1,142 research outputs found
The Public Papers of Governor Brereton C. Jones, 1991-1995
In his inaugural address, Governor Brereton C. Jones proclaimed, This administration is committed to having the most positive, progressive, exciting four years in our state\u27s history.
Through speeches and press releases, this volume reflects the principal concerns of Jonesâs time in office. Thematically organized, the more than two hundred public statements included here present the public face of the Jones administration on such issues as health care, education, economic development, the environment, and governmental reform. Nowhere else has the full text of these speeches and press releases been printed.
Governor Jones, born in 1939, was elected to the West Virginia legislature in 1964, where he served for four years before retiring from politics. After moving to Kentucky and switching allegiance from the Republican to the Democratic Party, he re-entered politics with a successful campaign to become lieutenant governor in 1987. He was elected the Commonwealth\u27s fifty-fourth governor in 1991 by a record margin of nearly two to one.
Jones initiated a number of reforms once in office. He turned a 300 million surplus in four years, and he passed dramatic ethics reform in both the executive and legislative branches. Health-care issues were also of great importance to Jones, who spent the years before his election working with the Kentucky Health Care Access Foundation in addition to farming. After surviving a helicopter crash in 1992, he turned the main focus of his administration toward health-care reform and initiatives. Though he met with legislative opposition when he proposed universal health care for all Kentuckians, he did help pass legislation in 1994 that would serve as a solid beginning on the issue for future governors.
Penny M. Miller, a professor of political science at the University of Kentucky, is the author of Kentucky Politics and Government: Do We Stand United?, and the co-author of two other books, The Kentucky Legislature: Two Decades of Change and Political Parties and Primaries in Kentucky. Her articles have appeared in leading professional journals such as Journal of Politics, Western Politics Quarterly, Women & Politics, Kentucky Law Journal, and Political Science & Politics. She serves as a board member of the Kentucky Long-Term Policy Research Center and Kids Voting Kentucky. She also served as Chair of the Kentucky Commission on Women, and as a board member of the Kentucky Center for Public Issues and the White House Commission on Presidential Scholars.
A good starting point for those interested in late-twentieth-century Kentucky politics. It deserves a place on every Kentucky bookshelf. âFilson History Quarterly
Reflects the principal concerns of Jonesâs administration through speeches and press releases. âDocumentary Editing
A useful resource for anyone interested in the main issues during his term as governor. . . . A valuable reference tool. âNorthern Kentucky Heritage
Contains the essence of the legacy of Brereton C. Jones. It is indispensable to research libraries and all who would know it, while understanding the art of politics and the power of the spoken word. âRegister of the Kentucky Historical Societyhttps://uknowledge.uky.edu/upk_political_science_papers/1010/thumbnail.jp
Dynamic response of boundaryâlayer turbulence to oscillatory shear
The temporal response of a wellâdeveloped turbulent boundary layer to the superposition of oscillatory shear has been measured experimentally, over a wide range of frequencies. The response is primarily a periodic organization in magnitude of components of the turbulent velocity field at the forcing frequency. Oscillatory production of turbulence arises predominantly as a modulation of the mean production process in the parent boundary layer. Close to the wall, the relative phases of response of components of turbulent kinetic energy indicate that temporal redistribution of turbulent kinetic energy is driven by robust coherent motions of the underlying mean flow. The local directions of redistribution deduced from these measurements indicate a wall impingement (splatting) effect, consistent with characterizations from numerical simulation.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/70705/2/PFADEB-3-1-178-1.pd
Topological Entanglement of Polymers and Chern-Simons Field Theory
In recent times some interesting field theoretical descriptions of the
statistical mechanics of entangling polymers have been proposed by various
authors. In these approaches, a single test polymer fluctuating in a background
of static polymers or in a lattice of obstacles is considered. The extension to
the case in which the configurations of two or more polymers become non-static
is not straightforward unless their trajectories are severely constrained. In
this paper we present another approach, based on Chern--Simons field theory,
which is able to describe the topological entanglements of two fluctuating
polymers in terms of gauge fields and second quantized replica fields.Comment: 16 pages, corrected some typos, added two new reference
Current challenges in three-dimensional bioprinting heart tissues for cardiac surgery.
