109,040 research outputs found
Julia G. Gilmore Wrote to Her Parents and Brothers in Fairview, Illinois, That She Had Arrived in Amelia to Join William and Christine Van Raalte Gilmore Who Live There.
Julia G. Gilmore wrote to her parents and brothers in Fairview, Illinois, that she had arrived in Amelia to join William and Christine Van Raalte Gilmore who live there. She had met Rev. Albertus C. Van Raalte and his daughter, Mary, in Chicago, who accompanied her to Amelia. It is not clear if Father Van Raalte accompanied the young ladies to Virginia. Apparently Clark Gilmore, her brother, is also in Amelia. Julia commented that she saw so many people of dark color.https://digitalcommons.hope.edu/vrp_1870s/1058/thumbnail.jp
Gilmore, G C, 216230
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/387670Surname: GILMORE. Given Name(s) or Initials: G C. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: 216230. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: SEA-1719.209940
Item: [2016.0049.19963] "Gilmore, G C, 216230
Poet Brian Gilmore, professor of Law at Michigan State University, reads from his work at the Michigan Writers Series
Poet Brian Gilmore, professor of Law at Michigan State University, reads from his work. Gilmore answers questions from the audience regarding his writing style and his hometown of Washington, D.C. Gilmore is introduced by MSU Librarian Robin Silbergleid. Part of the MSU Libraries Michigan Writes Series. Held in the Main Library
Poet, lawyer and Michigan State University College of Law professor Brian Gilmore reads from his works and answers questions from the audience at the Michigan Writers Series
Poet, lawyer and Michigan State University College of Law professor Brian Gilmore talks about his family and growing up while reading from his books of poetry, "Elvis Presley is alive and well and living in Harlem" and "Jungle nights and soda fountain rags: poem for Duke Ellington & the Duke Ellington Orchestra". Gilmore answers several questions from unidentified members of the audience. Introduced by MSU Librarian Michael Rodriguez. Part of the Michigan State University Libraries' Michigan Writers Series
Musical score, "Haste Love," for voice and piano. Words by Minnie Gilmore, music by Alfred G. Robyn. Balmer and Weber Music House Company, c. 1892
Patrick Gilmore's daughter, Minnie L. Gilmore, was an author in her own right. Her published works include "Songs from the Wings," "Pipes from the Prairieland," "A Son of Esau," and "The Woman Who Stood Between." One of her verses, from "Songs from the Wings," is entitled "To my father--Patrick Sarsfield Gilmore": "Though he is dead, I still may do/ Him honor, by a life akin/ To that pure life my childhood knew,/ His fatherheart within./ And for the true musician's place,/ You claimed a throne beside the priest;/ Since both, you said, redeemed the base,/ And blessed both great and least." In this song, her verse was set to music by Alfred George Robyn (1860-1935) a composer of light opera and founder of the Marion English Opera Company in New York. Balmer and Weber Music House Company, [c.] 1892
William Gilmore Simms's Selected Reviews on Literature and Civilization
Moltke-Hansen's introduction to part two examines Simms's roles in, and responses to, the Romantic critical revolution and the other revolutions then roiling Europe and America.Cover -- William Gilmore Simms's Selected Reviews on Literature and Civilization -- Title -- Copyright -- CONTENTS -- Acknowledgments -- Notes on the Text, or, the Devil and Noah Webster -- Introduction: The Man of Letters as Critic -- Part 1: Literature -- Literature's Long View -- Reviews -- Sir Edward Bulwer-Lytton's The Disowned and Pelham (February 1829) -- James E. Heath's Edge Hill -- or, the Family of the Fitzroyals, a Novel (1 June 1829) -- James Hogg's The Shepherd's Calendar (15 June 1829) -- Charles R. Carroll's Address Delivered Before the Society of Friends of Ireland (1 July 1829) -- William Ellery Channing (October 1842) -- John Greenleaf Whittier's Poems (October 1843) -- G. P. R. James's Arabella Stuart (May 1844) -- Frances Anne Kemble Butler's Poems (August 1844) -- Literature in Ancient Rome (January 1845) -- Catharine Maria Sedgwick's Home (June 1845) -- Jean Paul Frederich Richter's Flower, Fruit and Thorn Pieces. Volumes 1 and 2 (June and September 1845) -- Sir Edward Bulwer-Lytton's Translation of The Poems and Ballads of Johann Schiller (August 1845) -- Benjamin D'Israeli's Sybil, or the Two Nations (October 1845) -- Poe's Poetry (November 1845) -- Elizabeth Missing Sewell's Laneton Parsonage (April 1849) -- John Motley's Merry Mount -- a Romance of the Massachusetts Colony (April 1849) -- J. T. Headley's The Adirondack -- or Life in the Woods (October 1849) -- James Russell Lowell's A Fable for Critics (October 1849) -- Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's Kavanagh (October 1849) -- William Cowper's Poems (October 1849) -- New Novels (April 1850) -- Sir Thomas Carlyle's Latter-Day Pamphlets (July 1850) -- Henry William Herbert's Frank Forester's Fish and Fishing of the United States (July 1850) -- The Life and Letters of Thomas Campbell (September 1850) -- Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's Poems (September 1850)Robert Browning's Poems (September 1850) -- Alfred Lord Tennyson's In Memoriam (November 1850) -- William Wordsworth's The Prelude, or Growth of a Poet's Mind (November 1850) -- Nathaniel Hawthorne's The House of the Seven Gables (July 1851) -- Christopher Wordsworth's Memoirs of William Wordsworth (July 1851) -- Margaret Fuller's Memoirs (1852) -- Herman Melville's Moby-Dick (January 