Cambodian Studies Titles From ASBS histories have been written about Cambodia from the 1940s to the Contact us, For allenquiries, please contact Asian studies Book Services Nijenrodeplantsoen http://www.asianstudiesbooks.com/cambodia.htm
Extractions: by Reyum Institute of Arts and Culture This catalogue was published for an exhibition of art works focusing on the absences resulting from the Khmer Rouge era: how the missing and murdered affect the present, and how, as time goes on, the killings and their causes are remembered or forgotten, repressed or made into myth. The volume contains an essay by the curators (in Khmer and English), and a catalogue of the artists, their statements of intention, and colour illustrations of some of their works. Artists include Vann Nhat, Ngeth Sim, Srei Bandol, Svay Ken, Tum Saren, Phy Chan Than, Soeung Vannara, Lim Muy Theam, Ly Daravuth, and Jan Montyn. Published by Reyum
Beryllium Timeline--The 1950's 1958 Brush continues its cooperation in studies relating to beryllium by participatingin a Results of the study are published in 1959 by the us Department of http://www.befacts.com/timeline/fifties.html
Extractions: On the medical front, the Beryllium Case Registry (BCR) establishes the criteria for determining whether an individual has CBD and new theories begin to develop regarding whether the chronic form of the disease has an immunological component or results from the traditional dose-response relationship. It will be decades (until the 1980s) before the medical-scientific community reaches consensus about this. Brush's "Air Sampling Program" for use at its Luckey, Ohio, plant includes eight-hour average exposure limits (for "special locations") and 72-hour average exposure limits (for other locations), with exposures measured using general area air sampling and breathing zone air sampling. Measurement of any sample exceeding 2 micrograms triggers "an immediate investigation" and use of "corrective measures to bring the sample below the target level." If sample results exceeding 2 micrograms persist for 15 days, the operation is shut down immediately "pending the installation of corrective procedures." A daily weighted average concentration exceeding 5 micrograms also triggers immediate shutdown.
Beryllium Timeline--The 1990's Brush initiates parallel, independent epidemiological studies through Dr. KathleenKreiss at the and Disease Registry, Public Health Service, us Department of http://www.befacts.com/timeline/nineties.html
Extractions: New medical developments, especially the Blood Lymphocyte Proliferation Test (BLPT), have led to new definitions of CBD, including conditions where workers do not show signs or symptoms or illness, X-ray changes or any functional evidence of disease. Widespread blood testing by Brush and others, together with these relaxed diagnostic criteria, lead to an increased number of CBD cases in the 1990s. With the increased cases come new questions about whether CBD, as it has come to be defined, may be caused by exposures below the OSHA standard. The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, Public Health Service, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services issues a Toxicological Profile for Beryllium. The Profile states that "[a]lthough the soluble and insoluble forms of beryllium can cause chronic beryllium disease, workers breathing air containing beryllium at less than 0.002 milligrams in a cubic meter [the 2 microgram standard] (a level that government rules permit in a workplace) will probably not develop lung damage as a result of exposure."
Queen Mary - Alumni-Lost Friends If anyone can help with contact details for those shown below, please let us know. NicholasMan, P017 NM, Fellow graduates (Biology Business studies 1997). http://www.qmw.ac.uk/alumni/lost90.shtml
ClassNotes Please send us your name, class year and the information you'd like to share. is aprofessor in the Department of English and Asian American studies Program at http://www-ucdmag.ucdavis.edu/sp00/ClassNotes.html
Extractions: What's new with you? Tell us about your job, your family, your interests, and let us share the news here and in the print version of UC Davis Magazine. Please send us your name, class year and the information you'd like to share. Sarah (Mulock) Duncan is the curator of the San Gabriel Museum and remains active in the Women's Division of the Chamber of Commerce, the San Gabriel Community Coordinating Council and the Mission District Partnership Committee. In 1998, San Gabriel named her Older American of the Year. After graduating from UC Davis, Duncan attended California State University, Los Angeles, taught kindergarten for 30 years and raised two sons. She lives on land that was part of her grandparents' ranch and still visits former Davis roommates Kay Lilienthal Wooden and Eleanor Robinson Williamson. Chester Locke writes this year that his family is celebrating 150 years and five generations of farming. He manages the Locke Ranch in Lockeford, along with Chris Locke, a 1973 UC Berkeley graduate, and Bonnie Locke Ruth Rockefeller , Cred., recently retired from the North Coast Railroad Authority board, having served since its inception 10 years ago. After retiring from a 25-year career teaching high school, Rockefeller devoted her time, as an editorial in the
