5,997 research outputs found
Steve Watson
A photograph of Steve Watson, Furman Student Body President in 1963 and 1964
Humboldt Holding Up: Retiring Eureka Police Chief Steve Watson on the Challenges and Successes of His Time With EPD, the Staffing Crisis and the Department’s Recent Texting Scandal
It came as a surprise when Eureka Police Chief Steve Watson — who has been with the Eureka Police Department for nearly 17 years, the last four of them as chief — announced late last month that he would be retiring at the end November.
“While my fire has not diminished, it is time for me to take a restful step back and reflect with pride on a career well spent, even as I look forward with enthusiasm to the next adventure,” Watson wrote in his retirement announcement.
With only a couple of days left in his tenure, Watson was kind enough to join this week’s episode of Humboldt Holding Up — the Outpost‘s little podcast that could — for a sort of exit interview before he enters into the next chapter of his life. Topics discussed with Watson include: The recent texting scandal and Watson’s feelings about the imminent investigation report How the EPD and policing in Eureka was impacted by the pandemic The current difficulties of hiring and retaining police officers Evolving changes in attitudes and practices in policing and the “last gasp” of the old bastion The difficulties of addressing the “tragic triad” of homelessness, mental illness and addiction, and why Watson supports augmenting police work with mental health crisis intervention specialists Watson’s proudest accomplishments and his appreciation for many people he’s worked with More
RoMEO Studies 6: Rights metadata for open-archiving
This is the final study in a series of six emanating from the UK JISC-funded RoMEO Project (Rights Metadata for Open-archiving) which investigated the Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) issues relating to academic author self-archiving of research papers. It reports the results of a survey of 542 academic authors showing the level of protection required for their open-access research papers. It then describes the selection of an appropriate means of expressing those rights through metadata and the resulting choice of Creative Commons licences. Finally it outlines proposals for communicating rights metadata via the Open Archives Initiative’s Protocol for Metadata Harvesting (OAI-PMH)
Steve Stockman, Workshop
Steve Stockman is the author of Walk On: The Spiritual Journey of U2. He is also a pop culture critic and weekly radio host on BBC Radio Ulster. Stockman is the Presbyterian Chaplain of Queens University in Belfast, Ireland
RoMEO Studies 5: IPR issues for OAI Data and Service Providers
This paper is the fifth in a series of studies emanating from the UK JISC-funded RoMEO Project (Rights Metadata for Open-archiving). It reports the results of two surveys of OAI Data Providers (DPs) and Service Providers (SPs) with regards to the rights issues they face. It finds that very few DPs have rights agreements with depositing authors and that there is no standard approach to the creation of rights metadata. The paper considers the rights protection afforded individual and collections of metadata records under UK Law and contrasts this with DP and SP’s views on the rights status of metadata and how they wish to protect it. The majority of DP and SPs believe that a standard way of describing both the rights status of documents and of metadata would be usefu
Pteroteinon Watson 1893
Pteroteinon Watson, 1893 Watson (1893) fixed P. laufella as the type species for this genus, when he established the genus Pteroteinon. There are ten species of this Afrotropical genus, which is restricted to West and central Africa (Larsen 2005, Vande weghe 2009). All reported food plants are palms, and P. laufella is a recognised minor pest in West Africa.Published as part of Cock, Matthew J. W., Congdon, Colin E. & Collins, Steve C., 2014, Observations on the biology of Afrotropical Hesperiidae (Lepidoptera). Part 6. Hesperiinae incertae sedis: palm feeders, pp. 1-61 in Zootaxa 3831 (1) on page 44, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3831.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/492082
Student Recital (1971)
Student Recital presented by BJC Music Department. Students: Jan Snortland, Roxanne Wanser, Deb Blanc, Leslee Watson, Clyde Bauman, Cathy Tello, Steve Hillesland, Randy Nicolai. Location: Chorus Room. Time 2:15 pm
Steve Stockman, Keynote Session 1
Keynote speaker Steve Stockman is the author of Walk On: The Spiritual Journey of U2. He is also a pop culture critic and weekly radio host on BBC Radio Ulster. Stockman is the Presbyterian Chaplain of Queens University in Belfast, Ireland
Steve Almond, 32nd Annual ODU Literary Festival
Steve Almond is the author of two story collections, My Life in Heavy Metal and The Evil B.B. Chow, the novel Which Brings Me to You (with Julianna Baggott), and the non-fiction book Candyfreak. His new book is a collection of essays, (Not That You Asked). He lives outside Boston with his wife, two children, and mounting debt. His online home is www.stevenalmond.com
Introduction : heritage, affect and emotion
There has been a shift in the heritage landscape in recent years. It has been a
palpable, visceral shift that challenges the format, engagements and paradigms
through which we articulate heritage at sites, in scholarship and in practice. Fuelling this shift is a groundswell of research that attends to the value, power and politics of affect and emotion, and shapes heritage landscapes as experienced, as curated and as foundational to our relationship with the past. These sensibilities, evoked and experienced, also co-constitute meaning in memory, identity and heritage, past and present (Crang and Tolia-Kelly, 2010). This edited collection was developed to capture this shift, and it does so by interrogating the very underpinnings of heritage and the moments, engagements and economies that shape and enable its presence in the twenty-first century. Earlier explorations of visual representation in heritage research (see Waterton and Watson, 2010), along with a more recent call to expand the palate of heritage theory (Waterton and Watson, 2013), had already signalled the tum to a consideration of more-than-textual embodied approaches to heritage research. With this volume, we seek to put a little more might behind that tum and propel heritage studies away from simpler 'two-dimensional' textual
readings and narrative accounts towards engaging with experience, the sensory
realm and the affective materialities and atmospheres of heritage landscapes
- …
