1,181 research outputs found
Laurie Stone, 23rd Annual ODU Literary Festival
Laurie Stone is the author of the novel Starting with Serge; a collection of literary memoirs, Close to the Bone; and Laughing in the Dark: A Decade of Subversive Comedy. She was a columnist for The Village Voice for twenty-five years and her work has been published in Ms. Magazine, New York Woman, The New York Times Book Review, The New Yorker, The Utne Reader, and Art Forum.
Stone is the recipient of grants from The New York Foundation for the Arts and The MacDowell Colony, and she received the 1996 Nona Balakain Excellence in Reviewing Award from the National Book Critics Circle. Stone is currently writing short fiction and a second novel, Apart from Sex. She will be Old Dominion’s Writer In Residence for fall 2000
Managing Technological Development: Strategic and Human Resources Issues/ Laurie Larwood, Urs E. Gattiker.
In English.Gattiker, Urs E. / Larwood, Laurie -- Gattiker, Urs E. / Larwood, Laurie -- Perry, Lee Tom / Sandholtz, Kurt W. -- Osborn, Richard N. / Strickstein, Aubrey / Olson, Jon -- Edwards, Frank L. / Larwood, Laurie -- Hitt, Michael A. / Ireland, R. Duane / Goryunov, Igor Y. -- Gibbs, Barrie / Keen, Kevin / Lucas, Rob -- Gattiker, Urs E. / Larwood, Laurie -- Floyd, Steven W. -- Verdin, Jo Ann -- Gattiker, Urs E. -- Ettlie, John E. -- Gattiker, Urs E. -- Gattiker, Urs E. -- Frontmatter -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- Series Editors' Introduction / Section I: Innovation and R & D Management -- Introduction / Chapter 1. A "Liberating Form" for Radical Product Innovation / Chapter 2: Cooperative Multinational R & D Ventures: Interpretation and Negotiation in Emerging Systems / Chapter 3: Strategic Competitive Factors in the Acquisition of Technology: The Case of Major Weapon Systems / Chapter 4: The Context of Innovation: Investment in R & D and Firm Performance / Chapter 5: Innovation and Human Resource Productivity in Canada: A Comparison of "High" and "Low" Technology Industries / Section II: Human Resources and Technological Innovation -- Introduction / Chapter 6: A Micro Level Model of Information Technology Use by Managers / Chapter 7: The Impact of Computer Technology on Human Resource Information System Users / Chapter 8: Computer End-Users: The Impact of Their Beliefs on Subjective Career Success / Chapter 9: The First-Line Supervisor and Advanced Manufacturing Technology / Conclusion -- A Brief Summary of Volume I / Where Do We Go From Here? Directions for Future Research and Managers / About the Contributors -- Author Index -- Subject Index -- Backmatter1 online resource (240 pages)
Annie Laurie Williams, author\u27s agent, bust shot
Image shows Annie Laurie Williams, who sells books and stories to movie studios, has found herself a bright new writer.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1950s/16611/thumbnail.jp
Author and Educator Jody Allen Crowe to Speak on Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder at the U of M Crookston on Monday, January 26, 2009; Presentation begins at 2 p.m. in Kiehle Auditorium
Wilson, Laurie; Tollefson, Elizabeth. (2009). Author and Educator Jody Allen Crowe to Speak on Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder at the U of M Crookston on Monday, January 26, 2009; Presentation begins at 2 p.m. in Kiehle Auditorium. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/222016
Oral History Interview of Laurie Zoloth
This interview with Laurie Zoloth, PhD, 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. Professor Zoloth is the Margaret E. Burton Professor of Religion and Ethics at the University of Chicago. She is the author of four books and co-editor of six others, including Second Texts and Second Opinions: Essays on Jewish Bioethics and An Ethics for the Coming Storm: Jewish Thought and Global Warming. Her research explores religion and ethics, as well as the bioethics of genetic engineering, gene drives, stem cell research, synthetic biology, and climate change.
