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61. A Historical Overview Of Hydrologic Studies Of Artifical Recharge In The U. S. G
use of spreading basins has been practiced on Long Island since the 1930s. Historical references for artificial recharge studies in the us Geological Survey.
http://water.usgs.gov/ogw/pubs/ofr0289/epw_historical.html
Water Resources
A Historical Overview of Hydrologic Studies of Artificial Recharge in the U.S. Geological Survey
By E.P. Weeks
U.S. Geological Survey, P.O. Box 25046, MS 413, Denver Federal Center, Lakewood, Colorado 80225 Return to Table of Contents
Abstract
An overview of artificial recharge studies requires a precise definition of the topic to be covered. Todd (1959) defines artificial recharge, for his bibliography, as “the practice of increasing by artificial means the amount of water that enters a ground-water reservoir.” For this review, a narrower definition is invoked that includes direct recharge of potable water through spreading basins, pits, and injection or drainage wells, but excludes induced infiltration from wells, galleries, and collectors placed near streams. Deep well waste disposal and irrigation with sewage effluent as a recharge mechanism are not included. Literature reviews, except those used here, and papers that only mention artificial recharge as a solution to water-supply problems are also omitted. Sources of information for this review include Todd’s (1959) bibliography of artificial recharge through 1954, Signor et al.’s (1970) bibliography for 1955-67, and the web-based Water Resources Abstracts for the period after 1967. Studies that have not resulted in citation by those sources, such as those summarized in administrative reports, are thus not included.

62. Selected Bibliography For A Public Library Labor Studies Collection
a selection of Labor History and Labor studies titles suitable Fall of Radical Labor in the us Lawrence Hill strike of Akron, Ohio rubber workers in the 1930s.
http://www.afscme.org/otherlnk/laborbib.htm
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What's New Selected Bibliography for a Public Library Labor Studies Collection Labor History is American History! Labor Studies is for every library!
While most public libraries, even the smallest, give serious attention to their business collections and their business users, few pay equal attention to the interests of organized and unorganized workers, their history and their issues. May, Labor History Month, is the perfect occasion to focus on collection development in this important, but virtually invisible, area in many of our libraries. This list represents a selection of Labor History and Labor Studies titles suitable for most public library collections. Although the subject is international, the general focus here is on the U.S. workers' movements. Annotations are included only when they are necessary to elucidate the subject matter. All titles are in print, except where noted, and can generally be obtained through your usual sources. A few, also noted, can be direct-ordered from the publisher. Prices are not listed, but consideration has been given to affordability for the average public library, and paperback ISBNs are frequently provided. This is not meant to be a comprehensive list - although it seems to be growing every time it is revised! Some "classics" are omitted because they are out-of-print and/or very difficult to obtain; the author has obviously also made choices among recent works.

63. Yale University Press - Publisher Of Fine Books
Wenger has given us a model study of the impact in the twentieth century. Edward A. Abramson, American studies. political activities of the early 1930s or the
http://www.yale.edu/yup/books/062656.htm
Search for a Yale book
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Yale Series of Younger Poets

Metropolitan Museum of Art Books
Fixing Intelligence: For a More Secure America
by William E. Odom
"General Odom uses the unique insight gained from years of experience in the intelligence business to explain in plain language an issue that is critical to U.S. national security—intelligence community reform. A valuable resource to expert and novice alike, it serves both as an excellent introduction to the intelligence community, and also as a valuable guide to the current debate over how to proceed with intelligence community reform."—Senator Richard C. Shelby
The facts behind the summer blockbuster
The Day After Tomorrow
Red Sky at Morning:
America and the Crisis of the Global Environment
by James Gustave Speth " Moviegoers inspired to learn more will benefit from a new book called 'Red Sky at Morning' by James Gustave Speth, dean of the School of Forestry and Environmental Studies at Yale. The book, an overview of environmental threats, provides a list of the already observable consequences of warming... as well as a forecast of even greater calamities."

