953 research outputs found
Rosemary Stanton on ethical eating
There once was a time when what to have for dinner was a simple choice, decided by cost and availability. But no longer. In a world with increasingly diminishing resources, eating is now complicated by a range of social, environmental and agricultural concerns. Choosing our food is getting confusing, but here, talking at UTS in Sydney, nutritionist Rosemary Stanton gives some practical advice on ethical eating. She is joined by researcher Dana Cordell, who\u27s been studying the environmental implications of the decreasing supply of phosperous in Australia and the world. The event is chaired by Prof. Stuart White from UTS\u27s Institute for Sustainable Futures, and presented as part of the UTSpeaks Series.
Professor Stuart White has been researching sustainability for the last twenty years. In 1998 he was a member of the NSW Task Force on Water Conservation.
Dr Rosemary Stanton is a nutritionist and author of numerous books on the topic of healthy eating. She is also a member of the NSW Health Department\u27s Food Advisory Committee.
Dana Cordell is a senior researcher and doctoral student at the Institute for Sustainable Futures (ISF) at the University of Technology, Sydney. She is also co-founder of the Global Phosphorus Research Initiative.
 
Progress - The changing times.
Interview with Old Scholar and author Rosemary Hemphill (Goldie) about her memories of St Hilda's
Linked CD4 T cell help: broadening immune attack against cancer by vaccination
In the last decade, immunotherapy with monoclonal antibodies targeting immunological check points has become a breakthrough therapeutic modality for solid cancers. However, only up to 50 % of patients benefit from this powerful approach. For others vaccination might provide a plausible addition or alternative. For induction of effective anticancer immunity CD4+ T cell help is required, which is often difficult to induce to self cancer targets because of tolerogenic mechanisms. Our approach for cancer vaccines has been to incorporate into the vaccine design sequences able to activate foreign T cell help, through genetically linking cancer targets to microbial sequences (King et al. in Nat Med 4(11):1281–1286, 1998; Savelyeva et al. in Nat Biotechnol 19(8):760–764, 2001). This harnesses the non-tolerized CD4 T cell repertoire available in patients to help induction of effective immunity against fused cancer antigens. Multiple immune effector mechanisms including antibody, CD8+ T cells as well as CD4 effector T cells can be activated using this strategy. Delivery via DNA vaccines has already indicated clinical efficacy. The same principle of linked T cell help has now been transferred to other novel vaccine modalities to further potentiate immunity against cancer targets
Reader, text, and culture: how three agents transact while reading children's picturebooks
This dissertation explores reading, specifically describing the roles of reader, text, and culture in reading events. The study is grounded in the cultural theory of reading, framing reading as a transaction in which reader, text, and culture all act agentively. The study conflates theories of metacognitive reading, narrative conventions, children’s literature, multimodality, and the role of cultural knowledge in reading in order to thoroughly describe each agent’s roles. Data was collected through a think-aloud protocol in which a group of elementary school students individually read and shared their thinking about children’s fictional picturebooks. The readers’ statements while reading were then analyzed quantitatively in terms of the agentive moves made by reader, text, and culture. Data analysis of the agency of readers showed that readers most frequently performed five commonly described reading behaviors: summary, inference, prediction, synthesis, and making connections. The behaviors are further described in terms of their content and patterns of their individual use as well as their use in combination with other behaviors. Data analysis of the role of text demonstrated that that both written text and illustration acted frequently, though written text dominated the transactions. The study presents a catalog of textual conventions that pertain specifically to children’s fictional picturebooks. The study also describes how texts gradually release responsibility to readers. Data analysis of the role of culture demonstrated that genre-related knowledge was the type of extratextual knowledge that most frequently acted in the reading event. Knowledge of specific cultures portrayed in the text had little effect on interpretations. These findings are of potential significance for reading teachers and book publishers. The author suggests questions for future investigation which might clarify or confirm these findings.Ed. D.Includes bibliographical referencesby Rosemary Kin
Front Cover (Summer 2020)
The cover art is by Rosemary Gallick. This acrylic painting was created as a reflection on losing a dear colleague, friend, and well known national author who was part of the VCCS. When Bob Bausch passed last year, Rosemary wondered where his feisty energy had gone. Spirits Rising is a hopeful and uplifting artwork that transcends the physical world. Gallick believes that the artwork embraces the theme of New Horizons and visually imagines the possibilities
Sharing the Magic: The caregiver's guide to quality dementia care recreation and social programming
Sharing the Magic is the long awaited follow up to Discovering Adventure in Special Care. A book for professional caregivers with tips and models of approach to enhance interaction with those living with dementia. Use this terrific resource to help plan programs, develop a "social meals program", enhance socialization and learn how others have created a community within the special care environment. Rosemary Dunne presents another fine work in her easy to read style. Contributor, Barbara Moffatt, lends her experiences, stories and resident reflections to help make this book as insightful and proactive as Discovering Adventure in Special Care.bookPublished
Sense of Origins. A Study of New York's Young Italian Americans
In Sense of Origins, the author explores the lives of a significant group of self-identified young Italian Americans residing in New York City and its surrounding areas. The book presents and examines the results of a survey she conducted of their values, family relationships, prejudices and stereotypes, affiliations, attitudes and behaviors, and future perspectives of Italian American culture. The core of the study focuses on self-identification with Italian cultural heritage and analyzes it according to five aspects—physical, personality, cultural, psychological, and emotional/affective.
The data provides insights into today’s young Italian Americans and the ways their perception of reality in everyday interactions is affected by their heritage, while shedding light on the value and symbolic references that come with an Italian heritage. Through her rendering of relevant facets that emerge from the study, the author constructs interpretative models useful for outlining the physiognomy and characterization of second, third, fourth, and fifth generations of Italian Americans. In the current climate, questions of ethnicity and migrant identity around the world make Sense of Origins useful not only to the Italian American community but also to the descendants of the innumerable present-day migrants who find themselves living in countries different from those of their ancestors. The book will resonate in future explorations of ethnic identity in the United States
Chao Yuen Ren (1892–1982)
Y. R. Chao is easily the most famous linguist to have come out of China. Born before the end of the last dynasty in China, he received a traditional Confucian education, but was also one of the first Chinese people to be sent to the West for training in modern Western science (under the Boxer Indemnity Fund). The remarkable breadth and scope of his studies included physics, mathematics, linguistics, musical and literary composition, and translation, and he was a pioneer in many of these fields
Water-Jug and Plover’s Feather: Rudyard Kipling’s India in Rosemary Sutcliff’s Roman Britain
An exploration of Rosemary Sutcliff\u27s recuperative incorporation of elements of Rudyard Kipling\u27s fictions of India in her young adult novels of Roman Britain. -author supplied descriptio
Noisy Nora artwork : Preservation Lab Treatment Report
Acclaimed author and illustrator, Rosemary Wells, has written many endearing children’s books including Noisy Nora (a story about a mischievous young mouse). As part of Ms. Well’s initiative, Real Art for Young Artists, in 2019, Rosemary Wells generously donated more than a dozen original illustrations for long‐term display at the Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County. The opening for the exhibition is September 15th, 2019 at 2pm at the Children’s Library in the Main building downtown. The newly acquired illustrations are drawn in pen and India ink. There are 16 drawings (26 x 38 cm or smaller) and one booklet containing 8 pages (16 x 12 cm). To prepare the materials for long‐term exhibition, the Preservation Lab worked with numerous colleagues to carefully balance preservation standards with viewer’s needs, while also striving to maintain the artist’s intended interpretation of their work.View Catalog Record</a
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