30 research outputs found

    Prospectus, October 7, 1981

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    BOB BROWN, 55, DIES; News In Brief; Library open until 10 p.m.; Students play in tourneys; Christian Fellowship plans month; Guides needed; Honor society seeks students; Ski Club plans trips; Editor wonders
: Are you alive, Parkland?; PACT programs held; Artist presents workshop; Club selling hot dogs; More tips on shopping; Workshop offered on business; Classifieds; Song simple, yet good; Dunaway stars in new movie; \u27Journey\u27 not worth trip; Talk, learn through your TV in future; PATH holds meeting; Teacher market opening up; Skater returns, playing Tuesday; Children as thieves?: Even kids are dishonest; Golf team wins conference; VB team gives erratic show; Hearns/Leonard fight is reviewed; Sports Notes; Explore the humanities; Fast Freddy is back again; Fast Freddy Contest; Music offers something for everyonehttps://spark.parkland.edu/prospectus_1981/1010/thumbnail.jp

    Prospectus, February 17, 1982

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    SECRETARY OF STATE TO VISIT PARKLAND; MTD sets new ridership record; News In Brief; StuGo amendment passes; StuGo members elected; Testing for GED offered; Editor hates to put out 4-page paper; Lab causes inconvenience; Lady Cobras roll on, add to winning streak; Drink or drive--but not both; Behind the glitter...: Meet Ice Capades people; PC happenings...: Tax laws discussed, PC hosts math contest, Series deals with mothers; Ice Capades present unique extravaganza; Classifiedshttps://spark.parkland.edu/prospectus_1982/1028/thumbnail.jp

    Prospectus, February 24, 1982

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    SCHEDULE CONFLICT CANCELS PARKLAND APPEARANCE: SECRETARY OF STATE JIM EDGAR OFFERS VIEWS ON PROBLEMS AND D.W.I. LAW CHANGES; News In Brief; New D.W.I. law explained in detail; Heavy snows cost college $27,500 for salt, help; Letters To The Editor: New vice-president voices opinons, Dean says thanks, Student Government; StuGo votes yes on TV; State police design PFR program; Ripley receives Yaxley award; P.C. Happenings...: Exhibit features sculptures, Camerata to perform concert, Panel discusses adoption, Learn to handle stress, Pick up first aid cards, PACT presents \u27Coping with Miscarriage\u27; Smile, children!: S.A.D.H.A. to celebrate dental health with activities; Counseling Center provides help; Need help with tax returns?; 41 schools display artwork in show; Crabs need love, too; Pittsburgh comes to Champaign; Pat Larson: buoyant leader; Melting show causes erosion; I wish I may, I wish I might...: Students view starry sky; Disabled people no longer shut off from using PLATO; Irving\u27s latest: rehash of \u27Garp\u27; ODW doesn\u27t fulfill crowd expectation; Classifieds; Speaker to discuss diagnosing; Oscar contender a \u27no-miss\u27 movie; Now\u27s your chance to pick film favorites; Tom Jones to perform in March; Jam trio\u27s latest has more meaning; Ozzy tickets refunded; Cobras end season with another win; Lady Cobras undefeated, rolling on trail of successhttps://spark.parkland.edu/prospectus_1982/1027/thumbnail.jp

    Prospectus, October 21, 1981

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    STUDENTS HONORED WITH 800;NewsInBrief;TraditionalGermanmenu:ParklandOktoberfestisOctober28;BloodDriveComingNov.4;Femalesoutnumbermales;Seminaronchildrenheld;Correction;Gissing:Parkingproblems;Tournamentscompletefirstweek;Takechargeofstudying;PrepareforEMTcourses;Libraryhelpshandicapped;Parklandcanhandle4snowfall;CoinShowNov.1;P.C.Happ2˘7nin2˘7s:Skiclubplanningtrip,Typewriterstransfer,Sigmaplanningparty,800; News In Brief; Traditional German menu: Parkland Oktoberfest is October 28; Blood Drive Coming Nov. 4; Females outnumber males; Seminar on children held; Correction; Gissing: Parking problems; Tournaments complete first week; Take charge of studying; Prepare for EMT courses; Library helps handicapped; Parkland can handle 4 snowfall; Coin Show Nov. 1; P.C. Happ\u27nin\u27s: Ski club planning trip, Typewriters transfer, Sigma planning party, 90 to be awarded, Sessions planned, Thomas places third, Divorce seminar today; Watch Those Postal Rates!: Practice bulk mailing when sending your refund forms; Grace Jones\u27 new album shows her character; Social turmoil -- economics run wild; Classifieds; Fast Freddy improves; V-ballers play conference; Golf team prepares for upcoming tourney; Runners place second; Cobras lose bid for regionals; Fast Freddy Contest; Celebrate Halloween; It\u27s Friday! Enjoy Yourself!https://spark.parkland.edu/prospectus_1981/1008/thumbnail.jp

