1,933 research outputs found

    Spartan Daily, February 28, 1936

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    Volume 24, Issue 92https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/2420/thumbnail.jp

    IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT and STAGECOACH

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    A survey and assessment of the reception and influence of IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT (1934) and STAGECOACH (1939)

    Oral History Interview: Charles Payne

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    This interview is one of a series conducted concerning West Virginia coal mining. Taking a political theme, Mr. Payne discusses the role of Van A. Bitner in the United Mine Workers and West Virginia state politics. Such notables in West Virginia and UMW politics as Harley M. Kilgore, Homer Holt, Rush D. Holt, Clarence Meadows, John Easten, Homer Hanna, Joe Kenna, Ben Moore, Ned Smith, Fred Mooney, and Percy Tetlowe are mentioned.https://mds.marshall.edu/oral_history/1183/thumbnail.jp

    \u3ci\u3eThere Was An Old Woman\u3c/i\u3e

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    Once upon a time there was a Housing Inspector who received a call from the police. More pre­cisely, there was a young man, newly appointed by the mayor to serve as Housing Inspector, who received a call from the police

    Miami, my wife| A comedy in three acts

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    Countdown

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    Spartan Daily, October 19, 1938

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    Volume 27, Issue 20https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/2810/thumbnail.jp

    "Too close to call" : CNN's politics of captions in the coverage of the Florida Recount

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    Proceeding chronologically in terms of the events covered, Raimund Schieß in his paper „Too close to call: CNN’s politics of captions in the coverage of the Florida Recount“ focusses on Nov. 11, 2000, when the Bush campaign applied to Miami Federal Court to stop the manual recount of ballots which had been started in some counties. The paper studies the discursive practices employed by the CNN journalists to construct a particular version of the events, focussing on captions, i.e. the lines of text inserted at the bottom of the tv screen, and on the way in which they interact with the other verbal and visual components of the television text. Raimund Schieß concludes that captions, far beyond providing mere details of a speech event (who is talking to whom about what, where and when), are used to select, to highlight and hide, and thus to invite a preferred interpretation of the event. He is also able to show that captions are often employed to exploit a story’s potential for drama and sensation. His detailed micro-analysis of the verbal and visual dimensions of the television text is supported by careful documentation of the data, either through screen shots or via transcriptions of the stretches of broadcast discussed

    Spicy science: David Julius and the discovery of temperature-sensitive TRP channels.

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    This invited biographical review covers the career of Dr. David Julius and his discovery of thermosensitive TRP channels. Dr. Julius is currently the Morris Herzstein Chair in Molecular Biology and Medicine and Professor and Chair of Physiology at the University of California, San Francisco Medical School. He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and has received many distinguished awards for his landmark discoveries of the molecular basis of pain and thermosensation

    Spartan Daily, November 1, 1935

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    Volume 24, Issue 27https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/2355/thumbnail.jp
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