106 research outputs found

    The Grizzly, September 28, 1984

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    Limerick: Nuclear Power Comes to Montgomery County • Communication Arts\u27 Newest Member • News of Yesteryear: Is There a Ghost in UC\u27s Haunted Hall? • Shorts: PA German Studies; Political Ad Forum; Appointment • Soccer Rebounds From Loss to Drexel • X-Country Competes in Invitational • Hockey Player Named to US Squad • Pro Football Wrap-Up • Grizzlies Lose to W. Marylandhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/grizzlynews/1122/thumbnail.jp

    The Grizzly, September 21, 1984

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    Duryea Renovation Near Completion • Will Reaganomics Last? • UC Wins Award • Stay Tuned... • News of Yesteryear • Music at Ursinus: A New Director and New Directions • Students Excel in Business French • New Tunes • Grizzlies Fumble Opener • Bear Booters Take Two • Volleyball Team Off to a Strong Start • Pennant Race Winds Down • Friends of Library to Hold Book Sale • New Bloom in Physics Dept. • Calendar • Parents\u27 Day Schedulehttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/grizzlynews/1121/thumbnail.jp

    The Grizzly, October 5, 1984

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    Political Ad Forum Set • Blood Drive Exceeds Quota • Education Dept Lauded For Teacher Preparation Efforts • News of Yesteryear: Fleet Men Relate Overseas Experiences; Students Ask $561 in War Fund Drive • Letters: Student Opposes Conformity; Wet Commuter • Limerick Pt 2: The Evacuation Plan • Senior Ec/Ba Accounting Student Honored • Gridders Drop Third Straight • Tannenbaum Fills New Sports Information Post • Regular Baseball Season Ends • New Faculty Profiles: Zemel Joins Economics Department • Shorts: Pottery Exhibit; Career Workshop; Fellowships; Red and Gold Days; Speech Exam; Friends\u27 Book Salehttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/grizzlynews/1123/thumbnail.jp

    The Grizzly, September 14, 1984

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    Record Number Enter Ursinus • Town Hears College Plans • An Athlete\u27s Battle With Alcohol • News of Yesteryear • Ursinus Enters New Era of Communications • Cobbs Shows Enthusiasm for New Position • New Dean Coaches R.A.\u27s • English Moves Into New Offices • Smooth Sailing for Hockey....on a Bumpy Field • UC Soccer Wins Home Opener • Gridders Look to Be Winners • Cross Country Kicks Off \u2784 Season • Discover Philadelphia • McQuellan Leaves • Calendarhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/grizzlynews/1120/thumbnail.jp

    Lifestyle gambling, indebtedness and anxiety: A deviant leisure perspective

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    While once subject to wide-ranging state control, gambling has successfully culturally embedded itself within the normalised and legitimised forms of leisure such as the night-time economy, sports fandom and online forums of socialisation. Consequently, this article argues that existing research which conceptualises gambling as separate from everyday life is largely obsolete in the contemporary context. We argue here that gambling has become an integral feature of the wider masculine weekend leisure experience, intimately connected to an infantilised consumer identity that is peculiar to late-capitalism. This article, drawing upon ongoing ethnographic research among what we term ‘lifestyle gamblers’, utilises a deviant leisure perspective to problematise the myriad harms that emerge from this relationship, situated within a broader critique of consumerism and global capitalism. While social gambling is defended fiercely by the industry, this article argues that an identity-based culture of sports-betting that attaches fragile social and cultural capital to the allure of the gambling win encourages the chasing of losses and impulsive betting. Underscored by a culture of readily available and high-interest credit, we explore how gamblers in a technologically accelerated culture develop a pathological relationship to money as it becomes desublimated and loses its symbolic value. Such processes, exacerbated by the promise of consumer culture, have the potential to cast these young adults into a paralysing reality of indebtedness that is fraught with depression, stress, domestic instability and destructive behaviours of consumption

    Capturing Desire: Rhetorical Strategies and the Affectivity of Discourse

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    In this article I argue that psychoanalytical theory can help us understand the emotional force of political rhetoric. I undertake a theoretical enquiry into the method of interpreting political speeches as strategies of affective persuasion. Both rhetorical and psychoanalytical studies converge in their concern with the production of ‘plausible stories’ that aim to fold psychic investments into political judgements. To capture desire, I claim, political rhetoric must articulate ‘symptomatic beliefs’ in relation to wider situational exigencies. I sketch three distinct psychoanalytical approaches, each of which emphasises a different scenario of unconscious organisation where rhetorical strategies are pertinent: namely Freudian, Kleinian, and Lacanian approaches. These are then applied to the example of a controversial rhetorical intervention – Enoch Powell’s infamous Birmingham speech of 1968 – to demonstrate the various potential focii when undertaking analysis

    Maritime Operations and Emergency Preparedness in the Arctic–Competence Standards for Search and Rescue Operations Contingencies in Polar Waters

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    Emergencies on large passenger ships in the remote High North may lead to a mass rescue operation with a heavy strain on the emergency preparedness systems of the Arctic countries. This study focuses on the need for competencies related to large-scale Search and Rescue operations (SAR operations) amongst the shipping companies, vessels and governments involved. A SAR operation is the activity related to finding and rescuing people in distress. Several international standards, in particular the conventions by the International Maritime Organization (IMO), provide direction for education and training of seafarers and rescue staff. This study elaborates on the operational competence requirements for key personnel involved in large scale SAR operations. Findings from real SAR incidents and exercises provide in-depth understanding on the operational challenges. The chapter gives directions for competence programs, beyond obligatory international standards, and recommendations for further research

    Building safety in humanitarian programmes that support post-disaster shelter self-recovery: An evidence review

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    The humanitarian sector is increasingly aware of the role that good quality evidence plays in underpinning effective and accountable practice. This review addresses the need for reliable evidence by evaluating current knowledge about the intersection of two key outcome targets of post‐disaster shelter response ‐ supporting shelter self‐recovery and building back safer. Evidence about post‐disaster shelter programmes that aim to improve hazard resistance whilst supporting shelter self‐recovery has been systematically analysed and evaluated. Technical support, especially training in safer construction techniques, was found to be a key programme feature, but the impact of this and of other programme attributes on building safety was largely not ascertainable. Programme reports lack sufficient detail, especially about the hazard resistance of repaired houses. Accounts of shelter programmes need to include more reliable reporting of key activities and assessment of outcomes, in order to contribute to the growing evidence base in this field
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