Subject Index

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Subject Index SUBJECT INDEX A Auroral Research Aurora Borealis, Study by Rockets, 5, 5, May­ Acoustic Studies June 1966, p. 5 Solid Propellant Rockets, I, 6, July- August Auroral Oval, 6, 2, November- December 1962, p. 8 1966, p. 2 Aiming Studies Automaton Probability Analysis, 5, 1, September-October See Mobile Automaton 1965, p. 17 Availability Model for Shipboard Equipment, 2, Albedo Neutron Flux of Earth 5, May-June 1963, p. 9 Conference Report, 3, 2, November-Decem­ Azimuth Determination ber 1963, p. 25 Phase-Difference Measurement Sys tem, 3, 2, Neutron Detection, 3, 4, March-April 1964, November- December 1963, p. 13 p. 14 Alloys B See Metallic Alloys Amplifiers Beam-Plasma Interactions See Tunnel Diode Microwave Amplifiers Theory and Experiments, 3, 5, May-June AN/SPG-59 Radar Coaxial Cable Design, 2, 6, 1964, p. 2 July-August 1963, p. 18 Beam-Riding Missile Guidance Ocean Surface Reflection Effects, 2, Antennas I, See C onstant-K L enses November-December 1961 , p. 10 Radomes Biographies Tracking Antennas Gardiner, George W., I, 2, November- Decem­ Artificial Earth Satellites ber 1961 , p. 20 Azimuth Determinations, 3, 2, November­ Macaulay, P. Stewart, 5, 5, M ay-June 1966, December 1963, p. 13 p.3 Doppler Navigation, 5, 2, September- October Biological Simulation 1965, p. 2 Frog's Eye for Radar Display, I , 4, March­ Geodetic Determinations, 4, 3, January­ April 1962, p. 8 February 1965, p. 2 Biological Stimulator Gravity-Gradient Attitude Stabilization, 3, 5, See Small-Motion Biological Stimulator May-June 1964, p. 12 Boat Design Spin Control, 5, 1, September-October 1965, Hobby Description, 5, 2, November- Decem­ p.8 ber 1965, p. 18 See also DODGE Satellite Blobs Injun Satellite See Fluid Blobs Navy Navigational Satellite Boresight Errors of Radomes TRAAC Satellite Bandwidth Studies, 4, 1, September-October Artificial Radiation Belts 1964, p. 10 Characteristics, 2, 2, November- December Bowsprit for Sailing Catamaran 1962, p. 3 Hobby Description, 4, 4, M arch-April 1965, Degradation Effects on Solar Power Sys tems, p. 17 2, 2, November- December 1962, p. 8 Bubbles See also Radiation Studies See Fluid Blobs Attitude Control Thrust Vector Control Studies, 2, 4, March­ c April 1963, p. 2 TRAAC Satellite, I , 3, January- February Camera Systems 1962, p. 2 See DODGE Satellite See also Gravity-Gradient Attitude Stabiliza- Catamaran Bowsprit tion See Bowsprit for Sailing Catamaran Ju ly-August 1967 7 Chamber Music Groups at APL Conically Scanned Tracking Antennas, 1, 5, May­ Hobby Description, 3, 3, January-February June 1962, p. 12 1964, p. 15 Constant-K Lenses Chemical Kinetics of Gases, Description, 2, 4, March- April 1963, p. 8 ESR Studies, 6, 1, September-October 1966, Cordwood p.9 See W elded Cordwood Chemical Milling Cornucopia in Space, 3, 1, September- October Techniques, 6, 4, March-April 1967, p. 11 1963, p. 13 Chemical Propulsion Correction Codes Status and Future Trends, 4, 6, July-August See Codes 1965, p. 2 Correlator of Time Intervals between Electrical Circuit Testing Pulses, 5, 1, September-October 1965, p. 14 Hazardous Circuits, 1, 2, November-Decem­ Coupling Designed for Space Application, 5, 3, ber 1961, p. 19 January-February 1966, p. 16 