1,359,554 research outputs found

    Samuel S. Kirkham Civil War letter

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    This collection contains a letter written by Samuel S. Kirkham to his family while he was serving with the 12th Kansas Volunteer Infantry

    Letter dated 22 March 1968 from Don Kirkham to Lorenzo A. Richards

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    Letter dated 22 March 1968 from Don Kirkham, Professor of Agronomy and Physics at Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa, to Lorenzo A. Richards at Riverside, California, in response to the latter\u27s request to provide references to the University of California at RiversideI O W A S T A T E U N I V E R S I TY of Science Department of Agronomy chnology A M E S , I O W A 50010 March 22, 1968 Dr. Lorenzo A. Richards hkSS Fifth Street Riverside, California 92501 Dear Ren: Of course I will be glad to write any information that is requested from me from the University of California at Riverside, They will be mighty lucky to get you there. It will keep you even busier. Best regards. Very truly yours, Don Kirkham Professor of Agronomy S- Physics DK/jm

    Picturebook people:Illustrator Michael Kirkham pays tribute to the Provensens

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    Picturebook People is a review of the book The Art of Alice &amp; Martin Provensen (Chronicle Chroma) for graphic design journal Eye Magazine. With growing interest in late picture book author and illustrators Alice and Martin Provensen demonstrated by the recent publication of three books by or about them, it seemed an appraisal of this book – the closest thing to a critical monograph on the couple – was timely and important.  The aim of the review was to introduce uninitiated readers to the context and significant cultural contributions of the subjects and provide a critical reflection on the valuable material but somewhat superficial scope of the book. It is hoped this will function as a prompt to future authors in addressing the gaps left in the literature.  Information was gathered from the book under review, interviews and editorial pieces published about the subjects, and their own work. Ideas were developed through writing and discussion with academic and publishing colleagues and through editorial input from Eye Magazine. The book was photographed by Kirkham in the DJCAD Production Studio.  The review was published on the prominent graphic design journal Eye Magazine’s website where it will be searchable and accessible indefinitely.</p

    Picturebook people:Illustrator Michael Kirkham pays tribute to the Provensens

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    Picturebook People is a review of the book The Art of Alice &amp; Martin Provensen (Chronicle Chroma) for graphic design journal Eye Magazine. With growing interest in late picture book author and illustrators Alice and Martin Provensen demonstrated by the recent publication of three books by or about them, it seemed an appraisal of this book – the closest thing to a critical monograph on the couple – was timely and important.  The aim of the review was to introduce uninitiated readers to the context and significant cultural contributions of the subjects and provide a critical reflection on the valuable material but somewhat superficial scope of the book. It is hoped this will function as a prompt to future authors in addressing the gaps left in the literature.  Information was gathered from the book under review, interviews and editorial pieces published about the subjects, and their own work. Ideas were developed through writing and discussion with academic and publishing colleagues and through editorial input from Eye Magazine. The book was photographed by Kirkham in the DJCAD Production Studio.  The review was published on the prominent graphic design journal Eye Magazine’s website where it will be searchable and accessible indefinitely.</p

    Theoretical Identification of the Mechanisms of Sanctions

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    This chapter develops the ground for a comprehensive theoretical synthesis concerning the origins and impact of sanctions. The concept of the welfare state is central to understanding the mechanisms through which sanctions work. The chapter guides the reader through mainstream and alternative accounts of sanctions, including a brief overview of Welfare State Regime (WSR) approach that offers a theoretical framework for a comparative analysis of target states (Kirkham 2022). By looking inside the states under sanctions, the WSR approach addresses a crucial puzzle: why, even as sanctions have taken their toll on targeted states and induced economic problems and trade disruptions, have they been largely ineffective in terms of their stated objectives, such as political deterrence, foreign policy, or regime change. As some empirical cases demonstrate, despite initial economic grievances in the short run, in the longer run, the effects of sanctions are paradoxical: Target states manage to adjust to external pressures and to develop internal self-protection mechanisms.</p

