9,567 research outputs found
Perspective (Institute for Christian Studies)
Strategic Directions. An important decision: an exciting future [non affiliation decision with The King’s University College], Strategic Directions: The road not taken [background to non affiliation decision with The King’s University College], Strategic directions: The way forward for ICS [developing partnerships], Strategic Directions: Major ICS stakeholders gather to envision the future [the mission of ICS], Hellos and goodbyes: ICS staff & ICS Trustees including Margaret Schoemaker & Carol Lammers & Ed Piers & Barta Knoppers & Lynda Lange & John Tenyenhuis & Evert Wassink & Peter Heerema], ICS conference discusses “Religion without Religion” [Report of two day conference led by John D. Caputo centring on his book The Prayers and Tears of Jacques Derrida: Religion Without Religion”], Kuyper conference examines a hundred-year heritage [Nicholas Wolterstorff gives 100th anniversary Kyper’s Stone Lectures at Princeton Theological Seminary], Faculty activities: Doug Blomberg [half-time Senior Member in Education], From Liberty Seminary to ICS Ph.D. Studies [Kevin O’Brien], Junior member presents papers [Shane Cudney], Art Talks! Rudy Wiebe feature
Perspective (Institute for Christian Studies)
ICS Family Conferences: Western Canada Style: Christians and Popular Culture (BC South) [Dancing in the Dark by Dr. John Worst] Caring for My Father’s World (Alberta) [This is my Father’s World--Serving God in Creation by Dr. Uko Zylstra], Covenantal Memory or Amnesia in a Pluralist Culture: A Meditation on Deuteronomy 8, On the Move! The President’s Annual Report - 1990/91, Bruce Cockburn: Christians in a Post-Modern World [Rumours of Glory: Bruce Cockburn & Christian faith in a post-modern world], Hart Passes Milestone, Keith C. Sewel
4-H student Dena Christian Chewning prepares to cook meat in an oven
4-H student, Dena Christian Chewning, prepares to cook meat in an oven
Letter from J.W. Cook to Thomas Lamb Eliot
https://rdc.reed.edu/v1/resources/5e17b7c9-4bca-4fcf-8784-0915783532dd/thumb/128.jpgIt is possible that the author is James W. Cook, who was an important figure in the establishment of the Portland Unitarian Church
Letter from J.W. Cook to Thomas Lamb Eliot
https://rdc.reed.edu/v1/resources/c9f13811-9c93-449b-8b79-31dd26e7a981/thumb/128.jpgIt is probable that the author is James W. Cook, who was an important figure in the establishment of the Portland Unitarian Church
Letter from J.W. Cook to Thomas Lamb Eliot
https://rdc.reed.edu/v1/resources/413865c0-390a-449d-9d4e-f69f66754b8e/thumb/128.jpgIt is possible that the author is James W. Cook, who was an important figure in the establishment of the Portland Unitarian Church
Letter from J.W. Cook to Thomas Lamb Eliot
https://rdc.reed.edu/v1/resources/48a1abe6-3896-473b-bc17-0796ead5e587/thumb/128.jpgIt is probable that the author is James W. Cook, who was an important figure in the establishment of the Portland Unitarian Church
Michael Cook, Muhammad. Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1983
Decobert Christian. Michael Cook, Muhammad. Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1983. In: Bulletin critique des annales islamologiques, n°5, 1988. pp. 117-119
Bishop Stephen N. Ndlovu (1930-2000): collaborative and ecumenical church leadership after liberation
[Stephen Ndabambi Ndlovu was born in 1930 to Christian parents Ndabambi Ndlovu and Deredza Dube in Mazhabazha, Zimbabwe. His father had been a cook for a western missionary from the Brethren in Christ Church (BICC) named H.P. Steigerwald. Ndabambi and Deredza’s wedding was the first Christian wedding in Mazhabazha. Both Ndabambi and Deredza were teachers in the local BICC primary school, and so they often hosted visiting evangelists and preachers. The couple had four girls and eight boys, the firstborn being Stephen. The children grew up playing games like ingqobe and umacatshelana and were trained in practicing Christian piety by their parents, including forms of devotion such as evening prayers and hymn singing.
Oral History Interview with Robert Cook-Deegan
This interview with Bob Cook-Deegan, MD, is part of “Moral Histories: Voices and Stories from the Founding Figures of Bioethics,” an oral history project of the Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics. Prof. Cook-Deegan is a professor in the School for the Future of Innovation in Society and the Consortium for Science, Policy, and Outcomes at Arizona State University. He was the founding director of the Center for Genome Ethics, Law, and Policy at Duke University’s Institute for Genome Sciences and Policy. He served at the Office of Technology Assessment of the United States Congress where he contributed to major reports on emerging biomedical technologies and their societal impacts. He is the author of The Gene Wars: Science, Politics, and the Human Genome, a comprehensive account of the struggle to launch the Human Genome Project. His areas of expertise include genomics, genetic policy, Open Science, health technology, and public policy.
Bob Cook-Deegan recounts his childhood in Denver as the son of a physician. He discusses his early academic career, his undergraduate years at Harvard, his time at the University of Colorado Medical School, and his decision to pursue medical research. He also talks about becoming a father and maintaining a work-life balance with his two children and wife, Kathryn. Cook Deegan shares his experience researching Alzheimer’s disease, as well as his rotation at the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Cook-Deegan details his work at the Office of Technology Assessment (OTA), including reports on aging, biotech, and the Human Genome Project, and offers an account of its eventual demise due to political changes. Other topics include the history of the Bermuda Principles, the role of political administrations on health policy, the current turn to Open Science, and Cook-Deegan's own relationship to collecting oral histories. He concludes the conversation with a reflection on the Trump administration’s recent decision to cut funding for many science-funding agencies
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