Background
Hays, Robert Glenn was born on May 23, 1935 in Carmi, Illinois, United States. Son of Lewis Earl and Margaret Elizabeth (White) Hays.
(Robert G. Hays chronicles the "Indian problem" precisely ...)
Robert G. Hays chronicles the "Indian problem" precisely as it was explained to Americans through the editorial columns of the New York Times between 1860 and 1900, the years when battles between white settlers and Native Americans split a nation and its spirit apart.Covering the final forty-one years of the nineteenth century, Hays's collection of Times editorials gives readers what current accou...
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00FBBU67U/?tag=2022091-20
(The enigmatic science of military intelligence is examine...)
The enigmatic science of military intelligence is examined in this personal record, written by Brig.Gen. Oscar W. Koch, who served during World War II as chief of intelligence for General George S. Patton, Jr., one of the most colorful military leaders in American history. General Koch traces the growth and development of the infant science through detailed accounts of the intelligence role in some of the most celebrated battles of the war, and through his personal remembrances of Patton and his relationships with members of his intelligence staff. His story moves from the African campaign through Sicily, into France on D-Day and on to the Battle of the Bulge, pointing out how the work of the intelligence staff made the differences in the final reckoning. General Kochs book is more than a historical study, however. It is the exciting story of the operations behind the cloak and dagger illusions.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0764308009/?tag=2022091-20
( Robert G. Hays chronicles the "Indian problem" precisel...)
Robert G. Hays chronicles the "Indian problem" precisely as it was explained to Americans through the editorial columns of the New York Times between 1860 and 1900, the years when battles between white settlers and Native Americans split a nation and its spirit apart. Covering the final forty-one years of the nineteenth century, Hays’s collection of Times editorials gives readers what current accounts cannot: perspectives by contemporary writers with unique insights into the public images of Native Americans and their place in a nation bent on expansion. The authentic voices of a national newspaper’s daily record speak with an urgency both immediate and real. These editorials express the unbridled bitterness and raw ambition of a nation immersed in an agenda of conquest. They also resonate with the struggle to find a common ground. Some editorials are patronizing and ironic: "Yet it seems pitiful to cage so fine a savage among a herd of vulgar criminals in a penitentiary." Others include a willingness to poke fun: "Many persons on the platform were astonished to find that an illiterate barbarian’ could handle the weapon of sarcasm. The truth is that the Indians spoke far better than ninety-nine out of a hundred members of congress." And yet others evince an attitude of respect, which set the tone for reconciling national ambition with natural rights. In some instances, the Times allowed Native Americans to tell their own stories, as in this eloquent, moving account of the testimony of Satanta, the warrior chief of the Kiowas: "A certain dim foreboding of the Indians’ fate swept across his mind, and in its passage lit his eyes up with a fierce light, and his voice rose to a pitch of frenzy as he exclaimed: We don’t want to settleI love to roam over the prairie; there I am free and happy." History demonstrates that the costs of owning one’s soil and one’s destiny remain without measure. Many of the problems blocking the progress of Native Americans continue unsolved: unemployment, infant mortality, suicide, crime, alcoholism, and poverty. Following such works as Helen Hunt Jackson’s A Century of Dishonor and Dee Brown’s Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, Hays looks back on the records of national history for the roots of our challenges today.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0809320673/?tag=2022091-20
( Concern with ecology is not new,” writes Robert G. Hay...)
Concern with ecology is not new,” writes Robert G. Hays, who traces the histories of three agencies founded over 100 years ago by farsighted people concerned with the quality of the environment and the adequacy of resources in Illinois. The agencies, which presently direct their energies toward environmental problems and finding alternate fuel supplies, are the State Geological Survey (mineral product development); the State Water Survey (the quality and quantity of water for expanding populations); and the State Natural History Survey (insect infestations, plant disease epidemics, inventory of plant and animal life). Hays shows the historical roots of the present surveys, recounts their most important contributions, describes the specific roles of survey administrators, andafter identifying major state problems, needs, and policy issuesanalyzes the responses of the surveys.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0809309432/?tag=2022091-20
(Bradley Morris, a still-vital WWII vet, has awful memorie...)
Bradley Morris, a still-vital WWII vet, has awful memories of combat. He and Lizzie visit a Sicilian battlefield where he was mortally wounded and his best friend died. This brings peace of mind, but then Lizzie has a heart attack and lies near death. He recalls their lives--young sweethearts, going to war, raising kids, his alcoholism, facing the turmoil in their home town of Memphis after the MLK assassination. Can he keep promises, reconcile an old quarrel over Vietnam with a son, overcome the guilt of surviving war when his friend did not? And can he renew the faith he lost in battle?
