7,255 research outputs found

    Bob Close, author of love me sailor and Eliza Callaghan, at the Cafe Royale, Paris c.1948-49 [picture] /

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    Copyright restrictions apply.; Condition: good.; Part of the collection Albert Tucker, family and friends.; Related material: Albert Tucker, family and friends, [2]; National Library of Australia Pictorial Section PIC/6451/1-7; Exhibited: Albert Tucker family and friends 50 years of photographs, North Caulfield, Vic. Aug. 5-29 Aug. 1998

    Surgeon Generals Poliomyelitis Advisory Committee [Type III] -- 1962 -- Correspondence, OPV Miscellaneous -- letter, 1962-11-14

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    Letter from Monteith, J. Waldo dated 1962-11-14.Sabin Collection Fair Use Policy</a

    Albert Lewkowitz, 1883 - Nov. 11, 1954.

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    Bibliography of the works of philosopher and author Albert Lewkowitz.Philosopher and author, 1883-1954.Processed for digitizationSent for digitizationReturned from digitizationLinked to online manifestationdigitize

    Calibration of a Ground-Based Array Radar for Tomographic Imaging of Natural Media

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    Ground-based tomographic radar measurements provide valuable knowledge about the electromagnetic scattering mechanisms and temporal variations of an observed scene and are essential in preparation for space-borne tomographic synthetic aperture radar (SAR) missions. Due to the short range between the radar antennas and a scene being observed, the tomographic radar observations are affected by several systematic errors. This article deals with the modelling and calibration of three systematic errors: mutual antenna coupling, magnitude and phase errors and the pixel-variant impulse response of the tomographic image. These errors must be compensated for so that the tomographic images represent an undistorted rendering of the scene reflectivity. New calibration methods were described, modelled and validated using experimental data. The proposed methods will be useful for future ground-based tomographic radar experiments in preparation for space-borne SAR missions

    Franco (Albert M.) interview, 2000

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    Rhodes, GreeceAlbert was born November 10, 1914 to immigrant parents Rosa Boullissa and Marco Franco of the Island of Rhodes. He attended Leschi Elementary, Garfield High School and graduated from the University of Washington and University of Washington Law School Class of 1939. He served in the US Army Intelligence Corps. Returning to Seattle, he became a founding partner of the law firm Franco, Asia, Bensussen and Coe, and practiced immigration and business law, also serving as the representative of the Mexican Embassy in the Northwest. Albert was an early civil rights advocate, and helped author King County's Civil Rights Ordinance. He also served on the King County Human Rights Commission. A strong philanthropic supporter of the Jewish Community and United Way, Albert was past president of the Jewish Federation of Greater Seattle and was active in the Anti-Defamation League, the American Civil Liberties Union and the American Jewish Committee. In this interview Mr. Franco discusses the lawsuit of Eugene Levy vs. Jewish Family and Child Service (JFCS) of 1948. This accession is part of the Washington State Jewish Archives.To request a high resolution or uncompressed reproduction, or to obtain permission to use any portion of this item, contact the University of Washington Libraries, Special Collections. Email: [email protected]. Please reference the Digital ID Number

    Albert Einstein with Helen Dukas, Peter Bucky, Frida Sarsen-Bucky, Gustav Bucky and dog in garden.

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    Digital ImageDigital ImageDigital ImageGustav bucky was a German physicist and radiologist, best known for his work with scattered x-rays which was improved upon by Hollis E. Potter and later came to be known as the Bucky-Potter grid. He also worked with Albert Einstein to patent a “light intensity self-adjusting camera.”Frida Sarson-Buckywrote musical scores, poems, and stories for children. She married Gustav Bucky in 1910. The Bucky family emigrated to the United States of America in 1923, settling in New York City. They returned to Germany for a brief time in 1930 before escaping persecution and moving back to the USA in 1933.Peter Bucky was a radiologist and author. He wrote "The Private Albert Einstein" based on his conversations and interactions with Einstein himself and his father's friendship with him.Helen Dukas was Albert Einstein's personal secretary

    Albert Einstein with his son-in-law Rudolf Kayser in Saranac Lake, NY.

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    Digital ImageDigital ImageRudolf Kayser was a German literary historian and author. He was married to Albert Einstein's stepdaughter, Ilse Lowenthal Einstein, until her death in 1934. In 1935, he emigrated to the United States, teaching German and European literature at Brandeis University.Record added to DigiTool. Aleph record suppressed. J. Palmisano 09/15/2010

    Franco (Albert M.) interview, 1978

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    Rhodes, GreeceAlbert was born November 10, 1914 to immigrant parents Rosa Boullissa and Marco Franco of the Island of Rhodes. He attended Leschi Elementary, Garfield High School and graduated from the University of Washington and University of Washington Law School Class of 1939. He served in the US Army Intelligence Corps. Returning to Seattle, he became a founding partner of the law firm Franco, Asia, Bensussen and Coe, and practiced immigration and business law, also serving as the representative of the Mexican Embassy in the Northwest. Albert was an early civil rights advocate, and helped author King County's Civil Rights Ordinance. He also served on the King County Human Rights Commission. A strong philanthropic supporter of the Jewish Community and United Way, Albert was past president of the Jewish Federation of Greater Seattle and was active in the Anti-Defamation League, the American Civil Liberties Union and the American Jewish Committee. Albert Franco tells of his family's life on the Isle of Rhodes; why they left; how they came to Seattle. He tells of his father, Marco Franco's, achievements in business and of his father's extensive participation in community affairs, in the Sephardic community and in the community in general. He tells of his own education, his career as a lawyer, his war service in the Army Intelligence, and of his work in the community. He experienced discrimination by his fellow Jews when no Sephardic student could join a Jewish fraternity or sorority. This interview gives illuminating insights concerning the history of an early day Sephardic family and how a child who grew up in that era reacted as shown in his community work as as adult. His account of his father, Marco Franco, as a liaison between the various segments in the community is interesting. This accession is part of the Washington State Jewish Archives.To request a high resolution or uncompressed reproduction, or to obtain permission to use any portion of this item, contact the University of Washington Libraries, Special Collections. Email: [email protected]. Please reference the Digital ID Number

    [Letter from Albert K. Epstein to Dr. Meyer Bodansky - November 20, 1930]

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    Letter from Albert K. Epstein to Dr. Meyer Bodansky suggesting that he read a critique an author wrote on his textbook

    Albert Einstein with his son-in-law Rudolf Kayser at Einstein's summer home in Saranac Lake, New York.

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    Rudolf Kayser was a German literary historian and author. He was married to Albert Einstein's stepdaughter, Ilse Lowenthal Einstein, until her death in 1934. In 1935, he emigrated to the United States, teaching German and European literature at Brandeis University.Digital Imag
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