1,365,401 research outputs found
Halpern (Morris) interview
New York City, New York, United StatesThis accession is part of the Washington State Jewish Archives.
Side A only.
Morris Halpern was born in New York in 1896 to George and Rachael who immigrated in 1900. He was the youngest of five siblings. George Halpern came from Vilina, Estonia and studied at a yeshiva there. The family came to Seattle around 1901 or 1902 and George became the first rabbi of Bikur Cholim; he remained a rabbi there until 1919. Morris Halpern discusses his childhood including a reminiscence of Goldie Shucklin as well as his upbringing and schooling. Halpern worked in a shoe store prior to World War I and he and his brother Louis fought in the war in France from 1918 to 1919. On their return, Halpern joined his brother’s second hand store and worked there until 1948 when he went into the wholesale jewelry business. George Halpern left the synagogue over politics in the leadership around 1920 and returned to New York where he remarried and served as a rabbi in Mt. Vernon.To request a high resolution or uncompressed reproduction, or to obtain permission to use any portion of this item, contact the University of Washington Libraries, Special Collections. Email: [email protected]. Please reference the Digital ID Number
Correspondence with Manfred Halpern, June 20, 1963 - July 13 1963
Correspondence between Manfred Halpern and Fayez Sayegh, June 20, 1963 - July 13 1963, regarding Sayegh\u27s reader\u27s report of Halpern\u27s book, "The Politics of Social Change in the Middle East and North Africa"
A Conversation with Bruce Halpern
This video is a contribution C.A.P.E.'s Oral History Project.Bruce P. Halpern, the Emeritus Susan Linn Sage Professor of Psychology and Emeritus Professor of Neurobiology and Behavior, was interviewed by Emeritus Professor Howard C. Howland of Neurobiology and Behavior. Professor Halpern was born in Newark, New Jersey, and grew up in East Orange, New Jersey. He received a bachelor’s degree from Rutgers, and a PhD degree from Brown University in Psychology working under Carl Pfaffmann. He then came to Cornell as a post-doctoral student with Morley R. Kare in the Veterinary College. He then accepted an assistant professorship at Upstate Medical University in Syracuse, returning in 1966 to eventually become a tenured professor in the department of Psychology and the Section of Neurobiology and Behavior in the Division of Biological Sciences. In his years at Cornell Halpern served as chair of the Psychology for a total of 12 years while teaching in the introductory course in Neurobiology and Behavior, courses in Sensory Function and in Aging, all the while conducting research in, initially, taste and then smell. Howland and Halpern discuss the many changes in research and teaching over the last forty four years.1_tns9eu1
Presentation by Diane Halpern
A presentation: Workplace Flexibility: The Case for Employers, Employees, and Public Policies by Diane F. Halpern, PhD, Claremont McKenna College on behalf of Workplace Flexibility 2010
Seymour Halpern papers 1963-1967
Composed of addresses, speeches, testimony, correspondence, press releases, and Congressional Record excerpts; the papers of Seymour Halpern reflect a wide range of issues including problems posed by Palestininan refugees, defeating Arab boycott, cutting off foreign aid to the United Arab Republic and President Abdel Nasser of Egypt, denouncing U.S. arm shipments to Arab states, protesting Egyptian intervention in Yemen, responding to France's withdraw from NATO, celebrating Israel's anniversaries, supporting Hadassah, eulogizing J.F. Kennedy, assisting Jews in the Soviet Union, ratifying the Genocide convention, working towards domestic immigration reform, urging the dispatch of an international peace-keeping force in South Vietnam, and establishing a U.S. Committee on Human Rights. Of interest is correspondence in 1963 between Halpern and Richard M. Nixon regarding Nixon's visit to the United Arab RepublicunknownSeymour Halpern served seven terms in Congress from 1959-1973, as a Republican Representative from New YorkNHPRCCAT - rcBatch change test 0806201
Media Genealogy| Cinema/Cybernetics/Visuality: A Conversation with Orit Halpern
In this interview between Orit Halpern, associate professor of anthropology, sociology, and interactive design at Concordia University, and Eddie Lohmeyer, PhD student in the Communication, Rhetoric, and Digital Media Program at North Carolina State University, Professor Halpern discusses the challenges of writing a history of big data and interactivity and the possibilities that such a history might provide for advancing media criticism and practice. Particularly vital to the conversation was a discussion of method, the relationship between design, art, and scholarly practice in the humanities, and the challenges to rethinking, reworking, and revising older theoretical discussions concerning cybernetics, cinema, and biopolitics
Halpern family papers undated, 1916, 1983, 1986, 1991, 1999, 2001
Papers consist of copies of family photographs, a detailed genealogy research report, and two articles. The Halpern Research Report relates to the Halpern, Rothenberg, Klein, Cantor, and Lasker families. The articles, published in the Bronx County Historical Society Journal, are based on Carl Halpern's reminiciences of family members, growing up in the Bronx, and working as an office boy for the Hauserman Metal Manufacturing Company. The papers also include two oral histories, comprising a total of eight audiotapes that were conducted by Joel Halpern, Carl's son. The first, also recorded by Barbara Kirshenblat Gimblet, interviews Dr. Brusilov, from Long Beach, NY, who describes his life in eastern Poland prior to World War II. The second records Sam Alexander, also of Long Beach, NY, who participated in the Israeli War of IndependenceJoel Halper
Development Potential Study, Energy Facilities (Proposal)
This document is a proposal by Rogers, Golden & Halpern (RG&H) on behalf of the New Jersey Departments of Energy (DOE) and Environmental Protection (DEP), to perform a Development Potential Study for Energy Facility Siting. The study would be conducted for New Jersey's Coastal Zone Management Program, in response to the requirements of the Federal Coastal Zone Management Act (CZMA), and would provide general descriptions of potential land and water uses, by detailing factors in the built and natural environment which influence development of these uses, and by developing a method for evaluating the penalties and bonuses. The resulting report would provide the DOE and DEP with detailed information for use in determining the development potential of any location in the study area for each energy study use. The information and techniques provided would become a part of the Coastal Location Acceptability Method (CLAM) being developed by the DEP.Proposal was prepared for the Department of Environmental Protection, Department of Energy, State of New Jersey and submitted to the Department of the Treasury, Purchase Bureau, State of New Jersey.Purpose: To provide the New Jersey Departments of Environmental Protection (DEP) and Energy (DOE) with detailed information for use in determining the development potential of any location in the study area for each energy study use
Jeffrey Halpern, Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering, CEPS travels to Ireland
Prof. Halpern attended a metabolomics conference in Ireland for academic collaborations and cultural exploration. He continued on to the UK, Germany, and Greece to continue those goals
Understanding and Securing Your Author Rights When You Publish - Special Session with Eric Halpern of Penn Press
When you publish, you will be required to sign some sort of publishing agreement, but what does that agreement actually say? What rights are you giving away, and what rights do you retain? Can you post your article to your website? Can you use it in the classroom? Can you send it to colleagues?
This workshop will feature Eric Halpern, Director of Penn Press, who will discuss the main clauses of a book publishing contract, and Sarah Wipperman, Scholarly Communication & Digital Repository Librarian, who will discuss journal agreements, retaining your rights, and ways you can share your work
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