International Bibliography of the Theatre: 1982/1983/1984. Edited by Benito Ortolani. New York: Theatre Research Data Center, 1985, 1986, 1987. Pp. 186, x + 388, ix + 852. $70, $95, $120.

1990 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 93-95
Author(s):  
Ronald Vince
Keyword(s):  
New York ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 133 (3) ◽  
pp. 439-448
Author(s):  
Thomas Bauer, ◽  
Rüdiger Budde, ◽  
Sandra Schaffner
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 173
Author(s):  
Abbas Abbas

This article aims at describing the social life of the American people in several places that made the adventures of John Steinbeck as the author of the novel Travels with Charley in Search of America around the 1960s. American people’s lives are a part of world civilizations that literary readers need to know. This adventure was preceded by an author’s trip in New York City, then to California, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Maine, New Jersey, Saint Lawrence, Quebec, Niagara Falls, Ohio, Chicago, Illinois, Michigan, North Dakota, the Rocky Mountains, Washington, the West Coast, Oregon, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, New Orleans, Salinas, and again ended in New York. In processing research data, the writer uses one of the methods of literary research, namely the Dynamic Structural Approach which emphasizes the study of the intrinsic elements of literary work and the involvement of the author in his work. The intrinsic elements emphasized in this study are the physical and social settings. The research data were obtained from the results of a literature study which were then explained descriptively. The writer found a number of descriptions of the social life of the American people in the 1960s, namely the life of the city, the situation of the inland people, and ethnic discrimination. The people of the city are busy taking care of their profession and competing for careers, inland people living naturally without competing ambitions, and black African Americans have not enjoyed the progress achieved by the Americans. The description of American society related to the fictional story is divided by region, namely east, north, middle, west, and south. The social condition in the eastern region is dominated by beaches and mountains, and is engaged in business, commerce, industry, and agriculture. The comfortable landscape in the northern region spends the people time as breeders and farmers. The natural condition in the middle region of American is very suitable for agriculture, plantations, and animal husbandry. Many people in the western American region facing the Pacific Ocean become fishermen. The natural conditions from the plains and valleys to the hills make the southern region suitable for plantation land.


Author(s):  
Joseph R. H. Schaadt ◽  
Kamran Fouladi ◽  
Aaron P. Wemhoff ◽  
Joseph G. Pigeon

Data centers are most commonly cooled by air delivered to electronic equipment from centralized cooling systems. The research presented here is motivated by the need for strategies to improve and optimize the load capacity and thermal efficiency of data centers by using computational fluid dynamics (CFD). Here, CFD is used to model and optimize the Villanova Steel Orca Research Center (VSORC). VSORC, presently in the design stages, will provide a testing environment as well as the capability to investigate best practices and state of the art strategies including hybrid cooling, IT load distribution, density zones, and hot aisle and cold aisle containment. The results of this study will be used in the overall design and construction of the aforementioned research data center. The objective of this study is to find the optimal operating points and design layout of a data center while still meeting certain design constraints. A focus is on finding both the ideal total supply flow rate of the air conditioning units and the ideal chilled water supply temperature (CHWST) setpoint under different data center design configurations and load capacities. The total supply flow rate of the air conditioning units and the supply temperature setpoint of the chilled water system are varied as design parameters in order to systematically determine the optimal operating points. The study also examines the influence of hot aisle and cold aisle containment strategies in full containment, half containment, and no containment configurations on the determined optimal operating conditions for the modeled research data center.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vicky Steeves

This is a self-archived version of an article published in Collaborative Librarianship. The content of this article is not different from what is in the journal (found here: http://digitalcommons.du.edu/collaborativelibrarianship/vol9/iss2/4)Recommended CitationSteeves, Vicky (2017) "Reproducibility Librarianship," Collaborative Librarianship: Vol. 9 : Iss. 2 , Article 4. Available at: https://digitalcommons.du.edu/collaborativelibrarianship/vol9/iss2/4Over the past few years, research reproducibility has been increasingly highlighted as a multifaceted challenge across many disciplines. There are socio-cultural obstacles as well as a constantly changing technical landscape that make replicating and reproducing research extremely difficult. Researchers face challenges in reproducing research across different operating systems and different versions of software, to name just a few of the many technical barriers. The prioritization of citation counts and journal prestige has undermined incentives to make research reproducible.While libraries have been building support around research data management and digital scholarship, reproducibility is an emerging area that has yet to be systematically addressed. To respond to this, New York University (NYU) created the position of Librarian for Research Data Management and Reproducibility (RDM & R), a dual appointment between the Center for Data Science (CDS) and the Division of Libraries. This report will outline the role of the RDM & R librarian, paying close attention to the collaboration between the CDS and Libraries to bring reproducible research practices into the norm.


2015 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nendy Pratama Agusfianto

This study aims to (1) reveal the effect of customer relation management oncustomers’ commitments, (2) to find out the effect of customer relation management andcustomers’ trust, and (3) to uncover the effect of consumer trust on their commitment. Thistype of study belongs to associative research, which aims to investigate the relationshipbetween two or more variables. The population in this study encompassed all the customers ofNew York 1 beauty salon in Mataram. Using Malhotra opinion model, the number of samplesobtained was 65 people. The research data were collected through of use a questionnairedistributed to the a number of respondents, and the data analysis design employed for thepurpose was path analysis. Results of the analysis based on path analysis were presented asfollows (1) the management of customer relation management had no significant effect on thecustomers’ commitments, (2) the customer relation management had a significant and positiveimpact on the customers’ confidence, (3) the trust had a significant and positive effect on thecustomers’ commitment.Keywords : Customer Relation Management, Confidence, Commitment


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