374 research outputs found

    Communication Techniques for Gifted/ Talented Support Teachers

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    Dinkmeyer, D., Dreikurs, R., Encouraging children to learn., Englewood Cliffs, N. J., Prentice-Hall, 1963. Gazda, G. M., Asbury, F. R., Balzer, F. J., Childers, W. C., Walters, R. P., Human relations development: a manual for educators., Boston, Allyn and Bacon, 1977, (2nd ed

    Marietta College Basketball Team

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    Marietta College Basketball Team, 1930; studio photograph of players in uniform. Front Row (L-R): Harold Ward; Clarence Barton Kennedy; Raymond M. Hodge; William H. Longsworth, Jr.; Glen Hall. Back Row (L-R): Ellis T. Bookwalter; Harold Klare; Lawrence D. Penrose; John King; Ernest Gazda; Burley; """"Duke"""" Hayes (Mariettana, 1931)

    Egypt in the Roman imagination: A study of <italic>aegyptiaca</italic> from Pompeii.

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    This thesis develops the concept of aegyptiaca as a framework for interpreting both Egyptian objects imported to Roman Italy and objects of Roman manufacture in styles that were perceived to be Egyptian by their creators. This framework enables me to study both categories of material together within their Roman contexts, recognizing that for their viewers both imported objects and those made in Italy catered to the same taste for the exotic and foreign. By avoiding the existing problem of treating Roman-made objects primarily as poor quality imitation of Egyptian materials, the thesis examines the broader significance of both kinds of objects for a viewership composed of men and women of a wide range of social stations. I begin by uncovering Roman attitudes toward Egypt, as evidenced by literature relating to Roman tourism in Egypt. I then define and develop the concept of aegyptiaca, looking at ways in which it can help refine our understanding of how Romans in Italy, and specifically in Pompeii, would have understood and engaged with artifacts they believed to exhibit and Egyptian style. I examine the display of aegyptiaca I a range of contexts, from private gardens to public temples. I then focus on especially informative context, the Temple of Isis in Pompeii, from which there is rich evidence for the display of aegyptiaca to male and female viewers of different social classes. I conclude that Romans in Italy embraced seemingly inconsistent notions about the land of Egypt, their understandings largely created from their own imaginations. Egypt was admired for its antiquity, yet reputed to harbor fantastic animals and barbaric peoples. In keeping with such, often contradictory, preconceptions, Egyptian imports and objects made in Italy in Egyptian styles were inherently multivalent for their diverse viewers. As the decorative scheme of the Temple of Isis shows, both types of aegyptiaca engaged in a subtle dialogue with each other, drawing on and reinforcing Roman preconceptions of an imagined Egypt.PhDAncient historyArchaeologyArt historyCommunication and the ArtsSocial SciencesUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/123295/2/3068977.pd

    Controllable and tolerable generalized eigenvectors of interval max-plus matrices

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    summary:By max-plus algebra we mean the set of reals R\mathbb{R} equipped with the operations ab=max{a,b}a\oplus b=\max\{a,b\} and ab=a+ba\otimes b= a+b for a,bR.a,b\in \mathbb{R}. A vector xx is said to be a generalized eigenvector of max-plus matrices A,BR(m,n)A, B\in\mathbb{R}(m,n) if Ax=λBxA\otimes x=\lambda\otimes B\otimes x for some λR\lambda\in \mathbb{R}. The investigation of properties of generalized eigenvectors is important for the applications. The values of vector or matrix inputs in practice are usually not exact numbers and they can be rather considered as values in some intervals. In this paper the properties of matrices and vectors with inexact (interval) entries are studied and complete solutions of the controllable, the tolerable and the strong generalized eigenproblem in max-plus algebra are presented. As a consequence of the obtained results, efficient algorithms for checking equivalent conditions are introduced

    Marietta College Basketball Team

    No full text
    Marietta College Basketball Team, 1930; studio photograph of players in uniform. Front Row (L-R): Harold Ward; Clarence Barton Kennedy; Raymond M. Hodge; William H. Longsworth, Jr.; Glen Hall. Back Row (L-R): Ellis T. Bookwalter; Harold Klare; Lawrence D. Penrose; John King; Ernest Gazda; Burley; """"Duke"""" Hayes (Mariettana, 1931)

    Marietta College Basketball Team

    No full text
    Marietta College Basketball Team, 1930; studio photograph of players in uniform. Front Row (L-R): Harold Ward; Clarence Barton Kennedy; Raymond M. Hodge; William H. Longsworth, Jr.; Glen Hall. Back Row (L-R): Ellis T. Bookwalter; Harold Klare; Lawrence D. Penrose; John King; Ernest Gazda; Burley; """"Duke"""" Hayes (Mariettana, 1931)

    Marietta College Baseball

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    Marietta College Baseball Team; photograph of baseball team in uniform. Front Row (L-R): Jackson; Arlie Riggs; Lawrence Reynolds; Nicholus Schenk. Middle Row (L-R): Donald Lemon; J. Victor Salisbury; Loren G. Weinstock; Oran B. Farren; Russell Reiter; Everett W. Reiter; Robert O. Davies. Back Row (L-R): Donald Drumm; Scott Mendenhall; Edward Gross; Ernest Gazda; Harold Reginald Latimer; Boone; Kenneth Burley; Lawrence D. Penrose (Mariettana, 1931)

    Marietta College Baseball Team

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    Marietta College Baseball Team; photograph of baseball team posed at baseball diamond. Baseball Squad of 1932. Front Row (L-R): Albert Gross; Arthur Benedict; Lawrence Reynolds; Woods; Eugene P. Nevada; Schenck; Ernest J. Gazda. Middle Row (L-R): John Wade White; Wayne Archer; Robert G. Williams; William F. Smith; Russell B. Polonus; Donald Drumm. Back Row (L-R): Gayle H. Price; Hubert M. Price; Russell E. Reiter; Kenneth H. Boone; James E. Clark; Howard F. Steele (Mariettana, 1933)
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