Measurement of {alpha}{sub s} from hadronic event observables at the Z{sup 0} resonance (open access)

Measurement of {alpha}{sub s} from hadronic event observables at the Z{sup 0} resonance

The authors have measured the strong coupling {alpha}{sub s} using hadronic decays of Z{sup 0} bosons collected by the SLD experiment at SLAC. The data were compared with QCD predictions both at fixed order, O({alpha}{sub s}{sup 2}), and including resummed analytic formulae based on the leading and next-to-leading logarithm approximation. The study includes event shapes, jet rates, and particle correlations. They checked the consistency between {alpha}{sub s} extracted from these different measures and found the dominant uncertainty on {alpha}{sub s} to be from uncalculated higher order contributions.
Date: August 1, 1994
Creator: Ohnishi, Yukiyoshi
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A summary of the report on prospects for pyrolysis technologies in managing municipal, industrial, and Department of Energy cleanup wastes (open access)

A summary of the report on prospects for pyrolysis technologies in managing municipal, industrial, and Department of Energy cleanup wastes

Pyrolysis converts portions of municipal solid wastes, hazardous wastes and special wastes such as tires, medical wastes and even old landfills into solid carbon and a liquid or gaseous hydrocarbon stream. In the past twenty years, advances in the engineering of pyrolysis systems and in sorting and feeding technologies for solid waste industries have ensured consistent feedstocks and system performance. Some vendors now offer complete pyrolysis systems with performance warranties. This report analyzes the potential applications of pyrolysis in the Long Island region and evaluates the four most promising pyrolytic systems for their readiness, applicability to regional waste management needs and conformity with DOE environmental restoration and waste management requirements. This summary characterizes the engineering performance, environmental effects, costs, product applications and markets for these pyrolysis systems.
Date: August 1, 1994
Creator: Reaven, S. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Models for recurrent gas release event behavior in hazardous waste tanks (open access)

Models for recurrent gas release event behavior in hazardous waste tanks

Certain radioactive waste storage tanks at the United States Department of Energy Hanford facilities continuously generate gases as a result of radiolysis and chemical reactions. The congealed sludge in these tanks traps the gases and causes the level of the waste within the tanks to rise. The waste level continues to rise until the sludge becomes buoyant and ``rolls over``, changing places with heavier fluid on top. During a rollover, the trapped gases are released, resulting, in a sudden drop in the waste level. This is known as a gas release event (GRE). After a GRE, the wastes leading to another GRE. We present nonlinear time waste re-congeals and gas again accumulates leading to another GRE. We present nonlinear time series models that produce simulated sample paths that closely resemble the temporal history of waste levels in these tanks. The models also imitate the random GRE, behavior observed in the temporal waste level history of a storage tank. We are interested in using the structure of these models to understand the probabilistic behavior of the random variable ``time between consecutive GRE`s``. Understanding the stochastic nature of this random variable is important because the hydrogen and nitrous oxide gases released from …
Date: August 1, 1994
Creator: Anderson, D. N. & Arnold, B. C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Basic TRUEX process for Rocky Flats Plant (open access)

Basic TRUEX process for Rocky Flats Plant

The Generic TRUEX Model was used to develop a TRUEX process flowsheet for recovering the transuranics (Pu, Am) from a nitrate waste stream at Rocky Flats Plant. The process was designed so that it is relatively insensitive to changes in process feed concentrations and flow rates. Related issues are considered, including solvent losses, feed analysis requirements, safety, and interaction with an evaporator system for nitric acid recycle.
Date: August 1, 1994
Creator: Leonard, R. A.; Chamberlain, D. B.; Dow, J. A.; Farley, S. E.; Nunez, L.; Regalbuto, M. C. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Adventures in the evolution of a high-bandwidth network for central servers (open access)

