919 research outputs found
Archer Library Award 2024 Photographs
Image 1: Brett Waytuck, Dean, University Libraries and Archives presents the Dr. John Archer Library Award Trophy for 2024 to 4th year Visual Arts student Lindsay Demchuk
Image 2: Group photo with the Dr. John Library Award Trophy left to right - Robert Truszkowski, Head, Department of Visual Arts; Dr. Karla McManus, Department of Visual Arts; Lindsay Demchuk (2024 Dr. John Archer Library Award recipient); Brett Waytuck, Dean, University Libraries and Archives; Dr. David Dick, Dean, Faculty of Media, Art, and Performance
Image 3: Lindsay Demchuk with the Dr. John Archer Library Award Trophy
Image 4: Brett Waytuck presents the Dr. John Archer Library Award Certificate to Lindsay Demchuk
Image 5: Group photo with Dr. John Archer Library Award certificate left to right - Robert Truszkowski, Head, Department of Visual Arts; Dr. Karla McManus, Department of Visual Arts; Lindsay Demchuk (2024 Dr. John Archer Library Award recipient); Brett Waytuck, Dean University Libraries and Archives; Dr. David Dick, Dean, Faculty of Media, Art, and Performance
Image 6: Lindsay Demchuk with the Dr. John Archer Library Award Certificate
Image 7: Dr. Karla McManus and Lindsay Demchuk with the Dr. John Archer Library Award Certificat
Archer Library Award 2025 Photographs
Award 2025 2.jpg: Brett Waytuck presents the Dr. John Archer Library Award certificate to Addisen Nelson
Award 2025 5.jpf: (left to right) left to right are: Gillian van der Ven (Music Librarian), David Dick (Dean, Faculty of MAP), Brett Waytuck (Dean, University Libraries Archives), Addisen Nelson (Dr. John Archer Library Award 2025 recipient), Barbara Reul (Professor, Department of Music), Melissa Morgan (Head, Department of Music)
Award 2025 6.jpg: Addisen Nelson with the Dr. John Archer Library Award plaque
Award 2025 7.jpg: Addisen Nelson with the Dr. John Archer Library Award trophy
Award 2025 8.jpg: Addisen Nelson and Barbara Reul (Professor, Department of Music
Dr. Allison Archer - Faculty Author Interview
Dr. Allison Archer, Assistant Professor of Leadership Studies, discusses her recent article in the Journal of Politics, entitled “Political Advantage, Disadvantage, and the Demand for Partisan News.” Dr. Archer’s research interests include political communication, political psychology, and experimental methods. As a former journalist, she is largely interested in questions that are related to the media and politics
Archer, Nuala; Mobile Homes; reading
Biography: Nuala Archer (born 1955) is an American poet of Irish descent, author of five books, most recently, Inch Aeons (Les Figues Press, 2006). Her first book, Whale on the Line, won the Patrick Kavanagh Poetry Award in 1980. She has published poems in literary journals and magazines including The American Poetry Review, Mid-American Review and Seneca Review. Until 2011, she was an associate professor in the English Department at Cleveland State University. During the 1990s, she briefly served as the director of Cleveland State University Poetry Center. She has taught literature and edited the Midland Review at Oklahoma State University. She has also taught at Yale University and Albertus Magnus College. She has educated at Wheaton College in Illinois, Trinity College Dublin and the University of Wisconsin. Born in Rochester, New York to Irish parents, her family moved to Canada, Costa Rica, Ecuador and Panama.
-Wikipedia, Nuala Archer, 2020-09-1
Porting and Enabling Use of the Community Earth System Model on ARCHER
The Community Earth System Model (CESM) is a coupled climate model for simulating the earth's climate system. Composed of four separate sub-models simultaneously simulating the earth's atmosphere, ocean, land surface ice and sea ice, and one central coupler component, CESM allows researchers to conduct fundamental research into the earth's past, present and future climate states [1].
This report describes the work undertaken under the embedded CSE programme of the ARCHER UK National Supercomputing Service [2], and was entitled “Porting and Enabling use of the Community Earth System Model on ARCHER”, where the PIs were Dr Massimo Bollasina and Dr Mike Mineter, University of Edinburgh, with the technical work undertaken by the author, between the beginning of April and mid-November, 2014.
[1]www.cesm.ucar.edu/modesl/cesm1.0
[2]www.archer.ac.ukThis work was funded under the embedded CSE programme of the ARCHER UK National Supercomputing Service (http://www.archer.ac.uk
Archer, Nuala; Whale on the Line and Pan; reading
Biography: Nuala Archer (born 1955) is an American poet of Irish descent, author of five books, most recently, Inch Aeons (Les Figues Press, 2006). Her first book, Whale on the Line, won the Patrick Kavanagh Poetry Award in 1980. She has published poems in literary journals and magazines including The American Poetry Review, Mid-American Review and Seneca Review. Until 2011, she was an associate professor in the English Department at Cleveland State University. During the 1990s, she briefly served as the director of Cleveland State University Poetry Center. She has taught literature and edited the Midland Review at Oklahoma State University. She has also taught at Yale University and Albertus Magnus College. She has educated at Wheaton College in Illinois, Trinity College Dublin and the University of Wisconsin. Born in Rochester, New York to Irish parents, her family moved to Canada, Costa Rica, Ecuador and Panama.
-Wikipedia, Nuala Archer, 2020-09-1
Progress of Victoria : a statistical essay / by William Henry Archer.
At head of title: Intercolonial Exhibition essays, 1866.; "Intended as an introductory handbook to the annually-published Statistics of Victoria" -- Pref.; Written by author in his capacity as Registrar-General of Victoria.; Includes index.; Ferguson, J.A. Australia, 6085; Electronic reproduction. Canberra, A.C.T. : National Library of Australia, 2009
Bulletin No. 208 - Soil Erosion Archer Field Station
Bulletin No. 208 - Soil Erosion Archer Field Statio
Rowell and Archer
Actress and author Victoria Rowell spoke to students, staff and faculty on her memoir, *The Women Who Raised Me.* Rowell poses here with poster designer and Coordinator of MSU Libraries\u27 Instructional Media Center Pattye Archer
Land adjacent to Glebe Farm, Coventry Road, Lutterworth: Archaeological monitoring of boreholes (OASIS ID: headland3-369514)
Archaeological borehole monitoring was undertaken by Headland Archaeology on land adjacent to Glebe Farm, Coventry Road, Lutterworth. Evidence suggesting an earlier route for the watercourse slightly to the south of its current position to the west of the boreholing area were produced along with the suggestion that intermittent and conjoining water sources contributed to deposit a sequence of alluvial deposits at the west end of the works area. No deposits or materials suitable to aid in paleoenvironmental reconstruction were evident
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