21,074 research outputs found

    Glenn Clark, 1968

    No full text
    David Yellin, Mary Doughty, and Dr. Glenn Clark discuss insurance, health, economics, and sociology of Memphis and the impact of the ADC. Dr. Glenn Clark explains the impact that the Sanitation Strikes had on hospitals

    Review of The Feeling Intellect: Reading the Bible with C.S. Lewis

    No full text
    David G. Clark: Review of Roger J. Newell, The Feeling Intellect: Reading the Bible with C. S. Lewis (Eugene, Oregon, 2010). xi + 115 pages. $16.00. ISBN 9781608991389

    Dataset for 'A yellow polariton condensate in a dye filled microcavity'

    No full text
    Included here are the raw datasets for the dispersion imaging and interferometry in the paper A yellow polariton condensate in a dye filled microcavity. / Cookson, Tamsin; Georgiou, Kyriacos; Zasedatelev, Anton; Grant, Richard T.; Virgili, Tersilla; Cavazzini, Marco; Galeotti, Francesco ; Clark, Casper; Berloff, Natalia G.; Lidzey, David G.; Lagoudakis, Pavlos G. In: Advanced Optical Materials, 05.05.2017. The dataset is an updated version of the dataset DOI:10.5258/SOTON/D0093 and should be used in preference.</span

    (06) The Papers of Robert H. Goddard, Volume I: 1898-1924 [1921-1924: Beginnings of Experimentation with Liquid Propellants]

    No full text
    Meticulously curated and edited by Esther C. Goddard and G. Edward Pendray, The Papers of Robert H. Goddard is a 1700-page 3 volume set published in 1970. The set presents a careful and exhaustive chronological presentation of Robert Goddard’s life through diary snippets, notebook entries, correspondence, publications, speeches, patent outlines, school papers, press, reports and more. This section covers Robert Goddard\u27s life from 1921 through 1924. During this time, Goddard began his experimentation with liquid propellants for rockets, became a part-time consultant on solid-propellant rocket weapons for the U.S government, began a twenty-year tenure as Director of Physical Laboratories at Clark University, and married Esther Goddard (formerly Kisk). This section contains the following published articles by Goddard: That Moon-rocket Proposition - Refutation of Some Popular Fallacies , Scientific American (1921) The High-altitude Rocket , Monthly Weather Review (1924) This section contains correspondence by, to, and about Robert H. Goddard from the following people and entities: Lieutenant Commander Olaf M. Hustveldt, Charles Doolittle Walcott, Charles Greeley Abbot, Vatican Observatory, the Trustees of Clark University, Wallace W. Atwood, Navy Bureau of Ordnance, Wallace W. Atwood, F.W. Baldwin, Hermann Oberth, Lieutenant Commander Theodore Stark Wilkinson, C.S. Thompson, Major A. Gibson, William de C. Ravenel, Rear Admiral Charles B. McVay, Jr., A.A. Hamerschlag, Burton E. Livingston, Watson Davis, E.E. Free (Popular Radio), Axel Corlin, Nature, Albert Adams Merrill, David White, French Embassy. Disclaimer: The images in these scans have been rendered somewhat distorted after the fact. We apologize for this error. Thankfully, most of the photographs used in these papers are part of the The Goddard Rocket Researches: A Photographic Record and can be seen individually in high-quality scans.https://commons.clarku.edu/papersgoddard/1005/thumbnail.jp

    (09) The Papers of Robert H. Goddard, Volume II: 1925-1937 [1930-1932: The First New Mexico Adventure]

    No full text
    Meticulously curated and edited by Esther C. Goddard and G. Edward Pendray, The Papers of Robert H. Goddard is a 1700-page 3 volume set published in 1970. The set presents a careful and exhaustive chronological presentation of Robert Goddard’s life through diary snippets, notebook entries, correspondence, publications, speeches, patent outlines, school papers, press, reports and more. This section covers Robert Goddard\u27s life from mid 1930 to mid 1932 when Goddard received his first Guggenheim grant (this one from Daniel) which would bring Robert and Esther to Roswell, New Mexico for two years of rocket research. They would soon relocate to Roswell for a much longer stretch of time, 1934-1942, under grants from the Daniel and Florence Guggenheim Foundation. In April of 1932, Goddard achieved the first flight of a rocket with gyroscopic stabilization. This section contains correspondence by, to, and about Robert H. Goddard from the following people and entities: Charles Greeley Abbot, John C. Merriam, Franz Oskar Leo Elder von Hoefft, Wallace W. Atwood, David Lasser, Ivy Lee, Carl L. Bausch, W.F. Clark, L.T.E. Thompson, George Crompton, Lawrence Mansur, Walter S. Adams, Ernest O. Lawrence, John A. Fleming, Nils Thure Ljungquist, Florence Schloss Guggenheim, Major Kenneth B. Harmon, Frederick G. Keyes, George K. Burgess, Willis Ford Insurance Agency, G. Edward Pendray, R.E Turpin, Robert A. Millikan, Charles Franklin Brooks, Russell B. Hastings, H. Gordon Garbedian, H.G. Wells, Rudyard Kipling, Percy M. Roope, E.G. Minton, Charles F. Brooks, Lieutenant Colonel W.A. Capron. Disclaimer: The images in these scans have been rendered somewhat distorted after the fact. We apologize for this error. Thankfully, most of the photographs used in these papers are part of the The Goddard Rocket Researches: A Photographic Record and can be seen individually in high-quality scans.https://commons.clarku.edu/papersgoddard/1008/thumbnail.jp

