Category Title Author/Contributor Issue Year Page Ver.2009.01.09 Art

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Category Title Author/Contributor Issue Year Page Ver.2009.01.09 Art Category Title Author/Contributor Issue Year Page ver.2009.01.09 Art Jaquima Evans, Bill Fall 1995 27 Art Heart & Soul Williford, Hollis Fall 1995 62 Art Oleg Stavrowsky Winter 1996 41 Art The Watercolors of William Matthews Summer 1996 25 Art Out on the Range in the west Blake, Buckeye Summer 1997 18 Art Romantic Western Visions of Dave Holl Fall 1997 57 Art Buckeye Blake Summer 1999 12 Art Suzanne Baker Fall 1999 18 Art The Art of Tim Cox Wies, Barbara Spring 2000 57 Art The Art of Jack Swanson Spring 2001 18 Art Preserving the Old West Swenson, Jack Summer 2002 6 Art Remington's Buckaroos Summer 2002 24 Art Photo Images Rogers, Art Summer 2002 54 Art Artistic Activism Edger, Cathy O. Winter 2002 20 Art Zabal Zabel, Larry Summer 2004 58 Art Nevada's High Desert Fox, Patty Spring 2004 32 Art Nature in Bronze Thompson, S.L. Spring 2004 34 Art The Old Enemy Returns Walter, Bruce Spring 2004 35 Art Buckaroos & Cowboys Matthews, William Winter 2004 10 Art Out on the Range Fox, Patty Summer 2005 70 Art An Artful Ranch Hand Gage, Linda D. Spring 2006 34 Art Saturday Morning Heroes Kimball, Spencer Summer 2006 48 Art A Winter's Tale Matthews, William Winter 2006 42 Art The Quiet Season Matthews, William Winter 2007 34 Art Jack Swanson Cowboy Artist Summer 2007 44 History A Partnership for Profit Hedges, Candace Spring 1995 28 History History of Grazing on Public Lands Thomas, Heather S. Spring 1995 50 History A Voice Crying in the Wilderness Study Area Menzies, Richard Summer 1995 10 History Out on the Range in 1905-From the Archives-Tom Robinson Fall 1995 13 Page 1 History Trails & Tribulations Bopp, Suzanne B. Fall 1995 22 History Life in the Peace Zone Chase, Alston Fall 1995 61 History True Vaqueros Murrison, Teri T. Spring 1996 19 History Exodus Grant, Eric Spring 1997 10 History A Lady in the Wild West Carlin, Sherril-Steele Fall 1997 12 History Lewis & Clark Winter on the Coast Carlin, Sherril-Steele Winter 1998 24 History Ghost Shrimp on the High Plains Frasier, Chris Winter 1998 34 History Death of a Hardware Store Fox, Carolyn Summer 1998 52 History Winnemucca Hotel Angier, Larry Summer 1998 66 History History of Grazing on Public Lands Thomas, Heather S. Winter 1999 20 History The Price of Beef Flournoy, Rodney Winter 1999 23 History The West Remembered Routson, Rafael Spring 2000 46 History Lewis & Clark: Cowboys Erickson, Vern Summer 2001 74 History The Disappointed Bunch Walley, J. Zane Spring 2001 60 History Lewis & Clark-Gunfighters Jenkinson, Clay Fall 2001 6 History Big Lone Star Win Goodson, Jeff Fall 2001 34W History Remembering Black Canyon Carroll, Frank Fall 2002 11 History Undaunted Stewardship on Montana's Lewis & Clark Trail Daubert, Tom Fall 2002 89 History Nature Faking-Teddy Roosevelt Nelson, Barney Spring 2002 12 History Time & River Flowing Ochenski, George Spring 