3,530 research outputs found
No.529 Lois Hunter Moser
Transcript (38 pages) of interview by Becky B. Lloyd with Lois Hunter Moser on February 6, 2010Moser (b. 1935) was born in Providence, Rhode Island. She discusses growing up in Cranston, Rhode Island. She entered the Children\u27s Hospital School of Nursing in Boston in 1953. She discusses her school program, classes, requirements, living arrangement, duties, and their uniforms. She began working with polio patients her first year of school and rotated through departments caring for patients in the isolation, acute, and rehabilitative phases of the disease. She discusses topics such as working in warm pools with physical therapists, Stryker beds, working with patients in casts, iron lungs, chest respirators, tilting beds, and applying hot pack therapy and feeding patients in iron lungs. She has retained her course manuals from the time and reads a few sections on specific care for patients. She graduated in 1956 and stayed in full-time nursing until 1963. Ms. Moser is credited with starting the first US all children\u27s recovery room at Boston Children\u27s. She later worked as a nurse volunteer in various activities, including administering polio vaccines to school children. Ms. Moser married and raised two children. This interview is part of the Polio Oral History Project. Interviewer: Becky Lloy
Double Wedding Ring Quilt, owned by Royce and Lois Moser
Image of a Double Wedding Ring quilt created in 1900. Also includes questionnaires describing the quilt completed by Royce and Lois Moser as part of the Utah Quilt Guild\u27s documentation days held from 1988-199
Drunkard\u27s Path quilt, by unknown quilter
Image of Drunkard\u27s Path quilt created circa 1940-1950 by an unknown quilter. Also includes questionnaires describing the quilt completed by Lois Hunter Moser as part of the Utah Quilt Guild\u27s documentation days held from 1988-1994. This quilt was made in Missouri. During World War II (WWII), it was traded for chickens from Moser Hatchery in Versailles, Missour
Kansas Sunflower Variation quilt, by unknown quilter
Image of Kansas Sunflower Variation quilt created by an unknown quilter, date of creation unknown. Also includes questionnaires describing the quilt completed by Lois Hunter Moser as part of the Utah Quilt Guild\u27s documentation days held from 1988-199
Nine Patch quilt, by unknown quilter
Image of Nine Patch quilt created by an unknown quilter, date of creation unknown. Also includes questionnaires describing the quilt completed by Lois Hunter Moser as part of the Utah Quilt Guild\u27s documentation days held from 1988-1994. This quilt was made in Missouri. Estimated date of fabric used in quilt: 187
Turkey Tracks quilt, by Elizabeth Caperton Estes Sims
Image of Turkey Tracks quilt created by Elizabeth Caperton Estes Sims, date of creation unknown. Also includes questionnaires describing the quilt completed by Lois Hunter Moser as part of the Utah Quilt Guild\u27s documentation days held from 1988-1994. This quilt was made in Missouri. Estimated date of fabric used in quilt: 1900
Capstone Project: Implementing The City of Duluth's Keep Duluth Clean Campaign within the UMD Community
Nielsen, Stephanie; Moser, Jaeger; Smith, Hunter. (2020). Capstone Project: Implementing The City of Duluth's Keep Duluth Clean Campaign within the UMD Community. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/254690
To Olga : an appreciation in verse.
Poetic appreciation of Mrs. Olga Hunter, wife of the author. Bound in cream card covers with applied cover label
Kephart the Hunter
This article, pages 5 to 19, is titled, “Kephart the Hunter.” It appears in the January 1914 issue of The Berea Quarterly. On page 2 is a photograph taken from Kephart’s book “Our Southern Highlanders.” Horace Kephart (1862-1931) was a noted naturalist, woodsman, journalist, and author. In 1904, he left St. Louis and permanently moved to western North Carolina. Living and working in a cabin on Hazel Creek in Swain County, Kephart began to document life in the Great Smoky Mountains. “Our Southern Highlanders” was first published in 1913 and revised in 1922
Applicability of Phase-Function Normalization Techniques for Radiation Transfer Computation
The applicability of recently-developed four phase-function (PF) normalization techniques for modeling radiation transfer in strongly anisotropic scattering media is intensively examined using the discrete-ordinate method. The three simple techniques via normalization of only the forward- and/or backward-scattering directions were shown to reduce normalization complexity whilst retaining diffuse radiation computation accuracy for Henyey-Greenstein (HG) PFs. For Legendre PFs, however, such simple techniques are found to result in unphysical negative PF value at one or few correction direction in some cases. Additionally, negative PF values can occur for these simple techniques for ballistic radiation transfer for both HG and Legendre PF types. If negative-intensity correction is applied, however, radiative heat transfer calculation can still converge regardless of the appearance of negative PF values. The relatively complex Hunter and Guo 2012 technique, in which normalization is realized through a correction matrix covering all discrete directions, is shown to be applicable for diffuse and ballistic radiation for both PF types.Peer reviewed
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