4,638 research outputs found

    Spartan Daily, December 7, 1948

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    Volume 37, Issue 47https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/11160/thumbnail.jp

    Spartan Daily, April 22, 1949

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    Volume 37, Issue 118https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/11231/thumbnail.jp

    An Analysis of the Pharmacy Department at Saint Mary\u27s Memorial Hospital

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    [From the Introduction] Today, industrial engineering is rapidly becoming an integral part of many hospital organizations throughout the United States. The techniques of this profession can be applied to all systems within the hospital, one of the most important of which is the pharmacy department. It is within this department that the problem for study in this thesis was chosen. I. THE PROBLEM Statement of the problem. This thesis is concerned with a study of the pharmacy department of Saint Mary\u27s Memorial Hospital, located in Knoxville, Tennessee. Purpose of the study. The main purpose of the study was to discover how the operation of the pharmacy department under question could be improved, with an emphasis on the proper utilization of the non-pharmacist personnel. There were two constraints to the problem, those of service and cost. Service had priority over cost; or, in other words, proper service should be provided, even if additional cost is incurred in providing it

    Making Evaluation Reports Effective Interventions for Change

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    Despite recent advances in assessing Deaf persons, the rate of client compliance for following recommendations remains low. The assessment process often affects the eco-system of a client so that the system nullifies the impact of the assessment report; the process of assessment becomes an intervention. Since assessment is synonymous with intervention, it would be beneficial for diagnosticians to use intervention techniques purposefully. Some intervention guidelines are to: (1) identify the persons who comprise the client\u27s meaningful system and their patterns of relationships; (2) formulate a tentative systemic diagnosis of the presenting problem, from which the systemic effects of the evaluation can be predicted; (3) establish alliances with the relevant constituency; (4) compose the formal report document, which includes determining its language, prescribing and proscribing the involvement of specific persons, and predicting, prescribing, and/or reframing resistance; and (5) regulate the sequence of report distribution

    Deaf Dialogue, June 1981

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    A newsletter published for Deaf Catholics in Chicago, IL Deaf Dialogue Finding Ai

    The Catholic Auditor, September-October 1983

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    A newsletter published for Deaf Catholics in Trenton, N

    Spartan Daily, January 21, 1953

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    Volume 41, Issue 72https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/11819/thumbnail.jp

    Crossing the Borders of the Sacred and Profane: Holy Visions of a Clairvoyant from Hungary.

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    Visions, transcendental impulses and apparition of saints constitute a special category of religious experiences. Unlike the high-organized systems of the Church, the visionays are in a kind of religious illegality: mostly they separate themselves and keep their experiences to themselves because of the fear of incomprehension. My study is based on the stories of a Roman Catholic clairvoyant living in a middle-sized agricultural town (c.a.18.000 inhabitants) in southern Hungary. She has been having visual and auditive perceptions in the Church of Our Lady since 2003. Along the directions of Christ and the Virgin Mary she recognized her mission in the human society. The lack of the religious education and the general immoral lifestyle of today inspired her to fight for the soul of the youngsters. She used to write letters to the state services (department of education, etc.) asking for obligatory bible classes and attached religious education. Her natural modesty and silent, contemplative temperament restricts her from organising (or leading) a religious group or enunciating her experiences in a public sphere. The sacred experiences became integrated in her everyday life. For her the sacred and profane world have the same level of reality. The holy visions give her not only delightful visual experiences but mission, advices and instructions too. The only way she can express herself and share her experiences with her environment is through drawing: after a strong emotional and visual experience (which appears only in the church, during the Holy Mess) she tries to draw what normally would be undescribable by words. Only during the interviews is she forcing to put the visual expressions into words and coherent texts. The aim of my essay is to examine how these transcendental experiences change and shape the way of living and thinking of the clairvoyant. Can we recognize any influence on the people living around her? The results could bring us closer to understanding the connection between the message of visions and the convictions of this religious person
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