Tag: Legacy

Legacy A Biography of Moses and Walter Annenberg


Free Download Christopher Ogden, "Legacy: A Biography of Moses and Walter Annenberg"
English | 1999 | ISBN: 0316633798 | EPUB | pages: 624 | 3.4 mb
From the bestselling biographer of Pamela Digby Churchill Hayward Harriman comes a multi-generational saga of one of America’s wealthiest and most controversial families-the Annenbergs.

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Beyond the Legacy of the Missionaries and East Indians The Impact of the Presbyterian Church in the Caribbean


Free Download Jerome Teelucksingh, "Beyond the Legacy of the Missionaries and East Indians The Impact of the Presbyterian Church in the Caribbean "
English | ISBN: 9004416471 | 2019 | 230 pages | PDF | 3 MB
The missionaries from the Presbyterian Church of Canada and locally trained personnel provided the educational, religious and social foundations that allowed the marginalized peoples in the Caribbean to progress and assimilate during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

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Barbie Her Inspiration, History, and Legacy


Free Download Barbie: Her Inspiration, History, and Legacy by Robin Gerber
English | April 16th, 2024 | ISBN: 076039122X | 176 pages | True EPUB | 24.19 MB
Take an enthralling and richly illustrated trip through the official real-world story of the Barbie™ doll-from groundbreaking toy to beacon of female empowerment.

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A Science of Decision Making The Legacy of Ward Edwards


Free Download A Science of Decision Making: The Legacy of Ward Edwards By Jie W. Weiss, David J. Weiss
2008 | 536 Pages | ISBN: 0195322983 | PDF | 11 MB
Ward Edwards is well known as the father of behavioral decision making. In his 1954 Psychological Bulletin paper on decision making, he brought psychological ideas into what had been the province of economists. His influence in this realm is so pervasive that the Nobel committee was able to trace a direct path from Edwards’s work to Daniel Kahneman’s 2002 Prize for prospect theory. In a 1963 Psychological Review paper, Edwards brought Bayesian statistics to the attention of psychologists, who have continued to proliferate Bayesian ideas, underscoring the importance of the perspective. In a 1962 IEEE paper, Edwards foresaw how the world of intelligence gathering and analysis could by transformed by systems in which humans provided (subjective) probabilities and machines provided computational power. He also showed, in a 1986 book written with Detlof von Winterfeldt, how multiattribute utility analysis could help real-world decision makers generate satisfactory solutions to complex problems. In this book, 29 of Ward Edwards’s most important published papers are reprinted, a selection that spans six decades, allowing the reader to see how this strikingly creative thinker generated many of the ideas that are now core beliefs among current researchers. It is perhaps less well known that Edwards continued to make substantial contributions during the years after his retirement. Illness reduced his public appearances, but he continued his incisive thinking behind the scenes. At the time of his passing, he was involved in several projects, and seven new papers from these projects were completed for this book by his last set of collaborators. Edwards’s papers are a treat to read. His prose is the model of elegant simplicity, yet full of style and wit. With each paper, the editors have included a short introduction that presents Edwards’s reflections on the content or impact of the older papers, or describes the creation of the new ones. Obituaries written by former students and colleagues flesh out the human side of this remarkable scholar.

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A Lincoln Legacy The History of the U.s. District Court for the Western District of Michigan


Free Download David Gardner Chardavoyne, "A Lincoln Legacy: The History of the U.s. District Court for the Western District of Michigan "
English | ISBN: 0814348041 | 2020 | 336 pages | EPUB | 3 MB
A Lincoln Legacy: The History of the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Michigan by David Gardner Chardavoyne with Hugh W. Brenneman, Jr. provides the first and only comprehensive examination of the history of the United States federal courts in the Western District of Michigan. The federal courts were established by the U.S. Constitution to adjudicate disputes involving federal laws, disputes between litigants from different states involving state and federal laws, and to punish violations of criminal laws passed by Congress. During the Civil War, Abraham Lincoln signed legislation creating two federal districts in the state of Michigan: the Eastern and Western Districts―the latter of which is headquartered in Grand Rapids and which now encompasses the western half of the Lower Peninsula and all of the Upper Peninsula. With the rapid expansion of legislation passed by Congress, the increasing mobility of society, and the growth of interstate commerce, the federal courts have assumed an important and sometimes dominant role in major litigation today.

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The Panic of 1792 The History and Legacy of America’s First Financial Crisis [Audiobook]


Free Download Charles River Editors, Daniel Houle (Narrator), "The Panic of 1792: The History and Legacy of America’s First Financial Crisis"
English | ASIN: B08TM2T5VJ | 2020 | MP3@64 kbps | ~01:32:00 | 44 MB
During the Revolution, relatively little consideration had been given to the role of the federal government in the new nation, and the precise role and authority of an overarching entity with responsibility for all states within the union was a major problem. Having fought against and defeated a distant government that imposed seemingly arbitrary rules on the colonies, many people were suspicious about the role of the federal government. The only federal institution during the war was the Continental Congress, which had little real power and was unable to levy taxes from individual states. When the Constitution was drafted in 1787 and George Washington became the first president six years after the end of the Revolutionary War, he immediately began the task of creating the new federal administration.
One of the most urgent tasks Washington faced was the establishment of a treasury to oversee the finances of America and regulate its currency. This was desperately needed, both because the banking sector barely existed and because America was completely and comprehensively out of money. Indeed, it faced the very real possibility of becoming bankrupt since the massive costs of the Revolution had required borrowing on a vast scale. Banks in Holland provided some of the money, but the bulk came from Britain’s great European rival, France. France provided loan after loan to the Continental Congress, and by the time the war ended, the interest alone on these loans was crippling. Congress could not tax states directly, instead relying on financial requisitions, but few of them were actually paid. The balance of trade was heavily biased in favor of imports, with gold leaving the country at an alarming rate. To overcome this, Congress simply printed more and more paper money, which quickly lost its value. As Thomas MacGraw put it, "The War of Independence not only impoverished the country but also left it burdened with the highest public debt it has ever experienced, measured against the income of its government".

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