5,862 research outputs found
Rachel Backer, Phineas Pemberton and James Harrison, March 28, 1683
Letter dated March 28, 1683 (March 18, 1683 Old Style) from Rachel Backer to Phineas Pemberton
F-0066: 40 South 200 West, Lewiston, Utah, Joseph and Rachel Harrison Detton residence. Lot 8 Block 9 Plat A
F-0066: 40 South 200 West, Lewiston, Utah, Joseph and Rachel Harrison Detton residence. Lot 8 Block 9 Plat A (2 photos
Viola M. Harrison letter to Lucile Atcherson, August 14, 1914
On August 14, 1914, the executive secretary of the Nebraska Woman Suffrage Association, Viola M. Harrison, sent this letter to Lucile Atcherson, a suffragist in central Ohio and executive secretary of the Franklin County Woman Suffrage Association. Harrison wrote to Atcherson to confirm that the Nebraska Woman Suffrage Association's state banner, which had been on loan with the FCWSA, had arrived safely in Lincoln, Nebraska. Harrison also congratulated Atcherson on a successful petition event in Ohio, and expressed her hopes for both Ohio and Nebraska to achieve equal suffrage for women.
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
Practitioners' views on the use of formal methods: an industrial survey by structured interview
The recognised deficiency in the level of empirical investigation of software engineering methods is particularly acute in the area of formal methods, where reports about their usefulness vary widely. We interviewed several formal methods users about the use of formal methods and their impact on various aspects of software engineering including the effects on the company, its products and its development processes as well as pragmatic issues such as scalability, understandability and tool support. The interviews are a first stage of empirical assessment. Future work will investigate some of the issues raised using formal experimentation and case studies
Compte-rendu : « Disturbing Conventions : Decentering Thai Literary Cultures, Rachel V. Harrison, éd. »
Compte-rendu d'ouvrageCe document vous est offert par Aix-Marseille Université (AMU) Référence électronique Louise Pichard-Bertaux, « Disturbing Conventions : Decentering Thai Literary Cultures, Rachel V. Harrison, éd. », Moussons [En ligne], 25 | 2015, mis en ligne le 23 juillet 2015, consulté le 30 mars 2018. URL : http://journals.openedition.org/moussons/3301 Les contenus de la revue Moussons sont mis à disposition selon les termes de la Licence Creative Commons Attribution-Pas d'Utilisation Commerciale-Pas de Modification 4.0 International
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Experimental comparison of the comprehensibility of a Z specification and its implementation in Java
Comprehensibility is often raised as a problem with formal notations, yet formal methods practitioners dispute this. In a survey, one interviewee said 'formal specifications are no more difficult to understand than code'. Measurement of comprehension is necessarily comparative and a useful comparison for a specification is against its implementation. Practitioners have an intuitive feel for the comprehension of code. A quantified comparison will transfer this feeling to formal specifications. We performed an experiment to compare the comprehension of a Z specification with that of its implementation in Java. The results indicate there is little difference in comprehensibility between the two. (C) 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved
Marriage record of Drew, Sam and Kelley, Rachel
Marriage license for Sam Drew and Rachel Kelley. C.E. Harrison was the officiant
CANCELLED: Author and Activist Maggie Harrison Lowery to Speak
Tollefson, Elizabeth. (2018). CANCELLED: Author and Activist Maggie Harrison Lowery to Speak. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/223946
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