24,500 research outputs found
Ed Curry and Friend in Early Automobile
Ed Curry and friend in one of the Curry family's automobiles. It may be the winning Tampa-to-Bradentown race car
Ed Curry and Pud Stanford with racing trophy
Ed Curry and Pud Stanford with racing trophy. This is the trophy for the 1911 Tampa to Bradentown race. The trophy is now the property of the Eaton Florida History Room at the Manatee County Central Library
Interview with Charles Curry
Charles Curry served in the Air Force from 1955-57 as an intelligence officer with the Strategic Air Command and then came to MSU in 1960 to work on an MS in guidance and counseling. After completing this course of study in one year, he took a job as a counselor in the Cherry Hill School District in Detroit. In 1963, Curry was offered a position at MSU in freshman admissions, visiting high schools and recruiting students for the university. He worked closely with Dr. Gordon Sabine and President John Hannah to attract students for the National Merit and the Alumni Distinguished Scholarships. In 1968, Curry became Director of Admissions at Hope College, but returned to the MSU Admissions Office in 1971. For 12 years prior to his retirement in 1993, he was responsible for determining the eligibility of all entering freshman athletes, using the NCAA and Big Ten guidelines. Topics/people covered in the Interview include: Academic Orientation Program (AOP); ACT; Admissions Office; ADS (Alumni Distinguished Scholarship) Program; Air Force ROTC; American Personal Guidance Association; Athletics Department; Beaumont Tower; Big Ten Conference; Terry Carey; Central Michigan University; Cherry Hill School District; Denison University; Bob Fedore; Food Science; Tom Goodale; John Hannah; Jud Heathcote; Honors College; Hope College; James Madison; Walt Johnson; Justin Morrill; Kellogg Center; Katie Large; Lyman Briggs; National Defense Education Act (NDEA) Guidance Institute; National Merit semifinalists; NCAA; Gwen Norrell; P-cubed: Performance Predicts Performance; Ed Roeber; Gordon Sabine; SAT; Chuck Seeley; Spartan Aides; Strategic Air Command; University College; Wendell Westcott; Clifton Wharto
Interview with Charles Curry
Charles Curry served in the Air Force from 1955-57 as an intelligence officer with the Strategic Air Command and then came to MSU in 1960 to work on an MS in guidance and counseling. After completing this course of study in one year, he took a job as a counselor in the Cherry Hill School District in Detroit. In 1963, Curry was offered a position at MSU in freshman admissions, visiting high schools and recruiting students for the university. He worked closely with Dr. Gordon Sabine and President John Hannah to attract students for the National Merit and the Alumni Distinguished Scholarships. In 1968, Curry became Director of Admissions at Hope College, but returned to the MSU Admissions Office in 1971. For 12 years prior to his retirement in 1993, he was responsible for determining the eligibility of all entering freshman athletes, using the NCAA and Big Ten guidelines. Topics/people covered in the Interview include: Academic Orientation Program (AOP); ACT; Admissions Office; ADS (Alumni Distinguished Scholarship) Program; Air Force ROTC; American Personal Guidance Association; Athletics Department; Beaumont Tower; Big Ten Conference; Terry Carey; Central Michigan University; Cherry Hill School District; Denison University; Bob Fedore; Food Science; Tom Goodale; John Hannah; Jud Heathcote; Honors College; Hope College; James Madison; Walt Johnson; Justin Morrill; Kellogg Center; Katie Large; Lyman Briggs; National Defense Education Act (NDEA) Guidance Institute; National Merit semifinalists; NCAA; Gwen Norrell; P-cubed: Performance Predicts Performance; Ed Roeber; Gordon Sabine; SAT; Chuck Seeley; Spartan Aides; Strategic Air Command; University College; Wendell Westcott; Clifton Wharto
Interview with Charles Curry
Charles Curry served in the Air Force from 1955-57 as an intelligence officer with the Strategic Air Command and then came to MSU in 1960 to work on an MS in guidance and counseling. After completing this course of study in one year, he took a job as a counselor in the Cherry Hill School District in Detroit. In 1963, Curry was offered a position at MSU in freshman admissions, visiting high schools and recruiting students for the university. He worked closely with Dr. Gordon Sabine and President John Hannah to attract students for the National Merit and the Alumni Distinguished Scholarships. In 1968, Curry became Director of Admissions at Hope College, but returned to the MSU Admissions Office in 1971. For 12 years prior to his retirement in 1993, he was responsible for determining the eligibility of all