Monthly Acquisitions List -- January 2019 a -- General

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Monthly Acquisitions List -- January 2019 a -- General MONTHLY ACQUISITIONS LIST -- JANUARY 2019 A -- GENERAL B -- PHILOSOPHY. PSYCHOLOGY. RELIGION C -- AUXILIARY SCIENCES OF HISTORY D -- WORLD HISTORY AND HISTORY OF EUROPE, ASIA, AFRICA, AUSTRALIA, NEW ZEALAND, ETC E -- HISTORY OF THE AMERICAS E185.86 W.E.B. Du Bois’s data portraits : visualizing Black [Amherst, Massachusetts] : The .D846 2018 America : the color line at the turn of the W.E.B. Du Bois Center at the twentieth century / Whitney Battle-Baptiste and University of Massachusetts Britt Rusert, editors. Amherst ; Hudson, NY : Princeton Architectural Press, [2018] F -- HISTORY OF THE AMERICAS G -- GEOGRAPHY. ANTHROPOLOGY. RECREATION GF75 .E49 Anthropocene : a very short introduction / Erle C. Oxford, United Kingdom ; New 2018 Ellis. York : Oxford University Press, 2018. GR550 .W39 Fairy tale : a very short introduction / Marina Oxford, United Kingdom Oxford 2018 Warner. University Press, 2018. H -- SOCIAL SCIENCES HD30.22 .B38 Managerial economics and business strategy / New York, NY : McGraw-Hill 2017 Michael R. Baye, Bert Elwert Professor of Business Education, [2017] Economics & Public Policy, Kelley School of Business, Indiana University, Jeffrey T. Prince, Associate Professor of Business Economics & Public Policy, Harold A. Poling Chair in Strategic Management, Kelley School of Business, Indiana University. HD30.22 .M32 Managerial economics : applications, strategy, and Stamford, CT, USA : CENGAGE 2014 tactics / James R. McGuigan, JRM Investments, R. Learning, [2014] Charles Moyer, University of Louisville, Frederick H. deB. Harris, School of Business, Wake Forrest University. HF5549.5 .M5 The culture map : decoding how people think, New York : PublicAffairs, [2014] 2014 lead, and get things done across cultures / Erin Meyer. HM741 .N45 Social media and morality : losing our self control / Cambridge, UK ; New York : 2018 Lisa S. Nelson, University of Pittsburgh. Cambridge University Press, 2018. HM851 The server : a media history from the present to New Haven : Yale University .K7313 2018 the Baroque / Markus Krajewski ; translated and Press, [2018] with an introduction by Ilinca Iurascu. HM1111 The messages we send : social signals and Oxford, United Kingdom : .F475 2017 storytelling / G.R.F. Ferrari. Oxford University Press, 2017. HQ1075 Gender : your guide : a gender-friendly primer on New York : Adams Media, .A3577 2018 what to know, what to say, and what to do in the 2018. new gender culture / Lee Airton, PHD. J -- POLITICAL SCIENCE JK554 .G35 The American presidency and entertainment Lanham, Maryland : Lexington 2017 media : how technology affects political Books, [2017] communication / Thomas Gallagher. K -- LAW L -- EDUCATION M -- MUSIC AND BOOKS ON MUSIC N -- FINE ARTS N6494.A25 Ninth Street women : Lee Krasner, Elaine de New York : Little, Brown and G33 2018 Kooning, Grace Hartigan, Joan Mitchell, and Helen Company, [2018] Frankenthaler : five painters and the movement that changed modern art / Mary Gabriel. NK3785 .B87 Global clay : themes in world ceramic traditions / Bloomington, Indiana : Indiana 2017 John A. Burrison. University Press, [2017] P -- LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE P96.L5 Z54 2018 The mediated mind : affect, ephemera, and New York : Fordham University consumerism in the nineteenth century / Susan Press, 2018. Zieger. P96.S58 C66 Turning the page : storytelling as activism in New Brunswick, New Jersey : 2018 queer film and media / David R. Coon. Rutgers University Press, [2018] PN1009.5.E25 Beasts at bedtime : revealing the environmental Chicago : The University of H46 2018 wisdom in children’s literature / Liam Heneghan. Chicago Press, 2018. PN5474 .T74 Rhetorics of resistance : opposition journalism in Pittsburgh, Pa. : University of 2018 apartheid South Africa / Bryan Trabold. Pittsburgh Press, [2018] PR6102.U76 Milkman / Anna Burns. London : Faber & Faber, 2018. M55 2018 PS661 .R46 Representative American speeches, 2017-2018 / Amenia, New York : Grey 2018 [compiled by Grey House Publishing]. House Publishing, 2018. PS3562.E42 A6 So far so good : final poems: 2014-2018 / Ursula Port Townsend, Washington : 2018 K. Le Guin. Copper Canyon Press, [2018] PS3562.O4886 The Waverly Gallery / Kenneth Lonergan. New York : Grove Press, c2000. W38 2000 PS3564.U485 The friend : a novel / Sigrid Nunez. New York, New York : F75 2018 Riverhead Books, 2018. PS3573.A798 Wendy Wasserstein / Jill Dolan. Ann Arbor : University of Z65 2017 Michigan Press, [2017] PS3602.R53183 A lucky man : stories / Jamel Brinkley. Minneapolis, Minnesota : A6 2018 Graywolf Press, [2018] PS3607.R6344 Florida / Lauren Groff New York, New York : A6 2018 Riverhead Books, an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC, 2018 PS3608.O248 Where the dead sit talking / Brandon Hobson. New York, NY : Soho Press, W48 2018 [2018] PS3618.E43565 Indecency / Justin Phillip Reed. Minneapolis : Coffee House 3 I53 2018 Press, [2018] Q -- SCIENCE QC178 .B56 Gravity! : the quest for gravitational waves / Oxford, United Kingdom : 2018 Pierre Binétruy. Oxford University Press, 2018. R -- MEDICINE RC423 .F646 Motor speech disorders : diagnosis and San Diego, CA : Plural 2018 treatment / Donald B. Freed. Publishing, Inc., [2018] RC424 .M194 Clinical decision making in fluency disorders / San Diego, CA : Plural 2018 Walter H. Manning, Anthony DiLollo. Publishing, Inc., [2018] S -- AGRICULTURE T -- TECHNOLOGY T11 .A37 2018 The craft of scientific writing / Michael Alley. New York, NY : Springer, [2018] U -- MILITARY SCIENCE V -- NAVAL SCIENCE Z -- BIBLIOGRAPHY. LIBRARY SCIENCE. INFORMATION RESOURCES (GENERAL) Z694.15.R47 Maxwell’s handbook for RDA, resource Chicago : ALA Editions, an M39 2013 description & access : explaining and illustrating imprint of the American Library RDA: resource description and access using Association, 2013. MARC21 / Robert L. Maxwell. Special Collections E99.C6 R54 Claiming Turtle Mountain’s constitution : the Chapel Hill : University of 2017 history, legacy, and future of a tribal nation’s North Carolina Press, [2017] founding documents / Keith Richotte Jr. F591 .I84 2018 Pacing Dakota / Thomas D. Isern. Fargo, ND : North Dakota State University Press, [2018] F595 .M55 2018 Operation Snowbound : life behind the blizzards Fargo, ND : North Dakota State of 1949 / by David W. Mills. University Press, [2018] F642.M7 B378 Fort Abraham Lincoln / Aaron L. Barth. Charleston, South Carolina : 2018 Arcadia Publishing, [2018] F644.M5 A5347 Minot, North Dakota and area history, Vol. 1, [Minot, N.D.] : Sunshine 2017 1880-1940 / by Bruce Anderson. Creations, ©2017. F644.M5 A5347 Minot, North Dakota and area history, Vol. 2, [Minot, N.D.] : Sunshine 2018 1900-1949 / by Bruce Anderson. Creations, ©2018. F644.M5 Minot, North Dakota and area history, Vol. 3 : [Minot, N.D.] : Sunshine A53477 2018 the fabulous 50s / by Bruce Anderson. Creations, ©2018. GV707 .K65 North Dakota tough : unknown and forgotten [Fargo, North Dakota] : [Jeff 2018 stories from a rural state / Jeff Kolpack. Kolpack], 2018. HD9567.N65 Great American outpost : dreamers, mavericks, New York : PublicAffairs, 2018. R36 2018 and the making of an oil frontier / Maya Rao. PS3553.A4887 Songs of horses and lovers / poetry by Madelyne Fargo, ND : North Dakota State S66 2018 Camrud. University Press, [2018] PS3602.R668 Crude : poems / Taylor Brorby. North Liberty, Iowa, USA : Ice C78 2017 Cube Press, [2017] Oversize ND1489 .P119 Monochrome : painting in black and white / Lelia London : National Gallery 2017 Packer and Jennifer Sliwka. Company Limited, 2017. Children’s Fiction A265ll Lion lessons / Jon Agee. New York, NY : Dial Books for Young Readers, [2016] B849fns Felix’s new skirt / Kerstin Brichzin ; with pictures Hong Kong : Minedition by Igor Kuprin. published by Michael Neugebauer Publishing Ltd., 2018. B963mm Motor Miles / John Burningham. Somerville, Massachusetts : Candlewick Press, 2016. C388l Lucy / Randy Cecil. Somerville, Massachusetts : Candlewick Press, 2016. C913sw Saving Winslow / Sharon Creech. New York : Joanna Cotler Books, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers, [2018] D162v The visitor / Antje Damm ; translated by Sally-Ann New Zealand : Gecko Press, Spencer. [2018] D451ze Zola’s elephant / Randall de Sève ; illustrated by Boston : Houghton Mifflin Pamela Zagarenski. Harcourt, [2018] D545gr Good Rosie! / Kate DiCamillo ; pictures by Harry Somerville, Massachusetts : Bliss. Candlewick Press, 2018. D911mm Memphis, Martin, and the mountaintop : the Honesdale, Pennsylvania : sanitation strike of 1968 / Alice Faye Duncan ; Calkins Creek, an imprint of illustrated by R. Gregory Christie. Highlights, [2018] H178rcs Red : a crayon’s story / Michael Hall. New York, NY : Greenwillow Books, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers, [2015] H512pe A parade of elephants / Kevin Henkes. New York, NY : Greenwillow Books, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers, [2018] K29y You go first / by Erin Entrada Kelly. New York : Greenwillow Books, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers, [2018] L478d Door / by JiHyeon Lee. San Francisco, California : Chronicle Books LLC, 2018. L735bmls A big mooncake for Little Star / Grace Lin. New York, NY : Little, Brown and Company, 2018. M643sm Stickley makes a mistake! : a frog’s guide to trying Washington, DC : Magination again / by Brenda S. Miles, PhD ; illustrated by Press, [2016] Steve Mack. M854lb The little barbarian / Renato Moriconi ; English Grand Rapids, Michigan : language edition, Eerdmans Books for Young Eerdmans Books for Young Readers. Readers, 2018. N553f Found / Jeff Newman ; illustrated by Larry Day. New York : Simon & Schuster Books for
Recommended publications
  • Congressional Record-Senate. 2105
    • 1904. CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE. 2105 Paul, Minn., in favor of Government ownership of factories for A bill (S. 3720) to authorize the St. Joseph and Grand Island naval construction-to the Committee-on Naval Affairs. Railway Company, in the reconstruction of the bridge across the By Mr. THAYER: Petition of Alonzo W. Bond and 21 other Missouri River at or near St. Joseph, Mo., to lower said bridge voters of Worcester, Mass., against the.passage of a bill limiting and to shorten the draw span thereof; and the hom·s of labor-to the Committee on Labor. A bill (S. 3800) donating gun carriages to the Connecticut com- Also, petition of L. G. Lesure and 20 other voters of West missioners for the care and preservation of Fort Griswold. Boylesfon, Mass., urging passage of Hepburn-Dolliver bill-to the The message also announced that the House had passed with Committee on the Judiciary. amendments the bill (S. 3317) authorizing the Secretary of the By Mr. VREELAND: Resolution of D. T. Wiggins Post, No. Interior to grant right of way for pipe lines through Indian Ter­ 297, Grand Army of the Republic, Department of New York, in ritory in which it requested the concurrence of the Senate. favor of a service-pension bill-to the Committee on Invalid Pen­ The message further announced that the House had passed the sions. following bills; in which it requested the concurrence of the Sen­ By Mr. WADSWORTH: Petition of Rev. F. W. Grnpe and ate: others, of Gainesville, N. Y., for the passage of the Hepburn­ A bill (H.
