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1

Cremins, Brian. "Walt Kelly's Bridgeport." Inks: The Journal of the Comics Studies Society 2, no. 1 (2018): 1–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/ink.2018.0001.

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House, Deborah J. "Fall Waterfowl Use of Bridgeport Reservoir, Mono County, California." Western Birds 52, no. 4 (November 1, 2021): 278–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.21199/wb52.4.1.

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Aerial surveys from 2003 to 2019 documented the abundance of waterfowl at Bridgeport Reservoir in Mono County, California, from September through mid-November. Waterfowl totals at Bridgeport Reservoir averaged 33,106 ± 4050 (standard error) in the fall. Annual peak counts averaged 10,474 ± 1349, ranging from a low of 2583 in 2014 to the highest single-day count of 23,150 in 2005. Bridgeport Reservoir is a man-made water body in the intermountain West that waterfowl use primarily a mid-migration stopover site, with peak numbers occurring in September. The dominant waterfowl species, the Northern Shoveler (Spatula clypeata), Gadwall (Mareca strepera), Mallard (Anas platyrhynchos), Northern Pintail (A. acuta), and Green-winged Teal (A. crecca), showed both unimodal and bimodal migration chronologies. Regional drought, as indicated by the Palmer drought severity index, combined with a downward trend in waterfowl numbers explained 61.4% of annual variation in fall waterfowl totals. These data may allow future assessment of change in waterfowl abundance at Bridgeport Reservoir in the context of local or regional conditions, and as influenced by climate change.
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3

SCHALCK, HARRY. "Bridgeport, A Pictorial History." Connecticut History Review 27 (November 1, 1986): 58–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/44369280.

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4

Griffith, Kevin. "North of Bridgeport, Morel Hunting." College English 55, no. 4 (April 1993): 429. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/378652.

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5

Hartoonian, Gevork. "Bridgeport Center: Re-Minding Richard Meier." Journal of Architectural Education (1984-) 44, no. 1 (November 1990): 33. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1424973.

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6

Germain, Ashley St, Saki Onda, Julie Lauren Laifer, and Carole Presnick. "Postpartum Contraception at Bridgeport Hospital [1R]." Obstetrics & Gynecology 133, no. 1 (May 2019): 191S. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.aog.0000559460.11571.a3.

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7

Hartoonian, Gevork. "Bridgeport Center: Re-Minding Richard Meier." Journal of Architectural Education 44, no. 1 (November 1990): 33–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10464883.1990.11102665.

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8

Scetti, Fabio. "A Bridge to Portugal: Language and Identity in Bridgeport, CT." Journal of Lusophone Studies 5, no. 2 (December 19, 2020): 123–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.21471/jls.v5i2.357.

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Here I present the results of BridgePORT, an ethnographic study I carried out in 2018 within the Portuguese community of Bridgeport, CT (USA). I describe language use and representation among Portuguese speakers within the community, and I investigate the integration of these speakers into the dominant American English speech community. Through my fieldwork, I observe mixing practices in day-to-day interaction, while I also consider the evolution of the Portuguese language in light of language contact and speakers’ discourse as this relates to ideologies about the status of Portuguese within the community. My findings rely on questionnaires, participant observation of verbal interaction, and semi-structured interviews. My aim is to show how verbal practice shapes the process of identity construction and how ideas of linguistic “purity” mediate the maintenance of a link to Portugal and Portuguese identity.
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9

Textron, Bridgeport. "Bridgeport adopts ‘total quality’ in machine production." Production Engineer 64, no. 1 (1985): 35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/tpe.1985.0017.

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10

Embardo, Robert J. "“Summer lightning,” 1907: The Wobblies in Bridgeport." Labor History 30, no. 4 (September 1989): 518–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00236568900890331.

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Reville, David M. "BRIDGEPORT WORKING: VOICES FROM THE 20th CENTURY." Oral History Review 28, no. 2 (September 2001): 140–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/ohr.2001.28.2.140.

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12

SJAARDA, CAITLIN. "Soldiers Monument in Seaside Park Bridgeport, Connecticut." Connecticut History Review 50, no. 1 (April 1, 2011): 93–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/44370077.

