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Topic: Charles Emile Picard


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  Picard_Emile   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Emile Picard's father was the manager of a silk factory who died during the siege of Paris in 1870.
Picard's mother, the daughter of a medical doctor, was put in an extremely difficult position when her husband died.
In 1885 Picard was appointed to the chair of differential calculus at the Sorbonne in Paris when the chair fell vacant on the death of Claude Bouquet.
www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk /~history/Mathematicians/Picard_Emile.html   (1177 words)

  
 Picard, (Charles) Emile   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Picard was born in Paris and studied at the Ecole Normale Supérieure.
Picard's 'little theorem' states that an integral function of the complex variable takes every finite value, with one possible exception.
Picard's work on the integrals attached to algebraic surfaces, together with the associated topological questions, developed into an area of algebraic geometry that had applications in topology and function theory.
www.cartage.org.lb /en/themes/biographies/mainbiographies/P/Picard/1.html   (259 words)

  
 Picard Iteration Revisited
In differential equations, Picard iteration is a constructive procedure for establishing the existence of a solution to a differential equation
The first type of Picard iteration uses computations to generate a "sequence of numbers" which converges to a solution.
The goal of this article is to illustrate the second application of Picard iteration; i.
math.fullerton.edu /mathews/n2003/PicardIterationMod.html   (925 words)

  
 Roy Descendancy   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Charles Felix ROY maire de Notre-Dame du Lac (1888) was born on 21 MAY 1837.
She was married to Charles THERIAULT on 15 JAN 1839 in Cacouna, Quebec.
Charles ROY was born on 14 OCT 1858 in St. Arsene, Quebec.
members.aol.com /anniebe222/Roy.html   (1212 words)

  
 Group theory
Other group theorists of the nineteenth century were Bertrand, Charles Hermite, Frobenius, Leopold Kronecker, and Mathieu.
The study of what are now called Lie groups, and their discrete subgroups, as transformation groups, started systematically in 1884 with Sophus Lie; followed by work of Killing, Study, Schur and Maurer.
The discontinuous (discrete) theory was built up by Felix Klein, Lie, Poincaré, and Charles Emile Picard, in connection in particular with modular forms and monodromy.
www.brainyencyclopedia.com /encyclopedia/g/gr/group_theory_1.html   (1138 words)

  
 December 11 - Today in Science History   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
(Charles-) Émile Picard was a French mathematician whose theories did much to advance research into analysis, algebraic geometry, and mechanics.
He was the son of Charles Friedel (1832-99), French mineralogist and organic chemist.
The term “fuel cell” was coined in 1889 by Ludwig Mond and Charles Langer, who attempted to build the first practical device using air and industrial coal gas, to generate electricity by reacting hydrogen with oxygen.
www.todayinsci.com /12/12_11.htm   (3621 words)

  
 "P" Famous People   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Pederson, Charles J (1904-89) Chemist, born in Fusan, Korea.
Picard, (Charles) Emile (1856-1941) Mathematician, born in Paris, France.
Plank, Charles J (1915-89) Chemist and inventor, born in Kolkata (formerly Calcutta), E India.
www.jonathanselby.com /Pfam   (13285 words)

  
 Hermite
Charles Hermite's father was Ferdinand Hermite and his mother was Madeleine Lallemand.
Charles was the sixth of his parents seven children and when he was about seven years old his parents left Dieuse and went to live in Nancy to where the business had moved.
Charles was something of a worry to his parents for he had a defect in his right foot which meant that he moved around only with difficulty.
www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk /history/Mathematicians/Hermite.html   (1633 words)

  
 Charles Emile Picard -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Charles Emile Picard -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article
Charles Emile Picard (July 24, 1856 - December 11, 1941) was a (The Romance language spoken in France and in countries colonized by France) French (A person skilled in mathematics) mathematician.
(Click link for more info and facts about Picard theorem) Picard theorem
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/c/ch/charles_emile_picard.htm   (64 words)

  
 The Labour Gazette, February 1936, pages: 158-159.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Emile Tellier of Three Rivers, 2nd Vice-President; Mr.
Gerard Picard of Quebec City, General Secretary for Quebec Province; Mr.
Charles Paquet of Montreal, President of the Federation of Printers
socserv2.socsci.mcmaster.ca /maclabour/RESOURCES/Labour_Gazette/Federations_and_Unions/36-158.htm   (478 words)

  
 Picard_Emile
In 1881 Picard was nominated for membership of the mathematics section of the Académie des Sciences.
Picard made his most important contributions in the fields of analysis, function theory, differential equations
Among the honours given to Picard was his election to the Académie des Sciences in 1889, eight years after he was first unsuccessfully nominated.
homepages.compuserve.de /thweidenfeller/mathematiker/Picard_Emile.htm   (1161 words)