    [Show full text]
  • Mining Wars: Corporate Expansion and Labor Violence in the Western Desert, 1876-1920
    UNLV Theses, Dissertations, Professional Papers, and Capstones 2009 Mining wars: Corporate expansion and labor violence in the Western desert, 1876-1920 Kenneth Dale Underwood University of Nevada Las Vegas Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalscholarship.unlv.edu/thesesdissertations Part of the Latin American History Commons, Social History Commons, and the United States History Commons Repository Citation Underwood, Kenneth Dale, "Mining wars: Corporate expansion and labor violence in the Western desert, 1876-1920" (2009). UNLV Theses, Dissertations, Professional Papers, and Capstones. 106. http://dx.doi.org/10.34917/1377091 This Dissertation is protected by copyright and/or related rights. It has been brought to you by Digital Scholarship@UNLV with permission from the rights-holder(s). You are free to use this Dissertation in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s) directly, unless additional rights are indicated by a Creative Commons license in the record and/or on the work itself. This Dissertation has been accepted for inclusion in UNLV Theses, Dissertations, Professional Papers, and Capstones by an authorized administrator of Digital Scholarship@UNLV. For more information, please contact [email protected]. MINING WARS: CORPORATE EXPANSION AND LABOR VIOLENCE IN THE WESTERN DESERT, 1876-1920 by Kenneth Dale Underwood Bachelor of Arts University of Southern California 1992 Master
    [Show full text]
  • Public Danger
    DAWSON.36.6.4 (Do Not Delete) 8/19/2015 9:43 AM PUBLIC DANGER James Dawson† This Article provides the first account of the term “public danger,” which appears in the Grand Jury Clause of the Fifth Amendment. Drawing on historical records from the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the Article argues that the proper reading of “public danger” is a broad one. On this theory, “public danger” includes not just impending enemy invasions, but also a host of less serious threats (such as plagues, financial panics, jailbreaks, and natural disasters). This broad reading is supported by constitutional history. In 1789, the first Congress rejected a proposal that would have replaced the phrase “public danger” in the proposed text of the Fifth Amendment with the narrower term “foreign invasion.” The logical inference is that Congress preferred a broad exception to the Fifth Amendment that would subject militiamen to military jurisdiction when they were called out to perform nonmilitary tasks such as quelling riots or restoring order in the wake of a natural disaster—both of which were “public dangers” commonly handled by the militia in the early days of the Republic. Several other tools of interpretation—such as an intratextual analysis of the Constitution and an appeal to uses of the “public danger” concept outside the Fifth Amendment—also counsel in favor of an expansive understanding of “public danger.” The Article then unpacks the practical implications of this reading. First, the fact that the Constitution expressly contemplates “public danger” as a gray area between war and peace is itself an important and unexplored insight.
    [Show full text]
  • Download This Article As A
    YOU SAY DEFENDANT, I SAY COMBATANT: OPPORTUNISTIC TREATMENT OF TERRORISM SUSPECTS HELD IN THE UNITED STATES AND THE NEED FOR DUE PROCESSAI JESSELYN A. RADACK* "[S]hould the Government determine that the defendant has engaged in conduct proscribed by the offenses now listed.., the United States may... capture and detain the defendant as an unlawful enemy com- 1 batant." - Plea Agreement of "American Taliban" John Walker Lindh "You are not an enemy combatant-you are a terrorist. You are not a 2 soldier in any way-you are a terrorist." - U.S. District Court Judge William G. Young to "shoe bomber" Richard Reid "[Enemy combatants] are not there because they stole a car or robbed a bank .... They are not common criminals. They're enemy combatants and terrorists who are being detained for acts of war against our coun- 3 try and this is why different rules have to apply." - U.S. Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld A EDITOR'S NOTE: After this article was completely written and accepted for publication, the Supreme Court ruled in Hamdi v. Rumsfeld, as author Radack proposed with great foresight, that the Mathews v. Eldridge balancing test provides the appropriate analysis for the type of process that is constitutionally due to a detainee seeking to challenge his or her classification as an "enemy combatant." See Hamdi v. Rumsfeld, 124 S.Ct. 2633 (2004). *A.B., Brown University, 1992; J.D., Yale Law School, 1995. The author is Founder and Execu- tive Director of the Coalition for Civil Rights and Democratic Liberties (http://www.cradl.info).