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13

Winn, Christine, Joe Laveneziana, Jane Winters, Patrick Schmincke, John Pelazza, James Paturas, and Richard Kleindenst. "Joint Emergency Planning: The Journey of Bridgeport Hospital." Prehospital and Disaster Medicine 20, S3 (October 2005): s170. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1049023x00015752.

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14

Rigby, J. Keith, Mark G. McKinzie, and Brooks B. Britt. "Pennsylvanian sponges from the Graford Formation, Wise County, Texas." Journal of Paleontology 82, no. 3 (May 2008): 492–510. http://dx.doi.org/10.1666/07-060.1.

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A variety of Pennsylvanian sponges have been recovered from exposures along the shore of Lake Bridgeport and in nearby areas in Wise County, north-central Texas. Calcareous and hexactinellid sponges have locally weathered out of the Jasper Creek Shale (= upper Lake Bridgeport Shale) and the overlying Devil's Den Limestone of the Graford Formation, of Late Pennsylvanian Missourian age.The Demospongea protomonaxonids Heliospongia excavata King, 1933, and Coelocladia spinosa Girty, 1908 are represented in the studied collections by several specimens, as is the new genus and species Luterospongia texana. Agelasid ceractinomorph demosponges are represented by the fissispongiid Fissispongia jacksboroensis King, 1938, the maeandrostiid Maeandrostia kansasensis Girty, 1908, and the girtycoeliid, Girtycoelia typica King, 1933. Sponges of the Class Hexactinellida and the amphidiscophorid Family Stiodermatidae are represented by an extensive suite of specimens of the new genus and species Dermosphaeroidalis irregularis. Representatives of the hexactinellid reticulosid sponges include some unusually large specimens of the vase-shaped Endoplegma calathus Finks, 1960, of the Family Docodermatidae, and fragmental specimens of ?Stereodictyum orthoplectum Finks, 1960, of the Family Stereodictyidae. One unclassified root tuft fragment is also described and illustrated.Much of this diverse sponge fauna was endemic to the western embayment of Pangaea.
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Angerame, Eleanor, Jonathan Delgado, Dina Franceschi, Scott Lacy, Julia Nojeim, Melissa Quan, and Cristina Sandolo. "Framing the Positive Externalities: Community Gardening in Bridgeport, CT." Food Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal 11, no. 1 (2021): 33–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.18848/2160-1933/cgp/v11i01/33-49.

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16

Wood, Starr A., and Sandra A. Austin. "Building Bridges in Bridgeport for HIV-Positive Substance Abusers." Journal of HIV/AIDS & Social Services 8, no. 1 (March 17, 2009): 20–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15381500902736129.

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Mojarro Magaña, María, Luis Gabriel González Vázquez, Ahidé Berenice Mendoza Sánchez, Víctor Miguel Zepeda Orozco, and Juan Bernaldino Martínez Isabeles. "Puesta en marcha de centro de maquinado vertical Bridgeport." Ciencia Latina Revista Científica Multidisciplinar 6, no. 6 (January 3, 2023): 11508–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.37811/cl_rcm.v6i6.4213.

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Esta investigación muestra los resultados obtenidos de la puesta en marcha del centro de maquinado vertical con control numérico Fanuc utilizando herramientas de corte de la marca YG que se encuentra ubicado en las instalaciones del Tecnológico Nacional de México Campus Ciudad Guzmán. Además, se describen los requisitos que se requieren para operar una máquina de Control Numérico Computarizado y la descripción de los fundamentos que contribuyen a este objetivo. También se muestran los programas de cómputo que se emplearon para dibujar, programar y simular el maquinado de distintas piezas. Y la metodología empleada para determinar las variables de velocidad: angular, de avance y penetración, corte por pasada. Las herramientas mostraron estabilidad, durabilidad y buen acabado en los maquinados que se realizaron en 2 y 2.5 ejes.
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18

Herscovitch, Lara B. "Child care choices: Low income mothers in bridgeport, connecticut." Child & Youth Care Forum 25, no. 3 (June 1996): 139–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf02589306.

