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MLB Owners' Functional Background and their Franchise's PerformanceHowell, Matthew E 01 January 2016 (has links)
Major League Baseball owners possess different types of functional background experience. I examine the financial and on-field effects of the functional and geographic background of owners in the MLB from 2001-2014. A functional background in entrepreneurship appeared to have an insignificant effect on a team’s payroll expense and on-field performance. However, teams owned by corporations appeared to have significantly lower payrolls than all other teams, a relationship that supports the theory that corporations are not concerned with their team’s on-field performance. The operating income of teams, with owners, who inherited the franchise from a family member or purchased the team using an inherited trust, was significantly higher than other teams. However, the number of team wins was negatively affected by owners, who inherited ownership. A personal tie between the owner and the team’s location was insignificant as a determinant of team payroll expense and team wins.
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Critical evaluation of the Epworth League unit curriculum ..Ellison, Chauncey Warren January 1933 (has links)
Typewritten sheets in cover.
Thesis (M.A.)--Boston University
This item was digitized by the Internet Archive.
Bibliography: 91-93.
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The formation and functioning of the Trusteeship Council procedure for examining petitionsSmith, Shirley B. January 1957 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Boston University / It is difficult to understand petitions as a particular aspect of the Trusteeship System without knowledge of the historical forces which helped to shape the modern concept of trusteeship. It is easy, in fact, to think of trusteeship as a purely contemporary phenomenon. The opening statement of the Secretary-General of the United Nations at the first session of the Trusteeship Council highlights this point: "This is an occasion of historic significance. For the first time in the world's history a permanent international body, whose membership is composed solely of official representatives of Governments, is assembled to deal exclusively with the problems of non-self-governing peoples." The statement of the Secretary-General is, of course, correct, but it does not tell the lay reader any of the precedents behind the formation of this August body. If one accepts the principle that the protection of native rights is the cornerstone of modern trusteeship, there is evidence that ever since the 16th century there seems to have been a logical progression toward the evolution of the philosophy eventually advanced in the Covenant of the League of Nations and presently in the Charter of the United Nations. [TRUNCATED]
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Die geskiedenis van die Suid-Afrikaanse NoodhulpligaJoubert, Johannes 28 October 2015 (has links)
M.A. (History) / Please refer to full text to view abstract
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Some aspects of the European anarchyLane, Joseph Harold January 1940 (has links)
No abstract included. / Arts, Faculty of / History, Department of / Graduate
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Not only 'the younger daughter of Dr Abdurahman': a feminist exploration of early influences on the political development of Cissie GoolVan der Spuy, Patricia 01 April 2020 (has links)
Cissie Gool was an extraordinary presence on Cape Town's political and social scene in the first half of the twentieth century. She was the first black woman to preside over a national liberatory organisation, the National Liberation League (1935), and the Non-European United Front (1938). She was the only black woman to be elected to the Cape Town City Council before 1994, where she served for 25 years. She was the first black woman to obtain a Master's Degree in Psychology at the University of Cape Town, where she studied on and off from 1918 to the year of her death, 1963. In 1962 she graduated with a BA (LLB), and was the first black woman to be invited to the Cape Bar. This thesis explores the childhood and early life of Cissie Gool. I examine influences on her political development before she became the leader of the National Liberation League in 1935. This period of her life has left few material traces. Methodologically, this thesis confronts a challenge facing those who wish to discover hidden lives in the South African past. I argue that it is possible to trace influences on such a life if one shifts the lens through which one conducts historical research. Working with a paucity of sources, where most of the people who knew Cissie Gool as a young person are deceased, this thesis searches for and highlights key influences on Gool's early personal-political development. The thesis rests on a number of premises rooted in feminist theory. I begin from the position that 'the personal is political' and take seriously the argument that the family is a key engine of historical process. I take issue with the statement in much of the secondary literature that Cissie Gool was (merely) 'the younger daughter of Dr Abdurahman', which obscures the fact that this relationship was embedded in a family, in which Cissie's mother was at least as important as her father, and where being a younger daughter with an older sister was significant too. While recognising the significance of the fact that Cissie Gool was fathered by Dr Abdurahman, I underline the centrality of women in a patriarchal society where early socialisation is the specific task of women, and where women and girls experience some degree of social segregation from men and boys. In addition to focusing the lens on family dynamics, I trace sometimes tenuous but nevertheless, real threads linking Cissie Gool to particular political circles on the left in Cape Town in the 1920s and 1930s. I suggest that the leftist heterodoxy which characterised the mature Cissie Gool may be linked to a kindred political spirit among some of her early acquaintances, specifically those at the University of Cape Town, counterposed with the more rigid orthodoxies of friends of the Communist Party on the one hand, and on the other, the so-called Trotskyite purists with whom she was linked by marriage. Cissie Gool, may have been unique in her involvement in all three circles, which intersected at socials hosted by herself and her husband, Dr A H Gool. The androcentricity of both the secondary literature and contemporary documentary sources obscures the specifics of Cissie Gool's political development in this period. Nevertheless, this thesis is based on the premise that, in the absence of more concrete sources, an exploration of the various political circles with which Cissie Gool was associated, in the wider political and socio-economic context of 1920s and 1930s Cape Town, permits one to gain insight into key influences on the political development of Cissie Gool.
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Reconciling Femininity and Athleticism: The All-American Girls Professional Baseball League, 1943-1954Rucker, Traci L. January 2004 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)
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The role of the rapporteur in the League of Nations /Nkiwane, Solomon. January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
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Educating American Audiences: Claire Reis and the Development of Modern Music Institutions, 1912-1930Freeman, Cole 08 1900 (has links)
The creation of institutions devoted to promoting and supporting modern music in the United States during the 1920s made it possible for American composers to develop an identity distinct from that of European modernists. These institutions were thus a critical part of the process of modernization that began in the United States during the early decades of the twentieth century. There is substantial scholarship on these musical institutions of modern music, such as the International Composers’ Guild and the League of Composers; but little to no work has been done on the progressive musical institutions of the 1910s, such as the Music League of the People’s Music Institute of New York, which was founded by Claire Reis. This thesis addresses the questions of how and why American musical modernism came to be as it was in the 1920s through an examination of the various stages of Reis’s career. The first chapter is an extensive study of primary source material gathered from the League of Composers/ISCM Records collection at the New York Public Library, which relates to Reis’s work with the PML in the 1910s. The second chapter uses the conclusions of the first chapter to shine new light on an old subject: the 1923 schism within the ICG that led Reis and others to form the League. The traditional view that the schism was the result of a conflict in idea of style is called into question, and the role that gender and power structure played in the break are explored.
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The league of nations in the Spanish crisisDay, Margaret Elizabeth January 1946 (has links)
No description available.
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