Rice University - Rice University Rice University, founded as William Marsh Rice Institute for the Advancement of Literature, Art, and Science in 1892, opened 1912 in the Museum District of Houston, Texas. Rice is considered one of the nation's elite universities (often touted the "Harvard of the South"), consistently ranking amongst the top eschelon of national research universities. It is also distinguished by having one of the most selective student bodies in the nation, as well as one of the highest endowments (>$3 billion). William Marsh Rice (1816-1900), who made his fortune in Texas in the mid-19th century, left the bulk of his estate to the founding of a free institute in Houston and until 1964 Rice did not charge tuition. Even today, Rice's tuition is considerably lower than.
International University Bremen - International University Bremen International University Bremen (IUB) is a private, independent research university founded in 1999 in the city of Bremen in Northern Germany. IUB was founded by the collabration of the government of Bremen and Rice University of Houston, Texas. IUB offers degree programs in engineering, the natural sciences, humanities, and social sciences. References Official website External Links International University Bremen.
University of Utah - University of Utah The University of Utah opened under the name "University of Deseret" (see also University of Deseret) in Salt Lake City, Utah on February 28, 1850, only to be closed two years later for financial reasons. It reopened as a business school in 1867 and became a full university once again in 1869. The University was renamed University of Utah in 1894 and classes were first held on the present campus in 1900. The University is known colloquially as "the U." This stands for both University and Utah, and lends its format to the nickname for in-state rival, Brigham Young University, which is known as "the Y." The U. is the flagship Research I institution of Utah, and is one of 10 institutions that.
Glen Rice - Glen Rice Glen Anthony Rice (born Flint, Michigan, May 28, 1967) is an NBA basketball player, who stands 6 feet 8 inches tall. Rice attended the University of Michigan and remains one of the top scorers in Wolverine history and one of the top NCAA tournament performers. He was the 1989 Tournament Most Outstanding Player, and became the fourth pick in the 1989 draft by the Miami Heat. Rice became an immediate contributor, finishing third in scoring on the team to second-year center Rony Seikaly and rookie point guard Sherman Douglas, earning a spot on the all-rookie second team for his effort. In the following seasons he became Miami's top option and a recognized scorer in the league. In only Miami's fourth season, 1991-92, he lead Miami.
University of Wisconsin, Barron County - University of Wisconsin, Barron County The University of Wisconsin, Barry County is a two-year campus of the University of Wisconsin system located in Rice Lake, Wisconsin. The current Dean of the campus is Paul Chase. University of Wisconsin System: Baraboo/Sauk County Barron County Eau Claire Fond du Lac Fox Valley Green Bay La Crosse Madison Manitowoc Marathon County Marinette County Marshfield/Wood County Milwaukee Oshkosh Parkside Platteville Richland River Falls Rock County Sheboygan Stevens Point Stout Superior Washington County Waukesha Whitewater.
Condoleezza Rice - Condoleezza Rice Condoleezza Rice (born November 14, 1954) became Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs, commonly referred to as the National Security Advisor, on January 22, 2001, under President George W. Bush. She is the second African American and first woman to hold the office. Born in Birmingham, Alabama, she earned her bachelor's degree in political science, cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa, from the University of Denver in 1974; her master's degree from the University of Notre Dame in 1975; and her Ph.D. from the Graduate School of International Studies at the University of Denver in 1981. She is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and has been awarded honorary doctorates from Morehouse College in 1991, the University of Alabama.
Stan Rice - Stan Rice Stan Rice (1943 - December 9, 2002) was an American poet and artist and husband of writer Anne Rice (married 1961). He was a Professor of English and Creative Writing at San Francisco State University and retired as Chairman of the Creative Writing Department in 1989. Stan Rice wrote poems as chapter introductions for his wife Anne's Queen of the Damned. He has seven volumes of poetry published, his last, Red to the Rind, released in early 2002. He published a coffee-table book of his artwork in 1997, calling it simply Paintings. He was the proprietor of the Stan Rice Gallery in New Orleans, Louisiana. It was the death of the couple's first child, a daughter Michelle at age six of leukemia, which sparked Stan.
Rice (disambiguation) - Rice (disambiguation) Rice is a food grain eaten by a large proportion of the world's population as a primary staple. Rice is a place in the State of Virginia in the United States of America: see Rice, Virginia Rice University is a well known university in Houston, Texas. This is a disambiguation page; that is, one that just points to other pages that might otherwise have the same name. If you followed a link here, you might want to go back and fix that link to point to the appropriate specific page. Rice can also be a derogatory adjective referring to modified family cars, sports cars, or any type of vehicle. Generally this term refers to those cars which look fast (or look 'overdone') but have.
