2,163 research outputs found
Mortgage indenture
This document is an indenture between Benjamin N. Ogle of Red Lion Hundred and Clara A., his wife, of the first part, and Adam Prince of Brandywine Hundred of the second part. It was recorded in the office for Recording of Deeds at New Castle in Deed Record G, Volume 2, Page 507 by A.P. Shannon, Recorder, and Deputy B.R. Ustick. The indenture secures the payment of a debt of one thousand dollars owed by Benjamin N. Ogle to Adam Prince. In consideration of this debt, Benjamin N. Ogle and Clara A. Ogle convey a lot of land with buildings in Delaware City, Red Lion Hundred. This parcel is bounded by Ninth Street, Franklin Street, and lands formerly owned by D. Newbold and John Newbold. The document references previous indentures dating back to June 29, 1846, conveying the same property to Benjamin N. Ogle. The document is signed by Benjamin and Clara Ogle, with a green seal from the notary public, Daniel Farra, opposite the signatures. Additionally, the document includes an assignment of mortgage by John M. C. Prince and George S. Cloud, executors of Adam Prince, deceased, to Sallie A. Cloud. This assignment transfers the mortgage and accompanying bond, as well as the described lot, to Sallie A. Cloud. Witnessed by George O'Neill, Notary Public, and Thomas Davis, the assignment is signed and sealed by John M. C. Prince and George L. Cloud, with a red seal from the notary public below the signatures. The last page of the document acknowledges that the mortgage was recorded in the Records Office in Record H, Volume 1, Page 357, on September 16, 1818, by Thomas M. Ogle, Recorder
Mortgage indenture
This document is an indenture between Benjamin N. Ogle of Red Lion Hundred and Clara A., his wife, of the first part, and Adam Prince of Brandywine Hundred of the second part. It was recorded in the office for Recording of Deeds at New Castle in Deed Record G, Volume 2, Page 507 by A.P. Shannon, Recorder, and Deputy B.R. Ustick. The indenture secures the payment of a debt of one thousand dollars owed by Benjamin N. Ogle to Adam Prince. In consideration of this debt, Benjamin N. Ogle and Clara A. Ogle convey a lot of land with buildings in Delaware City, Red Lion Hundred. This parcel is bounded by Ninth Street, Franklin Street, and lands formerly owned by D. Newbold and John Newbold. The document references previous indentures dating back to June 29, 1846, conveying the same property to Benjamin N. Ogle. The document is signed by Benjamin and Clara Ogle, with a green seal from the notary public, Daniel Farra, opposite the signatures. Additionally, the document includes an assignment of mortgage by John M. C. Prince and George S. Cloud, executors of Adam Prince, deceased, to Sallie A. Cloud. This assignment transfers the mortgage and accompanying bond, as well as the described lot, to Sallie A. Cloud. Witnessed by George O'Neill, Notary Public, and Thomas Davis, the assignment is signed and sealed by John M. C. Prince and George L. Cloud, with a red seal from the notary public below the signatures. The last page of the document acknowledges that the mortgage was recorded in the Records Office in Record H, Volume 1, Page 357, on September 16, 1818, by Thomas M. Ogle, Recorder
Public worship and practical theology in the work of Benjamin Keach (1640-1704)
The late seventeenth century was a critical and fruitful period
for the Particular Baptists of England. Severely persecuted following
the Restoration, toleration in 1689 brought its own perils.
Particular Baptists were fortunate in having several strong leaders,
especially the London trio of Hanserd Knollys, William Kiffin, and
Benjamin Keach. Such a small and severely persecuted group as the
Baptists could afford little time for academic pursuits, thus of
necessity most of their theology was practical in nature.
Benjamin Keach (1640-1704) was the most outstanding practical
theologian among the English Particular Baptists of the late
seventeenth century. This dissertation is a study of Keach, in
particular his writings on public worship and practical theology.
Although Keach was a prolific author, he has been almost completely
neglected by scholars.
After a biographical sketch of Keach, this study considers his
writings on public worship and practical theology. In the area of
worship, Keach made two outstanding contributions: First, he was the
most vocal apologist for Baptist views on Baptism of his period.
Secondly, and more importantly, his hymn writing and defense of hymn
singing broke new ground, not just for Baptists, but for English
Protestantism, in general. In addition to his contributions in these
areas, he also dealt with the laying on of hands and the sabbath day
worship controversy.
Keach's contributions to practical theology fall into two main
groups: his writings that concern religious education and those that
deal with polity. In addition to these, Keach's vigorous advocacy of
a high Calvinist soteriology are also considered under the rubric of
practical theology. Keach's most important (although not his most
positive) contribution in this area were his soteriological writings.
Although well within the bounds of orthodoxy, some of the tendencies
in Keach's soteriology were taken up by the following generation of
Baptist leaders and developed into a stultifying hyper-Calvinism that
handicapped Baptist evangelism and missions.
In the conclusion, Keach's contributions to a theory of practical
theology are considered
Female life among the Mormons : a narrative of many years' personal experience /
Also attributed to Mrs. Benjamin G. Ferris.At head of title: Maria Ward's disclosures.Mode of access: Internet
Benjamin Pogrund: white witness of township life
Acclaimed South African "born journalist and author Benjamin Pogrund is widely known for covering the lives of black South Africans, including the Sharpeville massacre and the views of African leaders on political issues, and reporting on conditions in white prisons. He is described in his police file as "one of the strongest and most effective critics of the South African government.
