Elizabeth Loentz, Let me Continue to Speak the Truth: Bertha Pappenheim as Author and Activist
In: Nashim: a journal of Jewish women's studies & gender issues, Heft 20, S. 156
ISSN: 1565-5288
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In: Nashim: a journal of Jewish women's studies & gender issues, Heft 20, S. 156
ISSN: 1565-5288
In: http://hdl.handle.net/2027/umn.31951p01164675p
"No. 106." ; "Washington, D.C., Tuesday, July 13, 1954." ; Caption title. ; With: Survivors' benefits, members retired by 1 November 1953. [Washington, D.C. : Dept. of the Army, 1953] (Dept. of the Army pamphlet ; no. 21-63). ; Mode of access: Internet.
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Letter from Springfield College to Stephen T. Duggan, December 22, 1925. The letter is asking Dr. Duggan if he would consider recommending Dr. Peter Karpovitch to the Rockefeller Foundation for financial assistance to help support his studies and his research at Springfield College. The letter is a copy and is not signed. ; Peter V. Karpovich (1896-1975) was born in Russia and trained as a medical doctor at the State Military Academy of Medicine in Petrograd (St. Petersburg), Russia in 1919. Under increasing political and professional turmoil, he fled to Latvia in 1922. In Latvia, Karpovich worked at the Riga YMCA. In 1925, he traveled to the United States to research at Springfield College. While there, he enrolled as a special advanced student and earned a master's degree in physical education. In 1927, while completing his studies, he became a professor of physiology at the college. In the late 1940s, he met and married his second wife, Josephine Rathbone, an acclaimed scholar of physical education and relaxation. From 1961 to 1969, he served as the director of the physiology research laboratory at Springfield College, where he published several seminal books. Karpovich was a founding member of the American College of Sports Medicine and a consultant to many government, private and educational organizations. He remains an internationally recognized pioneer in physical education.
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In: Confraternitas, Band 18, Heft 2, S. 36
Letter from Govenor Herbert H. Lehman to William Wallace Farley, October 22, 1940 inviting Mr. Farley to a supper party in honor of Henry A. Wallace, Vice Presidential Candidate and running mate of Franklin D. Roosevelt in the 1940 U.S. Presidential Election.
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A letter report issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO provided information on the Air Force F-22 Raptor production cost estimate, focusing on: (1) the status of cost reduction plans, including some plans not yet implemented, and Air Force procedures for reporting on the plans; and (2) a comparison of the 1999 production cost estimates with the congressional cost limitation."
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This oral history interview was conducted by Dr. Laurie Brown L. Brown, M.D., on April 22, 1995 at the Omni Hotel of Charleston, South Carolina, venue for the 32nd annual meeting of the South Carolina Medical Association (SCMA). In this interview, Dr. Edward W. Catalano, M.D., former President of SCMA from 1993 to 1994, discusses his educational and professional background in pathology and laboratory medicine and the most significant issues that he sought to address during his tenure as president. Throughout the interview, Dr. Catalano speaks at length about his efforts to achieve unity within the organization when a representative voice was necessary in its dealings with the state legislature, and concludes by discussing issues surrounding the Clinton health care plan of 1993.
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In: CESifo forum volume 16, no. 3 (autumn 2015)
In: Survey report / Pew Research Center for the People and the Press
World Affairs Online
In: Veranstaltungen des Sächsischen Landtags 13
In: Hoppe-Seyler´s Zeitschrift für physiologische Chemie, Band 358, Heft 2, S. 1573-1582
Mode of access: Internet. ; Latest issue consulted: 1926. ; Description based on: 1898; title from title page.
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In: Family court review: publ. in assoc. with: Association of Family and Conciliation Courts, Band 60, Heft 2, S. 259-287
ISSN: 1744-1617
AbstractThe COVID‐19 pandemic created a unique catch‐22 for families with ongoing parenting cases. By materially changing the circumstances of everyday life while simultaneously closing the courts, the virus placed parents in impossible situations. Sometimes, parents had to decide whether to adhere to parenting schedules and perhaps expose their children to illness or death, or to disobey court orders and potentially expose themselves to possible serious legal penalties. In other parenting cases, the virus allowed opportunistic parents to wrongfully withhold their children while the courts were closed. In either situation, parents often did not qualify for emergency hearings and, even if they did, an unmanageable backlog in court proceedings realistically prevented their cases from being heard. The same pattern was observed in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, and it will logically take place any time a disaster causes legal problems and closes the courts. This article presents national data to reveal the extent to which courts closed during the pandemic and proposes a solution to these catch‐22 problems: a system in which states activate special masters to act as mobile or virtual neutral third‐party decision‐makers. By employing such a system, states would not be exercising any authority that they do not already commonly use, and they would uphold their obligations to families even in difficult times.
In: http://hdl.handle.net/2027/osu.32435069453892
"For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U. S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C." ; Cover title. ; Prepared in cooperation with Ohio Department of Natural Resources and Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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