5,427 research outputs found

    The Non-Participants

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    The Non-Participants is a collection of short stories that combine loosely to explore the movement of two characters from from the Upper Midwest from adolescence to young adulthood. Through a variety of narrative techniques the stories survey the literal and emotional landscapes of these characters\u27 lives

    Hybrid-electric vehicle design and applications

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    This paper discusses the considerations involved in hybrid-electric vehicle design. The tradeoffs between issues such as drive scheme/arrangement, motor choice, batteries, and temperature control are investigated. The technologies and components which are currently available, and those which are likely in the near future, are described. A sport utility vehicle is taken as a specific case study because they are very popular and relatively inefficient. Calculations indicate that a hybrid sport utility vehicle with all wheel drive is feasible using existing components. The next generation vehicle using new technologies is also predicted

    Vaughan, Frederick — Aggressive in Pursuit: The Life of Justice Emmett Hall

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    My laptop takes forever, now what!

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    ITAP Research Computing\u27s Data Workbench offers researchers access to an interactive computing environment for non-batch big data analysis and simulation. Researchers who outgrow their local computing resources can benefit from the extra computing power that Data Workbench offers without jumping directly into the High-Performance Computing clusters. In this presentation, we will discuss the details of Data Workbench, file storage options including the Data Depot and how to transfer large files reliably with the Globus research data management service

    Touch of Evil: Disagreements at the Heart of the Criminal Law Power

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    Evil has been a diffıcult presence to shake in the judicial treatment of Parliament’s criminal law power, s. 91(27). From its early treatment by the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council to the Supreme Court of Canada’s latest disagreements in Reference re Genetic Non-Discrimination Act, the necessity of suppressing evil has woven in and out of the jurisprudence of the criminal law power. Alluring for its potential to provide some integrity and definitional limits to a broad head of jurisdictional power, a judicial standard premised on evil ultimately distracts more than it assists in adjudicating the division of powers by drawing courts into unquantifiable assessments of the amount of evil required before Parliament can validly enact criminal law. Better for courts to be guided by the broader conception of criminal public purpose articulated in Justice Rand’s famous judgment in Margarine Reference as a way to enable the respect of the full scope of Parliament’s authority while also protecting the balance of federalism. The Supreme Court’s divided reasons in Reference re Genetic Non-Discrimination Act provide hope for just that approach while also suggesting that evil may continue to unhelpfully hover at the edges of a case law it has haunted for too long
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