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         Amringe Howard Van:     more detail
  1. Life assurance and savings banks. a lecture delivered by request of the trustees of Cooper Union for the advancement of science and art, in the Cooper Institute, February 17th, 1872 .. by John Howard Van Amringe, 2010-08-03
  2. Elements of Geometry and Trigonometry from the Works of A.M. Legendre: Adapted to the Course of Mathematical Instruction in the United States by Charles Davies, Adrien Marie Legendre, et all 2010-02-22
  3. Elements of Geometry and Trigonometry From the Works of a.M. Legendre: Adapted to the Course of Mathematical Instruction in the United States by Charles ... ; Edited by J. Howard Van Amringe [1890 ] by A. M. (Adrien Marie) Legendre, 2009-09-22
  4. Elements of geometry and trigonometry from the works of A.M. Legendre by A M. 1752-1833 Legendre, Charles Davies, et all 2010-07-30
  5. Life assurance and savings banks. a lecture delivered by request of the trustees of Cooper Union for by John Howard, Van Amringe, 2009-08-19
  6. Life assurance and savings banks by J. Howard Van Amringe, 1872-01-01
  7. A History of Columbia University 1754-1904 by John Howard; Smith, Munroe; et al. Van Amringe, 1904
  8. Charles King, LL. D by John Howard Van Amringe, 1904
  9. A plain exposition of the theory and practice of life assurance,: With a brief sketch of its history by John Howard Van Amringe, 1874
  10. Van Am! by John Kendrick Bangs, 1909

1. Biography-center - Letter V
Valvasor, Janez Vajkard www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Janez_Vajkard_Valvasor; van amringe,howard wwwhistory.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/amringe.html;
http://www.biography-center.com/v.html
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205 biographies

2. Famous Mathematicians With A V
howard van amringe. Ludolph van Ceulen. David van Dantzig. Bartel van der Waerden. Hendrik van Heuraet. Philip van Lansberge. Adriaan van Roomen. Frans van Schooten. Edward van Edward van Vleck
http://www.famousmathematician.com/az/mathematician_V.htm
Mathematicians - V
Giovanni Vacca
Giovanni Vailati
Patrick du Val
Luca Valerio
Howard van Amringe
Ludolph van Ceulen
David van Dantzig
Bartel van der Waerden
Hendrik van Heuraet
Philip van Lansberge
Adriaan van Roomen Frans van Schooten Edward van Vleck Alexandre Vandermonde Harry Vandiver Varahamihira Varahamihira Pierre Varignon Mikhail Vashchenko-Z Oswald Veblen Jurij von Vega Argelia Velez-Rodriguez John Venn Pierre Verhulst Pierre Vernier Giuseppe Veronese Urbain Le Verrier Ernest Vessiot François Viete Vijayanandi Gregorius Saint-Vincent Leonardo da Vinci Ivan Vinogradov Giuseppe Vitali Vincenzo Viviani Adriaan Vlacq Edward van Vleck Vito Volterra Walther von Dyck Helge von Koch Gottfried von Leibniz Carl von Lindemann Hilda Geiringer von Mises Richard von Mises John von Neumann Johann von Segner Philipp von Seidel Georg von Vega Gheorghe Vranceanu Send mail to webmaster@famousmathematician.com

3. Amringe
John howard van amringe. Born 3 howard van amringe was educated athome by his father until he entered Montgomery Academy. There he
http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Amringe.html
John Howard Van Amringe
Born: 3 April 1835 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania , USA
Died: 10 Sept 1915 in Morristown, New Jersey, USA
Click the picture above
to see a larger version Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
Howard Van Amringe was educated at home by his father until he entered Montgomery Academy. There he prepared to enter Yale University which he did in 1854. In 1856 he left and became a teacher of mathematics but returned to his studies in 1858 when he entered Columbia College in New York City. The College was to become Columbia University in 1912. Van Amringe received his A.B. in 1860 and his A.M. in 1863. Van Am, as he was known, spent his entire career at Columbia. He was professor of mathematics in the School of Mines from 1865 until 1873 when he was appointed professor of mathematics in the School of Arts. He was head of mathematics from 1892 until he retired in 1910. Amringe was a good teacher of mathematics, Thomas [4] writes:- ... probably no other teacher of his day was so loved and revered... but he was not a research mathematician of any quality. He did not publish any research papers on mathematics but he is important in his role in the founding of the

