1,333 research outputs found
Post-Polio Syndrome -- 1982-1991 -- Correspondence, Polio -- letter, 1990-05-30
Letter from Maynard, Frederick M. to Sabin, Albert B. dated 1990-05-30.Sabin Collection Fair Use Policy</a
Post-Polio Syndrome -- 1982-1991 -- Correspondence, Polio -- letter, 1990-06-21
Letter from Sabin, Albert B. to Maynard, Frederick M. dated 1990-06-21.Sabin Collection Fair Use Policy</a
Catholic Comments Podcast.
Professor Frederick Bauerschmidt reflects on the metaphor “God as Author.” What does it mean for us to be a character in the story God is writing
Coville’s Serendipitous Association with Blueberries Leading to the Whitesbog Connection
What led up to the association between Frederick Coville and Elizabeth White? This 26 year association began in 1911 and continued until Coville’s death in 1937. The commercial highbush blueberry industry was born and became established during this period. Frederick Vernon Coville was born March 23, 1867 in Preston, NY, graduated from Cornell University in 1887 and was hired by the U.S. Department of Agriculture as a botanist in 1888. His USDA office, labs and greenhouses were in downtown Washington, D.C. Washington’s urban environment was the first of a number of key circumstances that influenced and hastened blueberry domestication and commercialization. Coville was concerned that his four children (Stanley 11, Katherine 9, Cabot 3, and Frederick 1) would never learn the rural skills that he had acquired in his childhood in central New York. This concern was addressed by spending several summer vacations in rural areas of New England. A geologist friend in Washington, Arthur Keith, told him about a farm, next to his parent’s farm, that was for sale near Greenfield, NH. The Covilles bought the 40 acre, former Alexander property, on May 2, 1905. The second key factor was the abundant blueberry populations of, both highbush and lowbush that flourished in the surrounding fields. In 1906, less than a year after coming to Greenfield, Coville said: “that my interest was attracted to the subject of blueberry culture”. Previous attempts by others at establishing plantings had generally been unsuccessful. Coville collected seeds in 1906, and a colleague, George W. Oliver, began germination trials that fall. In 1907, Coville began greenhouse studies in Washington on the requirements for growing blueberries. When he returned to Greenfield in 1908, he brought and planted 179 seedlings that had been grown in Washington. Survival was 97% following a dry summer on the low-pH blueberry soil. The first outstanding bush for using in crosses was selected in July of 1908 in a pasture of his neighbor, Fred Brooks, for whom it was named. This was a very fortunate find, with many berries over 0.5 inches in diameter and with excellent flavor. ‘Brooks’ became a parent or was in the parentage of 13 of the first 15 USDA releases. In the short span of time from 1906 to 1910, he determined that blueberries require a moist but not wet soil and most importantly a low pH. Also determined were nutrient requirements, winter chilling importance, propagation techniques, and breeding procedures including self-sterility and seedling management. All of this information was published in the 101 page Experiments in Blueberry Culture, USDA Bul.193, Nov. 15, 1910. The Whitesbog connection began in Jan. 1911 after Elizabeth White had read Experiments in Blueberry Culture and had written to the USDA offering land and assistance. Commercialization followed this final indispensable key.Paper presented at NABREW Conference, Paper Session II:Blueberry History, on June 25, 2014, Atlantic City, N.J
Review of Frederick Douglass and Scotland, 1846: Living an Antislavery Life
This is a book review of Frederick Douglass and Scotland, 1846: Living an Antislavery Life by Alasdair Pettinger (Edinburgh University Press, 2019). KEYWORDS: Abolitionism, Antislavery, Douglass, Racism, Scotland, Transatlantic
André Marx' novels published in the edition die drei ??? (The Three Investigators)
Title: " published in the edition die drei ??? (The Three Investigators)". Department of German language and literature. Author: Frederick Maxmilian Scherrer. Sup i : PhD . T m Bučk á, Ph.D. P g : 54 (+ 5 p g f upp m t). L gu g : German. Key words: children/youth literature, crime serie for children/youth, die drei ???, The Three I tig t , . Abstract: This thesis deals with the present ti f novels published in the edition die drei??? ( The Three Investigators) in the context of american and german written literature for children/youth. The narrower subjects of analysis are topic selection, characters, locations and clients
Romány Andrého Marxe vydané v edici Die drei ???
