192,762 research outputs found
Special Publication (J.L.B. Smith Institute of Ichthyology) no.61
Online version of original print edition of the Special Publication of the J.L.B. Smith Institute of Ichthyology; No. 61A new lower-slope eelpout of the genus Dieidolycus Anderson, 1988 (Family Zoarcidae, Subfamily Lycodinae), is described from a single juvenile female trawled in 2008-2165 m off Tierra del Fuego, Chile. It differs from congeners D. leptodermatus Anderson, 1988 and D. adocetus Anderson, 1994 by its head pore pattern, 10 caudal-fin rays, 18 pectoral-fin rays and longer gill slit
Stephen Smith photograph, Taylor's Flying Carpet, 1985.
M. and D. Taylor's Flying Carpet - FP15 - photographed Easter 1985
Letter from D. M. F. Smith to Alden Partridge, 11 August 1826.
From the office of the New York Enquirer, Smith writes that he received Partridge's letter directed to M. M. Noah; cannot find the article Partridge alludes to.Transcription by Joseph Byrne. Transcriptions may be subject to error
Funeral Program for Ruby D. Smith Robinson, October 14, 1967
Funeral Program for Ruby D. Smith Robinson at West Mitchell C. M. E. Church. 3 pages
George Albert Smith correspondence, July 1909 [1]
Miscellaneous correspondence and papers of George A. Smith from July of 1909. Includes three letters from father John Henry Smith at Salt Lake City; a letter from George G. Gibbs, secretary for the First Presidency, sending copies of the form of marriage ceremony to be used when missionaries are called upon to perform it; a letter from Newton Woodruff at Smithfield, Utah, to his sister, Lucy Woodruff Smith; a letter signed "Atin" on ZCMI stationery, addressed to "Albert" [probably George Albert Smith]; a letter from Leland I. and Alice M. Acomb; and a letter from uncle D. P. Woodruff at Caldwell, Albert
Lucy Woodruff Smith correspondence, April 1910
Lucy Woodruff Smith correspondence, April 1910. Letters received while Lucy and George Smith were at Saint George, including letters from Lucy\u27s brother, Elias S. Woodruff at Salt Lake City; Heber J. Grant at Salt Lake City; "Mother," probably her mother-in-law, Sarah Farr Smith, at Salt Lake City; from Ann D. Watson at Salt Lake City; Lucy\u27s father-in-law, John Henry Smith, at Salt Lake City; "Aunt Lizzie" at Salt Lake City; Aunt Ellen M. Libbey at Littleton, New Hampshire; Alice Louise Reynolds at Provo, Utah; W. Avery Chapman at Palmyra, New Yor
Recent developments at the ANTARES AMS centre.
A. M. Smith, D. Fink, M. A. C. Hotchkis, G. E. Jacobsen, E. M. Lawson, C. Tuniz, E. Sacchi, D. Louvat, G. M. Zuppi and R. Bonett
Stephen Smith photograph, Ayr Fair, 1981.
M and D Taylor's Double Dive bomber - DDB1 - with Foden - FTS628F - photographed April 1981
DSpace for e-print archives
DSpaceTM (http://dspace.org/) is the new open source digital repository system from the MIT Libraries and Hewlett-Packard Labs designed to support the digital collections of academic research institutions, as well as the SPARC conception of Institutional Repositories for digital research material. The DSpace system has been described elsewhere in detail so the focus of this article is on its implementation at MIT for archiving e-prints and other artifacts of scholarly communication, and making these available to the public. The MIT Libraries are deeply concerned about the well-documented crisis in scholarly communication and are committed to working
towards innovative solutions. We share this concern with many of the MIT faculty and administration, several of who have been key supporters of the DSpace project and related
initiatives at the university. The MIT Libraries were a founding member of SPARC, and are a signatory of the Budapest Open Access Initiative (BOAI). This article will describe how MIT Libraries have implemented DSpace to support these goals
Ruby D. Smith Tribute by Carolyn Long Banks, circa 1980
Ruby D. Smith dedication by Carolyn Long Banks. Banks describes Smith as the fundamental person in the Atlanta Movement, and she kept the movement together through her organized leadership. 1 page
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