Model
Digital Document
Publisher
Lincoln Park Pub. Co.
Description
This is an issue of The Chronicle, published on May 4, 1952. Articles in this issue cover topics including "Colored Community News" and "News From Martin County" sections, covers various local events. Highlights include an athletic banquet at Gifford High School, a fish fry, and a Mother's Day observation by the Mission Society. The paper also contains political advertisements for local elections, such as for County Tax Assessor and County Commissioner, and reports on a Lee County spelling bee winner. Other content includes social events like a garden tea and a "Cotton Festival", an operetta by Wabasso Elementary, and local business advertisements.
Model
Digital Document
Publisher
Lincoln Park Pub. Co.
Description
This is an issue of The Chronicle, published on January 13, 1966. Articles in this issue cover topics including various local and national events. Key reports include revelations about a Ku Klux Klan group's violent directives, ongoing civil rights efforts in school desegregation and the challenges faced by figures like Julian Bond. Local news from Fort Pierce highlights federal funding for a community action organization and plans for a new shopping center. The newspaper also features social events such as the wedding reception for "world's fastest human" Robert "Bob" Hayes and recognizes Emmett Ashford, the first Black umpire in major league baseball.
Model
Digital Document
Publisher
Lincoln Park Pub. Co.
Description
This is an issue of The Chronicle, published on March 14, 1968. Articles in this issue cover topics including the Delta's "Music Is A Universal Language" event and reports on the final rites for pioneer resident Mr. Simson E. Ritchie. It also covers local news from organizations like the Pioneer Club, City-County League, and NAACP. The paper includes various church news, social events, and personal mentions, alongside advertisements for local businesses such as C&C Tire Sales.
Model
Digital Document
Publisher
Lincoln Park Pub. Co.
Description
This is an issue of The Chronicle, published on May 16, 1968. Articles in this issue cover topics including local community news in Fort Pierce, Florida. A prominent feature is the Fort Pierce Men's Civic Club's annual "March On The Choirs" program, where St. Paul AME and Mt. Olive Baptist Churches secured first place. The paper also touches upon local business responsibility, with an article titled "Businesses Must Clean Up or...", and includes advertisements for various cars.
Model
Digital Document
Publisher
Lincoln Park Pub. Co.
Description
This is an issue of The Chronicle, published on June 6, 1968. Articles in this issue cover topics including the assassination of Senator Robert F. Kennedy, reporting his death at age 42 and the national reactions, including calls for a national mourning day and an investigation into violence. The newspaper also features Marine Corps efforts to recruit Black officers and includes advertisements for products like tires.
Model
Digital Document
Publisher
Lincoln Park Pub. Co.
Description
This is an issue of The Chronicle, published on August 1, 1968. Articles in this issue cover topics including U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark's assessment that urban disturbances, like those in Cleveland, are not primarily due to conspiracy but rather "the random act of a handful of very extreme and violence-prone militants" and deeper causes of "centuries of oppression". The newspaper also covers a "Junior Herd Organizational Meet" and includes advertisements for Philco appliances.
Model
Digital Document
Publisher
Lincoln Park Pub. Co.
Description
This is an issue of The Chronicle, published on December 11, 1969. Articles in this issue cover topics including an editorial questioning the "phasing out" of Black schools, and the resignation of Fort Pierce City Manager George Adkins. It also reports on the results of the municipal election where Lee Nelson and Carol R. Lait were victorious. Other key articles detail a meeting of Black publishers to tackle advertising issues and a gathering of Black leaders in Miami to plan a statewide voter registration campaign. The newspaper further discusses the University of Florida Medical School's efforts to attract more Black students and announces journalism fellowships for Negroes.
Model
Digital Document
Publisher
Lincoln Park Pub. Co.
Description
This is an issue of The Chronicle, published on January 8, 1970. Articles in this issue cover topics including a black-white shoot-out in Sandersville, Georgia, with the SCLC dispatching Hosea Williams to address racial violence linked to historical oppression. The newspaper also covers an A.M.E. Laymen meeting discussing Christian discipline and human relations, and includes advertisements for men's apparel from Lams Dept. Store.
Model
Digital Document
Publisher
Indian River State College
Description
The IRSC Learning Resources Newsletter is published quarterly as an email to IRSC employees. Each issue contains updates and news pertaining to the three departments that make up Learning Resources: IRSC Libraries, IRSC Online, and IRSC Tutoring Centers. The Spring 2024 issue is the third newsletter. It contains announcements of the Brackett Preservation Lab Grand Opening, Heart Month programming, the new Scholarly Communications LibGuide and services for faculty, expanded Sage Journals access, welcomes three new IRSC Learning Resources employees, and promotes upcoming programing including Simple Syllabus webinars and Math & Science test review sessions.
Model
Digital Document
Publisher
IRSC Department of Biological Sciences
Description
Surgeons can compare three pre-graft methods for treating burn wounds. When using the split-thickness skin graft procedure, many different wound bed covers can be used. The lack of available donor sites can delay skin grafting. During this time, priming the wound bed is the best chance a patient has for full healing. An excised wound bed, an artificial dermal template, and a granulation tissue induced by cellulose sponge are all methods to prepare the wound for a split-thickness skin graft. All three wound bed covers are easy to apply and can be placed on bones and deep wounds, often without pain. Achieving reduced scar formation begins with a well-primed wound bed that can significantly improve the outcome of skin replacement.