Název práce: "Romány Andrého Marxe vydané v edici die drei ??? (Tři pátrači). Katedra germanistiky. Autor: Frederick Maxmilian Scherrer. Vedoucí práce: PhDr. Tamara Bučková, Ph.D. Počet stran: 54 (+ 5 stran příloh). Jazyk: němčina. Klíčová slova: literatura pro děti a mládež, kriminální romány pro děti a mládež, die drei ???, Tři pátrači. Abstract: Práce se zabývá představením románů Andrého Marxe vydaných v edici die drei ??? ( Tři pátrači) v kontextu americké a německy psané literatury pro děti a mládež. Užším předmětem analýzy jsou: výběr témat, postavy, místa a klienti.Title: " published in the edition die drei ??? (The Three Investigators)". Department of German language and literature. Author: Frederick Maxmilian Scherrer. Sup i : PhD . T m Bučk á, Ph.D. P g : 54 (+ 5 p g f upp m t). L gu g : German. Key words: children/youth literature, crime serie for children/youth, die drei ???, The Three I tig t , . Abstract: This thesis deals with the present ti f novels published in the edition die drei??? ( The Three Investigators) in the context of american and german written literature for children/youth. The narrower subjects of analysis are topic selection, characters, locations and clients.Katedra germanistikyPedagogická fakultaFaculty of Educatio
"Is Keynesianism Institutionalist?: An Irreverent Overview of the History of Money from the Beginning of the Beginning to the Present"
This paper poses that the one commonality between institutionalist thought and Keynesianism (as presented in his General Theory) was money. Tracing the origins and uses of money, the myth of the development of money as a medium of exchange is dispelled and replaced with money used as evidence of debt, specifically, government debt. This paper was presented as the Presidential Address to the 1998 Association for Institutionalist Thought conference. As such, the paper should be taken in the same spirit as the [in]famous neoclassical Robinson Crusoe story, or Paul Samuelson's story of the evolution of money. The only significant change that has been made is to add several endnotes that will make some of the references more clear; this might make the piece more accessible for students.
Creighton University School of Law Class of 1966
Graduates|Allan, Frederick B.; Black, Lawrence D.; Bloch, Steven R.; Bosiljevac, Mary L.; Brady, Michael G.; Callaghan, John M.; Duffy, Daniel J.; Essy, G. Douglas; Ferring, Michael H.; Fritz, Daniel R.; Giovannetti, Emil J.; Hening, George H.; Knight, Charles J.; Leuck, John F.; McDonnell, Patrick H.; McKenzie, Patrick R.; McQuillan, James M.; Meissner, Wendell E.; Neu, John H.; O'Leary, Lawrence F.; Pavel, David E.; Payne, John F.; Penry, George A.; Peters, Paul F.; Ranney, Thomas E.; Raznick, Arthur S.; Reno, Douglas W.; Schumacher, James R.; Shaughnessy, C. Patrick; Tarrell, John T.; Tarsney, Thomas J.; Thalken, Thomas D.; Travis, Michael F.; Weinberg, Maynard H. (not pictured)|22 x 39 in. (portrait
Focal radius, rigidity, and lower curvature bounds
“This is the accepted version of the following article: Luis Guijarro and Frederick Wilhelm, Focal radius, rigidity, and lower curvature bounds, which has been published in final form at: https://doi.org/10.1112/plms.12113.”We prove a new comparison lemma for Jacobi fields that exploits Wilking's transverse Jacobi equation. In contrast to standard Riccati and Jacobi comparison theorems, there are situations when our technique can be applied after the first conjugate point.
Using it, we show that the focal radius of any submanifold N of positive dimension in a manifold M with sectional curvature greater than or equal to 1 does not exceed π 2 . In the case of equality, we show that N is totally geodesic in M and the universal cover of M is isometric to a sphere or a projective space with their standard metrics, provided that N is closed.
Our results also hold for k th intermediate Ricci curvature, provided that the submanifold has dimension ⩾ k . Thus, in a manifold with Ricci curvature ⩾ n − 1 , all hypersurfaces have focal radius ⩽ π 2 , and space forms are the only such manifolds where equality can occur, if the submanifold is closed.
Example 4.38 and Remark 5.4 show that our results cannot be proven using standard Riccati or Jacobi comparison techniquesThe first author was supported by research grants MTM2011‐22612, MTM2014‐57769‐3‐P, and MTM2017‐85934‐C3‐2‐P from the MINECO, and by ICMAT Severo Ochoa project SEV‐2015‐0554 (MINECO). This work was supported by a grant from the Simons Foundation (#358068, Frederick Wilhelm
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