699 research outputs found
Aubrey Toulmin Carney contract, MSS.0281
Abstract: A contract dated 20 April 1950, with Charles Scribners Sons for her book, No Odds - No Victory.Scope and Content Note: The collection contains a contract dated 20 April 1950, with Charles Scribners Sons for her book, No Odds - No Victory.Biographical/Historical Note: Alabama author, Margaret Aubrey Toulmin Carney (Mrs. Fletcher Carney), was born 12 January 1921, in Dayton, Ohio, to Harry Aubrey and Margaret McCarty Toulmin. She attended Smith College, and later married Fletcher Burchnall Carney. She was a report for the Dayton Daily News and the Albuquerque Tribune. She was also a research assistant for her father and later an assistant dormitory director at the University of Alabama.She published No Certain Answer (1947) and No Odds - No Victory (1951).Carney died on 2 December 1989
Drawing paper 8.
Drawing Paper - the free newspaper-based gallery concerned with contemporary drawing practice - returns. Our 8th issue was curated and produced in collaboration with Anne Douglas, Kate Genever and Amanda Ravetz
Kids Cut Right Through the Nonsense;
Rob Carney is the author of the flash-essay collection Accidental Gardens and eight books of poems, most recently Call and Response (Black Lawrence Press 2021) and The Book of Sharks (Black Lawrence 2018), which was a finalist for the Washington State Book Award. He is a recipient of the Robinson Jeffers/Tor House Foundation Award for Poetry, a featured contributor to Terrain.org, and his work has appeared in dozens of journals. He lives in Salt Lake City
Kaslo School class
Back row: Fred Bell, Raymond Grothe, David Wheaton, Howard Long, John Lindsay , Ray Goodwin, Bill Turner, ________, Earnest Wood, Fred Green, Clinton Wood, Bert Goodwin, Jim Carney, Hilliard Hartin, ________, Arthur Brown, Douglas Bruce, Bert Lindsay. 2nd row: Miss Moore, Miss McTaggart, Celia Green, _______, _____ Miller, Miriam Vallance, Cora Murchison, Pearl Speirs, Kate Riddell, Agnes Vallance, Sarah Carney, Ida Nelson, ______, Jessie Millington, Minnie Nelson, Millie Goodwin, Ira Lindsay, Tommy Carney, Lockie Hodder, Charlie Wheaton?, Mr. Hislop. 3rd row: Olive _____, Leah Miller, Maggie Bell, Kate Bell, ______, Winnie Wood, Donna Livingston, ______, Lucille Perkins, ______, _____, Mary Vallance, Livingston, Harry Hodder, Gussie Carney, Bobby McKinney. 4th row seated on ground: Davis, Lettie Power, Lillie Hodder, Winnie Brown, Bell?, Kate Bell?, Lindsay, Lawrence Davis, ______, Earl Davenport, ________, Bobby Green, David Hartin. Same as 988.040.0410
Quotations from Chairman David (A Little Red Book of Truths to Enlighten and Guide on the Long March Toward the COTS Revolution)
Quotations from Chairman David is a brief and humorous examination of some issues related to commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) products in DoD and government systems. The author, David Carney, has borrowed from a most unusual historical source-a certain "Little Red Book" popular in the 1960s-and put together some useful observations on some of the facts and fictions that underlie the current interest in COTS-based systems
Supplement Series for the Journal of Religion & Society
The manipulation of collective identity has been a central theme in modern genocide. In the Rwandan context, postcolonial violence and the 1994 genocide were organized around the collective identities of “Hutu” and “Tutsi.” This article examines four different interpretive schools of “Hutu” and “Tutsi” identities and offers a theological analysis of the potentials and pitfalls of “Christian identity” in the contemporary Rwandan context. Drawing on both written and oral sources, the author argues that the German theologian Johann-Baptist Metz’s “memory of suffering” and the Catholic theological and pastoral commitment to “communion” can offer particular contributions to post-genocide reconciliation in Rwanda.Religion and IdentityReligion and Identity189-2011
Supplement Series for the Journal of Religion & Society
Despite their central importance for Ignatius of Loyola and the early generations of the Society of Jesus, sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Jesuit missions in Ethiopia are largely unknown in comparison to Jesuit encounters in China, Japan, India, Canada, and South America. This article offers a brief historical overview of these Jesuit Ethiopian missions between 1555 and 1640. The author also highlights six resonances between this early modern story of cross-cultural encounter and twenty-first-century mission and globalization. These include the imagination of a global Islamic menace; the dangers to Christian mission posed by political power and elitist paternalism; the need to envision catholicity as unity in diversity rather than unity in uniformity; the resurgence of religious and cultural traditionalism in the face of cosmopolitan globalization; and the importance to mission of long-term presence.|Keywords: Jesuit, Ethiopia, Pedro Páez, globalization, missionReligion and Globalization4-151
Interview with Rob Carney
Rob Carney is the author of eight books of poems, including Call and Response (Black Lawrence Press, 2021) and The Book of Sharks (Black Lawrence Press, 2018), which was named a finalist for the Washington State Book Award. Additionally, he is the author of Accidental Gardens (Stormbird Press, 2021), a collection of 42 flash essays about the environment, politics, and poetics; and the children’s book How the Baby Seal Was Born and Other Fables (Little Nomad, forthcoming). In 2014 he received the Robinson Jeffers/Tor House Foundation Award for Poetry. His work has appeared in Cave Wall, Columbia Journal, The Dark Mountain Project, and many others, and he writes a regularly featured series called “Old Roads, New Stories” for Terrain. org. He has a BA in English from Pacific Lutheran University (Tacoma, WA), an MFA: Creative Writing from Eastern Washington University (Spokane, WA), and a PhD from the University of Louisiana-Lafayette (Lafayette, LA). His teaching emphases include Modern American Literature, American Literature from 1865-to-Present, the Study of Drama, Poetry Writing, Modern Legacies for the Honors Program, as well as Special Topics and Eminent Authors courses
From poverty street to golden square [music] /
"Sung by Miss Kate Carney".; Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.mus-an12089076
Mutations in the protein kinase A R1α regulatory subunit cause familial cardiac myxomas and Carney complex
Cardiac myxomas are benign mesenchymal tumors that can present as components of the human autosomal dominant disorder Carney complex. Syndromic cardiac myxomas are associated with spotty pigmentation of the skin and endocrinopathy. Our linkage analysis mapped a Carney complex gene defect to chromosome 17q24. We now demonstrate that the PRKAR1α gene encoding the R1α regulatory subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase A (PKA) maps to this chromosome 17q24 locus. Furthermore, we show that PRKAR1α frameshift mutations in three unrelated families result in haploinsufficiency of R1α and cause Carney complex. We did not detect any truncated R1α protein encoded by mutant PRKAR1α. Although cardiac tumorigenesis may require a second somatic mutation, DNA and protein analyses of an atrial myxoma resected from a Carney complex patient with a PRKAR1α deletion revealed that the myxoma cells retain both the wild-type and the mutant PRKAR1α alleles and that wild-type R1α protein is stably expressed. However, in this atrial myxoma, we did observe a reversal of the ratio of R1α to R2α regulatory subunit protein, which may contribute to tumorigenesis. Further investigation will elucidate the cell-specific effects of PRKAR1α haploinsufficiency on PKA activity and the role of PKA in cardiac growth and differentiation
- …
