Books On-Line: Complete List by Title
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Written Proof: Vatican/Jesuit Conspiracy Against USA + World
Written Proof: Vatican/Jesuit conspiracy against USA + world Written Proof (of the Vatican/Jesuit conspiracy against USA + the whole world) https://www.RestoreMBI.com/written-proof.htm https://www.RestoreMBI.com/written-proof.pdf Hello fellow followers of Christ and prayer partners, This is a #RedAlert. What you are about to see is #written #proof from #Catholic #quotes of a very large #conspiracy. The #Vatican has planned to take over the #United #States of #America and #rule it, and the #world through the USA. And they plan to ruin it like they did to #Europe. And the Catholic leaders say they must kill/murder those who reject or oppose their #lawyers and “#doctrines”. #Chiniquy risked his life to tell you what they said, and yes they killed/murdered him for exposing their evil and crimes. But each of us can stop them. Watch for anyone who got Catholic or Jesuit training and oppose everything they do. Starting with the Catholic/Jesuit Supreme Court, and Jesuit Donald Trump, and including the Senate and House representatives, and all of their lawyers. Their Catholic or Jesuit training helps them look like us and sound like us, while they destroy good things from their inside positions. A man named Charles Chiniquy, was a contemporary of DL Moody and later became a friend of DL Moody and of Abraham Lincoln. Chiniquy was a Vatican “priest” for 50 years, but turned against the Vatican after the start of the USA Civil War. Chiniquy kept clashing against the leadership until God helped him to finally see that he needed to leave the Vatican system. -
List of Members
LIST OF MEMBERS, ALFRED BAKER, M.A., Professor of Mathematics, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada. ARTHUR LATHAM BAKER, C.E., Ph.D., Professor of Mathe matics, Stevens School, Hpboken., N. J. MARCUS BAKER, U. S. Geological Survey, Washington, D.C. JAMES MARCUS BANDY, B.A., M.A., Professor of Mathe matics and Engineering, Trinit)^ College, N. C. EDGAR WALES BASS, Professor of Mathematics, U. S. Mili tary Academy, West Point, N. Y. WOOSTER WOODRUFF BEMAN, B.A., M.A., Member of the London Mathematical Society, Professor of Mathe matics, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. R. DANIEL BOHANNAN, B.Sc, CE., E.M., Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio. CHARLES AUGUSTUS BORST, M.A., Assistant in Astronomy, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md. EDWARD ALBERT BOWSER, CE., LL.D., Professor of Mathe matics, Rutgers College, New Brunswick, N. J. JOHN MILTON BROOKS, B.A., Instructor in Mathematics, College of New Jersey, Princeton, N. J. ABRAM ROGERS BULLIS, B.SC, B.C.E., Macedon, Wayne Co., N. Y. WILLIAM ELWOOD BYERLY, Ph.D., Professor of Mathematics, Harvard University, Cambridge*, Mass. WILLIAM CAIN, C.E., Professor of Mathematics and Eng ineering, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C. CHARLES HENRY CHANDLER, M.A., Professor of Mathe matics, Ripon College, Ripon, Wis. ALEXANDER SMYTH CHRISTIE, LL.M., Chief of Tidal Division, U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey, Washington, D. C. JOHN EMORY CLARK, M.A., Professor of Mathematics, Yale University, New Haven, Conn. FRANK NELSON COLE, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Mathe matics, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. -
Executive Intelligence Review, Volume 31, Number 47, December
EIR Founder and Contributing Editor: Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr. Editorial Board: Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr., Muriel Mirak-Weissbach, Antony Papert, Gerald From the Associate Editor Rose, Dennis Small, Edward Spannaus, Nancy Spannaus, Jeffrey Steinberg, William Wertz Editor: Nancy Spannaus Associate Editors: Ronald Kokinda, Susan Welsh yndon LaRouche’s new flanking attack against George Shultz’s Managing Editor: John Sigerson L Science Editor: Marjorie Mazel Hecht fascist “Vulcans”—the controllers of President Bush—begins in this Technology Editor: Marsha Freeman issue, with LaRouche’s review of the explosive new book Confes- Book Editor: Katherine