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Emily Edmonds-Poli and David A. Shirk 2009- Contemporary Mexican Politics
CONTEMPORARY MEXICAN POLITICS EMILY EDMONDS-POLI and DAVID A. SHIRK ContempMexPolPBK.indd 1 10/16/08 12:23:29 PM #/.4%-0/2!29 -%8)#!.0/,)4)#3 CONTEMPORARY MEXIC AN POLITICS Emily Edmonds-Poli and David A. Shirk ROWMAN & LITTLEFIELD PUBLISHERS, INC. Lanham • Boulder • New York • Toronto • Plymouth, UK ROWMAN & LITTLEFIELD PUBLISHERS, INC. Published in the United States of America by Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc. A wholly owned subsidiary of The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, Inc. 4501 Forbes Boulevard, Suite 200, Lanham, Maryland 20706 www.rowmanlittlefield.com Estover Road, Plymouth PL6 7PY, United Kingdom Copyright © 2009 by Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Information Available Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Edmonds, Emily. Contemporary Mexican politics / Emily Edmonds-Poli and David A. Shirk. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN-13: 978-0-7425-4048-4 (cloth : alk. paper) ISBN-10: 0-7425-4048-0 (cloth : alk. paper) ISBN-13: 978-0-7425-4049-1 (pbk. : alk. paper) ISBN-10: 0-7425-4049-9 (pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Mexico--Politics and government--2000- I. Shirk, David A., 1971- II. Title. F1236.7.E36 2009 320.972--dc22 2008031594 Printed in the United States of America ™ The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI/NISO Z39.48-1992. -
Environmental Awareness Wildlife
ENVIRONMENTAL AWARENESS: Wildlife PUBLISH ED BY TH E COOPERATIVE EXTENSION SERVICES OF TH E NORTHEASTERN STATES • Building Houses, Feeders, and Baths .. 13 Table of Contents Houses ...................... 13 Bird Feeders ................. 18 Sheet Metal Predator Guards ... 21 Introduction ...................• . .... 1 Basic Principles for Squirrel, Raccoon, and Goose Nests ... 22 Understanding Wildlife ........... 3 Habitat ................. ..... 4 Preserving Animal Sign .............. 24 Interspersion ............•..... 4 Niche ............. ... .. ..... 5 Photography ....................... 26 Territory ................•..... 5 General Suggestions .......... 26 Limiting Factor ............... 5 Photographs of Animals ....... 27 Population Dynamics ........... 6 Mapping ........................... 28 Project Activities .................... 7 Record Keeping ...... ........ 7 Census Methods .............. ..... 30 Observing Wildlife ............. 7 Map Census .................. 32 Strip Census ................. 32 Habitat Improvement ................. 9 Drive Census ................. 33 Planting ...................... 9 Special Census Techniques .... 33 Fence Row Planting ........... 10 Marked Animals .............. 33 Where to Get Shrubs and Trees .. 11 Improvement of Existing Habitat 11 Additional Activities ................. 34 Brush Piles and Rock Dens ..... 12 Water Holes and Ponds ........ 13 Suggested Reading ..... • ........... 36 Written by Otis F. Curtis, 4·H Agent, The University of Connecticut Issued in furtherance of Cooperative -
Tragedy, Trouble Plague the Purdue Game
/ ^ V THE O b s e r v e r The Independent Newspaper Serving Notre Dame and Saint Marys OLUME 39 : ISSUE 30 M O N DAY, OCTO BER4, 2 0 0 4 NDSMCOBSERVER.COM Tragedy, troubleplague the Purdue game Ushers enforce marshmallow Pan collapses ban with student on shuttle bus tion 29, and one in section 35, a before By KATE ANTONACCI freshman section. News Writer Students’ ticket booklets were confiscated and their names were By CLAIRE HEININGER Cooler weather on Saturday given to the Office of Residence News Editor meant students packed on layers Life and Housing. of clothing, allowing some to con “This is just a ResLife matter,” A 68-year old man died of what ceal an usher’s worst nightmare Gagnon said. “I don’t want to see appeared to be a heart attack — marshmallows. As halftime students go to ResLife for some Saturday after he collapsed in a approached, many seniors pre thing silly like marshmallows. But Transpo shuttle bus before the pared for their traditional sec we just can’t tolerate the occasion football game. tion-wide marshmallow fight, as of throwing things. I don’t know a University spokesman Matt stadium personnel manned the state in the country that permits Storin said the man fell at approx aisles waiting to catch throwers. people to throw things. I looked imately 11 a.m. while aboard a Coordinator of stadium person the other way for two or three bus scheduled to travel from the nel Cappy Gagnon said seven stu years because it was smaller and White Field North parking lot, dents were kicked out, and two pretty harmless. -
1 Agenda Ciudadana El Oso, El
