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         Bryant Conant James:     more books (21)
  1. Robert Boyle's Experiments in Pneumatics by James Bryant (editor) Conant, 1950
  2. Harvard Case Histories in Experimental Science, Volume II by Conant, James Bryant, General Editor, 1957
  3. Harvard Case Histories In Experimental Science (2 Volumes) by James Bryant, editor Conant, 1957-01-01
  4. Harvard Case Histories In Experimental Science : Volume 2 by James Bryant (Editor) Conant, 1970
  5. Harvard Case Histories In (2v) Experimental Science, Two Volumes by James Conant;General EditorBryant;Associate EditorLeonard K. Nash, 1948
  6. Indian Review Vol 46 No. 6 June 1945 by G. A. (Editor); Robert Holland; T. R. Venkatarama Sastri; James Bryant Conant; Sardar Rambir Singh; P. C. Malhotra; T. K. Venkataraman; M C. Agarwal; Shiv Sahai Kapur; Harischaran Mukerjee Natesan, 1945

21. Review Of Nicholas Lemann, The Big Test
September / October 1999 Mark Satin, Editor. II especially Henry Chauncey, headof the Educational Testing Service, and James Bryant Conant, president of
http://www.radicalmiddle.com/x_lemann.htm
Radical Middle Newsletter
Idealism Without Illusions NEWSLETTER: HOME About Us Site Map Subscribe Now! ... About Our Sponsor, the Center for Visionary Law September / October 1999 Mark Satin, Editor Seriously, folks do we really need a meritocracy? Everybody thinks the tension between “winners” and “losers” is increasing in this country, but nobody knows how to respond. Oh, there are proposals for narrowing the gaps between winners and losers proposals for fairer taxation, broader access to medical care, etc. But among progressives and conservatives alike, it’s heresy to suggest there’s something fishy about the way most middle class people become “winners” in the first place. Surely most non-wealthy people who become doctors, lawyers, top-tier college professors, etc., reach those vaunted stations in life in large part because of their talents and abilities? And it’s beyond heresy beyond even the worst Sixties claptrap to suggest that we don’t need “winners” at all. Isn’t it? In an extraordinary book released this month, The Big Test: The Secret History of the American Meritocracy (Farrar, Straus, 406 pp., $27), Nicholas Lemann one of our most prominent “neoliberal” journalists

22. Harvard University Press/Harvard Observed
John T. Bethell was Editor of Harvard Magazine and its precursor, the Harvard Alumni Educationalcommunities, wrote James Bryant Conant, Harvard's midcentury
http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog/BETHAR.html
John T. Bethell was Editor of Harvard Magazine and its precursor, the Harvard Alumni Bulletin, from 1966 to 1994. Harvard Observed was published in conjunction with the magazine's centennial anniversary observance.
Harvard Observed
An Illustrated History of the University in the Twentieth Century
John T. Bethell
"Educational communities," wrote James Bryant Conant, Harvard's midcentury president, "mirror the life of the nation of which they are a part." Depicting the evolution of twentieth-century Harvard in the broader context of national and world events, Harvard Observed shows how changes in the structure and aspirations of American society led the University to remake itself after World War II, and to do so again after the social upheavals of the Vietnam era. The book opens in 1898, when a quick victory in the Spanish-American War made the United States a world power. The narrative spans the presidencies of Charles William Eliot, A. Lawrence Lowell, James Bryant Conant, Nathan Pusey, Derek Bok, and Neil Rudenstine, tracing the ups and downs of America's oldest university in a century that saw the dismantling of empires, war on a planetary scale, the age of flight, electronic communications, the evolution of jazz and rock music, the parsing of the atom, artificial intelligence, the arrival of film as a major art form, genetic engineering, global interdependence, and the exploration of deep space. As a documentary of the changing institutional life of a major research university

23. INDUSTRYWEEK COLUMN -- Beyond Job Skills
By EditorIn Chief, John Brandt. James Bryant Conant, president of Harvard Universityfrom 1933 to 1953, said it best in 1943 Our purpose is to cultivate in
http://www.industryweek.com/Columns/Asp/columns.asp?ColumnId=405

24. PROJECT GUTENBERG - Catalog By Title - O
AUTHOR Bryant Conant, James, Editor LANGUAGE English SUBJECT Science_ Chemistry PG ENTRY 1234 POSTING DATE Mar 1998 ZIP.
http://www.informika.ru/text/books/gutenb/gutind/TEMP/i-_o2.html

