995 resultados para Clothing and dress on television.
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Recipes for domestic wines, cider, etc., on p. 306-315.
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Includes indexes.
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Published also under title: Look your best.
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Cover title.
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Mode of access: Internet.
Adult homemaking education; a unit in clothing selection, a unit in home arrangement and furnishing,
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"Publications of the Bureau of business research" on inside back cover.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Supplement to Quantity and cost budgets, Oct., 1936.
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Dedication "To the toasts of Great-Britain" (p.¹[5-8]) subscribed "J.B.D." -- Caption, p.²[1]: Dress. A poem. -- "Finis" on p. 26 & 35. -- Special t-p, p. [27]: Apple-pye. A poem. By Dr. King [i.e. Leonard Welsted]. Now first printed from a correct copy. -- P.³[1]-3 is "Books lately publish'd ... All printed for E. Curll, at the Dial and Bible..."
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"Reprinted ... October 25, 1922."
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Includes index.
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"Supersedes Leaflet no. 230, Make-overs from men's suits."
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This study draws upon cultivation theory, acculturation theory, and works on intergroup relations to examine the effects of print media exposure and contact on subjective social reality and acculturation attitudes of Chinese immigrants in Australia. Data was gathered via a survey administered to 265 respondents with Chinese origin. Results indicate that exposure to mainstream newspapers is only positively related to one indicator of subjective reality, namely, outgroup perception whereas exposure to ethnic newspapers was not significantly related to any of the indicators of subjective reality. Acculturation attitudes, on the other hand, are more closely related to group perception and contact but not closely associated with exposure to print media. These findings have again challenged the direct effect assumption of cultivation theory, paved the ground for combining mediated communication variables with interpersonal communication variables in acculturation research and suggested policy implications for interethnic coexistence. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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In this article we review the methods used by television news channels in their reporting of the clashes between the Hungarian police and refugees at the Serbian-Hungarian border on 16th of September 2015. With the help of content analysis we examine the techniques used by each editorial board to portray events differently,resulting in dissimilar effects on recipients. During the analysis we examine news coverage for one specific day as presented by Hungarian, German and pan-European broadcasters. German news programs were chosen for comparison with Hungarian ones due to the fact that most of the refugees were heading towards Germany. We conclude that there are significant differences between the information that was broadcast according to television channels; owner expectations presumably play an important role in this.