13 results for stemmed:albert

TES1 Session of January 4, 1964 cobbler Sarah Albert village bullets

(There was a boy in the shop too. He wasn’t their son, just an apprentice to the cobbler. He slept in the kitchen. His name was Albert, Albert Lang. He was 11, I think. The cobbler and his wife didn’t have any children. She had trouble with her glasses. This was strange, because most people didn’t have them. I don’t know where she got them, in another town, but they weren’t very good. Handmade, they had to grind the glass and stuff. They were like magnifying glasses, in a frame on her nose.

(The cobbler was comparatively well off, though not wealthy. He was 53 years old when he died. The boy Albert was too young to take his place when he died, so the village didn’t have a cobbler for a couple of years. The boy was a fisherman for a while. Then another cobbler came and Albert helped him in the shop.

(The people didn’t go to London often. Some never went at all. The first Sarah who died at 17 never went. Albert’s Sarah went. King Edward was in London then. Albert and Sarah did well and could afford to go. When Edward was being crowned they went to London. They didn’t see the coronation, they were just common people but they wanted to be there. Everybody was excited.

(In London, I don’t know why, Albert’s wife liked to go to the bakery shops. They had fancier breads there than they did in the village. I’ll figure out why I want to call Albert Ralph. The bakery always smelled good. Sarah liked to eat a lot.

TES8 Session 415 June 10, 1968 pilot gulf Blevins bailed fuel

(On June 5, 1968 John Pitre telephoned Jane from Franklin, LA, seeking answers to three questions: the reasons for John’s uneasiness concerning his wife Peg last week; the reasons for the loss of leg feeling John experiences in hot weather; and data on a pilot, Albert Blevins, who vanished on a flight in a small plane near the Gulf Coast about four years ago, presumably near Franklin.

[...] Seth gave data on Albert Blevins; perhaps John can check some of it. [...]

SDPC Part One: Chapter 3 cobbler Sarah village wires bullets

[...] The boy, Albert, was too young to take over the shop, and for a couple of years the village had no cobbler, and the boy was a fisherman. Then another cobbler came and Albert helped out in the shop again … He finally married. [...]

[...] Albert’s Sarah went. [...] Albert and Sarah did well and could afford to go. [...]

[...] His name was Albert Lang. [...]

Albert liked to hunt, but he couldn’t get much because the ground was too rocky … deer and rabbits, a special kind of rabbit, no big tails, gray hares of some kind. [...]

TPS4 Jane’s Notes Tuesday, April 18, 1978 Eddie plots switch blemished didnt

(Eddie Albert calls again today telling me he just finished Speaks, asking about world problems, starvation, good and evil, etc. [...]

NoME Part Two: Chapter 4: Session 823, February 27, 1978 principle complementarity uncertainty quantum Heisenberg

[...] Albert Einstein, whose own work was rooted in strict causality, found a notion like the free will of an electron untenable, even though much earlier (in 1905) he had laid the foundation for quantum mechanics in his special theory of relativity.

UR1 Section 3: Session 701 June 3, 1974 Einstein physicist diagrams theories destroying

[...] by Robert W. Lawson, © 1961 by the Estate of Albert Einstein, Crown Publishers, Inc., New York, N.Y.) She soon laid it aside, telling me that she couldn’t understand much of it except by making a strong effort of will. [...]

7. Evidently Albert Einstein wasn’t a great mathematician. [...]

NoME Part Two: Chapter 3: Session 822, February 22, 1978 ether ego medium Framework Plato

Late in the last century some very ingenious experiments failed to scientifically prove the existence of the ether, however, and the theory was finally dispensed with for good following Albert Einstein’s publication of his special theory of relativity in 1905.

TES8 Session 418 June 24, 1968 sounds tumult undirected chaotic Grossman

[...] The name Albert comes to mind. [...]

DEaVF1 Chapter 3: Session 889, December 17, 1979 units waves cu particles operate

2. According to Albert Einstein, no material particle in our universe can be accelerated from rest to quite the speed of light, which is about 186,000 miles per second in a vacuum. [...]

UR2 Section 6: Session 730 January 15, 1975 fetus dolphins soul selfhood astrology

6. I’d say that in a context like the one he uses here, Seth automatically refers to Albert Einstein’s special and general theories of relativity. [...]

NoME Part One: Chapter 1: Session 803, May 2, 1977 chair sculptor die disasters patterns

[...] Albert Einstein, in his special theory of relativity, demonstrated that nothing else in the universe can quite reach — let alone surpass — the speed of light. [...]

TES7 Session 298 October 31, 1966 teaching Piccadilly teacher object school

(Two male teachers and a female were involved with Jane while she sought work as a teacher—Mr. Don Hennigen and Mr. Albert Ryerson. [...]

UR2 Appendix 19: (For Session 712) hole sound massive particles atom

In his special theory of relativity, however, Albert Einstein showed that mass is a highly concentrated form of energy. [...]