Journal articles on the topic 'Sununu, John E., 1964-'

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1

Holden, Constance. "Was John Sununu Joking?" Science 252, no. 5002 (April 5, 1991): 35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.252.5002.35.d.

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HOLDEN, C. "Was John Sununu Joking?" Science 252, no. 5002 (April 5, 1991): 35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.252.5002.35-c.

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3

Cohen, David B. "George Bush's Vicar of the West Wing: John Sununu As White House Chief of Staff." Congress & the Presidency 24, no. 1 (March 1997): 37–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07343469709507824.

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Kanabar, Varsha, Jeremy P. T. Ward, and Clive P. Page. "Obituary: Stuart John Hirst (1964–2009)." Pulmonary Pharmacology & Therapeutics 23, no. 4 (August 2010): 229–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pupt.2010.05.005.

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Doud, Richard K., and John Vachon. "An Interview with John Vachon 28 April 1964." Archives of American Art Journal 45, no. 1/2 (January 2005): 18–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/aaa.45.1_2.25435101.

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White, Nicholas J. "‘Ungentlemanly capitalism’: John Hay and Malaya, 1904–1964." Management & Organizational History 14, no. 1 (September 4, 2018): 98–122. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17449359.2018.1465826.

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7

Morgenstern, Leon. "From Cardiology to Laparoscopy: John Carroll Ruddock, MD (1901-1964)." Surgical Innovation 12, no. 3 (September 2005): 185–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/155335060501200301.

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Hughes, John M., and Anthony R. Kampf. "Who's Who in Mineral Names: John Francis Rakovan (b. 1964)." Rocks & Minerals 92, no. 1 (December 6, 2016): 81–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00357529.2017.1241694.

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9

Cooke, Lez. "Six and ‘Five More’: Experiments in Filmed Drama for BBC2." Journal of British Cinema and Television 14, no. 3 (July 2017): 298–323. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/jbctv.2017.0375.

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In 1964–6 John McGrath produced two series of filmed dramas for BBC2, the first under the series title Six, while the second series, provisionally titled ‘Five More’, was transmitted without a series title. At a time when most drama was being produced from the television studio, some of it still being transmitted live, this was a new departure, with the first six films pre-dating Up the Junction (1965) and the second series predating Cathy Come Home (1966), the two Wednesday Plays which have been celebrated for making the breakthrough to filmed drama at the BBC. Unlike the Loach/Garnett films, which were made by the Drama Department, McGrath's series were commissioned by Huw Wheldon's Documentary and Music Programmes department, which also produced Peter Watkins’ Culloden (1964), and were described as a hybrid of ‘documentary fiction’. In fact, they were an eclectic mix of different forms and styles, from Ken Russell's silent cinema pastiche, The Diary of a Nobody (1964) to Philip Saville's experimental The Logic Game (1965) and John Irvin's lyrical Strangers (1966). This article seeks to reconsider these films as examples of forgotten television drama from the mid-1960s and to examine the claim that they represent a new form of ‘documentary fiction’.
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Boardman, Thomas J., David R. Brillinger, and John W. Tukey. "The Collected Works of John W. Tukey, Volume I, Time Series: 1949-1964." Technometrics 27, no. 3 (August 1985): 319. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1269718.

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Boardman, Thomas J. "The Collected Works of John W. Tukey, Volume I, Time Series: 1949–1964." Technometrics 27, no. 3 (August 1985): 319. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00401706.1985.10488061.

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12

FONTAINE, PHILIPPE. "THE HOMELESS OBSERVER: JOHN HARSANYI ON INTERPERSONAL UTILITY COMPARISONS AND BARGAINING, 1950–1964." Journal of the History of Economic Thought 32, no. 2 (May 11, 2010): 145–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1053837210000155.

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This paper traces interpersonal utility comparisons and bargaining in the work of John Harsanyi from the 1950s to the mid-1960s. As his preoccupation with how theorists can obtain information about agents moved from an approach centered on empathetic understanding to the more distanced perspective associated with game theory, Harsanyi shifted emphasis from the social scientist’s lack of information vis-à-vis agents to agents’ lack of information about each other. In the process, he provided economists with an analytical framework they could use to study problems related to the distribution of information among agents while consolidating the perspective of a distant observer whose knowledge can replace that of real people.
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THORPE, ANDREW. "The Labour Governments 1964-1970, Volume 2: International Policy By John W. Young." History 91, no. 303 (July 2006): 480–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-229x.2006.373_56.x.

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14

Priestley, M. B., and D. R. Brillinger. "The Collected Works of John W. Tukey. Volume 1: Time Series, 1949-1964." Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series A (General) 148, no. 3 (1985): 280. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2981973.