2002 22 History Trashing Teddy's Legacy Findley, Tim Spring 2002 29 History A Pioneer Memory Lord, Bertie Fall 2003 15 History The Way It Was Bennett, Marjorie Fall 2003 56 History Everything for the Vaquero-Legacy of G.S. Garcia Durham, Griff Summer 2003 14 History A Sense of Place Howell, Jim Spring 2003 33 History America's lst Forester Thomas, Jack Ward Winter 2003 10 History 1882 in the Bitterroot Lord, Herbert W. Winter 2003 46 History Time in a Bottle Menzies, Richard Spring 2004 72 History Dakota's Recovering Spirit Jenkinson, Clay Fall 2005 10 History Letter from Fontainebleau, Oct. 28, 1785 Fall 2006 63 History The Last Drive Vail, Ned Winter 2007 10 History Donn Davies Rawhider-1916-2005 Zimmer, Stephen Winter 2007 22 History Grazing Clan-Sheep Biery, Pamela Winter 2007 28 Page 2 History The 4th Annual Old Sheepherders' Party Boyle, Judy Summer 2007 78 History Ned Buntline's History of the American West Grady, Janet L. Winter 2007 26 History Ranch Rides Pinkerton, Alan Winter 2007 34 History There is a Sorrow Here that Weeping Cannot Symbolize Walley, J. Zane Fall 2008 27 Just for Fun Ultimate Recycler Whitney, Ruth L. Summer 1992 12 Just for Fun Just Tell Me Where It Hurts Webb, Harry E. Summer 1992 40 Just for Fun All Bull Pelton, R.W. Spring 1993 19 Just for Fun The Cowboy & the Explorers Bilodeaux, Jean Spring 1994 13 Just for Fun Always a Step Away from Disaster Peterson, Gwen Summer 1994 43 Just for Fun Something Smells Funny Here & I Don't Think It's Bread Hall, Gene Fall 1994 13 Just for Fun Wanna Be Morris, Frank "Two Jump" Fall 1994 47 Just for Fun Red Shirt and the Search DePaoli, Ed Fall 1994 54 Just for Fun Predator Friendly Black, Baxter Fall 1994 54 Just for Fun Well, They Did Say That But Nelson, Barney Spring 1995 12 Just for Fun Dude Morrison, Dan Summer 1995 20 Just for Fun Ole Bossy Hisbel, Ike Fall 1995 18 Just for Fun One Man's Meat Tritten, Larry Fall 1995 42 Just for Fun After the Honeymoon Bardwell, John Winter 1996 12 Just for Fun The Bridges of Lander Co. Menzies, Richard Spring 1996 38 Just for Fun It's Hard to Outrun a Plane Black, Baxter Spring 1996 45 Just for Fun The Mother of all Veggies Dufurrena, Carolyn Summer 1996 26 Just for Fun Marty & the Dance of the Dress Petersen, Gwen Fall 1996 47 Just for Fun The Overflowing Trough Pitts, Lee Spring 1997 27 Just for Fun "Baby"-an Elk who thinks he's a horse Badgley, Jan Summer 1997 14 Just for Fun Meditation on a Hat That Went South Menzies, Richard Summer 1997 21 Just for Fun Carhart Cowboy Black, Baxter Summer 1997 55 Just for Fun Chic or Sheep? Petersen, Gwen Fall 1997 55 Just for Fun Let a Vegetarian Take You to Dinner Dagget, Dan Winter 1998 8 Just for Fun Owls and Beer (reprint from the East Oregonian) Winter 1998 17 Just for Fun Boots & Sandals Hall, Dennis Spring 1998 14 Just for Fun Considering the Bovine Bardwell, John Spring 1998 31 Just for Fun Equine Therapy Higby, Lisa Fall 1998 25 Page 3 Just for Fun That Look in the Eye McMahan, Gary Fall 1998 35 Just for Fun The Ride