1,378 research outputs found

    Untitled letter from Samuel Goddard to Lyndon Johnson, February 5, 1965

    No full text
    Carbon copy of letter (2 p) From Samuel P. Goddard, Governor of Arizona, to The President, February 5, 1965.Epson Perfection 4870 Photo, 400 dpi, 24 bi

    Morris K. Udall - Central Arizona Project

    No full text
    Governor Samuel Goddard to Morris K. Udall, June 15, 1966

    Morris K. Udall - Central Arizona Project

    No full text
    Arizona Governor Samuel Goddard to Wayne Aspinall, June 14, 1965

    Letter to the President on Minute No. 218

    No full text
    Letter: From Samuel P. Goddard, Governor of Arizona, to The President, February 5, 1965 (carbon copy

    Morris K. Udall - Central Arizona Project

    No full text
    Sam Goddard, Governor of Arizona, to Jim Shelton, June 7, 1966 - correspondence

    Data and Code for Goddard et al 2023 – SAI and Antarctica (2)

    No full text
    These repositories (1-5) contain the HIST (199001-200912), SSP245 (205001-206912), and Global+1.0 (205001-206912) data and code (Jupyter notebooks .ipynb) needed to run the analysis in Goddard et al. 2023 - The impacts of Stratospheric Aerosol Injection on Antarctic ice loss depend on injection location. For questions and other SAI experimental data please contact the corresponding author

    Untitled letter from Lyndon Johnson to Samuel Goddard, March 13, 1965

    No full text
    Carbon copy of a response letter (1 p) from Lyndon Johnson to Samuel Goddard. Includes coversheet (1 p) from Robert Sayre to Orren Beaty, March 15, 1965.Epson Perfection 4870 Photo, 400 dpi, 24 bi

    Data and Code for Goddard et al 2023 – SAI and Antarctica (1)

    No full text
    These repositories (1-5) contain the HIST (199001-200912), SSP245 (205001-206912), and Global+1.0 (205001-206912) data and code (Jupyter notebooks .ipynb) needed to run the analysis in Goddard et al. 2023 - The impacts of Stratospheric Aerosol Injection on Antarctic ice loss depend on injection location. For questions and other SAI experimental data please contact the corresponding author

    (05) The Papers of Robert H. Goddard, Volume I: 1898-1924 [1915-1920: Experimentation with Solid Propellants]

    No full text
    Meticulously curated and edited by Esther C. Goddard and G. Edward Pendray, The Papers of Robert H. Goddard is a 1700-page 3 volume set published in 1970. The set presents a careful and exhaustive chronological presentation of Robert Goddard’s life through diary snippets, notebook entries, correspondence, publications, speeches, patent outlines, school papers, press, reports and more. This section covers Robert Goddard\u27s life from 1915 through 1920. During this time, he became an Assistant Professor in Physics at Clark University, demonstrated that reaction takes place in a vacuum, hence a rocket could function in airless space, received his first Smithsonian grant for rocket work, conducted research for the U.S. Signal Corps and Army Ordinance, demonstrated solid-propellant military rockets, published A Method of Reaching Extreme Altitudes , and began his twenty-plus year tenure as Professor of Physics at Clark University. This section contains the following published articles by Goddard (there are also unpublished works on subjects such as atomic disintegration): Approximate Solution of a General Case of Rocket Action , Physical Review (1919) A Method of Reaching Extreme Altitudes , Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections (1919) On High-altitude Research , Science (1920) The Rocket Method , Journal of the Worcester Polytechnic Institute (1920) The Possibilities of the Rocket in Weather Forecasting , Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (1920) This section contains correspondence by, to, and about Robert H. Goddard from the following people and entities: William T. Foster, Edmund C. Sanford, Edward Charles Pickering, Charles Greeley Abbot, Charles Doolittle Walcott, Edgar Buckingham, Hudson Maxim, Richard Rathbun, George I. Rockwood, Samuel Wesley Stratton, Rear Admiral Ralph Earle, Major General George O. Squier, Colonel Edward Marsh Shinkle, Robert Simpson Woodard, Nahum D. Goddard, George E. Hale, Hugh M. Dorsey, General Clark C. Williams, Hudson Maxim, General George W. Burr, Walter S. Adams, Major W.A. Borden, Clarence N. Hickman, Lieutenant Colonel Herbert O’Leary, Charles F. Marvin, Gordon S. Fulcher, Bronx Exposition Inc, A. Russell Bond (Scientific American Monthly), Karl Taylor Compton, Henry N. Crowther, Rear Admiral Ralph Earle, Robert Esnault-Peleterie, Lieutenant Colonel Amos A. Fries, Macmillian & Co., Ltd., Lieutenant Commander Olaf M. Hustveldt, William de C. Ravenel, F.P. Fergusson. Disclaimer: The images in these scans have been rendered somewhat distorted after the fact. We apologize for this error. Thankfully, most of the photographs used in these papers are part of the The Goddard Rocket Researches: A Photographic Record and can be seen individually in high-quality scans.https://commons.clarku.edu/papersgoddard/1004/thumbnail.jp

    The Leah and Samuel Levenson Papers

    No full text
    Samuel Levenson was a Worcester native who received his A.B. from Clark University in 1930 and his A.M. in 1936. He was a journalist and both he and his wife, Leah, were authors of biographies. Samuel died in 1977 and Leah in 2000 and Leah left their papers and library without restriction to Clark University in her will. Appropriate books were incorporated into the Goddard Library circulating collection. The books written by the Levensons were primarily biographies of Irish men and women. The papers include transcriptions and tapes of interviews made in the course of the Levensons’ researches, photographs of the biographees, authorizations and permissions forms, contracts, and journals written by Granville Hicks. Leah was working on a biography of Abbie Hoffman at the time of her death and the papers include notes, tapes and a rough draft. There are also many letters written by Samuel to Leah while he was in the army during World War II, some of which are transcribed
    corecore