9,615 research outputs found
Oral History Interview with Dr. Anthony Catanese, Past President of Florida Tech (2002-2016)
Executive Summary: Interview with Dr. Anthony Catanese, Past President of Florida Tech (2002–2016)
Date of Interview: September 14, 2023 Interviewer: Dr. Gordon Patterson
This document summarizes a comprehensive interview with Dr. Anthony Catanese, who served as the President of Florida Institute of Technology from 2002 to 2016. The conversation covers his leadership philosophy, key achievements, challenges faced, and his perspective on the university\u27s evolution and future
Literary Landscapes: Belfast with Glenn Patterson
Open Book's summer series on Literary Landscapes concludes with one of the most documented yet little understood cities in the United Kingdom - Belfast. A byword for sectarian violence, Belfast is sandwiched between encroaching mountains and the sea;the city is built on mud-flats and has inspired countless poets and authors.Open Book's literary guide to this multi faced and complicated city is author Glenn Patterson, described as Northern Ireland's prose laureate. Born in Belfast, Glenn has been writing about the city since the 1980s. His first novel 'Burning Your Own' won the Betty Trask prize. He still lives in Belfast and his work reflects its ever changing nature.Glenn takes Mariella around his city - to the setting of his latest novel, to where the old Belfast docks began in the footsteps of Anthony Trollope, to the foot of the surrounding hills which inspired Jonathan Swift and to the last independent bookshop in the city
Interview with Anthony F. Janson
Anthony F. Janson is a retired professor and former Department Chair for the UNCW Department of Art and Theatre [retired December 2002]. This interview covers his complete life and career. He discusses his relationship with his art historian father, H.W. Janson, including his relationship as son and co-author and editor of the Janson texts on art history. The interview covers Tony's career as a scholar, book editor, author, art museum curator [at Indianapolis Art Museum and North Carolina Art Museum], and as a professor. Throughout, he comments on important artists in history and his philosophy of art history. He also includes stories of his time in the Vietnam War
Interview with Anthony F. Janson
Anthony F. Janson is a retired professor and former Department Chair for the UNCW Department of Art and Theatre [retired December 2002]. This interview covers his complete life and career. He discusses his relationship with his art historian father, H.W. Janson, including his relationship as son and co-author and editor of the Janson texts on art history. The interview covers Tony's career as a scholar, book editor, author, art museum curator [at Indianapolis Art Museum and North Carolina Art Museum], and as a professor. Throughout, he comments on important artists in history and his philosophy of art history. He also includes stories of his time in the Vietnam War
Reviews
Poems and Stories. J.R.R. Tolkien, illustrated by Pauline Baynes. Reviewed by Nancy-Lou Patterson.
Tolkien\u27s Art. Jane Chance Nitzsche. Reviewed by Nancy-Lou Patterson.
Dorothy L, Sayers: Nine Literary Studies. Trevor H. Hall. Reviewed by Nancy-Lou Patterson.
C.S. Lewis. Spinner of Tales. Evan K. Gibson. Reviewed by Sister Mary Anthony Weinig.
J.R.R. Tolkien. Fantasy Literature als Wunscherfulling und Weltdeutung. Dieter Petzold. Reviewed by Manfred Zimmerman.
The Language of the Night: Essays on Fantasy and Science Fiction. Ursula Le Guin, edited and with introduction by Susan Wood. Reviewed by Grace E. Funk
Passaic Falls, Patterson N. J.
Penciled on back of mount: H.C.S. No. 46.Attribution based on other stereographs from Anthony's "Stereoscopic views of Passaic Falls and Patterson, New Jersey." These stereos can be viewed at: http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/award97/nyplhtml/dennhome.html.Title from item.Forms part of: Charles F. Himes collection of stereographs by amateur photographers in the Marian S. Carson collection
Letter from Anthony Brummelkamp to Mrs. G. Groen van Prinsterer
In a letter to Mrs. G. Groen van Prinsterer from Rev. Anthony Brummelkamp, the author is clearing up some statements of Rev. Budding and chiding Rev. Hendrik Scholte for having an arrogant and sharp tone. A foonote to the letter mentions the school operated by Rev. Brummelkamp and Rev. Albertus C. Van Raalte in Arnhem.https://digitalcommons.hope.edu/vrp_1840s/1193/thumbnail.jp
Imagining marketing : art, aesthetics, and the avant-garde / edited by Stephen Brown and Anthony Patterson.