  
 Appell   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
In 1881 Appell married Amelie, niece of Bertrand and of Hermite and a cousin of Emile Picard.
There he was given information by his half-brother Charles, which he would report to the French War Office on his return to Paris.
Charles was to pay a price for this when, in 1889, he was imprisoned for anti-German activities.
www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk /history/Mathematicians/Appell.html   (1334 words)

  
 Paris War Days   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Charles Humbert, senator of the Meuse, gave the helmet and sabre that had been worn by Lieutenant Marshall von Bieberstein to the editor of the Matin.
The latter part of the afternoon is taken up in another tour of inspection, dinner is a movable feast to be observed if there happens to be time for it, and then there is another pile of letters and telegrams a foot high to be gone through and answered; and so to bed, very late.
Picard will join the army to-morrow as a reservist employed in the general staff.
www.blackmask.com /thatway/books134c/7prwr.htm   (20238 words)

  
 St Charles Herald Guide, Clubs & Organizations   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Charles Parish Hospital, 1057 Paul Maillard Rd., Luling, 785-6242.
Meetings are held at the St. Charles Parish School Board office in Luling on the 3rd Wed.
Formed to establish a museum in St. Charles Parish, the group meets on the third Thursday of the month except during the summer at different locations.
heraldguide.com /clubs   (1444 words)

  
 Borel, Emile Félix-Edouard-Justin   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
In the 1890s Borel did his most important work: on probability, the infinitesimal calculus, divergent series, and, most influential of all, the theory of measure.
He provided a proof of Charles Emile Picard's theorem 1896.
In the 1920s he wrote on the subject of game theory, before John Von Neumann (generally credited with being the founder of the subject) first wrote on it in 1928.
www.cartage.org.lb /en/themes/Biographies/mainbiographies/B/Borel/1.html   (181 words)

  
 SK Biography
She was consulted by her colleagues on hiring decisions, took part in the organization of international conferences, and was on cordial terms with the best mathematicians in the world (indeed, in her time, she was considered one of them).
The eminent astronomer Hugo Gyldén referred ironically to the pentad of Charles Rermite, Kovalevskaia, Mittag-Leffier, Charles Émile Picard, and Weierstrass as the "mutual admiration society" of late nineteenth-century mathematics.
Kovalevskaia was a celebrity-a target for those who sought the vicarious excitement of attaching themselves to famous people.
www.american.edu /academic.depts/cas/mathstat/skday01/BIO-SK.html   (2573 words)

  
 The World
She was predeceased by a son, Charles Montgomery; three brothers, John A., Robert W. and Richard S. Mitchell, and a sister, Ruth Pierce.
She was born in Westford, VT on September 7, 1916, the daughter of Avila and Aldora (Desnoyers) Senecal.
She married Joseph Picard on September 19th, 1936.
www.vt-world.com /Archive/2004/March_24_2004/Obits.htm   (1865 words)

  
 24 Jul History: This Date   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
François II's short reign, with his mother Catherine de Médicis (1519-89) as queen regent, was dominated by the struggle between the Guise family and the Protestants; a struggle which was also taking place in Scotland, where the Protestant nobles were in revolt against Mary of Guise.
When François died in 1560, Catherine de Médicis remained queen regent during the minority of her second son Charles IX (1550-74).
The widowed Mary remained in France as dowager queen for a few months until the death of her mother forced her to return to Scotland in 1561.
www.jcanu.hpg.ig.com.br /history/h4jul/h4jul24.html   (9369 words)

