196 research outputs found

    Ursinus College Alumni Journal, Spring 1945

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    In memoriam • President\u27s page • Commencement • Spring term opens • Forum speakers • Dramatics • Christmas festivities • Sports revue • Visitors date • Dances • Debating • Y.M. and Y.W. events • Operetta • Messages to the alumni • College presidents sponsor legislation • Ursinus is family tradition • News about ourselves • Necrology • Our war correspondents • Program for veterans • Ursinus honor roll • Men and women in the service • Alumni Association nomineeshttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/alumnijournal/1024/thumbnail.jp

    Ursinus College Alumni Journal, Summer 1945

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    In memoriam • A word of appreciation • President\u27s page • Commencement activities • Report on the Loyalty Fund • Sports program • Faculty resignations and appointments • Students participate in full extra-curricular program • Summer term • Our war correspondents • Your officers\u27 letters • Honors to Ursinus alumni • Dr. Livingood: Consultant and author • Missing men reported safe • News about ourselves • Ursinus honor roll • Battle veterans wounded • In the service • Necrologyhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/alumnijournal/1025/thumbnail.jp

    Ursinus College Alumni Journal, Winter 1945

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    Dedication • What kind of memorial? • Alumni Day, 1946 • President\u27s page • Ursinus celebrates 75th anniversary: Special convocation held • Commencement exercises • Opening exercises, 76th academic year • Ursinus College Woman\u27s Club plans many activities • Sports revue • Gold star men of Ursinus • Salutation • Our foreign correspondents • Letter to the alumni • College entertains Navy unit • Returned to civilian status • News about ourselves • Necrology • Alumni Association executive committee creates reserve fund • Specialist in weather forecasting • Honored men of Ursinushttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/alumnijournal/1023/thumbnail.jp

    Ursinus College Alumni Journal, Summer 1946

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    Board of Directors encourage alumni participation • Alumni committees active • Dr. Johnson commencement speaker • President\u27s page • Directors plan for future • Alumni give $31,000 • Retirement plan • Five earn degrees • Missions secretary • Modern pioneer • Operations Africa • A Dean\u27s mailbox • That others may live • Dr. Miller retires • Seminary gets new head • Faculty and staff additions • Penfield winner • Dr. Garrett studies in France • News about ourselves • Commencement prizes • Challenge of Picalqui • Highlights in fall sports • Local Alumni Association meetings • News around town • Necrology • Summer conferences • College solves housing problem • Fall enrollment 700 • Alumni Association officershttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/alumnijournal/1028/thumbnail.jp

    Ursinus College Alumni Journal, Spring 1946

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    Farewells to Ursinus • Education for veterans • Alumni Day • President\u27s page • Faculty and staff changes announced • Exhibits to be shown Commencement week • College pastor retires after 18 years\u27 service • Loyalty Fund grows • Professor and Mrs. Sheeder to leave Ursinus • Enrollments remain at high peak • Warren K. Hess \u2731, elected Berks judge • Wounded veterans attend courses • Ursinus and World War II • Store displays mural of college • News from the campus • Athletic policy defined • Sports revue • Secretary\u27s letter • Ensminger \u2714, receives Legion of Merit medal • Former professor invents electronic computer • Control of nuclear energy • News about ourselves • Necrology • Dr. DeWire aided in atom bomb experiments • Alumni Association nomineeshttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/alumnijournal/1027/thumbnail.jp

    The Iowa Homemaker vol.20, no.1

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    Recreation that Recreates, Editor, page 1 Dual Personalities, Catherine Raymond, page 2 Married Right Out of College, Mary Ellen Lynch Brown, page 3 Sally Bows to Summer’s Sun, Kathryn Cooley, page 4 Selling Yourself, Kathryn Monson, page 6 I Want a Cotton Dress, Marcia E. Turner, page 7 Playtime Pays Dividends, Jane Wiley, page 8 Behind Closed Doors, Margaret Kumlien, page 9 Sunshine Sports, Jeanette Woodward, page 10 Packing the Convention Bag, Shirley Ambrose, page 11 What’s New in Home Economics, page 12 Veishea Presents, Adelaide Richardson, page 14 Picnic Basket, Dorothy Jo Weber, page 16 Alums in the News, Bette Simpson, page 17 Make Room for Music, Nancy Mason, page 18 Behind Bright Jackets, Betty Bice, page 20 Journalistic Spindles, Dorothy Anne Roost, page 23 Biography of a Home Economist, Eleanor White, page 2

    ‘Re-reading Raphael Samuel: Politics, Personality and Performance’

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    For British historian Raphael Samuel, history and politics were inextricable. Best known as the founder of the history workshop movement, the controversial historian took his stance on the democratisation of history-making, becoming an outspoken advocate for public history. Despite making a significant contribution to contemporary historiography, he remains a neglected, even disparaged, figure. This paper contends that the most significant aspect of Samuel’s historical work was not one or other theory of history or argument about the past but his entire way of being an historian. Samuel embodied as much as expressed his ideas, consciously using his personality as a powerful political tool. It is further argued that conventional approaches to intellectual history, focusing on textual outputs, do not fully recognise the significance of performative modes of thinking. Theoretical approaches to performance as identity offer important insight here but can be too schematic in their view of applied and enacted thought. A biographical approach, by contrast, provides the intimate perspective necessary to fully appreciate the fluidity and complexity of such a personality. The paper first situates Samuel in the context of his earlier life, focusing on how and why he created such a public persona and how he adapted it in response to changing circumstances. It then considers the implications and effectiveness of this persona by assessing how it was perceived and narrated by others, acknowledging, in the process, why different groups engaged with and interpreted it differently

    Longitudinal evaluation of quality of life in 288 patients with Neurofibromatosis 2

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    Advances in molecular biology have resulted in novel therapy for neurofibromatosis 2-related (NF2) tumours, highlighting the need for robust outcome measures. The disease-focused NF2 impact on quality of life (NFTI-QOL) patient questionnaire was assessed as an outcome measure for treatment in a multi-centre study. NFTI-QOL was related to clinician-rated severity (ClinSev) and genetic severity (GenSev) over repeated visits. Data were evaluated for 288 NF2 patients (n = 464 visits) attending the English national NF2 clinics from 2010 to 2012. The male-to-female ratio was equal and the mean age was 42.2 (SD 17.8) years. The analysis included NFTI-QOL eight-item score, ClinSev graded as mild, moderate, or severe, and GenSev as a rank order of the number of NF2 mutations (graded as mild, moderate, severe). The mean (SD) 8.7 (5.4) score for NFTI-QOL for either a first visit or all visits 9.2 (5.4) was similar to the published norm of 9.4 (5.5), with no significant relationships with age or gender. NFTI-QOL internal reliability was good, with a Cronbach’s alpha score of 0.85 and test re-test reliability r = 0.84. NFTI related to ClinSev (r = 0.41, p < 0.001; r = 0.46 for all visits), but weakly to GenSev (r = 0.16, p < 0.05; r = 0.15 for all visits). ClinSev related to GenSev (r = 0.41, p < 0.001; r = 0.42 for all visits). NFTI-QOL showed a good reliability and ability to detect significant longitudinal changes in the QOL of individuals. The moderate relationships of NFTI-QOL with clinician- and genetic-rated severity suggest that NFTI-QOL taps into NF2 patient experiences that are not encompassed by ClinSev rating or genotype
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