1,428 research outputs found
Envision Film Festival: Josh Larsen
Josh Larsen, Radio Host, Author, Editor and Film Critic, Think Christian, Chicago, IL, speaks about the purpose and function of movies, and the possibility of seeing them as prayers.
This chapel preceded the Envision Film Festival
Josh Weil, 38th Annual ODU Literary Festival
Josh Weil is the author of the novel The Great Glass Sea, a New York Times Editor\u27s Choice and finalist for the Center for Fiction\u27s Flaherty-Dunnan First Novel Award, and the novella collection The New Valley, awarded the Sue Kaufman Prize from the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the New Writers Award from the GLCA. A Fulbright Fellow and National Book Award 5-under-35 honoree, he has written for The New York Times, Granta, Tin House, One Story and Esquire, among others. He lives with his family in the foothills of the Sierra Nevadas
2011-2012 Josh Weil
Josh Weil is the author of the novel The Great Glass Sea, the novella collection The New Valley, and story collection The Age of Perpetual Light. He has been awarded the Dayton Literary Peace Prize, the Sue Kaufman Prize from The American Academy of Arts and Letters, the California Book Award, the Library of Virginia’s Literary Award, the GrubStreet National Book Prize, the New Writers Award from the GLCA, and a “5 Under 35” Award from the National Book Foundation. Weil’s short fiction has garnered a Pushcart Prize and appeared in Granta, Esquire, Tin House and One Story, among others. He has written non-fiction for The New York Times, Time.com, Poets & Writers and The Sun. A recipient of fellowships from the Fulbright Foundation, the MacDowell Colony, the Merrill House, and Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, he has been the Picador Professor in Literature at the University of Leipzig, the Distinguished Visiting Writer at Bowling Green State University, the Grisham Writer-in-Residence at the University of Mississippi, the Tickner Writer-in-Residence at Gilman School, and the Distinguished Lecturer at The Sozopol Writing Seminars. He has taught at Columbia University, New York University, The New School, Brooklyn College, Sierra Nevada College, and Bennington College, as well as at numerous conferences, including the Squaw Valley Community of Writers and Bread Loaf. He lives with his family in the Sierra Nevada of Northern California. (Photo credit: Jilan Carroll Glorfield)https://egrove.olemiss.edu/grisham_res/1008/thumbnail.jp
Josh Stock: Awesomeness Expert, and the delicious joys of teaching middle school
Josh Stock, author of “Awesome Sauce,” talks about his work and how he motivates his students. He also shares insights about teaching in the time of the COVID-19 pandemic and lessons learned. The Q&A was codesigned by Shalin Hai-Jew and April Robbs
Inflationary economic boom continues
Josh Lehner.Title from PDF caption (viewed on April 15, 2022).Converted from HTML.Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English
Biopolymer showcase with non-canonical amino acid - 5th Open Force Field Workshop (2022)
The "Biopolymer showcase with non-canonical amino acid" follow up workshop to the 5th Open Force Field Workshop, presented by Josh Mitchell of OpenFF.
A session on biopolymer support in OpenFF Toolkit 0.11, showing advanced usage by parametrizing a protein with a post-translational modification (PTM). This workshop demonstrates loading and parametrizing biopolymers with the OpenFF Toolkit, including a preview of support for a non-canonical amino acid. We introduce the Toolkit's new biopolymer support, and then demonstrate a way to apply a post-translational modification. We look at optimizing charge generation by transferring charges generated from a simpler molecule to our new peptide, and then simulate it in OpenMM!
This workshop was recorded on the 27th of September 2022 and has been edited down to size. We'd love to hear your thoughts on whether this editing improves your viewing experience!
The materials to run this workshop can alternatively be downloaded here: https://gist.github.com/Yoshanuikabundi/66007cb9966b1455a259baaf7cd7e7c3
The video is also available on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lZ4UUgHQpWg
To run, first install Conda, then download the materials, and finally follow the instructions in README.md. Alternatively, the notebook can be followed and executed online on Binder: https://mybinder.org/v2/gist/Yoshanuikabundi/66007cb9966b1455a259baaf7cd7e7c3/HEADThis work was supported by NIH Grant NIH R01 GM132386
Get yourself connected: time, space, and character networks in David Mitchell\u27s fiction
This thesis explores the works of novelist David Mitchell, paying specific attention to the ways in which he uses his narratives to emulate and remediate global networks and contemporary fiction tropes. Though his novels are rarely set in the immediate present, Mitchell\u27s creations are connected in ways that specifically evoke social networks, Internet databases and new media. He has created an insular universe through five novels, and goes out his way to show that every character is a node in a web that spans all five. Characters reappear in novels that are not otherwise related to each other, or reveal familial and ancestral connections to previous or future characters. I will explore each novel in turn, mapping the connections within and between each work. In addition, I will also show that Mitchell is interested in contemporary fictional practices such as remediation, patchwriting, and appropriation
Environmental economic accounting for interconnected ecosystem assets and ecosystem services in the Mitchell River catchment, Queensland: Data inventory
This data inventory is produced to supplement the information contained in the accompanying reports that present the pilot set of ecosystem accounts for the Mitchell catchment and describe the methodologies used in account construction.Full Tex
Who benefits from the housing market? (graph of the week)
Josh Lehner.Title from PDF caption (viewed on March 22, 2021).Converted from HTML.This archived document is maintained by the State Library of Oregon as part of the Oregon Documents Depository Program. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposes.Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English
Update on Oregon personal income in 2020
Josh Lehner.Title from PDF caption (viewed on December 22, 2020).Converted from HTML.This archived document is maintained by the State Library of Oregon as part of the Oregon Documents Depository Program. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposes.Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English
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