204,483 research outputs found
[Reisealbum W. H. Graham]
[REISEALBUM W. H. GRAHAM]
[Reisealbum W. H. Graham] ( - )
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Widmungseintrag, Bl. 1 ( - )
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Illustrationen und Einträge Bl. 1 - 10 (1)
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Graham W. Strong Presbyterian Church in Utah historic site nomination papers
Clippings (information artifacts); Correspondence; Histories; ProposalsThis collection consists of documents dating 1978-1981 created and/or collected by Graham W. Strong in his work to develop a list of Utah Presbyterian Church sites to be nominated to the National Register of Historic Places. The materials include correspondence, historical information and research on historical sites and site markers, memorial plaque requests, newspaper clippings, photocopies of photographs and publications, and an undated account of an historical tour to Utah Presbyterian sites.; This collection consists of documents dating 1978-1981 created and/or collected by Graham W. Strong in his work to develop a list of Utah Presbyterian Church sites to be nominated to the National Register of Historic Places. The materials include correspondence, historical information and research on historical sites and site markers, memorial plaque requests, newspaper clippings, photocopies of photographs and publications, and an undated account of an historical tour to Utah Presbyterian sites.; The Cache County file (Box 1, Folder 1) includes photocopied pages from The Ariel, with images of Calvin M. Parks, the Cache Valley Seminary, Academy building in Logan, Parks Hall, and Honeyman Hall.; Graham Strong worked with John S. H. Smith ("Jack") the Preservation Historian from the Division of State History (Utah State Historical Society) on this project. There is a letter in the Correspondence file from Smith to Strong, dated February 2, 1979 about the project (Box 1, Folder 2).; The Historic Site Marker Requests file (Box 1, Folder 4) includes copies of forms submitted by Graham Strong to the Utah State Historical Society for Presbyterian churches in American Fork, Manti, Monroe, Richfield, Salina, and Springville, and also Liberal Hall in Mount Pleasant.; The Historic Sites Tour file (Box 1, Folder 5) contains an account of a bus tour (undated, but probably about 1978) led by Graham Strong with site lectures by Jack Smith. Thirty-seven people took the tour. The file also includes photocopies of 4 photographs taken on the tour.; In the Newspaper Clipping file (Box 1, Folder 8) there is an article from the Sun advocate (a Price, Utah newspaper) dated October 1978 announcing that Ferron Presbyterian Church and Castle Dale School have been accepted to the National Register of Historic Places.; The Salt Lake Collegiate Institute file (Box 1, Folder 10) includes a photocopy of a 1904 photograph of the "Sheldon Jackson College faculty and staff", with all the names penned in the margins.; Arranged alphabetically by subject or historic site location, thereunder chronologically.; Biographical Note; Graham W. Strong: Graham Wilfrid Strong was born December 26, 1935, was a resident of Utah who died May 19, 2002 and was buried in the Salt Lake City Cemetary.; Sources (viewed online March 31, 2016): Tributes.com/obituary website United States Social Security death index, 1935-2014 website; Cache County; Correspondence, 1979-1980; Duchesne County; Historic sites marker requests; Historic sites tour; Hungerford Academy; Mt. Pleasant; Newspaper clipping--Sun advocate (Price, Utah, October 1978); Payson City; Salt Lake Collegiate Institut
Correspondence from Arlington State College President Dr. Jack R. Woolf to W. Harold Watson
Correspondence from Arlington State College President Dr. Jack R. Woolf to W. Harold Watson dated July 16, 1962. In his letter of July 12, 1962, Watson expresses his disapproval of the college\u27s announced integration in the fall of 1962. Woolf\u27s response explains that the decision was made with regrets , but as the result of careful study and consideration of the other court actions taken in similar matters.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_jackrwoolfpapers/1017/thumbnail.jp
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A letter from W. Graham Claytor to Manuel Lujan.
A letter from W. Graham Claytor, Secretary of the Navy, to Manuel Lujan, Representative from New Mexico, thanking him for Vice Admiral Watkins
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A letter from W. Graham Claytor to Ron Maples.
