8,829 research outputs found
Bill Harney on a spear fishing expedition with Eric Jolliffe and Robert Fitzpatrick, off Long Reef, New South Wales, ca. 1940s [picture] /
Title based on information from acquisition documentation and from caption on verso.; Part of collection: Collection of photographs of author and bushman, Bill Harney, ca. 1940-1962.; Photograph taken by Jim Fitzpatrick, a photographer with the Department of Information in the 1940s in Sydney. Robert Fitzpatrick is the son of the photographer.; Also available in an electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn3706122; Purchased from Michael Treloar Antiquarian Booksellers, List 90, Lot 64, 2006
Telegram from J. F. Fitzpatrick of the Salt Lake Tribune, to Amon G. Carter, Jr.
Telegram from J. F. Fitzpatrick of the Salt Lake Tribune, to Amon G. Carter, Jr. upon the death of Amon Giles Carter. The telegram expresses condolences and sympathy about his death.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_meachamcarterpapers/1195/thumbnail.jp
Recommended from our members
Letter from Rep. Fitzpatrick concerning the Willow Grove Reserve Base
Letter from Representative Michael Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania to the BRAC Commission concerning the Willow Grove Joint Reserve Base. In the letter, Fitzpatrick outlines three major defenses of the base and its importance to the community and national security
Chairman of the Council, Edward Porter gives instructions to Bill Pertzel, Council worker, Drouin, Victoria [picture] /
"U429/8. Lawns along Main Street, Drouin, are kept in order by employees of the Drouin Council. There are 42 men working for the Council; mostly on road repairing. Funds are raised by rates on property. The Chairman of the Council, Edward G. Porter, gives instructions to one of the Council's workmen. No lawnmowers have been made in Australia since 1942--they are classed as luxury goods." --Printed on label.; Title devised by cataloguer from caption on label.; Condition: Good.; Part of the collection: Drouin town and rural life during World War II.; Also available in an electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-an241790156
Miss Fitzpatrick as Katharina
The TIFF was created at 1200 dpi and 8-bit grayscale.Miss Fitzpatrick as Katharina in Taming of the Shrew. Engraved by G. Greatbach from a Daguerreotype by Mayall. John Tallis & Company, London & New York
Non 3-choosable bipartite graphs and the Fano plane
It is known that the smallest complete bipartite graph which is not 3-choosable has 14 vertices. We show that the extremal configuration is unique.PT: J; CR: BROWN E, 2002, MATH MAG, V75, P83 ERDOS P, 1979, CONGRESSUS NUMERANTI, V26, P155 FITZPATRICK SL, DMS854IR U VICT DEP HAUSON D, 1996, ARS COMBINATORIA, V44, P183 VIZING VG, 1976, DISKRET ANAL, V29, P3 WOODALL DR, 2001, LONDON MATH SOC LECT, V288, P269; NR: 6; TC: 0; J9: ARS COMB; PG: 15; GA: 948CQSource type: Electronic(1
Generous Thinking: A Radical Approach to Saving the University
This is the recording of the keynote presentation by Kathleen Fitzpatrick, author of “Generous Thinking: A Radical Approach to Saving the University.” The presentation was held on Wednesday, January 27th, 2021 via the Zoom cloud video conferencing system. It was sponsored by the University of Kansas Libraries and The Commons and held in conjunction with the inaugural KU Summit on Community-Engaged Learning and Scholarship, hosted by the Center for Service Learning.
Fitzpatrick is the director of Digital Humanities and a professor of English at Michigan State University. She is also the author of “Generous Thinking: The University and the Public Good” and "Planned Obsolescence: Publishing, Technology, and the Future of the Academy."Kathleen Fitzpatrick, author of “Generous Thinking: A Radical Approach to Saving the University,” discusses her research into thinking and leading generously. Fitzpatrick urges KU faculty and staff to think critically, constructively, and generously in order to engage effectively with each other and beyond the university.University of Kansas LibrariesThe Common
The game of zombies and survivors on cartesian products of graphs
We consider the game of Zombies and Survivors as introduced by Fitzpatrick, Howell, Messinger and Pike (2016) This is a variation of the game Cops and Robber where the zombies (in the cops’ role) are of limited intelligence and will always choose to move closer to a survivor (who takes on the robber’s role). The zombie number of a graph is defined to be the minimum number of zombies required to guarantee the capture of a survivor on the graph. In this paper, we show that the zombie number of the Cartesian product of n non-trivial trees is exactly ⌈2n/3⌉. This settles a conjecture by Fitzpatrick et. al. (2016) that this is the zombie number for the n-dimensional hypercube. In proving this result, we also discuss other variations of Cops and Robber involving active and flexible players
Joan Fitzpatrick: In Memoriam
Joan Fitzpatrick graduated from Harvard Law School in 1975. Women were then beginning to enter the legal profession in increasing numbers, but role models were still important in encouraging women to become equal partners in our profession. Joan was an especially effective role model for our students. I think she realized that. It was one of the things that drove her to excel in everything she did. Joan told me—more than once in fact—that she earned every penny she made. It was a point of pride to her. She was a hard worker whose work yielded very important results. And she was the kind of teacher who would make students think: If Professor Fitzpatrick can do that, then I can also do great and important things. Joan joined our faculty in 1984. In her eighteen years with us, she became an internationally known and respected authority on human rights. She was a primary author or editor of six books, the author or co-author of fourteen book chapters, and the author or co-author of about forty scholarly articles. Joan spoke on issues of international human rights throughout North America and Europe. In the words of one of her admirers, she was brilliant, eloquent, and internationally renowned
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