JH Ausubel.
Bulletin de l'Institut océanographique, Monaco
20 (1):
67
2001
Bulletin de l'Institut océanographique, Monaco, no spécial 20, fascicule 1
…International Aquarium Congress for the chance to share with you, the leaders of the international aquarium community, news of progress toward the implementation of a scientific program to carry out…
JH Ausubel.
Technology in Society
14:
187–198
1992
…up in public squares. Prostitution is less subtle than in the past. The black market exchange rate appeared to make the average monthly Russian salary about 10 or 20 dollars,…
CR Frink, PE Waggoner, JH Ausubel.
Pollution Prevention Review
11 (3):
77–82
2001
…Today, fertilizer manufacturers have idle capacity. This, combined with weak agricultural markets in Europe and the U.S., reveal how groundless are fears that fertilizer use will soon explode. There is…
…views my city through a soda straw. They only look at one thing at a time, for instance, underground storage tanks, or stormwater runoff, drinking water, trucker safety. . ….
…to raise the standards to fight global warming, major U.S. auto makers say the public doesn’t want to drive econo-boxes on wheels. “In this market, fuel economy isn’t a driving…
JH Ausubel.
Energy Policy
23 (4/5):
411–416
1995
Also pp. 501-512 in Integrated Assessment of Mitigation, Impacts, and Adaptation to Climate Change, N Nakicenovic, WD Nordhaus, R Richels, and FL Toth (eds), International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, Laxenburg, Austria, 1994.
…best growers in Iowa, the average Iowa grower, and the world average, says the world grows only about 20 percent of the top Iowa farmer. Interestingly, the production ratio of…
JH Ausubel.
George C. Marshall Institute News
3 (4):
2001
…familiar trio, one that has dominated the study of history. George Marshall supremely understood this trio. General Marshall served as Chief of Staff of the US Army during World War…
JH Ausubel.
The Scientist
10 (3):
11
1996
…technical personnel to compete with the perceived scientific prowess of the Soviets. With fresh memories of the victories of science in World War II and ample tax revenues, the government…
…harm to the natural world. The world population grew almost fourfold in the 20th century, to 6 billion, creating sprawling cities that erased the natural landscape and sucked up natural…
Jesse H. Ausubel.
phe.rockefeller.edu, January
1997
…distribution and abundance of marine life. Sea life holds great interest for the public in the USA and around the world. Aquariums and exhibitions on marine life in natural history…