219 research outputs found
Apprentice indenture, Charles Goodfellow Index: Royal Society Collection
Apprentice Indenture, Charles Goodfellow, 20 Sept. 1870.
Indenture of apprenticeship of Charles Goodfellow,
son of Robert Goodfellow of Hyler, Co. Cornwall (U.K.),
to William Henry Lean of Falmouth, master shipwright, to
serve for seven years from 3 November 1863 (sic).
Endorsed with certificate of satisfactory completion.
signed, sealed with 3 small wafer seals.
J. Walker, Hill Ledger, see RS 20/3
RS 461
The People's Poet transformed: Geoff Goodfellow in conversation with Garry Costello
An Author event presented by The Friends of the University of Adelaide Library and held in the Ira Raymond Room, Barr Smith Library, 16 May 2019Legendary performance poet and short prose writer Geoff Goodfellow has performed his poetry at schools, jails, colleges, universities, construction sites, factories, rock concerts and literary festivals, across Australia and in Canada, the United States, Cuba, China, Europe and the United Kingdom
Goodfellow Fund
The Fourth Annual Goodfellow Ball was held at the Hotel Texas, with great success. Attendance at the ball was one way of giving underprivileged families in Fort Worth, Texas, a real Christmas. The event was sponsored by the Business and Professional Women\u27s Club and all proceeds are being donated to the Goodfellow Fund, which provides aid to families in need. Pictured during the presentation of a $1,660 check to Goodfellows, left to right, are Mrs. Audie Largent, Henry Love, and Mrs. Ida Belle Hicks. Mrs. Largent led the sales contest by selling 259 tickets. She is wearing a hat, blouse, striped blazer, and a matching skirt. Mr. Love is the manager of Hotel Texas. He is dressed in a double breasted pinstripe suit. Mrs. Hicks, of the Star-Telegram, is accepting the check on behalf of the Goodfellows. She is wearing a hat and a coat.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1940s/12055/thumbnail.jp
Knowledge co-production and behavioural change: collaborative approaches for promoting sustainable mobility
This is the author accepted manuscript of a chapter published by Goodfellow Publishers in Low Carbon Mobility Transitions, edited by Debbie Hopkins, James Higham.The final version is available from Goodfellow Publishers via the link in this record.Published 2016. ISBN: 978-1-910158-64-7 hbk; 978-1-910158-65-4 eBook.Behavioural change has become regarded as a key tool for policy makers to promote behavioural change that can reduce carbon emissions from personal travel. Recommended changes in travel behaviours range from travel mode shifts (from car to bicycle and walking), through amending established habits (car sharing rather than sole car occupancy) to more radical alternatives, such as reducing short haul flying and replacing such flights with rail travel. Yet academic research has suggested that promoting low carbon travel behaviours, in particular those associated with leisure and tourism practices, is particularly challenging because of the highly valued and conspicuous nature of the consumption involved. Accordingly, traditional top-down approaches to developing behavioural change campaigns have largely been ineffectual in this field and this chapter explores innovative ways to understand and develop behavioural change campaigns that are driven from the bottom upwards. In doing so, we draw on emergent literature from management studies and social marketing to explore how ideas of service dominant logic can be used to engage consumers in developing each stage of a behavioural change campaign. Using data and insights from research conducted in the south-east of the UK, we outline and evaluate the process for co-producing knowledge about low carbon travel and climate change. By focusing on two key segments of traditionally frequent flyers (young professionals and ‘empty nesters’) we illustrate how behavioural change campaign creation can be an engaging, lively and productive process of knowledge and experience sharing. The chapter ends by considering the role that co-production and co-creation can have in developing strategies for low carbon mobility and, more broadly, the ways in which publics understand and react to anthropogenic climate change
The road to recovery Reimagining Kaikoura after a natural disaster
It is widely recognized that tourist destinations are vulnerable to disruptions caused by natural disasters, and understanding tourism response and recovery to natural disasters is a critical topic of research internationally (Mair et al., 2016). Post-disaster recovery is defined as: “the development and implementation of strategies and actions to bring the destination back to a normal (pre-event) condition or an improved state” (Mair et al., 2016: 2). Recovery may commence immediately following a crisis or disaster, or can be delayed if a destination has been considerably damaged and residents and businesses profoundly affected. Scott et al. (2008) have suggested that the disaster recovery process contains three phases – recovery of damaged infrastructure, marketing responses (revolving around communication and recovery marketing), and adaptations to the new system. These phases may occur sequentially or simultaneously, with different stakeholder groups managing them (Mair et al., 2016)
Uncovering Cupid: two hitherto unseen or unknown editions of The Royal Pastime of Cupid, Or New and Most Pleasant Game of the Snake, published by Robert Sayer and Henry Overton
Literature related to The Royal Pastime of Cupid alludes to an edition published by Robert Sayer in the 1770s. The Victoria & Albert Museum holds a copy of the game printed in London by R. H. Laurie, c. 1850. The V&A website offers:
An edition of the Game of the Snake (an adaptation of the Game of the Goose) is known to have been issued by Robert Sayer about 1750. Robert Laurie and James Whittle succeeded Sayer at his premises at 53 Fleet Street in 1794 and were in turn succeeded by R. H. Laurie in 1813; it would appear that the [print] is an impression from the original plate with altered lettering. (V&A Online ).