64. Latino Studies Home Page IUB
women in the formation and development of us society The course carries both S H and Culture studies credit We will focus on 1930s1950s constructions of Latinos
http://www.indiana.edu/~latino/courses_latino.htm

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Program Overview “Latino Studies” refers to the study of those U.S. populations whose roots are traced to original Spanish speaking citizens of this country, and immigrants from countries in Latin America and the Caribbean. The goal of the new Latino Studies Program, under the direction of Prof. Jorge Chapa, is to introduce students to a wide range of current research and scholarly opinion on the history, culture and social status of Latinos in the United States. It provides the opportunity for students to develop a keen understanding of Latinos from an interdisciplinary perspective. In addition to offering courses, the department will enhance the campus and community at large through the support of such activities as lectures, conferences, seminars, exhibits, and research. Undergraduate Courses L101 Introduction to Latino/a Studies This course is intended to provide an introduction and overview on Latino issues. The course will begin with a brief overview of the histories of the major Latinos national origin groups in the United States. The bulk of the course will examine a number of topics and issues that are key to understanding contemporary Latinos; e.g., immigration, language, education, employment, etc. The third and briefest part of the course will build upon the previous sections by asking how the history and current status of Latinos might influence their near term future, under various assumptions. The goals of this course include the following: 1) helping its student develop an informed basis for talking and thinking about Latinos; 2) developing an awareness on how Latinos fit or don't fit into American society; and, 3) applying this knowledge to assess current issues and future possibilities.

65. Agee And Evans' Great Experiement
dignity that faced the United States during the 1930s. Readers uncomfortable with Let us Now Praise Famous Men s a song, and a distorted socialstudies textbook
http://history.hanover.edu/hhr/hhr93_5.html
Let Us Now Praise Famous Men : Agee and Evans' Great Experiment
Suzanne A. Austgen
It was in 1936 that James Agee and Walker Evans, on assignment for Fortune magazine, drove into rural Alabama and entered the world of three families of white tenant farmers. And it was in this same year that Franklin D. Roosevelt was elected to his second term as president, his New Deal having won the resounding support of American voters. Fortune Let Us Now Praise Famous Men , is, as much as the New Deal itself, a great experiment in addressing the issues of social responsibility and human dignity that faced the United States during the 1930s. Roosevelt was elected to the presidency in 1932 because he recognized the need for an innovative approach to the U.S. economy. Financial institutions, including the banking system and the stock market, had been thoroughly undermined along with American confidence, and had miserably failed to recover on their own, as Hoover had promised. The methods that had been used to bring the economy out of a slump in the 1920s were simply not working anymore, and the casualties of depression were rapidly mounting in a frightening new world. As Roosevelt recognized that traditional plans for economic recovery could not end the Depression, so Agee and Evans knew that traditional methods of photography and journalism would not work to convey accurately the hard and simple lives of the tenant farmers. They experimented, attempting to create an approach to art that conveyed a new height of consciousness, yet allowed their subjects to retain their dignity. In its own experimentation, Roosevelt's administration also faced the challenge of achieving consciousness while preserving dignity. The administration on a massive scale of government relief that was not only economically sound, but allowed people the pride of earning their own living, was not easy.

66. German At Berkeley: Past, Present, And Future
numbers in the late 1920s and 1930s, reaching a and diversity of our program allow us to balance We currently offer Designated Emphases in Film studies and in
http://german.berkeley.edu/about/
Home People Courses Undergraduate ... About Us About the Department A Long Tradition Pioneering Cultural Studies Disciplinary Openness Campus and Local Resources ... Giving to the Department
Das Land, das die Fremden nicht beschützt, ist zum Untergang verurteilt.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Search: German at Berkeley: Past, Present, and Future A Long Tradition The turn of the century saw a marked advancement in German studies at Berkeley. Following the appointment of president Wheeler in 1899 and of German professor Hugo Schilling in 1901, the department began to flourish. By 1907, the German Department boasted 8 full time faculty members, student enrollment increased, and undergraduate and graduate course options expanded. In 1906, 25 students received the B.A. degree with a German major and two took the M.A. Degree. 1908 saw the first dissertation on a German topic at Berkeley. The decade beginning in 1910 was a period of transition for the Department as new appointments were made in the wake of several deaths and retirements. During and after WW I, student enrollment dropped sharply and the Department was critized for the supposed pro-German sentiments of some of its faculty. There was, however, a steady increase in student numbers in the late 1920s and 1930s, reaching a total of about 1,600 on the eve of World War II. The decline during the war years was more than offset immediately after the war; in 1946, no fewer than 2,172 students enrolled in German courses. After WW II the German Department continued to expand and soon became the largest German department in the United States. In the middle 1960s, there were 23 full-time staff members, 65 to 70 teaching assistants, and three non-academic employees. This faculty served a student population which, in 1963, numbered 1,893 in the lower division and 438 in the upper division; 121 students enrolled in graduate courses. The department continued to provide a liberal arts education to some 90 to 100 undergraduate majors and a professional training as scholars and teachers to some 80 or 90 graduate students.

