6,608 research outputs found

    Jesse Stuart Day at Marshall university, 1975

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    Jesse Stuart Day at Marshall university, 1975, b&w ; 21 x 26 cm.https://mds.marshall.edu/mu_archives_photographs/1124/thumbnail.jp

    Marshall Pres. Stewart Smith, ca. 1960

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    Marshall College Pres. Stewart Smith, ca. 1960, b&w. Back reads: Stuart Smith, Marshall President.https://mds.marshall.edu/doris_miller_papers/1163/thumbnail.jp

    0113: Jesse Stuart Papers, 1929-1986

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    The Jesse Stuart Collection consists primarily of magazines given by Mr. Stuart which contain articles, stories, or poems written by him or about him. Approximately half of these items are in the original publication; the others are photoreproductions of originals lent by Mr. Stuart. Another significant part of the collection was purchased from International Bookfinders, Inc., of Pacific Palisades, California, and includes first editions of Mr. Stuart’s works, galley proofs, and some manuscript material. A third group of material is comprised of articles, stories, or poems written by or concerning Mr. Stuart which have been located and added to the collection by the library staff, by interested persons, or by Mr. Stuart himself, since 1976. This added material is inventoried separately. The bulk of the addendum to the Jesse Stuart papers consists of magazines purchased from William Curry, a collector of Jesse Stuart material, in 1977. There is also a box containing items donated to the collection by interested individuals. These items included correspondence, photographs, and newspaper clippings. Also included are purchased papers from other sources, including a typescript manuscript of the short story, “How to Thread a Needle.

    0573: Robert B. Hayes, 1965-1984

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    Marshall University dean and president. Papers consist of items related to Jesse Stuart: newspaper clippings, ephemera and correspondence

    Alfred Marshall y el banco central: Política monetaria

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    Editada en la Fundación Empresa PúblicaComo resultado de sus contribuciones a la teoría monetaria, Alfred Marshall propuso una renovación institucional decisiva dentro del sistema monetario: defendió un sistema de banca central con argumentos más racionales que los de sus predecesores —especialmente Walter Bagehot— y concedió un papel mucho más importante a la autoridad monetaria en el control de la política monetaria (especialmente en la lucha anticíclica). Marshall no contempló el sistema de banco central como «mal menor», sino como uno superior a cualquier plan basado en la convertibilidad para luchar contra los males de la moneda: fluctuaciones de su valor y ciclos del crédito. Sus ideas en política monetaria fueron semilla para las de John Maynard Keynes, y su relevancia sirvió para que las de éste encontrasen el terreno abonado.Based on his contributions to monetary theory, Alfred Marshall expounded on an important institutional innovation in the monetary system: he defended a central bank with more theoretical based arguments than his predecessors did —particularly Walter Bagehot— and he gave a leading role to the monetary authority in managing and controlling monetary policy (especially for countering the cycle). Marshall did not see the central bank system as a «minor evil» but a superior framework —even to any plan based on convertibility— to solve the problem of fluctuations in the value of money and credit cycles. His ideas in monetary policy were the seed for the Cambridge School and their relevance helped to prepare the way for spreading the proposals of John Maynard Keynes about monetary policy.Publicad

    Letter from William Stuart to Marshall BB James

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    ShoshoneLetter from William Stuart (perhaps) who is a civilian warning U.S. Marshal B.B. James about a young white girl being held by Indians. The Marshall gave the letter to a Colonel Lewis who passed it on to his superior General Gibbon who is in turn sending it to the Office of Indian Affairs

    Mrs. Sterling Hamlet with Jesse Stuart (on right), ca. 1958,

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    Mrs. Sterling Hamlet with Jesse Stuart (on right), ca. 1958, b&w. Note on back reads: L. Mrs. Sterling Hamlet (nee Theodosia Kirkland), past president, Women\u27 s Club of Huntington. R. Jesse Stuart (Author\u27s luncheon).https://mds.marshall.edu/doris_miller_papers/1106/thumbnail.jp

    Naomi Deane Stuart, wife of Jesse Stuart, ca. 1955

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    Naomi Deane Stuart, wife of Jesse Stuart, ca. 1955, b&w. HUPCO stamp on back without date. In 1939, Stuart married Naomi Deane Norris, a school teacher.https://mds.marshall.edu/doris_miller_papers/1205/thumbnail.jp

    Marshall Perron, MLA for Stuart Park

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    Marshall Perron, MLA for Stuart Park. Deputy Chief Minister. Treasurer, Minister for Lands and Housing.Unknown

    The Future of the Working Classes: A Comparison Between J.S. Mill and A. Marshall

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    Both J. S. Mill and A. Marshall had a lifelong concern with the living conditions of the working classes and theorized the possibility of a new age, characterized by a widespread mental and moral cultivation. This paper compares the precise arguments put forward by them in the period ranging from Mill‟s “The Claims of Labour” (1845) to Marshall's "Principles" (1890), against the background of the evidence of progress they had. It is argued that, at different stages and with different specific arguments, their predictions relied on self-reinforcing mechanisms, in which a better life was the cause, no less than the effect, of progress. In order to make similarities and differences more transparent from a logical point of view, two simple mathematical formulations are proposed.
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