8,308 research outputs found

    Tipped-in poems in Poems by William Cullen Bryant

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    This edition contains four additional tipped-in poems by the book's author. Poems appear to be cut from various newspapers of the period. Signature by book's owner located on title page.Bryant, William Cullen, 1794-1878

    Cullen-Ward, L, NX70683

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete.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/379940Surname: CULLEN-WARD Given Name(s) or Initials: L Military Service Number or Last Known Location: NX70683 Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 17214193752 Item: [2016.0049.12233] "Cullen-Ward, L, NX70683

    Cullen Residence

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    Construction drawing of the Cullen residence project, showing construction details.Pencil on vellu

    Cullen, L B L

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    Cullen, V. L.

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    Distracted reader # 2: A ridge, a section, an existing boundary, additions, a removed partition. A floor; concrete (where possible)

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    ISSN: 2350-3165 This is the second in the 'distracted-reader' series, being a collaboration between two artists and three writers. The textual editing was my responsibility, Layla Tweedie-Cullen was the image editor and publication designer. Parr and Western provide a photographic essay on the ruinous state of Barton Gillespie’s modernist house in Westmere, Auckland, into photographs of mutely eloquent architectural and landscape fragments taken in Los Angeles and Mexico. Menzies’ essay reads the Barton Gillespie house as a figure of rapport between people, topography and climate. Pearce considers the itinerancy and conceptual mobility of Parr and Western’s practice. Babbage reflects on the different audiences that Parr and Western’s temporary, quasi-architectural spaces create, and the way the spaces operate as platforms for occupancy and performanc

    Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)

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    Letter from Thomas L. James to Roy H. Cullen discussing a donation to the Sam Houston Area Council

    Bill Cullen, 1993

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    Bill Cullen, Wood Machining Teacher, seconded to S. M. Collins Vic. P/L in Bairnsdale - Kiln drying Seasoning processing plant, 1993. Photograph originally appeared in the 'Swinburne Staff News', 3rd September 1993

    L. M. Cullen The Brandy Trade under the Ancien Régime. Regional Specialisation in the Charente

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    Lachiver Marcel. L. M. Cullen The Brandy Trade under the Ancien Régime. Regional Specialisation in the Charente. In: Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales. 57ᵉ année, N. 5, 2002. pp. 1384-1386

    Fibonacci s-Cullen and s-Woodall Numbers

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    Abstract The m-th Cullen number C m is a number of the form m2 m + 1 and the m-th Woodall number W m has the form m2 m − 1. In 2003, Luca and Stȃnicȃ proved that the largest Fibonacci number in the Cullen sequence is F 4 = 3 and that F 1 = F 2 = 1 are the largest Fibonacci numbers in the Woodall sequence. Very recently, the second author proved that, for any given s > 1, the equation F n = ms m ± 1 has only finitely many solutions, and they are effectively computable. In this note, we shall provide the explicit form of the possible solutions
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