605 research outputs found
ROTC 1951 Color Guard 2
These Jacksonville State College students were members of the ROTC Color Guard. From left are Harold Dodson, T.L. Allen, Jr., Clark Lewis, and Kenneth Fowler. Shown they stand in uniform carrying flags and rifles on the campus quad. (circa December 12, 1951)https://digitalcommons.jsu.edu/lib-ac-histimg/4723/thumbnail.jp
ROTC 1951 Color Guard 1
These Jacksonville State College students were members of the ROTC Color Guard. From left are Harold Dodson, T.L. Allen, Jr., Clark Lewis, and Kenneth Fowler. Shown they stand in uniform carrying flags and rifles on the campus quad. (circa December 12, 1951)https://digitalcommons.jsu.edu/lib-ac-histimg/4722/thumbnail.jp
Baseball Throw, Run, Hit Participants
Participants of the baseball throw, run and hit contest are from left, front row, Neldon Smuin, Sonja Smuin, Sammi Kay, Max Coombs, Mike Robins, Sharyl Neal and Yvonne Nelson. Second row, Doug Allen, Julene Johnson, Kathy Killpack, Clark Emery, Galen Turner, Alice Christensen, Janet Gardiner and David Rasmussen. Third row, Margie Merrell, RAndy Smuin, Rich Morton, John Wiseman, Vicki Fowler, Thad Jenkins and Kenneth Bodily. Back row, Grant Drollinger, Val Mortenson, Dennis Hatch and Wayne Eschler
The constitution of magnesium-rich magnesium-zirconium alloys
The magnesium-zirconium system has been studied to 0.8 per cent zirconium which represents the limit of solubility of zirconium in liquid magnesium at 950°C. Alloys have been prepared by two methods of alloy additions, and the results compared. Microstructural studies have been made of the alloys in the cast, extruded, and heat-treated conditions. The limit of solid solubility has been determined on the basis of resistivity and temperature coefficient of resistivity measurements, as well as by metallographic examination, with good agreement. A secondary structure resulting from precipitation of a second phase within cored regions of the alloy has been studied by both light and electron microscopy. X-ray diffraction studies of cored regions separated from the alloy give no evidence for the existence of a compound Mg2Zr which has been previously proposed --Abstract, page 9
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Christian scriptures in Muslim culture in the work of Kenneth Cragg
Much of Kenneth Cragg's writing is devoted to finding common ground between Christianity and Islam. A conservative Christian upbringing and a liberalising education based on the Enlightenment's values have contributed to this approach. Although Cragg often quotes the Bible, he has not written on Christian Scriptures to the same extent that he has on the Qur'an. His theology of Christian Scriptures has been affected by his engagement with the Qur'an. Cragg's traditional approach to the Bible has been reinforced by Muslims' view of their Scripture. To handle problems his traditional approach creates, Cragg filters Scriptures through a single model of revelation. Thus Scriptures are valued only for their contribution to this revelation. The result is that he unconsciously develops a canon within the canon. He solves problems with the Old Testament by handling it in a way similar to the Qur'an: both become a type of old testament to the New. In connection with the New Testament, 'hospitality' is key to Cragg's interpretation. Those parts which communicate his understanding of hospitality are one major, though often unarticulated, criterion for his canon within the canon. Cragg was one of the earliest to propose comparing Christ rather than the Bible to the Qur'an. His understanding of different scriptural issues between the Bible and the Qur'än has led him to see the comparison as one of revelation to revelation rather than Scripture to Scripture. Some of the difficulties that Cragg has had with the Bible as Scripture could be helped within the framework of his theology if he were to consider a variety of models, rather than a single one, for understanding Scriptures. His exegesis tends to be intuitive and at crucial points vulnerable to a more historical approach which is concerned to work with the meaning the author would have had for the text
UHS Sophomore Class
