23,241 research outputs found
Harbinger, 1981
Harbinger is a student-edited and designed magazine published each spring since 1980.POETRY: Letter To Blackwell From St. Louis – Lyssa Heidi Klein; In A Pet’s Cemetery – Mary Beth Leon; Boston – Alice Goodman; Via Pigeon – Laura Moss; The Woman Who Was One Day Gone – Ann Daniel; Dreams – Lyssa Heidi Klein; Rest Stop – Marcia Gale Kester; Execution – Laura Moss; One – Lyssa Heidi Klein – Driving Through Nebraska – Marcia Gale Kester; Portraits – Alice Goodman; Northern Express – Marcia Gale Kester; Zinnie’s – Alice Goodman; Woman Of Glass – Mary Beth Leon; Heat Stroke – Jeanne Alaska Bernard. FICTION: Nemo Nullified – Jeanne Alaska Bernard; The Pincher – Patricia Ann Freeman; The Bridge – Gretchen McCullough; A Beginning – Ann Daniel; Snow Pieces – Becky Andros. PHOTOGRAPHY: Patricia Ann Freeman; Lisa K. Nelson; Molly Baur; Frances Bock; Wendy Sue Gilson; Lynwood Jenkins; Julie B. Trumbo; Dana Lauren Ford; Chella McNeice Garrett; Heather Jane Fitch; Dana Lynne Ladendorff. ART: Barb Buford; Susan Schlegel; Nancy Jamieson; Sue Luger; Carla Dickey; Lisa K. Nelson; Jane Ann Meador; Janet Brown
Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)
Handwritten letter from Alberta Stephens to Daniel W. Kempner thanking him for the generous donation to the memorial fund for Mrs. Fred Schneider
The Trail, 1922, The Yearbook of Daniel Baker College, Published Annually by the Senior Class
Yearbook for Daniel Baker College in Brownwood, Texas includes photos of and information about the college, student body, professors, and organizations
Susan A. STEPHENS, Seeing Double. Intercultural Poetics in Ptolemaic Alexandria.
Donnet Daniel. Susan A. STEPHENS, Seeing Double. Intercultural Poetics in Ptolemaic Alexandria.. In: L'antiquité classique, Tome 73, 2004. pp. 343-344
Report on Meteorological Research March 1, 1935 (m-1)
The object of the report was to elucidate in detail the various features of the research program in meteorology being carried on at the Daniel Guggenheim Airship Institute in Akron, Ohio. Mr. L. J. Fangman, of the U.S. Weather Bureau, was collaborating with the author in carrying out work such as a study of autographic records of the various meteorological elements during frontal passages with a view to the possible prediction of the intensity of the accompanying disturbance as it may affect the operation of aircraft and a study of atmospheric gustiness with a view to finding the dependence between frequency end amplitude of velocity fluctuations and the vertical temperature and velocity gradients
Susan E. Stephens & John J. Winkler (Ed.), Ancient Greek Novels. The Fragments. Introduction, Text, Translation and Commentary
Donnet Daniel. Susan E. Stephens & John J. Winkler (Ed.), Ancient Greek Novels. The Fragments. Introduction, Text, Translation and Commentary. In: L'antiquité classique, Tome 66, 1997. p. 420
(Fourth) Report on Meteorological Activities at the DGAI (8-1-36)(Weather Bureau Copy)
This report is on the investigations of frontal phenomena at the Daniel Guggenheim Airship Institute in Akron, Ohio from January 1, 1935 through August 1, 1936. The investigation was carried out with the cooperation of the U.S. Bureau of Aeronautics, the U.S. Weather Bureau, the California Institute of Technology, and the Guggenheim Airship Institute. Mr. R.C. Robinson of the Weather Bureau cooperated with the author in carrying out the investigation. The object of the investigation was to determine the intensity of the atmospheric disturbances (i.e. rapidity of wind shift and gustiness) accompanying the passage of cold fronts, along with a study of the characteristics of the air masses involved and other features which might affect the intensity of the disturbance. The report treated thirty cold fronts which passed the station during 1935 to 1936
Archives and Images as Repositories of Time, Language, and Forms from the Past: A Conversation with Daniel Eisenberg
Daniel Heiner and wives
Daniel Heiner with his wives, Martha Stephens and Sarah Coulam, of Morgan, Utah
Daniel Akech
abstract: Daniel was a little boy when the war came to his village. He witnessed people being shot and running for shelter. There was no food or water so he drank urine and ate tree leaves.
“Lost Boys Found” is an ongoing, interdisciplinary project that is collecting, recording and archiving the oral histories of the Lost Boys/Girls of Sudan. The collection is a work-in-progress, seeking to record the oral history of as many Lost Boys/Girls as are willing, and will be used in a future book.Age: 24Region: Upper NileThis picture and bio was donated to the "Lost Boys Found" oral history project from The Arizona Lost Boys Cente
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