7,035 research outputs found

    Louis M. Swartz [approximately 1940]

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    From the Toledo Heights Tidbits, a portrait of Louis M. Swartz, a soldier from the Toledo Heights Area of Toledo, as he fishes from a small boat, The neighborhood newspaper published news about servicemen from the Toledo Heights Area throughout World War II. Terms associated with the photograph are: Toledo Heights Tidbits | Toledo Heights Area (Toledo, Ohio) | Swartz, Louis M. | fishing | soldiers | World War, 1939-1945 | newspapers | portrait

    Robert M. Harris, Mrs. Collection

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    Photograph of Chickasaw Governor Robert M. Harris, c.1889-1890. Photo by Swartz & Freeman, Denison, TX

    Louis M. Swartz

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    From the Toledo Heights Tidbits, a portrait of Louis M. Swartz, a soldier from the Toledo Heights Area of Toledo, as he fishes from a small boat. The neighborhood newspaper published news about servicemen from the Toledo Heights Area throughout World War II

    Swartz, David M.

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    Library licensing and criminal law: The Aaron Swartz case

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    Reviews the ways that library licenses for subscription content contributed to criminal charges against activist Aaron Swartz, when he downloaded content from JSTOR on the MIT campus. (Author Note: This piece predates Swartz's death by suicide in 2013.)Sims, Nancy, A. (2011). Library licensing and criminal law: The Aaron Swartz case. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, 10.5860/crln.72.9.8637

    Sporogenesis in Botrichium Virginianum Swartz

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    The earliest resultful work done in Pteridophytes, very closely similar to Botrychium Virginianum Swartz, was the work of Goebel (1890) on the Ophioglossales. Bower (1890) followed Goebel in his work on the Ophioglossales. He completed a work in 1896, which according to Burlingame (1907), who also did valuable work on the Ophioglossales, is the most comprehensive and satisfactory that has thus far been done. This work had a stimulating effect upon the early study of Botrychium Virginianum Swartz because of the almost entirely similar histology of the two plants. Burlingame’s (1907) work in the Ophioglossales, was done in 1907. He is the most recent worker on this plant. He concentrated his study upon the sporange

    g-Elements, finite buildings and higher Cohen–Macaulay connectivity

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    AbstractChari proved that if Δ is a (d−1)-dimensional simplicial complex with a convex ear decomposition, then h0⩽⋯⩽h⌊d/2⌋ [M.K. Chari, Two decompositions in topological combinatorics with applications to matroid complexes, Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 349 (1997) 3925–3943]. Nyman and Swartz raised the problem of whether or not the corresponding g-vector is an M-vector [K. Nyman, E. Swartz, Inequalities for h- and flag h-vectors of geometric lattices, Discrete Comput. Geom. 32 (2004) 533–548]. This is proved to be true by showing that the set of pairs (ω,Θ), where Θ is a l.s.o.p. for k[Δ], the face ring of Δ, and ω is a g-element for k[Δ]/Θ, is nonempty whenever the characteristic of k is zero.Finite buildings have a convex ear decomposition. These decompositions point to inequalities on the flag h-vector of such spaces similar in spirit to those examined in [K. Nyman, E. Swartz, Inequalities for h- and flag h-vectors of geometric lattices, Discrete Comput. Geom. 32 (2004) 533–548] for order complexes of geometric lattices. This also leads to connections between higher Cohen–Macaulay connectivity and conditions which insure that h0<⋯<hi for a predetermined i

    Springfield Football: Odeneal, Swartz, and Moore

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    Three members of the 1947 Springfield College football team pose for a photo as they kneel in front of some trees looking forward with their helmets placed in front of them. They include William Odeneal, Douglas Swartz, and Alan Moore
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