67. U.S. Senator Chuck Grassley - News Release - Grassley's Committee Studies Reform
Grassley s Committee studies Reform Options for Social Security Iowa was designed to serve in the 1930s looks very place, is good news to all of us in Congress
http://grassley.senate.gov/releases/1998/p8r02-14.htm
For Immediate Release
Tuesday, February 10, 1998
Contact: Jill Kozeny
Grassley's Committee Studies Reform Options for Social Security
Iowa Senator Takes Lead in Bi-Partisan Effort to Save Important Program
Washington, D.C. Seeking prompt action to save Social Security and ensure viability of the program when the baby boomer generation begins to retire, Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa today conducted the first Congressional hearing of the year to consider options for reform of the retirement program that serves 32 million Americans. "The sooner we act to save this important program, the better. The vast majority of resources for people in retirement come from the Social Security program. Without it, many retirees simply could not survive. In 1997 alone, 417,000 Iowans received Social Security benefits," said Grassley, who serves as Chairman of the Senate Special Committee on Aging. Grassley said that dramatic demographic changes that will come with retirement beginning in 2008 of the largest group of Americans the baby boomers make reform of Social Security inevitable. He said some reform proposals assume no major restructuring of Social Security and aim simply to make sure the program continues providing adequate income to older Americans.

68. Website Title
changes in surprising ways that affect us all program for interdisciplinary social development studies department reflects its foundation in the 1930s to support
http://anthropology.cua.edu/about/
Navigate CUA CUA Home President Admissions CUA Athletics Campus Ministry Home@CUA Web Mail Cardinal Card Phone Book Cardinal Students Mullen Library Public Affairs Summer Sessions Alumni About Us Applying to our Program Undergraduate Programs Graduate Programs ... Calendar of Events
Welcome!
Whether you're just browsing faculty including their courses and interests, information about undergraduate and graduate programs we offer, courses at the department, and information about admissions and financial aid CUA anthropologists apply this comparative, naturalistic approach to social and cultural dimensions of environmental studies, in both past and contemporary societies, health and migration, ethnicity and religion, economic integration of localities into regional systems, ancient civilizations of the Americas, and the emerging high-tech Information Age. We invite you to explore our website and to 'drill down' through faculty webpages to syllabuses of recent courses and see what anthropology is at CUA. undergraduate major culminates in a two-semester Senior Seminar in which students research and write a thesis. In addition, we offer minor tracks interdisciplinary social development studies Overall ours is a small program in an environment that offers some unique opportunities. Small means it's not for everyone; but if you think it might be right for you, or want to find out, contact us by phone (202-319-5080), fax (202-319-4782), e-mail (below), or mail to Department of Anthropology, The Catholic University of America, Washington, DC 20064.

69. Theology: Postgraduate Islamic Studies
degree courses available and the opportunity to get in touch with us via this web site. Islamic studies has been taught at Birmingham since the 1930s.
http://www.theology.bham.ac.uk/postgrad/islam/
Theology: Postgraduate Islamic Studies
University Fast Find Site Index Schools / Departments Telephone Directory Email Directory Useful Contacts Frequently Asked Questions Directions / Maps Acronym Directory Vacancies THEOLOGY: POSTGRADUATE ISLAMIC STUDIES
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University Links University Postgraduate Prospectus School of Historical Studies Information Services: Theology On-Line Application Form ... Information for International Students SEARCH THIS SITE SEARCH WHOLE UNIVERSITY Welcome to the Department of Theology's Web Pages for Post Graduate Islamic Studies. You will find information here on the Centre for the Study of Islam and Christian-Muslim Relations (CSIC), with details on all our activities, degree courses available and the opportunity to get in touch with us via this web site. Islamic studies has been taught at Birmingham since the 1930s. In 1976 the Centre for the Study of Islam and Christian-Muslim Relations (CSIC) was founded, and in 1991 an undergraduate programme was started at the then Westhill College. In the last few years both of these units have become part of the University of Birmingham in the Department of Theology , School of Historical Studies. Please click on the links below for more information. You will also find these on the menu bar on the left of each page.

