198,461 research outputs found
NH Incumbents in Good Position for November Election 5/12/2004
Congressmen Charlie Bass and Jeb Bradley, as well as Senators Judd Gregg and John Sununu, all have strong favorability ratings in New Hampshire. Gregg, Bradley and Bass are in strong positions for re-election in November
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Compensatory Time vs. Cash Wages: Amending the Fair Labor Standards Act?
In the 108th Congress, two work hours flexibility bills have been introduced: S. 317 by Senator Gregg and H.R. 1119 by Representative Biggert. Both bills deal with a compensatory time off option (comp time) β though the Gregg proposal is somewhat broader, projecting other changes in the overtime provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) as well. This report is limited to consideration of the issue of comp time
NH Elected Officals 9/13/1999
Senator Judd Gregg has the highest overall favorability rating among the major office holders in New Hampshir
Gregg & Sununu Favorability Slides 2/23/2007
Republican Senators John Sununu and Judd Gregg have seen their popularity in the Granite State drop in the wake of the 2006 election
Free Will: Real or Illusion - A Debate
Debate on free will with Christian List, Gregg Caruso, and Cory Clark. The exchange is focused on Christian List's book Why Free Will Is Real
Gandhi, Mahatma, 1869-1948, Letter.
Letter to /Richard B. Gregg. Expresses sympathy and concern over Gregg\u27s wife\u27s Health. Also refers to Gregg\u27s book coming off press.https://dh.howard.edu/og_corres/1009/thumbnail.jp
NH Congressional Incumbents - Likely Relection 10/06/2004
Republican Congressmen Charlie Bass and Jeb Bradley and Senator Judd Gregg are all poised to win reelection in November. All lead their Democratic challengers by wide margins
Archaeological Investigations at the Wade (GC-38) and Estes (GC-49) Sites in the Sabine River Basin, Gregg County, Texas
Buddy C. Jones conducted extensive archaeological investigations in the 1950s and 1960s at many sites in the mid-Sabine River basin of East Texas, especially on Caddo sites of various ages in Gregg, Harrison, and Rusk counties. However, that work has not illuminated our understanding of the archaeology of the Caddo Indian peoples that lived along this stretch of the Sabine River as much as it could have, primarily because little of the work completed by Jones was ever published, or the results and findings shared with professional and avocational archaeological colleagues working in the region. The Caddo archaeology of the Gregg County stretch of the Sabine River, in particular, is poorly known by comparison with the archaeological record in the upper Sabine River or to the archaeological studies recently completed downstream in Harrison County at sites such as Pine Tree Mound (41HS15).
To begin to develop a better appreciation of the Caddo archaeology in the mid-Sabine River basin, we have made a concerted effort to analyze and document collections obtained by Jones from Caddo sites in Gregg County and the surrounding region. In this article, we discuss the archaeological findings from the Wade and Estes sites discovered and investigated by Jones in the late 1950s and early 1960s.
The sites are near each other in the southeastern part of Gregg County. The Wade site is on a landform near the confluence of Peatown Creek and Dutchman Creek, northern-flowing tributaries to the Sabine River. The Estes site is on a large alluvial terrace on the north side of the Sabine River, across from the confluence of Dutchman Creek and the Sabine River This article focuses particularly on the excavations of portions of an ancestral Caddo house structure at the Wade site and the analysis of the substantial decorated sherd assemblages at both the Wade and Estes sites
Gregg\u27s Support Strong 7/23/2003
A majority of New Hampshire residents feel the country is headed in the right direction. Senator Judd Gregg still enjoys strong support from New Hampshirites, while Senator John Sununu and Representative Charlie Bass receive modest support from Granite Staters
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