242,051 research outputs found

    R. L. Gordon and Ron S. Jordan

    No full text
    "No 485 Sqn Ldr R. L. Gordon D.F.C. & Ba[r]. "Butch" From 22nd July 1943 Killed at Batchelor 27th Feb 1944 No 421681 Flying Officer Ron. S. Jordan AM DFM Served in 31 Beaufighter Squadron Coomalie Creek, Darwin From 22-7-43 To 1-5-44. [Signature] Ron S. Jordan."Number 485 Squadron Leader R. L. Gordon, Distinguished Flying Cross & Ba[r], "Butch". From 22nd July 1943. Killed at Batchelor 27th February 1944. Number 421681 Flying Officer Ron S. Jordan, Member of the Order of Australia, Distinguished Flying Medal. Served in 31 Beaufighter Squadron, Coomalie Creek, Darwin. From 22-7-43 To 1-5-44. [Signature] Ron S. Jordan

    Oral history interview with Gordon Sullivan, 2015

    No full text
    Transcript of an oral history interview with General Gordon R. Sullivan, conducted by Sarah Yahm at the Sullivan Museum and History Center on 23 April 2015, as part of the Norwich Voices oral history project. Gordon Sullivan was a member of the Norwich University Class of 1959. After graduating from Norwich University, he served in a variety of Army command and staff assignments in the United States, Germany, Korea and Vietnam. He became Chief of Staff of the U. S. Army on 21 June 1991. The Sullivan Museum and History Center at Norwich University was named in his honor. Topics of interest within the oral history include General Sullivan's Army career as well as his legacy, philosophy, and activities after his retirement from the U.S. Army

    Oral history interview with Gordon R. Brown

    No full text
    Transcript not available electronically. Please contact CBI.Brown discusses Control Data Corporation's move into manufacturing plug-compatible products and the development of mass storage technology.Brown, Gordon R.. (1980). Oral history interview with Gordon R. Brown. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/107159

    Clara with Dorothy and Gordon, Victor and wife Dorothy and son Victor, Herbert and Beryl, Clermont, Queensland, ca. 1932 [picture] /

    No full text
    Glass negative no. 330.; Part of the Gordon Cumming Pullar collection of glass negatives of Clermont, Yeppoon and nearby locations, Queensland, ca. 1905-1932.; Photograph no. 61 in the book A shifting town : glass-plate images of Clermont and its people.; Standing l to r: Dorothy Pullar, Gordon Pullar jnr, Herbert Pullar, Herbert's wife, Beryl (nee Cox); seated: Clara Pullar, Dorothy (Victor's wife) and her son Victor Pullar jnr.; Condition: Emulsion lift, Scratched, Dirty.; Also available in an electronic version via the internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn4192061; Published in: A shifting town : glass-plate images of Clermont and its people / by G.C. Pullar ; compiled by Richard and Marguerite Stringer ; text by Marguerite Stringer. St. Lucia, Qld. : University of Queensland Press, 1986

    Donald Gordon McPherson

    No full text
    "RAAF. 14. Liberator. Squdn. [FO]. Donald. Gordon. McPherso[n] 407295. Fenton."Royal Australian Air Force. 14 Liberator Squadron. Flying Officer Donald Gordon McPherso[n]. 407295. Fenton

    Malcolm Gordon Gurr

    No full text
    "Sgt Malcolm Gordon Gurr Spitfire Squadron Strauss airstrip Only Aussie in group".Sergeant Malcolm Gordon Gurr. Spitfire Squadron, Strauss airstrip. Only Aussie in group

    Letter from Gordon Hirabayashi to Joseph R. Goodman, June 9, 1942

    No full text
    Letter from Gordon Hirabayashi to Joseph R. Goodman, sent from King County jail in Seattle. Hirabayashi describes events leading up to his arrest after turning himself in to the F.B.I., his experiences in jail, and positive regard for his fellow inmates. He mentions Goodman's upcoming visit to his family in an incarceration camp.Personal correspondence, organizational records, government documents, publications, and other papers created or collected by Joseph R. Goodman documenting the forced removal and incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II, as well as organized resistance to incarceration. Included in the collection are records of the Japanese Young Men's Christian Association and the Japanese American Citizens' League in San Francisco, including papers of the Japanese YMCA's executive secretary Lincoln Kanai; Sakai family papers; Goodman's correspondence to and from Japanese American incarcerees, organizations opposing forced removal and incarceration of Japanese Americans, the War Relocation Authority, and others; publications, photographs, and ephemera from the Topaz Relocation Center, where Goodman taught high school; War Relocation Authority records and publications; and newspaper clippings, pamphlets, and reports about forced removal and incarceration created by various government, religious, and civic organizations, in California and nationwide

    Gordon R. Sullivan, approximately 1957-1958

    No full text
    Portrait of Gordon Russell Sullivan, Norwich University class of 1959, as a cadet.Identity of photographer uncertain

    Finite size effects and the supersymmetric sine-Gordon models

    No full text
    We propose nonlinear integral equations to describe the groundstate energy of the fractional supersymmetric sine-Gordon models. The equations encompass the N = 1 supersymmetric sine-Gordon model as well as the phi(id,id,adj) perturbation of the SU(2)(L) x SU(2)(K)/SU(2)(L+K) models at rational level K. A second set of equations is proposed for the groundstate energy of the N = 2 supersymmetric sine-Gordon model

    On the integrability of the sine-Gordon system

    No full text
    This thesis investigates the integrability of the sine-Gordon system of nonlinear partial differential equations when the dependent variables are subject to some very particular boundary conditions. In chapter 1 the sine-Gordon system is introduced and, with N ϵ Z, P, Q ϵ R, the sets of initial-boundary value problems A(_N) and B(_P,Q) are defined. In the set A(_N) at the spatial variable x is unbounded and the boundary conditions are fixed by initially choosing the topological charge N. This set of problems is the one usually associated with the sine-Gordon system. In the set B(_P,Q) the spatial coordinate is constrained to the semi-line (-oo,0) and there exists two boundary parameters P,Q ϵ R to be chosen a priori. It is the study of this second set of initial-boundary value problems for arbitrary P, Q which forms all the original work of this dissertation. The study presented here is primarily concerned with the development of three separate inverse scattering methods for solving these sets of initial-boundary value problems. The first of these is developed in chapter 3 and is applicable to a subset of the problems in A(_N). The method is the one usually associated with the sine-Gordon system and studies the asymptotics of the initial data as x → ±oo. It is included in this thesis for completeness and as background for the original material which follows. Next, in chapters 4 and 5, the inverse scattering methods appropriate to initial-boundary value problems in subsets of B(_P,O) and B(_P,Q#O) are constructed. In these cases it is important to realise that it is only possible to study the asymptotics of the initial data as x → -oo. Once these three methods have been formulated they are used to find soliton solutions and infinite sets of integrals of motion for these boundary value problems. When a boundary is present at x = 0 the interaction of the solitons with this boundary is studied. These topics are addressed in chapter 6. Finally in chapter 7 the question of the integrability of both sets of problems is addressed. By interpreting the various inverse scattering methods in terms of canonical coordinate transformations of phase space it is seen that the existence of such methods can be viewed as a constructive proof of the integrability of these boundary value problems
    corecore