458,071 research outputs found
L. R. Smith
"[Spr L R Smith] 23 Field Coy 1941 - 43 1st and last bomb raid L. r. Smith 83 Newton [obscured]one Broken Hi[ll] [obscured] Smith".[Sapper L R Smith] 23 Field Company 1941 - 43. 1st and last bomb raid L. R. Smith 83 Newton [obscured]one Broken Hi[ll] [obscured] Smith
Letter: Norman R. Smith to Ida M. Tarbell, April 9, 1901
Handwritten letter, 3 pages, writes of his father, Victor Smit
Oral History Interview with R. M. Smith
The National Museum of the Pacific War presents an oral interview with Robert Smith. Rather than speak about his own role in the Flying Tigers, Smith discusses some of the unsung heroes of the unit. He praises the Chinese-American engineers and the chief of engineering, Bill Schaper. He recalls that Schaper bravely volunteered to go to Rangoon to help repair planes, and that he was the last one to evacuate the area. Smith also discusses the perils of flight training and the tremendous discipline it took to be a Flying Tiger
George Albert Smith correspondence, October 1891
Letters to George Albert Smith writtien in October of 1891, including letters from Louis R. Wells, brother Winslow Smith, brother Ezra Chase Smith: R. Maeser, Aunt Priscilla Smith, Thomas Webber, and six letters from Lucy Woodruf
Oral history interview with R. Blair Smith
Transcript, 47 pp.After describing his early life, Smith describes his move to International Business Machines (IBM) as a salesman. He discusses his experiences with the IBM 701 and 702 computers and his role in founding the Digital Computer Association (later SHARE). Smith also recalls how a chance meeting with C. R. Smith, president of American Airlines, eventually led to the development of the SABRE system. He also describes the design, sale, and implementation of the SABRE system and the changes caused by the System/360.Smith, R. Blair. (1980). Oral history interview with R. Blair Smith. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/107637
A how-to guide for the Smith College Proxy Carbon Life Cycle Cost Calculator
Detailed written guide for using the LCC calculator for Smith College. A similar guide can be adapted for users of the calculator at your institution.
The Smith College Proxy Carbon Life Cycle Cost Calculator is a tool designed to include climate impacts in the evaluation of present and future costs of projects on campus. At the request of the Study Group on Climate Change, this Excel tool was developed as part of the implementation of a proxy carbon price at Smith College
Overview of Carbon Pricing Toolkit and the Smith College Proxy Carbon Price Tool
Webinar (40 minutes) that covers the basic mechanics of implementing/testing a proxy carbon pricing approach and walks step-by-step through an example use of the Smith College proxy price tool. Presentation by Alex Barron, Assistant Professor of Environmental Science and Policy and Susan Sayre, Associate Professor of Economics, Smith College
Clinicians behind the curtain : are White Smith students addressing race and racism, why or why not? If so, how?
The literature confirms the importance of providing cross-cultural education and the development of cross-cultural skills for trainees entering clinical practice. In recognition of this, Smith College School for Social Work has a written commitment to anti-racism and as part of this commitment the college has developed a curriculum that addresses race and racism in clinical practice and the social work profession. Given this commitment, this study surveyed twelve white Smith College School for Social Work students to understand if white Smith students were addressing race and racism with clients of color in clinical practice, why or why not, and if so, how they were doing it. Results showed that the majority of white Smith students were addressing race and racism with clients of color, and while the majority surveyed could identify skills and techniques to address race, the majority were doing so inconsistently. Results further indicated that when race was addressed, it was the client\u27s race and not the clinician\u27s race. These findings are discussed and their educational implications raised. Keywords: race, racism, multi-cultural competency, racial color-blindednes
Cybocephalus iviei T. R. Smith in T. R. Smith & Cave 2007
Cybocephalus iviei T. R. Smith (Fig. 85–92) Cybocephalus iviei T. R. Smith in Smith and Cave 2007a: 169–170. Distribution. West Indies (Puerto Rico, U.S. Virgin Islands). Hosts. Pseudococcidae: Hypogeococcus pungens Granara de Willink. Remarks. A large series of C. iviei was collected, sifting litter underneath cacti and agave. Cybocephalids are often associated with scale insects feeding on cacti, and it can be inferred that this was why so many of these beetles were found thus. Another series of this beetle was collected in flight intercept traps on Buck Island, U.S. Virgin Islands. This species (published as C. kathrynae) has been documented feeding on the pollen of Mammillaria nivosa Link ex N. D. Pfeiffer and was captured in Puerto Rico feeding on H. pungens (Curbelo-Rodrígues et al. 2012). This is a wingless species, unlike Cybocephalus randalli; no winged phenotypes have been found. Originally this species was determined to be C. kathrynae by the author (Curbelo-Rodrígues et al. 2012). However, upon further examination and with more specimens on hand for dissection, the author has determined that the species recorded in Puerto Rico by Curbelo-Rodrígues et al. (2012) was C. iviei.Published as part of Smith, Trevor Randall, 2022, Review of the Cybocephalidae (Coleoptera) of North America and the West Indies with descriptions of two new species of Cybocephalus Erichson, pp. 1-35 in Insecta Mundi 2022 (950) on page 16, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.730061
Family History of Adam R. Smith
Family history of Adam R. Smith, connections to the coal mining in southeast Kansas
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