Prepared by Kyler Andrew Culver, October 29, 2003
1 flat oversize box, .5 cubic feet, 11th floor
Biographical Note
Richard Morris (1939- ) began to work as a coordinator for the Committee
of Small Magazine Editors and Publishers (COSMEP) in 1968 and eventually
became its executive director, but his main career in life was as an author
of works that popularized and clarified major concepts in science and
philosophy. "A scientist who abandoned his discipline in the 1970s
to write poetry, Morris later returned to science to write books on physics
and cosmology, which is concerned with the birth, development and possible
death of the universe."* His books are praised for their layperson's
approach and enjoyable discussions of complex issues.
* "Richard Ward Morris" in Dictionary of
Literary Biography: Contemporary Authors at http://www.galenet.com
as accessed October 2003
Scope and Content
The collection consists of Morris' Master's thesis, other scientific
writings and notes, a group of statistics and computations centered on
one experiment, and various unrelated materials such as typing practice
pages, class registers and correspondence.
Box1
Folder -- Contents
Master's thesis in physics, The Diffraction of Polarized Light
by a Conducting Straight Edge in the Geometrical Shadow (University
of New Mexico, 1964)
Carbon copy typescript of untitled paper ("In this paper we will
discuss the application of finite temperature perturbation theory to
a system of many, identical, interacting fermions...") with equations
handwritten [no date]
Handwritten notes, original, "Grand Ensembles" [no date]