1,803,278 research outputs found

    Ray Winfield

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    "Ray Winfield SX25038 Nor Force Sigs 1942-1943"Ray Winfield SX25038 Norforce Signals 1942-1943

    Ladies Aid Society, Winfield Memorial Church collection

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    This collection consists of a ledger containing membership and financial records of the Ladies Aid Society of Winfield Memorial Church, Little Rock, Ark

    Winfield Fine Art in Jewelry

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    Records from the business, Winfield Fine Art in Jewelry, including promotional materials and business correspondence

    Biennial report of the Winfield State Training School. Biennial report of the State Training School Winfield, Kansas. Biennial report of the State Home for Feeble-minded, Winfield, Kansas. Annual and biennial report of the Board of Control of the State Charitable Institutions of Kansas Biennial report of the Board of Control of the State Charitable Institutions of Kansas Kansas. Board of Trustees of State Charities and Corrections., Biennial Report Biennial report of the State School for Feeble-minded Youth at Winfield [Biennial Report of the] Institution for the Education of Idiotic and Imbecile Youth [Biennial Report of the ] State Asylum for Idiotic and Imbecile Youth

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    Vols. for 1902-1904 also included in Biennial report of the Board of Trustees of State Charities and Corrections of the State of Kansas; vol. for 1906 also included in Annual and Biennial report of the Board of Control of the State Charitable Institutions of Kansas; vol. for 1908 also included in Biennial report of the Board of Control of the State Charitable Institutions. In 1984 the Kansas Department of Corrections opened the Winfield Pre-Release Center on the grounds of the State Hospital and in 1989 the name of the Center was changed to Winfield Correctional Facility. In 1996 the State Hospital closed and much of its infrastructure was absorbed by the Correctional Facility, which continues to operate today. See: http://www.doc.ks.gov/facilities/wcf/histor

    Other Titles: Biennial Report of Winfield State Hospital and Training Center, 1960-1980 Winfield State Hospital and Training Center (1960-1980)

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    These biennial reports are summaries of the activities of this agency. They were extracted from a series of Kansas agency reports covering over 100 state agencies and institutions bound together for each biennium., 1959/1960 - 1979/1980. The State Asylum for Idiotic and Imbecilic Youth was first established in 1881 in Lawrence, Kansas. In March of 1887, the entire facility was moved from Lawrence to Winfield. In 1957, the name of the institution was changed to Winfield State Hospital and Training Center.The initial legislation for residential care for the mentally retarded in Kansas was enacted in March of 1881, when the people of Kansas first recognized the need for residential care for the mentally retarded with the establishment of the State Asylum for Idiotic and Imbecilic Youth, designating an old university building (North College hall) situated in Lawrence as a temporary location for the institution. The institution was opened on September 1, 1881. Three years later, the legislature of 1885,relocated the residential facility from Lawrence to Winfield with the donation of a tract of land to the state for this purpose. In March of 1887, the entire facility with 31 residents was moved from Lawrence to Winfield. Custodial care at minimal cost prevailed until 1919 when the facility was renamed the State Training School, reflecting the changing concept that the retarded could be helped and taught to perform some tasks useful to society in general. In 1957, the name of the institution was changed to Winfield State Hospital and Training Center. This change took cognizance of the need for a multidiscipline treatment program rather than a purely educational and training program. Statutory objective of the hospital is 'to examine, treat, educate and rehabilitate the persons admitted so as to make such persons more comfortable, happy and better fitted to care for and support themselves.' In subsequent years, the need for additional treatment facilities for the retarded was recognized with the conversion in 1953 of the Hospital for Epileptics at Parsons to an institution for the retarded and the opening of the Kansas Neurological Institute in Topeka in 1960. Winfield State Hospital and Training Center is currently the oldest and largest of four state institutions for the residential care of the mentally retarded in Kansas. The opening of other facilities changed the pattern of admissions for Winfield State Hospital. Individuals eligible for admission include those who are mentally retarded and/or multi-handicapped mentally retarded under six years of age and over 21 years of age, as well as nonambulatory, multi-handicapped retarded individuals of any age group. Since it is one of four hospitals for the mentally retarded, this hospital can develop programs for certain specific age groups and types of mentally retarded individuals rather than scatter the efforts of its personnel over the entire range of problems represented by the total mentally retarded category. The purpose of the hospital and training center is to provide the very best possible medical care, education, and training to assist each patient in reaching the maximum of his potential. The overall resident goal of this agency is a program of treatment and training for the purpose of habilitating each individual patient to achieve the maximum development of his or her potential physical, mental and social abilities and returning him or her to their homes and communities as soon as possible. The programs of all of the residential facilities complement each other in facilities and training programs and are supervised and/or coordinated through the Division of Institutional Management of the State Board of Social Welfare. The philosophy of treatment at the Winfield State Hospital and Training Center is based on the premise that mentally retarded individuals are institutionalized because of some maladaptation that makes them unacceptable to society. The function of the hospital is to correct or alleviate the maladaptation so that the individual may return to the community to be either wholly independent or still receiving some measure of protection and support. Winfield State Hospital and Training Center provides specialized services for as many as possible of the mentally retarded and their families within the state. The institution follows the developmental approach in delivery of services. The center takes an optimistic view that all behavior can be modified. Retarded persons, even if profoundly retarded, are capable of growth, development and learning. Three basic assumptions fundamental to this concept: (1) All human beings are in a constant state of change; (2) development is sequential, orderly, and predictable; and (3) all development is modifiable, and the rate and direction of development is influenced by the provision of planned opportunities. Services offered by Winfield state hospital and training center include a full array of habilitative and rehabilitative programs for mentally retarded children and adults. The programs vary from vocational and prevocational training level services and special education, through self-help skills programs for both ambulatory and non-ambulatory patients, to services for aggressive individuals, through comprehensive total care services for all types of developmentally disabled persons including those with physical or sensory impairments. A complete range of medical, nursing and allied services is provided for residents

