A distinct conceptualization of health literacy assessment, theNational Assessment of Adult Literacy (NAAL), a US nationallyrepresentative assessment of English literacy among Americanadults age 16 and older defines functional health literacy as theability to read, understand, and act on health information ineveryday life. In the NAAL categorization format, patients maybe: 1) Proficient if able to perform the complex activitiesinvolved in searching and comprehending health information(10-12% of the US adult population); 2) Intermediate if capable ofconducting moderately difficult tasks for finding basic healthrelatedfacts (about 50% of the US adult population); 3) Basic ifonly able to comprehend the information in a clearly writtenpamphlet; and 4) Below Basic, if barely capable to follow a set ofshort instructions. These individuals have limited Englishliteracy.

In addition, over the years SIM has established numerous awards. The first award, the Certificate of Merit (now the C.L. Porter Award for Distinguished Service) was created in 1963 to recognize individual members for unselfish and outstanding service to the society. A second award the SIM High School Science Award was established in 1964. In 1966 the Charles H. Thom Award, the highest award in the society was instituted to award individuals who have made outstanding contributions to research in industrial microbiology. The first recipient of this award was Kenneth B. Raper in August of 1967. Since those early years several more awards have been created to recognize the outstanding work in the field. The Waksman Outstanding Teaching Award was established in 1989 and in 1992 the Schering-Plough Research Institute Young Investigator Award intended to give recognition and support young researchers was instituted.


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Description: Ā Journals, newsletters, programs, abstracts, and pamphlets organized into three sub-series: Journals and Newsletters, Conference, Workshop and Meeting Materials, and Special and Miscellaneous Publications.

As the errors of Scripture are very numerous, nothing like anexhaustive list can be included in a small pamphlet like this,but every end will be served by the instances subjoined, which wehave arranged in groups, for the purpose of preserving somethinglike order.

These last two examples are not very weighty, but in a bookwhich professes to be inspired, and demands unreserved andunconditional belief, we expect minute p. 50accuracy. The argument weadvance is accumulative. Probably no book of goodreputation has so many contradictory passages as the Bible; theexamples referred to in this pamphlet form but a small part ofwhat might be brought forward, if we allowed ourselves a largerspace.

Meanwhile the park educational program in 1928 was placed in chargeof Acting Park Naturalist Earl V. Homuth, a professor of biology at theUniversity of California, San Diego. The summer activities, whichextended from July 1 to August 22, included:

The park interpretive program continued to be active prior to WorldWar II. In August 1940 Doerr was transferred to Rocky Mountain NationalPark as assistant superintendent. He was replaced by George C. Ruhle whowould direct the interpretive program at Crater Lake until 1953. Thus,the park naturalist staff for 1940 and 1941 consisted of one permanentand eight part-time positions. During those years research sponsored byDr. John C. Merriam with cooperation from the staff of the University ofOregon was conducted in the park, involving studies in archeology,geology, biology, climatology, and nature appreciation. The research wasdesigned to "eventually become a part of the naturalist program."[26]

1. In cooperation with the National Park Service, to further interestin the scientific investigation and interpretation of the naturalfeatures of Crater Lake National Park, Oregon Caves National Monument,and Lava Beds National Monument, in the fields of geology, history,biology, anthropology, forestry, botany, and the natural sciences.

In 1942 a site at the junction of the approach roads from Medford andKlamath Falls had been chosen for the central park museum. The revisedprospectus proposed construction of a museum building at an estimatedcost of $320,000. The building would contain exhibit, community andlecture, dark, library, and office rooms as well as a warming stationand ski hut room for winter use. The museum would include the parkrelief map, murals, paintings, and exhibits on geology, biology,prehistory, history, meteorology, flora, fauna, skiing and winter use,fire prevention and suppression, and aesthetics. In addition, Ruhlerecommended two trailside markers and exhibits-in-place" just north ofLlao Rock and at the road cut through the Llao dacite flow, preparationof a pamphlet for motorists on Rim Drive, and improvements to theSinnott Memorial. [36]

The draft museum prospectus prepared in 1947 underwent considerablediscussion during the 1950s. Finally in October 1957 a museum prospectusfor the park was approved. A new site was selected for the centralmuseum which would also serve as a visitor and information center andthe hub of naturalist activities, such as guided field trips,orientation talks, and lectures, on the rim. The site was near theentrance to the campground on the south side of the plaza near thejunction of the approach roads from Medford and Klamath Falls. Ascontemplated the building would house an entrance lobby and receptionroom, two exhibit rooms, an auditorium with a seating capacity of 500,and space for office, exhibit preparation, and storage. The primaryobjective of the museum would be to impart to the visitor aconception of what Crater Lake signified by its aesthetic qualities andvalues as well as to demonstrate that behind its beauty lay a scientificstory that provided meaning. The outline of exhibit content providedthat the central theme would be geology supported by the subthemes ofbiology, history, prehistory, forest protection, and sequence ofseasonal phenomena. Woven into all exhibits would be the idea ofaesthetics. The prospectus recommended roadside exhibits for at leastseventeen locations along park roads, most of them along Rim Drive, andsome twenty roadside markers to point out sites of interest. [42]

10 pamphlets published by Revere Copper and Brass Incorporated. New York: undated.; All 10 pp. Titles include: "Better Homes For Lower Incomes, by Buckminster Fuller; "A Higher Living Standard at Lower Cost," by Cass Gilbert, Jr.; among others.

This folder contains material regarding various aspects of the architectural profession such as "expanded services" and architectural education; Correspondence, memos, pamphlets, telegrams, business card, speech, news release, clipping, newsletter. e24fc04721

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