Rawlings, Timm Winter 1999 10 Just for Fun Babbitt in Wonderland Pombo, Richard Winter 1999 31 Just for Fun Ho Ho Hobo Pitts, Lee Winter 1999 47 Just for Fun Winning the West with a Song Findley, Tim Winter 1999 66 Just for Fun Texas Hospitality Sutherland Lin Summer 1999 11 Just for Fun All Purpose Jacknives Ain't Just for Whittlin Taylor, Ryan M. Spring 1999 27 Just for Fun Lost in Oklahoma Black, Baxter Fall 1999 15 Just for Fun Don't Make Me Do What I Done in Texas Sutherland Lin Fall 1999 56 Just for Fun BUD Black, Baxter Fall 2000 13 Just for Fun Familiar Things Pitts, Lee Fall 2000 27 Just for Fun I Wove You Billy Leftwich, Bill Fall 2000 49 Just for Fun Gate Ethics Rawlins, Timm Summer 2000 13 Just for Fun Hammer, Please! Taylor, Ryan M. Summer 2000 69 Just for Fun Moonrise Black, Baxter Winter 2000 13 Just for Fun Dropping off Turtles Bardwell, John Winter 2000 24 Just for Fun Wife in the Ranch Lane Lee, Debbie Spring 2000 20 Just for Fun Quicksand & Quickwits Meyer, Dean Winter 2001 7 Just for Fun Wholly Cow! & a Few Sheep Thrills Weis, Barbara Summer 2001 15 Just for Fun Bangtail Bob or Bouncing Betsy Bardwell, John Summer 2001 53 Just for Fun A Kicker for the Vikings Meyer, Dean Fall 2001 20 Just for Fun Paradise Lost Menzies, Richard Summer 2002 12 Just for Fun A Horse Matters Black, Baxter Summer 2002 32 Just for Fun Fast Times at Uncle Bucks Marine, David Fall 2003 46 Just for Fun Sonny & Easter Sefton, Joann Fall 2003 49 Just for Fun The Branding Christensen, Marion Kem Spring 2003 49 Just for Fun Mules are Peculiar Black, Baxter Spring 2003 55 Just for Fun Fries with That Taylor, Ryan M. Winter 2003 13 Just for Fun Hay Crew Lunch Dufurrena, Carolyn Summer 2004 42 Just for Fun Buckaroo Wisdom Bardwell, John Spring 2004 14 Just for Fun Some of my Best Friends Smell Pitts, Lee Spring 2004 65 Just for Fun Wedding Details Taylor, Ryan M. Winter 2005 13 Just for Fun What Would Davy Say? Findley, Tim Winter 2005 28 Page 4 Just for Fun Send'Em to Reform School Lilley, Floy Winter 2005 35 Just for Fun The Anvil & the Telephone Pole Black, Baxter Summer 2005 21 Just for Fun Ladies At Work/Don't Interrupt Petersen, Gwen Summer 2005 40 Just for Fun My last bucking horse Meyer,Dean Summer 2005 65 Just for Fun Doggy Perfume Petersen, Gwen Fall 2005 22 Just for Fun Cowboys & Other Fictional Characters Pitts, Lee Fall 2005 22 Just for Fun The Mouse that Isn't O'Toole, Sharon S. Spring 2006 10 Just for Fun Wannabe Sullivan, Terry Spring 2006 39 Just for Fun Towing Burkhart, L.T. Spring 2006 76 Just for Fun Political Science for Dummies Bardwell, John Summer 2006 10 Just for Fun My Close Encounter With the World's Fastest Indian Menzies, Richard Summer 2006 32 Just for Fun How to Interview a Wolf Kiley, Bill Summer 2006 62 Just for Fun Vegetation-Eradication Program Bardwell, John Fall 2006 16 Just for Fun Technical Lapses Black, Baxter Fall 2006 89 Just for Fun Rascal & Miss Pinky Petersen, Gwen Winter 2006 21 Just for Fun Snakes, Sense & the Florist Service Thomas, John Jr.
