FY 2011 DOI Log Generated by EFTS at Fri Feb 03 06:46:32 EST 2012 4813 Records in This Log
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At the Frontier of NLP, Machine Learning and Semantics
2018-ENST-0062 EDITE - ED 130 Doctorat ParisTech THÈSE pour obtenir le grade de docteur délivré par TELECOM ParisTech Spécialité « Computer Science and Multimedia » présentée et soutenue publiquement par Julien PLU le 21 12 2018 Knowledge Extraction in Web Media : At The Frontier of NLP, Machine Learning and Semantics Directeur de thèse : Dr. Raphaël TRONCY Co-encadrement de la thèse : Dr. Giuseppe RIZZO Jury Pierre-Antoine CHAMPIN, Dr HDR, LIRIS, University Claude Bernard Lyon 1, France, reviewer Harald SACK, Prof, FIZ Karlsruhe, Leibniz Institute for Information Infrastructure, Germany, reviewer Anna Lisa GENTILE, Dr, IBM Research Almaden, USA, examiner Andrea TETTAMANZI, Prof, Inria Sophia Antipolis, France, examiner Christian BONNET, Prof, EURECOM, France, president TELECOM ParisTech école de l’Institut Télécom - membre de ParisTech Dedication I dedicate this thesis to my family, and especially to my grandfather Bernard who always pushed me and encouraged me even when I did not believe in myself anymore. Acknowledgements Thanks to my interested, encouraging and enthusiastic father: he was always keen to know what I was doing and how, although it was difficult to explain him what my work was all about! I am grateful to all my family members and friends who have supported me until the end. Thanks a million to my two great supervisors Prof. Raphaël Troncy and Dr. Giuseppe Rizzo for their amazing supervision and always valuable advice to continue to improve this work again and again. A special thanks goes to the 3cixty project that has provided the funding for this thesis. A special mention to my group members: Jose, Ghislain, Enrico and Pasquale who became good friends along the years. -
Chinese Exclusion and Tong Wars in Portland, Oregon
Utah State University DigitalCommons@USU All Graduate Theses and Dissertations Graduate Studies 12-2019 More Than Hatchetmen: Chinese Exclusion and Tong Wars in Portland, Oregon Brenda M. Horrocks Utah State University Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/etd Part of the History Commons Recommended Citation Horrocks, Brenda M., "More Than Hatchetmen: Chinese Exclusion and Tong Wars in Portland, Oregon" (2019). All Graduate Theses and Dissertations. 7671. https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/etd/7671 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate Studies at DigitalCommons@USU. It has been accepted for inclusion in All Graduate Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@USU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. MORE THAN HATCHETMEN: CHINESE EXCLUSION AND TONG WARS IN PORTLAND, OREGON by Brenda M. Horrocks A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF ARTS in History Approved: ______________________ ____________________ Colleen O’Neill, Ph.D. Angela Diaz, Ph.D. Major Professor Committee Member ______________________ ____________________ Li Guo, Ph.D. Richard S. Inouye, Ph.D. Committee Member Vice Provost for Graduate Studies UTAH STATE UNIVERSITY Logan, Utah 2019 ii Copyright © Brenda Horrocks All Rights Reserved iii ABSTRACT More Than Hatchetmen: Chinese Exclusion and Tong Wars in Portland, Oregon by Brenda M. Horrocks, Master of Arts Utah State University, 2019 Major Professor: Dr. Colleen O’Neill Department: History During the middle to late nineteenth century, Chinese immigration hit record levels in the United States. This led to the growth of Chinatowns across the West Coast. -
^Orrcrnsl)ESTINATIONS
