144 research outputs found

    General Cramer thanks Secretary Stimson for compliments

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    Response by General Cramer to Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson for his letter of appreciation for the critique of the Pearl Harbor Board report

    Secretary Stimson has high regard for critique of the Pearl Harbor Board report

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    Leter to MGEN Myron C. Cramer, the Army Judge Advocate General, thanking him for his critique of the Pearl Harbor Board report

    Study of the action of the Russian leadership and orders for the defense of the Yalu, with particular reference to Generals Kuropatkin and Zasulich.

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    This paper provides information on the Russian military leadership of General Kuropatkin and General Zasulich during the Russo-Japanese War. There are short biographies on both generals and information about directives given (orders for the defense), to include positive and negative characteristics and facts about each of these leaders. A conclusion gives lessons learned from the study of this battle and the importance of intelligent leadership

    Military Commissions: Trial of the Eight Saboteurs

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    When your President asked me to talk about something and gave me the choice of subjects, I really didn\u27t know just what to select. I much would have preferred that he would have told me what he would like to have me talk about, but being this is a lawyers\u27 meeting and being that we have been through the trial of the eight saboteurs in Washington, I thought that probably you ladies and gentlemen would be interested in the legal aspects of that trial. Now, I have got to say at the outset that so far as the facts are concerned, the record of the trial has been ordered sealed by the President until the close of the war and those connected with the trial have been told not to disclose any of the facts concerning it. However, to all intents and urposes, I might say what you have read in the papers is the gist of the whole trial, where these eight men, who were trained in a sabotor school in Germany, came over to this country in two submarines, four of whom landed on Long Island and the others in Florida, with $180,000 altogether in United States money, a lot of ammunition, secret paraphernalia for secret writing, and instructions on how to bomb bridges and munition plants and that sort of thing. They were speedily caught. They were tried. We even went through habeas corpus proceedings in the Supreme Court of the United States. And six of them were electrocuted and the other two sentenced to long prison terms, the terms being reduced by the President, all in the short time of two months and one day

    Some legal phases of border service.

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    This paper discusses border service under conditions not involving the application of the neutrality laws, with particular reference to situations where shots are fired into American territory across the international boundary, and to bandit raids across the international boundary, and to bandit raids across the international boundary into American territory

    Draft rules to govern exclusion case hearings.

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    Letter of transmittal to John J. McCloy providing draft rules to govern exclusion case hearings

    Memorandum for the Assistant Secretary of War from the Judge Advocate General, War Department dated July 29, 1943 with receipt note

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    Memorandum on the subject of military police guarding evacuees en route between Relocation Centers and Segregee Centers

    Proposed changes for how classified information is made available to Department of Justice ligation cases

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    Memorandum from the Army Judge Advocate General to John J. McCloy. Provides a lengthy and detailed response to a request from the Secretary of War for consideration of change to current procedures for disclosure of classified information to U.S. Attorneys in ligation cases. The suggested change would delegate the action and decision on such cases to Military District commanders, to which the Judge Advocate General is strongly opposed

    Chapman College Founders Day Banquet, Anaheim, California, 1968

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    Chapman College Founders Day Banquet, Anaheim Convention Center, Anaheim, California, 1968. Left to right: Myron Cole, Mrs. C. C. Chapman, and Arlene Reasnor Sayres [author of Chapman Remembers].https://digitalcommons.chapman.edu/chapman_family/1031/thumbnail.jp

    Heat capacity measurements of yttrium barium(2)copper(3)oxygen(7-delta) near T(c): Fluctuation effects in a bulk superconductor

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    "High-resolution ac heat capacity measurements of YBa\sb2Cu\sb3O\sb{\rm 7-\delta} near the critical temperature are reported and discussed. The samples are high-quality single crystals, several of which display untwinned regions making up at least 50% of the sample mass. The heat capacity data show a cusp-like anomaly instead of the discontinuous step observed in ""classic"" superconductors. This divergence is indicative of the presence of fluctuation contributions and is due to the exceptionally short Ginzburg-Landau coherence length of this material. Because there is considerable uncertainty in the temperature of cross-over from mean-field to critical behavior, the zero-field heat capacity data are analyzed both as a lowest-order correction to mean-field BCS theory (the Gaussian approximation) and in terms of true critical behavior. The analysis shows that the data are best described within the Gaussian approximation as three-dimensional fluctuations of a two-component order parameter, but the results do not rule out a more complicated order parameter or a logarithmic (critical) divergence. The underlying BCS step indicates strong-coupling behavior."Application of a magnetic field broadens and suppresses the heat capacity transition, with no apparent shift in the onset of superconductivity, and with the effects more pronounced for fields applied parallel to the c-axis than for fields in the ab-plane. We find this behavior cannot be explained in terms mean-field theory. Rather, the anisotropic broadening and suppression may be understood in the context of critical finite-size scaling, since the length scale of the fluctuations is essentially restricted to values less than the lowest-order Landau radius in directions perpendicular to the applied field.Made available in DSpace on 2011-05-07T13:38:41Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2 license.txt: 4922 bytes, checksum: 910b249b4beec47e7ab768910c8f966f (MD5) 9114278.pdf: 4733854 bytes, checksum: 0ba701f834da66673b0c5e7a50398c19 (MD5) Previous issue date: 1990Item marked as restricted to the 'UIUC Users [automated]' Group (id=2) by Howard Ding ([email protected]) on 2011-05-07T14:57:22Z Item is restricted indefinitely.Restriction data tranferred 2014-07-01T11:26:54-05:00 Original Data Group with Access UIUC Users [automated] Release Date: none Reason: ETDs are only available to UIUC Users without author permissionETDs are only available to UIUC Users without author permissionU of I Onl
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