1,525 research outputs found

    Two- and Three-Dimensional Representations of Thomas Bewick Woodblocks

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    The Bell Museum at the University of Minnesota owns fouteen wood blocks that were engraved in the workshop of Thomas Bewick to illustrate his History of British Birds, 2 vols. (Newcastle, 1797, 1804), as well as a block for a tail piece printed in The Fables of Aesop (Newcastle, 1818). This data set includes representations of these blocks captured using four digitization methods. 3D models were produced using structured light scanning and photogrammetry. Next, we used reflectance transformation imaging (RTI) to create interactive visualizations of the blocks' surfaces under variable lighting conditions. Finally, a high resolution two-dimensional image was generated for each block using a GIGAmacro device.Hancher, Michael; Luce, Donald T; McFadden, Colin; Porter, Samantha T. (2019). Two- and Three-Dimensional Representations of Thomas Bewick Woodblocks. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://doi.org/10.13020/hw8q-c585

    SPECIAL ISSUE | Crowd (Mis)Representation: Aerial Photography at Donald Trump's Inauguration and the 2017 Women's March

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    Author: Riley Nisbet Wayne State University Download PDF version In a press conference given on the day following Donald Trump’s inauguration, the administration’s first press secretary, Sean Spicer, circulated the lie that the crowd at his presidential inauguration was the largest ever.[1] This was an early instance of the administration’s use of “alternative facts,” an alarming concept endorsed by its spokespeople to counter claims that the administration was untruthful. Contrary to t..

    Donald Hall, 11th Annual ODU Literary Festival

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    Donald Hall is not only one of our most prolific writers (six new books in 1987 alone, two more so far in 1988), but is perhaps the leading American person of letters. He is the author of ten books of poetry, beginning with Exiles and Marriages (winner of the Lamont Prize in 1955) and including Kicking the Leaves (1978) and most recently The Happy Man, which won the Lenore Marshall/The Nation Award as best book of poems for 1986; The Bone Ring, a play in verse (1987); and The One Day, a poem in three parts (1988). His sixteen books of prose cover a wide range of subjects: String Too Short To Be Saved is about growing up on—and saying what he thought then was a final farewell to—his grandparents\u27 subsistence farm in New Hampshire (1961); Seasons at Eagle Pond is about living now on that same farm (1987); Remembering Poets contains his reminiscences about T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, Dylan Thomas and Robert Frost (1978); Goatfoot Milktongue Twinbird (1978), The Weather for Poetry (1982) and Poetry and Ambition (1988) are about poetry and poetics; two other books are about sports: Dock Ellis in the Country of Baseball (1976) and Fathers Playing Catch With Sons (1985). At least three of his plays have been produced. Hall is also a busy editor, with seventeen additional titles to his credit. And finally, he is the author of four children\u27s books, including The Ox Cart Man, which won the Caldecott Award in 1980. In 1975, at the age of forty-seven, he resigned his Professorship of English at the University of Michigan and returned to Eagle Pond Farm to write full time; since then he has published sixteen books and edited six others (not counting new editions of older books). He seems able to grow with each new book

    Racism in Donald Trump‟S Campaign Speeches: Appraisal Analysis

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    This thesis entitled Racism in Donald Trump's Campaign Speeches: Appraisal Analysis. Appraisal analysis is a science study of Discourse Analysis. As for this study, the author uses the Affect Element of Appraisal Theory to analyze racism in Donald Trump's campaign speech. The writer is using Qualitative Data Analysis by Miles and Huberman (2014). The aims of this discussion are (i) to describe the affect elements found in Donald Trump's campaign speech and (ii) to explain the relation of racism to the campaign speech from Donald Trump in terms of Appraisal. There are two campaigns speech texts from Donald Trump discussed in this thesis, which both held in Phoenix, Arizona, United States on the different dates, the first was taken on August 15, 2015 and the second was taken on August 31, 2016. This study found that Donald Trumps used many feeling and emotional words to express himself but he discriminate and prejudice towards some nation, nationality and a religion that offended the people from the nation and the people that embraced the religion, which he discriminated against. It is concluded that Appraisal Analysis of Affect can be exposed Racism in the texts.Skripsi ini berjudul Racism in Donald Trump’s Campaign Speeches: Appraisal Analysis. Appraisal Analisis merupakan kajian ilmu Analisis Wacana. Tujuan dari pembahasan ini adalah (i) untuk mendeskripsikan elemen affect yang ditemukan dalam pidato kampanye dari Donald Trump dan (ii) untuk menjelaskan kaitan rasisme pada pidato kampanye dari Donald Trump yang dipandang dari segi Appraisal. Penulis menggunakan Qualitative Data Analysis dari Miles dan Huberman (2014). Ada dua teks pidato kampanye dari Donald Trump yang dibahas di skripsi ini, yang keduanya diselenggarakan di Phoenix, Arizona, Amerika Serikat pada tanggal yang berbeda, yang pertama diambil pada tanggal 15 Agustus 2015 dan yang kedua diambil pada tanggal 31 Agustus 2016. Studi ini menemukan bahwa Donald Trumps sering menggunakan banyak feelings and emotional words untuk mengekspresikan dirinya tetapi dia membeda-bedakan dan berprasangka kepada beberapa bangsa, kewarganegaraan dan agama yang menyinggung perasaan orang-orang dari negara orang-orang yang menganut agama yang didiskriminasikan olehnya. Disimpulkan bahwa Appraisal Analysis of Affect dapat mengekspos Rasisme dalam teks.Skripsi Sarjan