& ^ORrcrNsL)ESTINATIONS 41 ESSAYS ON CHINESE AMERICA AJoint Proiect of CHINESE HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA ond UCLA ASIAN AA,IERICAN STUDIES CENTER Origins and Destinations and popularized forms of history, such as Ken Burns' Civil War mini- Chinese American History: series, attests to the apparently opposite desire to making the past Achievements, Problems, Prospects come alive-to somehow connect. While the ideology of European American modernism is used to counter localism and "old world" habits and superstitions, the HIM MARK LAI countervailing grassroots search for meaning and steadying values Chinese Historical Society of America, San Francisco, California seems all the stronger. Even if the pie of "progress" continues to expand, we're no longer so confident about the values it embodies. In Interest in the study of Chinese American history and society began our separate living spaces, we worry about electromagnetic radiation, when Chinese Americans began establishing roots in this country and cnvironmental collapse, AIDS, homelessness and the "new" poor, forming a Chinese American community. However, this interest was sugar and other addictions, and the vacuousness of a technological limited to a small circle until after World War II, and even then it did materialism gone berserk. not become widespread until after the '60s. It is the purpose of this In his 1924 visit to the United States, the Chinese sociologist Fei paper to examine developments in the field of Chinese American Xiaotong noted that the major problem he saw with the United States historical studies since the end of World War II, to appraise the was thal it was "land without ghosts." Although he greatly treasured achievements, to examine some problem areas, and to assess its future the Western education he received, he mused: prospects. -
Lightspeed Magazine, Issue 58
TABLE OF CONTENTS Issue 58, March 2015 FROM THE EDITOR Editorial, March 2015 SCIENCE FICTION Surfacing Marissa Lingen The Brains of Rats Michael Blumlein Hot Rods Cat Sparks The New Atlantis Ursula K. Le Guin FANTASY The Way Home Linda Nagata A Face of Black Iron Matthew Hughes The Good Son Naomi Kritzer Documentary Vajra Chandrasekera NOVELLA The Weight of the Sunrise Vylar Kaftan NOVEL EXCERPTS Persona Genevieve Valentine Harrison Squared Daryl Gregory NONFICTION Interview: Patrick Rothfuss The Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy Book Reviews Amal El-Mohtar Artist Gallery Wylie Beckert Artist Spotlight: Wylie Beckert Henry Lien AUTHOR SPOTLIGHTS Marissa Lingen Michael Blumlein Cat Sparks Ursula K. Le Guin Linda Nagata Matthew Hughes Naomi Kritzer Vajra Chandrasekera Vylar Kaftan MISCELLANY Coming Attractions Stay Connected Subscriptions & Ebooks About the Editor © 2015 Lightspeed Magazine Wylie Beckert Ebook Design by John Joseph Adams www.lightspeedmagazine.com Editorial, March 2015 John Joseph Adams Welcome to issue fifty-eight of Lightspeed! Our Queers Destroy Science Fiction! Kickstarter campaign has now concluded, and we’re happy to report that it was extremely successful; we asked for $5,000 and got $54,523 in return, which was 1090% of our funding goal. As a result of all that success, we unlocked several stretch goals, including additional special issues Queers Destroy Horror!, which will be published in October as a special issue of Nightmare, and Queers Destroy Fantasy!, which will publish in December as a special issue of Fantasy Magazine. Thanks again so much to everyone who supported the campaign, and thanks of course to our regular readers and subscribers! And, next year, we’re planning to ask People of Color to destroy science fiction, so stay tuned for that! • • • • Awards season is officially upon us, with the first of the major awards announcing their lists of finalists for last year’s work, and we’re pleased to announce that “We Are the Cloud” by Sam J. -
Systematic Inequality: Displacement, Exclusion, and Segregation How America’S Housing System Undermines Wealth Building in Communities of Color
GETTY/BASTIAAN SLABBERS Systematic Inequality: Displacement, Exclusion, and Segregation How America’s Housing System Undermines Wealth Building in Communities of Color By Danyelle Solomon, Connor Maxwell, and Abril Castro August 2019 WWW.AMERICANPROGRESS.ORG Systematic Inequality: Displacement, Exclusion, and Segregation How America’s Housing System Undermines Wealth Building in Communities of Color By Danyelle Solomon, Connor Maxwell, and Abril Castro August 2019 Contents 1 Introduction and summary 2 American public policy systematically removes people of color from their homes and communities 6 Federal, state, and local policies have fortified housing discrimination 13 Conclusion 14 About the authors 15 Methodology 16 Appendix 18 Endnotes Authors’ note: CAP uses “Black” and “African American” interchangeably throughout many of our products. We chose to capitalize “Black” in order to reflect that we are discussing a group of people and to be consistent with the capitalization of “African American.” Introduction and summary Homeownership and high-quality affordable rental housing are critical tools for wealth building and financial well-being in the United States.1 Knowing this, American lawmakers have long sought to secure land for, reduce barriers to, and expand the wealth-building capacity of property ownership and affordable rental housing. But these efforts have almost exclusively benefited white households; often, they have removed people of color from their homes, denied them access to wealth- building opportunities, and relocated them to isolated communities. Across the country, historic and ongoing displacement, exclusion, and segregation continue to prevent people of color from obtaining and retaining their own homes and accessing safe, affordable housing. For centuries, structural racism in the U.S. -
Events Center
University Town Renaissance Man Philip Channing's &lucaling Ritds Center: Bridge Jonathan Miller 1 Favorite Photos Midlael Caine Over Campus Drive Visits UCI Page 10 Page 15 Page2 Pages Quis custodiet Who will guard ipsos custodes? the guardians? October 11, 1983 Third floor Gateway Commons, University of California, Irvine, CA 92717 Volume 16, Number 4 Moses Trains Here Olympic Hurdler AS Gives OK for Makes Strides On Irvine Tmck Events Center by Ken Young AS Council Approves Specifications; New U staff Debates Questions of 'Compromise' An older woman, strolling up to the gate at the UCI track and by Keith Bush coercion of anything designed to field stadium two weeks ago, New U staff enhance this campus," Terry said. In addition, Terry told the coun- was told by a security guard that After expanded debate, the As- cil that "if you vote 'yes' on this, the track was strictly off limits. sociated Students of UC! Execu- I know a good psychiatrist for She peered onto the track to tive Council voted Thursday to observe a large group of men approve preliminary architectur- you." After lengthy and sometimes running around with tape mea- al plans for the proposed Campus heated discussion, the council un- sures, calculators and more high- Events Center. animously decided to table the is- tech hardware than George Lucas The plans suggest an $11 to $12 needed to shoot the whole Star million facility with 5,000 indi- sue unW Oct. 6. Wars trilogy. She finally spotted vidual seats. The building will Council Re~rsal the man responsible for all this house concerts, physical educa- At the Oct. -
Los Angeles Department of City Planning RECOMMENDATION REPORT
Los Angeles Department of City Planning RECOMMENDATION REPORT CULTURAL HERITAGE COMMISSION CASE NO.: CHC-2016-3731-HCM ENV-2016-3732-CE HEARING DATE: October 20, 2016 Location: 6111 North Monterey Road; 6112 North TIME: 10:00 AM Toltec Way; 6117 North Monterey Road PLACE : City Hall, Room 1010 Council District: 14 200 N. Spring Street Community Plan Area: Northeast Los Angeles Los Angeles, CA 90012 Area Planning Commission: East Los Angeles Neighborhood Council: Arroyo Seco Legal Description: Oak Hill Park Tract, Block 2, Lots 28-29 PROJECT: Historic-Cultural Monument Application for the LEE RESIDENCE REQUEST: Declare the property a Historic-Cultural Monument OWNER: CMB Developers, Inc. Attn: Ilanit Maghen 1080 Everett Place Los Angeles, CA 90026-4413 APPLICANT: Highland Park Heritage Trust P.O. Box 50894 Highland Park, CA 90004 PREPARERS: Charles J. Fisher and Jonathan Silberman Highland Park Heritage Trust 140 S. Avenue 57 Highland Park, CA 90042 RECOMMENDATION That the Cultural Heritage Commission: 1. Take the property under consideration as a Historic-Cultural Monument per Los Angeles Administrative Code Chapter 9, Division 22, Article 1, Section 22.171.10 because the application and accompanying photo documentation suggest the submittal warrants further investigation. 2. Adopt the report findings. VINCENT P. BERTONI, AICP Director of PlanningN1907 [SIGNED ORIGINAL IN FILE] [SIGNED ORIGINAL IN FILE] Ken Bernstein, AICP, Manager Lambert M. Giessinger, Preservation Architect Office of Historic Resources Office of Historic Resources [SIGNED ORIGINAL IN FILE] Melissa Jones, Planning Assistant Office of Historic Resources Attachments: Historic-Cultural Monument Application CHC-2016-3731-HCM 6111 North Monterey Road; 6112 North Toltec Way; 6117 North Monterey Road Page 2 of 2 SUMMARY The 1938 Lee Residence is a two-story, East Asian Eclectic single-family dwelling with a detached two car garage located at 6111 North Monterey Road between Hardison Way and South Avenue 60 in the Hermon Community. -
