3,937 research outputs found

    On the Existence of Chronological Variations in the Composition of Roman Brass

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    Author Institution: Department of Chemistry, The Ohio State University, Columbus 1

    Sulfur in Roman Brass

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    Author Institution: Department of Chemistry, The Ohio State University, Columbus 1

    Early History of the Department of Chemisty of the Ohio State University

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    Author Institution: Department of Chemistry, Ohio State UniversitySidney Norton, appointed in 1873, was the first professor of chemistry at Ohio State, and for 20 years the only faculty member of the department. In these early years the annual student enrollment in chemistry was often less than 50. The growth of the department began in 1893 with the appointment of William McPherson as an assistant professor. By 1900, two more faculty members were added, and at the end of the first half century of its existence, there were 9 senior faculty members aided by a junior staff of about 40 assistants and graduate assistants. The undergraduate enrollment then totalled about 2,000 and the number of graduate students about 100

    Alien Registration- Starkey, Earle R. (Auburn, Androscoggin County)

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    https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/30369/thumbnail.jp

    Paul Tillich\u27s Communication Theology and the Rhetoric of Existentialism

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    20th century theologian and philosopher Paul Tillich believed that religion could only be understood in the context of the surrounding culture. He attempted to assert Christianity’s importance in the modern era, and did this through his use of language. In this study I examine how Tillich’s rhetorical situation uniquely informed the communication style of his sermons. Drawing on the work of Lloyd Bitzer, this rhetorical situation includes Tillich’s exigencies, rooted both in the personal and historical, his resources and constraints in the form of influences and limitations, and his audience which provided him with an arena. By examining selections from the three volumes of Tillich’s sermons, it is possible to construct his communication theory in five parts. These five elements include logos, or the appropriate use of reason; kairos, or right-timing; language invention and reconfiguration, including translation of religious symbols into existential language; prophetic style; and a focus on community and love. This project is a unique contribution to Tillichian studies and homiletics, as I examine Tillich’s sermons within a rhetorical and communicative frame

    CHMY 142N.04: College Chemistry I Lab

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    CHMY 142N.01: College Chemistry I Lab

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