430 research outputs found
Scott, number two
fiddles; guitarsColl. by Boyd Tackett, Jr. For M.C. Parler
George and Prentis Reaves Cookson Star Route Tahlequah, Oklahoma January 21, 1963
Reel 365, Items 1 — 5 and item 7
Fiddle tunes with guitar accompaniment
1. Texas Wagoner
2. Eighth of January
3. Sallie Johnson
4. Scott, Number Two
5. Soldier's Joy
7. Picnic on the HillFunding for digitization provided by the Arkansas Humanities Council and the Happy Hollow Foundation
Racism Reflected in Colour Blind Novel (1968) by Catherine Cookson: Critical Race Theory
This research is the study of racism reflected in Colour Blind novel (1968) by Catherine Cookson viewed from critical race theory. The purpose of this research is to analyze the racism reflected in Colour Blind novel (1968) by Catherine Cookson based on critical race theory. Method of data collection is conducted by analyzing and interpreting descriptively while the techniques of data analysis is a descriptive technique. The results of this research are: 1) The researcher finds the indicators of racism in Colour Blind as seen from critical race theory by Richard Delgado and Jean Stefancic (2001). 2) The researcher describes the racism happened in the novel Colour Blind. 3) The author takes the issue "racism" because in that year discrimination is an unfair treatment that usually happens by the majority groups towards minority groups that lead to racism in society
The first Australian palynologist: Isabel Clifton Cookson (1893–1973) and her scientific work
Isabel Clifton Cookson (1893–1973) of Melbourne, Australia, was one of that country’s first professional woman scientists. She is remembered as one of the most eminent palaeontologists of the twentieth century and had a distinguished research career of 58 years, authoring or co-authoring 93 scientific publications. Isabel worked with great distinction on modern and fossil plants, and pioneered palynology in Australia. She was a consumate taxonomist and described, or jointly described, a prodigious total of 110 genera, 557 species and 32 subspecific taxa of palynomorphs and plants. Cookson was a trained biologist and initially worked as a botanist during the 1920s. At the same time she became interested in fossil plants and then, Mesozoic–Cenozoic terrestrial (1940s–1950s) and aquatic (1950s–1970s) palynomorphs. Cookson’s research into the late Silurian–Early Devonian plants of Australia and Europe, particularly the Baragwanathia flora, between the 1920s and the 1940s was highly influential in the field of early plant evolution. The fossil plant genus Cooksonia was named for Isabel in 1937 by her principal mentor in palaeobotany, Professor William H. Lang. From the 1940s Cookson focussed on Cenozoic floras and, with her students, elucidated floral affinities by comparative analyses of micromorphology, anatomy and in situ pollen/spores between fossil and extant taxa. This led to an interest in pre-Quaternary and Quaternary terrestrial pollen and spores; hence Isabel was the first palynologist in Australia. Her work on Paleogene and Neogene pollen and spores during the 1940s and 1950s provided incontrovertible evidence of the former widespread distribution of many important elements of Southern Hemisphere floras. During the early 1950s, while approaching her 60th year, Isabel turned her attention to marine palynomorphs. She worked with great distinction with Georges Deflandre and Alfred Eisenack, and also as a sole author, on acritarchs, dinoflagellate cysts and prasinophytes from the Jurassic to Quaternary of Australia and Papua New Guinea. She also co-authored papers on aquatic palynomorphs with Lucy M. Cranwell, Norman F. Hughes and Svein B. Manum. Isabel Cookson laid out the taxonomic basis for the study of Australasian Mesozoic and Cenozoic marine palynofloras by establishing, or jointly establishing, 76 genera and 386 species of marine microplankton. Her studies throughout her career, although especially in marine palynology, concentrated largely on taxonomy. However, she was one of the first palynologists to demonstrate the utility of dinoflagellate cysts for relative age dating and correlation in geological exploration
Racism Reflected in Colour Blind Novel (1968) By Catherine Cookson: Critical Race Theory
This study discusses the Racism that is reflected in the Novel colour blind (1968) by Catherine Cookson area: critical race theory. Racism systems encompass economic, political, social, and cultural actions, as well believe that institutionalizes and perpetuate an unequal distribution of privileges, resources, and power between white people and people of Color. Racism involves white people and black people. People do discriminate towards white people or another people who have black skin because of their skin; The purpose of this research was to analyze the racism reflected in color blind (1968) Novel by Catherine Cookson area based on critical race theory. Method of data collection is done with documentation and analyzing using Critical Race Theory while the technique of data analysis is a descriptive technique. The main data in this research is character, punctuation, words, phrases, sentences, paragraphs/discourse in novel colour blind. The results of this research are; 1) Indicator lines using critical race theory by Delgado and Stefancic (2001: 101). In the community, 2) describes the racism occur in the novel color blind. Racism already existed long before the main character Rose Angela was born. 3) Reveals the reason why the author in the work of colour blind novel specifically addresses racism color blind published in 1968
Socio-economic inequality in small area use of elective total hip replacement in the English NHS in 1991 and 2001
International evidence suggests that there are substantial socio-economic inequalities in the delivery of specialist health services, even in the UK and other high-income countries with publicly funded health systems (Goddard and Smith 2001, Dixon et al. 2003, Van Doorslaer, Koolman and Jones 2004, Van Doorslaer et al. 2000). Studies of total hip replacement in the English NHS have yielded particularly striking examples, given that hip replacement is such a common, effective and longestablished health technology. Administrative data show that people living in deprived areas are less likely to receive hip replacement (Chaturvedi and Ben-Shlomo 1995, Dixon et al. 2004) while survey data suggest they may be more likely to need it (Milner et al. 2004). However, previous studies have not examined change in inequality over time. This paper presents evidence on the change in socio-economic inequality in small area use of elective total hip replacement in the English NHS, comparing 1991 with 2001. This was a period of important large-scale health care reform in England, involving at least two significant reforms that might potentially have influenced socio-economic inequality in health care delivery: (1) the introduction and subsequent abolition of the Conservative “internal market” 1991-7, and (2) the introduction in 1995 of a revised NHS resource allocation formula designed to reduce geographical inequalities in health care delivery. Two datasets, for 1991 and 2001, were assembled from routine NHS data sources: Hospital Episode Statistics (HES) on hospital utilisation in England and the corresponding decennial National Censuses in 1991 and 2001. Both datasets contain information on over 8,000 electoral wards in England (over 95% of the total). To improve comparability, a common geography of frozen 1991 wards was adopted. The Townsend deprivation score was employed as an indicator of socio-economic status. Inequality was analysed in two ways. First, for comparability with previous small area studies of hip replacement, by using simple range measures based on indirectly age-sex standardised utilisation ratios (SURs) by deprivation quintile groups. Second, using concentration indices of deprivationrelated inequality in use based on indirectly age-sex standardised utilisation ratios for each individual small area. Each SUR is the observed use divided by the expected use, if each age and sex group in the study population had the same rates of use as the national population.
