148,546 research outputs found

    JACOBSON RADICAL ALGEBRAS WITH QUADRATIC GROWTH

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    We show that over every countable algebraically closed field K there exists a finitely generated K-algebra that is Jacobson radical, infinite-dimensional, generated by two elements, graded and has quadratic growth. We also propose a way of constructing examples of algebras with quadratic growth that satisfy special types of relations.</p

    [Letter from Barbara Jordan to Denise L. Tobias - February 21, 1974]

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    Letter from Barbara Jordan to Denise L. Tobias discussing food supplement regulations created by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and a bill she introduced meant to re-introduce investigation on the topic while the bill is processed

    Engvald Jacobson Collection

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    Photocopy of typed transcription (5 leaves) of taped reminiscence (1964) concerning life in Norway, the family's decision to emigrate, building their house, rebuilding the barn, threshing, mail delivery to Daglum, N.D., his parents, Albert L. and Thea Gurine Ingebritsen Jacobson, his wife Eleanor Olson Jacobson, and his moving out of and returning to North Dakota. Some genealogical material included

    Orson L. Jacobson

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    Orson L. Jacobson poses for a portrait. He is the husband of Celestia Arvilla Jacobson. He worked for the Uintah Railway in Watson, Utah for awhile. He died May 5, 1962

    No. 67, Rowena Miller and Dorothy Jacobson, interview by Winnifred Margetts

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    Transcript (64 pages) of interview by Winnifred Margetts with Utah actresses Rowena Miller and Dorothy Jacobson on June 21, 1985. This interview is no. 67 in the Everett L. Cooley Oral History Project, and tape nos. 294 and 295Miller (b. 1911) and her sister, Dorothy Jacobson, discuss their theater experience in Salt Lake City during the 1940s-1950s with the Interstake Drama Group and the Deseret Theater. Interviewer: Winnifred Margett

    Proper Ferroelectricity in the Dion?Jacobson Material CsBi2Ti2NbO10: Experiment and Theory

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    A diverse range of materials and properties are exhibited by layered perovskites. We report on the synthesis, characterization, and computational investigation of a new ferroelectric?CsBi2Ti2NbO10, an n = 3 member of the Dion?Jacobson (DJ) family. Structural studies using variable temperature neutron powder diffraction indicate that a combination of octahedral rotations and polar displacements result in the polar structure. Density functional theory calculations reveal that the wider perovskite blocks in CsBi2Ti2NbO0 stabilize proper ferroelectricity, in contrast to the hybrid-improper ferroelectricity reported for all other DJ phases. Our results raise the possibility of a new class of proper ferroelectric materials analogous to the well-known Aurivillius phases

    Denise Brown's Graduate Recital

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    Original Format: CassetteComposers in the first graduate recital: Antonio Vivaldi; Robert Schumann; Gabriel Faure; Ambroise Thomas; Hugo Wolf; Herbert HowellsComposers in the second graduate recital: D. Scarlatti; A. Scarlatti; J. S. Bach; Jacques Offenbach; J. Brahms; Joaquin Rodrigo; Leonard BernsteinFirst Recital: Mezzo-SopranoSecond Recital: Mezzo-Sopran

    Ann L. Jacobson Papers

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    Ann Lisette Schnall Jacobson was born in 1806 in New Fairfield, Canada, to Johannes Schnall (1754-1819) and Margarethe Schnall (1763-1848). Her parents, originally from Bethlehem, worked as missionaries. After her father died in 1819 in Canada, she returned to Bethlehem with her mother. She taught for a time at the Girl\u27s School in Bethlehem. On October 26th, 1826 she married a Moravian minister, John Christian Jacobson (1795-1870). She then spent time living in Winston-Salem, NC; Nazareth, Pa.; and Bethlehem as her husband worked with the church. As a high ranking member of the church, John Christian Jacobson was often travelling and away from his family for long periods of time. Together, Ann and John had five children. She lived for a time with her only daughter Mary Jacobson Rondthaler and son-in-law Edward Rondthaler Jr. (1842-1931) in Brooklyn, New York, where Rondthaler was a Moravian minister as well. She returned to Bethlehem shortly before her husband\u27s death in November of 1870. Ann Jacobson died in Bethlehem on June 9th, 1883. 1 box This collection includes letters to Ann (often addressed as either Ann L. or Lisette A.) from her husband John Christian Jacobson. John Christian Jacobson\u27s 27 letters to his wife include accounts of trips to Bethlehem while his family was living in North Carolina, as well as to New England, Ohio, Michigan, Canada, and New York. This collection also includes letters written by Ann to her husband John while he was travelling and one to her mother Mary Schnall, informing her mother of the death of Ann\u27s young son, Jonathan and later letters from the Jacobsons to their daughter and son-in-law. Also included are letters written by Ann Jacobson\u27s sons, William, Eugene, and Edward, to their mother and others as well as a letter to Ann from her son-in-law Edward Rondthaler, Jr

    Jake Pinkerton with Edwin Jacobson, Oley Soder and Ted Jacobson

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    L-R: Pinkerton, E. Jacobson, Soder, T. Jacobson

    Dell Jacobson

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    Dell Jacobson is the son of Orson L. and Celestia A. Jacobson. He married Wanda Murray. He died July 23, 2000
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