Fear 3,000 Dead in Iran Earthquake
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Want Ads to the Democrat Because You Get 1931
The Worm Turns NOTICE Automobile* A A hearing on the application of the Hotchkiss Bulck Co. for ap- • Antcw and Track* (far Sale Into An Anaeonda proval certificate to install a retail and wholesale sta- DEMONSTRATION gasplfne filling HOUSE tion at 480 Watertown avenue will AL'S BARGAIN 1930 Oakland Coupe ■ By DAM PARKER be held on October 18th*. 1931* at 1930 De Soto RoadeUr 11:30 A. M. in the Mayor's office. 1328 Chev Coupe & Coach Is Our Best City Hail,. Watetbury, Connecticut, 1329 Ford Road*t«r ■ as provided by General Statute. 1929 Ford Coach & Sedan 1930 Oldamobll* Coupe Signed -FRANK HATES. Sales The homestead or realdence of the late Edward F. Cole 7" 9-30-St. Mayor. 1910 Auburn Sedan 1927 Bulck situated at No. 69 Linden Street, eon* ST Oct. 2. COupe—1125 Waterbury, Connecticut, LOUIS, 1928 Oakland Sedan slating of a desirable lot, a one-family residence^ ten rooms, THE SPIRIT OF ST LOUIS in fhe opening game of the World 1928 Oakland Sedan ot Announcements and a barn Series was that of a worm. But, the worm turned this afternoon— Its North Main. Dial 2*3147 Presentation used as a garage, will be sold at public auction by whose Coils crushed all the life out auction sale turned* Into an anaconda powerful Lost and Found held on the premises, rain or shine. October 10th, all around of the A’s—arid there's a new deal again. at two P. ... v*. ----- 12 Auto* For Hite Garage* To Let 10*1, o'clock, M., Standard Time. -
The Critical Issues Copyright © 2016, United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) Job No: DEW/1970/NA ISBN: 978-92-807-3550-5
www.unep.org United Nations Environment Programme P.O. Box 30552, Nairobi 00100, Kenya Tel: +254-(0)20-762 1234 Email: [email protected] web: www.unep.org Around the world, environmental conditions impact the lives of women and men in different ways as a result of existing inequalities. Gender roles often create differences in the ways men and women act in relation to the environment, and in the ways men and women are enabled or prevented from acting as agents of environmental change. UNEP and partners developed the Global Gender and 2016 Environment Outlook (GGEO), following the request of the Network of Women Ministers and Leaders for the Environment (NWMLE). The report aims GLOBAL GENDER AND to support governments in understanding the potential roles of men and women as agents of change and subsequently support ENVIRONMENT OUTLOOK development and implementation of gender- sensitive environmental policies. The Critical Issues Copyright © 2016, United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) Job No: DEW/1970/NA ISBN: 978-92-807-3550-5 Disclaimers The designations employed and the presentation of material in this publication do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of UNEP concerning the legal status of any country, territory or city or its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. For general guidance on matters relating to the use of maps in publications please go to http://www.un.org/Depts/ Cartographic/english/htmain.htm Mention of a commercial company or product in this publication does not imply endorsement by the United Nations Environment Programme. -
The Woman-Slave Analogy: Rhetorical Foundations in American
The Woman-Slave Analogy: Rhetorical Foundations in American Culture, 1830-1900 Ana Lucette Stevenson BComm (dist.), BA (HonsI) A thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at The University of Queensland in 2014 School of History, Philosophy, Religion and Classics I Abstract During the 1830s, Sarah Grimké, the abolitionist and women’s rights reformer from South Carolina, stated: “It was when my soul was deeply moved at the wrongs of the slave that I first perceived distinctly the subject condition of women.” This rhetorical comparison between women and slaves – the woman-slave analogy – emerged in Europe during the seventeenth century, but gained peculiar significance in the United States during the nineteenth century. This rhetoric was inspired by the Revolutionary Era language of liberty versus tyranny, and discourses of slavery gained prominence