5,662 research outputs found
The Pace Student
The Pace Student began publication in 1915. Its subscribers were Pace students, those studying in New York at Pace Institute as well as those studying the Pace Standardized Course in Accounting at affiliated schools throughout the U.S. and by correspondence. It was edited by Homer Pace, who also wrote many of the feature articles. It had a dual purpose. It was designed to provide Pace students with additional information about accounting and the accounting profession, and also to carry news about Pace students. The Pace Student became The American Accountant in 1927 and continued publication, throughout the Depression, until the last issue in 1933 [University Archivist
Marilyn Weigold
Dr. Marilyn E. Weigold is professor of history at Pace University and serves as the official Pace University Historian. She is the author of the official history book of Pace University entitled Opportunitas: the History of Pace University. David Finn, photographs.https://digitalcommons.pace.edu/pace-women/1031/thumbnail.jp
Janetta Rebold Benton
Janetta Rebold Benton is Distinguished Professor of Art History and Director of the Pforzheimer Honors College, serving the five undergraduate colleges, at Pace University, Pleasantville, NY. Dr. Benton has lectured every season since the spring of 1988 for the Metropolitan Museum of Art and lectures also at The Cloisters in New York; Smithsonian Institution and National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC; Boston Museum of Fine Arts; Society of the Four Arts in Palm Beach; and elsewhere in America and abroad. A former resident of Paris, she taught courses in art history there as the Art Historian at the American Embassy.
The author of seven books, the fourth edition of ARTS AND CULTURE: AN INTRODUCTION TO THE HUMANITIES (Robert DiYanni co-author, Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle River, NJ, two volumes, combined volume) was published in 2011, including a Chinese translation. Her book, MATERIALS, METHODS, AND MASTERPIECES OF MEDIEVAL ART, is available in hardcover and as an E-book (Praeger series on the Middle Ages, ABC-CLIO, Santa Barbara, CA, 2009). Her book, MEDIEVAL MISCHIEF: WIT AND HUMOUR IN THE ART OF THE MIDDLE AGES (Sutton Publishing, Stroud, Gloucestershire, 2004), studies an engaging aspect of medieval art. ART OF THE MIDDLE AGES (Thames & Hudson, London, 2002) was published in the acclaimed World of Art series. HOLY TERRORS: GARGOYLES ON MEDIEVAL BUILDINGS (Abbeville Press, NY, 1997) was published also in French as SAINTES TERREURS: LES GARGOUILLES DANS L\u27ARCHITECTURE MÉDIÉVALE (second edition, 2000). Dr. Benton was the guest curator and catalog author for the 1995 exhibition MEDIEVAL MONSTERS: DRAGONS AND FANTASTIC CREATURES at the Katonah Museum of Art, Katonah, NY. Her book, THE MEDIEVAL MENAGERIE: ANIMALS IN THE ART OF THE MIDDLE AGES (Abbeville Press, NY, 1992), a Book of the Month Club selection, was published also in French as BESTIAIRE MÉDIÉVAL: LES ANIMAUX DANS L\u27ART DU MOYEN AGE. Articles by Dr. Benton appear in the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s exhibition catalog, SET IN STONE: THE FACE IN MEDIEVAL SCULPTURE, 2007, as well as in scholarly journals including Cahiers de Civilisation Médiévale, Poitiers, 1998; Arte Medievale, Rome, 1993; Artibus et Historiae, Vienna, 1989; Zeitschrift für Kunstgeschichte, Munich, 1985; and others.
Dr. Benton was educated at Harvard University, Graduate School of Education, MDP diploma; took her Ph.D. in Medieval and Renaissance Art at Brown University; Master\u27s degree in Classical Art at George Washington University; and undergraduate degree in Fine Arts at Cornell University.https://digitalcommons.pace.edu/pace-women/1029/thumbnail.jp
First Amendment Rights for Publishers and the Distribution of Unsolicited Magazines to Inmates
This Article discusses whether inmates have a First Amendment interest in receiving unsolicited publications, and whether a publisher has a First Amendment interest in distributing unsolicited publications. Part II will discuss the history of prisoners’ First Amendment rights, specifically in relation to publications and communications, and how the standard for First Amendment violations of prisoner rights has evolved over time. Part III will focus on the Supreme Court case Turner v. Safley and how the test articulated in Turner applied to cases that followed. Part IV will address whether the Turner standard was the appropriate test to apply to whether publishers, and not inmates, have a First Amendment interest in distributing unsolicited publications specifically in reference to the Ninth Circuit case Hrdlicka v. Reniff. The Supreme Court specifically stated that the Turner test was created “to formulate a standard of review for prisoners’ constitutional claims . . . .” In Hrdlicka, the publishers of CJA, and not the prisoners, commenced the action, and thus the Turner test should not apply. Furthermore, a substantial issue of material fact does not exist in Hrdlicka, and the Ninth Circuit should have affirmed summary judgment. The last section of Part IV will discuss the standard that should have been applied in Hrdlicka
Independent origins of Spiranthes ×kapnosperia (Orchidaceae) and their nomenclatural implications
Spiranthes Rich. (Orchidaceae) is a commonly encountered but systematically and nomenclaturally challenging component of the North American orchid flora. Here, the evolutionary history and hybrid origin of the recently described S. sheviakii Hough and Young are critically examined. The available molecular data unambiguously support a hybrid origin of S. cernua (L.) Rich. × S. ochroleuca (Rydb.) Rydb. for S. sheviakii, the same parentage as the priority name S. × kapnosperia M.C. Pace. As hybrid formulas can have only one correct name, S. sheviakii is a synonym of S. × kapnosperia. It is likely that S. × kapnosperia evolved independently at least twice in at least two widely disjunct locations
Navigating Identity, Belonging, and Purpose in a Society in Flux
Chris Rabb is a family historian, author, and thought leader at the intersection of social identity, civic innovation, and equity. This is a lightly edited transcript of his 2023 Dyson Distinguished Lecture delivered at the Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University on October 25, 2023
Architects? We Don\u27t Need No Stinkin\u27 Architects
The author chronicles the participation of the Library staff in the renovation of Pace Law Library
Banjo: A Story without a Plot
Banjo: A Story without a Plot
Author: Claude McKay
Publisher: New York; London: Harper & Brothers Publishers, 1929
Description: McKay draws on his personal experiences living in France to depict dockworkers and drifters in the port town of Marseilles. The novel follows one group of beach boys, combining semi-autobiographical accounts of their pleasure-seeking lifestyle with their conversations about race relations and race politics, in France and abroad.
Note: First editionhttps://digitalcommons.pace.edu/rarebooks/1012/thumbnail.jp
Launching a New Environment Court: Challenges and Opportunities
This is the text of a speech given at the International Symposium on Environmental Courts and Tribunals, hosted by Pace Law School and the International Judicial Institute for Environmental Adjudication (IJIEA), on April 1, 2011, in White Plains, New York. Any annotations to the text of this speech have been added by the author in connection with its publication in this Special Edition
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