280 research outputs found
Lafitte Seminar 2013 videorecording
2013_01: Opening welcome, Larry Porter (0:00); welcome, Dr. David R. Baca (1:05); introduction, Larry Porter (2:51); recorded remarks, William C. Davis (5:18); Laffite Society infomercial, Ed Jamison (8:40); introduction, Lynette Haaga (17:35); "Laffite 101", Jeff Modzelewski (20:00).
2013_02: Galveston Historical Foundation infomercial, Dwayne Jones (0:00); introduction, Larry Porter (02:53); "The Raid on Barataria: Thomas ap Catesby Jones, the U.S. Navy and American Supremacy in the Gulf", Dr. Gene Smith (7:15).
2013_03: Introduction, Ed Jamison (0:00); "In the Aftermath of Ike: Digital Collection of the Laffite Society", Natalie Wiest and Dawn Letson (2:58); introduction, Ed Jamison (9:58); introduction, Ginny Roberts (10:26); "Jean Laffite in Galveston", R. Dale Olson (13:20).
2013_04: Introduction, Ed Jamison (0:00); Galveston County Historical Commission infomercial, Helen Mooty (0:32); introduction, Lou Graves Olson (4:38); "Women in Laffite's Life", Betty Connor (6:17); introduction, Lou Graves Olson (32:20); Jane Long lecture, Helen Mooty (34:27); introduction, Ed Jamison (56:56); Rosenberg Library infomercial, Casey Green (58:55).
2013_05: Introduction, Ed Jamison (0:00); Introduction to "The Mysteries of Laffite", Kathy Modzelewski (1:10); "The Treasure", Jack Watson (3:05); introduction, Kathy Modzelewski (15:00); "The Journal", Rob Peterson (16:15); introduction, Kathy Modzelewski (37:16); "The Death", Jeff Modzelewski (37:59); closing remarks and thanks, Larry Porter (57:47)
Laffite Seminar 2014 videorecording
----2014_01: Opening welcome, Larry Porter (0:00:00); welcome, Dr. David Baca (0:01:57); introduction, Ed Jamison (0:04:30); "Laffite 101", Jeff Modzelewski (0:07:12).
2014_02: Introduction, Ed Jamison (0:00:00); "David Porter, the Pirates of the Caribbean, and the Price of Success", Andy Hall (0:01:55).
2014_03: Introduction, Ed Jamison (0:00:00); "The Crew Left Behind", Lou Graves MacBeth (0:01:37).
2014_04: Introduction, Ed Jamison (0:00:00); "Constantine Malczewski: Emerging", Dr. Betje B. Klier (0:03:04) (incomplete).
2014_05: "Jim Bowie, Jean Laffite, and Slavery", Dr. Andrew J. Torget (0:00:00).
2014_06: Introduction, Ed Jamison (0:00:00); "The Mystery of the Jean Laffite Journals", Jeff Modzelewski (0:05:40); "Audrey, Lacie and John A.", a play by R. Dale Olson, performed by Jeff Modzelewski (narrator), Helen Mooty (Audrey Lloyd), Larry Porter (John A. Laffite), and Betty Connor (Lacie Laffite) (0:08:38) (incomplete)
Letter to Mrs. Jamison, October 1, 1914
This letter, written October 1,1914, by an unknown author, is in response to a request by Mrs. Jamison for assistance in the women's suffrage movement in Ohio. The author describes her and her Suffrage Club's enthusiasm for helping Mrs. Jamison, and states her club could spare two or three women to travel but could not provide financial assistance. The author lets Mrs. Jamison know her availability for the month, and says she can spare a weekend off from her job as a probation officer. The author writes in the letter that she believes three days will be enough to garner passion among Ohio women for the suffrage movement.
