186,045 research outputs found
James E. Welch to James C. Furman
A three page letter and envelope from James E. Welch to James C. Furma
Reverend James E. Welch to James C. Furman
A one page letter and envelope from Reverend James E. Welch to James C. Furma
MISSING WOMAN. Left Congress, Arizona, on August 29th; for Phoenix
MISSING WOMAN.
Left Congress, Arizona, on August 29th; for Phoenix, and has been neither seen nor
heard from since the evening of August 29th, in Phrenix.
Her name is MATTIE E. WELCH, and she was raised in Texas. Has possibly gone to Ft. Worth. Has father, brothers and sisters at Duncan, I. T. A married daughter, (Mrs. Mary E. Cook) lives at Weatherford, Texas.
DESCRIPTION.
She is 5 feet and·3 inches tall, 37 years old, and weighs 137 pounds. Skin fair; face freckled and tanned until it had a brawny appearance. Dark auburn hair, turning a little gray. Prominent forehead and nose, wide mouth, thin lips, large ears that have been pierced and grown up. Upper front tooth on right side of mouth badly decayed, dark and partly gone. Has large blue eyes that look rather pale, with good expression. She speaks firmly and frequently repeats in talking. Often bites the under lip. Mild and modest, with frank, open, honest appearance, and good moral habits. Industrious as a bee. Worked in the restaurant business for quite a while. Education somewhat limited. Uses but very little tobacco or snuff.
She was an affectionate wife and mother she was dressed in a suit of narrow blue-and-white striped ladies' duck, light percale shirt waist, new No. 3 Dongola kid button shoes, and white sailor straw hat, braided with
notched edges, blue band, and blue straws in top of crown.
Her only baggage was a white willow telescope basket, about 6xl4 inches square, carried by a tan leather shawl strap, with black handle. It contained a brown check gingham Mother Hubbard, and another of light calico with black dot; a blue worsted skirt and white waist, and a green plaid shawl. She had a tan leather pocketbook, about 2½x3½ inches square, with broken brass clasp.
She left a nursing babe, and six other little girls and boys.
Please send any Correspondence or information to R. C. Welch, Congress Arizon
Welch\u27s Letter to Alexander C. Abott
In this letter of November 24, 1895, William H. Welch reminds his colleague, Alexander C. Abott, of the University of Pennsylvania, of the soon to be published Journal of Experimental Medicine. The journal, of which Welch was founding editor, did commence the following year and is still in publication.
Courtesy of Medical Archives of The Johns Hopkins Medical Institutionshttps://digitalcommons.rockefeller.edu/jem-the-beginnings/1011/thumbnail.jp
Interview with Reverend C.C. Welch
In this interview, Reverend C. C. Welch discusses his life's work as a pastor and his views on the Civil Rights movement. Welch compares city and country churches, saying the people in the country are more sincere and real and have quieter services, while in the city the services are more emotional. He discusses conducting revivals and talks about the joy and satisfaction he gets out of preaching. He discusses several well-known local pastors. He explains the work of the church. He says they didn't believe in interfering with labor disputes. He discusses burial societies: a person paid a little money each month, and they received money if they went into the hospital and upon their death, for their burial expenses. He also describes how they kept a benevolent fund to aid victims of floods. However, he says the church couldn't do much to help during the Depression. Welch discusses Jim Crow laws and trying to register to vote. He was asked questions about the government. It took him a long time to finally get registered. He thinks finally got tired of dealing with him. He explains that he never participated in any marches, but his church held prayer meetings and institutes about how to act under pressure; they followed Martin Luther King, Jr.'s practice of nonviolence. He says he knew King and once gave a revival for King's father when the man was too sick to do it himself. He also mentions Fred Shuttlesworth; he says he had a lot of iron in him, so whites were too intimidated to bother him too much. When speaking about the unfair laws of the time, Welch says, It was miserable if you thought it would last always. But he always preached that they wouldn't last. He says he didn't try to break any unfair laws, just tried to get around them through boycotts. For example, many gas stations would refuse to check oil for black patrons, so the blacks learned who would and wouldn't, passed on that information to others, and succeeded in changing those gas stations' policies through not giving them their business
Welch, A C, WX641
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/424806Surname: WELCH. Given Name(s) or Initials: A C. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: WX641. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 4236.250482
Item: [2016.0049.57067] "Welch, A C, WX641
Molecular structure of highly excited resonant states in Mg-24 and the corresponding Be-8+O-16 and C-12+C-12 decays
Exotic Be-8 and C-12 decays from high-lying resonances in Mg-24 are analyzed in terms of a cluster model. The calculated quantities agree well with the corresponding experimental data. It is found that the calculated decay widths are very sensitive to the angular momentum carried by the outgoing cluster. It is shown that this property makes cluster decay a powerful tool to determine the spin as well as the molecular structures of the resonances.Physics, NuclearSCI(E)7ARTICLE5null8
Mitomycin C in highly myopic eyes - Author reply
Ophthalmology. 2005 Feb;112(2):208-18; discussion 219.