25. Colby | Commencement | Past Commencement Speakers
1957, Erwin D. Canham, Editor, Christian Science Monitor. 1958, Mary Ellen Chase,Maine author. 1960, James Bryant Conant, president emeritus, Harvard University.
http://www.colby.edu/commencement/pastspeakers.shtml

Commencement 2001 Roundup
Commencement Weekend:
schedule of events
Read President Adams's Baccalaureate address. ... Virtual Tour Year Speaker J.M. Montgomery, president, Knox County Bar Association Charles F. Warner, Sc.D., '79 Franklin W. Johnson, L.H.D. '91 Nathaniel Butler Jr., LL.D. '73 Jeremiah E. Burke Litt. D., LL.D. '90 Ralph D. McLeary, B.S., Marion D. Brown B.A., Joseph C. Smith B.S. (students) Nellie E. Pottle, Alfred K. Chapman (students) Donald C. Freeman B.A., Abbot E. Smith B.A., Agnes E. Osgood B.A. (students) Frederick Albert Pottle, Ph.D. '17 George Otis Smith Ph.D. '93 Herbert Shaw Philbrick Sc.D., '97 Arthur Eugene Bestor, LL.D. Franklin Winslow Johnson, L.H.D. '91, 15th President of Colby John H. Finley, editor, The New York Times Bainbridge Colby, U.S. Secretary of State Frederick M. Padelford, dean, Graduate School, University of Washington Clarence C. Little, head, Roscoe B. Jackson Memorial Lab. Kirtley Mather, professor, Harvard University Ira L. Letts, U.S. District Judge for District of Rhode Island

26. TAP: Vol 11, Iss. 2. Rank Class. Peter Schrag.
Send a letter to the Editor. It's now 60 years since James Bryant Conant, then thepresident of Harvard, and his protégé Henry Chauncey, both fullycertified
http://www.prospect.org/print/V11/2/schrag-p.html
Politics:
  • Lebanon Redux? Gershom Gorenberg watches the war unfold from Jerusalem. Channel Changer: CNN gives Connie Chung the boot, a decision Mary Lynn F. Jones hopes will presage a back-to-the-news movement. Morning After: Rumsfeld and Myers lower war expectations (retroactively); Baker masks his war ambivalence (badly). Gabriel Wildau on the Sunday talk shows. Remember Yorktown: Pierre Taminiaux on the French-American alliance that once was and could be again. Conference Call: The Fund for American Studies responds to TAP Online ; our author counters. Senator's Senator: Mary Lynn F. Jones on why Daniel Patrick Moynihan was a rare kind of politician. Law Review: Scalia on gay rights; Breyer on 17th-century poetry. E.J. Graff reports from a Supreme Court divided on the Texas sodomy case. [Note: This headline has been changed since its original publication.] Offensive Interference: Robert Kuttner on how war distracts from outlandish Bush policies. Send a letter to the editor The Co-Presidency: E.J. Dionne says if Karl Rove did not exist, George W. Bush would not be president.
  • 27. Vita: Ralph Lowell
    Current Issue · Contact · Archives · Centennial · Letters to the Editor ·FAQs Harvard president James Bryant Conant offered him such an idea in 1945.
    http://www.harvard-magazine.com/issues/mj97/vita.html

    Main Menu
    Search Current Issue Contact ... FAQs
    Pietro Pezzati's portrait of Lowell is at the Harvard Club of Boston. PHOTOGRAPH: STEPHEN SYLVESTER AND ROBERT ZINC - IMAGING SERVICES, WIDENER LIBRARY, Courtesy of the Harvard Club of Boston "I have lived my entire life in one area, I have been happily married for 45 years, and I have been in one business field," observed Ralph Lowell '12 in the fiftieth anniversary report of his Harvard class. "That is, I suppose, a picture of a 'Proper Bostonian.'" But Lowell, who also looked the part, was not just another cardboard figure out of Cleveland Amory's 1947 book of that title. By the early 1960s, Lowell was widely hailed as "Mr. Boston" for his service as a trustee of almost every important charitable, civic, and cultural institution in his native city. In 1973, Lowell was one of seven citizens officially recognized as "Grand Bostonians" for lives that "mirrored the spirit and dignity that have made [Boston] and its people so extraordinary." The Late George Apley sought to pass on to his son, to "think of one's self as a steward who owes the community a definite debt," came naturally. Ever since 1776, when a sixth-generation Massachusetts Lowell left Newburyport for Boston, family members had helped shape the city's history. Ralph Lowell's career as a bank executive would never match the pioneering achievements of industrialist Francis Cabot Lowell; his contributions to Boston's cultural scene as a foundation trustee were negligible alongside those of literary giants James Russell Lowell and Robert Lowell; and his role in guiding Harvard as a two-term Overseer paled in comparison to that of President A. Lawrence Lowell; nonetheless, he played an important part in the making of a "New Boston" during the mid twentieth century. Harvard's honorary degree citation in 1952 neatly summed up his life: "Worthy bearer of a famous name; a public-spirited Bostonian devoted to the welfare of his community and his College."

