35 research outputs found
Hopes in a Chest
Are you hoping? Then why not a hope chest!
Recently when visiting a friend, I was very much surprised when she asked if I cared to see her hope chest. It had never occurred to me what a worthwhile hobby such a project could be. As we started off to the attic up above. I could not imagine what was in store for me. I\u27ll have to admit that my ideas of the chest I would see were pretty badly shattered when it turned out to be about five large cardboard boxes
Letter Your Personality
With Dame Fashion dictating hair dress, clothing styles, facial makeup and other physicial features there seems to be little opportunity for Miss Average Imagination to be different. In despair she reverts back to her first love, her name. She probably chooses this escape, because her name is hers and hers alone, and she can do things with it that will be a little bit different than anybody else. Thus, the monogram has risen to popularity
Equipment Economics
I just finished cutting an angel food cake that was baked in a roaster, and it was just as nice as any I have ever seen come out of a range oven, said Miss Faith Madden, research assistant of the Household Equipment Department
#LSEreligion lecture: âThe state should not hold citizensâ values to accountâ â Gwen Griffith-Dickson
In May, Professor Gwen Griffith-Dickson gave a lecture at LSE entitled âReligion, Security and Strategy: An Unholy Trinity?â as part of LSEâs Religion and the Public sphere lecture series. In the lecture, Griffith-Dickson explored how it is in issues relating to âreligious extremismâ where the traditional boundaries between religion and state are breaking down. Michael Livesey writes that her talk serves as a repudiation of the benefits of the intrusions of the state into the life of public religion
Bringing Corpus Linguistics into Religious Studies: Self-representation amongst various immigrant communities with religious identity
This paper explores the interaction between corpus linguistics and the social sciences. We will use a type of social scientific data broadly oriented to questions in the humanities to investigate the extent to and the ways in which corpus linguistics methods contribute to research in the field of Religious Studies, and in the social sciences and humanities at large. The corpus consists of 73 interviews (357,788 words) with immigrant communities living in the UK, from various religious (Muslims, Hindus and Christians), ethnical and cultural backgrounds. These interviews were conducted in 2005 as part of a government-commissioned study broadly oriented to policy-makers, but located within the disciplinary approach of Religious Studies. We will examine common patterns of self-representation amongst various immigrant communities with religious identity, that are also economically integrated into British society. The major contribution of this paper is to assess how corpus linguistics methods can complement, refine and offer new insights to the type of discourse analysis currently established within the social sciences. At the same time, we seek to test the limits of corpus methods, given the data might not be either qualitatively or quantitatively apt in all respects for corpus techniques
The Iowa Homemaker vol.16, no.8
Billy Eats, Sleeps and Plays by Barbara Fischer, page 2
Foods for Gods from the Buffet by Helen Miller, page 3
Swing Into Spring! by Beth Johnson, page 4
Color Passports to Spring by Gaynold Carroll, page 5
Teachers Reveal Pets and Peeves by Peggy Schenk, page 6
Awearinâ the Green by Mildred Gauley, page 7
Table Shamrocks by Doris Ingle, page 7
Whatâs New in Home Economics, page 8
News in the Mail from Graduates by Faithe Danielson, page 10
Glad-irons Replace Sad-irons by Ida Ruth Younkin, page 11
Children Around the World by Mae Louise Buchanan, page 11
Behind Bright Jackets, page 12
Hopes in a Chest by Gwen Griffith, page 13
Spring Inventory by Gay Starrak, page 14
French Cookery Puzzles by Beth Cummings, page 16
Wear Polished Nails by Jane Helser, page 1
The Iowa Homemaker vol.18, no.3
Inside Information, page 1
Our Heritage by Daisy Mary Kimberley, page 2
Welcome by Genevieve Fisher, Dean, Home Economics Division, page 3
We Wondered âHow?â â So We Asked by Berniece Williams, page 4
Behind the Kitchen Door by Myrtle Marie Campbell, page 5
Shopper Sally at Your Service by Barbara Field, page 6
Conventioning from Coast to Coast by Alvina Iverson, page 7
All Aboard for Mortar Board by Jane Currie, page 7
Dear Freshman, by Winnifred Cannon, page 8
Equipment Economics by Gwen Griffith, page 9
Whatâs New in Home Economics edited by Marjorie Pettinger, page 10
Coed Training for Football by Ida Halpin, page 12
âThis Is the Way We Wash Our Clothesâ by Marian Abbott, page 13
Alums in the News by Faithe Danielson, page 14
How Do You Rate? by Dorothy Evans, page 16
Behind Bright Jackets, page 18
To Your Dresser by Eunice Anderson, page 20
Keeping Posted by the editor, page 2
Treatment outcome definitions in nontuberculous mycobacterial pulmonary disease: an NTM-NET consensus statement
Nontuberculous mycobacterial pulmonary diseases (NTM-PD) are increasingly recognised as opportunistic infections of humans. These chronic pulmonary infections have two main presentations. The first is a fibro-cavitary disease, that occurs in patients with pre-existing pulmonary diseases, such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, bronchiectasis, previous tuberculosis or other structural lung disease. The second presentation is a nodular- bronchiectatic disease of primarily the lingula and middle lobe that tends to affect a middle- aged and elderly female population [1]. Treatment of NTM-PD requires long-term administration of complex multidrug therapies that are species-specific. Currently recommended regimens are supported by a very limited evidence base [2, 3]. The increasing incidence of NTM-PD has sparked increased interest in performing prospective randomised clinical trials [4]. One of the drawbacks of the existing case series and clinical trials is that they have applied different outcome measures [5]. This hampers meta-analyses, which are important in these still understudied infectious diseases. To enhance the quality and interpretability of the results of future trials and retrospective cohort studies, we aimed to formulate clear and broadly acceptable outcome definitions for NTM-PD treatment
Equipment Economics
"I just finished cutting an angel food cake that was baked in a roaster, and it was just as nice as any I have ever seen come out of a range oven," said Miss Faith Madden, research assistant of the Household Equipment Department.</p
Hopes in a Chest
Are you hoping? Then why not a hope chest!
Recently when visiting a friend, I was very much surprised when she asked if I cared to see her hope chest. It had never occurred to me what a worthwhile hobby such a project could be. As we started off to the attic up above. I could not imagine what was in store for me. I'll have to admit that my ideas of the chest I would see were pretty badly shattered when it turned out to be about five large cardboard boxes.</p