- CA ON00239 F1411-S2-f3-1
- Pièce
- 1930
Fait partie de Kingston Picture collection
Item is a photograph of an R100 Airship over Kingston,1930.
Fait partie de Kingston Picture collection
Item is a photograph of an R100 Airship over Kingston,1930.
Fait partie de Kingston Picture collection
Item is a photograph of R-100 Airship over Murney Tower in Macdonald Park in Kingston.
Fonds consists of correspondence relating mainly to Alfred Bader's work in chemistry and his life as a gallery owner, art dealer, and art critic; subject files; papers documenting his early life in England, Canada, and the United States; records pertaining to his numerous travels around the world; writings and various publications; drafts and mss. in connection one of his memoirs entitled "Chemistry and Art: More Adventures of a Chemist Collector"; photographs. It also includes his POW shirt from WWII.
Bader, Alfred
All of Dredge and Dry dock facility, Anglin's yard and Anglin's Bay.
Fait partie de George E.O. Lilley fonds
Fait partie de Queen's Picture collection
A.M.S. Court ca.Nov.'24 presiding at the trial of Arts '24. Short commentary au verso on the dress code for men at that time.
Alternative Fuels: The Biomass Option
Fait partie de Reginald Harold Clark fonds
Dr. R. Overend (Dept of EMR)
Alternative Sources: The Role of Coal and Solar Energy
Fait partie de Reginald Harold Clark fonds
H. A. Becker: Solar and coal energy may supplant, and eventually replace, energy from oil and gas. The prospects for this development, the technology required and the economic conditions are discussed.
[American Gathering of Sixteen People]
Fait partie de Vosper collection
Item is a photograph of nine women, four men, one youth and two children casually standing along the porch of a large house draped with American flags, with "S" on the end gable, Carleton Island, Cape Vincent, N.Y., U.S.A.
Fait partie de Reginald Harold Clark fonds
W.H.C. Simmonds
An Analysis of the Club of Rome Study
Fait partie de Reginald Harold Clark fonds
R.H. Clark: The content and conclusions of the two reports are contrasted and criticized. The factors affecting world stability are considered as an introduction to the succeeding lectures on the subject.