Notley Photo Editor: Stuart Lewis sions of an Economic Hit Man, by John Perkins. Perkins knows from Circulation Manager: Stanley Ezrol the inside a good bit about some of the crimes that have been commit- INTELLIGENCE DIRECTORS: ted against Third World nations by Shultz’s crowd. But he also makes Counterintelligence: Jeffrey Steinberg, Michele Steinberg some important blunders, because he lacks the strategic-historical Economics: Marcia Merry Baker, overview, and competence in economics, which LaRouche provides. Lothar Komp History: Anton Chaitkin LaRouche has been at war with these Economic Hit Men—or Ibero-America: Dennis Small EHMs, as Perkins dubs them—for more than 30 years, as we docu- Law: Edward Spannaus Russia and Eastern Europe: ment in this issue (see “ ‘Hit Men’ vs. LaRouche’s Fusion Energy Rachel Douglas Foundation,” page 17), and as we shall report in further detail next United States: Debra Freeman week. It is they, and their controllers such as George Shultz, who INTERNATIONAL BUREAUS: Bogota´: Javier Almario railroaded LaRouche to prison for five years on trumped-up charges, Berlin: Rainer Apel because he represents the most potent intellectual force opposing Caracas: David Ramonet Copenhagen: Poul Rasmussen their vicious destruction of the nation-state. -
A Century of Mathematics in America, Peter Duren Et Ai., (Eds.), Vol
Garrett Birkhoff has had a lifelong connection with Harvard mathematics. He was an infant when his father, the famous mathematician G. D. Birkhoff, joined the Harvard faculty. He has had a long academic career at Harvard: A.B. in 1932, Society of Fellows in 1933-1936, and a faculty appointmentfrom 1936 until his retirement in 1981. His research has ranged widely through alge bra, lattice theory, hydrodynamics, differential equations, scientific computing, and history of mathematics. Among his many publications are books on lattice theory and hydrodynamics, and the pioneering textbook A Survey of Modern Algebra, written jointly with S. Mac Lane. He has served as president ofSIAM and is a member of the National Academy of Sciences. Mathematics at Harvard, 1836-1944 GARRETT BIRKHOFF O. OUTLINE As my contribution to the history of mathematics in America, I decided to write a connected account of mathematical activity at Harvard from 1836 (Harvard's bicentennial) to the present day. During that time, many mathe maticians at Harvard have tried to respond constructively to the challenges and opportunities confronting them in a rapidly changing world. This essay reviews what might be called the indigenous period, lasting through World War II, during which most members of the Harvard mathe matical faculty had also studied there. Indeed, as will be explained in §§ 1-3 below, mathematical activity at Harvard was dominated by Benjamin Peirce and his students in the first half of this period. Then, from 1890 until around 1920, while our country was becoming a great power economically, basic mathematical research of high quality, mostly in traditional areas of analysis and theoretical celestial mechanics, was carried on by several faculty members. -
Notes to Chapter 1
Notes Notes to Chapter 1 1. Lord David Cecil's discussion of Gaskell in Early Victorian Novelists (London: Constable, 1934) is a notorious example of devaluing a writer by reference to her femininity: 'she was all a woman was expected to be; gentle, domestic, tactful, unintelledual, prone to tears, easily shocked. So far from chafing at the limits imposed on her activities, she accepted them with serene satisfaction' (p. 198). The first writer to give extended treatment to Gaskell's involvement in feminism is Aina Rubenius in The Woman Question in Mrs Gaskell's Life and Work (Uppsala: Lundequistka Bokhandeln, 1950). 2. Raymond Williams finds that despite her 'deep imaginative sympathy' for the workers, Gaskell in Mary Barton shares and expresses middle-class fears about working-class action. Culture and Society (London: Chatto, 1958) p. 90. John Lucas writes that the reconciliation between classes in North and South comes down to teaching the lower orders to know their place. 'Mrs Gaskell and Brotherhood', in Tradition and Tolerance in Nineteenth-century Fiction, ed. David Howard et al. (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1966) p.205. 