6,360 research outputs found

    Kenneth Peacock's Songs of the Newfoundland Outports CD-ROM

    No full text
    Kenneth Peacock's Songs of the Newfoundland Outports, 3 vols., on CD-ROM. -- "Collected between 1951 and 1961 by Kenneth Peacock, under the auspices of what was then the National Museum of Canada, this is the most comprehensive collection of traditional Newfoundland folk music ever complied. With over 500 songs in three volumes, it represents the single greatest contrbution to the preservation of Newfoundland folk song in any format." (case liner

    8.07.001: "The Pink, White and Green" dedicated to Don Walsh by Al Pittman, February 1999

    No full text
    Signed by the author. While this copy is dedicated to Don Walsh, the original poem was dedicated to his brother Des, as indicated below the title

    Patrick J. Walsh Correspondence

    No full text
    Entries include brief biographical information, a typed introductory letter to Walsh concerning the Maine Author Collection and publication notice of his book in an upcoming issue of the Maine Library Bulletin, a handwritten biographical letter of presentation from Walsh on Northern Novelty Company, Monticello, Maine, stationery, and a typed letter on receipt of his book Humor: Informative, Soothing, and Ticklish for the Maine Author Collection from the Maine State Library

    Walsh & Hoyt: Traumatic Optic Neuropathies: Management - Early Studies

    No full text
    Early reports concerning surgical decompression suggested it to be of little value in treating traumatic optic neuropathy. In these cases decompression was performed transcranially. Hooper operated on five patients with traumatic optic neuropathy. Two patients recovered vision, but only one patient had optic canal decompression. Hughes explored 8 cases in his series of 90 patients, with no visual improvement. Edmund and Godtfredsen operated on 6 patients in their series of 22 patients. The vision of only one patient improved following surgery, changing from no light perception to light perception. Based on this experience and the available pathologic material, Walsh felt that visual recovery was unlikely if amaurosis occurred at the moment of impact and advised against surgical intervention. He also cautioned against operating on unconscious patients. However, in cases of delayed visual loss, Walsh suggested that surgical decompression might be more promising

    Walsh & Hoyt: Traumatic Optic Neuropathies: Injury Mechanisms

    No full text
    Optic nerve injury mechanisms are thought of as primary and secondary. Primary mechanisms result in permanent injury to the optic nerve axons at the moment of impact. Walsh felt that primary injury resulted in mechanical shearing of the optic nerve axon and vasculature. In contrast, secondary mechanisms cause damage to the optic nerve subsequent to the force of impact. He suggested that these mechanisms included ongoing vasospasm and swelling of the optic nerve within the confines of the nonexpansile optic canal leading to worsening ischemia and further loss of axons that possessed the potential for recovery immediately following impact

    Letter from Lawrence Walsh to Fr. [...]

    No full text
    Holograph letter from Labhras Breathnach (Lawrence Walsh), Pontificio Collegio Urbano de Propaganda Fide, Via Propaganda 1, Rome, to Fr. [...]. Commenting on a work entitled 'La conversione del mondo infidele' which makes reference to England as 'la vecchia isola dei Santi', explaining that he wrote to the author, and asking about a book supposedly written by Oliver Plunkett on the question. Enclosing holograph letter reply from the author [...] in which he protests great admiration for Ireland and defends his use of the title for England

    Letter from Robert J. Walsh Jr., Chief, Freedom of Information/Privacy Office, Department of the Army, to Michi Weglyn, July 23, 1990

    No full text
    A letter from Robert J. Walsh Jr., Chief, Freedom of Information/Privacy Office, Department of the Army, to Michi Weglyn. The letter is a response to Weglyn's 1988 Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), regarding records on the Japanese American Citizenship League (JACL).These materials are from box 73 and 74 of the Frank Chin Papers. The Frank Chin Papers contain personal and professional correspondence between Frank Chin and Michi Weglyn relating to particular projects on which either author was working as well as files related to the Day of Remembrance Tribute to Michi Weglyn

    Alien Registration- Walsh, E Kenneth (Portland, Cumberland County)

    No full text
    https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/21710/thumbnail.jp

    The Boys of St. Vincent

    No full text
    Videocassette of a film dramatization, loosely based on events which occurred at an orphanage operated by the Irish Christian Brothers religious order in St. John's, Newfoundland, in the 1970s; and on subsequent revelations from former residents of orphanages in Ontario, and natives in religious schools on reserves in Western Canada. The film, with a screenplay by Des Walsh, won numerous awards, including seven Gemini Awards in 1994

    Panel III: Military Cooperation and Questions of Law

    No full text
    Appearing: Scott L. Silliman (Duke University, School of Law), chair; William Fenrick (International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia), Marco Sassoli (University of Geneva, Switzerland), Gary Walsh (NORAD and US Northern Command), and Colonel Kenneth W. Watkin (Canadian Forces), panelists
    corecore