8,185 research outputs found

    Anthony R. Davis

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    Bickerton (1984a) is a recent exposition of the language bioprogram hypothesis (henceforth LBH), which seeks to account for similarities in Creole grammars in "the structure of a species-specific program for language" that is relatively unaffected by input from pre-existing languages. The validity of this claim depends on both the circumstances of creole origins and the nature of the putative similarities, and on both counts the LBH has been attacked. My purpose here is to examine these two issues and to suggest briefly some areas in which the LBH might be tested or expanded.</jats:p

    Discussion group, Jordan Davis, Anthony Sarmiento (staff), and Rickey Hart at Neighborhood Planning Council #12 Youth Center at Blessed Sacrament Church in Chevy Chase, D.C., July 1970

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    Discussion group (L to R) Jordan Davis, Anthony Sarmiento (staff), and Rickey Hart at Neighborhood Planning Council #12 Youth Center at Blessed Sacrament Church in Chevy Chase, D.C., July 1970. The Youth Center was funded by the Mayor's Office of Youth Opportunities Services (OYOS). Jordan Davis and Rickey Hart were Vice-Chair and Chair of a city wide youth council organized by CYOS. Donated by Anthony Sarmiento

    Fingolimod exacerbated affective psychosis?

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    Alyssa Fitzpatrick, Scott R Clark, Rowena Newcombe, Anthony Davis and Bernhard T Baun

    Journalist-Source Relations, Mediated Reflexivity and the Politics of Politics

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    This essay discusses journalist-source relations but with an emphasis on how such relations influence the understanding and behaviour of politicians. It explores the issue through empirical work conducted at the site of the UK Parliament at Westminster. Findings are based on semistructured interviews with 60 Members of Parliament (MPs) and 20 national political journalists. The research findings initially confirmed many of the observations of earlier studies in the field. UK journalist-source relations still resemble Gans’ (1979) original ‘‘tug-of-war’’ description of an evershifting power balance between the two sides. Such interactions, in turn, are reflected in more compliant or adversarial news coverage. Of greater interest here, the interviews also revealed that such relations have come to play a significant role in the micro-level politics of the political sphere itself. This is because reporter-politician relations and objectives have become institutionalised, intense and subject to a form of ‘‘mediated reflexivity’’. Consequently, politicians have come to incorporate such reporter interactions into their daily thinking and behaviour. As such, journalists are seen as more than a simple means of message promotion to the public. They also act, often inadvertently, as information intermediaries and sources for politicians trying to gauge daily developments within their own political arena

    sj-pdf-1-jiv-10.1177_08862605221128052 – Supplemental material for Trajectories of Emerging Adults’ Binge Drinking and Depressive Symptoms and Associations With Sexual Violence Victimization: Examining Differences by Sexual and Gender Minority Status

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    Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-jiv-10.1177_08862605221128052 for Trajectories of Emerging Adults’ Binge Drinking and Depressive Symptoms and Associations With Sexual Violence Victimization: Examining Differences by Sexual and Gender Minority Status by Daniel Siconolfi, Jordan P. Davis, Eric R. Pedersen, Joan S. Tucker, Michael S. Dunbar, Anthony Rodriguez and Elizabeth J. D’Amico in Journal of Interpersonal Violence</p

    Information bulletin (San Bruno, Calif.), no. 25 (August 1, 1942)

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    Bulletin no. 25 from Tanforan Assembly Center, signed by center manager Frank E. Davis, regarding August issue coupon books.Personal correspondence, organizational records, government documents, publications, and other papers created or collected by Joseph R. Goodman documenting the forced removal and incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II, as well as organized resistance to incarceration. Included in the collection are records of the Japanese Young Men's Christian Association and the Japanese American Citizens' League in San Francisco, including papers of the Japanese YMCA's executive secretary Lincoln Kanai; Sakai family papers; Goodman's correspondence to and from Japanese American incarcerees, organizations opposing forced removal and incarceration of Japanese Americans, the War Relocation Authority, and others; publications, photographs, and ephemera from the Topaz Relocation Center, where Goodman taught high school; War Relocation Authority records and publications; and newspaper clippings, pamphlets, and reports about forced removal and incarceration created by various government, religious, and civic organizations, in California and nationwide

