Search Results
George Braxton Pegram papers, 1903-1958
40.61 Linear Feet (95 document boxes and 1 record carton)- Abstract Or Scope
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Correspondence, manuscripts, and subject files on most aspects of Pegram's career. Also, a large quantity of research notes made by Lucy J. Hayner (1898-1971), Professor Emeritus of Physics at Columbia University, who was writing a history of Columbia's Physics Dept., 1905-1954, can be found in folders throughout the collection.
Henry Michael Foley papers, 1913-1982
10.5 linear feet (22 boxes)- Abstract Or Scope
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This collection consists of correspondence, manuscripts, student papers, research notes, and printed materials including Foley's professional and departmental files, lecture and laboratory notes, his file of research projects and student papers, and his research for the JASON Division of the Institute for Defense Analyses (later of Stanford Research Institute).
Henry Michael Foley papers, 1913-1982 10.5 linear feet (22 boxes)
- Creator
- Foley, Henry Michael, 1917-1982
- Abstract Or Scope
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This collection consists of correspondence, manuscripts, student papers, research notes, and printed materials including Foley's professional and departmental files, lecture and laboratory notes, his file of research projects and student papers, and his research for the JASON Division of the Institute for Defense Analyses (later of Stanford Research Institute).
- Collection Context
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Selig Hecht papers, 1914-1937
7 boxes (7 boxes)- Abstract Or Scope
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Hecht's correspondence with other scientists, articles, lectures, notebooks, and laboratory notes and reports on the mechanics of vision and adaptation to light. The correspondence is primarily with William J. Crozier, Otto Glaser, Jacinto Steinhardt, George Wald, and Ernst Wolf. The notebooks cover the period from 1914-1925.
Selig Hecht papers, 1914-1937 7 boxes (7 boxes)
- Creator
- Hecht, Selig, 1892-1947
- Abstract Or Scope
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Hecht's correspondence with other scientists, articles, lectures, notebooks, and laboratory notes and reports on the mechanics of vision and adaptation to light. The correspondence is primarily with William J. Crozier, Otto Glaser, Jacinto Steinhardt, George Wald, and Ernst Wolf. The notebooks cover the period from 1914-1925.
- Collection Context
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