14 resultados para 5-Dibromo-1-methylindole
em Harvard University
Resumo:
Printed circular signed by Samuel Cheney stating school regulations.
Resumo:
Two-page document containing financial calculations related to Croswell's day and evening students.
Resumo:
A brief one-page note from Croswell resigning from the South Grammar School.
Resumo:
One-page letter from Croswell to George Richards, the Pastor of the Universal Society in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, requesting information about teaching opportunities in the area.
Resumo:
One leaf containing the response of Pastor George Richards to Croswell's September 1, 1794, request for information on teaching opportunities.
Resumo:
One-page letter from Croswell to Captain James Scott, Master of the Boston Marine Society, that accompanied Croswell's work on lunar observations.
Resumo:
Draft of a letter requesting help in publishing a map.
Resumo:
Draft of a one-page letter to Judge John Davis regarding a mathematical problem.
Resumo:
Draft of a one-page letter regarding Croswell's maps of the stars.
Resumo:
One-page handwritten letter from Judah Monis to the Corporation discussing the potential long-term losses associated with a plan to advance twenty-five percent of the cost of the Hebrew Grammar to the College.
Resumo:
A half-page handwritten report by a committee of the Corporation endorsing the Judah Monis's Hebrew Grammar following their revision of the work as recommended by a June 8, 1724 vote of the Board of Overseers. The document is signed by President Benjamin Wadsworth, Professor Edward Wigglesworth, Tutor Henry Flynt, and Rev. Nathaniel Appleton. The document is a fragment and some of the missing text transferred to the back of the Hebrew Grammar Account (HUG 1580.5 Box 1, Folder 8).
Resumo:
This long and narrow leather-bound volume, sometimes referred to as the Long College Book, contains early records of Harvard's two governing boards, the Corporation and the Board of Overseers, as well as a miscellany of entries, made in multiple hands, on assorted topics. Although its proper title is College Book 1, the spine title reads "College Book 1 & 2" due to a nineteenth century labeling error. Proceedings from Corporation and Overseers' meetings were entered unsystematically in this volume, alongside financial statements and other records. The varied purposes of the individual quires which make up this volume, along with the early scarcity of paper, contribute to its disorganized nature. One scholar described it as "jumbled together in a haphazard way now impossible of explanation," although several other scholars have attempted to explain its organization. Some entries are in Latin.