104,841 research outputs found
[Letter from J. J. Delaney to T. N. Carswell - June 3, 1942]
A letter written to Mr. T. N. Carswell, Abilene, Texas, from J. J. Delaney, President, Schreiner Institute, Kerrville, Texas, dated June 3, 1942. Delaney advises that there is no course on alcoholic effects offered but that drinking is not tolerated in "this institution"
Delaney, Caldwell
Thomas Caldwell Delaney (1918-2007), noted author, one-time director of the Museum of Mobile, dean of the University Military School, and headmaster of Julius T. Wright School for girls, signs a copy of his book Deep South inside the Haunted Bookshop for Ann Schoffner
Delaney, Arkansas
Early street scene in Delaney. (cf. Harry Harnish. Historical Geography of the Upper White River Valley, T/1978/H37."(On verso: Delaney Ark. 1915.
The Demise of Stock-Drop Claims in the Wake of Dudenhoeffer
On March 27, 2023, the Catholic Law community joined together for the third presentation of the 2023 Student Scholars Series, given by Mary Delaney. She was an evening division student who graduated in January 2023, and this summer Delaney will begin work in the IRS Office of Chief Counsel within the Large Business and International Division. Delaney\u27s work entitled, The Demise of Stock-Drop Claims in the Wake of Dudenhoeffer, examines fiduciary duty concerns related to the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) by continuing to invest in stock despite having knowledge of its increasingly precarious value. The Presentation respondent was Professor Regina T. Jefferson, Catholic Law in Washington, D.C
The Demise of Stock-Drop Claims in the Wake of Dudenhoeffer
On March 27, 2023, the Catholic Law community joined together for the third presentation of the 2023 Student Scholars Series, given by Mary Delaney. She was an evening division student who graduated in January 2023, and this summer Delaney will begin work in the IRS Office of Chief Counsel within the Large Business and International Division. Delaney\u27s work entitled, The Demise of Stock-Drop Claims in the Wake of Dudenhoeffer, examines fiduciary duty concerns related to the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) by continuing to invest in stock despite having knowledge of its increasingly precarious value. The Presentation respondent was Professor Regina T. Jefferson, Catholic Law in Washington, D.C
J. T. Wiswall papers, W.0011
Abstract: Two notebooks, containing mathematical equations and scientific essays, as well as the handwritten manuscripts of J. T. Wiswall's works "The African" and "Iliad of the Family," neither of which were ever published.Scope and Content Note: The collection contains two small, leather notebooks. One contains the handwritten manuscript "The African" and includes a bookplate identifying Caldwell Delaney as the owner. The other contains the handwritten manuscript "Iliad of the Family," as well as mathematical equations and scientific essays.Biographical/Historical Note: A Mobile, Alabama, author, J. T. Wiswall published two books,
The Last Crusader in 1861 and
Mr. Christopher Katydid (of Casconia) in 1864 (under the pseudonym Mark Heywood). The two handwritten manuscripts in this collection, "The African" and "Iliad of the Family," were never published, although they were listed in Robert E. Bell's
Bibliography of Mobile, which noted that Mobile historian Caldwell Delaney held the manuscripts in his private collection
Disordered spherical bead packs are anisotropic
Investigating how tightly objects pack space is a long-standing problem, with relevance for many disciplines from discrete mathematics to the theory of glasses. Here we report on the fundamental yet so far overlooked geometric property that disordered mono-disperse spherical bead packs have significant local structural anisotropy manifest in the shape of the free space associated with each bead. Jammed disordered packings from several types of experiments and simulations reveal very similar values of the cell anisotropy, showing a linear decrease with packing fraction. Strong deviations from this trend are observed for unjammed configurations and for partially crystalline packings above 64%. These findings suggest an inherent geometrical reason why, in disordered packings, anisotropic shapes can fill space more efficiently than spheres, and have implications for packing effects in non-spherical liquid crystals, foams and structural glasses
Thomas Ronald Delaney Donation Note
T. Ronald Delaney's note about donating this collection of documents to the Creighton University Law Library.Box 1, Folder 11 pag
Letter, [Author unclear] to Paulina T. Merritt
Handwritten letter to Paulina Merritt from an unknown author, October 1, 1876.
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