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2. Titles and Abstracts of Papers Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1938.
- Subjects
- *
SUBURBS , *COMMUNITIES - Abstract
The article presents titles and abstracts of papers submitted at a meeting held in Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1938. The paper "The Sequent Occupance of a Boston Suburban Community," presented by Edward A. Ackerman focuses on areas surrounding the Boston metropolitan district. The proximity of a large city market, plots of level land and fertile soil determine the existence of these suburban fanning communities. The article "The Recession of Victoria Falls," by Wallace W. Atwood. The world famous falls on the Zainbesi have had a strange and remarkable history in recession. The gorge is serpentine with many curious off-shoots, and located on the floor of a broad and much older flat-bottomed valley. Today the water tumbles over a ledge, fully a mile in length, and into a very narrow chasm 350 ft. deep.
- Published
- 1939
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Boston: Building in History's Attic.
- Subjects
URBAN renewal ,MANUFACTURING industries ,PAPER industry ,PUBLISHING - Abstract
The article discusses the challenges faced by the government of Boston in Massachusetts as it aims to initiate modernization processes in the city in 1954. The biggest industrial category in Boston is manufacturing which allows the city to compete well against other cities in the U.S. in 1951. According to the author, Boston ranks fourth in allied and paper industries as well as in publishing and printing business categories.
- Published
- 1954
4. Term-Paper Hustlers.
- Subjects
REPORT writing ,TECHNICAL writing ,GHOSTWRITING - Abstract
The article discusses the rising trend of term paper by the collegians in Boston, Massachusetts. It states that the reason appears under several names including Universal Termpapers, Termpapers Unlimited and Quality Bullshit. It states that the organizations have turned out around 4,000 term papers for the students willing to pay 3 dollar a page for standardized material and 6 dollar a page for custom-made. It also states that ghostwriting on a modest scale has been a campus ploy.
- Published
- 1971
5. Abstracts of Papers Presented at the Twelfth Annual Meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research.
- Subjects
PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY ,THRESHOLD (Perception) ,CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
This article presents abstracts of papers presented at the twelfth annual meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research, which was held at the Hotel Sheraton-Plaza in Boston, Massachusetts on November 9-12, 1972. The paper presented by J.C. Jackson and F.K. Graham of the University of Wisconsin cites threshold intensity effects on two orienting response components. Sokolovian theory suggests that the orienting response should be large near psychophysical threshold, fall to a minimum around 10-20 decibels and then rise again until it is depressed by competition with the defense reflex.
- Published
- 1973
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. For Proper Bostonians.
- Subjects
NEWSPAPER publishing ,NEWSPAPER circulation - Abstract
The article reports on the efforts by newspapers in Boston, Massachusetts in boosting circulation after implementing price increases. Among the newspapers that posted reduced profits were "Post," "Herald," and "Globe." The reasons cited for the problems faced by Boston's newspapers include an overcrowded market, display advertisements, and oversized headlines. In response to a drop in circulation, the newspapers launched contests to lure readers back.
- Published
- 1950
7. The Psychology of Newspapers: Five Tentative Laws.
- Author
-
Allport, Gordon W. and Faden, Janet M.
- Subjects
NEWSPAPERS ,JOURNALISM ,INTERNATIONAL law ,MASS media ,JOURNALISTS ,NEUTRALITY ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
The article presents information on the psychology of newspapers along with an exhaustive study of the treatment, which Boston newspapers accorded to revision of the Neutrality Act that gripped the attention of the U.S. in the fall of 1939. This investigation is based upon a complete sample of weekday and Sunday editions of English-language newspapers published in Boston, Massachusetts. The extent to which this simplification of the story took place in the Boston papers was estimated as carefully as possible. The evidence indicates that editors and newswriters attempt to give as comprehensive and adequate a representation of events as they dare; while the readers insist upon selecting, sharpening, and pointing the issue still further to suit their desire for simplification and definiteness. Newspapers must dramatize and select in order to produce in their readers the emotional integration required for a good fight. A newspaper's pattern of influence is built around its editorial policy. Most papers do to a certain extent select news items favoring the editorial policy of the paper, and reject those that are opposed. In summary, the evidence reported in this study is interpreted as supporting five generalizations which are offered here as tentative laws in the new field of the psychology of newspapers: (1) issues are skeletonized; (2) any given newspaper's field of influence is well-patterned; (3) readers are more emotional than editors; (4)public interest as reflected in newspapers is variable in time; (5) public interest rapidly fatigues and presses for an early closure.