4. Sterling
George van amringe. Mary van amringe. Ella Camilla van amringe. Henry van amringe. Thomas Sterling van amringe. John howard van amringe, who married
http://users.adelphia.net/~budd/Sterling.html
Sterling James Sterling married the daughter of Thomas Budd and Susanna Cole , Rebecca. (After her death he would marry Amelia Porter). He and Rebecca had the following children:
  • William Sterling
  • Thomas C. Sterling, who married Edith Weatherby. They were the parents of:
    • James Sterling
    • Rebecca Sterling
    • Ann Sterling
    • Anne Elizabeth Sterling
    • A. Henry Sterling
  • Mary L. Sterling, who married Charles Hollingshead and had:
    • James Sterling Hollingshead
    • Charles William Holllingshead
  • Budd Sterling, who married Elizabeth Wright and had:
    • Anna W. Sterling
  • Joseph Sterling, who married Sarah Hamilton and had:
    • Elizabeth Sterling
    • Rebecca Sterling
    • William Harrison Sterling
    • Sarah Hamilton Sterling
    • Thomas C. Sterling
    • Joseph Sterling
  • Benjamin Sterling, who married Elizabeth Elkinton and had:
    • Benjamin Sterling
  • Susan Sterling, who married William Van Amringe and had:
    • Elizabeth O. Van Amringe, who married John Smith and had:
      • George Van Amringe Smith
    • James S. Van Amringe, who married Mary Martin and had:
      • William Budd Van Amringe
      • Mary Ellen Van Amringe
    • George Van Amringe, who married Adeline Young
  • 5. References For Amringe
    References for howard van amringe. JW Burgess, Reminiscences of an American Scholar(1934). John howard van amringe, Columbia Alumni News (5 Nov, 1915), 42.
    http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/References/Amringe.html
    References for Howard Van Amringe
    Articles:
  • R C Archibald, A semicentennial history of the American Mathematical Society 1888-1938 (New York, 1980), 110-112.
  • J W Burgess, Reminiscences of an American Scholar
  • John Howard Van Amringe, Columbia Alumni News (5 Nov, 1915), 42.
  • M H Thomas, John Howard Van Amringe, Dictionary of American Biography Main index Birthplace Maps Biographies Index
    History Topics
    ... Anniversaries for the year
    JOC/EFR October 1997 School of Mathematics and Statistics
    University of St Andrews, Scotland
    The URL of this page is:
    http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/References/Amringe.html
  • 6. Sterling
    Ella Camilla van amringe; Henry van amringe. Thomas Sterling van amringe;John howard van amringe, who married Cornelia Buckner and had
    http://home.adelphia.net/~budd/Sterling.html
    Sterling James Sterling married the daughter of Thomas Budd and Susanna Cole , Rebecca. (After her death he would marry Amelia Porter). He and Rebecca had the following children:
  • William Sterling
  • Thomas C. Sterling, who married Edith Weatherby. They were the parents of:
    • James Sterling
    • Rebecca Sterling
    • Ann Sterling
    • Anne Elizabeth Sterling
    • A. Henry Sterling
  • Mary L. Sterling, who married Charles Hollingshead and had:
    • James Sterling Hollingshead
    • Charles William Holllingshead
  • Budd Sterling, who married Elizabeth Wright and had:
    • Anna W. Sterling
  • Joseph Sterling, who married Sarah Hamilton and had:
    • Elizabeth Sterling
    • Rebecca Sterling
    • William Harrison Sterling
    • Sarah Hamilton Sterling
    • Thomas C. Sterling
    • Joseph Sterling
  • Benjamin Sterling, who married Elizabeth Elkinton and had:
    • Benjamin Sterling
  • Susan Sterling, who married William Van Amringe and had:
    • Elizabeth O. Van Amringe, who married John Smith and had:
      • George Van Amringe Smith
    • James S. Van Amringe, who married Mary Martin and had:
      • William Budd Van Amringe
      • Mary Ellen Van Amringe
    • George Van Amringe, who married Adeline Young
  • 7. The Value Of The Civil Engineer -- Van Brunt, Henry: In Cornell University's Mak
    15, issue 4 (April 1873). van amringe, J. howard, A.M, Ph.D 8, issue 4 (June 1890). van amringe, W. F., Principles of Zoology
    http://moa.cit.cornell.edu/moa/browse.author/v.4.html
    A B C D ... Non-alphabetic
    The Value of the Civil Engineer Van Brunt, Henry:
    Previous Next The Value of the Civil Engineer Manufacturer and Builder , vol. 9, issue 6 (June 1877). The Value of the "Henry" as a Unit Manufacturer and Builder , vol. 23, issue 2 (February 1891). The Value of the Lens to Man Manufacturer and Builder , vol. 18, issue 7 (July 1886). Valued Appreciation The American Missionary , vol. 42, issue 7 (July 1888). A Valued Worker gone The American Missionary , vol. 37, issue 9 (Sept 1883). Values that do not Fluctuate Manufacturer and Builder , vol. 20, issue 8 (August 1888). Vambery, Arminius, Professor England in the Orient The North American Review , vol. 156, issue 436 (March 1893). Vambery, Arminus, Professor Russia and England The North American Review , vol. 160, issue 462 (May 1895). Vampyres Harper's New Monthly Magazine , vol. 10, issue 59 (April 1855). Van Amringe, J. H, Professor Life Assurance The Galaxy , vol. 15, issue 3 (March 1873). Van Amringe, J. H, Professor Life Assurance The Galaxy , vol. 15, issue 2 (February 1873). Van Amringe, J. H, Professor