Civil Defense Metropolitan Area Survival, 2, 5, May-June Creep Measurement Machine 1963, p. 18 High-Temperature Materials, 6, 1, Septem­ Clear Air Turbulence ber-October 1966, p. 16 Radar Detection Studies, 6, 1, September­ Cylindrical Shells October 1966, p. 2 Deflection Analysis of Clamped Free, 3, 1, Clocks, Precision Portable September- October 1963, p. 19 Time Synchronization between R emote Lo­ cations, 3, 4, March-April 1964, p. 22 o See also Time and Frequency Standards Laboratory Damping Springs Coaxial Cable Gravity-Gradient Stabilized Satellites, 2, 2, AN/SPG- 59 Radar Design Considerations, 2, November-December 1962, p. 20 6, July- August 1963, p. 18 Deflection Analysis Codes See Vibration Studies Error Detection and Correction, 5, 2, Novem­ Deformed Spheroids ber-December 1965, p. 10 Flow Field Computer Studies, 4, 4, March­ Combustion Instability in Solid Propellant Rockets, April 1965, p. II. 1, 6, July-August 1962, p. 8 See also Fluid Blobs Computer Applications Department of Defense Gravity Experiment Satel­ APL Information Retrieval System, 2, 4, lite March-April 1963, p. 17 See DODGE Satellite Electronic Signal Decoding, 5, 4, March­ Detection by Radar April 1966, p. 12 See Radar D etection Ministick Artwork, 6, 3, J anuary- February Detectors 1967, p. 9 See N eutron Detectors Motion Picture Film Making, 5, 5, May­ Proton D etectors June 1966, p. 11 Deterrence Radar Detection Probability Solutions, 3, 2, Scientific Analysis, 1, 1, September-October November-December 1965, p. 13 1961 , p. 16 Stokes Flow for Deformed Spheroids, 4, 4, Dielectric Spherical Lenses March- April 1965, p. 11 See Constant-K L enses Computer Hardware Diffusers Digital Filter, 4, 3, January- February 1965, Shock-Duct, 2, 5, May-June 1963, p. 2 p. 13 Diffusion Coefficients of Gases Triode-Diode Function Generator, 2, 6, July­ Source-in-Flow Measurements, 1, 4, March­ August 1963, p. 15 April 1962, p. 2 Computer Pantomimes, 5, 5, M ay-June 1966, p. 11 Digital Filters Conference on Earth's Albedo Neutron Flux, 3, 2, Optimal Adaptive, 4 , 3, January-February November- December 1963, p. 25 1965, p. 13 8 :\PL Technical Digest Digital Pulse Compression Radar Receiver Error Detection and Correction Codes Phase Modulation Waveforms, 6 , 4, March­ See Codes April 1967, p. 2 ESR Studies Diodes Gas Phase "Chemical Kinetics, 6 , 1, Septem­ See Triode-Diode Function Generator ber- October 1966, p. 9 Tunnel Diodes Trapped Free R adicals, 2, 3, January- Febru­ Director's Reports, Excerpts ary 1963, p. 2 I , 3, January- February 1962, p. 25 Excerpts from the Director's Reports 2, 3, January- February 1963, p. 24 See Director's R eports 3, 3, January-February 1964, p. 19 Explosions 4, 3, January- February 1965, p. 18 See Nuclear Explosions 5, 3, January- February 1966, p. 18 Explosive Light Filter 6 , 3, January- February 1967, p. 16 Flashblindness Protection System, 5, 6, July­ Display Systems, Radar August 1966, p. 11 See Radar Display Systems Extensometer DODGE Satellite Creep Measurement, 6 , 1, September-October Television Camera Design and Performance, 1966, p. 16 6 , 5, May- June 1967, p. 9 Eye Protection Television Camera Photometric and Optical See Explosive Light Filter Considerations, 6 ,5, May- June 1967, p. 15 Television System Geometry, 6 , 