13,255 research outputs found

    Correspondence from Ralph C. Benedict to President Gideonse regarding a recently passed resolution

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    Page 1:Correspondence from Ralph C. Benedict to President Gideonse regarding a recently passed resolution. Letter is dated February 22, 1943. Page 2: Correspondence from Ralph C. Benedict to Mr. T. N. Hurd, Farm Manpower Director. Letter is dated February 22, 1943. Pages 3-6: Enclosed in the correspondence from Ralph C. Benedict to Mr. T. N. Hurd is this 4-page essay about College Summer School for Farm Hands. Page 7: Note attached to College Summer School for Farm Hands essay regarding the Farm Labor Resolution the New York City Board of Higher Education passed on February 15, 1943

    A Historical Guide to Ralph Ellison

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    The essays in this collection treat the whole of Ralph Ellison's body of work, including his famous novel Invisible Man. The volume confronts Ellison the man of ideas, essayist, and short story writer, as well as the material in his posthumously published novel Juneteenth, in order to provide contemporary readers and critics with a comprehensive examination of Ellison.Intro -- Contents -- Abbreviations -- Introduction -- Ralph Ellison, 1913-1994: A Brief Biography -- ELLISON IN HIS TIME -- "Creative and Cultural Lag": The Radical Education of Ralph Ellison -- A Delicate Ear, a Retentive Memory, and the Power to Weld the Fragments -- "Something Warmly, Infuriatingly Feminine": Gender, Sexuality, and the Work of Ralph Ellison -- The Integrated Literary Tradition -- Ralph Ellison's Politics of Integration -- Illustrated Chronology -- Bibliographical Essay: Probing the Lower Frequencies: Fifty Years of Ellison Criticism -- Contributors -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- Q -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- Y -- ZThe essays in this collection treat the whole of Ralph Ellison's body of work, including his famous novel Invisible Man. The volume confronts Ellison the man of ideas, essayist, and short story writer, as well as the material in his posthumously published novel Juneteenth, in order to provide contemporary readers and critics with a comprehensive examination of Ellison.Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, YYYY. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries

    Entangling Moving Cavities in Noninertial Frames

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    An open question in the field of relativistic quantum information is how parties in arbitrary motion may distribute and store quantum entanglement. We propose a scheme for storing quantum information in the field modes of cavities moving in flat space-time and analyze it in a quantum field theoretical framework. In contrast with previous work that found entanglement degradation between observers moving with uniform acceleration, we find the quantum information in such systems is protected. We further discuss a method for establishing the entanglement in the first place and show that in principle it is always possible to produce maximally entangled states between the cavities.</p

    C-2003: Richmond, Utah, Ralph T. Van Noy residence. Lot 1-2-3 Block 32 Plat A. Built 1936

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    C-2003: Richmond, Utah, Ralph T. Van Noy residence. Lot 1-2-3 Block 32 Plat A. Built 193

    Ralph, Mrs. T. C.

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    Photograph from the C.R. Savage Portrait Studio. Name associated with the photograph: Mrs. T. C. Ralp

    Ralph, Mrs. T. C.

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    Photograph from the C.R. Savage Portrait Studio. Name associated with the photograph: Mrs. T. C. Ralp

    Gen. Ralph Stearley,

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    Gen. Ralph Stearley, former commander of Ninth Tactical Air Command during WWII, speaks at World War II reunion of ex-N. T. A. C. students, North Texas Agricultural College (N. T. A. C.), 07/04/1946https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_utaphotographcollection/1261/thumbnail.jp

    Characterization and structure in the development of Tudor comedy

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    The role of characterization in dramatic structure is assessed by theoretical criteria. Characters who perform actions necessary for the completion of the narrative sequence are said to be "bound" to the narrative; those without such obligations are "free". Characters who maintain a single, constant meaning during the course of a play are said to be "static"; characters who change or develop into new roles are "dynamic". Horatian decorum demanded that comic characters be static, and the characters of Plautine and Terentian tradition were almost always bound to narrative intrigue. However, evaluations of six Tudor comedies show an increasing use of non-classical characterization within the comic form. In the early comedies lohan lohan and Roister Doister all characters are bound and static, yet the impetus to enlarge the role of characterization is evident. The characters of lohan lohan are expanded from their French source, and Roister Doister includes extraneous episodes in which Udall displays his braggart hero. Free characters abound in Misogonus; as well the play brings dynamic characterization into the scope of comedy with the conversion of its prodigal son. Free characters offer new possibilities of non-narrative plotting. In comedies of the 1580s favourite traditional characters appear as diversions outside the action, and thematic arrangements of characters inform the increasingly complex plots. Lyly stresses the symbolic potential of characters in Endimion, whereas Greene uses dynamic characterization to heighten the illusion of independent figures in Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay. Love's Labour's Lost exposes the limitations of comic artifice by pulling the characters between convention and individualization. By the end of the sixteenth century free and dynamic characters had become common, and characterization had established a sizable claim on the design of English comedy. These developments set the English form apart from its neoclassical counterparts

    C-0704: 505 West 100 North, Smithfield, Utah, Asa D. Weeks/Ralph R. and Ethel W. Green residence. Sec 28 T 13N R 1E. Built 1897

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    C-0704: 505 West 100 North, Smithfield, Utah, Asa D. Weeks/Ralph R. and Ethel W. Green residence. Sec 28 T 13N R 1E. Built 189

    Additions and Corrections: Hydrogen Storage in Graphite Nanofibers: Effect of Synthesis Catalyst and Pretreatment Conditions (langmuir (2004) 20 (714-721))

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    Hydrogen Storage in Graphite Nanofibers: Effect of Synthesis Catalyst and Pretreatment ConditionsAngela D. Lueking, Ralph T. Yang,* Nelly M. Rodriguez, and R. Terry K. Baker Langmuir 2004, 20, 714-721. Reference 5 was incorrectly cited. The correct reference reads as follows: (5) Dillon, A. C.; Jones, K. M.; Bekkedahl, T. A.; Kiang, C. H.; Bethune, D. S.; Heben, M. J. Na
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