Includes bibliographical references and index.xvii, 302 pages :Imagination is a word that is widely used by marketing practitioners but rarely examined by marketing academics. This neglect is largely due to the imagination's 'artistic' connotations, which run counter to the 'scientific' mindset that dominates marketing scholarship. Of late, however, an artistic 'turn' has taken place in marketing research, and this topical study argues that the mantle of imagination has now passed on from the artist to the marketer. It contends, moreover, that the tools and techniques of artistic appreciation can be successfully applied to all manner of marketplace phenomena. Key features include:
* the treatment of artistic artefacts as a source of marketing understanding
* a detailed discussion surrounding the argument that marketers should adopt more imaginative modes of academic expression
* an analysis of the kind of art that marketing is, and the place of imagination in marketing's artistic palette.
This book provokes a new way of thinking about marketing, and will prove invaluable to marketing academics, researchers and practitioners
Heteropsomyinae Anthony 1917
Subfamily Heteropsomyinae Anthony, 1917. Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., 37(4):189. COMMENTS: Named by Anthony to reflect perceived relationship between Heteropsomys and Dasyprocta. Expanded by Kraglievich (1965) and Patterson and Pascual (1968b) to include Proechimys and associate genera. Modified by Woods (1982:386) when West Indian Spiny Rats classified with capromyids. West Indian Spiny Rats are transitional in characters between Echimyidae and Capromyidae, and here are placed in their own subfamily within the Echimyidae until the two families are revised. Varona (1974:73) placed all West Indian Spiny Rats in the genus Heteropsomys. However, there are clear differences between the forms on each island, so the original generic names are maintained here, except that Homopsomys is combined with Heteropsomys (Woods, 1989a, b).Published as part of Charles A. Woods, 1993, Order Rodentia - Suborder Hystricognathi, pp. 771-806 in Mammal Species of the World (2 nd Edition), Washington and London :Smithsonian Institution Press on page 799, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.735308
SEISMIC ANALYSIS OF THE ARBUCKLE GROUP IN THE PATTERSON AND HARTLAND FIELDS, WESTERN KANSAS
The Cambrian-Ordovician Arbuckle Group is the thickest of all candidate CO2 storage zones at the Patterson site, involving the Patterson and Hartland fields, in Western Kansas. The Arbuckle Group is laterally extensive and highly heterogenous, consisting mainly of dolomite with scattered beds containing chert and sand. The Patterson Site has been evaluated for its potential for Carbon Capture Utilization and Storage (CCUS). However, previous characterization studies of the Patterson Site have suffered the lack of available subsurface data (e.g., 3-D seismic data and well logs) targeting the Arbuckle Group. In this study, two recently acquired 3D seismic surveys along with two new deep wells were utilized to carry out seismic characterization of the Arbuckle Group employing post-stack (model-based) and pre-stack simultaneous AVO inversion methods. Two new 3D seismic surveys were acquired over the Patterson and Hartland fields, and two new wells, Patterson KGS #5-25 and Hartland KGS #6-10, were drilled for this project, adding to the only deep well in the area: the Longwood well. Each of the new seismic surveys consists of 3D pre-stack time migrated gathers and 3D post-stack PSTM data. The Patterson and Hartland post-stack seismic were tied to their corresponding well data to establish a time-depth relationship. This seismic-to-well tie process showed the Arbuckle top to be a weak reflector located at ~1024-1040 ms TWT in the Patterson seismic and ~1050 ms TWT in the Hartland seismic data. Additionally, the well tie process revealed both seismic surveys to be of reverse polarity. Seismic data were analyzed using the post-stack 3D volumes and the pre-stack gathers following methodologies commonly employed in reservoir characterization studies. Post-stack model-based and simultaneous AVO inversion methods yielded 3D impedance inversion volumes from the pre-stack time migrated seismic data. The two impedance volumes delineate the top of the Arbuckle group better than the reflection amplitude seismic which do not produce a distinct top of the Arbuckle reflection. The P-impedance volume generated through simultaneous AVO inversion showed better correlation with original P- impedance well logs, and lower RMS error than that obtained from the post-stack inversion. In most areas in the Patterson and Hartland fields, the inversion results show a lower impedance upper Arbuckle and a higher impedance lower Arbuckle zone. Measured borehole observations of porosity and density show lower densities and higher porosities corresponding with the low impedance upper Arbuckle zones, while the high impedance lower Arbuckle correlates to high borehole measured density and lower porosity values of the lower Arbuckle. Using the seismic impedance volumes of the Patterson and Hartland data, upper and lower Arbuckle thickness maps were generated to help identify areas that can potentially hold large volumes of CO2 in place. Based on the criteria of high thickness and high porosity (implied from low impedance), areas within the upper Arbuckle were identified in both fields that have good potential for CO2 storage
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