    Winfield "Mainstreet" redevelopment

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    "This report is produced as part of the Kansas Community Technical Assistance Program supported by a 304 grant from the Economic Development Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce." "April, 1982."METHODOLOGY -- CHARACTERISTICS OF SURVEY RESPONDENTS -- CHARACTERISTICS OF CENTRAL BUSINESS DISTRICT STRUCTURES -- SATISFACTION WITH PUBLIC FACILITIES, UTILITIES AND SERVICES -- ATTITUDES TOWARD THE PROBLEMS AND FUTURE OF DOWNTOWN WINFIELD -- CONCLUSION -- APPENDIX "A" -- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS -- DOWNTOWN BUSINESS DISTRICT -- OWNERSHIP/RENT-LEASE OF STRUCTURES AND PROPERTY IN BUSINESS DISTRICT BY BLOCK CLUSTER -- VACANCIES IN BUSINESS DISTRICT BY BLOCK CLUSTER -- BUILDING IMPROVEMENTS IN BUSINESS DISTRICT BY BLOCK CLUSTER -- IMPORTANCE OF APPEARANCE OF BUSINESS DISTRICT BY BLOCK CLUSTER -- SATISFACTION WITH PUBLIC FACILITIES AND SERVICES

    Guide to the Floyd Winfield Smith Papers

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    Finding aid for the Floyd Winfield Smith Papers with consist primarily of the passports and travel documents of Floyd Winfield Smith, which included his wife Florene and daughters Katherine and Mildred in the early years, and the immunization records for Floyd and Florene

    Armand G. Winfield in His Studio

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    Photograph of Armand Winfield in his studio at Winfield Fine Art in Jewelry, Greenwich Village, New York City, circa 1946

    The General News: January 28 [Winfield High School Newspaper, Winfield, West Virginia]

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    Newspaper from Winfield High School in Winfield, West Virginia. Year circa 1955

    General News: 1955 May [Winfield High School Newspaper, Winfield, West Virginia]

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    Newspaper from Winfield High School in Winfield, West Virginia in Landon Saunder\u27s senior year
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