Unconventional surface state pairs in a high-symmetry lattice with anti-ferromagnetic band-folding
Many complex magnetic structures in a high-symmetry lattice can arise from a superposition of well-defined magnetic wave vectors. These “multi-q” structures have garnered much attention because of interesting real-space spin textures such as skyrmions. However, the role multi-q structures play in the topology of electronic bands in momentum space has remained rather elusive. Here we show that the type-I anti-ferromagnetic 1q, 2q and 3q structures in an face-centered cubic sublattice with band inversion, such as NdBi, can induce unconventional surface state pairs inside the band-folding hybridization bulk gap. Our density functional theory calculations match well with the recent experimental observation of unconventional surface states with hole Fermi arc-like features and electron pockets below the Neel temperature. We further show that these multi-q structures have Dirac and Weyl nodes. Our work reveals the special role that band-folding from anti-ferromagnetism and multi-q structures can play in developing new types of surface states.This article is published as Wang, Lin-Lin, Junyeong Ahn, Robert-Jan Slager, Yevhen Kushnirenko, Benjamin G. Ueland, Aashish Sapkota, Benjamin Schrunk et al. "Unconventional surface state pairs in a high-symmetry lattice with anti-ferromagnetic band-folding." Communications Physics 6, no. 1 (2023): 78.
DOI: 10.1038/s42005-023-01180-6.
Copyright 2023 The Author(s).
Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0).
Posted with permission.
DOE Contract Number(s): AC02-07CH11358; 842901
Creating MHC-Restricted Neoantigens with Covalent Inhibitors That Can Be Targeted by Immune Therapy
Intracellular oncoproteins can be inhibited with targeted therapy, but responses are not durable. Immune therapies can be curative, but most oncogene-driven tumors are unresponsive to these agents. Fragments of intracellular oncoproteins can act as neoantigens presented by the major histocompatibility complex (MHC), but recognizing minimal differences between oncoproteins and their normal counterparts is challenging. We have established a platform technology that exploits hapten–peptide conjugates generated by covalent inhibitors to create distinct neoantigens that selectively mark cancer cells. Using the FDA-approved covalent inhibitors sotorasib and osimertinib, we developed “HapImmune” antibodies that bind to drug–peptide conjugate/MHC complexes but not to the free drugs. A HapImmune-based bispecific T-cell engager selectively and potently kills sotorasib-resistant lung cancer cells upon sotorasib treatment. Notably, it is effective against KRASG12C-mutant cells with different HLA supertypes, HLA-A*02 and A*03/11, suggesting loosening of MHC restriction. Our strategy creates targetable neoantigens by design, unifying targeted and immune therapies. SIGNIFICANCE: Targeted therapies against oncoproteins often have dramatic initial efficacy but lack durability. Immunotherapies can be curative, yet most tumors fail to respond. We developed a generalizable technology platform that exploits hapten–peptides generated by covalent inhibitors as neoantigens presented on MHC to enable engineered antibodies to selectively kill drug-resistant cancer cells
Can We Tell Stories Out of Our Memories? The Contributions of Derrida and Benjamin
The author draws from Jacques Derrida’s and Walter Benjamin’s writings on
memory in order to argue that as these two thinkers deal with the simultaneity
of the diachronic and synchronic dimension of time they open up the
possibility of thinking about the relation between memory and narrative in a
more complex way. These two theorists affirm the discontinuity and the nonrecognition
between past events and present discourses and show the danger of
conflating memory and narrative without the awareness of its limits
Fourier transforms of Nilpotent Orbits, limit formulas for reductive lie groups, and wave front cycles of tempered representations
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Mathematics, 2011.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 54-56).In this thesis, the author gives an explicit formula for the Fourier transform of the canonical measure on a nilpotent coadjoint orbit for GL(n, R). If G is a real, reductive algebraic group, and O C g* = Lie(G)* is a nilpotent coadjoint orbit, a necessary condition is given for 0 to appear in the wave front cycle of a tempered representation. In addition, the coefficients of the wave front cycle of a tempered representation of G are expressed in terms of volumes of precompact submanifolds of certain affine spaces. In the process of proving these results, we obtain several limit formulas for reductive Lie groups.by Benjamin Harris.Ph.D
A low cost modular actuator for dynamic robots
Thesis: S.M., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering, 2018.This electronic version was submitted by the student author. The certified thesis is available in the Institute Archives and Special Collections.Cataloged from student-submitted PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (pages 89-91).This thesis details the hardware and control development for a low-cost modular actuator, intended for use in highly dynamic robots. A small 12 degree of freedom quadruped robot has built using these actuators, on which several control experiments have been performed. Despite the relatively low cost of the actuators, the quadruped has demonstrated unprecedented dynamic behaviors for a robot of this scale and number of degrees of freedom, such as a full 360° backflip from standing on flat ground. Several other implementations of these actuators are also discussed, a including bilateral teleoperation and haptic feedback system and a 6 degree of freedom lower-body biped robot.by Benjamin G. Katz.S.M
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