96,839 research outputs found

    Albert Crow Papers

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    Albert Crow was born on March 17, 1868, in Arkadelphia, Arkansas, the eldest son of Austin M. Crow and Abigail Mendenhall Crow. His involvement within the Arkadelphia community included the founding of the Arkadelphia Telephone Company with his brother–in-law William Gerig in 1891. This partnership remained in intact until his death. He was also the secretary of the Arkadelphia Novelty Company as well as co-owner of the Crow Brothers Drug store. He was furthermore involved with the management of the Popular Bluff Telephone Company in Missouri. By 1900, he owned an insurance and real estate company with his father and then became tax assessor for Clark County. In 1902, he was an advertising agent for St. Louis, Iron Mountain, Southern, and Fort Smith Railway. He died of typhoid fever August 7, 1903. This collection contains correspondence and other documents associated with Crow’s businesses. There are also tax assessment records, deeds, abstracts, assorted financial papers, and a Daughters of the American Colonists membership application

    Coupled cavity QED for coherent control of photon transmission (I): Green function approach for hybrid systems with two-level doping

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    This is the first one of a series of our papers theoretically studying the coherent control of photon transmission along the coupled resonator optical waveguide (CROW) by doping artificial atoms for various hybrid structures. We will provide the several approaches correspondingly based on Green function, the mean field method and spin wave theory et al. In the present paper we adopt the two-time Green function approach to study the coherent transmission photon in a CROW with homogeneous couplings, each cavity of which is doped by a two-level artificial atom. We calculate the two-time correlation function for photon in the weak-coupling case. Its poles predict the exact dispersion relation, which results in the group velocity coherently controlled by the collective excitation of the doping atoms. We emphasize the role of the population inversion of doping atoms induced by some polarization mechanism.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figure

    Letter from Representative Burdick to Medicine Crow Regarding US Senate Bill 2151, May 25, 1956

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    This letter, dated May 25, 1956, from United States (US) Representative Usher Burdick to Medicine Crow replies to Medicine Crow\u27s appeal for Burdick to support US Senate Bill 2151 (S. 2151) which provides for per capita payments to members of the Three Affiliated Tribes. Burdick says that he will do all he can to support the tribes. See also: Letter from Medicine Crow to Representative Burdick Regarding US Senate Bill 2151, May 22, 1956https://commons.und.edu/burdick-papers/1314/thumbnail.jp

    Letter from Senator Langer to Medicine Crow Informing Him that US Senate Bill 2151 is now US Public Law, June 5, 1956

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    This letter dated June 5, 1956, from United States (US) Senator William Langer to Medicine Crow, informs Medicine Crow that US Senate Bill 2151 (S. 2151) was signed by the president and is now US Public Law. A handwritten note on the top of the letter reads, S. 2151.https://commons.und.edu/langer-papers/1951/thumbnail.jp

    Letter from Senator Langer to Medicine Crow Informing that US Senate Bill 2151 Passed the Senate, March 20, 1956

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    This letter dated March 20, 1956, from United States (US) Senator William Langer to Medicine Crow, informs Medicine Crow that US Senate Bill 2151 (S. 2151), which provides for the segregation of funds for the Three Affiliated Tribes, passed the US Senate and will go on to the US House of Representatives. A handwritten note on the letter reads, S. 2151. See also: Letter from Medicine Crow to Senator Langer Regarding US Senate Bills 2875 and 2151, March 14, 1956https://commons.und.edu/langer-papers/1937/thumbnail.jp

    Florida Historical Quarterly, Vol. 14, Issue 3

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    The First American Road in Florida: Pensacola-St. Augustine Highway, 1824. Part II Mark F. Boyd East Florida Seminary, Micanopy C. L. Crow The Panton, Leslie Papers: Letters of William Panton to John Forbes The Annual Meeting of the Florida Historical Society : Minutes Reports New members Note

    Florida Historical Quarterly, Vol. 14, Issue 3

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    The First American Road in Florida: Pensacola-St. Augustine Highway, 1824. Part II Mark F. Boyd East Florida Seminary, Micanopy C. L. Crow The Panton, Leslie Papers: Letters of William Panton to John Forbes The Annual Meeting of the Florida Historical Society : Minutes Reports New members Note

    Letter from Representative Burdick to Mrs. John Sitting Crow Regarding Fort Berthold Claims, March 12, 1954

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    This letter, dated March 12, 1954, from United States (US) Representative Usher Burdick to Mrs. John Sitting Crow concerns the Three Affiliated Tribes of the Fort Berthold Reservation\u27s claims before the Court of Claims. Burdick writes that he has called both the Indian Claims Commission and the Court of Claims about the matter, adding that there are no copies of the Fort Berthold hearings available. See also: Report by Cragun to the Three Affiliated Tribes Regarding the Fort Berthold Claims, January 12, 1954 Letter from Mrs. John Sitting Crow to Representative Burdick Regarding Fort Berthold Claims, February 25, 1954https://commons.und.edu/burdick-papers/1029/thumbnail.jp

    Florida Historical Quarterly, Vol. 15, Issue 2

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    Engagements at St. Johns Bluff St. Johns River, September-October, 1862 T. Frederick Davis A Letter of Captain V. Chamberlain 7th Connecticut Volunteers Florida University (1883) C. L. Crow The Contention Over the Superintendencia of the Floridas D. C. CorbittSidney Lanier in Florida Lena E. Jackson The Panton, Leslie Papers: A Letter of Edwin Gairdner to William Panton, 1798 Note

    Ecoso exchange newsletter 2/14; Dec. 1990

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    This issue emphasizes the launching of the Crow Collection and creation of the Crow Collection Trust. Along with this, there will be a new format of Ecoso Exchange newsletter, which will focus on development of the Crow Collection as a Living Library, with its subscribers receiving: * reprints of some of the documents in the Collection * information on seminars, exhibitions and other projects which will be popularising the ideas in the Crow Collection * information on how the Collection is being used * information on current campaigns of other organisations In this issue: Pages: 1. New Opportunities for Ecoso Exchange 2. The Launching of the Crow Collection 2. The Library launch - The Collection as a Teaching Tool 2. The Seminar Launch - Planing for 21st Century 3. Three Seminar Publications 4. The Celebratory Dinner - a Reunion of Activists 5. The Crow Collection Trust - A living Library 7. Possible Projects for the Crow Collection Trust 8. Encouragement from Long Time-Supporters
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