9,807 research outputs found
[Labor's Wayne Swan, Kevin Rudd, Opposition Leader Simon Crean and Mark Latham meet for their usual fortnightly discussion amidst speculations of leadership challenge] 2002 [picture] /
Condition: Good.; Title devised by cataloguer.; Inscriptions: signed "O'Neill" - l.l.corner. "18 x 20 - SMH - news review - Alan Ramsey column" - in pencil l.c. "SMH 15-11-02 for Sat 16-11-02" - in pencil l.r.; Part of: Ward O'Neill collection.; Also available in an electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn3585601
Author Profile: Thomas Ward
"I can never resist fresh sushi with a cup of green tea. My greatest achievement has been our three wonderful kids. …" This and more about Thomas Ward can be found on page 4722
2010-2011 Jesmyn Ward
Jesmyn Ward received her MFA from the University of Michigan and is currently an associate professor of creative writing at Tulane University. She is the author of the novels Where the Lines Bleeds and Salvage the Bones, which won the 2011 National Book Award. She is also the editor of the anthology The Fire This Time and the author of the memoir Men We Reaped, which was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. In 2016, the American Academy of Arts and Letters selected Ward for the Strauss Living Award. (Photo credit: Tony Cook)https://egrove.olemiss.edu/grisham_res/1009/thumbnail.jp
Paul Ward Interview
This interview is an oral history conducted by Rich Schmidt with Paul Ward. The interview took place at Linfield University on January 7, 2020.
The interview was conducted as part of Linfield University\u27s project celebrating the 65th anniversary of The Streak. Linfield\u27s football team has not had a losing record in a season since 1955, an unprecedented run of success. These interviews are with people who contributed to the 1956 Linfield team that won the conference championship and began The Streak.
Linfield team working on this project include: Matthew Hodges (\u2706), Rich Schmidt, Kevin Curry (\u2792), Mike Lempner, Kiana Anderson (\u2720), and Zell Burke (\u2723)
Henry Ward Beecher portrait
Rev. Henry Ward Beecher (1813-1887) studied at Lane Theological Seminary in Cincinnati, Ohio, and gained a reputation for his oratorical skills. In his sermons, he vehemently attacked drinking and slavery and called for more women's rights. He even convinced his congregations to equip a regiment of soldiers for the American Civil War, along with sending guns to anti-slavery factions during "Bleeding Kansas." His sister, Harriet Beecher Stowe, was the author of Uncle Tom's Cabin
Studies on the immunochemistry of respiratory syncytial virus
Nine respiratory syncytial (RS) virus polypeptides, VP200, VGP95, VP68, VGP48, VPN41, VP35, VP27, VP23 and VGP20 were identified by comparing 35 S-cysteine/methionine labelled extracts of infected and uninfected HEp-2 cells, and by radioimmunoprecipitation using a hyperimmune human serum. Three of these polypeptides, VGP95, VGP48 and VGP20 were shown to be glycosylated by incorporation of 3H-glucosamine. VGP48, VP23 and VGP20 were shown to comprise a disulphide bond-linked protein as they were coprecipitated by a monoclonal antibody and resolved as a single band (Mr 75K) by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under non-reducing conditions. VPN41 was shown to be the major nucleoprotein by purification of the nucleocapsid. A rapid method for the partial purification of the nucleocapsid from infected cells was devised, and the conditions required to obtain detergent-soluble preparations of VPN41 were determined. Two-dimensional peptide mapping of VPN41 revealed considerable structural conservation among the nucleoproteins from strains of RS virus isolated in Southampton over five consecutive years, and from two laboratory strains. Bovine RS virus nucleoprotein was also shown to be closely related to nucleoproteins from the human strains by peptide mapping. Preliminary data obtained by an enzyme-linked immunoabsorbent assay showed cross-reactivity of monoclonal antibodies among nucleoproteins from all strains. Monoclonal antibodies were raised to the nucleoprotein and used to demonstrate that VPN41 was susceptible to cleavage into two major fragments, Mr 27K and 14K, during the preparation of nucleocapsids from infected Vero or bovine kidney cells, but not from HEp-2 cells. Similar cleavage of VPN41 was observed when nucleocapsids prepared from HEp-2 cells were treated with trypsin. Human serum antibody levels to the major nucleoprotein and to the two glycoproteins were measured by radioimmunoprecipitation using detergent soluble, radioiodinated antigens. Sera from a group of mothers whose babies escaped RS virus infection during a local epidemic showed increased antibody levels to VPN41 when compared to sera from mothers whose babies had become infected with RS virus within the first 6 months of life. In infants who remained uninfected with RS virus during the first 12 months of life the maternal gift of antibody decayed to about 50% at 3 months with traces of antibodies detected in a few sera at 12 months. The antibody levels detected in the sera of infants less than 3 months old convalescent from primary RS virus infection did not exceed the mean levels present in the serum of uninfected babies. Infants between the ages of 6 and 12 months were able to mount an IgG response to VPN41 and VGP48 but, unlike adults, a particularly striking finding was their failure to produce antibodies to VGP95.</p
Tintásüveg: Egy biblioterápiai gyűjtemény margójára
This article reports on a two-year project, Reading for Recovery(R4R), made possible by the Carnegie-Whitney grant from the American Library Association. The goal was to build a tool with the purpose of facilitating library resources for creative and informal bibliotherapy geared toward people with substance use/abuse problems. In addition to first introducing the results of their work in an article to Hungarian audiences vested tremendously in bibliotherapy, the author wishes to share the difficulties project staff members had to face. Besides issues caused by a major change at the host institution (and out of project staff's control), staff members also had to develop individual strategies to handle the hardship caused by the topic itself. The author, principal investigator of R4R, for example, ended up writing short stories from the material they handled. One example is also included, along with questions to help working with the text individually or in a group setting, such as a book club, a model R4R promotes.Peer reviewedIn Hungarian
Tintásüveg: Egy biblioterápiai gyűjtemény margójára
This article reports on a two-year project, Reading for Recovery(R4R), made possible by the Carnegie-Whitney grant from the American Library Association. The goal was to build a tool with the purpose of facilitating library resources for creative and informal bibliotherapy geared toward people with substance use/abuse problems. In addition to first introducing the results of their work in an article to Hungarian audiences vested tremendously in bibliotherapy, the author wishes to share the difficulties project staff members had to face. Besides issues caused by a major change at the host institution (and out of project staff's control), staff members also had to develop individual strategies to handle the hardship caused by the topic itself. The author, principal investigator of R4R, for example, ended up writing short stories from the material they handled. One example is also included, along with questions to help working with the text individually or in a group setting, such as a book club, a model R4R promotes.Peer reviewedIn Hungarian
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