United States Marine Corps - 3d Battalion 3d Marines since Mar 2010
1stLt
Linear Retail Properties Jul 2007 - Jan 2010
Analyst
Vesper Realty Advisors, LLC Mar 2006 - Jun 2007
Associate
PERTINENT EMPLOYMENT Sierra Vista, AZ Dec 2010 to Jan 2013 Senior Game DesignerDeVry University Phoenix, AZ Oct 2008 to Dec 2010 Assistant ProfessorLeft Field Productions Ventura, CA Feb 2006 to Jan 2008 Sr. Game DesignerSierra Online/The Sierra Network Oakhurst, CA Jan 1991 to Nov 1997 Lead Game Designer
Education:
Pomona College Claremont, CA 1973 to 1977 B.A. in History
Dr. Aronson graduated from the Wake Forest University School of Medicine in 1986. He works in Greensboro, NC and specializes in Internal Medicine. Dr. Aronson is affiliated with Moses H Cone Memorial Hospital and Wesley Long Hospital.
Yelm, WA Southern California Las Vegas, NV Simi Valley, CA Seattle, WA Auburn, WA Lancaster, CA
Relationship:
Married
About:
Love Jesus unashamedlyLove my family wholeheartedlyCompletely engaged in the local church I go toFilm production is awesomeMusic is a massive part of my life
Tagline:
Spiritually practical
Richard Aronson
Lived:
Sierra Vista, AZ I'm like a Val, you know? Los Angeles, Oakhurst, Ventura Phoenix, AZ
Work:
General Dynamics Information Technology Inc - Senior Game Designer (2010) DeVry University - Teach Game Programming (2010) Sierra Online, The Sierra Network, Legacy Interactive, Left Field Productions, DeVry University
Education:
Pomona College - History
About:
I designed the first (text based) RPG on "The Sierra Network", "Drake's Peak", in late 1991. I transferred from SOL to TSN in 4/93 and eventually designed "The Ruins of C...
Tagline:
Please say why you're circling me if you don't know me and desire reciprocation - tks.
Richard Aronson
Richard Aronson
Richard Aronson
Youtube
Interview with Richard Aronson, programmer, w...
The Classic Gamers Guild Podcast episode 130: Our guest this week is R...
Duration:
59m 14s
Seminar 2015 - Dr. Richard Aronson
Dr. Aronson will present a talk at Dauphin Island Sea Lab on Friday, M...
Duration:
1h 12m 56s
2008 Distinguished Alumni Award Recipient Ric...
Bio video of Richard M. Aronson, 2008 recipient of the USD School of L...
Duration:
5m 56s
Justice Richard M. Aronson, Fourth District C...
The Legacy Project recounts the stories and preserves the rich judicia...
Duration:
1h 31m 20s
VHP #57 Richard Aronson US Army
Duration:
2h 36s
Newton Talks Oral History: An Interview with ...
Richard Aronson was drafted in October 1951, and left his studies at S...
"The window is still open, but it's closing rapidly," Richard Aronson, head of the department of biological sciences at Florida Institute of Technology who was not part of the study, tells the Monitor in an interview. "This is the time to fight this out. We need to fight more now than ever before."
Richard Aronson and his team at FIT studied coral reefs off the Pacific coast of Panama. The reefs in this corner of the ocean are vibrant and home to hundreds of species of ocean-dwellers. The FIT team took core samples from the reefs to determine their lifespan, much like tree experts count the ri
Date: Jul 06, 2012
Source: Google
Study: Climate Change Drove Pacific Reefs to Total Ecosystem Collapse
s humans continue to pump greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, the climate is once again on the threshold of a new regime, with dire consequences for reef ecosystems unless we get control of climate change, said coauthor Richard Aronson, a biology professor at Florida Institute of Technology.
The real message here is that corals do have the resiliency to recover, said Richard Aronson, a coral reef ecologist and paleobiologist at the Florida Institute of Technology in Melbourne. It happened 1,500 years ago after 2,500 years of nothing, so it could happen again.
The study, led by Richard Aronson and Lauren Toth from the Florida Institute of Technology, inserted 17-foot-long small-bore aluminum pipes through layers of coral and removed cross-sections of the coral reefs. They took these cross-sections from coral reefs along the coast of Panama in the Pacific
Date: Jul 05, 2012
Category: Sci/Tech
Source: Google
Natural climate change shut down Pacific reefs: study
"Climate change could again destroy coral-reef ecosystems, but this time the root cause would be the human assault on the environment and the collapse could be longer-lasting," said co-author Richard Aronson of FIT.