Vol. 1 edited by I. P. Khrushchov alone. ; Vol. 1 published in St. Petersburg by Tov. "Nechatni︠a︡ S. N. I︠A︡kovleva" Nevskiĭ ir. ; t. 1. Politicheskii︠a︡ sochinenii︠a︡.--t. 2. Statʹi istoriko-politicheskii︠a︡ i filisofikii︠a︡. ; Mode of access: Internet.
The Tweed Family Papers consists primarily of correspondence between Mrs. Richard Tweed and her children, relatives, and friends. Diaries, essays and poetry written by family members, newspaper clippings (photocopies), and financial and legal material are also included, as are a handful of photographs. All related primarily to the life of Mrs. Richard Tweed and her descendants. ; Mrs. Richard Tweed, upon whom the majority of the materials focus, was the sister-in-law of William Marcy ("Boss") Tweed, who controlled the Democratic political machine at New York City's Tammany Hall during the mid-19th century. He and his associates misappropriated public funds on a large scale, leading to his arrest and imprisonment in 1871. ; The Tweed Family Papers are organized by the following categories: Correspondence, Newspapers, Literary Production, Photographs, Financial Material, Printed Material, Scrapbook Material, Legal Material, and Artifacts. ; Tweed Family Papers, 1836-1932 and undated, Southwest Collection/Special Collections Library, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, Texas ; Box 1, File 8
This service record is an account of military actions during the American Civil War by veteran M. M. Grantham dated from 1904. ; All descriptive lists and service records in this United Confederate (Civil War) Veterans manuscript collection believed to be based out of Robert E. Lee Camp #158 of the United Confederate Veterans (Fort Worth, Tex.). ; The Southwest Collection Manuscript Record can be accessed at the following URL: http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/ttusw/00119/tsw-00119.html ; 1 leaf, 2 pdf pages. ; Regiment & Battles mentioned: Confederate States of America. Army. Georgia Infantry Regiment, 43rd ; Perryville, Battle of, Perryville, Ky., 1862 ; Missionary Ridge, Battle of, Tenn., 1863 ; Champion Hill, Battle of, Miss., 1863.
En una democracia representativa la campaña electoral es la antesala del voto. El valor del sufragio depende del debate público que le precede. Una campaña abierta, plural y competitiva garantiza el voto libre y soberano. En las Elecciones Generales de 2004 y en las elecciones locales y autonómicas de 2011, los actos electorales fueron desplazados por la ciudadanía que tomó las calles y plazas del estado. En ambas ocasiones, la campaña de los votantes cuestionó y apagó la de los candidatos. Las jornadas de reflexión cobraron una dimensión colectiva y deliberativa, en contra de las prohibiciones de la Junta Electoral; rebasada ya tres veces por las cibermultitudes. Pero, ¿quiénes son las cibermultitudes del 13-M y el 15-M? ¿Qué papel podrían jugar?
The Tweed Family Papers consists primarily of correspondence between Mrs. Richard Tweed and her children, relatives, and friends. Diaries, essays and poetry written by family members, newspaper clippings (photocopies), and financial and legal material are also included, as are a handful of photographs. All related primarily to the life of Mrs. Richard Tweed and her descendants. ; Mrs. Richard Tweed, upon whom the majority of the materials focus, was the sister-in-law of William Marcy ("Boss") Tweed, who controlled the Democratic political machine at New York City's Tammany Hall during the mid-19th century. He and his associates misappropriated public funds on a large scale, leading to his arrest and imprisonment in 1871. ; The Tweed Family Papers are organized by the following categories: Correspondence, Newspapers, Literary Production, Photographs, Financial Material, Printed Material, Scrapbook Material, Legal Material, and Artifacts. ; Tweed Family Papers, 1836-1932 and undated, Southwest Collection/Special Collections Library, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, Texas ; Box 1, File 8
This service record is an account of military actions during the American Civil War by veteran M. M. Crates (1846- ), dated from 1912. ; 1 leaf ; 2 pdf pages. ; All descriptive lists and service records in this United Confederate (Civil War) Veterans manuscript collection believed to be based out of Robert E. Lee Camp #158 of the United Confederate Veterans (Fort Worth, Tex.). United Confederate Veterans. R.E. Lee Camp No. 158 (Fort Worth, Tex.) ; The Southwest Collection Manuscript Record can be accessed at the following URL: http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/ttusw/00119/tsw-00119.html
This service record is an account of military actions during the American Civil War by veteran M. M. Fatherrer (1846- ), dated from 1905. ; 1 leaf ; 2 pdf pages. ; All descriptive lists and service records in this United Confederate (Civil War) Veterans manuscript collection believed to be based out of Robert E. Lee Camp #158 of the United Confederate Veterans (Fort Worth, Tex.). United Confederate Veterans. R.E. Lee Camp No. 158 (Fort Worth, Tex.) ; The Southwest Collection Manuscript Record can be accessed at the following URL: http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/ttusw/00119/tsw-00119.html
The Tweed Family Papers consists primarily of correspondence between Mrs. Richard Tweed and her children, relatives, and friends. Diaries, essays and poetry written by family members, newspaper clippings (photocopies), and financial and legal material are also included, as are a handful of photographs. All related primarily to the life of Mrs. Richard Tweed and her descendants. ; Mrs. Richard Tweed, upon whom the majority of the materials focus, was the sister-in-law of William Marcy ("Boss") Tweed, who controlled the Democratic political machine at New York City's Tammany Hall during the mid-19th century. He and his associates misappropriated public funds on a large scale, leading to his arrest and imprisonment in 1871. ; The Tweed Family Papers are organized by the following categories: Correspondence, Newspapers, Literary Production, Photographs, Financial Material, Printed Material, Scrapbook Material, Legal Material, and Artifacts. ; Tweed Family Papers, 1836-1932 and undated, Southwest Collection/Special Collections Library, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, Texas ; Box 1, File 8