    Prospectus, September 23, 1981

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    CANDIDATES VOICE THEIR VIEWS; News In Brief; Parkland P adds to landscape; Editors voice opinions; Homeowners can save; WPCD to broadcast football; Football plan goes into effect; New club formed at Parkland; U of I to study special lottery; Scholarships offered to women; Free seminar offered; Vietnam vets made more; Students may still sign up for insurance; Neil Simon\u27s hit musical showing soon; PC offers 3-hour telecourse; Create your own decorations; Classifieds; Beware of Matt\u27s addiction ; McNichol, Hamill star in Georgia ; Two top bands to perform at ISU; C-U Symphony kicks off season Saturday; Assembly Hall offers ticket deals; LRC helps students and faculty; Area\u27s next cash crop?: Some farmers try sunflowers; Mark predicts election results; Drug from sea may hold new hope for cancer and herpes; Newhart to visit C-U area; Speech team needs help; Record shops may become obsolete; VB team loses opener; ...but wins 2nd game; Parkland College Basketball Schedule -- Women 1981-82; Golf team wins against Danville; Sports Notes; Cross Country team off to running start; Airsho offers good timehttps://spark.parkland.edu/prospectus_1981/1012/thumbnail.jp

    Prospectus, May 7, 1981

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    SPEECH TEAM 11TH RANKED; National Forensics Top 20; C of C V-P, Neils predicts downtown area will change; Overcast and Snyder receive award; Co-Editors named for 1981-82; Barnes looks back on his Parkland experiences; Letters to the Editor: Student criticizes review; Classifieds; Our mistake! Stugo candidate got platform in on time; Convocations Wants You!!; Now is the time to get married; More letters to the Editor: New Stugo senator, Jackson appreciates support; Schumacher\u27s final notes...; Trail, Hillary win in close Stugo election last week; Trail expresses gratitude for the voters; Be kind to animals ; Japan King of bicycle road; Motocross bikes good for kids; Rogers, Gayle at Assembly Hall May 13.; Off Broadway: Dynamic, Aggressive; Gayle not living under Lorett\u27s shadow now!; Piloting not as easy as you may think!; Drug problem is going to get worse. ; Art Thesis Exhibit disappointing; Latin may be on its way back; Parkland secretaries enjoy the good life; Model Rockets popular; RWS\u27S help each other; PC offers one-day driving course; Ramblin\u27: Alender\u27s rambles are over; Rundgren just changing with the times; Do you want hard rock...?; Frazier, Turpin part of Senior May Fest; Here\u27s the 1981 Prospectus staff; CIRS has the info on day care; Did You Know That...Some Superstitions; \u27Recent rains still not enough\u27: Burwash; Barkstall appalled by Atlanta slayings: Urban League director says blacks are still discriminated against; Are we running out of natural resources?; Get out your horses for PC\u27s Horse Show; Parkland Happenings: Spring concerts feature Irving Berlin; Awards Banquet a success!; Winning Intellectual Freedom Essay; A child\u27s world is important throughout all stages; Dental classes named for \u2781-82; Final Examinations -- Spring, 1981; Cobras bow to Lake Land; Patrick to Tennessee; Softball team beats Danville; ...beat Lincoln Land three; Letter to the Sports Editor: Student upset; Walder wins final Fast Freddy; scoreboard; Baseballhttps://spark.parkland.edu/prospectus_1981/1017/thumbnail.jp

