15,728 research outputs found

    Hilary Rose and Steven Rose. Science and Society

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    Malherbe Jean-François. Hilary Rose and Steven Rose. Science and Society. In: Revue Philosophique de Louvain. Quatrième série, tome 72, n°15, 1974. p. 641

    Hilary Rose and Steven Rose. Science and Society

    No full text
    Malherbe Jean-François. Hilary Rose and Steven Rose. Science and Society. In: Revue Philosophique de Louvain. Quatrième série, tome 72, n°15, 1974. p. 641

    Rose, Hillary; Rose, Steven: "Can neuroscience change our minds?", 2016 [Reseña]

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    Obra reseñada: Rose, Hillary; Rose, Steven: Can Neuroscience Change Our Minds? Polity, Cambridge, 2016. 179 pp

    Response by Steven Rose

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    Trip account

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    Trip account - AMs, 15 pp. “I am attempting to give you some account of a recent vacation trip which we were privileged to enjoy - Rose, Mother and I…” As the account of the trip to view the eclipse is unsigned, we can’t say for sure but as the author states “Rose, Mother and I” one could logically assume that the author is a sibling of T. Rose Curtis

    ROSE POLY and ME A Memoir

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    Author discusses his time as an engineering student and football player (1955-59), and then football coach, track coach, athletic director, instructor and then assistant professor of civil engineering at Rose Polytechnic Institute (now Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology) (1962-64). As a football player in 1958, he led the nation in scoring with 168 points in 8 games. Sixty-two years later, the 168 points continues to be the record for points in a season by an Indiana college football player. His 21.0 points per game were the national record for thirty years (1958-88) until broken by Barry Sanders of Oklahoma State. In 1957 and 1958, the Rose Poly football team won fifteen games in a row over two seasons while the defense held opponents to 5.4 points per game. In 1958, the team led the NCAA Division II in defense holding opponents to 95.8 yards per game and a total of 31 points (3.9 points per game). As the football coach, he rescued the team from a disastrous previous year in which the team lost all of its games and scored only six points. The author concludes with his afterthoughts on his alma mater after a career of more than 60 years in engineering education.https://scholar.rose-hulman.edu/alum_pub/1003/thumbnail.jp

    Non-CO2 Greenhouse Gas Emissions Data for Climate Change Economic Analysis

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    *Chapter 5 of the forthcoming book "Economic Analysis of Land Use in Global Climate Change Policy," edited by Thomas W. Hertel, Steven Rose, and Richard S.J. Tol

    Trove: Innovation in Access to Information in Australia

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    In late 2009 the National Library of Australia released version 1 of Trove [1] to the public. Trove is a free search engine. It searches across a large aggregation of Australian content. The treasure is over 90 million items from over 1000 libraries, museums, archives and other organisations which can be found at the click of a button. Finding information just got easier for many Australians. Exploring a wealth of resources and digital content like never before, including full-text books, journals and newspaper articles, images, music, sound, video, maps, Web sites, diaries, letters, archives, people and organisations has been an exciting adventure for users and the service has been heavily used. Finding and retrieving instantly information in context; interacting with content and social engagement are core features of the service. This article describes Trove features, usage, content building, and its applications for contributors and users in the national context

    Rose Pu oral history interview and transcript

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    This recording and transcript form part of a collection of oral history interviews conducted by the Chao Center for Asian Studies at Rice University. This collection includes audio recordings and transcripts of interviews with Asian Americans native to or living in Houston.Mrs. Rose Pu was born in Beijing in 1927 and lived in the Forbidden City with her family. She moved to Shanghai when she was two, and experienced the Japanese bombing of the city during World War II. She came to America when she was 20 to finish college, but could not find a job even after earning an MBA from Baylor University. She ultimately became a schoolteacher and even spent time on a Fulbright fellowship in Scotland teaching. She now lives next door to her daughter in Houston, and was 90 years old when the interview was recorded

    Interview: Unconventional Weapons and Activist Scientists

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    Steven Rose was instrumental in rallying scientists and sounding the alarm about military misuse of the life sciences in the 1960s and 1970s. In this interview, he comments on the role of scientists in the movement against chemical and biological weapons during that period
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