    8. Detailed Record
    • By Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain ; William Roscoe Thayer ; Charles Henry Smith; John De Witt ; Jesse Lynch Williams ; John howard van amringe ; Charles E L
    http://worldcatlibraries.org/wcpa/ow/8147c6391109d168.html
    About WorldCat Help For Librarians Universities and their sons; history, influence and characteristics of American universities, with biographical sketches and portraits of alumni and recipients of honorary degrees.
    Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain William Roscoe Thayer Charles Henry Smith John De Witt Jesse Lynch Williams John Howard Van Amringe Charles E L Wingate Albert Lee Henry Gallup Paine
    Find libraries with the item Enter a postal code, state, province or country
    WorldCat is provided by OCLC Online Computer Library Center, Inc. on behalf of its member libraries.

    9. Amringe
    Biography of howard van amringe (18351915) John howard van amringe. Born 3 April 1835 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania , USA howard van amringe was educated at home by his father until he entered Montgomery Academy
    http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/history/Mathematicians/Amringe.html
    John Howard Van Amringe
    Born: 3 April 1835 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania , USA
    Died: 10 Sept 1915 in Morristown, New Jersey, USA
    Click the picture above
    to see a larger version Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
    Howard Van Amringe was educated at home by his father until he entered Montgomery Academy. There he prepared to enter Yale University which he did in 1854. In 1856 he left and became a teacher of mathematics but returned to his studies in 1858 when he entered Columbia College in New York City. The College was to become Columbia University in 1912. Van Amringe received his A.B. in 1860 and his A.M. in 1863. Van Am, as he was known, spent his entire career at Columbia. He was professor of mathematics in the School of Mines from 1865 until 1873 when he was appointed professor of mathematics in the School of Arts. He was head of mathematics from 1892 until he retired in 1910. Amringe was a good teacher of mathematics, Thomas [4] writes:- ... probably no other teacher of his day was so loved and revered... but he was not a research mathematician of any quality. He did not publish any research papers on mathematics but he is important in his role in the founding of the

    10. John H Von Amringe
    _private/imageflipbot.htm John howard van amringe Acting President, 1899.
    http://beatl.barnard.columbia.edu/imagearchive/earlycu/amringe.htm
    [_private/imageflipbot.htm] John Howard Van Amringe
    Acting President, 1899

