2,541 research outputs found
Ellen Nakamura photograph
Ellen Nakamura, who had been interned at the Jerome Relocation Center in Arkansas, served as a recruitment scout for Seabrook Farms. She regularly communicated with H. Leon Yager, the WRA official in charge of the Philadelphia office, about the working and housing situations of relocated internees at Seabrook, and on the numbers of additional detained Nisei and Issei who might be brought to New Jersey.Early 1950s photo of Japanese American Ellen Nakamura. Ellen was relocated to the Jerome Relocation Center in Arkansas. She later led a group of Japanese American interns to New Jersey to work at Seabrook Farms Co
Representatives from the Jerome Relocation Commission in Arkansas
Ellen Nakamura, featured in the center of this photograph. The brick buildings and greenery of Seabrook Farms presented a sharp contrast to the barracks and desert-like conditions of the internment camps.Representatives from the Jerome Relocation Commission in Arkansas invited to find jobs and available houses for those still in camps in response to invitation from "CF" Seabrook. They not only checked out work and housing availability, but also visited the merchants in Bridgeton to determine the attitude of the local residents. Pictured: Fuju Sasaki, Ellen Nakamura, Harold Ouchida. Picture taken during the the 1940s
Jerome Agel Research Collection 1951, 1970s-1980s
The Jerome Agel Research Collection includes materials collected by Jerome Agel in preparation for the book 'Deliverance in Shanghai' which was published in 1983. The book tells the story of Jewish immigrants in Shanghai during World War II. Included here are printed materials, correspondence with former residents of Shanghai, interviews, and memoirs. A small portion of Jerome Agel’s manuscript is also included.Jerome Agel is the author of more than forty books. He has collaborated with Marshall McLuhan, Carl Sagan, Stanley Kubrick, Herman Kahn, and Issac Asimov. His works include the nonfiction novel 'Deliverance in Shanghai' and 'The U.S. Constitution for Everyone.'See Inventory List.Processeddigitize
Jerome Cooperative Enterprise = ゼローム共同企業組合
Regulations made by Jerome Cooperative Enterprise. Page 8 is missing.The Atsushi Art Ishida Collection is comprised of photographs, negatives, camp newspapers, WRA documents, memorabilia, and correspondence chronicling his time immediately after the exclusion order and during his incarceration in the Santa Anita Assembly Center in California, the Jerome camp in Arkansas, the Tule Lake camp in California, and the Minidoka camp in Idaho, as well as digital reproductions of photographs documenting his life in Japan and Artesia, California during the pre-war years and his time during the Korean War. The majority of the photographs in the collection were taken by Atsushi Art Ishida and he would often develop them in his room in the barracks where he had constructed a makeshift dark room in the camp. His photographs depict the life in the incarceration camps, capturing the buildings, such as barracks, guard towers, a hospital, fire station, and warehouse, the workers for farming, laundry, mess hall, and logging, and the sports games that the incarcerees played. Also photographed are the farewell scenes in which the incarcerees who were being transferred from the Jerome camp to the Tule Lake Segregation Center
Ellen Nakamura
Ellen Nakamura was relocated to the Jerome Relocation Center in Arkansas. She later led a group of Japanese American interns to New Jersey to work at Seabrook Farms Co
Global Weak Solutions for an Incompressible Charged Fluid with Multi-Scale Couplings: Initial-Boundary Value Problem
The Cauchy problem for the Poisson-Nernst-Planck/Navier-Stokes model was investigated by the first author in [J.W. Jerome, An analytical approach to charge transport in a moving medium, Transport Theory Statist. Phys. 31 (2002) 333-366], where a local existence uniqueness theory was demonstrated, based upon Kato's framework for examining evolution equations. In this article, the existence of a global weak solution is proved to hold for the model, in the case of initialboundary-value problem. Connection of the above analysis to significant applications is addressed, including bio-hybrid devices in neuronal cell monitoring, bio-reactor devices in tissue engineering and microfluidic devices in Lab-On-Chip technology
A systematic review of barriers and facilitators to mammography in Hispanic women
Purpose: A systematic review of the research on barriers and facilitators to mammography in Latinas was conducted to determine if the challenges faced by these women are unique to this population.
Method: Medline and CINAHL database searches for the years 2005-2013 were included. The PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses) guidelines were used to guide this review.
