Academic literature on the topic 'Carter-Johnson'

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Journal articles on the topic "Carter-Johnson"

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McLeman, Robert, George Heath, Charles Vollan, and Colin Robertson. "How Drought Helped Jimmy Carter (Nearly) Win South Dakota in 1976." Great Plains Research 34, no. 1 (March 2024): 13–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/gpr.2024.a933407.

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abstract: Since 1900 only two Democratic presidential candidates have ever won the popular vote in South Dakota: Franklin Roosevelt (1932 and 1936) and Lyndon Johnson (1964). In 1976 Democratic candidate Jimmy Carter won 49.2% of South Dakota’s popular vote, posting what is still to this date the best showing of a Democratic presidential candidate in the state since Johnson. Carter enjoyed higher support among rural South Dakotan voters than did incumbent President Gerald Ford and would have won the state if high urban voter turnout had not favored Ford. Although Ford had numerous disadvantages going into the election, including the fallout from Watergate and contentious agricultural policies, here we show by comparing county-level voting results with precipitation records that the anomalously high support for Carter among rural South Dakotans was likely associated with the socioeconomic consequences of an unusually severe drought that hit the state in the spring and summer of 1976.
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Harvey, Robert J. "Motor Oil or Snake Oil: Synthetic Validity Is a Tool Not a Panacea." Industrial and Organizational Psychology 3, no. 3 (September 2010): 351–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1754942600002522.

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The focal article (Johnson et al., 2010) provides a highly upbeat assessment regarding the potential for job component validation (JCV) and J-coefficient methods to “substantially advance the science and practice of industrial and organizational (I-O) psychology through synthetic validity” (emphasis added). It follows on the heels of earlier, similarly enthusiastic endorsements (Jeanneret, 1992; Jeanneret & Strong, 2003; LaPolice, Carter, & Johnson, 2008). For example, LaPolice et al. claimed that the JCV Rs they obtained “are all very close to the maximum correlation for each dependent variable, suggesting that our models are approaching the best possible prediction” (p. 435, emphasis added).
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Thomas, Claudia. "Samuel Johnson and Elizabeth Carter: Pudding, Epictetus, and the Accomplished Woman." South Central Review 9, no. 4 (1992): 18. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3189478.

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Benforado, Susan. "CHILLIDA. Peter Selz , James Johnson SweeneyJORGE CASTILLO, DRAWING, PAINTING, SCULPTURE. Carter Ratcliff." Art Documentation: Journal of the Art Libraries Society of North America 6, no. 2 (July 1987): 94–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/adx.6.2.27947761.

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Berger, Edward. "Jazz Portraits: 2000–2010." Journal of Jazz Studies 7, no. 1 (March 1, 2011): 77. http://dx.doi.org/10.14713/jjs.v7i1.10.

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Musicians featured in this collection of Ed Berger's photographs include Eric Alexander, Geri Allen, Billy Bang, Eddie Bert, Ray Bryant, Candido, Ron Carter, Marc Cary, Dave Douglas, Kurt Elling, Ned Goold, Wycliffe Gordon, Henry Grimes, Chico Hamilton, Roy Hargrove, Barry Harris, Jon Hendricks, Fred Hersch, Ingrid Jensen, Howard Johnson, Kidd Jordan, Teo Macero, Russell Malone, Branford Marsalis, Christian McBride, Grachan Moncur III, Paul Motian, Nicki Parrott, Les Paul, Jeremy Pelt, Houston Person, Riza Printup, Dizzy Reece, Eric Reed, Sam Rivers, Scott Robinson, Fred Staton, George Wein, Frank Wess, Joe Wilder, and Jackie Williams.
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Brissaud, Constantin. "Du social au « sociétal »." Genèses 133, no. 4 (February 16, 2024): 94–112. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/gen.133.0094.

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Cet article analyse l’essor et le déclin d’une entreprise typique du liberalism étasunien : le « mouvement pour les indicateurs sociaux ». Ces derniers s’opposent aux indicateurs économiques comme le PIB, tout en s’inscrivant dans le projet liberal d’un pilotage des politiques publiques à l’aide d’indicateurs statistiques. Au milieu des années 1960, plusieurs intellectuel·les anti-marxistes se focalisent ainsi sur la « culture » des individus, plutôt que sur les indicateurs économiques hérités du New Deal qui définissaient le liberalism . Ils et elles inventent ce faisant une nouvelle manière d’être liberal , critique des programmes sociaux de la « Great Society » de L. Johnson et compatible avec les administrations Nixon puis Carter, qui bientôt est dénommée neoliberalism .
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Johnson, Darius O., Briana Markoff, and Dorinda J. Carter Andrews. "Resisting racism in school." Phi Delta Kappan 104, no. 7 (April 2023): 18–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/00317217231168258.