  
 Biogragpy of Giuseppe Peano </a></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> However <b>Emile</b> <b>Picard</b> had independently discovered this method and had credited Schwarz with discovering the method first. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> This was his first work on the topic that would play a major role in his research over the next few years and it was based on the work of Schröder, Boole and <b>Charles</b> Peirce. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> A more significant feature of the book is that in it Peano sets out with great clarity the ideas of Grassmann which certainly were set out in a rather obscure way by Grassmann himself.</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>www.andrews.edu /~calkins/math/biograph/biopeano.htm</font>   (1680 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><a href="http://genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/html/id.phtml?id=34266">The Mathematics Genealogy Project - C. Émile Picard</a></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Click here to see the students listed in chronological order. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> According to our current on-line database, C. Émile <b>Picard</b> has 7 students and 3365 descendants. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> If you have additional information or corrections regarding this <a href="/topics/Mathematician" title="Mathematician" class=fl>mathematician</a>, please use the update form.</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu /html/id.phtml?id=34266</font>   (120 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><a href="http://www.absolutearts.com/artsnews/2000/04/17/26847.html">Xavier Mellery Paintings and Drawings - Van Gogh Museum - Absolutearts.com</a></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Upon his return, Mellery established himself in Brussels, where he became acquainted with the lawyer Edmond <b>Picard</b>, the writers Camille Lemonnier and <b>Emile</b> Verhaeren and the collector Arthur Boitte, among others. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> In the numerous letters to his friends in that period, he wrote about his artistic ideal and his constant attempts to advance his art: In point of fact, we may be certain that the most beautiful things in art are those that have yet to be said. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> His introduction to the island took place in 1878 through the writer <b>Charles</b> De Coster, who needed illustrations for his description of the Netherlands in the magazine Tour du monde.</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>www.absolutearts.com /artsnews/2000/04/17/26847.html</font>   (841 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><a href="http://www.britannica.com/search?query=Picard&submit=Find&source=MWTEXT">Search Results for Picard - Encyclopædia Britannica</a></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> luminous glow appearing in the vacuum above the mercury in a barometer tube when the tube is shaken, first noticed in 1675 by a French astronomer, Jean <b>Picard</b>. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> French <a href="/topics/Mathematician" title="Mathematician" class=fl>mathematician</a> who created the first effective theory of the measure of sets of points and who shares credit with René-Louis Baire and Henri Lebesgue of France for launching the modern theory... </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> E-text of this book by William <b>Picard</b> Stephens.</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>www.britannica.com /search?query=Picard&submit=Find&source=MWTEXT</font>   (319 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><u>MATHFUNC</u>   <i>(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)</i></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> <b>Charles</b> Hermite(1822-1901) was a <a href="/topics/Mathematician" title="Mathematician" class=fl>mathematician</a> working at the Ecole Polytechnique and the Sorbonne and well known for his differential equation, their polynomial solutions, Hermitian matrixes, work on the quintic equation and its relation to elliptic functions, plus the proof that e is a transcendental numer. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Adrien-Marie Legendre (1752-1833) was a member of the French Academy of Sciences and well known for his mathematical calulations including the gravitational ellipsoid problem which led to the functions Pn(x). </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> <b>Emile</b> Mathieu (1835-1890) was a French applied <a href="/topics/Mathematician" title="Mathematician" class=fl>mathematician</a> known for his work in group theory, potential theory and for his 1868 paper on vibrating elliptic membranes in which his equation and functions first appear.</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>aemes.mae.ufl.edu /~uhk/MATHFUNC.htm</font>   (15420 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><a href="http://www.safran-arts.com/42day/history/h4dec/h4dec11.html">11 Dec History: This Date</a></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> The equal team prize is shared by <b>Charles</b> Olbert, Christopher Clearfield and Nikolas Williams, students at the North Carolina School of Science & Math in Durham. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> They used data from NASA's Chandra X-Ray telescope to analyze a wave of energy moving at high speeds near the remnant of a supernova. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> It was called by King <b>Charles</b> I out of his desperate need for money and lasted for twenty years.</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>www.safran-arts.com /42day/history/h4dec/h4dec11.html</font>   (7826 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><a href="http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0194160.html">Henry Picard</a></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> <b>Picard</b>, <b>Charles</b> <b>Emile</b> (1856-1941) (The Hutchinson Dictionary of Scientific Biography) </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Patrick Stewart: el capitan <b>Picard</b> vuelve a la carga (El Nuevo Herald) </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> `Lisa <b>Picard</b> is Famous'.