34 research outputs found

    Concert recording 2015-03-06

    Get PDF
    [Track 01]. Jubilate! / Ronald Caravan -- [Track 02]. Little symphony. Poco adagio-allegro-poco adagio ; [Track 03]. Andante tranquillo ; [Track 04]. Burleske ; [Track 05]. Intermezzo ; [Track 06]. Finale / Harald Genzmer -- [Track 07]. Rondo / Zdenek Lukas

    PAMFix, a fixative developed to enable remote platelet function testing: uses and applications

    Get PDF
    PAMFix is a fixative that was developed to stabilise the platelet biomarker P-selectin on activated platelets. Stabilisation of this biomarker introduced the possibility of performing measurements of platelet function remotelywhere there was no access to special equipment or technical expertise. The idea was to use PAMFix to fix the platelets after stimulating platelets in blood, after which the stabilised samples would be transported to a central laboratory for ana`lysis by flow cytometry. This would obviate the need for special equipment or technical expertise at or near the point at which the blood was collected and processed. Here we demonstrate the stability of samples of blood treated with PAMFix and describe several applications which the use of PAMFix has proved to be particularly beneficial

    1935 The Freshman, vol. 2, no. 13

    Get PDF
    The Freshman was a weekly, student newsletter issued on Mondays throughout the academic year. The newsletter included calendar notices, coverage of campus social events, lectures, and athletic teams. The intent of the publication was to create unity, a sense of community, and class spirit among first year students. The front page of issue 13 is dedicated in memoriam of Emile J. Dawson (1910-1932), who died from a cerebral hemorrhage after he struck his head on a concrete floor at the Armory, knocked down by his opponent in an intramural boxing tournament

    1935 The Freshman, vol. 2, no. 11

    Get PDF
    The Freshman was a weekly, student newsletter issued on Mondays throughout the academic year. The newsletter included calendar notices, coverage of campus social events, lectures, and athletic teams. The intent of the publication was to create unity, a sense of community, and class spirit among first year students

    1935 The Freshman, vol. 2, no. 14

    Get PDF
    The Freshman was a weekly, student newsletter issued on Mondays throughout the academic year. The newsletter included calendar notices, coverage of campus social events, lectures, and athletic teams. The intent of the publication was to create unity, a sense of community, and class spirit among first year students

    1935 The Freshman, vol. 2, no. 18

    Get PDF
    The Freshman was a weekly, student newsletter issued on Mondays throughout the academic year. The newsletter included calendar notices, coverage of campus social events, lectures, and athletic teams. The intent of the publication was to create unity, a sense of community, and class spirit among first year students. Included in this issue is an article about forming a Glee Club and genres of music selected based on the gender of participants

    1935 The Freshman, vol. 2, no. 16

    Get PDF
    The Freshman was a weekly, student newsletter issued on Mondays throughout the academic year. The newsletter included calendar notices, coverage of campus social events, lectures, and athletic teams. The intent of the publication was to create unity, a sense of community, and class spirit among first year students. Included in this issue is discussion of littering on campus

    1935 The Freshman, vol. 2, no. 17

    Get PDF
    The Freshman was a weekly, student newsletter issued on Mondays throughout the academic year. The newsletter included calendar notices, coverage of campus social events, lectures, and athletic teams. The intent of the publication was to create unity, a sense of community, and class spirit among first year students. This issue includes a story of the kidnapping of Stanwood Searles, president of the sophomore class, by members of the freshmen class as part of an annual interclass competition between first and second year students on campus

    Tracing the Spread of Early Christianity Through Coins; Stan Hudson, DMin; February 19, 2009

    No full text
    Two thousand years ago, long before high-resolution images and HDTVs, Romans emperors learned to disseminate their political message through coins. Roman coins, wrote numismatist Michael Grant, served a propaganda purpose far greater than has any other national coinage before or since. Stan Hudson (DMin, Fuller Theological Seminary) is a biblical numismatist and pastor of the Moscow Seventh-day Adventist Church in Idaho and Pullman Community Worship in Washington. He was the main numismatist consultant for the Faces of Power exhibit, and many coins from his personal collection were on display for this exhibit in the Lynn H. Wood Archaeological Museum.https://knowledge.e.southern.edu/arch_museum_lectures/1007/thumbnail.jp
    corecore