3 Pages

0522-cannon-haywoodobit

Course: USA 1928, Fall 2009
School: Allan Hancock College
Rating:
 
 
 
 
 

Word Count: 2072

Document Preview

William Cannon: D. Haywood -- Soldier to the Last [May 22, 1928] 1 William D. Haywood -- Soldier to the Last by James P. Cannon Published in The Daily Worker [New York], v. 5, no. 120 (May 22, 1928), pg. 6. The death of Haywood was not unexpected. The declining health of the old fighter was known to his friends for a long time. On each visit to Moscow in recent years which our Party work necessitated we noted...

Register Now

Unformatted Document Excerpt

Coursehero >> California >> Allan Hancock College >> USA 1928

Course Hero has millions of student submitted documents similar to the one
below including study guides, practice problems, reference materials, practice exams, textbook help and tutor support.

Course Hero has millions of student submitted documents similar to the one below including study guides, practice problems, reference materials, practice exams, textbook help and tutor support.
William Cannon: D. Haywood -- Soldier to the Last [May 22, 1928] 1 William D. Haywood -- Soldier to the Last by James P. Cannon Published in The Daily Worker [New York], v. 5, no. 120 (May 22, 1928), pg. 6. The death of Haywood was not unexpected. The declining health of the old fighter was known to his friends for a long time. On each visit to Moscow in recent years which our Party work necessitated we noted the progressive weakening of his physical powers and learned of the repeated attacks of the fatal disease which finally brought him down. Our anxious inquiries during the past month, occasioned by the newspaper reports of his illness, only brought the response that his recovery this time could not be expected. Nevertheless we could not abandon the hope that his fighting spirit and his will to live would pull him through again and the news that death had triumphed in the unequal struggle brought a shock of grief. A Soldier to the Last. The death of Haywood is a double blow to those who were at once his comrades in the fight and his personal friends, for his character was such as to invest personal relations with an extraordinary dignity and importance. His great significance for the American and world labor movement was also fully appreciated, I think, by our Party and by the Communist International, in the ranks of which he ended his career, a soldier to the last. An outstanding personality and leader of the prewar revolutionary labor movement in America and also a member and leader of the modern Communist movement which grew up on its foundation, Bill Haywood represented a connecting link which helped to establish continuity between the old movement and the new. Growing out of the soil of America, or better, hewn out of its rocks, he first entered the labor movement as a pioneer unionist of the formative days of the Western Federation of Miners 30 years ago. From that starting point he bent his course toward the conscious class struggle and marched consistently on that path to the end of his life. He died a Communist and a soldier of the Communist International. Wrote Memoirs. It is a great fortune for our Party that he finished his memoirs and that they are soon to be published. They constitute a record of the class struggle and of the labor movement in America of priceless value for the present generation of labor militants. The career of Haywood is bound up with the stormy events which have marked the course of working class development in America for 30 years and out of which the basic nucleus of the modern movement has come. He grew up in the hardship and struggle of the mining camps of the West. Gifted with the careless physical courage of a giant and an eloquence of speech, Bill soon became a recognized leader of the metal miners and developed with them through epic struggles toward a militancy of action combined with a socialistic understanding, even in that early day, which soon placed the Western Federation of Miners, which Haywood said "was born in a Bull Pen," in the vanguard of the American labor movement. It was the merger of these industrial proletarian militants of the West with the socialist political elements represented by Debs and DeLeon which brought about the formation of the IWW in 1905. The fame and outstanding prominence of Haywood as a labor - William D. "Big Bill" Haywood died of a stroke on May 18, 1928. 1 2 Cannon: William D. Haywood -- Soldier to the Last [May 22, 1928] Haywood's syndicalism was the outcome of his reaction against the reformist policies and parliamentary cretinism of the middle class leaders of the Socialist Party -- Hillquit, Berger & Co. But syndicalism, which in its final analysis is "the twin brother of reformism," as Lenin has characterized it, was only a transient theory in Haywood's career. He passed beyond it and thus escaped that degeneration and sterility which overtook the syndicalist movement throughout the world during and after the war. The World War and the Russian Revolution did not pass by Haywood unnoticed, as they passed by many leaders of the IWW, who had encased themselves in a shell of dogma to shut out the realities of life. Becomes a Communist. These world-shaking events combined with the hounding and dragooning of the IWW by the United States government -- the "Political State" which syndicalism wanted to "ignore" -- wrought a profound change in the outlook of Bill Haywood. He emerged from Leavenworth Penitentiary in 