Recommended publications
  • Ranching Catalogue 
    Catalogue Ten –Part Four THE RANCHING CATALOGUE VOLUME TWO D-G Dorothy Sloan – Rare Books box 4825 ◆ austin, texas 78765-4825 Dorothy Sloan-Rare Books, Inc. Box 4825, Austin, Texas 78765-4825 Phone: (512) 477-8442 Fax: (512) 477-8602 Email: [email protected] www.sloanrarebooks.com All items are guaranteed to be in the described condition, authentic, and of clear title, and may be returned within two weeks for any reason. Purchases are shipped at custom- er’s expense. New customers are asked to provide payment with order, or to supply appropriate references. Institutions may receive deferred billing upon request. Residents of Texas will be charged appropriate state sales tax. Texas dealers must have a tax certificate on file. Catalogue edited by Dorothy Sloan and Jasmine Star Catalogue preparation assisted by Christine Gilbert, Manola de la Madrid (of the Autry Museum of Western Heritage), Peter L. Oliver, Aaron Russell, Anthony V. Sloan, Jason Star, Skye Thomsen & many others Typesetting by Aaron Russell Offset lithography by David Holman at Wind River Press Letterpress cover and book design by Bradley Hutchinson at Digital Letterpress Photography by Peter Oliver and Third Eye Photography INTRODUCTION here is a general belief that trail driving of cattle over long distances to market had its Tstart in Texas of post-Civil War days, when Tejanos were long on longhorns and short on cash, except for the worthless Confederate article. Like so many well-entrenched, traditional as- sumptions, this one is unwarranted. J. Evetts Haley, in editing one of the extremely rare accounts of the cattle drives to Califor- nia which preceded the Texas-to-Kansas experiment by a decade and a half, slapped the blame for this misunderstanding squarely on the writings of Emerson Hough.
    [Show full text]
  • The American West C1835-C1895
    Ecclesfield School History Department The American West c1835-c1895 History GCSE (9-1) Revision Booklet This topic is tested on Paper 2, with the Elizabeth topic The exam lasts for 1 hour and 45 minutes There are 32 marks for American West (Section A) You should spend 50 minutes on this section Paper 2 1h45: American West and Elizabeth (8th June, PM) Name:________________________ History Teacher: ________________ 1 The American West, c1835-c1895 What do I need to know for this topic? Key Details Red Amber Green topic (Need to (Nearly (Nailed revise a there) it) lot) • Plains Indians: beliefs and way of life (survival, land and war) • The Permanent Indian Frontier (Indian Removal Act 1830) and the Indian Appropriations Act (1851) • Migration: Oregon Trail (1836 onwards), California Gold Rush (1849) • Migration: Donner Party and Mormons (1846-7) • The development and problems of white settlement farming • Reasons for conflict and tension between settlers and Indians – the Fort Laramie 62 Treaty (1851) - The early settlement of the West, of the settlement early The • Problems of lawlessness and attempts to tackle this 1. 1. c1835 • Significance of the Civil War and post-war reconstruction (Homestead Act 1862, Pacific Railroad Act 1862, First Transcontinental Railroad 1869) • Homesteaders’ solutions to problems: new technology, the Timber Culture Act 1873 and spread of the railroad • Continued problems of law and order • The cattle industry (Iliff, McCoy, 76 - Goodnight, the significance of Abilene) • The impact of changes in ranching
    [Show full text]
  • SORTED by CODE Books Are in the Same Order on the Shelf As They Are on This List
    SORTED BY CODE Books are in the same order on the shelf as they are on this list. PLEASE return to the correct spot. If you check someone out but the book is somehow not on the list, please add it to this list. If a call number is wrong, please fix it in the book and double check it with the list. Please make sure any books taken out are checked out. There is a box on the back table for when people are looking, any book they take off the shelf should be placed here for us to reshelve, to avoid disorganization. Last Updated: 04/04/18 by Grey Code Title Author Masters Thesis 040.DIN.1 Spiralling Webs of Relation: Movements Toward An Indigenist Criticism Nova, Joanne Rochelle Di Worldeaters: An Ecosophical Critique of Western Industrial Civilization in 040.Dun.1 Selected Works of Linda Hogan and Ursula K. Le Guin Dunn, Aimee 040.GRI.1 Spanish Occupation of the Hasinai Country 1690-1737, The Griffith, William Joyce Serials Regarding Native North Americans 042.CHA.1 Reference Library of Native North America Vol. 1 Champagne, Duane 042.CHA.2 Reference Library of Native North America Vol. 2 Champagne, Duane 042.CHA.3 Reference Library of Native North America Vol. 3 Champagne, Duane 042.CHA.4 Reference Library of Native North America Vol. 4 Champagne, Duane Cambridge History of the Native Peoples of the Americas: North America, 042.TRI.1 The Trigger, Bruce G. - volume editor Cambridge History of the Native Peoples of the Americas: North America, 042.TRI.2 The Trigger, Bruce G.