    11. The Columbia Core Curriculum, 1888-1959
    1894, John howard van amringe (CC 1860) succeeds first Dean of Columbia College,Henry Drisler (CC 1839); to serve until 1910, 1897. Move from 49 th St.
    http://beatl.barnard.columbia.edu/stand_columbia/TimelineCore.html
    F 11 The Columbia Core Curriculum, 1888-1959 President F.A.P. Barnard doubts importance of the undergraduate program to University’s future; calls for its elimination College enrolled 250 students Undergraduate program designated “Columbia College” to distinguish it from the graduates schools and Faculties; President Seth Low sees it primarily as feeder to the professional schools. Greek eliminated as an admission prerequisite to the College John Howard Van Amringe (CC 1860) succeeds first Dean of Columbia College, Henry Drisler (CC 1839); to serve until 1910 Move from 49 th St. to Morningside Heights; no provision for separate College facilities or dormitories Admission allowed without Latin, but deficiency had to be remedied before graduation College enrolled 475 students; up from 250 a decade earlier Nicholas Murray Butler becomes CU’s 12 th president President Butler rejects idea of eliminating the College, as some faculty urged University acquires South Field for $2 Million; designated for undergraduate buildings

    12. Portraits De Personnages Celebres : AMR
    AMR. AB-C-D-E-F-G-H-I-J-K-L-M-N-O-P-Q-R-S-T-U-V-W-X-Y-Z.amringe (howard van) Photo 1. © Onlipix.com - 2002.
    http://www.onlipix.com/personnages/amr.htm
    AMR A B C D ... Z

    13. Books On-line: Authors Starting With "D"
    Illustrated Poems, by Lydia howard Sigourney (HTML and TEI at Michigan by J. howard van amringe (frame and JavaScript-dependent page images at Cornell
    http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/book/authorstart?D

    14. The Value Of The Civil Engineer -- Van Brunt, Henry: In Cornell University's Mak
    van amringe, J. howard, AM, Ph.D., Columbia College. The New England Magazine,vol. 8, issue 4 (June 1890). van amringe, WF, Principles of Zoology.
    http://cdl.library.cornell.edu/moa/browse.author/v.4.html
    A B C D ... Non-alphabetic
    The Value of the Civil Engineer Van Brunt, Henry:
    Previous Next The Value of the Civil Engineer Manufacturer and Builder , vol. 9, issue 6 (June 1877). The Value of the "Henry" as a Unit Manufacturer and Builder , vol. 23, issue 2 (February 1891). The Value of the Lens to Man Manufacturer and Builder , vol. 18, issue 7 (July 1886). Valued Appreciation The American Missionary , vol. 42, issue 7 (July 1888). A Valued Worker gone The American Missionary , vol. 37, issue 9 (Sept 1883). Values that do not Fluctuate Manufacturer and Builder , vol. 20, issue 8 (August 1888). Vambery, Arminius, Professor England in the Orient The North American Review , vol. 156, issue 436 (March 1893). Vambery, Arminus, Professor Russia and England The North American Review , vol. 160, issue 462 (May 1895). Vampyres Harper's New Monthly Magazine , vol. 10, issue 59 (April 1855). Van Amringe, J. H, Professor Life Assurance The Galaxy , vol. 15, issue 3 (March 1873). Van Amringe, J. H, Professor Life Assurance The Galaxy , vol. 15, issue 2 (February 1873). Van Amringe, J. H, Professor

    15. Columbia College
    In John howard van amringe, who became dean of the School of Arts and later of the vigorous and determined defender. van amringe nevertheless remained a peculiar champion for
    http://www.college.columbia.edu/core/oasis/history1.php