Timothy Dean Draper Department: History
ABSTRACT Name: Timothy Dean Draper Department: History Title: "A Little Kingdom of Mixed Nationalities": Race, Ethnicity, and Class in a Western Urban Community—Rock Springs, Wyoming, 1869-1929 Major: History Degree: Doctor of Philosophy Approved by: Date: Dissertation Director NORTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. ABSTRACT In 1885, the mining settlement of Rock Springs, Wyoming, witnessed one of the worst episodes of ethnocentric violence in the urban West as Euroamerican miners massacred Chinese laborers and burned Chinatown to the ground. Less than four decades later, in 1926, inhabitants of Rock Springs, including immigrants and natives, Asian Americans and Euroamericans, came together at a time of heightened national ethnic tensions to celebrate the diversity of their municipal community in the first of four annual "International Night" festivals. This study explores the apparently dichotomous reality of Rock Springs from its establishment as a mining camp during the building of the Union Pacific Railroad in the late 1860s to the conclusion of the International Night movement in the mid- to late 1920s The focus of this dissertation centers upon the role of immigrants and their descendents in constructing diverse community networks and how they syncretized those varied networks into a unifying ethos of "municipal community," an identity expressed through their sense of ethno-racial boundaries, western heritage, inter-class cooperation, and negotiation with monopoly capitalism. By focusing on ethnicity, race, class, and region, I address how the inhabitants of Rock Springs negotiated the cultural and material challenges to construction of a community identity posed by a hegemonically inclined Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. -
NW LERA Racism/Antiracism 2021 Powerpoint
Racism/An*racism in The Union Movement Barbara J. Diamond, Diamond Law Training Northwest LERA Oregon as a White Utopia: What Do We Know? Share Out! TW: Some of this informaon includes images of racist violence and hate toward Black and Asian people. Federal Dona*on Land Act of 1850 Free land given to: "every white [male] sePler...American half breed Indians included.” The first Black exclusion law in Oregon, adopted in 1844 by the Provisional Government mandated that Lash Laws Black people aempFng to sele in Oregon would be publicly whipped—thirty- nine lashes, repeated every six months—unFl they departed. Oregon’s Constuonal Convenon of November 7, 1857. Voters disapproved of slavery by a wide margin. But--- Black people prohibited from being in the state, owning property, and making contracts. Racism in the Union Movement • City Unions United Against Racism • Barbara J. Diamond The 1860 census for Oregon reported 128 African Americans in a total Census populaon of 52,465. Stop and Think What were the conscious beliefs of white sePlers which permiPed them to adopt and carry out exclusion and lash laws? 19th Century Unions Naonally 19th Century Unions were white-only with few excepFons. Black and Chinese workers were not permiPed to join. Especially true in construcFon trades and railroad unions. David Roediger, The Wages of Whiteness: Race and the Making of the American Working Class, 1991 Rock Springs Massacre 1885 White miners, led by Knights of Labor, killed 28 Chinese and wounded 15 others in Wyoming. Aeer a dispute about who would be able to work in a coal mine owned by Union Pacific, 36 Chinese coal miners had their sleeping barracks set afire near Newcastle Washington by a white mob. -
Groundwater Technical Report for the Central Texas Regional Mobility Authority 183 North Mobility Project
