1,355,345 research outputs found

    Hanly, A G, NX202873

    No full text
    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/390184Surname: HANLY. Given Name(s) or Initials: A G. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: NX202873. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 56626.214953 Item: [2016.0049.22477] "Hanly, A G, NX202873

    Donald Hanly Sweet, February 2, 1924 - May 12, 2022

    No full text
    Stanford University graduate Donald Hanly Sweet passed away peacefully at age 98 on May 12, 2022 after suffering a stroke, less than three months after the passing of Beth Sweet, his beloved wife of 73 years

    J. Frank Hanly

    No full text
    At age 16, Illinois native J. Frank Hanly (1863-1920) walked most of the way to Warren County, Indiana looking for work. Eventually he entered politics there and later moved to Lafayette. As governor he created the Indiana Railroad Commission and focused on temperance. He was the Prohibition Party’s candidate for president in 1916. Hanly died in 1920 after a car and train accident in Ohio and is buried in Warren County.Use of this image is restricted to IHS reference purposes only. IHS may not reproduce. Information taken from the book The Governors of Indiana, edited by Linda C. Gugin and James E. St.Clair, published by the Indiana Historical Society Press in cooperation with the Indiana Historical Bureau, State of Indiana.Destination Indiana - Governors of Indiana, 1893-1941 Journe

    Hearse Carrying Michael Hanly

    No full text
    4" x 6". Unmounted. Photograph found in a folder titled, "Michael Hanly." Image originally removed by Robin Nagle in 09/07. Photograph in good condition.Color photograph of hearse carrying Michael Hanly. Flower arrangement adorns the car while another vehicle follows closely behind

    Hearse Carrying Michael Hanly

    No full text
    4" x 6". Unmounted. Photograph found in a folder titled, "Michael Hanly." Image originally removed by Robin Nagle in 09/07. Photograph in good condition.Color photograph of hearse carrying Michael Hanly. Flower arrangement adorns the car while another vehicle follows closely behind

    Changing travel behaviour

    No full text
    TSU: The Transport Studies Unit, established since 1973 at Oxford University, was awarded the status of a designated research centre of the ESRC from 1994 to 2004. The research programme, initially focussed on traffic growth and the development of dynamic methodologies, was launched at a Linacre Lecture in Oxford which attracted much press attention for its comments on induced traffic. The Unit transferred to University College London in January 1996. After a successful mid-term review, the second five year programme focussed on the process of behavioural change and appraisal tools. ESRC funding and designation came to an end in September 2004 with an exceptionally well-attended final event in London on ‘Changing Travel Behaviour’, which constituted a suitably unifying theme bringing together a large proportion of the Unit’s research projects. Appreciations were given by many of the leading stakeholders in transport policy and research, with an audience of over 400 academics and practitioners. Shortly after, the ESRC Transport Studies Unit disbanded as an entity. The seven researchers who had carried out the programme are now continuing their activities at six different locations in three countries, though maintaining contact and continuing to disseminate and extend the results of the ten years work. Transport research of course continues at both Oxford University (TSU in the School of Geography) and UCL (CTS in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering). The ambiguity of ‘changing’: The phrase ‘changing travel behaviour’ is ambiguous – changing as a description of what actually happens, and changing as an active intent by public or private agencies. The twin underlying propositions are that travel behaviour does change, and by understanding this travel behaviour can be changed. There is a third, implied statement, that travel behaviour should be changed. This goes beyond the research programme. All three statements are controversial, but the controversies are resolved by different methods, from empirical and theoretical analysis to public debate. All three underpin the need to understand the processes of behavioural change, and to incorporate this understanding in the tools for appraising both transport investment and – as became apparent during the period of the research – other transport policies as well. The logical structure used for this report (in part developed retrospectively in the course of planning for the TSU final event) has five parts: (1) establish the nature of the changes in travel behaviour that have actually happened; (2) consider the specific effects of two of the most important general influences, namely income, and demographic forces; (3) 2 consider the evidence on the effect of transport policy, including both investment and non-investment initiatives. Those studied include new opportunities such as park-and-ride, increases and reductions in road capacity, increases and reductions in public transport fares and motoring costs, the effects of soft measures such as travel plans and information provision; (4) consider some theoretical and practical understanding of the nature of changes in behaviour; (5) discuss the policy implications of the wor

    Letter from J.A. Hanly to Hagan

    No full text
    Holograph letter from J.A. Hanly, Hôtel Ludovisi, Via Liguria, Rome, to Hagan. In deep gratitude for his financial assistance to a complete stranger; the debt will be repaid on Monday

    The impact of the admissions process on school racial climate for Black students at a selective enrollment high school: A case study

