1,393 research outputs found

    Harbinger, 1983

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    Harbinger is a student-edited and designed magazine published each spring since 1980.TABLE OF CONTENTS: CARMEN MARTI – Patchwork, After the Rain, Beat; TERI DIANNE CIACCHI – Waxing Glorious, Coming Out for Air; DOREN MELIUS – Photograph; AMY KNOX BROWN – Elements, Limitations; LYNDON JENSEN – Chicago Dance; JANE EPPERSON – Photograph; AMY WILSON – Fireflies, Deer Season, The Mall; RUBY SPRANG – Pen and Ink; CAROLYN KELLEHER – Nickelodeon, Guises; MARIE KLEIN – Photograph; SHARON O’NEIL – Where the Shoe Ends, Preparations, Twelfth Night; NORA B. INFANTE – Your Book of Song, Braided Cycle, No Sacrifice as Such; JANICE OLSON – Photograph; JOHNAJ. RAMOS – Rounding Corners, Self-Satisfaction, Woman’s Best Friend; JO ANN M. BUSH – Photograph; MARIANNE TURKALJ BOST – Preparation; ROBIN L. LARSON – The Delivery, The Black Slate, Fall; DEDRA BENSON – Photograph; JOANNA MCKEE – The Private; COLLEEN BEVINS –Photograph; PENNEY LUTHI – Special Moments; BARBARA THOMAS – Best Laid Plans; TRACI LA ROSE – Photograph

    Visual Basic 2012 Programmer's Reference

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    Rod Stephens is a VB programming guru and the author of more than two dozen programming books, including Stephens' Visual Basic Programming 24-Hour Trainer. He also writes frequently for such magazines as Visual Basic Developer, Visual Basic Programmer's Journal, and Dr. Dobb's Journal. Rod's VB Helper website (vb-helper.com) provides thousands of pages of tips, tricks, and code examples for VB programmer

    James Stephens

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    James StephensIrish writer. His date of birth is uncertain, but probably not the 1882 which JJ believed. Raised in an orphanage, his early published writing began with pieces in the journal Sinn Féin. He became a prolific author, making a name with fiction (notably The Crock of Gold, 1912) but also publishing poetry and Irish history and culture. In 1925 he moved to London, and in the 1930s Stephens gave radio broadcasts for the BBC on assorted literary topics. While Stephens initially disdained JJ's writing, JJ developed a fascination with Stephens in 1927, believing that they shared a birthday, and at one point suggested to Stephens that he should finish the then-languishing "Work in Progress" (noted first in JJ's letter of 20 May 1927 to Harriet Shaw Weaver, LI 253-54). Fortunately this did not come to pass. Nevertheless, they became friends, corresponding and visiting from time to time. JJ translated Stephens's poem "Stephen's Green" into at least five languages. William Brockman</p

    An apology for, and an invitation to the people call'd Quakers [electronic resource] : to rectifie some errors which through the scandals givers they have fallen into : wherein the true original causes both humane and divine of all the divisions of the church and mischiefs in the state and among the people are plainly and briefly opened and detected.

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    Imperfect: print show-through.Attributed to Edward Stephens [who wrote under the name of Socrates Christianus]--National union catalog pre-l956 imprints.Reproduction of original in the Huntington Library.WingElectronic reproduction

    Correspondence regarding the construction of a museum

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    This 1945 correspondence, from Thurman Leatherwood to George M. Stephens, discusses the construction of a museum in Swain County, North Carolina. The letter is among the Horace Kephart papers. Horace Kephart (1862-1931) was a noted naturalist, woodsman, journalist, and author and promoter of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.|<?4-5" c c o o p EDWARDS & LEATHERITOOD p y Attorneys at Law y Bryson City, N. G. April 3, 1945 Mr. George M. Stephens c/o Stephens Press 48 Vlalnut Street Asheville, N. G. Dear Mr. Stephens: Mr. Stupka, of the Park Service, x'jas here a few days ago to see about the Kephart property. As I understand they plan to construct a museum in Swain County as soon as possible after the war and would like to place the property in the museum. This would be a fine thing and I believe would meet the approval of all Mr. Kephart!s friends. In the meantime, however, until the museum is constructed, I think it ?jould be well for us to hold the property. I have talked with Mr. Kelly Bennett, who is a member of the Kephart committee, and this, of course, meets with his approval, Yours truly, Sgd. Thurman Leatherwood. L/

    Food begging and sharing in wild bonobos (Pan paniscus): assessing relationship quality?

