605 research outputs found

    With Tony, from America, over the sea! [first line of chorus]

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    abapiano and voiceads on inside front and on back covers for Chappell & Co., Ltd. stockC 6338Johns Hopkins University, Levy Sheet Music Collection, Box 154a, Item 053Words by Adrian Ross. Music by Lionel Monckton.Frank M. Rapto

    With Tony, from America, over the sea! [first line of chorus]

    No full text
    abapiano and voiceads on inside front and on back covers for Chappell & Co., Ltd. stockC 6338Johns Hopkins University, Levy Sheet Music Collection, Box 154a, Item 053Words by Adrian Ross. Music by Lionel Monckton.Frank M. Rapto

    Come with me, come to the ball [first line]

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    abapiano and voiceads on back cover for Chappell & Co., Ltd. stockC 6334=5Johns Hopkins University, Levy Sheet Music Collection, Box 151, Item 125Words by Adrian Ross. Music by Lionel Monckton.Sung by Mr. G. Carvey. From the Musical Play The Quaker Girl.Frank M. Rapto

    Come with me, come to the ball [first line]

    No full text
    abapiano and voiceads on back cover for Chappell & Co., Ltd. stockC 6334=5Johns Hopkins University, Levy Sheet Music Collection, Box 151, Item 125Words by Adrian Ross. Music by Lionel Monckton.Sung by Mr. G. Carvey. From the Musical Play The Quaker Girl.Frank M. Rapto

    Golden glowing Lamps are throwing Light above [first line]

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    sectionalpiano and voiceads on back cover for Chappell & Co., Ltd. stockC 6113Johns Hopkins University, Levy Sheet Music Collection, Box 146, Item 187aWords by Adrian Ross. Music by Franz Lehar. Arranged for the Piano by H.M. Higgs.Henry W. Savage Offers The Merry Widow.Archi Gun

    Golden glowing Lamps are throwing Light above [first line]

    No full text
    sectionalpiano and voiceads on back cover for Chappell & Co., Ltd. stockC 6113Johns Hopkins University, Levy Sheet Music Collection, Box 146, Item 187aWords by Adrian Ross. Music by Franz Lehar. Arranged for the Piano by H.M. Higgs.Henry W. Savage Offers The Merry Widow.Archi Gun

    Active control with dielectric barrier discharge actuators applied to high-lift devices

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    An experimental investigation examined the capability of dielectric barrier discharge (DBD) actuators to control a high-lift device system. Aerodynamic tests investigated the potential of utilising the actuator to control the flap side-edge vortex flow field. Acoustic tests examined the attenuation of slat noise with a DBD actuator. The sparse knowledge related to the control of a vortex flow field with a DBD actuator necessitated a more fundamental study that used a NACA 0015 wing. From this study, it was shown that the application of control resulted in a more diffused tip vortex. The actuator's ability to control the evolving vortex flow field was weakly dependent on the Reynolds number but strongly dependent on the angle of attack. Consequently, a DBD actuator was applied to a flap side edge. However, it was concluded that the actuator had no discernible effect on the flow field due to its addition of momentum being too low to destabilise the formation of the flap side-edge vortex. The slat research concerned the attenuation of the leading-edge component of high-lift device noise. At an angle of attack of two degrees, several tonal noise components with broadband content appeared in the slat noise spectrum. These noise features were successfully suppressed with a DBD actuator operating in open-loop control. For closedloop control, a quasi-static feedback controller was implemented. Comparable levels of performance were obtained for both control methods with more than a 20 dB reduction achieved in the dominant tonal noise feature. The research conducted shed new light on the application of DBD actuators to control the high-lift device system. However, further research is needed if the device is to be utilised to control flap side-edge flow field. The attenuation of slat tonal noise with broadband content was achieved with the actuator

    Creaming off talent or aiding development? ("Featuring Viewpoint from" Phil Woolas MP)

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    Think of migration and a long list of related issues come to mind - wages, employment, housing, community cohesion. But what about development, asks Laura Chappell Copyright (c) 2010 The Author. Journal compilation (c) 2010 ippr.

    Betty Brown-Chappell, February 5, 2019

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    Before joining the EMU School of Social Work in 1996, Betty Brown-Chappell was already an activist for the poor and oppressed. The author of numerous books and articles, her work has been featured in the New York Times, Ebony Magazine, The Detroit Free Press, the Ann Arbor News, and many other media publications. Having served as Associate Director of the McNair Scholars Program at EMU and as Director of the Honors College, Brown-Chappell was the recipient of the College of Health and Human Service Everett L. Marshall Award for Distinguished Service in 2003 and the 2012 recipient of the MLK Humanitarian Award along with Senator Debbie Stabenow. She has met with General Kofi Annan at the United Nations, served as People to People Ambassador in Eastern Europe, and has testified before the Michigan legislature on social work licensing. Brown-Chappell retired from EMU in 2014.https://commons.emich.edu/oral_histories/1057/thumbnail.jp
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