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Parker, Michael. "Northern Odyssey: John Montague's "The Cry" (1964) in Its Political Contexts." New Hibernia Review 7, no. 1 (2003): 87–109. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/nhr.2003.0032.

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16

Mozumi, Seiichiro. "The Kennedy–Johnson Tax Cut of 1964, the Defeat of Keynes, and Comprehensive Tax Reform in the United States." Journal of Policy History 30, no. 1 (December 19, 2017): 25–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0898030617000379.

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Abstract:In 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson, the successor of John F. Kennedy, signed into law the largest tax cut in U.S. history until 1981, the so-called Kennedy–Johnson tax cut. Many scholars have evaluated it as representative Keynesian tax policy; this article focuses on the effort of the Treasury Department, tax experts such as Stanley S. Surrey and Wilbur D. Mills, the chairman of House Committee on Ways and Means, to reform the federal income tax system comprehensively—making it simpler, fairer, and more equitable—and their defeat by the 1964 tax cut. Through the policymaking and legislative process, the Kennedy administration’s Council Economic Advisers defeated the Treasury and Surrey by domesticating Keynes’s ideas on tax policy. Until the 1964 passage of the tax cut, Mills, with his inconsistent action, abandoned the accomplishment of their ideal tax reform.
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17

FARBER, DAVID. "THINKING AND NOT THINKING ABOUT RACE IN THE UNITED STATES." Modern Intellectual History 2, no. 3 (October 10, 2005): 433–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s147924430500051x.

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John Skrentny, The Minority Rights Revolution (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2002)Richard King, Race, Culture and the Intellectuals, 1940–1970 (Washington, DC: Woodrow Wilson Press, 2004)Since June 1964, all three branches of the federal government have supported the goal of racial justice in the United States. John Skrentny, in The Minority Rights Revolution, explains how that goal and related ones have been implemented over the last sixty years. He argues that key policy developments since that time were driven less by mass movements and much more by elite “meaning entrepreneurs.” Well before the 1964 Civil Rights Act was made law, in the immediate post-World War II years, a bevy of transatlantic intellectuals responded to Nazi race policy by seeking a universalist vision that would unite humanity. Richard King, in Race, Culture and the Intellectuals, explores how intellectuals pursued that anti-racist universalist vision and then how African and African-American intellectuals in the 1960s, in particular, rejected universalism and began, instead, to pursue racial justice through cultural particularism. King's traditional intellectual history, when combined with Skrentny's sociological analysis of how elites managed ideas to pursue specific policies, reveals how American society, in pursuit of racial justice, moved from the simple stated ideals of the 1964 Civil Rights Act—equal opportunity and access—to the complexities of affirmative action and an embrace of “diversity” in American life.
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Stern, Mark. "Calculating Visions: Civil Rights Legislation in the Kennedy and Johnson Years." Journal of Policy History 5, no. 2 (April 1993): 231–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0898030600006722.

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The presidential years of John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson are synonymous with the culmination of the Second Reconstruction. This study examines the civil rights legislative strategies of presidents Kennedy and Johnson as they dealt with what became the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Voting Rights Act of 1965.
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19

Wyver, John. "‘Filming the invisible’: Barrie Gavin in conversation with John Wyver." Journal of Popular Television 9, no. 1 (March 1, 2021): 15–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/jptv_00039_7.

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Barrie Gavin (b. 1935) is a celebrated producer, director and writer who is best known for numerous programmes about music and musicians made primarily for BBC Television from 1964 onwards. He worked on numerous occasions with the conductors Pierre Boulez and Simon Rattle, and with them and other collaborators he has directed more than 90 films. In this conversation recorded in Leeds in June 2018 Gavin discusses with the writer and producer John Wyver his ideas about making music television, his innovative approaches to filmmaking, his profiles of composers including Luigi Nono, Karlheinz Stockhausen and Toru Takemitsu, and his working relationships with Boulez and Rattle.
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20

PARK, TAE-GYUN. "Different Roads, Common Destination: Economic Discourses in South Korea during the 1950s." Modern Asian Studies 39, no. 3 (July 2005): 661–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0026749x05001885.

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‘[P]ower of vested interests is vastly exaggerated compared with the gradual encroachment of ideas…. The ideas of economists and political philosophers, both when they are right and when they are wrong, are more powerful than is commonly understood. Indeed the world is ruled by little else.’ (John Maynard Keynes, 1964[1936], 383)
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Oliveira, Adriana Lucinda, and Luiz Everson da Silva. "Ideologia segundo John Thompson: reflexões da política de educação no período da ditadura militar brasileira (1964-1985)." Revista HISTEDBR On-line 13, no. 54 (March 22, 2014): 220. http://dx.doi.org/10.20396/rho.v13i54.8640179.

