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Political Science: American College
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Political science is organized into several fields, each representing a major subject area of teaching and research in colleges and universities. These fields include comparative politics, American politics, international relations, political theory, public administration, public policy, and political behavior.
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Michael S. London was a history major and political science minor in college. He spent years trying to make sense of what was happening in the world. Then in 1969, during a visit to Yale University, someone drew his attention to a small ivy-covered, windowless building and explained that the building was known as the Tomb, the home of Skull and Bones. Being the inquisitive type, London asked his host about Skull and Bones. The reply, in a hushed tone of fear, was that London did not want to know about what went on in the Tomb. That was exactly the wrong thing to say to him, and a 34-year journey began.
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A native of Tarrytown, New York, Mr. McGowan was graduated from Providence College in 1974 with a B.A. degree in Political Science and has completed the Executive Program at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He resides in Hartsville with his wife, Diane. They have two children. He is active in a variety of educational support organizations and is currently serving as chairman of the Board of Visitors of Coker College.
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Verdone is a graduate of Rutgers College, with a B.S. in Political Science and Italian, Rutgers School of Law, Camden, with a Juris Doctorate degree. Prior to her work with Chicago Title, she worked at the law firm of Duane, Morris & Heckscher in Philadelphia.
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The Ralph J. Bunche Award is for the best scholarly work in political science published in the previous calendar year that explores the phenomenon of ethnic and cultural pluralism. The 2007 joint recipients are co-authors Fredrick C. Harris (Columbia University), Valeria Sinclair-Chapman (University of Rochester), and Brian D. McKenzie (Texas A&M University) for Countervailing Forces in African-American Civic Activism, 1973-1994 (Cambridge University Press, 2006), and Mark Q. Sawyer (University of California, Los Angeles) for Racial Politics in Post-Revolutionary Cuba (Cambridge University Press, 2006).
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