- Published
- 1940
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. WORDS COINED IN BOSTON.
- Author
-
Ernst, C. W.
- Subjects
COINAGE ,PAPER money ,CONGREGATIONAL churches - Abstract
The article discusses several words coined in Boston, Massachusetts. The term "commonwealth" originated from the region which is associated to the first declaration of the American independence on May 14, 1634. The word "paper money" was first used in 1691. "Congregational" was termed to Richard Mather's founded church to differ from the Colonist or Presbyterian.
- Published
- 1903
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. PRINCE SCHOOL.
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL exhibitions ,SCHOOLS ,INDUSTRIAL arts ,DRAWING ,PAPER arts ,COOKING - Abstract
The article reports on the school exhibit conducted by the Prince school in Boston, Massachusetts. The exhibit showcased different types of skill training including, sewing, drawing, and manual training. The younger students presented folded papers and cardboard works and the pencil sketches of the higher level students were also displayed. A menu of various dishes is also included in an attractive display of cookery.
- Published
- 1899
10. Farewell, Traveler.
- Subjects
NEWSPAPERS ,PERIODICAL circulation ,ADVERTISING ,BUSINESS failures - Abstract
The article reports on the announcement made by George Akerson, publisher of the "Boston Traveler," that the newspaper will stop its presses for good in Massachusetts on July 10, 1967. Akerson explains that the paper had fallen a few thousand copies behind the Herald-Traveler Corp., and he found increasing difficulty in the afternoon field. In response, Akerson reverses the paper's circulation decline by expanding regional coverage, and removing advertisements from the front page.
- Published
- 1967
11. Scientists Look at the Living Cell.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,BIOLOGY - Abstract
The article offers information on several scientific papers presented at a recently held meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Boston, Massachusetts. Dependence of biology on physics was discussed by several naturalists including Richard S. Bear, Ernest C. Pollard and Barbara W. Low. All living creatures including human beings are affected by the laws that govern matter and the study of matter comes under physics.
- Published
- 1954
12. 5 of Boston's 'Big 8' Universities Took No Action Against Students Involved in Term-Paper Scandal.
- Author
-
Boffey, Philip M.
- Subjects
UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,DISCIPLINARY infractions ,COLLEGE students ,REPORT writing ,AMERICAN business enterprises - Abstract
The article reports that no disciplinary action has been taken by five of the eight major universities in the Boston area, Massachusetts against students whose names were found on the customer lists of companies that were selling term papers. These institutions include Boston College, Harvard University, Northeastern University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the University of Massachusetts.
- Published
- 1974
13. The Herald's Agony.
- Subjects
PERIODICAL publishing ,PUBLISHING finance ,PUBLISHING & economics - Abstract
The article focuses on the financial crisis faced by Herald Traveler Corp. in Boston, Massachusetts. According to its president Harold Clancy, the newspaper has been generating substantial losses which cannot support the present operation. Moreover, stockholders outside the country will likely favor for liquidation although local shareholders wants to keep the paper going. It adds that the loss of the company's television station WHDH has hampered the supposedly support of Hearst Corp.
- Published
- 1972
14. The War of the Weeklies.
- Subjects
NEWSPAPERS ,MASS media ,SUBSCRIPTIONS to serial publications - Abstract
The article reports that two newspapers of Boston, Massachusetts, namely "Boston After Dark" (BAD) and "Cambridge Phoenix " are involved in intense competition to win maximum readership and subscriptions. BAD strengthened its news coverage to stay in the competition. Both newspapers published stories on a Boston fire that took eight lives. Ted Gross, editor of BAD, says that the competition allows newspapers to presents news items in the best possible way.
