41,297 research outputs found
Robert Anderson, Michigan State University professor emeritus of Religious Studies, talks about his life and his career
Robert Anderson, Michigan State University professor emeritus of Religious Studies, talks about his life and his career at MSU. After receiving his doctorate from Boston University in 1957, Anderson says that he came to MSU as the university's first full time Religious Studies professor. He says that there was always some opposition to teaching religion on campus and explains how the Religious Studies Department handled teaching religion while honoring the separation of church and state, used local pastors as instructors, and eventually began to include religious traditions other than Christianity and Judaism in its curriculum. He also reflects on his research interests, his love of teaching and the courses he taught, and reluctantly becoming an administrator later in his career. Anderson says that he attended seminary with Martin Luther King Jr. and later listened with delight when King spoke at MSU in 1965. Anderson is interviewed by MSU Professors David Stowe and Jon Keune, and University Development Officer Seth Martin
Robert Anderson Interview, October 26, 1987
Robert Anderson recalls his military service in the U.S. Navy in the Pacific theater during World War Two. He recalls listening to Tokyo Rose, which the ship recorded and played for the men. Anderson remembers Tokyo Rose’s warnings that the atabrine tablets the crew took to prevent malaria would cause sterility, which initially worried some men, and that their sweethearts in the United States would leave them. He discusses Tokyo Rose’s minimal influence on the troops, who enjoyed her music.https://scholarworks.umt.edu/tokyorose_interviews/1005/thumbnail.jp
Robert Anderson from Fort Sumter, Charleston Harbor, March 22, 1861.
Major Robert Anderson, commanding Fort Sumter just prior to the start of the American Civil War, reports to Colonel L. Thomas on several matters.https://digitalcommons.wofford.edu/littlejohnmss/1266/thumbnail.jp
Robert Anderson (* vor 1668; † nach 1696), englischer Mathematiker und Seidenweber
Publikationen: Robert Anderson: Stereometrical Propositions variously applicable, but particularly intended for Gageing, 1668. Die vervollkommente Visierkunst, 1669.
Quelle: Michaud, Biographie universelle ancienne et moderne.
Teilnachlass: Kurzbiographie
Umfang: 1 S.
Datum: undatiert
Archiv-Signatur: Astr.-NL-4.32
Baylor University Grant Teaff Plaza Floyd Casey Stadium, Planting Details L4 of L7.
J. Robert Anderson graduated from Texas Tech with a B. S. in Park Administration in 1973, and from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign with a Master off Landscape Architecture in 1975. He is a Registered Landscape Architect in the state of Texas, and a Distinguished Alumnus Award recipient from the College of Agricultural Sciences & Natural Resources at Texas Tech, and a Fellow of the American Society of Landscape Architects, among many other honors.The donation consists of numerous schematic designs, construction sets, originals, portfolio boards, mounted presentations, books, and digital copies of landscape architecture projects undertaken by J. Robert Anderson FASLA, including landmarks in Austin, San Antonio, and Oklahoma City, educational spaces at Texas A&M, Baylor, Texas Tech, Texas State, and the University of Texas at Austin, as well as corporate, retail, and residential work. An additional 15 linear feet of materials relating to office operations, books, digital files and photos, marketing materials, and half-size construction sets is included
Australian author Jessica Anderson, 1998 [picture] /
Title from acquisitions documentation, see file NLA12/324.; Part of the collection: Robert McFarlane collection of photographs.; Acquired in digital format; access copy available online.; Mode of access: Online.; Purchased from the photographer, 2011
Interview with Robert K. Anderson
Robert K. Anderson was born in Colorado in 1922. He received his DVM from Colorado State University in 1944 and an MPH from the University of Michigan in 1950. He served in the military from 1944 to 1946. He practiced veterinary medicine in 1944 and 1946, before and after serving in the military. He worked as Chief of Veterinary Public Health Services for the City of Denver from 1947 to 1956 and as an instructor at the University of Colorado Medical School from 1950 to 1956. In 1956, he came to the University of Minnesota with a joint appointment as a faculty member in the School of Veterinary Medicine and the School of Public Health. He served as the Associate Dean of the College of Veterinary Medicine from 1965 to 1971. With Ruth Foster, he invented the Gentle Leader® Headcollar in 1982. In his dual roles in Veterinary Medicine and Public Health, Anderson co-founded and served as director of CENSHARE, the Center to Study Human-Animal