3,076 research outputs found
Image 2 in New floral distribution records of Aquilegia nivalis (Baker) Falc. ex B.D. Jacks and Doronicum falconeri C.B. Clarke ex Hook. f. from the Valley of Flowers National Park, Uttarakhand, India
Image 2. Aquilegia nivalisPublished as part of Rana, C.S. & Rawat, D.S., 2012, New floral distribution records of Aquilegia nivalis (Baker) Falc. ex B.D. Jacks and Doronicum falconeri C.B. Clarke ex Hook. f. from the Valley of Flowers National Park, Uttarakhand, India, pp. 2911-2914 in Journal of Threatened Taxa 4 (9) on page 2912, DOI: 10.11609/JoTT.o3036.2911-4, http://zenodo.org/record/509283
Image 4 in New floral distribution records of Aquilegia nivalis (Baker) Falc. ex B.D. Jacks and Doronicum falconeri C.B. Clarke ex Hook. f. from the Valley of Flowers National Park, Uttarakhand, India
Image 4. Herbarium of Doronicum falconeriPublished as part of Rana, C.S. & Rawat, D.S., 2012, New floral distribution records of Aquilegia nivalis (Baker) Falc. ex B.D. Jacks and Doronicum falconeri C.B. Clarke ex Hook. f. from the Valley of Flowers National Park, Uttarakhand, India, pp. 2911-2914 in Journal of Threatened Taxa 4 (9) on page 2913, DOI: 10.11609/JoTT.o3036.2911-4, http://zenodo.org/record/509283
C.S. Lewis Chapel: Chris Armstrong
Dr. Chris Armstrong speaks on work and vocation for C.S. Lewis Chapel.
Chris R. Armstrong (PhD, Duke University) is founding director of Opus: The Art of Work - an institute for faith and vocation at Wheaton College. A church historian, Chris also serves on the biblical and theological studies faculty at Wheaton. He has written the forthcoming Medieval Wisdom for Modern Christians: Finding Authentic Faith in a Forgotten Age with C.S. Lewis (Baker Academic/Brazos Press, May 2016) and Patron Saints for Postmoderns (InterVarsity Press, 2009). Chris serves as senior editor of Christian History and founding senior editor of the Patheos Faith and Work Channel. He blogs at https://gratefultothedead.wordpress.com
C.S. Lewis: Reactions from Women
Recounts the experiences of eight women (including the author) who knew C.S. Lewis
C.S. Lewis’s theory of Sehnsucht as a tool for theorizing L.M. Montgomery’s experience of ‘The Flash'
Album of photos from the Southern New Jersey Savings Bonds Committee Meeting, Seaview Country Club, Absecon, New Jersey, in 1955
Cover (blank). Typed label: A Pictorial Record of the Southern New Jersey Savings Bond Committee Meeting Held at the Seaview Country Club, Absecon, New Jersey, February 25, 1955, representing six counties: Atlantic, Cape May, Cumberland, Gloucester, Ocean and Salem. Photos: L-R Russell S. Britton, Ivy Baker Priest, James McGrath, Captain Oscar Pederson. Eastern Airlines aircraft with (L-R) Captain Ernest von Kleek, Mrs. William Y. Christian, Ivy Baker Priest, and Capt. Oscar Pederson. Eastern Airlines aircraft with (L-R) Captain Ernest von Kleek, Mrs. William Y. Christian, Ivy Baker Priest, and Capt. Oscar Pederson. Eastern Airlines aircraft with (L-R) Captain Ernest von Kleek, Ivy Baker Priest, Mrs. William Y. Christian, and Leslie Brown. Eastern Airlines aircraft with (L-R) Leslie Brown, Ivy Baker and Captain Oscar Pederson. Ivy Baker Priest, left, with Leslie Brown. Ivy Baker Priest, left, with Bruce Murphy. (L-R) Leslie Brown, Mrs. William Y. Christian, Ivy Baker Priest, and Sid Pickens. (L-R) Mrs. C.S. Ryan, Ivy Baker Priest, and Mrs. William Y. Christian. Standing: Edward Jones, Hugh Wathen, Theodore Kendall, and Alfred S. Nugent. Seated: Leslie Brown and Elwood Kirkman. Standing: Alfred S. Nugent, Edward C. Jones, Leslie Brown, Mrs. William Y. Christian, Theodore Kendall, and Hugh Wathen. Seated: Ivy Baker Priest and Elwood Kirkman.(L-R) Mrs. William Y. Christian, Ivy Baker Priest, Mrs. William Alton, Mrs. Virginia Adams. Ivy Baker Priest at microphone and Mrs. C.S. Ryan, seated. Ivy Baker Priest at microphone and seated, left to right: Elwood Kirkman, Leslie Brown, and Hugh Wathen. (L-R) Leslie Brown, General C.S. Ryan, and Mrs. C.S. Ryan. (L-R) Leslie Brown, Ivy Baker Priest, Mrs. C.S. Ryan and General C.S. Ryan. (L-R) James McGrath, General C.S. Ryan, Russell S. Britton, and Leslie Brown. (L-R) Leslie Brown, Mrs. Ivy Baker Priest, and J. Milton Featherer. (L-R) Monroe Mendelsohn, Ivy Baker Priest, and Leslie Brown. (L-R) Leslie Brown, Ivy Baker Priest, Clarence McCormick, and Russell S. Britton. (L-R) Leslie Brown, Ivy Baker Priest, and Thomas Bowen. (L-R) Leslie Brown, Ivy Baker Priest, and Ben Leuchter. (L-R) Leslie Brown, Ivy Baker Priest, and Russell S. Britton. (L-R) Monroe Mendelsohn, Thomas Bowen, Charles Braun, J. Milton Featherer, Clarence McCormick, and Ben Leuchter. (L-R) Leslie Brown, Kathleen Dumas, Ivy Baker Priest, Ruth Burnley, and Peggy Yarrow. (L-R) Leslie Brown, Albert Strang, Ivy Baker Priest, and Penn Cramer. (L-R) Leslie Brown, Albert Strang, Ivy Bake Priest, and Penn Cramer. (L-R) Harry R. Colson, Ivy Baker Priest, William C. Koeneke, and Edward Nesbitt. (L-R) James McGrath, Ivy Baker Priest, and Russell S. Britton. (L-R) Rev. Arthur McKay Ackerson, Ivy Baker Priest, and Leslie Brown. (L-R) Leslie Brown, Mrs. William Y. Christian, Ivy Baker Priest, Bruce Dimon, and Lemuel Hires. (L-R) William C. Kline, Harry Sickler, Ivy Baker Priest, Elmer Matthews, and Leslie Brown. (L-R) Leslie Brown, Ivy Baker Priest, Philip Poorman, Frank P. Mazzoni. (L-R) Leslie Brown, Charles Miller, Ivy Baker Priest, and A.l. Townsend. (L-R) Leslie Brown, Hon. Benjamin H. Corson, Ivy Baker Priest, Harry Klawitter, and Ambrose Parr. (L-R) Philip Kronowitt, Frank Sutton, Jr., Ivy Baker Priest, and R.M. Janvier. (L-R) Leslie Brown, Ivy Baker Priest, Harry Stewart, and Russell S. Britton. (L-R) Frank S. Flowers, Leslie Brown, Ivy Baker Priest, and Paul W. Peterson. (L-R) Leslie Brown, Ivy Baker Priest, Mrs. Ben Leuchter, and Ben Leuchter
