5,980 research outputs found

    Letters of Lieutenant John W. Phelps, U.S.A., 1837-1838

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    Lieut. John Walcott Phelps (Brig.-Gen., Vols. 1861) of Vermont, served in the Seminole War during 1837, 1838 and 1839. Following these, a score of letters will be published here written by Samuel Forry, Surgeon, U. S. A., to Lieut. Phelps from various forts in Florida during the campaigns of 1837 and 1838. The originals of both series are in the possession of John W. Phelps, of Northfield, Massachusetts, a son of General Phelps; who, through Mrs. Roy V. Ott, of Ocala, has given The Florida Historical Society copies and permission to publish them. A biographical sketch of Lieut. Phelps will appear in an early number of the Quarterly

    Letter: Helen W. Phelps to Ida M. Tarbell, September 18, 1917

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    Handwritten letter. 3 page

    Arthur W. Phelps Oral History Interview

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    The original manuscript transcript of this interview is available in University Archives Oral History Collection in the Special Collections Research Center, Swem Library, College of William and Mary.This interview was conducted as part of the College of William and Mary Oral History Project. Having come to William and Mary in 1945, Mr. Phelps has been on the law faculty (at first the department of juris prudence) longer that anyone in Williamsburg. At one time dean of the law school, he has observed its modern growth and tells of this in his interview.College of William and Mar

    Other title: Original binding title: New historical war map; Other title: Brief description of 100 battles and skirmishes of the war

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    Prime meridian: Washington.; South Florida shown separately and not included in latitudinal range.; "Entered according to Act of Congress in the year 1862 by Phelps & Watson; in the Clerks Office of the District Court of the Southern District of New York.

    A Handwritten Account of Three Pages About the Visit of Rev. Philip and Margaret Phelps to Holland, Michigan, as the Phelps Family Made a Western Tour.

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    A handwritten account of three pages about the visit of Rev. Philip and Margaret Phelps to Holland, Michigan, as the Phelps family made a western tour. The document may have been written by Frances Phelps Otte. The document is undated. There is considerable detail in the account as to the various kinds of transportation used and the places stayed during the trip. At this time, Phelps was pastor of the Reformed Church, Hastings on- Hudson, New York. The author believed that the Board of Education of the Reformed Church in America may have suggested visiting the Colony. When the Phelps called on the Van Raaltes, Mrs. Van Raalte was holding daughter, Anna, who was very sick. Van Raalte was not home. The Phelps were entertained at supper by the John Van Vlecks. Van Vleck was conducting academy classes in some home. Phelps preached September 28 in the Dutch Church. On Monday, the Phelps took the stage to Grand Haven.https://digitalcommons.hope.edu/vrp_1850s/1346/thumbnail.jp

    Rev. Philip Phelps Jr. Wrote in the Christian Intelligencer

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    In this issue of The Christian Intelligencer, Rev. Phillip Phelps Jr., Principal of the Holland Academy, concludes his efforts to answer the issues raised by W in the December 1 issue. He very carefully and lovingly gives his defense of the Holland Academy and the fund-raising efforts of Rev. Albertus C. Van Raalte. It is ironic that if W is Rev. Charles Scott that Phelps called him to serve at Hope College later in this decade.https://digitalcommons.hope.edu/vrp_1860s/1033/thumbnail.jp

    Assessment of process for setting 2018 rates for coordinated care organizations

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    to: Oregon Health Authority ; from: Anne Karl, Manatt, Phelps & Phillips LLP.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

    Letter from W. T. Johnson to Rev. G. M. Phelps

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    Letter from W. T. Johnson to Rev. G. M. Phelps, thanking him for leading devotions at the Vocational Agriculture Teachers\u27 Conference

    Edmund Phelps’ Structuralist Theory of Employment

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    The paper evaluates the contribution of Nobel Prize-winning American economist Edmund Phelps to the development of contemporary economics. The author analyzes Phelps’ structuralist theory of employment and compares his views with the ideas of other acclaimed economists such as Milton Friedman, John M. Keynes, and Friedrich A. Hayek. Godłów-Legiędź looks at Phelps’ achievements in the context of the Swedish Royal Academy of Sciences’ decision to grant him a Nobel Prize, and describes Phelps’ position on some key dilemmas of 20th century economics. According to Godłów-Legiędź, the assessment of Phelps’ achievements offered by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences is in fact incomplete, because it overlooks his structuralist theory of employment. Phelps, who calls himself a structuralist, considers this theory of employment to be his most important contribution to macroeconomics, Godłów-Legiędź notes. Phelps’ achievements cannot be viewed exclusively in terms of the link between inflation and unemployment, she says. It is necessary to consider the economist’s focus on what he described as “endogenizing the natural rate of unemployment,” an approach that reveals the differences between Phelps’ theory and those of Keynes and his followers as well as the monetarists and neoclassicists. Defining the natural rate of unemployment as a function of real demand and supply, Phelps referred to the 1930s dispute between Keynes and Hayek that involved the classicist and Austrian interpretations of key economic relationships. Phelps’ unorthodox approach is reflected not only by his theory and attitude to neoclassical economics, Godłów-Legiędź says, but also by his assessment of European and American capitalism and his belief about the need for fundamental changes in economic and social policies
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