Academic literature on the topic 'Bingo hall'

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Journal articles on the topic "Bingo hall"

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Rees-Davies, Toby. "CPR at the bingo hall." Nursing Standard 33, no. 5 (August 1, 2018): 35. http://dx.doi.org/10.7748/ns.33.5.35.s16.

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Suárez, C. Paredes, V. Fernández-Redondo, and J. Toribio. "Bingo-hall worker's occupational copper contact dermatitis from coins." Contact Dermatitis 47, no. 3 (September 2002): 182–000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1034/j.1600-0536.2002.470308_17.x.

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De Groot, Kees. "Bingo! Holy play in experience-oriented society." Social Compass 64, no. 2 (April 13, 2017): 194–205. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0037768617697392.

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What place is there for holy play in experience-oriented society? Is it possible and useful to make analytic distinctions between the liturgical quality of events? I explored these questions by doing research on the boundaries between the religious field and the field of leisure. Fifty site visits to public events in the Netherlands (2006–2014) resulted in a collection of ethnographic data. I used the concept of play as introduced by the Dutch historian Johan Huizinga and the tools of ritual studies to explore whether these could help to produce an account of the liturgical quality of ritualized meetings. Holy play might be found in unexpected places, such as in a bingo hall. Huizinga’s broad diagnosis of modernity may be outdated, but the tools he introduced remain useful to distinguish the elements that constitute late-modern meetings as more or less playful – even when this involves combinations that seem contradictory from Huizinga’s own point of view.
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Walton, Edward A. "Carbon monoxide poisoning at an in-door ice arena and bingo hall—Seattle, 1996." Journal of Emergency Medicine 14, no. 5 (September 1996): 660. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0736-4679(96)90209-7.

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Bedford, Kate. "Getting the Bingo Hall Back Again? Gender, Gambling Law Reform, and Regeneration Debates in a District Council Licensing Board." Social & Legal Studies 20, no. 3 (September 2011): 369–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0964663911407652.

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Bedford, Kate D. "Regulating Volunteering: Lessons from the Bingo Halls." Law & Social Inquiry 40, no. 02 (2015): 461–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/lsi.12100.

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This article uses charitable bingo to explore the sociolegal regulation of volunteers. Using case studies of two provincial bingo revitalization initiatives in Canada, I explore how charities and government officials manage the tension between regulating and incentivizing volunteers. I show that bingo revitalization plans in Alberta and Ontario increased surveillance of nonregularized workers and failed to protect charity service users from unpaid labor requirements. Moreover, revitalization initiatives reframe the volunteer role to focus on customer service and explaining how charities benefit the community. The potential for bingo volunteering to promote spaces of mutual aid with players will thus likely decline. I suggest that the allied power of charity and state over unpaid workers is increasing, giving charities better‐protected interests in volunteer labor and changing the tasks that volunteers do. The need for more research exploring the interests of volunteers as regulatory stakeholders in their own right is thus pressing.
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Hutchinson, Peter James, Joan L. Bottorff, Natalie Chambers, Roberta Mowatt, Dennis Wardman, Debbie Sullivan, and Wanda Williams. "What Are the Odds? Community Readiness for Smoke-Free Bingos in First Nation Communities." International Journal of Indigenous Health 7, no. 1 (June 7, 2013): 32. http://dx.doi.org/10.18357/ijih71201112351.

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Community members have identified second-hand smoke exposure among young women and children within First Nations communities as a concern. As part of a community-based research project, we analyzed experiences related to establishing smoke-free public spaces and the challenges related to smoking and bingo. The purpose of this study was to a) describe and compare community smoking at bingo in First Nations communities, and b) draw implications for assessing and supporting community readiness for comprehensive tobacco control policies (TCPs). Data were collected using individual interviews, group discussions, and observations in the community. The establishment of smoke-free public spaces in communities evolved out of concern by people traditionally responsible for the well-being of the community. Despite close proximity and similar socioeconomic contexts, readiness to extend these successes to bingos held in community halls was influenced by three main factors: a) economic drivers, b) the smoking majority, and c) grassroots support. Although models for assessing community readiness provide a useful starting point for understanding local TCP development and implementation in First Nations communities, other factors also need to be considered. Using a comprehensive approach to assessing community readiness has the potential to increase success in extending TCPs and practices in First Nations communities in ways that are culturally relevant, address local conditions, and build on existing efforts.
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Bottorff, Joan L., Joanne Carey, Roberta Mowatt, Colleen Varcoe, Joy L. Johnson, Peter Hutchinson, Debbie Sullivan, Wanda Williams, and Dennis Wardman. "Bingo halls and smoking: Perspectives of First Nations women." Health & Place 15, no. 4 (December 2009): 1014–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.healthplace.2009.04.005.