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19

Wilson, Robert G. "Sand Sagebrush (Artemisia filifolia) and Brittle Pricklypear (Opuntia fragilis) Control." Weed Technology 3, no. 2 (June 1989): 272–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0890037x00031791.

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Experiments were conducted at Bridgeport, NE, during 1983 through 1987 to select alternatives for silvex and 2,4,5-T for sand sagebrush and brittle pricklypear control. Of the six herbicides examined, the butoxyethyl ester of 2,4-D at 2.2 kg ae/ha was equivalent to the propylene glycol butyl ether ester of silvex or 2,4,5-T for sand sagebrush control. The potassium salt of picloram at 0.3 kg ae/ha was equal to silvex for brittle pricklypear control.
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20

Bernstein, Larry H., Maxime Coles, and Attilio Granata. "The Bridgeport Hospital Experience With Autologous Transfusion in Orthopedic Surgery." Orthopedics 20, no. 8 (August 1997): 677–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.3928/0147-7447-19970801-05.

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21

Lichter, Allan F. "Bouncing Back." New England Journal of Entrepreneurship 5, no. 2 (March 1, 2002): 9–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/neje-05-02-2002-b003.

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As on previous occasions, the editors of the New England Journal of Entrepreneurship have sought to interview local small businessowners as well as entrepreneurs who have national reputations. One such small business operator is Allan Lichter, coowner of Millennium Graphics in Bridgeport, Connecticut. Mr. Lichterʼs story is certainly unique to him and to his partner, but readers may resonate with portions of this story as to how challenging it can be to surmount the ups and downs of the business cycle.
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22

Kimball, Rustin A., and Merlynd K. Nestell. "Multi-factored stratigraphy and new correlation standards in the lower part of the Canyon Group (Missourian, Upper Pennsylvanian), Wise County, Texas: A can of worms untangled." Stratigraphy 4, no. 4 (2007): 329–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.29041/strat.04.4.03.

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Several Late Pennsylvanian (Early Missourian) age limestone beds exposed in isolated outcrops in the Trinity River Valley in southwestern Wise County and named by Böse (1917), and Scott and Armstrong (1932) are assigned to the Palo Pinto Formation (lower part of the Canyon Group). Clearly designated type localities or type sections were not given for some limestone beds named in these two previous studies. These limestone units in southwest Wise County occur in coherent stratigraphic sequences in three key areas: along Dry Creek, around Martin Lake, and along Boons Creek. Original type localities have been located and suitable reference sections have been established for these limestone beds. The Canyon Group was established for outcrops of strata in the Brazos River Valley. Correlation of strata between the type area and strata in the Trinity River Valley is based on stratigraphic position, textural characteristics of the limestone, and similarities in flora and fauna, including the presence of distinctive algae and fusulinacean species of Triticites and Nankinella. Equivalence of several of the units named by Scott and Armstrong (1932) is established: the Boone Creek Limestone and Hudson Bridge Limestone; the Sanders Bridge Limestone and unnamed (Yl4) limestone; and the Martin Lake Limestone and Balsora Limestone. The names first used in the literature and retained here are the Boone Creek Limestone, Sanders Bridge Limestone, and the Martin Lake Limestone. Two additional limestone units present between the Martin Lake Limestone and the Willow Point Limestone are formally designated here as the Bridgeport Road Limestone and the Kirkman Limestone. The findings of this investigation follow the Canyon Group nomenclature established by Laury (1962). The two new limestone units, along with the Bridgeport Coal and the Willow Point Limestone, are placed in the Posideon Formation, with the Willow Point Limestone forming the top member. In the Posideon Formation, the Bridgeport Road Limestone may correlate to one of the lower limestone units within the Pp1 shale of Laury (1962) in the type area. The time-synchronous overlying conodont rich core shale has been correlated previously to the Pp1 shale in the type area. The Kirkman Limestone is correlated to the Pp2 limestone, and the Willow Point Limestone to the Wiles Limestone, both correlations based on the presence of overlying time-synchronous core shale in both river valleys. The Sanders Bridge Limestone is correlated to the middle of the Palo Pinto Formation in the type area in the Brazos River Valley.
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23

Szczepkowski, Maciej. "Znaczenie podatków majątkowych w dochodach miast regionu Nowej Anglii." Kwartalnik Kolegium Ekonomiczno-Społecznego. Studia i Prace, no. 2 (November 27, 2016): 91–104. http://dx.doi.org/10.33119/kkessip.2016.2.6.

