175 research outputs found
Desain Interior Ex-Wisma Barbara sebagai Sentra UKM kawasan Jarak-Dolly
Gang Dolly sebagai kawasan bisnis prostitusi tidak hanya menghidupi para pelaku bisnis prostitusi, namun juga warga sekitar yang membuka usaha-usaha seperti rumah kos, warung makan, warung kopi, laundri, tukang parkir, dan usaha kecil lainnya. Dua tahun setelah penutupan kawasan lokalisasi Jarak-Dolly, perekonomian Jarak-Dolly perlahan bangkit dengan berdirinya UKM-UKM dan perencanaan dolly sebagai kawasan edu-wisata oleh LSM dan Pemerintah Kota Surabaya. Untuk mengoptimalkan pengembangan UKM, dibutuhkan fasilitas pendukung untuk memasarkan produk. Dalam penelitian ini, penulis mengambil data eksisting UKM binaan Gerakan Melukis Harapan, serta melakukan pengamatan dan pengambilan data langsung di kawasan Jarak-Dolly. Penulis menggunakan bangunan ex-Wisma Barbara sebagai objek desain, untuk kemudian dialih fungsikan menjadi Sentra UKM yang akan mendukung aktifitas pengembangan UKM, memperkenalkan produk-produk UKM, memperkenalkan sejarah dari kawasan jarak dolly serta aktifitas edu-wisata kawasan Jarak-Dolly dengan nilai historis, pembinaan, dan edukatif.
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Gang Dolly as a prostitution business area not only supports the prostitution business, but also the local people who open businesses such as boarding houses, food stalls, coffee shops, laundries, parking attendants, and other small businesses. 2 years after the closure of the Dolly Distance-area localization, Dolly's economy has slowly risen with the establishment of Small Medium Enterprises (SME) and dolly planning as an edu-tourism area by Non-governmental organization (NGO) and the Surabaya City Government. To optimize the development of SMEs, required supporting facilities to market the product. In this study, the authors retrieve the existing data of SMEs developed by the Gerakan Melukis Harapan, as well as observing and collecting data directly in the area of Dolly. The author uses the ex-Wisma Barbara building as the design object, then converted to SME center that will support the SME development activities, introduce SME products, introduce the history of the dolly distance and the Dolly Distance-tourism activities with historical value, Coaching, and educative
Desain Tas dengan Konsep Wasteless materialuntuk UKM Batik Dolly
Batik Dolly memiliki motif khas jarak (Ricinus communis) dan kupu-kupu namun kurang ada ketertarikan masyarakat untuk membeli kain batik Dolly. Inovasi dan pengembangan produk turunan dari batik Dolly dibutuhkan untuk menaikkan nilai jual batik Dolly dengan menggukanan batik cap dan batik tulis. Desain produk dari batik seperti produk-produk apparel saat ini hanya menggunakan batik pada bagian motif tertentu dalam satu lembar kain batik, sehingga banyak material kain batik yang tersisa dan tidak digunakan. Dalam perancangan desain tas dan produk apparel lainya, penulis menggunakan metode yaitu observasi, wawancara, analisis aktifitas, analisis produk tas, analisis proses pembutan batik, dan analisis pola potong batik, analisis hasil batik dan design thinking. Dengan mendesain pola cetak batik cap yang disesuaikan dengan pola potong produk akan mengurangi material batik yang terbuang, pola potong dari membagi kain batik menjadi beberapa modul, dengan wasteless material batik dengan mengatur pola cap pada batik yang disesuaikan dengan pola potong produk apparel seperti tas maka mengurangi jumlah kain batik yang terbuang. ================================================================================================
Dolly Batik has a Jarak (Ricinus communis) motif and butterflies but there is less public interest in buying Dolly batik cloth. Innovation and development of derivative products from Dolly batik is needed to increase the selling value of Dolly batik by using stamp batik and batik tulis(written batik). Product designs from batik such as apparel products currently only use batik on certain parts of the motif in one sheet of batik cloth, so that a lot of batik cloth material is left and not used. In designing bag designs and other apparel products, the author uses methods such as observation, interviews,activity analysis, bag product analysis, batik process analysis, and analysis of batik cut patterns, analysis of batik results and design thinking. By designing printed batik patterns that are tailored to the product cut pattern will reduce the waste of batik material, the pattern of cutting from dividing batik cloth into several modules, with wasteless batik material by arranging stamp patterns on batik adapted to cut patterns of apparel products such as bags then reducing the amount of batik cloth wasted.from Dolly batik is needed to increase the selling value of batik Dolly, with wasteless batik material by arranging stamp patterns on batik that are adjusted to the cut patterns of apparel products such as bags, thereby reducing the amount of wasted batik cloth
Barmann, Dolly Reed (Gilmore), 1902-1963 (SC 3350)
Finding aid only for Manuscripts Small Collection 3350. Two letters to WKU faculty member Frances Richards from author and poet Dolly Barmann, an Allen County, Kentucky native residing in Fort Worth, Texas, regarding her writing and her book of poems, Trammel Fork Creek. Includes clippings about Barmann’s work and two of her poems, “Goin to the Grist Mill” and “Moonshiners.