1 AGENDA CIUDADANA EL OSO, EL PUERCOESPIN Y UNA RELACIÓN QUE NO CUAJA Lorenzo Meyer La Obra y las Circunstancias.- Si quien fuera embajador norteamericano en México, Jeffrey Davidow, hubiera planeado el momento de lanzar su libro El oso y el puercoespín. Testimonios de un embajador de Estados Unidos en México, (Grijalbo, 2003), la cosa no le hubiera podido salir mejor. Hoy, la naturaleza de la relación México-Estados Unidos es, de nuevo, uno de los temas que están en el centro de la discusión nacional. Sin embargo, esta discusión tiene una naturaleza más de posición de principios que de análisis de hechos, discusión de generalidades en vez de posibilidades de acciones constructivas. El libro del embajador es una oportunidad de enfocar la discusión de tema tan vital hacia lo concreto, hacia la política como arte de lo posible sin olvidar lo deseable. La razón inmediata por la que hoy se está debatiendo en México la forma que debe tener nuestra política hacia Estados Unidos, está relacionada con el cese/renuncia de Adolfo Aguilar Zinser a su puesto como representante de México en Naciones Unidas. Este incidente ha adquirido proporciones insospechadas porque ha tenido lugar en una circunstancia de agresividad norteamericana y vacío mexicano por la imposibilidad de lograr un consenso sobre cual debe ser la relación con el poderoso vecino del norte. En la actualidad, la frontera mexicano-americana es la región del mundo donde cotidianamente se vive el mayor contraste entre el exceso y la falta de poder, entre la riqueza y la pobreza, entre el instinto de dominio y el instinto de supervivencia, entre la prepotencia y la desconfianza sistemática como políticas nacionales. -
American Amateur Diplomats During the Administrations of Woodrow Wilson: an Evaluation
University of Montana ScholarWorks at University of Montana Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers Graduate School 1971 American amateur diplomats during the administrations of Woodrow Wilson: An evaluation Martin V. Melosi 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 Melosi, Martin V., "American amateur diplomats during the administrations of Woodrow Wilson: An evaluation" (1971). Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers. 5192. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd/5192 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]. AMERICAN AMATEUR DIPLOMATS DURING THE ADMINISTRATIONS OF WOODROW WILSON: AN EVALUATION By Martin Victor Melosi B.A., University of Montana, 1969 Presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Mas ter of Arts UNIVERSITY OF MONTANA 1971 Approved by: ChEirman, BoXrd~^^BxamiMrs A ) /) C'^fUL-^S fatfUN) UMI Number: EP40656 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. K&iwtriton PtfWishlflg UMI EP40656 Published by ProQuest LLC (2014). Copyright in the Dissertation held by the Author. -
Henry Lane Wilson and Republican Policy Toward Mexico, 1913-1920
Henry Lane Wilson and Republican Policy toward Mexico, 1913-1920 Raymond L. Shoemaker* Henry Lane Wilson of Crawfordsville, Indiana, is best known to students of American history for his activities as ambassador to Mexico between 1910 and 1913, during the tu- multuous Mexican Revolution, but Wilson also played a signifi- cant role after 1913 in the formulation of Republican party policy toward Mexico. This policy, which was openly hostile to the Mexican Revolution and its leaders, culminated in the party platform on which Warren G. Harding ran in 1920. From 1913 to 1920, Republican leaders repeatedly drew upon Henry Lane Wilson's knowledge and expertise to attack what they considered President Woodrow Wilson's weak and vacillating Mexican policy. Henry Lane Wilson had served for seventeen years in the American diplomatic corps prior to Woodrow Wilson's election to the presidency in 1912.' Included in his services were minis- tries to Chile, Greece, and Belgium, and an ambassadorship to Mexico. Diplomacy was a logical career for Wilson; his father, James Wilson, had also been a politician and diplomat who served as minister to Venezuela in his last years. Henry Lane Wilson first tried his hand at business, only to lose his small fortune in the Panic of 1893.* He then turned to politics, work- ing hard for William McKinley during the 1896 campaign. As a reward for his services, President McKinley appointed Wilson minister to Chile.3 At the time Wilson took up his post, United States-Chile relations were unsettled. Wilson was sympathetic to the Chi- leans and tried with some success to overcome their hostility. -
The Mexican Journeys of William Jennings Bryan, a Good Neighbor