An advanced finite element system for static and dynamic analysis-with application to the design of radial impellers
An advanced
finite-element
package,
tailored to the static and
dynamic
analysis of radial
impellers has been
produced. Two families
of new elements, one
for thin
and thick plates and
the other
for thin
and
thick shells,
have been derived
and proved
to perform very well
within a wide range of structural thicknesses. Static and
dynamic
economical solvers, two-
and three-dimensional
mesh generation and
plotting, sectorial symmetric analysis, steady state response,
transient response, and other programs are part of the large
number of
facilities
available in the
package.
The finite-element
package
has been
validated
by
solving a
large
number of simple case studies and comparing the package results
with those
obtained from
analytical solutions.
Two different
radial
impeller,
experimental validation
tests
have been
carried out, the first being the dynamic
analysis of a
radial impeller
using the time averaged
holographic technique, and the
second the
measurement of
the steady-state stresses
by
means of a
strain-gauge/slip ring assembly
for
a rotating
impeller. The
experimental results have been
shown to be in
good agreement with
those
obtained from the package
Risk-driven Return Sensitivity in Retail Trading: Evidence From Robinhood User Data
This paper considers the effects of returns on Robinhood user flows. Further analysis estimates whether these effects are different for securities classified within certain economic sectors. Using ticker-day level panel data, I regress Robinhood user flows on different levels of returns. My central findings indicate that Robinhood traders choose stocks that see the largest daily fluctuations in returns. This effect is generally stronger when returns are negative and when stocks are classified in sectors with the largest associations with Robinhood user flows.
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Risk-driven Return Sensitivity in Retail Trading: Evidence From Robinhood User Data
This paper considers the effects of returns on Robinhood user flows. Further analysis estimates whether these effects are different for securities classified within certain economic sectors. Using ticker-day level panel data, I regress Robinhood user flows on different levels of returns. My central findings indicate that Robinhood traders choose stocks that see the largest daily fluctuations in returns. This effect is generally stronger when returns are negative and when stocks are classified in sectors with the largest associations with Robinhood user flows.
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Law and Finance Matter: Lessons from Externally Imposed Courts
This paper provides novel evidence on the real and financial market effects of legal institutions. Our analysis exploits persistent and externally imposed differences in court enforcement that arose when the U.S. Congress assigned state courts to adjudicate contracts on a subset of Native American reservations. Using area-specific data on small business lending, we find that reservations assigned to state courts, which enforce contracts more predictably than tribal courts, have stronger credit markets. Moreover, the law-driven component of credit market development is associated with significantly higher per capita income, with stronger effects in sectors that depend more on external financing.This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced version of an article accepted for publication in The Review of Financial Studies, following peer review. The version of record Law and Finance Matter: Lessons from Externally Imposed Courts James R. Brown J. Anthony Cookson Rawley Z. Heimer; Volume 30, Issue 3, 1 March 2017, Pages 1019–1051. is available online at: DOI: 10.1093/rfs/hhw030. Posted with permission.</p
Courting Economic Development
We show that court enforcement uncertainty hinders economic development using sharp variation in judiciaries across Native American reservations in the United States. Congressional legislation passed in 1953 assigned state courts the authority to resolve civil disputes on a subset of reservations, while tribal courts retained authority on unaffected reservations. Although affected and unaffected reservations had similar economic conditions when the law passed, reservations under state courts experienced significantly greater long-run growth. When we examine the distribution of incomes across reservations, the average difference in development is due to the lower incomes of the most impoverished reservations with tribal courts. We show that the relative under-development of reservations with tribal courts is driven by reservations with the most uncertainty in court enforcement.This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in The World Bank Economic Review following peer review. The version of record Courting Economic Development (with T. Cookson and R. Heimer). 2017. World Bank Economic Review, Papers and Proceedings of the 26th Annual Bank Conference on Development Economics, 30 (Supplement_1), S176-S187. is available online at: DOI: 10.1093/wber/lhw027. Posted with permission.</p
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