1852) -- Herman Melville's Pierre, or the Ambiguities (October 1852) -- Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Blithedale Romance (October 1852) -- J. V. Huntington's The Forest (January 1853) -- Charles Dickens' Bleak House (January 1854) -- Mrs. Elizabeth Gaskell's Cranford (January 1854) -- Anthons's Manual of Greek Literature (April 1854) -- Thomas Campbell's Specimens of the British Poets (April 1854) -- Thomas De Quincey's Writings (April 1854) -- Charles Kingsley's Hypatia (April 1854) -- Hudson Gurney's Translation of The Works of Apuleius (July 1854) -- Caroline Lee Hentz's The Planter's Northern Bride (July 1854) -- Phoebe Carey's Poems and Parodies (July 1854) -- The Poetical Works of Alexander Pope (July 1854) -- Henry David Thoreau's Walden (8 February 1855) -- Our Literary Docket-New Publications: William Cullen Bryant and Lady Morgan (20 May 1859) -- Our Literary Docket-Novelists, George Eliot, James Hungerford, and Charlotte Mary Yonge (31 May 1859) -- Our Literary Docket-Lord John Campbell's Shakspeare (3 June 1859) -- Our Literary Docket-Charles Lever's Gerald Fitzgerald, the Chevalier (21 June 1859) -- Our Literary Docket-Anthony Trollope's The Bertrams and Doctor Thorne (22 June 1859) -- Our Literary Docket-Bartholomew Rivers Carroll Jr., Hayne, and Timrod (9 August 1859) -- Our Literary Docket-Allen Hampden's Hartley Norman (20 August 1859) -- James Clarence Mangan's Poems (16 February 1860) -- Current Irish Literature from Haverty (2 October 1860)Martin Farquhar Tupper's Poetical Works (24 February 1866) -- Leigh Hunt's The Book of the Sonnet (5 April 1867) -- John William De Forest's Miss Ravenel's Conversion from Secession to Loyalty (4 June 1867) -- John Conington's Æneid (29 June 1867) -- The Late Henry Timrod (19 October 1867) -- Charles Warren Stoddard's Poems (9 November 1867) -- Putnam's Magazine (22 January 1870) -- Part II: Civilization -- A Critical Revolution and a Revolutionary Critic -- Review Essays -- François Guizot, Democracy in France (April 1849) -- Tuckerman's Essays and Essayists (July 1850) -- Ellet's Women of the Revolution (July 1850) -- The Southern Convention (September 1850) -- Works Cited -- IndexMoltke-Hansen's introduction to part two examines Simms's roles in, and responses to, the Romantic critical revolution and the other revolutions then roiling Europe and America.Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, YYYY. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries
GENERALISATIONS OF THE GILMORE-GOMORY TRAVELING SALESMAN PROBLEM AND THE GILMORE-GOMORY SCHEME: A SURVEY
One of the first and perhaps the most well-known polynomially solvable special case of the traveling salesman problem (TSP) is the Gilmore-Gomory case (G-G TSP). Gilmore and Gomory presented an interesting patching algorithm for this case with a fairly non-trivial proof of its validity. Their work has motivated a great deal of research in the area leading to various generalisations of their results and thereby identification of fairly large polynomially solvable subclasses of the TSP. These results form a major portion of the literature on solvable cases of the TSP. In this paper, we survey the main results on solvable cases of the TSP which are direct generalisations of the G-G TSP and/or the Gilmore-Gomory patching scheme. </jats:p
An investigation of Stakeholder Relationships in the Marketing of Tourism within Northern Ireland
Tourism is a high growth industry and there is increasing recognition that it must be managed and governed in a sustainable manner (Jamal and Getz 1995; Sautter and Leisen 1999; Gilmore and Simmons 2007; Gilmore et al. 2008). Tourism planners and managers operate at national, regional and local levels, and interaction is required at inter and intra sectoral level (Sautter and Leisen 1999; Wilson, Nielsen and Buultjens 2009). Tourism has some unique and individual characteristics which result in the need for a unique form of management, such as
- Fragmentation of industry and infrastructure
- Involvement of both public and private sector companies
- Many companies are small – medium sized enterprises
- Includes a variety of services and products (Gilmore 2003).
The specific Northern Ireland context adds a further dimension in that the region is emerging from a sustained period of political instability. Political instability can have a negative impact on tourism (Altinay et al 2002; Gilmore et al 2008), and as such tourism is a relatively new focus on the Northern Ireland agenda. Within the tourism industry there is much focus on interactions and relationships as a result of conflicting directions among stakeholders (Sautter and Leisen 1999; Sheehan, Ritchie and Hudson 2007; Wilson, Nielsen and Buultjens 2009). Quite often there may be disagreement as to which stakeholder view should be prominent, and as to what objectives should be met. This results in a fragmented and disjointed approach to tourism management. Tourism planners and managers acknowledge that this
fragmentation can negatively impact upon levels of coordination and cohesion within the tourism industry which consequently weakens the overall value of the tourism offering (Jamal and Getz 1995; Sheehan, Ritchie and Hudson 2007; Wilson, Nielsen and Buultjens 2009)
Book Review
A. Funston, M. Gil & G. Gilmore (Eds). (2014). Strong starts, supportedtransitions and student success. UK: Cambridge Scholars Publishing.Reviewed by Birgit Schreiber
Letter re: annual pass
Letter from J. A. Gilmore, president of the Federal League of Professional Base Ball Clubs, to Amon Carter thanking him for an annual pass
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