William Marsh Rice - William Marsh Rice William Marsh Rice (1816-1900), who made his fortune in Texas in the mid-19th century, left the bulk of his estate to the founding of a free institute in Houston, Texas. This institute opened in 1912 as William Marsh Rice Institute for the Advancement of Literature, Art, and Science. Today the institute has developed into Rice University..
Kim Stanley Robinson - politics, as well as many alternative lifestyles (including ones where non-monogamous relationships are commonplace). Some reviewers (including, for instance, many of the reader reviews at Amazon.com) have criticised these aspects of the books on the basis that it is Marxist and Green propaganda, and completely unrealistic. Other reviewers have categorised such people as wanting to read "Young Christian Republicans Go To Mars", and have suggested that the point of science fiction is to explore new ideas. Other novels His other novels include Icehenge (1984), The Memory of Whiteness (1985) -- a musican's tour through the solar system --and the alternate history The Years of Rice and Salt (2002), a thought experiment about a world without Christianity, featuring Muslim, Chinese and Hindu culture and philosophy. Not only because of the long time.
James Stirling (architect) - the 1960s. Stirling was born in Glasgow and obtained his architecture degree at Liverpool University, but set up office in London. He was awarded the Pritzker Prize in 1981. The Stirling Prize, a British annual prize for architecture since 1996, was named after him. Some of Stirlings most well-known realizations include Engineering building, Leicester University (1959) Training center for Olivetti in Haslemere History Faculty Library, Cambridge University (1968) Expansion of Rice University in Texas Several low cost housing projects and residences Performing Arts Center for Cornell University Clore Gallery expansion, Tate Gallery, London Arthur M. Sackler Museum Addition to Harvard's Fogg Museum Neue Staatsgalerie, Stuttgart (1977-83) No 1 Poultry, City of London (1998).
John Norman - its male dominant/female submissive BDSM content. Lange is a philosophy professor at Queens College of the City University of New York. Followers of Norman’s philosophy are termed Goreans. Table of contents showTocToggle("show","hide") 1 Books 2 Personal Views 3 Career 4 External Links Books Science fiction: “Chronicles of Gor,” also “Chronicles of Counter-Earth” (1967-2001) “The Telnarian Histories” (1991-1993) Historical fiction: Time Slave (1975) Ghost Dance (1979) Nonfiction: Imaginative Sex (1974) Norman is a protégé of Edgar Rice Burroughs, and his influential Gor series bears parallels to Burroughs’ John Carter of Mars. His novels include lengthy philosophical and sociological dissertations contrasting the malaise of modern society (everything from common dishonesty to nuclear holocaust) with the remedial beauty of natural society. Placing emphasis on living in accordance with a Nietzsche-esque natural order, he sponsors.
IEEE 802.11 - HIPERLAN standard. 802.11a also provides for up to 54 Mbit/s operation, but is not interoperable with 802.11b. Certification Because the IEEE only sets specifications but doesn't test them, a trade group called the Wi-Fi Alliance runs a certification program that members pay to participate in. Virtually all companies selling 802.11 equipment are members. The Wi-Fi trademark, owned by the group, guarantees interoperability. Currently, Wi-Fi can mean any of 802.11a, b, or g; by fall, Wi-Fi also includes the security standard Wi-Fi Protected Access or WPA. Products that say Wi-Fi are supposed to also indicate the band in which they operate in, 2.4 or 5 GHz. Standards The following standards and task groups exist with the working group: IEEE 802.11 - The original 2 Mbit/s, 2.4 GHz standard IEEE 802.11a - 54.
Immanuel Velikovsky - Gymnasium after moving to Moscow, and graduated with a gold medal in 1913. He then travelled to Europe, visiting Palestine, briefly studying medicine at Montpellier, France, and taking premedical courses at the University of Edinburgh. Having returned to Russia before the outbreak of World War I, Velikovsky enrolled in the University of Moscow and received a medical degree in 1921. Then he left Russia for Berlin, where he married Elisheva Kramer, a young violinist. He edited the journal, Scripta Universitatis, for which Albert Einstein prepared the mathematical-physical section. From 1924 to 1939 Velikovsky lived in Palestine, practicing psychoanalysis - he had studied under Freud's pupil, Wilhelm Stekel in Vienna - and editing Scripta Academica Hierosolymitana. In 1930 he published the first paper to suggest epileptics are characterized by pathological encephalograms, now.
