967 resultados para Huneker, James, 1857-1921.
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Illustrated end papers.
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"Editorial committee: John Calvin Metcalf, chairman, Fiske Kimball, Bruce Williams, Robert Henning Webb, James Southall Wilson."
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"Historical sketch of York" (p. 34-82) is by F.D. Marshall.
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Added t.-p., engraved, with vignette, dated: 1846.
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Back Row: manager Alfred May, Hugh Wilson, Ernie Vick, James Johns, Don Swan, trainer Archie Hahn
3rd Row: Frank Steketee, Bill Van Orden, Walter Dean, Paul Goebel, Stan Muirhead, Leroy Neisch, Theodore Bank
2nd Row: Charles Petro, Louis Curran, captain R. Jerome Dunne, Coach Fielding Yost, Frank Cappon, Douglas Roby
Front Row: Irwin Uteritz, John Searle, Harry Kipke, Robert Knode
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Back Row: James Johns, Irwin Uteritz, Harold MacGregor, John Gunther, Waldeck Levi, Homer(?) Martin, Charles Kreis, Stephen Garfield, Walter Kreinheder, Frank Culver, Herndon Taylor, Walter Dean, John Perrin, Herbert Dunphy, ? McWood, assistant coach Angus Goetz, Frederick Novy, Paul Goebel, Stan Muirhead, Edward Usher, Leroy Neisch, assistant coach Elton Wieman, assistant coach A.J. Sturznegger
Front Row: Verne Richards, Oscar Olson, Louis Curran, William Crawforth, Harry Kipke, John Searle, Franklin Cappon, Theodore Banks, John Evans, John Keatley, Donald Hathaway, John Fairbairn, J.W. McAuliffe, John Landowski, Alexander Oliver, Donald Swan, Douglas Roby, Bernard Kirk, Robert Jerome Dunne, trasiner Archie Hahn, Leroy Neisch
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Top Row: Ath. Dir. Philip Bartelme, coach Ray Fisher, student mngr. Porter, Milton Dixon, Douglas Roby
Middle Row: Arthur Karpus, Lowell Genebach, Henry Vick, Peter Van Boven, John Perrin, James Johnson, (?) Howard Liverance
Front Row: ?Mentz, Kenneth Ronan, Adolph Klein
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Printed by the Plimpton Press, Norwood, Mass.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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University of Illinois bookplate: "From the library of Conte Antonio Cavagna Sangiuliani di Gualdana Lazelada di Bereguardo purchased 1921".
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Hamilton (2001) makes a number of comments on our paper (Harding and Pagan, 2002b). The objectives of this rejoinder are, firstly, to note the areas in which we agree; secondly, to define with greater clarity the areas in which we disagree; and, thirdly, to point to other papers, including a longer version of this response, where we have dealt with some of the issues that he raises. The core of our debate with him is whether one should use an algorithm with a specified set of rules for determining the turning points in economic activity or whether one should use a parametric model that features latent states. Hamilton begins his criticism by stating that there is a philosophical distinction between the two methods for dating cycles and concludes that the method we use “leaves vague and intuitive exactly what this algorithm is intended to measure”. Nothing is further from the truth. When seeking ways to decide on whether a turning point has occurred it is always useful to ask the question, what is a recession? Common usage suggests that it is a decline in the level of economic activity that lasts for some time. For this reason it has become standard to describe a recession as a decline in GDP that lasts for more than two quarters. Finding periods in which quarterly GDP declined for two periods is exactly what our approach does. What is vague about this?