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Rolofson, Kelsey N. "Capitalist and Communal Foundations in The Bingo Palace." Undergraduate Research Journal for the Humanities 4, no. 1 (June 29, 2020): 55–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.17161/urjh.v4i1.13445.

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Published in 1994, Louise Erdrich’s The Bingo Palace traces the journey of Lipsha Morrissey, who is called to return to his childhood home, a fictional Ojibwe reservation, after years of living off-reservation with his father. Upon his return, Lipsha becomes enamored with a young woman, Shawnee Ray, and entangled in conflict with Lyman, Lipsha’s uncle, half-brother, and the father of Shawnee Ray’s child, who plans to build a glamorous “Bingo Palace” on reservation land to bring wealth to the Ojibwe people. As Lipsha struggles to reconcile his conflict with Lyman, he faces questions of identity, family, and an ethical dilemma: would the economic benefits of a “Bingo Palace” outweigh the cultural costs?
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Aslan, Dr Imran. "Measuring Halal awareness at Bingol City." Journal of Social Sciences (COES&RJ-JSS) 5, no. 3 (July 1, 2016): 340–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.25255/jss.2016.5.3.340.355.

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Books on the topic "Bingo hall"

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Bingo night at the fire hall: Rediscovering life in an American village. San Diego: Harcourt Brace, 1999.

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Rowe, Rachael. Collapse in a bingo hall: A perspective on collapse in a public place. Birmingham: University of Central England in Birmingham, 1997.

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Holland, Barbara. Bingo night at the fire hall: The case for cows, orchards, bake sales, & fairs. New York: Harcourt Brace, 1997.

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Holland, Barbara. Bingo night at the fire hall: The case for cows, orchards, bake sales & fairs. Hampton Falls, N.H: Beeler Large Print, 1999.

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Hemken, Rod. The bingo passport: A nationwide guide of top bingo halls : your passport to nationwide bingo fun. Frontier, Wy: H.I. Co., 1998.

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Mason, Sheryl. The directory of American Indian casinos and bingo halls. Lone Star, Tx: Lone Star Connection, 1995.

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Scale + timbre: The Chan Centre for the Performing Arts, Bing Thom Architects. London: Black Dog Pub., 2002.

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Bingo Hall Detectives. HarperCollins Publishers, 2022.

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Whitelaw, Jonathan. Bingo Hall Detectives. HarperCollins Publishers, 2022.

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Notebooks, Dabber Bingo Score. Born to Yell Bingo: Game Score Tracking Sheet - Gift for Bingo Hall Callers and Players. Independently Published, 2019.

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Book chapters on the topic "Bingo hall"

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Toyota, Yasuhisa, Motoo Komoda, Daniel Beckmann, Marc Quiquerez, and Erik Bergal. "Bing Concert Hall." In Concert Halls by Nagata Acoustics, 125–30. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-42450-3_16.

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Murphy, Fergus, and Maurice Murphy. "Is the Glass Still Half Full? Can Social Marketing Threat Appeals Still have a Role in Reducing Binge Drinking Among Female College Students?" In The Customer is NOT Always Right? Marketing Orientationsin a Dynamic Business World, 883. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-50008-9_245.

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Bedford, Kate. "Death of the Ex-Policeman." In Bingo Capitalism, 148–74. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198845225.003.0006.

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Chapter 5 shows that lower-level actors within firms have much to teach us about the gendered and classed impacts of regulation. The chapter analyses how staff working in commercial bingo experienced the shift from ‘command and control’ style regulation, underpinning the 1968 Gaming Act, to the current risk-based regime in the 2005 Gambling Act. Seeking to contribute a gendered angle to scholarship on the consequences of regulatory reform for occupational status and autonomy, the chapter examines the impact of self-regulation on commercial bingo hall managers—a mostly male, non-professional group of workers whose claims to status have relied heavily on state licensing procedures. By analysing the changing rules, practices, and feelings involved in personnel licensing within bingo halls, the chapter makes two interlinked claims. First, as the state stepped back from assessing and authorizing employee expertise, managerial authority, status, pay, and working conditions were all reduced. Second, the chapter identifies a classed and gendered desire for a return to command-and-control-style regulation.
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Bedford, Kate. "The Sociolegal Significance of Membership." In Bingo Capitalism, 175–202. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198845225.003.0007.