5, May-June F 1967, p. 2 See also Artificial Earth Satellites Feedback Technique Doppler Navigation Hydraulic Servos, 4, 2, November-December System Description, 5, 2, November-Decem­ 1964, p. 12 ber 1965, p. 2 Filters Drag Racing See Digital Filters Hobby Description, 4, 1, September- October Fins 1964, p. 17 See Missile Fins Drops Fipple Flutes See Fluid Blobs See Chamber Music Groups at APL Fire Codes E Error Detection and Correction, 5, 2, Novem­ ber- December 1965, p. 10 Earth's Albedo Neutron Flux Flames See Albedo N eutron Flux of Earth Laminar Flame Studies, I , 3, January-Febru­ Earth's Radiation Belts ary 1962, p. 10 See Radiation Studies R adicals in, Studies, 2, 6, July-August 1963, Electrical Circuit Tester p. 2 See Hazardous Electrical Circuits Flashblindness Protection Electron Beam-Plasma Interactions, 3, 5, May­ See Explosive Light Filter June 1964, p. 2 Flow Fields of Deformed Spheroids Electronic Packaging Computer Studies, 4, 4, March-April 1965, Chemical Milling Process, 6 , 4, March-April p. 11 1967, p. 11 Fluid Blobs Welded Cordwood, I , 1, September-October Motion Studies, 1,5, May- June 1962, p. 2 1961, p. 20 See also D eformed Spheroids Electron Spin Resonance Studies Fluid Magnetic Spring See ESR Studies Polaris, 2, 1, September- October 1962, p. 16 ELF Flutter See Explosive Light Filter Missile-Wing Simulation T ests, 2, 4, M arch­ Equipment Availability April 1963, p. 12 Shipboard Defense Systems, 2, 5, May- June Four-Channel Video Integrator 1963, p. 9 See Video Integrator July- August 1967 9 Free Radicals High-Speed Chemical Propulsion, 4 , 6, July­ ESR Studies of Trapped Free Radicals, 2, 3, August 1965, p. 2 January- February 1963, p. 2 High-Temperature Materials Mass Spectrometric Studies, 5, 4, March­ Creep Measurements, 6, 1, September­ April 1966, p. 2 October 1966, p. 16 Frequency Monitoring Design Allowables of Alloys, 3, 4, March­ VLF Phase Measurements, 4, 4, March­ April 1964, p. 2 April 1965, p. 2 VLF Transmissions, 1, 5, May-June 1962, High-Temperature Measurement p. 7 See Intermittent Thermometer Pyrometer Frog Optic Nerve Fibre Radar Display Simulation, 1, 4, March­ Histories April 1962, p. 2 Terrier Missile Development, 4, 6, July­ August 1965, p. 18 Function Generators VT Fuze, 2, 1, September-October 1962, Triode-Diode, 2, 6, July- August 1963, p. 15 p. 18 Fuzes Hobbies See VT Fuze Boat Design, 5 , 2, November-December 1965, G p. 18 Bowsprit for Catamaran, 4, 4, March- April Gardiner, George W. 1965, p. 17 See Biographies Chamber Music Groups at APL, 3, 3, Janu­ Gas Phase Chemical Kinetics ary-February 1964, p. 15 ESR Studies, 6, 1, September- October 1966, Drag Racing, 4, 1, September- October 1964, p. 9 p. 17 Gas Transport Radio-Controlled Model Airplanes, 2, 3, Source-in-Flow Measurements, 1, 4, March­ January- February 1963, p. 18; 4 , 5, May­ April 1962, p. 2 June 1965, p. 17 Generators Telescope Making, 2, 6, July-August 1963, See Function Generators p.8 Geodesy by Satellites, 4, 3, January-February 1965, Wine Making, 3, 6, July-August 1964, p. 18 p. 2 Hose Coupling Gravity-Gradient Attitude Stabilization See Coupling Damping Spring Design, 2, 2, November­ Human Perception December 1962, p. 20 Model Limits, 1, 3, January- February 1962, Theory and Satellite Applications, 3, 5, May­ p.
