1,780 research outputs found
Kate: The Keen Android Travel Extension
Kate is a working prototype that shows that an app can assist a traveller in the travel decision process. Kate is built up from modules, the source of travel data (now the calendar) and travel time prediction (now Tripcast from Model IT) can easily be switched to another source which will require only the change of one module.Man Machine InteractionMediamaticsElectrical Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Scienc
The Manager’s Dilemma: Role Conflict in Marketing
Norris Brisco, Melvin Copeland, Henry Erdman, Benjamin Hibbard, George Hotchkiss, Leverett Lyon, Stanley Resor, Clarence Saunders, Harry Tosdal, Roland Vaile: Who are these people? They are great men in the history of marketing, according to Wright and Dinsdale (1974). They are marketing heroes. But riot society’s heroes. Rather than hero, the marketing man is usually a villain in novels; he is the butt of jokes; and respondents to surveys think poorly of him.conflict, marketing, manager
Building the case for culturally specific prenatal through grade 3 strategies in Oregon
prepared by Callie H. Lambarth, Amanda Cross-Hemmer, Lorelei Mitchell, Beth L. Green and Kate Normand.Title from PDF cover (viewed on December 30, 2019).Covers OCLC #1134399567 and OCLC #1134399474.This archived document is maintained by the State Library of Oregon as part of the Oregon Documents Depository Program. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposes.Includes bibliographical references.Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English
Chronicles of Oklahoma
Article tells the story of Kate May and her journey west with her family. Henry Kilian Goetz provides a biographical tribute to the pioneer woman, who made the land run into the Cherokee Outlet after the death of her husband and had to find a way to provide for her eight children
Sustaining seas: oceanic space and the politics of care/ edited by Kate Johnston, Nancy Lee, and Elspeth Probyn.
Includes bibliographical references and index."Why read Sustaining Seas? It is as simple as this: the seas sustain all life. This edited book emerges from conversations across several disciplines, and including practitioners of different specialities (artists, writers, planners, policy makers) about how to sustain the seas, as they sustain us"--Oceanic regime shift / Lesley Green -- “The sea is empty”: fishers, migrants and a watery humanism / Elspeth Probyn -- Speculative harbouring at Blackwattle Bay: interdisciplinary pedagogies and the politics of care / Kate Johnston, Susanne Pratt -- Caring for tuna of the Western Indian Ocean: where the politics and ecology meet / Mialy Andriamahefazafy, Christian A. Kull, Pamima Leste, Patsy Theresine, Safina Echa -- The multiple meanings of fish: policy disconnections in Australian seafood governance / Sonia Garcia Garcia, Kate Barclay, Rob Nicholls -- What is a fresh fish? knowledge and lived experience in the UK and Portugal / Monica Truninger, João Baptista, David M. Evans, Peter Jackson, Nádia Carvalho Nunes -- Late nights and live tanks: entanglements of caring at Golden Century / Nancy Lee -- Catfish: halal, green or disgusting? investigating practices of traditional farming and care in Indonesia / Arum Budiastuti -- Free Fish Heads: a case study of knowing and practicing seafood differently / Emma L Sharp -- Out of sight, out of mind: the challenge of regulating high seas fisheries / Rosemary Rayfuse -- Participatory processes as twenty-first century social knowledge technology: metaphors and narratives at work / Erena Le Heron, Richard Le Heron, June Logie, Alison Greenaway, Will Allen, Paula Blackett, Kate Davies, Bruce Glavovic, Daniel Hikuroa -- When penalizing harm propagates harm: rethinking marine resource enforcement and relations from South Africa / Marieke Norton -- The protection of small-scale fisheries in global policymaking through food sovereignty / Alana Mann -- The sea and the breathing / Astrida Neimanis (words), Janet Laurence (artwork) -- We drain east to the Pacific: or, a Sydney-centric theoretical description of Anthropocene stormwater drainage / Jennifer Mae Hamilton -- Toxic Bloom: rewriting William Hunter’s obstetric model to represent the epigenetic toxification of bodies / Clare Nicholson -- Looking for skin, finding kin / Kassandra Bossell -- Operation crayweed: merging art and science to restore underwater forests / Adriana Vergés, Michaelie Crawford, Lana Kajlich, Ezequiel M. Marzinelli, Alexandra Söderlund, Peter D. Steinberg, Jennifer Turpin, Georgina Wood, Alexandra H. Campbell -- Buoyant ecologies: interspecies cooperation for sea level rise adaptation / Adam Marcus -- South Korean reef metropolis / Amaia Sánchez-Velasco, Jorge Valiente Oriol, Gonzalo Valiente -- Living breakwaters: SCAPE landscape architecture / SCAPE Landscape Architecture -- Sustaining the seas through interdisciplinary songwriting / Kim Williams, Sarah M. Hamylton, Lucas Ihlein, Leah Gibbs -- The sea is time: contestations of temporality in J.P. Clark-Bekederemo's The Raft / Henry Obi Ajumeze -- Thinking from the Southern Ocean / Charne Lavery.1 online resource (ix, 338 pages)
Gregory and Miller at program and book signing with author Donald L. Miller
Kate Gregory, Assistant Professor/ Political Papers Archivist at MSU Libraries shares the closing remarks following Donald L. Miller, the guest speaker
The role of Rural Women New Zealand in the Kate Valley landfill consultation programme : a dissertation submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Applied Science (Environmental Management) at Lincoln University
Public involvement is developing in recognition as an important step in attaining acceptance in local communities for developments, and it can produce important benefits for the majority of parties involved, including the proponents and the community (University of Manchester EIA, 2003).