    28. Beacon Journal | 12/22/2002 | The Man To Blame For The SAT
    man to blame for the SAT By Michael Douglas Beacon Journal associate Editor Yet Chaunceywould find in James Bryant Conant, the president of Harvard, a mentor
    http://www.ohio.com/mld/ohio/news/columnists/michael_douglas/4788880.htm
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    Our Site Tools Weather Akron Cleveland Cincinnati Local Events Yellow Pages Discussion Boards ARCHIVES Miss a story? Search our archives as far back as 1990. Click here for archives Cars.com Local car shopping, automotive news and "car talk" from Ohio's online leader, Cars.com Click here for Cars.com Back to Home News Columnists Monday, Mar 31, 2003 Michael Douglas Posted on Sun, Dec. 22, 2002 The man to blame for the SAT By Michael Douglas Beacon Journal associate editor The death of Henry Chauncey attracted little attention this month. His family and friends didn't gather around Larry King or even Charlie Rose to reminisce about his full and remarkable 97 years. He wasn't a Nobel Prize winner or a minor celebrity. All Chauncey did was change the way we live. He turned the Scholastic Aptitude Test into a national obsession. Recall, say, the past year of cocktail parties and other gatherings you may have attended, and, surely, the SAT has surfaced at least once. Someone has a tale to tell, and the scores slowly tumble into conversation. ``I got a 1450, and couldn't believe it. I barely cracked a book all of high school,'' goes one version. Another confesses: ``I am terrible at standardized tests. I had all As, and still took the SAT five times to get above 1000.''

    29. Bobos In Paradise
    David Brooks, a senior Editor at the conservative Weekly Standard II when Harvardpresident and establishment superpillar James Bryant Conant apparently became
    http://www.socialpolicy.org/recent_issues/WI00/metcalf.html
    Book Review
    Lo, the Poor WASP
    Roy Metcalf A review of Bobos in Paradise: The New Upper Class and How They Got There Roy Metcalf, an ex-newspaper man, was publications director for the New York City Housing Authority. Currently, he teaches at the School of Visual Arts. "Oh wad some power the giftie gie us To see oursels as others see us!" Robert Burns staff the new electronic economy of the information age. They differ from their predecessors though—they are anything but square. They do not seek money—it seeks them. They are excruciatingly politically correct, and what they do must have significance beyond material gain. There is almost an air of desperation about their inconspicuous conspicuous consumption. They are not quite as Christlike as Kerouac’s Subterraneans , but they aspire. They are really nice. David Brooks, a senior editor at the conservative Weekly Standard , lets us read all about it in his book, Bobos in Paradise: The New Upper Class and How They Got There . We’ve been subjected to the Hippies, Yippies, Yuppies, and Buppies. Now it’s the "Bobos," his term for the new caste of "bourgeois bohemians" who now seems to have most of the good jobs. He explains that this stealth revolution got under way shortly after the World War II when Harvard president and establishment super-pillar James Bryant Conant apparently became worried that the hereditary WASP aristocrats he had been training were too dumb to run the brave new world of the American empire. Give him credit for reacting in the traditional American way by importing new brains.

    30. ROBERT ULICH: EDUCATOR OF EDUCATORS
    by Heather Miller, Editor and Author. and comparative education were recognized withhis appointment to the first James Bryant Conant Professorship at Harvard
    http://www.harvardsquarelibrary.org/unitarians/ulich.html
    Recommended Reading Notable Unitarians Home Harvard Square Library Home
    ROBERT ULICH: EDUCATOR OF EDUCATORS
    (Photo courtesy of Harvard University Archives)
    by Heather Miller, Editor and Author Robert Ulich was a professor of the history and philosophy of education at Harvard University from 1935 until 1960. During those years, he published ten books whose subjects ranged from comparative education to the history of educational thought to his own philosophy of self-transcendence outlined in his best known book, The Human Career
    Ulich's first wife Elsa, who was known in Germany as the Swedish Angel of Siberia for her work with POWs during World War I.
    In 1929 he married Elsa Brandstroem, daughter of the Swedish ambassador to Russia. As a Swedish Red Cross nurse, she had acted on behalf of German prisoners of war by visiting heartrendering camp after camp all over Siberia, and thereafter became known as the Swedish Angel of Siberia.
    There is little question that the tragic rise of the Nazi party in Germany, whose ultimate aims Ulich foresaw with uncommon clarity, shaped his approach to educational philosophy. Ulich wrote, "Nothing is more dangerous to mankind than the divine gift of faith uncontrolled by the equally divine gift of reason."

