59 research outputs found
Haus in der Heimat: Lesebuch für die Volksschulen in Baden-Württemberg: Drittes Schuljahr
Here is a typical third-grade reader from Germany in the 1950's. It contains a wealth of stories with colored and monochrome illustrations. I find three fables grouped together. LM, TB, and FC. TB is told in the version by Wilhelm Curtmann. The other two are attributed to Aesop. Only TB gets an illustration, but that a good monochrome depiction of the friend up a tree (102). By comparison with the art in the second-grade reader, "Von Frühling zu Frühling," this art is more typical of what I found in Germany in the 60's. The publishers seem to be a consortium of three in three cities: Gemeinschaftsverag: Badenia-Verlag; Paul Christian Lehrmittelverlag; and Union Verlag.Here is a typical third-grade reader from Germany in the 1950's. It contains a wealth of stories with colored and monochrome illustrations. I find three fables grouped together. LM, TB, and FC. TB is told in the version by Wilhelm Curtmann. The other two are attributed to Aesop. Only TB gets an illustration, but that a good monochrome depiction of the friend up a tree (102). By comparison with the art in the second-grade reader, "Von Frühling zu Frühling," this art is more typical of what I found in Germany in the 60's. The publishers seem to be a consortium of three in three cities: Gemeinschaftsverag: Badenia-Verlag; Paul Christian Lehrmittelverlag; and Union Verlag.This is a hardbound book (hard cover)This is a hardbound book (hard cover)Language note: GermanLanguage note: GermanZweite AuflageZweite AuflageBilder und Zeichnungen von Nikolaus PlumpBilder und Zeichnungen von Nikolaus Plum
Confluence up to garbage in graph transformation
\ua9 2021 The Author(s)The transformation of graphs and graph-like structures is ubiquitous in computer science. When a system is described by graph-transformation rules, it is often desirable that the rules are both terminating and confluent so that rule applications in an arbitrary order produce unique resulting graphs. However, there are application scenarios where the rules are not globally confluent but confluent on a subclass of graphs that are of interest. In other words, non-resolvable conflicts can only occur on graphs that are considered as “garbage”. In this paper, we introduce the notion of confluence up to garbage and generalise Plump\u27s critical pair lemma for double-pushout graph transformation, providing a sufficient condition for confluence up to garbage by non-garbage critical pair analysis. We apply our results in two case studies about efficient language recognition: we present backtracking-free graph reduction systems which recognise a class of flow diagrams and a class of labelled series-parallel graphs, respectively. Both systems are non-confluent but confluent up to garbage. We also give a critical pair condition for subcommutativity up to garbage which, together with closedness, implies confluence up to garbage even in non-terminating systems
The Light and Shadow of Feminist Research Mentorship: A Collaborative Autoethnography of Faculty-Student Research
“Research assistant” is a term used to describe student researchers across a variety of contexts and encompasses a wide array of duties, rewards, and costs. As critical qualitative scholars situated in a discipline that rarely offers funded research assistantships to graduate students, we explore how we have engaged in faculty-student research in one particularly understudied context: the independent study. Using narrative writing and reflection within a framework of collaborative autoethnography, the first three authors reflect as three “generations” of protégés who were each mentored through independent studies during their MA programs by the fourth author. We explore the environmental context, mentor facets, and protégé facets that highlight the light and shadow, or successes and struggles, of our mentoring relationships. Reflecting on our own experiences of collaborative research through independent studies, we suggest a model for feminist research mentorship that may be enacted across disciplines
Advocating for integrative medicine: providers' stories of resonance, negotiation, and community
Integrative medicine (IM) is a holistic health care option that blends complementary, alternative medicine with biomedical models of care. Many medical care facilities do not offer IM treatment for patients, yet the demand for IM is growing. Therefore, IM providers are in the position of educating and promoting IM to patients and other medical practitioners. There is limited research literature focusing on how IM providers communicate advocacy for IM. Therefore, this research is designed to explore the perspectives of providers about the ways that they communicate advocacy for IM in their lives and their medical practice. Interview data we collected at The Center reveals the ways that IM providers continuously advocate for IM through their resonance with IM philosophy, by negotiating systemic tensions that revolve around IM, and by forming communities of practice with patients and other providers. Results of this investigation offer insight about IM, communication, and advocacy.</jats:p
Valentine. Valentine Greetings
A plump blue-eyed girl in a green coat, white hat, and a white muff. Text: Valentine Greetings. Date is approximate.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/romance_revelry/1012/thumbnail.jp
Studies on regeneration in the cerebral hemispheres of adult Triturus viridescens after unilateral incision, 1959
A denaturing of the non- places: The redefinition of the urban voids of the escalator area in Hong Kong
