2,000 research outputs found

    Colby McIntyre Correspondence

    No full text
    Entries include biographical information including McIntyre\u27s legal name, a typed biographical letter and a letter sent with newspaper criticism, as well as, a book for the Maine Author Collection

    Mary and Christopher Pratt

    No full text
    In one of a series of books presenting contemporary Canadian artists to teenagers, Lind discusses the lives, relationship, and artistic development of Mary and Christopher Pratt. 7 bibl. ref

    Completed suicide in men accused of sexual crimes involving children: Implications for a humanistic approach

    No full text
    Contents Introduction: child sexual abuse and adult offenders, Kanka Mallick and Christopher Bagley. Conceptual and Policy Issues: Towards rethinking moral panic: child sexual abuse conflicts and social constructionist responses, Chris Atmore; Children first: challenges and dilemmas for social workers investigating and treating child sexual abuse, Christopher Bagley. Clinical Issues: Is family dysfunction more harmful than child sexual abuse? A controlled study.Guy Pelletier and Lee C. Handy; The interactive effects of physical, emotional and sexual abuse on adjustment in a longitudinal study of 565 children from birth to 17, Christopher Bagley, Loretta Young and Kanka Mallick; Long-term evaluation of group counselling for women with a history of child sexual abuse: focus on depression, self-esteem, suicidal behaviours and social support, Christopher Bagley and Loretta Young. Adolescent Outcomes: The youngest profession – the oldest oppression: a study of sex work, Susan McIntyre; Child and adolescent prostitution in Canada and The Philippines: comparative case studies and policy proposals, Christopher Bagley. Social Work Issues: Child protection and children’s welfare: complementary priorities?, Elaine Sharland; Mothers’ involvement in child sexual abuse investigations and support: community care or child protection?, Shirley Jackson and Graham Tuson. Offender Issues: Men and women who kill and men who abuse children: a study of the psychiatric–child abuse interface, Colin Pritchard and Julia Stroud; Completed suicide in men accused of sexual crimes involving children: implications for a humanistic approach, Christopher Bagley and Colin Pritchard; Index.<br/

    Interview with Christopher T. Hodge

    No full text
    Interview conducted by Anna McIntyre at the Savannah Marriot Riverfront hotel on August 21, 2018. Chris started his law enforcement career as a Game Warden in 2000 and, at the time of this video, currently serves as Captain of the Macon office. He comes from a family of law enforcement officers and believes it is in his blood. In this interview, Chris elaborates on the technological changes he has seen in his career and the expectations the public has about law enforcement.https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/poag-oral-histories/1055/thumbnail.jp

    Off the Shelf: Official Newsletter of UWEC Libraries, 40th Anniversary Issue: 1982-2022, Fall 2022

    No full text
    In This Issue: From the Director's Desk - Around the Libraries: The McIntyre Library Catalog: A Timeline, The Eleanor Jones Papers, 1943-2017 - Let the Music See You Outro - Barron County Library Highlights + Updates - Welcome, Jennifer! - Recent Acquisitions - Protecting Your Right to Read - Save the Date: Toya Wolfe Author Talk - Updates From the Blugold Makerspace - After Dark 2022 - Welcome, Eva! - Welcome, Sarah! - Staff News.The 40th Anniversary Issue of Off the Shelf, Fall 2022, Issue 96

    Mflme Juha

    No full text
    This collaborative project began when the Ford Foundation approached Gerry Mulgrew (director of Communicado Co. theatre group), in search of experienced arts practitioners to form links and opportunities with the Tanzanian theatre group, Parapanda Arts Lab. Mulgrew chose McIntyre to help him develop workshop techniques that involved ‘performed’ drawing and storytelling. The aim was to use these techniques to enable creative conversations between actors, that cut across cultural and linguistic boundaries. McIntyre was invited to undertake a residency with Communicado Co. in order to explore both conventional theatrical approaches to improvisatory workshop and those related to the placement and community-based activities he organises for fine art undergraduates at Northumbria. The residency generated the workshop process that equipped McIntyre to be Visual Art Director of the multi-media performance Mflme Juha. McIntyre also used the drawing practices on which the workshop technique was constructed to explore the visualisation of short stories for children. Seven Stories (the National Centre for Children’s Books) commissioned McIntyre to contribute to a documentary TV programme (McIntyre worked with author David Almond [winner of the Whitbread award], actor Kevin Wheatley [Inspector Morse and Auf Weidesein Pet] and the director/producer Lesley Duncanson), to help describe the development of a narrative idea through the contrasting acts of writing, drawing and reading. The result was ‘The Savage’ (screened on ITV, 3rd September 2006). As a follow-up, McIntyre was invited to be artist-in-residence for ‘the Big Draw’, a weekend event in which visual narratives were developed in partnership with writers and actors