    [Show full text]
  • Fulton County Indiana Obituaries 1942
    FULTON COUNTY INDIANA OBITUARIES 1942 Friday, January 2, 1942 Mrs. Lura Etta DAVIDSON, 66, former resident of this city, passed away Thursday afternoon at her home, 1619 Mariette street, South Bend. Mrs. Davidson had been in ill health for the last number of years, it was stated. The deceased, who removed from Rochester to the up-state city 24 years ago, perhaps will be better remembered as the wife of Louis W. DAVIDSON, who operated a grocery store in the building now occupied by the Snapp Grocery, on East Ninth street. Mrs. Davidson was born in Miami county on January 22nd, 1875. Her marriage to Louis W. Davidson was solemnized in this city on June 9th, 1905. The survivors are four children, Glenn [DAVIDSON] and Paul DAVIDSON and Mrs. Donald BAKER, of South Bend, and Mrs. Kenneth ABEFE, of Buchannan, Mich. Funeral services will be held Sunday afternoon, one o’clock, at the Forest Hay Funeral Home, 1201 South Michigan street, South Bend. Rev. Clayton BROWNE, pastor of the First Baptist church of South Bend, will be in charge of the services. Grave-side services will be held in the Rochester I.O.O.F. cemetery at approximately three o’clock Sunday afternoon. The body will lie in state at the Hay Funeral Home up until the hour of the funeral, it was stated. Rochester relatives this afternoon received word of the death of Mrs. Margaret POST which occurred Friday morning in the Kelly hospital at Argos, Ind. The deceased’s husband is Glen POST, a drug salesman, who resides in Argos.
    [Show full text]
  • "The Butte Affair Reviewed," by Eugene V. Debs
    The Butte Affair Reviewed by Eugene V. Debs Published in The American Socialist [Chicago], vol. 1, no. 3, whole no. 91 (Aug. 1, 1914), pp. 1, 4. The assault upon the Butte Miners’ Union, the wrecking of its hall with dynamite, and the looting of its safe by its own members, coupled with the riot which followed between the two factions into which the union had been torn, egged on by a vicious element im- ported for that purpose, has made June 23 [1914] a memorable date in the annals of the labor movement. There is much in this deplorable affair that is still wrapped in mystery, but enough is known to warrant the general conclusion that the Butte Miners’ Union has long been marked for destruction and that its enemies have for months been conspiring to deliver the coup that should put an end to its existence. Has Decided Views. Since that fateful night at Butte which witnessed this brutal and disgraceful scene, this rioting among men who wear the union badge and call themselves brothers, and the wanton killing and maiming of innocent people, I have read everything in the way of a report which has been issued by the respective factions and which has found its way into the public print, and I confess that I am as yet unable to account for this tragic and inexcusable affair. But I have some decided views upon the matter which I will now proceed to express in the briefest manner possible. First of all, I know Butte Miners’ Union and am familiar with its record from the beginning.