70. The Princeton Mathematics Community In The 1930s (PMC26)
The early 1930s were a unique period of time and were used to long hours of concentrated studies, but such Some of us would drive in to attend plays or concerts
http://infoshare1.princeton.edu/libraries/firestone/rbsc/finding_aids/mathoral/p
The Princeton Mathematics Community in the 1930s
Transcript Number 26 (PMC26)
© The Trustees of Princeton University, 1985
MALCOLM ROBERTSON
RECOLLECTIONS OF PRINCETON This is a written contribution, dated 11 October 1984, by Malcolm Robertson. During the hot Ontario summer of 1931, when I had just completed two years of graduate studies in mathematics at the University of Toronto, I looked forward with great expectation to my upcoming admission to Princeton University in September. Another Canadian graduate student in mathematics, Albert W. Tucker, had preceded me there two years earlier. It was not surprising that he was doing well in his continuing studies, since he already had a very fine scholastic record in Toronto. Fortunately for me, he also had a kind concern for the needs of others. I have felt grateful ever since that, according to plan, he and a fellow Princeton student, Edwin W. Titt, appeared in Hamilton, Ontario, about two-thirty in the morning one day in September to pick me up by car. Ed Titt, later to become my dormitory room-mate, had a well used but sturdy open car in which we all drove to New Jersey, stopping briefly in Buffalo to pick up another student, Frank Cubello. It was a beautiful autumn day, filled with sunshine and the riotous colors of the changing leaves, and the drive was most enjoyable. We stopped briefly to admire the campus at Cornell and eventually arrived in Princeton just before dark. This was my first glimpse of the charming college town that was to play such a large part in my life, and a joyful and exhilarating experience it was indeed. I have never forgotten that first encounter, and my feeling of excitement and awe at the lovely stately homes among the old trees, the magnificent university campus with both new and old stone buildings, acres of well-kept lawns, and even a lake and a peaceful golf course. I had to live there for three years even to begin to appreciate the richness and character

71. Consequences (v1,No1) - Trends In U.S. Climate During The Twentieth Century
not shown) has been fairly steady since the 1930s. of hurricanes making landfall in the us and in Furthermore, recent studies indicate that even if significant
http://www.gcrio.org/CONSEQUENCES/spring95/Climate.html
CONESQUENCES: Volume 1, Number 1
Trends in U.S. Climate during the Twentieth Century
by Thomas R. Karl Richard W. Knight David R. Easterling Robert G. Quayle The Authors all serve on the scientific staff of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's National Climatic Data Center (NCDC), in Asheville, North Carolina. Thomas Karl , who has also been active in defining an international Global Climate Observing System, serves as the Center's Senior Scientist. Robert Quayle is Chief of the NCDC Global Climate Laboratory and David Easterling and Richard Knight are staff meteorologists. The NCDC is the nation's repository for all current and past meteorological records. H as the climate of the United States changed significantly during the century that is about to end? In what ways and by how much? Have national trends emerged that agreeor perhaps disagreewith what is expected from projections of global greenhouse warming? In this review assessment we focus on the climate history of the conterminous U.S. (excluding Alaska and Hawaii) for the century that is about to end. We first examine the observations that conventionally describe weather and climate and next, the now pressing question of whether observed changes in this country are consistent with predictions of anticipated, global greenhouse warming. In doing so, we need always remember that while we are among the largest countries in terms of land area, the U.S. covers but about 2% of the surface of the Earth; what happens meteorologically within its borders is but a sampling of that amount drawn from an interrelated, global system. While we have a U.S. National Climatic Data Center (NCDC), its mission is necessarily global because climate itself is a global phenomenon: the atmosphere respects no national boundaries. At the same time, it is local weather conditions that most affect us, individually or collectively. Any response to the question of impending climate change must first be weighed in light of regional and national impacts, in this country or any other.

72. Library Of Congress / Federal Research Division / Country Studies / Area Handboo
BULGARIA A Country Study. Search Bulgaria Agrarian Reform; The Fall of Stamboliiski; The Tsankov and Liapchev Governments; The Crises of the 1930s
http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/bgtoc.html
BULGARIA - A Country Study
Search Bulgaria
Include word variants Use only words as entered.