The Franklin County Woman Suffrage Association was formed in 1912, after the Ohio Constitutional Convention elected to bring to a vote the question of removing the words "white male" from the state constitution with regard to voting rights. Headquartered in the Chamber of Commerce building in Columbus, Ohio, the organization put out regular publications, organized public speeches and meetings, distributed literature and held parades in support of the suffrage movement. Women's suffrage in Ohio was defeated in a special election in 1912 and again in 1914 and 1916 before a resolution narrowly passed in 1917 allowing municipal voting by women in Columbus. In 1920, the 19th Amendment passed, extending the vote to women and prohibiting state and federal government from denying suffrage on the basis of sex
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Woman as Object
This paper discusses the creation process of thirteen works by the author addressing women's issues using mannequins of actual women as a metaphor. Robyn Beirman Jamison discusses interviewing and photographing the women, creating the works, and the imagery of objectification of women by society
The Making of Green Engineers Sustainable Development and the Hybrid Imagination:Synthesis Lectures on Engineering
This book discusses the ways in which engineering educators are responding to the challenges that confront their profession. On the one hand, there is an overarching sustainability challenge: the need for engineers to relate to the problems brought to light in the debates about environmental protection, resource depletion, and climate change. There are also a range of societal challenges that are due to the permeation of science and technology into ever more areas of our societies and everyday lives, and finally, there are the intrinsic scientific and technological challenges stemming from the emergence of new fields of "technosciences" that mix science and technology in new combinations.In the book, the author discusses and exemplifies three contending response strategies on the part of engineers and engineering educators: a commercial strategy that links scientists and engineers into networks or systems of innovation; an academic strategy that reasserts the traditional values of science and engineering; and an integrative strategy that aims to combine scientific knowledge and engineering skills with cultural understanding and social responsibility by fostering what the author terms a "hybrid imagination."Professor Jamison combines scholarly analysis with personal reflections drawing on over forty years of experience as a humanist teaching science and engineering students about the broader social, political and cultural contexts of their fields. The book has been written as part of the Program of Research on Opportunities and Challenges in Engineering Education in Denmark (PROCEED), funded by the Danish Strategic Research Council, for which Professor Jamison has served as coordinator.Table of Contents: Turning Engineering Green / Contending Approaches to Engineering Education / The Emergence of Green Engineering / Educating Green Engineers / Fostering Hybridity / A Case Study: The Alley Flat Initiative in Austin, Texas / Conclusion
Organic Syntheses. Volume 84
Aaron Van Dyke, (with K.M. Miller and T. F. Jamison) is a contributing author, (S)-(+)-Neomenthyldiphenylphosphine in nickelcatalyzed asymmetric reductive coupling of alkynes and aldehydes: Enantioselective synthesis of allylic alcohols and a-hydroxyketones
Abstract: Ni(cod)2 (S)-(+)-Neomenthyldiphenylphosphine Triethylborane Dimethylimidizolidinone 1-Phenyl-1-butyne (R)-(E)-2-Benzylidiene-1-cyclohexyl-butan-1-ol (R)-Butan-2-one Dimethylsulfidehttps://digitalcommons.fairfield.edu/chemistry-books/1001/thumbnail.jp
Corrigendum to “I\u27ll catch you when you fall: Social safety nets and housing instability in IPV-exposed pregnant women”. Journal of Affective Disorders, 291C, 352-358 (Journal of Affective Disorders (2021) 291 (352–358), (S0165032721004675), (10.1016/j.jad.2021.05.023))
The authors regret to note that some of the statistics in the abstract were not correctly updated in the final revision. All in-text statistics are correct. There are no meaningful differences in the direction or significance of the findings related to this error. In addition, the copyediting staff at Elsevier regret to note that the author affiliations were not correctly specified. Dr. Howell and Ms. Jamison\u27s university is located in the United States. The authors and copyediting staff would like to apologise for any inconvenience caused. DOI of original article: 10.1016/j.jad.2021.05.023
Cooperative checkpointing for supercomputing systems
Thesis (M. Eng.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2005.This electronic version was submitted by the student author. The certified thesis is available in the Institute Archives and Special Collections.Includes bibliographical references (p. 91-94).A system-level checkpointing mechanism, with global knowledge of the state and health of the machine, can improve performance and reliability by dynamically deciding when to skip checkpoint requests made by applications. This thesis presents such a technique, called cooperative checkpointing, and models its behavior as an online algorithm. Where C is the checkpoint overhead and I is the request interval, a worst-case analysis proves a lower bound of (2 + [C/I])-competitiveness for deterministic cooperative checkpointing algorithms, and proves that a number of simple algorithms meet this bound. Using an expected-case analysis, this thesis proves that an optimal periodic checkpointing algorithm that assumes an exponential failure distribution may be arbitrarily bad relative to an optimal cooperative checkpointing algorithm that permits a general failure distribution. Calculations suggest that, under realistic conditions, an application using cooperative checkpointing may make progress 4 times faster than one using periodic checkpointing. Finally, the thesis suggests an embodiment of cooperative checkpointing for a large-scale high performance computer system and presents the results of some preliminary simulations. These results show that, in extreme cases, cooperative checkpointing improved system utilization by more than 25%, reduced bounded slowdown by a factor of 9, while simultaneously reducing the amount of work lost due to failures by 30%. This thesis contributes a unique approach to providing large-scale system reliability through cooperative checkpointing, techniques for analyzing the approach, and blueprints for implementing it in practice.by Adam Jamison Oliner.M.Eng
An analysis of the English as a Second Language Program needs of Somalians in Barron, Wisconsin
Includes bibliographical references
Oral history podcast
You are a part of a collegewide effort to increase access to education and empower students
through "open pedagogy." Open pedagogy is a "free access" educational practice that places you
- the student - at the center of your own learning process in a more engaging, collaborative
learning environment. The ultimate purpose of this effort is to achieve greater social justice in
our community in which the work can be freely shared with the broader community. This is a
renewable assignment that is designed to enable you to become an agent of change in your
community through the framework of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals
(SDGs). For this work, you will integrate the disciplines of English/Creative Writing, History,
and Women and Gender Studies to achieve SDG #5: Gender Equality. With a focus on Targets
5.1: End all forms of discrimination against all women and girls everywhere and 5.4 Recognize
and value unpaid care and domestic work through the provision of public services, infrastructure
and social protection policies and the promotion of shared responsibility within the household and
the family as nationally appropriateNot peer reviewedAssignment guidelinesUnited Nations Sustainable Development Goals Open Pedagogy Fellowshi
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