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Darius O. Johnson, Briana Markoff, and Dorinda J. Carter Andrews examined data from focus groups conducted with more than 60 Black boys in midwestern high schools to learn how teachers and schools can refuse antiblackness and reimagine futures for Black boys in school. Black boys and young men want safe school environments and will create safe communal spaces when needed. They seek teachers who are culturally relevant; they want to be able to trust their teachers; and they want to be their full, authentic selves at school. Findings show how educators can work within antiblack institutions toward reducing in-school suffering while working to create better futures for Black boys in school.
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Handau, Megan, and Evelyn M. Simien. "The Cult of First Ladyhood: Controlling Images of White Womanhood in the Role of the First Lady." Politics & Gender 15, no. 03 (July 26, 2019): 484–513. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1743923x19000333.

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AbstractIn recent decades, scholars have begun to analyze the role of the first lady in American society. Though the relationship between gender ideologies and this identity has been analyzed, little attention has been paid to how other aspects of the first ladies’ identities could shape the way the public and the first ladies themselves view their role. In this article, we offer an intersectional analysis that considers historical notions of hegemonic femininity in relation to race. We assert that the role of the first lady is a raced-gendered institution that produces a controlling image of white womanhood that simultaneously privileges white femininity and subordinates black womanhood. We conduct an analysis of the autobiographies of six first ladies: Edith Wilson, Eleanor Roosevelt, “Lady Bird” Johnson, Rosalynn Carter, Hillary Clinton, and Michelle Obama.
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Hoch, Greg. "Ecology of the Dakota Landscapes: Past, Present, and Future by W. Carter Johnson and Dennis H. Knight (review)." Great Plains Research 33, no. 2 (September 2023): 136–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/gpr.2023.a925337.

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Smith, Jonny. "‘Something like the truth’: Confronting the Honesty of Brutalism and Post-War Planning in The Offence." Journal of British Cinema and Television 20, no. 1 (January 2023): 46–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/jbctv.2023.0656.

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This article explores the 1973 thriller The Offence in relation to its representation and utilisation of post-war urban planning and modernist architecture, with particular reference to brutalism and new towns. It considers the film to be at a seminal intersection between British cinema and post-war modernism, building on and ultimately eclipsing Get Carter and A Clockwork Orange which have received much of the critical attention in this specialised discourse. While the film is ostensibly a character study of a troubled policeman, Detective Sergeant Johnson, I argue that The Offence’s engagement with post-war urban planning and modernist spatiality is its defining feature. The film’s extensive location shooting in Bracknell, utilising modernist and brutalist spaces, offers a direct intervention into architectural and planning discourses of the period. The Offence’s bleak narrative set within the context of a modernist new town reflects criticisms of such quintessentially post-war spaces as ‘subtopias’ to quote Ian Nairn’s polemical attacks in his 1955 book Outrage. The architectural centrepiece of The Offence is the entirely purpose-built set of the police station, where Johnson interrogates suspected child molester Baxter. As an exemplar of brutalist architecture the space conforms to Katherine Shonfield’s characterisation of brutalism as inherently honest, ‘dragging to the surface what we are in the habit of covering up’. The film’s extensive use of brutalist locations, then, creates a unique intersection and tension between the architectural style’s demand for a raw, honest edifice and the narrative’s central investigation into the impossibility of finding objective truth. The Offence is thus due a necessary reappraisal as a radical ethical and aesthetic engagement with post-war planning and architecture within British cinema.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Carter-Johnson"

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fazlollahi, Afag S. "Elizabeth Carter's Legacy: Friendship and Ethics." Digital Archive @ GSU, 2011. http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/english_diss/69.

