Nicholas Murray BUTLER Arranged Correspondence Box Contents Box
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
An Examination of Trinity Grammar School, Sydney, 1913 to 1976
University of Wollongong Research Online University of Wollongong Thesis Collection 1954-2016 University of Wollongong Thesis Collections 1989 An evangelical school in an evangelical diocese: an examination of Trinity Grammar School, Sydney, 1913 to 1976 Phillip J. Heath University of Wollongong Follow this and additional works at: https://ro.uow.edu.au/theses University of Wollongong Copyright Warning You may print or download ONE copy of this document for the purpose of your own research or study. The University does not authorise you to copy, communicate or otherwise make available electronically to any other person any copyright material contained on this site. You are reminded of the following: This work is copyright. Apart from any use permitted under the Copyright Act 1968, no part of this work may be reproduced by any process, nor may any other exclusive right be exercised, without the permission of the author. Copyright owners are entitled to take legal action against persons who infringe their copyright. A reproduction of material that is protected by copyright may be a copyright infringement. A court may impose penalties and award damages in relation to offences and infringements relating to copyright material. Higher penalties may apply, and higher damages may be awarded, for offences and infringements involving the conversion of material into digital or electronic form. Unless otherwise indicated, the views expressed in this thesis are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of the University of Wollongong. Recommended Citation Heath, Phillip J., An evangelical school in an evangelical diocese: an examination of Trinity Grammar School, Sydney, 1913 to 1976, Master of Arts (Hons.) thesis, Faculty of Education, University of Wollongong, 1989. -
Elettorato Attivo 16 17
ELETTORATO ATTIVO Cognome Nome Corso di studi ADAMO ELISA LINGUE E CULTURE DELL'EURASIA E DEL MEDITERRANEO ABAKAH RITA Lingue, civiltà e scienze del linguaggio ABATE MARCO CONSERVAZIONE E GESTIONE DEI BENI E DELLE ATTIVITÀ CULTURALI ABBAD SOUMIA ECONOMIA E COMMERCIO ABBATE ISABELLA LINGUE E CIVILTA' ORIENTALI ABBATE LAURA LINGUE E LETTERATURE EUROPEE, AMERICANE E POSTCOLONIALI ABBATE ALESSANDRA CONSERVAZIONE E GESTIONE DEI BENI E DELLE ATTIVITÀ CULTURALI ABBIENDI MATTEO GOVERNANCE DELLE ORGANIZZAZIONI PUBBLICHE ABBONIZIO JACOPO CHIMICA E TECNOLOGIE SOSTENIBILI ABBRUSCATO JACOPO Lingue, civiltà e scienze del linguaggio ABBRUZZESE SOFIA Lingue, civiltà e scienze del linguaggio ABDALLA NELLY LINGUE, CULTURE E SOCIETÀ DELL'ASIA E DELL'AFRICA MEDITERRANEA ABDEL RAHMAN IMAN Lingue, civiltà e scienze del linguaggio ABDELHAMID MOHAMED NADIA SCIENZE DEL LINGUAGGIO ABDELKERIM SARA LINGUE, CULTURE E SOCIETÀ DELL'ASIA E DELL'AFRICA MEDITERRANEA ABEBE SEYUM ASSEFA INFORMATICA - COMPUTER SCIENCE ABICCA STELLA LINGUE, CULTURE E SOCIETÀ DELL'ASIA E DELL'AFRICA MEDITERRANEA ABINANTI SUSHMA LINGUE, CULTURE E SOCIETÀ DELL'ASIA E DELL'AFRICA MEDITERRANEA ABOAF FEDERICO ITALIANISTICA ABOU EL SEOUD HENI LINGUE, CULTURE E SOCIETÀ DELL'ASIA E DELL'AFRICA MEDITERRANEA ABRAM FRANCA MARIA CONSERVAZIONE E GESTIONE DEI BENI E DELLE ATTIVITÀ CULTURALI ABRAM JACOPO ECONOMIA AZIENDALE ACAMPORA LUIGI Informatica ACAMPORA NAOMI CONSERVAZIONE E GESTIONE DEI BENI E DELLE ATTIVITÀ CULTURALI ACCARDI GRETA Lingue, civiltà e scienze del linguaggio ACCARDI VIRGINIA Lingue, civiltà -
TRANSIENT LUNAR PHENOMENA: REGULARITY and REALITY Arlin P