Mitomycin C modulation of corneal wound healing after photorefractive keratectomy in highly myopic eyes.
Gambato C, Ghirlando A, Moretto E, Busato F, Midena E.
SourceRefractive Surgery Service and Antimetabolite Therapy Research Unit, Department of Ophthalmology, University of Padova, Padova, Italy.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To evaluate the role of topical mitomycin C in corneal wound healing (CWH) after photorefractive keratectomy (PRK) in highly myopic eyes.
DESIGN: Prospective, double-masked, randomized clinical trial.
PARTICIPANTS: Seventy-two eyes of 36 patients affected by high (>7 diopters) myopia.
METHODS: In each patient, one eye was randomly assigned to PRK with intraoperative topical 0.02% mitomycin C application, and the fellow eye was treated with a placebo. Postoperatively, mitomycin C-treated eyes received artificial tears (3 times daily, tapered in 3 months), whereas the fellow eye was treated with fluorometholone sodium 2% and artificial tears (3 times daily, tapered in 3 months).
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Uncorrected visual acuity (UCVA) and best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA), contrast sensitivity, manifest refraction, and biomicroscopy. Contrast sensitivity was determined using the Pelli-Robson chart. Corneal confocal microscopy documented CWH.
RESULTS: Mean follow-up was 18 months (range, 12-36). No side effects or toxic effects were documented. At 12-month follow-up examination, UCVAs (logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution) were 0.4+/-0.48 and 0.5+/-0.53 (P = .03) in mitomycin C-treated eyes and corticosteroid-treated eyes, respectively. At 1 year, corneal haze developed in 20% of corticosteroid-treated eyes, versus 0% of mitomycin C-treated eyes. At 12, 24, and 36 months, corneal confocal microscopy showed activated keratocytes and extracellular matrix significantly more evident in untreated eyes (Ps = 0.004, 0.024, and 0.046, respectively).
CONCLUSION: Topical intraoperative application of 0.02% mitomycin C can reduce haze formation in highly myopic eyes undergoing PRK.
Comment in
Ophthalmology. 2006 Feb;113(2):357; author reply 357-8
No.357, Tom Welch, interview by Joe Arave and Greg Thompson
Transcript (51 pages) of interview by Joseph Arave with Tom Welch, a leader in Salt Lake\u27s Olympic bid, on December 27, 1991, and January 22, 1992. This interview is no. 357 in the Everett L. Cooley Oral History ProjectTom Welch (b. 1944) discussed the Utah Olympic Bid Effort for 1994 and 2002: the people involved, strategies developed, and the benefits he sees to the state from this effort. Interviewers: Joe Arave, Gregory C. Thompso
B -> eta K-c(eta ' K-c) decays in QCD factorization
We study the exclusive decays of the B meson into pseudoscalar charmonium states eta(c) and eta(c)' within the QCD factorization approach and find that the non-factorizable corrections to naive factorization are infrared safe at leading-twist order. The spectator interactions arising from the kaon twist-3 effects are formally power suppressed but chirally and logarithmically enhanced. An important improvement by including the O(alpha(s)) corrections is the cancellation of the renormalization scale mu dependence of the decay amplitude. However, the calculated decay rates are too small to accommodate the experimental data. On the other hand, we compare the theoretical calculations for B meson decays to J/psi, psi', eta(c) and eta'(c), and find that the predicted relative decay rates of these four states are approximately compatible with the experimental data.http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000223097800007&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=8e1609b174ce4e31116a60747a720701Physics, Particles & FieldsSCI(E)17ARTICLE3365-3703
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