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         Us Studies 1940s 1950s 1960s:     more detail
  1. Daily Life in the United States, 1940-1959: Shifting Worlds by Eugenia Kaledin, 2000-09-30

21. The Gazette - Grapevine 1960 -October 2000
here to go to the 1930s 1940s 1950s 1970s the NSW Secondary Principals Councilon the Board of studies. with other Gazette readers, please drop us a brief
http://www.usyd.edu.au/publications/gazette/oct2000/grapevine60.html
GRAPEVINE - 1960s Click here to go to the Grapevine columns. Kenneth David Steel (BSc '60, MSc '61) is managing director of Computer Systems Research Consultancy. Alexander David Doyle (BScAgr '61 MScAgr '73) retired to the Blue Mountains following 40 years service with NSW Agriculture in northern New South Wales. John Frederick Morris (BA '61, DipEd '62) has retired to Pacific Palms after 11 years as Principal of Canowindra High School. He has also taught in other schools in both rural and metropolitan NSW. Edward Bean Le Couteur (BA '62) continues to be actively involved in the Sydney University Cricket Club and as Chair of its Foundation has raised over $500,000. Carl John Booth (BDS '62) owns a private dental practice in Southern Germany. Timothy Ashley Hardy (BSc (Hons) '63) completed an MA and PhD at the University of Toronto. He is now an Associate Professor at the University of Canberra, where he has established a Graduate School of Education, been Dean of Students, and rewarded for excellence in teaching. Claire Elizabeth Wagner (BA '63, DipTCP '66)

22. DePaul University
of us Civil Rights Policies, 1940s and 1950s title The International Context ofus Civil Rights Science Association Middle East studies Association Society
http://www.depaul.edu/~psc/vitae/layton.htm

23. US Popular Culture Web Links
States Popular Culture Department of Translation studies, University of TelevisionLinks from FASTus-6. CrimeBoss Crime Comic Books of the 1940s and 1950s.
http://www.uta.fi/FAST/US7/REF/pclinks.html
U.S. Popular Culture Web Links
FAST-US-7 (TRENAV2C) United States Popular Culture
Department of Translation Studies, University of Tampere
General Popular Culture and Entertainment
Film and TV History and Culture
Sports History and Events
Popular Literature and Cartoons
Social, Historical, Age and Gender Phenomena

24. HS228 Lecture Notes: AI
In late 1940s and 1950s there were many who were as in the us, AI promised too muchto deliver; two AI groups in Experimental Psychology and Cognitive studies.
http://www.chstm.man.ac.uk/teaching/hs228_b1.htm
HS228 Week 11 Slot 1
Outline of Lecture
1) what is meant by Artificial Intelligence? 2) the emergence of AI in the United States 3) AI in the UK 4) why is AI controversial? The name Artificial Intelligence appeared in the 1950s, but the mechanical modelling of human characteristics has a much longer history: mechanical brains, automata a definition of AI is rather difficult, since it means different things to different people. however: 1) AI is a specialty within computer science 2) AI aims to construct computer programs to model aspects of intelligent behaviour -mostly symbolic aspects sometimes physiological 3) AI involves many areas of study: game playing, theorem proving, cognitive modelling, natural language, machine vision, expert systems, robots, 4) AI uses digital computers: expensive ones: therefore story of how AI got funded is important 5) AI researchers developed list-processing languages : different from the numerically based high level languages of the 1950s: ALGOL, FORTRAN, etc
  • -> LISP and POP-2
  • logic and structure rather than numbers
6) these languages are difficult: learnt through apprenticeship at certain locations like a craft skill
Emergence and development of AI in US
During and just after the Second World War there emerged new interconnected areas of research: information theory, Operations Research, cybernetics and computer science

