2,295 research outputs found

    Moyo Vol. IV N 1

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    Gilmore, Seth. A Note From Our Fearless Leader . 3. Aufrance, Jeremy. Oral Sects: A Look at Denison\u27s Music Scene . 4. Blake, Ben. Pay Attention! . 9. Russell, Mark. Above & Below: Unearthing the Denison Underground . 10. Gilmore, Seth. The Death of Cooties . 12. Christie, Carey. Summer Whoroscopes: Something for Every Sinner . 19. Mathews, Peter Edward. Sankofa: The Africa Inside Us All . 20. Perry, Andrea. Taking it Off: Denison\u27s Hidden history De-robed . 22. Clamurro, William H. Sexual Deviance: A Clamurrian Analysis . 24. Trabert, Heather. Get Out! (But Kindly Leave Your Wallets Behind) . 26

    The Times, They Are Changing

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    In 2015, Rutgers became only the second accredited law school in the United States to select the open-source ILS, Koha. The merger of two unique catalogs at Rutgers Law School has presented unique challenges with respect to migration mapping, data recall for large records, and relevancy ranking, all of which affect search results and usability of the OPAC. System migrations always result in some data being lost or incorrectly transferred. The hope is to minimize just how much data is compromised while fixing errors that might not have come to light but for the migration.Peer reviewe

    Heather McHugh, 4th Annual ODU Literary Festival

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    The author of Dangers, published in 1978 in Houghton Mifflin\u27s New Poetry Series, and A World of Difference, also a Houghton Mifflin publication (1981), Heather McHugh is a rare poet, known for her formal elegance, her piercing wit, and her supple use of rhyme and rhythm. The Denver Quarterly remarked on her interest in seeing doubly and double-talking and praised her passionate intelligence and affection for the tongue\u27s intimate intricacies. McHugh\u27s Thursday evening reading will conclude the 1981 Literary Festival. McHugh grew up in Williamsburg and now teaches at the State University of New York at Binghamton. She is a member of the board of directors of the Associated Writing Programs

    Exile Vol. XLIII No. 2

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    41st Year Title Page i Epigraphy by Ezra Pound ii Table of Contents iii / Contributors\u27 Notes 70-71 Editorial Board 72-73 ART Untitled by Kari Hernquist \u2799 4 Talking Out my Window by Heather Trabert \u2797 13 Renamed I by Ben Blake \u2797 18 photo paint by alex e. blazer \u2797 23 Butterfly by Mary Donnelley \u2797 32 unabridged by alex e. blazer \u2797 37 Holding Me In by Heather Trabert \u2797 43 Untitled by Kari Hernquist \u2797 55 Untitled by Camille Gammon-Hittelman \u2799 61 Stars by Mary Donnelley \u2797 69 POETRY Victrola by erin c. malone \u2799 1 All by Kellam Ayres \u2797 2-3 curtailed sun in the net by alex e. blazer \u2797 5 the weaker sex by Bekah Taylor \u2700 6 A poem concerning a silent manifesto by Colin Bossen \u2798 14 Father by Alison Stine \u2700 15 Vacant by Sean Boyle \u2700 16 Ecstasy by Amy spears \u2798 17 Seven Haikus by Jen Suster \u2797 21 Pages from a Diary by Trish Klei \u2797 22 Watching an Ageless Woman and an Ancient Trade by Heather Trabert \u2797 24-25 Still Waters by Jay Brandeis \u2799 26 just shy of freedom by Sean Boyle \u2700 36 [Touch the mothers you never knew] by Heather Trabert \u2797 38 Fishing for Meaning by Bekah Taylor \u2700 39 the novel by Sara Brown \u2799 40-41 annihilation by erin c. malone \u2799 42 Upon Enlistment by Trish Klei \u2797 44 the expatriate by erin c. malone \u2799 47 Rockettes by Trish Klei \u2797 48-49 Abstraction by Colin Bossen \u2798 54 always kinesis by alex e. blazer \u2797 56-57 Lily by Alison Stine \u2700 58-59 Falling In by Bekah Taylor \u2700 60 this bird has flown by paul durica \u2700 62-63 exfoliating some sun by alex e. blazer \u2797 64 Liberation: May 8, 1945 by Jen suster \u2797 65 PROSE Journal: 12 December 1996 through 15 January 1997 by Lynn Tramonte \u2798 7-12 Ash by paul durica \u2700 19-20 Birdhouse by Tyler Smith \u2797 27-35 Party in December by paul durica \u2700 45-46 Smoke Circles by Alison Stine \u2700 50-53 Seal by Lynn Tramonte \u2798 66-68 All submissions are reviewed on an anonymous basis, and all editorial decisions are shared equally among the members of the Editorial Board. -72 Cover art Toy Child by Ben Blake \u2797 -7