Adventures in the evolution of a high-bandwidth network for central servers

In a small network, clients and servers may all be connected to a single Ethernet without significant performance concerns. As the number of clients on a network grows, the necessity of splitting the network into multiple sub-networks, each with a manageable number of clients, becomes clear. Less obvious is what to do with the servers. Group file servers on subnets and multihomed servers offer only partial solutions -- many other types of servers do not lend themselves to a decentralized model, and tend to collect on another, well-connected but overloaded Ethernet. The higher speed of FDDI seems to offer an easy solution, but in practice both expense and interoperability problems render FDDI a poor choice. Ethernet switches appear to permit cheaper and more reliable networking to the servers while providing an aggregate network bandwidth greater than a simple Ethernet. This paper studies the evolution of the server networks at SLAC. Difficulties encountered in the deployment of FDDI are described, as are the tools and techniques used to characterize the traffic patterns on the server network. Performance of Ethernet, FDDI, and switched Ethernet networks is analyzed, as are reliability and maintainability issues for these alternatives. The motivations for re-designing the SLAC …
Date: August 1, 1994
Creator: Swartz, K. L.; Cottrell, L. & Dart, M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pilot-scale treatability test plan for the 100-HR-3 operable unit (open access)

Pilot-scale treatability test plan for the 100-HR-3 operable unit

This document presents the treatability test plan for pilot-scale pump-and-treat testing at the 100-HR-3 Operable Unit. The test will be conducted in fulfillment of interim Milestone M-15-06E to begin pilot-scale pump-and-treat operations by August 1994. The scope of the test was determined based on the results of lab/bench-scale tests (WHC 1993a) conducted in fulfillment of Milestone M-15-06B. These milestones were established per agreement between the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), the Washington State Department of Ecology and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and documented on Hanford Federal of Ecology Facility Agreement and Consent Order Change Control Form M-15-93-02. This test plan discusses a pilot-scale pump-and-treat test for the chromium plume associated with the D Reactor portion of the 100-HR-3 Operable Unit. Data will be collected during the pilot test to assess the effectiveness, operating parameters, and resource needs of the ion exchange (IX) pump-and-treat system. The test will provide information to assess the ability to remove contaminants by extracting groundwater from wells and treating extracted groundwater using IX. Bench-scale tests were conducted previously in which chromium VI was identified as the primary contaminant of concern in the 100-D reactor plume. The DOWEX 21K{trademark} resin was recommended for pilot-scale testing …
Date: August 1, 1994
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
High gradient tests of SLAC Linear Collider Accelerator Structures (open access)

High gradient tests of SLAC Linear Collider Accelerator Structures

This paper describes the current SLAC R&D program to develop room temperature accelerator structures for the Next Linear Collider (NLC). The structures are designed to operate at 11.4 GHz at an accelerating gradient in the range of 50 to 100 MV/m. In the past year a 26 cm constant-impedance traveling-wave section, a 75 cm constant-impedance traveling-wave section, and a 1.8 m traveling-wave section with detuned deflecting modes have been high-power tested. The paper presents a brief description of the RF test setup, the design and manufacturing details of the structures, and a discussion of test results including field emission, RF processing, dark current spectrum and RF breakdown.
Date: August 1, 1994
Creator: Wang, J. W.; Deruyter, H.; Eichner, J.; Fant, K. H.; Hoag, H. A.; Koontz, R. F. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Studies of strong electroweak symmetry breaking at future e{sup +}e{sup {minus}} linear colliders (open access)

Studies of strong electroweak symmetry breaking at future e{sup +}e{sup {minus}} linear colliders

Methods of studying strong electroweak symmetry breaking at future e{sup +}e{sup {minus}} linear colliders are reviewed. Specifically, we review precision measurements of triple gauge boson vertex parameters and the rescattering of longitudinal W bosons in the process e{sup +}e{sup {minus}} {yields} W{sup +}W{sup {minus}}. Quantitative estimates of the sensitivity of each technique to strong electroweak symmetry breaking are included.
Date: August 1994
Creator: Barklow, Timothy L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A finite element analysis of room temperature silicon crystals for the Advanced Photon Source bending-magnet and insertion-device beams (open access)

A finite element analysis of room temperature silicon crystals for the Advanced Photon Source bending-magnet and insertion-device beams