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The aim of this article is to delineate the role of property taxes in local government revenues in New England in the USA. In the paper I analyse the data from: Boston, Providence, Bridgeport, Manchester, Portland and Burlington. The article consists of three parts. The first part of the study describes local government in the US. The second part of the article shows structure of local government revenues. Finally, in connection with observed relations in revenues structure in New England's cities, the author discusses popular single tax theory.
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24

Collins, Denis. "The University of Bridgeport Faculty Strikes: Introduction to the Special Issue." Journal of Academic Ethics 1, no. 3 (2003): 233–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/b:jaet.0000014628.06898.a8.

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25

Witkowski, Mary K. "Sources for business and labor history in the Bridgeport Public Library." Labor History 31, no. 1-2 (March 1990): 44–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00236569000890071.

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26

Greenberg, I. "Vocational Education, Work Culture, and the Children of Immigrants in 1930s Bridgeport." Journal of Social History 41, no. 1 (September 1, 2007): 149–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jsh.2007.0133.

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27

Miles, Leland. "Brief Comments on Collective Bargaining at the University of Bridgeport: 1974–1987." Journal of Academic Ethics 1, no. 3 (2003): 267–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/b:jaet.0000014580.23938.7d.

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28

Bucki, Cecelia. "Transforming ILWCH: Pioneering the International Approach to Labor History." International Labor and Working-Class History 82 (2012): 37–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0147547912000385.

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I remember my very first seminar with David Montgomery at the University of Pittsburgh in January 1976. Here I was, a working-class kid from Bridgeport, Connecticut, trying to switch from rank-and-file labor activism to an academic career. Montgomery's classroom was an intense experience. His seminars were a combination of readings in secondary sources as well as deep reading in primary sources (whether business magazines, industrial relations expert reports, or radical and union journals). In addition, there were always student-generated political debates on one or another left-wing perspective—we had widely diverse ideological leanings! David accepted all approaches in the New Labor History, as long as the evidence was there.
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Cecelia Bucki. "Connecticut Business and Labor in the World War I Era: The Bridgeport Case." Connecticut History Review 56, no. 1 (2017): 3. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/connhistrevi.56.1.0003.

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30

Lankenau, Stephen E., Michael C. Clatts, Lloyd A. Goldsamt, and Dorinda Welle. "Crack Cocaine Injection Practices and HIV Risk: Findings from New York and Bridgeport." Journal of Drug Issues 34, no. 2 (April 2004): 319–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/002204260403400204.

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31

Gute, David M., and Michael Taylor. "Revitalizing neighbourhoods through sustainable brownfields redevelopment: Principles put into practice in Bridgeport, CT." Local Environment 11, no. 5 (October 2006): 537–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13549830600853452.

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32

Friedman, Stacey R., Jesse Reynolds, Michael A. Quan, Stephanie Call, Cindy A. Crusto, and Joy S. Kaufman. "Measuring changes in interagency collaboration: An examination of the Bridgeport Safe Start Initiative." Evaluation and Program Planning 30, no. 3 (August 2007): 294–306. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.evalprogplan.2007.04.001.

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33

Nestell, Merlynd K., and Rustin A. Kimball. "Historical analysis and reinterpretation of the lower part of the Canyon Group (Missourian, Upper Pennsylvanian), Wise County, Texas: A fine can of worms." Stratigraphy 4, no. 4 (2007): 313–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.29041/strat.04.4.02.

