5,395 research outputs found

    Roger Abrahams, author

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    Roger Abrahams, director of the African and Afro-American Research Institute at the University of Texas-Austin and author of Positively Black, argues the case for ethnic diversity in this interview. He also discusses that the idea of "new ethnicity" is not restricted to black or brown America and he sees a widespread return to old mores inherent in the traditional ethnic value system. Interviewed by WTMJ-TV host Jim Peck.GrayscaleSoun

    Unlucky for Some : 13 poems by Roger McGough

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    Inspired by and featuring the poetry of Roger McGough (by permission of the author), Unlucky for Some is a spare, minimalistic work about homelessness, mental illness and class division performed entirely in slow motion.\ud \ud This multimedia work also utilised prerecorded and live feed video and music, and experimented with synchronous and asynchonous live and mediatised performance

    Dr. Glendon Swarthout

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    Hosted by Roger M. Busfield, MSU Assistant Professor of Speech and Theater, Meet the Author is designed to introduce a general audience to a contemporary author and their work through in-depth interviews. This episode features a conversation between Dr. Glendon Swarthout, prolific author and English professor at MSU, and assistant professors Sam S. Baskett and Theodore B. Strandness

    The early Middle English reflexes of Germanic *ik ‘I’: unpacking the changes

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    The phonological shape of the PDE first-person nominative singular pronoun ‘I’ is assumed to have a simple history. The final consonant of WGmc *ik ‘palatalises’ (i.e. fronts and assibilates), and later drops, yielding [iː], which develops through the Great Vowel Shift into something like [ai]. However, the late Old English and early Middle English evidence indicates that such a simple narrative does not match the attested data. Rather, there are significant temporal, geographical and variational aspects, including complex lexical diffusion. The Linguistic Atlas of Early Middle English, Corpus of Tagged of Texts contains 145 texts that include one or more variants of the pronoun ‘I’. Between them, they exemplify an intricate history. In this article we unpack the changes that have brought about the attested complexity. As a basis we use the etymology of this item created for the recently published Corpus of Narrative Etymologies (CoNE), which itself interfaces with its accompanying Corpus of Changes (CC). The history of this small grammatical word ultimately needs to be considered against the wider background of velar palatalisation in general and in relation to the reflexes of other commonly occurring items of a similar structure. But the changes visible in ‘I’ seem not to be fully replicated in any of them, and here we confine ourselves to its particular and apparently unique history

    A Conversation with Roger Welsch

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    In this session, moderated by Barre Toelken and William A. "Bert" Wilson, audience members have the opportunity to discuss Roger Welsch's plenary lecture, and his other works and ideas, with the author

    Spoken language reference materials

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    Content of the CD distributed with the Handbook of Standards and Resources for Spoken Language Systems. Edited by Dafydd Gibbon, Roger Moore, Richard Winski. Published by Mouton de Gruyter, 1997

    Iteration of order preserving subhomogeneous maps on a cone

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    We investigate the iterative behaviour of continuous order preserving subhomogeneous maps f:KKf: K\,{\rightarrow}\, K, where KK is a polyhedral cone in a finite dimensional vector space. We show that each bounded orbit of ff converges to a periodic orbit and, moreover, the period of each periodic point of ff is bounded by βN=maxq+r+s=NN!q!r!s!=N!N3!N+13!N+23!3N+132πN, \beta_N = \max_{q+r+s=N}\frac{N!}{q!r!s!}= \frac{N!}{\big\lfloor\frac{N}{3}\big\rfloor!\big\lfloor\frac{N\,{+}\,1}{3}\big\rfloor! \big\lfloor\frac{N\,{+}\,2}{3}\big\rfloor!}\sim \frac{3^{N+1}\sqrt{3}}{2\pi N}, where NN is the number of facets of the polyhedral cone. By constructing examples on the standard positive cone in Rn\mathbb{R}^n, we show that the upper bound is asymptotically sharp

    Gene expression studies using retroviral vectors

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    Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Biology, 1986Includes bibliographies.by Roger David Cone.Ph. D.Ph. D. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Biolog

    Conservative philosopher Roger Scruton delivers last of 'Democracy and Moral Conviction' lectures

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    Includes descriptive metadata provided by producer in MP3 file: "Listen to Roger Scruton, author of The Meaning of Conservatism and Arguments for Conservatism, lecture on 'Freedom of Religion' at Vanderbilt Law School on April 16, 2007. The lecture was the fourth and last of the 'Democracy and Moral Conviction' lecture series.

    Hart (A. Tin dal). William Lloyd, bishop, politician, author and prophet, 1627-1717.

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    Aubert Roger. Hart (A. Tin dal). William Lloyd, bishop, politician, author and prophet, 1627-1717.. In: Revue belge de philologie et d'histoire, tome 33, fasc. 4, 1955. pp. 967-969
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