Nebraska History posts materials online for your personal use. Please remember that the contents of Nebraska History are copyrighted by the Nebraska State Historical Society (except for materials credited to other institutions). The NSHS retains its copyrights even to materials it posts on the web. For permission to re-use materials or for photo ordering information, please see: http://www.nebraskahistory.org/magazine/permission.htm Nebraska State Historical Society members receive four issues of Nebraska History and four issues of Nebraska History News annually. For membership information, see: http://nebraskahistory.org/admin/members/index.htm Article Title: The Mexican Journeys of William Jennings Bryan, A Good Neighbor Full Citation: Edward H Worthen, “The Mexican Journeys of William Jennings Bryan, A Good Neighbor,” Nebraska History 59 (1978): 484-500. URL of article: http://www.nebraskahistory.org/publish/publicat/history/full-text/NH1978BryanMexico.pdf Date: 1/6/2015 Article Summary: William Jennings Bryan visited Mexico in 1897, 1904, and 1922. Examining these trips in more detail illuminates his reactions to Mexican-American diplomacy during his tenure as U.S. secretary of state during the Wilson administration. Cataloging Information: Names: William H Prescott, General Lew Wallace, Mayne Reid, Matias Romer, Lawrence W Levine, Benito Juarez, Captain John Ayers, Jose Lopez-Portillo y Rojas, Santa Anna, Woodrow Wilson, Porfirio Diaz; Victoriano Huerta, Francisco I Madero, Henry Lane Wilson, Frank F Fletcher, Secretary McAdoo, Charles -
Senate Reads As Upon Certain Claims of Yetta Mae Slayton; Committee on Banking and Currency
1838 tONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATp March 11 H. R. 3859. A bill for the relief of Jose Commerce and National Association of Man the Journal of the proceedings of Mon Zavala-Rivera; to the Committee on the ufacturers, the New Jersey State Chamber day, March 9, 1953, be dispensed with. Judiciary. · of Commerce, and others, a similar declara The PRESIDENT pro tempore. With By Mr. BURLESON: tion of policy and since prices depend upon H. R. 3860. A bill conferring jurisdiction wages, that similar suggestions be made to out objection-- upon the United States District Court for the the major labor organizations, such as the Mr. MORSE. Mr. President, reserv Northern District of -Texas, Abilene division, American Federation of Labor and the Con ing the right to object, rule III of the to hear, determine, and render judgment gress of Industrial Organizations; to the Standing Rules of the Senate reads as upon certain claims of Yetta Mae Slayton; Committee on Banking and Currency. follows: to the Committee on the Judiciary. 80. By the SPEAKER: Petition of R. G. Roberts, of Seattle, Wash., and others, rela The Presiding Officer having taken the H. R. 3861. A bill for the relief of Fumiko chair, and a quorum being present, the tive to the present financial and taxation Nakane; to the Committee on the Judiciary. Journal of the preceding day shall be read, By Mr. CELLER: systems of the Government and enclosing a proposed bill entitled "Financial Emancipa and any mistake made in the entries cor H. R. 3862. A bil'. for the relief of Alek rected. -
It's Revenue Waiting Game
Call 224-2361 Clinton County News Day or Night S&hvm^JthsLClinJt0n,(bisuL$in^ 15 Cents 117th Year Vol.31 ST JOHNS, MICHIGAN 48879 36 Pages December 6,1972 Units wait for checks It's revenue waiting game Are you concerned about getting the straight facts.on a question which arises but don't On the county level, commissioners It's a waiting game in Clinton County no checks had been received by Mon the Revenue Sharing egg is hatched." BATH CHARTER Township, are working with a figure of $353,000, know where to find the answer? day night. At their Monday night meeting the operating with several new board We'll find the facts for ques for county units wondering: "how much previously reported to be slated for the and When?" While the County Board Of Com DeWitt city administrator, Dan Elliott, members since the November election, county government. tions submitted by our readers. Although figures have been released missioners have made tentative plans said he couldn't name an exact figure also has not made any plans for the They have approved $150,000 for road Just drop us a line at FACT naming amounts units are to receive for fheir share of Revenue Sharing, DeWitt would receive and recom federal funds. other units, such as DeWitt Township mended delaying plans for use of the In DeWitt Township, officials are also improvement on a 1-year program. FINDER, Clirtton'County News from Federal Revenue Sharing no Road commissioners have requested St Johns 48879. definite amounts have been named and are not counting their "chickens until funds until the check is received. -
Mexican Anti-Americanism and Regional Integration in North America