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Late Pennsylvanian (Early Missourian) age limestone strata exposed in several isolated outcrops in the Trinity River Valley in southwest Wise County, Texas were last described by Bose (1917), and Scott and Armstrong (1932). These strata can be correlated with the Upper Pennsylvanian Palo Pinto and Posideon formations of Laury (1962) in the lower part of the Canyon Group in the Brazos River Valley. The two reports were stratigraphically inconsistent concerning the seven limestone units of the Palo Pinto Formation as named by Scott and Armstrong (1932), and both included many poorly located type sections. The Bose (1917) report included no map and many key geographic references were to 1914 ranch names. Wise County records have helped to pinpoint these locations and allowed the reconciliation of the Bose (1917) Palo Pinto limestone localities to those of Scott and Armstrong (1932). Examination of exposures of these strata, and their associated fusulinid and conodont faunas has demonstrated that the following correlations to the Canyon Group in the type area in the Brazos River Valley in Palo Pinto County can be made (in descending order): (i) a conodont-rich black mudstone (indicating maximum transgression and a deep basin environment) at the base of the Wolf Mountain Shale and just above the Wiles Limestone correlates to a similar interval just above the Willow Point Limestone, well exposed in the area around the southwest shore of Lake Bridgeport; (ii) the Willow Point Limestone (= Bridgeport Limestone of Bose) correlates to the Wiles Limestone (top of the Posideon Formation); (iii) strata in the Martin Lake area just south of Bridgeport correlate to equivalent age conodont-rich black mudstones present in the middle part of the Posideon Formation; (iv) the Martin Lake Limestone is a fusulinid/algal grainstone containing a distinctive nankinellid fusulinacean at all outcrops and indicates very shallow marine deposition. It correlates with the top part (= Wynn Limestone) of the Palo Pinto Formation; (v) the Hudson Bridge Limestone correlates with the lower part of the Palo Pinto Formation. A black shale interval a few centimeters thick found in a core taken in an abandoned quarry in the Palo Pinto Formation in southwestern Wise County is correlated to a crinoid - conodont-rich 10-25cm unit that marks the base of the Palo Pinto Formation on top of the Keechi Creek Shale in much of Palo Pinto County. The new correlation of the Willow Point Limestone, the uppermost member that Scott and Armstrong (1932) reported as being in the Palo Pinto Formation, and its placement into the overlying Posideon Formation, leaves six limestone members in the Palo Pinto Formation identified in Wise County. Its top and bottom members, the Martin Lake Limestone and the Hudson Bridge Limestone, respectively, now are firmly correlated to the top and bottom, respectively, of the Palo Pinto Formation in the type area. A 1937 revision of the geologic map of Wise County raised the lower boundary of the Palo Pinto Formation, placing its lowest two members into the older Mineral Wells Formation of the Strawn Group (Armstrong 1937).
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34

Asthana, Shefalika, Srikanth R. Karna, and Irine Ann Shelby. "Amaranthine: Humanoid Robot Kinematics." International Journal of High Speed Electronics and Systems 29, no. 01n04 (March 2020): 2040015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s0129156420400157.

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Humanoid robots are employed in a wide range of fields to replicate human actions. This paper presents the mechanism, configuration, mathematical modeling, and workspace of a 3D printed humanoid robot – Amaranthine. It also discusses the potential scope of humanoid robots in the present day and future. Robots can be programmed for automation as per the demand of the task or operations to be performed. Humanoid robots, while being one of the small groups of service robots in the current market, have the greatest potential to become the industrial tool of the future. Introducing a Humanoid Robot-like Amaranthine holds huge scope majorly in the fields of medical assistance, teaching aid, large industries where heavy-duty operations require application-specific software, etc. Amaranthine was 3D printed and assembled at the RISC Lab of University of Bridgeport.
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35

Reckhow, Sarah, Jeffrey R. Henig, Rebecca Jacobsen, and Jamie Alter Litt. "“Outsiders with Deep Pockets”: The Nationalization of Local School Board Elections." Urban Affairs Review 53, no. 5 (August 10, 2016): 783–811. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1078087416663004.

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Recent election cycles have seen growing attention to the role of “outside” money in urban school board elections. Using an original data set of more than 16,000 contributions covering election cycles from 2008 to 2013 in four school districts (Los Angeles, CA; New Orleans, LA; Denver, CO; Bridgeport, CT), we show how large national donors play a significant role. Our study links two dynamic fields that are rarely studied together: (1) the behavior of wealthy donors in a changing national campaign finance system and (2) the evolving politics of urban education. By examining donor networks, we illuminate the mechanisms behind the nationalization of education politics and national donor involvement in local campaigns. We show that shared affiliations through education organizations are significantly associated with school board campaign contributions.
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Pais, Namitha Viona, James O’Donnell, and Nalini Ravishanker. "Investigating the Joint Probability of High Coastal Sea Level and High Precipitation." Journal of Marine Science and Engineering 12, no. 3 (March 21, 2024): 519. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jmse12030519.