25. Center For Immigration Studies
Whether in us agriculture in the 1940s and 1950s, in Western Europe in the 1960sand 1970s, or the Middle East and Asia since the 1970s, importing foreign
http://www.cis.org/articles/2001/back501.html
There Is Nothing More Permanent
Than Temporary Foreign Workers
April 2001 By Philip Martin Download pdf version
Guest or foreign worker programs aim to add workers to the labor force without adding permanent residents to the population. Between 1942 and 1964, some 4.6 million Mexicans were admitted to the United States as Braceros or guest workers to fill jobs on U.S. farms. While more Mexicans — some 5.3 million — were apprehended in the United States during these years, legal Mexican immigration increased. Between 1942 and 1944, 13,000 Mexican immigrants were admitted; between 1962 and 1964, 146,000 were admitted. Guest worker programs tend to increase legal and illegal immigration for two major reasons: distortion and dependence. Distortion refers to the fact that economies and labor markets are flexible: They adjust to the presence or absence of foreign workers. If foreign workers are readily available, employers can plant apple and orange trees in remote areas and assume that migrant workers will be available when needed for harvesting. Dependence refers to the fact that individuals, families, and communities abroad need earnings from foreign jobs to sustain themselves, so that a policy decision to stop guest worker recruitment can increase legal and illegal immigration. This Backgrounder focuses on two examples of guest worker programs that resulted in increased legal and illegal immigration: the Mexico-U.S. Bracero program and Germany’s recruitment of foreign workers in the 1960s and early 1970s. In both cases, employers’ "need" for guest workers lasted longer and proved to be larger than originally expected, leading to the aphorism: There is nothing more permanent than temporary foreign workers.

26. COLD WAR LINKS
The Harvard Project On Cold War studies An excellent Cold War Resources On The WebUS NEWSOnline COLD WAR MUSEUM - Timeline 1940s 1950s 1960s 1970s
http://www.sid-ss.net/mil/coldwar.htm
HOME The DETAILS! IMAGES THE COLD WAR MILGEN.HTM US NAVY KOREA VIETNAM ... THE COLD WAR by Paul J. Healy WHAT THE COLD WAR WAS ALL ABOUT DEEP OCEAN, COLD WAR via Undersea Warfare Magazine (Spring 2000 issue) COLD WAR LINKS Revelations from the Russian Archives Library of Congress Guarding the Cold War Ramparts
The U.S. Navy’s Role in Continental Air Defense A paper published by the US Naval war College
The Lost Cold War Submarines FAST ATTACKS AND BOOMERS IN THE COLD WAR An exhibition presented by 2000 National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution DoD decides not to create Cold War medal
by Staff Sgt. Marcia Triggs - 23 Jan 2002 From ARMY LINK NEWS
DoD Cold War Recognition Certificate
The OFFICIAL .mil site
Army manages DoD's Cold War certificate program
Official .mil news (Jan. 1999)
  • Ed Thelen's Nike Missile Web Site The Last Nike Missile Site NIKE AJAX AND HERCULES ORDNANCE SUPPORT UNITS THE NIKE SITE via REDSTONE ARSENAL HISTORY PAGE Nike Missiles at Fort Tilden - Queens NY
  • SOSUS - via the official NOAA website From the VFW Magazine:
    Honoring their Secret Service Stealth Beneath the Sea: The 'Wet Cold War'
    At Cold War's End: US Intelligence on the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, 1989-1991

    27. UBC Archives - Student Enrolment Figures
    Sessional studies, Correspondence Courses, Intersession, Guided Independent Study,and Spring Session. 1910s / 1920s / 1930s / 1940s / 1950s / 1960s / 1970s
    http://www.library.ubc.ca/archives/enrolmnt.html
    UBC Student Enrolment Figures:
    1915-present
    Enquiries about student enrolment numbers are amongst the most frequently asked questions in the University Archives. As a consequence, we have compiled the yearly enrolment figures which appear below in chart form. More detailed information (i.e. break-down by faculties) appears in the annual calendars which are available in the Archives. The numbers appearing in the "Total" category generally reflect enrolment for the Winter (September-April) session. For approximately the first decade of the University's existence the "Other" figure represents individuals enroled in short courses. Later the category includes individuals participating in Summer Session, Extra-Sessional Studies, Correspondence Courses, Intersession, Guided Independent Study, and Spring Session. Year Undergraduates Graduates Total Other Grand Men Women Men Women Total ======================================================================= 1915/16 228 151 379 379 1916/17 190 179 369 74 443 1917/18 200 216 416 258 674 1918/19 265 273 538 379 917 1919/20 547 341 890 640 1,530
    Last modified: Wednesday, 11-Dec-2002 09:50:03 PST

