131,775 research outputs found

    Double Irish Chain quilt, by Lena Ida Sonderegger Anderson

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    Image of Double Irish Chain quilt created early 1900s by Lena Ida Sonderegger Anderson. Also includes questionnaires describing the quilt completed by Wilva S. Anderson as part of the Utah Quilt Guild\u27s documentation days held from 1988-1994. Estimated date of fabric in quilt-1915; Lena made quilts for pleasure and out of necessity; Wilva inherited the quilt from her mother in-Law, Lena Anderso

    Letter from S. C. Anderson to S. B. Simmons. Letter from S. B. Simmons to S. C. Anderson

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    Letter from S. C. Anderson to S. B. Simmons, concerning plans for exhibit. Letter from S. B. Simmons to S. C. Anderson, concerning plans for meeting

    Letter from S. C. Anderson to S. B. Simmons. Letter from S. B. Simmons to S. C. Anderson

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    Letter from S. C. Anderson to S. B. Simmons, concerning visit to Test Farm. Letter from S. B. Simmons to S. C. Anderson, apologizing for not being able to visit the Test Farm

    Letter from S. C. Anderson to S. B. Simmons

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    Letter from S. C. Anderson to S. B. Simmons, concerning ham show, Thanksgiving donations, and exhibition

    Chapter 14: MD Anderson Publications and Publication Ethics

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    Dr. Goepfert has served on a number of editorial boards and is keenly interested in the educational dissemination of information critical to cancer research. In this section he talks about some of MD Anderson’s publications and also addresses some controversies with publication. He first raises the ethical issue of how authorship is assigned to a manuscript going out for publication. Today there are guidelines for assigning authorship, but twenty years ago, he explains, some department chairs at MD Anderson reviewed all manuscripts going for publication and insisted on being listed as first author of an article, whether they made any contribution to the research or not. Dr. Goepfert contrasts his own practice of putting his name on a paper only if he has contributed. Dr. Goepfert then shifts subjects and describes several MD Anderson educational publications, beginning with Cancer Bulletin, distributed free to all physicians across Texas.https://openworks.mdanderson.org/mchv_interviewchapters/2010/thumbnail.jp

    Chapter 1: MD Anderson Culture; and Faculty

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    Dr. Kleinerman begins this chapter by explaining that she came to MD Anderson from the NCI in the early eighties because she was interested in running clinical trials with children diagnosed with osteosarcoma and was unable to do so at the NCI. She recalls her colleagues’ reactions when she said she was going to Texas and notes that despite the growth of MD Anderson’s reputation, there is a lingering perception that the institution is not as good as those in the East and in California. She tells an anecdote that indicates the perception that “we’re yokels.” She notes that MD Anderson never aspired to have the same structure as an academic institution because of the strong focus on cancer and translational research. “We don’t want to be a Harvard, a Yale, a Stanford.”https://openworks.mdanderson.org/mchv_interviewchapters/2394/thumbnail.jp

    Chapter 04: An Opportunity to Work at the New Cancer Hospital, MD Anderson

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    Mrs. McGready sketches how she was working as a medical librarian at University of Texas Medical Branch when she was offered an opportunity to work at MD Anderson. MD Anderson had just come in to Houston, housed in Baker Estate. Dr. Bertner, in charge, everything comes through him. Repeat of story of MD Anderson’s one car, a Ford station wagon.https://openworks.mdanderson.org/mchv_interviewchapters/1055/thumbnail.jp
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