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The design strategies for flood risk reduction in coastal towns must be informed by the likelihood of flooding resulting from both precipitation and coastal storm surge. This paper discusses various bivariate extreme value methods to investigate the joint probability of the exceedance of thresholds in both precipitation and sea level and estimate their dependence structure. We present the results of the dependence structure obtained using the observational record at Bridgeport, CT, a station with long data records representative of coastal Connecticut. Furthermore, we evaluate the dependence structure after removing the effects of harmonics in the sea level data. Through this comprehensive analysis, our study seeks to contribute to the understanding of the joint occurrence of sea level and precipitation extremes, providing insights that are crucial for effective coastal management.
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37

Selig, Gad J., Elif Kongar, Neal Lewis, Christian Bach, and Tarek M. Sobh. "The proposed PhD in Technology Management at the University of Bridgeport: a case study." International Journal of Information and Operations Management Education 5, no. 2 (2013): 172. http://dx.doi.org/10.1504/ijiome.2013.054294.

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38

PALMQUIST, DAVID W. "DOING TWENTIETH CENTURY HISTORY IN A STATE WITH A COLONIAL MINDSET: THE BRIDGEPORT CASE." Connecticut History Review 53, no. 2 (October 1, 2014): 214–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/44370245.

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39

Conroy, William. "Studying brownfields: governmentality, the post-political, or non-essential materialism?" Fennia - International Journal of Geography 196, no. 2 (November 7, 2018): 204–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.11143/fennia.70295.

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This paper sets out to evaluate several common theoretical frameworks employed in critical studies of brownfield redevelopment. Specifically, it analyzes the relevance of governmentality, the post-political, and non-essentialist materialism in that context. To do so, it explores how these theoretical frameworks map on to Bridgeport, Connecticut’s BGreen 2020, and its approach to the redevelopment of vacant and underutilized land – and brownfields more specifically. It argues that these frameworks come up short when applied to this empirical case because they put forth untenable ontological claims regarding the constitution of the subject and political agency. Going further, it asserts that these frameworks fail to identify a way forward for those seeking emancipatory political interventions in the context of brownfield redevelopment and urban environmental politics. In closing this paper suggests that Jason W. Moore's recent writing on “capitalism as world-ecology” can provide a way forward where these other frameworks fail.
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40

Allen, Dick. "Crossing the Picket Line: A Brief Faculty Memoir of the Historic University of Bridgeport Strike." Journal of Academic Ethics 1, no. 3 (2003): 331–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/b:jaet.0000014585.73495.0c.

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41

Knox, James C., and John W. Attig. "Geology of the Pre-Illinoian Sediment in the Bridgeport Terrace, Lower Wisconsin River Valley, Wisconsin." Journal of Geology 96, no. 4 (July 1988): 505–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/629244.

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42

De Filippis, Luigi, and Andrea Billi. "Morphotectonics of fissure ridge travertines from geothermal areas of Mammoth Hot Springs (Wyoming) and Bridgeport (California)." Tectonophysics 548-549 (June 2012): 34–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tecto.2012.04.017.

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43

Elmannai, Wafa, Abdul Razaque, and Khaled Elleithy. "Deployment of TCP University of Bridgeport (UB) to Control Law Enforcement Department over Wireless Mesh Network." Journal of Communications and Computer Engineering 3, no. 1 (December 10, 2012): 40. http://dx.doi.org/10.20454/jcce.2013.427.

