5,089 research outputs found

    Lynch, Jane. Interview about active heritage in Harbour Grace and the heritage district in the town.

    No full text
    Jane Lynch discusses Harbour Grace's history: the heritage district, the old homes and other structures in the town, and the laneways. She talks about the town's needs and what she would like to see happen to attract more tourists and locals to Harbour Grace

    Grace in Spoofax

    No full text
    Grace is a programming language that aims to be an example of a contemporary object-oriented language, to be used for teaching university level students. The language specification of Grace is informal, and its various implementations are difficult to comprehend and change. Spoofax Grace is an implementation of the Grace programming language, meant to serve both as a reference implementation, but also a specification, that can be easily read, understood and changed. Spoofax Grace is implemented using the Spoofax language workbench, providing a declarative grammar, program transformations and dynamic semantics. From these specifications a language interpreter is generated that can execute Grace programs. The system covers the core aspects of Grace, yet a number of language features remain unimplemented. The implementation can be correlated to the informal Grace specification, and can be changed or extended at will.Electrical Engineering, Mathematics and Computer ScienceSoftware TechnologyProgramming Language

    Perceptions of Aging & Sleep Health

    No full text
    Grace Lynch ’25, Psychology and Biology major Faculty mentor: Dr. Caitlan Tighe, Psycholog

    Perceptions of Aging & Sleep Health

    No full text
    Grace Lynch ’25, Psychology and Biology major Faculty mentor: Dr. Caitlan Tighe, Psycholog

    Digital Spark Presentation: Verge Cowork, A Place to Thrive

    No full text
    In this presentation, Grace Lynch, Ursinus College Class of 2025, discusses her summer experience working with Verge Cowork, a collaborative and community-centric coworking space located in Trappe and Collegeville, Pennsylvania

    Rights issues for digital video

    No full text
    An examination of the legal, technical and policy issues surrounding digital video resources in higher education

    Grace Halsell

    No full text
    letter from author John Howard Griffin to Halsell1752px x 1084px7/25/72 [postcard] Dear Grace, Buried in work and know you are too. Had a good talk with your mother the other evening. Hope to see you soon. Love from all the Griffins. Howar

    NJVid: New Jersey Statewide Digital Video Portal

    No full text
    Presentation to the 2008 Spring StatesNet meeting describing the development and technical functionality of the statewide digital video portal, NJVid.NJVid is funded by the Institute of Museum and Library Services and is a collaboration of William Paterson, NJEdge and Rutgers University. The three year project will offer three collections, the NJVid Commons collection of freely available videos, commercial collections at participating organizations and lectures captured in the classroom by participating educators

    Gaudeamus by Grace Gesell Dickens

    No full text
    A poem titled "Gaudeamus" written by Grace Gesell Dickens, the wife of Springfield College alum, Fred W. Dickens (Class of 1914). There is a note on the bottom of the second page to Harold G. Lynch saying that the poem was written because of his fall remembrances of playing Football at Springfield College

    Grace Aguilar’s historical romances

    No full text
    PhDMy dissertation looks critically at Grace Aguilar’s historical romance novels and short stories, and investigates English writers’ uses of history in early- to mid-nineteenth century fiction. Shifting the current critical emphasis on Aguilar’s Jewish texts, I have analyzed the ways in which Aguilar revises the genres of the national tale, the gothic romance, and the medieval romance in order to demonstrate her participation in the construction of nineteenth-century domestic values. In Chapter One, I introduce to critical debate Aguilar’s juvenilia, relying on unpublished manuscripts and novels published only in the twentieth century to establish the origins of Aguilar’s interest in history and historical writing. Locating Aguilar’s narrative style in the early nineteenth-century national tale, I show that as a child Aguilar envisioned the English and Scottish nations as a family, making domesticity both a private and a public—a female and a male—value. Chapter Two focuses on Aguilar’s use of history to express nineteenth-century domestic ideals in her version of the gothic romance. Deploying the setting of the Catholic Inquisition in Spain and Portugal, Aguilar writes gothic tales that unite Jewish and Protestant gender values. She makes heroic the Jewish female martyr to suggest not only that nineteenth-century Protestants and Jews share similar domestic principles, but also that Jewish women could be seen as ideal models for Protestant women. Finally, in Chapter Three I explore Aguilar’s participation in the nineteenth-century medievalist tradition by reflecting on her revision of nineteenth-century literary idealizations of the Middle Ages. In these short stories, Aguilar fictionalizes the sixteenth-century European chivalric ethos, looking critically at the role of women in court society at the end of the Middle Ages. Deploying the tropes prevalent in popular nineteenth-century anti-medievalist fiction, Aguilar debunks celebrations of the Middle Ages by showing how chivalry is antagonistic to nineteenth-century domesticity
    corecore