1,438 research outputs found
Proposals by Amos Lay. Geographer and map publisher, Author and publisher of the late maps of the northern part of the State of New-York, upper and lower Canada. For revising, correcting, and republishing from the latest authorities and from a
On verso: Amos. Lay 215, National Annual 150-/334
United States 1830
Relief shown by hachures. Hand colored. Shows county boundaries and parts of Lower Canada, Upper Canada, and New Brunswick Prime meridians: Washington and Greenwich. Includes illustrations, decorative cartouche, an inset map of Florida and a statistical table. "May 1830" -- within title cartouche. "Entered according to act of Congress, May 8th, 1827 ... ." Keyed to index; no index present. This map has been conserved through the generosity of George Mosher, 2011.Color1:2,000,000
New York 1820
Second Edition, revised & published 1820Relief shown pictorially. Shows township and military tract boundaries. Prime meridians: New York City and Greenwich.Color;1:429,15
Amos Stagg Biography
This is a brief biography of Springfield College faculty member and alumnus Alonzo Amos Stagg. An All-American Yale player, Amos Alonzo Stagg (1862-1965) brought football to the YMCA Training College (now Springfield College) and coached the institution’s first team in 1891. This document is most likely written and created by someone at Springfield College, but the exact author is unknown.For more information on Amos Alonzo Stagg, see: https://springfield.as.atlas-sys.com/agents/people/661Paper is fragile
User guide to the Centre for Population Change GHS database 1979-2009
Máire Ní Bhrolcháin originated the proposal to create a time-series database of General Household Survey demographic histories from the 1970s to the present and was Principal Investigator on the project to create the data file. Éva Beaujouan assembled the database, with assistance from Mark Lyons-Amos, under the direction of Máire Ní Bhrolcháin and Ann Berrington. All authors have contributed to the compilation of this User Guide but Éva Beaujouan is its principal author
The Grouped Author-Topic Model for Unsupervised Entity Resolution
This paper describes a generative approach for tackling the problem of identity resolution in a completely unsupervised context with no fixed assumption regarding the true number of identities. The problem of entity resolution involves associating different references to authors (in a paper's author list, for example) with real underlying identities. The references may be written in differing forms or may have errors, and identical references may refer to different real identities. The approach taken here uses a generative model of both the abstract of a document and its list of authors to resolve identities in a corpus of documents. In the model, authors and topics are associated with latent groups. For each document, an abstract and an author list are generated conditioned on a given group. Results are presented on real-world datasets, and outperform the best performing unsupervised methods.</p
Letter to Amos Alonzo Stagg from the New York Athletic Club not dated
Letter to Amos Alonzo Stagg from the New York Athletic Club. The letter is not dated and the author's name is not readable. The letter states the regrets that a team cannot be formed in time to play in early October, but possible later in the season. The author addresses Stagg as "Lonny." The letter is part of a series of letters received by Stagg regarding arrangements to play Springfield College in Football.For more information on Amos Alonzo Stagg, see: https://springfield.as.atlas-sys.com/agents/people/661Brackets and question marks in the text field represent words or phrases that were not readable due to the authors handwriting. The envelope for this item exists. To see envelope, click here: http://cdm16122.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/compoundobject/collection/p15370coll2/id/14464/rec/
Letter to Amos Alonzo Stagg from Weslyan University dated September 23, 1891
Letter to Amos Alonzo Stagg from the Weslyan University Foot Ball Association dated September 23, 1891 asking if October 10, 1891 is free for a game and offering $50 from the receipts. The author of the letter is thought to F.W. Taskaberry, but the writing is hard to read and this transcription might be inaccurate. The letter is part of a series of letters received by Stagg regarding arrangements to play Springfield College in Football.For more information on Amos Alonzo Stagg, see: https://springfield.as.atlas-sys.com/agents/people/661Brackets and question marks in the text field represent words or phrases that were not readable due to the authors handwriting. The envelope for this item exists. To see envelope, click here
- …
