This underground SF newspaper printed 125,000 copies of an issue. Then it disappeared.
Ana Leorne
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The cover of issue seven of the San Francisco Oracle.Daniel D. Teoli Archival Collection / Archive.org
No other publication epitomized the alternative ideals of a generation quite like the San Francisco Oracle. Featuring everything from full page ads for the Grateful Dead to interviews with Timothy Leary, entrepreneurial hippies would receive ten free copies to sell on the streets of Haight-Ashbury, then use the earnings to re-up on more to sell. It epitomized the alternative ideals of a whole generation, and incarnated a new way of utopian living that for a millisecond actually seemed like an enduring possibility.
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ATLANTA, April 1, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Petrolern LLC has been awarded a $1.15 million grant from the United States Department of Energy (DOE) to further develop and commercialize its state-of-the-art artificial intelligence-based technology for estimation of earth stresses without requirement for costly well logging. Failure to construct reasonably accurate in-situ stress models costs the industry billions of dollars annually due to wellbores failure, poor performance of reservoirs, induced seismicity, cap-rock integrity issues, inability to monitor fluid movement as well as inappropriate well placement and completion design. A good understanding of the stress field can lead to substantial improvement in subsurface operations such as drilling, completions, fracturing, production, EOR and CO2 sequestration. However, the required wireline logs for stress estimations are very costly to acquire, typically only available in pay zones (not the overbu
Meet the newest grantees of the Bisciotti Foundation Translational Fund jhu.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from jhu.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
No one knows yet what the new government campus will look like. But the leaders who have final say on the design have made this promise: It will be out of this world.
No one knows yet what the new government campus will look like. But the leaders who have final say on the design have made this promise: It will be out of this world.