    [Show full text]
  • NMU Center for Native American Studies Resource Room Book Collection Sort by Code Updated September 9, 2017
    NMU Center for Native American Studies Resource Room Book Collection Sort by Code Updated September 9, 2017 CALL NUMBER TITLE AUTHOR OR EDITOR 007.Gom.1 Native American Music Directory Gombert, Gregory 007.IAC.1 Source Directory Indian Arts & Crafts Board 007.MCA.1 Native American Crafts Directory McAlister, Diane L. 007.NNA.1 Native American Directory National Native American Coorperative 008.CHA.1 Native North American Almanac, The Champagne, Duane Native North American Almanac: A Reference Work on Native North Americans in the United States and Canada, 008.CHA.2 The Champagne, Duane 008.Dar.1 How We Live Now Darion, Ellen 008.Dut.1 Indians of the Southwest Dutton, Bertha - editor 008.Fol.1 America's Ancient Treasures Folsom, Franklin 008.Fra.1 Many Nations Frazier, Patrick - editor 008.MOR.1 1992 International Directory & Resource Guide Morris, Karin Anishinabe Michi Gami (People of the Great Lakes): A 008.NAF.1 Guidebook for Public Policymakers Native American Fellows Anishinabe Michi Gami (People of the Great Lakes): A 008.NAF.2 Guidebook for Public Policymakers Native American Fellows Anishinabe Michi Gami (People of the Great Lakes): A 008.NAF.3 Guidebook for Public Policymakers Native American Fellows 008.PHS.1 Gathering of Native Americans (GONA) 008.RUS.1 Native American FAQs Handbook Russell, George 008.RUS.2 Native American FAQs Handbook Russle, Geroge How to Tell the Difference: A Guide to Evaluating Children's Slapin, Beverly, Seale, Doris, and 008.SLA.1 Books for Anti-Indian Bias Gonzales, Rosemary Everything You Wanted
    [Show full text]
  • January 2015, There Was Also a Steampunk Vehicle May 2016, September 2016)
    CONTENTS 3-4 COVER FEATURE Southern Missouri Rangers Fifth Annual Women’s Wild West Shootout 6-7 EDITORIALS How do we Stop the Loss of Members and Expand our Membership? Another Perspective Another Way of Looking at This SASS Divisional Championships Single Action Shooting Society® 8-9 COSTUMING CORNER 215 Cowboy Way, Edgewood, NM 87015 Wild Wild West and a Steampunk Convention 505-843-1320 • Fax 877-770-8687 © 2019 10-11 WILD BUNCH All rights reserved Oklahoma State Wild Bunch Championship 2018 The Cowboy Chronicle Magazine is Designed and Printed by 12-16 GUNS & GEAR The Single Action Shooting Society® Visit the SASS web site at: Dispatches From Camp Baylor—The Legend of “Heaven” and “Hell” www.sassnet.com BAMM Rifles 17-29 ANNUAL MATCHES EDITORIAL STAFF Rattlesnake Gulch Roundup 2018 Cowford Regulators 2018 Annual Match EDITOR-IN-CHIEF A Dark Day on The Santa Fe 2018 Skinny First Annual Shootout at The OK Corral SASS Pennsylvania State Championship 2018 MANAGING EDITOR Michigan State Championship Range War 2018 Misty Moonshine Appalachian Showdown XXVII EDITORS EMERITUS 30-35 PRODUCT REVIEW Cimarron’s Uberti 1858 Conversion Tex & Cat Ballou Swab-Its® Bore-Sticks™ ADVERTISING MANAGER 36-44 FICTION Square Deal Jim Small Creek: Kid Galena Rides—Chapter 9 410-531-5456 | [email protected] 45 HEALTH & FITNESS GRAPHIC DESIGN Stretching for Cowboy Action Shooters™ Mac Daddy 46-48 PROFILES 2018 Scholarship Recipient Diamond Kate, SASS #95104 STAFF WRITERS The Beginning of the End - Essay by Diamond Kate, SASS #95104 Big Dave, The Capgun Kid, Capt. George SASS Alias — Possibly the Best Part of the Game! Baylor, Col.