A letter from W. Graham Claytor, Secretary of the Navy, to Ron Maples regarding information and a letter from Vice Admiral Watkins
Graham W. Jackson, circa 1950
Portrait of Graham W. Jackson. Written on recto: To Dr. and Mrs. E.A. Jones, Sincerely, or should I say musically, Graham W. Jackson.The Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library acknowledges the generous support of the Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR) in supporting the processing and digitization of a number of historic collections as part of the project: Our Story: Digitizing Publications and Photographs of the Historically Black Atlanta University Center Institutions.</em
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Solid and living: the Italian Woolf renaissance
‘Solid and living’ examines the renewed attention that Virginia Woolf has been enjoying in Italy since her publication rights expired in 2011, and how such attention has kept growing together with Virginia Woolf’s appeal, consolidating her as a cultural icon in Italy. The study starts with a brief introduction to the early history of the publication of Woolf in Italy, mainly thorough documents held at the historical archive of Mondadori, the publisher who owned the Italian translation rights of the writer since 1944. When the rights fist expired in 1991, a wave of re-translations appeared on the Italian marketplace, but the duration of the publication rights was soon extended to 70 years from the death of the author. Once Woolf’s works were finally on the public domain, their publication in Italy was characterized by three main paths: the retranslations of her most important novels by leading publishers (e.g., Giulio Einaudi Editore), the translations of works that had never been translated before (e.g., her Diaries), and the appearance of refined editions of her books in the catalogues of small, independent publishers (e.g., Nuova Berti, Mattioli 1885 and Racconti edizioni). All this ushered an ‘Italian Woolf Renaissance’. By means of interviews with translators and publishers of Woolf’s works, and of an analysis of their reception in the Italian cultural network through websites and social media, this chapter elucidates the reasons behind this ‘Woolf Renaissance’, and it shows the many ways in which Italians’ fascination for Woolf’s books and work is in constant growth
The dialectic of self and other in Montaigne, Proust and Woolf
This thesis investigates the construction of identity in relation to an other. It considers three
writers who, working at moments when the nature of selfhood was an urgent issue, conduct
profound and original enquiries into the question of self- construction, and seeks both to
reassess their contributions to this debate, and, in bringing their preoccupations and methods
to bear upon each other, to open up new ways of approaching and reading their work.
Considering a range of socio-cultural and religious forms of otherness -- the cannibal, the
witch, the Jew, the aristocrat, the woman, the divine -- it embraces material from a number of
important modem critical fields, and suggests how these topics might be combined to offer a
coherent statement about the enduring issue of s elf- fashioning.
The thesis seeks to map out a trajectory of decreasing investment in external communities,
and an increasing perception of the self as a source and agent in the construction of identity.
Looking in turn at the work of Montaigne, Proust and Woolf, it argues that where the Essais
construct complex orders which appropriate the other to reinforce the identity of the self,
Proust and Woolf increasingly, although gradually, and by no means always successfully,
attempt to negotiate a less precisely- engaged relationship between other and self, and to
assign the other a less constitutive role in the realization and expression of identity. The
thesis also considers more briefly contexts in which this trajectory is reversed. To the extent
that they examine modernist subjectivity, Proust and Woolf articulate an anxiety about the
separation of self and world which leads to an attempted recuperation of the integrated orders
depicted by Montaigne
Application of new parameterizations of gas transfer velocity and their impact on regional and global marine CO2 budgets
One of the dominant sources of uncertainty in the calculation of air–sea flux of carbon dioxide on a global scale originates from the various parameterizations of the gas transfer velocity, k, that are in use. Whilst it is undisputed that most of these parameterizations have shortcomings and neglect processes which influence air–sea gas exchange and do not scale with wind speed alone, there is no general agreement about their relative accuracy.The most widely used parameterizations are based on non-linear functions of wind speed and, to a lesser extent, on sea surface temperature and salinity. Processes such as surface film damping and whitecapping are known to have an effect on air–sea exchange. More recently published parameterizations use friction velocity, sea surface roughness, and significant wave height. These new parameters can account to some extent for processes such as film damping and whitecapping and could potentially explain the spread of wind-speed based transfer velocities published in the literature.We combine some of the principles of two recently published k parameterizations [Glover, D.M., Frew, N.M., McCue, S.J. and Bock, E.J., 2002. A multiyear time series of global gas transfer velocity from the TOPEX dual frequency, normalized radar backscatter algorithm. In: Donelan, M.A., Drennan, W.M., Saltzman, E.S., and Wanninkhof, R. (Eds.), Gas Transfer at Water Surfaces, Geophys. Monograph 127. AGU, Washington, DC, 325–331; Woolf, D.K., 2005. Parameterization of gas transfer velocities and sea-state dependent wave breaking. Tellus, 57B: 87–94] to calculate k as the sum of a linear function of total mean square slope of the sea surface and a wave breaking parameter. This separates contributions from direct and bubble-mediated gas transfer as suggested by Woolf [Woolf, D.K., 2005. Parameterization of gas transfer velocities and sea-state dependent wave breaking. Tellus, 57B: 87–94] and allows us to quantify contributions from these two processes independently.We then apply our parameterization to a monthly TOPEX altimeter gridded 1.5° × 1.5° data set and compare our results to transfer velocities calculated using the popular wind-based k parameterizations by Wanninkhof [Wanninkhof, R., 1992. Relationship between wind speed and gas exchange over the ocean. J. Geophys. Res., 97: 7373–7382.] and Wanninkhof and McGillis [Wanninkhof, R. and McGillis, W., 1999. A cubic relationship between air?sea CO2 exchange and wind speed. Geophys. Res. Lett., 26(13): 1889–1892]. We show that despite good agreement of the globally averaged transfer velocities, global and regional fluxes differ by up to 100%. These discrepancies are a result of different spatio-temporal distributions of the processes involved in the parameterizations of k, indicating the importance of wave field parameters and a need for further validation
Letter from Congressman Graham A. Barden to W. T. Johnson
Letter from Congressman Graham A. Barden to W. T. Johnson, sending in statement for S. B. Simmons camp dedication. Statement for camp dedication
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