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Haberman Educational Foundation
Haberman is a surname of Germanic origin. People with the name include: * Clyde Haberman, American journalist * Daniel Haberman (1933–1991), American poet *Hardy Haberman, American author, filmmaker, educator, designer *Maggie Haberman, American journalist *Mandy Haberman, English inventor and entrepreneur, inventor of the Haberman feeder *Martin Haberman Martin Haberman (1932 – January 1, 2012) was an educator who developed interviewing techniques for identifying teachers and principals who will be successful in working with poor children. The most widely known of his programs was (The Nationa ... (1932–2012), American educator, university dean, and author; eponym of The Haberman Educational Foundation * Robert Haberman, Romanian-American socialist lawyer and left-wing activist; Mexican government minister * Seth Haberman, American developer of viewer-customized television advertising * Steven Haberman, English professor of actuarial science Locations * Haberman station ...
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Surname
In some cultures, a surname, family name, or last name is the portion of one's personal name that indicates one's family, tribe or community. Practices vary by culture. The family name may be placed at either the start of a person's full name, as the forename, or at the end; the number of surnames given to an individual also varies. As the surname indicates genetic inheritance, all members of a family unit may have identical surnames or there may be variations; for example, a woman might marry and have a child, but later remarry and have another child by a different father, and as such both children could have different surnames. It is common to see two or more words in a surname, such as in compound surnames. Compound surnames can be composed of separate names, such as in traditional Spanish culture, they can be hyphenated together, or may contain prefixes. Using names has been documented in even the oldest historical records. Examples of surnames are documented in the 11th ...
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Germanic Peoples
The Germanic peoples were historical groups of people that once occupied Central Europe and Scandinavia during antiquity and into the early Middle Ages. Since the 19th century, they have traditionally been defined by the use of ancient and early medieval Germanic languages and are thus equated at least approximately with Germanic-speaking peoples, although different academic disciplines have their own definitions of what makes someone or something "Germanic". The Romans named the area belonging to North-Central Europe in which Germanic peoples lived ''Germania'', stretching East to West between the Vistula and Rhine rivers and north to south from Southern Scandinavia to the upper Danube. In discussions of the Roman period, the Germanic peoples are sometimes referred to as ''Germani'' or ancient Germans, although many scholars consider the second term problematic since it suggests identity with present-day Germans. The very concept of "Germanic peoples" has become the subject of ...
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Clyde Haberman
Clyde Haberman (born May 18, 1945) is an American journalist who has contributed to ''The New York Times'' in various capacities since 1977. Early life and education Haberman was raised in an Orthodox Jewish family and attended yeshiva through 8th grade. He is a graduate of The Bronx High School of Science (1962) and City College of New York (1966). He was drafted by the U.S. Army in 1968, serving two years, first in Georgia, then in Germany. Career Haberman began his association with ''The New York Times'' as a copy boy in 1964 and then as City College of New York correspondent. He was fired by Abe Rosenthal in 1966 after sneaking a fictional college award and awardee into the Times. Haberman then worked at the ''New York Post'', returning to the ''Times'' in 1977. His assignments included staff editor of The Week in Review; Metro reporter; City Hall bureau chief; and, from 1982 to 1995, foreign correspondent in Tokyo and Rome, and bureau chief in Jerusalem (1991–1995). Ov ...
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Daniel Haberman
Daniel Haberman (1933–1991) was an American poet, translator and graphic designer. Haberman was instrumental in founding the American Poets' Corner at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City and was the Cathedral's first Poet-in-Residence, from 1983 to 1986. In 1988 he and his wife, pianist Barbara Nissman, moved from New York to a farm in the Allegheny Mountains of West Virginia, where he lived until his death. Early life and education Haberman was born in New York City in 1933, the son of Benjamin Haberman, a typesetter, and his wife Sadie (Daisee) Ballin. He attended the Walden School, Carnegie Mellon University, and the graduate school of New York University. He was educated in the second-hand bookshops of Manhattan and by two years of study with Edward Dahlberg. Poet Haberman published two volumes of poetry in his lifetime, ''Poems'' (Art Direction Book, 1977; 2nd edition, 1982) and ''The Furtive Wall'' (Art Direction Book, 1982), the latter with etching ...
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Hardy Haberman
Hardy Haberman (born July 27, 1950) is an American author, filmmaker, educator, designer living in Dallas, Texas. He is a prominent figure in the leather/fetish/BDSM community, and a frequent speaker at leather events and contests. In the mid-1970s, Haberman become involved in LGBT activism as part of the Dallas Gay Political Caucus (later known as the Dallas Gay and Lesbian Alliance), the city's first LGBT advocacy group. In late 1976, he became interested in the leather subculture. In 1980, Haberman co-produced the first Cedar Springs Carnival, held during Gay Pride Week in Dallas. The Carnival coincided with the Dallas Gay Pride Parade, an event organized by a committee of Oak Lawn merchants and the first in Dallas since 1972. In 1984 Haberman joined the board of the Dallas chapter of the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD). By the late 1990s, Haberman was a well-known educator in leather circles, teaching classes at events such as Texas Leather Pride in Austin, S ...