Plenary - Roundtable Discussion: On The Move With Queer Labor: LGBT Organizing at Unionized Workplaces
Roundtable Discussion: On The Move With Queer Labor: LGBT Organizing at Unionized Workplaces Chair: Miriam Frank, author of Out in the Union: A Labor History of Queer America Donna Cartwright, retired co-President, Pride at Work, AFL-CIO Anne Balay, author of Steel Closets: Voices of Gay, Lesbian, and Transgender Steelworkers Dolly Martinez, Pride at Work activist and campaign manager for Retail Action Projec
The “Popular Cultural Memory” in Contemporary Fiction : An Intertextual Reading of Hey Dolly by Amanda Svensson
Adapting the concept of the ”popular cultural memory” and its necessary “context knowledge” established by Karin Kukkonen, this bachelor thesis seeks to examine how this memory is “at work” and expresses itself in contemporary fiction, by doing an intertextual reading of the swedish author Amanda Svensson's debut Hey Dolly. Within the intertextual structures of Hey Dolly the reader encounters allusions and references that address almost everything from contemporary popular culture to established authors in the swedish canon, mainly as means for the characters to help them express their emotions and thoughts, by “choosing” from already available content of popular culture to use and modify. The intertextuality alluding to the popular cultural memory does at the same time address the concept of the ideal reader throughout the novel. This ideal reader is addressed by the narrator as one of those “in the know”, as competent enough to see this “popular cultural memory” at work in the novel by “getting” these intertextual allusions and references. Thus any (real) reader has to be equipped with the same expertise of popular culture as the narrator in order to fully understand this intertextuality. The intertextual practices of Hey Dolly should be understood as traits used by the author to express and implicate her/his awareness of the texts “surroundings”, traits indeed found even in the name of Hey Dolly's main protagonist, symptomatically influenced from contemporary, western American commercial culture. Given the premiss where this intertextual framework relies on a heavily contemporary influenced popular cultural context, it potentially would run the risk of not being understood, should future popular culture contexts operate under different premisses. In this regard the high cultural canon memory would have to be regarded as being more stable and “reliable” than the popular cultural memory, as the norms for the canon are more fixed and rarely negotiated. Arguing that this intertextual reading of Hey Dolly is of an immense value and significant for understanding how the Zeitgeist operates and should be approached, this thesis is still based on the premiss where the intertextual reading of Hey Dolly has largely been nonexistent when looking at how Hey Dolly has been received. Instead in the swedish media we find a consistent dominance of how its reception has been read from almost exclusively a gendered point of view, where Hey Dolly is seen and regarded as the forthcoming of a new representation of the girl/woman ideal. The intertextual reading of Hey Dolly would instead be regarded as “secondary” at best, where the story by itself is self sufficient, even if the reader lacks the necessary context knowledge of how this ”popular cultural memory” is at work in the text
PELATIHAN WIRAUSAHA UMKM UNTUK MASYARAKAT TERDAMPAK DI EKS-LOKALISASI DOLLY SURABAYA
Abstract
Closing of Dolly Localization was on June 18th 2014 ago, left economic problems for impacted society around ex-localization who had been relied their life years by serving the parking area, small store, laundry, etc through many people who visited that place. After localization was closed, the society lost their income. Therefore, the author and team took an initiative to do community service by giving an entrepreneurship training for SME to impacted society in ex-localization. The materials of training were given, covered SME’s management, financial and accounting system for SME, product packaging, and digital marketing. The aim of this training is to improve society’s capability and competency running their business.