The photographs were taken for the 1937 edition of the Uintah High School yearbook. They are on page 33. The subjects of this page are the members of the Sophomore Class. Top row, from left to right: Dona Calder, Tad Merkley, and Naomi Allen. Second row down, from left to right: Clifford Carter, Phoebe Hatch, and Ornal Roper. Third row down, from left to right: Lucile Lundgreen, Orlo Goodrich, and Stella Slaugh. Fourth row down, from left to right: Kenneth Samuels, Beth Goodrich, and Arvid Merkley. Fifth row down, from left to right: Shirley Smith, Paul Stringham, and Amy Ainge. Sixth row down, from left to right: Junius Goodrich, Lorna Fowler, and William Harrison. Bottom row, from left to right: May Millecam, Dale Stewart, and Clelia Jones
UHS Junior Class
The photographs were taken for the 1938 edition of the Uintah High School yearbook. They are on page 36. The subjects are the members of the Junior Class. Top row, from left to right: Tad Merkley, Ruth Hackler, and Reed Birchell. Second row down, from left to right: Shirley Smith, Orlo Goodrich, and Roberta Cook. Third row down, from left to right: Colton McKeachnie, Naomi Allen, and Weldon Fox. Fourth row down, from left to right: Beth Goodrich, Austin Haws, and Lorna Fowler. Fifth row down, from left to right: Charles Bingham, Betty Anderson, and Ornal Roper. Sixth row down, from left to right: Ethelda Richens, Don Erickson, and Lorna Nickel. Seventh row down, from left to right: Earl House, Birdie Witmer, and Glendon Swain. Bottom row, from left to right: Lois Dodds, Kenneth Samuels, and Virginia Merkley
Portrait of the 1962 University of Alabama football team
This is a portrait of the 1962 University of Alabama football team. Caption on back: 1962 Alabama Crimson Tide, 1st Row: Ingram Culwell, Kenneth Mitchell, Jack Hurlbut, Mal Moore, Charlie Stephens, Eddie Versprille, Lee Roy Jordan, Charlie Pell, Jimmy Dill, Billy Piper, Al Lewis, Mickey Andrews, Butch Henry, Clark Boler; 2nd Row: Tim Davis, Gaylon McCollough, Hudson Harris, Benny Nelson, Mike Hopper, Jimmy Wilson, Jimmy Sharpe, Bob Pettee, Gary Martin, Carlton Rankin, Larry McGill, Cotton Clark, Steve Allen, Richard O'Dell, Dink Wall; 3rd Row: Steve Wright, Bill Wieseman, Lynn Fowler, Dale Layton, Bill Battle, Farris Morton, Dan Kearley, Grady Elmore, Buddy French, Frankie McClendon, Butch Wilson, Ray Ogden, Richard Williamson, Jim Simmons, Wayne Freeman; Not pictured: Joe Namath, Gerald Stephens, Elbert Cook
Isolation and Aggregation in Economics
In explaining economic phenomena, economic analysis concentrates on selected influences and fixes the host of other factors under a ceteris paribus clause. This view, which goes back to Alfred Marshall (1842-1924), is developed in the first part of the book.
Aggregation is viewed as a particular application of ceteris paribus analysis - isolation from "structural effects". This leads to an approach, called "closed aggregation", which was introduced by Kenneth May and is also implicit in Keynes' writings but has been neglected more recently. It is argued that macroeconomic models are more stable and more general than the corresponding micro models and that there is no simple analogy between them
Kenneth Lewis Roberts Correspondence
Entries include brief biographical information, a typed biography, typed and handwritten correspondence on personal stationery from Kennebunk Beach, Maine, including a humorous letter in 1933 concerning the Society for Helping Maine Literature, his belief that the author collection was in need of Arnoldiana such as a donated pike head handmade by Arnold\u27s blacksmiths for the attack on Quebec, the manuscript of Arundel sent to be opened after publication and loaned to Leonard for Doubleday Doran and Company and a surprising Western Union telegram requesting permanent loan of the manuscript for MIT, handwritten and typed correspondence from Roberts in Italy including a handwritten artistic postcard from his wife, numerous biographical newspaper review clippings with photographic images, book synopses, and a poem for Theodore Roosevelt who could remember neither the author nor title of the book he was reading, a research question concerning Maine people on cookery, notes through the years concerning his friends, the staff at Doubleday, historians, libraries, and librarians as well as transition at the Maine Development Commission, correspondence with Mary A. Benjamin on Walter R. Benjamin, Autographs, stationery and a postcard concerning the possible sale of a copy of a Maine land grant document, a gift instead from Roberts of his vellum copy of the Trelawny-Goodyear grant of 1631, and the reply of Stubbs from the Maine State Library on receipt of this copy of the Casco Bay land grant
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