The Astrophysical Journal, 697:1–15, 2009 May 20 doi:10.1088/0004-637X/697/1/1 C 2009. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Printed in the U.S.A. TRANSIENT LUNAR PHENOMENA: REGULARITY AND REALITY Arlin P. S. Crotts Department of Astronomy, Columbia University, Columbia Astrophysics Laboratory, 550 West 120th Street, New York, NY 10027, USA Received 2007 June 27; accepted 2009 February 20; published 2009 April 30 ABSTRACT Transient lunar phenomena (TLPs) have been reported for centuries, but their nature is largely unsettled, and even their existence as a coherent phenomenon is controversial. Nonetheless, TLP data show regularities in the observations; a key question is whether this structure is imposed by processes tied to the lunar surface, or by terrestrial atmospheric or human observer effects. I interrogate an extensive catalog of TLPs to gauge how human factors determine the distribution of TLP reports. The sample is grouped according to variables which should produce differing results if determining factors involve humans, and not reflecting phenomena tied to the lunar surface. Features dependent on human factors can then be excluded. Regardless of how the sample is split, the results are similar: ∼50% of reports originate from near Aristarchus, ∼16% from Plato, ∼6% from recent, major impacts (Copernicus, Kepler, Tycho, and Aristarchus), plus several at Grimaldi. Mare Crisium produces a robust signal in some cases (however, Crisium is too large for a “feature” as defined). TLP count consistency for these features indicates that ∼80% of these may be real. Some commonly reported sites disappear from the robust averages, including Alphonsus, Ross D, and Gassendi. -
Obituary "C" Index
Obituary "C" Index Copyright © 2004 - 2021 GRHS DISCLAIMER: GRHS cannot guarantee that should you purchase a copy of what you would expect to be an obituary from its obituary collection that you will receive an obituary per se. The obituary collection consists of such items as a) personal cards of information shared with GRHS by researchers, b) www.findagrave.com extractions, c) funeral home cards, d) newspaper death notices, and e) obituaries extracted from newspapers and other publications as well as funeral home web sites. Some obituaries are translations of obituaries published in German publications, although generally GRHS has copies of the German versions. These German versions would have to be ordered separately for they are kept in a separate file in the GRHS library. The list of names and dates contained herein is an alphabetical listing [by surname and given name] of the obituaries held at the Society's headquarters for the letter combination indicated. Each name is followed by the birth date in the first column and death date in the second. Dates may be extrapolated or provided from another source. Important note about UMLAUTS: Surnames in this index have been entered by our volunteers exactly as they appear in each obituary but the use of characters with umlauts in obits has been found to be inconsistant. For example the surname Büchele may be entered as Buchele or Bahmüller as Bahmueller. This is important because surnames with umlauted characters are placed in alphabetic order after regular characters so if you are just scrolling down this sorted list you may find the surname you are looking for in an unexpected place (i.e. -
A.L. Goodhart
A.L. Goodhart William Goodhart, QC LSE Law, Society and Economy Working Papers 1/2010 London School of Economics and Political Science Law Department This paper can be downloaded without charge from LSE Law, Society and Economy Working Papers at: www.lse.ac.uk/collections/law/wps/wps.htm and the Social Sciences Research Network electronic library at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1536089. © William Goodhart, QC. Users may download and/or print one copy to facilitate their private study or for non-commercial research. Users may not engage in further distribution of this material or use it for any profit-making activities or any other form of commercial gain. This paper can be downloaded without charge from LSE Law, Society and Economy Working Papers at: www.lse.ac.uk/collections/law/wps/wps.htm and the Social Sciences Research Network electronic library at: http://ssrn.com/abstract= [number]. A.L. Goodhart William Goodhart, QC * My father, Arthur Lehman Goodhart, was born in New York City on the 1st of March 1891 into a wealthy Jewish family. He was the last of the three children of Philip and Hattie Goodhart. Both his parents came from families which had profited greatly from the astonishing economic growth of the USA. Arthur's paternal grandfather, Julius Goodhart, came from a Jewish family which had originally settled in Holland – Goodhart is a Dutch name – but which had moved to Germany by the time of his birth. He emigrated to the USA in 1837 and settled in Cincinnati. When he got established he sent home to Germany for a wife, and Rosa Rosenbaum was duly supplied. -