Keywords: Training, SME, Impacted Society, Dolly Ex-Localization
Abstrak
Penutupan Lokalisasi Dolly pada 18 Juni 2014 lalu, meninggalkan masalah ekonomi bagi masyarakat terdampak di sekitar eks-lokalisasi yang telah bertahun - tahun menggantungkan hidupnya dengan membuka usaha tempat parkir, warung, laundry, dll dengan memanfaatkan ramainya pengunjung di tempat tersebut. Setelah lokalisasi ditutup, masyarakat kehilangan sumber penghasilan. Oleh karena itu, penulis dan tim berinisiatif melakukan pengabdian masyarakat dengan memberikan pelatihan wirausaha UMKM kepada masyarakat terdampak di eks-lokalisasi Dolly. Materi pelatihan yang diberikan yaitu: manajemen UMKM, pencatatan keuangan dan akuntansi untuk UMKM, hingga pengemasan dan pemasaran produk secara digital. Tujuan pelatihan ini adalah untuk meningkatkan kemampuan dan keterampilan masyarakat dalam menjalankan UMKM mereka.
Kata kunci: Pelatihan, UMKM, Masyarakat Terdampak, Eks-Lokalisasi Doll
Trophic biology and migratory patterns of sympatric Dolly Varden (Salvelinus malma) and Arctic char (S. alpinus)
The trophic ecology (diet and head morphology) and migration patterns of two closely related salmonid fishes, Arctic char (Salvelinus alpinus (Linneaus, 1758)) and Dolly Varden (Salvelinus malma (Walbaum, 1792)), were examined in tributaries of Lake Aleknagik, southwestern Alaska, to test for differentiation between species. Schoenerâ s Index of Proportional Overlap and multivariate analyses of diets suggested that these species had significantly different trophic niches. Arctic char and the largest individuals of both species had the most diverse diets, and sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka (Walbaum, 1792)) eggs dominated the diet of both species, especially Arctic char. Arctic char had larger jaws and wider heads than Dolly Varden of similar body length, which may contribute to interspecific diet difference. The species also differed in migration patterns; otolith microchemistry indicated that juvenile Arctic char were produced by non-anadromous mothers whereas the mothers of the Dolly Varden had been to sea in the season prior to spawning. The species also segregate in spawning habitat (Arctic char in the lakes and Dolly Varden in streams), and in juvenile rearing habitat. Our study provides the first evidence of divergent feeding and migratory ecology between sympatric juvenile Arctic char and Dolly Varden, differences that may constrain hybridization and introgression between them.The accepted manuscript in pdf format is listed with the files at the bottom of this page. The presentation of the authors' names and (or) special characters in the title of the manuscript may differ slightly between what is listed on this page and what is listed in the pdf file of the accepted manuscript; that in the pdf file of the accepted manuscript is what was submitted by the author
Metal concentrations (AS, CD, CR, PB, HG and SE) in Dolly Varden (Salvelinus malma) from the Aleutian Islands, Alaska:
Concerns about contaminants in fish have increased in recent years, especially in species consumed heavily in subsistence diets. Most studies of contaminants in Alaskan subsistence foods have focused on mainland Alaska not the Aleutian Islands. Several islands along the Aleutian Archipelago of Alaska have supported military bases which may be a source of pollution, and the proximity of the Aleutian chain to Eastern Asia may increase its susceptibility to atmospheric deposition of heavy metals. This study compares levels of arsenic, cadmium, chromium, lead, mercury and selenium in the egg, kidney, liver and muscle of Dolly Varden (Salvelinus malma) from Umnak, Adak, and Amchitka Islands in the Aleutian Chain of Alaska. I examined levels as a function of tissue, gender, collection site, and size. There were significant differences in the levels of metals as a function of tissue, with kidney having the highest levels of arsenic and cadmium, and kidney and liver having significantly higher levels of chromium and mercury than the other tissues examined. Selenium and arsenic in muscle and liver were highly correlated with both length and weight of fish. Arsenic and mercury in muscle were highly correlated with levels in liver, kidney and egg. There were few significant gender differences in metal concentrations, with females having higher levels of chromium in muscle and cadmium in kidney than males. However selenium in liver was higher in males than females. On Amchitka mean mercury levels were higher in both muscle (149 ppb; ng/g, wet weight) and liver (321 ppb) compared to fish from Adak and Umnak (muscle = 24 ppb and liver = 44 ppb). Dolly Varden collected from Cannikin Lake and Fox Lake on Amchitka were probably not sea run. This may explain the elevated mercury levels found in Dolly Varden from Amchitka Island. Landlocked Dolly Varden feed more heavily on smaller fish and fish eggs which places them at a higher trophic level than anadromous fish which primarily feed on amphipods. Selenium levels were highest in muscle (761 ppb) and liver (1,860 ppb) of fish caught in Cannikin Lake on Amchitka Island. Overall, concentrations of the metal contaminants in Dolly Varden were relatively low when compared with other studies on anadromous and marine fish from the region, and differences among collection sites may be due to trophic level differences between landlocked (Cannikin Lake) and sea-run Dolly Varden.M.S.Includes bibliographical references (p. 56-76)by Christian Jeitne
