46,136 research outputs found

    Cox, Robert M. (SC 903)

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    Finding aid only for Manuscripts Small Collection 903. A journal compiled by Robert M. Cox listing Bowling Green and Warren County Confederate veterans and those who are deceased, items of the Bowling Green United Confederate Veterans group, 1915, 1923 (3), and newspaper clipping of Cox’s obituary, n.d

    The Substance of Gloup

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    An essay on Gloup, the Gloucestershire group of concrete poets, including dom sylvester houedard (dsh), Ken Cox, John Furnival, concentrating in particular on the relationship between Cox and houedard and looking at the implications of this radical legacy for contemporary thought and practice. INDEX|press is a small artist run magazine and gallery programme based in Stroud with a radical international programme

    Charles Cox Collection

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    Catalogs of Mount Lebanon University and Mount Lebanon Female College, both founded in 1853, in Bienville Parish, Louisiana by the Louisiana Baptist State Convention.https://digitalcommons.latech.edu/manuscript-finding-aids/1083/thumbnail.jp

    Point field models for the galaxy point pattern. Modelling the singularity of the two-point correlation function

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    There is empirical evidence that the two-point correlation function of the galaxy distribution follows, for small scales, reasonably well a power-law expression ξ(r)rγ\xi(r)\propto r^{-\gamma} with γ\gamma between 1.5 and 1.9. Nevertheless, most of the point field models suggested in the literature do not have this property. This paper presents a new class of models, which is produced by modifying point fields commonly used in cosmology to mimic the galaxy distribution, but where γ=2\gamma=2 is too large. The points are independently and randomly shifted, leading to the desired reduction of the value of γ\gamma.Comment: Inserted a missing part of the abstract; 8 pages, 6 figures, uses aa.cls and natbib.sty (included); accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic

    The Story of George M. Waldburg

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    George M. Waldburg was a wealthy landowner of Savannah and St. Catherine\u27s Island, Georgia. He grew cotton on his plantation, owned a number of slaves, and invested in the railroad and banking companies. He was active in community affairs. Doctors and judges were included in his friends circle in Savannah. He died in 1856 at the age of sixty-one; leaving an estate valued at $51,955.00 to his brother Jacob.https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/sav-bios-lane/1117/thumbnail.jp
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