Kearse Awards (CLA)-- 2005-2007
Browse this collection by
Recent Submissions
-
Gender Differences for Speed and Accuracy in the Judgment of the Six Basic Emotions
(RIT: College of Liberal Arts, 2007) -
Community factors of ethnic disparities in preterm birth rates
(RIT: College of Liberal Arts, 2007) -
Kearse Student Writing Awards 2007
(RIT: College of Liberal Arts, 2007) -
Self-portrait as the allegory of painting (La Pittura)
(RIT: College of Liberal Arts, 2007) -
Writing Portfolio
(RIT: College of Liberal Arts, 2007) -
À la carte television: Friend or foe?
(RIT: College of Liberal Arts, 2007) -
A tendency to incite: Applying Kenneth Burke's pentad to Cohen v. California
(RIT: College of Liberal Arts, 2007) -
Kearse Distinguished Lecture: Liberal education and its discontents
(RIT: College of Liberal Arts, 2007) -
A Macroeconomic policy analysis of the first presidency of George W. Bush
(RIT: College of Liberal Arts, 2007) -
Crime prevention through environmental design: An Evaluation of its implications and challenges
(RIT: College of Liberal Arts, 2007) -
Measuring the effects of viewing plastic surgery reality television programs upon college students' self-esteem and body-image satisfaction
(RIT: College of Liberal Arts, 2007) -
Lady buffalo
(RIT: College of Liberal Arts, 2007) -
Video games improve visual selective attention
(RIT: College of Liberal Arts, 2007) -
Worse than death
(RIT: College of Liberal Arts, 2007) -
Civil liberties in wartime: The Debate concerning torture
(RIT: College of Liberal Arts, 2007) -
Leave your language at the door
(RIT: College of Liberal Arts, 2007) -
Environmental economic tensions evidenced by Allegheny Energy, Inc.'s 10-K filing
(RIT: College of Liberal Arts, 2007) -
Seminar: Art and intentions
(RIT: College of Liberal Arts, 2006) -
Product placement in film and television
(RIT: College of Liberal Arts, 2005) -
Professional tennis players as endorsers in Tennis Magazine: A content analysis of advertisements over 40 years
(RIT: College of Liberal Arts, 2005)A celebrity endorser is “a famous person who uses public recognition to recommend or co-present with a product in an ad” (Stafford et al. 2003, p.1). The portrayal of professional athletes in magazines and on television ...