APA 2021 Virtual On-Demand Library Index
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Buddhism in America
Buddhism in America The Columbia Contemporary American Religion Series Columbia Contemporary American Religion Series The United States is the birthplace of religious pluralism, and the spiritual landscape of contemporary America is as varied and complex as that of any country in the world. The books in this new series, written by leading scholars for students and general readers alike, fall into two categories: some of these well-crafted, thought-provoking portraits of the country’s major religious groups describe and explain particular religious practices and rituals, beliefs, and major challenges facing a given community today. Others explore current themes and topics in American religion that cut across denominational lines. The texts are supplemented with care- fully selected photographs and artwork, annotated bibliographies, con- cise profiles of important individuals, and chronologies of major events. — Roman Catholicism in America Islam in America . B UDDHISM in America Richard Hughes Seager C C Publishers Since New York Chichester, West Sussex Copyright © Columbia University Press All rights reserved Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Seager, Richard Hughes. Buddhism in America / Richard Hughes Seager. p. cm. — (Columbia contemporary American religion series) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN ‒‒‒ — ISBN ‒‒‒ (pbk.) . Buddhism—United States. I. Title. II. Series. BQ.S .'—dc – Casebound editions of Columbia University Press books are printed on permanent and durable acid-free paper. -
United States House of Representatives Committee on Agriculture Subcommittee on Biotechnology, Horticulture and Research Specia
United States House of Representatives Committee on Agriculture Subcommittee on Biotechnology, Horticulture and Research Specialty Crops in the Next Farm Bill March 9, 2017 Testimony of: James Field Director of Business Development Frey Farms, LLC 111 County Hwy 15 Suite A Keenes, IL 62851 Thank you Chairman Davis, Ranking Member Grisham and all members of the subcommittee for the opportunity to share my thoughts about the treatment of specialty crops under the Farm Bill. This subcommittee’s work to promote specialty crops -- and on crafting federal policies that allow providers to be competitive in the marketplace -- is appreciated by fresh fruit and vegetable providers across the country. First, a bit about myself and the business I represent. My name is James Field. I am the Director of Business Development for Frey Farms, headquartered in Keenes, IL. Frey Farms specializes in growing, packing, and shipping fresh market fruits and vegetables. We are best known as the nation's largest fresh pumpkin producer. Our farms and facilities are located in Florida, Georgia, Missouri, Arkansas, Indiana, West Virginia, and Illinois. Frey Farms is a member of the United Fresh Produce Association, which represents growers, shippers, processors and sellers of fresh fruits and vegetables across the country. The CEO of Frey Farms, Sarah Frey, has served on United Fresh’s Government Relations Council and is a member of its board of directors. Through United Fresh and on our own, Frey Farms has actively engaged with policymakers on a variety of issues that impact the specialty crop sector, including the Farm Bill, so we are thankful for the opportunity to share our perspective on Farm Bill programs that impact our ability to do business. -
On Lay Practice Within North American Soto Zen James Ishmael Ford 5 February 2018 Blue Cliff Zen Sangha Costa Mesa, California L
