1,358,604 research outputs found

    Letter from Frank Fenn to Gifford Pinchot, August 7, 1912

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    Kooskia, Idaho. In this letter, Frank Fenn seems to be replying to the same query that Pinchot directed at Sherman; that is, Fenn writes to Pinchot filling him in on the details of his first year as a Forest Ranger. His recitation also encompasses some of the more general history of Forest Service activities in the area. Fenn draws a distinction in practice between today's 1912's practices and how things were in the good old days

    Fibring the complement of the Fenn-Rolfsen link

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    In this note it is shown that the complement of the singular linked spheres in four dimensions defined by Fenn and Rolfsen can be fibred by tori. Also a symmetry between the two componente is revealed which shows that the image provides an example of a Spanier-Whitehead duality. This provides an immediate proof that the α-invariant is non zero

    Fibring the complement of the Fenn-Rolfsen link

    No full text
    In this note it is shown that the complement of the singular linked spheres in four dimensions defined by Fenn and Rolfsen can be fibred by tori. Also a symmetry between the two componente is revealed which shows that the image provides an example of a Spanier-Whitehead duality. This provides an immediate proof that the α-invariant is non zero

    The Early Years of the Bitterroot Forest Reserve: Major Frank Fenn Reports to Washington

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    This is a compilation of a number of documents, and contains an introduction written by Dennis Baird. Some of this introduction appears to be missing, but what is present provides some historical context to the main text, which is a 1901 report from Ranger Frank Fenn written in response to an argument by a Judge Heyburn that the then-called Bitterroot Reserve needed to be shrunk in size. Fenn argues against this idea. At the end of the document are two maps: one shows the Bitterroot Reserve as it was originally established, and the other shows its boundaries in 1907

    DR. Joseph Fenn Sleigh to James Barry

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    Dr. Joseph Fenn Sleigh (1733-70), Quaker and art connoisseur, practised as a physician in Cork. He had attended the Quaker school at Ballitore soon after Edmund Burke was a pupil there and later studied medicine in Edinburgh where he knew Oliver Goldsmith (1730-74). He was on the staff of the North Infirmary Hospital, Cork from 1759 until his death. Goldsmith wrote an elegy on him (Tim Cadogan and Jeremiah Falvey, A Biographical Dictionary of Cork (Dublin, 2006), p. 311). He was a life-long acquaintance of Burke. Barry, now aged 22, was in Dublin attending classes in figure drawing at the Dublin Society's Art School (The Dublin Society Drawing Schools, Students and Award Winners 1746-1876, compiled by Gitta Willemson (Royal Dublin Society, 2000), pp. 4, 248).non-peer-reviewe

    Shirley Shunk Fenn papers

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    Personal correspondence, photographs and memorabilia relating to the Fenn and Shunk families, especially to Lloyd Fenn, Frank A. Fenn, and Charles William Shunk. This collection details Shirley Fenn who was a member of many state organizations

    Obituary for Earl Clement Davis, Unitarian Yearbook

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    Obituary for Earl Davis written in the annual Unitarian Yearbook published by the American Unitarian Association. These yearbooks often contained obituaries (referred to as a \u27Necrology\u27) for recently deceased ministers and leaders. The author, Dan Huntington Fenn, was a Unitarian minister whose father, William Wallace Fenn, also a Uniatrian minister, once served as Dean of the Harvard Divinity School.https://commons.clarku.edu/funeral/1001/thumbnail.jp

    Dr. John Fenn

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    Dr. John Fenn. Graduated from Yale Medical School in 1961.Yale-new Haven Hospital - 1982-1993. From the Yale Vascular History Powerpoint.https://elischolar.library.yale.edu/surgeryimages/1180/thumbnail.jp

    Fenn College in Cleveland

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    Caption reads: "Euclid Avenue at 19 street. Building in center background is Fenn College. District #4, Cleveland, Ohio. Credit Line - C. W. Ackerman." An electric streetcar and several automobiles head east on Euclid Avenue, just north of East 18th Street. The Art Deco Downtown Chevrolet building (just before the Charleston Hotel) is located at 1935 Euclid Avenue and is now part of the Cleveland State University. 1900 Euclid Avenue, once ? Multigraph, has been converted to loft apartments. Fenn College, established in 1881, merged with Cleveland State University in 1965. Fenn Tower, designed by George B. Post & Sons, was originally known as the National Town and County Club. The 22-story building, completed in 1930, was sold to Fenn College in 1937 as additional classroom and office space and renamed in 1939 to honor Serano Peck Fenn. In 2002, major renovations took place all over Cleveland State University’s campus, including Fenn Tower being converted into a residence hall, with 175 apartment style dorm rooms. The building, located at 2401 Euclid Avenue, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2003

    A Fungal Foray

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    Jessica Fenn is a junior geology major from Tell City, Indiana
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