    Cast of St. James Play presented at library

    No full text
    Father Stahl, Annie Bailey, Obal Christopher, Francis Doyles, McIntyre Brothers, Allie Christopher, McIntyre, Sadie Christopher, Wendt, Annie Wohl and sister, Charles and Maurice Hoffman, Virginia Hinton, Dalton, Joe McCormac

    Skin autofluorescence and all-cause mortality in Stage 3 CKD

    No full text
    Background and objectives: novel markers may help to improve risk prediction in CKD. One potential candidate is tissue advanced glycation end product accumulation, a marker of cumulative metabolic stress, which can be assessed by a simple noninvasive measurement of skin autofluorescence. Skin autofluorescence correlates with higher risk of cardiovascular events and mortality in people with diabetes or people requiring RRT, but its role in earlier CKD has not been studied.Design, setting, participants, &amp; measurements: prospective cohort of 1741 people with CKD stage 3 was recruited from primary care between August 2008 and March 2010. Participants underwent medical history, clinical assessment, blood and urine sampling for biochemistry, and measurement of skin autofluorescence. Kaplan–Meier plots and multivariate Cox proportional hazards models were used to investigate associations between skin autofluorescence (categorical in quartiles) and all-cause mortality.Results: in total, 1707 participants had skin autofluorescence measured; 170 (10%) participants died after a median of 3.6 years of follow-up. The most common cause of death was cardiovascular disease (41%). Higher skin autofluorescence was associated significantly with poorer survival (all-cause mortality, P&lt;0.001) on Kaplan–Meier analysis. Univariate and age/sex-adjusted Cox proportional hazards models showed that the highest quartile of skin autofluorescence was associated with all-cause mortality (hazard ratio, 2.64; 95% confidence interval, 1.71 to 4.08; P&lt;0.001 and hazard ratio, 1.84; 95% confidence interval, 1.18 to 2.86; P=0.003, respectively, compared with the lowest quartile). This association was not maintained after additional adjustment to include cardiovascular disease, diabetes, smoking, body mass index, eGFR, albuminuria, and hemoglobin.Conclusions: skin autofluorescence was not independently associated with all-cause mortality in this study. Additional research is needed to clarify whether it has a role in risk prediction in CKD

    Mrs. McIntyre’s Fateful Struggles: The Innocent Bystander, Mrs. McIntyre, is Inherently Good in Flannery O’Connor’s “The Displaced Person”

    No full text
    In Flannery O’Connor’s short story “The Displaced Person” there are many themes that pertain to religion, but in addition O’Connor develops secular concepts throughout the story. One such character, Mrs. McIntyre comes across to the readers as a self centered, racist, and xenophobic woman. She treats her tenant farmers, the Shortleys, Astor, Sulk, and the Guizacs with great disrespect and wants to or threatens to dismiss all of them at different points throughout the story. Critics of Mrs. McIntyre, such as Miles Orvell author of Invisible Parade: The Fiction of Flannery O’Connor, argues that her character is unsympathetic and selfish by nature. In addition to Orvell’s claims, other critics including Linda C. Norman author of the thesis, entitled, Secular Protagonists in Flannery O’Connor’s Fiction suggests that Mrs. McIntyre is a mercenary and obsessed with Materialism. One last critic Karl-Heinz Westarp author of Precision and Depth In Flannery O’Connor’s Short Stories argues that Mrs. McIntyre struggles with her moral conscience and is unaware of her high level of ignorance. Although Mrs. McIntyre has a poor character and a meager temperament, all of her attitudes, thoughts, and opinions are shaped by the characters around her and the culture in which she lives. Mrs. McIntyre has struggled personally with relationships and financial troubles which added to her derogatory outlook on Mr. Guizac’s situation. Flannery O’Connor develops Mrs. McIntyre as an inherently good woman who is an innocent bystander with a strong moral conscience, who helps the Guizacs seek refuge and gives Mr. Guizac a job and a home, but as the story goes on her ideologies and morals are influenced by the other characters around her, such as, Mr. and Mrs. Shortley, her financial situation, and the culture in which she lives in

    sj-docx-1-spo-10.1177_17479541221106824 - Supplemental material for The association between junior tennis players’ physical and cognitive attributes and groundstroke performance

    No full text
    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-spo-10.1177_17479541221106824 for The association between junior tennis players’ physical and cognitive attributes and groundstroke performance by Mitchell Turner, Alyce Russell, Kate Turner, Philipp Beranek, Christopher Joyce, Fleur McIntyre and Travis Cruickshank in International Journal of Sports Science & Coaching</p
    corecore