5,567 research outputs found

    Henderson High School Class of 1965

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    This composite photo of the Henderson High School graduating class of 1965 includes the following individuals from left to right: Mrs. Leonard (sponsor), C. C. Ward (principal), T. Collier (sponsor), Mrs. Sherrod (sponsor), George Prewitt, Jr. (vice-president), Monzene Strudwick (treasurer), William Gillespie (president), Darnell Boyd (secretary), Thomas McGlown, James Perkins, Dorothy Vaughn, Carolyn Watt, Artie Suell, Carolyn Henderson, Billy Hudson, Gloria Williams, Josephine Paige, Daisy Williams, Everlena Poe, Linda Bradford, Dorothy Jackson, Willette Webber, Mamie Spencer, Ethel Graham, Charles Perkins, Eddie Burton, Vietta J. Harris, Willie J. Outlaw, Joyce C. Johnson, William Banks, Leonna Clay, Pauline Sharp, Doris McCarter, Charles Jenkins, Catherine Jones, Louise Hendrix, Dorothy Gandy, Juliaphine Taylor, Shirley A. James, Helen Collier, Maggie T. Fox, Lelia B. Petty, H. B. Sharp [photo missing], Mary L. James, Julia Vaugh, Richard Vaughn, Lloyd J. Johnson, Joe. W. Hogan, Mary Williams, Willie M. Blair, Hattie Kelly, LeRay Mason, Glenda Campbell, Earnestine Perry, Charles Banks, Marquette Powers, Thelma Cunningham, Betty Nichols, Leroy Turner, Bessie R. Davis, Eva Mae Daniel, Morris Evans, Bettie Rush, Louisa Jefferson, Katherine Johnson, Loreain Davis, Dorothy A. Stalling, Charles Zuber, Martha J. Rieves, Josephine Bell, Marilyn Watson, Herman Ashford, Theodore Pearson, Willie Hampton, Julia A. Bell, Dorthy Jackson, Margaret Perry, Eddie B. Randall, Gladys Turner, James Holley, Irene Hunter, Howard Lanier, Jr., Daniel Neal, Annie Lindsey, Wilson Ashford, David Gibbs, Nora Nicks, Mamie R. Addison, Grover Kennard, Jr., L. C Reese, Maxine Fox, Earnestine Williams, Dora M. Rieves, Mary Tobb, Thelma J. Jackson. The class motto Use Today for Tomorrow May Never Come is in the center of the photographs. There is some yellowing in the photograph due to sun damage.https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/mss-henderson-oktibbeha-county-schools-photos/1004/thumbnail.jp

    World War I Poster - The Red Triangle

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    This simple poster has the red triangle along with the letters Y.M.C.A. at the top of the page. Beneath it is a poem by Daniel M. Henderson titled "The Red Triangle," about the YMCA services to American and Allied troops during World War I.The poet, Daniel McIntyre Henderson, was born in Glasgow on July 10, 1851. He wrote a considerable number of poems before moving to the Baltimore, Maryland, but most of them were not preserved. Henderson gave up poetry upon moving, and worked as a bookkeeper with Messrs. R. Renwick & Sons, a furniture manufacturer. Memories of home revived his poetic sensibilities, and in 1874 he wrote "Flow'rs frae Hame," which was set to music by Archibal Johnson. According to the Wisconsin State Work (July 1918, Vol. XXIX, No. 2), a publication of the State Young Men's Christian Association of Wisconsin, "The National War Work Council of the Y.M.C.A. was so impressed with "The Road to France," the $250 prize poem by Daniel Mclntyre Henderson of South Orange, N.J., that an appeal was made to the National Arts Club to supply posters containing the poem, to be placed in every building of the Y.M.C.A. in this country and in the war zones. 'The Red Triangle' was written by Mr. Henderson to further the present Y.M.C.A. campaign."The top and right edges are worn

    Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)

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    Letter from D. W. Kempner to Peter Henderson & Co. requesting an order of several different Rock Garden plants to be sent to Joseph R. Bertig

    Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)

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    Letter from Peter Henderson & Co. to D. W. Kempner regarding a shipment of Rock Garden plants to Joseph R. Bertig that had gone awry

    System architecture induces document architecture

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    The documentation of an architecture is as important as the architecture itself. Tasked with communicating the structure and behaviour of a system and its constituent components to various stakeholders, the documentation is not trivial to produce. It becomes even harder in open, modular systems where components can be replaced and reused in each progressive build. How should documentation for such systems be produced and how can it be made to easily evolve along with the system it describes? We propose that there is a close mapping between the system architecture and its documentation. We describe a relational model for the architecture of open systems, paying close attention to the property that certain components can be reused or replaced. We then use ideas from storytelling and a discourse theory called Rhetorical Structure Theory (RST) to propose a narrative-based approach to architecture documentation; giving both a generic narrative template for component descriptions and a RST-based relational model for the document architecture. We show how the two models (system and documentation) map onto each other and use this mapping to demonstrate how document fragments can be stored, automatically extracted and collated to closely reflect the system’s architecture