The third generation of synchrotron radiation sources, such as the Advanced Photon Source (APS), will provide users with a high brilliance x-ray beam with high power and power densities. In many cases, the first optical component to intercept the x-ray beam is a silicon-crystal monochromator. Due to extreme heat loading, the photon throughput and brilliance will be severely degraded if the monochromator is not properly designed (or cooled). This document describes a series of finite element analyses performed on room temperature silicon for the three standard APS sources, namely, the bending magnet, Wiggler A, and Undulator A. The modeling is performed with the silicon cooled directly with water or liquid gallium through rectangular channels. The temperature distributions and thermally induced deformations are presented.
Date: August 1, 1994
Creator: Assoufid, L.; Lee, W. K. & Mills, D. M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The analysis and specification of large high-pressure, high-temperature valves for combustion turbine protection in second-generation PFB power plants: Topical report (open access)

The analysis and specification of large high-pressure, high-temperature valves for combustion turbine protection in second-generation PFB power plants: Topical report

The purpose of this study was to provide a specification for the high-pressure/high-temperature valves for turbine overspeed protection in a commercial-scale second-generation pressurized fluidized bed combustion (PFBC) power plant. In the event of a loss of external (generator) load, the gas turbine rapidly accelerates from its normal operating speed. Protection from excessive overspeed can be maintained by actuation of fuel isolation and air bypass valves. A design specification for these valves was developed by analyses of the turbine/compressor interaction during a loss of load and analyses of pressure and flow transients during operation of the overspeed protection valves. The basis for these analyses was the Phase 1 plant conceptual design prepared in 1987.
Date: August 1, 1994
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A chemical model for the major electrolyte components of the Hanford waste tanks. The binary electrolytes in the system: Na-NO{sub 3}-NO{sub 2}-SO{sub 4}-CO{sub 3}-F-PO{sub 4}-OH-AI(OH){sub 4}-H{sub 2}O (open access)

A chemical model for the major electrolyte components of the Hanford waste tanks. The binary electrolytes in the system: Na-NO{sub 3}-NO{sub 2}-SO{sub 4}-CO{sub 3}-F-PO{sub 4}-OH-AI(OH){sub 4}-H{sub 2}O

An aqueous thermodynamic model is developed, based on the equations of Pitzer, which accurately model the major binary electrolytes in the Na-NO{sub 3}-NO{sub 2}-SO{sub 4}-CO{sub 3}-F-PO{sub 4}-OH-Al(OH){sub 4}-H{sub 2}O chemical system. This model was developed both from existing data in the literature, and from new osmotic and solubility measurements made as part of this study. Some of the new experimental data developed as part of this study include measurements of osmotic coefficients for NaNO{sub 3}, NaNO{sub 2}, and Na{sub 3}PO{sub 4} at both 50 and 100{degrees}C as well as selected measurements of NaF at 100{degrees}C. In addition, the solubility of gibbsite was measured in mixed NaOH-NaNO{sub 3} solutions to determine the reliability of existing thermodynamic models of aluminum hydroxide solubility when applied to concentrated nitrate. In general the final model proposed here is valid from dilute solution to salt saturation over the temperature range 25-100{degrees}C. The accuracy of the model is tested by comparisons of the model predictions with experimental data in selected common-ion ternary systems. When necessary a few commonion ternary ion interaction parameters for the Pitzer model were developed.
Date: August 1, 1994
Creator: Felmy, A. R.; Rustad, J. R.; Mason, M. J. & Bretonne, R. de la
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Multiple encapsulation of LANL waste using polymers. Final report (open access)

Multiple encapsulation of LANL waste using polymers. Final report

Polymer encapsulation of lead shielding/blasting grit (surrogate) mixed waste was optimized at bench scale using melamine formaldehyde, polyurethane, and butadiene thermosetting polymers. Three pellet-based intermediate waste forms, and a final waste form, were prepared, each providing an additional level of integrity. Encapsulated waste integrity was measured by chemical and physical techniques. Compliance was established using the Toxicity Characteristic Leaching Procedure. Equipment appropriate to pilot-scale demonstration of program techniques was investigated. A preliminary equipment list and layout, and process block flow diagram were prepared.
Date: August 12, 1994
Creator: Schwartz, R. L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Identification of radionuclides of concern in Hanford Site environmental cleanup (open access)