    [Show full text]
  • The Trial of the Century Courtesy of the Idaho State Historical Society
    Trial of the Century Photo of the First Ada County Courthouse , early 1900s (70-84.1), and location of the Trial of the Century courtesy of the Idaho State Historical Society. Sponsored By: Boise City, Offi ce of the Mayor Byron Johnson, Fourth Judicial District Bar Association Idaho Supreme Court Justice (retired) Ernest A. Hoidal, Attorney at Law Spontaneous Productions Inc. Paul and Susie Headlee 2007 Marks the 100th Anniversary of the “Trial of the Century” In 1907 the nationʼs attention turned to Idahoʼs capital city where newsmen anxiously followed the eraʼs most sensational trial. The leaders of the powerful Western Federation of Miners labor union, William “Big Bill” Haywood, George Pettibone, and Charles Moyer stood accused of hiring Harry Orchard to assassinate former Idaho Governor Frank Steunenberg outside his Caldwell home by detonating a bomb attached to his gate. Many colorful players and events set the stage for the trial. When Orchard implicated the union leaders, the State of Idaho acted swiftly having the union leaders taken into custody by the Pinkerton Detective Agency and “extraditing” them from Denver to Boise by way of a late-night train ride in what had the appearance of a kidnapping. Why was Governor Steunenberg assassinated? At the end of the 19th century America was divided by conflicts between capital and labor that many feared would lead to outright war between the classes. Wealthy business owners, bosses and their agents clashed, at times violently, with workers and the unions that represented them. Abuses abounded on both sides. The rich and powerful, and the poor and frustrated were on a collision course, with anarchy and Socialism among the possible outcomes.
    [Show full text]
  • Ed Boyce: the Curious Evolution of an American Radical
    University of Montana ScholarWorks at University of Montana Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers Graduate School 1993 Ed Boyce: The curious evolution of an American radical Robert William Henry The University of Montana Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Henry, Robert William, "Ed Boyce: The curious evolution of an American radical" (1993). Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers. 4692. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd/4692 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at ScholarWorks at University of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at University of Montana. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Maureen and Mike MANSFIELD LIBRARY Copying allowed as provided under provisions of the Fair Use Section of the U.S. COPYRIGHT LAW, 1976. Any copying for commercial purposes or financial gain may be undertaken only with the author’s written consent. MUniversity ontana of ED BOYCE: THE CURIOUS EVOLUTION OF AN AMERICAN RADICAL by Robert William Henry B.A., History, University of Washington, Seattle, 1985 Presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in History University of Montana 1993 Approved^jy a // 'm - /Chairman, Board of Examiners - y y . .____________ I__________. _____ &kyf D€an, Graduate School / 3 0/ m3 Date UMI Number: EP40156 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted.
    [Show full text]
  • Judge Fremont Wood
    HISTORY OF IDA H 0 The Gem of the Mountatns ILLUSTRATED VOLUME II CHICAGO THE S. J. CLARKE PUBLISHING COMPAJ:\Y 1920 220 HISTORY OF IDAHO purchasing department and while there saved the board a large amount of money, as he found many discrepancies in the purchasing of supplies and in some instances saved as much as one hundred per cent. In 1918 he was elected to represent his district in the state legislature on the republican ticket, the nomination 'coming to him unsolicited. The chairman of the state republican committee wrote him, stating that if he would accept the nomination it would be equivalent to his elec­ tion. There is no man in the state who stands higher with all classes, especially with the laboring classes and railroad men, as they have implicit confidence in his ability and integrity. He has justified their faith by the excellent service which he has rendered to Idaho as a member of the general assembly. He was a delegate to the Trainmen's convention held at Denver, Colorado, in 1902 and was a delegate to the convention of Railway Conductors held at Detroit, Michigan, in 1913. .He attended the convention of Railway Condutcors at Boston, Massachusetts, in the capacity of a visitor in 1910. He is an effective and earnest speaker, expressing himself forcefully and clearly, and his friends predict that he has not yet reached the heights to Which' he wlll attain politically. He gives thoughtful and earnest consideration to the vital problems coming up for settlement and does not hesitate to support any cause if he is a believer in its justice and worth.
