6,356 research outputs found
David C. Weinstein
David C. Weinstein spent 24 years at Fidelity Investments, where he served as Chief of Administration and was a member of the firm’s Operating Committee, chaired the Ethics Committee, and led Fidelity’s government relations efforts in Washington, DC, and various states. After retiring in 2008, Weinstein founded Write the World, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization for young writers, designed to bridge literacy gaps and equip students with the skills essential for success in school, career, and life
Replication Files for Redding and Weinstein "Accounting for Trade Patterns".
This folder contains the replication files for Redding, Stephen J. and David E. Weinstein (2024) "Accounting for Trade Patterns".THIS DATASET IS ARCHIVED AT DANS/EASY, BUT NOT ACCESSIBLE HERE. TO VIEW A LIST OF FILES AND ACCESS THE FILES IN THIS DATASET CLICK ON THE DOI-LINK ABOV
Requiem for a Philosophy Professor: Remembering David N. Mowry
Host Jack Russell Weinstein remembers his professor and mentor, David N. Mowry who passed away on April 23, 2019. In a powerful and emotional tribute to their relationship, Jack reflects both on David’s career and his own life. David was a SUNY Distinguished Teaching Professor of Philosophy at the State University of New York, Plattsburgh, and the founding director of their university’s honors program. Jack graduated from Plattsburgh State in 1991, with a B.A. in philosophy.
The full text of this tribute can be found at the Why? Radio blog www.PQED.org, along with pictures of David and Jack. The tribute first appeared on the blog on April 24.https://commons.und.edu/why-radio-archive/1011/thumbnail.jp
INFOCATCH: A MORE POWERFUL FEED PROVIDER BUILT ON WEBSCRAPING
(Statement of Responsibility) by David Weinstein(Thesis) Thesis (B.A.) -- New College of Florida, 2016RESTRICTED TO NCF STUDENTS, STAFF, FACULTY, AND ON-CAMPUS USE(Bibliography) Includes bibliographical references.This bibliographic record is available under the Creative Commons CC0 public domain dedication. The New College of Florida Libraries, as creator of this bibliographic record, has waived all rights to it worldwide under copyright law, including all related and neighboring rights, to the extent allowed by law.Faculty Sponsor: Gillman, Davi
Mikami-Weinstein Type Theorem for Cosymplectic Groupoid Actions
The Mikami-Weinstein theorem is a generalization of the classical Marsden-Weinstein-Meyer symplectic reduction theorem to the case of symplectic groupoid actions. In this paper, we introduce the notion of a cosymplectic groupoid action on a cosymplectic manifold and prove a theorem that is a natural analogue of the Mikami-Weinstein theorem.The author is grateful to R. Goto for his encouragement. The author also thanks N. Ikeda for useful conversations. He greatly appreciates the suggestions of the anonymous referees, which considerably improved the presentation. This work was supported by JSPS KAKENHI Grant Number JP23KJ1487
Sheaf quantization in Weinstein symplectic manifolds
Using the microlocal theory of sheaves, we associate a category to each
Weinstein manifold. By constructing a microlocal specialization functor, we
show that exact Lagrangians give objects in our category, and that the category
is invariant under Weinstein homotopy.Comment: 60 pages. More details on Maslov descen
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The Courtroom as Classroom: Independence, Imagination and Ideology in the Work of Jack Weinstein
This Article explores influences that have shaped Judge Weinstein\u27s judicial behavior. The author argues that Weinstein\u27s conception of the judicial role has been influenced in significant respects by his career as a law professor. Tracing continuities and discontinuities between the roles of a professor and a trial judge, the author concludes that Judge Weinstein manifests both the desire for intellectual autonomy and the consequent lack of regard for institutional accountability that are characteristic of the former role. The Article then seeks to evaluate the judge-centered approach to judicial independence it imputes to Judge Weinstein. The author contends that the desire to give free reign to his extraordinary intelligence and creativity plays a part in judge Weinstein\u27s pursuit or creation of the extraordinary in preference to the ordinary- litigations rather than cases-an interpretation that helps to explain certain inconsistencies in his judicial work. The author also considers the possibility that ideology plays a part in judge Weinstein\u27s approach to his role as a federal judge. He arg·ues that there are three interrelated ideas that exercise a consistent(v powerful influence on Weinstein\u27s judicial behavior and that may be thought ideological: access, communication and empathy. He concludes that the dichotomy between independence and ideology in judge Weinstein\u27s work may be false, because independence of a type-ethical individualism-is his overriding ideology. Although focusing on the work of judge Weinstein, the Article suggests some general conclusions about independence and accountability in a trial judge, about judicial imagination, and about ideology
The Courtroom as Classroom: Independence, Imagination and Ideology in the Work of Jack Weinstein
This Article explores influences that have shaped Judge Weinstein\u27s judicial behavior. The author argues that Weinstein\u27s conception of the judicial role has been influenced in significant respects by his career as a law professor. Tracing continuities and discontinuities between the roles of a professor and a trial judge, the author concludes that Judge Weinstein manifests both the desire for intellectual autonomy and the consequent lack of regard for institutional accountability that are characteristic of the former role. The Article then seeks to evaluate the judge-centered approach to judicial independence it imputes to Judge Weinstein. The author contends that the desire to give free reign to his extraordinary intelligence and creativity plays a part in judge Weinstein\u27s pursuit or creation of the extraordinary in preference to the ordinary- litigations rather than cases-an interpretation that helps to explain certain inconsistencies in his judicial work. The author also considers the possibility that ideology plays a part in judge Weinstein\u27s approach to his role as a federal judge. He arg·ues that there are three interrelated ideas that exercise a consistent(v powerful influence on Weinstein\u27s judicial behavior and that may be thought ideological: access, communication and empathy. He concludes that the dichotomy between independence and ideology in judge Weinstein\u27s work may be false, because independence of a type-ethical individualism-is his overriding ideology. Although focusing on the work of judge Weinstein, the Article suggests some general conclusions about independence and accountability in a trial judge, about judicial imagination, and about ideology
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Ginzburg-Weinstein Isomorphisms for Pseudo-Unitary Groups
Ginzburg and Weinstein proved in [GW92] that for a compact, semisimple Lie group K endowed with the Lu-Weinstein Poisson structure, there exists a Poisson diffeomorphism from the dual Poisson Lie group K* to the dual k* of the Lie algebra of K endowed with the Lie-Poisson structure. We investigate the possibility of extending this result to the pseudo-unitary groups SU (p, q ), which are semisimple but not compact. The main results presented here are the following. (1) The Ginzburg-Weinstein proof hinges on the existence of a certain vector field X on k*. We prove that for any p, q, the analogous vector field for the SU (p, q ) case exists on an open subset of k*. (2) Each generic dressing orbit ψ(λ) in the Poisson dual AN can be embedded in the complex flag manifold K/T . We show that for SU (1, 1) and SU (1, 2), the induced Poisson structure π(λ) on ψ(λ) extends smoothly to the entire flag manifold. (3) Finally, we prove the Ginzburg-Weinstein theorem for the SU (1, 1) case in two different ways: first, by constructing the vector field X in coordinates and proving that it satisfies the necessary properties, and second, by adapting the approach of [FR96] to the SU (1, 1) case
Author to Visit Cedarville University Campus
David McGlynn, author and associate professor of English at Lawrence University in Appleton, Wisconsin, will produce a podcast, teach a master’s level course and sign readers’ books at Cedarville University on January 23
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