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O presente trabalho apresenta uma reflexão sobre o conceito de Ideologia, segundo John Thompson, buscando identificar questões marcantes no período da ditadura militar brasileira (1964-1985). Nesse sentido, exemplificamos algumas estratégias ideológicas utilizadas pelo governo militar para manter uma relação de dominação após o golpe e destacamos a política educacional adotada naquele período.
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Lawrence, David R. "The neotype of Crassostrea gigantissima (Finch, 1824)." Journal of Paleontology 65, no. 2 (March 1991): 342–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022336000020679.

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In 1824 the British naturalist John Finch described (p. 40) a large fossil oyster from Shell Bluff, Burke County, Georgia, as Ostrea Gigantissima. Ten years later, T. A. Conrad (1834, p. 156-157) described this same taxon as Ostrea georgiana. For many years the oyster was most commonly identified using Conrad's name, but Howe (1937) clearly pointed out the priority and synonymy involved. More recently, the species has been assigned to the genus Crassostrea Sacco, 1897, and recognized (e.g., Sohl and Kauffman, 1964) as Crassostrea gigantissima (Finch). This Cenozoic taxon has special significance (Sohl and Kauffman, 1964) because it is most certainly the direct ancestor of C. virginica (Gmelin, 1791), the type species for Crassostrea.
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23

Malard, Letícia. "Que país é este? (memória, política e cultura)." O Eixo e a Roda: Revista de Literatura Brasileira 19, no. 1 (June 30, 2010): 97–115. http://dx.doi.org/10.17851/2358-9787.19.1.97-115.

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Partindo de propostas teóricas do pesquisador britânico John Barrell,leremos o poema “Que país é este?”, de Affonso Romano de Sant’Anna, comouma declaração discursiva de realidade comparada com outras declaraçõesdiscursivas suas contemporâneas ou não, para entendê-lo precisamente comodiscurso que corporifica um problema, não universal nem genérico, mas específicoe histórico do país “Brasil”, especialmente do regime militar (1964-1985).
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West, Gordon F., Ron M. Farquhar, George D. Garland, Henry C. Halls, Lawrence W. Morley, and R. Don Russell. "John Tuzo Wilson: a man who moved mountains." Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 51, no. 3 (March 2014): xvii—xxxi. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/cjes-2013-0175.

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Fifty years ago, the world’s Earth Scientists experienced the so-called “Revolution in the Earth Sciences”. In the decade from 1960 to 1970, a massive convergence took place from many diverse and contradictory theories about the tectonic processes operating on Earth (then loosely called “mountain building”) to a single widely accepted paradigm now called Plate Tectonics. A major player in leading the international “Revolution” was Canadian geophysicist J. Tuzo Wilson. This tribute reviews how he helped define and promote the Plate Tectonic paradigm, and also, from 1946 to 1967, how he led a rapid expansion of the role of geophysics in Canadian and international earth science. Wilson was a controversial figure before and during the “Revolution”, but his influence was large. It was not coincidental that earth science research in Canada grew by 1964 to the point where the National Research Council of Canada could add the Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences to its group of Canadian research journals.
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Lang, Kevin. "Racial Realism: A Review Essay on John Skrentny's After Civil Rights." Journal of Economic Literature 53, no. 2 (June 1, 2015): 351–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1257/jel.53.2.351.

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In his valuable contribution, After Civil Rights, John Skrentny shows that in many sectors of the labor market, race is used in ways that were unanticipated when the 1964 Civil Rights Act was enacted. With separate chapters on the professions and business, the public sector, media and entertainment, and the low-skill market, he demonstrates that the new racial realism is widespread, generally has some justification from social scientific research, and is usually inconsistent with judicial decisions. I review the racially realistic practices (racial matching, increasing diversity, racial signaling, and racial characteristics) and discuss their implications for labor economics and for policy. (JEL J15, J24, J71, J81, K31)
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Bassalo, José Maria Filardo, and Olival Freire Junior. "Wheeler, Tiomno e a Física brasileira." Revista Brasileira de Ensino de Física 25, no. 4 (December 2003): 426–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/s0102-47442003000400013.

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Este artigo examina as relações do físico norte-americano John Archibald Wheeler com o físico brasileiro Jayme Tiomno. A imagem de Tiomno como um dos físicos teóricos mais brilhantes de sua geração emerge amplificada; mas fica claro, também, que os prejuízos causados pelo regime militar (1964-1985) ao desenvolvimento da ciência brasileira foram ainda maiores do que os que usualmente se reconhece.
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Pouchard, Michel. "John B. Goodenough’s Role in Solid State Chemistry Community: A Thrilling Scientific Tale Told by a French Chemist." Molecules 25, no. 24 (December 21, 2020): 6040. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules25246040.