- Published
- 1971
15. Boston: A Journalistic Poor-Farm.
- Author
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Villard, Oswald Garrison
- Subjects
ALMSHOUSES ,PURITANS ,NONCITIZENS - Abstract
Boston, located in Massachusetts, is the abandoned farm of American literature, journalistically it is the poor-farm of the U.S. Nothing in Boston astonishes foreigners more than its press, nothing more clearly illustrates the passing of what was once the Athens of the U.S. To understand in full the degradation of its dailies one must know the extraordinary transformation which has come over the stronghold of the Puritans, one must realize that the Boston of today has comparatively little in common with that of forty years ago.
- Published
- 1923
16. American Oriental Society.
- Subjects
MEETINGS ,ASIAN studies ,SCHOLARS - Abstract
The 126th meeting of the American Oriental Society was held in Boston, Massachusetts and Cambridge on April 16 and 17, 1914. The attendance was somewhat smaller than usual, though all the leading institutions at which Oriental studies are carried on were represented. The two sessions on Thursday and the one on Friday morning were held in the handsome quarters of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, admirably adapted for gatherings of scientific bodies, while the session on Friday afternoon was in the Phillips Brooks House at Harvard. Preceding the reading of papers there was a short business meeting, at which various reports were read and the more important correspondence with foreign scholars and institutions during the year.
- Published
- 1914
17. 1968 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENT.
- Subjects
ANNUAL meetings ,SUBJECT headings ,SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
The article presents the program of the 63rd Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association to be held from August 26-29, 1968. It will be held in Boston, Massachusetts. The Program Committee, consisting of Chairman Philip M. Hauser, William J. Goode, Robin M. Williams. Jr., O.D. Duncan, and Gerhard E. Lenski is planning sessions on the central theme of "On the Gap Between Sociology and Social Policy". The session topics are as follows: 1) Plenary sessions: Sociology and the Negro Revolt, Sociology and Social Accounting; 2) Thematic Sessions: Conformity and Social Control, Law and the Administration of Criminal Justice, Socialization and Education, Population and Population Control, Sociology and Environmental Planning, The Polity and the Academy, Sociology and Social Development, Sociology and Systems Analysis, Sociology and Socialist Countries, 3) Regular Sessions: The New Sociometrics, Theory Building. In order to broaden member participation in the Annual Meeting, the 1968 Program Committee is planning a limited number of sessions utilizing a Seminar format. Papers contributed by members apart from those scheduled for organized sessions, will be screened and grouped under appropriate subject headings.
- Published
- 1967
18. THE THIRD NATIONAL MEETING OF THE SOCIETY.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,OPERATIONS research ,INVENTORY control ,SHOPPING - Abstract
The article offers information on the Third National Meeting of the Operations Research Society of America which was held on Boston, Massachusetts on November 23-24, 1953. The main topic of the meeting focused on operations research in business and industry including inventory control and production scheduling and consumer shopping. One of the research papers discussed in the conference is "The Distribution of Searching Effort," by Bernard O. Koopman.
- Published
- 1954
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. NOTES.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,TRADE associations ,ECONOMISTS ,RESOURCE allocation ,ECONOMIC development ,COMPARATIVE advantage (International trade) - Abstract
The article presents a list of conferences to be held on various topics, from December 27-29, 1963 in Boston, Massachusetts as part of the 76th Annual Meeting of the American Economic Association. A meeting on the theme Principles of Efficiency to be presided over by Paul A. Samuelson of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The papers to be discussed are The Measurement of Waste by Arnold Harberger and The Efficient Allocation of Capital by Jack Hershleifer. A meeting on the theme Re-Appraisals in American Economic History to be presided over by Douglass North of the University of Washington. The papers to be discussed are A New Look at Hunter's Hypothesis about the Ante-Bellum Iron Industry by Peter Temin, Ante-Bellum Interregional Trade Reconsidered by Albert Fishlow and Canals and Development -- A Discussion of the Issue by Roger Ransom. A meeting on Comparative Costs and Economic Development to be presided over by C. P.Kindleberger of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The papers to be discussed are The Experience of India by Wilfred Malenbaum, The African Situation by Walter A. Chudson and The Case of Brazil by Werner Baer.