    [Show full text]
  • Central Oregon Range Wars
    Central Oregon Range Wars By Unknown Following the forced re-settlement of the region’s Indian groups onto reservations after the Civil War, the grasslands of Eastern and Central Oregon became available for agriculture and livestock. As “open ranges,” these lands were traditionally available for all locals to share. The 1880s and 1890s proved particularly suited to the development of large cattle herds and sheep flocks as new rail lines allowed producers to ship both wool and cattle to the expanding markets across the United States. As a result, the number of sheep and cattle east of the Cascades increased dramatically. Since no legal statutes existed at the time to restrict usage, the rapid, unregulated exploitation of the grasslands resulted in overgrazing. Between 1885 and 1910 the number of sheep in Wasco County was approximately 130,000. Given such numbers, the range was unable to regenerate itself, and became increasingly degraded. By the late 1890s, growing tensions between cattle ranchers and sheepmen over control of the open ranges led to a series of disputes known as the “range wars.” Cattlemen themselves held sheepmen in contempt for two specific reasons. Unlike cattle, sheep will eat weeds, also known as forbs, in addition to native grasses. As a result, the sheep stripped a landscape of its plant life, leaving nothing edible behind. Additionally, the equestrian culture of the cattlemen viewed sheepherders with disdain because the herdsmen tended animals on foot rather than on horseback. The expansion of wheat farming in Central and Eastern Oregon during this same period exacerbated competition for the range lands.
    [Show full text]
  • WAR in the WEST the Bundy Ranch Standoff and the American Radical Right
    WAR IN THE WEST The Bundy Ranch Standoff and the American Radical Right A Special Report from the Southern Poverty Law Center Montgomery, Alabama JULY 2014 southern poverty law center WAR IN THE WEST The Bundy Ranch Standoff and the American Radical Right THE SOUTHERN POVERTY LAW CENTER is a nonprofit organization that combats hate, intolerance and discrimination through education and litigation. Its Intelligence Project, which prepared this report and also produces the quarterly investigative magazine Intelligence Report, tracks the activities of hate groups and the nativist movement and monitors militia and other extremist antigovernment activity. Its Teaching Tolerance project helps foster respect and understanding in the classroom. Its litigation arm files lawsuits against hate groups for the violent acts of their members. MEDIA AND GENERAL INQUIRIES Mark Potok or Heidi Beirich Southern Poverty Law Center 400 Washington Ave., Montgomery, Ala. (334) 956-8200 www.splcenter.org This report was prepared by the staff of the Intelligence Project of the Southern Poverty Law Center. The Center is supported entirely by private donations. No government funds are involved. © Southern Poverty Law Center. All rights reserved. southern poverty law center about the report Written by Ryan Lenz and Mark Potok Edited by Heidi Beirich Designed by Russell Estes, Shannon Anderson and Sunny Paulk Cover photos by Jim Urquhart/Reuters/Corbis and Ryan Lenz southern poverty law center table of contents Executive Summary 5 Guns of April: The Bundy Standoff 8 Backgrounding Bundy: The Movement 18 Land Use and the ‘Patriots’: A Timeline 22 southern poverty law center After the climbdown: Militiamen and other support- ers of Cliven Bundy head for the corral where govern- ment agents were holding the Nevadan’s cattle.
