10,279 research outputs found

    Marilyn Weigold

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    Dr. Marilyn E. Weigold is professor of history at Pace University and serves as the official Pace University Historian. She is the author of the official history book of Pace University entitled Opportunitas: the History of Pace University.   David Finn, photographs.https://digitalcommons.pace.edu/pace-women/1031/thumbnail.jp

    Pace Energy and Climate Center 2015 Annual Report

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    In 2015, Pace Energy and Climate Center continued a 27-year tradition of successfully advancing clean energy policies and solutions in communities across the State of New York and the Northeast region, across the United States, and around the world. As a unique organization that operates at the boundaries between law, policy, business, and regulation, we continue to bring innovative thinking, strong analysis, technological understanding, and stakeholder engagement to the vital climate and energy challenges facing us today. We have been pleased to become a key player in the New York Public Service Commission’s Reforming the Energy Vision (“REV”) initiative. REV seeks to devolve the electric utility of the future to accommodate new renewable and distributed energy resources, improve resiliency, and avoid significant increases in customer bills. We operate with a small staff of highly capable experts, multiplied by the commitment and energy of student interns, and leveraged through a community of clean energy stakeholders. Pace identifies and understands the issues, crafts the solutions and improvements needed, and uses the tools of law and policy advocacy to change the way things are done—for the better. In 2015, we continued and strengthened program efforts in many areas, expanded our reach an influence into new areas, and scored important victories in ensuring that clean, efficient, and renewable energy would be an increasing part of our lives, today and tomorrow. Facing the challenges of climate change up close, we design and implement solutions at the same scale—at the level of state and local policy and action—that will empower and support community initiatives wherever Pace works. All our work is made possible by the generous support of our funders and the continued commitment of Dean David Yassky, the staff and faculty of the Pace Law School, and the entire Pace University team. Standing behind them is a strong network of Pace alumni and donors who help keep us all going. We couldn’t do it without each of them

    Mike Pace and David Morse oral history recording

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    An audio recording of an oral history of Mike Pace, Reserve Police Officer, and David Morse, Sheriff's Office Deputy, on trends in crime and law enforcement in Hillsboro, Oregon from 1980-2005. There is a transcript of this interview

    Janetta Rebold Benton

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    Janetta Rebold Benton is Distinguished Professor of Art History and Director of the Pforzheimer Honors College, serving the five undergraduate colleges, at Pace University, Pleasantville, NY.  Dr. Benton has lectured every season since the spring of 1988 for the Metropolitan Museum of Art and lectures also at The Cloisters in New York; Smithsonian Institution and National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC; Boston Museum of Fine Arts; Society of the Four Arts in Palm Beach; and elsewhere in America and abroad. A former resident of Paris, she taught courses in art history there as the Art Historian at the American Embassy. The author of seven books, the fourth edition of ARTS AND CULTURE: AN INTRODUCTION TO THE HUMANITIES (Robert DiYanni co-author, Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle River, NJ, two volumes, combined volume) was published in 2011, including a Chinese translation. Her book, MATERIALS, METHODS, AND MASTERPIECES OF MEDIEVAL ART, is available in hardcover and as an E-book (Praeger series on the Middle Ages, ABC-CLIO, Santa Barbara, CA, 2009). Her book, MEDIEVAL MISCHIEF: WIT AND HUMOUR IN THE ART OF THE MIDDLE AGES (Sutton Publishing, Stroud, Gloucestershire, 2004), studies an engaging aspect of medieval art. ART OF THE MIDDLE AGES (Thames & Hudson, London, 2002) was published in the acclaimed World of Art series. HOLY TERRORS: GARGOYLES ON MEDIEVAL BUILDINGS (Abbeville Press, NY, 1997) was published also in French as SAINTES TERREURS: LES GARGOUILLES DANS L\u27ARCHITECTURE MÉDIÉVALE (second edition, 2000). Dr. Benton was the guest curator and catalog author for the 1995 exhibition MEDIEVAL MONSTERS: DRAGONS AND FANTASTIC CREATURES at the Katonah Museum of Art, Katonah, NY. Her book, THE MEDIEVAL MENAGERIE: ANIMALS IN THE ART OF THE MIDDLE AGES (Abbeville Press, NY, 1992), a Book of the Month Club selection, was published also in French as BESTIAIRE MÉDIÉVAL: LES ANIMAUX  DANS  L\u27ART DU MOYEN AGE. Articles by Dr. Benton appear in the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s exhibition catalog, SET IN STONE: THE FACE IN MEDIEVAL SCULPTURE, 2007, as well as in scholarly journals including Cahiers de Civilisation Médiévale, Poitiers, 1998; Arte Medievale, Rome, 1993; Artibus et Historiae, Vienna, 1989; Zeitschrift für Kunstgeschichte, Munich, 1985; and others. Dr. Benton was educated at Harvard University, Graduate School of Education, MDP diploma; took her Ph.D. in Medieval and Renaissance Art at Brown University; Master\u27s degree in Classical Art at George Washington University; and undergraduate degree in Fine Arts at Cornell University.https://digitalcommons.pace.edu/pace-women/1029/thumbnail.jp