Haverford College Bulletin, New Series, 46-47, 1947-1948
LocKed case. CLASS l_D ^£,0t) BOOK B*^ THE LIBRARY OF HAVERFORD COLLEGE THE GIFT OF HAVEKFOPD finT.T.¥;r3n?. ACCESSION NO. 1 ?> "^ M Co Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2011 with funding from LYRASIS IVIembers and Sloan Foundation http://www.archive.org/details/haverfordcollege4647have Haverford College Bulletin 1948-1949 CATALOG VOLUME XLVII NUMBER One JUNE, 1948 Issued June, October, November, December by Haverford College, Haverford, Pennsylvania Entered as second-class matter November 2, 1944 at the Post Office at Haverford, Pa., under the Act of August 24, 1912 Printed in U. S. A. Haverford College Bulletin 1948- 1949 HAVERFORD, PENNSYLVANIA ' II w- CONTENTS College Calendar, 1948-49 4 Corporation 6 Board of Managers 7 Faculty 9 Administration 13 Standing Committees of the Faculty and Administration 14 College Program 15 History 18 Admission 21 College Entrance Board Tests 22 Advanced Standing 25 Financial Arrangements 26 Rooms 26 Expenses 26 College Responsibility 27 Monthly Payments 28 Student Loan Fund 28 Student Aid 28 Scholarships 29 Curriculum 33 General 33 Bachelor's Degree 33 Required Courses 34 Limited Electives 34 Major Concentration 35 Free Electives 37 Freshman Program 38 Sophomore, Junior, and Senior Programs 40 Preparation for Professions 40 2 Regulations 41 Conflicting Courses 41 Additional Courses 42 Special Cases 42 Grading of Students 42 Failures and Dropped Courses 42 Intercollegiate Cooperation 43 Visitors and Lecturers 44 Current Changes . 45 Graduate Study 46 Admission to Candidacy for Master's Degree 46 Requirements 46 Fellowships 47 Courses of Instruction 49 Non-academic Instruction 99 Extra-curricular Activities 101 Health Program 104 Library, Laboratories, and other Academic Facilities 105 Fellowships, Prizes and Honors 110 Alumni Association 117 Index 120 104a S M T W T F S S M T W T F S Sept. -
No. 14~ THEY ONLY INCREASE the STATURE of the MAN
Prepared in the Interests of Book Collecting at the The University of Michigan No. 14~ THEY ONLY INCREASE THE STATURE OF THE MAN. 1Sept 1947 A Little Dinner reminded us that we had more than two hours to for Lincoln wai t before the Lincoln At 12:01 A.M. on July Papers could be opened. 2G, 1947, the Robert Todd He proposed that we Lincoln Collection of pa might pass the time plea pers relating to his father, santly listening to some of Abraham Lincoln, was our company tell us what opened to the public. they hoped to find in the This was that moment for collection. ,..rh ich many men had Dr Evans called first on wai ted years. The faces of Carl Sandburg. With a those men grouped around gentle smile on his face, the safes which had held and in the Middle West the papers were bright ern voice familiar to all with hope or troubled Lincolnians, Mr Sandburg wi th fears and worries or announced that he would stilled to conceal emo accompany himself on his lions. Yet were they all ex guitar with songs of the pectanL This was the mo American past. First, there ment; starring 00'\'''' they was a Revolutionary War would have - or they song by Joseph Warren would not have-s-answers about his hopes for the 10 questions about Lin future of our America coln which puzzled them. and then there was a bal These Lincoln Papers Reprinted with permission of S. J. Ray and . lad of Lincoln's time- the Kansas City Star had been sealed at the in- about a boy and a girl. -
ED174481.Pdf
