1,172 research outputs found
The Bay of Pigs
The purpose of this thesis is to investigate the events leading up to the Bay of Pigs debacle to determine how a venture so greatly misconceived came to be approved. The study gives attention to the beginnings of the exile brigade in the Eisenhower administration, how the election campaign influenced its growth, and the evolution and commitment in the Kennedy administration.
The procedure involved a review of the historical backgrounds, an objective chronicle of the disaster, and a look at the national and midwest reaction and response. The study is based on accounts written by those who participated in decision making, press interviews with members of the invasion force, and on-the-spot stories as related in books, newspapers, and magazines.
The results emphasize some of the inherent weaknesses of our system of government and how virtually impossible it is to engage in operations of this size and keep them secret in an open society.
In conclusion, Cuba is a dramatic demonstration of the ineptness of United States Latin-American policies or lack of policies; a demonstration also of prevailing American attitudes to any revolutionary change. The concept of trying to impose a right-wing government on Cuba that would immediately be labelled a Yankee creation was completely wrong
Sleep Deprivation and Pain Intensity
Little or poor quality sleep is often reported in patients suffering from acute or chronic pain. Conversely, sleep loss has been known to elevate pain perception; thus a potential bi-direction relationship exists between sleep deprivation and pain. The effect of sleep deprivation on the thermal pain intensity has yet to be determined, furthermore, sex differences in pain have not been examined following sleep deprivation. There is also a higher prevalence of insomnia in women, and reports indicate that sleep quality is diminished and pain sensitivity may be greater during high hormone phases of the menstrual cycle. In Study 1 we examined the effects of 24-hour total sleep deprivation (TSD) on pain intensity during a 2-minute cold pressor test (CPT). We hypothesized that TSD would augment thermal pain intensity during CPT and women would demonstrate an elevated response compare to men. In Study 2 we investigated the effects of menstrual phase on pain intensity during CPT following TSD. We hypothesized that pain intensity would be augmented during the mid-luteal (ML) phase of the menstrual cycle. In Study 1, pain intensity was recorded during CPT in 14 men and 13 women after normal sleep (NS) and TSD. Pain intensity responses during CPT were elevated in both conditions; however, pain intensity was augmented (~ 1.2 a.u.) following TSD. When analyzed for sex differences, pain intensity was not different between men and women in either condition. In Study 2, pain intensity was recorded during CPT in 10 female subjects during the early follicular (EF) and ML phases of the menstrual cycle after TSD. Estradiol and progesterone levels were elevated during the ML phase, however, pain intensity was not different between the two phases. We conclude that TSD significantly augments pain intensity during CPT, but this response is not sex dependent. We further demonstrate that the collective effect of TSD and elevated gonadal hormone concentrations do not result in a differential pain response during the EF and ML phases of the menstrual cycle. Collectively, sleep loss augments pain intensity ratings in men and women and may contribute to sleep loss in painful conditions
Pionic Color Transparency
We use a semi-classical approximation to investigate the effects of color
transparency on pion electroproduction reactions. The resulting reduced nuclear
interactions produce significant, but not dominating, differences with the
results of conventional distorted-wave, Glauber-type treatments at kinematics
accessible to Jefferson Laboratory. Nuclear effects that could mimic the
influence of color transparency are also discussed.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
Effective conductivity of composites of graded spherical particles
We have employed the first-principles approach to compute the effective
response of composites of graded spherical particles of arbitrary conductivity
profiles. We solve the boundary-value problem for the polarizability of the
graded particles and obtain the dipole moment as well as the multipole moments.
We provide a rigorous proof of an {\em ad hoc} approximate method based on the
differential effective multipole moment approximation (DEMMA) in which the
differential effective dipole approximation (DEDA) is a special case. The
method will be applied to an exactly solvable graded profile. We show that DEDA
and DEMMA are indeed exact for graded spherical particles.Comment: submitted for publication
The Kolmogorov-Smirnov test for the CMB
We investigate the statistics of the cosmic microwave background using the
Kolmogorov-Smirnov test. We show that, when we correctly de-correlate the data,
the partition function of the Kolmogorov stochasticity parameter is compatible
with the Kolmogorov distribution and, contrary to previous claims, the CMB data
are compatible with Gaussian fluctuations with the correlation function given
by standard Lambda-CDM. We then use the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test to derive upper
bounds on residual point source power in the CMB, and indicate the promise of
this statistics for further datasets, especially Planck, to search for
deviations from Gaussianity and for detecting point sources and Galactic
foregrounds.Comment: Improved significance of the results (which remain unchanged) by
using patches instead of ring segments in the analysis. Added sky maps of the
Kolmogorov-parameter for original and de-correlated CMB ma
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