1919 in a receptive and studious mood. He was already 50 years old but he conquered the mental rigidity which afflicts so many at that age. He began, slowly and painfully, to assimilate the new and universal lessons of the war and the Russian Revolution. First taking his stand with that group in the IWW which favored adherence to the Red International of Labor Unions, he gradually developed his thought further and finally came to the point where he proclaimed himself a Communist and a disciple of Lenin. He became a member of the Communist Party of America before his departure for Russia. There he was transferred to the Russian Communist Party and in recognition of his lifetime of revolutionary work, he was given the status of an "old party member" -- the highest honor anyone can enjoy in the land of Workers' Triumph. As everyone knows, Haywood in his time had been a prisoner in many jails and, like all men who have smelt iron, he was keenly sensitive to the interests of revolutionaries who suffer this crucifixion. He attached the utmost importance to the work of labor defense and was one of the founders of the ILD [International Labor Defense]. He contributed many ideas to its formation and remained an enthusiastic supporter leader even in that day is illustrated by the fact that he was chosen chairman of the historic First Convention of the IWW in 1905. First Convention of the IWW. The brief, simple speech he delivered there, as recorded in the stenographic minutes of the convention, stands out in many respects as a charter of labor of that day. His plea for the principle of the class struggle, industrial for unionism, for special emphasis on the unskilled workers, for solidarity of black and white workers, and for a revolutionary goal of the labor struggle anticipated many established principles of the modern revolutionary labor movement. The attempt to railroad him to the gallows on framed-up murder charges in 1906 was thwarted by the colossal protest movement of the workers, who saw in this frame-up against him a tribute to his talent and power as a labor leader and to his incorruptibility. His name became a battle cry of the socialist and labor movement and he emerged from the trial a national and international figure. He rose magnificently to the new demands placed upon him by this position and soon became recognized far and wide as the authentic voice of the proletarian militants of America. The schemes of the reformist leaders of the Socialist Party to use his great name and popularity as a shield for them were frustrated by the bold and resolute course he pursued. Through the maze of intrigue and machinations of the reformist imposters in the Socialist Party, he shouldered his way with the doctrine of class struggle and the tactics of militant action. Headed Left Wing. The proletarian and revolutionary elements gathered around him and formed the powerful "Left Wing" of the party which made its bid for power in the convention of 1912. The "Reds" were defeated there and the party took a decisive step along the pathway which has led to its present position of reformist bankruptcy and open betrayal. The subsequent expulsion of Haywood from the National Executive Committee was at once a proof of the opportunist degeneration of the party and of his own revolutionary integrity. Cannon: William D. Haywood -- Soldier to the Last [May 22, 1928] right up to his death. What is very probably his last message to the workers of America, written just before he was stricken the last time, is contained in a letter which is being published in the June [1928] number of The Labor Defender, now on the press. As a leader of the workers in open struggle Haywood was a fighter the like of which is all too seldom seen. He loved the laboring masses and was remarkably free from all prejudices of craft or race or nationality. In battle with the class enemies of the workers he was a raging lion, relentless and irreconcilable. His field was the open fight and in mass strikes his powers unfolded and multiplied themselves. Endowed with a giant's physique and an absolute disregard of personal hazards, he pulled the striking workers to him as to a magnet and imparted to them his own courage and spirit. Akron Strike. I remember especially his arrival at Akron during the great rubber workers' strike of 1913, when 10,000 strikers met him at the station and marched behind him to the Hall. His speech that morning has always stood out in my mind as a model of working class oratory. With his commanding presence and his great mellow voice he held the vast crowd in his power form the moment that he rose to speak. He had that give, all too rare, of using only the necessary words and of compressing his thoughts into short, epigrammatic sentences. He clarified his points with homely illustrations and pungent witticisms which rocked the audience with understanding laughter. He poured out sarcasm, ridicule, and denunciation upon the employers and their pretensions and made the workers feel with him that they, the workers, were the important and necessary people. He closed, as he always did, on a note of hope and struggle, with a picture of the final victory of the workers. Every word from beginning not end, simple, clear, and effective. T...

Find millions of documents on Course Hero - Study Guides, Lecture Notes, Reference Materials, Practice Exams and more. Course Hero has millions of course specific materials providing students with the best way to expand their education.

