1,568 research outputs found
Fulton Soldiers and Sailor's Club in Trenton.
Fulton Soldiers and Sailor's Club in Trenton in Fulon Street, Trenton, NJ. At Opswing ceremonies, 1953 third club house next to their second house
Marriage record of Loring, Frank R. and Fulton, Mamie L.
Marriage license for Frank R. Loring and Mamie L. Fulton. J.P. Rowlison was the officiant
Fulton Sheen and Lawrence Harvey at Fatima
Bishop Fulton Sheen with author Lawrence Harvey and his daughter at Fatima.https://ecommons.udayton.edu/imri_photos/1156/thumbnail.jp
Susie and John Fulton
The author discusses the life of Susie and John Fulton and the challenges they faced in establishing the first church school and constructing the first mission ship in Fiji as Adventist missionaries
The responsiveness of black Fulton county commissioners to black concerns in Fulton county, 1989
Blacks have held three of the seven positions on the Fulton County Board of Commissioners since 1979. In 1986, that number was increased to five. The purpose of this study is to determine whether or not black residents of Fulton County feel that the black commissioners are more responsive to their needs than the white commis-sioners who were a majority before 1986. The significance of this study is that it will add to the existing literature on the responsiveness of black elected officials in the U.S. as a whole and the south in particular. The study will add to the ongoing debate about the role of black elected officials in the deliverability of services to their black constituents. The five black County Commissioners were inter-viewed to see how responsive they feel they have been to black citizens. A total of 100 black residents of the southern part of the county were surveyed to determine their perceptions of service delivery since blacks gained a majority on the Fulton County Board of Commissioners. The major finding of this study was that 94 percent of the respondents surveyed felt that the black commissioners are more responsive to their needs. The main sources of information for this study were obtained from interviews, books, journals, newspapers and magazines
Should We Bother?: Regional Planning in California
In 2004, Drusilla van Hengel´s Regional Planning and Analysis class received a distinguished guest for a presentation. Planner William Fulton, author of three best-selling books including the classic Guide to Californian Planning, spoke about his experiences and his views on the current state and the future of regional planning in California. Mr. Fulton has recently been selected to the Ventura County City Council
A study of the National Youth Administration work projects for Negroes in Fulton County, Georgia, 1940
In the fall of 1938, Mr. William Shell, state director of the Negro division of the National Youth Administration in Georgia, in the role of guest speaker, delivered an address to a class in Public Welfare Administration at the Atlanta University School of Social Work. He spoke on the National Youth Administration in Georgia for Negroes. Stimulated by a desire to learn to what extent the National Youth Administration Program was fulfilling its main objectives in the NYA Work Projects set up for Negroes in Atlanta, the author chose as a subject for a thesis, "The National Youth Administration Work Projects for Negroes in Fulton County, Georgia." Work Projects were those projects operated by NYA through which youths between the ages of eighteen and twenty-four who were out-of-school were compensated for activities in which they were engaged. This study would include all the Negro NYA Work Projects in Atlanta and Fulton County. To make such a study it was necessary to visit and to observe the projects while they were in operation and through these means be able to ascertain whether or not they were fulfilling their objectives
Evaluating Fulton County senior services social support role, 1998
This study evaluated the effects of Central Fulton Senior Services' nutrition program on senior citizens' perceived social support. A 25-item questionnaire measured the dimensions of support: Tangible, Affectionate, Emotional/Informational, and Positive Social Interaction. The questionnaire was administered to 40 elderly meal recipients (Congregate Dining and Meals on Wheels) of Fulton County, Georgia. The Chi-Square Test of Association was used to analyze the study's findings. The findings revealed significant chi-square values for the majority of the questionnaire items, resulting in the rejection of the null hypothesis. The study's research hypothesis was supported favorably by the findings
A program evaluation of the Fulton County discharge planning program, 2005
This evaluation examines the effectiveness of the Fulton County Discharge Planning Program in expediting the mentally ill defendant through the criminal justice system. The sample consists of 30 males who have been diagnosed as mentally ill and consented to jail diversion. Participants were randomly selected from a list provided from the discharge planner without demographic restrictions. Data for this study was collected using a 49-item questionnaire. The Attitude Measure Scale II (AMSII) questionnaire consists of 49 questions inquiring about the participants' beliefs about professionals, knowledge about the Fulton County Discharge Planning Program and community mental health services. Descriptive statistics were used to analyze the data. The findings showed that the Fulton County Discharge Planning Program is effective in expediting the mentally ill defendant through the criminal justice system
An assessment of the cost effectiveness of closing seven underutilized neighborhood health facilities in Fulton County, Georgia, 1980
The primary intent of this study is to examine neighborhood health facilities operated by Fulton County that are less than optimally used by the communities for which they were intended to serve. An attempt has been made to identify underutilized health facilities and to assess their cost effectiveness. The study is based on analysis of all health centers' usage over a one-year period, and costs incurred by Fulton County to operate underused health facilities. The political environment within which the health system of Fulton County exists accounts for the reluctance of the Fulton County Health Department in closing any health facilities in this County. The seven identified underutilized health facilities are: Alpharetta Health Center, Sandy Springs Health Center, Howell Mill Health Center, Palmetto Health Center, Red Oak Health Center, Collins Health Center, and Techwood Health Center. From this study, after careful analysis of each facility and the community it serves, emerges the recommendation that it will be cost effective to Fulton County to close three facilities, drastically cut services in three facilities experiencing decline but where services arc warranted, and Increase services to one community
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