Identification of radionuclides of concern in Hanford Site environmental cleanup

The purpose of this document is to consider which radionuclides should be included in conducting environmental surveys relative to site remediation at Hanford. During the operation of the Hanford site, the fission product radionuclides and a large number of activation products including the transuranic radionuclides were formed. The reactor operations and subsequent chemical processing and metallurgical operations resulted in the environmental release of gaseous and liquid effluents containing some radionuclides; however, the majority of the radionuclides were stored in waste tanks or disposed to trenches and cribs. Since some contamination of both soils and subsurface waters occurred, one must decide which radionuclides still remain in sufficient amounts to be of concern at the time when site remediation is to be complete. Many of the radionuclides which have constituted the principal hazard during site operation have half-lives on the order of a year or less; therefore, they will have decayed to insignificant amounts by the year 2030, a possible date for completion of the remediation process.
Date: August 1, 1994
Creator: Perkins, R. W. & Jenquin, U. P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Faster magnet sorting with a threshold acceptance algorithm (open access)

Faster magnet sorting with a threshold acceptance algorithm

The authors introduce here a new technique for sorting magnets to minimize the field errors in permanent magnet insertion devices. Simulated annealing has been used in this role, but they find the technique of threshold acceptance produces results of equal quality in less computer time. Threshold accepting would be of special value in designing very long insertion devices, such as long FEL`s. Their application of threshold acceptance to magnet sorting showed that it converged to equivalently low values of the cost function, but that it converged significantly faster. They present typical cases showing time to convergence for various error tolerances, magnet numbers, and temperature schedules.
Date: August 1, 1994
Creator: Lidia, S. & Carr, R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A study of K{sub s} {Lambda} and {bar {Lambda}} production in hadronic Z{sup 0} decays (open access)

A study of K{sub s} {Lambda} and {bar {Lambda}} production in hadronic Z{sup 0} decays

We present a preliminary measurement of the inclusive production rates of K{sub s}, A and X hadrons produced in e{sup +}e{sup {minus}} annihilation at the Z{sup 0} pole. The analysis is based upon approximately 50K Z{sup 0} decays collected in the SLD experiment at SLAC in 1993. The observed rates of (K{sub s}) = 1.02 {plus_minus} 0.02 {plus_minus} 0.09 and ({Lambda}) + ({bar {Lambda}}) = 0.38 {plus_minus} 0.01 {plus_minus} 0.04 are consistent with previous measurements. Our differential cross section peak-position results are shown to be consistent with QCD predictions based on the modified leading logarithm approximation and local parton-hadron duality.
Date: August 1, 1994
Creator: Baird, K. G.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Phase II Water Rental Pilot Project: Snake River Resident Fish and Wildlife Resources and Management Recommendations. (open access)

Phase II Water Rental Pilot Project: Snake River Resident Fish and Wildlife Resources and Management Recommendations.

The Idaho Water Rental Pilot Project was implemented in 1991 as part of the Non-Treaty Storage Fish and Wildlife Agreement between Bonneville Power Administration and the Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Authority. The goal of the project is to quantify resident fish and wildlife impacts resulting from salmon flow augmentation releases made from the upper Snake River Basin. Phase I summarized existing resource information and provided management recommendations to protect and enhance resident fish and wildlife habitat resulting from storage releases for the I improvement of an adromous fish migration. Phase II includes the following: (1) a summary of recent biological, legal, and political developments within the basin as they relate to water management issues, (2) a biological appraisal of the Snake River between American Falls Reservoir and the city of Blackfoot to examine the effects of flow fluctuation on fish and wildlife habitat, and (3) a preliminary accounting of 1993--1994 flow augmentation releases out of the upper Snake, Boise, and Payette river systems. Phase III will include the development of a model in which annual flow requests and resident fish and wildlife suitability information are interfaced with habitat time series analysis to provide an estimate of resident fish and …
Date: August 1, 1994
Creator: Stovall, Stacey H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
SY101 in situ viscometer instrument system design description (open access)

