180,339 research outputs found
Letter from I. C. Van Der Karr, Kankakee, Illinois, to Agnes M. Wert, Des Moines, Iowa, September 29, 1945
Letter written on business letterhead from I. C. Van Der Karr of Kankakee, Illinois, to Agnes M. Wert of Des Moines, Iowa, concerning the latter's purchase of a grave marker for a deceased family member
Letter from Agnes C. Nolan to Hagan
Holograph letter from Agnes C. Nolan, Hotel Flora, Rome, to (Hagan), in thanks for obtaining access to the papal audience. Easter felicitations
Agnes Sorma Mitglied des Deutschen Theaters [als Gretchen] / [fotografiert von:] C. Brasch
AGNES SORMA MITGLIED DES DEUTSCHEN THEATERS [ALS GRETCHEN] / [FOTOGRAFIERT VON:] C. BRASCH
[Künstlerfotografien zum Faustthema : Darsteller und Darstellerinnen des "Faust"] (-)
Agnes Sorma Mitglied des Deutschen Theaters [als Gretchen] / [fotografiert von:] C. Brasch (141) (1)
Fotografie: Agnes Sorma Mitglied des Deutschen Theaters [als Gretchen] (1
Flood Wave-Tide Wave Interaction on the James River During the Agnes Flood
During the Agnes flood hourly tidal height data were collected at seven locations along the tidal James River and currents were measured at two transects in the lower James. A comparison between actual tides and currents and the predicted tidal features as given by the tide and tidal current tables of NOAA was made. Results of this comparison show that Agnes did significantly affect water levels in the upper portion of the tidal James, especially near Richmond. However in the lower portion of the James no discernible rise was evident due to the passage of the flood crest. A small storm surge (feet) was noted on the day of the passage of Agnes, 21 June, throughout the tidal James. A phase shift in times of high and low water due to the interaction of the two wave systems was not observed. In the freshwater portion of the tidal James currents continually ebbed during the passage of the flood crest. In the saline portion of the system, the flood effect on the currents was limited to the surface portion of the channel.Virginia Institute of Marine Scienc
J. O. and Agnes Schulze, c. 1904
J. O. Schulze and his wife Agnes Sueppel Schulze in the doorway of their home, c. 1904. J. O. Schulze co-foundef the city of Irving, Texas, in 1903. He married Agnes Sueppel during that same year. Both were natives of Iowa City, Iowa. Due to Agnes's poor health, the couple left Irving and returned to Iowa City in 1905. The man in the center of the doorway is unidentified
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