HIS/WMN140 Women In American History American women fifteen hundred biographies, REF CT3260 notable Hispanic Americanwomen, REF E184.S75N68 ImmigrantsNew York ImmigrantsUnited StatesHistory http://northonline.sccd.ctc.edu/cmcdowell/classes/his140sp03.htm
Extractions: Prepared by Connie McDowell, Librarian General Strategies for Research Plan your search brainstorm. Think about what types of materials are needed and jot down a plan for your research. Check bibliographies in text book for references to other sources of information Use reference books (encyclopedias, etc. see below) to gain an overview of your topic. Consult bibliographies in reference books for additional resources. Identify keywords and key concepts to use in constructing search strategies. Search the Library Catalog (and other library catalogs) to find books on your topic. Search periodical databases , e.g., ProQuest, SIRS, Ethnic NewsWatch, Alt-Press Watch, to find articles from journals, magazines and newspapers. Critically evaluate all information, especially web resources.
Library Resources For HIS112 Latino Encyclopedia, REF E184.S75L357 1995. Mexican American biographies, REF E184M5 M454. notable Native Americans, REF E 89 N67. top of page. Immigration Sites. http://northonline.sccd.ctc.edu/nslib/HIS112/sites.htm
Extractions: Content on this web site is provided for informational purposes only. We accept no responsibility for any loss, injury or inconvenience sustained by any person resulting from information published on this site. We encourage you to verify any critical information with the relevant authorities. About Us Contact Us Privacy Links Directory ...
Academic Directories the Irish potato famine and its effect on immigration to North business, and Tucson sChinatowns, as well as short biographies of notable Chinese Americans http://www.alllearn.org/er/tree.jsp?c=23260
Biographies biographies of SVU Officers. the USA he passed through the standard phases of immigration waiter, bartender in which context he met the notable linguists and http://www.svu2000.org/whatwedo/c1btwo.htm
Extractions: SVU CZECHOSLOVAK SOCIETY OF ARTS AND SCIENCES Biographies of SVU Officers MILOSLAV RECHCIGL, JR. Mila Rechcigl, as he likes to be called, a scientist, scholar and amateur historian, is current President of the Czechoslovak Society of Arts and Sciences (SVU). He is a native of Mlada Boleslav, Czechoslovakia, who has lived since 1950 in the US. After receiving a scholarship, he went to Cornell University where he studied from 1951-58, receiving his B.S., M.N.S., and Ph.D. degrees there, specializing in biochemistry, nutrition, physiology, and food science. He then spent two years conducting research at the National Institutes of Health as a postdoctoral research fellow. Subsequently he was appointed to the staff of the Laboratory of Biochemistry at the National Cancer Institute. During 1968-69 he was selected for one year of training in a special USPHS executive program, in research management, grants administration, and science policy. This led to his appointment as Special Assistant for Nutrition and Health in the Health Services and Mental Health Administration. In 1970 he joined the Agency for International Development as Nutrition Advisor and soon after was promoted to the position of Chief of Research and Institutional Grants Division. Later he became a Director with the responsibility for reviewing, administering and managing AID research. He is the author or editor of over thirty books and handbooks in the field of biochemistry, physiology, nutrition, food science a technology, agriculture, and international development, in addition to a large number of scientific articles and book chapters.
Canada In The Making - Glossary As governor, his favouritism of British immigrants and the controversial use of publicfunds One of his most notable actions during his time in Nova Scotia was http://www.canadiana.org/citm/reference/biographies_e.html
Extractions: Canadian academic, lawyer and politician; prime minister from 1891 to 1892. An energetic man, he was appointed to the Senate in 1887, serving in Cabinet , and also briefly acted as Mayor of Montreal from 1887 to 1888. In his brief term as prime minister, he pushed for public service and Criminal Code reforms, as well as a reciprocity treaty with the U.S. He resigned in 1892 due to ill heath and died in Montreal the following year.