3. See especially Patsy Stoneman, Elizabeth Gaskell (Brighton: Harvestelj 1987), and Margaret Homans, Bearing the Word: Language and Female Experience in Nineteenth-century Women~ Writing (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1986). 4. Winifred Gerin, Eliubeth Gaskell: A Biography (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1976) p. 17. 5. Annette B. Hopkins, Elizabeth GaskeU: Her life and Work (London: John Lehmann, 1932) p. 34. 6. See Sally Stonehouse, 'A Letter from Mrs Gaskell', Brontl Society Transactions, vol. 20 (1991) pp. -
Front Matter
Cambridge University Press 978-1-107-01316-2 - The Cambridge Companion to Women’s Writing in Britain, 1660–1789 Edited by Catherine Ingrassia Frontmatter More information the cambridge companion to women’s writing in britain, 1660–1789 Women writers played a central role in the literature and culture of eighteenth- century Britain. Featuring essays on female writers and genres by leading scho- lars in the field, this Companion introduces readers to the range, significance, and complexity of women’s writing across multiple genres in Britain between 1660 and 1789. Divided into two parts, the Companion first discusses women’s participation in print culture, featuring essays on topics such as women and popular culture, women as professional writers, women as readers and writers, and place and publication. Additionally, Part I explores the ways that women writers crossed generic boundaries. The second part contains chapters on many of the key genres in which women wrote, including poetry, drama, fiction (early and later), history, the ballad, periodicals, and travel writing. The Companion also provides an introduction surveying the state of the field, an integrated chronology, and a guide to further reading. catherine ingrassia is Professor of English at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, Virginia. She is the author of Authorship, Commerce, and Gender in Eighteenth-Century England: A Culture of Paper Credit (Cambridge, 1998); editor of a critical edition of Eliza Haywood’s Anti- Pamela and Henry Fielding’s Shamela (2004); and co-editor of A Companion to the Eighteenth-Century Novel and Culture (2005) and the anthology British Women Poets of the Long Eighteenth Century (2009). -
R.Kirschbaum, Thesis, 2012.Pdf
Introduction: Female friendship, community and retreat Friendship still has been design‘d, The Support of Human-kind; The safe Delight, the useful Bliss, The next World‘s Happiness, and this. Give then, O indulgent Fate! Give a Friend in that Retreat (Tho‘ withdrawn from all the rest) Still a Clue, to reach my Breast. Let a Friend be still convey‘d Thro‘ those Windings, and that Shade! Where, may I remain secure, Waste, in humble Joys and pure, A Life, that can no Envy yield; Want of Affluence my Shield.1 Anne Finch’s “The Petition for an Absolute Retreat” is one of a number of verses by early modern women which engage with the poetic traditions of friendship and the pastoral.2 Finch employed the imagery and language of the pastoral to shape a convivial but protected space of retreat. The key to achieving the sanctity of such a space is virtuous friendship, which Finch implies is both enabled by and enabling of pastoral retirement. Finch’s retreat is not an absolute retirement; she calls for “a Friend in that Retreat / (Tho’ withdrawn from all the rest)” to share in the “humble Joys and pure” of the pastoral. Friendship is “design’d [as] the Support of Human-kind”, a divine gift to ease the burden of human reason and passion. The cause of “the next World’s Happiness, and this”, 1 Anne Finch, “The Petition for an Absolute Retreat” in Miscellany Poems, on Several Occasions, printed for J.B. and sold by Benj. Tooke at the Middle-Temple-Gate, William Taylor in Pater-Noster-Row, and James Round (London, 1713), pp. -
Administration and Instruction 1835-19261
