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Antislavery clergy in antebellum Kentucky, 1830-1860Harlow, Luke E. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Wheaton College Graduate School, Wheaton, IL, 2004. / Abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 102-107).
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Landmark Baptists ecclesiology can affect soteriology /Pevehouse, James Melvin. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (Th. M.)--Dallas Theological Seminary, 2005. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves [66]-68).
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Staging Orson WellesGretzinger, Matthew Christopher 12 November 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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Who Is Our Master? -Debates during Civil Service Reforms-Park, Soo-Young 11 November 2005 (has links)
Who is the American bureaucracy's master in national government? At least three different sets of answers have been proposed. The first answer claims a single master of American bureaucracy, be it the president, Congress, or the courts. The second denies that there is any master over the bureaucracy and claims the existence of bureaucratic autonomy. In the middle of the two theories, there lies multiple masters theory.
This dissertation attempts to advocate multiple masters theory by answering such questions as "Is the conception of multiple masters only theoretically conceivable, or is it historically supported?" or "Does the historical record suggest that multiple masters scheme was seriously in play in actual American constitutional dialogue?"
To be a master, one should have at least one of the following powers - budget, personnel, information, and regulatory review. This dissertation focuses on one of them - the appointing power. To look at it historically, this dissertation chose four distinct periods of American history. They are the founding era, Jacksonian era, Republican era, and the Carter Administration. These eras were related to the four important civil service reform acts: the two Tenure of Office Acts of 1820 and 1867, Pendleton Act of 1883, and the CSRA of 1978. Congressional debates recorded in Congressional Record were analyzed to find evidences supporting multiple masters perspective.
There were evidences that support the significant existence and role of the multiple masters perspective in all the four eras analyzed. Although weakened in the 1978 debate, the multiple masters theory was supported in important congressional debates by leading politicians of the day, providing historical foundation for the theory.
The multiple masters perspective provides a need to construct a normative foundation for bureaucrats to adopt, because bureaucrats, in many cases, cannot avoid making decisions on which master to choose and which to ignore at a given time on a given issue.
Under the multiple masters scheme, bureaucrats may have to play the role of balance wheel in the constitutional order, using their statutory powers and professional expertise to favor whichever constitutional masters need their help to preserve the purpose of the Constitution itself. / Ph. D.
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The paleoecology of the Keyser limestone: a re-evaluationWong, Sam J. January 1985 (has links)
Makurath (1977), in studying the Keyser Limestone, concluded that brachiopods were distributed randomly, casting doubt over the validity of using recurrent communities as a paleoenvironmental tool. However, a re-evaluation of the Keyser fauna, utilizing cluster analysis, polar ordination, and detrended correspondence analysis, reveals that the fauna can be arranged along a gradient, according to distance from the shore. Recurrent communities do exist within the Keyser Limestone. With the aid of coenocorrelation curves, they can be traced along the entire Appalachian basin.
The most nearshore community, belonging to Benthic Assemblage 1 of Boucot (1975), is the Stromatolite Community, followed by the Tentaculites-Meristella-Cupularostrumgordoni Schuchertella and Meristella Communities of Benthic Assemblage 2, the Stromatoporoid-Coral, Crinoid, and Gypidula communities of Benthic Assemblage 3, the Dalejina -Atrypa-Rhynchospirina Community of Benthic Assemblage 4, and the Eccentricosta-Cupularostrum Assemblage 5. / M.S.
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Structural and Hydrological Influences on the Evolution of Hellhole Cave, Pendleton County, West VirginiaZinz, Daniel C. 08 August 2007 (has links)
No description available.
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Speleogenesis of Shoveleater Cave, Pendleton County, West VirginiaHarman, Gayle E. 13 December 2012 (has links)
No description available.
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