Papers of Stephen Timoshenko, 1928-1957.

ArchivalResource

Papers of Stephen Timoshenko, 1928-1957.

Mss. and printed copies of Timoshenko's writings, lecture notes, monographs, books, and other papers. Includes ms. of his "Theory of Elastic Stability" (1936), selected scientific papers of Stephen P. Timoshenko with a biographical sketch, and a list of early Russian papers compiled by Donovan Harold Young (b. 1904) which formed the preface and biographical sketch section of the "Collected Papers of Timoshenko" (1953).

400 items.4 containers.

Information

SNAC Resource ID: 8250026

Library of Congress

Related Entities

There are 5 Entities related to this resource.

Young, D.H. (Donovan Harold), 1904-

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University of Michigan.

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Outside of museum holdings, no comprehensive survey and inventory of campus artwork had been attempted since 1937. With support from the Michigan Commission on Art in Public Places, 1,076 items were inventoried during 1988-1990. Additional inventory work was undertaken in 1997-1998 for risk management purposed, but generated little new information. From the description of Inventory of University of Michigan-owned art, 1988-1990, 1997-1998. (University of Michigan). WorldCat record id...

Stanford university

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Stanford entered into a research project with the National Iranian Radio and Television agency in 1974 to study and recommend a satellite-based communication system for Iran and how to utilize it for Iran's educational radio and television. From the description of Stanford NIRT project records, 1974-1978. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 122510722 The Leland Stanford Junior University was established in 1885 in memory of Leland Stanford Jr., the only child of Senator and Mrs. ...

Timoshenko, Stephen P.

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Timoshenko, Stephen, 1878-1972

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Stephen Prokofievitch Timoshenko, a world-renowned authority on theoretical and applied mechanics, was educated at the Munich Polytechnic Institute and at the University of Gottingen. He taught at the Polytechnic Institute of Kiev (1907-11) and the Polytechnic Institute of St. Petersburg (1912-17), before fleeing Russia for Yugoslavia. He taught at the University of Zagreb from 1920 to 1922, and then moved to the United States. He was a research engineer at Westinghouse and taught at the Univers...