144,453 research outputs found
Gallagher, R D, 427459
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/386685Surname: GALLAGHER. Given Name(s) or Initials: R D. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: 427459. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 52553.208455
Item: [2016.0049.18978] "Gallagher, R D, 427459
Interview with Tom Gallagher by Brien Williams
Biographical NoteThomas D. Gallagher was born on September 6, 1954, in Redfield, South Dakota, to Ray and Theresa Gallagher. His father was a lawyer and was active in the Veterans of Foreign Wars, serving as its national commander in 1969-1970. Tom attended the University of South Dakota and later received a master’s degree in public policy from the Kennedy School at Harvard University. He moved to Washington, D.C. to work for the Congressional Research Service from 1978-1980. He became a staff member of the Senate Budget Committee when Senator Muskie was its chairman. He started working for Senator Mitchell in early 1981 as a legislative assistant on the Finance Committee, where he remained for about four years. He then took a job at the International Trade Commission. At the time of this interview, he was senior managing director of International Strategy and Investment.
SummaryInterview includes discussion of: Gallagher’s father’s involvement in the Veterans of Foreign Wars and how this spurred Gallagher’s interest in public affairs; the path Gallagher took to Washington, D.C.; working for the Congressional Research Service; working on the Senate Budget Committee staff for Senator Muskie; John McEvoy’s recommendation of Gallagher to work for Mitchell; Finance Committee issues; the political considerations between Budget and Finance; Mitchell’s working relationship with Gallagher and other staff; working on a bill on alternative energy tax credits; working with state staff to learn Maine issues; Mitchell’s relationship with Senator Dole; the fate of Democrats in the 1980 election; an anecdote about Mitchell being kicked out of a Delta Air Lines lounge and the company’s subsequent apology; Mitchell’s judge-like demeanor; the 1982 U.S. Senate campaign and election; the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981, the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982, and the Foreign Investment and Real Property Tax Act of 1980; Senator Long as a mentor to Mitchell; Social Security reform; the looming need for Tax Reform; Reagan’s economic policies; the partisanship of Senate staffers; the difference between being part of a committee staff or member staff; “psychic remuneration”; how Mitchell positioned himself to become part of the Senate leadership; and the skills that Mitchell has that have contributed to his success
Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)
Letter from Daniel W. Kempner to N. D. Gallagher asking if he has made a shipment
Incommensurability in Aristotle's Theory of Reciprocal Justice
