247,760 research outputs found

    York\u27s Roots and wings (Book Review)

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    A review of York, S. (2016). Roots and wings. St. Paul, MN: Redleaf Press. 334 pp. $44.95. ISBN 978160554455

    Corporate Finance in the Law School Curriculum

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    Review of: Corporate Finance: Cases and Materials. By Robert W. Hamilton: West Publishing Co., St. Paul, Minnesota, 1984

    Powers\u27 Parent engagement in early learning (Book Review)

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    A review of Powers, J. (2106). Parent engagement in early learning. St. Paul, MN: Redleaf Press. 173 pp. $29.95. ISBN 978160554438

    Hill\u27s Dribble drabble: Process art experiences for young children (Book Review)

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    Hill, D. B. (2016). Dribble drabble: Process art experiences for young children. St. Paul, MN: Red Leaf Press. 106 pp. $15.95. ISBN 978160554528

    St. Paul\u27s Indian Burial Mounds

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    Sullivan\u27s Cultivating the genius of black children: Strategies to close the achievement gap in the early years (Book Review)

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    Sullivan, D. R. (2016). Cultivating the genius of black children: Strategies to close the achievement gap in the early years. St. Paul, MN: Redleaf Press. 166 pp. $29.95. ISBN 978160554405

    COST : action chemistry conference on supramolecular chemistry in water

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    Scientists and chemists from 18 countries gathered in Malta for the 3rd Scientific Meeting on Supramolecular Chemistry in Water between the 9 − 11th of November 2013 at the Old University Building on St Paul Street in Vallettapeer-reviewe

    “You Can’t Put a Price on Something That’s Not for Sale”: Eminent Domain in St. Paul, Virginia (1970 - 1985)

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    The St. Paul Redevelopment Project was unique and touted as the first-of-its-kind to feature cooperation from all three levels of government. Several government agencies helped St. Paul accomplish an “impossible dream,” spending an estimated thirty million dollars to rechannel the Clinch River in the 1970s and 1980s. The small town of 1,000 residentsrelocated 100 families from South St. Paul to carry out the project, much to the dismay of many of the residents. A primary factor in enforcing the power of eminent domain in the St. Paul Redevelopment Project was the idea of “progress,” a commonality of many redevelopment projects. The St. Paul Redevelopment Project serves as a small case study of government intervention in the Appalachian region and of resistance. St. Paul as a community and “place” has been shaped by elected officials and government agencies, but ‘place’ also belongs to individuals. The example of redevelopment in St. Paul, Virginia, and the use of eminent domain exposes a complex system of power relations at work in Appalachia, that at least in the case under study, suggests how the response of one family, the Couches, reflected both participation in the dominant system of commodification and a rejection of it
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