Notable Decisions Of The U.S. Supreme Court, 20022003 Term notable Decisions of the US Supreme Court, 20022003 Term. US Can Imprison ImmigrantsSet for Deportation (April 29, 2003) Justices, 54, uphold mandatory http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0908895.html
Extractions: History and Government Supreme Court Three-Strikes Law Validated (March 5, 2003): Railway Workers Can Sue When Vulnerable to Illness (March 10, 2003): HMOs Must Accept All Qualified Doctors (April 2, 2003): Justices Set Guidelines on Punitive Damages (April 7, 2003): Court Gives States Authority to Ban Cross-Burning (April 7, 2003): U.S. Can Imprison Immigrants Set for Deportation (April 29, 2003): Court Rules Charities Can Be Charged with Fraud (May 5, 2003): Maine Prescription Drug Plan Gets Qualified Approval (May 19, 2003): Court Expands Federal Authority (May 27, 2003): Justices Restrict Medication of Defendants (June 16, 2003): Court Saves Affirmative Action Program (June 23, 2003): In Grutter v.
Extractions: Enter your email address here: Having a web site will not drive clients to your firm. Odd that a web designer would write something that bold, but it is true. It is also true that simply advertising in an online legal directory is not enough. Neither is it enough to create a snazzy intro or plug in a few keywords into your web page, relax and wait for the clients to roll in. However, you can generate new clients from the Internet using a combination of these techniques. Potential clients are looking for legal assistance online and the amount of people searching for a lawyer on the Internet increases each day. This brief article will detail how you can help clients find your firm instead of your competition through a variety of techniques. A more in-depth look at these strategies will be published next month on our web site and at TechnoLawyer.com.
CD-ROMs By Disk Number 1850 359 Passenger and Immigration Lists Philadelphia 1850 367 Family History NotableBritish Families Vermont, 1850 500 Southern biographies and Genealogies http://www.gwest.org/cdbynum.htm
Mr. Kellys History II Project - Web Resources with information about Asian immigration to the lanugage, music, genelogy, and notableIrish Americans. of women s suffrage and biographies of significant http://www.wbps.org/pages/library/kelly19thcen.htm
Extractions: After sailing across the Atlantic Ocean for 10 weeks, land was sighted. He landed on a small island in the Bahamas which Columbus named San Salvador. He claimed the island for the king and queen of Spain. When Columbus reached Cuba, he thought it was the mainland of Japan. Columbus returned to Spain in March 1493.
United States Boys Clothes: Immigration (Large areas of Poland at the time were part of Tearust Russia.) The Jews are notablebecause of all the immigrant groups, the Jews were most likely to stay in http://histclo.hispeed.com/country/us/imm/us-imm.html
Extractions: Figure 1. America as a result of the Revolutionry War gained independence from Britain in 1783. The first wave of immigration after independence occurred as a result of the disorders caused by the French Revolution and subsequent Napoleonic Wars . Large numbers of Europeans fled the economic distress and battlefield horrors by emmigrationg to America. Economic distress in Ireland, especially the Potato Famine of 1845-46, caused the next wave of European immigration. Most immigrants during the first half of the 19th century came from the British Isles and northern Europe (Germany and Svandinavia). This gradually changed and during the second half of the 19th century immigration increased from Eastern and Souther Europe. During this period, immigrants from Austria-Hingary, Italy, and Russia constituted more than half of the total. The number of immigrants gradually increased during the 19th century,. By the early 20th century about 1 million immigrants entered Ameruican annually. This sharply fell off during World War I (1914-18). After the War, immigration began to rise again until restricted by Congress in the early 1920s. Early immigration laws had primarily been aimed at the Chinese. The restrictive laws passed by Congress in the 1920s affected all countries.
Extractions: Chronological Thread This is part 1 of a 6 part document. This newsletter is never sent out unsolicited. UNSUBSCRIBE instructions can be found at http://www.visalaw.com/subscribe2.html . The complete newsletter will also be posted shortly at http://www.visalaw.com/bulletin/ http://www.visalaw.com . SSHD serves immigration clients throughout the world from its offices in the US, Canada and the People's Republic of China. To schedule a telephone or in-person consultation with the firm, go to http://www.visalaw.com/intake.html . To receive a free e-mail subscription to Siskind's Immigration Bulletin, fill out the form at http://www.visalaw.com/subscribe2.html or send an email message to mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] with the message in the body of the e-mail "subscribe your e-mail address". TO UNSUBSCRIBE GO TO http://www.visalaw.com/subscribe2.html