    28. Sources Leaflets
    Royal School of Veterinary studies, Edinburgh, 1963 grafting, operations, injectionsetc using animals, 1940s1950s. to work on oral contraceptives, 1960s-1980s.
    http://library.wellcome.ac.uk/collections/src46.shtml
    Home News Sitemap Contact ... Projects Search The Wellcome Library Collections Special collections Archives and Manuscripts ... Resources and finding aids Sources leaflets Sources Leaflet list No. 46 ANIMALS AND VETERINARY MEDICINE Personal Papers Societies and Associations General Collections Wellcome archives Personal papers Sir Charles Arthur Lovatt EVANS, FRCP, FRS (1884-1968) PP/CLE
    Correspondence with the Royal School of Veterinary Studies, Edinburgh, 1963-1965. Correspondence relating to a proposed Research Panel on detection of drugs in racehorses with the Jockey Club and the National Hunt Committee, 1963 Dame Honor Bridget FELL, FRS (1900-1986) PP/HBF
    Notebooks relating to experiments on animals, 1930s-40s Henry FOY (1900-1991) and Athena KONDI (?-1954) PP/FAK
    Papers re the use of a colony of baboons in Kenya for the study of vitamin b deprivation, 1950s-1970s Professor Percy Cyril Claude GARNHAM, CMG, FRS (1901-1995) PP/PCG
    Large amount of correspondence with veterinary organisations and laboratories around the world, 1950s-70s

    29. NIH Press Release - NCI Completes Nationwide Study Of Radioactive Fallout From 1
    of persons exposed, information from the Chernobyl studies is expected the assessmentof the impact of the us exposures weapons plant from in the 1940s and 1950s
    http://www.nih.gov/news/pr/jul97/nci-25.htm
    NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH
    National Cancer Institute
    FOR RELEASE
    Friday, July 25, 1997 NCI Press Office
    NCI Completes Nationwide Study of Radioactive Fallout from 1950s Nuclear Tests The National Cancer Institute (NCI) has completed a study to assess Americans' exposures to radioactive iodine-131 fallout from atmospheric nuclear bomb tests carried out at the Nevada Test Site (NTS) in the 1950s. Depending on their age at the time of the tests, where they lived, and what foods they consumed, particularly milk, Americans were exposed to varying levels of I-131. Because of the radioactive decay of I-131, such exposures did not exceed two months following each test. Because I-131 accumulates in the thyroid gland, concerns have been raised that the fallout could cause thyroid cancer in people who were exposed to it as children. In 1982, Congress passed legislation calling for the Department of Health and Human Services to develop methods to estimate I-131 exposure, to assess I-131 exposure levels across the country from the Nevada tests, and to assess risks for thyroid cancer from these exposures.

    30. Daniel Horowitz, "Betty Friedan And The Making Of 'The Feminine Mystique' "
    Contact us. experience of leftwing politics and culture in the 1940s and 1950s Horowitzis Sylvia Dlugasch Bauman Professor of American studies and director
    http://www.umass.edu/umpress/fall_00/horowitz.html

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    University of Massachusetts Amherst
    Campus.
    Betty Friedan and the Making of The Feminine Mystique The American Left, the Cold War, and Modern Feminism
    Daniel Horowitz
    Finalist, Biography, Independent Publisher Book Awards Winner, Northeast Popular Culture Association's Annual Book Award A highly praised, controversial reevaluation of a major feminist leader "Horowitz's engaging, well-told story is a landmark contribution to our understanding of both Betty Friedan and the origins of the modern women's movement."
    Times Literary Supplement (London) "To his great credit, Daniel Horowitz, who has labored long in the archives, has produced a fascinating, even riveting, account of how the legacy of one generation of women of the American left ended up influencing and shaping a generation of New Left women. It is a vital story, and a story well told."
    Dissent "Horowitz carefully delineates the links between the Popular Front feminism of the Old Left and the New Left feminism of the 1960s, thereby casting doubt on the claims of novelty that many have made about social movements of the 1960s. In the process, he illuminates important details of Friedan's early life by mining everything from her papers while a student at Smith College to her articles for the labor press."

