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Integration by Part In this page we are going to discuss about integration by parts concept.This method is used for performing the integration on the product. If one of the product is unity then the integration on the product can be easily integrable. If the product of the integration are of two different kinds of functions then we simply use the
Teachers prepare to demonstrate the projects they built for the Rocketry Engineering Design Challenge during the 2017 GE Foundation High School STEM Integration Conference at the Center for Space Education at NASA's Kennedy Space Center. High school teachers from across the country took part in the week-long conference, which is designed to explore effective ways for teachers, schools and districts from across the country to integrate STEM throughout the curriculum. The conference is a partnership between GE Foundation and the National Science Teachers Association. Photo credit: NASA/Chris Chamberland
29 May 2018 - OECD Forum 2018 – Integrating Migrants
Nassira El Moaddem, Director & Editor in Chief, Le Bondy Blog
Sebene Eshete, Advocacy Coordinator, Generation 2.0, Equality and Diversity, Greece
Andreas Hollstein, Mayor, Altena, Germany
Mina Jaf, Founder and Executive Director, Women Refugee Route; Laureate, Women of Europe Awards 2017
Seema Malhotra, Member of Parliament; Chair, All Party Parliamentary Group on Assistive Technology, United Kingdom
Rui Marques, former High Commissioner of Migration and Integration, Portugal; Founder, Ubuntu Academy
Jean-Christophe Dumont, Head, International Migration Division, Employment, Labour and Social Affairs, OECD
Photo: OECD/Mariano Bordon
On Wednesday, September 28, 2022, at the University of Mississippi’s Gertrude C. Ford Center, Mr. James Meredith was recognized by both that educational institution and the U.S. Marshals Service. With the 60th anniversary of the integration of the University approaching on October 1, the institutional ceremony, entitled “The Mission Continues-Building Upon the Legacy,” gave USMS Director Ronald L. Davis the perfect opportunity to award Meredith one of highest honors he could, and made him an Honorary Deputy U.S. Marshal. In the history of the U.S. Marshals Service only a handful of people have ever received this honor.
Of the approximately 350 deputy U.S. marshals and deputized personnel that ensured the registration and safety of Mr. Meredith during this time, few are living today. Retired Deputy U.S. Marshal Herschel Garner, the youngest of the cadre of deputies present during the riots that preceded registration, attended the ceremony representing all of them.
This historical event continues the partnership between the USMS and the University of Mississippi in recognizing the importance of educational equality and the role of our deputies in bringing this about. While it truly was a battle that resulted in Mr. Meredith attending and graduating from the school of his choice, the decade celebrations from 2002 to 2022 remain important moments in their own right.
Photo by Shane T. McCoy/US Marshals
10 April 2019, 'Integration' Press Point
Belgium - Brussels - April 2019
© European Union / Fred Guerdin
Serafino NARDI, Head of Unit - Unit D1 Press officers and relations with media
Karl-Heinz LAMBERTZ, President of the Committee of the Regions
Valeria MANCINELLI, Mayor of Ancona, awarded the 2018 World Mayor Prize
29 May 2018 - OECD Forum 2018 – Integrating Migrants
Nassira El Moaddem, Director & Editor in Chief, Le Bondy Blog
Sebene Eshete, Advocacy Coordinator, Generation 2.0, Equality and Diversity, Greece
Andreas Hollstein, Mayor, Altena, Germany
Photo: OECD/Mariano Bordon
According to the people of Munich the joke of the year: Danes in Lederhosen. Kept getting the question: »Are you Americans?«
Following the successful integration of Zephiro 23 into the mobile gantry, the following stage, Zephiro 9, is integrated.
Vega flight VV01 is set to lift off on 13 February.
ESA’s new, small launcher will carry nine satellites into orbit on its very first flight: Italian space agency’s LARES and ALMASat-1 with seven CubeSats from European universities.
For further information please visit:
Integration series
"words"
"How great the multitude of truths which the garment of words can never contain!"
Bahá'u'lláh
20 May 2019 - OECD Forum
Migrants' Integration
Speakers : Oleksandra Vakulina
Host, Business line - Euronews;
Ana Bailao: Advocate, Council on Housing; Deputy Mayor City of Toronto, Canada.
Stephanie Cox : Founder, Austria’s first job fair for refugees; Member - Austrian Parliament, Austria.
Tareq Hadhad : Founder - Peace by Chocolate, Canada.