in the reform culture that was dominated by the American antislavery movement and shared among the sisterhood of reforms. The woman-slave analogy functioned on the idea that the position of women was no better – nor any freer – than slaves. It was used to critique the exclusion of women from a national body politic based on the concept that “all men are created equal.” From the 1830s onwards, this analogy came to permeate the rhetorical practices of social reformers, especially those involved in the antislavery, women’s rights, dress reform, suffrage and labour movements. Sarah’s sister, Angelina, asked: “Can you not see that women could do, and would do a hundred times more for the slave if she were not fettered?” My thesis explores manifestations of the woman-slave analogy through the themes of marriage, fashion, politics, labour, and sex. -
Baseball Autographs Signed 1950-55 Callahans 297 Honus Wagner 9
January 31 Auction: Baseball Autographs Signed 1950-55 Callahans 297 Honus Wagner 9 ............................ 500 Such a neat item, offered is a true high grade hand-signed 290 Fred Clarke 9.5 ......................... 100 Honus Wagner baseball card. So hard to find, we hardly ever Sharp card, this looks to be a fine Near Mint. Signed in par- see any kind of card signed by the legendary and beloved ticularly bold blue ink, this is a terrific autograph. Desirable Wagner. The offered card, slabbed by PSA/DNA, is well signed card, deadball era HOFer Fred Clarke died in 1960. centered with four sharp corners. Signed right in the center PSA/DNA slabbed. in blue fountain pen, this is a very nice signature. Key piece, this is another item that might appreciate rapidly in the 291 Clark Griffith 9 ............................ 150 future given current market conditions. Very scarce signed card, Clark Griffith died in 1955, giving him only a fairly short window to sign one of these. Sharp 298 Ed Walsh 9 ............................ 100 card is well centered and Near Mint or better to our eyes, Desirable signed card, this White Sox HOF pitcher from the this has a fine and clean blue ballpoint ink signature on the deadball era died in 1959. Signed neatly in blue ballpoint left side. PSA/DNA slabbed. ink in a good spot, this is a very nice signature. Slabbed Authentic by PSA/DNA, this is a quality signed card. 292 Rogers Hornsby 9.5 ......................... 300 Remarkable signed card, the card itself is Near Mint and 299 Lot of 3 w/Sisler 9 ..............................70 quite sharp, the autograph is almost stunningly nice. -
Tigers Will Reveal Status of Yanks
Four Game Series With Tigers Will Reveal Status Of Yanks SWIFT WINS OWN New Golf King Likes How Sarazen Gave The Boys The Birdie Loss Of Dickey May GAME FROM GIANTS To Try His Luck Affect Pennant ” IN TENTH INNING Hopes Rather Than “PlaySafe Great Overtime Struggle Of Ruppert Machine By ART KRENZ Increases Lead of Pi- (XEA Service Golf Writer) New York, July 6—(UP)—The New Tkrk Yankees, and a hunch player! Cleveland, July 6—A gambler rates—Waiters Hitting their pennant chances weakened by Bill Dickey’s suspension, That’s Gene crowned British and national Sarazen, recently Steadily opposed the hustling Detroit Tigers to-day in the first of a open champion. series at Yankee stadium. the significant four-game Time after time during his tour of triumph through Pittsburg, July S.—About five- Baseball writers expect this ser- west and south last winter, and during his playing in Eng- thousand fans saw a real nip and rather tuck ball game here to-day, the ies to. determine whether the land and at Fresh Meadow, Sarazen took the chance, TREES: 4 :W Pirates winning over the Giants OLYMPIC HOPE Tanks have gone into a slump, whe- he har played hunch- of the than play the safe way. Repeatedly to 3 after ten Innings play, ther Dicker’s suspension has been es that seem to have planned out score being tied on three -different whether right most of the tine. occasions. With four umpires at a serious, blow, and Bucky Thus, at Auga Callente, In the work the game took on all the ap- Harris’ Tigers are to be considered stroked the first Open of 1930. -
Intimate Partner Violence Against Women on the Colombia Ecuador Border
