72 research outputs found
Dr. Boylan Dies, Was Brooklyn College Head
Copy of article reporting on Dr. Boylan\u27s Death
Calls Brooklyn College Hotbed of Communism
Newspaper clipping on concerns expressed by Representative J. Parnell Thomas of the Dies Congressional Committee that Brooklyn College was center for communist activity
Camp Near City For Study and Farming Urged
Article in The Herald Tribune regarding a volunteer work camp for Brooklyn College. Sunday, October 25, 1942
Farm Help From Brooklyn
Herald Tribune article; 150 students participating in the 1944 farm labor project. April 30, 1944
Hot Spell Helps State Farmers Get in Planting
Herald Tribune article mentioning 1943 Brooklyn College farm program.Thursday, June 10, 1943
Leather Painting Exhibition On Display at Art Center Newspaper Clipping
Newspaper clipping titled Leather Painting Exhibition On Display at Art Center. Article discusses exhibition titled Lyle Novinski: Leather Paintings. Exhibition showcased 15 sewn leather compositions by Lyle Novinski. Exhibition was at the Art Center in Waco, Texas in September 1976. Dated September 12, 1976, Waco Tribune-Herald, Page 7B.https://digitalcommons.udallas.edu/faculty_off_campus_76-77/1000/thumbnail.jp
Brooklyn College Farm Labor Lesson in Transplanting
New York Herald Tribune photograph with caption of Dr. Benedict and student in greenhouse. Sunday, May 9, 1943
Chronicles of Oklahoma
Article details how students of the School of American Research restored centuries old pueblos and American Indian pottery
3 newspaper articles titled Camp Near City For Study and Farming Urged, College Offers Farm Labor Plan, and Student Helpers on Farms
Page 1: Article published on October 25, 1942. The subtitle is Report on Brooklyn College Volunteers To Be Sent to Higher Education Board. Page 2: Article published on November 1, 1942. Subtitles are Brooklyn Professor Would Combine Field Work and Summer School Study, ITS MOTIVE IS PATRIOTIC, and Experience of 86 Who Helped With Crops Up-State Is Basis for Proposal. Page 3: Article published on November 4, 1942. The subtitle is Brooklyn College Experiment Cited as Possible Solution of Problem
Human Rights and the Pink Tide in Latin America : Which Rights Matter?
Latin America witnessed the election of ânew Leftâ governments in the early 21 st century that, in different ways, sought to open a debate about alternatives to paradigms of neoliberal development. What has this meant for the way that human rights are understood and for patterns of human rights compliance? Using qualitative and quantitative evidence, this article discusses how human rights are imagined and the compliance records of new Left governments through the lens of the three âgenerationsâ of human rights â political and civil, social and economic, and cultural and environmental rights. The authors draw in particular on evidence from Andean countries and the Southern Cone. While basic civil and individual liberties are still far from guaranteed, especially in the Andean region, new Left countries show better overall performances in relation to socio-economic rights compared to the past and to other Latin American countries. All new Left governments also demonstrate an increasing interest in âthird generationâ (cultural and environmental) rights, though this is especially marked in the Andean Left. The authors discuss the tensions around interpretations and categories of human rights, reflect on the stagnation of first generation rights and note the difficulties associated with translating second and third generation rights into policy
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