    Skeneidae Clark 1851

    No full text
    FAMILY: SKENEIDAE Clark, 1851 The family Skeneidae comprises a polyphyletic assemblage of small, mostly white, non-nacreous snails that remain very poorly known. Our current knowledge of South African skeneid vetigastropods is extremely limited. Some will almost certainly prove not to be vetigastropods. I include a number of potential skeneids species below, but the generic referrals are at best tentative. The taxonomy of this group has not been helped by Bartsch’s penchant for creating species names from anagrams of Africa, e.g. arifca, cifara, facira, farica, ficara and rifaca. Cirsonella Angas, 1877. Type species (m.): Cirsonella australis Angas, 1877.Published as part of Herbert, David G., 2015, An annotated catalogue and bibliography of the taxonomy, synonymy and distribution of the Recent Vetigastropoda of South Africa (Mollusca), pp. 1-98 in Zootaxa 4049 (1) on pages 41-42, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4049.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/24536

    Loggers on speeder and skeleton car at Camp 4, Simpson Logging Company, Mason County, Washington, approximately 1935

    No full text
    Caption on image: Camp 4, Simpson Log. Co. C. Kinsey Photo, Seattle. No. 22 PH Coll 516.3954One logger holds a print of a Clark Kinsey photograph. Sol G. Simpson and his family moved to Mason County in 1887, where Simpson worked laying ties and rails for the Port Blakely Mill Company's logging railroad. He formed S. G. Simpson Company in Matlock in 1890. Three of Simpson's brothers joined him in Mason County, and two of them worked for him. Simpson Logging Company opened its first sawmill, the Reed Mill, at Shelton in 1925. Numerous other mills and logging operations along the West Coast have been acquired by Simpson over the years. [Source: James, David. Grisdale: Last of the Logging Camp. Fairfield, Washington: Ye Galleon Press, 1986.] Camp no. 4 was located on Schaletske Prairie near the middle branch of the Satsop River. An earlier Camp Four operated on the Wynooche River not far from Grisdale in 1924. Houses were snuggled against the tracks and parents fenced their yards to keep little tots from interfering with log trains. The water tower supplied thirsty locomotives. Camp water came from a nearby creek. Camp 4 at Schaletske Prairie was in existence from 1930 to 1940

    Loggers on railroad car being pushed by Simpson Logging Company's three-truck Shay locomotive 7, camp 3, Mason County, Washington, approximately 1935

    No full text
    Caption on image: Simpson Log Co., Camp #3. C.K. Kinsey Photo. PH Coll 516.3920Two loggers hold prints of Clark Kinsey photographs. Sol G. Simpson and his family moved to Mason County in 1887, where Simpson worked laying ties and rails for the Port Blakely Mill Company's logging railroad. He formed S. G. Simpson Company in Matlock in 1890. Three of Simpson's brothers joined him in Mason County, and two of them worked for him. Simpson Logging Company opened its first sawmill, the Reed Mill, at Shelton in 1925. Numerous other mills and logging operations along the West Coast have been acquired by Simpson over the years. [Source: James, David. Grisdale: Last of the Logging Camp. Fairfield, Washington: Ye Galleon Press, 1986.].] Camp nos. 1 and 2 were absorbed into Camp 3, which was located 17 miles north of Shelton on the upper Skokomish Valley, by West Lake. The camp was in existence from 1930 to 1947. This particular Shay locomotive was built for the Phoenix Logging Company in January of 1924. It was acquired by Simpson when it bought Phoenix Logging. This locomotive served camps 4, 7 and 3 from 1924 until 1947. It is currently on display in Shelton

    Endoxocrinus A.H. Clark 1908

    No full text
    Genus Endoxocrinus A.H. Clark, 1908 Type species of the genus: Encrinus parrae Gervais (in Guerin, 1835). Synonymy: Endoxocrinus Clark, 1908 b: 151; Diplocrinus Döderlein, 1912: 21; Annacrinus A.H. Clark, 1923: 11; Diplocrinus sensu lato Roux, 1978: A 9 (unpublished data) and 1981: 481. Emended diagnosis A diplocrinine genus with Br 1 + 2 of each brachitaxis united by synostosis tending to syzygy; IBr 2 ax; IIBr to VBr series of 1 to 5 brachials, usually 2 (98 %) in IIBr, 2 or 3 beyond IIBrax, exceptionally up to 7 in IIIBr to VBr; end of arms with rudimentary pinnules <1 cm long; arm branching usually endotomous; relatively short stalk (ratio of stalk length to crown length usually <2, frequently <1.2) sometimes with a callus on the distalmost infranodal facet; mature symplexies and cryptosymplexies without interpetaloid groove, and symplexial crenularium with usually 6–8 (up to 10 in largest columnals) major culmina per interpetaloid zone. Included species Encrinus parrae Gervais (in Guérin, 1835); Pentacrinus alternicirrus Carpenter, 1882; Pentacrinus maclearanus Thomson, 1877; Pentacrinus wyvillethomsoni Jeffreys, 1870.Published as part of David, Jerome, Roux, Michel, Messing, Charles G. & Ameziane, Nadia, 2006, Revision of the pentacrinid stalked crinoids of the genus Endoxocrinus (Echinodermata, Crinoidea), with a study of environmental control of characters and its consequences for taxonomy, pp. 1-50 in Zootaxa 1156 on page 32, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.17226
    corecore