    Donald Gray Memorial Garden photographs

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    Eight photographs document the Donald Gray Memorial Gardens in Cleveland, Ohio. Gray designed the Horticultural Gardens for the Great Lakes Exposition of 1936-1937. The gardens remained north of the Cleveland Municipal Stadium after the exposition and were named for Gray after his death. The garden did not survive the demolition of Memorial Stadium and the rebuilding of the Cleveland Browns Stadium in 1997. Donald A. Gray (1891-1939), landscape architect and designer, was born in Tyrone, Pennsylvania, the son of Charles G. and Rose (Williams) Gray. He graduated from Bucknell University in Pennsylvania and attended Harvard University, afterwards working briefly with Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr., in the Olmsted Brothers firm in Brookline, Massachusetts, the premier landscape architect firm in America. Gray came to Cleveland in 1920, establishing a practice in landscape architecture and designing many private gardens and estates in Cleveland, the Heights, and outlying suburbs. In 1925 he traveled to England, studying the gardens of great houses there. He designed the landscaping for the development of Fairhill Road houses in 1931, making his own home there for several years. He designed the landscape for Forest Hill Park and some of the designs for the Cleveland Cultural Gardens in Rockefeller Park. Dedicated to "making a beautiful city of Cleveland," Gray worked on developing the Cleveland Garden Center with Mrs. William Gwinn Mather and Mrs. Charles. A. Otis. On 11 Jan. 1928, Gray married Florence Ball. They had 1 daughter, Virginia. Gray died in Cleveland and was buried in Highland Park Cemetery. The photographs were taken by Ihna Thayer Frary. The Ihna Thayer Frary Audiovisual Collection was given to the Ohio Historical Society by Mr. Frary in two sections. One was in March of 1963 and the remainder in May of 1965 by his sons, Dr. Spencer G. and Allen T. Frary following their father's death. I.T. Frary (1873-1965) was the publicity and membership secretary for the Museum of Art in Cleveland, Ohio. He taught for many years at the Cleveland Institute of Art and Western Reserve University's School of Architecture. He did much research of Ohio and American architecture and was the author of seven major works and numerous scholarly articles on architectural and art history. One of his major works was Early Homes of Ohio published in 1936

    Other title: Costs, benefits, and overall impacts of the state of Ohio's economic development programs; Other title: Economic Development Study Advisory Committee--final report

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    "Donald T. Iannone, OEDS Project Director, was the primary author of this final report"--P. 2.; "This study was completed through a grant from the State of Ohio Office of Budget and Management."; "May 28, 1999."; "This Report ... has been accepted for Inclusion in Urban Publications ..."--Added cover.; Includes bibliographical references (271-273).; Harvested from the web on 3/14/1

    Memo from Yukio Mochizuki to Dr. [Donald] Hata, October 13, 1977

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    A memo updating Professor Donald Teruo Hata on Mochizuki's research progress. This memo includes updates about copies of letters and photographs that were made that the J and T Copy Shop, logistical information about the Independent Study, and a note about the event hosted by Michi Weglyn.Collection of notes, articles, correspondence, photographs, and term papers collected by Yukio Mochizuki, a student at CSU Dominguez Hills, while researching Japanese American incarceration and Japanese Peruvian internment during World War II

    Memo from Yukio Mochizuki to Dr. [Donald] Hata, September 8, 1977

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    Yukio Mochizuki updates Professor Donald Teruo Hata about his research. He mentions that everything went well at J and T, which was the copy store mentioned in item csudh_moc_0024. He refers to other enclosed items such as letters and the independent study approval form from item csudh_moc_0025, however none of these are included in this item.Collection of notes, articles, correspondence, photographs, and term papers collected by Yukio Mochizuki, a student at CSU Dominguez Hills, while researching Japanese American incarceration and Japanese Peruvian internment during World War II

    Review of Hierarchy, History, and HumanNature: The Social Origins of Historical Consciousness, by Donald E. Brown

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    abstract: In this book the author, an anthropologist, traces the history of historiography through numerous past literature cultures. He tested and rejected several hypotheses, but retained on that historiography was strongest in societies in which leadership was not determined by hereditary--relatively speaking

    Tagging of Biomedical Articles on CiteULike: A Comparison of User, Author and Professional Indexing

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    This paper examines the context of online indexing from the viewpoint of three different groups: users, authors, and professional indexers. User tags, author keywords and descriptors were collected from academic journal articles, which were both indexed in Pubmed and tagged on CiteULike, and analysed. Descriptive statistics, informetric measures, and thesaural term comparison shows that there are important differences in the use of keywords between the three groups in addition to similarities which can be used to enhance support for search and browse. While tags and author keywords were found that matched descriptors exactly, other terms which did not match but provided important expansion to the indexing lexicon were found. These additional terms could be used to enhance support for searching and browsing in article databases as well as to provide invaluable data for entry vocabulary and emergent terminology for regular updates to indexing systems. Additionally, the study suggests that tags support organisation by association to task, projects and subject while making important connections to traditional systems which classify into subject categories
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