Recommended publications
  • Judgement No. 92 41
    Judgement No. 92 41 Judgement No. 92 (Original : English) Case No. 91: Against : The Secretary-General of Higgins the Inter-Governmental Maritime Consultative Orgauization Request for rescission of a decision of the Secretary-General of IMCO terminating the secondment of a United Nations stafl member to IMCO before its date of expiration. No rules of law dealing specifically with the rights and obligations of members of the staff of the United Nations and its specialized agencies who take up service with an organization different from the one to which they belong, whether by “loan”, ” transfer “, or “ secondment “.-Legal effect of the agreement (CO-ORDINATION/ R.430) and the Memorandum of Understanding (CO-ORD/CC/S0/91) of the Consul- tative Committee on Administrative Questions. Legal definition of ” secondment “.-Distinguished from “ transfer ” and “ loan ‘I.- Existence of three parties to a contract of secondment, namely, the releasing organization, the receiving organization and the staff member concerned.-Consent of staff member required to secondment, its duration, and the terms and conditions of employment in the receiving organization.-Terms and conditions of secondment cannot be varied unilaterally or simply by agreement between the two organizations to the detriment of the staff member.-Inapplicability of Staff Regulation 1.2 of the United hrations.- Existence of a contract of employment between IMCO and the Applicant and applicability to the Applicant of the Staff Regulations and Rules of IMCO, including IMCO Staff Regulation 9, despite the absence of a letter of appointment from IMCO.-Non-obser- vance by the Respondent of the due process to which the Applicant was entitled before termination of secondment.-Contested decision cannot be sustained.
    [Show full text]
  • India-Pakistan Conflict: Records of the Us State Department, February 1963
    http://gdc.gale.com/archivesunbound/ INDIA-PAKISTAN CONFLICT: RECORDS OF THE U.S. STATE DEPARTMENT, FEBRUARY 1963-1966 Over 16,000 pages of State Department Central Files on India and Pakistan from 1963 through 1966 make this collection a standard documentary resource for the study of the political relations between India and Pakistan during a crucial period in the Cold War and the shifting alliances and alignments in South Asia. Date Range: 1963-1966 Content: 15,387 images Source Library: U.S. National Archives Detailed Description: Relations with Pakistan have demanded a high proportion of India’s international energies and undoubtedly will continue to do so. India and Pakistan have divergent national ideologies and have been unable to establish a mutually acceptable power equation in South Asia. The national ideologies of pluralism, democracy, and secularism for India and of Islam for Pakistan grew out of the pre-independence struggle between the Congress and the All-India Muslim League, and in the early 1990s the line between domestic and foreign politics in India’s relations with Pakistan remained blurred. Because great-power competition—between the United States and the Soviet Union and between the Soviet Union and China—became intertwined with the conflicts between India and Pakistan, India was unable to attain its goal of insulating South Asia from global rivalries. This superpower involvement enabled Pakistan to use external force in the face of India’s superior endowments of population and resources. The most difficult problem in relations between India and Pakistan since partition in August 1947 has been their dispute over Kashmir.
    [Show full text]
  • Newsletter Collections Academic Affairs Collections
    Prairie View A&M University Digital Commons @PVAMU Newsletter Collections Academic Affairs Collections 2-1963 Newsletter - February 1963 Prairie View Agricultural and Mechanical College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.pvamu.edu/newsletter Recommended Citation Prairie View Agricultural and Mechanical College, "Newsletter - February 1963" (1963). Newsletter Collections. 414. https://digitalcommons.pvamu.edu/newsletter/414 This News Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Academic Affairs Collections at Digital Commons @PVAMU. It has been accepted for inclusion in Newsletter Collections by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @PVAMU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. From the Desk of {[the President NEWSLETTER PRAIRIE VIEW A. & M. COLLEGE Prairie View, Texas VOLUME XXXIII February, 1963 Number 6 A. CALENDAR - FEBRUARY, 1963 1. Second Semester Classes begin ...... February 1 2. State Meetinp - Agricultural and Home Demonstration Agents of Texas (continues). February 1 3. Negro History Week Convocation February 3 1. Ministers' Conference .... February 5-6 5. Choir Clinic. ............... February 9 6. Income Tax Clinic ...... .February 11 7. Class A and B State Basketball Tournament . February 11-16 8. Class AAAA, AAA, and AA State Tournament February 21-23 9. Concert - Houston Symphony Orchestra. .February 21 10. College Basketball - - Here Prairie View vs Grambling College , . .February 2 Prairie View vs Alcorn A. and M. College .February 1 Prairie View vs Arkansas A. M. 6 N. .February 23 Prairie View vs Wiley College ..... .February 25 Prairie View vs Texas Southern .February 27 Away Prairie View vs Grambling College Grambling, Louisiana • , February Prairie View vs Alcorn A. 6 M.