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    Food transfers are often hypothesised to have played a role in the evolution of cooperation amongst humans. However, they also occur in non-human primates, though no consensus exists regarding their function(s). We document patterns of begging for food and success rates as well as associated factors that may influence them for wild bonobos at LuiKotale, Democratic Republic of Congo. Our data, collected over 1074 observation hours, focus on 260 begging events (outside mother-offspring dyads) of which 37 % were successful. We find no support for the “reciprocity hypothesis”—that food is exchanged for grooming and/or sexual benefits; and only weak support for the “sharing under pressure” hypothesis—that food is transferred as a result of harassment and pays off in terms of nutritional benefits for the beggar. Instead, our data support the “assessing-relationships” hypothesis, according to which beggars gain information about the status of their social relationship with the possessor of a food item. This seems to hold particularly true for the frequent, albeit unsuccessful begging events by young females (newly immigrated or hierarchically non-established) towards adult females, although it can be observed in other dyadic combinations independent of sex and age

    Tamed and untamed political emotions

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    The complex entanglement between reason and emotion is evident in all political debate. In public discourse the idea that politics is concerned only with the reasoned exchange of dispassionate arguments is maintained by marginalising less rational human feelings and in viewing passions as politically dangerous. Over the last decade, social and cultural theory has challenged the liberal notion that emotions have no place in the public sphere. So what place do the emotions have in politics, asks Julie Stephens as she discusses three books on the theme in the&nbsp;Australian Review of Public Affairs. • Julie Stephens is an associate professor in the College of Arts, Victoria University where she teaches sociology. Her research interests include political dimensions of mothering, social movements and the cultural outsourcing of emotion. She is author of&nbsp; Confronting Postmaternal Thinking: Feminism, Memory and Care (Columbia University Press 2012). Title: Politics and the Emotions: The Affective Turn in Contemporary Political Studies Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Date Published: 2012 Authors: Paul Hoggett and Simon Thompson (eds) Title: Emotions in Politics: The Affect Dimension in Political Tension Palgrave Macmillan Date Published: 2013 Author: Nicolas Demertzis (ed) Title: Political Emotions: Why Love Matters for Justice Belknap Press of Harvard University Press Date Published: 2013 Author: Martha C. Nussbaum Images: book cover

    Nate Stephens Earns Two Best Paper Awards

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    It is a rare thing for an author to win a best paper award for his or her published research. It is even more unusual, however, for an author to win two of those awards in the same year. Yet Nate Stephens, assistant professor of accounting, has done just that for research published in the Accounting Horizons and Issues in Accounting Education journals.https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/huntsman_news/1045/thumbnail.jp

    The U.S.-Korea Alliance at 60 Years: Looking Back, Looking Forward

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    In a special lecture titled The U.S.-Korea Alliance at 60 Years: Looking Back, Looking Forward, Ambassador Stephens will draw on her nearly 40 years of experience in Korea and her diplomatic career to place the U.S.-Korea relationship in historical context and discuss the issues that will define it in the 21st century, including relations in the region, North Korea, and global issues such as addressing climate change and promoting sustainable economic growth. Ambassador Stephens is a Koret Fellow and Visiting Scholar at Stanford University’s Shorenstein Center for Asia and Pacific Research, where she teaches and speaks on issues related to the U.S. and Asia. Ambassador Stephens served as a U.S. career diplomat from 1978-2013, achieving the personal rank of Career Minister. She was U.S. Ambassador to the Republic of Korea from 2008 to 2011. A few of her earlier foreign assignments included consular and public affairs officer in Guangzhou, China, chief of the internal political unit in Seoul, and principal officer of the U.S. Consulate in Busan, Korea. Ambassador Stephens’ awards include the Korean government’s Sejong Cultural Prize and the Korea-America Friendship Association Prize, the YWCA’s Women’s Leadership “Special Prize” Award, and the Outstanding Achievement Award from the American Chamber of Commerce in Korea. Ambassador Stephens is the author of “Reflections of an American Ambassador to Korea.”https://digitalcommons.lmu.edu/ybminlectureseries/1013/thumbnail.jp
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