entering freshman athletes, using the NCAA and Big Ten guidelines. Topics/people covered in the Interview include: Academic Orientation Program (AOP); ACT; Admissions Office; ADS (Alumni Distinguished Scholarship) Program; Air Force ROTC; American Personal Guidance Association; Athletics Department; Beaumont Tower; Big Ten Conference; Terry Carey; Central Michigan University; Cherry Hill School District; Denison University; Bob Fedore; Food Science; Tom Goodale; John Hannah; Jud Heathcote; Honors College; Hope College; James Madison; Walt Johnson; Justin Morrill; Kellogg Center; Katie Large; Lyman Briggs; National Defense Education Act (NDEA) Guidance Institute; National Merit semifinalists; NCAA; Gwen Norrell; P-cubed: Performance Predicts Performance; Ed Roeber; Gordon Sabine; SAT; Chuck Seeley; Spartan Aides; Strategic Air Command; University College; Wendell Westcott; Clifton Wharto
Interview with Charles Curry
Charles Curry served in the Air Force from 1955-57 as an intelligence officer with the Strategic Air Command and then came to MSU in 1960 to work on an MS in guidance and counseling. After completing this course of study in one year, he took a job as a counselor in the Cherry Hill School District in Detroit. In 1963, Curry was offered a position at MSU in freshman admissions, visiting high schools and recruiting students for the university. He worked closely with Dr. Gordon Sabine and President John Hannah to attract students for the National Merit and the Alumni Distinguished Scholarships. In 1968, Curry became Director of Admissions at Hope College, but returned to the MSU Admissions Office in 1971. For 12 years prior to his retirement in 1993, he was responsible for determining the eligibility of all entering freshman athletes, using the NCAA and Big Ten guidelines. Topics/people covered in the Interview include: Academic Orientation Program (AOP); ACT; Admissions Office; ADS (Alumni Distinguished Scholarship) Program; Air Force ROTC; American Personal Guidance Association; Athletics Department; Beaumont Tower; Big Ten Conference; Terry Carey; Central Michigan University; Cherry Hill School District; Denison University; Bob Fedore; Food Science; Tom Goodale; John Hannah; Jud Heathcote; Honors College; Hope College; James Madison; Walt Johnson; Justin Morrill; Kellogg Center; Katie Large; Lyman Briggs; National Defense Education Act (NDEA) Guidance Institute; National Merit semifinalists; NCAA; Gwen Norrell; P-cubed: Performance Predicts Performance; Ed Roeber; Gordon Sabine; SAT; Chuck Seeley; Spartan Aides; Strategic Air Command; University College; Wendell Westcott; Clifton Wharto
Ed Curry and Friend in one of the Curry Family's automobiles
Ed Curry and friend in one of the Curry family's automobiles
Ed and Whitney Curry with Race Cars and trophies
Ed and Whitney Curry with the Curry race cars amd trophies. They won the trophy that sits on the car hood during the races "on the sands" at Daytona. Ed Curry, in flat topped hat, balances the trophy atop the car's hood, while Whitney Curry stands in dark coat at right, behind the boys in the car. He holds the second trophy. The trophy from the car hood was for many years in the Eaton Room of the Manatee County Central Library. It must have been wintertime, since the men are in heavy coats. There is a photographer's logo on the lower right of the image
Observing Functional Logic Computations
A lightweight approach to debugging functional logic programs by observations is presented, implemented for the language Curry. The Curry Object Observation System (COOSy) comprises a portable library plus a viewing tool. A programmer can observe data structures and functions by annotating expressions in his program. The possibly partial values of observed expressions that are computed during program execution are recorded in a trace file, including information on non-deterministic choices and logical variables. A separate viewing tool displays the trace content. COOSy covers all aspects of modern functional logic multiparadigm languages such as lazy evaluation, higher order functions, non-deterministic search, logical variables, concurrency and constraints. Both use and implementation of COOSy are described
Op-ed piece by Ed King describing the author\u27s visit to a University of Maine co
Op-ed piece by Ed King describing the author\u27s visit to a University of Maine conference called Reading Stephen King: Issues of Choice, Censorship, and the Place of Popular Literature in the Canon. Ed King\u27s fellow attendees stopped talking to him after he admitted that he had never read any of Stephen King\u27s books and was only planning to write about how much money Stephen King makes
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