73. H-Holocaust Discussion Network
HNet discussion group devoted to the study of the Holocaust, anti-semitism, and Jewish history in the 1930s and 1940s. Features archive, essays, reviews, links to related resources, course syllabi, and subscription information.
http://www2.h-net.msu.edu/~holoweb/
home news about search ...
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    Welcome to H-Holocaust
    Reviewer:
    John Radzilowski
    Author: Gunnar S. Paulsson
    Title: Secret City: The Hidden Jews of Warsaw, 1940-1945 Reviewer: Michael J. Hoffman
    Author: Donald Bloxham
    Title: Genocide on Trial: War Crimes Trials and the Formation of Holocaust History and Memory Reviewer: David A. Messenger
    Author: Istvan Deak
    Title: Essays on Hitler's Europe "Holocaust Survivor Gets Around to a Prom," New York Times, June , 6th (Lebowitz) New story, updated bibliographies (Cohen) Faces of Resistance: Women in the Holocaust / Exhibit in NYC June 7-14 (Lebowitz) ... Re: recent article in Haaretz abt Rabbiner Regina Jonas (Klein) (fwd)
    Social Sciences Online Send comments and questions to H-Holocaust Editors
  • 74. Library Of Congress / Federal Research Division / Country Studies / Area Handboo
    SOUTH AFRICA A Country Study. Search World War I and Afrikaner Nationalism; Conflict in the 1920s; The Great Depression and the 1930s; The
    http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/zatoc.html
    SOUTH AFRICA - A Country Study
    Search South Africa
    Include word variants Use only words as entered.

    75. 1930's On Film
    1930s America was a decade of unparalleled its cultural richness, the 1930s remain nearly invisible in in the 1930s was created in June 1998 for the American studies Program at
    http://xroads.virginia.edu/~1930s/home_1.html
    american culture, american history, 1930s, great depression, New Deal, FDR, WPA, CCC, OTR, gangster film, hollywood musical, Frank Capra, Charlie Chaplin, Marx brothers, Pare Lorentz, Frontier Films, Prohibition, documentary film, WPA, murals, Walker Evans, Margaret Bourke-White, Constance Rourke, Frederick Lewis Allen, Gilbert Seldes, Vanity Fair, New Yorker Magazine, Survey Graphic, Fortune Magazine, Saturday Evening Post, comic strip, superman, Babe Ruth, Cavalcade of America, Amos 'n' Andy, Country and Western, swing music, Robert Johnson, soap opera, skyscraper, Hoover Dam, World's Fair, Blue Ridge Parkway, Aberdeen Gardens, Colonial Williamsburg, Federal Theatre Project

    76. National Park Service: Expansion Of The NPS In The 1930s (Preface)
    the unexpected benefits of undertaking this study has been Service people who were active in the 1930s. to George A. Palmer, who sent us additional information
    http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/unrau-williss/adhi0.htm
    NPS Expansion: 1930s
    MENU Contents Foreword Preface pre-1933 Reorganization New Deal Recreation ... Appendix
    Expansion of the National Park Service in the 1930s:
    Administrative History Preface
    The following study, which examines one of the most significant decades in the development of the National Park Service, is one of the first in what will be a series of administrative histories of the National Park Service. Initiated by NPS Chief Historian Edwin C. Bearss, the administrative history program will result in studies that will not only be of importance to managers in the Service, but will be of interest to the general student as well. Any study is the result of the combined efforts of a number of people, and this one is no exception. Edwin C. Bearss initiated the program, gave us the project, and was a source of encouragement throughout preparation of the project. Barry Mackintosh, NPS Bureau Historian, provided general administrative oversight of the project. Harry Butowsky, Historian, WASO, supplied us with his study on nomenclature and the supporting documentation for it. Ben Levy, senior historian in the Washington office, helped us to find material on the NPS Advisory Board and shared his insights into the Historic Sites Act of 1935. Gerald Patten, Assistant Manager, and Nan V. Rickey, Chief, Branch of Cultural Resources, Mid-Atlantic/North Atlantic Team, Denver Service Center, provided encouragement for the project and released us from team-related work so that we could work on it.

