8,921 research outputs found
Robert Maxwell Harris Home
Photograph of L to R: 1. Lucy Harris, 2. Nettie Harris, 3. Gov. R.M. Harris, 4. "Bob" R.M. Harris, Jr. on a Pony, 5. Mamie Harris Boyd, 6. Tommie Harris, 7. Robert Harkins, 8. Hallie Harris, 9. C.C. Harkins, 10. Baby Inza Harkins, 11. Jennie Harris, 12. Helen Willis, 13. J. Hamp Willis, 14. Emma Willis, 15. Dixie Harris, 16. Lula H. Harkins at Robert Maxwell Harris' home East of Tishomingo, Indian Territory, c. 1902
Performance of a micro-engineered ultrasonic particle manipulator
An ultrasonic microfluidic particle manipulator has been modeled and its experimentally measured separation performance has been compared with the modeled results for 1 µm latex particles, and yeast particles in water
Author-Agent Conversation
Author-agent conversation, April 21st, 2023
Langsam 646, Elliston Poetry Room
Host: Chris Bachelder
Author: Allegra Hyde
Agent: Erin Harris
1.) Welcome (Bachelder)
2.) Introduction of Allegra Hyde (Bachelder)
3.) Introduction of Erin Harris (Bachelder)
4.) Writer and agent’s paths and their intersection (Hyde, Harris)
5.) Writer and agent working relationship (Hyde, Harris)
6.) Publishing short stories versus novels (Hyde, Harris)
7.) Query letter and timing to seek representation (Hyde, Harris)
8.) Audience Q&A (Hyde, Harris)
9.) Where the market is now (Hyde, Harris)
10.) Closing (Bachelder
Letter to Guy Guernsey from R.M. Rogers, 1913
This letter from R.M. Rogers of the Rogers Palace Laundry Co. was sent to Guy Guernsey, secretary of Chicago-Kent College of Law, in 1913, in search of a recent graduate for a law partnership.
Transcript:
6/5/13
Mr. Guy Guernsey Sec - Chgo Kent College of Lw Harris Trust Bldg,
Dear Sir,
I would like to talk with one of your this year\u27s grads about a law partnership.
What I want - a young man, husky, fearless, energetic, fertile thinker, of good habits + good character - there are 3 kinds of men, (1) oppressors, (2) oppressees, (3) those with backbone enough not to be a no. 2. + principle enough not to be no. 1.: one who allows no one to prevent him getting what belongs to him - it\u27s a No. 3. I want
Yours truly, RM Rogershttps://scholarship.kentlaw.iit.edu/memorabilia/1002/thumbnail.jp
A Conversation with Jessica B. Harris
A conversation with culinary historian and award-winning author Jessica B. Harris, moderated by Gabrielle Fulton Ponder
Biographical essay of Grant Harris
A short biographical essay of Grant Harris, owner of Cowtown, the oldest weekly rodeo in America, located in New Jersey. This essay was written as a part of the You're U.S. project (http://youreus.com/). Created by Emile Klein, You’re U.S. is a unique ethnographic project using arts and craftsmanship to display the distinctive character of people across America. Its goal is to create an engaging and accessible public archive of American people and their histories, an archive that provides diverse opinions and honest representations of those documented.The New York Foundation for the Arts acts as the project's fiscal sponsor.Dirk Johnson, the biographer, is a nationally prominent author and journalist known for his award-winning work as Bureau Chief for The New York Times and Newsweek magazine. He is the author of Biting the Dust and Meth: America's Home Cooked Menace
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[Oral History Interview with Edward Harris]
Interview with Edward Harris, who was an activist and later became an author. Harris discusses his book "In the Shadow of Big Tex", growing up in Dallas with his family, his college experience at El Centro College, Bishop College, and Arlington State College (now UTA), getting drafted, his activism with SNCC and Grassroots Incorporated, being arrested and later committed for "hypersensitivity to racial discrimination", and other community programs he was involved in
Graphical sensitivity analysis with different methods of imputation for a trial with probable non-ignorable missing data
Graphical sensitivity analyses have recently been recommended for clinical trials with non-ignorable missing binary outcome. We demonstrate an adaptation of this methodology for a continuous outcome of a trial of three cognitive-behavioural therapies for mild depression in primary care, in which one arm had unexpectedly high levels of missing data. Fixed value and multiple imputation from a normal distribution (assuming either varying mean and fixed SD, or fixed mean and varying SD) were used to obtain contour plots of the contrast estimates with their P values superimposed; their confidence interval; and the root mean square error. Imputation was based on both the outcome value alone, or on change from baseline. The plots showed fixed value imputation to be more sensitive than imputing from a normal distribution, but the normally distributed imputations were subject to sampling noise. The contours of the sensitivity plots were close to linear in appearance with the slope approximately equal to the ratio of the proportions of subjects with missing data in each trial arm
Graphical sensitivity analysis with different methods of imputation for a trial with probable non-ignorable missing data
Graphical sensitivity analyses have recently been recommended for clinical trials with non-ignorable missing outcome. We demonstrate an adaptation of this methodology for a continuous outcome of a trial of three cognitive-behavioural therapies for mild depression in primary care, in which one arm had unexpectedly high levels of missing data. Fixed-value and multiple imputations from a normal distribution (assuming either varying mean and fixed standard deviation, or fixed mean and varying standard deviation) were used to obtain contour plots of the contrast estimates with their?P-values superimposed, their confidence intervals, and the root mean square errors. Imputation was based either on the outcome value alone, or on change from baseline. The plots showed fixed-value imputation to be more sensitive than imputing from a normal distribution, but the normally distributed imputations were subject to sampling noise. The contours of the sensitivity plots were close to linear in appearance, with the slope approximately equal to the ratio of the proportions of subjects with missing data in each trial arm
Oscar Harris Collection
Oscar Lewis Harris, Jr. is a notable architect, artist, mentor, and author. During his over 40 year career, he created and designed "symbols of civilization" as a part of the Atlanta skyline and other cities in the South.
At the AUC Robert W. Woodruff Library we are always striving to improve our digital collections. We welcome additional information about people, places, or events depicted in any of the works in this collection. To submit information, please contact us at [email protected]
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