2,317 research outputs found
[Telegram from E. D. Joost to Giles B. Cook - October 3, 1933]
Telegram from E. D. Joost, secretary on behalf of Odelia R. Staiti, to the Reverend Giles B. Cook informing him of the passing of H. T. Staiti on Monday, October 2, 1933
Doris Giles
After Doris had completed her nursing training at the Brisbane General Hospital, John Flynn asked her to come and work at the Penola Home for the Australian Inland Mission Hospital at Maranboy in 1922, along with her friend Jean Herd. During her time at the hospital there was not a doctor who visited regularly, so that Doris and Jean were left to manage the hospital and treat all sorts of illnesses. The hospital was also the social centre for the surrounding area with a library and gramophone. Among the young men who visited, was Harold Giles, a policeman station nearby. In 1924, Doris went to Melbourne for midwifery training and on her return to Darwin she married Harold. The couple commenced their married life at the Kahlin Compound, they had four children. In 1928, Harold resigned from the police force to take up a position as manager of Elsey Station near Mataranka. Times where hard and isolating, often Doris and the children were left for long period's time to manage the station with a cook and one stockman while the rest were out on a cattle muster.
In 1940, part of the homestead was washed away by a big flood they escaped on a raft built by the stockmen and others at the station. When the Japanese started bombing raids in the Territory, Doris and her two children were evacuated to Brisbane. Months later she retuned to look after visitors and soldiers who came in truck loads each day for their meals. In 1941 the Giles bought a house at Indooroopilly where Doris and the children lived for part of each year while the children attended school. They sold their home in 1955 and moved to Sandgate, Harold died in 1960 and Doris in July 1979.Nurs
Telegram from Curtis Cook to Amon G. Carter, Jr.
Telegram from Curtis Cook, Managing Editor of the Wichita Falls Record News, to Amon G. Carter, Jr. upon the death of Amon Giles Carter. The telegram expresses condolences about his death.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_meachamcarterpapers/1363/thumbnail.jp
Lamar Giles, 40th Annual ODU Literary Festival
Lamar Giles writes novels and short stories for teens and adults. He is the author of the 2015 Edgar® Award Nominee Fake ID, the 2016 Edgar® Award Nominee Endangered, and Overturned from Scholastic Press. He is a founding member of We Need Diverse Books and resides in Virginia with his wife. Check him out online at www.lamargiles.com or follow @LRGiles on Twitter
Letter from Oblinger, Uriah W. to Cook, John; Cook, Eliza
Letter from Oblinger, Uriah W. (Uriah Wesley), 1842-1901 to Cook, John; Cook, Eliza (Eliza Oblinger
Antipodean American Literary Studies: An Interview with Paul Giles
Paul Giles is Challis Professor of English at the University of Sydney, Australia. He is the author of many books discussing English, American, and Australian literature from transnational perspectives, including American Catholic Arts and Fictions: Culture, Ideology, Aesthetics (Cambridge University Press, 1992), Virtual Americas: Transnational Fictions and the Transatlantic Imaginary (Duke University Press, 2002), The Global Remapping of American Literature (Princeton University Press, 2011..
Schooling and education.
Schooling and education by Giles R. Wright with Howard L. Green and Lee R. Parks. Number 4 in the New Jersey Ethnic Life Series. Published by New Jersey Historical Commission
William Watson, Mr. and Mrs. Cully A. Cobb, William L. Giles, Jack Cook
MSU Alumni Association president William Watson (left) is shown presenting a plaque to Mr. and Mrs. Cully A. Cobb for their generosity to MSU. Looking on at the presentation were Dr. W. L. Giles, MSU President (second from right), and Jack Cook (right), alumni association treasurer.https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/ua-photo-collection/6086/thumbnail.jp
Exploration of decision support tools to rationalize antimicrobial use in bovine respiratory disease
Eén van de grootste bedreigingen voor kalveren op vlak van dierenwelzijn, economische verliezen en gezondheid zijn respiratoire aandoeningen (Boviene respiratoire aandoeningen, BRD). In de zoektocht om BRD en de nadelige effecten ervan te beheersen en minimaliseren, worden antimicrobiële groepsbehandelingen vaak ingezet. Met de opkomst van antibioticaresistentie in zowel de humane en veterinaire geneeskunde, moet het antibioticumgebruik bij landbouwhuisdieren reduceren en rationaliseren. Momenteel wordt er nog steeds gebruik gemaakt van het BRD-concept om dieren te selecteren voor behandeling, maar dit concept is gebaseerd op klinische tekenen en omvat een breed scala aan respiratoire aandoening, variërend van een eenvoudige verkoudheid tot een levensbedreigende longontsteking. Deze werkwijze resulteert ongewild in overmatig en onoordeelkundig gebruik van antibiotica. Dus weten welk kalf te behandelen is een prangende vraag. Daarom beoogt deze PhD-thesis te helpen verduidelijken welke klinische tekenen of biomarkers kunnen worden gebruikt voor doeleinden zoals vroegtijdige waarschuwing, detectie van (bacteriële) longontsteking, diagnose van betrokken ademhalingspathogenen en therapie-initiatie
Diversity in action : minority group media and social change (text-only version)
This magazine, written by Melissa Giles, features three Brisbane-based media organisations: Radio 4RPH, Queensland Pride and 98.9FM. The PDF file on this website contains a text-only version of the magazine. Contact the author if you would like a copy of the text-only EPUB file or a copy of the full digital magazine with images. An audio version of the magazine is available at http://eprints.qut.edu.au/41729/\ud
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