    Previous
    Contents Next
    Chapter 1: "the insistent problems of the present"
    It all started quietly enough. On 20 January 1919 the faculty of Columbia College resolved that "the requirement in Philosophy A and History A be replaced by a course in Contemporary Civilization." Curricular decisions usually don't reverberate beyond the college campus where they're implemented, and the founders had no idea that they were creating what has been described as "probably the most famous course ever in the American curriculum." And this committee in turn enlisted the aid of several younger faculty members and set about writing a syllabus to be used the following fall. What was this new course in contemporary civilization? How was it going to provide wisdom and a new understanding? Butler was closest to the mark when he spoke of "the realities of life," for the phrase most commonly used - in Columbia College announcements, in the course's syllabus, in descriptions of the course to outsiders, by the course's teachers - was that CC, as the course quickly came to be abbreviated, was an attempt to deal with "the insistent problems of the present." Right from the start then, contemporary problems, not the boundaries of a single academic discipline, determined the content of CC. Although it is common today to speak of CC as a "core" course, this way of speaking developed much later - largely because of the success of CC and other courses at Columbia - and it is perhaps misleading to attempt to portray the original experiment in contemporary civilization as an attempt to impose a "core" of knowledge that all students had to master. The original impetus was much different.

    16. Davies
    The 1883 and final version was published by J. howard van amringe. He wasa professor at Columbia College where Davies had his last teaching job.
    http://www.uzes.net/books/bookreviews/davies.htm
    Home Instruments Books MarketWatch ... Catalogue CHARLES DAVIES, Elements of Surveying Davies' Surveying was first published in book form in 1830. It was originally written as a series of lecture notes for use by the Cadets at West Point. At that time, the Military Academy was one of the foremost schools for mathematics in the country. For this reason the book was directed towards more-highly educated readers than were other works of the period. The book's two introductory chapters on mathematics offer instruction in logarithms and plane trigonometry, but not geometry. The continuing chapters provide details about the principal surveying instruments then in use. These were the telescopic theodolite, compass, level, plain table, cross, and a number of computing and drafting scales. Practical instruction is also given in determining area, general surveying, topography and harbor surveying. Numerous working examples are included, with corresponding illustrations appearing in the rear on nine folded plates. The plates also have detailed engravings of the various instruments. One of the examples in the 1830 text involves surveying a large tract of land using four different instruments. The theodolite is utilized for overall horizontal control, the compass and cross for fill-in work, and the plane table for adding topographic features. The book was so well received at the Academy that Davies rewrote the entire text to make it suitable for general distribution.

    17. The College And  The Core
    1894. John howard van amringe ( CC 1860) succeeds first Dean of Columbia College, Henry Drisler CC 1898) succeed van amringe as 3rd Dean of Columbia College
    http://beatl.barnard.columbia.edu/cuhis3057/CoreTLine.htm
    The College and the Core: A Timeline
    President F.A.P. Barnard
    doubts importance of the undergraduate program to University’s future; calls for its elimination College enrolled 250 students Undergraduate program designated “Columbia College” to distinguish it from the graduates schools and Faculties; President Seth Low sees it primarily as feeder to the professional schools. Greek eliminated as an admission prerequisite to the College John Howard Van Amringe (CC 1860) succeeds first Dean of Columbia College, Henry Drisler (CC 1839); to serve until 1910 Move from 49 th St. to Morningside Heights; no provision for separate College facilities or dormitories Admission allowed without Latin, but deficiency had to be remedied before graduation College enrolled 475 students; up from 250 a decade earlier Nicholas Murray Butler becomes CU’s 12 th president President Butler rejects idea of eliminating the College, as some faculty urged University acquires South Field for $2 Million; designated for undergraduate buildings

    18. Sexual Reality
    John howard van amringe (Maeroff, l984), a dean of Columbia College (an Ivy Leagueschool) in the late l9th century said in defense of the allmale private
    http://www.bapfelbaumphd.com/Sexual_Reality.html
    Bernard Apfelbaum, PhD
    SEXUAL REALITY AND HOW WE DISMISS IT Paper presented as part of Panel: "What is Sex For?", Annual meeting, American Association of the Advancement of Science, S.F. State University, November, 1984.
    THE BIOLOGICAL-ROMANTIC MYSTIQUE
    In the play Harvey , Elwood P. Dowd declares that he struggled with reality all his life and finally overcame it. I think he was speaking for all of us. How we overcome sexual reality is a case in point.
    Let's begin with the question facing our panel: What is sex for? The first answer that most people give is that sex is for procreation. Now suppose that we were to point out the unreality of this answer by suggesting that if the purpose of sex was procreation there would be no way to account for our experience of year 'round estrus since procreation is efficiently accomplished in infrahuman species even when limited to one month out of the year. (Homosexuality, if cited as an example of nonprocreative sex, would only be dismissed as an aberration.)
    This would cause our respondents no difficulty, of course. They would simply reply (much as they would about homosexuality) that these are

