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ContributorsThe Pride Publishing Company (Contributor)
Created1977-12-15
DescriptionSelected articles: Canadians Take To
The Streets; Gay Athletes Fight Anita; CCR; Book Reviews; Homosexual rignt that used boys cracked; 15 held
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ContributorsThe Pride Publishing Company (Contributor)
Created1978-02
DescriptionSelected article titles: On Gay Marches…; Anita Bryant in Tucson Feb. 20; A Day Without Human Rights, Is Like a Day Without Sunshine; Prof Says Gay Males Wed Women for 'Self-respect'; Book Reviews
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ContributorsThe Pride Publishing Company (Contributor)
Created1978-04-15
DescriptionSelected article titles: Sterling Gruver Assumes CCR Directorship; Sterling's Notes…On Gay Community Service Centers; On Top with George Hill; How Much Do You Know about the Gay Rights Issue?; CCR Bake Sale at Club Phoenix
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ContributorsThe Pride Publishing Company (Contributor)
Created1978-05-18
DescriptionSelected article titles: Lesbian Mother Awarded Custody; A Dragon Lives Forever…The Pride Interviews Dragon Lady and Alter-ego, Tom Clark; Black's Beach; St. Paul, Wichita Voters Ax Civil Rights for Gays; Coors Beer Boycott to Continue
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ContributorsFinan, Timothy J. (Author) / West, Colin Thor (Author) / Austin, Diane E. (Author) / The Pride Publishing Company (Publisher)
Created2000-08
Description

As a major component of the Climate Assessment Project for the Southwest, this study is part of a larger effort to assess the vulnerability of natural and human systems to climate variability and change in the southwestern U.S. As importantly, this assessment seeks to fulfill the project’s larger mission of

As a major component of the Climate Assessment Project for the Southwest, this study is part of a larger effort to assess the vulnerability of natural and human systems to climate variability and change in the southwestern U.S. As importantly, this assessment seeks to fulfill the project’s larger mission of working directly with communities to improve their ability to respond adequately and appropriately to climatic events and climate change. The goal of this study is to demonstrate the utility of a rapid ethnographic approach for (1) conducting a community-level assessment of climate related vulnerability and (2) extending the findings to other assessments.