141,941 research outputs found

    Hubbard Notice of Adopted Amendment (2012-08-20)

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    21 pp. Adopted 2012-08-20. Department of Land Conservation and Development Notice of Adopted AmendmentComprehensive Plan Map amendment from Medium Density Residential to Commercial and a zone change from Medium Density Residential (R-2) to Residential Commercial (RD) for a 0.23 acre parcel located at 2732 D Street in Hubbard, OR

    Bernard Rosecrans Hubbard, 1888-1962

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    An extended biographical sketch of Father Bernard Hubbard, alternating between third-person description and excerpts in the first person by Father Hubbard.An extended biographical sketch of Father Bernard Hubbard, alternating between third-person description and excerpts in the first person by Father Hubbard

    Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)

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    Letter from Sam T. Hubbard to D. W. Kempner letting him know that the 1949 Cotton Exchange Year Book has been delayed and that they are sending him the 1948 edition

    G. Scott Hubbard

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    G. Scott Hubbard Prof. G. Scott Hubbard has been engaged in space R&D for more than 40 years - including 20 years with NASA that culminated in the role of Director of NASA’s Ames Research Center. Hubbard currently is a consulting Professor in the Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics at Stanford University where he focuses on planetary exploration, especially Mars and also serves as the Director of the Stanford Center of Excellence for Commercial Space Transportation. Prof. Hubbard is Editor-in-Chief of a new peer-reviewed journal “New Space” devoted to the emerging entrepreneurial space industry and also serves as Chair of the SpaceX Commercial Crew Safety Advisory Panel and a Strategic Adviser to Wyle Laboratories. From 2002 to 2006 Hubbard was the Director of NASA’s Ames Research Center where he led the 2500 person research organization, revived the Center’s capability in supercomputing and established NASA’s first University Affiliated Research Center with the University of California. Hubbard also signed the first agreement between NASA and Google for joint R&D. In 2003 he served full time as the sole NASA representative on the Columbia Accident Investigation Board (CAIB), where he directed impact testing that demonstrated the definitive physical cause of the loss of the Columbia. In 2000 Hubbard served as NASA’s first Mars program director and successfully restructured the entire Mars program in the wake of mission failures. His award winning book entitled, “Exploring Mars: Chronicles from a Decade of Discovery”, describes his work on NASA’s Mars Program. Prof. Hubbard is the founder of NASA’s Astrobiology Institute, establishing it in 1998. He conceived the Mars Pathfinder mission with its airbag landing and was the manager for NASA’s highly successful Lunar Prospector Mission. Earlier in his career, Hubbard led a small start-up high technology company in the San Francisco Bay Area and was a staff scientist at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL). At LBNL Hubbard developed several basic technologies for gamma-ray and charged particle detectors still in use today. During his NASA career, Hubbard received seven NASA medals including NASA’s highest award, the Distinguished Service Medal and the Presidential Meritorious Achievement Award. He is a Fellow of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA), elected to the International Academy of Astronautics (IAA) and also was awarded the Von Karman medal by the AIAA. Hubbard received his undergraduate degree in physics and astronomy at Vanderbilt University and his graduate education in solid state and semiconductor physics at the University of California at Berkeley. Prof. Hubbard regularly serves on both National Academy of Science and NASA Advisory committees. He continues his 50-year interest in music by regularly playing guitar in a jazz group.https://commons.erau.edu/space-congress-bios-2016/1025/thumbnail.jp

    D. Allan Bromley Letter to Allan Hubbard

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    Letter by D. Allan Bromley, Director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy, to Allan Hubbard, Assistant to Vice President Quayle for Domestic Policy and Executive Director of the Council of Competitiveness. Bromley invites Hubbard to attend the September 12, 1991 meeting of the President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST)

    Bernard Rosecrans Hubbard, 1888-1962

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    A short biographical sketch of Father Hubbard; typewritten manuscript.A short biographical sketch of Father Hubbard; typewritten manuscript

    Suppression of d-wave superconductivity in the checkerboard Hubbard model

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    Using a dynamical cluster quantum Monte Carlo approximation, we investigate the d-wave superconducting transition temperature T(c) in the doped two-dimensional repulsive Hubbard model with a weak inhomogeneity. The inhomogeneity is introduced in the hoppings t' and t in the form of a checkerboard pattern where t is the hopping within a 2x2 plaquette, and t' is the hopping between the plaquettes. We find inhomogeneity suppresses T(c). The characteristic spin excitation energy and the strength of d-wave pairing interaction decrease with decreasing T(c), suggesting a strong correlation between these quantities

    A Comparative Study of the Jazz Trumpet Styles of Clifford Brown, Donald Byrd, and Freddie Hubbard: An Examination of Improvisational Style from 1953-1964.

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    This study is a comparative examination of the musical lives and improvisational styles of jazz trumpeter Clifford Brown, and two prominent jazz trumpeters whom historians assert were influenced by Brown—Donald Byrd and Freddie Hubbard. Though Brown died in 1956 at the age of 25, the reverence among the jazz community for his improvisational style was so great that generations of modern jazz trumpeters were affected by his playing. It is widely said that Brown remains one of the most influential modern jazz trumpeters of all time. In the case of Donald Byrd, exposure to Brown’s style was significant, but the extent to which Brown’s playing was foundational or transformative has not been examined. With regards to Hubbard, assertions of his affinity for Brown’s playing during his formative years are well founded, but how much of Brown’s influence was retained by Hubbard as he developed his own personal style has been unexamined. This study examines the early life, musical training, significant professional experiences, and musical influences of Clifford Brown, Donald Byrd, and Freddie Hubbard to assist in forming a more complete picture of the evolution of their respective improvisational styles. In order to call into question the extent of Brown’s influence upon Byrd and Hubbard I scrutinize the playing of these three men in a comparative manner, focusing on traditionally analyzed elements such as melodic, harmonic, and rhythmic tendencies as well as performance elements specific to the trumpet. When one jazz musician is influenced by the improvisational style of another many of the aforementioned elements may be transferred and adopted in the formation of style. Therefore, by identifying the elements that make up Clifford Brown’s modern jazz trumpet style and looking for commonalities and differences among the three trumpeters, a more complete and accurate understanding of the interrelationships between Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard is achieved

    Photograph - W. D. Hubbard

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    Photograph of W.D. Hubbard with a handwritten note on the back.https://digitalcommons.gardner-webb.edu/first-baptist-shelby-wd-hubbard/1000/thumbnail.jp

    Bust shot of Jack D. Hubbard

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    Image shows a bust shot of Jack D. Hubbard. Published in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram morning edition, November 5, 1950.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1950s/7341/thumbnail.jp
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