On Lay Practice Within North American Soto Zen James Ishmael Ford 5 February 2018 Blue Cliff Zen Sangha Costa Mesa, California Last week I posted on my Monkey Mind blog an essay I titled Soto Zen Buddhism in North America: Some Random Notes From a Work in Progress. There I wrote, along with a couple of small digressions and additions I add for this talk: Probably the most important thing here (within our North American Zen and particularly our North American Soto Zen) has been the rise in the importance of lay practice. My sense is that the Japanese hierarchy pretty close to completely have missed this as something important. And, even within the convert Soto ordained community, a type of clericalism that is a sense that only clerical practice is important exists that has also blinded many to this reality. That reality is how Zen practice belongs to all of us, whatever our condition in life, whether ordained, or lay. Now, this clerical bias comes to us honestly enough. Zen within East Asia is project for the ordained only. But, while that is an historical fact, it is very much a problem here. Actually a profound problem here. Throughout Asia the disciplines of Zen have largely been the province of the ordained, whether traditional Vinaya monastics or Japanese and Korean non-celibate priests. This has been particularly so with Japanese Soto Zen, where the myth and history of Dharma transmission has been collapsed into the normative ordination model. Here I feel it needful to note this is not normative in any other Zen context. -
Upenn Chemistry POCC Symposium & POCC Award Honoring About the POCC: Founded More Than Sixty Years Ago, Prof
The POCC gratefully acknowledges support from: The Philadelphia Organic Chemists' Club 31st Biennial UPenn Chemistry POCC Symposium & POCC Award Honoring About the POCC: Founded more than sixty years ago, Prof. Marisa Kozlowski The Philadelphia Organic Chemists' Club is one of the oldest independent chemistry clubs in the United States. Its central purpose is to facilitate interaction between scientists from academia and the many chemical and pharmaceutical companies in the greater Philadelphia area. Monthly POCC seminars are held in the Carolyn Hoff Lynch Lecture Hall at Thursday, 28 October 2010 the University of Pennsylvania. Information about the Department of Chemistry POCC can be found at: http://www.pocclub.org/ University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, PA PROGRAM POCC 2010 - 2011 Officers: Chair: Patrick Walsh 1:00 Registration, Lynch Room, Department of Chemistry, University of Pennsylvania Chair-Elect: Andrew B. Benowitz Secretary: Nicole C. Goodwin 1:30 Prof. Stephen Waters Assistant Secretary: Frederick (Simon) Golec, Jr. The University of Vermont Treasurer: Joseph M. Karpinski Strategies for the Synthesis of Nitrogen Heterocycles and Alkaloid Natural Products The Philadelphia Organic Chemists' Club Awardees 2:30 Dr. Mary Mader 1990 Amos B. Smith, III (University of Pennsylvania) Eli Lilly 1993 Conrad J. Kowalski (SmithKline Beecham) Design of Potent and Selective 2- 1994 Madeleine M. Joullié (University of Pennsylvania) Aminobenzimidazole-Based p38 MAP Kinase 1995 Bruce Maryanoff (RW Johnson Pharmaceuticals) 1996 Ralph F. Hirschmann (University of Pennsylvania) Inhibitors with Excellent in Vivo Efficacy 1997 William Nugent (DuPont) 1998 Gilbert Stork (Columbia University) 3:30-4:00 Coffee break 1999 Cynthia Maryanoff (RW Johnson Pharmaceuticals) 2000 Frank Mallory (Bryn Mawr College) 2002 Franklin A. -
California Buddhist Centers - Updated January 1, 2007
California Buddhist Centers - Updated January 1, 2007 - www.BuddhaNet.net -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Abhayagiri Buddhist Monastery Address: 16201 Tomki Road, Redwood Valley, CA 95470 CA Tradition: Theravada Forest Sangha Affiliation: Amaravati Buddhist Monastery (UK) EMail: [email protected] Website: http://www.abhayagiri.org -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- All One Dharma Address: 1440 Harvard Street, Quaker House Santa Monica CA 90404 Tradition: Zen/Vipassana Affiliation: General Buddhism Phone: e-mail only EMail: [email protected] Website: http://www.allonedharma.org Spiritual Director: Group effort Teachers: Group lay people Notes and Events: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- American Buddhist Meditation Temple Address: 2580 Interlake Road, Bradley, CA 93426 CA Tradition: Theravada, Thai, Maha Nikaya Affiliation: Thai Bhikkhus Council of USA -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- American Buddhist Seminary Temple at Sacramento Address: 423 Glide Avenue, West Sacramento CA 95691 CA Tradition: Theravada EMail: [email protected] Website: http://www.middleway.net Teachers: Venerable T. Shantha, Venerable O.Pannasara Spiritual Director: Venerable (Bhante) Madawala Seelawimala Mahathera -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- American Young Buddhist Association Address: 3456 Glenmark Drive, Hacienda -
