2,260 research outputs found
Folder 9: Schwiderski, Richard Craig v. State of Texas 2, 1979-1984
Photocopy of a section of an article written by New York author Richard Reeves and titled 'Too Late to Kill the Messenger' and dated 1979, and argues for the role of media during violent situations
Letter from Virginia Lowers, to Thomas A. Reeves, July 4, 1945
In this letter, Thomas Reeves updates Miss Lowers on his recent combat experiences in which he was injured and subsequently received the purple heart as well as other accolades for his time in action.Gerth Archives Japanese American History Collection contains books, pamphlets, flyers, photographs, booklets, correspondence, periodicals, and oversized material related to Japanese Americans. Subjects in the collection include incarceration camps, Southbay local history, World War II propaganda, Japanese American families, incarceration camp pilgrimages, and other topics
The Pro-competitive Value of Closed Platforms & Walled Gardens: Some Thoughts In Response to Tim Wu
Antitrust law has dealt with the genuine competitive issues posed by closed systems adequately without any presumption or bias in favor of open systems. Daniel Wall & Amanda Reeves (Latham & Watkins)
Replication Data for: "Difficulty of Reaching Respondents and Nonresponse Bias: Evidence from Large Government Surveys"
Replication Data for: "Difficulty of Reaching Respondents and Nonresponse Bias: Evidence from Large Government Surveys
Replication Data for: "Difficulty of Reaching Respondents and Nonresponse Bias: Evidence from Large Government Surveys"
Replication Data for: "Difficulty of Reaching Respondents and Nonresponse Bias: Evidence from Large Government Surveys
Supplemental_Material – Supplemental material for The Rhetoric of Recessions: How British Newspapers Talk about the Poor When Unemployment Rises, 1896–2000
Supplemental material, Supplemental_Material for The Rhetoric of Recessions: How British Newspapers Talk about the Poor When Unemployment Rises, 1896–2000 by Daniel McArthur and Aaron Reeves in Sociology</p
Impact of structured heterogeneities on reactive two-phase porous flow
Two-phase flow through heterogeneous media leads to scale-free distributions of irregularly shaped pockets of one fluid trapped within the other. Although reactions within these fluids are often modeled at the homogeneous continuum scale, there exists no current framework for upscaling from the pore scale that accounts for the complex and scale-free geometry of the bubbles. In this paper, we apply a linear-kinetics reaction-diffusion model to characterize the steady-state chemical environment inside the irregular pockets. Using a combination of theory and invasion-percolation simulations, we derive scaling laws describing the distribution of diffusion times within bubbles. We show that chemical concentrations within the bubbles are determined by the Laplace transform of the entire distribution of diffusion times from each location. This serves as a means to compute average concentrations of reactant within a bubble of unique geometry and size. Furthermore, the overall system size imposes upper bounds on the distribution of bubble sizes, thereby imposing a system-size dependence on the statistics and average concentrations. These conclusions have profound implications for continuum models of porous reactive flow, where kinetic and equilibrium parameters are often chosen from laboratory measurements made at centimeter scales.United States. Dept. of Energy. Office of Basic Energy Sciences (Award DE-AC02-05CH11231
sj-docx-1-mmc-10.1177_20501579221080333 - Supplemental material for Selectively localized: Temporal and visual structure of smartphone screen activity across media environments
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-mmc-10.1177_20501579221080333 for Selectively localized: Temporal and visual structure of smartphone screen activity across media environments by Daniel Muise, Yingdan Lu, Jennifer Pan and Byron Reeves in Mobile Media & Communication</p
The Book of Daniel and manticism: a critical assessment of the view that the Book of Daniel derives from a mantic tradition
This dissertation examines the consensus view that is based on Hans-Peter
Müller's 1969 and 1972 articles: Daniel was a mantic wise man in the Mesopotamian
ASA
court, and this was the self-understanding or aspiration of the maskilim of Dan 11:33, 35,
12:3, 10, who wrote the book. Chapter 1 reviews the arguments that make the mantic connection and Chapter 2 concludes that a direct connection with the Danes of Aqht, Ezek, and Jub, and with the angel in 1 Enoch should be rejected. There is evidence that the
tradition of a priest in Ezra 8: 2 and Neh 10: 7, and found also in the superscription to
the Old Greek of Bel, and 4 Ezra 12:10-11, and suggested the name.
Chapter 3 concludes that the portrayal of the court diviners in Dan 1-6 is wholly
negative and includes both the diviners, and the essence of the professions, i. e., the
ability to interpret a divine revelation. The critique is conveyed through the story line,
explicit criticisms, irony, and humour. Chapter 4 concludes that Daniel, the interpreter
of dreams and the writing on the wall, is distinguished from every other character and role. In the final form of Dan, Daniel as the divinely assisted each time he interprets, just as when he receives help from an interpreting angel in Dan 7-12.
Chapter 5 demonstrates that the portrayal of Daniel as the divinely assisted
interpreter makes sense of the reinterpretation of old prophecies against the Assyrians
as prophecies against Antiochus IV Epiphanes. Hab 2:2-4 and Isa 52-53 were also
understood as predictions about the maskilim themselves. Comparisons are then made
with the Teacher of Righteousness, the writers of the Hodayot, and with three Essenes
portrayed by Josephus. These too were portrayed as divinely assisted interpreters
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