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Jason Samuels
Pages featuring Jason Samuels
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Blog
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Table of Contents
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Title Page
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Directory
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General Comments
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All Comments
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Comments by Commenter
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2011–12 Elaine Anderson, President
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1969–70 Richard N. Hey, President
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1979–80 Ira L. Reiss, President
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1989–90 M. Janice Hogan, President
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2009–11 Gary Bowen, President
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1968–69 Elizabeth S. Force, President
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1978–79 Paul C. Glick, President
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2007–09 Maxine Hammonds Smith, President
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1988–89 David Olson, President
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1959–60 Aaron Rutledge, President
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1967–68 William E. Kenkel, President
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1977–78 Gerhard Neubeck, President
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1958–59 Henry A. Bowman, President
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1987–88 Graham Spanier, President
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1957–58 Mildred Morgan, President
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1948–49 Ernest G. Osborne, President
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1966–67 William M. Smith, President
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1976–77 William C. Nichols, President
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1986–87 Hamilton I. McCubbin, President
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1956–57 David B. Treat, President
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1946–47 Larry K. Frank, President
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1975–76 Carlfred Broderick, President
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1985–86 Joan Aldous, President
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1955–56 Judson T. Landis, President
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1945 Sidney E. Goldstein, President
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1965–66 Ivan Nye, President
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1974–75 Richard K. Kerckhoff, President
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1984–85 Sharon Price, President
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1964–65 Clark E. Vincent, President
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1993–94 Harriette Pipes McAdoo, President
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1983–84 Bert N. Adams, President
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1954–55 Gladys Hoagland Groves, President
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1942–44 Ernest W. Burgess, President
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1973–74 Leland Axelson, President
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1953–54 Dorothy T. Dyer, President
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1941 Ernest Groves, President
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1963–64 Blaine R. Porter, President
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1992–93 Patricia Kain Knaub, President
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1972–73 Murray A. Straus, President
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1982–83 James Walters, President
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1939–1940 Adolph Meyer, President
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1962–63 Wallace Fulton, President
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1991–92 Brent Miller, President
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1961–62 David Mace, President
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1971–72 Eleanore B. Luckey, President
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1981–82 Wesley R. Burr, President
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Meet Sidney E. Goldstein, past NCFR president
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1938 Paul Sayre, President
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1990–91 Lynda Henley Walters, President
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1960–61 Harold T. Christensen, President
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1970–71 Gerald Leslie, President
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1980–81 Kate B. Garner, President
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NCFR has hand in development of U.S. Dept. of Health, Education, and Welfare
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NCFR’s executive secretaries
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1960 NCFR conference merges with international family conference
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NCFR History Facts
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FLE certification explored as early as 1964
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Consolidating NCFR’s Sections, 1961
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1938 Conference: The Contribution of the Family to the Cultural Wealth of the Nation
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1969 brings Family Action section to NCFR
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Awards in 1938
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NCFR moves to Minneapolis in 1955
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Cold War-era conference connects USSR scholars to NCFR
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How can NCFR best serve families? Words from a past president
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Membership and Awards in 1940
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1948 parenting advice from Ernest Osborne
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Gerhard Neubeck: Fleeing Nazi Germany, teaching human sexuality, and presiding over NCFR
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Membership and Awards in 1939
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Thinking of our late colleague, Alexis Walker, on her birthday
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1994: Hillary Rodham Clinton receives NCFR’s Distinguished Service to Families award
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NCFR’s growth in the 1970s
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Three NCFR conferences canceled during WWII
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1940 Conference: The Family in Wartime
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1990–1999
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1941 Conference: Family Preparedness
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Membership in 1941
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1980–1989
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1970–1979
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1960–1969
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1950–1959
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1953 Midwest Ad Hoc Conference on the proposed U.S. Family Department of Welfare
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1938–1949
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Journals and Publications and Affiliates in 1970–71
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Affiliates in 1979–80
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Membership in 1986–87
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Structure and Governance in 1988–89
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Membership and CFLE in 1994–95
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CFLE in 1995–96
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Membership and CFLE in 1998–99
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CFLE in 1999–2000
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Membership and CFLE in 2006–07
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CFLE in 2005–06
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Membership and CFLE in 2007–08
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Membership and CFLE in 2010–11
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Membership and CFLE in 2009–10
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Journals and Publications and Other Activities in 2009–10
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Membership and CFLE in 2011–12
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List of archived documents
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Acknowledgements
Recent Comments in this Document
June 7, 2016 at 3:19 pm
Sure, no problem
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June 7, 2016 at 2:45 pm
I wondered if I could use this for a project in my Chicano Studies class at ASU. The project will be put up in an exhibit display and possibly travel around to schools. Please let me know.