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Chapter 6 revisits debates about the role of membership in building alternative, non-capitalist forms of collective being. Rather than assuming that the committed member is distinct from the passive, usually feminized consumer, the chapter seeks instead to explore the ways that membership is, or is not, activated in non-commercial and commercial gambling. Using bingo practices as evidence, the chapter probes the blurred boundaries between membership and consumption, exploring how the two are co-constituted. After charting the gendered and racialized membership exclusions in working men’s clubs, the chapter traces how women’s bingo organising labour involves resistance to state membership rules. Mutual aid practices are sustained by this resistance. Finally, the chapter identifies a distinctive sense of membership within commercial bingo, wherein halls become the realm of occupying players—usually older women—who act like they own the place. The chapter thereby seeks to trouble the dichotomy between membership and consumption.
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Bedford, Kate. "Maggie’s Den." In Bingo Capitalism, 88–117. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198845225.003.0004.

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Chapter 3 shows the transformation that occurred, between 1968 and 1997, in lawmakers’ approaches to bingo and what it represented about the nation. Focusing especially on Margaret Thatcher’s Conservative government (1979–90), it identifies three key changes. First, commercial bingo was significantly deregulated, and political debates were refocused on the need to bolster the industry, including by taxing non-commercial operators that were its alleged competitors. Second, political debates about gambling moved away from self-organized mutual aid towards charity. Third, there were increased references to commercial bingo within discussions of welfare and consumer responsibility, and as a result gambling became proof of individual fecklessness rather than national cultural and economic decline. In charting these changes, the chapter makes bingo reforms central to the state’s broader project of welfare state restructuring and better regulation in the 1980s and 1990s. In particular, it emphasizes the state’s alliance with charitable actors to privilege non-participatory forms of gambling (especially lotteries) over gambling run by non-commercial members’ clubs. The chapter also identifies the key role of gender in gambling debates, showing that deregulation rested in significant part on claims that commercial bingo halls provided lonely old women with their only source of company.
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Gmelch, George, and Sharon Bohn Gmelch. "Fieldwork from Campus." In In the Field, 221–37. University of California Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520289611.003.0013.

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While nothing can equal the experience of doing fieldwork in an unfamiliar culture, it is possible for students to approximate it close to home. Two fieldwork assignments the authors use in anthropology classes give students hands-on experience. One involves conducting participant observation in local bingo halls. In the other, students interview international students on campus. Both teach important research and life skills (e.g., observation, communication, analysis), but the latter, in particular, gives students insight into their own culture and awareness of ethnocentrism.
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Menconi, David. "Linthead Pop." In Step It Up and Go, 10–25. University of North Carolina Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469659350.003.0002.

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Charles Cleveland “Charlie” Poole was a banjo-playing mill laborer who lived an eventful life before passing at age 39 from one alcohol binge too many. He was arguably the most important musician to emerge from the stringbands populating mill towns across the North Carolina Piedmont -- a working-class hero as well as an important crossroads figure in the 1920s evolution of old-time music into what became bluegrass and country music, recording songs that remain bluegrass-festival standards to this day. And yet he has never been inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame.
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Wilson, G. Terence, and Christopher G. Fairburn. "Treatments for Eating Disorders." In A Guide to Treatments that Work, 579–610. Oxford University Press, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med:psych/9780195304145.003.0021.

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A very substantial number of well-designed studies (Type 1 and Type 2) have shown that manual-based cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is currently the treatment of choice for bulimia nervosa (BN); roughly half of patients receiving CBT cease binge eating and purging. Well accepted by patients, CBT is the most effective means of eliminating the core features of the eating disorder and is often accompanied by improvement in psychological problems such as low self-esteem and depression; long-term maintenance of improvement is reasonably good. A large number of good to excellent outcome studies (Type 1 and Type 2) suggest that different classes of antidepressant drugs produce significantly greater reductions in the short term for binge eating and purging in BN patients than a placebo treatment; the long-term effects of antidepressant medication on BN remain untested. There is little evidence that combining CBT with antidepressant medication significantly enhances improvement in the core features of BN, although it may aid in treating comorbid anxiety and depression. The continuing paucity of controlled research on outcomes of treatment for anorexia nervosa (AN) contrasts sharply with the quantity and quality of research on outcomes of treatment for BN and binge-eating disorder (BED). Nevertheless, a specific form of family therapy, referred to as the Maudsley Model, has shown promising effects on AN in adolescent patients, although this remains to be shown to be a specific effect. Several different psychological treatments appear equally effective in reducing the frequency of binge eating in the short term in BED; these treatments include CBT, interpersonal therapy (IPT), behavioral weight loss programs, and guided self-help based on cognitive-behavioral principles. To date, only CBT and IPT have been shown to have significant longer term effects in eliminating binge eating. Evidence on the specific effects of antidepressant medication on BED is mixed. As yet, there has been no research on the treatment of the most common eating disorder diagnosis, “eating disorder not otherwise specified.”
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Krassas, Gerasimos E., and Luigi Bartalena. "Endocrinology of eating disorders." In Oxford Textbook of Endocrinology and Diabetes, 280–87. Oxford University Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199235292.003.2243.