    Narrative support for technical documents: Formalising Rhetorical Structure Theory

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    Business Process Re-engineering (BPR) is an area that requires a lot of technical documents and an important feature of a well-written document is a coherent narrative. Even though computer software has helped authors in many other aspects of writing, support for document narratives is almost non-existent. Therefore, we introduce CANS (Computer-Aided Narrative Support), a tool that uses Rhetorical Structure Theory to enhance the narrative of a document. From this narrative, the tool generates questions to prompt the author for the content of the document. CANS also allows the author to explore alternative narratives for a document. A catalogue of predefined narrative structures for popular types of documents is provided too. Our tool is still in its rudimentary stages but sufficiently complete to be demonstrated

    The Next Era Of Capitalism with Hubert Joly and Rebecca Henderson

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    It’s fashionable to declare that capitalism is in decline – or even broken - because it isn’t working for those who need it most. But both individual firms and business leaders are now pushing back with exciting proposals for new directions. The next era of capitalism is the topic of an extraordinary conversation with former Best Buy Chairman and CEO Hubert Joly who makes the case for “shareholder capitalism” in his book, The Heart of Business. He is joined by Harvard Business School Professor Rebecca Henderson, author of Reimagining Capitalism in a World on Fire.Jacobs, Lawrence R.. (2021). The Next Era Of Capitalism with Hubert Joly and Rebecca Henderson. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/225937

    Normal Reference Bandwidths for the General Order, Multivariate Kernel Density Derivative Estimator

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    This note derives the general form of the approximate mean integrated squared error for the q-variate, th-order kernel density r th derivative estimator. This formula allows for normal reference rule-of-thumb bandwidths to be derived. We give tables for some of the most common cases in the literature.Derivative Estimation, Smoothing, AMISE

    Observation of the decay ξc0 → Ω- K+

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    complete author list: Henderson S.; Kinoshita K.; Pipkin F.; Saulnier M.; Wilson R.; Wolinski J.; Xiao D.; Yamamoto H.; Sadoff A.; Ammar R.; Baringer P.; Coppage D.; Davis R.; Kelly M.; Kwak N.; Lam H.; Ro S.; Kubota Y.; Lattery M.; Nelson J.; Perticone D.; Poling R.; Schrenk S.; Wang R.; Alam M.; Kim I.; O'Neill J.; Nemati B.; Romero V.; Severini H.; Sun C.; Wang P.; Zoeller M.; Crawford G.; Fulton R.; Gan K.; Kagan H.; Kass R.; Lee J.; Malchow R.; Morrow F.; Sung M.; Whitmore J.; Wilson P.; Butler F.; Fu X.; Kalbfleisch G.; Lambrecht M.; Skubic P.; Snow J.; Wang P.; Bortoletto D.; Brown D.; Dominick J.; McIlwain R.; Miller D.; Modesitt M.; Shibata E.; Schaffner S.; Shipsey I.; Battle M.; Ernst J.; Kroha H.; Roberts S.; Sparks K.; Thorndike E.; Wang C.; Stroynowski R.; Artuso M.; Goldberg M.; Haupt T.; Horwitz N.; Kennett R.; Moneti G.; Playfer S.; Rozen Y.; Rubin P.; Skwarnicki T.; Stone S.; Thulasidas M.; Yao W.; Zhu G.; Barnes A.; Bartelt J.; Csorna S.; Jain V.; Letson T.; Mestayer M.; Akerib D.; Barish B.; Cowen D.; Eigen G.; Stroynowski R.; Urheim J.; Weinstein A.; Morrison R.; Tajima H.; Schmidt D.; Sperka D.; Procario M.; Daoudi M.; Ford W.; Johnson D.; Lingel K.; Lohner M.; Rankin P.; Smith J.; Alexander J.; Bebek C.; Berkelman K.; Besson D.; Browder T.; Cassel D.; Cheu E.; Coffman D.; Drell P.; Ehrlich R.; Galik R.; Garcia-Sciveres M.; Geiser B.; Gittelman B.; Gray S.; Hartill D.; Heltsley B.; Honscheid K.; Jones C.; Kandaswamy J.; Katayama N.; Kim P.; Kreinick D.; Ludwig G.; Masui J.; Mevissen J.; Mistry N.; Nandi S.; Ng C.; Nordberg E.; O'Grady C.; Patterson J.; Peterson D.; Riley D.; Sapper M.; Selen M.; Worden H.; Worris M.; Würthwein F.; Avery P.; Freyberger A.; Rodriguez J.; Yelton J.; Henderson S.; Yelton J.; Rodriguez J.; Freyberger A.; Avery P.; Würthwein F.; Worris M.; Worden H.; Henderson S
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