Similarly, Caroline Goodfellow suggests Laurie’s print “may have been taken from a mid-18th century plate produced for Robert Sayer” (Goodfellow 1991, p. 18). It appears to be assumed that, because Sayer’s stock passed to his assistants, Robert Laurie and James Whittle, Laurie & Whittle’s 1794 edition of the game, and R. H. Laurie’s 1850 edition, were struck from Sayer’s plate. However, a recent discovery by the author shows this assumption is unfounded. This presentation will show Robert Sayer’s “peasant dance” edition of Cupid, thereby demonstrating Laurie & Whittle’s edition uses a unique design not printed from Sayer’s plate.
A second discovery by the author has unearthed another “peasant dance” edition of the Royal Pastime of Cupid published from an address associated with the Overton family. The presentation will also briefly review the various locations of the White Horse and several Overton catalogues to suggest this edition was published by Henry Overton c. 1717
Goodfellow Ball, advance preparation
Preparations for the fourth annual Goodfellows Ball at Hotel Texas on November 29, 1941, were discussed at this meeting in the Continental Bank. Left to right are Mrs. Sheldon H. Wilson, president of the Business and Professional Women\u27s Club; Miss Ruth Townsen, immediate past president of the club, and Henry Love (standing), Hotel Texas manager. The club and the hotel are sponsoring the benefit for The Star-Telegram Goodfellows Fund. Mrs. Wilson and Miss Townsen are sitting at a desk, looking at documents and Mr. Love is standing beside them. On the desk are pieces of paper, keys, a book and a lamp. Mrs. Wilson is wearing a blouse, coat and skirt, Miss Townsen is wearing a dress and hat, and Mr. Love is wearing a suit.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1940s/10138/thumbnail.jp
FGFR2 Polymorphisms and Endometrial Cancer Risk
Mentor: Paul J. Goodfellow
From the Washington University Undergraduate Research Digest: WUURD, Volume 5, Issue 2, Spring 2010. Published by the Office of Undergraduate Research.
Henry Biggs, Director of Undergraduate Research and Associate Dean in the College of Arts & Sciences; Joy Zalis Kiefer, Undergraduate Research Coordinator, Co-editor, and Assistant Dean in the College of Arts & Sciences; Kristin Sobotka, Editor
Trajectories of functional limitations, health-related quality of life and societal costs in individuals with Long COVID: a population based longitudinal cohort study
Objectives: to examine trajectories of functional limitations, fatigue, health-related quality of life (HRQL) and societal costs of patients referred to long COVID clinics.Design: longitudinal single-arm service evaluation utilising real-time user data.Setting: 35 Long COVID clinics in the UK.Participants: 4087 adults diagnosed with long COVID in primary or secondary care deemed suitable for rehabilitation, and registered in the Living With Covid Recovery (LWCR) programme between 4 August 2020 and 5 August 2022.Main outcome measures: generalised linear mixed models were fitted to estimate trajectories of functional limitations, using the Work and Social Adjustment Scale (WSAS); scores of ≥20 indicate moderately severe limitations. Secondary outcomes included fatigue using the Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy – Fatigue (FACIT-F) reversed score (scores of ≥22 indicate impairment), HRQL using the EQ-5D-5L, and long COVID-related societal costs, encompassing healthcare costs and productivity losses. Results: the mean WSAS score at 6 months after registration in the LWCR was 19.1 (95% confidence interval (CI) 18.6, 19.6), with 46% of the participants (95% CI 40.3%, 52.4%) reporting a WSAS score above 20 (moderately severe or worse impairment). The mean change in the WSAS score over the 6-month period was -0.86 (95% CI -1.32, -0.41). The mean reversed FACIT-F score at 6 months was 29.1 (95% CI 22.7, 35.5) compared to 32.0 (95% CI 31.7, 32.3) at baseline. The mean EQ-5D-5L score remained relatively constant between baseline (0.63, 95% CI 0.62, 0.64) and 6 months (0.64, 95% CI 0.59, 0.69). The monthly societal cost per patient related to long COVID at 6 months was £931, mostly driven by the costs associated with working days lost. Conclusions: individuals referred to long COVID clinics in the UK reported small improvements in functional limitations, fatigue, HRQL and ability to work within 6 months of registering in the LWCR programme.<br/
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