385,361 research outputs found

    The Groove Merchants, April 6, 1993

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    This is the concert program of the Groove Merchants performance on Tuesday, April 6, 1993 at 8:00 p.m., at the Concert Hall, 855 Commonwealth Avenue. Works performed were Secret Loveby Victor Young, Phoenix by Jimmy Giuffre, Jackie-ing by Thelonius Monk, Dis' is it by Daniel Smith, Blues for J by Jimmy Smith, First Song (for Ruth) by Charlie Haden, and Contemplation by McCoy Tyner. Digitization for Boston University Concert Programs was supported by the Boston University Humanities Library Endowed Fund

    Adam Smith’s Unnaturally Natural (nonetheless Naturally Unnatural) use of the Word Natural

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    Natural and nature are complex words, fraught with ambiguity and contradiction. This paper does not attempt to give a complete account of Smith\u27s use of these words. However, it does demonstrate that Smith did not necessarily approve of what he called natural or nature . Economists and others who assume otherwise are in error. A study, analysis, and/or interpretation of Smith\u27s work which depends upon this (at times unstated) assumption - that Smith necessarily approved of nature or the natural - needs to be read with great care; perhaps even incredulity.

    Phyllis J. Smith Short

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    Phyllis Short, Class of 1947, majored in Music with an specialty in Piano. She was a member of Delta Omicron, a music sorority

    Phi Delta Phi

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    From the 1933 Pandora. Officers: T.D. Cook, Magister; V.B. Moore, Clerk; E.M. Smith, Reporter; J.H. Napier, Historian. Chapter Roll: S.W. Clarke, J. Earl Colvin, T. Dudley Cook, McCarthy Crenshaw, Cleburne Gregory, J. Hamilton Lokey, Frank R. Mitchell, Virlyn B. Moore, L.R. Morgan, J. Hamilton Napier, Oscar Roberts, Ernest M. Smith, Frank Swift, Joe Thomas, Lamar Tillman, Robert Twitty, T.W. Willingham, G.H. Wotte

    Reading Adam Smith: Understanding the Misinterpretations & the Fallacy of the Adam Smith Problem

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    This paper investigates Adam Smith’s intricate vision of human motivation and seeks to expose the fallacy of the “Adam Smith Problem”. Through an expansive study of the famed economist’s two most prominent works, An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations (WN) and The Theory of Moral Sentiments (TMS), I will show that the two are perfect complements of one other and that Adam Smith did not set down in one place his views on the nature of man. Adam Smith saw man for what he truly is, dominated by selfinterest but not without concern for others, able to reason but not necessarily able to reach the best or right conclusion while all the time seeing one’s own actions through a veil of self-delusion. WN and TMS are equally important books, and in order to understand the economics and philosophy of Adam Smith, both must be read and studied

    Dedication: J. Denson Smith

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    Nimrod J. Smith

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    Report : Claim of N. Smith. [3048] Ex-chief of the Eastern Cherokees of North Carolina; asks payments due from tribe

    Smith, Andrew J. (1839 - )

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    This biographical summary was created by the Works Progress Administration (WPA) between 1936 and 1939

    Peter J. Smith Collection

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    Letters, typed copy of his family reminiscence entitled "Dakota days of years ago," (38 leaves) and a newspaper clipping. Reminiscence includes mention of his family homestead in Cavalier County, a blizzard, pioneer days near Pembina, N.D., people and equipment involved in threshing, digging water wells, Olga, Bathgate, Beaulieu, and Walhalla, N.D., country school, churches, hunting, horses and horse-drawn vehicles, and removing tree stumps

    Nimrod J. Smith

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    52-1Indian AffairsReport : Claim of of N. Smith. [3048] Ex-chief of the Eastern Cherokees of North Carolina; asks payments due from tribe.1892-22
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