1,356,289 research outputs found
Marcia L. Fudge interview, 20 April 2017
Marcia L. Fudge was raised in Shaker Heights. Fudge served as chief staff for Congresswoman Stephanie Tubbs Jones during her first term. Fudge was mayor of Warrensville Heights from 2000 until elected to Congress in 2008. She chaired the Congressional Black Caucus from 2013-2015. This 2017 interview was collected as part of a yearlong, community-wide commemoration of the 50th anniversary of Carl Stokes\u27 election as mayor of Cleveland
The late Capt. J.M. Fudge : his life story as a fisherman and businessman
The Late Capt. J.M. Fudge His Life Story As A Fisherman And BusinessmanCover titl
Chequers produces the best and most elaborate fudge available
Does the text the cabinet agreed at Chequers amount to a soft Brexit or a soft-ish Brexit? Neither, says Jim Gallagher (Centre on Constitutional Change): it is yet another fudge that defers a decision on the final shape of the deal into the transitional period, and beyond
Veterinary science : humans, animals and health
This living book is a collection of open access materials bringing scientific papers to a humanities audienc
Brave New Words: Labour, The courts and the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms
In Health Services and Support – Facilities Subsector Bargaining
Association v. British Columbia, [2007] 2 S.C.R.
391, the Supreme Court of Canada overturned precedent and
concluded “that the grounds advanced in the earlier decisions for
the exclusion of collective bargaining from the Charter’s protection
of freedom of association do not withstand principled scrutiny
and should be rejected” (at para. 22). The author explores
the Supreme Court of Canada’s change of heart and what this
change implies, not only for constitutional doctrine, but also for
what the Court understands about the governance of the post-
Fordist world of work. She situates the Court’s reasoning in a
few key cases dealing with labour’s distinctive rights – to bargain
collectively and to strike – in the social context that both shapes
the legal discourse about labour rights and influences organized
labour’s power. She considers the paradox of the Supreme Court’s
embrace of Fordist labour rights in a post-Fordist economy, and
suggests a modest, though important, role that the Court could
play in fostering social justice in the brave new world of work.
Dans l’arrêt Health Services and Support – Facilities Subsector
Bargaining Association c. Colombie-Britannique [2007]
2 R.C.S. 391, la Cour Suprême du Canada a invalidé un précédent
et a conclu que «les motifs avancés dans les arrêts précédents
pour exclure les négociations collectives de la protection
accordée par la Charte à la liberté d’association ne résistent pas
à un examen fondé sur les principes pertinents et qu’ils devraient
être écartés» (au para. 22). L’auteure explore le revirement de la
Cour Suprême du Canada et ce qu’implique ce changement, non
seulement pour la doctrine constitutionnelle, mais aussi pour ce
que la Cour comprend au sujet de la façon de gouverner dans le
monde post-Fordiste du travail. Elle situe le raisonnement de la
Cour dans quelques cas-clés traitant des droits distinctifs des travailleurs
– la négociation collective et la grève – dans le contexte
social qui à la fois détermine la forme du discours juridique au
sujet des droits des travailleurs et influence le pouvoir du mouvement
syndical. Elle considère le paradoxe que la Cour Suprême épouse des droits des travailleurs Fordistes dans une économie post-Fordiste, et suggère un rôle modeste, mais important, que pourrait jouer la Cour pour favoriser la justice sociale dans le nouveau monde prometteur du travail
Ronald Fudge, circa 1985
Indoor view of man and woman. Written on verso: "Ronald Fudge '83, TV 12 Eyewitnesses News Anchor, Augusta GA, Class of 1983".The Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library acknowledges the generous support of the Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR) in supporting the processing and digitization of a number of historic collections as part of the project: Our Story: Digitizing Publications and Photographs of the Historically Black Atlanta University Center Institutions.</em
Managing and Processing Nuclear Data Libraries with FUDGE
FUDGE (For Updating Data and Generating Evaluations) is an open-source code that supports reading, visualizing, checking, modifying, and processing nuclear reaction and decay data. For ease of use the front-end of FUDGE is written in Python while C and C++ routines are employed for computationally intensive calculations.
FUDGE has been developed primarily at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) with contributions from Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL). It is used by the LLNL Nuclear Data and Theory (NDT) group to deliver high-quality nuclear data libraries to users for a variety of applications. FUDGE is also the world leader in converting data to the Generalized Nuclear Database Structure (GNDS) and working with GNDS data, including processing and visualizing. GNDS is a new extensible hierarchy that has been internationally adopted as the new standard for storing and using nuclear data libraries, replacing the previous standard ENDF-6.
A new public release of FUDGE has recently been published on github. This paper gives an overview of nuclear data processing capabilities in FUDGE, as well as describing the latest release, new capabilities, future plans, and basic instructions for users interested in applying FUDGE to their nuclear data workflow
Monstrous acts: bestiality in early modern England.
Erica Fudge explores a shift in attitudes towards bestiality in the sixteenth century and how this impinged on wider issues concerning human status
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[Allison Fudge Garcia speaking]
Photograph of Allison Fudge Garcia, a Teach North Texas student, standing behind a podium and holding a green ribbon in her hand. The speaker from earlier is standing to the side by a doorway to the outside. They are at the UNT College of Education Grad Banquet
Fudge Snow Sedan 1932
This snowplane, built in 1932 by Fudge Snow Sedans of Moosomin, Saskatchewan. It is currently on display at the Reynolds Alberta Museum in Wetaskiwin, Alberta (R 2007.005.0001). A Ford Model A engine mounted on the exterior back of the vehicle drives a propeller. The vehicle travelled on four skiis and could reach a speed of 40 - 60 kph
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