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Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) is the most reliable protocol. That was previously introduced for wired networks only. Lately the TCP started to act poorly for several factors due to the advent of wireless network. The represented factors which need to be addressed are recovery mechanism, backup mechanism, mobility, congestion window and maximum packet size. Based on existing variants, new were introduced. The most two debated variants are Vegas and Westwood which motivated many researches. However, the number of studies proved that Vegas could perform more efficiency than other variants during the congested network whereas Westwood could consume less bandwidth. Hence, in our previous publications, we already proved by integrating some features of Vegas and Westwood to get better and more stable variant even in high congested network. It is called TCP University of Bridgeport (TCP-UB).Based on a previous simulation, TCP-UB proved a high efficiency, less bandwidth consumption and stability from static and mobility point of view. Therefore, in this paper we are using NS2 simulator to perform TCP-UB over wireless mesh network supported with manhattan mobility model. It provides robust and faster transmission service among several police stations in Connecticut, USA.Furthermore, we are comparing TCP-UB with Vegas and Westwood from a static and mobility point of view based on bandwidth consumption and congestion window scenario. On the basis of findings, we validate that TCP-UB is also better performer even over wireless mesh network.
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44

Zhu, Tiejun. "Empirical Research on the Effectiveness of MOOCs in Developing Design Students on Sino-foreign Cooperation University Programs." International Journal of Emerging Technologies in Learning (iJET) 11, no. 06 (June 27, 2016): 19. http://dx.doi.org/10.3991/ijet.v11i06.5304.

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Nowadays, the implementation of Sino-foreign cooperative education program has become an essential way to internationalize Chinese higher education.The large number of MOOC online resources currently available, and their innovative teaching modes has provided a new and novel channel to promote such programs. In order to systematically illustrate and reveal the effectiveness of utilizing MOOC in these projects, which sponsored by Undergraduate cooperative education project of visual communication design between Anhui Polytechnic University and University of Bridgeport, researchers carried out a one-year targeted and systematic tracking, investigation, comparative analysis, consultation, summary and the real-time assessment. Experimental data and detailed research results show that the MOOC intervention mechanism achieved a positive effect in promoting and supplementing students’ knowledge and understanding of their major. It not only strengthened students’ skills and literacy, it was also found to significantly promote traditional classroom teaching at Anhui Polytechnic University. The project proved successful with design students by combining in class and online teaching. It is recommended that such projects be further promoted and applied in the future.
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45

Sharma, A., A. Azizi-Yarand, B. Clayton, G. Baker, P. McKinney, C. Britton, M. Delshad, and G. Pope. "The Design and Execution of an Alkaline/Surfactant/Polymer Pilot Test." SPE Reservoir Evaluation & Engineering 16, no. 04 (October 10, 2013): 423–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/154318-pa.

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Summary A tertiary alkaline/surfactant/polymer (ASP) pilot flood was implemented during 2010 in the Illinois basin of the US, and is continuing currently. With initial discovery of the Bridgeport sandstone formation in the early 1900s and more than 60 years of waterflooding, the pilot was designed to demonstrate that ASP flooding could produce sufficient quantities of incremental oil to sanction a commercial project. Laboratory experiments, including corefloods, were performed to determine the optimal chemical formulation for the pilot and to provide essential parameters for a numerical-simulation model. Polymer-injectivity tests, single well chemical tracer tests (SWCTTs), and an interwell-tracer-test (IWTT) program were all performed to prepare for and support a full interpretation of the pilot results. A field laboratory was run through the duration of the pilot to monitor the quality of the injection and production fluids, which turned out to be critical to the success of the pilot. We present the results and interpretation of the ASP pilot to date, the challenges faced during the project, and the lessons learned from the field perspective.
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46

Parfitt, Steven. "Democracies in Conflict: Union Democracy, Industrial Democracy, and Machinists in Bridgeport, Connecticut, during the First World War." Historical Studies in Industrial Relations, no. 34 (January 2013): 83–110. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/hsir.2013.34.4.

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47

Scetti, Fabio. "HOW TO ‘SELL’ THE PORTUGUESE LANGUAGE? PROMOTING THE PORTUGUESE LANGUAGE WITHIN TWO NORTH AMERICA COMMUNITIES." Diacrítica 32, no. 2 (July 2, 2019): 21. http://dx.doi.org/10.21814/diacritica.436.

