229,575 research outputs found

    Correspondence - 1962, June 26 - R. E. Hamilton

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    Correspondence from R. Hamilton to Fay Webb Gardner. Handwritten.https://digitalcommons.gardner-webb.edu/fay-webb-gardner-samuel-andrews/1001/thumbnail.jp

    Hamilton College Library Home Notes

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    Hamilton College Library Acquires The Shaker Messenger Archives Communal Societies Collection: New Acquisitions Lamech, Brother, Johann Peter Mill, J. Max Hark. Chronicon Ephratense; A History of the Community of Seventh Day Baptists at Ephrata, Lancaster County, Penn’a. Lancaster, Pa.: S. H. Zahm & Co., 1889. xvi, 288 p. 26 cm. Clark, Christopher. A Shock to Shakerism: Or A Serious Refutation of the Idolatrous Divinity of Anne Lee, of Manchester, (Eng.). Richmond, Ky.: Printed for T. W. Ruble, 1812. iv, 114 p. 20 cm. Noyes, T. R. (M. D.). Report on the Health of Children in the Oneida Community. Oneida, N. Y.: [n. p.], 1878. 8 p. 22 cm. Harter, Mrs. J. H. and [Harvey L. Eads]. True Religion. A Poem, by Mrs. J. H. Harter, Auburn, N.Y. and Rhymes on Shakerism by Mrs. Harter and Lizzie Morton. [n.p: n.d.]. 20 p. 15 cm. Collection relating to “The Children of Light” (an intentional community established about 1950 and located at Dateland, Arizona since 1963). [Correspondence, photographs, hymnody and poetry, sound recordings, newspaper photocopies and transcriptions, and ephemeral items]

    L. W. Hamilton

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    "R.A.A.F. 1942 Darwin. 31 Beau Fighter. Squadron. L.W. Hamilton. 68863."Royal Australian Air Force 1942. Darwin. 31 Beau Fighter. Squadron. L.W. Hamilton. 68863

    [Letter from C. R. Hamilton to Dr. Meyer Bodansky - February 11, 1930]

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    Letter from C. R. Hamilton to Dr. Meyer Bodansky, giving Dr. Bodansky permission to reproduce several photomicrographs

    Indigenous vegetation types of Hamilton Ecological District

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    The following descriptions of indigenous vegetation types and lists of the most characteristic species have been compiled for the major landform units of the Hamilton Ecological District, which lies within the Waikato Ecological Region (McEwen 1987). The boundaries of the Hamilton Ecological District correspond approximately to those of the Hamilton basin, with the addition of parts of hills and foothills at the margins of the basin. The vegetation descriptions and species lists are based on knowledge of the flora of vegetation remnants in the ecological district, historical records (e.g., Gudex 1954), and extrapolation of data from other North Island sites with similar environmental profiles

    [Letter from C. R. Hamilton to Dr. Meyer Bodansky - February 11, 1930]

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    Letter to Dr. Meyer Bodansky from C. R. Hamilton, dated February 11th, 1930. The letter gives permission to Dr. Bodansky to reproduce information from Hamilton's scholarly works in the new edition of Bodansky's textbook on physiological chemistry

    The built environment, Hamilton City Council policies and child driveway safety: a balancing act

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    Driveway run-overs continue to bring tragedy to New Zealand families at a higher rate than any other Western nation. Meanwhile, little progress appears to have been made in regard to the recommendations of previous research. This project investigates whether recommendations in regard to one key factor in driveway run-overs, the built environment, are reflected in current local body policies and regulations. The research evaluates Hamilton City Council policies affecting the renovation and/or erection of domestic residences with a view to determining whether they are consistent with existing knowledge and best practice initiatives designed to minimise accidental injuries to children on driveways. The project compares the findings of a review of the existing literature on child safety best practice for the built environment and urban design of driveways, with a review of Hamilton City Council policies and guidelines relating to the built environment of residential properties and adjacent roads (the Operative District Plan, Ten Year Plan, Urban Growth Strategy, Vista, and more), along with relevant central government policy. These findings are triangulated with data from interviews with four expert informants – one child safety expert and three Hamilton City Council employees involved in planning, policy and transport – who provide insights into the translation of policies into practice

    Hamilton College Library Home Notes

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    Know Thyself! Lectures on Phrenology by Dr. J. P. M’Lean at [blank] on the Evening of [blank.] Subjects: How to Read Character Scientifically; Including the Physical, Social, Moral, and Intellectual Development of the Race. Public Examinations at the Close of Each Lecture. [New York]: Office of the “Phrenological Journal,” 389 Broadway. S. R. Wells, Publisher, [c. 1870]

    A discontinuous Galerkin moving mesh method for Hamilton-Jacobi equations

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    In this paper we consider the numerical solution of first-order Hamilton-Jacobi equations using the combination of a discontinuous Galerkin finite element method and an adaptive rr-refinement (mesh movement) strategy. Particular attention is given to the choice of an appropriate adaptivity criterion when the solution becomes discontinuous. Numerical examples in one and two dimensions are presented to demonstrate the effectiveness of the adaptive procedure

    The Beinecke Lesser Antilles Collection at Hamilton College: A Catalogue of Books, Manuscripts, Prints, Maps, and Drawings, 1521-1860

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    This distinguished catalogue of the Lesser Antilles provides extensive, precise descriptions of approximately one thousand printed books and one thousand manuscripts that Walter Beinecke, Jr., collected over several decades and donated to Hamilton College in Clinton, New York, where he was a trustee. The collection includes hundreds of rare original documents, fifty maps, plantation reports, correspondence, and oil paintings and watercolors. The catalogue of the Walter Beinecke, Jr., Collection describes unique manuscript material and many rare books more fully than previously available in bibliographies. The Houghs have applied advanced bibliographical knowledge to this work and in some instances have added cogent historical annotation. The collection\u27s content addresses issues of broad international significance. Full understanding of the early history of the United States can best be achieved by studying interaction among the European states and the Antilles, as well as the commercial connection between the continental colonies and the Antilles. During the century and a half represented in this collection, England grew from a northern European power to a dominant world power, its growth largely funded by wealth provided from the Indies. This work will be invaluable to libraries with holdings in Caribbean material, slave and slave trade material, economic history, American cartography, early American history, and general American travel books. It will be useful to all historians writing on the history of the region or on the history of colonialism and the slave trade generally. 414 pages : illustrations ; 29 cmhttps://digitalcommons.hamilton.edu/books/1063/thumbnail.jp
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