Photo : © Andrew Wheeler / OECD
You know, I seldom mix modern with vintage Halloween pieces, but this year I have created a whole display section to doing just that. Much of what we are looking at here is the art of Matthew Kirscht, the little clip on candles to the right are Lori Rudolph's of Retro Rudolph, and the tiny compo JOL to the left is vintage. These old and new pieces go so well together.
29 May 2018 - OECD Forum 2018 – Integrating Migrants
Nassira El Moaddem, Director & Editor in Chief, Le Bondy Blog
Sebene Eshete, Advocacy Coordinator, Generation 2.0, Equality and Diversity, Greece
Andreas Hollstein, Mayor, Altena, Germany
Mina Jaf, Founder and Executive Director, Women Refugee Route; Laureate, Women of Europe Awards 2017
Seema Malhotra, Member of Parliament; Chair, All Party Parliamentary Group on Assistive Technology, United Kingdom
Rui Marques, former High Commissioner of Migration and Integration, Portugal; Founder, Ubuntu Academy
Photo: OECD/Mariano Bordon
Integration bill passed by the Scottish Parliament.
The Scottish Parliament has voted to transform the way health and social care services are provided by passing “landmark” legislation this afternoon.
Coroner Noble Yocum of Etowah County, Al. examines the personal effects of William L. Moore, the civil rights worker slain on a lone march, April 24, 1963—the day after Moore was gunned down.
Moore was, a postal worker and Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) member who had participated in and staged civil rights demonstrations in Baltimore, Annapolis and Washington, D.C. before his fateful march..
He was assassinated in Attalla, Alabama April 23, 1963, during a single person protest march from Chattanooga, Tennessee to Jackson, Mississippi, where he intended to deliver a letter to Governor Ross Barnett, supporting civil rights.
Moore became involved with the civil rights movement purposefully, but at the same time almost by accident.
He had earlier picketed for peace in his adopted home town of Binghamton, N.Y., but decided he wanted to join the civil rights movement in Baltimore where ongoing demonstrations were taking place.
Moore found work as a substitute letter carrier while in Baltimore.
Students at Morgan State University were attempting to desegregate the Northwood theater February 15, 1963 when Moore happened by. Twenty-six students were sitting-in at the lobby and the theater manager was reading them a trespass notice.
Moore decided to join them and was arrested along with the students. Altogether, 151 black and one white, Moore, were arrested that day.
White students from Johns Hopkins and Goucher then joined the protest in the coming days
On February 21st the theater desegregated.
The next day Moore decided to stage a 35-mile march from Baltimore to Annapolis wearing two sign-boards: one reading “End Segregation in Maryland” and the other “Equal Rights for All Men.”
He was unable to deliver his letter to the governor, but talked to an aide at length and delivered the letter to him.
On his second march he walked to the White House. He arrived at about the same time that Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. was being released from the Birmingham jail after protests in that city.
His letter to President John F. Kennedy said that he intended to walk to Mississippi and "If I may deliver any letters from you to those on my line of travel, I would be most happy to do so."
For his third protest he planned to walk from Chattanooga, Tennessee to Jackson, Mississippi and deliver a letter to Governor Ross Barnett urging him to accept integration. He was wearing sandwich board signs stating; "Equal rights for all & Mississippi or Bust".
In an account of his Baltimore sit-in and Annapolis walk written for the CORE newsletter, Moore wrote:
“Perhaps it was this walk which gave me the idea for my forthcoming walk in the south. When I wrote my friend, Jim Peck, about the southern walk, he replied that possibly this would be more effective as a group action and that, furthermore it would be extremely dangerous for a lone individual.”
“However, I had made up my mind. I felt that a white3 mailman, here in the south, delivering a letter to Governor Barnett would have a certain impact. I definitely plan to take this walk during my vacation.”
On April 23, 1963, about 70 miles into his march, Moore was interviewed by Charlie Hicks, a reporter from radio station WGAD in Gadsden, Alabama, along a rural stretch of U.S. Highway 11 near Attalla.
The station had received an anonymous phone tip about Moore's location. In the interview, Moore said: "I intend to walk right up to the governor's mansion in Mississippi and ring his doorbell. Then I'll hand him my letter." Concerned for Moore's safety, Hicks offered to drive him to a motel. Moore insisted on continuing his march.
Less than an hour after the reporter left the scene, a passing motorist found Moore's body about a mile farther down the road, shot twice in the head at close range with a .22 caliber rifle. The gun's ownership was traced to Floyd Simpson, whom Moore had argued with earlier that day, but no formal charges were ever filed against him. Moore died a week short of his 36th birthday.