    [Show full text]
  • Horse Todos a B Alliebelle 23.072 a Big To'do 26.392 a Bit
    HORSE TODOS A B ALLIEBELLE 23.072 A BIG TO'DO 26.392 A BIT STORMY 25.592 A BOY NAMED EM 28.675 A BRILLIANT IDEA 31.402 A BRUSH OF BEAUTY 21.393 A CAT NAMED SNIPE 28.551 A CAT THAT FLIES 25.368 A CENTURIAN 29.172 A DEVILISH RIDE 24.916 A DIEHL 34.923 A DOS PUNTAS 42.616 A E PHI SENSATION 23.497 A FLEET OF NINE 23.302 A GIRL NAMED MARIA 29.537 A GLASS OF WATER 22.147 A GOLDEN JET 22.575 A GRAND N' MORE 19.560 A JEALOUS WOMAN 36.719 A LA MODA 28.673 A LIL DUMAANI 27.721 A LISTER 25.068 A LITTLE AT A TIME 26.233 A LITTLE OFF 31.467 A LITTLE TOO LATE 25.373 A LOT OF ACTION 26.490 A LOT OF MON 27.211 A MATTEROFSPEAKING 24.041 A MCCOUGHTRY 25.178 A MI ZORRITO 44.348 A MILLION FIELDS 25.005 A MOMENT IN TIME 29.541 A NATIONALTREASURE 33.592 A NATURAL 29.383 A NEW DAWN 25.094 A NEW YORK PHILLIE 23.229 A P MINK 29.223 A P VALOR 30.045 A PERFECT SQUEEZE 28.415 A PINT FOR MARY 26.393 A PLUS TOPPER 28.873 A QUESTION OF TIME 21.185 A RACING DELIGHT 28.495 A RANG A TANG 26.600 A ROCKY STORM 21.775 A ROD 33.263 A ROGUE SNUCK IN 24.666 A ROYAL FLUSH A 18.962 A SHE'S ADORABLE 33.925 A SHOT AWAY 28.920 A SINGLE MAN 21.532 A SMART JUDGE 23.806 A STAR IS GORN 23.954 A STORY OF REVENGE 29.442 A STUDENT 29.494 A T MONEY 30.054 A TOE BY THREE 25.800 A TOUT L'HEURE 42.875 A TRIPP ROYALE 29.433 A USED GUN 23.246 A WALK ABOVE 25.728 A WINK AND A SMILE 32.705 A WISH FOR KOSUTE 20.514 A WORD TO THE WISE 30.596 A Z WARRIOR 35.400 A'INTYOUDREAMIN 22.520 A.
    [Show full text]
  • China Naval Modernization: Implications for U.S
    China Naval Modernization: Implications for U.S. Navy Capabilities—Background and Issues for Congress (name redacted) Specialist in Naval Affairs May 12, 2017 Congressional Research Service 7-.... www.crs.gov RL33153 China Naval Modernization: Implications for U.S. Navy Capabilities Summary China is building a modern and regionally powerful navy with a limited but growing capability for conducting operations beyond China’s near-seas region. The question of how the United States should respond to China’s military modernization effort, including its naval modernization effort, is a key issue in U.S. defense planning. Observers of Chinese and U.S. military forces view China’s improving naval capabilities as posing a potential challenge in the Western Pacific to the U.S. Navy’s ability to achieve and maintain control of blue-water ocean areas in wartime—the first such challenge the U.S. Navy has faced since the end of the Cold War. More broadly, these observers view China’s naval capabilities as a key element of an emerging broader Chinese military challenge to the long- standing status of the United States as the leading military power in the Western Pacific. China’s naval modernization effort encompasses a broad array of platform and weapon acquisition programs, including anti-ship ballistic missiles (ASBMs), anti-ship cruise missiles (ASCMs), submarines, surface ships, aircraft, and supporting C4ISR (command and control, communications, computers, intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance) systems. China’s naval modernization effort
    [Show full text]
  • April 2020 New Releases
    APRIL 2020 NEW RELEASES gale.com/thorndikepress CONTENTS ABOUT THIS CATALOG African-American ...................... 14 SIMULTANEOUS STANDING ORDERS Basic .............................................. 3 RELEASE TITLES Numbers appearing with titles Did you know that Thorndike indicate the Standing Order tier Bill’s Bookshelf ............................. 6 Press publishes more than 250 level. For Standing Order plan Biography and Memoir .............. 7 Large Print titles simultaneously and tier descriptions, go to our Christian Fiction ........................ 12 with the original publisher’s website at gale.com/thorndike/ Christian Historical Fiction ....... 13 standard print edition each year? standingorders. Everyone can read Large Print, Christian Mystery ...................... 13 All Standing Order prices listed in so buy additional copies of those this catalog include discount. Not Christian Romance ................... 12 high-demand titles in a format all available in Canada. Christian Select ......................... 16 your patrons can enjoy. Clean Reads .............................. 11 SERIES COMPLETE OFFERS PLEASE NOTE Core ............................................... 4 Whenever we publish a title that Actual Large Print covers may be Distribution Titles ................. 17–18 completes a series, you save $$. different from those appearing Editor’s Choice ............................ 16 You can purchase a complete in this catalog. Book prices and release dates may change Genre Value (Hardcover) ........... 16 series at
