Richard nelson basketball player

Major Works of Richard R. Nelson

  • "A Theory of the Low Level Equilibrium Trap in Developing Countries", 1956, AER.
  • "The Simple Economics of Basic Scientific Research" 1959, Journal of Political Economy, v.67 (3), p.297 [pdf, js]
  • "Aggregate Production Functions and Medium-Range Growth Projections", 1964 AER.
  • "Introduction" 1962, in Nelson, editor, The Rate and Direction of Inventive Activity: Economic and Social Factors [nber, pdf]
  • "The Link Between Science and Invention: the case of the Transistor", 1962, in Nelson, editor, The Rate and Direction of Inventive Activity:[pdf]
  • "Investments in Humans, Technological Diffusion and Economic Growth", with E.S. Phelps, 1966, AER.
  • "A ‘Diffusion’ Model of International Productivity Differences in Manufacturing Industry", 1968, AER.
  • Technology, Economic Growth, and Public Policy, with M.J. Peck and E.D. Kalachek, 1968.
  • "Toward an Evolutionary Theory of Economic Capabilities", with S.G. Winter, 1973, AER.
  • "Ne

    Richard Nelson (playwright)

    American dramatist

    Richard John Nelson (born October 17, 1950) is an American playwright and librettist. He wrote the book for the 2000 Broadway musical James Joyce's The Dead, for which he won the Tony Award for Best Book of a Musical, as well as the book for the 1988 Broadway production of Chess.[1] He is also the writer of the critically acclaimed play cycle The Rhinebeck Panorama.

    Personal life

    Nelson was born in Chicago, Illinois to Viola, a dancer, and Richard Finis Nelson, an accounting-systems analyst and some times sales representative.[2] During Nelson's childhood, the family moved frequently to accommodate his father's work, but they settled for long stretches in Gary, Indiana, the outskirts of Philadelphia, and finally in a suburb of Detroit. Nelson's earliest theatrical influences were in musical theatre, and he estimates that he saw more than twenty-five musicals before ever seeing his first straight play.[3]

    He graduated from Hamilton College in 1972, and received an honorary Doctor of

    Printmaker Richard Nelson was born in Wichita Falls, Kansas, in 1954. His formal education began at Rice University, Texas, where, while pursuing engineering, he began studying engraving under Swiss printmaker Dadi Wirz. Nelson then studied for a time at the experimental printmaking workshop Atelier 17 in Paris, France, with Stanley William Hayter before returning to the US and settling in New York. 

    From 1977 to 1998, he "worked, taught, and cleaned up at [Master Printer Robert] Bob Blackburn's Printmaking workshop". In the early 1980s he returned to engineering as he continued to volunteer at the Blackburn Workshop. From Artura.org: "Although I tried to be a full-time artist once in Paris for a bit, I missed having hot showers and went back to engineering. I accepted my role as being able to support the [Robert Blackburn] Printmaking Workshop and various artist friends with part of my income from Bell Labs. I have no 'artist's statement' but rather a statement for those with jobs—'buy more art.'"


    In a

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