100 research outputs found

    Urban Renewal in Newcastle : Profile of Watkinson Glass Associates

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    Written by freelance author Melissa Barclay the article in Stained Glass Quarterly of America,charts the career of Cate Watkinson and her company Watkinson Glass Associates through words and illustrations of the work she has created in the last 20 years

    Open Access Books and the Lever Press

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    Several high profile projects in North America and Europe are exploring the potential of flipped publishing models for long form digital scholarship in the humanities and qualitative sciences. Although the mechanisms proposed for achieving it vary, the “big idea” is that the costs of publishing monographs should be borne by the producer (author, institution, government agency) rather than the consumer. Such a system could offer economic advantages to publishers and libraries and theoretically better aligns funding responsibility with beneficiaries. However, the incentives for the authors themselves to engage with a flipped model are poorly defined, administrators are concerned about the financial implications, and librarians are struggling to identify thow they add value in this new ecosystem. This presentation suggests ways to better align the benefits of open access with the interests of those who care about scholarly book publishing and explores some implications for the design of new publishing programs and platforms. Initiatives underway at Michigan Publishing, the publishing division of the University of Michigan Library which includes a university press, are described (several are supported by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation) and are put in the context of other national and international experiments in open access book publishing, including an important initiative from within the Liberal Arts College community, the Lever Press.-- Charles Watkinson is Director of University of Michigan Press and Associate University Librarian for Publishing

    The author. By Samuel Foote, Esq [electronic resource].

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    Drop-head title.Possibly issued with 'The tempest' by William Shakespeare, the J. Wenman edition, 1778.The O copy at shelfmark Vet A5e 1467 is on its ownElectronic reproduction.English Short Title Catalog,Reproduction of original from Trinity College Library Watkinson Collection

    Mathematics in the Mind\u27s Eye: Michael Schultheis Paints Poetic and Conceptual Geometries

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    Michael Schultheis is an established artist and a formally-educated mathematician. In his practice the two disciplines are inextricably linked. His large-scale lyrical paintings at first glance seem to focus on the effects of light and atmospheres, representing cloudscapes or waterscapes in resonant color. Yet moving through these mists are decidedly mathematical references --- drawn geometric shapes and hand-written equations. These are employed by Schultheis to represent the physical world or to express feelings (or both). For example, he may examine the structure of a pine cone or reflect on human relationships or do both at the same time. The resulting works of art present a personal world understood conceptually through geometry and made tangible through paint

    A Study of Direct Author Subvention for Publishing Humanities Books at Two Universities: A Report to the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation by Indiana University and University of Michigan

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    This report was produced as the main deliverable from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Grant 41400692, “A Study of Direct Author Subvention for Publishing Humanities Books at Two Universities.” The Indiana University team led by PI Carolyn Walters, consisted of Jason Baird Jackson, Scott Smart, Nick Fitzgerald, Gary Dunham and Shayna Pekala. The University of Michigan team led by PI James Hilton consisted of Paul Courant, Sidonie Smith, Meredith Kahn, Charles Watkinson, Jim Ottaviani, and Aaron McCollough. Lead authorship of the different sections in this report is indicated in the opening paragraphs.This white paper presents recommendations about how a system of monographic publication fully funded by subventions from authors’ parent institutions might function, based on research activities supported by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation at Indiana University and the University of Michigan. While the contributors present a strong argument for implementing such an “author subvention” system, they describe a number of challenges and potential unintended consequences. Particular issues discussed include how to determine which publishers would be eligible for support, how best to support untenured faculty, and how to avoid disenfranchising scholars at less well-funded institutions.Andrew W. Mellon Foundationhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/113671/1/IU Michigan White Paper 09-15-2015.pdfDescription of IU Michigan White Paper 09-15-2015.pdf : White pape

    Greyville School District No. 3836 - 03

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    Photograph - A teacher and pupils standing in the doorway of the Greyville School building near Athabasca, Alberta. ATS 15-67-23-W4. Teacher, John Watkinson; Standing left to right, Annie Fodchuk, Peter Kowalchuk, unknown, Leon McKitowich, Nancy Bowzaylo. Seated left to right, unknown, Annie Baron, unknown and William KowalchukWatkinson, John; Fodchuk, Annie; Kowalchuk, Peter; McDitowich, Leon; Bowzaylow, Nancy; Baron, Annie; Kowalchuk, Willia

    Paradise lost [electronic resource] : A poem. In twelve books. By John Milton. With a biographical and critical account of the author and his writings.

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    The imprint is false; probably printed at York for Wilson, Spence and Mawman.Electronic reproduction.English Short Title Catalog,Reproduction of original from Trinity College Library Watkinson Collection

    Some remarks upon the temper of the late writers about convocations. [electronic resource] : Particularly, Dr. Wake, Dr. Kennet, and the author of Mr. Atterbury's principles, &c. By a Gentleman in the country.

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    Variously attributed to Francis Atterbury or George Smalridge.Electronic reproduction.English Short Title Catalog,Reproduction of original from Trinity College Library Watkinson Collection

    Self-archiving practice and the influence of publisher policies in the social sciences

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    Authors in different disciplines exhibit very different behaviours on the so-called ‘green’ road to open access, i.e. self-archiving. This study looks at the self-archiving behaviour of authors publishing in leading journals in six social science disciplines. It tests the hypothesis that authors are self-archiving according to the norms of their respective disciplines rather than following self-archiving policies of publishers, and that, as a result, they are self-archiving significant numbers of publisher PDF versions. It finds significant levels of self-archiving, as well as significant self-archiving of the publisher PDF version, in all the disciplines investigated. Publishers’ self-archiving policies have no influence on author self-archiving practice

    A cure for the heart-ache; a comedy, in five acts, as performed at the Theatre-Royal, Covent-Garden. By Thomas Morton, Esq. Author of Columbus, Zorinski, Way to get married, and Children in the wood [electronic resource].

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    At foot of title page: Price two shillings in square brackets.Price in square brackets: (Price Two Shillings.)Electronic reproduction.English Short Title Catalog,Reproduction of original from Trinity College Library Watkinson Collection
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