Below is a small sample set of documents:

UT Chattanooga - EDUC - 575
PowerPoint Presentation Must use at least 20 facts you learned about Tennessee Must include 1 fact from each category: Geography History Famous People Government Must include at least 5 pictures gathered by your photographer Must have at least 5 slides M
csubak.edu - CS - 277
The beamer classManual for version 3.07.\begincfw_frame \frametitlecfw_There Is No Largest Prime Number \framesubtitlecfw_The proof uses \textitcfw_reductio ad absurdum. \begincfw_theorem There is no largest prime number. \endcfw_theorem \begincfw_proof
Universitat de Valencia - PE - 00063
Palaeontologia Electronicahttp:/palaeo-electronica.orgA NEW TITANOSAURIFORM SAUROPOD (DINOSAURIA: SAURISCHIA) FROM THE EARLY CRETACEOUS OF CENTRAL TEXAS AND ITS PHYLOGENETIC RELATIONSHIPS Peter J. RoseABSTRACT A collection of primitive titanosauriform
Wisconsin - CHEM - 343
Problem Set 7 RadicalsChem 343 Reich March 25, 2009Group 26Products including all stereoisomers? HBrGroup 27Products including all stereoisomers? HBr peroxidesGroup 28Draw all monochlorination products including all stereoisomers. CH3 Cl2 hGroup 2
순천향대학교 - ACM - 101
Dave Goulet ACM101c 5/6/05Inner Products and Self-AdjointnessIf we have an inner product and a linear operator L, then the adjoint of L, if it exists, is defined as the operator which satisfies XLf, g\ = Xf, L* g\ (1)for all f and g in the space of int
Texas A&M - ICS - 295
JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL PHYSICS ARTICLE NO.137, 346365 (1997)CP975809An Algorithm for Two-Dimensional Rigidity Percolation: The Pebble GameDonald J. Jacobs* and Bruce Hendrickson*Department of Physics and Astronomy, Michigan State University, East L
순천향대학교 - ACM - 101
O. BrunoACM 101c Final ExamMay 27, 20051. Due no later than Thursday June 2 at 5pm. 2. The honor code is in effect. 3. Exam to be taken in one continuous session of at most six hours, with two mandatory rest hours-so that a total of no more than four h
University of Texas at Dallas - ECO - 4340
Economics 4340 Isaac McFarlinProblem Set #5:Labor Economics University of Texas at Dallas1. Question 1 in chapter 8 of Contemporary Labor Economics by McConnell et al. (course textbook) on page 271.2. Question 3 in chapter 8 of Contemporary Labor Econ
University of Texas at Dallas - ECO - 4340
Economics 4340 Isaac McFarlinProblem Set #4:Labor Economics University of Texas at Dallas1. Question 2 in chapter 6 of Contemporary Labor Economics by McConnell et al. (course textbook) on page 204.2. Question 6 in chapter 6 of Contemporary Labor Econ
University of Texas at Dallas - ECO - 4340
Economics 4340 Isaac McFarlinProblem Set #3:Labor Economics University of Texas at Dallas1. The following table pertains to data for a given firm.Labor Output Price (D1) Price (D2)0 1 2 3 4 5 60 15 29 42 54 65 75$10.00 10.00 10.00 10.00 10.00 10.00
University of Texas at Dallas - ECO - 4340
Economics 4340 Professor McFarlinLabor Economics & Human Resources University of Texas at Dallas Problem Set #1Problem 1: Fundamentals of the Labor Supply Model This problem has roots from your intermediate microeconomic class. Suppose that an individua
University of Texas at Dallas - ECO - 4340
Economics 4340 Isaac McFarlinProblem Set #2:Labor Economics University of Texas at Dallas1. Consider an individual who currently earns $20,000 as an unskilled laborer. Suppose that by taking courses full time at a community college for one year, the pe
University of Texas at Dallas - ECO - 4340
David Macpherson10/31/2006Chapter 9: Mobility, Migration, and EfficiencyNext page1. Types of Labor MobilityJump to first pageTypes of Labor MobilityJob change/no change in occupation or residenceA waiter switches working from Andrew's Capital Bar
University of Texas at Dallas - ECO - 4340
David Macpherson10/23/2006Chapter 7: Alternative Pay Schemes and Labor EfficiencyNext page1. Economics of Fringe BenefitsJump to first pageFringe Benefits as a Proportion of Compensation4% 3% 8% 7% Wage and Salaries Legally Required Benefits Paid L