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In this tribute to John B. Goodenough I will describe how John’s talk on the metal-to-nonmetal transition of vanadium oxide VO2, presented at the Bordeaux Conference (September 1964) attended by inorganic chemists, metallurgists, crystallographers, thermodynamicists and physicists, provided a pioneering vision of interdisciplinary research to come. John gave a complete description of the paradigm on how the physical properties of a solid depend on its structure and bonding, by employing the chemical notions as local distortions and interatomic distances as well as the physics notions such as band width and the Hubbard on-site repulsion U. I will illustrate how inspiring John’s ideas were, by discussing the research examples of my own research group in the sixties-seventies. The fundamental approach of John B. Goodenough to Solid State Chemistry, leading particularly to lithium battery applications, is at the heart of the 2019 Nobel Prize awarded to John.
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McOuat, Gordon, and Mary P. Winsor. "J. B. S. Haldane's Darwinism in its religious context." British Journal for the History of Science 28, no. 2 (June 1995): 227–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0007087400032970.

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Early in this century, only a few biologists accepted that natural selection was the chief cause of evolution, until the independent calculations of John Burdon Sanderson Haldane (1892–1964), Sewall Wright and R. A. Fisher demonstrated that ideal populations subject to Mendel's laws could behave as Darwin had said they would. Evolutionary theorist John Maynard Smith, a student of Haldane's, has raised the question of why Haldane, who was no naturalist, took up the subject of evolution, and he suggests that the answer may have to do with Haldane's lively interest in religion. In fact Maynard Smith's answer has much more evidence in its favour than he knew.
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Seymour, Richard. "John Spargo and American Socialism." Historical Materialism 17, no. 2 (2009): 272–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156920609x436225.

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AbstractMarkku Ruotsila's impressive new biography of John Spargo is an incisive assessment of one of the earliest architects of neoconservatism. Spargo, a British socialist who spent most of his life in the United States, had moved gradually to the right of the socialist movement, advocating a gradualist and anti-revolutionary interpretation of Marxism. Having defended the American intervention in WWI, he was an early and avid critic of the Bolshevik Revolution. It was Spargo who composed the Colby Note that formalised the Wilson administration's anti-communist doctrine, and engaged in a political alliance with Benito Mussolini which he maintained through Italy's Fascist years on account of Mussolini's intransigent anti-communism. A harsh critic of the Roosevelt administration's 'New Deal' and its recognition of the USSR, he moved to the hard right in his domestic politics, supporting the Dies Commission and McCarthy, and later supporting first Richard Nixon then Barry Goldwater in the 1964 elections. This review examines Spargo's journey to the right in the light, not only of the peculiar Hyndmanite Marxism into which he was initially inducted and the reformist socialism to which he later graduated, but also of his social Darwinism, his support for colonialism, and his perceptions of the global racial order. I argue that Ruotsila, while providing an unprecedented glimpse into a neglected prehistory of neoconservatism, is mistaken to see Spargo's transition as a logical and linear progression in which he successfully preserved the core of his 'Social Gospel' even as he became a Republican activist. He also understates, I will maintain, the role of Spargo's racial concerns in the fervent anti-communism that he espoused after 1917.
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Lai, David C. "John Burdon Sanderson Haldane (1892-1964) Polymath Beneath the Firedamp: The Story of J.B.S. Haldane." Bulletin of Anesthesia History 16, no. 3 (July 1998): 1–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s1522-8649(98)50040-6.

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HARRISON, BENJAMIN T., and CHRISTOPHER L. MOSHER. "John T. McNaughton and Vietnam: The Early Years as Assistant Secretary of Defense, 1964–1965." History 92, no. 308 (October 2007): 496–514. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-229x.2007.00404.x.

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Phillips, Justin. "Portraits of Power: Ohio and National Politics, 1964-2004by Abe Zaidan and John C. Green." Political Science Quarterly 123, no. 3 (September 2008): 519–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/j.1538-165x.2008.tb01784.x.

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Santos, Heloisa Occhiuze dos. "Ideário pedagógico municipalista de Anísio Teixeira." Cadernos de Pesquisa, no. 110 (July 2000): 105–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/s0100-15742000000200004.