    Contemporary Art and Transitional Justice in Northern Ireland: The Consolation of Form

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    Abstract Contemporary artworks in Northern Ireland are explored here as critical constellations, in Walter Benjamin’s sense, that engage the cultural processes of transition through their problematisation of it. It is argued that the artworks become sites in which the assumptions of transition are opened up for critical reflection, requesting attention to the foreclosing of the meanings of memory, of past-and-future, of community. A mode of critical questioning of the present renders the present problematic not in terms of exclusions nor with reference to a past that cannot or will not be erased, but in terms of the present’s inability to be conceived through a linear conception of time. That is, the past and its relation to both the present and to the future are set in oscillation as artworks explore the complex temporalities of a present self-consciously attempting to narrate itself away from the past. The artworks, ‘without the bigotry of conviction’ as Seamus Deane put it, suggest that the task of dealing with the past is flawed wherever the past is conceived as a history that can be rendered present to be judged by subjects who are thereby placed beyond it. That is the illusion of a present ‘no-time’ that dovetails with the desires of commercial enterprise and neo-liberal conceptions of freedom. If this suggests an unceasing restlessness, the consolation is that this questioning does take a form, not as judgement or political decision but as artworks which by definition, remain open to reinterpretation and new understandings. These issues are discussed with reference to the work of four artists in Northern Ireland: the paintings of Rita Duffy, the photography and installation work of Anthony Haughey, and the sculptural works of Philip Napier and Mike Hogg

    Atlas of the Global Burden of Stroke (1990-2013): The GBD 2013 Study

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    Background—World mapping is an important tool to visualize stroke burden and its trends in various regions and countries. Objectives—To show geographic patterns of incidence, prevalence, mortality, disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) and years lived with disability (YLDs), and their trends for ischemic stroke (IS) and hemorrhagic stroke (HS) in the world for 1990 to 2013. Methodology—Stroke incidence, prevalence, mortality, DALYs and YLDs were estimated following the general approach of the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) 2010 with several important improvements in methods. Data were updated for mortality (through April 2014) and stroke incidence, prevalence, case fatality, and severity through 2013. Death was estimated using an ensemble modelling approach. A new software package, DisMod-MR 2.0 was used as part of a custom modelling process to estimate YLDS. All rates were age-standardized to new GBD estimates of global population. All estimates have been computed with 95% uncertainty intervals (UI). Results—Age-standardized incidence, mortality, prevalence and DALYs/YLDs declined over the period from 1990 to 2013. However, the absolute number of people affected by stroke has substantially increased across all countries in the world over the same time period, suggesting that the global stroke burden continues to increase. There were significant geographical (country and regional) differences in stroke burden in the world, with the majority of the burden borne by low- and middle-income countries. Conclusions—Global burden of stroke has continued to increase in spite of dramatic declines in age-standardized incidence, prevalence, mortality rates, and disability. Population growth and ageing have played an important role in the observed increase in stroke burden

    Global variations in diabetes mellitus based on fasting glucose and haemogloblin A1c

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    Fasting plasma glucose (FPG) and haemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) are both used to diagnose diabetes, but may identify different people as having diabetes. We used data from 117 population-based studies and quantified, in different world regions, the prevalence of diagnosed diabetes, and whether those who were previously undiagnosed and detected as having diabetes in survey screening had elevated FPG, HbA1c, or both. We developed prediction equations for estimating the probability that a person without previously diagnosed diabetes, and at a specific level of FPG, had elevated HbA1c, and vice versa. The age-standardised proportion of diabetes that was previously undiagnosed, and detected in survey screening, ranged from 30% in the high-income western region to 66% in south Asia. Among those with screen-detected diabetes with either test, the agestandardised proportion who had elevated levels of both FPG and HbA1c was 29-39% across regions; the remainder had discordant elevation of FPG or HbA1c. In most low- and middle-income regions, isolated elevated HbA1c more common than isolated elevated FPG. In these regions, the use of FPG alone may delay diabetes diagnosis and underestimate diabetes prevalence. Our prediction equations help allocate finite resources for measuring HbA1c to reduce the global gap in diabetes diagnosis and surveillance.peer-reviewe
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