1,457 research outputs found

    Memorandum from Roscoe E. Bell, Chief, Agricultural Division, to Charles Ernst, Director, Topaz, December 31, 1942

    No full text
    Memo from Roscoe E. Bell to Charles Ernst regarding an incident where military police at Topaz harassed and threatened an incarceree with a gun.Personal correspondence, organizational records, government documents, publications, and other papers created or collected by Joseph R. Goodman documenting the forced removal and incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II, as well as organized resistance to incarceration. Included in the collection are records of the Japanese Young Men's Christian Association and the Japanese American Citizens' League in San Francisco, including papers of the Japanese YMCA's executive secretary Lincoln Kanai; Sakai family papers; Goodman's correspondence to and from Japanese American incarcerees, organizations opposing forced removal and incarceration of Japanese Americans, the War Relocation Authority, and others; publications, photographs, and ephemera from the Topaz Relocation Center, where Goodman taught high school; War Relocation Authority records and publications; and newspaper clippings, pamphlets, and reports about forced removal and incarceration created by various government, religious, and civic organizations, in California and nationwide

    Information bulletin (San Bruno, Calif.), no. 25 (August 1, 1942)

    No full text
    Bulletin no. 25 from Tanforan Assembly Center, signed by center manager Frank E. Davis, regarding August issue coupon books.Personal correspondence, organizational records, government documents, publications, and other papers created or collected by Joseph R. Goodman documenting the forced removal and incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II, as well as organized resistance to incarceration. Included in the collection are records of the Japanese Young Men's Christian Association and the Japanese American Citizens' League in San Francisco, including papers of the Japanese YMCA's executive secretary Lincoln Kanai; Sakai family papers; Goodman's correspondence to and from Japanese American incarcerees, organizations opposing forced removal and incarceration of Japanese Americans, the War Relocation Authority, and others; publications, photographs, and ephemera from the Topaz Relocation Center, where Goodman taught high school; War Relocation Authority records and publications; and newspaper clippings, pamphlets, and reports about forced removal and incarceration created by various government, religious, and civic organizations, in California and nationwide

    Letter from E. R. Fryer, Regional Director, War Relocation Authority, to Lincoln Kanai, May 18, 1942

    No full text
    Letter from E. R. Fryer to Lincoln Kanai: "I cannot conceive of this country utilizing forced labor, even in the war effort. There may be a mobilization of man power, and the distribution of this man power in such a way that it can best serve the country, but this is quite different from any conception of forced labor. We are vitally concerned, as you are, with the problem of idle people in assembly centers and relocation centers, especially the latter. For this reason, our relocation projects are being placed in areas where productive work can immediately be done on land. By next Spring, unless we fail miserably in our objectives -- and we shall not -- all employable people should be busy at that kind of work they are best able to do, and within project areas. I sincerely hope that when you are evacuated, you will continue to keep in touch with this office. We shall welcome your continued advice and assistance."Personal correspondence, organizational records, government documents, publications, and other papers created or collected by Joseph R. Goodman documenting the forced removal and incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II, as well as organized resistance to incarceration. Included in the collection are records of the Japanese Young Men's Christian Association and the Japanese American Citizens' League in San Francisco, including papers of the Japanese YMCA's executive secretary Lincoln Kanai; Sakai family papers; Goodman's correspondence to and from Japanese American incarcerees, organizations opposing forced removal and incarceration of Japanese Americans, the War Relocation Authority, and others; publications, photographs, and ephemera from the Topaz Relocation Center, where Goodman taught high school; War Relocation Authority records and publications; and newspaper clippings, pamphlets, and reports about forced removal and incarceration created by various government, religious, and civic organizations, in California and nationwide

    How do people vote? an econometric study of the determinants of voting in the municipality of São Paulo

    No full text
    Este trabalho busca estudar os determinantes sociais do voto nas eleições para prefeito de 1996 e 2000, realizadas no município de São Paulo. Para alcançar tal objetivo são utilizadas duas metodologias estatísticas distintas: um modelo linear simples aqui denominado Modelo de Goodman e um modelo bayesiano desenvolvido pelo cientista político Gary King. Inicialmente, são derivados os fundamentos estatísticos e matemáticos dos modelos de Goodman e de King, para que, finalmente, sejam apresentados os resultados das estimações realizadas para três variáveis demográficas no pleito de 1996 e para sete variáveis demográficas no pleito de 2000, através de mapas espaciais do município de São Paulo.This essay seeks to study the social determinants of the vote in the elections for mayor in the city of São Paulo that occurred in 1996 and 2000. To reach such a target, two statistical methodologies are applied: a simple classical linear model - the so called Goodman model - and a bayesian model developed by Prof. Gary King. In the first part of the essay, the statistical and mathematical foundations of these two models are presented. In the last part, the estimation results for three social variables in the 1996 election and seven social variables in the 2000 election are presented. The estimated parameters are presented in the form of spatial maps