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Em sintonia com os princípios democráticos inspirados pela filosofia educacional de John Dewey, Anísio Teixeira foi construindo ao longo das suas atividades na vida pública, o que neste artigo se chamou de ideário pedagógico municipalista. O artigo apresenta essa trajetória pública: Bahia (1924 - 1929); Distrito Federal (1931 - 1935); Bahia (1947 - 1951); Rio de Janeiro (1952 - 1961); Rio de Janeiro (1962 - 1968); Brasília (1963- 1964); Rio de Janeiro (1967 - 1970).
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McLoughlin, P. J. "‘…it’s a United Ireland or Nothing’? John Hume and the Idea of Irish Unity, 1964–72." Irish Political Studies 21, no. 2 (June 2006): 157–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07907180600707532.

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Ligler, Heather, and Athanassios Economou. "Entelechy revisited: On the generative specification of John Portman’s architectural language." Environment and Planning B: Urban Analytics and City Science 45, no. 4 (December 19, 2016): 623–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0265813516676489.

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John Portman’s work attracts significant commentary, although the focus is typically on the commercial and social aspects of his work as opposed to the actual designs and their related architectural implications. The obvious place to start unpacking his contribution is in his widely recognized and published commercial portfolio, yet he maintains that his design principles are found in his personal domestic work. Here, his 1964 residence Entelechy I is analyzed to inform the development of a parametric shape grammar that generates the original design as well as a series of variations. The goal of this research is to engage Portman’s architectural philosophy and constructively assess his claims of its implicit relationship to his work to date. Key rules suggesting his principles and anticipating his ongoing architectural contribution are outlined. The structure provided by shape computation, involving both shape rules and rule schemas, is positioned as the theoretical basis for an ongoing study of transformations within Portman’s language.
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Cedrez da Silva, Thiago, and Edgar Ávila Gandra. "“Memórias pesadas”: os estivadores do Rio Grande/RS e o golpe civil-militar." Revista Paginas 7, no. 14 (December 2, 2015): 63. http://dx.doi.org/10.35305/rp.v7i14.158.

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El objetivo de este trabajo es el análisis de la trayectoria de los trabajadores de la estiba en Río Grande durante el año 1964, pasando por el impacto que los acontecimientos de aquel año repercutieron en la forma de vida de los trabajadores portuarios rio-grandinos. Con nuestra propuesta, nuestro objetivo es identificar los cambios que ocurrieron en la vida diaria de estos trabajadores, en su mayoría militantes, que muestra la relación entre la vida cotidiana de la clase obrera y su actividad sindical. Será a partir del estudio de la memoria de nuestros protagonistas y el diálogo con otras fuentes, que buscan comprender los signos de la autonomía y las formas de resistencia al control y la dominación de la intervención que sufrió aquel año la el sindicato de estibadores de Río Grande, hacia el final del gobierno laborista de John Goulartt y los primeros meses de aplicación de la dictadura cívico-militar de 1964
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Nascimento, Thiago. "O ENSINO DE HISTÓRIA E ESTUDOS SOCIAIS EM JOHN DEWEY E DELGADO DE CARVALHO * THE TEACHING OF HISTORY AND SOCIAL STUDIES ON JOHN DEWEY AND DELGADO DE CARVALHO." História e Cultura 4, no. 2 (September 15, 2015): 212. http://dx.doi.org/10.18223/hiscult.v4i2.1636.

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<p style="margin: 0cm 0cm 0pt; text-align: justify;"> </p><p><strong>Resumo: </strong>A memória de muitos professores de História e historiador es, sobretudo a dos que atuaram na luta contra os Estudos Sociais e as licenciaturas curtas no decorrer dos anos de 1970 e 1980, tende a associar fortemente os Estudos Sociais à política educacional adotada após a ascensão dos militares ao poder. No entanto, as primeiras discussões em torno do tema se remetem, no Brasil, aos anos de 1920 no contexto da introdução do movimento da Escola Nova no país. Nos anos antecedentes ao golpe civil-militar de 1964, constituiu-se no Brasil uma concepção de Estudos Sociais que teria longa vida, muitas leituras e releituras, cujo principal expoente foi Carlos Delgado de Carvalho. Nesse artigo, analisamos a influência da filosofia educacional de John Dewey para o ensino de Estudos Sociais e a obra de Delgado de Carvalho.</p><p><strong>Palavras-chave: </strong>Ensino de História; Estudos Sociais; Escola Nova; Delgado de Carvalho.</p><p style="margin: 0cm 0cm 0pt; text-align: justify;"> </p><p><strong>Abstract: </strong>The memory of many history teachers and historians, especially those who served in the fight against the Social Studies and the graduate short over the years 1970 and 1980, tends to strongly associate the social studies with the education politics adopt after the rise of the military government. However, the early discussions about the topic are refers, in Brazil, to the year 1920 in connection with the introduction of the New School movement in the country. In the years before the 1964 military government in Brazil constructed of a conception social studies that would have long life and lots of reading and rereading, whose principal exponent was Carlos Delgado de Carvalho. In this article we analyze the influence of the educational philosophy of John Dewey for teaching social studies and the work of Delgado de Carvalho.</p><p style="margin: 0cm 0cm 0pt; text-align: justify;"> </p><p><strong>Keywords: </strong>Teaching of History; Social studies; New School; Delgado de Carvalho.</p><p style="margin: 0cm 0cm 0pt; text-align: justify;"> </p>
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38

Beckwith, John. "CUMS Remembered." Canadian University Music Review 20, no. 1 (May 16, 2013): 1–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1015643ar.