Keating et al. Conflict and Health (2021) 15:24 https://doi.org/10.1186/s13031-021-00351-y RESEARCH Open Access Intimate partner violence against women on the Colombia Ecuador border: a mixed- methods analysis of the liminal migrant experience Colleen Keating1, Sarah Treves-Kagan2 and Ana Maria Buller3* Abstract Background: Intimate partner violence (IPV) has serious long-term health and psychological consequences and is highly prevalent in Latin America and among displaced populations. Liminality - the ambiguous in-between state of individuals completing a migratory journey - represents a state of legal, economic, and physical insecurity. Through the framework of liminality, this analysis seeks to understand the unique challenges faced by displaced Colombian women in Ecuador including their experience of IPV. Methods: We performed a secondary analysis of 15 in-depth interviews and 319 longitudinal surveys, conducted on the border of Ecuador and Colombia, following a sequential explanatory mixed-methods design. We analysed interviews thematically and mapped the main themes onto complementary quantitative variables. We conducted logistic regression with identified risk and protective factors (measured at time 1) and recent IPV (measured at time 2), controlling for demographic characteristics and IPV at time 1. Results: Our mixed-methods analysis revealed four main mechanisms by which displacement influenced the social and economic realities of Colombian women years after crossing the border, compounding their risk of IPV and limiting their ability to escape it. Lack of legal residence and documentation, violence experienced along life course and migratory continuums which increased their risk for later revictimisation, social isolation including loss of support networks and restricted mobility and lastly, financial stress. -
Untying the Knot: an Analysis of the English Divorce and Matrimonial Causes Court Records, 1858-1866 Danaya C
University of Florida Levin College of Law UF Law Scholarship Repository Faculty Publications Faculty Scholarship 1-1-2004 Untying the Knot: An Analysis of the English Divorce and Matrimonial Causes Court Records, 1858-1866 Danaya C. Wright University of Florida Levin College of Law, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarship.law.ufl.edu/facultypub Part of the Common Law Commons, Family Law Commons, and the Women Commons Recommended Citation Danaya C. Wright, Untying the Knot: An Analysis of the English Divorce and Matrimonial Causes Court Records, 1858-1866, 38 U. Rich. L. Rev. 903 (2004), available at http://scholarship.law.ufl.edu/facultypub/205 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Faculty Scholarship at UF Law Scholarship Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Faculty Publications by an authorized administrator of UF Law Scholarship Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. UNTYING THE KNOT: AN ANALYSIS OF THE ENGLISH DIVORCE AND MATRIMONIAL CAUSES COURT RECORDS, 1858-1866 Danaya C. Wright * I. INTRODUCTION Historians of Anglo-American family law consider 1857 as a turning point in the development of modern family law and the first big step in the breakdown of coverture' and the recognition of women's legal rights.2 In 1857, The United Kingdom Parlia- * Associate Professor of Law, University of Florida, Levin College of Law. This arti- cle is a continuation of my research into nineteenth-century English family law reform. My research at the Public Record Office was made possible by generous grants from the University of Florida, Levin College of Law. -
Chinese Women in the Early Twentieth Century: Activists and Rebels
Chinese Women in the Early Twentieth Century: Activists and Rebels Remy Lepore Undergraduate Honors Thesis Department of History University of Colorado, Boulder Defended: October 25th, 2019 Committee Members: Primary Advisor: Timothy Weston, Department of History Secondary Reader: Katherine Alexander, Department of Chinese Honors Representative: Miriam Kadia, Department of History Abstract It is said that women hold up half the sky, but what roles do women really play and how do they interact with politics and society? In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries Chinese women reacted in a variety of ways to the social and political