Many authors have discussed techniques to include when designing and implementing a public involvement programme (Rowe & Frewer, 2000; Shepard & Bowler, 1997 Morgan, 1998; UNEP, 2002), however, evaluative measures which assess the success of consultation programmes have not been thoroughly investigated.
Barriers exist in society which disallow particular groups to effectively contribute to public participation programmes (Diduck & Sinclair, 2002). Specific information regarding how individual 'hard to reach' groups should be involved in consultation is not provided and suggestions to ameliorate issues with involving such groups is generic in nature.
This research focuses on Rural Women New Zealand (RWNZ), a group who have been identified as 'hard to reach', largely through a case study of a proposed landfill in the Kate Valley area in North Canterbury. A combination of two techniques were used to assess RWNZ's involvement in the consultation programme, including an assessment of historical documents and associated reports, and interviews carried out with seven RWNZ members.
Results indicated that RWNZ perceived that they were not adequately involved in the Kate Valley consultation programme. Several personal and external barriers were identified by the RWNZ interview participants that impeded their participation in the Kate Valley consultation programme.
This research identifies important features that a consultation proponent can employ to effectively involve RWNZ in a public participation programme in the future. A significant finding, largely unrelated to the Kate Valley consultation programme regards the apparent lack of knowledge that the general public have about consultation processes and their individual rights and opportunities
Teardrop by L. Kate
Kate, Lauren. Teardrop. New York: Delacorte Press, 2013. Print.This Young Adult fantasy novel explores the compelling story of Eureka Boudreaux who was taught at a young age to never, ever cry. Ever since her mother drowned in an accident by the force of a rogue wave, Eureka no longer has the desire to live.Not long after the terrifying incident, a mysterious boy, Ander, enters her life. Although she has never seen Ander before, he feels strangely familiar and has an unusual talent for appearing in front of Eureka when she least expects him. He appears to know everything about her and warns her that she is in grave danger. Not long after their first encounter, Eureka discovers that Ander is the only person who has come close to making her cry.As she learns to cope with her new reality, Eureka finds solace in Brooks, her oldest friend with whom she can share anything. Together they try to solve the mystery of the strange inheritance from her mother – a locket, a letter, a stone, and an ancient book that no one understands. Eureka recruits a fortune teller who is able to translate the text and finds that the book is a story about a girl who had her heart broken and cried the ancient world of Atlantis into the sea. Characters from the book have an uncanny similarity to the people whom she shares a deep connection in her own life. The more of the book that she uncovers, the stranger her life becomes. Soon Eureka discovers that the story is more than an ancient tale and Ander may be telling the truth about her safety. This book is the first in a trilogy, which leaves readers waiting in anticipation for the next installment. It explores themes of depression from the loss of a parent and the author weaves an intricate plot that helps the heroine overcome her grief. Overall, it is a fast-paced story that is well suited to young adult audiences, featuring complex characters, love, and dark magic.Recommended: 3 out of 4 starsReviewer: Janice KungJanice Kung is an Academic Library Intern at the University of Alberta’s John W. Scott Health Sciences Library. She obtained her undergraduate degree in commerce and completed her MLIS in 2013. She believes that the best thing to beat the winter blues is to cuddle up on a couch and lose oneself in a good book
Among the Deep Sea Fishers, volume 38, issue 1 (April 1940)
Map [Grenfell Stations] -- Sir Wilfred on his seventy-fifth birthday [illustration] -- Privileges / Wilfred T. Grenfell -- Kivi goes to Finland / Cecil S. Ashdown -- Dr. Curtis writes of Dr. Paddon -- Dr. Paddon / Rev. Henry Gordon -- Medical patrol / The late Dr. Harry L. Paddon -- Reflections / Janet W. Stewart -- Sealing on the Canadian Labrador / Harrington staff -- Report of the St. Anthony Hospital -- About dogs / Laura N. Thompson -- Our special needs -- Financial report of the International Grenfell Association -- 50,000 miles for Labrador -- Flight to Labrador, concluded / Dr. Alexander Forbes -- Needlework Guild column -- Grenfell Association of America -- New England Grenfell Association -- Grenfell Labrador Medical Mission -- Grenfell Association of Great Britain and Ireland -- Alumni news -- Labrador days in Florida / Catherine Vaughn -- Here and there among the children / Kate M. Keddie.Includes map: Grenfell Stations and other places of interest to the Association, and Twillingate, the location of the Notre Dame Bay Memorial Hospital (p. 1).Among the Deep Sea Fishers: the Official Organ of the International Grenfell Association. This journal was published quarterly from 1903 to 1981 with the twofold purpose of providing "a record of Mission activities [and] also a strong and convincing appeal to every supporter and friend of Dr. Grenfell's work." The articles describe mission life, services and experiences. The Mission began under the auspices of the Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen but later a separate mission, the International Grenfell Association, was formed by Dr. Wilfred Grenfell
Lottie Durham Collection
Photograph of the Tussy Family of Lindsay & Colbert, OK, November 1924, in Tussy, OK. L to R: front: 1-2. UNIDENTIFIED, 3. Alex Tussy, 4-5. UNIDENTIFIED. Middle: 1. UNIDENTIFIED 2. Henry Tussy, 3. Mrs. Henry Tussy, 4. UNIDENTIFIED. Back: 1-3. UNIDENTIFIED. View Includes: Mary, Jennie, Lucy, Lola, Edna, Kate, Francis, Lois & Ruth
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