13,720 research outputs found
Perrott, Allen and Westoway, 1974
Photograph originally appeared in the 'Swinburne Newsletter', 20th June 1974. Left to right: Marianne Perrott, Peter Allen, lecturer, Graphic Design Mark Westoway Participates in a student send off for the Art School Head Mr Laurie Pendlebury
Mr. Melvin J. Collier, RWWL AUC, June 2011
This video is a conversation with Mr. Melvin J. Collier. Mr. Collier talks about his book, "From Mississippi to Africa: A Journey of Discovery". Daniel Le, AUC Woodruff Library, is the interviewer
Interview Excerpt of Mr. Donald M. Crawford, Sr.
(1948-2018) Donald Mitchell Crawford, Sr. (“DC”), musician, author, and educator, was born on May 24, 1948, and was a lifelong resident of Birmingham, AL. His father and mother owned and operated “C & S Charter Tours Bus Company,” the first black-owned bus company in the state of Alabama. Crawford was a 1966 graduate of Western Olin High School in Birmingham, AL. Crawford was an outstanding drum major, playing first chair alto saxophone under the tutelage of the late Amos F. Gordon, Sr. After high school, he received a music scholarship to Alabama State University (ASU) where he earned both his Bachelor’s and Master’s Degrees in Music Education and was later inducted into the “School of Music Hall of Fame” at ASU. He was the youngest ever inducted into the Alabama Jazz Hall of Fame. He was a veteran of the U.S. Army and performed with the 291 st and 283rd Army Band in Fort Bennett, GA. DC was Band Director at Jackson Olin High School and taught in the Birmingham School System for over thirty-five years. His love for music and performing lead him after his retirement to serve as Band Director for Miles College.
Crawford is the author of “The Wheels of the Birmingham Civil Rights Movement.” This book chronicles the lives of his late father and mother, Worcy and Christine Pride Crawford, and the role he and the company played in the Birmingham Civil Rights Movement
Interesting anecdotes, memoirs, allegories, essays, and poetical fragments, [electronic resource] : tending to amuse the fancy, and inculcate morality. By Mr. Addison.
Mr. Addison is a pseudonym.On p. 1: Anecdote of Cromwell.Electronic reproduction.English Short Title Catalog,Reproduction of original from British Library
Interesting anecdotes, memoirs, allegories, essays, and poetical fragments, [electronic resource] : tending to amuse the fancy, and inculcate morality. By Mr. Addison.
Mr. Addison is a pseudonym.P. 1 contains an 'Anecdote' beginning "A certain nobleman, .. ".Electronic reproduction.English Short Title Catalog,Reproduction of original from British Library
Interesting anecdotes, memoirs, allegories, essays, and poetical fragments, [electronic resource] : tending to amuse the fancy, and inculcate morality. By Mr. Addison.
Mr. Addison is a pseudonym.On p. 1: Anecdote of Doctor Young.Electronic reproduction.English Short Title Catalog,Reproduction of original from British Library
Mr Alain Elkann Author and Journalist Italian Republic
Visit by Mr Alain Elkann Author and Journalist Italian Republi
Letter from Misao Miyakawa to Mr. [John Victor] Carson, September 27, 1942
This letter acknowledges receipt of an affidavit, presumably for Mikoto Miyakawa, see Items csudh_rsp_0684 and csudh_rsp_0685. The author expresses very sincere gratitude for Mr. Carson's kindness
To what extent, in the novel ‘The Strange Case Of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde’ by R. L. Stevenson, the good and evil sides of a man is brought to light by the external (social) and internal (psychological) factors and what are the results of this metamorphosis over the psychology of Dr. Jekyll?
Scottish author Robert Louis Stevenson was born in Edinburgh in 1850. Stevenson,
besides his authorship, was also a well-known poet and a travel-writer. Today, Stevenson is
among the authors whose novels are most translated to other languages in the world .
‘Stevenson's characters often prefer unknown hazards to everyday life of the Victorian
society.’1
‘The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde’ by Robert Louis Stevenson, which is
accepted as the best novel of the R. L. Stevenson, first published in 1886 and in a real short
time sold nearly 40,000 copies in Britain. The mystery of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde is revealed
by the testimonies of Dr. Lanyon, Mr. Utterson, Mr. Enfield, and Poole(Jekyll's butler). One
day, with the help of Dr. Jekyll’s will, Mr. Utterson (Jekyll's lawyer), finds out that a stranger,
named as Mr. Hyde, is the heir of the Dr. Jekyll's heritage. Mr. Utterson first couldn’t realize
the fact behind this weird situation despite his wide research about this stranger and
conversations with his friend Dr. Jekyll. However a few witnesses who witnessed this man
only mention the irritating evil energy that transpires through his being. First Dr. Jekyll states
that Mr. Hyde is simply a close friend of his. Then, when Mr. Hyde is suspected of murder
Enhanced performance of hexavalent chromium reducing cathodes in the presence of Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 and lactate
Biocathodes for the reduction of the highly toxic hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)) were investigated using Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 (MR-1) as a biocatalyst and performance was assessed in terms of current production and Cr(VI) reduction. Potentiostatically controlled experiments (?500 mV vs Ag/AgCl) showed that a mediatorless MR-1 biocathode started up under aerated conditions in the presence of lactate, received 5.5 and 1.7 times more electrons for Cr(VI) reduction over a 4 h operating period than controls without lactate and with lactate but without MR-1, respectively. Cr(VI) reduction was also enhanced, with a decrease in concentration over the 4 h operating period of 9 mg/L Cr(VI), compared to only 1 and 3 mg/L, respectively, in the controls. Riboflavin, an electron shuttle mediator naturally produced by MR-1, was also found to have a positive impact in potentiostatically controlled cathodes. Additionally, a microbial fuel cell (MFC) with MR-1 and lactate present in both anode and cathode produced a maximum current density of 32.5 mA/m2 (1000 ? external load) after receiving a 10 mg/L Cr(VI) addition in the cathode, and cathodic efficiency increased steadily over an 8 day operation period with successive Cr(VI) additions. In conclusion, effective and continuous Cr(VI) reduction with associated current production were achieved when MR-1 and lactate were both present in the biocathodes
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