151,017 research outputs found

    Panorama vom Rigi Berg

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    gezeichnet von H. Keller ; gestochen von J.J. Scheurman 1815Fussleiste: "Gezeichnet auf dem Rigi-Kulm, 1814 von H. Keller"Mit KlappenRückendeckel, innen: "Le Mont Righi, dessiné près de Zoug, B. Bullinger del., F. Hegi sc.

    Panorama vom Rigi Berg

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    gezeichnet von H. Keller ; gestochen von J.J. Scheurman 1815Fussleiste: "Gezeichnet auf dem Rigi-Kulm, 1814 von H. Keller"Mit KlappenRückendeckel, innen: "Le Mont Righi, dessiné près de Zoug, B. Bullinger del., F. Hegi sc.

    Interview with Herbert B. Keller

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    Interview in two sessions, May and June 1996, with Herbert B. Keller, professor of applied mathematics with a joint appointment in the Division of Engineering and Applied Science and the Division of Physics, Mathematics, and Astronomy. Dr. Keller received his BEE at Georgia Tech in 1945 and his PhD from New York University (Institute for Mathematics and Mechanics, later the Courant Institute) in 1954. At Caltech as a visiting professor in 1965; joined the faculty as full professor in 1967. Executive officer for applied mathematics, 1980-1985. He discusses growing up in Paterson, N.J., with his older brother, mathematician Joseph Keller, and education in mathematics at Eastside High School. Matriculates at Georgia Tech and joins NROTC; in World War II, serves as a fire-control officer on the USS Mississippi. After the war, he takes graduate courses in electrical engineering at Georgia Tech; soon follows his brother to NYU and the institute established there by Richard Courant. Recollections of Courant and Charles De Prima; fellow students: Peter Lax, Louis Nirenberg, Cathleen Morawetz, and Harold Grad. Bicycling trip in Europe, 1948, with his brother; meeting up with Courant in Switzerland. Thesis work with Bernard Friedman. From 1951-1953, he taught mathematics at Sarah Lawrence. Recalls working with Robert Richtmyer at Courant on the Atomic Energy Commission's UNIVAC computer; becomes associate director of the AEC Computation and Applied Mathematics Center; Edward Teller and Hans Bethe as consultants; visits Los Alamos and Livermore. Initial invitation to Caltech in 1960 from Gilbert McCann, head of what was then called information science (now computer science). Happy at Courant and unimpressed with Caltech's offer, he declines, but visits Caltech in 1965 at invitation of Gerald Whitham, joining new applied mathematics program. Returns to NYU for a year, then back to Caltech to stay. Recalls applied math group--Donald Cohen, Philip Saffman, Julian Cole, later Joel Franklin. Recalls Jack Todd. Helps establish and for many years teaches one of Caltech's most popular courses: Applied Mathematics 95 (AMA 95). Discusses early development of computer science at Caltech: Donald Knuth, Carver Mead, Charles L. Seitz., Ivan Sutherland, Mani Chandy. Discusses his relations with Caltech's pure mathematicians and aerodynamicists. Recalls sabbatical at INRIA [Institut National de Recherche en d'Informatique et en Automatique] and visiting professorship at Paris-Orsay. Visiting fellow at Christ College, Cambridge, and DAMTP (Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics) in 1993. Concludes by recalling his impressions of K.O. Friedrichs and Fritz John at Courant and his work with his brother

    Antwurt dem hochgelerten Doctor Joan. Pugenhag uss Pomern, Hirt zuo Wittenberg, uff die Missive, so er an den hochgelerten Doctor Hesso, Leerer zuo Presslaw geschickt, das Sacrament betreffende

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    durch Cuonrad Ryssen zuo Ofen gemachet. ...Conrad Reyss vermutlich Pseudonym von Michael Keller. Die Schrift wird auch Johann Landtsperger zugeschrieben.Impressum gemäss VischerBogensignaturen: A⁴, B

    Keller, K B, 217114

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    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/396512Surname: KELLER. Given Name(s) or Initials: K B. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: 217114. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: SEA-3489.233138 Item: [2016.0049.28805] "Keller, K B, 217114

    Gordon Keller Historical Marker Reveal, B

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    A man and a woman go to reveal the Gordon Keller historical marker on the campus of Tampa General Hospital on Davis Islands in Tampa, Florida.https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/gordon_keller_nursing/1066/thumbnail.jp

    Correspondence between Mark Keller and Sheila Blume (1980-1990)

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    Correspondence between Mark Keller and Sheila Blume (1980-1990) related to the oral history project that resulted in an interview published in the journal Addiction: Conversation with Mark Keller, V. 80, issue 1, p 5-9 in 1985. Full audio tapes also available in the CAS Archives. From the Mark Keller Papers

    Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis

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    The present study examines one of the fundamental aspects of author co-citation analysis (ACA) - the way co-citation counts are defined. Co-citation counting provides the data on which all subsequent statistical analyses and mappings are based, and we compare ACA results based on two different types of co-citation counting - the traditional type that only counts the first one among a cited work's authors on the one hand and a non-traditional type that takes into account the first 5 authors of a cited work on the other hand. Results indicate that the picture produced through this non-traditional author co-citation counting contains more coherent author groups and is therefore considerably clearer. However, this picture represents fewer specialties in the research field being studied than that produced through the traditional first-author co-citation counting when the same number of top-ranked authors is selected and analyzed. Reasons for these effects are discussed

    Hin und Her. Utopie lebendiger Gemeinschaft in Goethes "Märchen" und die Folgen ("Wanderjahre", Keller, Handke)

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    Der Beitrag fokussiert das Hin und Her als ein von Goethe favorisiertes Bewegungs- und Zeitkonzept. In seinem Wesen selbst schwankend vermag das Hin und Her im Märchen zunächst die persönlichen und historischen Wirrnisse utopisch auf die Idee einer lebendigen Gemeinschaft hin zu überschreiben. Die beispiellose Integration von Phantasie und Erzählung, Individuum und Gemeinschaft bleibt jedoch ein Einzelfall, dem die zunehmende Desynchronisation von Individuum und Gemeinschaft im Hin und Her des epischen Erzählens in den Wanderjahren entgegentritt. Gottfried Keller und Peter Handke zeigen exemplarisch zwei verbleibende Alternativen auf, wie auf Goethe bezugnehmend ein Erzählen im Zeichen des Hin und Her aussehen kann: Keller verlagert die Vorstellung lebendiger Gemeinschaft ganz in den Traum; Handke unternimmt den Versuch, in der Phantasie eine Gemeinschaft der Vereinzelten zu stiften
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