Resource Type

Victory in the making! : the equipment you and I make serves our armed forces-- on land--on sea--and in the air!

A military airplane flies toward a submarine at sea. An explosion is seen in the water next to the submarine. At the lower edge of the poster are three small images: a tank, a battleship, and an airplane.
Date: unknown
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library

Victory starts here!

A hand punches a time card in a dark blue time clock hanging on a dark blue wall.
Date: unknown
Creator: Bates, Richard E.
System: The UNT Digital Library

I want you for U.S. Army : nearest recruiting station.

Uncle Sam points at the viewer. Half-length portrait of Uncle Sam, pointing at the viewer as part of the United States government effort to recruit soldiers.
Date: unknown
Creator: Flagg, James Montgomery, 1877-1960
System: The UNT Digital Library

Wanted : red blooded men for immediate service over-seas.

All lettered poster. The title is white letters in red square. The extended text is in red and white on blue.
Date: unknown
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library

War supplies for Russia-- : a convoy of British and American lorries streams along the Persian route to Russia.

A long convoy of covered trucks travels on a winding road. In the sky overhead are military airplanes, and in the background are an encampment and a large mountain range.
Date: unknown
Creator: Blake.
System: The UNT Digital Library

Watch your talk for his sake : never mention arrivals, sailings, cargoes, or destinations to anybody.

The black and white photo is of a man standing in the crow's nest at the mast of a ship, holding binoculars and looking out to sea.
Date: unknown
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library

We pledged it, we'll beat it!

A large, white capital letter "B" on a dark blue background. Superimposed diagonally over the B is a morse code symbol in red.
Date: unknown
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library

What Britain puts in the common pool.

Color pictograph showing military supplies and facilities produced by Britain. In the center is an outline map of Britain, with 10 arrows around it, each pointing to a picture of a product or facility: tanks, boats, port and ship repair facilities and fueling, food, airfields, clothing and uniforms, shipping, hospitals and medical facilities, warships and aircraft.
Date: unknown
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library

[Wire to the Axis]

A serpent made of metal wears a helmet with a swastika on it. The serpent has long tail, sharp teeth, and a long snout. Smoke billows in background. Metal beams in a "V" formation appear to approach the serpent from the upper left area of the poster.
Date: unknown
Creator: Artzybasheff, Boris, 1899-1965.
System: The UNT Digital Library

With Douglas DC-3 luxury liners, Delta Air Lines provides the fastest transportation to and from the South.

Delta commercial airplane in flight.
Date: unknown
Creator: Delta Air Lines.
System: The UNT Digital Library

You deliver the ships--we'll deliver the goods! : stay on the job, don't slow up the ship!

A Navy commander in a jacket, scarf, and cap stands at a high point on a battleship holding binoculars. Turbulent waters surround the ship and other large ships are seen in the distance.
Date: unknown
Creator: Whitcomb, Jon.
System: The UNT Digital Library

Your own vegetables all the year round-- : if you dig for victory now.

Small color poster shows a wooden basket with a handle, filled with a variety of vegetables.
Date: unknown
Creator: Wilson, Norman.
System: The UNT Digital Library

Your production : beat your promise.

Illustration of a giant boot about to crush caricatures of Benito Mussolini, Adolf Hitler, and a caricatured Japanese soldier (probably representing Hideki Tojo).
Date: unknown
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library

Recycling and the Consumer

This document contains consumer information regarding recycling in the United States.
Date: 1979
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library

Binary Phase Diagrams of Transition Elements

Chart issued by the U.S. National Bureau of Standards illustrating the systematic relationships between phase diagrams of transition elements. This chart includes color illustrations.
Date: May 1980
Creator: Waterstrat, Richard M.
System: The UNT Digital Library

The Modernized Metric System: the International System of Units-SI

Revised wall chart of the seven base units of the modernized metric system, including length, mass, time, electric current, temperature, amount of substance, luminous intensity, and plane angle.
Date: August 1981
Creator: United States. National Bureau of Standards.
System: The UNT Digital Library

Symbols of Service: Wear Them Proudly & Properly!

