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Turner, Caroline Sotello Viernes – Harvard Educational Review, 2007
According to recent data, only 3 percent of all college and university presidents are women of color. While the numbers remain disturbingly low, some of these women of color are making history as the "first" of their gender, race, and ethnicity to become president of a public, baccalaureate degree-granting college or university. In this…
Descriptors: Race, Higher Education, Leadership, Females
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Ganter, Granville – American Indian Quarterly, 2007
History has not always been kind to Sagoyewatha, or, as he is more commonly known, Red Jacket. One of the most eloquent spokesmen for Native sovereignty in the early national period, Sagoyewatha was nonetheless accused by his peers of cowardice, alcoholism, and egotism. Fortunately, this picture is beginning to change. Christopher Densmore's…
Descriptors: Biographies, Historians, American Indians, American Indian History
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McNeil, Betty Ann – Catholic Education: A Journal of Inquiry and Practice, 2006
Born an Episcopalian in New York, Elizabeth Ann Bayley (1774-1821), married (1794) William Magee Seton (1768-1803). Blessed with three daughters (Anna Maria, Rebecca, and Catherine Charlton, called "Kit") and two sons (William and Richard), the couple briefly enjoyed the comforts of social status and prosperity. They opened their arms to…
Descriptors: Educational History, Clergy, American Indians, Change Agents