John SC Abbott and Self-Interested Motherhood
Capitalizing on Mother: John S.C. Abbott and Self-interested Motherhood CAROLYN J. LAWES She who was first in the transgression, must yet be the principal earthly instrument in the restoration. ... Oh mothers! reflect upon the power your Maker has placed in your hands. There is no earthly influence to be compared with yours God has constituted you the guardians and the controllers ofthe human family. John S.C. Abbott' N THE EARLY nineteenth century, middle-class Americans rushed to rehabilitate the image of women. New England's IPuritans had castigated women as the daughters of Eve, re- sponsible for the introduction of sin into the world and the damnation of humankind.^ But Americans ofthe late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries stood this analysis upon its head: The research for this article was generously supported by a Kate B. and Hall J. Peterson Fellowship at the American Antiquarian Society. The author also wishes to thank Scott E. Casper, David J. Garrow, Julie Goodson-Lawes, T'homas G. Knoles, Sandra Pryor, Caroline F. Sloat, Elizabeth Alice White, Karin Wulf, and the anonymous readers uf the manuscript for their invaluable advice and suppon. 1. John S.C. Abbott, The Mother at Home: Or, the Principles of Maternal Duty (Boston, 1^33)' I4ÍÍ-49- The Mother at Home 'io\á more than a quarter of a million copies and went through numerous editions and printings. 2. See. far example. Mary Maples Dunn, 'Saints and Sisters: Congregational and Quaker Women in the Early Colonial Period,' in Janet Wilson James, ed.. Women in Avu-7ican Religion (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1980): 27-46; Lonna M. -
Lineage-Patriarchen-Soto-Zen.Pdf
De lineage van de Patriarchen Sōtō Zen 1. Bibashi Butsu Daioshō 2. Shiki Butsu Daioshō 3. Bishafu Butsu Daioshō 4. Kuruson Butsu Daioshō 5. Kunagommuni Butsu Daioshō 6. Kashō Butsu Daioshō 7. SHAKAMUNI BUTSU DAIOSHO –> (Shakyamuni, Gautama, Siddhata, ca. 563 v.C. - 483 v.C.) 8. Makakashō Daioshō 9. Ananda Daioshō 10. Shōnawashu Daioshō 11. Ubakikuta Daioshō 12. Daitaka Daioshō 13. Mishaka Daioshō 14. Bashumitsu Daioshō 15. Butsudanandai Daioshō 16. Fudamitta Daioshō 17. Barishiba Daioshō 18. Funayasha Daioshō 19. Anabotei Daioshō 20. Kabimora Daioshō 21. Nagyaharajunya Daiosho (Nagarjuna) 22. Kanadaiba Daioshō 23. Ragorata Daioshō 24. Sōgyanandai Daioshō 25. Kayashata Daioshō 26. Kumorata Daioshō 27. Shayata Daioshō 28. Bashubanzu Daioshō 29. Manura Daioshō 30. Kakurokuna Daioshō 31. Shishibodai Daioshō 32. Bashashita Daioshō 33. Funyomitta Daioshō 34. Hannyatara Daioshō 35. BODAIDARUMA DAIOSHO (Bodhidharma, P'u-t'i-ta-mo, Daruma, Bodaidaruma, ca. 470-543) 36. Taisō Eka Daioshō (Hiu-k'o, 487-593) 37. Kanchi Sōsan Daioshō (Seng-ts'an, gest. 606 ?) 38. Daii Dōshin Daioshō (Tao-hsin, 580-651) 39. Daiman Kōnin Daioshō (Gunin, Hung-jen, 601-674) 40. Daikan Enō Daioshō (Hui-neng, 638-713) 41. Seigen Gyōshi Daioshō (Ch'ing-yuan Hsing-ssu, 660-740) 42. Sekitō Kisen Daioshō (Shih-t'ou Hsi-ch'ein, 700-790) 43. Yakusan Igen Daioshō (Yüeh-shan Wei-yen, ca. 745-828) 44. Ungan Donjō Daioshō (Yün-yen T'an-shing, 780-841) 45. Tozan Ryokai Daioshō (Tung-shan Liang-chieh, 807-869) 46. Ungo Doyo Daioshō (Yün-chü Tao-ying, gest. 902) 47. Dōan Dōhi Daioshō 48. Dōan Kanshi Daioshō 49. Ryōzan Enkan Daioshō (Liang-shan Yüan-kuan) 50. -
CA Students Urge Assembly Members to Pass AB