Poster which "represents in correct order of precedence, ribbons and devices most likely to be worn by members of today's Air Force" (top of poster), with an image and label for each.
Date: September 1985
Creator: United States. Department of the Air Force.
System: The UNT Digital Library

A Dad...Teaches, Supports, Plays, Listens, Loves

Bilingual poster depicting a father hugging a child and reading "A Dad...Teaches, Supports, Plays, Listens, Loves," and "Thank you to the unsung heroes of children's lives...loving supportive parents." One side is in English and the other side is in Spanish.
Date: [2002..2015]
Creator: Texas. Department of Health.
System: The Portal to Texas History

Ecoregions of Texas [Poster]

Poster containing a map color-coded to "denote areas of general similarity in ecosystems and in the type, quality and quantity of environmental resources" with a key to regions and sub-regions in the lower-left corner along with a similar inset for the conterminous United States (scale 1:2,500,000). The poster also includes a list of the regions in Texas with descriptions and illustrative photographs to the right of the map, which is continued on the back. The back of the poster also includes a smaller version of the state map in the lower-left corner along with a list of common and scientific names of native plants and and wildlife, as well as a source list.
Date: 2004
Creator: Griffith, Glenn E.; Bryce, Sandra A.; Omernik, James M.; Comstock, Jeffrey A.; Rogers, Anne C.; Harrison, Bill et al.
System: The Portal to Texas History

Anisotropic Flow in the Forward Directions

The STAR Forward TPCs (FTPCs) extend the STAR acceptance for charged particles into the region 2.5 < |eta| < 4.0. We see the first signal of directed flow (v{sub 1}) at RHIC energies. While v{sub 1} is consistent with zero in the central rapidity region it rises up to 2 percent at pseudorapidities of +-4. With this signal we can verify that elliptic flow (v{sub 2}) is in-plane. The measurement of v{sub 2} in the FTPCs confirms the falloff by a factor of about 2 compared to mid-rapidity previously seen by PHOBOS [1]. In addition we look for higher harmonics (v{sub n}, n>2) where in the case of v{sub 4} a signal is seen in the STAR TPC. With the available statistics for the FTPCs we give an upper limit for these harmonics, since the results agree with zero within the errors. However, the falloff of v{sub 4} from mid-rapidity to forward-rapidities appears to be faster than for v{sub 2}.[1] B.B. Back. Phys. Rev. Lett. 89, 222301 (2002)
Date: March 9, 2004
Creator: Oldenburg, Markus D. & Putschke, Jorn
System: The UNT Digital Library

Testing the Concept of Drift Shadow Using X-Ray Absorption Imaging

None
Date: November 22, 2005
Creator: Forsberg, A. A.; Altman, S. J.; Peplinski, W. J. & Ho, C. K.
System: The UNT Digital Library

Center for Environmental Kinetics Analysis

Over the past two decades, numerous studies have produced high quality information on the rates at which bacteria can reduce metal oxides. The prototypical study--such as the one depicted to the right--focuses on only a few of the myriad variables affecting the rate. This approach allows for effective dissection of the mechanisms underlying DMRB activity, but, it also produces disjoint information that must be synthesized if we hope to predict the behavior of bacteria at the systems level.
Date: April 5, 2006
Creator: Bandstra, Joel Z.; Burgos, William D. & Peyton, Brent M.
System: The UNT Digital Library

Kinetics of U(VI) reduction control kinetics of U(IV) reoxidation

For the in situ reductive immobilization of U to be an acceptable strategy for the removal of that element from groundwater, the long-term stability of U(IV) must be determined. Rates of biotransformation of Fe species influence the mineralogy of the resulting products (Fredrickson et al., 2003; Senko et al., 2005), and we hypothesize that the rate of U(VI) reduction influences the mineralogy of resultant U(IV) precipitates. We hypothesize that slower rates of U(VI) reduction will yield U(IV) phases that are more resistant to reoxidation, and will therefore be more stable upon cessation of electron donor addition. U(IV) phases formed by relatively slow reduction may be more crystalline or larger in comparison to their relatively rapidly-formed counterparts (Figure 1), thus limiting the reactivity of slowly-formed U(IV) phases toward various oxidants. The physical location of U(IV) precipitates relative to bacterial cells may also limit the reactivity of biogenic U(IV) phases. In this situation, we expect that precipitation of U(IV) within the bacterial cell may protect U(IV) from reoxidation by limiting physical contact between U(IV) and oxidants (Figure 1). We assessed the effect of U(VI) reduction rate on the subsequent reoxidation of biogenic U(IV) and are currently conducting column scale studies to determine …
Date: April 5, 2006
Creator: Senko, J.M.; Minyard, M.L.; Dempsey, B.A.; Roden, E.E.; Yeh, G.-T. & Burgos, W.D.
System: The UNT Digital Library

Photon and neutron productions studies in the MIPP experiment

None
Date: May 1, 2006
Creator: Nigmanov, Turgun
System: The UNT Digital Library