Academic literature on the topic 'Canals, United States: New Jersey, 1894'

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Journal articles on the topic "Canals, United States: New Jersey, 1894"

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YOUNG, DAVIS A. "JOSEPH HENRY AND GEOLOGY AT PRINCETON." Earth Sciences History 38, no. 2 (2019): 232–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.17704/1944-6178-38.2.232.

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ABSTRACT The first documented geology lectures at Princeton were given in 1825 by John Finch (circa 1790–circa 1835), an English visitor to the United States. In the 1830s, John Torrey (1796–1873) delivered a few geology and mineralogy lectures at the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University), but Joseph Henry (1797–1878), Professor of Natural Philosophy at the College of New Jersey from 1832 to 1848, introduced the first repeated geology course. In the 1830s, the College of New Jersey instituted a handful of short courses on topics outside of the regular curriculum. Geology was assigne
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Wong, Rita. "Past and Present Acts of Exclusion." M/C Journal 4, no. 1 (2001). http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/mcj.1893.

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In the summer of 1999, four ships carrying 599 Fujianese people arrived on the west coast of Canada. They survived a desperate and dangerous journey only for the Canadian Government to put them in prison. After numerous deportations, there are still about 40 of these people in Canadian prisons as of January 2001. They have been in jail for over a year and a half under mere suspicion of flight risk. About 24 people have been granted refugee status. Most people deported to China have been placed in Chinese prisons and fined. It is worth remembering that these migrants may have been undocumented
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Stewart, Jon. "Oh Blessed Holy Caffeine Tree: Coffee in Popular Music." M/C Journal 15, no. 2 (2012). http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/mcj.462.

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Introduction This paper offers a survey of familiar popular music performers and songwriters who reference coffee in their work. It examines three areas of discourse: the psychoactive effects of caffeine, coffee and courtship rituals, and the politics of coffee consumption. I claim that coffee carries a cultural and musicological significance comparable to that of the chemical stimulants and consumer goods more readily associated with popular music. Songs about coffee may not be as potent as those featuring drugs and alcohol (Primack; Schapiro), or as common as those referencing commodities li
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Book chapters on the topic "Canals, United States: New Jersey, 1894"

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Bunk, Brian D. "Soccer Goes Pro." In From Football to Soccer. University of Illinois Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252043888.003.0006.

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Two professional soccer leagues began play in 1894. The American League of Professional Football was formed by baseball club owners in Boston, Brooklyn, Philadelphia, New York, Baltimore, and Washington DC. A rival league called the American Association of Professional Football (AAPF) had four teams in Philadelphia, Trenton, Newark, and Paterson, New Jersey. The chapter argues that baseball owners launched a soccer league because they wished to maintain control over professional team sports and viewed it as an additional revenue stream that would allow them to make money year-round. The motiva
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Auclair, Clara. "The Personal Is Technical." In Collecting Cinema, Rewriting Film History. Amsterdam University Press, 2025. https://doi.org/10.5117/9789048565955_ch05.

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Francis Doublier (1878–1948), started his career in the laboratories of the Lumière factory in 1894 and two years later was sent to Eastern Europe and Russia to promote the Cinématographe. In 1902, he left France for the United States, where he spent the rest of his life working in film laboratories. Doublier was an avid film collector, who crafted his own heritage and identity as a film pioneer through a large collection of films, cameras, and photographs he kept on display in his own laboratory-museum inside his home in Fort Lee, New Jersey. Through the analysis of three series of photograph
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Ehrenfeld, David. "More Field Ecology: Rightofway Island." In Swimming Lessons. Oxford University Press, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195148527.003.0035.

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On all but one of the field trips in my Field Ecology course, I take my students to the sorts of places that they have been to before: the beach, the pinelands, the Highlands forest, farms, old fields, streams, salt marshes, suburbs. But on the third trip, after the ones to the campus and to the experimental plots at Hutcheson Forest, we go to a place that is, for all its superficial familiarity, altogether different and exotic. This trip is to America’s deserted empire, what the person who knew it best, ecologist Frank Egler, described as the Right of way Domain. Right-of-way land comprises a
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