2,349 research outputs found
Lincoln Inn, Gooding, Idaho, between 1909 and 1918
Caption on image: 815 - "An Inn Worth While" The Lincoln, Gooding, Idaho. Photo by M. B. Martin
Handwritten on verso: Dear Emma, Arrived last night at one o'clock. Stayed in this hotel overnight. Just had my breakfast now as soon as I mail this will hunt for my cousins. Beautiful weather will write you to morrow - love Your Husband H. E. M.The Lincoln Inn was opened in Gooding, Idaho, in 1909. It was built by F. R. Gooding, who also founded the town of Gooding. The Inn had a restaurant which served fancy French food on china. The Gooding Inn burned down in 1960. Prior to founding the town F. R. Gooding served as Idaho Governor and as a state senator.Scanned from an original postcard using a ScanMaker 6800 at 100-175 dpi in JPEG format at compression rate 3 and resized to 768x600 ppi. 2007
Colonel Michael Gooding, 22nd Indiana Infantry, Company A
Gooding wears a Union military uniform. Written in ink at the bottom of the photograph is "M. Gooding Col Comdg/ 22nd Ind Vols."1860s (1860-1869)600ppiCivil War Military FrontDC046This Civil War Military Front collection was funded by LSTA. Gooding enlisted as a captain in July 1861. He was promoted to major in May 1862 and then colonel in June 1862
Letter from Daisy Gooding
Letter - Mrs. Daisy Gooding shares many anecdotes about the life of a ferryman in Athabasca from 1905 until 1923. Her father, Mr. Christopher Johnston, operated a ferry on the Athabasca River during the 1920 to 1921 season. She tells of her parents' life in the town of Athabasca with her father becoming the town policeman, after the Northwest Mounted Police detachment closed, and his further jobs as a homesteader and ferryman. Stories are told about her father dealing with the many interesting situations arising from policing in a small town (3 pages
Dataset for multicenter comparison of measures for quantitative evaluation of contouring in radiotherapy
This dataset was created to perform a comparison of tools used for the assessment of contouring between different institutions. A survey was conducted between institutions using this dataset, the results of which will be published separately. The dataset consists of two CT images with "test" and "reference" RTSS, for which participants were asked to submit the values for the contouring measures they used. Ground truth measurements are not provided. The first study consists of a synthetic image with synthetic shapes. The second study is based on one case from the AAPM 2017 Thoracic Auto‐Segmentation Challenge dataset, case LTCSC-Test-S1-201, for which an additional "test" contour has been added
Dataset for multicenter comparison of measures for quantitative evaluation of contouring in radiotherapy
This dataset was created to perform a comparison of tools used for the assessment of contouring between different institutions. A survey was conducted between institutions using this dataset, the results of which will be published separately. The dataset consists of two CT images with "test" and "reference" RTSS, for which participants were asked to submit the values for the contouring measures they used. Ground truth measurements are not provided. The first study consists of a synthetic image with synthetic shapes. The second study is based on one case from the AAPM 2017 Thoracic Auto‐Segmentation Challenge dataset, case LTCSC-Test-S1-201, for which an additional "test" contour has been added
Translating sociological discourse. Robert Gooding- Williams’s Look, A Negro!
This article presents a commentary on some aspects dealing with specialized translation
of the languages of philosophy and sociology of racism.
After being published in journals of philosophy and collective works, the articles analyzed
here appeared in Gooding-Williams’s 2006 volume Look, a Negro!: Philosophical
Essays on Race, Culture and Politics. Devoted to some of the themes at hand in the
debate about anti-black racismin contemporary America, these essays show the author’s
commitment to his subject, reporting his colleagues’ ideas and presenting his own. They
are written in a warm, engaging style, which aims at persuading the reader to take side
in the debate about anti-black racismand – possibly – to agree with their author
Mycobacterium tuberculosis-specific cellular immune profiles suggest bacillary persistence decades after spontaneous cure in untreated tuberculosis
Individuals with self-healed tuberculosis from the preantibiotic era offer a unique insight into the natural history of and protective immunity to tuberculosis. In 27 such persons whose tuberculosis self-healed >50 years earlier, circulating Mycobacterium tuberculosis antigen-specific interferon ? (IFN-?)- and interleukin 2 (IL-2)-secreting T cells were detected ex vivo in 16 and 19 individuals, respectively. The M. tuberculosis-specific T cell cytokine profile was dominated by effector memory T cells that secrete both IFN-? and IL-2 and included T cells that secrete only IFN-? or IL-2, suggesting persistence of antigen secreted by viable bacilli. Of 10 individuals with no M. tuberculosis antigen-specific IFN-?-secreting T cells detectable ex vivo, 7 had evidence of central memory T cells, consistent with clearance of infection
Historic Newspapers in the Digital Age: 'Search All About It'
In recent years, cultural institutions and commercial providers have created extensive digitised newspaper collections. This book asks the timely question: what can the large-scale digitisation of newspapers tell us about the wider cultural phenomenon of mass digitisation? The unique form and materiality of newspapers, and their grounding in a particular time and place, provide challenges for researchers and digital resource creators alike. At the same time, the wider context in which digitisation of cultural heritage occurs shapes the impact of digital resources in ways which fall short of the grand ambitions of the wider theoretical discourse. Drawing on case studies from leading digitised newspaper collections, the book aims to provide a bridge between the theory and practice of how these digitised collections are being used. Beginning with an exploration of the hyperbolic nature of technological discourses, the author explores how web interfaces, funding models and the realities of contemporary user behaviour, contrast with the hyperbolic discourse surrounding mass digitisation. This book will be of particular interest to those who want to investigate how user studies can inform our understanding of technological phenomena, including digital resource creators, information professionals, students and researchers in universities, libraries, museums and archives
Indie Publishing at Your Library: Introducing Pressbooks Public and the Indie Author Project
Are you a local writer or independent author? Join us to learn how you can create, share, and discover independently published books with Broward County Library’s free publishing resources. This session will cover how to format, design, and produce professional quality book files with the Pressbooks Public tool and how to reach new readers through libraries statewide and potentially all across the U.S. and Canada with the Indie Author Project
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