92,046 research outputs found

    Oral history interview with Joseph F. Burt

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    Transcript, 30 pp.With support from the National Science Foundation (Grant No. 0811988, “Designing and Using FastLane: Distilling Lessons for Cyberinfrastructures”) CBI researchers Jeffrey Yost and Thomas Misa conducted oral history interviews with 70 NSF staff members as well as numerous additional interviews during 29 university site visits. An overview of the project is available at and a complete set of 643 publicly available interviews is at . Here on the CBI oral history database is a selection of notable NSF staff including Joseph F. Burt, Jean Feldman, C. Suzanne Iacono, Constance McLindon, Carolyn L. Miller, Paul Morris, Andrea T. Norris, Erika Rissi, Craig Robinson, Mary F. Santonastasso, Rich Schneider, Frank P. Scioli, Beverly Sherman, George Strawn, and Frederic J. Wendling. Topics common to many of the interviews include the design and development of the NSF’s FastLane computer system, interactions with users, e-government initiatives, grants management practices, peer review, and NSF policies and practices. These interviews span a wide range of NSF staff, from program officers to senior managers. Joseph Burt was a senior staff member in Administrative Services and gives insight into the human-relations management and policy consequences of FastLane.National Science Foundation Grant No. 0811988, “Designing and Using FastLane: Distilling Lessons for Cyberinfrastructures”Burt, Joseph F.. (2011). Oral history interview with Joseph F. Burt. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/175120

    Supplemental material for NHANES Dataset

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    Supplemental material for manuscript titled "Obesity is associated with hyperandrogenemia in a nationally-representative sample of U.S. girls aged 6-18 years" by Su Hee Kim, Aaron F. Pannone, Mark D DeBoer, Christopher R. McCartney, Christine M. Burt Solorzan

    Batty, Burt F.

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    Burt F. Batty - Director of Student Aid.https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/univ_photos/1679/thumbnail.jp

    University Status Committee--Letter to Dr. James F. Carr, Jr.

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    Letter to Dr. James F. (Jimmy) Carr, Jr., Assistant to the President, from Richard E. Burt, Board MemberThis letters shares Burt\u27s endorsement of the name change from Harding College to Harding University

    Additional data for Systematics of BX3 and BX2+ Complexes (X= F, Cl, Br, I) with Neutral Diphosphine and Diarsine Ligands

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    ADDITIONAL DATA for &#39;Systematics of BX3 and BX2+ Complexes (X= F, Cl, Br, I) with Neutral Diphosphine and Diarsine Ligands&#39; by Jennifer Burt, James Emsley, William Levason, Gillian Reid and Iain Tinkler. It consists of the original spectra for all new compounds.</span

    Letter from M. C. Burt to S. B. Simmons; F. N. S. F. Give Public Program

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    Letter from M. C. Burt to S. B. Simmons, concerning conference. Account of Future North State Farmers program in Dudley, North Carolina

    Struthers Burt

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    If the pen is mightier than the sword, Maxwell Struthers Burt was a stalwart warrior. Poet, essayist, novelist, short story writer, librettist, reviewer, author of a literary manifesto, contributor to letter-to-the-editor columns, and personal letter writer, Burt seems never to have stopped writing over a career of a half-century. His principal publisher was Charles Scribner’s Sons, which, under the editorial leadership of Maxwell Perkins, published the work of Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Thomas Wolfe, and a variety of other respected writers. Burt’s articles, essays, poems, and stories appeared in many of the most successful magazines in America: Scribner\u27s Magazine, The Saturday Evening Post, The Red Book Magazine, Ladies’ Home Journal, and The North American Review. He wrote scores of reviews for such publications as The Saturday Review of Literature, the New York Times, and the Philadelphia Record. Untiringly, Burt sent his views to the editors of far-flung newspapers: the Jackson\u27s Hole Courier, the St. Petersburg Times, the Princeton Alumni Weekly, and the New York Herald Tribune. The “Most Unforgettable Character” he had ever met. an old-time cowboy named Cal Carrington, was the subject of Burt’s article in The Reader’s Digest. When totalitarianism threatened the writers’ freedom in 1941, Burt wrote and circulated the American Authors’ Manifesto, which was signed by one hundred writers, including E. B. White, Frank Waters, Floyd Dell, and Max Lerner. The Best Short Stories of 1915 honored Burt’s “The Water-Hole,” and his fine story “Each in His Generation” won first prize in the 0. Henry Memorial Award competition in 1920. Respected, frequently praised, and widely read in the 1920s and 1930s, Burt, the stalwart warrior, is today a forgotten soldier

    Jessie Burt Mahlke

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    A studio portrait of Jessie Burt Mahlke age 3
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