Reprints of articles by Fergus, mainly on aspects of ophthalmology - surgical, theoretical, instructional - and on industrial eye diseases among sailors and miners. Also includes presidential address to the Royal Philosophical Society of Glasgow on 'Present Position and Prospects of ... the Society 1908', and a sketch of the life of William McKenzie, professor of Anatomy at the Andersonian, 1819-1828.
Includes information on the courses of study available, departmental facilities, research interests and recent publications of academic staff, careers in geography and lists of departmental staff.
General Studies was devised to help students wishing to follow a course of guided reading.
According to an early invitation, SPAID Fellowship started out as an initiative aiming to ensure that the industrially disabled were not forgotten in the International Year of Disabled People (1981).
The SPAID Fellowship was understood as the 'Supporters Club' for the organisation. People disabled by industry would meet those interested to help them and to prevent further disease. SPAID Fellowship developed around St Barnabas Church, Bethnal Green, London. Following a get-together at the home of Joan Piccolo of Rainham, Essex, in February 1981, and an inaugural occasion at St Barnabas in June, meetings were expected to take place every first Saturday of the month from 2-4 pm.
Later on SPAID Fellowship developed also at Merseyside.
Joan Piccolo, whose husband had died of an asbestos-related disease, campaigned as part of the Women Against the Dust group; see 'Morning Star', 1 April 1976.
Two series:
- analogue registers and finding aids
- OEDA case database and data sheets