Along with Chronicle magazine, HSM members receive several membership benefits including bonus Chronicle content, digital access to Chronicle and Michigan History magazines, free access to History Hounds lectures, and more! Access all of your membership benefits by logging in to our website and visiting our Member Benefits page.
Both of HSM's magazines rely on outside writers for our feature story and special section content. The next article could be written by YOU! First-time writers, journalists, academics, and seasoned authors are all welcome to query and submit their ideas for review. Learn more about that process on our Submissions Guidelines page.
Established in 1897, the Chronicle is Clemson University's first and only student art and literary magazine. Twice a year, our staff promotes, produces, and distributes a new issue representing the best artistic and literary work that Clemson students have to offer. We have many committees that work together to create the magazine including creative direction, layout, promotions/events, copy-editing, art submissions, literary submissions, merchandise, web, and business. From art and photography, to poems, short stories, essays, audio and visual submissions, we accept a wide variety of submissions every semester, many of which are selected to appear in the magazine.
Chronicles is a U.S. monthly magazine published by the Charlemagne Institute and associated with paleoconservative views.[1][2][3][4] Its full current name is Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture. It was founded in 1977 by the Rockford Institute. Today, the journal is published by the successor organization Charlemagne Institute. Since 2021, Paul Gottfried is the editor-in-chief.[5]
The magazine became a monthly publication in 1982. In 1984, Thomas Fleming joined as managing editor. Fleming, who had been a co-founder of Southern Partisan magazine, brought neo-Confederate views to Chronicles.[6] By 1989 the subscription list had grown to nearly 15,000. Fleming published right-wing authors like Sam Francis, Clyde N. Wilson, Paul Gottfried, and Chilton Williamson Jr. As the Soviet Union broke up at the end of the Cold War and nationalism rose there and in Eastern Europe, some articles in Chronicles argued that the United States too would need to disintegrate by ethnicity.[6] Chronicles "churned out regular anti-immigrant pieces, attacking Latin American and Southeast Asian immigration on the basis of race, culture, national identity and populist defense of the white working class", according to Joseph Lowndes.[11]
Computerworld Magazine has named Cornell University one of the 100 best places to work in information technology (IT) for the second consecutive year. The university earned a place on the magazine's "100 Best Places To Work in IT" for 2008 as a result of a national survey of employers and more than 31,000 IT workers.
Earlier this year, Conceive Magazine named Cornell one of the 50 most family-friendly employers and the National Association for Female Executives named Cornell one of the top nonprofit employers for female executives in the United States. In 2006 and 2007, Working Mother magazine placed the university on its list of 100 best companies for working mothers. In 2005, 2006 and 2007, the American Association of Retired Persons named Cornell one of 50 best employers for workers age 50 years and older; and in 2007 and 2008, the university earned recognition from the Dave Thomas Foundation for Adoption as one of the "100 Best Adoption Friendly Workplaces."
Echo magazine is an award-winning magazine created by a team of Journalism, Graphic Design, and Photography students every spring semester in the capstone class titled College Magazine Workshop. For each issue, students re-imagine the magazine and choose a unique theme and design style. Recent issues have explored themes including "life," "home," and "body." In 2020, Echo took the top Crown Award as a Gold Crown winner for "The Body Issue" print edition and accompanying website.
The KEMSA Chronicle magazine is distributed to members of KEMSA, which are licensed EMS professionals in the state of Kansas and outside the state of Kansas, as well as local and state agencies, legislators, service providers, and Kansas educational institutions including Kansas community colleges. The KEMSA Chronicle is published four times each year.
Regular features of the magazine include: a president's message, a service spotlight, service chronicles, event previews, event wrap-ups, membership news, and much more. Special features include: Annual Conference information in the summer issue, and a conference wrap-up with photos and award winners in the fall issue.
Full issues of the magazine are available for members in our members only section. For a preview of each issue, click on the cover image below to view a table of contents. To download the service spotlight article, click on the EMS Service name.
The quarterly Chronicle of the Dog magazine keeps APDT members abreast of contemporary pet dog training techniques and provides a lively forum for discussion of dog training and behavior issues. Regular columns address topics such as how to structure behavior modification programs, training and assessing shelter dogs, handling techniques for veterinary technicians and groomers, training tips, case studies, and much, much more. Subscription price is $50 per year renewed on an annual anniversary basis. Digital subscriptions are available for $25 per year. Multi-year discounts are available for both print and digital editions.
The new edition of the UN Chronicle magazine, Issue 3, 2007, which focuses on racial discrimination, is now available in English and in French. Titled The Solidarity of Peoples,it contains 26 articles on the present state of the international debate on racism and racial discrimination. The contributions look at present and past forms of social exclusion of affected groups and populations, and the multiple dimensions of racial discrimination and related forms of intolerance.
The UN Chronicle is the flagship quarterly publication of the United Nations. It covers a wide range of information and debate on the activities of the Organization, as well as issues of concern to it. The magazine features interviews, essays and opinions from officials and personalities connected with the Organization and its specialized agencies, as well as from academia and non-governmental organizations.
Two special contributions on the impact of the transatlantic slave trade and slavery are made by the Vice Chancellor Emeritus of the University of the West Indies, Professor Rex Nettleford, and Brown University Professor James T. Campbell. Other priority issues featured in the magazine include: the misuse of science to justify racism; the new racism in Europe; State-led efforts to eliminate racism; racism in football; discrimination against aboriginal peoples and the Roma people; and race and poverty in Latin America.
Washington Irving eventually followed his conscience and enlisted for military service, and subsequently served on the staff of the governor of New York. Successive editors sought more and more original material and focused on the U.S. Navy and American culture and society, until the magazine title was changed to Analectic Magazine and Naval Chronicle, reflecting its character as an unofficial naval service journal.
The Chronicle is the oldest, locally-owned newspaper in the southern Willamette Valley. The Chronicle, established in 1909, serves the cities of Creswell, Springfield and Cottage Grove, as well as many towns in between - with hyper-local coverage across multiple platforms. In addition to the weekly paper, there is the website and Emerald Valley Magazine. The magazine, published seasonally for northern and southern Lane County, is the premier lifestyle magazine in the area.
There will be a booth set up to get more information about the magazine, visit www.thecurbsidechronicle.org. For information on the Homeless alliance and all their programs visit www.homelessalliance.org.
Measure 114, which narrowly passed last fall, would ban making, selling or buying ammunition magazines that hold more than 10 rounds. It also would require people to take a firearm safety course and pass a background check to receive a permit to buy a gun. And it would close a loophole in federal gun law that allows people to buy guns without a completed background check if it takes more than three days to process a background check.
Plaintiffs argued that large-capacity magazines, which allow gun users to fire more than 10 shots without reloading, are standard and commonly used for self-defense. But Immergut said the evidence they provided was largely anecdotal and outweighed by data compiled by an expert witness for the state.
But large-capacity magazines are commonly used in mass shootings, including the three deadliest shootings in American history: the 2017 Las Vegas shooting at a country music festival that killed 60 people; the 2016 Pulse Nightclub shooting in Orlando, Florida, where 49 people died; and the 2007 Virginia Tech shooting where 32 people died.
aa06259810