    Letter dated 17 October 1967 from Don Kirkham to Lorenzo A. Richards

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    Letter dated 17 October 1967 from Don Kirkham, professor at Iowa State University at Ames, Iowa, to Lorenzo A. Richards at the U.S. Salinity Laboratory in Riverside, California, asking for a reference for the source of some diagramsO W A S T A T E U N I V E R S I TY of Science Department of Agronomy chnology A M E S , I O W A 50010 October 17, 1967 Dr. L. A. Richards, Care of U. S. Salinity Laboratory P.O. Box 672 Riverside, California Dear Ren: Could you please give me *r reference^here these diagrams first appeared? I want to use them in a book we hope to get done. I assume I have your permission to use the diagrams. I hope you and Zilla are busier then ever and are enjoying , yourselves. // ~/y- 17 Very truly yours, / 5 1/ 3 * ft ftrf yp»**S Don Kirkham Professor of Agronomy & Physics / - 0A X J fci DK/jmr encl.: "Non-mathematical example showing how unsaturated flow depends on both the capillary and gravitational potential" "Illustration of Darcy\u27s law for three geometries

    Picturebook people:Illustrator Michael Kirkham pays tribute to the Provensens

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    Picturebook People is a review of the book The Art of Alice &amp; Martin Provensen (Chronicle Chroma) for graphic design journal Eye Magazine. With growing interest in late picture book author and illustrators Alice and Martin Provensen demonstrated by the recent publication of three books by or about them, it seemed an appraisal of this book – the closest thing to a critical monograph on the couple – was timely and important.  The aim of the review was to introduce uninitiated readers to the context and significant cultural contributions of the subjects and provide a critical reflection on the valuable material but somewhat superficial scope of the book. It is hoped this will function as a prompt to future authors in addressing the gaps left in the literature.  Information was gathered from the book under review, interviews and editorial pieces published about the subjects, and their own work. Ideas were developed through writing and discussion with academic and publishing colleagues and through editorial input from Eye Magazine. The book was photographed by Kirkham in the DJCAD Production Studio.  The review was published on the prominent graphic design journal Eye Magazine’s website where it will be searchable and accessible indefinitely.</p

    60946: Photograph of Joseph Kirkham

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    Photograph of Joseph Kirkham, broth of Len Kirkham and brother-in-law of Robert Glyndon Coode. Editor's Comment: Pte. Kirkham wears the belt of the Pattern 1903 equipment, and a satchel carrying the Gas Hood.</p

    Austin Papers: Series IV, 1831-1834

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    Copy of transcript for a letter from Thomas Kirkham to Stephen F. Austin, in which Kirkham informs Austin that his daughter has finished school and wishes to become a teacher or a tutor for female pupils. Kirkham asks Austin for his opinion on the prospect of Kirkham's daughter relocating to the Austin colony and offering her services there

    Hydroscapha Kirkham Hot Springs Population

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    Hydroscapha Kirkham Hot Springs Population Material Examined. I D A H O: B o i s e C o.; Kirkham Hot Springs; in moss on rocks; 17 JUN 1982; G.A. Shook (11 CIDA). This population may be conspecific with the Hot Creek Falls Hydroscapha, as the two populations are morphologically very similar. They share the character of the wide tentorial bridge and rounded lateral points of the mesosternal disc, and differ significantly only in the shape of the disc of the mesoventrite. The disc in the Kirkham population is 1.2× as wide as long, whereas the disc in the Hot Creek Falls population is 1.8× as wide as long.Published as part of Maier, Crystal A., Ivie, Michael A., Johnson, James B. & Maddison, David R., 2010, A New Northern-Most Record for the Family Hydroscaphidae (Coleoptera: Myxophaga), with Description of a New Nearctic Species, pp. 289-302 in The Coleopterists Bulletin 64 (4) on page 300, DOI: 10.1649/0010-065x-64.4.28
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