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    • Page 210

    • Page 210
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    • protection. As the train meandered across central Arkansas, it grew to more than forty wagons, including several hundred blooded horses and a thousand head of cattle; the total wealth of the caravan was $70,000, by far one of the richest to cross...
    • Chapter 19 - Page 135

    • Chapter 19 - Page 135
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    • Henry and others taking mutton to Dixie. Henrietta and Ann, household chores. Making silk. Letter from Henry Lunt to daughter, Hen~.irtti~. ll'illard on mission. Sheep dipping corrals. Rass's pet ewe. Typhoid epidemic and new water system. First...
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    • PAHUTE LEGENDS William R. Palmer 1958 OH 0598 How The Eagle Became Bald-headed It sometimes happened in the long ago that some living thing went bad and became a source of trouble to all the others. Sometimes they wrought so much sorrow and...
    • Page 48

    • Page 48
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    • MUTED MOTHERHOOD 44 Economic stigmas. The final stigma was an economic stigma, meaning that people made judgments about a family’s economic situation if the mother stayed at home. One woman explained being told that “…with today’s economy...
    • Page 22

    • Page 22
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    • No pirates no princesses 17 marketers target increasingly obese children with fat, sugar and chemical laden foods. On the other hand, clothing companies show models that are exceedingly thin and young displaying provocative clothing for nine and...
    • Page 57

    • Page 57
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    • No pirates no princesses 52 cultural seepage have either moved to smaller towns (Las Vegas, NV to Parowan, UT) or planned moves (Los Angeles, CA to Chicago, IL). Some mothers chose to homeschool their children to avoid the inevitable influence from...
    • Page 165

    • Page 165
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    • No pirates no princesses 160 friend again for a long time. Guess what no play dates outside the house for that. I find that there‘s so much parenting like that, guilt parenting. It‘s hard for my not to get stern with other kids. And I do it...
    • Page 26

    • Page 26
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    • 23 supported the idea that growing food helps children make better food choices, which has been a growing need with the rise of childhood obesity rates. In 2008 approximately seventeen percent of children and adolescents aged two to nineteen years...
    • Page 27

    • Page 27
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    • 24 same time, citizens of industrialized nations, the United States chief among them, [were] becoming alienated from the sources of food they eat” (Gow 2005). “To decrease the threat of the obesity epidemic, children need to broaden the...
    • Page 28

    • Page 28
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    • 25 experiential learning basis, have been proposed as a method to reinforce nutrition education because youth who plant and harvest their own produce are more likely to eat it” (Beckman, Smith, 2008, p. 12). The 2008 study conducted by Beckman...
    • Page 12

    • Page 12
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    • HAZEN COOLEY, B.S. Assistant Secretary and Treasurer CHARLES B. COOLEY, B.S. Assistant Professor of Vocational Industrial Education PARLEY DALLEY, B.S., M.S. Assistant Professor of Chemistry and Mathematics MARY L. BASTOW, B.S. Assistant Professor...
    • Page 125

    • Page 125
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    • EAT AT CORRY'S '\V^iere Good Foods Cost Less' CEDAR CITY, UTAH HENRY E. PETERSEN Registered Pharmacist The Rexall Store CEDAR CITY, UTAH THIS BOOK IS BOUND IN A KINGSCRAFT COVER Manufactured rjy KINGSPORT, TENNESSEE We Are Always for You I. E....

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