    Welcome Remarks: Aftershock Conference, September 5-8, 2006

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    This is the welcome remarks delivered by David A. Caputo, Ph.D., President of Pace University on the occasion of the anniversary commemoration of the September 11, 2001 event. The conference is entitled Aftershock: Rethinking the Future Since September 11, 2001 held at the Michael Schimmel Center for the Arts, New York City from September 5-8, 2006

    The Information Edge - Library Newsletter - First Issue

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    The State of The Pace Libraries: Respecting the Past; Pursuing the Future William Murdock in Collaboration with David T.S. Leighton Graduate Center Library Expands at 1 Martine David T.S. Leighton Lexis/Nexis Debuts at Pace...A World of Information at Your Fingertips Nancy Bobrek Tax Researchers Alert - RIAs Unpinned System Is Here Nancy Bobre

    The Quiet Revolution Redux: How Selected Local Governments Have Fared

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    Professor David Callies notes two significant trends since the Quiet Revolution and The Taking Issue were written in the early 1970\u27s: (1) local land use controls have not withered away and many local governments are increasingly able to regulate the use of land through better plans and planning, and more sophisticated local ordinances (including environmental controls); (2) federal courts have reentered the regulatory takings arena, striking down several regional and state-wide land use controls on constitutional grounds. For both reasons, he suggests that local land use controls are an excellent arena to regulate development of all but the truly state-wide or regional variety. He uses examples from Hawaii, Oregon and Florida

    Nonhuman Rights to Personhood

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    2012 Dyson Distinguished Lecture, delivered April 26, 2012 at Pace Law School. Introduction by Prof. David N. Cassuto. Video available here

    Dr. Leon Lederman, Terri Willard ’89, David Kung \u2789, and Dr. Stephanie Pace Marshall

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    Dr. Leon Lederman, Terri Willard \u2789, David Kung ’89, and Dr. Stephanie Pace Marshall discuss the early years of IMSA and the charter class experience. Willard and Kung start by recalling how they decided to come to IMSA. Dr. Pace Marshall asks them about their earliest memories of the school. They remember the challenges of living away from home. Dr. Lederman asks them to reflect on their learning experiences. Experiential learning stands out for both Willard and Kung - visiting a cemetery for history class, performing Shakespeare\u27s Tempest for English, teaching peers calculus in math class - and the innovative approaches of the teachers. Dr. Pace Marshall asks how the IMSA experience changed them, and both speak to it as a gift. All four participants in the conversation speak to how the sorts of opportunities IMSA offers might be extended or applied to other students. Recorded at the 2009 Alumni Reunion by IMSA Media Services. Duration: 0:14:52https://digitalcommons.imsa.edu/oral_histories/1001/thumbnail.jp
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