12,726 research outputs found

    Underwood, Johanna Louisa, 1840-1923 (SC 2295)

    Get PDF
    Finding aid only for Manuscripts Small Collection 2295. Diary of Johanna Louisa Josie Underwood, the daughter of a prominent Bowling Green, Kentucky family. She records her experiences while living in Scotland, where her father was serving as consul, from 1862 to 1864. She also describes her travel through several European countries and her return to the United States in 1864, when the family spent a year in San Francisco. She writes observantly about places and people, news of the Civil War, and family events. The diary includes a few early entries by her mother and summaries of family members\u27s whereabouts from 1865-1871. Loose items in the diary include family letters and poems

    Policy and Practice Brief: Medical Continuing Disability Reviews and Related Concepts; A Discussion of Medical CDRs and the Age 18 Redetermination

    Get PDF
    This brief provides an overview of the policies and procedures governing the continuing disability review process within the Social Security Administration. Discussed are the Age 18 Redetermination process as well as practical tips for beneficiaries and their representative payees as they negotiate this continuing disability review process

    The space-time budget method in criminological research

    Get PDF
    This article reviews the Space-Time Budget method developed by Wikström and colleagues and particularly discusses its relevance for criminological research. The Space-Time Budget method is a data collection instrument aimed at recording, retrospectively, on an hour-by-hour basis, the whereabouts and activities of respondents during four days in the week before the interview. The method includes items about criminologically relevant events, such as offending and victimization. We demonstrate that the method can be very useful in criminology, because it enables the study of situational causes of crime and victimization, because it enables detailed measurement of theoretical concepts such as individual lifestyles and individual routine activities, and because it enables the study of adolescents’ whereabouts, which extends the traditional focus on residential neighborhoods. The present article provides the historical background of the method, explains how the method can be applied, presents validation results based on data from 843 secondary school students in the Netherlands and describes the methods’ strengths and weaknesses. Two case studies are summarized to illustrate the usefulness of the method in criminological research. The article concludes with some anticipated future developments and recommendations on further readings

    'All at Sea': an Accusation of Piracy against William Herle in 1565

    Get PDF
    This article will concentrate—in case-study form—on a body of littlestudied and unpublished archival documents in the High Court of Admiralty (HCA) papers at the National Archives in London relating to the Elizabethan intelligencer William Herle (d. 1588). The HCA papers reveal the day-to-day workings of the administrative body responsible for the surveillance and legal process of England’s substantial coastline and home waters

    Max E. G. Bartels and the Javan lapwing Vanellus macropterus

    Get PDF
    No description supplie

    Using Geographic Information Science to Map the Flight of the Regicides in Seventeenth- century New England

    Get PDF
    In mid-seventeenth century two of the judges who condemned King Charles I of England to death became regicide fugitives when his son came to the throne as Charles II. The two men fled to New England and eluded their Royalist pursuers for twenty years. I am attempting to track their travels and hideouts through standard historical research and, more recently, the use of Geographic Information Science (GIS), a form of digital mapping technology which organizes information in a geographical format by adding spatial coordinates to existing data to form a geodatabase. This article describes the application of GIS to test an eighteenth-century historian’s description of the regicides’ movements in Connecticut during the spring and summer of 1661

    The Best He Could, As Fast As He Could: The World War II Experiences of Wesley Crawley, Bryant College, ‘36

    Get PDF
    This paper focuses on the wartime experiences of Wesley Crawley, a 1936 graduate of Bryant College and one of three Crawley brothers to graduate from Bryant and serve in World War II. In addition to interviews with Crawley that took place in 2009, the paper draws from the letters that Crawley received from the Bryant Service Club as well as the letters that he and his family wrote to the Club. After graduating from U.S. Army Officer Candidate School in Ft. Monmouth, New Jersey, Crawley was sent to North Africa where, in 1943, he was briefly captured, but later released, by the Germans. He spent much of the remainder of the war in Italy, France, and eventually Germany. Following the war, Crawley returned to his home in Fall River, Massachusetts where he worked for the Fall River National Bank, retiring as Vice President in 1983

    Measurements and determinants of children's exposure to background gamma radiation in Switzerland.

    Get PDF
    Epidemiological studies of children's cancer risks associated with background gamma radiation exposure have used geographic exposure models to estimate exposure at their locations of residence. We measured personal exposure to background gamma radiation, and we investigated the extent to which it was associated with children's whereabouts. We collected data on whereabouts and exposure to background gamma radiation over a 5-day period among children aged 4-15 years in Switzerland. We used D-Shuttle dosimeters to measure children's exposure, and we asked parents to write their children's activities in diaries. We used Poisson mixed-effects and linear regression models to investigate the association of hourly and overall doses, respectively, with children's reported whereabouts. During the observed time, 149 participating children spent 66% indoors at home; 19% indoors away from home; and 15% outdoors. The mean personal exposure was 85.7 nSv/h (range 52.3 nSv/h-145 nSv/h). Exposure was 1.077 (95% CI 1.067, 1.087) times higher indoors than outdoors and varied by building material and (predicted) outdoor dose rates. Our study provides detailed information about children's patterns of exposure to background gamma radiation in Switzerland. Dwelling building materials and outdoor dose rates are important determinants of children's exposure. Future epidemiological studies may benefit from including information about building materials
    • …
    corecore