178,706 research outputs found
Two songs [music] /
251 (Publisher number). For voice and piano.; Cover title.; "Sung by Mrs. C.C. Lance (Miss Christie Fuller), Mrs. Reginald Quesnel, Miss Eva Mylott, etc!".; Pl. no.: 251.; Publication date approximated from the Copyright date of "A red, red rose" which published separately.; Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.mus-an10558992. Last year / words by J. Le. Gay. Brereton ; music by Esther Kahn -- Red, red rose / words by Robert Burus [i.e. Burns] ; music by Esther Kahn
Johanna Simon Kahn Family Collection 1941-1946
This collection largely contains correspondence and documents from the family of Johanna Simon Kahn (from Frankfurt am Main), in the context of their fate during WWII.
There is a letter from the American consulate in Stuttgart denying visas to Gustav Kahn's family in Europe (1940); two letters on Red Cross stationary from Johanna Simon Kahn
to her son, Gustav Kahn in New York City, briefly giving greetings and news, before her deportation to Theresienstadt (1942); a letter from a Rabbi summarizing the (negative) fate of
Johanna Kahn and her relatives Julius Lichtenstein and Hugo Lichtenstein(1946). Accompanying the correspondence are vital documents such as a 1941 tax clearance certificate for Irma
Kahn (Gustav Kahn's wife); birth certificate for Margot Kahn (daughter of Gustav and Irma Kahn) and scanned pages of a 1940 German passport with red "J" for
Margot Kahn.Johanna Kahn (née Simon), lived in Frankfurt. She probably died in 1943 in Poland.Processed for digitizationSent for digitizationReturned from digitizationLinked to online manifestationdigitize
Molecular and solid-state (8-hydroxy-quinoline)aluminum interaction with magnesium: A first-principles study
The interaction between Mg and (8-hydroxyquinoline)aluminum, Alq(3), is investigated via ab initio molecular dynamics based on density-functional theory. We model the Alq(3) thin film both with a single Alq(3) molecule in vacuo (as is usually done in the literature) and with an Alq(3) crystalline structure. Comparing the results from these two models, we show that bulk calculations provide a better description of the chemical processes involved, allowing the Mg atom to react with two neighboring Alq(3) molecules, as was alluded to in a previous publication [S. Meloni, A. Palma, A. Kahn, J. Schwartz, and R. Car, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 125, 7808 (2003)]. Moreover, core-level shift calculations are in good agreement with experimental measurements only when using the solid phase approach. We also propose a different interpretation of the Al(2p) experimental core level presented in a previous work [C. Shen, A. Kahn, and J. Schwartz, J. Appl. Phys. 89, 449 (2001)]
Kahn et al Supplemental methods & figure legends.docx
Supplemental file to Kahn et al 2024 (Am J Cell Physiology)</p
Kahn, William R. interview
Oral History interview of William Kahn. Interview conducted by Steinberg, Andrew J. at Kahn Residence
Bertha Kahn Cohn Collection 1934-2000
This collection contains two 1939 kennkarte (identification cards) stamped with "J" for Hanchen Kahn and Siegfried
Samuel Kahn from Gerolzhofen. There are also photocopies of documents for Bertha Cohn, wife of Carl Cohn, primarily consisting of
asset declarations and letters from Oberfinanzkasse des Oberfinanzpräsidenten Berlin-Brandenburg and Deutsche Bank regarding their
confiscated account. Accompanying this material is a letter from Landesarchive Berlin explaining that Bertha Cohn was deported in 1942
and perished in Majdanek.Copies of documents provided by Landesarchiv BerlinBertha Cohn, née Kahn lived in Berlin-Charlottenburg together with her husband, Carl Cohn. He died in December 1936 and
was buried in the Jewish cemetery, Berlin Weissensee. Bertha Cohn was deported “East” in June 1942; she died probably in the Majdanek
concentration camp. Before her deportation she had to declare her property (‘Vermögenserklärung’).Processed for digitizatio
Oral history interview with Robert E. Kahn
Copyright to this oral history is held by Robert E. Kahn.Kahn briefly discusses his educational background and involvement with the development of ARPANET before focusing on the operations of the Information Processing Techniques Office (IPTO) of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). Kahn describes the development of computer networks with DARPA support and explains the process of contracting research at DARPA as well as the creation of DARPA budgets in detail. In this context he discusses the work of various DARPA and IPTO personnel including J. C. R. Licklider, Vinton Cerf, Larry Roberts, and George Heilmeier. This interview was recorded as part of a research project on the influence of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) on the development of computer science in the United States.Kahn, Robert E.. (1989). Oral history interview with Robert E. Kahn. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/107380
Kahn-Nathan J. et Rozenbaum H. — La Contraception, aujourd'hui et demain
H. J. Kahn-Nathan J. et Rozenbaum H. — La Contraception, aujourd'hui et demain. In: Population, 25ᵉ année, n°4, 1970. pp. 896-897
Kahn-Nathan J. et Rozenbaum H. — La Contraception, aujourd'hui et demain
H. J. Kahn-Nathan J. et Rozenbaum H. — La Contraception, aujourd'hui et demain. In: Population, 25ᵉ année, n°4, 1970. pp. 896-897
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