17,136 research outputs found

    James S. Rogers Civil War letter

    No full text
    This collection consists of a letter written by James S. Rogers while serving with the 3rd Iowa Cavalry at Little Rock, Arkansas

    Letter from James L. Rogers to M. S. Sanders

    No full text
    Letter from James L. Rogers to M. S. Sanders, inquiring about a Vocational Agriculture Teacher position

    J.B. McNamara from Bruce Rogers, March 2, 1932-July 23, 1932

    No full text
    Letters to J.B. McNamara from Bruce Rogers dated March 2, 1932 to July 23, 1932

    James Rogers

    No full text
    This negative shows a painting of James Rogers by Laussat Richter Rogers. James Rogers lived from 1780 to 1868

    James Rogers

    No full text
    This negative shows a painting of James Rogers by Laussat Richter Rogers. James Rogers lived from 1780 to 1868

    CONNECTIONS:Sculpture Exhibition by Steinunn Thórarinsdóttir and James Rogers

    No full text
    This fall, 23 sculptures by the award-winning Icelandic artist Steinunn Thórarinsdóttir will be exhibited at University of Southern Denmark and in the cities of Odense and Copenhagen as a part of DIAS Fellow Dr. James Rogers’ interdisciplinary project on war and art. The aim of the CONNECTIONS exhibition is to utilise art as a medium through which to stimulate discussion, bridge differences, and connect people – at a time when societies are physically and ideologically divided

    CONNECTIONS:Sculpture Exhibition by Steinunn Thórarinsdóttir and James Rogers

    No full text
    This fall, 23 sculptures by the award-winning Icelandic artist Steinunn Thórarinsdóttir will be exhibited at University of Southern Denmark and in the cities of Odense and Copenhagen as a part of DIAS Fellow Dr. James Rogers’ interdisciplinary project on war and art. The aim of the CONNECTIONS exhibition is to utilise art as a medium through which to stimulate discussion, bridge differences, and connect people – at a time when societies are physically and ideologically divided

    CONNECTIONS:Sculpture Exhibition by Steinunn Thórarinsdóttir and James Rogers

    No full text
    This fall, 23 sculptures by the award-winning Icelandic artist Steinunn Thórarinsdóttir will be exhibited at University of Southern Denmark and in the cities of Odense and Copenhagen as a part of DIAS Fellow Dr. James Rogers’ interdisciplinary project on war and art. The aim of the CONNECTIONS exhibition is to utilise art as a medium through which to stimulate discussion, bridge differences, and connect people – at a time when societies are physically and ideologically divided

    Using Age and Spatial Flow Structures in the Indirect Estimation of Migration Streams

    No full text
    This paper presents a modeling strategy for describing and estimating interregional migration flows. The categorical log-linear model is used to demonstrate various approaches to estimation, including direct and indirect methods. And estimates of known data on interdivisional migration patterns in the United States during the 1995-2000 period are used to illustrate the effectiveness of the various log-linear models. The important aspects of the modeling strategy presented in this paper include parameter interpretation, incorporation of auxiliary or a priori information, and assessment of the various model predictions. The results show that capturing the interactions between origins and destinations are very important for accurate predictions

    'Modern-day Tinkerer’ - A review of the Work of James Rogers

    No full text
    James Rogers’ work spans many dimensions and materials, drawing inspiration from ancient oracles and cosmical networks. His use of clay and wax, plates and inks, drawing robots, and extruders reflects these influences. According to James Rogers, everything is interconnected.James Rogers embodies the spirit of a modern-day tinkerer, seamlessly merging ancient divination practices with contemporary technology and artistic exploration. His early memory of a parental tinkerer remained in his imagination; when his father, who worked as an electrician, attached the word 'bomb' to some electrical components that he had collected from the back of his van, including wires, a battery, a little clock screen, it was not something that could explode or without needing to know whether they worked; it inspired the young James, who spies and gadgets greatly influenced. Today, having learnt the technology through trial and error, Rogers can transform assemblages into fully functioning electronic components and robotic machines, oracles to access emerging electrical and cosmical networks, and the use of etching as a divination process
    corecore