Global Networking Timeline: 2000-2009 Research School of Pacific and Asian studies, Australian National University, CanberraACT 0200 from home is available to 167.5 M people in the us, 24.6 M in http://www.ciolek.com/PAPERS/GLOBAL/2000ten.html
Extractions: http://www.ciolek.com/PEOPLE/ciolek-tm.html Document created: 14 Mar 2000. Last updated: 17 Mar 2003 This document, intended as a reliable electronic reference tool, provides a timeline for three types of developments and milestones: (1) advances in long distance person-to-person communication; (2) advances in storage, replication, cataloguing, finding, and retrieval of data; (3) standardisation of concepts and tools for long distance interaction. The advancements may have a: T echnical (hardware), C onceptual (software), or an O rganisational aspect, or represent an important M ilestone in the history of a given invention, and are annotated as such in the timeline. This document is only as good as the collated information itself. Please email any additional data and corrections to tmciolek@coombs.anu.edu.au . Your collaboration and input is warmly appreciated. work in progress - tmc Home Page
Classnotes: Spring 2002 | Emmanuel College | Boston, Massachusetts God is good to us. Mary Ann Connolly Kerrigan and Polly Donovan Smith are board membersof LETS (Life Enrichment Transition studies) sponsored by UMASSBoston. http://www.emmanuel.edu/alumni/classnotes/2002spring/1950.asp
Extractions: Newton Highlands, MA 02161 Joan O'Neil Acord suffered a heart attack in August and is recovering nicely. Margaret Lane Brady and her husband John are enjoying their sunset years skiing, sailing and playing tennis with their daughters and nine grandchildren. They have been blessed with family and good health. Barbara Harrington Lynch and her husband will be celebrating their 49th wedding anniversary in July 2002. Miriam McLinden Jeanne McGinn and Marie Connery Franciose Class correspondent:
Classnotes: Spring 2002 | Emmanuel College | Boston, Massachusetts She is also teaching Psychology and Women's studies at Manchester Community Collegewith Ann She spent 9 years with the us Geological Survey and 16 years with http://www.emmanuel.edu/alumni/classnotes/2002spring/1960.asp
Extractions: N. Palm Beach, FL 33408 Mary E. Friel, SND has relocated to E. Hartford, CT in the founding of a Welcoming Community for Woman interested in being SNDs. She is also teaching Psychology and Women's Studies at Manchester Community College with Ann Pasquino. Mary and Ann enjoy their work as Information Volunteers in the Appalachian Mountain Club and White Mountains of New Hampshire. Carol Delaney Looney Rodem has four children who have blessed her with eleven grandchildren in eleven years! Vin has three boys, Kara '86 has one boy and twin girls, Doug has one boy and one girl and John has three boys. Life is beautiful! Barbara Taylor has given personal safety seminars throughout Florida and since September 11th she has seen a 100% increase in classes. Martha Donahue Patton visited China the first two weeks of November 2001. Shanghai, Yangtze River cruise, Xian and Beijing are highlights.
ARS Research Timeline - 1910s First us veterinary license issued for production of antihog-cholera serum studiesmade of precooling to prevent decay in red raspberries; these studies led to http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/timeline/1910chron.htm
Extractions: Wild blueberry domesticated. Demonstrated that pasteurization kills toxin-producing organisms in raw milk without destroying beneficial lactic acid bacteria. Insecticide and Fungicide Act passed. Brucella abortus first isolated from cattle in the U.S. Of gainfully employed persons, 31 percent were engaged in agriculture. Demonstrated that typhus fever is transmitted by lice. Radium isolated.
University Of Chicago Magazine, Class Notes, April 96, Of Mice, Men, and Women Liane Russell, PhD'49, studies mutated genes in a documentaryabout her work with Japanese women during the us government's occupation http://magazine.uchicago.edu/9604/9604BOBClassnews5.html
Extractions: The University of Chicago Magazine April 1996 Return to April 1996 Table of Contents What's the news? We are always eager to receive your news at the Magazine, care of the Class News Editor, University of Chicago Magazine, 5757 Woodlawn Ave., Chicago, IL 60637, or by E-mail: uchicago-magazine@uchicago.edu. To write us with your news directly, click here for our e-mail form: uchicago-magazine@uchicago.edu No engagements, please. Items may be edited for space. For that reason, starting with the February/96 issue we will no longer list all of the U of C alumni present at a wedding, but only those alumni who are relatives or were members of the wedding party. As news is published in the order in which it arrives, it may not appear immediately. Please specify the year under which you would like your news to appear. Otherwise, we will list: (1) all former undergraduates (including those who later received graduate degrees) by the year of their undergraduate degree, and (2) all former students who received only graduate degrees by the year of their final degree. Of Mice, Men, and Women: Liane Russell, PhD'49, studies mutated genes in mice to learn more about disease-producing genes in humans.