    [Show full text]
  • New York, 10 December 1962 ENTRY INTO FORCE
    3. CONVENTION ON CONSENT TO MARRIAGE, MINIMUM AGE FOR MARRIAGE AND REGISTRATION OF MARRIAGES New York, 10 December 1962 . ENTRY INTO FORCE: 9 December 1964 by the exchange of the said letters, in accordance with article 6. REGISTRATION: 23 December 1964, No. 7525. STATUS: Signatories: 16. Parties: 54. TEXT: United Nations, Treaty Series , vol. 521, p. 231. Note: The Convention was opened for signature pursuant to resolution 1763 (XVII),1 adopted by the General Assembly of the United Nations on 7 November 1962. Ratification, Ratification, Accession(a), Accession(a), Participant2,3 Signature Succession(d) Participant2,3 Signature Succession(d) Antigua and Barbuda..... 25 Oct 1988 d Jamahiriya................ Argentina....................... 26 Feb 1970 a Mali ............................... 19 Aug 1964 a Austria ........................... 1 Oct 1969 a Mexico........................... 22 Feb 1983 a Azerbaijan ..................... 16 Aug 1996 a Mongolia ....................... 6 Jun 1991 a Bangladesh .................... 5 Oct 1998 a Montenegro8 .................. 23 Oct 2006 d Barbados........................ 1 Oct 1979 a Netherlands ...................10 Dec 1962 2 Jul 1965 Benin ............................. 19 Oct 1965 a New Zealand .................23 Dec 1963 12 Jun 1964 Bosnia and Niger.............................. 1 Dec 1964 a 4 Herzegovina ............ 1 Sep 1993 d Norway.......................... 10 Sep 1964 a Brazil ............................. 11 Feb 1970 a Philippines..................... 5 Feb 1963 21 Jan 1965 Burkina Faso.................. 8 Dec 1964 a Poland............................17 Dec 1962 8 Jan 1965 Chile ..............................10 Dec 1962 Romania ........................27 Dec 1963 21 Jan 1993 Côte d'Ivoire .................. 18 Dec 1995 a Rwanda.......................... 26 Sep 2003 a 4 Croatia .......................... 12 Oct 1992 d Samoa............................ 24 Aug 1964 a Cuba ..............................17 Oct 1963 20 Aug 1965 Serbia4 ........................... 12 Mar 2001 d Cyprus ..........................