SY101 in situ viscometer instrument system design description

This documents the design and description of the in situ viscometer, developed for the hydrogen mitigation project.
Date: August 18, 1994
Creator: Pearce, K. L.; Stokes, T. I. & Vagelatos, N.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pilot-scale treatability test plan for the 200-BP-5 operable unit (open access)

Pilot-scale treatability test plan for the 200-BP-5 operable unit

This document presents the treatability test plan for pilot-scale pump and treat testing at the 200-BP-5 Operable Unit. This treatability test plan has been prepared in response to an agreement between the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and the State of Washington Department of Ecology (Ecology), as documented in Hanford Federal Facility Agreement and Consent Order (Tri-Party Agreement, Ecology et al. 1989a) Change Control Form M-13-93-03 (Ecology et al. 1994) and a recent 200 NPL Agreement Change Control Form (Appendix A). The agreement also requires that, following completion of the activities described in this test plan, a 200-BP-5 Operable Unit Interim Remedial Measure (IRM) Proposed Plan be developed for use in preparing an Interim Action Record of Decision (ROD). The IRM Proposed Plan will be supported by the results of this treatability test plan, as well as by other 200-BP-5 Operable Unit activities (e.g., development of a qualitative risk assessment). Once issued, the Interim Action ROD will specify the interim action(s) for groundwater contamination at the 200-BP-5 Operable Unit. The treatability test approach is to conduct a pilot-scale pump and treat test for each of the two contaminant plumes associated with the 200-BP-5 Operable …
Date: August 1, 1994
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Acceptance test procedure for C-018H, 242-A evaporator/PUREX plant process condensate treatment facility (open access)

Acceptance test procedure for C-018H, 242-A evaporator/PUREX plant process condensate treatment facility

This Acceptance Test Procedure (ATP) has been prepared to demonstrate that the Electrical/Instrumentation system function as required for this facility. Each company or organization participating in this ATP will designate personnel to assume the responsibilities and duties as defined herein for their respective roles.
Date: August 16, 1994
Creator: Parrish, D. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Melter feed tank operating map from the FA-10.02 test data (open access)

Melter feed tank operating map from the FA-10.02 test data

The operability of the Melter Feed Tank (MFT) feed loops has been tested during the DWPF-FA-10.02 test. The ability to feed the melter at three distinct melter feed rates (0.20, 0.45, and 0.90 gpm), two distinct agitator speeds (65 and 130 rpm), varying liquid levels, and varying slurry rheologies was tested. This report correlates the operability of the feed loops with the above mentioned variables. The data are presented in the form of operating maps, Figs. 1 through 4, which are plots of the liquid level versus the wt% total solids (and yield stress) for two agitator speeds. The maps are divided into regions of acceptable feed loop operation and unacceptable feed loop operation. This report does not consider how closely the compositions of the MFT, the melter feed lines, and the Hydragard samples agree. The significant observations in this report are as follows: Both feed loops satisfy the operability criteria down to a liquid level below the upper impeller blade at low speed agitation (65 rpm). Under high speed agitation (130 rpm), feed loop No. 2 operates much more poorly than feed loop No. 1. The uncertainty associated with the wt% total solids of a slurry sample is larger …
Date: August 1, 1994
Creator: Spatz, T. L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A solubility model for amorphous silica in concentrated electrolytes (open access)