    Creighton University Magazine Fall/Winter 2011

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    A MATTER OF THE HEART Timothy R. Lannon, S.J., returns to his alma mater to become the first alumnus to hold the position of president of Creighton University. Learn more about this gregarious leader and how he arrived at this time and place. Page 8. ADVANCING CARDIAC CARE A lot has changed in the diagnosis and care of heart patients since Creighton University first launched its cardiology program 50 years ago, but one thing has remained the same: Creighton’s commitment to providing quality, compassionate care in an atmosphere of new discovery. Page 14. REACHING OUT : CREIGHTON'S DON DOLL, S.J. PHOTOGRAPHS THE WORK OF JESUIT REFUGEE SERVICE IN INDONESIA / REACHING OUT Since its founding in 1980, the Jesuit Refugee Service (JRS) has been assisting the poor and marginalized around the world — and Creighton photographer Don Doll, S.J., has been there to capture its efforts. Most recently, he traveled to Indonesia, as JRS reached out to a tsunamiravaged community. Page 18. IN THE FAITH: CATHOLIC AT CREIGHTON While Creighton is open and welcoming to all students, regardless of their religious beliefs, it continues to provide its Catholic students with unique opportunities to live, express and grow in their faith. Page 24.12

    Mrs. Beeman Fisher, Mrs. L. R. Elliott, Mrs. Frank Davis, and George C. Sumner of the Friends of the Library

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    (From the left) Mrs. Beeman Fisher, chairman; Mrs. L. R. Elliott, Mrs. Frank Davis, and George C. Sumner (standing), getting ready to mail announcements for special events. Mr. Sumner is seen holding a stack of papers, Mrs. Fisher is writing down information, Mrs. Elliott is showing Mrs. Fisher cards, and Mrs. Davis is photographed with a stack of papers in front of her, invitation for a book and author luncheon during the National Library Week celebration. Fort Worth Star-Telegram Morning edition April 8, 1962.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1960s/1750/thumbnail.jp

    Women and independence in the nineteenth century novel : a study of Austen, Trollope and James

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    'Women and independence in the nineteenth century novel : a study of Austen, Trollope and James', begins with the concept of independence and works through the three most common usages of the word. The first, financial independence (not needing to earn one's livelihood) appears to be a necessary prerequisite for the second and third forms of independence, although it is by no means an unequivocal good in any of the novels. The second, intellectual independence (not depending on others for one's opinion or conduct; unwilling to be under obligation to others), is a matter of asserting independence while employing terms which society recognizes. The third, of being independent, is exemplified by an inward struggle for a knowledge of self. In order to trace the development of the idea of self during the nineteenth century, I have chosen a group of novels which seem to be representative of the beginning, the middle, and the end of the period. Particular attention is given to the characterizations of Emma Woodhouse, Glencora Palliser, Isabel Archer, Milly Theale and Maggie Verver. Whereas in Jane Austen's novels the self has a definite shape which the heroine must discover, and in Anthony Trollope's novels the self (reflecting the idea of socially-determined man) must learn to accommodate social and political changes, in Henry James's novels the self determined by external manifestations (hollow man) is posed against the exercise of the free spirit or soul. Jane Austen's novels look backward, as she reacts against late eighteenth century romanticism, and forward, with the development of the heroine who exemplifies intellectual independence. Anthony Trollope's women characters are creatures of social and political adaptation; although they do not derive their reason for being from men, they must accommodate themselves to men's wishes. And Henry James looks backward, wistfully, at Austen's solid, comforting, innocent self and forward, despairingly, to the dark, unknowable self of the twentieth century
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