University Of Chicago Magazine, Class Notes, April 96, Of Mice, Men, and Women Liane Russell, PhD'49, studies mutated genes in mice to onlyintegrated online grocery-shopping and -delivery service in the us Jane M http://magazine.uchicago.edu/9604/9604BOBClassnews6.html
Extractions: The University of Chicago Magazine April 1996 Return to April 1996 Table of Contents What's the news? We are always eager to receive your news at the Magazine, care of the Class News Editor, University of Chicago Magazine, 5757 Woodlawn Ave., Chicago, IL 60637, or by E-mail: uchicago-magazine@uchicago.edu To write us with your news directly, click here for our e-mail form: uchicago-magazine@uchicago.edu No engagements, please. Items may be edited for space. For that reason, starting with the April/96 issue we will no longer list all of the U of C alumni present at a wedding, but only those alumni who are relatives or were members of the wedding party. As news is published in the order in which it arrives, it may not appear immediately. Please specify the year under which you would like your news to appear. Otherwise, we will list: (1) all former undergraduates (including those who later received graduate degrees) by the year of their undergraduate degree, and (2) all former students who received only graduate degrees by the year of their final degree. Of Mice, Men, and Women: Liane Russell, PhD'49, studies mutated genes in mice to learn more about disease-producing genes in humans.
Alumni News 1940s. if I got the advanced training and deeper background that came from graduatestudies. HERBERT DANIEL (MS '67) Raj has become a naturalized us citizen and http://www.geo.arizona.edu/news/Spring00/alumninews.html
Extractions: Spring 2000 TABLE OF CONTENTS NEXT ARTICLE PREVIOUS ARTICLE ALUMNI NEWS GEORGE KIERSCH (PHD '47) George writes that, the last newsletter takes me back to the early days and a great time of my life. Also I look so young in the photo of faculty members of 1952! George and his wife Joan continue to retain their home in Tucson, but in recent years have spent much of their time in the La Jolla area due to Jane's health. George is Professor Emeritus in the Dept. of Geological Sciences at Cornell Univ. Alumni Bill Price BILL PRICE (BS '46, MS '48) Bill stopped by the department during GeoDaze to say hello. He and his wife live six months of the year in Denver and six months in Tucson, but Bill says his heart belongs to Tucson! Go to: ARTHUR MIRSKY (MS '55) Art is Professor Emeritus with the Dept. of Geology at Indiana Univ.-Purdue Univ., Indianapolis. He writes of his student days at the UA: I went to UA in 1953-1955 for my MS in Geology. My time there had a major impact on my intellectual development and the choice of my life's work.
The Harvard Law School Forum - 1990s Date September 19, 1996 Speaker Jamie Gorelick, '75 us Deputy Attorney RogerPilon - Director, Cato Center for Constitutional studies Frederick Schauer http://www.law.harvard.edu/studorgs/forum/90s.html
IBM Archives 1989 a fiveyear, $25 million grant program to help improve us elementary and In addition,IBM's current contracts, joint studies and sponsored research represent a http://www.ibm.com/ibm/history/history/year_1989.html
Extractions: IBM becomes the first company in the world to ship the industry's fastest microcomputer processor, Intel's powerful new i486 microprocessor. superconductivity . A U.S. patent is granted to IBM for the world-record high-temperature superconducting materials invented by four scientists at the Almaden Research Center. Jack D. Kuehler becomes president of IBM.
TCU Magazine Class Notes Col. Fragola was elected to a threeyear term on the Board of the Institute in Cambridgeat the completion of his studies. Veale was the us defense attache. http://www.magazine.tcu.edu/tcumagazine/articles/2002-04-CN70.htm
Extractions: Fall 2003 Jim Bowie and the rest of the five-person Auburn Links Team carded a 59 to win the Dixie Sectional at the Cotton Creek Golf Club in Golf Shores, Ala. The Auburn Links at Mill Creek team will represent the South Alabama/North Florida area in the Buick Scramble National Finals at Walt Disney World. The Buick Scramble is the world's largest amateur golf tournament with over 2,000 teams and 100,000 players. Jim is the regional vice president for Bell Atlantic. He lives in Columbus, Ga.
