368,397 research outputs found
Martin L. Davey portrait
Portrait of Governor Martin L. Davey who served two, two year terms as Governor from 1935-1939
Marie Wing telegram to Martin L. Davey, December 31, 1934
Dated December 31, 1934, this is a telegram from Marie Wing to Martin L. Davey, in which she personally welcomes him to his new position as governor of Ohio and expresses her high hopes for his service to the state. The telegram is made for the Christmas season with "Holiday Greetings" at the top and featuring a candle with holly on the left and the three magi, or wise men, traveling to Bethlehem, on the right.
Martin L. Davey, Ohio's 53rd governor, was born on July 25, 1884, in Kent, Ohio, where his father, John Davey, founded the Davey Tree Expert Company which provides tree, lawn, and other plant care. Davey attended Kent High School, and upon graduation worked for the Oliver Typewriter Company in Cleveland, Ohio. Later, he attended Oberlin College, but decided to help his father found the Davey Tree Expert Company. He served as mayor of Kent from 1913-1918 and served in the United States House of Representatives from 1918-1921 and 1923-1929. In 1934, he was elected governor, after having lost the race previously in 1928 to republican Myers Y. Cooper. As governor, Davey passed the School Foundation Bill and restructured Ohio's Relief Administration
Orville Wright at Glenn L. Martin Company plant
Orville Wright poses with Hartson and Milburn in front of the main entrance to the Glenn L. Martin Company factory during Orville\u27s visit to the factory. This photograph is attributed to Glenn L. Martin Company, Baltimore, Maryland.https://corescholar.libraries.wright.edu/special_ms1_photographs/2857/thumbnail.jp
Letter from Alvin L. Martin to Paul B. Hendrickson
Letter and transcript from Alvin L. Martin to Paul B. Hendrickson, with envelopeTranscript created by James and Betty Gill
Martin L. Webb, 1958
Black-and-white photographic portrait of Martin L. Webb, professor of electrical engineering at Norwich University, in October 1958
Martin-Löf Complexes
In this paper we define Martin-L¨of complexes to be algebras for
monads on the category of (reflexive) globular sets which freely add cells in
accordance with the rules of intensional Martin-L¨of type theory. We then
study the resulting categories of algebras for several theories. Our principal
result is that there exists a cofibrantly generated Quillen model structure on
the category of 1-truncated Martin-L¨of complexes and that this category is
Quillen equivalent to the category of groupoids. In particular, 1-truncated
Martin-L¨of complexes are a model of homotopy 1-types. In order to establish
these facts we give a proof-theoretic analysis, using a modified version of Tait’s
logical predicates argument, of the propositional equality classes of terms of
identity type in the 1-truncated theory
Cheryl L. Martin, interviewed by Kim Sealy, Part 2
Cheryl L. Martin, interviewed by Kim Sealy, November 15, 2001, Brewer, Maine. Martin talks about personal and parent’s educational background; decision to join Air Force instead of go to college; military history; “MAINEiacs”; federal versus state military service; time in basic training; benefits; logistics and shipping duties; year off with Fortune 500 company; CCAF; time as boom operator (air refueling); time in Kosovo; war effect on family; Shaw Air Force Base; rank and gender issues; air versus ground combat; experience in “gender free” military culture; officer versus enlisted rankings. Text: 44 pp. transcript. Time: 01:19:43.
Listen:
Part 1: mfc_na3235_c2342_01 Part 2: mfc_na3235_c2342_02https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mf144/1056/thumbnail.jp
No.197, Martin Brixen, interview by Everett L. Cooley
Transcript (103 pages) of interview by Everett L. Cooley with Martin Brixen, architect and former campus planner for the University of Utah, on December 9, 12, and 19, 1988. This interview is no. 197 in the Everett L. Cooley Oral History Project, and tape nos. 908, 909, 910, and 911. Accompanied by some papers and photographs associated with the University campus master planBrixen (b. 1927) recalls his background and education in architecture; his work as head of Campus Planning, University of Utah, 1950s-1960s; private practice as an architect in Salt Lake City, 1960s-1980s; and his assessment of architecture on the campus and in the Salt Lake community. Interviewer: Everett L. Coole
Cheryl L. Martin, interviewed by Kim Sealy, Part 1
Cheryl L. Martin, interviewed by Kim Sealy, November 15, 2001, Brewer, Maine. Martin talks about personal and parent’s educational background; decision to join Air Force instead of go to college; military history; “MAINEiacs”; federal versus state military service; time in basic training; benefits; logistics and shipping duties; year off with Fortune 500 company; CCAF; time as boom operator (air refueling); time in Kosovo; war effect on family; Shaw Air Force Base; rank and gender issues; air versus ground combat; experience in “gender free” military culture; officer versus enlisted rankings. Text: 44 pp. transcript. Time: 01:19:43.
Listen:
Part 1: mfc_na3235_c2342_01Part 2: mfc_na3235_c2342_02https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mf144/1055/thumbnail.jp
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