The city produces spaces that could be termed as voids, due to a momentum of a design which tends to fill with clear functions and meanings each corner of it. As the city develops, within the limits of it appear as an integral part, spaces that lack of a clear role. Their meaning is continuously open to the formulation and often emerges "randomly" from the event of occasional events. What may make the acceptance of the void as a key element in an urban structure and under what conditions this (urban space) can be determined? The absence of a building in an area of the city is not enough for giving him the concept of 'urban void'. Spaces that can be characterized by a specific function or they serve an aesthetic point of view, and particularly in any case characterized by contents of the "filled" with interesting or indifferent actions of everyday life within cannot be defined as urban voids. Instead it could be seen to what extent, and even buildings are urban voids in conditions devoid of above characteristics. The voids are derivatives of unforeseeable transformations of the city. Their presence creates strange feelings. It could be seen as a reaction to the body of the city or a collateral development. So, which is the aesthetic perception of the urban voids of the escalator area? What defines them as voids? They are places? Or non- places? Do they have potentials to be filled with a specific function and which is the best solution? To be an integral part of the city or a parasitical formation of spaces? The site of the escalators is a mosaic of non-places, a mixture of different micro worlds with an escalator system to penetrate them and automatically define them as a performance. People who travel with the escalators are the viewers of the performance. Those who use the micro worlds, the performers, experience the semi-private spaces. But what exactly is the role of public space in this area? How can we re-define the new Hong Kongian public space under the new conditions of neo-liberalism? Which is the part of these urban voids inside this interrogation and redefinition of the public space? In conclusion, how we should treat these urban voids in order to serve the new re-defined feeling of Hong Kong? Goal The purpose of this project is to re- question and to re- defines the urban feeling of the Hong Kong through the re- formation of the urban voids of the escalators- area.dsd. architecture thinkingArchitectureArchitectur
The Nutritional Status and Physical Growth of Children in Bali, Indonesia (5) (Special Issue Dedicated to Professor Rikuo HAYASHI)
The author has already reported four researches concerning the relations of growth of physical condition and assimilation of nutrition in the pupils of the Maranatha Elementary School, Bali, Indonesia. In this study, the author elucidates about the relation of the degree of corpulence and physical examination in the pupils of the Harapan Elementary School as almost same conditions as the Maranatha Elementary School to compare both pupils. The result shows that the similar trends of the growth of physical conditions of pupils concerning each age as those of Japan. As the degree of corpulence, the prior investigations have already paid attentions to both extremes of lean and plump in Japanese pupils. However, the author explicitly elucidates the differentiation of three classes: namely, standard, lean and plump in the pupils of the Harapan Elementary School. The author thinks that the theme in the future study is to fuller elucidate the relations of the growth of physical condition and assimilation of nutrition in the pupils in Indonesia.6KJ00006126659論文Articledepartmental bulletin pape
Fisherman at lake cooking in a boiling spring the trout just caught, Yellowstone Park, U.S.A.
You are looking northeast from the shore of Yellowstone Lake across Thumb Bay, one of its many spreading arms. The place is extraordinary in many ways, but the most striking peculiarity of all is the possibility of such a proceeding as you see now--that fisherman has just caught in the lake the plump trout on his line and now he is lowering his prize into a spring of boiling water, only a few feet from the cool depths of the lake itself. The waters of the boiling spring evidently rise from sources absolutely separate from the lake bed--as separate as if they came up in pipes set by a plumber! Yet geologiests say the boiling waters like those of the Lake are of meteoric origin, i.e.: were deposited in the form of rain or snow, but that they gradually filtered down through the ground into rock hollows leading to subterranean depths of terrific heat. The most famous spouting geysers are off at your left (northwest) twenty or thirty miles away by the wagon-road. Even if the geysers were not here with their weird fascination, this lake would deserve a throng of visitors for the sake of its beauty in this rare situation, almost a mile and a half higher than sea-level. Its mountain-walled basin covers 139 square miles. Just here along the shore, the waters are seldom more than twenty or thirty feet deep, but there are places where the bed sinks 300 feet. The waters are alive with plump, pink-fleshed salmon-trout. (See H.M. Chittenden's "Yellowstone National Park;" Encyclopaedia articles on "Geysers," etc.) From Notes of Travel, No. 13, copyright, 1904, by Underwood & Underwood
Fisherman at lake turning to cook in a boiling spring the trout just caught, Yellowstone Park, U.S.A.
You are looking northeast from the shore of Yellowstone Lake across Thumb Bay, one of its many spreading arms. The place is extraordinary in many ways, but the most striking peculiarity of all is the possibility of such a proceeding as you see now--that fisherman has just caught in the lake the plump trout on his line and now he is lowering his prize into a spring of boiling water, only a few feet from the cool depths of the lake itself. The waters of the boiling spring evidently rise from sources absolutely separate from the lake bed--as separate as if they came up in pipes set by a plumber! Yet geologiests say the boiling waters like those of the Lake are of meteoric origin, i.e.: were deposited in the form of rain or snow, but that they gradually filtered down through the ground into rock hollows leading to subterranean depths of terrific heat. The most famous spouting geysers are off at your left (northwest) twenty or thirty miles away by the wagon-road. Even if the geysers were not here with their weird fascination, this lake would deserve a throng of visitors for the sake of its beauty in this rare situation, almost a mile and a half higher than sea-level. Its mountain-walled basin covers 139 square miles. Just here along the shore, the waters are seldom more than twenty or thirty feet deep, but there are places where the bed sinks 300 feet. The waters are alive with plump, pink-fleshed salmon-trout. (See H.M. Chittenden's "Yellowstone National Park;" Encyclopaedia articles on "Geysers," etc.) From Notes of Travel, No. 13, copyright, 1904, by Underwood & Underwood
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