    [Show full text]
  • New York, 10 December 1962 .ENTRY INTO FORCE
    3. CONVENTION ON CONSENT TO MARRIAGE, MINIMUM AGE FOR MARRIAGE AND REGISTRATION OF MARRIAGES New York, 10 December 1962 ENTRY. INTO FORCE: 9 December 1964 by the exchange of the said letters, in accordance with article 6. REGISTRATION: 23 December 1964, No. 7525. STATUS: Signatories: 16. Parties: 56. TEXT: United Nations, Treaty Series , vol. 521, p. 231. Note: The Convention was opened for signature pursuant to resolution 1763 (XVII)1, adopted by the General Assembly of the United Nations on 7 November 1962. Ratification, Ratification, Accession(a), Accession(a), Participant2,3 Signature Succession(d) Participant2,3 Signature Succession(d) Antigua and Barbuda...................................25 Oct 1988 d Kyrgyzstan...................................................10 Feb 1997 a Argentina .....................................................26 Feb 1970 a Liberia..........................................................16 Sep 2005 a Austria ......................................................... 1 Oct 1969 a Libya............................................................ 6 Sep 2005 a Azerbaijan....................................................16 Aug 1996 a Mali..............................................................19 Aug 1964 a Bangladesh................................................... 5 Oct 1998 a Mexico.........................................................22 Feb 1983 a Barbados ...................................................... 1 Oct 1979 a Mongolia...................................................... 6 Jun
    [Show full text]
  • Presidio Fire Department Logbooks, 1941-1992
    Presidio Fire Department Logbooks, 1941-1992 GOGA 35291 Golden Gate National Recreation Area Park Archives and Records Center ATTN: Park Archives and Records Center Presidio of San Francisco Building 201, Fort Mason Building 667 McDowell Ave. San Francisco, CA 94123 San Francisco, CA 94129 [Mailing Address] [Physical Address] www.nps.gov/goga/historyculture Phone: 415-561-2807 Fax: 415-441-1618 Susan Ewing Haley, Park Archivist Introduction Golden Gate National Recreation Area Park Description Golden Gate National Recreation Area (GGNRA), a unit of the National Park Service, was established by an Act of Congress on October 27, 1972. The 80,000-acre park encompasses a great diversity of cultural and natural resources in and around the Bay Area of San Francisco, California. It includes Muir Woods National Monument and Fort Point National Historic Site. The park holds almost five million three-dimensional and documentary artifacts dating from the time before European contact to the present. They are preserved and maintained for the public by the Division of Cultural Resources and Museum Management, which includes the Park Archives and Records Center (PARC). Park Archives and Records Center (PARC) Historical Note GGNRA and the sites within it have been collecting records since their inception. The PARC was established in 1994 to receive records and archival collections from the U.S. Army and the Presidio Army Museum after the closure of the Presidio of San Francisco as an Army base. The collections continue to grow through the donation of materials by private individuals, transfer of inactive park records by staff, and acquisition of relevant documentary materials.
    [Show full text]
  • An Examination of the Presidency of John F. Kennedy in 1963. Christina Paige Jones East Tennessee State University
    East Tennessee State University Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University Electronic Theses and Dissertations Student Works 5-2001 The ndE of Camelot: An Examination of the Presidency of John F. Kennedy in 1963. Christina Paige Jones East Tennessee State University Follow this and additional works at: https://dc.etsu.edu/etd Part of the History Commons Recommended Citation Jones, Christina Paige, "The ndE of Camelot: An Examination of the Presidency of John F. Kennedy in 1963." (2001). Electronic Theses and Dissertations. Paper 114. https://dc.etsu.edu/etd/114 This Thesis - Open Access is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Works at Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University. It has been accepted for inclusion in Electronic Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THE END OF CAMELOT: AN EXAMINATION OF THE PRESIDENCY OF JOHN F. KENNEDY IN 1963 _______________ A thesis presented to the faculty of the Department of History East Tennessee State University In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Masters of Arts in History _______________ by Christina Paige Jones May 2001 _______________ Dr. Elwood Watson, Chair Dr. Stephen Fritz Dr. Dale Schmitt Keywords: John F. Kennedy, Civil Rights, Vietnam War ABSTRACT THE END OF CAMELOT: AN EXAMINATION OF THE PRESIDENCY OF JOHN F. KENNEDY IN 1963 by Christina Paige Jones This thesis addresses events and issues that occurred in 1963, how President Kennedy responded to them, and what followed after Kennedy’s assassination. This thesis was created by using books published about Kennedy, articles from magazines, documents, telegrams, speeches, and Internet sources.