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On the occasion of his induction as a lifetime honorary member of the Canadian University Music Society, the Dean of Canadian composers, John Beckwith, offers a personal reflection on the triumphs and vicissitudes across more than thirty years of the Society. From its 1964 founding as a network of music deans and directors under the acronym CAUSM, through its metamorphosis into a learned society in the 1980s, to its present day hybrid form, CUMS is remembered—with affection and whimsy—as an agent in development of the Canadian music establishment.
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39

The Editors. "Notes from the Editors, September 2017." Monthly Review 69, no. 4 (August 31, 2017): 2. http://dx.doi.org/10.14452/mr-069-04-2017-08_0.

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buy this issueThe publication last month of The Age of Monopoly Capital: The Selected Correspondence of Paul A. Baran and Paul M. Sweezy, 1949&ndash;1964, edited by Nicholas Baran and John Bellamy Foster, constitutes a landmark for Monthly Review Press. A historical document in itself, The Age of Monopoly Capital is not simply about the writing of their magnum opus, but also provides a window onto an entire era of American life.Click here to purchase a PDF version of this article at the Monthly Review website.
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40

GIVAN, BENJAMIN. "Apart Playing: McCoy Tyner and “Bessie's Blues”." Journal of the Society for American Music 1, no. 2 (May 2007): 257–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1752196307070095.

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Jazz pianist McCoy Tyner's improvisation on the theme “Bessie's Blues,” recorded with the John Coltrane Quartet in 1964, exemplifies the traditional Afrodiasporic performance practice of “apart playing.” A formulation of the art historian Robert Farris Thompson, apart playing occurs whenever individual performers enact different, complementary roles in an ensemble setting. For interpretative purposes, the concept helps to provide a cultural context for certain pitch-based formal devices, such as substitute harmonies and playing “outside” an underlying chord or scale, which Tyner uses in the course of his solo.
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Do Amparo, Paula Cristina Gomes, and Gabriel Martins Da Silva. "CLARICE VAI AO ZOOLÓGICO: NOTAS SOBRE OLHAR E DIFERENÇA ANIMAL." Organon 36, no. 72 (December 17, 2021): 66–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.22456/2238-8915.117291.

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A escritora Clarice Lispector reservou, ao longo da sua obra, um espaço privilegiado para o encontro entre humanos e animais, através de trocas de olhares que desestabilizam a hierarquia ontológica entre os seres. Em uma argumentação interessada no papel do olhar durante o encontro com a diferença animal, analisaremos os contos “O búfalo”, de Laços de Família (1960), e “Tentação”, de A legião estrangeira (1964), em diálogo com os trabalhos de Giorgio Agamben e John Berger sobre o lugar social do zoológico como dispositivo de separação, controle e catalogação do que é dado como natureza e cultura.
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42

Kiguradze, I., and Z. Sokhadze. "On Singular Functional Differential Inequalities." gmj 4, no. 3 (June 1997): 259–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/gmj.1997.259.

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Abstract Classical theorems on differential inequalities [Coddington and Levinson, Theory of ordinary differential equations, Mc Graw-Hill Book Company, Inc., 1995, Hartman, Ordinary differential equations, John Wiley & Sons, 1964, Walter, Differential and integral inequalities, Springer-Verlag, 1970] are generalized for initial value problems of the kind and where ƒ : C([a, b]; Rn ) → Lloc (]a, b]; Rn ) is a singular Volterra operator, c 0 ∈ Rn , h : [a, b] → [0, +∞[ is continuous and positive on ]a, b], ‖ · ‖ is a norm in Rn , and [u]+ and [u]– are respectively the positive and the negative part of the vector u ∈ Rn .
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43

Domingos, Charles Sidarta Machado. "Ligações perigosas: a deterioração das relações entre os governos de João Goulart e John Kennedy no ano de 1962." Tempo 24, no. 3 (December 2018): 525–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/tem-1980-542x2018v240306.

