75 resultados para Colby Dean Runnals
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Includes covers and articles from the Colby alumni magazine and from the Echo, correspondence, donor lists for the Mayflower Associates, and photographs.
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A collection of Colby student poetry edited by Norris Potter, Jr. "This 'Anthology of Recent Colby Verse' merits the attention of everyone interested in poetry-or in Colby. It contains, perhaps, no great poems; but it contains many interesting ones." --From the introduction by Merle Crowell, Editor of the American Magazine.
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Student Affairs Adds Deans for Spiritual Life, Sexual Diversity Hugh Gourley, Art Museum Director and Leader TwitterFEED Colby Covers the Campaign Mitchell Scholar Wins Travel Fellowship to Jordan Finance Alumni Give Students a Preview Shea Is New Goldfarb Center Director New Storage Facility To Be Boon to Colby Libraries Author and Icon, Woodward Receives Lovejoy Honor South African Reconciliation Advocate is Oak Fellow Message in a Box Tobacco Banned on Most of Campus New Mellon Fellowship in Environmental Studies Belgrade Lakes EPSCoR Research Has Impact Colby Volunteers Boost SAT Scores for Local Students
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Blair Offers Seven Lessons to Grads Writing for Everyone On the Job Front Brown's Organization SPARKs Change Seven Students Receive 2012 Fulbright Grants Faculty Awarded Named Professorships Focus on Humanities Bold Reflections TwitterFEED Two Hundred and Counting
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Once a homeless teen, Jessica Boyle ’12 worked to make Colby a place where students like her can thrive.
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Modeling Clean Energy A New Home Sweet Home Opening a Dialogue Walking in Someone Else's Shoes Delayed Reaction, Strong Occupation New Affiliation with Columbia Same Place, Different Mission Giving Marriage a New Ring TwitterFEED Microcosm of a Small World
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Tony Blair to Speak at Commencement Science Building Gets Go-Ahead Spike Lee Does the Colby Thing Historian Leonard Awarded Lincoln Prize Presidential Preview Show by Mike Daisey Creates Nationwide Controversy President Adams as Art Curator Chen Wins Peace Grant--Again Qin Awarded Watson Fellowship Roots in Slavery Tell Bigger Story TwitterFEED A (Real) Virtual Community Corrado Tapped as Expert on Super PACs
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A Touch of Glass Witness to History Colby Renews "No-Loan" Commitment Fresh Idea The Anthropology of Air Travel Oak Fellow Fights India's Caste System If the Ring Fits… TwitterFEED New Maisel Fund Opens Doors to the World Goodbye, Oil (Almost)
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Passion Defines Grads Colby Dumps Bottled Water Bullish on Colby: 2011 Graduates Find Success in Tight Market Four Fulbright Fellows; Projects for Peace Winners Hanson Scholar Feels an Affinity Philosophy Prof's Advice: "Plastikos" TwitterFEED Update: Nick Tucker '11J Student Entrepreneurs Win Start-Up Cash Schwalm '99 Shoots NFL Photo of the Year Rising Senior Wins Jeapardy! Admitting the Illustrious Class of 2015
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During the period of 1990-2002 US households experienced a dramatic wealth cycle, induced by a 369% appreciation in the value of real per capita liquid stock market assets followed by a 55% decline. However, consumer spending in real terms continued to rise throughout this period. Using data from 1990-2005, traditional life-cycle approaches to estimating macroeconomic wealth effects confront two puzzles: (i) econometric evidence of a stable cointegrating relationship among consumption, income, and wealth is weak at best; and (ii) life-cycle models that rely on aggregate measures of wealth cannot explain why consumption did not collapse when the value of stock market assets declined so dramatically. We address both puzzles by decomposing wealth according to the liquidity of household assets. We find that the significant appreciation in the value of real estate assets that occurred after the peak of the wealth cycle helped sustain consumer spending from 2001 to 2005.
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Public and private actors increasingly cooperate in global governance, a realm previously reserved for states and intergovernmental organizations (IOs). This trend raises fascinating theoretical questions. What explains the rise in public-private institutions and their role in international politics? Who leads such institutional innovation and why? To address the questions, this paper develops a theory of the political demand and supply of public-private institutions and specifies the conditions under which IOs and non-state actors would cooperate, and states would support this public-private cooperation. The observable implications of the theoretical argument are evaluated against the broad trends in public-private cooperation and in a statistical analysis of the significance of demand and supply-side incentives in public-private cooperation for sustainable development. The study shows that public-private institutions do not simply fill governance gaps opened by globalization, but cluster in narrower areas of cooperation, where the strategic interests of IOs, states, and transnational actors intersect.
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Evidence from developed and developing countries alike demonstrates a strongly positive relationship between religiosity and happiness, particularly for women and particularly among the elderly. Using survey data from the oldest old in China, we find a strong negative relationship between religious participation and subjective well-being in a rich multivariate logistic framework that controls for demographics, health and disabilities, living arrangements and marital status, wealth and income, lifestyle and social networks, and location. In contrast to other studies, we also find that religion has a larger effect on subjective well-being on men than women.
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Despite rapid economic growth and poverty reduction, inequality in Chile has remained high and remarkably constant over the last 20 years, prompting academic and public interest in the subject. Due to data limitations, however, research on inequality in Chile has concentrated on the national and regional levels. The impact of cash subsidies to poor households on local inequality is thus not well understood. Using poverty-mapping methods to asses this impact, we find heterogeneity in the effectiveness of regional and municipal governments in reducing inequality via poverty-reduction transfers, suggesting that alternative targeting regimes may complement current practice in aiding the poor.
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We propose and test the implications of a two-dimensional concept of candidate quality in U.S. House elections. Strategic quality is composed of the skills and resources necessary to wage an effective campaign; personal quality is composed of the characteristics most ordinary citizens value in their leaders and representatives, such as personal integrity and dedication to public service. We employ district informants in studies of the 1998 and 2002 congressional elections to measure these qualities in candidates, and we merge mass survey data with the district informant indicators to assess constituents’ awareness and evaluation of House candidates, and voting choice. We find that awareness tends to be responsive to candidates’ strategic quality, and that incumbent evaluation is remarkably responsive to variation in personal quality, even taking into account the quality of challenger emergence. These and other findings appear to support a more positive view of citizen capacity than is common in the congressional elections literature, especially in light of the electoral security of House incumbents.