6,094 research outputs found
RAIN
Volume 15, Number 1
Inside: People Power; Community Healthcare; Berlin Carsharing Interviews; Building for Pedestrians. Scanned from print copy loaned by Tom Bender
RAIN began in October 1974 as a publication of ECO-NET, an environmental education network funded by the Hill Foundation and an Environmental Education grant. Its office was based in the Environmental Education Center at Portland State University. With a focus on the Pacific Northwest, particularly Oregon, RAIN originally described itself as a “bulletin board” with an “emphasis on environmental/energy related and communications kinds of information” and interested in “the evolutionary possibilities of inter-disciplinary connections.”https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/rain_japt/1102/thumbnail.jp
RAIN
Volume 7, Number 10
Inside: Lost Latin Ecotopia; The Values of Waste
RAIN began in October 1974 as a publication of ECO-NET, an environmental education network funded by the Hill Foundation and an Environmental Education grant. Its office was based in the Environmental Education Center at Portland State University. With a focus on the Pacific Northwest, particularly Oregon, RAIN originally described itself as a “bulletin board” with an “emphasis on environmental/energy related and communications kinds of information” and interested in “the evolutionary possibilities of inter-disciplinary connections.”https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/rain_japt/1067/thumbnail.jp
RAIN
Volume 7, Number 3
Inside: Wood Furnaces; Banking on Solar; The Synfuels Connection
RAIN began in October 1974 as a publication of ECO-NET, an environmental education network funded by the Hill Foundation and an Environmental Education grant. Its office was based in the Environmental Education Center at Portland State University. With a focus on the Pacific Northwest, particularly Oregon, RAIN originally described itself as a “bulletin board” with an “emphasis on environmental/energy related and communications kinds of information” and interested in “the evolutionary possibilities of inter-disciplinary connections.”https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/rain_japt/1060/thumbnail.jp
RAIN
Volume 9, Number 4
Inside: Development for Whom?; The Anatomy of Freedom; What If: Women and Future Technology
RAIN began in October 1974 as a publication of ECO-NET, an environmental education network funded by the Hill Foundation and an Environmental Education grant. Its office was based in the Environmental Education Center at Portland State University. With a focus on the Pacific Northwest, particularly Oregon, RAIN originally described itself as a “bulletin board” with an “emphasis on environmental/energy related and communications kinds of information” and interested in “the evolutionary possibilities of inter-disciplinary connections.”https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/rain_japt/1071/thumbnail.jp
RAIN
Volume 7, Number 6
Inside: Reagan Era Environmentalism; Heat Pump Water Heaters; Richard Merrill on Bioregional Agriculture
RAIN began in October 1974 as a publication of ECO-NET, an environmental education network funded by the Hill Foundation and an Environmental Education grant. Its office was based in the Environmental Education Center at Portland State University. With a focus on the Pacific Northwest, particularly Oregon, RAIN originally described itself as a “bulletin board” with an “emphasis on environmental/energy related and communications kinds of information” and interested in “the evolutionary possibilities of inter-disciplinary connections.”https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/rain_japt/1063/thumbnail.jp
RAIN
Volume 14, Number 3
Inside: Village-Organized Healthcare; The Homeless Garden Project; Center for Appropriate Transport; Ecotopia, Bulgaria
RAIN began in October 1974 as a publication of ECO-NET, an environmental education network funded by the Hill Foundation and an Environmental Education grant. Its office was based in the Environmental Education Center at Portland State University. With a focus on the Pacific Northwest, particularly Oregon, RAIN originally described itself as a “bulletin board” with an “emphasis on environmental/energy related and communications kinds of information” and interested in “the evolutionary possibilities of inter-disciplinary connections.”https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/rain_japt/1100/thumbnail.jp
RAIN
Volume 14, Number 1
Inside: Decentralized Politics; The Natural Economy of Laos; Swiss Origins; The Oregon Experiment Revisited. Scanned from print copy loaned by Tom Bender
RAIN began in October 1974 as a publication of ECO-NET, an environmental education network funded by the Hill Foundation and an Environmental Education grant. Its office was based in the Environmental Education Center at Portland State University. With a focus on the Pacific Northwest, particularly Oregon, RAIN originally described itself as a “bulletin board” with an “emphasis on environmental/energy related and communications kinds of information” and interested in “the evolutionary possibilities of inter-disciplinary connections.”https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/rain_japt/1098/thumbnail.jp
RAIN
Volume 14, Number 2
Inside: Working Communities; Community Supported Agriculture; Downtown Community Television; Workbikes and Society; Self-Reliance and Activism in India; Real and Imagined Communities; Cities Against Centralization; Neighborhood Controlled Food and Transport; Direct Self-Government; Respected Local Labor
RAIN began in October 1974 as a publication of ECO-NET, an environmental education network funded by the Hill Foundation and an Environmental Education grant. Its office was based in the Environmental Education Center at Portland State University. With a focus on the Pacific Northwest, particularly Oregon, RAIN originally described itself as a “bulletin board” with an “emphasis on environmental/energy related and communications kinds of information” and interested in “the evolutionary possibilities of inter-disciplinary connections.”https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/rain_japt/1099/thumbnail.jp
Universidad y mass media
El autor del texto examina las relaciones entre Medios de Masas y Universidad, en todos sus puntos de conexiĂłn y efectos recĂprocos. Nos recuerda la diferente funciĂłn hoy establecida para ambos medios respecto a la transmisiĂłn de InformaciĂłn, y señala cĂłmo actualmente la Universidad tiene una vital funciĂłn en el completar el vacĂo dejado por los medios masivos respecto a conocimientos y cultura
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