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Resumo: O ano de 1962 não tem sido tratado com a devida ênfase pela historiografia brasileira que se preocupa com o governo Goulart e o golpe de 1964. Neste artigo, descortinarei de forma mais detalhada a relação bilateral entre Brasil e Estados Unidos ao longo daquele ano, bem como demonstrarei como a posição da Política Externa Independente do governo Goulart em relação a Cuba ao longo do ano foi a causa principal do afastamento entre os países e a razão da política de desestabilização patrocinada pelos estadunidenses. Para tanto, nossos interlocutores serão a documentação oficial produzida pelo Ministério das Relações Exteriores do Brasil, os pronunciamentos do presidente brasileiro, a grande imprensa, as cartas trocadas entre os presidentes Goulart e Kennedy e os documentos produzidos pelo governo dos Estados Unidos.
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Zimmerman, Jonathan. "“One's Total World View Comes Into Play”: America's Culture War Over Alcohol Education, 1945-1964." History of Education Quarterly 42, no. 4 (2002): 471–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1748-5959.2002.tb00007.x.

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In 1948, fundamentalist theologian Edward John Carnell launched a spirited attack upon the “disease concept” of alcoholism. The Bible stated in no uncertain terms that drunkenness was a sin, Carnell wrote. By deeming alcoholism a sickness, clergymen and educators threatened to erode the “sense of guilt” that had once surrounded it. “The drinker takes the first glass as a free agent,” Carnell intoned. “He knows in advance the risks of his act, yet he proceeds…. As a moral, rational being, then, the drunkard is guilty and stands under God's severe wrath.” Yet in public schools and even in churches, Carnell complained, too many Americans learned to regard alcoholism as a medical affliction rather than as an ethical lapse. “The crux of the problem is whether man is made in the image of God, and thus is a responsible moral being, or whether he is just a product of naturalistic forces and is responsible to none,” Carnell concluded. “In judging drunkards, then, one's total world view comes into play.”
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Streeter, Stephen M. "Campaigning Against Latin American Nationalism: U.S. Ambassador John Moors Cabot in Brazil, 1959-1961." Americas 51, no. 2 (October 1994): 193–218. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1007925.

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A recent edited study of U.S. ambassadors assigned to Latin American countries beset by economic and political crises assesses the importance of individuals as determinants of U.S. foreign policy. Although the authors differed in their conclusions, two in particular suggested that even ambassadors who enjoyed great operational independence rarely disagreed with the ideological premises of their superiors in Washington. Historian Louis A. Pérez, for example, portrayed U.S. ambassador to Cuba Sumner Welles as “an active powerbroker” who “operated out of a defined ideological framework, a world view that allowed him to recognize social forces as potential friend or likely foe to U.S. interests.” Welles's attempt in 1933 to remove Cuban President Ramón Grau San Martin, who had abrogated the Platt Amendment, coincided with the State Department's policy of keeping Cuba favorable to U.S. economic and strategic interests. Scholar Jan Knippers Black came to a similar conclusion about the role of Ambassador Lincoln Gordon in the 1964 overthrow of leftist Brazilian President João Goulart. Black found it “extremely difficult to isolate his [Gordon's] imprint on more fundamental aspects of policy … it seems unlikely that U.S. policies and actions would have differed in any significant way, had some other individual been serving at that time and place as ambassador.”
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Crespino, Joseph. "The Best Defense Is a Good Offense: The Stennis Amendment and the Fracturing of Liberal School Desegregation Policy, 1964–1972." Journal of Policy History 18, no. 3 (July 2006): 304–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jph.2006.0008.

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In December 1969, Governor John Bell Williams of Mississippi, one of the most notorious southern segregationists, proposed a $1 million program financed by the Mississippi state legislature to file school desegregation suits in northern states. “For fifteen years we have been on the defense,” Williams said. “Now we are going on the offense.” Williams's campaign was just one example of an odd but familiar trend that had emerged by 1970. Some of the most determined southern segregationists became enthusiastic supporters of northern school desegregation. In January 1970, the attorneys general in Mississippi, Louisiana, and Florida announced plans to intervene as friends of the court in a Pasadena, California, school desegregation case. In February 1970, the governor of Louisiana appealed to citizens of his state to fund a nationwide television campaign calling for equal treatment between northern and southern schools. Most important, that same month, U.S. Senator John C. Stennis of Mississippi carried the fight to the floor of the Senate. He introduced an amendment to a federal education bill that called for equal desegregation efforts in both the North and the South, regardless of whether the segregation resulted from state action or residential patterns. Stennis complained that the federal government was pursuing a regional desegregation plan. His ostensible goal was to bring about “one uniform policy” on school desegregation, “applicable nationwide.” But the real motivation, which almost every southern official conceded, was the hope that accelerated desegregation in the North would spark a broader, national backlash against school desegregation.
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HOLST, JOHN. "Paulo Freire in Chile, 1964–1969: Pedagogy of the Oppressed in Its Sociopolitical Economic Context." Harvard Educational Review 76, no. 2 (July 1, 2006): 243–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.17763/haer.76.2.bm6532lgln2744t3.

