57,740 research outputs found

    Andrew Baskin Family Genealogy - Accession 1156 - M532 (583)

    No full text
    This collection consists of excerpts (title page, table of contents, and pages 1-3 and 12-15) from The Baskin(s) Family South Carolina—Pennsylvania with Stephens and Martin notes by Raymond Martin Bell (1975). The photocopied excerpts cover the origin of the Baskin family name and details the Southern Branch following the lineage of Andrew Baskin (ca1730-1800) of Kershaw and Lancaster Counties in South Carolina.https://digitalcommons.winthrop.edu/manuscriptcollection_findingaids/2502/thumbnail.jp

    Baskin family papers

    No full text
    MSS. 22. 1869-1948 and undated. 1 cubic foot. Includes records created by the family Robert Ren Baskin (1854-1911) and Rebecca J. Simpson Baskin (1863-1962). The collection consists of correspondence, financial and legal records, and miscellaneous personal, political, agricultural, medical, religious, and educational materials. Records created by the family of Robert Ben Baskin (1854-1911), and Rebecca J. Simpson Baskin (1863-1961). Includes Ku Klux Klan material, 1900-1935 and undated, and a greeting card with African-American caricature, undated

    Oral history interview with Robert Leroy Baskin, conducted by Becky B. Lloyd, part 1 (audio and transcript)

    No full text
    This is a series of two interviews focusing on Rob Baskin\u27s work with Great Salt Lake. Mr. Baskin was born in Montclair, New Jersey, and grew up in the small town of Branchville. His parents were school teachers, and his father was also a seasonal ranger at Yellowstone National Park. Each summer for most of Mr. Baskin\u27s life, he traveled West with his family for their summer job. Mr. Baskin graduated from Thiel College in Pennsylvania with a Bachelor\u27s of Arts degree in geology. He received his Master\u27s degree in geography from the University of Utah. His thesis work involved a thermal imaging project of the Great Salt Lake. He started working for the Utah office of the USGS while still a student, and accepted full-time employment there upon graduation. He discusses his considerable and interesting scientific work on the Great Salt Lake

    Oral history interview with Robert Leroy Baskin, conducted by Becky B. Lloyd, part 2 (audio and transcript)

    No full text
    This is a series of two interviews focusing on Rob Baskin\u27s work with Great Salt Lake. Mr. Baskin was born in Montclair, New Jersey, and grew up in the small town of Branchville. His parents were school teachers, and his father was also a seasonal ranger at Yellowstone National Park. Each summer for most of Mr. Baskin\u27s life, he traveled West with his family for their summer job. Mr. Baskin graduated from Thiel College in Pennsylvania with a Bachelor\u27s of Arts degree in geology. He received his Master\u27s degree in geography from the University of Utah. His thesis work involved a thermal imaging project of the Great Salt Lake. He started working for the Utah office of the USGS while still a student, and accepted full-time employment there upon graduation. He discusses his considerable and interesting scientific work on the Great Salt Lake

    Scoloplacidae Bailey & Baskin 1976

    No full text
    <p>Family Scoloplacidae Bailey & Baskin 1976</p> <p> Scoloplacinae Bailey & Baskin 1976:5 [ref. 161] (subfamily) <i>Scoloplax</i></p>Published as part of <i>Laan, Richard Van Der, Eschmeyer, William N. & Fricke, Ronald, 2014, Family-group names of Recent fishes, pp. 1-230 in Zootaxa 3882 (2)</i> on page 56, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3882.1.1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/7047777">http://zenodo.org/record/7047777</a&gt

    Effective Leadership in the Family Business

    No full text
    Identifying and developing leaders in a family business can be more difficult than traditional business. Here Aronoff and Baskin discuss the different styles of leadership and what style might work with what family member including the Directing Leader, the Coaching Leader, the Counseling Leader and the Delegating Leader.https://digitalcommons.pepperdine.edu/businessbooks/1002/thumbnail.jp

    Family altruism and incentives

    No full text
    The author builds on the altruistic model of the family, to explore the strategic interaction between altruistic parents, and selfish children, when children's efforts are endogenous. If there is uncertainty about the amount of income the children will realize, and if parents have imperfect information, the children have an incentive to exert little effort, and to rely on their parent's altruistically motivated transfers. Because of this, parents face a tradeoff between the insurance that bequests implicitly provide their children, and the disincentive to work prompted by their altruism. The author shows that if parents can credibly commit to a pattern of transfers, they will choose not to compensate children in bad outcomes, as much as predicted by the standard (no uncertainty, no asymmetric information) dynastic model of the family. Alternatively, parents may choose to forgo any insurance, and offer a fixed level of bequest, to elicit greater effort from their children. The optimal transfers structure that the author derives, reconciles the predictions of the altruistic family model, with much of the existing evidence on inter-generational transfers, which suggests that parents compensate only partially, or not at all, for earnings differentials among their children. Moreover, the author shows that Ricardian equivalence holds in this setup, except when non-negativity constraints are binding.Economic Theory&Research,Environmental Economics&Policies,Health Economics&Finance,Educational Sciences,Safety Nets and Transfers

    Committee for Family Forestlands (CFF) annual report

    No full text
    This archived document is maintained by the Oregon State Library as part of the Oregon Documents Depository Program. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposes.Began with 2009.Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English

    Ratze Family

    No full text
    Latvian Canadian family members including Rita and Juris and children15.0 Family photo

    Rosa B. Guess Papers - Accession 373

    No full text
    The collection contains papers relating to members of the Addison, Dunlap, Gaston, Gill, McCollough, McDowell, Strait and Wylie families as well as various other families. Included in the papers are correspondence, military orders, court orders, deeds, wills, notices, financial records, government appointments, contracts of employment, documents relating to land transactions, tax forms, and a petition of guardianship, an application for Confederate Roll of Honour, a statement of births and deaths, a list of taxable property in Chester, a deposition, an affidavit, and an editorial column. The collection is made up entirely of positive photocopies of original documents. The collection may assist in genealogical research of the above named families. Rosa Baskin Strait Guess (1892-1988) was a Winthrop graduate of the Class of 1911, was a longtime music teacher at Rock Hill High School, author, and a genealogist descended from some of the earliest families in Chester, SC including revolutionary leader Justice John Gaston (1700-1782).https://digitalcommons.winthrop.edu/manuscriptcollection_findingaids/1478/thumbnail.jp
    corecore