164 research outputs found

    Pumpkin Seed Tea Cure

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    In the short anecdote heard here, Elsie Smith explains her experience with pumpkin seed tea and how she saw it work.https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/songstorysamplercollection/1003/thumbnail.jp

    Investing in the Future: an interview with Yuet Wei Wan

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    Recent graduate Yuet Wei Wan completed her Illinois Wesleyan career in 1993 with a 4.0 GPA and bachelor\u27s degreea in Mathematics and Economics. She then went on to embark on an exciting new career in investment banking

    Letter From Elsie M. Smith to Alfred L. Shoemaker, February 24, 1949

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    A handwritten letter from Elsie M. Smith addressed to Alfred L. Shoemaker, dated February 24, 1949. Within, Smith provides a list of beliefs, superstitions and old sayings that her grandmother used to talk about, including many related to weather, luck, animals, sewing and witchcraft.https://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/shoemaker_documents/1023/thumbnail.jp

    Undated Letter From Elsie M. Smith to Alfred L. Shoemaker

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    A handwritten letter from Elsie M. Smith addressed to Alfred L. Shoemaker, dating from circa 1950. Within, Smith provides Shoemaker with a list of weather prediction beliefs and other superstitions involving animals and luck.https://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/shoemaker_documents/1139/thumbnail.jp

    Young Australians navigating the ‘Careers Information Ecology’

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    The policy orientations of advanced neoliberal democracies situate young people as rational actors who are responsible for their own career outcomes. While career scholars have been critical of how this routinely ignores the unequal effects of structural constraints on personal agency, they have long suggested that young people should have access to the best available ‘roadmaps’ and advice to navigate the uncertainties baked into the contemporary economic landscape. Complementing the significant attention that is given to the (potentially emancipatory) experience of formal careers guidance, we present findings from a multi-method study. We explore young Australians’ (aged 15–24) navigation of careers information through a nationally representative survey (n = 1103), focus groups with 90 participants and an analysis of 15,227 social media comments. We suggest that the variety of formal and informal sources pursued and accessed by young people forms a relational ‘ecology’. This relationality is twofold. First, information is often sequential, and engagements with one source can inform the experience or pursuit of another. Second, navigation of the ecology is marked by a high level of intersubjectivity through interpersonal support networks including peers, family and formal service provision. These insights trouble a widespread, but perhaps simplistic, reading of young people having largely internalised a neoliberal sensibility of ‘entrepreneurial selfhood’ in their active pursuit of a range of career advice. Throughout our analysis, we attend to the ways that engagement in the career information ecology is shaped by social inequalities, further underscoring challenges facing careers guidance and social justice goals

    The Ursinus Weekly, December 7, 1953

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    Prom to feature Johnny Austin, Sr. lord and lady • Wanamaker to give $1,000 scholarship • Sella resigns as senior prexy; Popowich unanimously chosen • Sixteenth Messiah performance to be held in Bomberger, Thursday • IRC to hear Chester Bowles at Bryn Mawr tonight • William S. Pettit named Dean of Ursinus College • MSGA hears student ideas at meeting • Raises revised by Stars and Players • Marge Merrifield wins hockey honor • Y plans party • Editorials: Honor at Ursinus; Maintenance mixup? • Cutting • Greek columns • Thespians present All my sons ; Reviewer notes fine performances • Pledge reveals fun and difficulties of informal Ursinus sorority initiation • Dorms eagerly anticipate vendors\u27 nightly visit • Hockey team ends season • JV Belles down Penn, W. Chester, Bryn Mawr • Soccermen lose to F&M; Season ends with party • Third team undefeated • Basketball season opens; Bears win, 84-66; 78-56 • Walker, Cox head 1954 football, soccer elevens • Dickinson downs Ursinus in football finale, 19-13 • Hockey-soccer game ends in 2-2 tie • Christmas vespers service to be held December 13 • Chemical society members visit chemical exposition • Truex speaks to pre-medders on opportunities in medicine • French Club holds program of vocal, piano music • Christmas dance plannedhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/weekly/1484/thumbnail.jp

