894 research outputs found
Ancestors of Henry Dewey Jacoby, Sr.
Family tree listing descendents for Henry Dewey Jacoby, Sr.The family tree mentions the family names Goldstucker, Jacoby, Kahnweiler, Loe, and Meyerson; as well as the towns of Alsenz, Grundstadt, Grünstadt and Münsterappel.Henry Jacoby was born in circa 1817 in Bavaria, Germany; he died in 1886 in Pensacola, Florida.digitize
Jacoby, Henry Sylvester
Memorial Statement for Professor Henry Sylvester Jacoby who died in 1955. The memorial statements contained herein were prepared by the Office of the Dean of the University Faculty of Cornell University to honor its faculty for their service to the university
Johann Jacoby Collection 1849-1860
The collection continas a handwritten and signed letter from Johann Jacoby to author and politician A. Bernstein with notes on a petition to be presented to the Preußischer Landtag. The letter ends with a note stating that something must be done about a memorial in Berlin for the exiled politician Heinrich Simon.The collection also contains a page dated April 1849 and signed by Jacoby, on which he wrote the lines : "Der Sturm bricht los! Der Sieg ist uns gewiss! Auf Wiedersehn in einem freien Lande!"The Prussian-Jewish physician and writer Johann Jacoby was born May 1, 1805, in Königsberg. He strongly believed in equal civil rights for Jews and Gentiles alike, and voiced these believes at the Prussian and then at the all-German National Assembly. He was a member of the German Progress Party, and he joined the German Social Democratic Party after the creation of the new German Empire in 1870. Johann Jacoby died in Königsberg on March 6, 1877.The original German-language inventory is available in the folderProcessed for digitizatio
Energy--markets and regulation : essays in honor of M.A. Adelman
Includes index.Bibliography: p. [343]-367.edited by Richard L. Gordon, Henry D. Jacoby, and Martin B. Zimmerman
Informing transparency in the Paris Agreement: the role of economic models
Establishing a credible and effective transparency regime to support the Paris Agreement – broader than its formal ‘transparency framework’ – will be both crucial and challenging. The Agreement provides for review of achievements under national pledges (Nationally Determined Contributions, or NDCs), but much of this information will become available only well after key steps in the launch of this latest attempt to control human influence on the climate. Still, in these early years, information and understanding of individual and collective performance, and of relative national burdens under the NDCs, will play an important role in the success or failure of the Agreement. However, because of the phasing of various steps in the 5-year cycles under the Agreement and the unavoidable delays of two or more years to produce and review government reports, the Climate Convention and other intergovernmental institutions are ill-suited to carry out timely analyses of progress. Consequently, in advance of formal procedures, academic and other non-governmental groups are going to provide analyses based on available data and their own methodologies. The article explores this transparency challenge – using the MIT Economic Projection and Policy Analysis (EPPA) model to construct sample analyses – and considers ways that efforts outside official channels can contribute to the success of the Agreement
The effect of increased national oil company sales on OPEC and the long run structure of the international petroleum market
Thesis. 1979. M.S.--Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Alfred P. Sloan School of Management.MICROFICHE COPY AVAILABLE IN ARCHIVES AND DEWEY.Bibliography: leaves 141-142.by Henry Furlow Owsley, III.M.S
Supplement to the Jacoby family genealogy, which was published 22 March, 1930 /
Mode of access: Internet
High school success
authors: Jennifer Bevers, Dany Douglas, Isabella Jacoby, and Marisa Molnar.This archived document is maintained by the State Library of Oregon as part of the Oregon Documents Depository Program. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposes.Includes bibliographical references.Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English
Freethinker and atheist
Only one in five Americans say they could definitely vote for an atheist for President but that has not stopped the recent spate of public intellectuals proudly displaying their unbelief — Christopher Hitchens, Richard Dawkins and Sam Harris among them. Author Susan Jacoby will be defending freethinkers and our secular republic
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