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book and Rogers
In 1940 Rogers became professor of clinical psychology at Ohio State University, where he wrote his second book, Counseling and Psychotherapy ( 1942 ).
Cubs broadcaster Jack Brickhouse called it the hardest ball he had ever seen hit without benefit of the wind, while " Cubs ' batting coach batting coach Rogers Hornsby ," reported Les Biederman of The Sporting News, " said it was the longest he ever witnessed and manager Bob Scheffing agreed it was No. 1 in his book.
For example, Dave Rogers, in the book The Prisoner and Danger Man, said that Markstein claimed to have created the concept first and McGoohan later attempted to take credit for it, though Rogers himself doubted that McGoohan would have wanted or needed to do that.
* In Buck Rogers first book, Armageddon 2419, ( 1928 ), by Philip Francis Nowlan the enemy ships used " repellor beams " for support and propulsion.
Rogers also discusses this issue in her book " Anselm on Freedom ", using the term " four-dimensionalism " rather than " eternalism " for the view that " the present moment is not ontologically privileged ", and commenting that " Boethius and Augustine do sometimes sound rather four-dimensionalist, but Anselm is apparently the first consistently and explicitly to embrace the position.
There were Roy Rogers action figures, cowboy adventure novels, and playsets, as well as a comic strip, a long-lived Dell Comics comic book series ( Roy Rogers Comics ) written by Gaylord Du Bois, and a variety of marketing successes.
Gowdy has been nominated, repeatedly, for every major Canadian book prize, including the Giller Prize ( twice short-listed, once long-listed ); the Governor General's Award ( three-times short-listed ); and the Rogers Writers ' Trust Fiction Prize ( twice-shorted listed ).
The book then proved a great success, and Rogers followed it up with an equally sumptuous edition of his Poems ( 1834 ).
Everett Rogers introduced it in his 1962 book, Diffusion of Innovations, writing that " Diffusion is the process by which an innovation is communicated through certain channels over time among the members of a social system.
Don Peppers and Martha Rogers, in their book on the subject, The One to One Future, speak of managing customers rather than products, differentiating customers not just products, measuring share of customer not share of market, and developing economies of scope rather than economies of scale.
Adams, Jr. and contributing editors including Rockwell Kent, W. A. Dwiggins, Frederic Goudy, Dard Hunter, Bruce Rogers, A. Edward Newton and many others who were well known in the book world.
* Everett Rogers furthered Tarde's " laws of imitation " in the 1962 book Diffusion of innovations.
On CBC Radio's Sounds Like Canada on September 21, Shelagh Rogers said of the book that " it's the most fun I've had in bed in a long time.
* David Ignatius, Agents of Innocence, Avon, 1988 ( paperback ) This book contains a thinly disguised portrait of Buckley ( as Tom Rogers )
The noted sci-fi writer Harlan Ellison once referred to him as " Glen Larceny " for the notorious similarities between Larson's shows and cinema blockbusters, for example, Alias Smith and Jones was taken from Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid ; McCloud from Coogan's Bluff ; Battlestar Galactica from Star Wars ; BJ & The Bear from Every Which Way But Loose ; Automan from Tron ; The Fall Guy from Hooper ; and Buck Rogers was simply a remake of the original comic book and film serial character.
In his influential book, Client-Centered Therapy, in which he presented the client-centered approach to therapeutic change, psychologist Carl Rogers proposed there are three necessary and sufficient conditions for personal change: unconditional positive regard, accurate empathy, and genuineness.
In addition, 200 limited edition medals were created and Liverpool based author and journalist Ken Rogers wrote a book One Hundred Years Of Goodison Glory to commemorate the occasion.
In 1993, Walton's book was adapted into a film, Fire in the Sky, directed by Robert Lieberman and starring D. B. Sweeney as Travis Walton, Robert Patrick as Mike Rogers and Scott MacDonald as Walton's brother Dan Walton.
" Steve " Stevens founded Real People Press, a publisher of works on psychology and personal change in 1967, in order to publish a book by Carl Rogers and Barry Stevens entitled " Person to Person ".
Grant wrote " Buck Rogers " with The Pixies as an influence, but " on a comic book level ".
In 1992, Rogers and his wife Sharon co-wrote a book, Storm Center: A Personal Account of Tragedy & Terrorism which describe the events surrounding the downing of Iran Air 655 and the minivan bombing from their personal perspectives.
The Will Rogers Follies is a musical with a book by Peter Stone, lyrics by Betty Comden and Adolph Green, and music by Cy Coleman.
The title is a pun on the comic book character Buck Rogers, and especially on one collective title of his adventures in particular, Buck Rogers in the 25th Century.