    [Show full text]
  • Boston College Law School Magazine Fall 1993 Boston College Law School
    Boston College Law School Digital Commons @ Boston College Law School Boston College Law School Magazine 10-1-1993 Boston College Law School Magazine Fall 1993 Boston College Law School Follow this and additional works at: http://lawdigitalcommons.bc.edu/bclsm Part of the Legal Education Commons Recommended Citation Boston College Law School, "Boston College Law School Magazine Fall 1993" (1993). Boston College Law School Magazine. Book 3. http://lawdigitalcommons.bc.edu/bclsm/3 This Magazine is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Commons @ Boston College Law School. It has been accepted for inclusion in Boston College Law School Magazine by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Boston College Law School. For more information, please contact [email protected]. P UBLJCATION NOTE EDITOR IN CHIEF/PUBLICATION DIRECTOR Amy S. DerBedrosian SENIOR EDITOR Brian P. Lutch Associate D can, Administration P HOTOGRAP HERS Tom Ferentz, Sarah Hood, John Kennard, Bob Kramer, John Miliscnda, Sue Owrutsky, David Oxton, William Short, Steven Vedder I LL USTRATO R Christopher Bing For additio nal information or questio ns about Boston College Law School Magazine, please concan Amy S. D erBedrosian, Boston College Law School 885 CCrHre Street, Newton, MA 02159 (61 7) 552-3935 Copyright 1993, Boston College Law Sc hool. All publication rights reserved. O pinions expressed in Boston Coliege Law School Magazine do not necessarily refl ect the views of Boston College Law School or Boston Coll ege. On the Cover: Arbitration, mediation,
    [Show full text]
  • Newspaper Reports of Calumet's Italian Hall Disaster
    Upper Country: A Journal of the Lake Superior Region Volume 4 Article 4 2016 No News Is Good News: Newspaper Reports of Calumet’s Italian Hall Disaster Allie Penn Wayne State University, graduate student, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://commons.nmu.edu/upper_country Part of the Journalism Studies Commons, Labor History Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Penn, Allie (2016) "No News Is Good News: Newspaper Reports of Calumet’s Italian Hall Disaster," Upper Country: A Journal of the Lake Superior Region: Vol. 4 , Article 4. Available at: https://commons.nmu.edu/upper_country/vol4/iss1/4 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Journals and Peer-Reviewed Series at NMU Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Upper Country: A Journal of the Lake Superior Region by an authorized editor of NMU Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected],[email protected]. Penn: No News Is Good News: Newspaper Reports of Calumet’s Italian Hall Disaster No News Is Good News: Newspaper Reports of Calumet’s Italian Hall Disaster Allie Penn “Take a trip with me in 1913, To Calumet, Michigan, in the copper country. I will take you to a place called Italian Hall, Where the miners are having their big Christmas ball.” 1 Singer Woody Guthrie wrote “1913 Massacre” almost forty years after the disaster occurred. When he crooned the above lyrics about the 1913-14 Copper Country Strike in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, he wanted to memorialize the worker’s unionization movement and the tragedy of the Italian Hall Disaster.
    [Show full text]
  • Bartosj0513.Pdf (494.5Kb)
    THE BLIGHT OF THE FEDERATION: JAMES MCPARLAND, THE PINKERTON NATIONAL DETECTIVE AGENCY AND THE WESTERN FEDERATION OF MINERS, 1892-1907 by Jeffrey Michael Bartos A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in History MONTANA STATE UNIVERSITY Bozeman, Montana April 2013 ©COPYRIGHT by Jeffrey Michael Bartos 2013 All Rights Reserved ii APPROVAL of a thesis submitted by Jeffrey Michael Bartos This thesis has been read by each member of the thesis committee and has been found to be satisfactory regarding content, English usage, format, citation, bibliographic style, and consistency and is ready for submission to The Graduate School. Dr. Billy G. Smith Approved for the Department of History, Philosophy, and Religious Studies Dr. David Cherry Approved for The Graduate School Dr. Ronald W. Larsen iii STATEMENT OF PERMISSION TO USE In presenting this thesis in partial fulfillment of the requirements for a master’s degree at Montana State University, I agree that the Library shall make it available to borrowers under rules of the Library. If I have indicated my intention to copyright this thesis by including a copyright notice page, copying is allowable only for scholarly purposes, consistent with “fair use” as prescribed in the U.S. Copyright Law. Requests for permission for extended quotation from or reproduction of this thesis in whole or in parts may be granted only by the copyright holder. Jeffrey Michael Bartos April 2013 iv DEDICATION For my “Uncle,” Harold C. Fleming, Professor Emeritus of Anthropology, Boston University and my “Aunt” Nancy Fleming. You continue to inspire.
    [Show full text]