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Cobalt Metabolism of Young College Women on Self-Selected DietsHarp, Mary Wanda Jones 08 1900 (has links)
This study was undertaken to determine the cobalt intake in food and milk, and the excretion of cobalt in the urine and feces of young college women living in the home management house at the North Texas State College and consuming a self-selected diet. Cobalt as a trace inorganic element has long been recognized according to Martin (1945) as a nutritional essential in ruminants in whom cobalt deficiency is a typical anemia. For that reason emphasis has been placed upon studies with ruminants, since it seems logical to use a species for which cobalt is known to be essential.
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The Origin and Development of Henderson State CollegeBledsoe, Bennie Gene, 1917- 12 1900 (has links)
The problem of this study is to present a complete historical record of Henderson State College, Arkadelphia, Arkansas, from 1890 to 1970. The sources of data included public records, legislative acts, court decisions, reports, catalogues, bulletins, periodicals, newspapers, letters, minutes, yearbooks, files, official records, interviews, and histories of public education and higher education in the United States. Standard methods of historical research were employed in examining 'materials.. pertinent to the study.
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A Study of Selected Factors Influencing Science Majors Toward Science CareersBragg, Louis Hairston 08 1900 (has links)
"The purpose of this study is to gather information concerning some factors which may have operated to influence science majors in North Texas State College toward science careers."--4.
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Food Consumption of College AthletesWays, Rachel Wilkins 08 1900 (has links)
"The present study was undertaken to calculate the nutritive value of the food consumed by male college athletes eating a self-selected diet in the college athletes dining room"--3.
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A Survey of Accounting Majors at North Texas State College from 1944 to 1950 to Evaluate Their Academic Training for the Vocational Positions Now HeldCunningham, John A. 05 1900 (has links)
"This study attempts to review informatively the status of graduates from the School of Business Administration in that period in which students have first been graduates with a major in accounting."--1.
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Mennonites and higher education in the 1960s : the story of two Canadian Mennonite colleges in Winnipeg, ManitobaVoth, Gay Lynn 05 1900 (has links)
The Mennonites are a religious, social and ethnic group with origins in the time of
the sixteenth century Reformation. The group was named after a Dutch Anabaptist
leader, Menno Simons, who provided the members with substantial theological
leadership. Throughout the last four centuries, the Mennonites have migrated around the
world and divided into over a hundred different sub-groups. In 1989, Canada was home
to over 100,000 Mennonite members who belonged to 735 church congregations that
were part of 30 separate groups. The two largest Mennonite groups in Canada are the
Conference of Mennonite Brethren Churches (MB) and the Conference of Mennonites in
Canada (CMC). These two groups, and the Colleges they own and operate, are the focus
of this thesis topic - Mennonites and Higher Education in the 1960s.
By 1960, the Mennonite Brethren Bible College (MBBC) and the Canadian
Mennonite Bible College (CMBC) had become involved in the process of opening their
communities to the professional and vocational opportunities available in Canada while
selectively closing the community to secular influences. The Colleges made institutional
decisions which allowed them to offer a university standard education in a parochial
setting.
These decisions created an active discussion within the two sponsoring Mennonite
constituencies. Some members, within each group, were less inclined to embrace the
influences of a growing urban, modern worldview because involvement in modern
Canadian society would require the adaptation of their traditional, rural identity. The
Colleges, on the other hand, encouraged changes while attempting to maintain continuity
with essential community ideals. This process of change is the focus of this thesis.
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Mennonites and higher education in the 1960s : the story of two Canadian Mennonite colleges in Winnipeg, ManitobaVoth, Gay Lynn 05 1900 (has links)
The Mennonites are a religious, social and ethnic group with origins in the time of
the sixteenth century Reformation. The group was named after a Dutch Anabaptist
leader, Menno Simons, who provided the members with substantial theological
leadership. Throughout the last four centuries, the Mennonites have migrated around the
world and divided into over a hundred different sub-groups. In 1989, Canada was home
to over 100,000 Mennonite members who belonged to 735 church congregations that
were part of 30 separate groups. The two largest Mennonite groups in Canada are the
Conference of Mennonite Brethren Churches (MB) and the Conference of Mennonites in
Canada (CMC). These two groups, and the Colleges they own and operate, are the focus
of this thesis topic - Mennonites and Higher Education in the 1960s.
By 1960, the Mennonite Brethren Bible College (MBBC) and the Canadian
Mennonite Bible College (CMBC) had become involved in the process of opening their
communities to the professional and vocational opportunities available in Canada while
selectively closing the community to secular influences. The Colleges made institutional
decisions which allowed them to offer a university standard education in a parochial
setting.
These decisions created an active discussion within the two sponsoring Mennonite
constituencies. Some members, within each group, were less inclined to embrace the
influences of a growing urban, modern worldview because involvement in modern
Canadian society would require the adaptation of their traditional, rural identity. The
Colleges, on the other hand, encouraged changes while attempting to maintain continuity
with essential community ideals. This process of change is the focus of this thesis. / Arts, Faculty of / Classical, Near Eastern and Religious Studies, Department of / Graduate
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A Study of a Selected Group of Science Related Characteristics of Non-Science MajorsBearden, Bennie Paul 08 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to gather information related to the characteristics of two groups of undergraduate non-science majors; namely, those students who once considered science as a career and subsequently changed to a non-science major and those who have never considered a career in science. It is frequently observed that children in the elementary school have an intense interest in science. One of the principal concerns of this study is how and for what reasons has the interest in science changed between elementary school and college? It is also the purpose of this study to gather information related to the attitudes of these college students toward the science courses they have had in high school and toward their science teachers. In attempting to arrive at an answer, the group who once considered a science career and those who have never considered an occupational choice in a field of science will be compared in the following areas: 1. General information such as sex, age, size of high school attended, rank within their graduating classes, college classification and military experiences. 2. Occupations and hobbies of parents. 3. Experiences which may influence attitudes toward science such as elementary school science, high school science courses, high school science teachers, attitudes toward science requirements, high school courses liked most, high school courses liked least, and membership in science clubs. 4. College science courses completed. 5. Extent of the interviewees' present interest in science, Finally, the circumstances surrounding the tentative choice of a science career by those who once considered such a career will be discussed.
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Comparison of One Hundred Non-Veteran Freshmen with One Hundred Veteran Freshmen in Scholastic Achievements and Personality Traits During the Fall Semester of 1946 at North Texas State Teachers CollegePetrash, Johnny J. 06 1900 (has links)
"The purpose of this study is to determine whether there is a significant difference between non-veterans and veterans in certain scholastic achievements and personality traits."--1.
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"A College for Women, or Something Like It": Bedford College and the Women's Higher Education Movement, 1849-1900Brown, Megan Katherine 01 January 2011 (has links)
Bedford College, established in 1849, was the first institute of higher education for women in England, and with it came the beginning of the women's higher education movement. While Bedford is often dismissed or ignored by modern scholars for not being equal to the women's colleges associated with Cambridge and Oxford, it was crucial in the development of these later colleges and was a bellwether of the women's higher education movement. By examining personal letters and official college documents and carefully assessing later-written histories of Bedford and the other women's colleges, this thesis will explain why and how the College was successfully founded two decades before any other college for women in England. It will also include a thorough discussion of the events that occurred before and during Bedford's establishment, its enigmatic founder Elisabeth Jesser Reid and the role of the women's higher education movement in Bedford's development. This thesis will also show how the successful foundations of Girton and Newnham Colleges at Cambridge University and Lady Margaret Hall and Somerville College at Oxford were made possible by the monumental strides made by Bedford College's influence on the creation of the women's higher education movement.
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