changes of the era. Some women were actively engaged in politics while others were not. Some women became revolutionaries and fought for reform in China, other women were more willing to work with and within the established cultural framework. Discussion of reforms and reformers in the late nineteenth-early twentieth centuries are primarily focused on men and male activism; however, some women felt very strongly about reform and were willing to die in order to help China modernize. This thesis explores the life experiences and activism of five women who lived at the end of China’s imperial period and saw the birth of the Republican period. By analyzing and comparing the experiences of Zheng Yuxiu, Yang Buwei, Xie Bingying, Wang Su Chun, and Ning Lao Taitai, this thesis helps to unlock the complex and often hidden lives of Chinese women in modern Chinese history. Lepore 1 Table of Contents Introduction ……………………………………………………………………………..……… 2 Part 1 ………………………………………………………………………………….………… 4 Historiography ……………………………………………………………………………4 Historical Context …………………………..…………………………………………… 8 Part 2: Analysis …………………………………..…………………………..………………. -
2011Baseballguide.Pdf
2 22011011 HOOLYLY CRROSSOSS BAASEBALLSEBALL AT A GLLANCEANCE HOLY CROSS QUICK FACTS COACHING STAFF MISSION STATMENT Location: . .Worcester, MA 01610 Head Coach:. Greg DiCenzo (St. Lawrence, 1998) COLLEGE OF THE HOLY CROSS Founded: . 1843 Career Record / Years: . .69-81 / Four Years Enrollment: . 2,897 Record at Holy Cross / Years: . .69-81 / Four Years DEPARTMENT OF ATHLETICS Color: . Royal Purple Assistant Coach/Recruiting Coordinator: The Mission of the Athletic Department of the College Nickname: . Crusaders . .Jeff Kane (Clemson, 2001) of the Holy Cross is to promote the intellectual, physical, Affi liations: . NCAA Division I, Patriot League Assistant Coach: and moral development of students. Through Division I President: . Rev. Michael C. McFarland, S.J. Ron Rakowski (San Francisco State, 2002) athletic participation, our young men and women student- Director of Admissions: . Ann McDermott Assistant Coach:. Jeff Miller (Holy Cross, 2000) athletes learn a self-discipline that has both present and Offi ce Phone: . (508) 793-2443 Men’s Baseball Offi ce Phone: . .(508) 793-2753 long-term effects; the interplay of individual and team effort; Director of Financial Aid: . Lynne M. Myers E-Mail Address: . [email protected] pride and self esteem in both victory and defeat; a skillful Offi ce Phone: . (508) 793-2265 Mailing Address: . .Greg DiCenzo management of time; personal endurance and courage; and Director of Athletics: . .Richard M. Regan, Jr. Head Baseball Coach the complex relationships between friendship, leadership, Associate Director of Athletics:. Bill Bellerose College of the Holy Cross and service. Our athletics program, in the words of the Associate Director of Athletics:. Ann Zelesky One College Street College Mission Statement, calls for “a community marked Associate Director of Athletics:. -
Dawes Scores
- Nirr PRESS RUN nUi WIATHEB J AVERAGE DAILV CIRCULATION I PoMeast kr O.' a* Weathks Barcaa, for the Month of May, 1029 "'f ' ' Vikr’Bkvdk 5,330 Showers and cooler tonight'and Membera of the A adit Bnrean oC gtste librsfy* Thnnday. Clrcolatlons . / v. <; t r r VOL. XLIII., NO. 209. (ClaMifled Advertising on Page lif) SOOTH MANCHESTER, CONN., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 19 ,1929. FOURTEEN PAGES PRICE THREE CENTS QUEER MALADY GRADUATION M ENACES SEVEN Stowaway Coming Home FESTIVITIES Three Dead and Four Seriously INUMEUGHT lU—-Fifteen Doctors Study ing the Case. AND^ETAIKS STAUTODAY ' Chicago,. June 19.— ^Three- DAWES SCORES ■\ ’ yrar-oid Lorraine Markowskl diednoagy, the third victim of a mysteribus poison that is Famous Newlyweds i Pose High School Commencement threatening to claim the lives to Great Brit of a ff^ ily of seven. Heat Wave Qontinues Program Opens With An Fifteen*, 'physicians, includ for Prctmres and Talk ing several specialists, were ain Stnick Keynote of studying the case as Lorraine With Reporters— L 0 n e All Over TTie nual Class Day; To Award qnccumbed. The other dead I Nation’s Policy Toward were Chester Kwlatkowskl, 7, and'blff sister, Agnes, 8. These Eagle Back to Work. < 1 Diplomas Tomorrow Eve. two were children of Mrs, Irv The gods of beat continued toAreported 108 and 110 qegreea re Naval Disarmament; Brit ing Markbwski by a former hurl their fireballs with relentlew spectively. Manchester High school will marriage. abandon at most of the United .The mid-west after a, scorching Mltchel Field, N. Y.. June 19.— yesterday saw no prospects of a let ish Press Unanhnons in graduate a class of 139 students to Two ' other children and States today. -
