2,895 research outputs found

    Data: Algorithms for new types of fair stable matchings

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    This data corresponds to the data and experiments described in Section 5 of the following paper: Algorithms for new types of fair stable matchings Authors: Frances Cooper and David Manlove The paper is located at: https://arxiv.org/abs/2001.10875 The software is located at: https://zenodo.org/record/3630383 The data is located at: https://zenodo.org/record/3630349 See the README for more information.</p

    Lawrence Cooper interview, 1988

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    Cooper, Lawrence - Audio Oral History interview - CSWA ❧ Interviewed by Frances Lomas Feldman on June 2, 1988. An interview with Lawrence Cooper. ❧ Lawrence Cooper. Interviewed by Frances Feldman. Date of interview: 6-2-88. Length of interview: 2 hours and 53 minutes. Transcript of interview: 36 pp. ❧ INTERVIEW SUMMARY: An interview with Lawrence Cooper, as he discusses his work with United Way of Los Angeles, the Welfare Planning Council of Los Angeles, the All Nations Foundation, the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce, and others. ❧ INTERVIEW TOPICS: Representative of business; volunteer with boards and agencies: Blue Cross; Mental Health Development Commission; role in reorganization of United Way. ❧ ADDITIONAL MATERIAL: 1. Curriculum Vitae; 2. Business cards; 3. Program for National Alliance of Business, Los Angeles Metro, 10th Anniversary Dinner, 17 October 1978. Includes tribute to Lawrence Cooper; 4. Letter to Daniel Blain, Director of State Dept. of Mental Hygiene, from Edward Tuttle, president of Welfare Planning council. Includes mention of Lawrence Cooper. 5. LA Rotary list of members, including Lawrence Cooper

    Samuel, Frances and Uncle Cooper Apperly

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    Photograph of Samuel and Frances Workman with Uncle Cooper Apperly

    Sara Winthrop Smith letter to Frances Casement, August 14, 1887

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    Letter written to Frances Casement from Sara Winthrop Smith of Cincinnati, Ohio, August 14, 1887. Winthrop expresses the challenges of generating support for the suffrage movement among the conservative residents of her city, and encourages the creation of clear materials that make the argument for women's suffrage to be more widely distributed. This item comes from the Frances Jennings Casement Papers, a manuscript collection comprised of letters and association records related to the founding and leadership of the Ohio Woman Suffrage Association. Casement (1840-1928) was born in Painesville, Ohio, and graduated from Painesville Academy and Willoughby Female Seminary. Her father, Charles Casement, supported abolition and women's suffrage and encouraged Frances to be active in social causes. Frances Casement established the Painesville Equal Rights Association in 1883, and shortly after became involved in the Ohio Woman Suffrage Association, serving as its president from 1885 to 1888

    Jane Jones letter to Frances Casement, November 11, 1887

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    This brief letter written by Jane Jones of Piqua, Ohio, to Frances Casement indicates that, while Ms. Jones is a temperance supporter, she does not support the suffrage movement and has passed a selection of promotional materials to a colleague at the local chapter of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union who is a suffrage proponent. This item comes from the Frances Jennings Casement Papers, a manuscript collection comprised of letters and association records related to the founding and leadership of the Ohio Woman Suffrage Association. Casement (1840-1928) was born in Painesville, Ohio, and graduated from Painesville Academy and Willoughby Female Seminary. Her father, Charles Casement, supported abolition and women's suffrage and encouraged Frances to be active in social causes. Frances Casement established the Painesville Equal Rights Association in 1883, and shortly after became involved in the Ohio Woman Suffrage Association, serving as its president from 1885 to 1888

    Frances Duyckinck Cooper Wood

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    Transcript of interview conducted on May 28, 1980, in Honolulu, Hawaii.Includes index

    Mrs. J. H. Ammon letter to Frances Casement, December 24, 1884

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    Letter from Josephine M. (Mrs. J. H.) Ammon of Cleveland to Frances Casement, December 24, 1884. Ammon expresses her thanks to Casement and her fellow suffrage supporters in Painesville, Ohio, for recently hosting Ammon and other women from Cleveland. She discusses an upcoming lecture to take place titled "Should Women Vote?" and explores options to combine efforts in the region with regard to public lectures. This item comes from the Frances Jennings Casement Papers, a manuscript collection comprised of letters and association records related to the founding and leadership of the Ohio Woman Suffrage Association. Casement (1840-1928) was born in Painesville, Ohio, and graduated from Painesville Academy and Willoughby Female Seminary. Her father, Charles Casement, supported abolition and women's suffrage and encouraged Frances to be active in social causes. Frances Casement established the Painesville Equal Rights Association in 1883, and shortly after became involved in the Ohio Woman Suffrage Association, serving as its president from 1885 to 1888

    Mrs. M. B. Haven letter to Frances Casement, September 25, 1884

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    Letter from Mrs. Martha (M. B.) Haven of Cleveland, Ohio, to Frances Casement, September 25th, 1884. Haven encloses petitions and requests Casement's assistance in collecting names to protest the decision of Adelbert College to close admission to women. Adelbert College (originally named Western Reserve College) would go on to stop admitting women in 1888; female students were instead enrolled in the College for Women of Western Reserve University, though the two schools continued to cooperate closely for years. After a series of mergers between a number of other schools and colleges, the institution would be known as Case Western Reserve University beginning in 1967. This item comes from the Frances Jennings Casement Papers, a manuscript collection comprised of letters and association records related to the founding and leadership of the Ohio Woman Suffrage Association. Casement (1840-1928) was born in Painesville, Ohio, and graduated from Painesville Academy and Willoughby Female Seminary. Her father, Charles Casement, supported abolition and women's suffrage and encouraged Frances to be active in social causes. Frances Casement established the Painesville Equal Rights Association in 1883, and shortly after became involved in the Ohio Woman Suffrage Association, serving as its president from 1885 to 1888
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