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Maggie Haberman
Maggie Lindsy Haberman (born October 30, 1973) is an American journalist, a White House correspondent for ''The New York Times'', and a political analyst for CNN. She previously worked as a political reporter for the ''New York Post'', the New York ''Daily News'', and ''Politico''. She wrote about Donald Trump for those publications and rose to prominence covering his campaign, presidency, and post-presidency for the ''Times''. In 2022, she published the best-selling book '' Confidence Man: The Making of Donald Trump and the Breaking of America''. Early life Haberman was born on October 30, 1973, in New York City, the daughter of Clyde Haberman, who became a longtime journalist for ''The New York Times'', and Nancy Haberman (née Spies), a media communications executive at Rubenstein Associates. At that firm, a "publicity powerhouse" whose eponymous founder has been called "the dean of damage control" by Rudy Giuliani, Haberman's mother worked for a client list of influential N ...
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Mandy Haberman
Mandy Nicola Haberman (born 1954) is an English people, English inventor and entrepreneur. She is founding member and Freeman of the Guild of Entrepreneurs, Director of the Intellectual Property Awareness Network and a visiting Fellow at Bournemouth University, from where she has an honorary doctorate. She is best known for her successfully upheld patent enforcement battles and inventing the Haberman Feeder, the Anywayup Cup and the Suckle Feeder. Inventions After her daughter was born in 1980 with Stickler syndrome, a congenital abnormality characterized by distinctive facial abnormalities, ocular problems, hearing loss, and joint and skeletal problems first studied by Gunnar B. Stickler in 1965, Haberman invented the Haberman Feeder bottle for infants with feeding difficulties, described as “a significant advance in the feeding of infants with cleft palates and should be a preferred feeder rather than conventional means." Her second invention was the Anywayup cup, an intuitive ...
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Martin Haberman
Martin Haberman (1932 – January 1, 2012) was an educator who developed interviewing techniques for identifying teachers and principals who will be successful in working with poor children. The most widely known of his programs was (The National) Teacher Corps, which was based on his intern program in Milwaukee. He was an advisor to alternative certification programs around the United States and developed ways of bringing more minorities into teaching. His developmental efforts were focused on helping to resolve the crises in urban schools serving fifteen million at-risk students by helping these school districts "grow their own" teachers and principals. Haberman was a Distinguished Professor at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee. He served six years as editor of the Journal of Teacher Education, and eleven years as a dean in the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee The University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee (UW–Milwaukee, UWM, or Milwaukee) is a public urban research u ...
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Robert Haberman
Robert Haberman was an American socialist lawyer and activist Activism (or Advocacy) consists of efforts to promote, impede, direct or intervene in social, political, economic or environmental reform with the desire to make changes in society toward a perceived greater good. Forms of activism range fro ... who lived most of his life in Mexico City and Yucatán working as the head of the Foreign Language Department of the Ministry of Education. Of Romanian Jewish origin, he helped introduce important socialist reforms to the Yucatán Peninsula.Víctor Alba, ''Politics and the labour movement in Latin America'' (Stanford University Press, 1968) Page 113 References American socialists American emigrants to Mexico Jewish socialists Mexican Jews Mexican people of Romanian-Jewish descent Mexican socialists American people of Romanian-Jewish descent Naturalized citizens of Mexico Lawyers from Mexico City Year of birth missing Year of death missing {{US ...
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Seth Haberman
Seth Haberman is CEO of Sense Education, an artificial intelligence company that uses unsupervised machine learning technology, as well as bioinformatic algorithms, to identify how people solve open-ended problems. He was also the founder of VisibleWorld, a developer of viewer-customized television advertising. Prior to founding Sense Education and Visible World, Haberman was founder of Montage Group, where he invented and licensed seminal non-linear editing technologies to all of the leading manufacturers of non-linear editing systems (such as Avid and Final Cut Pro). Montage’s innovative work developing its "MServer" software earned an Academy Award for technological achievement in 1987, an Emmy Award in 1993 for "Enabling Technology for Non-Linear Editing Systems Using Digital Images and Sounds", shared with EMC among others. He has been Chair of the Video Gaming and Technology awards panel for the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences The National Academ ...
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Steven Haberman
Steven Haberman (born 26 June 1951) is Director and Deputy Dean in Cass Business School, Professor of Actuarial Science in its Faculty of Actuarial Science and Insurance and is Founding Editor of the ''Journal of Pension, Economics and Finance''. He was educated at Ilford County High School, Trinity College, Cambridge (MA) and City University (PhD, DSc). Career *Prudential Assurance Company, 1972–74 *Government Actuary's Department, 1977–97 *City University: lecturer, Department of Actuarial Science 1974–79, senior lecturer 1979–83, reader 1983–85, professor 1985–, dean School of Mathematics 1995–2002 *Deputy dean, Cass Business School 2002– See also *List of British Jewish scientists List of British Jewish scientists is a list that includes scientists from the United Kingdom and its predecessor states who are or were Jewish or of Jewish descent. Physicists * Petrus Alphonsi, Spanish (not British) astronomer and doctor * E ... References External links * ...
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Haberman Station
Haberman was a station along the Long Island Rail Road's Lower Montauk Branch that was located at the intersection of Rust Street and 50th Street in Maspeth, Queens. The station is named after the Haberman Steel Enamel Works in Berlin Village. Haberman opened as a station for the convenience of workmen in September 1892; service was furnished by the Long Island City-East New York Rapid Transit trains. There never was a station building. The station still had manual railroad crossing gates and a guard shack as recently as 1973. It was closed on March 16, 1998 along with Penny Bridge, Fresh Pond, Glendale and Richmond Hill stations; average daily westbound ridership at the station in 1997 was 3. In January 2018, Haberman was one of 8 stations on the Lower Montauk Branch that were considered for reopening in a study sponsored by the New York City Department of Transportation. On some maps, Haberman mistakenly appears as the name of the neighborhood which the station was located, ...
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