    [Show full text]
  • BIRMINGHAM PUBLIC LIBRARY Department of Archives and Manuscripts
    BIRMINGHAM PUBLIC LIBRARY Department of Archives and Manuscripts Connor, Theophilus Eugene 'Bull' Papers, 1951, 1957-1963 Background: Theophilus Eugene Connor was born in Dallas County, Alabama in 1897. Trained as a telegraph operator, Connor settled in Birmingham in the 1920s and worked as a radio sports announcer. Capitalizing on his popularity with radio listeners and his well-known nickname (,Bull'), Connor entered politics in 1934 and was elected to the Alabama House of Representatives. Connor was elected Public Safety Commissioner of Birmingham in 1937, a position that gave him administrative authority over the city's police and fire departments, public schools, public health and the public libraries. He held this position until 1954, and held the position again from 1958 to 1963 when he was forced from office by a change in the city form of government. During his long political career Connor ran two unsuccessful campaigns for governor of Alabama and was a leader of the 1948 Dixiecrat revolt. From 1964 to 1973 he served as President of the Alabama Public Service Commission, the state agency that regulates public utilities. Connor died in Birmingham in 1973. Eugene 'Bull' Connor is most famous for his staunch defense of racial segregation and for ordering the use of police dogs and fire hoses to disperse civil rights demonstrators in Birmingham during the spring of 1963. Scope and Content: These papers, which consist of letters, memoranda, clippings, photographs, and reports are the office files kept by Connor during his last five years as Commissioner of Public Safety. The papers from Connor's earlier terms were destroyed when he left office in 1954.
    [Show full text]
  • The Prairie View Standard - June 1963 - Vol
    Prairie View A&M University Digital Commons @PVAMU PV Standard Newspapers Publications 6-1963 The Prairie View Standard - June 1963 - Vol. LIII No. 9 Prairie View Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.pvamu.edu/pv-newspapers Recommended Citation Prairie View Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas. (1963). The Prairie View Standard - June 1963 - Vol. LIII No. 9., Vol. LIII No. 9 Retrieved from https://digitalcommons.pvamu.edu/pv-newspapers/283 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Publications at Digital Commons @PVAMU. It has been accepted for inclusion in PV Standard Newspapers by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @PVAMU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. "Pn&OUe Staudatd VOLUME 53 Prairie View A. & M. College, Prairie View Branch, Hempstead, Texasjune, 1963 NUMBER NINE Cheerleading and Dr. Evans Baton Twirlers Clinic Scheduled Talks With A clinic for cheerleaders, baton twirlers, majorettes and school President sponsors of these activities is President John F. Kennedy in­ scheduled at Prairie View A. and vited Dr. E. B. Evans to meet M. College on July 14-19. with him at the White House on Nearly a thousand elementary Wednesday, June 19. and high school students usual­ ly attend the annual clinic which Dr. Evans attended the top- is now in its seventh year. An level conference which is report­ outstanding staff of visiting in­ ed to have concerned itself with structors will include Roland civil rights problems and educa­ Brinkley, director, Bob Wasson, tion on all levels. Windy Roaches, Linda Robert­ son, Jane Hamilton, Ilene Slates, PUBLIC HEALTH NURSING — Students are shown at work in reading Caren Oiolli, Judy Barnes, and room of Public Health Center.
    [Show full text]
  • 22 November 1963: Where Were You?
    22 November 1963: Where Were You? Our Class had a unique relationship with President John F. Kennedy. He became president when we became upper class. He was a Navy Man, war hero, skipper of PT- 109. He loved football and the Army-Navy game. We lost our ‘rubbers’ when we marched in his Inaugural Parade, and we lost our innocence on 22 November 1963. Our experiences that day were unique, and for the first time since throwing our hats in Halsey Field House five months earlier, we were all unified via a single event. What is your story? Where were you when you first heard that the President had been assassinated? Our classmates contributed the following memories. Ron Walters (6th Co): I remember that day. I was on the USS Cromwell (DE- 1014) off the coast of Brazil when President Kennedy was assassinated. Mike Blackledge (4th Co): I had just returned from [grad school] math class at North Carolina State and as I came through the quadrangle, I heard the radios reporting from the open windows of the dormitories. I received a second shock when one of the undergrads called out, “Hey, I wonder what Jackie’s doing tonight?” Two different worlds. Bob Lagassa (2nd Co): I will never forget that day. I, along with a large group of '63 classmates, was in the middle of a typical Submarine School day of study and lectures at SubBase New London when we heard the fateful news. We were stunned, shocked, angry, tearful! Classes were suspended the remainder of the day and we went to our loved ones for consolation.
