856 resultados para Lincoln University history
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Events for Lincoln University Homecoming October 5-12, 2003 LU Blue Tigers vs. Northwestern Oklahoma University
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Events for Lincoln University Homecoming October 7-14, 2001 LU Blue Tigers vs. Westminster College
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Events for annual Lincoln University homecoming October 9-14, 2000 LU Blue Tigers vs. Stillman College
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Events for Annual Lincoln University Homecoming September 29-October 6, 2013 LU Blue Tigers vs. Emporia State University
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Events for Annual Lincoln University Homecoming October 12-19, 2014 LU Blue Tigers vs. Texas College
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Brochure for annual Lincoln University homecoming on November 15, 1975 Lincoln University vs. Southeast Missouri State University
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Brochure for annual Lincoln University homecoming on November 19, 1966 LU Tigers vs. Langston Lions
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Brochure for annual Lincoln University homecoming on November 6, 1965 Lincoln University vs. Kentucky State University.
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Events for Annual Lincoln University Homecoming October 2-8, 2016 LU Blue Tigers vs. St. Joseph's College
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Events for Annual Lincoln University Homecoming October 19, 1935 Lincoln University vs. West Virginia State College
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v.2.1902-1937, the Bryan administration, by B.D. Myers.
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Vol. 1. Gregory of Tours.--Early intercourse of England and Germany.--Antecedents of the Reformation.--The Stephenses.--Muretus.--Joseph Scaliger.--Life of Joseph Scaliger (Fragment).--Peter Daniel Huet.--A chapter of university history.--F.A. Wolf.--Oxford Studies.--Vol. 2. Calvin at Geneva.--Tendencies of religious thought in England, 1688-1750.--Life of Bishop Warburton.--The Calas tragedy.--Present state of theology in Germany (1857).--Learning in the Church of England.--Philanthropic societies in the reign of Queen Anne.--Life of Montaigne.--Pope and his editors.--Buckle's History of civilization in England.
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v. 1. 1870-1910, by Alexis Cope, ed. by T. C. Mendenhall.--v. 2. Continuation of the narrative from 1910 to 1925, by O. C. Hooper, ed. by T. C. Mendenhall.--v. 3. Addresses and proceedings of the semicentennial celebration, October 13-16, 1920, ed. by T. C. Mendenhall, assisted by J. S. Myers.--v. 4. The universty in the great war. pt. 1. Wartime on the campus, by W. H. Siebert, with a chapter by Carl Whittke. pt. 2. Our men in military and naval service, supervised and ed. by W. H. Siebert, except chapters II to IX, inclusive, by E. H. McNeal. pt. 3. In the camps and at the front.--v. 5. Addresses and proceedings of the inauguration of Howard Landis Bevis, October 24 and 25, 1940, ed. by William McPherson and H. K. Schellenger.--v. 6. Addresses and proceedings of the seventy-fifth anniversary, 1948-49.--v. 7. The Bevis administration, 1940-1956. pt. 1. The university in a world at war, 1940-1945. --v. 10. The Enarson years, 1972-1981, by Paul Underwood.
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Despite the fact that theorization has been established as an important social mechanism in a variety of contexts, little research has explicated how this process works. I argue that theorization entails strategic constructions of history, or rhetorical history, in order to persuade audiences of legitimacy. I examine the role that history plays in actors’ theorizations of the Ontario wine industry as world class. By conducting a rhetorical analysis of the newsletters and websites of Ontario wineries, I find that various themes of history are routinely employed to re-theorize the industry as one that produces world class wines. In general, the findings suggest that the narratives of Ontario wineries tap into global repertoires of fine wine to portray the continuity of current practices with those of Old World winemaking. In addition, wineries sometimes tap into local histories to convey a sense of uniqueness, but they also obscure the history of poor winemaking in the region.