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A survey of the Atlanta market for electro-metal finishingBaran, Victor Joseph 12 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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Design of a dual burner for the 1996 Olympic Games hand-held torchBarry, Kevin Michael 08 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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Addition to Fowler Elementary School : a story of interventionLee, YunJung 08 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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The Rhetorical City: (Re)Arranging and (Dis)Placing Atlanta's Urban SpaceTulloch, Scott 12 August 2014 (has links)
In this dissertation spatial arrangement and placement are considered par excellence among the instrumental functions of rhetoric. I unsettle the canon of arrangement in consideration of the spatial turn. Approaching space by way of arrangement brings to bear a different range of phenomena and is a departure from the prevailing practices of existing scholarship on rhetorical memory places. Rhetorical arrangements of space, their deep structure and underlying coherence in public discourse, are contingent and unstable. Arrangements of space widely circulating in public discourse furnish provisional order to orient life, politics, and planning. Arrangements of space have inherent thresholds, limits periodically exposed and contested in public discourse warranting displacement. Despite displacement, traces of past arrangements of space are preserved in public documents and leave lasting impressions on the built environment. Accordingly, space may be viewed as a layered rhetorical document; a work in progress whose surface writing has recorded over imperfectly erased remnants of earlier drafts. Former arrangements of space and their displacement may be uncovered and interpreted by the critic.
The methodology I develop in this dissertation, a rhetorical cartography, entails evaluating numerous arrangements and displacements of space across time. I analyze arrangements and displacements of Atlanta’s urban space to demonstrate the methodological import of a rhetorical cartography. Rhetorical invention and (re)arrangement of Atlanta is the city’s most enduring and pronounced characteristic, aggressively made and remade through forms of boosterism that has been labeled the “Atlanta Spirit.” The first chapter details rhetorical invention and arrangement of Atlanta as a regional railroad center, recognized as the “Gate City of the South.” The second chapter introduces pivotal displacement of Atlanta as urban space became centrally rearranged within the logics of race, as the “City Too Busy To Hate.” In the third chapter I focus on arrangements of Atlanta as an “International City,” linked with discourses of global economics and multiculturalism. The fourth chapter analyzes recent rearrangement as “Sustainable Atlanta,” linked to environmental discourses, with ecological and planetary scope. The cartography evinces the rhetorical vitality, multiplicity, and openness of Atlanta’s urban space.
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Mourning and message Martin Luther King Jr.'s 1968 Atlanta funeral as an image event /Burns, Rebecca, January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Georgia State University, 2008. / Title from title page (Digital Archive@GSU, viewed July 22, 2010) M. Lane Bruner, committee chair; David Cheshier, Leonard Teel, committee members. Includes bibliographical references (p. 124-137).
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Coming together, multicongregational and multicultural unity and diversity through the eucharistNorsworthy, C. Gray. January 1997 (has links)
Thesis (D. Min.)--McCormick Theological Seminary, 1997. / Includes bibliographical references.
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The discourse of Planned Parenthood of the Atlanta Area, 1964--1972Miller, Melissa N. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Georgia State University, 2006. / Title from title screen. Michael Bruner, committee chair; Merrill Morris, Marian Meyers, committee members. Electronic text (138 p.) : digital, PDF file. Description based on contents viewed July 19, 2007. Includes bibliographical references (p. 112-128).
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" Major League City": Atlanta, Professional Sports, and the Making of a Sunbelt Metropolis, 1961-1976Trutor, Clayton J. January 2018 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Marilynn Johnson / This dissertation is a study of how the pursuit, advent, and popular response to professional sports in Atlanta both shaped and reflected the region’s evolving political and consumer culture during the 1960s and 1970s. It examines the concerted effort by municipal elites during this time period to acquire professional sports franchises for their city and its environs. Atlanta’s leadership succeeded at luring four major professional sports franchises to Atlanta in a six-year period (1966-1972) by securing significant public and private investments in two playing facilities in the Central Business District (CBD). Scholars of the economic history of professional sports describe the increasing geographic mobility of the major leagues in the post-World War II era as “franchise free agency.” Atlanta took advantage of this expanding market by making civic investments in two playing venues as a means of attracting franchises. This dissertation analyzes how the emerging metropolis’ negotiation of “franchise free agency” reshaped the culture, public policy, and urban planning of Atlanta. It shows how Atlanta provided a model employed by future Sunbelt cities as they pursued professional teams of their own, often luring clubs from Rust Belt cities with similarly lucrative offers of public support. This dissertation proceeds to analyze the response to professional sports in Metropolitan Atlanta in the decade after it achieved major league status. The city’s elites assumed that residents would embrace the teams and transform their tony playing facilities into twin focal points of leisure and communal pride. Instead, Atlantans from all of the region’s racial, socio-economic, and residential clusters responded apathetically to the teams. The collective shrug with which Atlantans reacted to their new franchises demonstrated the growing cultural divergence which characterized life in the booming Sunbelt center over the course of the 1960s and 1970s. In subsequent decades, civic elites in other rapidly growing Sunbelt centers believed, like their predecessors in Atlanta, that municipal investments in professional sports would provide their communities with a wellspring of unity and prestige. Residents of these metropolitan areas responded to their new stadiums and teams in the 1980s and 1990s with an apathy similar to that of Atlantans toward their teams during the 1960s and 1970s. / Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2018. / Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. / Discipline: History.
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The Un-site: by Black Women, for Black WomenUpton, Taylour M. 15 June 2020 (has links)
No description available.
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A Feasibility Model for Organizations Contemplating a Change of VenueSimonetti, Angela Marie 20 May 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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