Grapevine - 1970's was impressed with the growth in the University since the 1960s and very Loudon Brown,Robert (PG Dip Management studies 1975) was Chief Medical Photographer http://www.alumni.strath.ac.uk/grapevine/1970s.html
Extractions: Alexandrou, George (BSc, PhD Civil Engineering 1979) works as a Civil Engineer with the Ministry of Agriculture Natural Resources and Environment, Nicosia, Cyprus. George can be contacted by email minagre@cytanet.com.cy Chattopadhyay, Asok (BSc Mechanical Engineering 1970) would love to hear from former classmates. Connolly, Lesley Coupar, Alan (BA Psychology 1970) is now working in private practice as a clinical and health psychologist in Edinburgh. Alan would be pleased to hear from anyone of his era and would be interested in any ideas on networking with psychologists, especially in the Edinburgh area. Alan can be contacted by email at acoupar@tiscali.co.uk Cowell, James (BArch Architecture 1970) is Group Board Director of Ove Arup responsible for design and technical development, sustainable design and specialist services. Devine, Thomas
Grapevine - 1960's of Andreae's Christianopolis Reipublicae Descriptio' (1619) published by Kluwerlast year and retires as Director of the School of American studies at Dundee http://www.alumni.strath.ac.uk/grapevine/1960s.html
Extractions: Anderson, Brian (Diploma Physical Education 1967) is currently in his 29th year as Head of Physical Education at St Machar Academy, Aberdeen. Brian tries to keep relatively fit by refereeing football and basketball, although these activities prevent his golf handicap getting lower. Coley, Ron (MSc Civil Engineering [Water Resources] 1967) sends greetings to all former classmates. He is married with six children and two grandchildren and living in Canada. Ron works around the world as a private consultant and engineering specialist in international water resources, sustainable development, project management, wetland habitat creation, preservation and management. He previously worked as Chief Engineer and Western Regional Manager of Ducks Unlimited Canada, a major, private conservation organisation dedicated to the creation, preservation and management of upland and wetland waterfowl habitat throughout Canada. Docherty, Samuel
WETA Productions: Elizabeth Campbell WETA's program on the development and construction of the us Holocaust Museum of AmericaAward at the National Council for the Social studies annual conference. http://www.weta.org/productions/campbell/time90s.html
Extractions: Introduction In Her Own Words TIMELINE 1990s to Present Producer Notes Send a birthday Greeting WETA produces and airs Ken Burns' epic documentary, "The Civil War." With an eye to poetic detail and a respect for the narrative force of images, it wins a primetime Emmy and dozens of other awards. Locally, WETA premieres "Nine Months," a weekly half-hour program following the pregnancies of eight local women at risk of having low birthweight babies. After serving more than 2 years as WETA's Vice-Chairman, Ward Chamberlin moves to lead New York City's WNET as Vice-President and Managing Director of Broadcasting. WETA premieres "Â…talking with David Frost," a critically praised interview series with host David Frost and guests including President and Mrs. Bush, Andrew Lloyd Weber, General Norman Schwarzkopf, and former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. "Folk Masters," a co-production of WETA FM, Carnegie Hall and Radio Smithsonian, begins with a 13-part series "Traditional Music in the Americas". WETA broadcasts the first over-the-air transmission of a digital high-definition television (HDTV) program in the U.S., from the WETA transmission tower in Bethesda to the U.S. Capitol.
Tyson Foods, Inc.: Company Info: History Don Tyson left his agricultural studies at the University of Arkansas to join 1995,Tyson brought both CargillÂ’s us broiler operations and McCarty Farms, Inc http://www.tysonfoodsinc.com/corporate/history/default.asp
Extractions: More than 60 years have passed since John Tyson drove his battered truck to Chicago to deliver a load of 500 Arkansas chickens. Tyson heard that chickens were bringing a better price in northern markets, so he cashed in his savings and borrowed the rest of the money he needed to finance the trip. He sold the birds for a profit of $235, $220 of which he wired home to pay on his debts and buy another load of birds. Out of that trip sprung the foundations of a company that would revolutionize the poultry industry. We invite you to walk through time and discover how the world's largest poultry company rose out of the soil of Northwest Arkansas. Eras Time Line John Tyson moved to Springdale, Arkansas, with his wife and one-year-old son, Don. He made a living hauling hay, fruit, and chickens for local growers. Inching northward, John Tyson made frequent poultry deliveries to Kansas City and St. Louis. Because the company already had the chicks, the grain to feed them, and a trucking company to haul the grown chickens to market, the Tyson organization invested in a grower farm. By 1952, 19 other companies in the Springdale area had jumped on the poultry bandwagon. Don Tyson left his agricultural studies at the University of Arkansas to join his fathers battle against a vulnerable and fluctuating market. When their rollercoaster ride hit a low, with the market and poultry diseases taking their toll, the Swanson Company offered to buy the Tyson business. But now, as in the past, adversity fueled Johns determination. With his son at his side, the "Tyson Team" pushed forward.