65 research outputs found
A Time Budget for the Homemaker
The question of shortening the working day is not one which concerns only the man who works in a mill or the woman in the factory. It is of quite as much importance for those who believe that the homemaker, with her three hundred and sixty-five day job, has an obligation to her community and state. Wise family financing is being increasingly emphasized because incomes, in the large majority of homes, are limited. For a similar reason, wise use of time needs as much consideration
The Goal of Home Management Courses at Iowa State
The initial letters of the words Home Economics are coming to stand for Health and Happiness Education in the Home, and today men and women in this field are emphasizing more and more the importance of giving to the student in home economics an appreciation of all of the responsibilities of the homemaker, together with that subject matter which will enable her to be more intelligent in her own home or in the training of girls and women for homemaking
Put the Home Into Homemaking
The status of the American Home is such as to offer a challenge to the women of the United States. The home is at present a turbulent haven--an uncertain citadel
The Household Administration Department
From a department with instructors loaned from the Foods and Nutrition, and Textiles and Clothing Departments, Household Administration has grown to have its own faculty, which at the present time numbers 12, with Dean Richardson as its head. Some of the newer developments in Home Economics are to be found in this department, thru courses in child care and training, equipment and home management. Miss Davison is in charge of equipment work; Mrs. Lancaster directs the child care and training program, and Miss Lindquist is responsible for the home management courses. Dr. Elizabeth Hoyt is Dr. Hazel Kyrk\u27s successor this year and is directing a study of consumption habits in Iowa farm homes as a part of the program of research on the economic problems of the home
The Iowa Homemaker vol.5, no.10
Table of Contents
Right Family Relationships by Mrs. Minnie Allen, page 1
Refinishing Your Personality by Thirza Hull, page 2
Changing a House Into a Home by R. M. Ballie, page 2
Ethics of the Crew by Ruth M. Lindquist, page 3
Housecleaning by Edith Ruggles, page 4
Girlsâ 4-H Page, page 5
With the Iowa State Home Economics Association, page 6
Editorial, page 7
Whoâs There and Where, page 8
Impressions of a Marketing Trip, page 9
The Eternal Question, page 10
Pottery â Itâs Use in the Home, page 1
The Iowa Homemaker vol.4, no.8
Table of Contents
Put the Home Into Homemaking by Ruth M. Lindquist, page 3
The Thanksgiving Table by Elizabeth Peterson, page 4
Sunshine for Babies by Edna Armstrong, page 5
Conference of Extension Specialists by Viola Jammer, page 5
Something Old for Which to Be Thankful by Marian Bigelow, page 6
A Course for Homemakers by Pearl Harris, page 6
Only 39 More Days Until Christmas by Rhea Ferne Schultz, page 7
The Evolution of Home Economics by Ruth Elaine WIlson, page 8
College Girls Earn Their Way in the Rockies by Marvel Secor, page 8
News From the State Association by Margaret M. Baker, page 9
Campus News, page 10
Whoâs There and Where, page 11
Editorial, page 12
The Eternal Question, page 13
Homemaker as Citizen, page 14
The Possibilities of Batik, page 1
The Iowa Homemaker vol.3, no.8
Table of Contents
The Goal of Home Management Courses at Iowa State by Ruth M. Lindquist, page 3
Home Economics Venture Upon âIndiaâs Coral Strandâ by Marcia E. Turner, page 4
The Bell Recipe File by Opal Wind, page 4
Carving the Turkey by Viola M. Bell, page 5
An Interview With Scottish Hockey Coach by Lucile Barta, page 5
Two and One-half Miles Saved a Day by Grata Thorne, page 6
Cranberries for Thanksgiving by Katherine Goeppinger, page 7
Who is Responsible for the Child - by âA Bachelorâ, page 8
The Evolution of Home Economics at Iowa State by Ruth Elaine Wilson, page 9
Why is a Mulligan? by âJoe Baggsâ, page 10
Turning the Corners Up by Laura E. Bublitz, page 10
The Sport of Amateur Housekeeping by Anna Jacobson, page 11
Whoâs There and Where by Helen I. Putnam, page 12
Dressing the Homemaker by Margaret Dix, page 1
The Iowa Homemaker vol.6, no.2 Extra
Table of Contents
An Invitation to Attend the Dedication of Home Economics Hall by Anna E. Richardson, page 1
In Our New Home at Last by Marcia E. Turner, page 2
Household Equipment by Eloise Davison, page 2
A Walk Around Campus by Vivian Jordan Brashear, page 3
Textiles and Clothing by Frances Sims, page 4
Child Care and Parent Training by Lydia Swanson, page 4
Applied Art by Joanna M. Hansen, page 5
Foods and Nutrition Department by Alma M. Riemenschneider, page 6
Institutional Management by Linda Spence Brown, page 7
Physical Education by Winifred R. Tilden, page 7
Home Economics Vocational Education by Marica E. Turner, page 8
The Department of Hygiene by Grace Magee, page 8
The Household Administration Department by Ruth M. Lindquist, page 9
Homemakers Department by Elizabeth M. Rivers, page
The Iowa Homemaker vol.3, no.12
Table of Contents
A Greeting to Iowa Homemakers by Dr. Louise Stanley, page 3
A New Book on âMeal Planning and Table Serviceâ by Florence E. Busse, page 4
A Bill of Rights for the Child by Lulu R. Lancaster, page 4
Shrubs as a Garden Background by Juanita Beard, page 5
âTis Egg Time Again by Beth Bailey McLean, page 6
The New Domestic System by Claude L. Benner, page 7
A Time Budget for the Homemaker by Ruth M. Lindquist, page 8
Figures That Do Not Lie by Mae L. Kelley, page 9
The Cooking of Meats by P. Mabel Nelson, page 10
The Psychology of Clothing by Eveleth Pedersen, page 11
Iowa State Women in Rural Schools by W. H. Lancelot, page 12
A Yarn about Yarns by Irene Christian, page 13
Tea Room Accounting by George M. Fuller, page 14
Whoâs There and Where by Dryden Quist, page 15
Editorial, page 16
Homemaker as Citizen, page 17
The Eternal Question, page 18
Mrs. Purchaser Chooses Upholstery by Lucile Barta, page 1
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The Reprogramming of Tumor Stroma by HSF1 Is a Potent Enabler of Malignancy
Stromal cells within the tumor microenvironment are essential for tumor progression and metastasis. Surprisingly little is known about the factors that drive the transcriptional reprogramming of stromal cells within tumors. We report that the transcriptional regulator Heat-Shock Factor 1 (HSF1) is frequently activated in cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs), where it is a potent enabler of malignancy. HSF1 drives a transcriptional program in CAFs that complements, yet is completely different from, the program it drives in adjacent cancer cells. This CAF program is uniquely structured to support the malignant potential of cancer cells in a non-cell-autonomous way. Two central stromal signaling moleculesâTGFÎČ and stromal-derived factor 1 (SDF1) â play a critical role. In early stage breast and lung cancer, high stromal HSF1 activation is strongly associated with poor patient outcome. Thus, tumors co-opt the ancient survival functions of HSF1 to orchestrate malignancy in both cell-autonomous and non-cell-autonomous ways, with far-reaching therapeutic implications
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