19,045 research outputs found
Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)
Letter from Ray I. Mehan to Jay A. Phillips thanking for the tax assessments transmitted through March 15
Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)
Letter from Jay A. Phillips to Ray I. Mehan discussing which items to sell and which ones to keep regarding Daniel W. Kempner's death
Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)
Letter from Jay A. Phillips to Ray I. Mehan informing that the returns should be filed with Ross Cox regarding Daniel W. Kempner's Estate
Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)
Letter from Jay A. Phillips to Ray I. Mehan informing the value of the books and mentions that Ross Cox is invested in the books
In Memoriam: Walter Ray Phillips
The School of Law regrets to share news of the passing of Walter Ray Phillips on November 8, 2023, at the age of 91. He retired from the law school in 2000 after 27 years as a member of the faculty. During his tenure, he served as acting dean in 1976 and associate dean from 1975 to 1983, and he held the Talmadge and Lumpkin professorships. He has been described as a master teacher and scholar, a pillar of the law school and a gentleman in every sense of the word. Several colleagues recall him being someone who could teach any subject as long as he had a book. Author of 12 law books, his teaching portfolio included: tax, civil procedure, bankruptcy, banking, corporate reorganization and legal ethics. Students honored him with the legal ethics teaching award on one dozen occasions. He served on many law school committees and oversaw the school\u27s transition from quarters to semesters. At the university level, he served on or chaired most major committees. He also directed the university\u27s self-study in 1980. Phillips received the law school’s highest honor – the Distinguished Service Scroll Award – in 2000. Phillips is survived by his two daughters, Bonnie Koryn and Lee Evans, and two grandchildren, Rachel Good and Luke Evans. Please be sure to keep the Phillips family in your thoughts and prayers during this sorrowful time.
2000 – UGA School of Law Distinguished Service Scroll Awar
Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)
Letter from Jay A. Phillips to Ray I. Mehan showing what shares Daniel W. Kempner had in the the United States National Bank before his passing
In Memoriam: Walter Ray Phillips
The School of Law regrets to share news of the passing of Walter Ray Phillips on November 8, 2023, at the age of 91. He retired from the law school in 2000 after 27 years as a member of the faculty. During his tenure, he served as acting dean in 1976 and associate dean from 1975 to 1983, and he held the Talmadge and Lumpkin professorships. He has been described as a master teacher and scholar, a pillar of the law school and a gentleman in every sense of the word. Several colleagues recall him being someone who could teach any subject as long as he had a book. Author of 12 law books, his teaching portfolio included: tax, civil procedure, bankruptcy, banking, corporate reorganization and legal ethics. Students honored him with the legal ethics teaching award on one dozen occasions. He served on many law school committees and oversaw the school\u27s transition from quarters to semesters. At the university level, he served on or chaired most major committees. He also directed the university\u27s self-study in 1980. Phillips received the law school’s highest honor – the Distinguished Service Scroll Award – in 2000. Phillips is survived by his two daughters, Bonnie Koryn and Lee Evans, and two grandchildren, Rachel Good and Luke Evans. Please be sure to keep the Phillips family in your thoughts and prayers during this sorrowful time.
2000 – UGA School of Law Distinguished Service Scroll Awar
Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)
Letter from Jay A. Phillips to Ray I. Mehan informing that there are polices in the trust left for Mary Jean Kempner after his death. He also mentions if any of the gifts for Mary Jean Kempner were taxable
Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)
Letter from Ray I. Mehan to Jay A. Phillips discussing discrepancies in the premiums paid on life insurance policies during the calendar years of 1932 to 1949 for Daniel W. Kempner after examination of the records
Revisiting the empirical existence of the Phillips Curve for India
This paper revisits the empirical existence of the Phillips curve in the Indian context. To estimate the Phillips curve we need two variables – inflation and the output gap. In the case of India, incorrect measurement of both variables causes much difficulty in estimating the Phillipscurve. We use a non-linear Kalman filter approach to estimate the output gap and find that the Kalman filter estimate captures all the dynamics of the economy. Our results show that after taking supply shocks into consideration, there is clear evidence as to the existence of the Phillips curve in India for recent years.Kalman Filter; Output Gap; Inflation
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