807 research outputs found
OTOH
Contains the essay “Unsettled Feelings". Funded by SSHRC Institutional Explore Grant. Design by Chloe Brumwell & Randy Lee Cutler.Unsettle
Coat Cooke & Joe Poole | Coat Cooke & Rainer Wiens: Reviews
Coat Cooke album reviews by Randy Raine-Reusch. Coat Cooke (sax); Joe Poole (drums); Rainer Wiens (guitar)
Interview with Randy Stoecker, author, Liberating Service Learning and the Rest of Higher Education Civic Engagement
It’s common for colleges in the U.S. to have service learning programs of one kind or another. These are sometimes criticized as being liberal or even radical endeavors — especially if “social justice” language is employed. But what if these are, in fact, conservative programs at their heart, ones that, in the context of the corporatized university, are furthering the neoliberal project and inhibiting the development of better social welfare policies? Listen to our interview with Randy Stoecker as he discusses his book, Liberating Service Learning and the Rest of Higher Education Civic Engagement (Temple University Press, 2016), for a first-hand critique as well as some thoughts on how we might all better serve our students — and the communities they would engage with
1971 Jay-Cee-An BJC -- Page 115
Photographs of BJC freshmen115
Elder, Mary Jane
Ellis, Lynn
Emerson, Paula
Engstrom, Ronald
Erling, Scott
Fast, Tim
Ferderer, James
Fetch, Myron
Fickenscher, Mark
Fielhaber, William
Flagg, Marshall
Folk, Carol
Folstrom, Diane
Fox, Chuck
Fox, John
Fracassi, Len
Frank, Mike
Freeburg, Terry
Frey, Marylin
Fricke, Kathy
Fricke, Randy
Fuchs, Bruce
Gartner, Constance
Gaugler, Nanc
Reflections 1979
The 1979 issue of Reflections is edited by Randy Waters with Michele Barale and Joyce Compton Brown serving as faculty advisers. Cover art and photography is by Les Brown. Author biographies are included on a contributors page at the conclusion of the issue. Award winners of the student literary context include: Randy Waters, Debbie Drayer, and Susan Sheilds.https://digitalcommons.gardner-webb.edu/reflections/1005/thumbnail.jp
The role of copulatory plugs in mosquito-parasitic nematode Strelkovimermis spiculatus
The mosquito-parasitic nematode, Strelkovimermis spiculatus (Mermithidae: Nematoda) emerges from hosts and aggregates to form mating clusters characterized by intense male-male competition for females. Successful males deposit a copulatory plug over the female vulva after mating. In choice experiments, males strongly preferred virgin females, whereas plugged females were ignored. Males were not observed attempting to remove the plug nor endeavoring to mate. Females with a copulatory plug repelled males. The observed chemical repellency was independent of females, since excised plugs alone showed the same negative male response. The plug contributes significantly to female fitness because removal of the plug after mating was found to reduce fecundity by 90%. About average of 805 spermatids were found to leak out from a female in the first 2 h after plug removal. Our initial hypothesis that the plug provides a nutritional gift was rejected due to the fact that there was no post-mating reduction in plug size that would have indicated absorption.M.S.Includes bibliographical referencesby Yu-Han La
Species suitability guide for Colorado
Compiled by Randy Moench, data from the Colorado State Forest Nursery, Fort Collins, Colorado
1972 Jay-Cee-An BJC -- Page 61
Photograph of BJC students who received awards and scholarships for academic achievementBJC Students awarded honors
Sophomores selected for Who's Who Among American Junior College Students are, FRONT: Clyde
Bauman, Ron Bickle, Nancy Gaugler, John MacMartin, SECOND ROW: Clyde Sebastian, Sue Kopp,
Claire Anne Carmichael, Rene Constantine, Yvonne Moilanen, THIRD ROW: Linda Durey, Roberta
Marone, Duane Schultz, Larry elson. STANDING: Brian Johnson, Randy icolai, Lee Toman. NOT
PICTU RED: Bob Mazurek and Cheryl Wescott.
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