DOCUMENT RESUME ID 174 481 SE 028 617 AUTHOR Champagne, Audrey E.; Kl9pfer, Leopold E. TITLE Cumulative Index tc Science Education, Volumes 1 Through 60, 1916-1S76. INSTITUTION ERIC Information Analysis Center forScience, Mathematics, and Environmental Education, Columbus, Ohio. PUB DATE 78 NOTE 236p.; Not available in hard copy due tocopyright restrictions; Contains occasicnal small, light and broken type AVAILABLE FROM Wiley-Interscience, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 605 Third Avenue, New York, New York 10016(no price quoted) EDRS PRICE MF01 Plus Postage. PC Not Available from EDRS. DESCRIPTORS *Bibliographic Citations; Educaticnal Research; *Elementary Secondary Education; *Higher Education; *Indexes (Iocaters) ; Literature Reviews; Resource Materials; Science Curriculum; *Science Education; Science Education History; Science Instructicn; Science Teachers; Teacher Education ABSTRACT This special issue cf "Science Fducation"is designed to provide a research tool for scienceeducaticn researchers and students as well as information for scienceteachers and other educaticnal practitioners who are seeking suggestions aboutscience teaching objectives, curricula, instructionalprocedures, science equipment and materials or student assessmentinstruments. It consists of 3 divisions: (1) science teaching; (2)research and special interest areas; and (3) lournal features. The science teaching division which contains listings ofpractitioner-oriented articles on science teaching, consists of fivesections. The second division is intended primarily for -
Water on the Moon, III. Volatiles & Activity
Water on The Moon, III. Volatiles & Activity Arlin Crotts (Columbia University) For centuries some scientists have argued that there is activity on the Moon (or water, as recounted in Parts I & II), while others have thought the Moon is simply a dead, inactive world. [1] The question comes in several forms: is there a detectable atmosphere? Does the surface of the Moon change? What causes interior seismic activity? From a more modern viewpoint, we now know that as much carbon monoxide as water was excavated during the LCROSS impact, as detailed in Part I, and a comparable amount of other volatiles were found. At one time the Moon outgassed prodigious amounts of water and hydrogen in volcanic fire fountains, but released similar amounts of volatile sulfur (or SO2), and presumably large amounts of carbon dioxide or monoxide, if theory is to be believed. So water on the Moon is associated with other gases. Astronomers have agreed for centuries that there is no firm evidence for “weather” on the Moon visible from Earth, and little evidence of thick atmosphere. [2] How would one detect the Moon’s atmosphere from Earth? An obvious means is atmospheric refraction. As you watch the Sun set, its image is displaced by Earth’s atmospheric refraction at the horizon from the position it would have if there were no atmosphere, by roughly 0.6 degree (a bit more than the Sun’s angular diameter). On the Moon, any atmosphere would cause an analogous effect for a star passing behind the Moon during an occultation (multiplied by two since the light travels both into and out of the lunar atmosphere). -
Liicoli Ooliection
F The Oliver R. Barrett LIICOLI OOLIECTION "Public Auction ^ale FEBRUARY 1 9 AND 20 at 1:45 and 8 p. m. at the Parke-Bernet Galleries- Inc • • 980 MADISON AVENUE ^J\Qw Yovk 1952 LINCOLN ROOM UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS LIBRARY MEMORIAL the Class of 1901 founded by HARLAN HOYT HORNER and HENRIETTA CALHOUN HORNER H A/Idly-^ nv/n* I Sale Number 1315 FREE PUBLIC EXHIBITION From Tuesday, February 12, to Date of Sale From 10 a. Tfj. to 5 p. m. y Tuesday 10 to 8 Closed Sunday and Monday PUBLIC AUCTION SALE Tuesday and Wednesday Afternoons and Evenings February 19 and 20, at 1 :45 and 8 p. m. EXHIBITION & SALE AT THE PARKE-BERNET GALLERIES • INC 980 Madison Avenue • 76th-77th Street New York 21 TRAFALGAR 9-8300 Sales Conducted by • • H. H. PARKE L. J. MARION A. N. BADE A. NISBET • W. A. SMYTH • C. RETZ 1952 THE LATE OLIVER R. BARRETT The Immortal AUTOGRAPH LETTERS ' DOCUMENTS MANUSCRIPTS ' PORTRAITS PERSONAL RELICS AND OTHER LINGOLNIANA Collected by the Late OLIVER R. BARRETT CHICAGO Sold by Order of The Executors of His Estate and of Roger W . Barrett i Chicago Public Auction Sale Tuesday and Wednesday February 19 and 20 at 1:45 and 8 p. m. PARKE-BERNET GALLERIES • INC New York • 1952 The Parke -Bernet Galleries Will Execute Your Bids Without Charge If You Are Unable to Attend the Sale in Person Items in this catalogue subject to the twenty per cent Federal Excise Tax are designated by an asterisk (*). Where all the items in a specific category are subject to the twenty per cent Federal Ex- cise Tax, a note to this effect ap- pears below the category heading. -
