440,264 research outputs found

    [Supplementary Offense Report by G. R. Rose and R. S. Stovall #2]

    No full text
    Handwritten copy of a supplementary offense report by G. R. Rose and R. S. Stovall. The report states that Buell Wesley Frazier drove Lee Harvey Oswald to work on the morning of President Kennedy's assassination. His sister, Mrs. Randle, saw Oswald put a long package into the back of the vehicle. Both individuals were taken in for questioning

    [Supplementary Offense Report by G. R. Rose and R. S. Stovall #1]

    No full text
    Supplementary offense report by G. R. Rose and R. S. Stovall. The report states that Buell Wesley Frazier drove Lee Harvey Oswald to work on the morning of President Kennedy's assassination. His sister, Mrs. Randle, saw Oswald put a long package into the back of the vehicle. Both individuals were taken in for questioning

    [Supplementary Offense Report by Rose, Stovall, and Adamcik #2]

    No full text
    Handwritten supplementary offense report by G. R. Rose, R. S. Stovall, and J. P. Adamcik. The officers went to the home of Ruth Paine and Mrs. Lee Harvey Oswald. Maps, photographic equipment, and a blanket containing a gun were taken. Ruth Paine and Mrs. Lee Harvey Oswald gave affidavits at the Homicide Office

    [Supplementary Offense Report by Rose, Stovall, and Adamcik #1]

    No full text
    Supplementary offense report by G. R. Rose, R. S. Stovall, and J. P. Adamcik. The officers went to the home of Ruth Paine and Mrs. Lee Harvey Oswald. Maps, photographic equipment, and a blanket containing a gun were taken. Ruth Paine and Mrs. Lee Harvey Oswald gave affidavits at the Homicide Office

    [Supplementary Offense Report by Rose, Stovall, Moore, and Adamcik #1]

    No full text
    Supplementary offense report by G. R. Rose, R. S. Stovall, H. M. Moore, and J. P. Adamcik. The officers obtained a search warrant and searched 2515 W. 5th Street again. They found many photographs and papers

    Did Plant Patents Create the American Rose?

    Full text link
    The Plant Patent Act of 1930 was the first step towards creating property rights for biological innovation: it introduced patent rights for asexually-propagated plants. This paper uses data on plant patents and registrations of new varieties to examine whether the Act encouraged innovation. Nearly half of all plant patents between 1931 and 1970 were for roses. Large commercial nurseries, which began to build mass hybridization programs in the 1940s, accounted for most of these patents, suggesting that the new intellectual property rights may have helped to encourage the development of a commercial rose breeding industry. Data on registrations of newly-created roses, however, yield no evidence of an increase in innovation: less than 20 percent of new roses were patented, European breeders continued to create most new roses, and there was no increase in the number of new varieties per year after 1931.

    Letter from H. G. Rose to S. B. Simmons

    No full text
    Letter from H. G. Rose to S. B. Simmons, concerning new teacher, group meeting, and check

    Letter from H. G. Rose to S. B. Simmons

    No full text
    Letter from H. G. Rose to S. B. Simmons, concerning job application, school year, and planned shop expansion

    Strategies for Latino Empowerment in the 1990's Conference-Banquet

    No full text
    Conference agenda from a joint conference of the Rose Institute and the Institute of Social Justice on Latino empowerment, reapportionment, redistricting, and politics
    corecore