34,077 research outputs found

    Thomas Lambert\u27s Personal History Statement, Circa 1946

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    This is a short biography of Lambert focusing on his time in WWII and the Nuremberg Trials

    Thomas F. Lambert\u27s Five-Year Diary Sept. 26 1936-April 2 1937

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    This is a diary Lambert received in 1936 where he journals every day starting September 26 1936 to April 2 1937. In the journal he talks about some of his travels which can also be seen through some of the photos in the collection

    How to Regulate

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    Markets sometimes fail. But so do regulatory efforts to correct market failures. Sometimes regulations reach too far, condemning good activities as well as bad, and sometimes they don&amp;apos;t reach far enough, allowing bad behavior to persist. In this highly instructive book, Thomas A. Lambert explains the pitfalls of both extremes while offering readers a manual of effective regulation, showing how the best regulation maximizes social welfare and minimizes social costs. Working like a physician, Lambert demonstrates how regulators should diagnose the underlying disease and identify its symptoms, potential remedies for it, and their side effects before selecting the regulation that offers the greatest net benefit. This book should be read by policymakers, students, and anyone else interested in understanding how the best regulations are crafted and why they work.</jats:p

    Photograph of a marching band in the German Art Parade in Munich, Germany, 7/16/1937

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    This is one of the photographs taken by Thomas F. Lambert, Jr. visiting many sights in Munich that were later destroyed like the Brown House and the Temple of Honor. The verso of the photograph has the following inscription: Here come the Blackshirts! A parade in Munich. Soldiers preceded by band!https://dc.suffolk.edu/lambert-images/1009/thumbnail.jp

    Photograph of a Nazi propaganda poster handing on a building in Munich, Germany, 1937

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    This is one of the photographs taken by Thomas F. Lambert, Jr. visiting many sights in Munich that were later destroyed like the Brown House and the Temple of Honor. The verso of the photograph has the following inscription: Poster to illustrate propaganda to unify, or regiment youth in Germany to the Nazi credo of blood and iron.https://dc.suffolk.edu/lambert-images/1004/thumbnail.jp

    Catherine Lambert, Grosvenor Street, [London], to Sir James Edward Smith

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    Thanks for turkey. [Aylmer Bourke] Lambert unable to write as suffering from a toothache. A vote at the Linnean Society led by Lambert failed in removing the "tanners' and some other house", smell so offensive that [William George] Maton had to leave before dinner was over. A mild winter. Describes attractions of Boyton House, Wiltshire, including gardens. Praises Smith's "sublime hymns". Discusses poetry including "odditys [sic]"of Lord Byron and Lord [Thomas] Erskine's [1st Baron Erskine (1750-1823), lord chancellor] poem "The Farmer's Vision". Sir Joseph [Banks] ill, discussion of [Sarah Sophia] Banks' will [(1744-1818), sister of Banks and collector of antiquarian items, ]. Has seen Lady Banks and the Countess Bentinck, and Maton in connection with Banks' health

    Catherine Lambert, Grosvenor Street, [London], to Sir James Edward Smith

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    Thanks for turkey. [Aylmer Bourke] Lambert unable to write as suffering from a toothache. A vote at the Linnean Society led by Lambert failed in removing the "tanners' and some other house", smell so offensive that [William George] Maton had to leave before dinner was over. A mild winter. Describes attractions of Boyton House, Wiltshire, including gardens. Praises Smith's "sublime hymns". Discusses poetry including "odditys [sic]"of Lord Byron and Lord [Thomas] Erskine's [1st Baron Erskine (1750-1823), lord chancellor] poem "The Farmer's Vision". Sir Joseph [Banks] ill, discussion of [Sarah Sophia] Banks' will [(1744-1818), sister of Banks and collector of antiquarian items, ]. Has seen Lady Banks and the Countess Bentinck, and Maton in connection with Banks' health

    Photograph of the exterior of a building in Munich, Germany displaying a Nazi propaganda banner, 1937

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    This is one of the photographs taken by Thomas F. Lambert, Jr. visiting many sights in Munich that were later destroyed like the Brown House and the Temple of Honor. The verso of the photograph has the following inscription: Nazi propaganda telling the Germans that Hitler, the (unintelligible)\u27s Joan of Arc, is ready any hour to lay down their lives for his ideas.https://dc.suffolk.edu/lambert-images/1001/thumbnail.jp

    Bell Tower, original design

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    One of the symbols of Christian Brothers campus, the Bell Tower was erected in 1958 with a design by Brother Lambert Thomas Matthews (President, 1953-1962). Building the Tower was sponsored by the Mothers' Club

    Sad memorials of the royal martyr, or, A parallel betwixt the Jewes murder of Christ and the English murder of King Charls the First [electronic resource] : being a sermon preached on the solemnity of His Majestie's martyrdom in the Cathedral-Church of Sarum, An. Dom. 1669 /

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    Attributed to Thomas Lambert. Cf. BM.Probably preached Jan. 30, 1670.Reproduction of original in Union Theological Seminary Library, New York.WingArber's Term cat.Marginal notes.Electronic reproduction
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