- Published
- 1963
20. 4 Boston-Area Business Buying, Selling Term Papers.
- Subjects
BUSINESS enterprises ,REPORT writing ,SCHOOL reports ,COLLEGE students ,PLAGIARISM -- Universities & colleges - Abstract
The article reports that at least four businesses in Boston, Massachusetts have been organized to provide college students with term papers. The companies cover almost any subject in practically any language and sell term papers at $2 a page. However, some local colleges and universities are distressed about the possibility of mass-produced plagiarism.
- Published
- 1971
21. THE MOVEMENT AND CONCENTRATION OF RETAIL TRADE IN METROPOLITAN AREAS.
- Author
-
Doherty, Richard P.
- Subjects
RETAIL industry ,METROPOLITAN areas ,COMMERCIAL products ,AREA studies ,RETAIL stores ,URBAN economics - Abstract
A conference paper pertaining to the movement of retail trade in metropolitan areas is presented. The author discusses the work of the Boston University Bureau of Business Research in the creation of a retail trade study for the Boston market area. This study is based off of information found in the 1930 Census of Distribution.
- Published
- 1941
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. THE COMMERCE OF BOSTON ON THE EVE OF THE REVOLUTION.
- Author
-
MORISON, SAMUEL ELIOT
- Subjects
HISTORY of Boston, Mass. ,HISTORY of commerce ,HISTORY of foreign trade regulation ,AMERICAN Revolutionary War, 1775-1783 ,COLONIAL Massachusetts, ca. 1600-1775 - Abstract
A conference paper is presented about the commerce of Boston, Massachusetts during the time leading up to the American Revolution. It discusses the source material provided by the Massachusetts Historical Society. It examines tables of annual average clearances and provides a broad view of the total movement of sea-borne commerce. The paper also analyzes imports, the exportation of enumerated colonial products, and the direct trade between Boston and Great Britain.
- Published
- 1922
23. EFFECTS OF SHORT ELECTRIC WAVES UPON STREPTOCOCCI FROM INFECTED TEETH.
- Author
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OARTEL, J. S. and WOLF, E. ALFRED
- Subjects
ORAL microbiology ,ELECTRIC waves ,STREPTOCOCCUS ,DENTAL pathology - Abstract
A conference paper that discusses the results of a research study conducted to determine the effects of short electric waves on microorganisms, particularly streptococci, often present in the roots of infected teeth is presented. The paper was read at a joint meeting of the American College of Dentists and the American Association for the Advancement of Science held in Boston, Massachusetts on December 29, 1933.
- Published
- 1934
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Can't Censor Student Papers, Colleges Told.
- Subjects
DECLARATION of intention ,JUDICIAL discretion ,STUDENT publications ,JOURNALISTS ,FREEDOM of speech - Abstract
The article reports on the decision of the federal district judge related to the banning of school publications in Boston, Massachusetts. The jurist ended the conflict between the student writers, school directors and board members by declaring freedom of speech among campus newspaper writers. The pronouncement has given the students their right to express their sentiments and opinions to the school administrators.
- Published
- 1970
25. ACM 72 25th Anniversary Conference.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,ANNIVERSARIES - Abstract
The article presents information on the "25th Anniversary Conference" of the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), which would be held in Boston, from August 14-16, 1972. Adrian Ruyle, ACM 72 general conference chairman, states that meeting would be a showcase of what ACM is doing now: it will reflect the full range of ACM's presents interests and activities. The Technical Program would be a coordination of the efforts of ACM's 27 Special Interest Groups and Special Interest Committees. The Commercial Program, offered in lieu of exhibits, will aim to cover current developments in the business sector of data processing. John. J. Donovan, chairman of the ACM 72 Technical Program Committee, states that the committee planned the technical program with three goals in mind: to help the professionals and students; to serve knowledgeable professionals by providing high quality, advanced technical sessions; to reduce the time lag between the generation of results and their public presentation by having immediate state-of-the-art sessions.
