225,543 research outputs found

    Jessie Wilson to Dean Clara Marshall

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    Letter to Dean Clara Marshall regarding post-graduate courses

    Mission Santa Clara Cross with Santa Clara College campus in background, c. 1887

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    Round image of Mission Santa Clara cross surrounded by white picket fence

    CLARA conceptual design report

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    This report describes the conceptual design of a proposed free electron laser test facility called CLARA that will be a major upgrade to the existing VELA accelerator test facility at Daresbury Laboratory in the UK. CLARA will be able to test a number of new free electron laser schemes that have been proposed but require a proof of principle experiment to confirm that they perform as predicted. The primary focus of CLARA will be on ultra short photon pulse generation which will take free electron lasers into a whole new regime, enabling a new area of photon science to emerge

    Mission Santa Clara and California Hotel, c. 1856

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    This image is one of the earliest images of Mission Santa Clara, after 1855. The adobe wall extends from the Baptistry to the arch of old gate to Major Domo Ignacio Alviso's headquarters. The building at right, known as California Hotel, was a mission adobe that became an inn in the 1840's. It was used by Santa Clara College for a dormitory and classroom until it fell in the 1906 earthquake. The second floor of the California Hotel was added in 1855, by John Nobili, S.J., founder of the College. Per McKevitt, this daguerreotype is believed to have been taken by Carlton E. Watkins between 1855, when the clock was installed in the bell tower, and before 1857 when the College acquired its own daguerreotype apparatus. The sign over the front gate reads ""Santa Clara College."

    Picture of Santa Clara College, c. 1865

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    Historic Santa Clara Missio

    Mission Santa Clara Indian Apartment, c.1784-1818

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    Photo by painter and photographer Mrs. Alice Iola Hare (1857-1926). According to Father Arthur Spearman this Indian home was part of Mission Santa Clara's third site (1784-1818) and was later occupied by "Yankee squatters" (around 1850)

    Mission Santa Clara Indian Dwelling, c.1784-1818

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    Photo by painter and photographer Mrs. Alice Iola Hare (1857-1926). According to Father Arthur Spearman this Indian "choza" or hut was part of Mission Santa Clara's third site (1784-1818). The Indian home was built of "adobe, ladrillo (brick) support under beam ends, sapling stringers, tules, mud, raw-hide bound and tejidos (cloth)"

    Santa Clara College Frontage 1864

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    Santa Clara Colleg
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