1,338 research outputs found

    Anna Clay and S. M. Caudill Residences - Morehead, Kentucky

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    Aerial photograph of Anna Clay and S. M. Caudill Residences in Morehead, Kentucky, circa 1945.https://scholarworks.moreheadstate.edu/roger_barbour_negatives_collection/1166/thumbnail.jp

    Science in Law: Reliance, Idealization & Some Calvinist Insights

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    Dr. David S. Caudill presented this paper at the Calvinism for the 21st Century Conference at Dordt College, April 2010

    Ayars, Rebecca Caudill, 1899-1985 (SC 3348)

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    Finding aid only for Manuscripts Small Collection 3348. Letter, 5 March 1958, of author Rebecca Caudill Ayars, Urbana, Illinois, to WKU faculty member Frances Richards. Owing to a previous engagement, she declines an invitation to WKU’s Leiper English Club dinner

    Letcher County - JD Caudill\u27s Store and Rockhouse Post Office

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    JD Caudill\u27s Store/Rockhouse Post Office in Letcher County, Kentucky 1884. By adding a post office to his general store, JD Caudill would increase his business significantly. It would be a one stop shop for groceries, goods, and mail.https://scholarworks.moreheadstate.edu/sprague_photo_collection/1253/thumbnail.jp

    A Darkness at Dawn: Appalachian Kentucky and the Future

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    Outspoken Appalachian writer Harry M. Caudill analyzes the exploitation and decline of the eastern Kentucky mountain lands, which have rendered “no people in the nation...more forlorn than the Appalachian highlanders in our time.Frontier attitudes, a strong attachment to the land, and isolation have produced in Appalachia a backwoods culture which made its people susceptible to an outside exploitation of their resources that has perpetrated on them a passive society largely dependent on relief. But the times, says Mr. Caudill, are changing. A growing world population and global industrialization have created a drastically altered situation in eastern Kentucky. The area’s resources of energy are essential to the progress and well-being not only of the nation but also of the world; and the world is prepared to court the favor of the people who control these resources and is prepared to pay the price demanded by those owners. Mr. Caudill makes an eloquent plea for Kentuckians to reclaim the resources that lie in their mountains and to demand their fair share of the wealth generated by those resources. If they are willing to do this, the state and especially the people in eastern Kentucky can have a bright and prosperous future. But they can delay no longer. They must break the mold of passivity and take destiny into their own hands. Harry M. Caudill is the author of such well-known books as Night Comes to the Cumberlands, Dark Hills to Westward, and My Land is Dying. The Kentucky Bicentennial Bookshelf is a celebration of two centuries of the history and culture of the Commonwealth.https://uknowledge.uky.edu/upk_appalachian_studies/1004/thumbnail.jp

    Laboratory Life and the Economics of Science in Law

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    Issuing a bold and, in light of current preoccupations with AIME, untimely call for the continued relevance of Laboratory Life, David Caudill’s chapter realigns the question of Latour’s value for legal theory. Rather than mapping the unstable, unpredictable movements of the legal trajectory – a term that, in preceding chapters, has taken on several perhaps inconsistent layers of meaning – Caudill proposes to reconsider the relationship between law and the sciences (and revisits some of the drama of the Science Wars) under the auspices of the economics of science, a flourishing sub-field of science studies veritably inaugurated by Laboratory Life’s influential discussion of cycles of credit and credibility. Deftly untangling the law-sciences-economics knot, Caudill stages the matter of Philip Mirowski v. Bruno Latour (and Michel Callon), in which the defendants were accused of complicity with neoliberalism and charged, by proxy, with the allegedly pernicious effects of the increasing commercialisation of research on the scientific establishment. Mirowski’s critique runs out of steam, Caudill shows, and runs off the rails as soon as the details of law’s appropriation of scientific research and evidence are examined. But the often dismaying implications of Science Wars-era disputes – now being recapitulated or replayed in miniature, in the economics wing of the science studies field and in legal studies – continue to haunt contemporary law as well as science policy, because it remains unclear to what extent judges and regulators (and legal academics) appreciate the material contributions of works like Laboratory Life to the improvement of our understanding of the sciences, and to what extent the co-production thesis developed by Latour, Callon and others still registers as a fanciful exercise in debunking.</p

    Will Cannady, President Kenneth Pitzer, William Caudill, and Thomas Vreeland at Rice School of Architecture Rice Design Fete

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    Professor Will Cannady, Rice University’s School of Architecture, President Kenneth S. Pitzer, Professor William Caudill, School of Architecture, and Thomas Vreeland, School of Architecture, at the annual Architectural Design Fete. Original resource is a black and white photograph

    Parades of Horribles, Circles of Hell: Ethical Dimensions of the Publication Controversy

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    This article examines the ethical dimensions of the controversy over no-citation rules and current publication practices. In the literature concerning that controversy, ethical concerns are often mentioned, but usually in tandem with other concerns. Professor Caudill isolates and categorizes the different types of ethical dilemmas, and demonstrates that at different levels of the controversy, the ethical concerns are different. He identifies three levels--the controversy over no-citation rules, the broader controversy over publication practices, and the even broader controversy over privatization of law (the so-called disappearing trial, ADR, and the end of law as we know it)

    Will Cannady, President Kenneth Pitzer, William Caudill, and Thomas Vreeland at Rice School of Architecture Rice Design Fete

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    Professor Will Cannady, Rice University’s School of Architecture, President Kenneth S. Pitzer, Professor William Caudill, School of Architecture, and Thomas Vreeland, School of Architecture, in conversation during the annual Architectural Design Fete. Original resource is a black and white photograph

    Terrestrial Laser Scanning and Historic Building Information Modeling of the Caudill House in College Station, Texas. Poster presented at the 2021 22nd Annual Historic Preservation Symposium, February 13, 2021

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    The Caudill House is a Mid-century Modern residence in College Station, Texas. William (Bill) Caudill (1914-1983) designed the residence while working as a founding partner of the architectural firm, Caudill, Rowlett, and Scott (CRS). In order to facilitate renovation planning of the Caudill House, terrestrial laser scanning (TLS) and historic building information modeling (HBIM) were conducted at the Mid-century Modern residence in College Station, Texas. Both the residence���s interior and exterior were laser scanned for the production of an HBIM. This model serves as a 3D as-built to better plan renovation on the historic residence. TLS survey of the home reinforced issues in documenting modern buildings, as well as their solutions both in terms of preparation and execution
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