University of Texas at Dallas - ECO - 4340
David Macpherson9/19/2006Chapter 6: Wage Determination and the Allocation of LaborNext page1. Theory of a Perfectly Competitive Labor MarketJump to first pagePerfectly Competitive Labor MarketPerfectly competitive labor markets have the following c
University of Texas at Dallas - ECO - 4340
David Macpherson9/19/2006Chapter 3: Population, Participation, and Hours of WorkNext page1. The Population BaseJump to first pagePopulation and Labor ForceThe size of the labor force depends on the size of the population and the percentage of the p
University of Texas at Dallas - ECO - 4340
David Macpherson9/19/2006Chapter 5: The Demand for LaborNext page1. Derived Demand for LaborJump to first pageDerived DemandThe demand for labor is a derived demand.That is, it is derived from the demand for the product or service that the labor i
University of Texas at Dallas - ECO - 4340
David Macpherson9/19/2006Chapter 2: The Theory of Individual Labor SupplyNext page1. The Work-Leisure Decision: Basic ModelJump to first pageAssumptionsIndividuals choose between work and leisure.Work is time spent on a paying job. Leisure include
University of Texas at Dallas - JLS - 036100
Janis L. Schubert GISC 6382 Spring 2004An Analysis of Surface Water Quality in the Trinity River BasinObjectiveThe area of Texas covered by the Trinity River Basin has seen explosive growth for an extended period of time. When land is developed for urb
University of Texas at Dallas - JLS - 036100
Assignment of Hazardous Materials Risk to Transportation Networks: A GIS MethodologyJanis L. Schubert Kevin M. Curtin University of Texas at Dallas April 21, 20071IntroductionRouting for hazardous materials (HAZMAT) is an important public safety issue
Georgia Tech - PHYSICS - 2211
FALL SEMESTER 2006Physics 2211 Test Form 521 Name_Test Form = 3-digit number at the top of the first page of this test. Student Number = Your full 9-digit GTID# (Georgia Tech ID number) 1. Print your name, test form number and student number in the sect
Ohio State - FISHER - 521
Introduction to Financial AccountingChapter 7, Module 2 Slide 1CHAPTER 1 MODULE Chapter 7 Module1 2 Chapter 7 Module 2AMIS 211 Introduction to Financial AccountingProfessor Marc SmithHi everyone. Welcome back. Let's continue our discussion of selling
UMiami - MSC - 243
Date/Time:Station:o4500040000o3500030000o2500020000o1500010000o5000oSea Level Feet (Approx)o o
Ohio State - FISHER - 521
Introduction to Financial AccountingChapter 7, Module 3 Slide 1CHAPTER 1 MODULE Chapter 7 Module1 3 Chapter 7 Module 3AMIS 211 Introduction to Financial AccountingProfessor Marc SmithHi everyone. Welcome back. Let's go ahead and continue our discussi
Ohio State - FISHER - 521
Introduction to Financial AccountingChapter 7, Module 8 Slide 1CHAPTER 1 MODULE Chapter 7 Module1 8 Chapter 7 Module 8AMIS 211 Introduction to Financial AccountingProfessor Marc SmithHi everyone. Welcome back. Let's wrap up our discussion of Accounts
East Los Angeles College - LS - 72682
Protein Expression and PuriWcation 48 (2006) 113 www.elsevier.com/locate/yprepReviewCurrent strategies for the use of aYnity tags and tag removal for the puriWcation of recombinant proteinsJos Arnau , Conni Lauritzen, Gitte E. Petersen, John PedersenU
East Los Angeles College - LS - 72682
Journal of Biotechnology 115 (2005) 113128Advanced genetic strategies for recombinant protein expression in Escherichia coliHans Peter Srensen, Kim Kusk MortensenLaboratory of BioDesign, Department of Molecular Biology, Aarhus University, Gustav Wieds
Lake County - CS - 598
IEEE/ACM TRANSACTIONS ON NETWORKING, VOL. 6, NO. 3, JUNE 1998237A 50-Gb/s IP RouterCraig Partridge, Senior Member, IEEE, Philip P. Carvey, Member, IEEE, Ed Burgess, Isidro Castineyra, Tom Clarke, Lise Graham, Michael Hathaway, Phil Herman, Allen King,
Lake County - MATH - 0152
AAbsolute Hodge Cohomology with CoecientsThe aim of this appendix is to provide a natural interpretation of absolute Hodge cohomology as extension groups in the category of algebraic Hodge modules over R (A.2.7). We use the opportunity to reconsider the