Moore's letter was found and opened. In it, Moore reasoned that "the white man cannot be truly free himself until all men have their rights." He asked Governor Barnett to: "Be gracious and give more than is immediately demanded of you...."
CORE organized a group to try to complete Moore’s walk in May 1963. The group was pelted with rocks by white rioters, injuring a number of marchers.
On May 8th, police stopped the march at the Alabama line and arrested everyone in the group. According to an account written for the CORE newsletter, a mob of whites in a nearby field shouted “Get the goddam communists!” “Throw them n____s in the river!” and “Kill ‘em, Kill ‘em!”
Following a memorial service at the murder site, another group of CORE marchers tried again. Before they took two steps, they were all arrested.
The march was finally completed when two people started out April 23, 2008. Ellen Johnson and Ken Loukinen walked the 320 miles from Reece City, Alabama, near where Moore was killed, and delivered Bill Moore's original letter to the capitol at Jackson, Mississippi.
Bob Zellner, a long-time activist and first white Field Secretary of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee, was with them and attempted to present the letter to Governor Haley Barbour on May 6, 2008, but Barbour refused to meet with the party.
No one was ever tried for Moore's murder..
For more information and related images, see flic.kr/s/aHsmLvyqDg
The photographer is unknown. The image is an Associated Press photograph housed in the D.C. Library Washington Star Collection.
November 12th, 2015
I don't know if Crowded House were on tour in the UK when the songs four seasons in one day and weather with you were written but it wouldn't surprise me. I thought I was on for a glorious sunset but that big old ball of gas was teasing and I trudged home. En route my inner child was taken by the kite waving in the wind to scare the birds and I watched it for a while before moving on again. The light was now low and as I carried on to my left there was suddenly this giant face looking at me from the trees. Never have I been equally in awe of a piece of art as I have been startled in the same breath. Hopefully I will get a shot when there is better light as I don't think this quite does it justice.
Technology Integration for digital fabrication: Arduino, drives and 3D printer for chasis and wheels.
29 May 2018 - OECD Forum 2018 – Integrating Migrants
Andreas Hollstein, Mayor, Altena, Germany
Photo: OECD/Mariano Bordon
29 May 2018 - OECD Forum 2018 – Integrating Migrants
Jean-Christophe Dumont, Head, International Migration Division, Employment, Labour and Social Affairs, OECD
Photo: OECD/Mariano Bordon
29 May 2018 - OECD Forum 2018 – Integrating Migrants
Sebene Eshete, Advocacy Coordinator, Generation 2.0, Equality and Diversity, Greece
Photo: OECD/Mariano Bordon
The revolutionary era of education speaks out its belongnings to technologies in all subjects and in all levels. This integration of technology in education has challenged all educational philosophies beacuse it is rapidly changing.
DSV-3 Turtle / DSV-4 Sea Cliff
The other two 6-foot diameter HY-100 steel spheres originally fabricated for the Alvin were later used for the Navy's Turtle (DSV-3) and her sister ship Sea Cliff (DSV-4), built to a design similar to the Alvin. Turtle had video and still cameras, two six-function hydraulic manipulators, and four large view ports. Sea Cliff had two 7-function hydraulically operated manipulator arms, three 11-cm view ports, and video and still camera systems.
The US Navy’s Deep Submergence Vehicle Turtle (DSV-3) and and its sister submersible Sea Cliff (DSV-4) participated in deep-sea search and recovery, oceanographic research, and underwater archaeology. Turtle and Sea Cliff were classified as manned, non-combatant, untethered submersibles. Each vehicle consists of a 6-foot diameter spherical pressure hull mounted on a metal frame. Inside the hull are the control electronics for navigation, lighting and video, and a life support system capable of supporting a crew of three for 72 hours. Located externally on the frame are the battery and hydraulic, ballast, trim, and propulsion systems. There are also two manipulators that allow the vehicles’ crews to handle and retrieve items on the seafloor.
The vehicles were launched on 11 December 1968 and accepted by the Navy in 1970. In keeping with the Navy’s submersible tradition, they are named for towns in the United States whose names are reminiscent of the ocean or sea life. Turtle was named after Turtletown, Tennessee, while Sea Cliff’s namesake is Sea Cliff, New York.