- Published
- 1972
26. Boston's Civil War.
- Subjects
SACCO-Vanzetti Trial, Dedham, Mass., 1921 ,ACTIONS & defenses (Law) ,TRIALS (Law) - Abstract
The article presents a perspective on the impact of the Sacco-Vanzetti case in the city of Boston, Massachusetts. According to the author, the city has absorbed in, and obsessed by the case of two Italian radicals. The author added that the issue has occasioned a controversy of extraordinary bitterness all over the city.
- Published
- 1927
27. Boston Bargain.
- Subjects
BUSINESSPEOPLE - Abstract
The article deals with the decision of tycoon John Fox of Boston, Massachusetts to purchase Boston's "Post" newspaper for 3,100,000 U.S. dollars. Fox bought the newspaper using his unorthodox approach of buying securities when nobody loves them. A brief history of the newspaper is presented. It is also noted that the newspaper's 125 staffers are hoping the Fox could revive the ailing publication.
- Published
- 1952
28. Goldbeater's Ancient Art Lags Behind Demand for Leaf.
- Subjects
DOMES (Architecture) ,GOLD ,MAINTENANCE - Abstract
The article reports that Hyde Park, Massachusetts-based Chaplin & Horton has produced hand-beaten gold leaf for the repainting of the dome of Massachusetts State House in Boston. It states that the production of the gold leaf is done by melting 23 1/2 karat gold at 160 degrees Fahrenheit and cooling down the molten gold in a mold. Moreover, booking the trimmed leaves, which consists of putting them between sheets of paper, is the final operation of the production of the gold leaf.
- Published
- 1946
29. RUTH COBB.
- Subjects
PAINTING ,ASIAN art ,NATURE - Abstract
The author talks about painting and her art influences. She cites the inspirations derived from the collection of oriental art in the world featured in exhibits at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, Massachusetts. She considers the textures and patterns of nature, the variations of growing things, and objects in sunlight and in shade as the subjects that interest her. She shares that she does not follow any scientific formula for developing color schemes.
- Published
- 1961
30. THE YEARS AHEAD.
- Author
-
Hardee, Melvene D., Klopf, Gordon J., and Minister, Edward B.
- Subjects
VOCATIONAL guidance ,HIGHER education ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. - Abstract
This article presents information about the 1963 American College Personnel Association (ACPA) Convention in Boston, Massachusetts, on the theme "The Years Ahead." The 1963 conference will provide an opportunity for the membership to think about the direction of the profession of student personnel work in higher education for the years ahead. The approach the ACPA is using to explore personnel work in higher education in the years ahead is through the appointment of 12 working commissions, consisting of 15 to 20 members each. These commissions have both a regional cluster of members and a national constituency. The program for the Boston 1963 Convention will have some 72 meetings dealing with the 12 program areas of the Commissions listed above. In addition, the chairmen of the commissions will present major papers dealing with the years ahead for their particular program area of student personnel work. Several provocateurs will analyze and question the points of view presented by each of the papers.
- Published
- 1962
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. professional activities.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,COMMUNICATION ,SPECIAL events - Abstract
This article announces several events related to communication, including the Advance Program Available for Summer Simulation Conference to be held in Boston, Massachusetts, The First European Conference on Computational Physics in Geneva, Switzerland, and two Symposium on Pedagogic Languages with Small Computers in Lawrence, Kansas.