Development of a Requirements Classification Scheme for Automated Support of Software Development
Computer hardware technology has advanced to the point where it is feasible to develop software systems that exceed one million lines of code. Software engineering, the discipline concerned with developing these systems, typically includes the following phases in the software development cycle: requirements phase, design phase, implementation phase, test phase and the installation and checkout phase [IEEE, 1983]. This paper is concerned with a classification scheme to support knowledge-based analysis of software requirements. Because requirements in these large systems can become quite numerous and complex, it is a very difficult task to analyze them in order to identify potential problems, i.e., problems that may arise in later phases, such as incompleteness, conflict, ambiguity, and absence of testability. Current software productivity tools such as CASE (Computer-Aided Software Engineering), executable requirements languages, prototyping tools, and test harnesses provide much assistance in later phases of software development, but not much for the requirements phase. It is well-known in software engineering that the most costly and profound software errors are likely to occur at the requirements definition phase, early in the software development cycle. The productivity tools mentioned earlier either work from code which has been developed for the system. or work with user requirements statements which have been translated into a restricted, formal language. There are several problems with translating user requirements into a formal language very early in the project First, it is difficult for the user to understand requirements as they have been translated and interpreted by the systems analyst. Second, the systems analyst may have made wrong assumptions or interpretations in the process of translation. Finally, formal languages do not have any provision for ambiguity, and early in the requirements phase, ambiguities may exist, to be worked out as more is learned about the system
Guest Editorial
It is an honor and a pleasure to have the December 2013 issue of Higher Learning Research Communications dedicate its issue to selected papers from the 4th International Conference on Teaching and Learning, held in Bangkok in November, 2013. The conference theme, Higher Learning in the ASEAN Context, highlights the emerging community of ten Southeast Asian nations and the upcoming launch of the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) in 2015. The AEC will affect higher education systems in Southeast Asia in terms of harmonization of higher education and student mobility. This emerging regional demographic gives us a glimpse of the future of transnational education.
The papers selected for this issue represent research both within and outside of ASEAN, all touching on aspects of transnational education. Jeannin reports on how diversity affects students’ learning in an international classroom in Thailand. Billingham, Gragg, and Bentley (Australia) highlight technology integration as an internationalizing practice. Ling considers challenges and outcomes of bilingual teaching and learning at the graduate level in Vietnam, contributing to the postgraduate educational field, which has not been amply explored in this matter. Stetz and Bauman (US) ask us to rethink the efficacy of recording our lectures for online viewing. Hartfield (Australia), Beltram-Cruz (Philippines), and Cruz (Philippines) review new pedagogical paradigms utilizing technology. Al-Masum and Chowdhury report on problems and progress at Bangladesh Open University in bringing higher education to an underserved population.
Throughout this issue, the authors bring a sense of internationality and the transnational transformation of higher education, along with the ubiquity of technology in the hands of the students and its impact on our teaching and learning styles. This issue of the HLRC Journal highlights some impacts that ASEAN and the AEC can and will have on higher education everywhere
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