book and synthesized
For instance, one study observed that people who hear five positive reviews on a book as read by five different synthesized voices perceive that book more favourably than if they hear the same five reviews as read by one synthesized voice.
Then Kerr synthesized the material into the book Okinawa: Kingdom and Province ( 1953 ), and then in Japanese as Ryūkyū no rekishi ( 1955 ).
The second side, however, was entirely made up of the heavily synthesized instrumental work " A Treatise on Cosmic Fire ", named after a 1930 book of the same name by theosophist Alice Bailey ( whose works, influenced by the writings of H. P.
MBDB was first synthesized by David E. Nichols, a leading pharmacologist and medicinal chemist, and later tested by Alexander Shulgin and described in his book, PiHKAL: A Chemical Love Story.
The book surveyed and synthesized the large, complex body of research on moral development and translated it for the general public.

book and research
the book was a fine historical novel about Edward 3,, and I did a week of research to get the details just right: the fifteenth-century armor, furnishings, clothes.
Ethnography can refer to both a methodology and a product of research, namely a monograph or book.
He wrote a mainstream novel that was set in Communist China, The Violent Man ( 1962 ); he said that to research this book he had read 100 books about China.
In 2008, Penny Sartori, an intensive care nurse from Swansea, published a book about near death experiences following 10 years of research.
Octave Chanute provided a great service to those interested in aerodynamics and flying machines by publishing a book outlining all of the research conducted around the world up to 1893.
With the information contained in Chanute's book, the personal assistance of Chanute himself, and research carried out in their own wind tunnel, the Wright brothers gained enough knowledge of aerodynamics to fly the first powered aircraft on December 17, 1903.
The late author Sheldon H. Harris in his book " Factories of Death: Japanese Biological Warfare, 1932-1945, and the American cover up " wrote that, The test program, could be part of Project AGILE or Project OCONUS which began in fall 1962 and which was funded at least through fiscal year 1963, was considered by the Chemical Corps to be “ an ambitious one .” The tests were designed to cover “ not only trials at sea, but Arctic and tropical environmental tests as well .” The tests, presumably, were conducted at what research officers designated, but did not name, “ satellite sites .” These sites were located both in the continental United States and in foreign countries.
This book has been heavily criticized on theoretical and methodological grounds, but some of its findings have been confirmed by further empirical research.
' The sentient ocean that covers much of the surface of Solaris in Stanislaw Lem's eponymous novel also seems, from much of the fictional research quoted and discussed in the book, to be based on some element other than carbon.
scholarships for programs, individual research, and book writing.
Knuth wanted the book to prepare students for doing original, creative research.
His book The Soccer Tribe published in 1981 was partly based on research carried out during his directorship of Oxford United, including as it did analysis of the ' tribal ' chanting of the club's fans during matches at the club's Manor Ground.
A major work of research and synthesis, the book was also important in historiographical terms: with it, Thompson demonstrated the power of an historical Marxism rooted in the experience of real flesh-and-blood workers.
This was suggested in circumstantial research by Petra Rees in her book The Shrieves House.
* Jack Higgins based his book The Eagle Has Landed on alleged research into a German abduction plot in the Second World War.
Higgins writes in the first person of finding the graves of 13 German paratroopers in an English churchyard, an event known not to have actually occurred, and claims that the book stems from his research into actual events.
Harriet, herself a victim of poison-pen letters ever since her trial, reluctantly agrees to help, and spends much of the next few months resident at the college, ostensibly to do research on Sheridan Le Fanu and assist a don with her book.
After enrolling in a course on " Measuring Municipal Governments ," Simon was invited to be a research assistant for Clarence Ridley, with whom he coauthored the book Measuring Municipal Activities in 1938.
As Harvard hypnotherapist Deirdre Barrett describes in the book “ Tales from a Hypnotherapist ’ s Couch ”, most modern research suggestions are designed to bring about immediate responses — an arm rises immediately, whereas hypnotheraputic suggestions are usually post-hypnotic ones that are intended to trigger responses affecting behavior for periods ranging from days to a lifetime in duration.
In her 1998 book of hypnotherapy case studies, she reviews the clinical research on hypnosis with dissociative disorders, smoking cessation, and insomnia and describes successful treatments of these complaints.
This area of research culminated in his 1982 book Evolution and the Theory of Games.
Jean Philippe Rushton ( born December 3, 1943 ) is a Canadian psychology professor at the University of Western Ontario who is most widely known for his work on racial group differences, such as research on race and intelligence, race and crime, and the application of r / K selection theory to humans in his book Race, Evolution and Behavior ( 1995 ).
Frank Redelius, one of Maroger's protégés from the Baltimore Realists group, wrote a book that updates, builds upon and revises Jacques Maroger's research of the painting techniques and formulas of the Old Masters.
The research psychologist Gary Marcus's book Kluge: The Haphazard Construction of the Human Mind compares evolutionary kluges with engineering ones like manifold vacuum-powered windshield wipers – when you accelerated or drove uphill, " Your wipers slowed to a crawl, or even stopped working altogether.
Kirlian's research first became known in the United States after Shelia Ostrander's and Lynn Schroeder's book " Psychic Discoveries Behind the Iron Curtain " was published in 1970.

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