- Published
- 1971
32. In the Driftway.
- Subjects
NEWSPAPERS ,STRIKES & lockouts - Abstract
This article presents news items, related to newspapers. When the late Leroy M. Bickford, of Boston, Massachusetts, provided recently in his will, that a copy of a Boston newspaper should be placed, daily, in every home in Newburg, Maine--his birthplace he doubtless thought that he was conferring "a great boon" upon the community in which he "first saw the light." It is painful to record the fact that the press throughout the country altogether fails to share his view. There is at least one Boston paper, which is establishing a position of curious prestige in the American press. The newspaper referred is the "Christian Science Monitor." It was the first newspaper, to record the serious general strike which broke out in Australia some months ago. That strike was sufficiently political in color to cause the censor to suppress all cable accounts of it, but the newspaper jogged along with a full report more than a week ahead of all other press dispatches on the subject.
- Published
- 1918
33. There'll Be A Lot To See And Do In Boston.
- Subjects
HISTORIC sites ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,BOOKSTORES ,CELEBRITIES ,HISTORIC buildings ,INTELLECTUAL cooperation - Abstract
The article presents information on historic sites and the Golden Jubilee Conference of the American Association of Textile Chemists & Colorists in Boston, Massachusetts. The Boston Common is the oldest public park in the U.S. Granary Burying Ground is a historic cementery which contains the graves of celebrities including John Hancock, Paul Revere and Samuel Adams. The Old Corner Book Store was built in 1712 and was a meeting place for renowned authors. The technical program will offer 51 papers coverage virtually every phase of textile wet processing from raw material to end-use performance.
- Published
- 1971
34. CHAPTER VII.
- Author
-
Howells, William Dean
- Subjects
VOYAGES & travels - Abstract
Chapter 7 of the book "My First Visit to New England" is presented. The chapter relates the author's visit to Haverhill where he saw a shoe-pegging machine, and his final stop in Boston, Massachusetts to search for Lowell in Cambridge. It recounts the author's meeting with James Russell Lowell whom he describes as the wisest and finest critic of the English language, as well as, insights into Lowell's works such as the "Biglow Papers," "Fable for Critics" and "Vision of Sir Launfal."
- Published
- 1894
35. CHAPTER VIII.
- Author
-
Howells, W. D.
- Subjects
INTERVIEWING ,DRAMA ,PERFORMING arts ,DRAMATISTS - Abstract
Chapter 8 of the book "The Story of a Play: A Novel" is presented. The Maxwells read an interview with Godolphin about his new play, which was written for him by a writer from Boston, Massachusetts and Godolphin's regard for Brice as an American drama writer. The morning papers published a review of the play that was presented in Midland and Godolphin received praises for his acting while the actress that played Salome received conflicting comments.
- Published
- 1898
36. Blackout.
- Subjects
NEWSPAPER strikes ,NEWSPAPER publishing ,WAGES ,LABOR unions & mass media ,NEWSPAPERS - Abstract
The article focuses on the citywide newspaper strike of the independent mailers' union in Boston, Massachusetts. It states that the Boston mailers struck independently for higher wages causing the ban of newspapers, and hope to build new factories where automation will reduce the number of mailers' tasks. Moreover, settlements under the local news coverage and the resumed distribution of newspaper in Boston showed the incapacity of press to boost its normal newsstand quota.
- Published
- 1957
37. The House That Jack Built.
- Author
-
Nason, John F.
- Subjects
CONSTRUCTION equipment ,BUILDING trades ,DWELLINGS ,CIVILIZATION ,PLUMBERS - Abstract
The workers of Boston, Massachusetts, have built a house of which they are proud. Not many miles from Plymouth Rock on the shores of Massachusetts Bay it stands, a half-brick half-wooden bungalow, which an American workingman, assert may mean almost as much to future civilization as that rock. This house was undertaken at a time when building materials had reached the top notch and labor was still one dollar an hour. A foreman was elected and a building committee consisting of bricklayers, carpenters, steam fitters, plumbers, plasterers, and paper hangers was chosen.
- Published
- 1922
38. A FIELD TEST OF A MODIFIED "TWO-STEP FLOW OF COMMUNICATION" MODEL.
- Author
-
Troldahl, Verling C.