NORTEAMÉRICA . Year 6, issue 2, July-December 2011 Recibido: 01/06/2011 Aceptado: 28/09/2011 Mexican Anti-Americanism And Regional Integration in North America BRIAN BOW * ARTURO SANTA -C RUZ ** ABSTRACT Regionalization is a fact in North America, but regionalism has barely gotten off the ground. Several factors have been proposed to explain the underdevelopment of regional institutions in North America: divergent interests and priorities, concerns about sovereignty, nationalism, and, particularly since 9/11, the United States’ preoccupation with policing its borders. One other important element has been largely left unexplored in government and academic stud ies: anti-Americanism. In considering the prospects for deeper North American integration, the per sis tence and effects of anti-Americanism in Mexico is definitively a factor. It is com plex and subtle, with numerous currents spouting from a single wellspring: the U.S. refusal to recognize Mexico as an equal partner. This article takes a historical and contextual approach to tracking its evolution. Key words: anti-Americanism, regional integration, U.S.-Mexico relations, North American identity. RESUMEN La regionalización es un hecho en Norteamérica; en cambio, el regionalismo apenas si ha despegado. Se han mencionado diversos factores para explicar la falta de desarrollo de las instituciones regionales en Norte amé - rica, entre los que se mencionan las prioridades e intereses divergentes, las preocupaciones respecto de la soberanía, el nacionalismo y, en particular desde el 11 de septiembre, la inquietud estadunidense de vigi lar sus fronteras. Ahora bien, un elemento que se mantiene inexplorado, en el gobierno y en los estudios académicos, es el espí r itu antiestadunidense. -
Porfirismo During the Mexican Revolution
University of Texas at El Paso DigitalCommons@UTEP Open Access Theses & Dissertations 2012-01-01 Porfirismo during the Mexican Revolution: Exile and the Politics of Representation, 1910-1920 Nancy Alexandra Aguirre University of Texas at El Paso, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.utep.edu/open_etd Part of the History Commons, Latin American Languages and Societies Commons, and the Latin American Studies Commons Recommended Citation Aguirre, Nancy Alexandra, "Porfirismo during the Mexican Revolution: Exile and the Politics of Representation, 1910-1920" (2012). Open Access Theses & Dissertations. 1773. https://digitalcommons.utep.edu/open_etd/1773 This is brought to you for free and open access by DigitalCommons@UTEP. It has been accepted for inclusion in Open Access Theses & Dissertations by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@UTEP. For more information, please contact [email protected]. PORFIRISMO DURING THE MEXICAN REVOLUTION: EXILE AND THE POLITICS OF REPRESENTATION, 1910-1920 NANCY ALEXANDRA AGUIRRE Department of History APPROVED: Samuel Brunk, Ph.D., Chair Cheryl E. Martin, Ph.D. Sandra McGee Deutsch, Ph.D. Frank G. Pérez, Ph.D. Benjamin C. Flores, Ph.D. Dean of the Graduate School Copyright © by Nancy Alexandra Aguirre 2012 PORFIRISMO DURING THE MEXICAN REVOLUTION: EXILE AND THE POLITICS OF REPRESENTATION, 1910-1920 by NANCY ALEXANDRA AGUIRRE, B.A., M.A. DISSERTATION Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of The University of Texas at El Paso in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Department of History THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT EL PASO December 2012 Acknowledgements Writing this dissertation has been a dream of mine since I found my passion for history as a seventh-grade Texas History student. -
Introduction
Introduction 203 Index Content Introduction ….....................................................................i Reality, v Fiction, vii The Fountainhead, ix Atlas Shrugged, xiii Nonfiction, xvii Published, xxi Prologue, Dandy Nerts and Rollie …..................................1 May 9, 2013, 2 Time and Money Spent, 3 Rollie, 6 Dandy Nerts, 8 Back on the Hook, 9 Part I The Aisle That Separates Chapter 1, We Thought You Fried ....................................11 Boom!, 11 Reagan, 14 My Forbes Avenue Helpers, 16 The Big Z, 17 Chapter 2, NYC …............................................................19 Index Queensboro Bridge, 19 th E. 85 Street, 21 One World Trade Center, 22 Mitsubishi Bank, 23 Sniff, 25 Chapter 3, A Hole in the Washtub …................................27 May 22, 1998, 27 Emmet, 30 Safety Net, 31 1969 Mustang Convertible, 32 Eye Lashes on Babydolls, 34 A Few of My Favorite Things, 35 Chapter 4, Pump Jacks …............................................... 38 Saturday, 38 Winter, 41 Spring, 43 Chapter 5, Keowee …...................................................... 44 At Home, 44 The Lake, 46 One Condition, 47 Kunstwerke, 48 Word of Mouth, 49 Gaudi, 50 Chapter 6, Trace …........................................................... 52 K1200, 52 Trace's Eyes, 55 Index Barcelona, 56 Chapter 7, Weasely …...................................................... 58 The Weasely House, 59 Overextended, 62 Chapter 8, Tripinfal …...................................................... 65 The Meeting in the Barn, 65 The Tripinfals,