22 research outputs found
Conestogan - 1970
The Elizabethtown College yearbook was known as the Etonian from 1922-1950; then changed its name to the Conestogan in 1951. No yearbook was published in 1929, or for the 1941-1942 academic year.https://jayscholar.etown.edu/conestogan/1029/thumbnail.jp
1965 Miracle Yearbook
https://digitalcommons.cedarville.edu/yearbooks/1044/thumbnail.jp
The Campaign To Establish A Last Great Wilderness: The Arctic National Wildlife Range
Thesis (Ph.D.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2005In 1960, after nearly a decade of controversy and failed legislative attempts, the Arctic National Wildlife Range was established by an executive order "for the purpose of preserving unique wildlife, wilderness, and recreational values." This is the story of the transformation of this little-known expanse of mountains, forest, and tundra into a place internationally recognized as one of the finest examples of wilderness. This dissertation is a political history of the conflict, examining the roles of key proponents and opponents and the sequence of actions that finally brought the Secretary of Interior to issue the order. More important, it is an exploration of the historic, cultural, philosophical, and scientific underpinnings of the campaign. It focuses upon the beliefs and values, the ideas and idealism, and the hopes and concerns for the future that inspired leaders of the effort, captured the public imagination, and galvanized the political support necessary to overcome powerful opposition. The immediate context of the campaign was the post-World War II transformation of American society. More than in any previous period, postwar America was receptive to the idea of setting an area aside for a unique combination of tangible and intangible values---cultural, symbolic, and spiritual values as well as wildlife, ecological, and recreational values. The controversy reflected growing concerns about the era's unprecedented rate of population growth; economic, industrial, and technological expansion; and consequent environmental alteration. For proponents, it came to symbolize the conflict between seemingly unbridled progress and the need to more carefully consider the environmental consequences of these trends. For opponents, the nine-million acre reservation represented a threat to the new state's economic prosperity, resented federal control of natural resources, and a restriction of the opportunity and freedom they came to Alaska seeking. Rooted in the progressive era split between utilitarian conservation and nature preservation, the campaign was, to a large degree, a contest between competing views of the appropriate relationship between postwar American society and its changing landscape. The view that prevailed reflects the successful integration of the emerging ecologically-based "environmental" perspective into the wilderness movement
The Rampart, Manley Hot Springs, And Fort Gibbon Mining Districts Of Alaska.
Thesis (M.A.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 1995This thesis on the Rampart, Manley Hot Springs, and Fort Gibbon mining districts of Alaska provides the first comprehensive public history of prospecting and mining activity in these three districts within the gold belt of Interior Alaska. Spanning almost one hundred years, the history begins in 1894 and extracts material from early recorders' books, old newspapers, correspondence of miners whose dreams drew them to the gold fields, and U.S. Geological Survey reports which analyzed Alaska's natural resources and mining economy. It surveys mining development from stampedes during the boom years of the turn-into-the-twentieth-century through periods of decline and on into the modern, mechanized, open-pit operations near the beginning of the twenty-first century. It concludes with an extensive annotated bibliography designed to assist other researchers in finding specialized, in-depth information about the three districts. <p
New Mexico Lobo, Volume 037, No 29, 5/10/1935
New Mexico Lobo, Volume 037, No 29, 5/10/1935https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1935/1014/thumbnail.jp
Conference on Alaskan placer mining, focus: gold recovery systems
Alaska Miners' Association and the School of Mineral Industry, University of Alaska, Fairbanks conference proceedings of the Alaskan Placer Mining conference on Gold Recovery Systems
New Mexico Lobo, Volume 037, No 11, 11/23/1934
New Mexico Lobo, Volume 037, No 11, 11/23/1934https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1934/1030/thumbnail.jp