    Ep. #121 - Heather Paxson

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    This recording and transcript form part of a collection of podcasts conducted by the Cultures of Energy at Rice University. Cultures of Energy brings writers, artists and scholars together to talk, think and feel their way into the Anthropocene. We cover serious issues like climate change, species extinction and energy transition. But we also try to confront seemingly huge and insurmountable problems with insight, creativity and laughter.Dominic and Cymene plug Cultures of Energy 7—this year’s energy humanities symposium at Rice which begins today, details at culturesofenergy.org—and then they turn to cheese, why it’s funny, how it can be applied to cats, “cheddaring,” and much more. Is there an anthropologist who knows more about cheese than anyone? Yes of course there is, it’s MIT’s Heather Paxson, author of the award-winning The Life of Cheese: Crafting Food and Value in America (U California Press, 2012). She joins us (14:59) to talk about her research on the microbiopolitics of food and naturally we begin with what’s in her fridge. Heather tells us about her investigation of artisanal cheesemaking and what it tells us about the shift from Pasteurian to Post-Pasteurian regimes of microbiopower. We hear about goat ladies as revolutionaries, the truth about vegan cheese, and debate whether artisanal foodmaking is an elite project. Heather discusses the search for moral meaning in everyday life as a throughline in her work and we turn to her latest research on food safety inspections, the porosity of food borders and the synecdochic reasoning of the state when it comes to managing food flows. We close by discussing the impact of feminist analytics of labor in her research. What is “beef candy China”? Listen on and you might just find out

    HERStory Makers 2023: Heather Mcclelland

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    Heather Mcclelland is a chartered psychologist and researcher at the University of Glasgow studying mental health. She took part in HERStory Makers 2023.What is HERStory Makers?HERStory Makers is a social media competition for female-identifying early career researchers to share their research, their career journeys, and to inspire the next generation. Winners are selected by public vote. HERStory Makers is also part of EXPLORATHON, Scotland's contribution to European Researchers' Night.In 2022-23, EXPLORATHON was supported by the Engineering & Physical Sciences Research Council [grant number EP/X020762/1].Author contributions to contentHeather Mcclelland conceived, planned, and recorded the video content. Kirsty Ross edited the video content to insert HERStory Maker credits, add subtitles, and ensured the video length was below Twitter/X limit of 2 mins and 20 secs.</p

    Creating and Scaling Innovative School Models Through Strategic Partnerships

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    · The Texas High School Project (THSP) was created in 2003 as a public-private alliance to support education reform across the state. · This article focuses on the pivotal role of philanthropy within the THSP alliance to create early college high schools (ECHS). · The model has been scaled at different levels to produce direct, affordable pathways for students to both attend college and attain skilled careers. · The ECHS schools have higher test scores, greater credits earned, and reduced dropouts rates compared to traditional schools. · Foundations with a track record for supporting successful work can increase the overall commitment to joint projects and attract additional members and support to an alliance. · Lessons for successful partnerships include investing in time together, managing the partnership through one organization, and using data for decision-making

    Institutional Racism and the Dynamics of Privilege in Public Health

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    Institutional racism, a pattern of differential access to material resources and power determined by race, advantages one sector of the population while disadvantaging another. Such racism is not only about conspicuous acts of violence but can be carried in the hold of mono-cultural perspectives. Overt state violation of principles contributes to the backdrop against which much less overt yet insidious violations occur. New Zealand health policy is one such mono-cultural domain. It is dominated by western bio-medical discourses that preclude and under-value Māori, the indigenous peoples of this land, in the conceptualisation, structure, content, and processes of health policies, despite Te Tiriti o Waitangi guarantees to protect Māori interests. Since the 1980s, the Department of Health has committed to honouring the Treaty of Waitangi as the founding document of Māori-settler relationships and governance arrangements. Subsequent Waitangi Tribunal reports, produced by an independent Commission of Inquiry have documented the often-illegal actions of successive governments advancing the interests of Pākehā at the expense of Māori. Institutional controls have not prevented inequities between Māori and non-Māori across a plethora of social and economic indicators. Activist scholars work to expose and transform perceived inequities. My research interest lies in how Crown Ministers and officials within the public health sector practice institutional racism and privilege and how it can be transformed. Through dialogue with Māori working within the health sector, fuelled by critical analysis and strategic advice from a research whānau (family) of Māori health leaders and a Pākehā Tiriti worker, and embracing the traditions of feminist and critical race theory I provide evidence of racism that can invoke strong emotional reactions. More disturbing is its normalisation to nigh imperceptibility within ones personal and professional life. The exposure of racism as a socially created phenomenon is a strength of the research presented here. My action orientation is my ethical response. Honouring Te Tiriti o Waitangi is a pathway to transforming racism. Such change is likely to be resisted by the Pākehā majority. This anticipated resistance is not a credible reason to weaken responsibility for such necessary change. Transforming institutional racism needs to be driven by senior managers, professional bodies, unions, and by communities. Policies, practices and leadership that enable institutional racism need to be systematically eliminated from the health sector. Crown officials must be supported to strengthen their professional accountabilities and to embrace ethical bicultural practice. Greater transparency could enable more effective monitoring of Crown behaviour and support transformed practice

    Why Look at Animals in Landscapes?

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    This book was published on the occasion of the two-person exhibition Reflexive Animals with work by Heather Passmore and Carrie Walker. The exhibition was held at SFU Gallery from September 8 to October 20, 2012. It includes written contributions by artist Julie Andreyev, poet Peter Culley and Bill Jeffries.final article publishe

    Women Leaders Affinity Group: Heather Monahan

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    Date: January 28, 2021 Guest: Heather Monahan, founder of Boss in Heels The Women Leaders Affinity Group, hosted by Dr. Amanda Main and Dr. Ellen Ramsey from the College of Business and Management, presented a webinar with best-selling author and keynote speaker Heather Monahan, founder of Boss in Heels, shared her expertise and experience on creating and maintaining confidence in everyday life.https://spiral.lynn.edu/bus_women-leaders/1000/thumbnail.jp
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