ADMINISTRATION AND INSTRUCTION 1835-19261 CHANCELLORS ALEXANDER WINCHELL, 1873-74. ERASTUS OTIS H~VEN, 1874-80. CHARLES N. SIMS, 1881-93. ]AMES RoscoE DAY, 1894-1922. CHARLES WESLEY FLINT, 1922-. ACTING CHANCELLORS DANIEL STEELE, Commencement, 1872. ]OHN R. FRENCH, October 1893-April1894. FRANK SMALLEY, summer of 1903 and year 1908-9. VICE-CHANCELLORS D~NIEL STEELE, Vice-President, 1871-72. ]OHN R. FRENCH, 1895-97. FRANK SMALLEY, Emeritus, Feb. 1, 1917-. HENRY ALLEN PECK, June-Nov. 1921. WILLIAM PR~TT GRAHAM (Acting, Jan.-June 1922), 1922- :PRESIDENTS OF GENESEE COLLEGE BENJAMIN FRANKLIN TEFFT, 1851-53. JosEPH CuMMINGs, 1854-57. JOHN MoRRISON REID, 1858-64. ]OHN WESLEY LINDSAY, 1865-68. DANIEL STEELE, Acting President of Genesee College, 1869-71. DEANS FREDERICK HYDE, Dean of the College of Medicine, 1872-87. GEORGE F. CoMFORT, Dean of the College of Fine Arts, 1873-93. JOHN R. FRENCH, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts, 1878-97. HE~RY DARWIN DIDAMA, Dean of the College of Medicine, 1888-1905. LEROY M. VERNON, Dean of the College of Fine Arts, 1893-96. ]AMES BYRON BROOKS, Dean of the College of Law, 1895-1914. tGEORGE ALBERT PARKER, Acting Dean of the College of Fine Arts, 1896-98. ALBERT LEONARD, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts, 1897-1900. ENSIGN McCHESNEY, Dean of the College of Fine Arts, 1898-1905. IThese and the following faculty lists are not revised beyond the college year, 1925-26. Also, changes in faculty rank, June 1926, are not given. tAppears more than once in this list of Deans. ADMINISTRATION AND INSTRUCTION-DEANS Io69 FRANK SMALLEY, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts (Acting, Sept. -
An African Millionaire
An African Millionaire Grant Allen An African Millionaire Table of Contents An African Millionaire.............................................................................................................................................1 Grant Allen.....................................................................................................................................................1 I. THE EPISODE OF THE MEXICAN SEER..............................................................................................1 II. THE EPISODE OF THE DIAMOND LINKS........................................................................................10 III. THE EPISODE OF THE OLD MASTER.............................................................................................20 IV. THE EPISODE OF THE TYROLEAN CASTLE.................................................................................27 V. THE EPISODE OF THE DRAWN GAME............................................................................................36 VI. THE EPISODE OF THE GERMAN PROFESSOR..............................................................................45 VII. THE EPISODE OF THE ARREST OF THE COLONEL...................................................................52 VIII. THE EPISODE OF THE SELDON GOLD−MINE...........................................................................62 IX. THE EPISODE OF THE JAPANNED DISPATCH−BOX..................................................................70 X. THE EPISODE OF THE GAME OF POKER........................................................................................78 -
Classic Mystery & Science Fiction with Fine Literature
Sale 427 Thursday, April 29, 2010 1:00 PM Classic Mystery & Science Fiction with Fine Literature Auction Preview Tuesday, April 27 - 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM Wednesday, April 28 - 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM Thursday, April 29 - 9:00 AM to 1:00 PM Or by appointment 133 Kearny Street 4th Floor:San Francisco, CA 94108 phone: 415.989.2665 toll free: 1.866.999.7224 fax: 415.989.1664 [email protected]:www.pbagalleries.com REAL-TIME BIDDINGAVAILABLE PBA Galleries features Real-Time Bidding for its live auctions. This feature allows Internet Users to bid on items instantaneously, as though they were in the room with the auctioneer. If it is an auction day, you may view the Real-Time Bidder at http://www.pbagalleries.com/realtimebidder/ . Instructions for its use can be found by following the link at the top of the Real-Time Bidder page. Please note: you will need to be logged in and have a credit card registered with PBA Galleries to access the Real-Time Bidder area. In addition, we continue to provide provisions for Absentee Bidding by email, fax, regular mail, and telephone prior to the auction, as well as live phone bidding during the auction. Please contact PBA Galleries for more information. IMAGES AT WWW.PBAGALLERIES.COM All the items in this catalogue are pictured in the online version of the catalogue at www.pbagalleries. com. Go to Live Auctions, click Browse Catalogues, then click on the link to the Sale. CONSIGN TO PBA GALLERIES PBA is always happy to discuss consignments of books, maps, photographs, graphics, autographs and related material. -