In just proportional exchange, under Aristotle's theory of reciprocal justice, superior sharers in a community materially assist the weaker, and receive honour as a reward. Aristotle's economic thought is represented with a system of 18 formulae. Explained are: (1) What Aristotle means when he says that it is impossible for two sharers or their erga to be commensurable; (2) The extent to which the variables in Aristotle's proportions can be quantified. (3) What diagonal pairing (κατ διμτρoν σζυξις) is; (4) How need makes sharers and their erga sufficiently' commensurable; and (5) Aristotle's theory of what is just in exchange. © 2012 BSHP.Barnes J., 1984, COMPLETE WORKS ARIST; Barnes J., 1977, ARTICLES ARISTOTLE, V2, P140; Burnet J., 1900, ETHICS ARISTOTLE; CORDNER C, 1994, PHILOSOPHY, V69, P291; Courant R., 1937, DIFFERENTIAL INTEGRA, V1; Danzig G, 2000, CLASSICAL PHILOL, V95, P399, DOI 10.1086-449509; d'Aquino Thomas, 1964, COMMENTARY ARISTOTLE, V1; Gallagher RL, 2011, BRIT J HIST PHILOS, V19, P363, DOI 10.1080-09608788.2011.563517; Gauthier R. A., 1970, ETHIQUE NICOMAQUE, V4; Heath T., 1949, MATH ARISTOTLE; Hesse M., 1965, PHILOS Q, V15, P328, DOI 10.2307-2218258; HUNT LH, 1975, AM PHILOS QUART, V12, P235; Irwin T., 1999, ARISTOTLE NICOMACHEA; Irwin Terence, 1988, ARISTOTLES 1 PRINCIP; Jackson H., 1879, 5 BOOK NICOMACHEAN E; JACKSON MW, 1985, J VALUE INQUIRY, V19, P99, DOI 10.1007-BF00151422; Joachim Harold Henry, 1951, ARISTOTLE NICOMACHEA; Judson L., 1997, OXFORD STUDIES ANCIE, V13, P147; Kenny Anthony, 1978, ARISTOTELIAN ETHICS; Klein F., 1945, ELEMENTARY MATH ADV; Kranz Walther, 1956, FRAGMENTE VORSOKRATI; Kuhner R., 1898, AUSFUHRLICHE GRAMM 2, V2; LIDDELL H, 1897, GREEK ENGLISH LEXICO; Marx K., 1904, INTRO CRITIQUE POLIT; McKerlie D, 2001, SOUTHERN J PHILOS, V39, P119; McNeill D., 1990, PUBLIC AFFAIRS Q, V4, P55; Meikle S., 1991, COMPANION ARISTOTLES; Meikle S., 1998, ARISTOTLES EC THOUGH; MEIKLE S, 1991, J HELLENIC STUD, V111, P193, DOI 10.2307-631900; Miller F. D., 1998, APEIRON, V31, P387, DOI 10.1515-APEIRON.1998.31.4.387; Minar Jr E.L., 1942, EARLY PYTHAGOREAN PO; Nussbaum M. C., 1988, OXFORD STUDIES ANCIE, P145; Olshewsky T., 1968, APEIRON J ANCIENT PH, V2, P1, DOI 10.1515-APEIRON.1968.2.2.1; Patzig G., 1990, ARISTOTELES POLITIK; Peck A. L., 1937, PARTS ANIMALS; Rackham H, 1981, ARISTOTLE ATHENIAN C; Rawls J, 1971, THEORY JUSTICE; RAWLS J, 1958, PHILOS REV, V67, P164, DOI 10.2307-2182612; Reeve C. D. C., 1998, ARISTOTLE POLITICS; Ross W., 1955, ARISTOTLE PARVA NATU; Samuelson P. A., 1948, EC INTRO ANAL; SCALTSAS T, 1995, ARCH GESCH PHILOS, V77, P248, DOI 10.1515-agph.1995.77.3.248; Shields C., 1990, ESSAYS HIST F COGNIT, P19; Shields C., 1999, ORDER MULTIPLICITY; SOUDEK J., 1952, P AM PHILOS SOC, V96, P45; Ste-Croix G.E.M. de, 1981, CLASS STRUGGLE ANCIE; Thomson J., 2004, NICOMACHEAN ETHICS10
Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)
Letter from from Daniel W. Kempner to N. D. Gallagher Clay Products Corp. asking how long it would take to get a shipment for some pots and the price