These DSVs are constructed of a fiberglass hull over the metal crew sphere, batteries and electric motors. The craft have television and still cameras, external lights, short-range sonars, and hydraulic remote-control manipulators. Turtle weighs 21 tons, Sea Cliff weighs 29 tons. These DSVs have an endurance of 8 hours at 1 knot, or 1 hour at 2.5 knots. Due to their limited range and endurance, their mother ship should be certain to remain in the vicinity.
Many submersibles control in-water trim by shifting mercury between chambers at either end of the vehicle. Mercury is also corrosive to aluminum, extremely toxic, requires extraordinary measures to prevent spills, and is difficult to clean up when a spill occurs. The Battelle "tungsten ball trim system" is the replacement trim system for Sea Cliff and Turtle. In this system sintered tungsten balls are the weight medium, stored in two stainless steel tubing coils at either end of the vehicle which are connected by a transfer line. Hydraulic fluid moves the balls through the tubing by means of slip flow past each ball, and plastic balls on either end of the daisy chain of tungsten balls provide a filler in the transfer tube when all the weight is shifted one way or the other.
Both submersibles were initially rated for a depth of 6,500 feet but received upgrades in the early 1980s. While the Turtle was rated at 10,000 foot operating depth, Sea Cliff had her original HY-100 steel crew sphere replaced in 1983 with a titanium sphere capable of 20,000 foot operations. Sea Cliff reached this depth for the first time in March 1985, during a dive in the Middle America Trench off the Pacific coast of Central America. This increase of 1500 meters over Alvin's limits provided access to 37% more of the sea floor. Turtle reached a depth of 10,000 feet on 3 October 1980, and Sea Cliff made it to 20,000 feet on 10 March 1985. At that depth, Sea Cliff was capable of reaching 98 percent of the world’s ocean floor, an area roughly six times that of the surface of the moon. As a result, Sea Cliff enjoyed the distinction of being named flagship for the “Year of the Ocean” in 1985.
Sea Cliff and Turtle were often called upon to locate and recover Navy equipment that was lost at sea. During its 20,000 foot sea trials, Sea Cliff was ordered to the site of a downed Marine Corps Sea Stallion helicopter. Operating at 1,500 feet, Sea Cliff used its manipulators both to retrieve pieces of the aircraft directly and to attach lift lines to other parts. Sections as heavy as 10,000 pounds were recovered. Overall, 61 dives were made, and 80 percent of the aircraft was retrieved. Most importantly, Sea Cliff found and recovered the remains of the aircraft’s four crew members for family burial. Similarly, in 1995, when a Navy swimmer delivery vehicle (SDV) was lost in 814 feet of water off Hawaii, Turtle found and retrieved it in an operation many thought was impossible.
Turtle and Sea Cliff had been based from Navy Landing Ship Dock (LSD), or, more commonly, from Navy oceanographic vessels. Any of them could be transported by C-5 aircraft, although such deployments were uncommon.
Since the end of the Cold War the submersibles Sea Cliff and Turtle were available for limited academic research through a cooperative arrangement between NOAA and the US Navy's Submarine Development Squadron Five in San Diego CA. These vehicles have expanded opportunities for peer-reviewed deep submergence research off the US west coast. Sea Cliff provided the science community with some additional access to the deep sea and permitted observations to depths approaching 6000 meters, a depth range otherwise only available by using ROV Jason or the other tethered vehicles of the National Deep Submergence Facility. This increase of 1500 meters over Alvin's limits provides access to 37% more of the sea floor, which represents an area that is greater than 90% of the surface area presently exposed on the continents.
Following the Navy's decision to decommission Sea Cliff, NAVSEA requested Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) to provide a technical assessment and costing of how to best integrate Sea Cliff into the National Deep Submergence Facility. Perhaps the most serious and biggest impediment to integrating Sea Cliff into the US deep submergence program was the lack of an adequate and stable funding base.
Turtle was retired and loaned to the Mystic Aquarium, Institute for Exploration, where it was placed on permanent display. Sea Cliff was turned over to the Office of Naval Research and as of 1999 was being stored at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute while its future was debated
Mystic Aquarium Mystic Ct.
29 May 2018 - OECD Forum 2018 – Integrating Migrants
Rui Marques, former High Commissioner of Migration and Integration, Portugal; Founder, Ubuntu Academy
Photo: OECD/Mariano Bordon
29 May 2018 - OECD Forum 2018 – Integrating Migrants
Andreas Hollstein, Mayor, Altena, Germany
Photo: OECD/Mariano Bordon