The Mayor of Casterbridge: Human Suffering in the Victorian Patriarchy
The Mayor of Casterbridge: Human Suffering in the Victorian Patriarchy Jung-Sun Choi Contents Ⅰ. Introduction Ⅱ. Female Characters and the Victorian Patriarchy Ⅲ. Male Characters and Hardy's Concern for Humanity Ⅰ. Introduction Thomas Hardy's The Mayor of Casterbridge (1886) has been criticized in two directions, the universal and the particular. The first examines the place of the individual life in a hostile or indifferent world, its destiny and limitation, broadly speaking, man's place in Nature. Thus, it focuses on the concepts such as coincidence, nature, destiny, and cosmic irony in relation with Hardy's pessimism. The second investigates the aspect that each character is the product of social and economic conditions, specifically, that of the Dorset region in England during industrialization. It delves into how characters are constructed, influenced by this specific region. In this sense Elaine Showalter's criticism of this work, "the unmanning of the Mayor of Casterbridge," deserves our attention, because it analyses masculinity and femininity of characters in the work from the feminist point of view, compared with the traditional criticism, which emphasizes 56 영미연구 제24집 the determinism of the work. Considering the importance of the relation of man and woman in the work, her criticism is significant in that it turns the focus of Hardy's criticism into one of his important aspects, namely, masculinity and femininity, which has been neglected by almost all critic s.1) However, although her criticism initiates the feminist interpretation of the work, we can also find some limitation in her criticism in trying to understand characters comprehensively. She mainly focuses on the vicissitude of masculinity and femininity in the hero, Michael Henchard. -
2012 Holy Cross Baseball Yearbook Is Published by Commitment to the Last Principle Assures That the College Secretary:
2 22012012 HOOLYLY CRROSSOSS BAASEBALLSEBALL AT A GLLANCEANCE HOLY CROSS QUICK FACTS COACHING STAFF MISSION STATMENT Location: . .Worcester, MA 01610 Head Coach:. Greg DiCenzo (St. Lawrence, 1998) COLLEGE OF THE HOLY CROSS Founded: . 1843 Career Record / Years: . 93-104-1 / Four Years Enrollment: . 2,862 Record at Holy Cross / Years: . 93-104-1 / Four Years DEPARTMENT OF ATHLETICS Color: . Royal Purple Assistant Coach / Recruiting Coordinator: The Mission of the Athletic Department of the College Nickname: . Crusaders . .Jeff Kane (Clemson, 2001) of the Holy Cross is to promote the intellectual, physical, Affi liations: . NCAA Division I, Patriot League Assistant Coach: and moral development of students. Through Division I President: . Rev. Philip L. Boroughs, S.J. Ron Rakowski (San Francisco State, 2002) athletic participation, our young men and women student- Director of Admissions: . Ann McDermott Assistant Coach:. Jeff Miller (Holy Cross, 2000) athletes learn a self-discipline that has both present and Offi ce Phone: . (508) 793-2443 Baseball Offi ce Phone:. (508) 793-2753 long-term effects; the interplay of individual and team effort; Director of Financial Aid: . Lynne M. Myers E-Mail Address: . [email protected] pride and self esteem in both victory and defeat; a skillful Offi ce Phone: . (508) 793-2265 Mailing Address: . .Greg DiCenzo management of time; personal endurance and courage; and Director of Athletics: . .Richard M. Regan, Jr. Head Baseball Coach the complex relationships between friendship, leadership, Associate Director of Athletics:. Bill Bellerose College of the Holy Cross and service. Our athletics program, in the words of the Associate Director of Athletics:. Ann Zelesky One College Street College Mission Statement, calls for “a community marked Associate Director of Athletics:.