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Eating disorders affect about five million Americans every year. There are three different eating disorders: anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, and binge eating disorder. Eating disorders are complex conditions deriving from a complex interplay of long-standing behavioural, emotional, psychological, interpersonal, and social factors. The neuronal circuits that control the ingestion of food are mainly related to catecholaminergic, serotoninergic, and peptidergic systems. In this respect, while serotonin, dopamine and prostaglandin promote the ingestion of food, by contrast, neuropeptide Y, noradrenaline, γ‎-aminobutyric acid (GABA), and opioid peptides inhibit food ingestion, thus causing the development of eating disorders (1). Eating disorders typically occur in adolescent girls or young women, although 5–15% of cases of anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa and 40% of cases of binge eating disorder occur in boys and men. Approximately 3% of young women are affected with these disorders, and probably twice that number has clinically important variants. Although early disorders mostly develop in adolescence or young adulthood, they can occur after the age of 40 years and are increasingly seen in young children (2). Eating disorders are more prevalent in industrialized societies than in nonindustrialized societies, and occur in all socioeconomic classes and major ethnic groups in the USA. About half of those who have anorexia nervosa or bulimia nervosa fully recover, approximately 30% have a partial recovery, and 20% have no substantial improvement in symptoms (2). The aim of this chapter is to give an overview of the endocrinology of eating disorders leading to excessive weight gain or excessive weight loss in humans. It is of note that despite the strong association between obesity and eating disorders, the increase in obesity is not followed by an increase in eating disorders (3).
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Kumar, Amit, Mahendra Kumar Sharma, Tajamul Farooq Wani, Anil Sharma, and Gepu Nyorak. "Varietal Wealth of Prunus Species." In Prunus - Recent Advances [Working Title]. IntechOpen, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.99048.

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Genus Prunus includes all the stone fruits (peach, nectarine, plum, apricot, almond and cherry) comprise around 98 species and classified under three subgenera namely: Amygdalus (peaches, nectraine and almonds), Prunophora (plums and apricots) and Cerasus (cherries). Genus Prunus have attained a prime position among all the temperate fruit crops as delicious edible drupe, and many species have ornamental values as well. Major species of importance are Prunus persica (peach), Prunus armeniaca (apricot), Prunus salicina (Japanese plum), Prunus domestica (European plum), Prunus americana (American plum), Prunus avium (Sweet cherry), Prunus cerasus (Sour cherry), Prunus dulcis (almond), Prunus ceracifera (Cherry plum), Prunus mira (Behmi), Prunus cerasoides (Wild Himalayan cherry), Prunus mahaleb (Mahaleb cherry) etc. Interspecific hybrids namely: plumcots, pluots and apriums also produce very delicious edible fruits. Commercial cultivars of different stone fruits are J H Hale, Cresthaven, Flordasun, Florda Prince, Elberta, Glohaven, July Elberta, Redhaven, Kanto 5, Sun Haven etc. of peaches, Fantasia, Mayfire, Red Gold, Snow Queen etc. belongs to nectarine, Turkey, Charmagz, Perfection, St. Ambroise, Royal, New Castle etc. are apricots, Santa Rosa, Black Beauty, Kelsey, Green Gage, Methley, Satsuma, Frontier, Burbank etc. are plums, Regina, Burlat, Lapins, Kordia, Stella, Bing, Van, Black Heart, Compact Lambert, Compact Stella etc. are cherries, and California Paper Shell, IXL, Mission, Nonpareil, Drake, Ne Plus Ultra, Pranyaj, Merced etc. are almonds.
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