The American System Vs. British Treason
Click here for Full Issue of EIR Volume 26, Number 17, April 23, 1999 between American policies and BAC policies. The British- orchestrated attempt to oust President Clinton from office in an illegal, unconstitutional coup d’e´tat, failed to install Al Gore into the Oval Office, but the President’s survival came The American System at a dear price. U.S.A. should join the ‘Survivors’ Club’ vs. British treason The last best hope for the world to avoid war and further by Anton Chaitkin financial and economic catastrophe, is for a rejuvenated Presi- dent Clinton, supported by anti-BAC forces in the United States and around the globe, to take the lead in crushing Lon- The American republic’s unique, pro-human economic and don and its lackeys, including those penetrated into his own social character was born in the Revolution and shaped over administration and both political parties’ Congressional cau- time by such revolutionary economic nationalists as Benja- cuses. min Franklin, George Washington, Alexander Hamilton, As LaRouche noted in The Road to Recovery, the post- Henry Carey, Henry Clay, Abraham Lincoln and, later, October 1998 actions of the BAC—the hyperinflationary Franklin D. Roosevelt. The British assassination of President binge, and the war drives in the Persian Gulf and the Bal- John F. Kennedy preempted his efforts to revive the tradition; kans—have driven leading Eurasian nations, led by China, and President William Jefferson Clinton has, on occasion, Russia, and India, to form a “Survivors’ Club” of nations, shown an “FDR impulse” to revive this essential American opposed to the lunacy coming out of nearly all Western cap- republican outlook and policy. -
The Tolstoyan Episode in American Social Thought 49
the tolstoyan episode in american social thought harry walsh Throughout a long and creative life Leo Tolstoy trod unstintingly the path of systematic philosophical inquiry. By examining every con tending system and by subjecting every body of thought to intense scrutiny, he was able at last to integrate his ideas into a very personal doctrine called tolstovstvo in Russian and referred to in these pages as Tolstoyism. Between Tolstoy's literary debut in 1852 and the late 1880's, when he first became known in America, Tolstoy's philosophical evolution took him through a welter of often contradictory beliefs. Taken as a stadial development, his works form a logical progression toward an ideal, but if they are to be viewed all at once, then their overall design is obscured. In nineteenth-century Russia the observant reader was able to plot the course by which Tolstoy's tireless mind moved successively from one idea to another. Thus the perceptive critic Mikhailovsky was able to predict with some accuracy the future direc tion of Tolstoy's literary efforts after reading Part Seven of Anna Karenina, wherein is described the shattering revelation that transformed Tolstoy's life and work. The author of The Cossacks and War and Peace came to be disowned by the man who wrote Confession and The Death of Ivan Ilyich. The American readership, however, received the young Tolstoy with the old. Whereas in 1885 only a single translation of The Cossacks was available to the American reader, by 1890 there were 34 titles in print, and a twenty-volume set of Tolstoy's collected works would soon appear.1 By reading only two of these works one might en counter both a defender of Orthodoxy and an apostate, an aristocrat and a muzhik, a pacifist and a militant nationalist, an advocate of family happiness and a preacher of celibacy and sexual continence, an objective observer of human behavior and an apostle.