A solubility model for amorphous silica in concentrated electrolytes

Silica is one of the major constituents of the earth`s crust and is ubiquitously present in most natural materials. The solubility of silica and other silica-containing compounds is, therefore, of primary concern in geochemistry and in chemical processing applications where silica scale formation, resulting from changes in temperature and electrolyte composition, can cause problems in process design and operation. This paper describes the development of an aqueous thermodynamic model for accurately predicting the solubility of amorphous silica and other silica-containing compounds in the system Na{sup +}-H{sup +}-Mg{sup 2+}-NO{sub 3}{sup {minus}}-SO{sub 4}{sup 2{minus}}-Cl{sup {minus}}-H{sub 2}O to high concentration and across the temperature range 25--100 C. This model, which utilizes the aqueous thermodynamic model of Pitzer, includes only one dissolved silica species, H{sub 4}SiO{sub 4}(aq), and is valid in neutral to very acidic solutions. The model is parameterized from the extensive set of solubility data in the literature as well as from new experimental data on amorphous silica solubility in HNO{sub 3} and HCl developed as part of this study. The accuracy of the model is tested on solutions more complex than those used in model parameterization.
Date: August 1, 1994
Creator: Felmy, A. R.; Schroeder, C. C. & Mason, M. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The discovery of the tau lepton: Part 1, The early history through 1975; Part 2, Confirmation of the discovery and measurement of major properties, 1976--1982 (open access)

The discovery of the tau lepton: Part 1, The early history through 1975; Part 2, Confirmation of the discovery and measurement of major properties, 1976--1982

Several previous papers have given the history of the discovery of the {tau} lepton at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC). These papers emphasized (a) the experiments which led to our 1975 publication of the first evidence for the existence of the {tau}, (b) the subsequent experiments which confirmed the existence of the r, and (c) the experiments which elucidated the major properties of the {tau}. That history will be summarized in Part 2 of this talk. In this Part 1, I describe the earlier thoughts and work of myself and my colleagues at SLAC in the 1960`s and early 1970`s which led to the discovery. I also describe the theoretical and experimental events in particle physics in the 1960`s in which our work was immersed. I will also try to describe for the younger generations of particle physicists, the atmosphere in the 1960`s. That was before the elucidation of the quark model of hadrons, before the development of the concept of particle generations The experimental paths to program we hot as clear as they are today and we had to cast a wide experimental net.
Date: August 1, 1994
Creator: Perl, M. L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Gyrokinetic and global fluid simulations of tokamak microturbulence and transport (open access)

Gyrokinetic and global fluid simulations of tokamak microturbulence and transport

Results are presented from the first systematic nonlinear kinetic simulation study of the swings and parameter dependences of toroidal ion-temperature-gradient (ITG) turbulence and transport, and from the first such study that includes sheared toroidal flows. Key results include the observation of clear gyroBohm scaling of the turbulent transport and of a surprisingly weak dependence of the transport on toroidal flow shear. Based on the simulation results, a parameterization of the transport is given that includes the dependence on all of the relevant physical parameters. The transition from local to nonlocal transport as a function of the profile scale length has been investigated using two-dimensional global fluid simulations of dissipative drift-wave turbulence. Local gyroBohm scaling is observed, except at very short profile scale lengths.
Date: August 30, 1994
Creator: Dimits, A. M.; Byers, J. A.; Williams, T. J.; Cohen, B. I.; Xu, W. Q.; Cohen, R. H. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A study of catalysts and mechanisms in synthesis reactions. Progress report, January 1994--December 1994 (open access)

A study of catalysts and mechanisms in synthesis reactions. Progress report, January 1994--December 1994

Surface-generated gas-phase radicals, which are the subject of this study, may function as important intermediates in several important partial and complete oxidation reactions. Two examples are the role of CH{sub 3} radicals in the oxidative coupling of CH{sub 4} and the role of OH radicals in the catalytic combustion of CH{sub 4}. Although the gas phase chemistry of simple hydrocarbon radicals is reasonably well understood, very little is known about the reactions that occur between these radicals and metal oxide surfaces. Moreover, the formation of hydroxyl radicals over oxides is a largely unexplored area of catalysis. Recent work in the laboratory has been devoted to the reactions of methyl radicals with reactive metal oxides, and the production of hydroxyl radicals under rate limiting conditions. This paper describes reactions of CH{sub 3} radicals with metal oxides; catalytic conversion of CH{sub 3} radicals to CH{sub 3}OH and HCHO; identification of surface-generated benzyl radicals; and formation of OH radicals under rate limiting conditions.
Date: August 1994
Creator: Lunsford, J. H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library