Stonehill College

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    638 research outputs found

    The First Snow

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    The first snowfall of the fall of 2020 in front of the MacPhaidin Library.https://soar.stonehill.edu/stonehillcampus_images/1125/thumbnail.jp

    The MacPhaidin Library During Quaratine 2020

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    The front exterior of the MacPhaidin Library in the summer of 2020 during COVID-19 quarantine.https://soar.stonehill.edu/stonehillcampus_images/1003/thumbnail.jp

    A Watercolor of A Cloud Over Meehan School of Business

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    The Leo J Meehan School of Business Building under a cloud. Taken from in front of the clock on the quad. Photo edited with Brushstroke for a watercolor effect.https://soar.stonehill.edu/stonehillcampus_images/1014/thumbnail.jp

    The MacPhaidin Library Surrounded by Trees

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    A close up photo of the front of the MacPhaidin Library. Photo edited with Oilist for a watercolor effect.https://soar.stonehill.edu/stonehillcampus_images/1013/thumbnail.jp

    A Field in Summer

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    A view of the field running along route 138 on the Stonehill College Campus.https://soar.stonehill.edu/stonehillcampus_images/1025/thumbnail.jp

    Wildflowers in Summer 2020

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    Wildflowers growing in the field close to route 138 on Stonehill College Campus.https://soar.stonehill.edu/stonehillcampus_images/1024/thumbnail.jp

    Toward the Hill

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    Looking towards Donahue Hall during the summer of 2020. Taken with Priisma app.https://soar.stonehill.edu/stonehillcampus_images/1032/thumbnail.jp

    Water Reflections

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    Ames Pond during the summer of 2020.https://soar.stonehill.edu/stonehillcampus_images/1030/thumbnail.jp

    In the Fountain

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    The front of the MacPhaidin Library reflected in the fountain.https://soar.stonehill.edu/stonehillcampus_images/1093/thumbnail.jp

    Who Reveals, Who Conceals?: Candidate Gender and Policy Transparency

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    © 2019 University of Utah. Do women candidates in the United States more openly provide the specific details of their policy preferences and make clear their political ideology? Previous research supports all manner of conflicting expectations regarding gender and campaign communication strategies. Here, with an eye toward offering evidence on the degree to which candidates make clear their issue positions, we consider how more than 1,300 candidates running in the 2016 elections from fifteen randomly chosen states answered voter guide questions. We do so both to better understand the murky theoretical relationship between gender and communication styles and to offer insight into the practical realities of how women run for office. Ultimately our findings support the notion that women run for office differently, offering less transparency of their issue positions than men. The implication, consistent with a theory of conditional political ambition, is that women weigh more seriously the decision to run for office and, thus, run more sophisticated campaigns when they do pursue office

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