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In this article, John Holst presents findings of his historical research on Paulo Freire's educational work in Chile from 1964 to 1969. Freire's Education as the Practice of Freedom, which was written in 1965 from notes he brought from Brazil, was informed by a liberal developmentalist outlook. In contrast, his Pedagogy of the Oppressed, written toward the end of his stay in Chile from 1967 to 1968, was influenced by Marxist humanist ideology. Considering this relatively rapid change in Freire's educational philosophy, Holst explores the manner in which Freire's time and work in Chile affected his ideological evolution. Holst contributes to Freirean studies by demonstrating that Freire's work in the Chilean political context proved to be decisive in his ideological and pedagogical growth. Freire's ideological evolution inspired his writing of Pedagogy of the Oppressed, widely considered one of the most important books on education in the twentieth century. Ultimately, Holst argues that Freire's pedagogy, like all pedagogy, can only be understood fully when seen within the specific sociopolitical and economic contexts within which it developed. Pedagogies are collective in nature, and Freire's, as he himself recognized, was no exception.
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48

Jones, Robert W., and Alan R. Lord. "On the award of TMS Honorary Membership, 15 November 2006 Dr John Whittaker – an appreciation." Journal of Micropalaeontology 28, no. 2 (November 1, 2009): 191–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1144/jm.28.2.191.

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Abstract. John Eustace Whittaker was born near Burnley, Lancashire on 25 September 1945 and educated at St Mary’s College, Black-burn. Despite being a devoted Lancastrian, fate has decreed that since leaving school he has spent the rest of his life elsewhere and he is now a resident of south Essex. His interest in earth science was stimulated by the Geography and Geology teacher at St Mary’s College, Ken James, and consequently he entered the then University College of Wales, Aberystwyth to read Joint Geography and Geology in 1964. John was, however, ‘rescued’ from the geographical side of things by the redoubtable Robin Whatley (TMS Honorary Member 2004) and, in 1967, commenced research under his supervision, at the same time striking up what was to become a lifelong friendship with him, and also with John Haynes. John’s doctoral work concerned living ostracods of coastal sites in southern England and his thesis, ‘The taxonomy, ecology and distribution of Recent brackish marine Ostracoda from localities along the coast of Hampshire and Dorset (Christchurch harbour, The Fleet and Weymouth Bay)’, was a monumental two volumes submitted in 1972. From this developed Marine and Brackish Water Ostracods (Athersuch et al., 1989), an important synoptic work still in regular use (if you can find a copy). Fate again took a hand when, in 1971, a position in the Natural History Museum, London became available, working with another formidable character, the late Geoffrey Adams – on foraminifera rather than ostracods! John worked at the NHM until his retirement in . . .
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Greenwood, J. A. "Access to computers." Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Part J: Journal of Engineering Tribology 235, no. 12 (October 26, 2021): 2525–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/13506501211044053.

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In one of Duncan Dowson’s talks on the early attempts to solve the elastohydrodynamic lubrication problem, he commented that progress only became possible when he and Gordon Higginson were granted private access to the University computer at weekends. And how these words brought back memories! For John Tripp and I could never have solved our numerical problem without the courtesy of the Norwalk State Technical College allowing us access to its computer out of term. That was in 1964. In this century, such a story is hard to believe, when every researcher has on his own desk, for his own use, a computer more powerful than either of the two referred to above. It seems worth recalling how computing has changed in my scientific lifetime.
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McGuire, John Thomas. "From Economic Security to Equality: Frieda Miller, Esther Peterson, and the Revival of the Alternative View of Public Administration, 1945-1964." American Review of Public Administration 48, no. 8 (November 14, 2017): 795–807. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0275074017740969.

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This article examines how Frieda Miller and Esther Peterson, two influential directors of the U.S. Department of Labor’s Women’s Bureau after World War II, revived and continued the alternative view of public administration through a combination of primary and secondary sources. Miller, who served as director from 1944 through 1953, reestablished a social justice–centered view of public administration through the creation of a special advisory committee and the institution of a new agenda that stressed equality over economic security. Peterson, who served from 1961 through 1964, quickly moved the Women’s Bureau into a political network with women’s labor leaders and the John F. Kennedy presidential administration, helping to create the Presidential Commission on the Status of Women (PCSW) and to enact a federal Equal Pay Act.
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