    [Show full text]
  • AN ABSTRACT of the THESIS of Brad D. Foster for the Degree of Master of Arts in English Presented on July 16, 2007. Title
    AN ABSTRACT OF THE THESIS OF Brad D. Foster for the degree of Master of Arts in English presented on July 16, 2007. Title: Constructing a Heroic Identity: Masculinity and the Western Film Abstract approved: ____________________________________________________________________ Jon Lewis This thesis employs the study of gender to demonstrate how recent Hollywood western films have constructed a hero that is reflective of contemporary beliefs regarding masculinity. Beginning with a New Historicist approach at studying gender, this work first considers the construction of masculinity in post World War II America and traces the evolution of the western hero’s masculinity from its iconic state in the 1950’s through it trial during second wave feminism, its rebuilding during the Reagan years, and its refinement within recent Hollywood films. This thesis considers each period of western films as a representation and reflection of its current culture, and as a result ultimately argues that the western genre has recently endeavored to perpetuate the conservative cultural view that a marital union is the ideal in contemporary American society. In tracing the progression of masculinity in the western hero, through cultural and textual readings, this thesis concludes that today’s paragon of the masculine western hero is more subject to domesticity and as such is more likely than its 1950s predecessors to accept marital living. © Copyright by Brad D. Foster July 16, 2007 All Rights Reserved Constructing Heroic Identities: Masculinity and the Western Film by Brad D. Foster A THESIS submitted to Oregon State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Presented July 16, 2007 Commencement June 2008 Master of Arts thesis of Brad D.
    [Show full text]
  • The American West; 1835-95 Key Topic 3: Conflict and Conquest, C1876-1895
    The American West; 1835-95 Key Topic 3: Conflict and conquest, c1876-1895 Background Information In this module you will revise: Changes in farming, the cattle industry and settlement (The impact of new technology and farming methods, changes in farming including; the winter of 1886-87 and the end of the open range, Continued growth of settlement; the Ex- oduster movement and Kansas (1879), the Oklahoma Land Rush of 1893) Conflict and tension (How effective were the solutions to problems of law and order; Sheriffs and marshals, Significance of Billy the Kid, OK Corral (1881), Wyatt Earp, the Johnson County War of 1892, conflicts at; The Battle of Little Big Horn (1876) and Wounded Knee Massacre (1890)) The Plains Indians; the destruction of their way of life (The hunting and ex- termination of the buffalo, reservations, changing government attitudes towards the Natives, including the Dawes Act (1887) and the closure of the Indian Fron- tier) K.T 3.1 Changes in farming, the cattle industry and settlement Changes to the cattle industry Through the 1870s so much money went into the cattle industry that open ranges became overpopulated . This resulted in cattle becom- ing weak as a result of hunger because there was not enough grass to feed all the cattle. This problem was made were by: Fall in demand: beef was so plentiful that shops lowered their prices which meant the price paid for cattle fell. Conditions of ranches: overpopulated ranches put huge pressure on the land and the grass never had time to grow leaving the land dry and withered.
    [Show full text]