4,273 research outputs found

    Prospectus of Santa Clara College

    No full text
    Prospectus of Santa Clara College, written around June 1855; author could have been Fr. Nobili or Peter Burnett

    Prospectus of Santa Clara College

    No full text
    Prospectus of Santa Clara College, written around June 1855; author could have been Fr. Nobili or Peter Burnett

    Santa Clara Magazine, Volume 30 Number 2, Winter 1988

    No full text
    10 - UNDERSTANDING THE NEW SOVIETS A first-person account of the Soviet Union today by the author of two books on Russia. By Jim Garrison 16 - HOW TO GET INTO ADVERTISING An English graduate goes from waiting tables to a senior vice presidency on Madison Avenue. By Barbara Boyle 20 - 1988 ECONOMIC FORECAST For 15 years, Mario Belotti\u27s been making forecasts that are amazingly accurate. By Mario Belotti 22 - SANTA CLARA AND THE POPES Reviewing historic links with Rome shows how it affected SCU. By Gerald McKevitt, S.J. 26 - SCU\u27S ETERNAL FLAIM Biology professor Frank Flaim is in his 50th year at Santa Clara. By Patricia Fowlerhttps://scholarcommons.scu.edu/sc_mag/1078/thumbnail.jp

    Santa Clara Magazine, Volume 28 Number 3, Winter 1986

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    2 - IS SILICON VALLEY A HOUSE OF CARDS? By Michael S. Malone. A fresh, freewheeling forecast of the future of Silicon Valley. 7 - MOTIVATING CHILDREN TO SUCCEED By Ruth E. Cook. The author suggests some guidelines for helping children who don\u27t work up to their true potential. 11 - IN SEARCH OF HUMANITY By William J. Rewak, S.J. Santa Clara\u27s president explores the university\u27s role in the development of the human person. 16 - LEARNING TO LEAD A photo feature of executives at the beach, engaged in a new and appealing program from the Executive Development Center that teaches them to become leaders. Photos by Gene Miller. Text by Peg Major. 20 - THE REAL POVERTY TRAP By Frances Moore Lappe. The author of Diet for a Small Planet discusses sixth myths that exist about poverty. 26 - A POLITICIAN\u27S ODYSSEY By Diane Dreher and William Stovet: California Assemblyman and SCU alumnus John Vasconcellos is the subject of this article by two members of the Santa Clara faculty. 29 - FROM DONOHOE ALUMNI HOUSE By Jerry Ken; executive director of the Alumni Association. A new column of news and notes about alumni activities and plans. 30 - NEWS FROM CAMPUS Keeping you up-to-date between issues of Santa Clara Today.https://scholarcommons.scu.edu/sc_mag/1072/thumbnail.jp

    Prospectus of Santa Clara College

    No full text
    Prospectus of Santa Clara College, written around June 1855; author could have been Fr. Nobili or Peter Burnett

    Prospectus of Santa Clara College

    No full text
    Prospectus of Santa Clara College, written around June 1855; author could have been Fr. Nobili or Peter Burnett

    Santa Clara Magazine, Volume 44 Number 3, Winter 2002

    No full text
    10 - GLOBALIZATION EMPOWERS GOOD AND EVIL By Rob Elder. Thomas Friedman, Pulitzer Prizewinning author and international affairs columnist for The New York Times, discusses this complex issue during a visit to campus. 14 - ON THE COLLISION OF WORLDS By Fred White. Corny science fiction movies inspire an SCU English professor to ponder deeply cosmic questions. 18 - THE CAMPAIGN FOR SANTA CLARA By Elizabeth Kelley Gillogly \u2793. SCU launches the largest campaign in its history, with plans for endowed scholarships, a new library, a new building for the Leavey School of Business, and much more.https://scholarcommons.scu.edu/sc_mag/1104/thumbnail.jp

