5,758 research outputs found

    Mr. Melvin J. Collier, RWWL AUC, June 2011

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    This video is a conversation with Mr. Melvin J. Collier. Mr. Collier talks about his book, "From Mississippi to Africa: A Journey of Discovery". Daniel Le, AUC Woodruff Library, is the interviewer

    Report on Meteorological Research March 1, 1935 (m-1)

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    The object of the report was to elucidate in detail the various features of the research program in meteorology being carried on at the Daniel Guggenheim Airship Institute in Akron, Ohio. Mr. L. J. Fangman, of the U.S. Weather Bureau, was collaborating with the author in carrying out work such as a study of autographic records of the various meteorological elements during frontal passages with a view to the possible prediction of the intensity of the accompanying disturbance as it may affect the operation of aircraft and a study of atmospheric gustiness with a view to finding the dependence between frequency end amplitude of velocity fluctuations and the vertical temperature and velocity gradients

    Daniel J. Boorstin

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    Photograph used for a newspaper owned by the Oklahoma Publishing Company. Caption: "Daniel J. Boorstin, author and keynote speaker.

    Dr. Daniel J. Boorstin (S2_B32_F3_33)

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    Dr. Daniel J. Boorstin-historian, author and Director of the National Museum of History and Technology at the Smithsonian Institution. He was the guest speaker at Bierce Library's Dedication Ceremony

    Author Meets Reader: Not the Marrying Kind: A Feminist Critique of Same-Sex Marriage

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    This is an audio recording of an author meets reader session held at the SLSA Annual Conference, University of York, 27 March 2013. Nicola Barker's book, Not the Marrying Kind: A Feminist Critique of Same-Sex Marriage, was the winner of the 2013 Hart SLSA Book Prize. In the session she introduces the book and then engages in discussion about it with Daniel Monk

    I Remember Daniel J. Levinson

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    The author\u27s personal memories of Daniel Levinson

    Defoe's Foes:The Author as Character

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    The most famous fictional Defoe features in J. M. Coetzee’s Foe (1986), in which he conjures Robinson Crusoe out of a memoir by a “true” castaway. Harrumphing across the country alongside the modern-day narrator of Stuart Campbell’s Daniel Defoe’s Railway Journey (2017), a surreal iteration quite literally leaps out of the pages of a Penguin Classics edition of his real-life counterpart’s travel writing. Setting aside a long tradition of neo-Georgian novels in which Defoe cameos as a seventeenth-century spy, a Defoe-as-character only for all intents and purposes, this chapter attends to two complex cases in the genre of author fictions: Coetzee’s Foe and Campbell’s Defoe

    Author Talk: Daniel Herman Discusses His Novel, The Feudist

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    Poster for an event where CWU History professor Daniel Herman discusses his historical novel The Feudisthttps://digitalcommons.cwu.edu/libraryevents/1223/thumbnail.jp

    Austrian economics: a tale of lost opportunities

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    This is a, somewhat indirect, rejoinder to Boettke (2019, this volume, Chapter 1). Doing Austrian economics is low prestige: Austrian economics does not get published in high-prestige journals and Austrian economists are not employed by top universities. And yet, up until World War II Austrian economics was an important part of the international economics community. The author argues that Austrian economists made several theoretical innovations that could have placed them at the frontier of research in economics, and present a brief coun-terfactual history of a thriving Austrian economics based on those innovations. However, the actual history of the Austrian School is quite different. A par-ticularly decisive factor that has made Austrian economics a fringe movement was the rejection of formal methods in theory and empirics. The author argues that Austrian economics is basically dying out as a voice in the conversation of modern economists

    Looking for Bubbe: The Remembered and Forgotten Jewish World in Heritage Tourism

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    Joan and Henry Katz Lecture in Judaic Studies. [Speaker] Daniel J. Walkowitz, PhD. Emeritus professor of history and of social & cultural analysis at New York University, author of The Remembered and Forgotten Jewish World.https://digitalcommons.fairfield.edu/bennettcenter-posters/1353/thumbnail.jp
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