- Subjects
FIELD research ,COMMUNICATION ,HYPOTHESIS ,RESEARCH - Abstract
This paper reports the findings of a carefully prepared field experiment conducted in the Boston area to test the "two step flow of communication" hypothesis. The results of the experiment, although far from definitive, seem to call for a reappraisal of the hypothesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1966
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. 3,000 Attend Golden Jubilee Conference.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
Information about several topics discussed at the golden jubilee conference of the American Association of Textile Chemists & Colorists (AATCC) held in Boston, Massachusetts in October 1971 is presented. The conference was organized to celebrate 50 years of AATCC's foundation and to honor its 270 charter members. A tribute was paid to the AATCC by the Society of Dyers and Colorists and several notable people of the textile industry including Herman F. Marka and Ernest R. Kaswell.
- Published
- 1971
40. FORMAL ORGANIZATION AND THE AMERICANIZATION PROCESS, WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO THE GREEKS OF BOSTON.
- Author
-
Treudley, Mary Bosworth
- Subjects
AMERICANIZATION ,FORMAL organization ,BEHAVIOR ,CONFORMITY ,PEASANTS ,IMMIGRANTS ,GREEKS - Abstract
The article focuses on formal organization and the Americanization process, with special reference to Greeks of Boston, Massachusetts. It presents the thesis that formal organization is an important instrument in the transformation of peasants into citizens of a modern state. An earlier paper dealt with individual and family choices between possible alternatives in the Americanization process. The author states that the modification of personality structure requires less effort if large groups can be handled at the same time. The totalitarian state proceeds by creating authoritarian structures and by compelling membership in them. Conformity to patterns set at the top is enforced upon lower ranks of members. Democracies, too, make use of hierarchical organizations and bring pressure upon individuals to conform to set behavior patterns, but they do not rely exclusively upon such organizations. To make the thesis more specific, the Americanization process has been characterized by a balance between authoritarian structures to which the newly arrived immigrant and his children must adjust and autonomous structures which he creates and can modify to suit his needs and taste.
- Published
- 1949
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. You Still Have to Wait, But—.
- Subjects
CITIES & towns ,AUTOMOBILE industry ,AUTOMOBILE dealers - Abstract
The article discusses a survey of 13 key U.S. cities by the periodical reveals that the big car makers still have a long way to go before the work through their backlogs. According to the poll, in spite of production hike, it takes from three months to one year to get popular models. Dealers for the Big Three, Ford, General Motors and Chrysler, cited the longest waiting periods and the fewest promises. A sample of the replies from dealers in principal cities, including New York City, Boston in Massachusetts, and Atlanta in Georgia, is presented.
- Published
- 1947
42. COMING EVENTS.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,COMPUTER industry - Abstract
This article presents information about the upcoming meetings and events related to the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM). The ACM, the American Mathematical Society (AMS) and the Association for Symbolic Logic are cosponsoring a symposium on "Mathematical Aspects of Computer Science" in New York during April 5-7, 1966. The Symposium is being held at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in conjunction with the AMS Meeting. The seventh international meeting of the SDS Users Group will be held during April 28-30 at the Sheraton Boston Hotel, Boston, Massachusetts. The meeting will include panel discussions on real-time computer systems, simulation, and time sharing. Hardware and software reports will be presented by the SDS staff. Sol Zasluff, SDS manager of market support, will be one of several featured speakers. The 18th semi-annual meeting of TUG, the Philco 2000 group, will be held at Newpurter Inn in Newport Beach, California during April 13-14. Host for the meeting will be Andre White, manager of the digital computer department at the Aeronutrunic Division of Philco Corp. in Newport Beach
- Published
- 1966
43. Henrietta Spills the Beans.
- Subjects
EDITORS ,COMIC books, strips, etc. ,RESIGNATION of employees - Abstract
The article highlights that managing editor Henrietta Perkins has recently denounced the R.O.T.C. unit at Boston University in Boston, Massachusetts. As managing editor of the college comic weekly, the Beanpot, she issued jokes devoted to the glories of the Boston University R.O.T.C. She displayed in this joke all the most seditious and dangerous qualities that a human being can have. The dean immediately demanded her resignation from the staff of the paper and suggested that action might be taken to remove her bodily from the college. The jokes were reprinted in the Boston press, the drawings were reproduced and Perkins was widely quoted.