Groundwater Technical Report for the Central Texas Regional Mobility Authority 183 North Mobility Project CSJ # 0151-05-100 and 3136-01-185 Prepared for CP&Y, Inc. Prepared by Cambrian Environmental with SWCA Environmental Consultants July 2, 2015 SWCA Project Number 25572-AUS This page left intentionally blank ES-1 Groundwater Technical Report for the Central Texas Regional Mobility Authority 183 North Mobility Project CAMBRIAN ENVIRONMENTAL 4422 Pack Saddle Pass No. 204 Austin, Texas 78745 with SWCA ENVIRONMENTAL CONSULTANTS 4407 Monterey Oaks Blvd No. 110 Austin, Texas 78749 Submitted to: CP&Y, Inc. The Chase Bank Building Tower of the Hills 13809 Research Blvd, No. 300 Austin, Texas 78750 Attn: Andy Atlas July 2, 2015 Geological analysis and interpretations conducted by and under the direct supervision of Kemble White Ph.D., P.G., Texas Professional Geoscientist license number 3863. As a licensed professional geoscientist I attest that the contents of this report are complete and accurate to the best of my knowledge. ES-2 This page left intentionally blank ES-3 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The proposed 183 North Mobility Project (Project) is a cooperative effort by the Central Texas Regional Mobility Authority (CTRMA) and the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) to improve US 183 from State Highway (SH) 45/Ranch-to-Market Road (RM) 620 to Loop 1 (MoPac) (CSJ 0151-05-100 and 3136-01-185).Proposed Project activities involve a total of approximately 724.6 acres; 714.2 acres of existing right-of-way (ROW), 8.0 acres of proposed ROW, and 2.4 acres of existing easements, as shown in Figure 1 (Project Area). -
Final Environmental Assessment
FINAL Environmental Assessment 183 North Mobility Project From Loop 1 (MoPac) to State Highway 45/Ranch-to-Market Road 620 CSJs: 0151-05-100 & 3136-01-185 Travis and Williamson Counties, Texas April 2016 The Environmental review, consultation and other actions required by applicable Federal environmental laws for this project are being, or have been, carried-out by TxDOT pursuant to 23 U.S.C. 327 and a Memorandum of Understanding dated December 16, 2014, and executed by the Federal Highway Administration and TxDOT. [This page left blank intentionally] Table of Contents 1.0 INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................................... 1 2.0 PURPOSE AND NEED ......................................................................................................... 9 2.1 NEED FOR THE PROPOSED PROJECT ........................................................................................................... 9 2.2 PURPOSE OF THE PROPOSED PROJECT ..................................................................................................... 10 3.0 ALTERNATIVES.................................................................................................................. 11 3.1 PRELIMINARY ALTERNATIVES ..................................................................................................................... 11 3.2 REASONABLE ALTERNATIVES ..................................................................................................................... 11 3.3 -
January 25, 1965 Minutes of the Six
January 25, 1965 Minutes of the Six Hundred and Nineteenth Meeting, a Regular Meeting of the State Highway Commission held in Austin, Texas, with the following members present: Herbert C. Petry, Jr. Chairman Hal Woodward Member J. H. Kultgen Member D. C. Greer State Highway Engineer IT IS ORDERED that a Regular Meeting of the State Highway Com mission be opened at 9:00 A.M., January 25, 1965. January 25, 1965 An initial appropriation of $177,800. 00 is hereby made to cover the State's share of cost to be incurred in the acquisition of right of way on the following listed projects which have been previously authorized by the Commission. Reimbursements to the counties and cities for the State's share of right of way expenditures will be made in accordance with the State-County or City Agreement. COUNTY PROTECT NO. HIGHWAY OR LOCATION FUNDS Newton RW 8020-1-23 St. 87 $ 5,000.00 Williamson RW 8014-1-15 U.S. 183 25,000.00 Bastrop RW 0014-1-17 St. 21 8,000.00 Cass RW 0019-1-11 St. 8 40,000.00 Willacy RW 433-4-3 St. 186 (Suppl. to 4,500.00 Min. 42757) Titus RW 8019-1-8 U.S. 67 (Suppl. to 6,000.00 Min. 52424) Williamson RW 0014-1-12 U.S. 183 (Suppl. to 3,300.00 Min. 54728) Hidalgo RW 255-7-24 U.S. 281 (Suppl. to 2,000.00 Min. 42361) Hidalgo RW 255-7-25 U.S. 281 (Suppl. to 20,000.00 Min.