SUMMARY:Previous attempts in cardiac bioengineering have failed to provide tissues for cardiac regeneration. Recent advances in 3-dimensional bioprinting technology using prevascularized myocardial microtissues as 'bioink' have provided a promising way forward. This review guides the reader to understand why myocardial tissue engineering is difficult to achieve and how revascularization and contractile function could be restored in 3-dimensional bioprinted heart tissue using patient-derived stem cells
Mission to a comet - Preliminary scientific objectives and experiments for use in advanced mission studies
Scientific objectives and experiments for comet missio
Nature tourism and Irish film
This article provides a historical overview and reading of seminal Irish film from the perspective of nature tourism. Within Irish cultural studies, tourism is frequently equated with an overly romantic image of the island, which has been used to sell the country abroad. However, using notions like the tourist gaze and taking on board influential debates around space/place, one can posit a more progressive environmental vision of nature and landscape in our readings of film
What do we know about different models of providing palliative care? Findings from a systematic review of reviews.
BACKGROUND: A wide range of organisational models of palliative care exist. However, decision makers need more information about which models are likely to be most effective in different settings and for different patient groups. AIM: To identify the existing range of models of palliative care that have been evaluated, what is already known and what further information is essential if the most effective and cost-effective models are to be identified and replicated more widely. DESIGN: A review of systematic and narrative reviews according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines. Study quality was assessed using the AMSTAR (A MeaSurement Tool to Assess Reviews) tool. DATA SOURCES: MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsycINFO, CINAHL, Cochrane Library, Web of Science and ASSIA were searched for reviews about models of service provision from 2000 to 2014 and supplemented with Google searches of the grey literature. RESULTS: Much of the evidence relates to home-based palliative care, although some models are delivered across care settings. Reviews report several potential advantages and few disadvantages of models of palliative care delivery. However, under-reporting of the components of intervention and comparator models are major barriers to the evaluation and implementation of models of palliative care. CONCLUSION: Irrespective of setting or patient characteristics, models of palliative care appear to show benefits and some models of palliative care may reduce total healthcare costs. However, much more detailed and systematic reporting of components and agreement about outcome measures is essential in order to understand the key components and successfully replicate effective organisational models
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Latitudinal gradients in butterfly population variability are influenced by landscape heterogeneity
The variability of populations over time is positively associated with their risk of local extinction. Previous work has shown that populations at the high-latitude boundary of speciesâ ranges show higher inter-annual variability, consistent with increased sensitivity and exposure to adverse climatic conditions. However, patterns of population variability at both high- and low-latitude species range boundaries have not yet been concurrently examined. Here, we assess the inter-annual population variability of 28 butterfly species between 1994 and 2009 at 351 and 18 sites in the United Kingdom and Catalonia, Spain, respectively. Local population variability is examined with respect to the position of the speciesâ bioclimatic envelopes (i.e. whether the population falls within areas of the âcoreâ climatic suitability or is a climatically âmarginalâ population), and in relation to local landscape heterogeneity, which may influence these range location â population dynamic relationships. We found that butterfly species consistently show latitudinal gradients in population variability, with increased variability in the more northerly UK. This pattern is even more marked for southerly distributed species with âmarginalâ climatic suitability in the UK but âcoreâ climatic suitability in Catalonia. In addition, local landscape heterogeneity did influence these range location â population dynamic relationships. Habitat heterogeneity was associated with dampened population dynamics, especially for populations in the UK. Our results suggest that promoting habitat heterogeneity may promote the persistence of populations at high-latitude range boundaries, which may potentially aid northwards expansion under climate warming. We did not find evidence that population variability increases towards southern range boundaries. Sample sizes for this region were low, but there was tentative evidence, in line with previous ecological theory, that local landscape heterogeneity may promote persistence in these retracting low-latitude range boundary populations
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