twsu.edu - CS - 843
SecureWirelessLANsV.Bharghavan CS Division, Department of EECS University of California at Berkeley Berkeley, CA - 94720AbstractMobile computing is a major area of current research. A variety of wirelessly networked mobile devices now make it possibl
UPR Humacao - INEL - 4215
UPR Humacao - ICOM - 5995
Dixie State - ECON - 333
Econ 333 Lecture 3 (Summary) Chapter 3: Theories of Development: A Comparative Development The theories of economic development can be broadly classified into 5 major categories. These are,1. The Linear-Stages Theory (1950s and 60s) 2. Structural Change M
Mich Tech - SSE - 3200
Chapter 2: MiddlewareContents - Chapter 2Understanding middleware Middleware as a programming abstraction Middleware as infrastructure A quick overview of conventional middleware platforms RPC TP Monitors Object brokers Middleware convergenceWeb servic
University of Texas at Dallas - BA - 3352
BA 3352: Forecasting Questions1. Use the monthly average stock price of the United Defense to answer the following questions. Month Price Month Price 01/00 45 01/01 76 02/00 48 02/01 72 03/00 46 03/01 79 04/00 55 04/01 81 05/00 57 05/01 81 06/00 62 06/01
University of Texas at Dallas - BA - 3352
1Computing the Standard Deviation of Sample MeansQuality control charts are based on sample means not on individual values within a sample. A sample is a group of items, which are considered all together for our analysis. Items within a sample lose thei
University of Texas at Dallas - OR - 6201
OPRE 6201 : 1. Formulation1Mathematical ModelsModel: A structure which has been built purposefully to exhibit features and characteristics of some other object such as a DNA model in biology, a building model in civil engineering, a play in a theatre a
Minnesota - VR - 8108
11.1IntroductionWhat is an equilibrium?An equilibrium is a statement about what the outcome of an economy is. Tells us what happens in an economy, and by an ecomomy we mean a well defined environment in terms of primitives such as preferences and tech
Kansas State University - BIOL - 543
BIOL 543 ORNITHOLOGY - FORMAT OF RESEARCH PAPER Preparing research in the format of a scientific paper can be a challenging skill to learn for many young scientists. The format of scientific writing is fairly rigid but the informal rules are not always cl
Texas San Antonio - CS - 4763
34IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON PATTERN ANALYSIS AND MACHINE INTELLIGENCE,VOL. 24,NO. 1,JANUARY 2002Detecting Faces in Images: A SurveyMing-Hsuan Yang, Member, IEEE, David J. Kriegman, Senior Member, IEEE, and Narendra Ahuja, Fellow, IEEEAbstractImages cont
Nevada - NRES - 482
United States Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Service Conservation Engineering Division Technical Release 55 June 1986Urban Hydrology for Small WatershedsTR-55To show bookmarks which navigate through the document. Click the sho
East Los Angeles College - MATH - 31022
On the Number of Prime Numbers less than a Given Quantity. (Ueber die Anzahl der Primzahlen unter einer gegebenen Grsse.) o Bernhard Riemann [Monatsberichte der Berliner Akademie, November 1859.] Translated by David R. WilkinsPreliminary Version: Decembe
Arizona - CS - 127
CSc 127a Fall 2007 - Review Topics for Exam 3The following is a list of suggested review topics that are new since Exam 2 and may appear on Exam 3. In addition to reviewing your notes, the textbook, collaborative exercises, and any quizzes, you should ma
Colorado - AMATH - 2460
APPM 2460 - worksheet for 4 October 2005 1. An easy way to make a vector in Matlab is with : notation. The best way to understand it is with a couple examples. Type x1 x2 x3 x4 = = = = 0:1:10 0:2:10 20:-2:10 5:.1:8What do each of the three numbers in thi
Colorado - AMATH - 2460
APPM 2460 - worksheet for 27 September 2005 1. Consider the matrices 1 0 3 A = 2 1 2 , 1 0 1 You can enter A into Matlab by typing A = [ [ -1 0 3 ]; [ 2 1 2 ]; [-1 0 1]; ] Also enter B. Matlab will easily multiply matrices; type A*B to get AB. Is this the
Washington - MATH - 030403