May 26, 2021 The Honorable Members of the California State Assembly State Capitol Sacramento, CA 95814 RE: Thousands of CA Public School Students Strongly Urge Support for AB 101 Dear Members of the Assembly, We are a coalition of California high school and college students known as Teach Our History California. Made up of the youth organizations Diversify Our Narrative and GENup, we represent 10,000 youth leaders from across the State fighting for change. Our mission is to ensure that students across California high schools have meaningful opportunities to engage with the vast, diverse, and rich histories of people of color; and thus, we are in deep support of AB101 which will require high schools to provide ethnic studies starting in academic year 2025-26 and students to take at least one semester of an A-G approved ethnic studies course to graduate starting in 2029-30. Our original petition made in support of AB331, linked here, was signed by over 26,000 CA students and adult allies in support of passing Ethnic Studies. Please see appended to this letter our letter in support of AB331, which lists the names of all our original petition supporters. We know AB101 has the capacity to have an immense positive impact on student education, but also on student lives as a whole. For many students, our communities continue to be systematically excluded from narratives presented to us in our classrooms. By passing AB101, we can change the precedent of exclusion and allow millions of students to learn the histories of their peoples. -
AÑO 2016 Aurora María López Medina
BOLETÍN INFORMATIVO DE DERECHO CANÓNICO ASOCIACIÓN ESPAÑOLA DE CANONISTAS P. 356 P. Número 38 2016 MADRID OT 2042331 BOLETÍN INFORMATIVO DE DERECHO CANÓNICO ASOCIACIÓN ESPAÑOLA DE CANONISTAS Número 38 – 2016 – Madrid ISSN: 1887-519X Depósito Legal: NA 3.383-2000 Impresión: Imprenta Kadmos Salamanca ÍNDICE PRESENTACIÓN Lourdes Ruano Espina ...................................................... 7 JUNTA DIRECTIVA ................................................................ 9 I. RESEÑA DE LAS NOVEDADES CANÓNICAS DEL AÑO 2016 Aurora María López Medina ............................................ 11 II. RESEÑA DE DERECHO ESPAÑOL SOBRE EL FAC- TOR RELIGIOSO AÑO 2016 Rosa María Ramírez Navalón .......................................... 37 III. LEGISLACIÓN DE LAS DIÓCESIS ESPAÑOLAS EN EL AÑO 2016 Bernardo Torres Escudero ................................................ 53 IV. NOVEDADES DE JURISPRUDENCIA CANÓNICA Bernardo Torres Escudero ................................................ 75 1. Discurso del Papa al Tribunal de la Rota Romana (21.1.2017) .................................................................. 75 2. Tribunal de la Rota Romana ........................................ 82 V. SELECCIÓN BIBLIOGRÁFICA Y SUMARIOS DE REVISTAS María José Redondo ......................................................... 97 1. Selección de bibliográfica ........................................... 97 a. Derecho Canónico ................................................ 97 b. Derecho Matrimonial ............................................ 100 c. Derecho -
Go Hungary – Go Indonesia: Understanding Culture and Society Book 2
GO HUNGARY – GO INDONESIA: UNDERSTANDING CULTURE AND SOCIETY BOOK 2 Edited by Tamás Novák BUDAPEST BUSINESS SCHOOL UNIVERSITY OF APPLIED SCIENCES Price: USD 39.99 2017 Go Hungary – Go Indonesia: Understanding Culture and Society Book 2 Edited by Tamás Novák GO HUNGARY – GO INDONESIA: UNDERSTANDING CULTURE AND SOCIETY BOOK 2 Edited by Tamás Novák BUDAPEST BUSINESS SCHOOL UNIVERSITY OF APPLIED SCIENCES 2017 GO HUNGARY – GO INDONESIA: UNDERSTANDING CULTURE AND SOCIETY Book 2 ISBN: 978-615-5607-27-1 © Budapest Business School, University of Applied Sciences, 2017 © Authors, 2017 Editor: Tamás Novák Cover design and graphics: János Baksa All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or used in any form or by any means without written consent from the publisher. Publisher: Budapest Business School, University of Applied Sciences Oriental Business and Innovation Center Book Series Contents About the Authors 7 Preface 11 Johanes Radjaban – Eko Setyo Humanika Indonesia – The Land of Languages and Religions 15 Anikó Sebestény Bali – The Island of the Thousand Temples, the Thousand Rice-Fields and the Million Tourists A successful encounter between international tourism and local culture 33 Zoltán Páldi Indonesia through the Eyes of a Hungarian 61 Mangku Purnomo – Barbara Beckert – Heiko Faust Role of Women in Promoting Sustainable Resource Management of Upland Bromo - East Java, Indonesia 83 Zsuzsanna Lantos Population Trends in Indonesia 105 Márta Kiss The “Good” and the “Evil” – Selected Folktales from Indonesia and Hungary 139 Polett Dus The Immersed Steps for Understanding 169 About the Authors Barbara BECKERT Barbara has been a research associate at the Department of Human Geography at the Georg-August-Universität Göttingen, Germany. -
