1,723,935 research outputs found
Letter with attachment: Elisabeth Christman to Ida M. Tarbell, November 2, 1921
Letter with copy of letter/report of Margaret Dreier Robins to Elisabeth Christman, October 12, 192
Anne Christman, August 5, 1932 - May 9, 2020
Long time Palo Alto resident Anne Christman, artist, mother and gardener, passed away peacefully at her home after a brief illness on May 9, 2020
Interview with Jill Christman
Writer, editor, and activist Jill Christman is the author of If This Were Fiction: A Love Story in Essays, and two memoirs. She currently resides in Muncie, Indiana, where she teaches creative nonfiction writing and literary editing and Ball State University
Christman House in Salem
The Christman House on Salt Street in Salem was built in 1824 by Jacob Christman, a carriage maker and wheelwright. His trade of wheelwright is reflected in the bars over the basement windows, which are made from metal wheel rims. The house was restored in 1969
Christman, John C.
Body cremated. Ella Christman - wife.https://stars.library.ucf.edu/cfm-ch-register-vol14/1614/thumbnail.jp
Jack Christman, crouching stance
Jack Christman, Purdue Guard, circa 1929-1930?Athletics - Football Players (C)Intercollegiat
Luther Christman: Professional reformer.
The purpose of this study was to provide an analysis of the career of Luther Christman in the historical context and evaluate the impact of his career on the nursing profession. Christman, an intelligent and original thinker, made a career as a reformer of nursing practice, nursing education, and nursing administration. Specifically this study identified the reforms he advocated in each setting, the methods he used to implement his reforms, the magnitude of change that actually occurred, the extent to which being a male in a predominantly female profession influenced his activities, his impact on nursing professional organizations, and the source of his reputation as a controversial figure. Data were collected from the Luther Christman Collection at Boston University and other archives, Christman's writings, and interviews with Christman, his family, colleagues, associates, and students. Christman's professional life was traced from his nursing education through his retirement from Rush University. He began urging baccalaureate education for nurses in the 1930s and was a leader in the development of clinical graduate programs in nursing. In the nursing development of clinical graduate programs in nursing. In the nursing administration, he worked to eliminate non clinical activities from nurses' work. He implemented decentralized administrative structures in the early 1950s and a self-governing professional staff model in the 1980s. In clinical practice, he developed a number of clinical innovations in mental health nursing and worked to advance the development of clinical ability of other nurses. Clinical competence was a central theme for Christman; it was the foundation upon which he built his ideas for educational and administrative reforms. In the end, while many of the innovations he advocated were adopted, none were implemented to the extent he desired. Nonetheless, if he had not been around to provoke the profession, much of the progress made over the past six decades may not have occurred.PhDBiographiesHealth Sciences, EducationHealth and Environmental SciencesNursingSocial SciencesUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/131279/2/9840604.pd
John Christman catches a football, 1956
Marquette end John Christman catches a football during a publicity shoot, 1956
Organum Aristotelicum, seu, Logicae Aristotelico-Thomisticae quaestiones potiores
quas cum parergis ex universa in alma & archi-episcopali Universitate Salisburgensi, praeside P. Augustino Magg ... ; publicae disputationi subiecit ... Iosephus Ignatius Christman ... ad diem 15. Iulii, anno M.D.CCIDiss. Univ. Salzburg, 170
Typed Letter, Signed, 1960 Nov 17
H.K. Christman to “Friend”, 1960 Nov 17, TLS, 1 pp. – H.K. Christman, Circulation Manager of the Signs of the Times World Extension, writes a general letter to contributors of the magazine to say thank you. In appreciation, they are sending out the Pacific Press Diary for 1961. The eagerly states that the December issue of the Signs of the Times had 268,500 copies made
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