1,481 research outputs found

    Editor\u27s Introduction & Front Pages

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    The Echo: September 14, 2018

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    Taylor lit by ‘A Million Lights’ – Additions being made to nearby park – Library has most successful summer program yet – New faculty welcomed into Taylor community – Newspaper business harder than it seems – Student’s creativity shines in summer job – Alumni takes risk with ‘The Preachers’ – Judd the Therapy Dog lends a helping paw – Say hello to your 2018-2019 co-editors (in chief) – Pizza & puppies: What could be better? – Humans of Taylor U – Weekly Crossword -- #TaylorU’s Top Tweets – Forgiveness flashes across the stage in ‘The Amish Project’ – Book embraces questions about relationships – The fear of failure defeated one death at a time – A&E Stay Up To Date – Our View – Two classes become one – Secular environment grows faith – The Echo benefits from faculty voices – Win over Wildcats, beaten by Bulldogs – Women’s soccer closes in on top 25 ranking – Weekly Preview – Scoreboard – Athletes of the Weekhttps://pillars.taylor.edu/echo-2018-2019/1002/thumbnail.jp

    Columbia Chronicle (09/23/2019)

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    Student newspaper from September 23, 2019 entitled The Columbia Chronicle. This issue is 16 pages and is listed as Volume 55, Issue 4. Cover story: Just the Beginning: Youth Strike for Climate Justice . Co-Editors-in-Chief: Blaise Mesa & Alexandria Yetter.https://digitalcommons.colum.edu/cadc_chronicle/2068/thumbnail.jp

    Suffolk Journal, vol.83, no. 1, Orientation Issue, 2019

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    https://dc.suffolk.edu/journal/1689/thumbnail.jp

    Turning Points in the History of St. Mary’s University School of Law (1980–1988)

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    St. Mary’s University School of Law in San Antonio, Texas has existed for nearly a century. Thus far, there have been seven important written histories of St. Mary’s University School of Law, but no one has yet attempted to write a comprehensive history of the law school, nor have any members of the faculty published autobiographies. Having taught law at St. Mary’s since 1982, Professor of Law Vincent R. Johnson shares his first-hand account about the life of the law school during most of the 1980s (specifically 1980 to 1988). That period encompasses the bulk of the deanship of James N. Castleberry Jr. Some of the moments discussed in this Article have proved to be turning points in the history of the law school including: the significant growth of full-time faculty in the early 1980s; introduction of computers and other technology that brought the university into the new technological era and greatly advanced scholarly productivity; changes in hiring policies; the creation and development of the annual summer study abroad program in Innsbruck, Austria; construction of the Sarita Kenedy East Law Library and the renovation and dedication of the Raba Building; student resentment of the administration; conflicts between the administration and the new, progressive professors; and the end of the Castleberry deanship. At the time, they were “tumultuous.” Other moments were not so important, but explain what life was like at the law school during a certain era

    The Echo: May 16, 2022

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    Taylor University prepares for 2022 commencement — Four years include unique journey — The Echo receives national, state press awards — Spring awards announced — Class of ’22 — 2022 Taylor University student awards — Commencement: Before crossing the stage — Faded tradition revisited by Taylor alumnus — How to spend your summer well — Lindsay reflects on first year — Lesson from a life lived in Olson — Hope Oak strikes note with Taylor community — Your Spotify Cue — The perfect return of ‘Better Call Saul’ — Lichacz’s lifelong love of music — Echo co-editors reflect on the last four years — Modern Solutions Required — Counting down the top sports stories of the year — Huseman follows an unexpected path — Saying goodbye to the back page of the Echohttps://pillars.taylor.edu/echo-2021-2022/1021/thumbnail.jp

    Celebrating Economies of Change: Brave Visions for Inclusive Futures

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    This issue has been inspired by a path-breaking conference held by the Canadian Society for Ecologi-cal Economics (CANSEE), which took place this past May 2019 in Waterloo, Ontario. Entitled Engaging Economies of Change, the conference aimed to ex-pand existing research networks in the economy-environment nexus by building connections beyond the academy in order to meaningfully engage with the practicalities of building and implementing change. This issue captures the rich content shared during the event, as well as descriptions of the pro-cesses and efforts made to create a welcoming and respectful space where academics and community activists could build alliances and discuss common challenges. The conference organizers – all graduate students and activists themselves -- called this ‘building a brave space’.This research was supported by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canad

    Volume CXXXVI, Number 15, February 15, 2019

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    The Cowl - v.83 - n.11 - Nov 29, 2018

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    The Cowl - student newspaper of Providence College. Vol 83 - No. 11 - November 29, 2018. 24 pages

    Birthday Greetings to Marja Härkönen

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    Marja Härkönen celebrated her 80th birthday on 17 October 2019
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