    Portfolio Vol. II N 4

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    Browne, Phil. Alumni . Picture. 2. Martindale, Virginia. A Statue By Jude . Prose. 3. Maxwell, Robert. Reflections . Poem. 6. Lewis, Lucy. Quiet Zone . Prose. 7. Varney, Chester. Tinder Box . Prose. 9. Beckham, Adela. Spring Harvest . Poem. 10. Beckham, Adela. Morning . Poem. 10. Black, James. The Drama at Denison . Prose. 11. Mackie, Reino. Landscape . Picture. 6. Flory, Doris. April Showers . Poem. 14. Flory, Doris. Aspiration . Poem. 14. Wager, Dick. Solitude . Poem. 14. Wager, Dick. Regret . Poem. 14. Bastida, Sorella y. Children on the Beach . Picture. 14. Saunders, Paul. Review of New Books . Prose. 15. Smith, Bob. Review of New Recordings . Prose. 15. Mitchell, Dave. A Farmyard . Picture. 16. Bonnet, Elsie. Hidden Village . Picture. 16. Taylor, Dave. Concerning Art . Prose. 17. Browne, Phil. Master Craftsman . Picture. 18. Deeds, Ed. Brothers, Sing On . Prose. 19. Boyd, Kate Olive. Spring at Denison . Poem. 20. Barss, William. Landscape . Picture. 20. Deane, Dorothy. The Taming of the Shrew . Prose. 21

    Pennsylvania Folklife Vol. 10, No. 1

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    • Tramp Work : Penknife Plus Cigar Boxes • Tramps of My Youth • The German Broadside Songs of Pennsylvania • The Rise of Interest in Folk Art • Dutch Treats for Breakfast • The Amish, Citizens of Heaven and America • Collectanea • My Great-Grandmother • Old Sweitzer\u27s Ghost • Pastimes of My Youth • Battalion Day • Seven Days Make One Weekhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/pafolklifemag/1004/thumbnail.jp

    Surveillance, Diversity and Vegetative Compatibility Groups of Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. vasinfectum Collected in Cotton Fields in Australia (2017 to 2022)

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    Cotton (Gossypium hirsutum) is a billion-dollar crop in regional New South Wales (NSW) and Queensland, Australia. Fusarium wilt (FW) caused by Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. vasinfectum (Fov) is an economically important disease. Initial disease losses of up to 90% when the disease was first detected resulted in fields being taken out of cotton production. The disease is now well-managed due to the adoption of highly resistant varieties. However, annual disease surveys recently revealed that the disease dynamic has changed in the past few seasons. With relatively mild and wet weather conditions during the 2021/22 growing season, FW was detected in eight surveyed valleys in NSW and Queensland, with the disease incidence as high as 44.5% and 98.5% in individual fields in early and late seasons, respectively. Fov is genetically distinct and evolved from local Fusarium oxysporum strains. Additionally, the pathogen was reported to evolve rapidly under continuous cotton cropping pressure. However, our knowledge of the genetic composition of the prevailing population is limited. Sequences of the translation elongation factor alpha 1 (TEF1) revealed that 94% of Fusarium isolates recovered from FW-infected cotton were clustered together with known Australian Fov and relatively distant related to overseas Fov races. All these isolates, except for nine, were further confirmed positive with a specific marker based on the Secreted in Xylem 6 (SIX6) effector gene. Vegetative compatibility group (VCG) analyses of 166 arbitrarily selected isolates revealed a predominance of VCG01111. There was only one detection of VCG01112 in the Border Rivers valley where it was first described. In this study, the exotic Californian Fov race 4 strain was not detected using a specific marker based on the unique Tfo1 insertion in the phosphate (PHO) gene. This study indicated that the prevalence and abundance of Fov across NSW and Queensland in the past five seasons was probably independent of its genetic diversity
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