    31. OWU Online | Class Notes
    1930s 1940s 1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s 2000s member for the MidwestUSJapan Association for Institute for International studies and Training
    http://magazine.owu.edu/2001-01/notes6.html
    Want to share your news here? Go to the alumni records update form to be included in the next Class Notes section of the Magazine
    Steve Bruce
    began his second season as an assistant women's basketball coach at Valparaiso University. In his former position at Bowling Green, Ky., his middle school boys teams were twice Southern Kentucky Middle School Champions. His 1998-99 team was undefeated, and his overall record was 56-9. Steve also served for three years as the head girls basketball coach at Bowling Green High School, where his 1991-92 team was the winningest team in 15 years. Steve received his masters degree from Morehead State University.
    David J. Byrd , as of July 2000, is an executive- on-loan to the New Jersey Secretary of State where he will handle gubernatorial initiatives, including bias in state procurement and government. Prior to this appointment, David served two years as director of the N.J.'s Office of Small Business, reorganizing it to serve as an advocate for the small business community within state government. This past summer, he also served as a surrogate speaker for the Republican National Committee at the 2000 GOP Convention in Philadelphia. David's e-mail address is dbyrd@secretary.sos.state.nj.us

    32. May98 Members News
    letter for you. 1940s . 1950s . 1960s . 1970s . 1980s 1940s. George Cummings (Civil Engineering, 1941) retired in 1960s. Keith Penfold (Electrical, Electronic and Information
    http://www.city.ac.uk/alumni/citynetwork/May98/may98members.htm
    may 1998 members' news News of former students and staff is given in order of the date they entered or first joined the University. Most people submitting news are interested to hear from those who remember them or those with an interest in their line of business. If you would like to get in touch with anyone listed here, the CUS Office will be happy to forward a letter for you.
    Former staff
    Lost - can you help? Deaths George Cummings (Civil Engineering, 1941) retired in 1986 after a career in civil engineering contracting. Major projects included five hydro-electric projects, thermal power stations, Chapel Cross atomic power station, the Thames Barrier, an R.C. Oil platform (Dunlin Field), Cairo wastewater and the Channel Tunnel. A Frederick Thompson (Electrical Engineering, 1943) Eric Collino (Mechanical Engineering, 1946) says he owes a debt of gratitude to the Skinners' Company, who founded his grammar school as well as being involved with the, then, Northampton Institute. Eric's career has encompassed aircraft jet engines, papermaking, refrigeration equipment, management consulting and, now, industrial gas compressors. He does business planning, competitor analysis, market research and special projects. Outside work, he enjoys opera and performing in amateur theatre. Alan Foster (Electrical Engineering, 1946)

    33. Class Notes: UA College Of Education
    1940s. studies, a member the advisory committee for the Women's studies MillenniumProject the United Space Alliance, a NASA contractor for the us Space Shuttle
    http://www.ed.arizona.edu/html/alumnotes.html
    We're very proud of the accomplishments of our alumni. The following information was submitted by alumni or their friends from Spring 2002 to the present. To add an update or make a correction, please send information to the college's alumni affairs coordinator, Ginny Geib Be sure to include the year you graduated and the degree you earned. If you hold more than one degree from the College of Education and they were awarded in different decades, indicate which decade you wish to use as your main affiliation. In Memoriam Archive: Class Notes before Spring 2002
    Dale Allen (BAE '41) retired from the Stockholm, Calif., school district after 50 years as a teacher and counselor. He also spent five years working in adult education. Warren P. Conrad (BAE '49, MEd '53) served on the faculty of Yuma High School for 34 years and has completed his 19th year of retirement. In 1990 he was recognized with a Distinguished Citizen Award from the UA Alumni Association and a Distinguished Service Award from the UA College of Education.
    Anita Barker Lohr (BAE '54, MA '55) of Tucson retired after more than 44 years in public education, including 31 years as elected Pima County School Superintendent. She's now enjoying traveling and cruises, as well as Wildcat basketball, volleyball and football.