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"Elizabeth Carter's Legacy: Friendship and Ethics" examines the written evidence about the relationships between Elizabeth Carter and her father, Dr. Nocolas Carte; Catherine Talbot; Sir William Pulteney (Lord Bath); and Samuel Johnson to explain how intellectual and personal relationships may become the principal ethical sdource of human happiness. Based on their own set of moral values, such as intellectual and individual liberty and equality, the relationships between Carter and her friends challenged eighteenth-century traditional norms of human relationships. The primary source of this study, Carter's poetry and prose, including her letters, present the poet's experience of intellectual and individual friendship, reflecting Aristotle's ethics, specifically his moral teaching that views friendship as a human good contributing to human happiness--to the chief human good. Carter's poems devoted to her friends, such as Dr. Carter, Talbot, Montagu, Lord Bath, as well as her "A Dialogue" between Body and Mind, demonstrate her ethical legacy, her specific moral principles that elevated human relationships and human life. Carter's discussion of human relationships introduces the moral necessity of ethics in human life.
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Early, O. J. "“Mere Supplicants at the Gate”: Northeast Tennessee Politics in the Antebellum Era." Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University, 2016. https://dc.etsu.edu/etd/3023.

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Antebellum political historians have long studied the era between Andrew Jackson’s election and the secession crisis through the colored knowledge of the Civil War. This project is an effort to reverse that trend. It explores northeast Tennessee’s political culture from the late 1830s through the start of the Civil War. It reveals that the Second American Party System, a wave of new enfranchised voters, and the area’s demographics mixed together to lay a foundation for the aggressive and populist political style that permeated the region from the 1830s through the 1850s. At the heart of these issues was the transition of power from East Tennessee to Middle Tennessee. As a way to analyze the region’s political culture, I look specifically at Democrats Andrew Johnson and Landon Carter Haynes and Whigs William Brownlow and Thomas Nelson.
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Lux, Erin. "From Rehabilitation to Punishment: American Corrections after 1945." Thèse, Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/23504.

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The incarceration rate in the United States has increased dramatically in the period since 1945. How did the United States move from having stable incarceration rates in line with global norms to the largest system of incarceration in the world? This study examines the political and intellectual aspects of incarceration and theories of criminal justice by looking at the contributions of journalists, intellectuals and policy makers to the debate on whether the purpose of the justice system is rehabilitation, vengeance, deterrence or incapacitation. This thesis finds that justice and the institution of the prison itself are not immutable facts of modern civilization, but are human institutions vulnerable to the influence of politics, culture and current events.
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TANZILLI, FRANCESCO. "POVERI, POLITICI E PROFESSORI: IL DIBATTITO SULLO STATO SOCIALE AMERICANO DA KENNEDY A BUSH." Doctoral thesis, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10280/382.

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Il presente lavoro intende esaminare il processo di decision making relativo alla politica sociale statunitense sviluppatosi a partire dalla fine degli anni Sessanta, fornendo un’analisi di carattere «istituzionalista» che ponga in rilievo gli snodi cruciali del dibattito relativo al welfare system federale svoltosi sia all’interno del Congresso, sia presso i think tank, i centri universitari, le organizzazioni culturali e religiose, le lobby e le altre realtà associative emerse dalla società civile. In particolare, la ricerca si concentra sull’intreccio tra ideologia politica, mentalità tradizionale, opinione pubblica e interessi specifici, e sull’influsso esercitato dalla dimensione culturale e istituzionale sul processo legislativo. Sono stati individuati quattro principali indirizzi socio-politici, ciascuno dei quali ha avuto un particolare influsso su altrettante ‘fasi’ del processo di riforma del welfare system statunitense svoltosi tra il 1968 e il 2006. L’analisi del dibattito culturale e politico è stata suddivisa pertanto in quattro diversi capitoli (capp. 2-5) che consentono di delineare percorsi distinti per le diverse ipotesi socio-culturali individuate, ai quali viene anteposta una premessa storica relativa alle origini del sistema assistenziale e previdenziale statunitense e alle politiche riformiste degli anni Sessanta (cap. 1).
The dissertation examines the process of decision making that determined the development of U.S. social policy from the end of the Sixties. It analyzes the institutional character of the debate that took place inside the Congress and inside the think tanks, the academic centers, the cultural and religious foundations and other associations. In particular, the research is focused on the tangle between political ideologies, traditional culture, public opinion and legislative process. The dissertation identifies four different socio-political streams: each of them influenced a particular “phase” of the reform of the U.S. welfare system from 1968 up to 2006. The analysis of the cultural and political debate has been divided in four chapters (chapters 2-5) that allow to delineate different developments for the four streams, after an historical premise (chapter 1) that presents the origins of American welfare system, from the colonial times to the Sixties.
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TANZILLI, FRANCESCO. "POVERI, POLITICI E PROFESSORI: IL DIBATTITO SULLO STATO SOCIALE AMERICANO DA KENNEDY A BUSH." Doctoral thesis, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10280/382.