    [Show full text]
  • Subject Index (1961-1969)
    SUBJECT INDEX (1961-1969) A Geodetic Determinations, 4, 3, January­ February 1965, p. 2 Acoustic Studies Gravity-Gradient Attitude Stabilization, 3, 5, Solid Propellant Rockets, 1, 6, July-August May-June 1964, p. 12 1962, p. 8 Spin Control, 5, 1, September- October 1965, ACT p. 8 See A erial Car T ransit S ystem See also DODGE Satellite AE- B Injun Satellite See Satellite Dipole Moments Navy Navigational Satellite TRAAC Satellite Aerial Car Transit Sys tem (ACT) Artificial Hand Description, 8 , 4, March- April 1969, p. 2 See M yoelectrically-Controll ed Prosthesis Aiming Studies Probability Analysis, 5, 1, September- October Artificial Radiation Belts 1965, p. 17 Characteristics, 2, 2, November- December 1962, p. 3 Air Blast Effects Degradation Effects on Solar Power Systems, Scaling Equations for T ypical Targets, 7 , 1, 2, 2, November- December 1962, p. 8 September-October 1967, p. 2 See also Radiation Studies Albedo Neutron Flux of Earth Atmosphere Explorer- B Conference R eport, 3, 2, November- Decem­ See Satellite Dipole Moments ber 1963, p. 25 Attitude Control Neutron Detection, 3, 4, M arch- April 1964, Thrust Vector Control Studies, 2, 4, March­ p. 14 April 1963, p. 2 Alloys TRAAC Satellite, 1, 3, January-February See M etallic Alloys 1962, p. 2 Amorphous Semiconductors See also Gravity-Gradient Attitude Stabiliza­ Structure, Theory, and Properties, 7 , 3, Jan­ tion uary-February 1968, p. 2 Auroral Research Amplifiers Aurora Borealis, Study by Rockets, 5, 5, May­ See T unnel Dio de M icrowave Amplifiers June 1966, p. 5 AN / SPG-59 Radar Coaxial Cable Design, 2, 6, Auroral Oval, 6, 2, November- December July- August 1963, p.
    [Show full text]
  • The Daily Egyptian, June 11, 1963
    Southern Illinois University Carbondale OpenSIUC June 1963 Daily Egyptian 1963 6-11-1963 The aiD ly Egyptian, June 11, 1963 Daily Egyptian Staff Follow this and additional works at: http://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/de_June1963 Volume 44, Issue 117 Recommended Citation , . "The aiD ly Egyptian, June 11, 1963." (Jun 1963). This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Daily Egyptian 1963 at OpenSIUC. It has been accepted for inclusion in June 1963 by an authorized administrator of OpenSIUC. For more information, please contact [email protected]. • Fraremity ForDegr~ DAILY EGYPTIAN Chark!r At Stake Page.4..s SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY Page 6 . Volume« EXTRA Carbondale, Illinois Tuesday, June 11, 1963 EXTRA Number 117 Record 1,400 To Receive Degrees I i .. .If .If Governor OHo Kerner i 8 To Receive Will Be The Speaker The largest graduating degree from Brown University Ph.D Degrees class In SIU's history --1,400 and a law degree from North-' candidates--will receive de­ western U n tv e r sit yin The Graduate School has grees Tbursday at the 88th Evanston. announced tbe names of eight annual spring commencement. The entire commencement candidates for doctor of pbi­ Tbe program will begin at will be televised live over losphy degrees from SIU this 7:30 p. m. in MCAndrew WSlU-TV, Channel 8, begin­ June. Stadium. ning at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. Tbe 88th annual commence­ Governor Otto Kerner will Ricbard Uray, operations ment Will be beld June 13 be the speaker. Kerner, who manager for the televiSion at 7:30 p.m.
    [Show full text]