    31. Center For High Technology Materials
    and leaving them to direct themselves. James Bryant Conant (letter in New YorkTimes, 13 August 1945). NEWS ARCHIVES. Webmaster/Content Editor Kirsty Mills.
    http://www.chtm.unm.edu/
    contact us search Univ. of New Mexico Director Steve Brueck. Center For High Technology Materials, MSC04 2710,
    1313 Goddard SE, Albuquerque NM 87106. Ph: 505 272 7800 Fx: 505 272 7801 A new People page now gives faster access to the CHTM directory. Check it out! CHTM NEWS A Life Dedicated to Optics and Public Service - Read Milton Chang's interview with CHTM's Art Guenther on page 46-7 of March '03 Photonics Spectra Posted 3/24/03 CHTM in the Press - CHTM 's progress in the breakthrough technology of immersion lithography gets coverage in Semiconductor Business News. Read all about it! Posted 3/3/03 Hubert Humphrey Elementary Visits CHTM - students learnt about lasers, froze bananas, made gold dimes, and saw how devices are made. See the photos and read their comments in the photo album Posted 3/3/03 High School Students get into research at CHTM!

    32. Promo.net/pg/nl/9804-5.txt
    landcxxx.xxx1236 Mar 1998 Captain Fracasse, by Theophile Gautier cptnfxxx.xxx1235Mar 1998 Organic Syntheses, James Bryant Conant, Editor rgsynxxx.xxx1234
    http://promo.net/pg/nl/9804-5.txt

    33. Nicholas Lemann
    Gergen, McNeil News Hour, November 2, 1999 David Gergen, Editorat-large of Educationfor a Classless Society, by James Bryant Conant (1940) In an address he
    http://people.brandeis.edu/~teuber/bigtest.html
    THE BIG TEST

    34. JCE 1997 (74) 609 [Jun] In This Issue
    JJ Lagowski for his 17 years of exemplary service as Editor of the Robert D. Beckerreceived the James Bryant Conant Award in High School Chemistry Teaching.
    http://jchemed.chem.wisc.edu/Journal/Issues/1997/Jun/abs609.html
    In This Issue
    The Cover: Inorganic Photochemistry Redux This month's cover was quilted from false-color luminescence images of a model of an airplane wing undergoing wind-tunnel testing. The colors indicate different pressures on different parts of the surface and are obtained from the intensity of fluorescence from a pressure sensing paint (see the paper by Gouterman that begins on page 679). This is one of thirteen papers in this issue that were generated from presentations at the symposium on inorganic photochemistry at the ACS national meeting last fall in Orlando, FL. The symposium, organized by Kirk S. Schanze and Russell H. Schmehl, updates a symposium, "Inorganic Photochemistry: State of the Art", that took place at an ACS meeting in Seattle in 1983. The earlier one, organized by Morton Hoffman, was published in the October 1983 issue of the Journal and is still available as a reprint volume from JCE Books (see page 635, ref 1).
    Schanze and Schmehl provide an overview of the symposium papers beginning on page 633. Many full-color illustrations from these papers, including the two false-color images of airplane wings that form the cover, appear in this overview. This issue in combination with the earlier state-of-the-art reprint volume provides an excellent overview of a very important area of research that has broad applicability to biochemistry, solid-state chemistry, and chemical sensing. The ACS National Meeting This month has been more hectic than most around Journal House because many of your staff were at the ACS National Meeting in San Francisco, attending sessions and staffing the JCE booth at the Chemical Exposition. (By the way, the booth is a great place to meet and chat with the editor, high school editor, book review editor, and the editor of