    19. ROCKS AND MINERALS TABLE OF CONTENTS 1937
    Bibliographical Notes, 89. The Amateur Lapidary, JH howard, 90. The Canon CityEmbayment, FC Kessler, 114. The Nature of Fossils, Edwin V. van amringe, 117.
    http://www.minsocam.org/MSA/collectors_corner/rm/toc1937.htm
    TABLE OF CONTENTS 1937 January Whole #66 Title Author Start
    Page
    Chips from the Quarry
    The Editor Goes Afield Peter Zodac A Visit to Grafton, New Hampshire John L. Baum The Minerals of West Pittston, Pa. M. Allen Northrup A Mineralogical Journey through Bohemia F. W. Cassirer The Amateur Lapidary J. H. Howard More Notes on Gem Polish J. H. Howard A Peek at Our Mail
    General Index of Authors and Contents. Volume 11, 1936
    February Whole #67 Title Author Start
    Page
    Rock Crystals - Some Facts and Uses Peter Zodac Herkimer County Quartz Crystals Newland How to Tell Right-Handed and Left-Handed Quartz Crystals Maurice R. Thompson Inclusions in Rock Crystal Peter Zodac The Real Beauty of Herkimer County Quartz Crystals W. J. Hollister Ellenville Quartz Crystals Peter Zodac Some Old Quartz Localities in Rhode Island Arthur L. Flagg Stibnite in Quartz from Nevada Frank Garaventa Digging Rock Crystals near Napanoch, N. Y. Peter Zodac The Amateur Lapidary J. H. Howard

    20. ROCKS AND MINERALS TABLE OF CONTENTS 1936
    A PEEK AT OUR MAIL, 193. THE AMATEUR LAPIDARY, JH howard, 194. THE ARTIFICIALCOLORING OF AGATES, EV van amringe, 194. AGATE BIBLIOGRAPHY, Peter Zodac,197.
    http://www.minsocam.org/MSA/collectors_corner/rm/toc1936.htm
    TABLE OF CONTENTS 1936 January Whole #55 Title Author Start
    Page
    Mineral Collecting in Norway Richmond E. Myers Minerals of the District of Columbia and Vicinity, with Pertinent Bibliography Dr. Titus Ulke Treatment of Fragile Specimens Charles R. Toothaker Halotrichite found near Freeland, Pa. John J. S. Shrader Serpentine at Ishpeming, Mich. A. Joseph Alessi The Amateur Lapidary J. H. Howard If You Want It You Can Get It
    A Peek at Our Mail
    Acknowledgments
    Club and Society Notes
    Minneapolis Mineral and Gem Club
    General Index of Authors and Contents
    February Whole #56 Title Author Start
    Page
    Mineral Collecting in Spitzbergen Richmond E. Myers A Mineralogical Trip Through Northern New York Wilbur J. Elwell Cosmopolitan Specimens Peter Zodac Collecting Minerals on Vacation Elmer N. Anderson Minerals of the District of Columbia and Vicinity, with Pertinent Bibliography. Part 2 Dr. Titus Ulke The Amateur Lapidary J. H. Howard Mud Sawing William J. Bingham Bibliographical Notes
    Club and Society Notes
    Wyoming Valley Historical and Geological Society Mineralogical Society of Arizona A Peek At Our Mail Acknowledgments March Whole #57 Title Author Start Page Two-Thirds of Nation's Wealth Comes from Minerals Colorado Rhodochrosite Allan Caplan A Mineralogical Trip Through New England Wilbur J. Elwell

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