    A REINVESTIGATION OF THE GOODMAN BANDS OF IODINE

    No full text
    1^{1} K.K. Lehmann, J. Smolarek, and L. Goodman, J. Chem Phys. 69. 1569, 1978.Author Institution: Department of Chemistry, S.U.N.Y. Binghamton; Department of Chemistry, McMaster UniversityThe Goodman bands1bands^{1} form the strongest evidence for the existence of bound states in the 28000<Te<40000cm128000<T_{e}<40000 cm^{-1} region of I2I_{2}.We have recorded the Goodman system in fluorescence following one and two-color excitation. Spectra have been obtained for both 127I2127I_{2} and 129I2129I_{2} using dye laser frequencies covering 1650018500cm116500 - 18500 cm^{-1}. At high resolution each band is resolved to reveal a cluster of 4-15 rotational lines. Our analysis has shown that the upper state is accessed via a resonance enhanced three-photon absorption process. A vibrational and rotational analysis has positively identified the upper terminus as the FO+uFO{^{+}}_{u} state (Te=47218cm1T_{e} = 47218 cm^{-1}), a member of the second tier of ion-pair states

    Special bulletin (San Bruno, Calif.), (August 27, 1942)

    No full text
    Special bulletin from Tanforan Assembly Center, issued by center manager Frank E. Davis, regarding "conduct on train en route to relocation project." Bulletin issued in English and Japanese.Personal correspondence, organizational records, government documents, publications, and other papers created or collected by Joseph R. Goodman documenting the forced removal and incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II, as well as organized resistance to incarceration. Included in the collection are records of the Japanese Young Men's Christian Association and the Japanese American Citizens' League in San Francisco, including papers of the Japanese YMCA's executive secretary Lincoln Kanai; Sakai family papers; Goodman's correspondence to and from Japanese American incarcerees, organizations opposing forced removal and incarceration of Japanese Americans, the War Relocation Authority, and others; publications, photographs, and ephemera from the Topaz Relocation Center, where Goodman taught high school; War Relocation Authority records and publications; and newspaper clippings, pamphlets, and reports about forced removal and incarceration created by various government, religious, and civic organizations, in California and nationwide

    Electronic bath approach to thermal effects in ion-surface scattering

    No full text
    McDowell's 1985 electronic bath theory of charge transfer is used to investigate the effect of varying surface temperature on the process of ion scattering from a solid surface. As a specific example, the system of Na+ scattered from W is modeled. The neutralization probability is found to have a significant temperature dependence only if the ion orbital energy is fairly close (within 1 eV) to the Fermi level, at closest approach. As well, the temperature effect is greatest when the ion's incident energy is small (on the order of a few eV). (C) 2000 American Institute of Physics. [S0021-9606(00)70305-9].PT: J; CR: ABRAHAMSON AA, 1969, PHYS REV, V178, P76 BRAKO R, 1981, SURF SCI, V108, P253 BU Y, 1990, J CHEM PHYS, V92, P3899 DAVISON SG, 1996, ELECT PROCESSES SOLI GOODMAN FO, UNPUB GOODMAN FO, 1963, J PHYS CHEM SOLIDS, V24, P1451 LOS J, 1990, PHYS REP, V190, P133 MCDOWELL HK, 1982, J CHEM PHYS, V77, P3263 MCDOWELL HK, 1985, J CHEM PHYS, V83, P772 MCDOWELL HK, 1987, J CHEM PHYS, V87, P1907 MERINO J, 1998, PHYS REV B, V58, P6982 NOURTIER A, 1989, J PHYS-PARIS, V50, P311 OLSON RE, 1971, APPL OPTICS, V10, P1848 OVERBOSCH EG, 1980, SURF SCI, V92, P310 PAPACONSTANTOPO.DA, 1986, HDB BAND STRUCTURE E; NR: 15; TC: 3; J9: J CHEM PHYS; PG: 4; GA: 277NRSource type: Electronic(1

