3,612 research outputs found

    Ms. Neely Terrell, RWWL AUC, March 2012

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    This video is a conversation with Ms. Neely Terrell. Ms. Terrell talks about her book, "Super Singles Activate". Anthony Kinsey and Jahnesta Horney, AUC Woodruff Library, are the interviewers

    Image Morphing with the Beier-Neely Method

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    The Beier-Neely feature-based image-morphing method is studied. Then, software implementing the Beier-Neely image-morphing method, designed and developed by the author, is presented. The software consists of three programs. The first program is a graphical user interface (GUI) used to manually select feature line segments. The second program is a morphing program that generates a morphing image sequence, where each intermediate frame in the sequence represents a stage in the morphing process. The third program converts the image sequence produced to a video that displays the image morphing effect.Graduat

    Philip P. Neely scrapbook of fugitive fiction, W.0022

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    Abstract: Scrapbook containing handwritten notes and newspaper clippings related to Philip P. Neely's writingsScope and Content Note: This scrapbook contains newspaper clippings and handwritten notes related to Philip P. Neely's writings. Highlights of the collection include copies of the short story series "Threads: From the Life-Woof of Hal Hankins, Esq.," selections from the autobiographical column "Leaves from my Life-Book," and selections from a social column entitled "Pen and Ink Gossip."Biographical/Historical Note: Philip Philips Neely was born on 8 September 1819 in Rutherford County, Tennessee. He was a Methodist minister and author of several serialized novellas as well as several books of sermons. Neely and his first wife, Henrietta, had one child, John Edwin Polk, before she died in 1847 (presumably in childbirth) with the couple's second child. With his second wife, J. Alice, they had at least one daughter, Julia E.Philip Neely died on 9 November 1868, in Mobile, Alabama

    Why the Courts Don\u27t Work

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    Justice Richard Neely, former justice of the West Virginia Supreme Court and professor of economics at the University of Charleston, delivered the John A. Sibley Lecture Why the Courts Don\u27t Work at the University of Georgia School of Law on February 17, 1983. Justice Neely is author of the book, How Courts Govern America, which was published by Yale University Press in 1981. In his book he advances the idea that judicial review is a democratic, institutional compensation for the structural defects of the legislative branch and the bureaucratic self-dealing of the executive branch of government

    Telegram from Bertha Wells Mead, Washington, D. C., to Lucine Finch and Edwin W. Finch, Greenwich, Connecticut, September 29, 1926

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    Notes and correspondence of sympathy written the Julia Neely Finch's family on her death

    Letter from Bertha Wells Mead, Washington, D. C. , to Edwin Finch and Lucine Finch, September 30, 1926

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    Notes and correspondence of sympathy written the Julia Neely Finch's family on her death

    Avance del estudio contextual de los sistemas de canales prehispánicos “fosilizados” del Valle de Tehuacán, Puebla. 29. Arqueología

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    Caran, S. C., B. M. Winsborough, J. A. Neely y S. Valastro, Jr. 1995. “Radiocarbon age of carbonate sediments (travertine, pedoconcretions, and biogenic carbonates): a new method based on organic residues, employing stable-isotope control of carbon sources”, Current Research in the Pleistocene, núm. 12, Corvallis, Oregon, pp. 75-77.Neely, James A., “Paleoecología, desarrollo cultural, y los usos de aguas en el Valle de Tehuacán, Puebla, Mexico”, en: Informe al Consejo de Arqueología del Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia de México, México, 1995, mecanuscrito.Neely, J. A., S. C. Caran y F. Ramirez Sorensen, “The prehispanic and colonial saltworks of the Tehuacan Valley and vicinity, southern Puebla, Mexico”, en: Paper presented in the Salt II Session at the 62nd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Nashville, Tennessee, 1997.Neely, J. A., S. C. Caran, B. M. Winsborough, F. Ramirez Sorensen y S. Valastro, Jr., “An early holocene hand-dug water well in the Tehuacan Valley of Puebla, Mexico”, Current Research in the Pleistocene, núm. 12, Corvallis, Oregon, 1995a, pp. 38-40.____, “A new approach in dating the prehistoric ‘fossilized’ canals of the Tehuacan Valley of southern Puebla, Mexico”, Paper presented to the 60th, Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Minneapolis, Minnesota, 1995b.Winsborough, B. M., S. C. Caran, J. A. Neely y S. Valastro, Jr., “Calcified microbial mats date prehistoric canals: radiocarbon assay oforganic extracts from travertine”, Geoarchaeology, núm. 11(1), New York, John Wiley and Sons Publishers, 1996, pp. 37-50Woodbury R. B. y J. A. Neely, “Water control systems of the Tehuacan Valley”, en: R.S. MacNeish (ed.), The Prehistory of the Tehuacan Valley, núm. 4, Austin, University of Texas Press, for the R.S. Peabody Foundation, 1972, pp. 81-153

    Technical analysis and central bank intervention

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    This paper extends the genetic programming techniques developed in Neely, Weller and Dittmar (1997) to show that technical trading rules can make use of information about U.S. foreign exchange intervention to improve their out-of-sample profitability for two of four exchange rates. Rules tend to take positions contrary to official intervention and are unusually profitable on days prior to intervention, indicating that intervention is intended to check or reverse predictable trends. Intervention seems to be more successful in checking predictable trends in the out-of-sample (1981-1996) period than in the in-sample (1975-1980) period. We conjecture that this instability in the intervention process prevents more consistent improvement in the excess returns to rules. We find that the improvement in performance results solely from more efficient use of the information in the past exchange rate series rather than from information about contemporaneous intervention.Banks and banking, Central ; Foreign exchange

    Technical trading rules in the European Monetary System

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    Using the genetic programming methodology developed in Neely, Weller and Dittmar (1997), we find trading rules that generate significant excess returns for three of four EMS exchange rates over the out-of-sample period 1986-1996. Permitting the rules to use information about the interest rate differential proved to be important. The reduction in volatility resulting from the imposition of a narrower band may reduce trading rule profitability. The currency for which there was least evidence of significant excess returns was the Dutch guilder, which was also the only currency that remained within a band of 2.25% throughout our sample period. Our results cannot be duplicated by the moving average or filter rules commonly used by technical analysts or by two trading rules designed specifically to exploit known features of target zone exchange rates. The observed excess returns cannot be explained as compensation for bearing systematic risk.Foreign exchange ; European Monetary System (Organization)
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