1,657 research outputs found

    Kathy Lee to James Meredith (1 October 1962)

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    https://egrove.olemiss.edu/mercorr_anti/1123/thumbnail.jp

    Farmers Insurance Exchange v. Adams: Concurrent Causation and the All-Risk Homeowner\u27s Policy

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    Lee Guild Interview, Events Coordinator at the Nutter Center

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    Kathy Morris interviewed Lee Guid on March 31, 2021 about her time as Events Coordinator for the Nutter Center. During the interview Guild discusses her coming to Wright State University, how the university changed over her long career, and finally her time working at the Nutter Center

    Color Computer Graphics as Applied to Introductory Calculus Instruction

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    The use of computer graphics to support and enhance the presentation of introductory calculus concepts is described. Computer graphics provides more accurate graph sketching, consistent presentations and the ability to develop mathematical models incrementally. The addition of extensive use of color aids even more, adding contrast, color keying, dimensionality, and interest to an illustration. Ten lessons have been designed, developed, and evaluated. They employ a set of subroutines which interface to the NBC APC microcomputer graphics software. These lessons as developed and evaluated may be used interactively in the classroom or by individuals, or noninteractively in the classroom by the use of photographic slides

    The foreclosure crisis in 2008: predatory lending or household overreaching?

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    At least early in the financial crisis, the high rate of foreclosures seemed to be due more to households' overreaching than to predatory lending. A disproportionate number of those being foreclosed on were well-educated, well-off and relatively young people.Foreclosure ; Mortgage loans ; Housing - Finance

    A BIOMECHANICAL ANALYSIS OF THE TAKE-OFF PHASE IN BELOW-KNEE AMPUTEE HIGH JUMP

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    An analysis of below-knee amputee take-off technique was performed on two athletes competing in the high jump finals of the 2004 Paralympic Games. Two digital video cameras were used to film the event with the data later digitised and reconstructed using standard 3-0 OLT procedures. Some similarities with non-amputee high jump technique were noted in that centre of mass height was low at touch-down (TO), there was a similar reported magnitude of negative vertical velocity at TO, and most of the vertical velocity generated occurred in the first half of the take-off phase. However, both below-knee amputee athletes exhibited a slower horizontal approach velocity, a lower positive vertical take-off velocity, a more upright leg position at touch-down and a greater range of motion of the hip throughout the take-off phase compared to what is known about non-amputee high jump technique. These differences may be associated with taking off from the prosthetic limb on the last stride of approach. Understanding why these differences occur has implications for coaching and improving technique

    CURVE SPRINTING KINEMATICS EXHIBITED BY ATHLETES USING A SINGLE, TRANS-TIBIAL PROSTHESIS

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    The purpose of our study was to determine whether kinematics exhibited during the curve section of a 200 m sprint are influenced by ‘limb type’ (prosthetic vs nonprosthetic limb) or ‘prosthetic limb side’ (‘inside’ compared to the ‘outside’ of the curve). Two video cameras (60 Hz) were used to capture 13 male athletes using a single, trans-tibial prosthesis during an international, 200 m T-44 competition. From mixed-model ANOVA (p < .05), prosthetic and nonprosthetic limb kinematics were different, but differences were dependent on the prosthetic limb side. The inside versus outside prosthetic limb may be affected more due to the rotational influences that affect the inside and outside foot differently. Therefore, athletes whose prosthetic limb was on the inside may be at a disadvantage compared to those with an outside prosthetic limb

    Editorial Essay

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    The word nomad, etymologically from the Greek word for pasture, evokes images of a pastoral landscape, a culture that relocates periodically, and suggests also that people's movement might occur in accordance with "rhythms of the landscape." Nomadic cultures, particularly those which survive today in the face of increasing cultural homogeneity, have long held a fascination for more settled cultures. NOMAD is not however, an anthropological investigation of differing nomadic cultures and their representation. Rather, the use of nomad as a theme for this issue provides the opportunity to conceive of the idea of nomad more broadly through themes of travel, movement, memory, displacement, imposition of boundaries and ideas about home, Diaspora and belonging. The nomad is at once the versatile intellectual, the wandering revolutionary, the environmental studies student, the cyber junky, the canoe tripper, and so on.&nbsp
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