294,154 research outputs found

    APPLICATION OF BINARY COMPOSITIONS IN MULTIDIMENSIONAL RECOGNITION TASKS

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    This paper examines the possibility o f using pattern recognition method, which is based on compositions of fuzzy relations, to work with multiple feature selections such as where the number o f features is greater than 3. Investigation o f problems, which are connected to multidimensional pattern recognition, is also applied. Some practical part concerning proposals on experiments is provided

    Johnston, Jesse Walter, Sr., 1880-1972 (SC 1337)

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    Finding aid only for Manuscripts Small Collection 1337. Journal kept by Jesse Walter Johnston, Sr., Sebree, Webster County, Kentucky, concerning the destructive 1937 flood and data about Johnston. He was minister of the First Baptist Church, Sebree from 1929 to 1944

    Академік О.О. Богомолець у пам’ятках матеріальної культури

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    Нинішній рік виявився щедрим на ювілейні дати, коли ми вшановуємо тих, чиї імена стали гордістю нашої країни. Серед діячів науки такою видатною постаттю був патофізіолог, дійсний член (з 1929) і президент (з 1930) ВУАН (з лютого 1936 р. до січня 1937 р. — АН УСРР, з січня 1937 р. — АН УРСР), академік (з 1932) і віце-президент (з 1942) АН СРСР, дійсний член Академії медичних наук СРСР (з 1944), Герой Соціалістичної Праці, Лауреат Державної премії СРСР Олександр Олександрович Богомолець (24 травня 1881 — 19 липня 1946)

    Mirador : setmanari de literatura, art i política

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    Publicació periòdica editada a Barcelona dedicada a la literatura, l'art i la política, amb una periodicitat setmanal entre 1929 i 1937. Continuada per la publicació MeridiàRevista editada en Barcelona dedicada a la literatura, el arte y la política, con periodicidad semanal que va de 1929 a 1937. Continuada por la publicación MeridiàJournal published in Barcelona devoted to literature, art and politics, on a weekly basis between 1929 and 1937. Continued by Meridi

    The Crescent Student Newspaper, December 13, 1977

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    Student newspaper of Pacific College (later George Fox University). 16 pages, black and white.https://digitalcommons.georgefox.edu/the_crescent/1937/thumbnail.jp

    W88-0084. Neevel, Alvin J. (1899-1965). Papers, 1921-1972. 0.25 linear ft.

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    Minister of the Reformed Church in America (RCA); received an A.B. degree from Hope College (1926), Th.B. degree from Western Theological Seminary (1929), and D.D. from Hope College (1937); licensed by the Classis Wisconsin (1929); ordained by the Classis of Albany (New York) (1929); served as a pastor at Westerlo, New York, and Clarksville, New York (1929-1939), Williston Park, New York (1939-1948); served as a field secretary for the Particular Synod of New York for the RCA (1948-1964). Collection includes biographical information, student papers written while attending Western Theological Seminary, 1926-1929; materials produced by Neevel when he served as field secretary of the Synod of New York, 1948-1964; Church Herald articles, 1948-1960, and photographs of his wife, Cornelia Nettinga Neevel (Hope College Class of 1927), at Hope College Preparatory School (1921) and Holland Junior High School (n.d.), and programs for the Hope College Girl’s Glee Club (ca. 1927) and B Natural Chorus (n.d.)

    Rhetorical smoke without revolutionary fire : a study of the consciousness of the New Zealand Waterside Workers Federation, 1915-1937 : a thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Sociology at Massey University

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    Page 302 is missing from the original copy.This thesis has two purposes. The first is to establish a tool for a Marxist analysis of trade union consciousness; the second is to demonstrate it in action in a case study of the New Zealand Waterside Workers Federation (NZWWF) from 1915-1937. Basing itself on the work of the classic Marxist revolutionary theorists, (Marx, Engels, Lenin, Trotsky, Luxemburg, Lukacs and Gramsci), a Marxist typology of essential revolutionary concepts is constructed. This is designed to assess the degree of revolutionary consciousness of any particular union, that is, the degree to which it struggles against bourgeois constraints or, on the contrary, the degree to which it succumbs. A multi-factorial, bi-polar typology is then built up from basic Marxist concepts with particular reference to trade unions and their role under capitalism and this typology is used to analyse the consciousness of the watersides. This analysis includes both a study of the historical constraints facing them and a detailed study of their responses. The historical constraints are the economic, political, and ideological forces confronting the trade union movement as a whole 1915-1937, together with an account of the development of the trade union movement within these constraints. The role of the transport workers and the watersiders within the wider union movement is described. The typology is then applied to the contents of the Federation newspaper, the Transport Worker, (TW), and the decisions of the Federation as recorded in the Minutes of its Annual (later Biennial) Conferences from 1915-1937. The actions and ideas of the Federation are discussed according to periods set by the economic and political conditions external to the union: Boom, 1915-1921; Stagnation 1922-1929; Depression, 1930-1934; Labour Government, 1935-1937. The Federation shows a development from a syndicalist, though not militant, position to one leaning heavily on political action through the parliamentary Labour Party

    Monetarist Interpretations of the Great Depression: An Evaluation and Critique

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    This paper rejects the proposition that there is only a single interesting question to ask about the decade of the 1930s. It is concerned not only with the role of money in the 1929-33 contraction but also with the relative role of monetary and nonmonetary factors in the recession of 1937-38 and subsequent recovery and, in addition, with the division of nominal income change between prices and real output. New empirical evidence bearing on each of these issues is provided The results suggest that both extreme monetarist and nonmonetarist interpretations of the decade of the l930s are unsatisfactory and leave interesting features of the data unexplained. Arguing against acceptance of an extreme monetarist interpretation are (1) the inability of changes in the money supply alone to explain the severity of the initial collapse in income between 1929 and the fall of 1931, (2) the steady weakening of the correlation between changes in nominal income and money as the 1930s progressed, (3) the failure of monetary factors to explain the nature and timing of the 1938-41 recovery, and (4) the apparent absence of any tendency for the mechanism of price flexibility to provide strong self-correcting forces as required by an approach that stresses monetary rules and opposes policy activism. Arguing against acceptance of an extreme nonmonetarist interpretation are (1) the close association between the collapse in income and the lagged effect of monetary changes after the fall of 1931, (2) the milder contraction and earlier recoveries associated with the more expansive monetary policies pursued in Europe, (3) the close association between money and income in the 1937-38 recession, and (4) the failure of the price change data to adhere to the expectational Phillips curve approach imbedded in many postwar econometric models constructed by nonmonetarists.
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