Jean Delisle: <i>Translation: An Interpretive Approach</i>
John D. Gallagher
Erlenallee 3
4400 Münster (Westf.)
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Forum on "The Phenomenological Mind" by S. Gallagher and D. Zahavi
Vengono discusse le tesi di D. Zahavi e S. Gallagher in relazione al rapporto tra fenomenologia e neuroscienze
Aristotle on<i>Eidei Diapherontoi</i>
Aristotle holds that there must be multiple forms of human being and those forms constitute a genos, this paper argues. Aristotle advances his claim by arguing that the strength of a polis rests on the existence of a spectrum of useful essential differences among its citizens. The paper rejects the notion that eîdos is a homonym, and argues that it signifies 'form,' not 'species.' Its theses are based on analysis of passages in the Ethics, Metaphysics, Politics and other works. The argument of the paper is compatible with 'individual' or 'particular' forms. The paper also proposes a solution to the issue of 'natural slavery.' © 2011 BSHP.Aquinas Thomas, 1993, COMMENTARY ARISTOTLE; AUBONNET J, 1995, ARISTOTLE POLITICS, V2; AUBONNET J, 1995, ARISTOTLE POLITICS, V1; Barnes J., 1984, COMPLETE WORKS ARIST; Barnes J., 1977, ARTICLES ARISTOTLE, V2, P140; BARNES J, 2004, NICOMACHEAN ETHICS; BOSTOCK D, 1995, ARISTOTLE METAPHYSIC, P134; Burnet J., 1900, ETHICS ARISTOTLE; BYWATER I, 1978, ARISTOTELIAN ETHICS; Bywater Ingram, 1894, ARISTOTELIS ETHICA N; Code A., 1984, CANADIAN J PHILOS S, V10, P41; Driscoll J., 1981, STUDIES ARISTOTLE, P129; Frede M., 1988, ARISTOTELES METAPHYS; GALLAGHER A, 1998, NEWSLETTER SOC ANCIE, V9, P1; GOTTHELF A, 1987, PHILOS ISSUES ARISTO, P420; Jaeger Werner, 1957, ARISTOTELIS METAPHYS; Joachim Harold Henry, 1951, ARISTOTLE NICOMACHEA; KAVE J, 1998, EC NATURE 14 CENTURY; KIRWAN C, 1993, ARISTOTLE METAPHYSIC, P177; KUHNER R, 1996, AUSFUHRLICHE GRAMM 2, V2, P295; LENNOX J, 2004, ARISTOTLE PARTS ANIM; LIDDELL H, 1897, GREEK ENGLISH LEXICO; MARX K, 1909, CAPITAL, P28; Newman W. L., 1887, POLITICS ARISTOTLE; PATZIG G, 1990, ARISTOTELES POLITIK, P1; PECK AL, 1937, PARTS ANIMALS; PELLEGRIN P, 1985, ARISTOTLE NATURE LIV, P101; Reeve CDC, 1998, ARISTOTLE POLITICS; ROSS WD, 1924, ARISTOTLES METAPHYSI, pR1; Schumpeter J. A., 1954, HIST EC ANAL; SHIELDS C, 1999, ORDER MULTIPLICITY, P31; SHIELDS C, ARISTOTLE A IN PRESS; Shields C., 1990, HIST FDN COGNITIVE S, P19; SIMPSON P, 1998, POLITICS ARISTOTLE; SMITH R, 1997, ARISTOTLE TOPICS BOO, P88; Smyth Herbert Weir, 1920, GREEK GRAMMAR; SOUDEK J., 1952, P AM PHILOS SOC, V96, P45; Walzer R. R., 1991, ARISTOTELIS ETHICA E; WOODS M, 1993, SYNTHESE, V96, P407; 1992, ARISTOTLE PARTIBUS A, P5824
Entry point into new trimeric and tetrameric imide-based macrocyclic esters derived from isophthaloyl dichloride and methyl 6-aminonicotinate
The one-step reaction of isophthaloyl dichloride with the 2-aminopyridine derivative (methyl 6-aminonicotinate) yields (i) a trimer-based macrocycle (EsIO)3 and (ii) a tetramer-based macrocycle (EsIO)4 in modest isolated synthetic yields (total of 25%), together with (iii) longer open-chain oligomers. The macrocyclisation relies on the semi-flexible imide hinge formed by reaction of the 2-amino(pyridine) functional group with two acyl chloride functional groups. The determining factors in macrocycle synthesis are (a) imide formation using the heteroaromatic ortho-N functionality; (b) the inherent ability of the imide to twist by 85-115 degrees from planarity (as measured by the CO...CO imide torsion angles and from computational calculations), thereby providing a hinge for macrocyclic ring closure or potentially (non)helical assembly in oligomer/polymer formation and (c) the conformational flexibility of the isophthaloyl group with meta-related carbonyl groups to twist and adopt either syn- or anti-conformations, although the syn-conformation is observed structurally for all isophthaloyl groups in both (EsIO)3 and (EsIO)4 macrocycles
Chaconne in D Minor from “Partita II for Unaccompanied Violin”
Performance of Bach's Chaconne in D Minor from “Partita II for Unaccompanied Violin” (adapted by Charles Gallagher), performed by the University Maryland Symphonic Wind Ensemble in Tawes Theater, December 9, 1997
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