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Il presente lavoro intende esaminare il processo di decision making relativo alla politica sociale statunitense sviluppatosi a partire dalla fine degli anni Sessanta, fornendo un’analisi di carattere «istituzionalista» che ponga in rilievo gli snodi cruciali del dibattito relativo al welfare system federale svoltosi sia all’interno del Congresso, sia presso i think tank, i centri universitari, le organizzazioni culturali e religiose, le lobby e le altre realtà associative emerse dalla società civile. In particolare, la ricerca si concentra sull’intreccio tra ideologia politica, mentalità tradizionale, opinione pubblica e interessi specifici, e sull’influsso esercitato dalla dimensione culturale e istituzionale sul processo legislativo. Sono stati individuati quattro principali indirizzi socio-politici, ciascuno dei quali ha avuto un particolare influsso su altrettante ‘fasi’ del processo di riforma del welfare system statunitense svoltosi tra il 1968 e il 2006. L’analisi del dibattito culturale e politico è stata suddivisa pertanto in quattro diversi capitoli (capp. 2-5) che consentono di delineare percorsi distinti per le diverse ipotesi socio-culturali individuate, ai quali viene anteposta una premessa storica relativa alle origini del sistema assistenziale e previdenziale statunitense e alle politiche riformiste degli anni Sessanta (cap. 1).
The dissertation examines the process of decision making that determined the development of U.S. social policy from the end of the Sixties. It analyzes the institutional character of the debate that took place inside the Congress and inside the think tanks, the academic centers, the cultural and religious foundations and other associations. In particular, the research is focused on the tangle between political ideologies, traditional culture, public opinion and legislative process. The dissertation identifies four different socio-political streams: each of them influenced a particular “phase” of the reform of the U.S. welfare system from 1968 up to 2006. The analysis of the cultural and political debate has been divided in four chapters (chapters 2-5) that allow to delineate different developments for the four streams, after an historical premise (chapter 1) that presents the origins of American welfare system, from the colonial times to the Sixties.
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Fazlollahi, Afag S. "Elizabeth Carter's Legacy: Friendship and Ethics." 2011. http://scholarworks.gsu.edu/english_diss/69.

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"Elizabeth Carter's Legacy: Friendship and Ethics" examines the written evidence about the relationships between Elizabeth Carter and her father, Dr. Nocolas Carte; Catherine Talbot; Sir William Pulteney (Lord Bath); and Samuel Johnson to explain how intellectual and personal relationships may become the principal ethical sdource of human happiness. Based on their own set of moral values, such as intellectual and individual liberty and equality, the relationships between Carter and her friends challenged eighteenth-century traditional norms of human relationships. The primary source of this study, Carter's poetry and prose, including her letters, present the poet's experience of intellectual and individual friendship, reflecting Aristotle's ethics, specifically his moral teaching that views friendship as a human good contributing to human happiness--to the chief human good. Carter's poems devoted to her friends, such as Dr. Carter, Talbot, Montagu, Lord Bath, as well as her "A Dialogue" between Body and Mind, demonstrate her ethical legacy, her specific moral principles that elevated human relationships and human life. Carter's discussion of human relationships introduces the moral necessity of ethics in human life.
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Books on the topic "Carter-Johnson"

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Boyd, C. Clifford. Archaeological investigations in the Watauga Reservoir, Carter and Johnson counties, Tennessee. [Knoxville]: University of Tennessee, Dept. of Anthropology, 1986.

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Knight, Richard L. The birds of northeast Tennessee: An annotated checklist for Carter, Johnson, Sullivan, Unicoi, and Washington counties. 2nd ed. Bristol, VA: Bristol Bird Club, 2008.

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Smith, Elizabeth Simpson. Five first ladies: A look into the lives of Nancy Reagan, Rosalynn Carter, Betty Ford, Pat Nixon, and Lady Bird Johnson. New York, N.Y: Walker, 1986.

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Weber, David C. An Ancestral Parade of the McLeod, Trogdon and Weber Families: With our related families in America: Bell, Bilhorn, Billica, Carter, Church, Clark, Cobb, Doll, Drew, Gale, Gooch, Guerrant, Hawes, Hogue, Jefferson, Johnson, Kloepfer, McLaren, Newcomb, Noble, Putnam, Sarchet, Snyder, Stever, Towle, and Whitehouse. Corona del Mar, California: author, 2009.

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Rand, Carter, and Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute, eds. Look for beauty: Philip Johnson and art museum design. Utica, NY: Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute, 2010.