    77. American Studies: Guides To The Collections: The United States And The 1930s:
    The Eccles Centre for American studies. Guides to the collections. The United States and the 1930s a Selective Guide to Materials in the British Library Anne
    http://www.bl.uk/collections/americas/us1930s.html
    document.write(''); Home Collections Americas print ...
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    This page contains links to Adobe PDF files. Accessibility solutions and free 'Reader' software are available from Adobe.
    The Eccles Centre for American Studies
    Bibliographical guides Eccles Centre Annual Lectures Guide to American Studies programmes Other activities ... Further information
    Guides to the collections
    The United States and the 1930s: a Selective Guide to Materials in the British Library
    Anne Sharp Wells The British Library holds a wealth of items, both contemporary and retrospective, about this important phase of United States history. This guide includes selected publications arranged by subject, geographical location or personal name. It does not contain journal articles. Each citation ends with the shelfmark in parentheses. The designation 'DSC' means that the work is held by the Document Supply service at Boston Spa but can be ordered for use at St. Pancras.
    The United States and the 1930s
    : (PDF format), 1.22MB

    78. American Studies
    on Americanist topics; Expanding links with partners to support American studies in the UK; Identifying support to continue the Centre s us Fellowship scheme
    http://www.bl.uk/collections/americas/american.html
    document.write(''); Home Collections Americas print ...
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    This page contains links to Adobe PDF files. Accessibility solutions and free 'Reader' software are available from Adobe.
    The Eccles Centre for American Studies
    The Eccles Centre for American Studies was founded by David and Mary Eccles in 1991. Based at the British Library - which houses the foremost collection of American books, manuscripts, journals, newspapers and sound recordings outside of the United States - the Centre has two broad aims: to promote the Library's North American materials, and to support American Studies in schools and universities.
    Bibliographical guides
    To fulfil this first aim, the Centre produces an on-going series of bibliographical guides to the Library's collections. These guides, listed below, are distributed both to academic and major public libraries in the United Kingdom and to centres of American Studies throughout the world.

    79. U.S. Embassy, Seoul, Information Resource Center - About The USA
    of the 1930s The Avalon Project 20th Century Documents Documents For the Study of American History Japanese Attack on Pearl Harbor, December 7, 1941 1941 us
    http://usembassy.state.gov/seoul/wwwh418a.html

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    The New Deal and world War II

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    An Outline of American History: Dept. of State Publication

    The Library of Congress

    Today in U.S. History: What Happened?

    American Memory from the Library of Congress: Historical Collections for the National Digital Library
    ...
    Dept. of State's American Studies Website

    Basic Documents and Writings The Constitution of the United States (1787) The Bill of Rights (1787) The Declaration of Independence (1776) The Mayflower Compact (1620) ... National Archives and Records Administration Famous Speeches Douglass: Archives of American Public Address Inaugural Addresses of the Presidents of the United States Presidential Speech Archive Pre-Colonial Era Early America - from Outline of American History Introduction to 1492: An Ongoing Voyage Religion and the Founding of the American Republic - Library of Congress Columbus and the Age of Discovery ... The Columbus Navigation The Colonial Era The Colonial Period - from Outline of American History Virtual Tour of Plimoth Plantation The Birth of A Nation History of Jamestown ... Rare Map Collection - Colonial America American Revolution

    80. Homeownership Alliance - Studies & Reports
    how the fixedrate mortgage has made homeownership possible for millions of Americans since the 1930s and continues to Archived studies Reports 2003 2002.
    http://www.homeownershipalliance.com/studies/index.php
    November 2003 - Mortgage Finance Innovation and the Achievement of Homeownership: The Role of the Fixed-Rate Mortgage (PDF) This white paper, written by Stuart Gabriel, Ph.D., explains how the fixed-rate mortgage has made homeownership possible for millions of Americans since the 1930s and continues to hold sway over adjustable rate mortgages. View the News Release Download the Study October 2003 - Home Sweet Loan: How Secondary Mortgage Markets Changed America (PDF) This Homeownership Alliance report released by former White House economic adviser and best-selling author Todd Buchholz, demonstrates that the secondary mortgage market has become a vital technological and financial innovation that has helped open the door for millions to achieve the American Dream. View the News Release Download the Study Stay informed on the latest issues that affect you and your home. Enter your email below to sign up for "News and Views".

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