Results: Of the 174 articles identified, 18 articles met inclusion criteria. The most consistent findings were that income and education were associated with screening.
Conclusions: Financial barriers and social characteristics were significant predictors of mammography in these studies, which were composed almost exclusively of low-income Latinas. These findings are similar to those found in other populations of low-income women and therefore are not likely unique to Latinas.
Implications for Practice: It is likely that there is little difference between poor Latinas and other populations of poor, non-English-speaking women in barriers and facilitators to mammography.Peer reviewe
Establishment of the Genetic/Genomic Competency Centerfor Education
Purpose: Develop a trans-disciplinary repository of genomics education resources using a Web-based learning management system. The repository maps and organizes genetic-genomic information and materials relevant to educators by healthcare discipline-specific competencies and performance indicators.Methods: An interdisciplinary project team was established to guide toolkit repository building and usability testing. The toolkit was built using the X-CREDIT software on the Moodle learning management platform, which includes a mapping matrix and browsing function that captures teaching resources in a searchable database linked to competencies, knowledge areas, performance indicators, learning activities and resources, and outcome assessments. Discipline-specific advisory groups assisted in resource identification, competency mapping, and peer review. The toolkit is multidisciplinary, currently including physician assistants and nurses, and provides a resource crosslink to discipline-specific competencies. All resources have a detailed description, and users may contribute new resources, which are peer reviewed for relevance and accuracy by an editorial board. Alpha and beta testing using online usability surveys that included toolkit exercises helped refine the structure, look, and navigation of the final website.Findings: One hundred thirty faculty– 124 nursing and 6 physician assistant faculty– agreed to participate. Of those, 59 users (45.4% response rate) completed the online usability survey. Nearly all users (94.9%) were able to find a competency that was relevant to their topic, and 85.4% were able to locate the relevant performance indicators. The majority (86.5%) felt the model adequately described the relationships between competencies, performance indicators, learning activities-resources, and assessments, and made conceptual sense. Survey respondents reported font color and size made the information difficult to read, windows were not large enough, and the “shopping cart” concept was confusing; all of these areas have been modified for the final toolkit version.Conclusions: Alpha and beta testing of the toolkit revealed that users can successfully obtain educational materials by searching competencies and performance indicators. The platform is accessible on the Internet at http://www.g-2-c-2.org and can be continually updated as new resources become available.Clinical Relevance: Faculty members need easy access to a wide range of accurate, current resources to facilitate integration of genomics into the curriculum.The definitive version is available at www3.interscience.wiley.comPeer reviewedThis project and research was supported by the Intramural Research Program of the National Institutes of Health, including support from the National Human Genome Research Institute and the National Cancer Institute
The Rector of the Seminary
by Jerome Caponi.Typescript.Thesis (J.C.L.)--Catholic University of America, 1964.Bibliography: leaves 71-73.Also available in microfilm
Validation of the cultural cancer screening scale for mammogram utilization in a sample of African American women
Background: The Cultural Cancer Screening Scale (CCSS) was developed to identify cultural factors relevant to breast and cervical cancer screening in a sample of Hispanic and white women in Southern California. This scale identified 5 distinct cultural factors as relevant in cancer screening decision making.
Objective: The purpose of this study was to consider psychometric estimates of the validity and reliability of this scale in a sample of African American women residing in an urban area of New Jersey.
Interventions/Methods: A total of 122 women, aged 40 to 90 years, with no history of breast cancer participated in the study. Internal consistency, reliability, construct, and predictive validity were assessed.
Results: Exploratory factor analysis resulted in the formation of 5 subsets: cancer screening fatalism, negative beliefs about health professionals, catastrophic disease expectations, symptomatic deterrents, and sociocultural deterrents, all clearly independent of each other. The Cronbach’s [alpha] for the composite score of the scale was .89. Predictive validity of the composite scale score was not significant, but 4 cultural items were significant: problems making an appointment, lack of transportation, discomfort with health professionals, and health professionals inappropriately touch their patients.
Conclusions: Overall, the CCSS demonstrated acceptable preliminary values of reliability and validity in this population.
Implications for Practice: Cultural and social factors relevant to cancer screening are very important for all women. The CCSS has not yet been used in nursing research but would be very appropriate for nurses to use to better understand why women choose to access cancer screening services.Peer reviewe
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