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Schobernd, Robert. Cape Abigail: A Carter A. Johnson Novel. Independently Published, 2018.

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Schobernd, Robert. Blonde Heiress: A Carter A. Johnson Thriller. Independently Published, 2018.

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Schobernd, Robert. Dogtrot Murder: A Carter A. Johnson and Kate Menke Thriller. Independently Published, 2018.

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(Illustrator), Kadir Nelson, ed. A Strong Right Arm: The Story of Mamie "Peanut" Johnson (Carter G Woodson Honor Book (Awards)). Dial, 2002.

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Company, Superior Mapping. Johnson City, Elizabethton & Washington Co., TN street map: Including Erwin ... W. Carter Co : A Superior travel map. Superior Mapping Co, 1997.

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Book chapters on the topic "Carter-Johnson"

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Dumbrell, John. "Lyndon Johnson to Jimmy Carter." In A Special Relationship, 75–105. London: Macmillan Education UK, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-0-230-80207-0_4.

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Brown, Robert D., and Robert DeMaria. "To Elizabeth Carter." In The Complete Poems of Samuel Johnson, 168–69. London: Routledge, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003273257-34.

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Carter, Todd. "Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter and Harold Wilson and James Callaghan: Personal Diplomacy, Friendship and US-UK Relations in the 1970s." In The Palgrave Handbook of Presidents and Prime Ministers From Cleveland and Salisbury to Trump and Johnson, 241–71. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-72276-0_12.

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"LYNDON BAINES JOHNSON, RICHARD NIXON, GERALD FORD, AND JIMMY CARTER:." In Presidents and the American Environment, 209–75. University Press of Kansas, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/jj.2990346.11.

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Wilson, Sondra Kathryn. "Report of the Executive Director for the Board Meeting of the First Quarter 1973." In In Search of Democracy, 359–62. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195116335.003.0075.

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Abstract Speaking Engagements On January 7, the Executive Director attended [a] meeting of the Special Contributions Fund Trustees, and later that evening attended the Association’s Fellow ship Dinner in New York City; on January 8, attended annual meeting of the Association, and the Board of Directors meeting in New York City; attended staff meeting on January rn; testified at hearing of the Senate Committee on Labor and Public Welfare against [the] President’s nomination of Peter J. Brennan as Secretary of Labor in Washington, D.C., on January 18; was honorary pallbearer at funeral services for Elmer Carter on January 19 in New York City; attended memorial services for President Lyndon Baines Johnson at City Hall in New York City on January 24; and on January 25, attended funeral service for President Johnson in Washington, D.C.; on January 29, attended annual meeting and annual dinner of the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights.
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Wasserman, Andrew. "“It’s Not Good Here Anymore”." In Fantastic Cities, 151–64. University Press of Mississippi, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.14325/mississippi/9781496836625.003.0009.

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Andrew Wasserman’s chapter examines how Kenny Scharf revisited mid-Cold War fantasies of nuclear energy, nuclear weaponry, and space travel as usable content for coping with late-Cold War fears in American cities. Wasserman focuses on the early-nineteen-eighties videos The Sparkle End and Carousel of Progress and reads them as visions of the short- and long-term effects of urban nuclear destruction. As Wasserman suggests, the videos’ emphasis on the city as a place of disaster and refuge are reflective of urban unease in the Carter era resolved through the products of the Kennedy and Johnson eras.
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Varel, David A. "Coming of Age at Fisk University." In The Scholar and the Struggle, 13–35. University of North Carolina Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469660967.003.0002.

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This chapter chronicles Reddick’s early life from his adolescence in Jacksonville, Florida to his collegiate career in Nashville, Tennessee. It explains how Fisk University, where he earned a BA in 1932 and an MA in 1933 while studying under Charles S. Johnson, E. Franklin Frazier, Lorenzo Dow Turner, Horace Mann Bond, and Arturo Schomburg, provided Reddick with the social network and intellectual training that guided his early entry into professional academic life. At Fisk, he became active in Carter G. Woodson’s Association for the Study of Negro Life and History; published in the Journal of Negro Education, The Crisis, and Opportunity; criticized the Southern Agrarians, and studied the racism in history textbooks. This chapter also explains how the Great Depression loomed large in Reddick’s formative years and pushed his politics to the left.
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Reynolds, R. "Web Credibility Measurment." In Handbook of Research on Electronic Surveys and Measurements, 296–98. IGI Global, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-59140-792-8.ch035.