“Becoming a Mother Is Nothing Like You See on TV!”: a Reflexive Autoethnography Exploring Dominant Cultural Ideologies of Motherhood
MORAN, EMILY JEAN, Ph.D. “Becoming a Mother is Nothing Like You See on TV!”: A Reflexive Autoethnography Exploring Dominant Cultural Ideologies of Motherhood. (2014) Directed by Dr. Leila E. Villaverde. 348 pp. Mothers in contemporary American society are bombarded with images and stereotypes about motherhood. Dominant cultural discourses of motherhood draw from essentialist and socially constructed ideologies that are oppressive to women. This study uses autoethnographic research methods to explore the author’s experiences becoming a mother. Feminist theory is utilized to analyze the themes, the silences, and the absences in the autoethnographic stories. Using a feminist theoretical lens allows the author to deconstruct the hegemonic ideologies that shape the experience becoming a mother. I examine the role of dominant ideologies of motherhood in my own life. I explore the practices of maternal gatekeeping paying particular attention to the role of attachment theory in shaping the ideology of intensive mothering. I argue that autoethnography as a research method allows writers and readers to cross borders so long as they practice deep reflexivity and allow themselves to be vulnerable. This research is similar to Van Maanen’s (1988) confessional tale, where the researcher writes about the process that takes place behind the scenes of the research project. In this project, I write an autoethnography and then I describe the process of analysis, vulnerability, and reflexivity while examining the themes and silences within the data. “BECOMING A MOTHER IS NOTHING LIKE YOU SEE ON TV!”: A REFLEXIVE AUTOETHNOGRAPHY EXPLORING DOMINANT CULTURAL IDEOLOGIES OF MOTHERHOOD by Emily Jean Moran A Dissertation Submitted to the the Faculty of The Graduate School at The University of North Carolina at Greensboro in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy Greensboro 2014 Approved by Leila E. -
2004 Annual Report
2004 Annual Report It’s my Good Jobs # Good Works # Good Citizen # Good Investment Senior Officers Financial Highlights M. Susan Chambers (Fiscal years ending January 31,) Executive Vice President, Risk Management, Insurance and Benefits Administration 04 $256.3 Robert F. Connolly Executive Vice President, Marketing and 03 $229.6 Consumer Communications, Wal-Mart Stores Division 02 $204.0 Net Sales (Billions) Thomas M. Coughlin Vice Chairman of the Board 01 $180.8 Douglas J. Degn 00 $156.2 Executive Vice President, Food, Consumables and General Merchandise, Wal-Mart Stores Division David J. Dible 04 $2.03 Executive Vice President, Specialty Group, Wal-Mart Stores Division 03 $1.76 Linda M. Dillman Diluted Earnings Per Share 02 $1.44 Executive Vice President and Chief Information Officer From Continuing Operations Michael T. Duke 01 $1.36 Executive Vice President, President and Chief Executive Officer, Wal-Mart Stores Division 00 $1.21 Joseph J. Fitzsimmons Senior Vice President, Finance and Treasurer Rollin L. Ford 04 9.2% Executive Vice President, Logistics and Supply Chain 03 9.2% David D. Glass Chairman of the Executive Committee of the Board 02 8.4% Return On Assets James H. Haworth Executive Vice President, Operations, 01 8.6% Wal-Mart Stores Division Charles M. Holley 00 9.8% Senior Vice President and Corporate Controller Craig R. Herkert Executive Vice President, 04 21.3% President and Chief Executive Officer,The Americas Thomas D. Hyde 03 20.9% Executive Vice President, Legal and Corporate Affairs and Corporate Secretary 02 19.4% Return On Shareholders’ Equity C. Douglas McMillon Executive Vice President, Merchandising, 01 21.3% SAM’S CLUB 00 22.9% John B.