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Emerson and Alfred
The vigour of his thought won admiration from Henry James, Sr. ( father of the novelist ) and from Ralph Waldo Emerson, through whom he met Thomas Carlyle and James Anthony Froude ; and his speculation further attracted Alfred Tennyson, the Oliphants and Edward Maitland.
" It was the opinion of New York's leading psychiatrist, Alfred Jelliffe, that she was to blame and that in order for Emerson to " get better " she would have to give up her career.
Here annually the world-famous lied-and chamber-music-festival Schubertiade Schwarzenberg takes place, with performances of artists like Alfred Brendel, Emerson String Quartet, Michael Schade, Robert Holl, Angelika Kirchschlager, Thomas Quasthoff.
Born in New York City, he was the son of Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt and his second wife, Margaret Emerson.
Besides articles and research monographs, Allee wrote a number of books, including Animal Aggregations: A Study in General Sociology ( 1931 ), Animal Life and Social Growth ( 1932 ), The Social Life of Animals ( 1938 ), Principles of Animal Ecology, co-authored by Alfred E. Emerson, Orlando Park, Thomas Park, and Karl P. Schmidt ( 1949 ), and Cooperation among Animals, with Human Implications ( 1951 ).
Williams, in what is now considered a classic by evolutionary biologists, outlines a gene-centered view of evolution, disputes notions of evolutionary progress, and criticizes contemporary models of group selection, including the theories of Alfred Emerson, A. H. Sturtevant, and to a smaller extent, the work of V. C. Wynne-Edwards.
From the Old Corner Book Store Ticknor and Fields published the works of Horatio Alger, Lydia Maria Child, Charles Dickens, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, James Russell Lowell, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Alfred Tennyson, Henry David Thoreau, Mark Twain, and John Greenleaf Whittier.

Emerson and E
It was subsequently placed in the middle of several spiral representations of the periodic system for classifying the chemical elements, such as those of Charles Janet ( 1928 ), E. I. Emerson ( 1944 ), John D. Clark ( 1950 ) and in Philip Stewart's Chemical Galaxy ( 2005 ).
* In the E. M. Forster novel A Room with a View, Lucy Honeychurch is carried to " some steps in the Uffizi Arcade " by George Emerson, when she faints after witnessing a murder in the Piazza della Signoria.
Ken Emerson wrote in his review of The Wild, the Innocent & the E Street Shuffle, " Greetings from Asbury Park, NJ.
Ida Emerson & Joseph E. Howard
Ida Emerson & Joseph E. Howard )-Arthur Collins on Edison Records-Len Spencer on Berliner Records & Columbia Records
: Words and Music by Ida Emerson and Joseph E. Howard ( 1899 )
Scripps Institution of Oceanography was founded in 1903 as the Marine Biological Association of San Diego, an independent biological research laboratory, by University of California Zoology professor William Emerson Ritter, with support from local philanthropist Ellen Browning Scripps and later her brother E. W. Scripps.
In 1961 Skelton was made an honorary brother of the Phi Alpha Tau Fraternity of Emerson College when he was awarded the Joseph E. Connor Award for excellence in the field of communications.
* Lee E. Emerson, 69th governor of Vermont
* Joseph E. Howard ( 1878 – 1961 ), American composer (" Emerson and Howard ")
Pioneering work in the model checking of temporal logic formulae was done by E. M. Clarke and E. A. Emerson and by J. P. Queille and J. Sifakis.
* E. Allen Emerson: The Beginning of Model Checking: A Personal Perspective ( this is also a very good introduction and overview of model checking )
* Emerson E. Glass
Aside from many photographs of Gilman and his contemporaries, the papers include Gilman's correspondence with leading figures of the day, including Charles W. Eliot, Sidney Lanier, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry James, James Russell Lowell, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, William McKinley, Basil Gildersleeve, Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, George Bancroft, Alexander Graham Bell, Thomas Huxley, Andrew Carnegie, Horace Greeley, Helen Keller, Louis Pasteur, Henry Ward Beecher, William Osler, W. E. B DuBois, Booker T Washington and others.
Though Emerson College has moved to various locations within the city of Boston, the appointment of Allen E. Koenig ( the ninth president of Emerson College ) almost took the college completely outside of Boston.
Powell, H. Littek, E. Henry, Emerson Wilson, and H. Griffin, felt that they had received more light from God concerning the original eschatology of the movement.
His mother, Margaret Emerson ( daughter of the Bromo-Seltzer inventor Isaac E Emerson ), was one of America's wealthiest women and most sought-after hostesses, operating at least seven large estates around the country.
* Willey, P. and Emerson, Thomas E., 1993 The Osteology and Archaeology of the Crow Creek Massacre.
A. E .-Conrad Aiken-Margaret Emerson Bailey-T. O. Beachcroft-William Rose Benét-Anthony Bertram-Edmund Blunden-Kay Boyle-Nancy Campbell-Thomas Caldecott Chubb-Elizabeth Coatsworth-Robert P. Tristram Coffin-Jane Culver-W. H. Davies-John Gould Fletcher-John Galsworthy-Viola Gerard Garvin-Stella Gibbons-Wilfrid Gibson-G. Rostrevor Hamilton-Ernest Hartsock-F. R. Higgins-John Lee Higgins-Robert Hillyer-Thomas Hornsby Ferril-Helen Hoyt-Julian Huxley-Leslie Nelson Jennings-Geoffrey Johnson-Frank Kendon-Stanley Kimmel-Alfred Kreymborg-Ruth Lechlitner-Marie Luhrs-Sylvia Lynd-Alister Mackenzie-E. H. W. Meyerstein-Harold Monro-Virginia Moore-David Morton-Edwin Muir-Robert Nichols-Jessica Nelson North-Alfred Noyes-Doris Pailthorpe-Herbert E. Palmer-Dorothy Parker-Laurence Powys-Frederic Prokosch-Lizette Woodworth Reese-Sarah-Elizabeth Rodger-Robert L. Roe-James Rorty-A. Wolseley Russell-Lady Margaret Sackville-Anderson M. Scruggs-Leonora Speyer-J. C. Squire-L. Steni-L. A. G. Strong-Sara Teasdale-Katharine Tynan-A. R. Ubsdell-Marie de L. Welch-John Hall Wheelock-Mary Brent Whiteside-Humbert Wolfe-Barbara Young
Emerson Harrington was born to John E. Harrington and Elizabeth Thompson Harrington in the town of Madison in Dorchester County, Maryland.
He was articled to the Plymouth architect James Harvey in 1893 ; in 1897 he moved to London where he assisted E. Keynes Purchase, Leonard Stokes and Sir William Emerson.