The Tweed Family Papers consists primarily of correspondence between Mrs. Richard Tweed and her children, relatives, and friends. Diaries, essays and poetry written by family members, newspaper clippings (photocopies), and financial and legal material are also included, as are a handful of photographs. All related primarily to the life of Mrs. Richard Tweed and her descendants. ; Mrs. Richard Tweed, upon whom the majority of the materials focus, was the sister-in-law of William Marcy ("Boss") Tweed, who controlled the Democratic political machine at New York City's Tammany Hall during the mid-19th century. He and his associates misappropriated public funds on a large scale, leading to his arrest and imprisonment in 1871. ; The Tweed Family Papers are organized by the following categories: Correspondence, Newspapers, Literary Production, Photographs, Financial Material, Printed Material, Scrapbook Material, Legal Material, and Artifacts. ; Tweed Family Papers, 1836-1932 and undated, Southwest Collection/Special Collections Library, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, Texas ; Box 1, File 8 ; Final pdf page includes a tag from the Queens College Historical Documents Collection from Flushing, New York.
Road Tax and the Environmental Costs of Road Transport. – Environmental protection costs are analyzed in terms of noise, air pollution, and biosphere impact of four road vehicles in the open countryside : vans, trailer trucks, buses, and private cars. A first approximation shows that inaccuracies in the evaluations of these costs are due to uncertainties stemming both from the physical models and from economic origins (diversity of national standards). To these we should add the phenomena of saturation, noise, and road wear, which are the external effects, as opposed to the former, which are the internal effects. The most satisfactory solution is to internalize any external effects we want to control. This internalization integrates the biosphere, individual satisfaction and dissatisfaction, private and public pecuniary interests, and lastly the guilty party (the polluter is the one who pays). Many effective forms of internalization exist, and it is up to the government to organize them so that things even out equitably and so that the costs due to this internalization are compensated by the advantages the community gets out of them. --- With the author and the publisher of the copyright agreement. The present version in PDF is under the copyright of EDITECOM (http://www.editecom.com/) - 1994. ; Les coûts entraînés par la protection de l'environnement en matière de transport routier ont été étudiés dans les effets du transport en rase campagne, pour quatre catégories de véhicules : les utilitaires, les poids lourds, les véhicules de transport collectif et les voitures particulières. Ces effets concernent particulièrement le bruit, la pollution de l'air, la biosphère. Une première approche montre que les imprécisions sur les évaluations de ces coûts tiennent à la fois aux incertitudes qui relèvent des modèles physiques et à celles qui relèvent de l'économie (diversité des normes nationales). Il faut y ajouter les phénomènes de saturation, le bruit, l'usure des chaussées. Cet article fait le point sur toutes les questions dans la problématique d'une orientation stratégique de la politique des transports.
Road Tax and the Environmental Costs of Road Transport. – Environmental protection costs are analyzed in terms of noise, air pollution, and biosphere impact of four road vehicles in the open countryside : vans, trailer trucks, buses, and private cars. A first approximation shows that inaccuracies in the evaluations of these costs are due to uncertainties stemming both from the physical models and from economic origins (diversity of national standards). To these we should add the phenomena of saturation, noise, and road wear, which are the external effects, as opposed to the former, which are the internal effects. The most satisfactory solution is to internalize any external effects we want to control. This internalization integrates the biosphere, individual satisfaction and dissatisfaction, private and public pecuniary interests, and lastly the guilty party (the polluter is the one who pays). Many effective forms of internalization exist, and it is up to the government to organize them so that things even out equitably and so that the costs due to this internalization are compensated by the advantages the community gets out of them. --- With the author and the publisher of the copyright agreement. The present version in PDF is under the copyright of EDITECOM (http://www.editecom.com/) - 1994. ; Les coûts entraînés par la protection de l'environnement en matière de transport routier ont été étudiés dans les effets du transport en rase campagne, pour quatre catégories de véhicules : les utilitaires, les poids lourds, les véhicules de transport collectif et les voitures particulières. Ces effets concernent particulièrement le bruit, la pollution de l'air, la biosphère. Une première approche montre que les imprécisions sur les évaluations de ces coûts tiennent à la fois aux incertitudes qui relèvent des modèles physiques et à celles qui relèvent de l'économie (diversité des normes nationales). Il faut y ajouter les phénomènes de saturation, le bruit, l'usure des chaussées. Cet article fait le point sur toutes les ...