    Gênese e construção de uma filosofia da gestalt na gestalt-terapia

    No full text
    Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Centro de Filosofia e Ciências Humanas. Programa de Pós-Graduação em FilosofiaA Gestalt-terapia é uma proposta de intervenção psicoterapêutica que se entende fundamentada numa leitura gestáltica da metapsicologia freudiana, por um lado, e numa interpretação fenomenológica da Psicologia da Gestalt, por outro. Seu principal mentor, Perls, referiu-se a esses fundamentos como uma sorte de "filosofia da gestalt", parcialmente desenvolvida na obra "Gestalt-terapia", escrita em 1951, com a colaboração de Paul Goodman e Ralph Hefferline. Na presente dissertação, pretendemos realizar um exame dessa filosofia, o que implica, em primeiro lugar, a investigação da gênese dos conceitos que a compõem, além da análise do modo como esses conceitos estão articulados nos termos daquela obra, principalmente. No primeiro capítulo estabelecemos um estudo sobre a origem do emprego psicológico da noção de "gestalt", o que nos remete à maneira como a Psicologia da Gestalt - em sua primeira geração - lê e emprega a noção husserliana de objeto intencional transcendente. No segundo capítulo, apresentamos a crítica de Husserl a esse emprego - que considera "naturalizante" -, bem como a proposta husserliana de redução da fenomenologia ao âmbito da filosofia transcendental, mostrando em que sentido - em função dessa redução - a segunda geração da Psicologia da Gestalt passa a empregar a noção de "gestalt" menos como uma estrutura fixa e mais como um campo auto-regulável. Discutimos, ainda, em que sentido esta noção de campo aparece na teoria que mais diretamente contribuiu para a construção da "filosofia da gestalt", a saber, a teoria organísmica de Goldstein. No terceiro capítulo, dissertamos sobre como - a partir da teoria organísmica de Goldstein - Perls se propõe a uma releitura gestáltica da metapsicologia freudiana e em que sentido essa releitura demanda uma investigação filosófica sobre a noção goldsteiniana de intencionalidade organísmica. No quarto capítulo é apresentada a investigação fenomenológica que Perls e Goodman fazem da noção de intencionalidade organísmica. No quinto e último capítulo, enfim, descrevemos o resultado desta investigação, que é a teoria do self, a peça mais importante da "Filosofia da Gestalt" anunciada por Perls. Gestalt Therapy is a motion of psychotherapeutic intervention which regards itself fundamented in a gestaltic reading of the freudian metapsychology on one hand , and a phenomenological interpretation of Gestalt Psychology on the other. Perls, Gestalt's chief mentor, referred to these fundaments as a sort of "Gestalt philosophy" somewhat developed in the work "Gestalt Therapy" , 1951, with collaborators Paul Goodman and Ralph Hefferline. This dissertation is aimed at axamining such philosophy which, in the first place, implies in an investigation of the genesis of the concepts it holds, as well as the way these concepts are chiefly articulated in that work terms. The first chapter is a survey on the origin of the psychological application of the notion of "Gestalt", which brings us the way "Gestalt philosophy" - in its first generation - reads and applies a husserlian notion of transcendent intentional object. The second chapter is Husserl's view of such applications, which he consideres to be "naturalizing", as well as his proposal of reduction of phenomenology in the transcendental philosophy environment, demonstrating which way - due to this reduction - the second generation of Gestalt Psychology begins to apply the notion of "gestalt" less as a fixed structure and more as a self-regulating field. We also discuss which way this field notion comes out in the theory which most directly contributed to the construction of the " Gestalt philosophy", that is, Goldstein's organismic theory. On the third chapter we comment how - out of Goldstein's organismic theory - Perls proposes a new gestaltic reading of Freud's metapsychology, and in what sense this new reading demands a philosophical investigation as for the goldsteinian notion of organismic intentionality. It is presented on the fourth chapter the phenomenological invesgigation which Perls and Goldstein make of the notion of organismic intentionality. On the fifth and last chapter we, finaly, describe the outcome of this investigation, which is the theory of the self, most important piece of "Gestalt philosophy" announced by Perls