    Santa Clara Magazine, Volume 27 Number 7, Summer 1985

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    2 - COMMON COURTESY By Thomas J. Peters. Competitive advantage is boiled down to service, quality, and courtesy. Everyone should provide it. Why else be in business? 9 - THE RISE AND FALL OF OPEC By T John Whalen, Jr. Traces the evolution of OPEC, discusses the dominant factors that led to its loss of power, and analyzes its impact on world oil prices and supplies. 13 - AN AFFLUENT AMERICAN RESPONDS TO GLOBAL POVERTY By William J. Wood, S.J. A Jesuit reflects on global poverty and explains why he is an affluent American, and describes those who are in the process of changing the world. 18 - STROKE BY STROKE A photo feature about the discipline and dedication crew demands of its rowers throughout the school year. Photos by Gene Miller. 23 - THE ABORTION QUESTION By Austin Fagothey, S.J. A reprint of this highly requested article from 1974 by Santa Clara\u27s legendary professor, Father Fagothey, as a memorial on the 10th anniversary of his death. 25 - THE SOURCES OF CONSCIENCE By James Tunstead Burtchaell, C.S.C. A public debate over abortion between a prelate and a politician raises a crucial question: How do Catholics decide what is right and wrong? 30 - ABORTION: THREE COMMENTS By William J. Rewak, S.J. A commentary on the articles in this issue by Father Fagothey and Father Burtchaell and some of the author\u27s own observations on abortion. 32 - NEWS OF SANTA CLARA New Founders of the University are named and the President recognizes three outstanding teachers at Santa Clara. 34 - CAMPAIGN FOR SANTA CLARA By Kenneth E. Cool. An update on the plans to develop an integrated center for the School of Law on the campus, and reports on major grants for innovations in teaching and research, the Retail Management Institute, and the School of Engineering Campaign.https://scholarcommons.scu.edu/sc_mag/1071/thumbnail.jp

    L’essor des agglomérations laténiennes : pour une lecture européenne

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    International audienceFrom the Atlantic to the Carpathians, data on agglomerated, open or fortified, settlements have multiplied in recent decades. However, shared analytical tools have yet to be developed to study these processes at the transnational scale at which they develop.This article, which is the result of a doctoral thesis , aims to suggest a European perspective on the rhythm of La Tene settlements development between the 4th and 1st centuries BCE. To achieve this, however, several reassessments are proposed:•to develop terms that do not shape the understanding of the object of study (such as "oppidum" and "open agglomeration"), since the naming of things is already an interpretation;•to reassess the extent of the phenomenon thanks to updated data, by developing tools that allow its comparison;•to move away from any monolithic view that would see a period of open agglomerations and then a period of oppida, in order to consider the processes as multifaceted and multi-scalar, at the interface between European dynamics and regional specificities;•to abandon any site-centrism. Urbanisation can be seen as a territorial process on which changes in mobility have a major impact.The inventory of 855 grouped (open or fortified) settlements in ten countries, from France to Slovakia, provides a new picture of the extent of the agglomeration wave between the 4th and 1st centuries BCE. Its chronological and functional study thus offers a global perspective on the processes of settlement agglomeration in La Tène Europe, highlighting crucial periods, rhythms and regional specificities. Deconstructing any monolithic view of urbanisation processes during the La Tène, this article aims to highlight some of the common trends at the scale of transalpine Europe, but also the numerous regional peculiarities and chronological shifts that characterise this vast, multiform and interconnected space.De l’Atlantique aux Carpates, les données sur les habitats agglomérés, ouverts comme fortifiés se sont multipliées ces dernières décennies. Reste toutefois à élaborer des outils d’analyse partagés, pour étudier ces processus à l’échelle transnationale où ils se développent.Cet article, issu d’une thèse de doctorat , vise à proposer une perspective européenne des rythmes de développement des agglomérations laténiennes entre le IVe et le Ier s. a.C. Pour y parvenir, plusieurs réévaluations sont toutefois suggérées :•Élaborer des termes qui ne contraignent pas la compréhension de l’objet à étudier (« oppidum » et « agglomération ouverte »), puisque nommer les choses c’est déjà interpréter ;•Réévaluer l’ampleur du phénomène grâce à des données actualisées sur une échelle vaste, en concevant les outils permettant leur comparaison ;•Sortir de toute vision monolithique qui verrait un temps des agglo ouvertes puis un temps des oppida, pour envisager les processus comme multiples et multiscalaires, à l’articulation entre dynamiques européennes et spécificités régionales ;•Sortir du site centrisme. L’urbanisation peut être considérée comme un processus territorial, au sein duquel les transformations de la mobilité ont un effet majeur.Le recensement de 855 sites d’habitat groupé (ouverts ou fortifiées), dans dix pays de la France à la Slovaquie, permet de proposer une image renouvelée de l’ampleur de la vague de création d’agglomérations entre le IVe et le Ier s. a.C. Leur étude chronologique et fonctionnelle offre ainsi une perspective globale des processus d’agglomération de l’habitat à l’échelle de l’Europe laténienne, en soulignant les périodes charnières, les rythmes et certaines spécificités régionales. En déconstruisant toute vision monolithique des processus d’urbanisation au cours de La Tène, cet article vise à souligner certaines des tendances partagées à l’échelle de l’Europe transalpine, mais aussi les multiples spécificités régionales et décalages chronologiques qui caractérisent ce vaste espace, par essence multiforme et interconnecté