    No full text
    Submission published under a 24 month embargo labeled 'U of I Access', the embargo will last until 2023-12-01The student, Sarah Hanly, accepted the attached license on 2021-12-01 at 15:36.The student, Sarah Hanly, submitted this Dissertation for approval on 2021-12-01 at 15:36.This Dissertation was approved for publication on 2021-12-02 at 15:21.DSpace SAF Submission Ingestion Package generated from Vireo submission #17341 on 2022-04-06 at 17:17:39Made available in DSpace on 2022-04-29T21:46:14Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 4 HANLY-DISSERTATION-2021.pdf: 1215981 bytes, checksum: 47bdd31a88cd0ef0fd1d2ef8be953874 (MD5) Sarah Hanly Dissertation 20211129.docx: 861452 bytes, checksum: 8d64763e175e9c2a502526c9d8a8fc92 (MD5) LICENSE.txt: 4208 bytes, checksum: 571db0997588220d5b40b7f011cf3bc6 (MD5) PROQUEST_LICENSE.txt: 4554 bytes, checksum: 6323aaf3ef4e6ad4e2ea414f33152fcc (MD5) Previous issue date: 2021-12-02Embargo set by: Seth Robbins for item 123359 Lift date: 2024-04-29T21:46:25Z Reason: Author requested U of Illinois access only (OA after 2yrs) in Vireo ETD systemEmbargo set by: Seth Robbins for item 123359 Lift date: 2024-04-29T21:47:53Z Reason: Author requested U of Illinois access only (OA after 2yrs) in Vireo ETD systemAuthor requested U of Illinois access only (OA after 2yrs) in Vireo ETD systemU of I OnlyChicago Public Schools changed its admissions process for selective enrollment schools in 2009 after a federal consent decree ended that had mandated racial quotas for admission. The district’s new system removed race as a factor for admission and instead focused on census based socio-economic factors. Since that change in admissions, the district has seen a decrease in Black student enrollment at the elite selective enrollment high schools. This case study examines the decline in Black student enrollment at a particular selective enrollment high school in Chicago Public Schools over a 25-year period. It considers the impact of the district’s change in the admissions process in 2009 on Black student enrollment at the school and how this reduction in enrollment affected the racial climate for its Black students. The purpose of the study is to address the research question: how has the current admission process at this selective enrollment school created a reduction in the number of Black students attending the school? Additionally, it also examines a subset to the main question: how has the reduction in the Black student population at the school impacted the school racial climate for Black students? The data was based on school enrollment statistics as well as interviews with Black alumni from different time periods between 1995-2020. Themes emerged from the interviews, such as school belonging, relationships with teachers and peers, and hypervisibility. The qualitative and quantitative evidence from this case study determined that there was a reduction in Black student enrollment over the 25-year period which was more pronounced after the new admissions process was in place. The study also concluded that due to this reduction, the school’s racial climate was negatively impacted for its Black students

    Health, Place and Hanly: modelling accessibility to hospitals in Ireland

    No full text
    The Irish Government is currently engaged in considerations about a proposed reorganisation of acute hospital services. The proposals in the 'Hanly' Report recommend the creation of new classifications of Major, General and Local Hospitals. This paper looked at how these proposals might affect geographical accessibility to Irish acute hospitals and modelled it within a GIS framework. Spatial data in the form of hospital location and size, road network and demographic distribution of over 65 's were drawn together within the GIS. A weighted accessibility formula was applied to produce a measure of accessibility called a Spatial Accessibility Measure based on travel time, hospital size and population-weighting. This measures was then applied to produce three scenarios modelled on; a) the existing configuration of services, b) a partial roll-out and c) a full roll-out of the proposed changes in the 'Hanly' Report. The scenarios identified those parts of the country, which were potentially likely to have increased/decreased accessibility to acute hospital services based on the different scenarios. Residents in the central and western parts of the country were shown to be most vulnerable, while the impacts of a full roll-out of Hanly suggests additional potential impacts on some suburban hospitals in the Greater Dublin area. The work provides a valuable and previously underdeveloped set of policy-informed spatial outcomes which can be adjusted if or when more beds are introduced into the Irish health care system in the next five to ten years

    Hedging Effectiveness under Conditions of Asymmetry

    No full text
    We examine whether hedging effectiveness is affected by asymmetry in the return distribution by applying tail specific metrics to compare the hedging effectiveness of short and long hedgers using Oil futures contracts. The metrics used include Lower Partial Moments (LPM), Value at Risk (VaR) and Conditional Value at Risk (CVAR). Comparisons are applied to a number of hedging strategies including OLS and both Symmetric and Asymmetric GARCH models. Our findings show that asymmetry reduces in-sample hedging performance and that there are significant differences in hedging performance between short and long hedgers. Thus, tail specific performance metrics should be applied in evaluating hedging effectiveness. We also find that the Ordinary Least Squares (OLS) model provides consistently good performance across different measures of hedging effectiveness and estimation methods irrespective of the characteristics of the underlying distribution.Hedging Performance; Asymmetry; Downside Risk; Value at Risk, Conditional Value at Risk. JEL classification: G10, G12, G15. ____________________________________________________________________ John Cotter, Director of Centre for Financial Markets, Department of Banking and Finance, University College Dublin, Blackrock, Co. Dublin, Ireland, tel 353 1 716 8900, e-mail [email protected]. Jim Hanly, School of Accounting and Finance, Dublin Institute of Technology, tel 353 1 402 3180, e-mail [email protected]. The authors would like to thank the participants at the Global Finance Annual Conference for their constructive comments.
    corecore