(The Dallas Morning News) (Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service)</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>www.infoplease.com /ipa/A0194160.html</font>   (230 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><a href="http://www.stanford.edu/group/CollegeBowl/archive/phl96/Prelim21.txt">[No title]</a></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> FTP name the Whig candidate for president in 1852, nicknamed "Old Fuss and Feathers." Answer: Winfield _SCOTT_ 2. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> In 1822, <b>Charles</b> McLaren made a suggestion regarding a 105-foot high mound called Hisarlik, but he was ignored for 50 years, until excavations revealed nine principal strata underneath. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> In the 1930s, Carl Blegen concluded that the seventh stratum, and not the second one, as Heinrich Schliemann had proposed, was, FTP, what capital of King Priam, described in a Homeric epic?</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>www.stanford.edu /group/CollegeBowl/archive/phl96/Prelim21.txt</font>   (2527 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><u>Alibris - Click here to find books by this author!</u>   <i>(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)</i></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Phipps ~ Phipps, <b>Charles</b> ~ Phipps, Clarence A. Phipps, Constantine ~ Phipps, David ~ Phipps, Diana ~ Phipps, Donald W., Jr. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Pickstone, <b>Charles</b> ~ Pickstone, John V. Pickthall, Barry ~ Pickthall, Marjorie ~ Pickthall, Marmaduke ~ Pickthall, Marmaduke William ~ Pickthall, Mohammad M. Pickthall, Muhammad M. Pickthorn, William </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Picot, Derek ~ Picot, <b>Emile</b> ~ Picot, Geneviève ~ Picot, Geoffrey ~ Picot, Gérard</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>www.alibris.com /authors/authors0322.html</font>   (844 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><a href="http://www.junkfoodforthought.com/bio/bio_P.htm">Food For Thought: Biographies</a></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Peirse, Sir Richard Edmund <b>Charles</b> (British air chief marshal) </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Perron, <b>Charles</b> Edgar du (Java-born Dutch writer, critic) </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Portal, <b>Charles</b> Frederick Algernon (British air chief marshal)</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>www.junkfoodforthought.com /bio/bio_P.htm</font>   (1666 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><u>World War One Veterans</u>   <i>(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)</i></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Arsenault, Joseph - Asdoor, <b>Charles</b> J. - Bacon, Fayette - Barlow, Edward C. Barnes, <b>Charles</b> E. - Beaudry, <b>Emile</b> - Beaudry, Napolean - Benoit, Rudolph </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Hall, Richard G. - Hall, Thomas - Hathaway, Richmond H. - Hebert, Wilbrud O. Henderson, George F. - Hennebery, Timothy E. - Holt, <b>Charles</b> S. - Huling, Martlin V. Johnson, Robert E. - Jones, E.F. Pollard - Karczmarczyk, Stanislaw - Kimme, Leroy F.* </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> O'Neill, John F. - Passmore, Howard - Patrick, Stanley R. - Pease, George S. Peterson, <b>Charles</b> W. - Petrick, Richard - <b>Picard</b>, Henry J. - Pickul, Frank</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>members.samnet.net /esso/Ww1.htm</font>   (300 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><script language="JavaScript"> <!-- // This function displays the ad results. // It must be defined above the script that calls show_ads.js // to guarantee that it is defined when show_ads.js makes the call-back. function google_ad_request_done(google_ads) { // Proceed only if we have ads to display! if (google_ads.length < 1 ) return; var s = ''; // For text ads, display each ad in turn. // In this example, each ad goes in a new row in the table. if (google_ads[0].type == 'text') { for(i = 0; i < 1; ++i) { s = '<body face="Arial"><br><table cellpadding=0><tr><td>  </td><td><table ><tr><td> </td><td colspan=2>' + '<a href="' + google_ads[i].url + '" title="' + google_ads[i].visible_url + '">' + google_ads[i].line1 + '</a>  <span style="font-size:10pt">'; if (google_info.feedback_url) { s += '<a href="' + google_info.feedback_url + '" style="color:#7070F0;text-decoration:none">(Ads by Google)</a>'; } else { s += '(Ads by Google)'; } s += '</span></td></tr>' + '<tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td>' + '<a href="' + google_ads[i].url + '" title="' + google_ads[i].visible_url + '" style="text-decoration:none;">' + google_ads[i].line2 + ' ' + google_ads[i].line3 + '</a></td></tr>' + '<tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>' + '<a href="' + google_ads[i].url + '" title="' + google_ads[i].visible_url + '" style="text-decoration:none; color:gray;">' + google_ads[i].visible_url + '</a></font></td></tr></table></td></tr></table>'; d = document.getElementById('ad' + (i + 1)); d.innerHTML = s; d.style.display = 'block'; } s = ''; for(i = 1; i < google_ads.length; i++) { s += '<div class="r" style="margin-left: 14px"><table cellspacing=0 cellpadding=0><tr>' + // '<td valign=top><img src="/images/a.gif"/ style="padding-top: 3px; padding-right: 3px"></td>' + '<td ><a href="' + google_ads[i].url + '" title="' + google_ads[i].visible_url + '">' + google_ads[i].line1 + '<div style="text-decoration: none; ">' + google_ads[i].line2 + ' ' + google_ads[i].line3 + '</div></a>' + '<font color="gray"><a href="'+ google_ads[i].url + '" title="' + google_ads[i].visible_url + '" style="text-decoration:none; color:gray;">' + google_ads[i].visible_url + '</a></font>' + '</td></tr></table></div>' } d = document.getElementById('sky1'); d.innerHTML = s; if(s.length > 0) { document.getElementById('sky').style.display = 'block'; } } /* <body face="Arial"><br><table cellpadding=0><tr><td>  </td><td><table ><tr><td> </td><td colspan=2> <a href=" ### GOOGLE ADS[i] URL ### "> ### GOOGLE ADS[i] VISIBLE URL ### </a></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> ### LINE 2 ###   ### LINE 3 ###</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray> ### link ### </font>  (sponsored link)</td></tr> </table></td></tr></table> */ /* // For an image ad, display the image; 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