High-k fluoropolymers dielectrics for low-bias ambipolar organic light emitting transistors (Olets)
Funding Information: Author Contributions: Conceptualization, A.A. and C.S.; methodology, A.A. and C.S.; validation, A.A., K.G.-R., and C.S.; data curation, A.A., K.G.-R., and C.S.; writing—original draft preparation, A.A. and C.S.; writing—review and editing, A.A., K.G.-R., and C.S.; supervision, C.S.; project administration, C.S.; funding acquisition, C.S. All authors have read and agreed to the published ver-sion ofFunding:the manuThescript.authors acknowledge the support from the Academy of Finland Flagship Program (Grant No.: 320167, PREIN) and the Aalto seed funding scheme. Publisher Copyright: © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.Organic light emitting transistors (OLETs) combine, in the same device, the function of an electrical switch with the capability of generating light under appropriate bias conditions. In this work, we demonstrate how engineering the dielectric layer based on high-k polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF)-based polymers can lead to a drastic reduction of device driving voltages and the improvement of its optoelectronic properties. We first investigated the morphology and the dielectric response of these polymer dielectrics in terms of polymer (P(VDF-TrFE) and P(VDF-TrFE-CFE)) and solvent content (cyclopentanone, methylethylketone). Implementing these high-k PVDF-based dielectrics enabled low-bias ambipolar organic light emitting transistors, with reduced threshold voltages (<20 V) and enhanced light output (compared to conventional polymer reference), along with an overall improvement of the device efficiency. Further, we preliminary transferred these fluorinated high-k dielectric films onto a plastic substrate to enable flexible light emitting transistors. These findings hold potential for broader exploitation of the OLET platform, where the device can now be driven by commercially available electronics, thus enabling flexible low-bias organic electronic devices.Peer reviewe
Robin Baker
Robin Baker was born to parents Doug and Patsy Baker in Phoenix, AZ, where he spent most of his youth. He graduated from Grand Canyon University in 1980 with honors in history and political science. His love of history led him to puruse a masters in history from Hardin-Simmons University and a doctorate in history from Texas A&M. He excelled in academics at all of these institutions, getting high honors. In 1999 Robin Baker came to George Fox University as the Provost. During his eight years as provost he oversaw the addition of 13 new undergraduate and 9 graduate programs. He is passionate about the globalization of education and helped institute the Act Six scholarship at George Fox. In addition to his work as provost Robin Baker has taught classes in history at the University. His research primarily focuses on American Civil War and Reconstruction, 19th-century American political/ quantitative history, and the history of the southern United States. He also takes a great interest in the works of C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien. Robin Baker was sworn in as the twelfth President of George Fox University on March 6, 2008.https://digitalcommons.georgefox.edu/noteable_individuals/1063/thumbnail.jp
C.S. Lewis: adaptations of life and work
The author discusses film representations of the life of C.S. Lewis – a famous English Christian writer. She also focuses on adaptations (that include books, television and cinema) of his most famous series The Chronicles of Narnia – series that for already sixty years have been published all over the world
The Nurse of Elfland: Lizzie Endicott and C.S. Lewis
In Surprised by Joy, C.S. Lewis introduced Lizzie Endicott as the first of two other blessings in his childhood, even before his introduction of Warnie. But apart from his abbreviated 136-word biography, very little is known about the nurse who introduced Lewis to faery tales. Based on the Lewis Family Papers, genealogical research, and personal interviews with Lizzie’s relatives, this article introduces Lizzie to the world of Lewismania. It also suggests various ways in which Lizzie influenced the man and the author that C.S. Lewis became, as well as the mythical worlds he created and Lewis’s anonymous tributes to her
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