Road Tax and the Environmental Costs of Road Transport. – Environmental protection costs are analyzed in terms of noise, air pollution, and biosphere impact of four road vehicles in the open countryside : vans, trailer trucks, buses, and private cars. A first approximation shows that inaccuracies in the evaluations of these costs are due to uncertainties stemming both from the physical models and from economic origins (diversity of national standards). To these we should add the phenomena of saturation, noise, and road wear, which are the external effects, as opposed to the former, which are the internal effects. The most satisfactory solution is to internalize any external effects we want to control. This internalization integrates the biosphere, individual satisfaction and dissatisfaction, private and public pecuniary interests, and lastly the guilty party (the polluter is the one who pays). Many effective forms of internalization exist, and it is up to the government to organize them so that things even out equitably and so that the costs due to this internalization are compensated by the advantages the community gets out of them. --- With the author and the publisher of the copyright agreement. The present version in PDF is under the copyright of EDITECOM (http://www.editecom.com/) - 1994. ; Les coûts entraînés par la protection de l'environnement en matière de transport routier ont été étudiés dans les effets du transport en rase campagne, pour quatre catégories de véhicules : les utilitaires, les poids lourds, les véhicules de transport collectif et les voitures particulières. Ces effets concernent particulièrement le bruit, la pollution de l'air, la biosphère. Une première approche montre que les imprécisions sur les évaluations de ces coûts tiennent à la fois aux incertitudes qui relèvent des modèles physiques et à celles qui relèvent de l'économie (diversité des normes nationales). Il faut y ajouter les phénomènes de saturation, le bruit, l'usure des chaussées. Cet article fait le point sur toutes les questions dans la problématique d'une orientation stratégique de la politique des transports.
This study will endeavor to give the reader a positive concept as to the value of Negro politicians through the life of M. M. Rodgers by ascertaining the answers to the following questions: 1. What background factors contributed to the evaluation of Texas Negro politician as exemplified by M. M. Rodgers? 2. Was it possible for a Negro in politics in this era to exhibit the philosophy and instincts of a true politician? 3. To what extent could a Negro wield political power in the form of patronage and influence within the scope of the Republican party of Texas? 4. What was the Negro aspiration in politics during the period from 1887-1909? 5. Why did the white politicians plan to rid themselves of the influential Negro in the Republican party? 6. What were the factors that caused M. M. Rodgers to retire from politics? The scope of this paper will begin in 1887, which is the year M. M. Rodgers was elected Alderman of the city of LaGrange, Texas, and closes in 1909, when he resigned as Deputy Collector of Internal Revenue for the Third District of Texas. The material date will begin around 1865, the end of the Civil War and the beginning of the period of reconstruction. For clarity on the material scope date, any date after 1881 will be in strict accord with the proof of the writer's hypothesis.
The Tweed Family Papers consists primarily of correspondence between Mrs. Richard Tweed and her children, relatives, and friends. Diaries, essays and poetry written by family members, newspaper clippings (photocopies), and financial and legal material are also included, as are a handful of photographs. All related primarily to the life of Mrs. Richard Tweed and her descendants. ; Mrs. Richard Tweed, upon whom the majority of the materials focus, was the sister-in-law of William Marcy ("Boss") Tweed, who controlled the Democratic political machine at New York City's Tammany Hall during the mid-19th century. He and his associates misappropriated public funds on a large scale, leading to his arrest and imprisonment in 1871. ; The Tweed Family Papers are organized by the following categories: Correspondence, Newspapers, Literary Production, Photographs, Financial Material, Printed Material, Scrapbook Material, Legal Material, and Artifacts. ; Tweed Family Papers, 1836-1932 and undated, Southwest Collection/Special Collections Library, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, Texas ; Box 1, File 1
The Tweed Family Papers consists primarily of correspondence between Mrs. Richard Tweed and her children, relatives, and friends. Diaries, essays and poetry written by family members, newspaper clippings (photocopies), and financial and legal material are also included, as are a handful of photographs. All related primarily to the life of Mrs. Richard Tweed and her descendants. ; Mrs. Richard Tweed, upon whom the majority of the materials focus, was the sister-in-law of William Marcy ("Boss") Tweed, who controlled the Democratic political machine at New York City's Tammany Hall during the mid-19th century. He and his associates misappropriated public funds on a large scale, leading to his arrest and imprisonment in 1871. ; The Tweed Family Papers are organized by the following categories: Correspondence, Newspapers, Literary Production, Photographs, Financial Material, Printed Material, Scrapbook Material, Legal Material, and Artifacts. ; Tweed Family Papers, 1836-1932 and undated, Southwest Collection/Special Collections Library, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, Texas ; Box 1, File 1