    35. C&EN: PEOPLE
    in 1946 as news Editor and quickly rose to Editor and finally to Award for Excellencein Education, ACS regional teaching and James Bryant Conant Awards, and
    http://pubs.acs.org/cen/topstory/7945/7945people.html
    Home This Week's Contents
    E-mail this article to a friend
    Print this article ... Science/Technology Concentrates Business Science/Technology Education ACS News ... Chemcyclopedia Back Issues How to Subscribe Subscription Changes E-mail webmaster PEOPLE
    November 5

    Volume 79, Number 45
    CENEAR 79 45 p. 48
    ISSN 0009-2347 [Previous Story] [Next Story] Obituaries Roger E. Gerkin, 70, professor emeritus in the department of chemistry at Ohio State University (OSU), died on May 23. Gerkin was born in Indiana and received his primary and secondary education in Indiana public schools. Since he was too young for military service in World War II, he proceeded directly to the University of Chicago, where he received A.B. and M.S. degrees in physical chemistry. In 1958, after completing graduate experimental work at the University of California, Berkeley, he accepted a temporary position at the University of Chicago. There, he worked with C. A. Hutchison Jr., who introduced him to the field of low-temperature electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. Gerkin was awarded a Ph.D. degree in physical chemistry from Berkeley under the guidance of K. S. Pitzer in 1960 and joined the OSU faculty in 1962. His early interest in the structures and properties of crystalline solids led Gerkin to undertake X-ray crystallographic studies on a great variety of carefully prepared pure inorganic and organic crystals. His extensive experimental investigations in physical chemistry included thermodynamic studies of heat capacities of crystalline solids; EPR spectroscopic studies at low and high magnetic field strengths in pure and dilutely substituted single crystals; studies of triplet-state EPR spectra and of isotope effects in triplet states; crystalline disorder; phase transitions in molecular and hydrated ionic crystals; and hydrogen-bonding in crystalline organic acids and hydrated inorganic salts.

    36. Nat'l Academies Press, Biographical Memoirs (1983), Adolph Hans Schultz
    wave tube, GRIFFITH CONRAD EVANS, compounds chem soc, James Bryant Conant, RUDOLPHLEO BERNHARD mall, beginning, proc, size, fur, third, Editor, adult, variation
    http://www.nap.edu/books/0309033918/html/324.html
    Biographical Memoirs V.54
    National Academy of Sciences ( NAS
    Related Books

    Openbook Linked Table of Contents Front Matter, pp. i-iv Table of Contents, pp. v-vi Preface, pp. vii-viii Title Page, pp. 1-1 Jesse Wakefield Beams, pp. 2-49 Elmer Keiser Bolton, pp. 50-73 Wilmot Hyde Bradley, pp. 74-89 James Bryant Conant, pp. 90-125 Griffith Conrad Evans, pp. 126-155 Rudolf Kompfner, pp. 156-181 Colin Munro MacLeod, pp. 182-219 Samuel Marion McElvain, pp. 220-249 Walter Joseph Meek, pp. 250-269 Rudolph Leo Bernhard Minkowski, pp. 270-299 Leonard Isaac Schiff, pp. 300-323 Adolph Hans Schultz, pp. 324-349 Edmund Ware Sinnott, pp. 350-373 William Hay Taliaferro, pp. 374-407 Robert Erastus Wilson, pp. 408-434
    THIS PAGE
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    Openbook Linked Table of Contents Front Matter, pp. i-iv Table of Contents, pp. v-vi Preface, pp. vii-viii Title Page, pp. 1-1 Jesse Wakefield Beams, pp. 2-49 Elmer Keiser Bolton, pp. 50-73 Wilmot Hyde Bradley, pp. 74-89 James Bryant Conant, pp. 90-125 Griffith Conrad Evans, pp. 126-155 Rudolf Kompfner, pp. 156-181

    37. Nat'l Academies Press, Biographical Memoirs (1983), Edmund Ware Sinnott
    wave tube, GRIFFITH CONRAD EVANS, compounds chem soc, James Bryant Conant, ADOLPHHANS finally, unique, self, harbor, laboratory, direct, Editor, teach, history
    http://www.nap.edu/books/0309033918/html/350.html
    Biographical Memoirs V.54
    National Academy of Sciences ( NAS
    Related Books