    34. Class Note Archives: UA College Of Education
    69) has retired from a 30year career teaching behavioral studies, the last 1940s. Herschool was recognized as a us Department of Education Blue Ribbon School
    http://www.ed.arizona.edu/html/alumnotearchive.html

    Summer 2001-Spring 2002
    1999-Summer 2001 Current Class Notes
    Summer 2001-Spring 2002 The following information was submitted by alumni or their friends starting in Summer 2001 but before Spring 2002.
    Josephine Sawaia (BAE '47) is enjoying retirement in Scottsdale, Ariz. In 2000, she was honored by the Roman Catholic Church with her induction into the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem in San Francisco, Calif.
    Patricia McFadden (BAE '62) of Tujunga, Calif., has been a first-grade teacher in the Los Angeles Unified District for 18 years. She has also been the district's bilingual coordinator for four years. Evelyn Sigafus (BAE '67), a mathematics teacher in Tucson Unified School District's Santa Rita High School, has been listed in the 2000-2001 and the 2001-2002 editions of America's Registry of Outstanding Professionals. James Stephens (BAE '69) has retired from a 30-year career teaching behavioral studies, the last 17 of which were in adult education at Pacific Lutheran University in Tacoma. He published

    35. News Watch | Milestones In Journalism Diversity
    Go to 1940s, 1950s Marvel Cooke becomes the first American reporter on a mainstreamUS newspaper, John Fang and Ruben Salazar begin their journalism studies.
    http://newswatch.sfsu.edu/milestones/
    Choose a Decade Quick Links Milestones Home About Milestones
    Milestones is an ongoing celebration of the diverse contributions to American journalism. It is a project of News Watch and students enrolled in the History of Journalism class at San Francisco State University. Learn More
    Milestones References:
    Web and print resources.
    Credits

    Feedback

    Milestones Calendar The first ethnic newspapers of the century are founded, including Robert Abbott's famous Chicago Defender. Go to 1900s The black press begins to flourish, anti-Asian sentiment rises, La Prensa newspaper is founded, as is American Indian magazine. Go to 1910s Go to 1920s Japanese American Citizens League publishes Pacific Citizen, journalist Ida B. Wells and columnist Will Rogers die.

    36. The World At War
    NIGERIA AND SOUTH AFRICA Kent Hughes Butts and Steven Metz Strategic studies Institute,United Libya, us Air Attacks, 1980s. Malaysia, Communist Uprising, 1940s.
    http://www.fas.org/man/dod-101/ops/war/
    FAS Military Analysis DOD 101 US Ops ... Join FAS
    The World at War
    "Perpetual peace is no empty idea, but a practical thing which, through its gradual solution, is coming always nearer its final realization..."
    IMMANUEL KANT CURRENT NEWS News Alert Service Liberation Movements, Terrorist Organizations, Substance Cartels, and Other Para-State Entities
  • Wars and armed conflicts @ Peace Pledge Union
  • Mario's Cyberspace Station coverage by Mario Profaca
  • Current United Nations Peacekeeping Operations
  • Integrated Regional Information Network (IRIN) @ UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
  • Journal of Humanitarian Assistance
  • Weekly Updates on World Conflicts Carter Center
  • STATE OF WORLD CONFLICT REPORT 1994-1995 Carter Center
  • Conflict Data Service INCORE (INitiative on COnflict Resolution and Ethnicity) information and links on ethnic conflict.
  • Contemporary Conflicts and Military history Information Resource Centre Canadian Forces College, Department of National Defence (Canada)
  • Analyses of Worlds Hot-Spots by Brendan Jordan
  • Contemporary Conflicts in Africa
  • ConflictWeb USAID resource on African conflict prevention, mitigation, and management.
  • 37. History Of Movies
    Index; Sunrise TheaterScifi films from the 1950s. of African American entree intothe us film industry C. Webb Young; SCREENsite Film and TV studies, by Jeremy
    http://www.yilmazguney.com/movies/history/history_of_movies.htm
    HISTORY OF MOVIES Pre-1920
    General Film Information
    Major Indices of Film Sites

