19,728 research outputs found
David Russell Turner
David Russell Turner passed his first year milestone. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack G. Turner
2017 CVM News: Dr. David Russell featured on Cornell Research
This news item from Cornell Research is about: “Tuberculosis is the single largest infectious disease killer in the world,” says David G. Russell, Microbiology and Immunology. “It’s a huge problem in Southern Africa, Asia, and Eastern Europe. There’s a tremendous underappreciation in the Western world for how big a problem it really is.
Transcript of interview with Russell Mawby
Russell Mawby first came to MSU as an undergraduate student, completing his BS degree in 1949. After earning a master's degree from Purdue, he returned to MSU and completed his PhD in agricultural economics in 1959. While he was working toward this degree, he also served as a faculty member in the Extension Service in the Department of Agricultural Economics, was master of ceremonies for two TV programs ("Rural Roundup" and "Country Crossroads"), and served as assistant director of Extension, working with the 4-H program. Mawby left MSU in 1964 to join the staff of the W K Kellogg Foundation as director of the Division of Agriculture. In 1970 he was appointed CEO of the Foundation, a position he held until his retirement in 1995. During his tenure he was involved in expansion and improvements to the Kellogg Biological Station. Mawby was a member and chair of the MSU Alumni Association Board of Directors and served for four years on the MSU Board of Trustees, a position he left in 1996. He now serves on the Board of the MSU Foundation. Topics/people covered in the interview include: Walter Adams; Alpha Zeta; Autumn Fest; Jack Breslin; Coooperative Extension Service; Eleanor Densmore; John DiBiaggio; John Engler; Joel Ferguson; Gordon Guyer; John & Sarah Hannah; Theodore Hesburgh; Glen Johnson; KBS; Kellogg Center for Continuing Ed; Kellogg Center for Residential Continuing Ed; Kellogg College; Kellogg Foundation; Kellogg International Leadership Program; W K Kellogg; Russell Kleiss; Cecil Mackey; Oxford University; Alpha Zeta Fellowship; M Peter McPherson; Paul Miller; Emory Morris; agricultural leadership program; MSU Alumni Association; Big Ten; Colleges of Ag, Education, Human Med, Law, Nursing, Veterinary Science; cyclotron; effect of WW II; Eli Broad College of Business; Equine Performance building; international involvement; James Madison College; Quonset village; student enrollment in 1945; George Perles; David Portius; Thomas Reed; Cy Russell; David Scott; Harold Shapiro; Robert Shaw; Lou Ann Simon; Glen Taggart; Bob Traxler; Malcolm Trout; Harold Tukey; University of Michigan; K K Vining; Clifton Wharto
No.367, A. Russell Mortensen, interview by Newell Bringhurst
Transcript (25 pages) of interview by Newell Bringhurst with A. Russell Mortensen, former director of the Utah Historical Society, on October 9, 1987. This interview is no. 367 in the Everett L. Cooley Oral History Project, and tape no. 1386Mortensen recalls his association with Fawn McKay Brodie from 1960 when he became director of the Division of State History (Historical Society) and over her lifetime. He discusses her relationship with her family and David O. McKay in particular. Interviewer: Newell Bringhurst See also interview No.1
Russell and Gina Sugarmon, Tennessee State Senator, 1969
This is an interview with Russell and Gina Sugarmon. Sugarmon was a black political leader, Tennessee State Senator, and he was defeated for reelection in the summer of 1968
sj-docx-1-jom-10.1177_0149206321994182 – Supplemental material for The Evolution of Resource-Based Inquiry: A Review and Meta-Analytic Integration of the Strategic Resources–Actions–Performance Pathway
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-jom-10.1177_0149206321994182 for The Evolution of Resource-Based Inquiry: A Review and Meta-Analytic Integration of the Strategic Resources–Actions–Performance Pathway by Laura D’Oria, T. Russell Crook, David J. Ketchen, David G. Sirmon and Mike Wright in Journal of Management</p
Cult: A Composite Novel
Cult (redacted)
The first component of the thesis is a composite novel called Cult which falls into two parts with seven narratives in each. Part 1 tracks the protagonist, Ellen, from her first involvement with the cult through to her eventually leaving it. Although fiction, the first half of the book answers the kinds of questions the author is asked when people discover that she was once a sannyasin (a follower of the guru Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh). While the experiences of meditation, group therapy and communal living are all faithfully rendered within the stories, the need for strong characters, narrative drive and a lightness of touch takes precedence.
Part 2 picks up Ellen’s story some twenty or so years later and explores what becomes of her in middle age. It also looks at other groups in society, such as academia, the law and the internet dating community which each have their own jargon, hierarchies, rituals and rules but are not considered to be cults.
The book examines the question raised in the Epigraph, ‘how do we be together when we feel so alone’ with a focus on relationships other than the familial and the romantic.
Collisions, Chasms and Connections: a Performative Exploration of the Composite Novel Form
The second part of the thesis is both a critical and creative response to three contemporary American books: Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout; A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan; and Legend of a Suicide by David Vann. The critical element comprises a close reading of the three books; a chronological reconstruction of their overarching storylines; and a consideration of what their authors have said about writing the books. It concludes that, in the composite novel, the simultaneous presentation of multiple views and storylines operate much like a 3D image to give the impression of depth to the characters and situations rendered. The creative element of the essay is a playful and personal response to the texts
Rabbit menace in New South Wales : an abridgement of the report / by David G. Stead ... commissioned on 30th April 1925 to inquire into matters connected with the rabbit menace in New South Wales.
At head of title: Department of Agriculture, New South Wales.; Electronic reproduction. Canberra, A.C.T. : National Library of Australia, 2012.; Library's copy signed by the author
2008 CVM News: Russell elected to AAAS
This news item is about: Cornell molecular microbiologist David G. Russell was among 471 other researchers nationwide elected to the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) this year, in honor of his distinguished contributions to his profession. The AAAS is the world's largest general scientific society and publisher of the journal Science. New fellows will be honored Feb. 16 at the Fellows Forum during the 2008 AAAS Annual Meeting in Boston
Shadowing the Legendary Dizzy Gillespie
Shadowing the Legencary Dizzy Gillespie with author and jazz aficionado David G. Brown
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