    Openbook Linked Table of Contents Front Matter, pp. i-iv Table of Contents, pp. v-vi Preface, pp. vii-viii Title Page, pp. 1-1 Jesse Wakefield Beams, pp. 2-49 Elmer Keiser Bolton, pp. 50-73 Wilmot Hyde Bradley, pp. 74-89 James Bryant Conant, pp. 90-125 Griffith Conrad Evans, pp. 126-155 Rudolf Kompfner, pp. 156-181 Colin Munro MacLeod, pp. 182-219 Samuel Marion McElvain, pp. 220-249 Walter Joseph Meek, pp. 250-269 Rudolph Leo Bernhard Minkowski, pp. 270-299 Leonard Isaac Schiff, pp. 300-323 Adolph Hans Schultz, pp. 324-349 Edmund Ware Sinnott, pp. 350-373 William Hay Taliaferro, pp. 374-407 Robert Erastus Wilson, pp. 408-434
    THIS PAGE
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    Openbook Linked Table of Contents Front Matter, pp. i-iv Table of Contents, pp. v-vi Preface, pp. vii-viii Title Page, pp. 1-1 Jesse Wakefield Beams, pp. 2-49 Elmer Keiser Bolton, pp. 50-73 Wilmot Hyde Bradley, pp. 74-89 James Bryant Conant, pp. 90-125 Griffith Conrad Evans, pp. 126-155 Rudolf Kompfner, pp. 156-181

    38. Com - Con
    NeedMoreBeer.com; Free HTML Editor; Website Translation; Website Promotion; RopeLadders. d.1306 Comyn, John, dc.1300 Conakry Conant, James Bryant Conant, Roger
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  • 39. Stephen Wolfram: A New Kind Of Science -- Relevant Books
    With a foreword by James Bryant Conant Harvard University Press Martin Raff, KeithRoberts James D. Watson Alder, Berni J., Editor Special Purpose Computers
    http://www.wolframscience.com/reference/books/a.html
    A B C D E ... W X Y Z
    A
    Simulated Annealing and Boltzmann Machines. A Stochastic Approach to Combinatorial Optimization and Neural Computing.
    Turtle Geometry: The Computer as a Medium for Exploring Mathematics

    MIT Press, 1986. [ISBN 0262510375
    Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs
    McGraw-Hill, 1985. [ISBN 0070004846
    Dynamics - The Geometry of Behavior
    Addison-Wesley, 1992. [ISBN 0201567164
    Foundations of Mechanics. Second Edition
    W.A. Benjamin, 1978. [ISBN 080530102X
    Dynamics - The Geometry of Behavior. Part 1: Periodic Behavior ( Vismath Volume 1)
    Aerial Press, Inc., 1982. [ISBN 0942344014 Dynamics - The Geometry of Behavior. Part 3: Global Behavior ( Vismath Volume 3) Aerial Press, Inc., 1985. [ISBN 0942344030 Handbook of Mathematical Functions Dover Publications, Inc., 1965. [ISBN 0486612724 Methods of Quantum Field Theory in Statistical Physics Dover Publications, Inc., 1963. [ISBN 0486632288 AY's Neuroanatomy of C. elegans for Computation CRC Press, 1992. [ISBN 0849342341 Sophus Lie's 1884 Differential Invariant Paper Math Sci Press, 1975. [ISBN 0915692112

    40. *O* Book Titles
    The Oregon Trail, Francis Parkman. Organic Syntheses, James Bryant Conant,Editor. Original Papers in the Case of Roux De Marsilly, Andrew Lang.
    http://www.omnisourcedirect.com/ebooks/titles/o-titles.htm
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    The Oakdale Affair Edgar Rice Burroughs The Oblong Box Edgar Allan Poe The Octopus Frank Norris The Odyssey Homer (translated by Butler) The Odyssey Off on a Comet Jules Verne Of Human Bondage W. Somerset Maugham The Old Bachelor William Congreve Old Christmas Washington Irving The Old Curiosity Shop Charles Dickens Old English Libraries Ernest A. Savage Old Friends, Epistolary Parody Andrew Lang The Old House Hans Christian Andersen Old Indian Days Charles A. Eastman Old Indian Legends Zitkala-Sa Old John Brown Walter Hawkins The Old Peabody Pew Kate Douglas Wiggin Oliver Twist Charles Dickens Othello, The Moor of Venice William Shakespeare Theologico-Political Treatise Benedictus de Spinoza On Being Found Out William Makepeace Thackeray One Basket Edna Ferber The One Thousand Dozen Jack London On Heroes and Hero Worship Thomas Carlyle On Horsemanship Xenophon (translated by Dakyns) On the Nature of Things Lucretius On Official Duty Anton Chekhov On the Origin of Species Charles Darwin On Revenues Xenophon (translated by Dakyns) On The Ruin of Britain (De Excidio Britanniae)

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