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Search resuls for: "Eastern Connecticut State University"


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Historically, political realignment has occurred when groups of voters change their affiliation to a new political party or candidate, especially around presidential and midterm elections. Yet the period between 1852 and 1860 is crucial here, for it saw the last time a major political party collapsed (the Whig Party in 1854) and the dissolution of another political party (the Democratic Party in 1860). The 1924 Democratic Party famously went through 103 ballots before agreeing on a compromise candidate, John W. Davis of West Virginia. Of course, party realignment is a tricky thing since we only come to know that it has happened in hindsight. A failure to reach a majority consensus signals the doom of an American political party.
Persons: Thomas Balcerski, James Buchanan, William Rufus King ”, Hakeem Jeffries, Patrick McHenry, let’s, V.O, Abraham Lincoln’s, Franklin D, Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, Andrew Jackson, Daniel Webster, Henry Clay, Lincoln, William Henry Seward, William L, Yancey, Stephen Douglas of, John C, Breckinridge, Theodore Roosevelt, Moose, Republican William Howard Taft, Woodrow Wilson, John W, Davis of, Hubert H, Humphrey, Republican Richard Nixon, Organizations: Eastern Connecticut State University, Oxford University Press, CNN, Republican Party, Democratic Party, Whig Party, Whigs, Republican Party . Southern Whigs, American Party, Democrats, Whig, Union, Democratic, Southern, Lincoln, splintering, Republican, GOP Locations: United States, Northern, Southern, Kansas, Nebraska, Charleston , South Carolina, Alabama, Baltimore, Stephen Douglas of Illinois, Kentucky, Davis of West Virginia, Vietnam, American
They sit back and wait, content to let the nation’s colleges and universities scout and nurture that talent. Look at what happened when California banned affirmative action nearly 27 years ago. The most obvious way to help colleges level the field among students is to level the field among colleges. Harvard University recently received a gift of $300 million, the University of Chicago received a gift of $100 million and Columbia University received a gift of $175 million. I asked Elsa Núñez, president of Eastern Connecticut State University, what her institution, with its modest $50 million endowment, could do with a $100 million gift.
Persons: , That’s, Chan Zuckerberg, Pell Grant, Elsa Núñez, , , you’re Organizations: University of California, Apple, Mastercard, Meta, Verizon, Harvard University, University of Chicago, Columbia University, Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, Harvard, Trinity Washington University, Pell, Eastern Connecticut State University Locations: California
Since then, the couple have come to appreciate not just the open space, but all the coffee shops. Ms. Gallagher, a gymnastics coach, writer and adjunct professor of English at Manchester Community College and Eastern Connecticut State University, regularly takes her laptop downtown, to Daybreak Coffee Roasters, in hopes of landing a window seat — “that’s my most coveted spot.”Stephen Tudisco, 51, moved to Glastonbury from Hartford two years ago, very intentionally: He wanted to shorten his commute to work at Connecticut Natural Gas, in East Hartford. When he found a move-in-ready, two-bedroom condominium listed for around $200,000, he too bid over the asking price, buying the unit for $222,000. “I like that the town is well maintained, very clean,” Mr. Tudisco said. “I’m close to a lot of outdoor stuff, but also just two miles from downtown.”
Persons: Gallagher, ” Stephen Tudisco, , Mr, Tudisco, “ I’m, Organizations: Manchester Community College, Eastern Connecticut State University, Connecticut Natural Gas Locations: Glastonbury, Hartford, Connecticut, East Hartford, downtown
Or they feature commercial characters from media juggernauts, imbued with predetermined personalities and storylines that encourage children to copy, not create. Yet bestselling toys — as distinct from best — are too often those that are most advertised to kids; digitally enhanced or linked to popular media characters; or both. Companies that profit hugely from licensed characters have a vested interest in preventing children’s creative play — and stifling their creativity. Toys that promote creativity are less likely to be huge moneymakers because they can be used repeatedly in lots of different ways. These toys seem to be made with a kind of planned obsolescence, so new ones will soon be needed.
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