6,273 research outputs found
Neil Armstrong letter to R. Thomas Davis regarding Armstrong's collateral employment activities, January 9, 1973
Dr. R. Thomas Davis was head of the Department of Aerospace Engineering at the University of Cincinnati
Recycling Detroit Reinventing the Motor City by Reclaiming The Past
Submitted by Henry Roberson ([email protected]) on 2012-07-16T14:29:51Z
No. of bitstreams: 2
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Davis, Neil- Spring 12.pdf: 3168866 bytes, checksum: cc91810b7f579e28ccbdf596dde90138 (MD5)Made available in DSpace on 2012-07-16T14:29:51Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2
license_rdf: 1232 bytes, checksum: bb87e2fb4674c76d0d2e9ed07fbb9c86 (MD5)
Davis, Neil- Spring 12.pdf: 3168866 bytes, checksum: cc91810b7f579e28ccbdf596dde90138 (MD5
Facing the Future: the Changing Shape of Academic Skills Support at Bournemouth University
This paper explores the potential impact of changes to higher education in England on student expectations, engagement, lifestyles and diversity, and outlines implications for the development of digital literacy within academic skills support at Bournemouth University (BU). We will investigate how tackling resource constraints with organisational change can also enable efficient, centralised provision of support materials that utilise networks to overcome the risk of fragmented support for digital literacy. We will also look at how changing delivery modes for support can accommodate changing student lifestyles whilst tackling a weakness of centralised support for digital literacy: that it can become detached from the student’s subject-focused academic practice. Finally we will explore how involving students in developing support can help us to face changes to student expectations and engagement whilst ensuring that materials are authentic and speak to learners in their own voice
Why Privacy Matters: An Interview with Neil Richards
Professor Daniel J. Solove discusses the book \u27Why Privacy Matters\u27 and the future of privacy with the author, Professor Neil Richards
Fred Davis, Neil Tramel, Tom Tramel, W. L. Giles, Mrs. Thomas E. Tramel
Dr. Fred Davis, director of the computing center at MSU, is shown with Neil Tramel and Tom Tramel (sons of the late Dr. Thomas E. Tramel), Dr. William L. Giles (MSU President), and Mrs. Thomas E. Tramel during a presentation in which the MSU computing center was officially named in honor of the late Dr. Thomas E. Tramel.https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/ua-photo-collection/6089/thumbnail.jp
Interview with AntipodeFoundation.org: “Much More Than You Think: The Spatialities of Italian Autonomy” – Interview with Neil Gray, author of “Beyond the Right to the City: Territorial Autogestion and the Take over the City Movement in 1970s Italy”
No abstract available
Jere Nash Interview with Neil McMillen (Part 2 of 2)
Interview conducted by author Jere Nash with University of Southern Mississippi history professor Neil R. McMillen in the process of writing Mississippi Politics: The Struggle for Power, 1976-2006. Topics discussed include Aaron Henry; race relations after the civil rights movement; and William Winter
Deep, deep down in a valley, Where flowers fade and bloom,
voiceCollected by Mary Jo Davis
For Mary Celestia Parler;
Transcribed by
Neil Byer
T. M. Davis
Fayetteville, Ark.
February 21, 1955
Reel 229, Item 9
Pearl Bryan's Fate
Deep, deep down in a valley,
Where flowers fade and bloom,
There lies our own Pearl Bryan,
In her cold and silent tomb.
The stars are shining brightly,
The moom was shining, too,
Up to her cottage window
Her own true lover drew.
Come, Pearl, let's take a-ramble
Down in the meadow so gay,
Come, Pearl, let's take a ramble
And name our wedding day.
Out walking in the meadow,
He led his love so gay,
Out rambling in the meadow
To name their wedding day.
Down in these woods I have you,
From me you cannot fly,
No human hands can save you,
Pearl Bryan, you must die.
What have I done, Scot Jackson,
That you should take my life?
I've always been loving
And would of been your wife.
Down on her knees before him,
Pleading for her life,
But in her tender bosom
He plunged that fatal knife.
The birds sang in the morning,
But mournful was the sound,
They found Pearl Bryan lifeless
On the cold and silent ground.Funding for digitization provided by the Arkansas Humanities Council and the Happy Hollow Foundation
2.12.005: "Corner Brook Festival, Des and Paul: Original from VCR" [1980-83]
00:13 Barry Davis, Randy Davis, Joan Compton -- 00:55 Des Walsh -- 01:14 Paul Dean -- 01:26 Frank Maher -- 01:31 Mike Tremblet -- 02:10 Neil Murray -- 03:01 Clyde Rose and Al Pittman -- 03:26 unknown, Frank Maher, Shari Strong, Gerry Strong, Barry Davis, Randy Davis, Paul Dean -- 03:37 Des Walsh on stage -- 15:30 Jack Bacfort, Des Walsh, Paul Dean. The band was called the NSGs (Not so Gifted) -- 21:00 Tickle Harbour -- 51:20 Des Walsh and Paul Dean holding court in the basement of the Glynmill Inn late night after the festival
Maximizing Research Impact Through Institutional and National Open-Access Self-Archiving Mandates
No research institution can afford all the journals its researchers may need, so all articles are losing research impact (usage and citations). Articles made “Open Access,” (OA) by self-archiving them on the web are cited twice as much, but only 15% of articles are being spontaneously self-archived. The only institutions approaching 100% self-archiving are those that mandate it. Surveys show that 95% of authors will comply with a self-archiving mandate; the actual expe-rience of institutions with mandates has confirmed this. What institutions and funders need to mandate is that (1) immediately upon acceptance for publication, (2) the author’s final draft must be (3) deposited into the Institutional Repository. Only the depositing needs to be mandated; set-ting access privileges to the full-text as either OA or Restricted Access (RA) can be left up to the author. For articles published in the 93% of journals that have already endorsed self-archiving, access can be set as OA immediately; for the remaining 7%, authors can email the eprint in re-sponse to individual email requests automatically forwarded by the Repository
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