1,388 research outputs found
The Aulos Player: 7-92
The Aulos PlayerLabeled "performed twice with comments by R.M." and "Douglass Music Dept. Recording"Rutgers Chorus: Austin Walter, conductor, Sam Walters, organ 1, David Drinkwater, organ
Women Leaders Affinity Group: Dr. Charlene Walters
Date: March 25, 2021
Guest: Dr. Charlene Walters, entrepreneurship coach, business and branding mentor and author
The Women Leaders Affinity Group, hosted by Dr. Amanda Main and Dr. Ellen Ramsey from the College of Business and Management, presented a Zoom event with Dr. Charlene Walters, who spoke about the realities of being an entrepreneur and the keys to success. Walters is an entrepreneurship coach, business and branding mentor and author of Launch Your Inner Entrepreneur.https://spiral.lynn.edu/bus_women-leaders/1001/thumbnail.jp
Celebration of Life for Lawrence T. Walters
Funeral program for Lawrence T. Walters, born July 19, 1917 and died November 23, 2006. The funeral was held November 30, 2006 at St. Paul United Methodist Church, officiated by Rev. Dr. Marcus A. L. Freeman, III. Funeral arrangements were made through the Lewis Funeral Home, and he was buried in the Fort Sam Houston National Cemetery near San Antonio, Texas
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Crime is in the air - air pollution and regulation in the UK
This latest briefing by Professor Reece Walters in the What is crime? series, draws attention to an area of harm that is often absent from criminological debate. He highlights the human costs of air pollution and failed attempts to adequately regulate and control such harm. Arguing for a cross disciplinary ‘eco-crime’ narrative, the author calls for greater understanding of the far-reaching consequences of air pollution which could set in train changes which may lead to a ‘more robust and meaningful system of justice’. Describing current arrangements in place to control and regulate air pollution, Walters draws attention to the lack of neutrality in current arrangements and the bias ‘towards the economic imperatives of free trade over and above the centrality of environmental protection’. While attention is often given to direct and individualised instances of ‘crime’, the serious consequences of air pollution are frequently neglected. The negative effects of pollution on health and well-being are often borne by people already experiencing a range of other disadvantages. In a global and national context, it is often the poor who are affected most. Ultimately, political and economic imperatives have historically helped to shape legal and regulatory regimes. Whether this is an inherent flaw in current systems or something that can be overcome in favour of dealing with more wide-ranging harms is an area that requires further discussion and debate
Selected simulation input and output for patchoulol synthase and germacradien-11-ol synthase
Files related to the biomolecular simulations in the following publication:
Active site loop engineering abolishes water capture in hydroxylating sesquiterpene synthases
Prabhakar L. Srivastava,[a] Sam T. Johns,[b] Rebecca Walters,[b] David J. Miller,[a] Rudolf K. Allemann*[a] and Marc W. Van der Kamp*[b]
[a]School of Chemistry, Cardiff University, Main Building, Park Place, Cardiff CF10 3AT, United Kingdom
[b]School of Biochemistry, University of Bristol, University Walk, Bristol BS8 1TD, United Kingdom
See the README.docx document for details
Sam Whiteside’s Prairie Creek Sites in Smith County, Texas
During primarily the late 1950s Sam Whiteside investigated a slate of sites on the upper reaches of Prairie Creek in eastern Smith County, Texas. Archaeological investigations ranged from fairly extensive efforts at a couple of sites, including the Chapman site (41SM56), to fairly limited excavations at others based on the amount of recovered artifacts. Artifacts and notes from a number of the sites were donated by Sam Whiteside to the Texas Archeological Research Laboratory at The University of Texas at Austin. However, artifacts and notes from other Prairie Creek sites were kept by the family and after Mr. Whiteside’s death were made available to the senior author. Other than the Chapman site, none of the archaeological findings from other sites has been published. This article makes that information available to the archaeological community in Texas
Working 'in the opposite direction': Joseph Beuys in the field
This paper will argue that revisiting the ideas and practice of the twentieth-century German artist Joseph Beuys is germane to contemporary discussions of place and human ecology in anthropology. Through an exploration of work undertaken by the artist and a discussion of the influence of Goethe on his practice, it will explore the way in which Beuys' approach to art was informed by a set of methodologies which saw the inner life of the human being and the outer world with which she or he engages as profoundly linked in both physical and psychic terms. Beuys' work points, the author will suggest, to the potential for a myth of fieldwork and a communication of its results that places the anthropologist within a constantly changing world of matter that she or he shapes and transforms and is, in turn, transformed by
Your eyes see distant stories / lifting off its fragile walls. You wonder / at its faint revelations.
Signed by the author / illustratorIt says that Jon von Zelowitz assisted Peter KochGoudy Thirt
Toroidal orbifolds of Z3 and Z6 symmetries of noncommutative tori
AbstractThe Hexic transform ρ of the noncommutative 2-torus Aθ is the canonical order 6 automorphism defined by ρ(U)=V, ρ(V)=e−πiθU−1V, where U, V are the canonical unitary generators obeying the unitary Heisenberg commutation relation VU=e2πiθUV. The Cubic transform is κ=ρ2. These are canonical analogues of the noncommutative Fourier transform, and their associated fixed point C⁎-algebras Aθρ, Aθκ are noncommutative Z6, Z3 toroidal orbifolds, respectively. For a large class of irrationals θ and rational approximations p/q of θ, a projection e of trace q2θ−pq is constructed in Aθ that is invariant under the Hexic transform. Further, this projection is shown to be a matrix projection in the sense that it is approximately central, the cut down algebra eAθe contains a Hexic invariant q×q matrix algebra M whose unit is e and such that the cut downs eUe, eVe are approximately inside M. It is also shown that these invariant matrix projections are covariant in that they arise from a continuous section E(t) of C∞-projections of the continuous field {At}0<t<1 of noncommutative tori C⁎-algebras such that ρ(E(t))=E(t). It turns out that the projection E(t) is the support projection of a canonical C∞-positive element that has the appearance of a noncommutative 2-dimensional Theta function. The topological invariants (or ‘quantum’ numbers) of E(t), e, and related projections are computed by a new and quicker method than in previous works. (They would also give topological invariants for finitely generated projective modules over noncommutative orbifolds associated to Z6 and Z3 symmetries of noncommutative tori.) We remark that these results have some bearing on research work related to noncommutative orbifolds used in string theory
Texas Labor History
Session Chair, Melody M. Miyamoto Walters Zachary Montz, Sam Houston State University, “What Killed the Tyler Tire Plant?: A Story of Labor, Economic Change, and State Hostility” Justin Jolly, Texas Christian University, “A Tale of Two Unions: The United Packinghouse Workers of America and the International Aeronautic Machinists in Fort Worth, 1936-1946” Michael Barera, University of Texas at Arlington, “Introduction to the Texas Labor Archives
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