    38. Wayland Baptist University--Alumni
    GRADUATES from the 1960s I'm very proud of the journal for leading the way into whathas become known as Appalachian studies. . (2737 us Hwy 421 S., Boone, NC
    http://www.wbu.edu/a/a03/cnote60.htm
    Faculty/Staff/Trustees
    Names A-G
    H-N O-Z
    To search for a name on this page, use Ctrl+F GRADUATES from the 1960s Dr. JERRY WILLIAMSON, BA'66, after nearly 30 years has retired as editor of "Appalachian Journal," a scholarly journal dedicated to the study of the Appalachian Region. Ten thousand pages later, the "Appalachian Journal" has become the premier publication in Appalachian studies. As Williamson ushered his 103rd and final issue to press, he has been recognized with the oldest and one of the highest honors in the field of Appalachian studies, a special W.D. Weatherford Award. Since 1970 The Appalachian Center and the Hutchins Library of Berea College have given only 10 of the special awards. "From its first appearance in the fall of 1972 until the coming of a new century and millennium, the "Appalachian Journal" has been at the forefront of the study of the Appalachian South," said Gordon McKinney, director of The Appalachian Center at Berea College. More than 300 scholarly articles, 250 poems and 500 book reviews and review essays, in addition to thousands of pages of printed material, cartoons and photographs passed through Williamson's editing before appearing in "Appalachian Journal." In addition to these staples, Williamson has included a significant number of interviews of cultural leaders in the region, record and video reviews, and special features. Williamson continued to publish outside of his work with the journal including two books, "Southern Mountaineers in Silent Films" and "Hillbillyland: What the Movies Did to the Mountains and What the Mountains Did to the Movies." In the course of his work as editor and scholar, however, Williamson continued to teach, and has come to be regarded as a master teacher.

    39. Global Networking Timeline: 1960-1989
    School of Pacific and Asian studies, Australian National 1960s C Edward Djikstrasuggests that software and data satellite for a number of us state, federal
    http://www.ciolek.com/PAPERS/GLOBAL/1900mid.html
    Global Networking:
    a Timeline
    Dr T. Matthew Ciolek Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies,
    Australian National University, Canberra ACT 0200, Australia
    tmciolek@coombs.anu.edu.au
    http://www.ciolek.com/PEOPLE/ciolek-tm.html Document created: 9 Jan 1999. Last updated: 5 Feb 2003 This document, intended as a reliable electronic reference tool, provides a timeline for three types of developments and milestones: (1) advances in long distance person-to-person communication; (2) advances in storage, replication, cataloguing, finding, and retrieval of data; (3) standardisation of concepts and tools for long distance interaction. The advancements may have a: T echnical (hardware), C onceptual (software), or an O rganisational aspect, or represent an important M ilestone in the history of a given invention, and are annotated as such in the timeline. This document is only as good as the collated information itself. Please email any additional data and corrections to tmciolek@coombs.anu.edu.au . Your collaboration and input is warmly appreciated. work in progress - tmc Home Page
    Early developments
    5th c. BCE

    40. Tradition Of Discovery-1950s
    the armament carried by the us Air Force's F research programs in the later 1950sincluded such relating to controlled thermonuclear fusion, studies were being
    http://www.hrl.com/TRADITION/Tradition.1950s.html
      HRL Home History Main Page
      etc.
      And in March, the Electronics and Guided Missile Department officially became known as the Research and Development Laboratories. We were still in Culver City however... the move to Malibu would still be a decade away. In 1951 the era of co-directors came to an end and Dr. Dean Wooldridge became the sole Director of the Research and Development Laboratories. The Guided Missile Laboratory consisted of seven departments; Aerodynamics, Theory and Analysis, Computers and Controls, Design Integration, Electronics, Propulsion and Launching, and Flight Operations, and was concerned primarily with specific military applications. The rather diverse activities of the Radar Laboratory found common ground in the fields of microwaves, pulse circuits, computers, and cathode-ray type indicators. Typical end products resulting from the efforts of this laboratory were ground and air-borne radar systems, automatic electronic computers, equipment for air traffic control, high-speed indication devices, and special purpose antennas. Major advances in the development of electronic systems were frequently the result of invention and successful development of basic components, such as electron tubes. The Electron Tube Laboratory was established early in 1951 to insure continued leadership of HRL in the field of electronic systems through invention, research, and development of electron tubes.

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