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This contribution presents the analysis of the position of the Portuguese language within two Portuguese communities located in North America: in Montreal, Quebec, Canada and in Bridgeport, Connecticut, United States of America. Enrollments are decreasing within the communitarian schools of the two communities, and some actors within these institutions are mobilizing discourses about the power of Portuguese as a global language of the future, a language of business. Thanks to our ethnographic approach, we observed discourses promoted by these institutions not anymore as a Heritage Language (HL), but ‘selling’ Portuguese as a new language for the future. Moreover, we realized how the nationalist paradigm in which one language is equal to one nation or community, and this refers to one norm, is maintained to support this new position. Due to a qualitative methodology, mixing interactional observation and semi-structured interviews, we aimed to articulate discursive analysis and analysis of language practices, mainly focusing on the perception and the identification of what is perceived as the ‘good’ Portuguese. Speakers continue to interrogate mixed or hybrid practices according to their repertoires and considering each context or situation. This may help questioning the complex ideology of ‘purity’ of a language.
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48

Stein, Emma C., Kristen Cooksey Stowers, Michelle L. McCabe, Marney A. White, and Marlene B. Schwartz. "Ingredient bundles and recipe tastings in food pantries: a pilot study to increase the selection of healthy foods." Public Health Nutrition 22, no. 09 (March 19, 2019): 1717–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1368980019000259.

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AbstractObjectiveThe present study examined the effect of ingredient bundles (i.e. measured ingredients with recipes) and recipe tastings as a strategy to increase the selection of healthy, target foods (kale, brown rice and whole-wheat pasta).DesignEach of the three conditions was tested once per week for three weeks. The conditions were: Treatment 1 (T1), recipe tastings only; Treatment 2 (T2), ingredient bundle plus recipe tastings; and Control, no intervention.SettingA food pantry in Bridgeport, CT, USA.ParticipantsFood pantry clients.ResultsControlling for family size and intervention week, the likelihood of clients in T2 (n 160) selecting at least one target item compared with the Control group (n 160) was 3·20 times higher for kale, 4·76 times higher for brown rice and 7·25 times higher for whole-wheat pasta. Compared with T1 (n 128), T2 clients were 2·67 times more likely to select kale, 7·67 times more likely to select brown rice and 11·43 times more likely to select whole-wheat pasta. No differences between T1 and the Control group were found.ConclusionsFindings suggest that innovative, nudging strategies such as ingredient bundles may increase appeal of foods and encourage pantry clients to select healthier options.
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49

Caggiano, Bishop Frank J., and Jem Sullivan. "Evangelizing Catechesis and the Institute on the Catechism." International Journal of Evangelization and Catechetics 4, no. 1 (2023): 85–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jec.2023.a912022.

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Abstract: Bishop Frank J. Caggiano, Bishop of Bridgeport, and Chairman of the Subcommittee on the Catechism of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops discusses the newly formed Institute on the Catechism on the podcast Echoing Faith Today . In the dialogue with Dr. Jem Sullivan, podcast host, Bishop Caggiano reflects on current challenges and opportunities for catechetical ministry in the United States, with a particular focus on evangelizing catechesis. The conversation highlights the graced moment of the publication of the Directory for Catechesis and Pope Francis' Apostolic Letter issued Motu proprio, Antiquum Ministerium . From these catechetical documents, Bishop Caggiano highlights the call to invite and form the faithful through the lens of the encounter with Jesus Christ within the community of the Church. The Institute on the Catechism of the USCCB will offer unique formational opportunities in evangelizing catechesis as the Church in the United States seeks to realize the theological-pastoral principles contained in the Directory for Catechesis and Antiquum Ministerium. Echoing Faith Today , a podcast dedicated to themes in the Directory for Catechesis , is hosted by Dr. Jem Sullivan, associate professor in the School of Theology and Religious Studies at The Catholic University of America.
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Apel, Simon. "Bridgeport Music, Inc. v. Dimension Films (USA), Metall auf Metall (Germany) and Digital Sound Sampling – »Bright Line Rules«?" Zeitschrift für geistiges Eigentum 2, no. 3 (2010): 331. http://dx.doi.org/10.1628/186723710793206774.

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