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0989992608/?tag=2022091-20
academic administrator reporter writer communications educator
Hays, Robert Glenn was born on May 23, 1935 in Carmi, Illinois, United States. Son of Lewis Earl and Margaret Elizabeth (White) Hays.
Bachelor of Science in Journalism, Southern Illinois University, 1961. Master of Science in Journalism, Southern Illinois University, 1972. Doctor of Philosophy, Southern Illinois University, 1976.
Reporter Granite City (Illinois) Press-Record, 1961-1963. Public relations writer Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, 1963-1966, alumni publications editor, 1966-1971. Researcher, assistant scientist Illinois Board Natural Resources/Conservation, 1971-1973.
Primary campaign manager Paul Simon for Congress, Illinois, 1974. Assistant professor journalism Sam Houston State University, Huntsville, Texas, 1974-1975. Associate professor journalism University Illinois, Urbana, 1975-1986, 87-99.
Professor emeritus, 2000. Chair mass communications department Southeast Missouri University, Cape Girardeau, 1986-1987. Author Vanilla Heart Public, Everett, Washington, since 2008.
Special correspondent St. Louis Post-Dispatch, 1964-1970. Stringer, Associate Press, 1964-1970. Stringer, United Press International, 1964-1970.
Member literature review panel Journal Applied Communications, 1990-1998, manuscript review board, 1992-1998. Editor research section American Council on Exercise Quarterly, 1978-1980. Associate editor Journal Correctional Education, 1969-1970.
Textbook manuscript review panel, Wadsworth Public Company, 1996. Textbook evaluators panel, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1984. Manuscript reviewer, Southern Illinois University Press, 1981.
Guest co-editor, Agriculture & Human Values, 1992. Communication research committee North Central Association agricultural experiment stations, 1989-1994, vice-chair, 1989-1990, chair, 1990-1991. Member executive council, Women Development, Midwest Universities Consortium International Activities, 1979-1980.
Member curriculum communications Women Development, Midwest Universities Consortium International Activities, 1983. Member reorganization task force, Research Division, International Association Agricultural Communicators Education 1991-1992. Vice-chair, Teaching Division, 1991-1993.
Member publications advisory committee Illinois-Indiana Sea Grant Program, 1994. Member, judges panel, National Council Farmer Cooperatives Publications Contest & Critique, 1991, 1992. Member, judges panel, Livestock Publications Council annual publications contest and critique, 1985-1990.
Coop Editorial Association Publications Contest & Critique, 1984. Member planning committee & session chair, first annual conference agricultural communications teachers, Mackinac Island, Michigan, 1981. Biloxi, Mississippi, 1982.
Member judges panel, Radio-television Division, International Association Agricultural Communicators Education Annual Critique & Awards Program, 1980, co-director Illinois-Indiana Sea Grant Program Science Writing Curriculam Project, 1997-1998. University Illinois Urbana-Champaign: member, campus senate, 1986, 1990-1991, 1994-1998. Member On-line Registration Steering Committee & Task Force, 1989-1990.
U I Direct on-line registration development committee, 1993-1995. College Agricultural, Consumer & Environmental Sciences representative Chancellor's Allerton Conference Workshop, Cultural Pluralism Classroom, 1990. With Adjunct General Corps.
United States Army, 1955-1957, with United States Army Reserve, 1957-1961.
(The enigmatic science of military intelligence is examine...)
(Bradley Morris, a still-vital WWII vet, has awful memorie...)
( Concern with ecology is not new,” writes Robert G. Hay...)
(Brand New. In Stock. Will be shipped from US. Excellent C...)
(Robert G. Hays chronicles the "Indian problem" precisely ...)
( Robert G. Hays chronicles the "Indian problem" precisel...)
Deputy registrar Champaign County Clerk Office, 1988-1991. 15th Illinois Congressional District coordinator Paul Simon President Campaign, 1987-1988. Member Champaign County steering committee Michael Dukakis President campaign, 1988.
Member steering committee Champaign County, Bill Clinton President Campaign, 1992. Champaign County chair, Paul Simon United States Campaign, 1984. Regional co-chair, Paul Simon United States Senate Campaign, 1990.
Communications Workshop faculty member Illinois Agricultural Leadership Foundation, 1990, 1992, member advisory seminar professionals, Cable-Satellite Public Affairs Network in Classroom, 1993-1994. Member South Carolina Writers Workshop, National Organization of Women, Association Education in Journalism and Mass Communications, Investigative Reporters and Editors, Research Society of America Periodicals, Illinois Press Association, Society Professional Journalists, Missouri Press Association, Kappa Tau Alpha, Gamma Sigma Delta, Champaign County Civil War Roundtable, American Civil Liberties Union (steering committee, Champaign County chapter, 1992-1995).
Married Mary Elizabeth Corley, December 21, 1957. Children: Alan Gregory, David Robert.