Appendix I Lunar and Martian Nomenclature
APPENDIX I LUNAR AND MARTIAN NOMENCLATURE LUNAR AND MARTIAN NOMENCLATURE A large number of names of craters and other features on the Moon and Mars, were accepted by the IAU General Assemblies X (Moscow, 1958), XI (Berkeley, 1961), XII (Hamburg, 1964), XIV (Brighton, 1970), and XV (Sydney, 1973). The names were suggested by the appropriate IAU Commissions (16 and 17). In particular the Lunar names accepted at the XIVth and XVth General Assemblies were recommended by the 'Working Group on Lunar Nomenclature' under the Chairmanship of Dr D. H. Menzel. The Martian names were suggested by the 'Working Group on Martian Nomenclature' under the Chairmanship of Dr G. de Vaucouleurs. At the XVth General Assembly a new 'Working Group on Planetary System Nomenclature' was formed (Chairman: Dr P. M. Millman) comprising various Task Groups, one for each particular subject. For further references see: [AU Trans. X, 259-263, 1960; XIB, 236-238, 1962; Xlffi, 203-204, 1966; xnffi, 99-105, 1968; XIVB, 63, 129, 139, 1971; Space Sci. Rev. 12, 136-186, 1971. Because at the recent General Assemblies some small changes, or corrections, were made, the complete list of Lunar and Martian Topographic Features is published here. Table 1 Lunar Craters Abbe 58S,174E Balboa 19N,83W Abbot 6N,55E Baldet 54S, 151W Abel 34S,85E Balmer 20S,70E Abul Wafa 2N,ll7E Banachiewicz 5N,80E Adams 32S,69E Banting 26N,16E Aitken 17S,173E Barbier 248, 158E AI-Biruni 18N,93E Barnard 30S,86E Alden 24S, lllE Barringer 29S,151W Aldrin I.4N,22.1E Bartels 24N,90W Alekhin 68S,131W Becquerei -
Abstracts from the Fifth European Workshop on Astrobiology EANA
International Journal of Astrobiology 5 (1): 67–88 (2006) Printed in the United Kingdom 67 doi:10.1017/S1473550406002849 f 2006 Cambridge University Press Abstracts from the Fifth European Workshop on Astrobiology EANA – European Astrobiology Network Association 10–12 October 2005 Budapest, Hungary Early Stars and Stellar Environments Oral Presentations The UV radiation environment in the Solar System Setting a scene: before another Earth will be found A. Hanslmeier(1), M. Vazquez(2), H. Lammer(3), M. Khodachenko(3) E. Szuszkiewicz(1,2), J. C. B. Papaloizou(3,4) (1) Institut fu¨r Physik, Geophysik Astrophysik Meteorologie, Univ.- (1) Institute of Physics, University of Szczecin, Poland; (2) Centre for Platz 5, A-8010 Graz, Austria; (2) Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias, Advanced Studies in Astrobiology and Related Topics, Szczecin, C/Vı´aLa´ctea s/n, E-38200, La Laguna, Tenerife, Spain; (3) Austrian Poland; (3) Astronomy Unit, Queen Mary, University of London, Academy of Science Space Research Institute Schmiedlstraße 6, A-8042 England; (4) Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Graz, Austria Physics, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Cambridge, England The UV radiation environment in the Solar System is dominated of The increasing number of extrasolar multi-planet systems, their diver- course by the Sun. Since the early Sun radiated more intensely in the sity, and dynamical complexities provide a strong motivation to study short wavelength range, the influence of this radiation to the early the evolution and stability of such systems. One of the most important planets and to the formation of early planetary atmospheres as well as features connected with planetary system evolution is the occurrence of to the evolution of life on Earth and possibly other planets has to be mean motion resonances, which may relate to conditions at the time of considered in detail.