    L’essor des agglomérations laténiennes : pour une lecture européenne

    No full text
    International audienceFrom the Atlantic to the Carpathians, data on agglomerated, open or fortified, settlements have multiplied in recent decades. However, shared analytical tools have yet to be developed to study these processes at the transnational scale at which they develop.This article, which is the result of a doctoral thesis , aims to suggest a European perspective on the rhythm of La Tene settlements development between the 4th and 1st centuries BCE. To achieve this, however, several reassessments are proposed:•to develop terms that do not shape the understanding of the object of study (such as "oppidum" and "open agglomeration"), since the naming of things is already an interpretation;•to reassess the extent of the phenomenon thanks to updated data, by developing tools that allow its comparison;•to move away from any monolithic view that would see a period of open agglomerations and then a period of oppida, in order to consider the processes as multifaceted and multi-scalar, at the interface between European dynamics and regional specificities;•to abandon any site-centrism. Urbanisation can be seen as a territorial process on which changes in mobility have a major impact.The inventory of 855 grouped (open or fortified) settlements in ten countries, from France to Slovakia, provides a new picture of the extent of the agglomeration wave between the 4th and 1st centuries BCE. Its chronological and functional study thus offers a global perspective on the processes of settlement agglomeration in La Tène Europe, highlighting crucial periods, rhythms and regional specificities. Deconstructing any monolithic view of urbanisation processes during the La Tène, this article aims to highlight some of the common trends at the scale of transalpine Europe, but also the numerous regional peculiarities and chronological shifts that characterise this vast, multiform and interconnected space.De l’Atlantique aux Carpates, les données sur les habitats agglomérés, ouverts comme fortifiés se sont multipliées ces dernières décennies. Reste toutefois à élaborer des outils d’analyse partagés, pour étudier ces processus à l’échelle transnationale où ils se développent.Cet article, issu d’une thèse de doctorat , vise à proposer une perspective européenne des rythmes de développement des agglomérations laténiennes entre le IVe et le Ier s. a.C. Pour y parvenir, plusieurs réévaluations sont toutefois suggérées :•Élaborer des termes qui ne contraignent pas la compréhension de l’objet à étudier (« oppidum » et « agglomération ouverte »), puisque nommer les choses c’est déjà interpréter ;•Réévaluer l’ampleur du phénomène grâce à des données actualisées sur une échelle vaste, en concevant les outils permettant leur comparaison ;•Sortir de toute vision monolithique qui verrait un temps des agglo ouvertes puis un temps des oppida, pour envisager les processus comme multiples et multiscalaires, à l’articulation entre dynamiques européennes et spécificités régionales ;•Sortir du site centrisme. L’urbanisation peut être considérée comme un processus territorial, au sein duquel les transformations de la mobilité ont un effet majeur.Le recensement de 855 sites d’habitat groupé (ouverts ou fortifiées), dans dix pays de la France à la Slovaquie, permet de proposer une image renouvelée de l’ampleur de la vague de création d’agglomérations entre le IVe et le Ier s. a.C. Leur étude chronologique et fonctionnelle offre ainsi une perspective globale des processus d’agglomération de l’habitat à l’échelle de l’Europe laténienne, en soulignant les périodes charnières, les rythmes et certaines spécificités régionales. En déconstruisant toute vision monolithique des processus d’urbanisation au cours de La Tène, cet article vise à souligner certaines des tendances partagées à l’échelle de l’Europe transalpine, mais aussi les multiples spécificités régionales et décalages chronologiques qui caractérisent ce vaste espace, par essence multiforme et interconnecté
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