Left-Handedness: Early Theories, Facts, and Fancies11This chapter is an expanded version of a paper presented at a symposium, The Sinistral Mind, March 3-4, 1977, San Francisco, Calif., and at a conference, Left-handedness, Brain Organization, and Learning, March 5-6, 1977, University of California, Berkeley. The section on “Ambidextral Culture” was presented, in different form, in papers at the Annual Meetings of the Midwest Psychological Association (Harris, 1978) and the International Neuropsychology Society (Harris, 1979).I am grateful to the staff of the Science Library and the Inter-Library Loan Office of Michigan State University for their help. Preparation of this paper was supported, in part, by an All-University grant from Michigan State University.

Author(s):  
LAUREN JULIUS HARRIS
2018 ◽  
Vol 79 (2) ◽  
pp. 85
Author(s):  
Rachael Samberg ◽  
Richard A. Schneider ◽  
Anneliese Taylor ◽  
Michael Wolfe

In 2017, four University of California (UC) campuses took a public stance on accelerating the transition to open access (OA) by endorsing the Open Access 2020 (OA2020) initiative’s Expression of Interest (EOI). OA2020 is an international effort to convert the existing corpus of scholarly journals from subscription-based access to OA. In March 2017, when the first three UC campuses—UC-Berkeley, UC-Davis, and UC-San Francisco—endorsed,1,2 there had been only one U.S. signatory institution (California State University-Northridge, having endorsed in July 2016). Six months later in September 2017, another UC campus, Merced, added its affirmation. As of this writing, these five California universities remain the only OA2020 EOI signatories from the United States.3


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