Department of History, Anthropology, & Philosophy
http://hdl.handle.net/10675.2/622424
2024-03-06T13:00:39ZThe Spaces They Occupied: Women as the Determiners of Success in the French Revolution
http://hdl.handle.net/10675.2/623293
The Spaces They Occupied: Women as the Determiners of Success in the French Revolution
Stewart, Keturah
This item presents the abstract for an oral presentation at the 21st Annual Phi Kappa Phi Student Research and Fine Arts Conference.
2020-05-04T00:00:00ZThe Past is a Foreign Country They View Things Differently There: The Perception of “The Invisible Empire of the Ku Klux Klan” as a Benevolent Secret Society from 1915 to 1965
http://hdl.handle.net/10675.2/623288
The Past is a Foreign Country They View Things Differently There: The Perception of “The Invisible Empire of the Ku Klux Klan” as a Benevolent Secret Society from 1915 to 1965
Typhair, Dillon
This item presents the abstract for a poster presentation at the 21st Annual Phi Kappa Phi Student Research and Fine Arts Conference.
2020-05-04T00:00:00ZThe Art of Conservation: The Federal Duck Stamp
http://hdl.handle.net/10675.2/623161
The Art of Conservation: The Federal Duck Stamp
Harris, Kirstyn
President Franklin Roosevelt signed the Duck Stamp Act into law in 1934. The Duck Stamp Act states that any waterfowl hunter over the age of 16 years old must buy a Federal Duck Stamp and that the sales from the stamp go to the Migratory Bird Conservation Fund. In the beginning, the government selected an artist to paint the stamp. After a few years of debates, there was a proposal to form the Federal Duck Stamp contest in which anyone could participate. This is the longest-running government controlled contest in the United States.
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2019-12-01T00:00:00ZYour Neighbors’ Approach: Looking at Various Medical Systems within the Augusta Area
http://hdl.handle.net/10675.2/622383
Your Neighbors’ Approach: Looking at Various Medical Systems within the Augusta Area
Boomer, Houlton
This research focuses on how the health care system one is used to using effects ones ability to seek and receive care in another System. Specific examples used within the study are the Western Medical System, The Traditional Chinese Medical System, and African American Root medicine. The study was done with interviews to health care providers and with surveys to citizens of the Augusta area. Unfortunately the data collected proved inconclusive with regards to the research question. However it did reveal a great deal of information about the patient population in the area, namely the tendency to remain with a single system with regards to health and the role of financial constraints in choice of healthcare system.
This file is restricted to Augusta University. Please log in using your JagNet ID and password to access.
2019-05-01T00:00:00Z