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Several researchers (e.g., Carter & Greenberg, 1965; Flanagin, & Metzger, 2000; Fogg, 2002; Johnson & Kaye, 2004; Newhagen & Nass, 1989) discuss or mention the concept of media or web credibility. The classic concept of credibility (typically attributed to Aristotle’s Rhetoric) identifies credibility as a multidimensional perception on the part of the receiver that the source of a message has a moral character, practical wisdom, and a concern for the common good. Warnick (2004) points out that the “authorless” nature of the online environment complicates the use of traditional analyses of credibility. The most common set of web credibility scales cited in the research are the Flanagin and Metzger (2000) items. The five Flanagin and Metzger scale items address the believability, accuracy, trustworthiness, bias, and completeness of the information on the web site. Other researchers have added other items such as fairness or depth of information. Flanagin and Metzger used a 7-point response format with anchors for each term (e.g., “Not At All Believable” to “Extremely Believable”). Other researchers have used a 5-point response format.
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Caroli, Betty Boyd. "Presidential Wives and the Press." In First Ladies, 309–35. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195099447.003.0011.

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Abstract By the second half of the twentieth century, most Americans accepted the fact that they were on a first-name basis with the wives of their presidents. The faces of Rosalynn Carter and Nancy Reagan peered out from the nation’s newsstands, and stories about Jackie Kennedy and Lady Bird Johnson continued to dot women’s magazines long after they had moved away from the capital. Men and women too young to have comprehended much political news during the Great Society and the Vietnam War retained a very clear picture of the First Lady from Texas, although their image of Hubert Humphrey-longtime senator, Lyndon Johnson’s vice-president, and later a contender for president himself-was fuzzy. Walter Mondale, for all the publicity he received as a presidential candidate in 1984, slipped quickly into obscurity in comparison with the woman from Georgia whom everyone called Rosa lynn. What schoolchild has not seen at least one film on Eleanor Roosevelt, but who recognizes the name of John Nance Garner as the vice president for eight of the years that Eleanor was First Lady?
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Feather, Leonard, and Ira Gitler. "m." In The Biographical Encyclopedia of Jazz, 425–89. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195074185.003.0013.

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Abstract Mabern, harold jr., pno, comp; b. Memphis, TN, 3/20/36. Started on dms., pl. w. Frank Strozier while in hs. Pursued serious pno. study after hearing Phineas Newborn Jr. Moved to Chi. 1954; pl. w. Morris Ellis bb; Walter Perkins’ MJT+3; Bob Cranshaw; Frank Strozier; Bobby Bryant; Willie Thomas. Moved to NYC ’59; pl. w. Harry “Sweets” Edison ’59; Lionel Hampton ’60; Art Farmer–Benny Golson Jazztet ’61–2; Roy Haynes, Irene Reid, Arthur Prysock ’62; Miles Davis in Calif.; J. J. Johnson ’63–5; Wes Montgomery ’64; Joe Williams ’66–7; Lee Morgan ’67; Walter Bolden Trio ’73–4. Member of Stanley Cowell’s 7-pno. Piano Choir ’70. Pl. and/or rec. in ’70s w. George Coleman; Danny Moore; Billy Harper; Roy Haynes; Freddie Hubbard; R. R. Kirk; Hank Mobley; Clark Terry; Joe Newman; and many others. Regular member of G. Coleman’s qt. since the ’80s. Taught pno. and improv. at William Paterson Coll. since ’71. In ’90 and ’91 Mabern toured Japan w. the 100 Gold Fingers of Jazz, a gp. comprising 10 top jazz pnsts. “Music is my love,” says Mabern. “I never take it for granted.” A strong bebop-based, blues-grounded player, he has been unjustly neglected through much of his career. Favs: Phineas Newborn Jr., Ahmad Jamal; arr: Thad Jones. Polls: BMI Jazz Pioneer. Fests: Eur., Jap. w. Coleman, J. Newman. TV: Jazz Set w. Bobbi Humphrey ’71; Soul w. Lucky Thompson ’70s. CDs: Col.; Sack.; Prest.; w. G. Coleman (Evid.); Betty Carter (Cap.); Lee Morgan; Mobley; Hubbard (BN); J. J. Johnson (Imp.); Contemp. Pno Ens. (Evid.; Col.); Cecil Payne; Jimmy Forrest; Eric Alexander (Del.); Kirk (Merc.); Strozier; Louis Smith (Steep.); J. Griffin (Gal.); G. Benson (CTI).
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