"77e s!(7q edv5e(s!h7tr X2bep"qzhC g i d g d | ig g j | g j g d jg d | x e7b g !skd7q d ig jj x g i i i l j r | d x d g g j ig g ig d d 7wP0Df7gwethb7swe 7s77yzh x v 7A v x v yD7t5!wu g d | g i j f q s !weex 77e syv5rs5~ j g x e7ee7eex df | x i j g x j d
Washington - MATH - 022503
5nddj (7h " fp7glujp7 p7h uj!cfw_ i h i h f ~ e h i h m i h ~ e ~ f cfw_ h o i h h j j j 75lCp h !7p 7l7djg g i g ff ! lC77dpWI2djdj7(d7D!5 t j o f ~ i h i h m i h o C t cfw_ j h f h v i h t h ogdj Cddj|77i &D pdgyr75! d !d7 7ldj a ih f jh ~ h o T! 7 ! (
Wyoming - CS - 4780
GNU Emacs Reference CardMotionentity to move over backward forwardfor version 20Starting EmacsC-b M-b C-p C-a M-a MC-x C-M-b C-M-a MC-v M-v C-x C-x C-u C-l C-f M-f C-n C-e M-e MC-x C-M-f C-M-e M-To enter GNU Emacs 20, just type its name: To read in
Utah - MATH - 1090
Wisconsin - CS - 378
1 An Inside Look at BotnetsPaul Barford Vinod Yegneswaran cfw_pb,vinod@cs.wisc.eduComputer Sciences Department University of Wisconsin, MadisonAbstract The continued growth and diversication of the Internet has been accompanied by an increasing prevale
Mich Tech - MEEM - 4405
6. 3D Solids and Solids of RevolutionMEEM4405 Introduction to Finite Element Analysis6.1 Introduction Problems of beam bending, plane stress, plates, etc. may be considered as special cases of 3D solids. So why not use 3D solids all the time? Harder t
Mich Tech - MEEM - 4405
5. Modeling, Errors and Accuracy (contd)MEEM4405 Introduction to Finite Element Analysis5.10 Numerical ErrorCauses for incorrect results: Mistakes (e.g. forgetting supports) Errors Modeling Error (e.g. due to assumptions inmathematical model) Discre
Mich Tech - MEEM - 4405
Modeling Errors and AccuracyMEEM4405 Introduction to Finite Element AnalysisConvergence Requirements If a mesh is repeatedly refined, will the results converge to a solution? Yes, if the elements used pass the patch test.MEEM4405 Introduction to Finit
Carnegie Mellon - CSE - 597
BIND: A Fine-grained Attestation Service for Secure Distributed SystemsElaine Shi Carnegie Mellon University rshi@cmu.edu Adrian Perrig Carnegie Mellon University perrig@cmu.edu Leendert Van Doorn IBM T.J. Watson Research Center leendert@watson.ibm.comA
CSU East Bay - STATISTICS - 1000
CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, HAYWARD STATISTICS DEPARTMENT Statistics 1000 Elements of Probability and Statistics MINI-PROJECT 3 The mouse data: Sixteen mice were randomly assigned to a treatment or a control group. Shown are their survival times, in days
CSU East Bay - STATISTICS - 1000
CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, HAYWARD STATISTICS DEPARTMENT Statistics 1000 Elements of Probability and Statistics MINI-PROJECT 2a Flip a coin 100 times. Stop after each time you have accumulated 10 more flips (i.e. after 10 flips, 20 flips, 30 flips, etc.
CSU East Bay - STATISTICS - 1000
CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, HAYWARD STATISTICS DEPARTMENT Statistics 1000 Elements of Probability and Statistics MINI-PROJECT 1Measure your pulse rate 25 times over the next few days, but don't take more than one measurement in any 10-minute period. Rec
CSU East Bay - STATISTICS - 1000
Ex: time spent studying and test scores Compute the linear regression line y = b0 + b1 x x 1 4 6 10 8 5 totals n mean sd 34 6 5.67 3.14 y 3 6 7 9 6 5 36 6 6 2 (x-x.bar) -4.67 -1.67 0.33 4.33 2.33 -0.67 (x-x.bar)^2 (y-y.bar) 21.78 2.78 0.11 18.78 5.44 0.44
Montana - MATH - 401
'Salt content'2.262.111.641.171.642.361.72.12.192.4
Texas San Antonio - INFS - 766
INFS 766Internet Security ProtocolsLectures 7 and 8 IPSECProf. Ravi SandhuIPSEC ROADMAPSecurity Association v IP AH (Authentication Header) Protocol v IP ESP (Encapsulating Security Protocol) v Authentication Algorithm v Encryption Algorithm v IKE (K
Illinois Tech - CS - 430
Introduction to Algorithms6.046J/18.401JLecture 8Prof. Piotr IndykData structures Previous lecture: hash tables Insert, Delete, Search in (expected) constant time Works for integers from cfw_0.mr-1 This lecture: Binary Search Trees Insert, Delete, S