    LAW IN PUBLIC HEALTH PRACTICE

    No full text
    Contributors -- Legal glossary for public health practitioners -- Introduction: the interdependency of law and public health / Wendy E. Parmet -- Perspective: law and great public health achievements / Anthony D. Moulton, Richard A. Goodman, and Wendy E. Parmet -- Section I. Legal basis for public health practice -- I. The law and the public's health: the foundations / Lawrence O. Gostin, F. Ed Thompson, and Frank P. Grad -- 2. The structure of law in public health systems and practice / Richard A. Goodman, Paula L. Kocher, Daniel J. O'Brien, and Frank S. Alexander -- 3. Regulating public health: principles and application of administrative law / Peter D. Jacobson, Richard E. Hoffman, and Wilfredo Lopez -- 4. Public health and the judiciary / Daniel D. Stier and Diane M. Nicks -- 5. Ethics and the practice of public health / Ruth Gaare Bernheim, Phillip Nieburg, and Richard J. Bonnie -- 6. Criminal law and public health practice / Zita Lazzarini, Richard A. Goodman, and Kim S. Dammers -- 7. International considerations / David P. Fidler and Martin S. Cetron -- Section II. The law and core public health applications -- 8. Legal counsel to public health practitioners / Wilfredo Lopez and Thomas R. Frieden -- 9. Frontline public health: surveillance and field epidemiology / Verla S. Neslund, Richard A. Goodman, and James L. Hadler -- 10. Identifiable health information and the public's health: practice, research, and policy / James G. Hodge, Jr., Richard E. Hoffman, Deborah W. Tress, and Verla S. Neslund -- 11. Legal authorities for interventions in public health emergencies / Gene W. Matthews, Ernest B. Abbott, Richard E. Hoffman, and Martin S. Cetron -- 12. Considerations for special populations / T. Howard Stone, Heather H. Horton, Robert M. Pestronk, and Montrece M. Ransom -- Section III. The law in controlling and preventing diseases, injuries, and disabilities -- 13. Integrating genetics into public health policy and practice / Ellen Wright Clayton and Mark A. Rothstein -- 14. Vaccination mandates: the public health imperative and individual rights / Kevin M. Malone and Alan R. Hinman -- 15. Control of foodborne diseases / Leslie Kux, Jeremy Sobel, and Kevin M. Fain -- 16. Bloodborne and sexually transmitted infections / Edward P. Richards III and Guthrie S. Birkhead -- 17. Prevention and control of chronic disease / Angela K. McGowan, Ross C. Brownson, Lynne S. Wilcox, and George A. Mensah -- 18. Prevention and control of diseases associated with tobacco use through law and policy / Richard A. Daynard, Mark A. Gottlieb, Edward L. Sweda, Jr., Lissy C. Friedman, and Michael P. Eriksen -- 19. Reproductive health / Bebe J. Anderson, Maurizio Macaluso, and Lynne S. Wilcox -- 20. Environmental health and protection / Paul A. Locke, Henry Falk, Christopher S. Kochtitzky, and Christine P. Bump -- 21. Injury prevention / Daniel D. Stier, James A. Mercy, and Melvin Kohn -- 22. Occupational safety and health law / Gary Rischitelli and Michael A. Silverstein -- Inde

    The early career op Christopher Goodman and his place in the development of English protestant thought

    No full text
    The career and thought of Christopher Goodman provides the backbone of this thesis. They are used to demonstrate the interaction between men and ideas in England during the middle years of the sixteenth century and so give a clearer picture of the development of English protestant thought. The study has set out to discover three things about Goodman and his book 'How Superior Powers Oght to be Obeyd(^1). The first is to explain his intention in writing the book; the second to describe its content] and the third to understand its impact in 1558.As a study of Goodman's book cannot be divorced from the study of its author, the biographical details of Goodman's life to I558 are investigated. They help to give the fullest possible picture of his intentions in writing the book. Detailed consideration Is given to his experiences in Edwardian Oxford at Brasenose College and Christ church and to his exile in Germany and Switzerland during the reign of Mary. To give an accurate description of the content and impact of Goodman's book it is necessary to establish its ideological context. This involves documenting the personnel, activities and ideas of the Christ Church Circle and of the Marian exiles, particularly those who comprised the English exile community in Geneva. Only if such a picture is pieced together is it possible to distinguish between the unusual and the commonplace in Goodman's thinking, and appreciate the revolutionary nature of his concept of a covenanted society, the people of God
    corecore