Relationships and Environments, one of the first centers to train and promote companion animal therapy. He retired in 1985. He served as a professor emeritus in both the School of Public Health and the College of Veterinary Medicine until his death on October 12, 2012.In the first interview, Robert K. Anderson begins by describing his background, including his childhood, education, his service in the military, his early career, and his reasons for pursuing degrees in veterinary medicine and public health. He discusses his experiences on the faculty of the University of Colorado Medical School, in private practice, as a faculty member of the University of Minnesota, and as an epidemiology teacher for the Pan American Health Organization. He goes on to describe the following: One Health and comparative health; collaboration among the different health science units at the University; his research on brucellosis; his work with rabies for Veterinary Public Health in Denver; the College of Veterinary Medicine’s (CVM) accreditation; the relationship among Veterinary Medicine, UMN central administration, and the Legislature; comparative funding for the CVM and the School of Public Health; and the CVM’s relationship with industry and the USDA. Concerning education within the CVM, Anderson discusses his teaching, the growth of veterinary manpower, women in veterinary medicine, and the recruiting of minority students. He then explores the merging of the CVM with the health sciences and his research on radiation and bovine leukemia. Later in his career, Anderson studied psychology, which led to his interest in human-animal bonds and animal behavior. He considers this work as foundational to creating the Gentle Leader® , reforming his beliefs about dog training, and prompting the establishment of the American College of Veterinary Behaviors, the Delta Society, and the Center to Study Human Animal Relationships and Environments. Among the figures he discusses in his interview, Anderson is particularly attentive to the roles of William T.S. Thorp, Joseph Massey, and Sidney Ewing in his career.
In the second interview, Robert K. Anderson and David Garloff focus most of their discussion on the Center to Study Human-Animal Bonds and Environments (CENSHARE), including its establishment, research, interactions with other university centers, and programs doing work on human-animal bonds, funding, educational programs and courses, its products and programs, many of the people and volunteers involved over the years, and other topics. They also discuss Temple Grandin, the Gentle Leader®, NIH funding of veterinary medicine studies, the Delta Society, Helping Paws, Anderson’s work as Chief of Veterinary Public Health Services for Denver, and disease transmission between animals and humans.Tobbell, Dominique A.; Anderson, Robert K.. (2012). Interview with Robert K. Anderson. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/142564
The Gross Physiology of the Cardiovascular System
This site is the online text of Dr. Robert M. Anderson's book The Gross Physiology of the Cardiovascular System. Even though biomedical knowledge is continually advancing and becoming more specific, Anderson feels that it is important to "have a clear understanding of the gross mechanical function of the cardiovascular system as a whole." This resource is provided as a model to do just that. The text is well organized and easy to navigate; additionally, a video that provides a summary of the online text can be viewed online
MD Anderson Nurses are the Greatest t-shirt, 1977
Dr. Robert C. Hickey and Renilda Hilkemeyer, R.N. wearing MD Anderson Nurses are the Greatest t-shirtshttps://openworks.mdanderson.org/nursing_img/1005/thumbnail.jp
J. Robert Anderson, Singing Hills: East Monument Sign Planting Elevation and Planting Plans.
J. Robert Anderson graduated from Texas Tech with a B.S. in Park Administration in 1973, and from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign with a Master of Landscape Architecture in 1975. He is a Registered Landscape Architect in the state of Texas, and a Distinguished Alumnus Award recipient from the College of Agricultural Sciences & Natural Resources at Texas Tech, and a Fellow of the American Society of Landscape Architects, among many other honors.The donation consists of numerous schematic designs, construction sets, originals, portfolio boards, mounted presentations, books, and digital copies of landscape architecture projects undertaken by J. Robert Anderson FASLA, including landmarks in Austin, San Antonio, and Oklahoma City, educational spaces at Texas A&M, Baylor, Texas Tech, Texas State, and the University of Texas at Austin, as well as corporate, retail, and residential work. An additional 15 linear feet of materials relating to office operations, books, digital files and photos, marketing materials, and half-size construction sets is included
- …