Virginia Pep Band - Virginia Pep Band is a student-run "marching band" at the University of Virginia, officially known as "The Award-Winning Virginia Fighting Cavalier Indoor/Outdoor Precision(?) Marching Pep Band, & Chowder Society Review, Unlimited!!!. Founded in its current form in 1974, it was modeled after the bands at Stanford, Rice and the Ivy League: scatter or scramble bands. Like other college bands, the Pep Band plays field shows at athletic events, but it adds irreverent humor to entertain its audiences. The Virginia Pep Band follows UVa's tradition of student governance, choosing a director from among the student body. They play at UVa football, basketball, lacrosse, soccer, and occasionally field hockey and ice hockey games. Also, they make annual appearances at the Charlottesville 10-miler and the United Way Day of Caring. Today, the band's existence.
Harold Kroto - he credits with developing skills useful in scientific research. He was raised Jewish, but the religion never seemed to fit his own beliefs, and he has become a strong atheist. He developed an interest in chemistry, physics, and mathematics in secondary school, and because his chemistry teacher in sixth form (last year of secondary school) believed that the University of Sheffield had the best chemistry department in the United Kingdom, he went to Sheffield. In 1961 he took a B. Sc honors degree at Sheffield, followed by a Ph. D at the same institution in 1964. His doctoral research involved high-resolution electronic spectra of free radicals produced by flash photolysis (breaking of chemical bonds by light). Among other things, his doctoral studies included some research on carbon suboxide, O=C=C=C=O, and this.
Hanja - a kind of gloss. Hanja are often also used as a form of shorthand in newspaper headlines, advertisements, and on signs. Some details of use follow. Hanja in Print Media Sino-Korean characters are used most frequently in academic literature, where they often appear without the equivalent Hangeul spelling. Either all words of Sino-Korean origin may be spelled using Hanja (which is extremely rare), or only those words with a specialized or ambiguous meaning may be printed in Hanja (which is the more common way of using them.) In books and magazines, Hanja are generally used sparingly, and only to gloss words already spelled in Hangeul when the meaning is ambiguous. Hanja are often used in newspaper headlines instead of Hangeul to eliminate the ambiguity typical of newspaperese in any language. Hanja.
Hermann Joseph Muller - He was born in New York City and attended Columbia University, earning his B.A. in 1910 and his Ph.D. in 1916. A student of Thomas Hunt Morgan, he taught at Rice Institute in Texas from 1915 until 1918, at Columbia from 1918 until 1920, and at the University of Texas from 1920 until 1933, when he became senior geneticist of the Institute of Genetics in Moscow, where he remained until 1937. In 1945, he became professor of zoology at Indiana University. His method for recognizing spontaneous gene mutation led to his discovery of a technique for artificially inducing mutations by means of X rays that has since had broad theoretical and practical application. For this discovery he was awarded the 1946 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine..
History of Sierra Leone - the southern United States. During the 1700s there was a thriving trade bringing slaves from Sierra Leone to the plantations of South Carolina and Georgia where their rice-farming skills made them particularly valuable. In 1787 the British helped 400 freed slaves from the United States, Nova Scotia, and Great Britain return to Sierra Leone to settle in what they called the "Province of Freedom." Disease and hostility from the indigenous people nearly eliminated the first group of returnees. This settlement was joined by other groups of freed slaves and soon became known as Freetown. In 1792, Freetown became one of Britain's first colonies in West Africa. Thousands of slaves were returned to or liberated in Freetown. Most chose to remain in Sierra Leone. These returned Africans--or Krio as they came to.
History of Seattle - Arthur A. Denny abandoned the original site at Alki in favor of the better protected site on Elliott Bay that is now part of downtown Seattle. Around the same time, David Swinson "Doc" Maynard began settling the land immediately south of Denny's. Seattle in its early years relied on the timber industry, shipping logs (and, later, milled timber) to San Francisco When Henry Yesler brought the first steam sawmill to the region, he chose a location on the waterfront where Maynard and Denny's plats met. Thereafter Seattle would dominate the lumber industry. Charlie Terry sold out Alki (which, after his departure barely held on as a settlement), moved to Seattle and began acquiring land. He either owned or partially owned Seattle's first timber ships. He eventually gave a land grant to.