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November 12, 2013 at 10:20 am
Also worth a mention: John Gottman gave a Research Update for Practitioners on his marital research, which was well attended.
By the way, the name is “Celine Le Bourdais.”
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August 21, 2013 at 11:47 am
Dennis,
Enjoyed the story. And, what a lucky break for me that you did make this decision. Hope all is well.
See in context
August 15, 2013 at 9:19 am
The 1980 Portland Conference was 12 days after Mt. St. Helen had erupted. There was lots of ash around all over, and I still have a bottle of that ash. That was the year we had an afternoon trip to near Mt. St. Helen’s planned, and still took the trip. On the way up the bus stopped at Crown Point which was typically one of the windiest spots around. The wind was so strong that it blew the name badges out of the plastic holders. It also blew Ruth Jewson, Helen Hartness, and me on top of each other (which was scary for us with Ruth, but she wasn’t hurt). The bus also stopped at Multnomah Falls which was stunning. That evening I played for Bert Adams to sing songs from some musicals. He did a magnificent job.
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August 13, 2013 at 1:24 pm
One of my first NCFR conferences was in Portland and I was still a doctoral student then, and a member of the Executive Committee of NCFR as the student rep. It was at that meeting that I was really thinking about my career and where I should go with it. I was a student in family sociology and my chair was Lee Axelson, then the President of NCFR. He wanted me to take a sociology position. But others suggested that my interests would be better served in Child and Family Development (then in Home Ec) where relationship issues would be easier to study. I did not know which way to go.
At that meeting we took a bus trip to the coast of Oregon for a “salmon bake” on the beach. I sat on the bus between Eleanor Luckey and Ruth Jewson. All the way over and back we talked about career directions and those two people who I respected so much listened to me, and gave me their counsel, experience, and wisdom. Eleanor noted that she had been trained in psychology but chose to go into child and family development since there were more peers there who could help her frame her ideas and help them mature. Ruth saw the emerging scholarship in CFD and the quality of research coming out. The result of that was my turning down sociology jobs and taking the CFD position at UNC-Greensboro, where John Scanzoni and others later joined me a a great department. And my first students there were Jay Mancini and Gary Bowen, who have become successful scholars in their own right.
So the memories of that NCFR in Portland so many years ago remind me of how important it is to continue to foster opportunities for young student scholars to meet with senior people who can give them other ideas, and perhaps bring perspectives that their own programs may not be able to offer. Keep mixing us all up, and recognize the key role you play in the stirring of the creative pots in this vital area of family research and practice.
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July 12, 2013 at 3:49 pm
These changes have been incorporated. Thanks for your feedback.
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July 11, 2013 at 8:52 am
Edits–
1. Please add that he was a professor for nearly 30 years
2. Also change “:marriage and family therapist” to “marriage and family researcher and therapist”
3. Prepare and Enrich should be all CAPS—PREPARE ENRICH
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July 8, 2013 at 4:16 pm
That terminology has been corrected. Thanks Marilyn.
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July 8, 2013 at 4:13 pm
In 1988-89, I was Association of Councils president-elect. In 1989-90, I was president. There was no vice president. Other officers were program chair, secretary/treasurer, and past president. Both the president elect and the president served on the NCFR Board.
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