1,964 research outputs found

    1.03.001 Nancy Feronia (Rice) Carpenter, Mrs. C. Carpenter, 1862-1863

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    1.03.001 Nancy Feronia (Rice) Carpenter, Mrs. C. Carpenter, 1862-186

    Nancy Carpenter Interview 2023

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    Nancy Carpenter, faculty member in Chemistry, talks about how she came to the University of Minnesota Morris, the Chemistry discipline, campus and community life, and the start of the McNair Program on the University of Minnesota Morris campus.https://digitalcommons.morris.umn.edu/stories/1089/thumbnail.jp

    A Collection Of Designs For Rural Retreats, As Villas, Principally In The Gothic And Castle Styles Of Architecture : With their Ichnography, or Plans, laid down to Scale; And Other Appendages / By James Malton, Architect, Author of an Essay on British Cottage Architecture, Young Painter's Maulstick, and other Works

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    Vorlageform des Erscheinungsvermerks: London: Published By J. And T. Carpenter, Booksellers, Old Bond Street; To Be Had At Taylor's Architectural Library, Holborn; Of All The Principal Booksellers; And Of The Author, No. 17, Norton Street, Portland-Place. - Erscheinungsjahr nach Copac ermittelt34 Ill. (Stahlst.

    Carpenter Family Fonds

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    Fonds consists of diaries, photographs, and genealogical material relating to members of the Carpenter family. The diaries were written by Charles Carroll Carpenter in 1844-1918, Charles Lincoln Carpenter in 1890-1910, and Nancy Feronia (Rice) Carpenter in 1862-1863. - There are 48 diaries written by Charles Carroll Carpenter between the years of 1844-1918, along with one journal titled "Index to Journals." - There is one diary written by Nancy Feronia (Rice) Carpenter for the year of 1862-1863. - There are 8 diaries written by Charles Lincoln Carpenter between the years of 1890-1910, along with one journal titled as "Records" 1898-1910.

    Nancy Carpenter

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    Carpenter, N..E. Chemistry of Sustainable Energy. CRC Press/Taylor & Francis: Boca Raton, 2014.https://digitalcommons.morris.umn.edu/cosa2014/1008/thumbnail.jp

    Writers Talk Featuring Mark Dawidziak & Susan Streeter Carpenter

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    Writers Talk, featuring two interviews from the May 7 Ohioana Book Festival. First, Mark Dawidziak, co-author of a book on forgotten American author Jim Tully. Then a talk with Susan Streeter Carpenter, author of "Riders on the Storm," a historical novel set in 1960s Cleveland.The media can be accessed here: http://streaming.osu.edu/knowledgebank/cstw12/WT_WCRS_04-16-11_MarkDawidziac_SusanStreeterCarpenter.mp3Ohio State University. Center for the Study and Teaching of Writin

    William Morris and Edward Carpenter: back to the land and the simple life, 1880-1910

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    This thesis focuses on the influence of William Morris and Edward Carpenter on aspects of the back-to-the-land and simple-life movements between the years 1880- 1910. Specifically, it seeks to define and explore the convergence and divergence of both writers' return-to-nature ideology, and considers their influence on the development of particular groups, who represented some of the multiplicity of backto- the-land ideas and experiments current during this period. The thesis is divided into three main parts; the intellectual framework for the study is broad, and takes into account the historical context, the cultural significance and the character of the material in each section. The first part of the thesis undertakes an expository evaluation of key texts from Morris's and Carpenter's political journalism, lectures and imaginative writing, examining how both writers developed an appropriate language to convey their social and political ideals. The critical method employed uses detailed textual analysis, identifying and discussing the individual qualities of Morris's and Carpenter's back-to-the-land writing, and reflecting on the differing emphases of their utopian rhetoric. The second part of the research explores the take-up of Morris's and Carpenter's ethos in four diverse and little known late-nineteenthcentury journals, concerned with simple-life issues and a return to the land, namely Seed-time, The New Order, Land and Labor and Land and People. It employs the thinking of Pierre Bourdieu and Mikhail Bakhtin to establish an appropriate balance between critical theory and empirical study. Lastly using a historical and descriptive method the thesis uses archival material to examine the nature and extent of both writers' influence on two Cotswold back-to-the-land experiments - the Whiteway Colony and the Chipping Campden Guild of Handicraft. These provide a particular opportunity to consider and compare the practical outcomes of return-to-the-land and simple-life ideologies. The study extends scholarship in this area by significantly re-appraising the relationship between Morris's and Carpenter's back-to-the-land writing, and reinstating Carpenter as a germinal influence. It also increases our understanding of the values and function of the journals in the study, and establishes an insight into the wider cultural assimilation of both writers' ideals

    Mary Carpenter Interviewed by Charlotte Aexel

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    Charlotte Aexel interviews Mary Carpenter, author of Flannery O’Connor: A Girl Who Knew Her Own Mind, on discovering O’Connor and the impact of Milledgeville on her life. Listen to the podcast version here: YouTube https://youtu.be/Qc_iNAdUDNs Spotify https://spotifyanchor-web.app.link/e/R5UTAVATwNbhttps://kb.gcsu.edu/collectingthepast/1018/thumbnail.jp

    Tour of Kentucky Folk Music #4

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    A documentary film on bluegrass concert held at the Leeds Center for the Arts in Winchester, Kentucky. Produced by H. Russell Farmer and Nancy Carpenter. A Kentucky Educational Television program, 1995

    Precision dicing and micromilling of silica for photonics

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    This thesis focuses on the development of precision dicing and micromilling machining techniques for silica photonic applications. Comparison is given between the studied and conventional techniques for machining silica, such as photolithography and etching, laser machining, etc..Precision dicing was used to create low loss input/output facets in the silica-on-silicon platform. It was demonstrated that ductile type dicing can produce facets in a silica-on-silicon substrate with a smooth, mirror like finish. The facet had a surface roughness (Sa) of 4.9 nm, a factor of ~7.5 improvement on previously reported roughnesses. An individual silica/air average interface loss, caused by surface roughness scatter, was calculated to be -0.63 dB and -0.76 dB for the TE and TM polarisations, respectively.Utilising dicing, glass photonic microcantilever devices are produced with integrated Bragg gratings and waveguides. Two cantilever interrogations methods have been shown; one utilising a single Bragg grating and the other using a pair of spectrally matched Bragg gratings to form a Fabry-Pérot interferometer. These cantilever devices were subjected to physical stimulus of external pressure change and profilometer actuation.A precision micromill was built by the author. Precision micromilling was used to remove the cladding material from the silica-on-silicon platform, for evanescent field access. By accessing the ductile milling regime, the mill enabled three-dimensional machining of flat, smooth, chip free grooves in silica. A groove with an average surface roughness (Sa) of 3.0 nm was measured, with a depth of cut of 17 µm. This micromilling method produces grooves that are seven times smoother and cut depths forty times deeper, than previously reported in the literature
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