Emerson and .
Emerson -- Platonist, idealist, doctrinaire -- sounded a high Transcendental note in his `` Boston Hymn '', delivered in 1863 in the Boston Music Hall amidst thundering applause: `` Pay ransom to the owner and fill the bag to the brim.
Fosdick, a brother of minister Harry Emerson Fosdick, was a graduate of Princeton, and a member of Phi Beta Kappa and the American Philosophical Association.
Emerson the previous day.
I took a deep breath and an even deeper swallow of my drink, and said, `` I admit that going back to Ralph Waldo Emerson for humor is like going to a modern musical comedy for music and comedy ''.
Emerson, in his lecture, refers to the `` startling experience which almost every person confesses in daylight, that particular passages of conversation and action have occurred to him in the same order before, whether dreaming or waking, a suspicion that they have been with precisely these persons in precisely this room, and heard precisely this dialogue, at some former hour, they know not when ''.
Emerson evaded the problem by shoving it aside, or rather by leaving it behind him: he walked out of the Unitarian communion, so that it could lick the wound of his departure, preserve its self-respect and eventually accord him pious veneration.
Here, too, must be placed Unitarianism and, less obviously from Christian inspiration, Emerson, Transcendentalism, and the idealism of Walt Whitman.
The Hopkinsian universal disinterested benevolence, although holding to original sin and the doctrine of election, inspired its adherents to heroic endeavours for others, looked for the early coming of the Millennium, and was paralleled by the confidence in man's ability cherished by the Unitarians, Emerson, and the Transcendentalists.
Alcott became friends with Ralph Waldo Emerson and became a major figure in transcendentalism.
Alcott is often criticized for his inability to earn a living and support his family ; he often relied on loans from his brother-in-law, Emerson, and others.
Beginning in 1836, Alcott's membership in the Transcendental Club put him in such company as Ralph Waldo Emerson, Orestes Brownson and Theodore Parker.
In late April 1840 Alcott moved to the town of Concord urged by Emerson.
A supporter of Alcott's philosophies, Emerson offered to help with his writing, which proved a difficult task.
With financial support from Emerson, Alcott left Concord on May 8, 1842, to a visit to England, leaving his brother Junius with his family.
Both Emerson and Sam May assisted in securing the home for the Alcotts.
Emerson wrote a eulogy, and Alcott helped plan the preparations.
These " conversations " as he called them, were more or less informal talks on a great range of topics, spiritual, aesthetic and practical, in which he emphasized the ideas of the school of American Transcendentalists led by Emerson, who was always his supporter and discreet admirer.
In April 1882, Alcott's friend and benefactor Ralph Waldo Emerson was sick and bedridden.
" Emerson died the next day.
Like Emerson, Alcott was always optimistic, idealistic, and individualistic in thinking.
Even so, Emerson noted that Alcott's brilliant conversational ability did not translate into good writing.
" When he sits down to write ," Emerson wrote, " all his genius leaves him ; he gives you the shells and throws away the kernel of his thought.
* 1994 – Jacqueline Emerson, American actress and singer ( Devo 2. 0 )
Emmerson Hall, Acadia University, was originally built 1913 as Emerson Memorial Library and shows strong Beaux Arts influences.
* 1882 – Ralph Waldo Emerson, American essayist ( b. 1803 )

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