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72 results found for ""Emily Dufton""
- Catching Up With Bruce Holley Johnson, Ph.D.
Pennsylvania, a small town on the Susquehanna River, north of Harrisburg, where he lives with his spouse, Emily
- Points Interview: Meet the New Editors of SHAD
These aren’t simple questions, Emily, and I don’t think there are straightforward answers here!
- The Points Interview — William Garriott and Eugene Raikhel
And finally, we’re very lucky to have an afterword to this volume by Emily Martin, who really pioneered
- The Eyes of the City: Fiorello La Guardia’s Committee on the Marihuana Problem in New York
In a newly published article in the Journal of Policy History, Emily Brooks discusses the disconnect
- Fiction Points: Ed Falco
1996) secured him Notre Dame’s Richard Sullivan Prize, and he won the Virginia Quarterly Review‘s 1986 Emily
- L’Affaire Sarah Halimi and “Reefer Madness” in Postcolonial France: Part I
Emily Tamkin, “Violent anti-Semitic incident rose 13 percent worldwide last year, report says,” The Washington
- Intolerable Normalcies: Multiple American Methadones
[ii] Emilie Gomart, “Methadone: Six Effects in Search of a Substance,” Social Studies of Science 32.1
- “Su Majestad, La Mujer”: Women’s Participation in Mexico’s Anti-Alcohol Campaigns, 1910-1940
President Emilio Portes Gil called on women as a singularly important moral force. When President Emilio Portes Gil launched the CNLCA in 1929, he exclaimed, “Women: for your husbands
- Doing Drugs (History) at the AAHM
Therapeutic Epistemologies Chair: Nicholas Rasmussen, University of New South Wales “Hedging Ones Bet: Emil
- Holy, Hated, or Hip?: The Circuitous History of Mexico’s Pulque
In a speech that launched the CNLCA, President Emilio Portes Gil advised, “Worker: spend in books what
- Weimar Germany, Part 1: Intoxicating Metropolis
Prostitutes purchase cocaine from “Emil.” May 1929. Bundesarchiv Bild, Creative Commons License.
- The Alcoholic Weepie that Ended D.W. Griffith’s Career
Struggle was based on Augustin Daly’s 1879 play “The Demon Drink,” which itself was a loose adaptation of Emile














