64,530 research outputs found

    [Telegrams to Jack Ruby from Cecilia Hamilton and N. J. Waldman, November 24, 1963 #1]

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    Individual telegrams by Cecilia Hamilton and N. J. Waldman to Jack Ruby, letting him know that the public supports him after assassinating Lee Harvey Oswald

    [Telegrams to Jack Ruby from Cecilia Hamilton and N. J. Waldman, November 24, 1963 #2]

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    Individual telegrams by Cecilia Hamilton and N. J. Waldman to Jack Ruby, letting him know that the public supports him after assassinating Lee Harvey Oswald

    Hamilton College Library “Home Notes”

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    Hamilton College Library Reopens Rare Book Room Communal Societies Collection: New Acquisitions Examination of Prophecies. The prophecies of Joanna Southcott have been closely examined for seven days, by twenty-three persons, chosen by Divine command ... London: printed by J. Greenham, 45, Drurylane. [1803]. Manuscripts and imprints from the Society of Separatists at Zoar, Ohio. “First Work on Linotype By Benjamin Apl 2-07”. Jezreel’s Tower, Gillingham, Kent. Real photo postcard, c. 1900

    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]

    Hamilton, Catherine Jane [pseud. Retlaw Spring] (1841–1935), author and journalist

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    Hamilton, Catherine Jane [pseud. Retlaw Spring] (1841-1935), author and journalist, was born on 25 January 1841 at Kilmersdon, Somerset, where she was baptized on 12 April 1841, the younger of two daughters of Richard Hamilton (1805?-1859), vicar of Kilmersdon, and his wife Charlotte, née Cooper (1809-1882), the fifth daughter of William Cooper, of Queens County, Ireland. She was of Irish heritage on both sides. Her father belonged to a military family with roots in Strabane (county Tyrone) - his father, John Hamilton, and her father’s four older brothers were all officers in the Fifth Foot – and was a graduate of Trinity College Dublin. He had been a bright scholar with an aptitude for languages, and as a preacher was praised for his powerful sermons and his ability to bring the Bible to life for his parishioners

    Jazz Tales from Jazz Legends: Oral Histories from the Fillius Jazz Archive at Hamilton College

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    Distills an oral history project that began in 1995 under the auspices of the Fillius Jazz Archive at Hamilton College in Clinton N.Y. Excerpts drawn from 325 one-on-one sessions conducted for the Archive are organized into categories including first-hand accounts of life on the road, inspiration, race and jazz, improvisation, and work inside the studios. Interviewees quoted in the book include icons in jazz world such as Joe Williams, Dave and Iola Brubeck, Jon Hendricks, Steve Allen, and Marian McPartland. Stories from unsung sidemen offer a rare perspective on the life and times of jazz artists who balance the love of music with the sacrifice inherent in the jazz lifestyle. The author provides informative commentary with personal insights into the accomplishments and personalities of over one hundred jazz artists. 209 pages with 13 black and white illustrationshttps://digitalcommons.hamilton.edu/books/1066/thumbnail.jp

    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

    J. S. deRauthac Hamilton correspondence with Lula Ulrica Whitaker, 1935 May 9

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    Letter from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill librarian J. S. deRauthac Hamilton to Lula Ulrica Whitaker regarding the disposition of Whitaker's 1935 University of Chicago masters thesis, entitled Twelve Southerners and Agrarianism

    J. S. deRauthac Hamilton correspondence with Lula Ulrica Whitaker, 1935 May 9

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    Letter from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill librarian J. S. deRauthac Hamilton to Lula Ulrica Whitaker regarding the disposition of Whitaker's 1935 University of Chicago masters thesis, entitled Twelve Southerners and Agrarianism
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