- Published
- 1925
44. Proceedings of the Semi-annual Meeting.
- Author
-
BLAKESLEE, GEORGE H.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,UNITED States history ,SOCIETIES - Abstract
The article presents an outline of the proceedings of the semi-annual meeting of the American Antiquarian Society held at the Club of Odd Volumes in Boston, Massachusetts on April 16, 1941. A list of presiding members is included. The results of elections for society offices are described. The papers presented at the meeting are also listed, including "The Brown Papers: The Record of a Rhode Island Business Family," "Declension in a Bible Commonwealth," and "The Reverend Robert Jenney."
- Published
- 1941
45. Science.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,RESEARCH - Abstract
This article discusses the matter related to science. The autumn meeting of the National Academy of Sciences, held in Boston, Massachusetts November 20, 21, 22, 1906 in the new buildings at the Harvard Medical School, was notable in several respects. The papers presented by guests and members in the scientific sessions of the Academy included the following "Experiments in Aerodromics," by A.G. Bell of Washington, "Acoustic Measurements," by A.G. Webster of Clark University, "Continental Sedimentation," by J. Barrell at Yale, "Evidence of Desiccation in Chinese Turkestan," by Ellswort'h Huntington of Harvard, and others.
- Published
- 1906
46. The Week.
- Subjects
PUBLIC schools ,TEXTBOOKS ,CHRISTIAN sects - Abstract
The article presents information on various developments of importance in the U.S. and other countries as of October 4, 1888. The city of Boston in Massachusetts has become greatly stirred up over the question of Roman Catholic influence in the conduct of public school. The provoking cause of the stir is the exclusion by the school committee of a text-book which members of the Catholic Church considered objectionable because of a reference to that church. The result is a general disposition on the part of women to avail themselves of the right to suffrage.
- Published
- 1888
47. CHARLES DEMETROPOULOS.
- Subjects
WATERCOLORISTS ,WATERCOLOR painting ,PAINT materials - Abstract
The article features artist Charles Demetropoulos and his watercolor paintings. His subjects in his artworks were mainly street scenes in Boston, Massachusetts, the coastline of New England, and the scenes in Greece and its isles. He was born in Lowell, Massachusetts in 1912 and was educated at the Massachusetts College of Art in Boston. His materials in painting include brushes made of camel's hair, sable and bristle.
- Published
- 1970
48. Photo Starter.
- Subjects
PHOTOTYPESETTING of newspapers - Abstract
The article presents a corporate profile of Compugraphic Corp., owned by entrepreneur William W. Garth, Jr., in Boston, Massachusetts. He founded the company in 1967 by hiring engineers to build a printing technology for newspaper companies. He invested about 30,000 dollars in phototypesetting machines and instructed his engineers to develop stripped-down machines to sell small daily and weekly newspapers.
- Published
- 1974
49. TRAVELERS' GUIDE THAT AIMS HIGH.
- Subjects
PHOTOGRAPHS - Abstract
A photograph of an official marker that was set up as a part of the program of the U.S. Civil Aeronautics Administration (CAA) to help civilian flyers locate themselves in Boston, Massachusetts in 1974 is presented.
- Published
- 1947
50. News for Bibliophiles.
- Author
-
L. S. L.
- Subjects
LITERATURE ,AUTHORS ,BIBLIOGRAPHY ,BOOKS - Abstract
The Club of Odd Volumes of Boston has recently published "Isaiah Thomas, Printer, Writer & Collector," by Dr. Charles L. Nichols of Worcester. This is the substance of a paper read before the Club a year ago, which is here expanded by the addition at a carefully compiled bibliography of books printed by Thomas. He was apprenticed to Zechariah Fowle, owner of a single press and a few hundred pounds of type, when the lad was only seven years old, and he used to set type standing on a bench, in order that he might reach the eases, though he knew then only the letters, and had not been taught to put then together and spell.
- Published
- 1912
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