Prof. Zoloth discusses growing up in Los Angeles influenced by her post-war immigrant Jewish parents and the political activism of the 1960s. She describes going on the first Venceremos Brigade to Cuba, traveling by invitation to Maoist China as a trade unionist in the early 1970s, and becoming a licensed vocational nurse in Philadelphia. After moving to Berkeley, CA, Zoloth discusses her growing interest in philosophy, religion, and ethics at San Francisco State University. She describes her involvement in founding various organizations like the Society for Jewish Ethics and the International Society for Stem Cell Research. Zoloth recounts her experiences with “bioethics summer camp,” a relaxed event where bioethicists could discuss complex issues together. She details her work as an investigator and chair of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Bioethics Advisory Board, most notably during the 9/11 attacks, and as a bioethics advisor for NASA on issues like planetary protection, the ethics of space exploration, and the “Sundowner Report” on animal ethics.
She discusses her teaching and scholarship at Northwestern University and the University of Chicago and reflects on the challenges of balancing her career while raising five children. The interview concludes with a discussion of the role of bioethics in anticipating and reflecting on the ethical implications of climate science, scientific research, and public health. In her role as a scholar of ancient religious texts, she ends the conversation with thoughts about the importance of memory and prophecy in philosophy and theology
Oral History Interview of Laurie Zoloth
This interview with Laurie Zoloth, PhD, 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. Professor Zoloth is the Margaret E. Burton Professor of Religion and Ethics at the University of Chicago. She is the author of four books and co-editor of six others, including Second Texts and Second Opinions: Essays on Jewish Bioethics and An Ethics for the Coming Storm: Jewish Thought and Global Warming. Her research explores religion and ethics, as well as the bioethics of genetic engineering, gene drives, stem cell research, synthetic biology, and climate change.
Prof. Zoloth discusses growing up in Los Angeles influenced by her post-war immigrant Jewish parents and the political activism of the 1960s. She describes going on the first Venceremos Brigade to Cuba, traveling by invitation to Maoist China as a trade unionist in the early 1970s, and becoming a licensed vocational nurse in Philadelphia. After moving to Berkeley, CA, Zoloth discusses her growing interest in philosophy, religion, and ethics at San Francisco State University. She describes her involvement in founding various organizations like the Society for Jewish Ethics and the International Society for Stem Cell Research. Zoloth recounts her experiences with “bioethics summer camp,” a relaxed event where bioethicists could discuss complex issues together. She details her work as an investigator and chair of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Bioethics Advisory Board, most notably during the 9/11 attacks, and as a bioethics advisor for NASA on issues like planetary protection, the ethics of space exploration, and the “Sundowner Report” on animal ethics.
She discusses her teaching and scholarship at Northwestern University and the University of Chicago and reflects on the challenges of balancing her career while raising five children. The interview concludes with a discussion of the role of bioethics in anticipating and reflecting on the ethical implications of climate science, scientific research, and public health. In her role as a scholar of ancient religious texts, she ends the conversation with thoughts about the importance of memory and prophecy in philosophy and theology
The Autonomy of Others: Reflections on the Rise and Rise of Patient Choice in Contemporary Medical Law
The author, Laurie, provides an account of the writings of Professor (Emiritus) of Forensic Medicine and Honorary Fellow, Professor J Kenyon Mason. In this chapter, an extract from Professor Mason's Festschrift, Laurie focusses specifically on Mason's writings on personal autonomy within the field of Medical Law. It draws on a retrospective of cases, of significance in Mason's writings, and considers what the implications are for the future of medical law
Transducer baffle interactions
Issued as Final report, Project E-25-694Final report has author: Laurie D. Marshal
Ray's gay gauntlet. by Laurie Oakes
The author wonders if the continued ban on homosexual warriors is an attempt to push the issue into court - and away from electoral backlash
The Right Not to Know: An Autonomy Based Approach – A Response to Andorno
The author comments on the question of a right not to know genetic information, in a response to Dr Adorno. The article discusses similaries shared between Laurie and Adorno, with the former differentiating his views by focussing on a privacy based approach, as opposed to an autonomy based approach
- …
