6,190 research outputs found
Serving the Needs of Homeless Library Patrons: Legal Issues, Ethical Concerns, and Practical Approaches
While cognizant of their social mission, public libraries often still have found it challenging to serve one of their most marginalized constituencies - the homeless. However, bound by legal mandate as well as American Library Association (ALA) core values of access, democracy, and serving the public, libraries must find ways to serve the needs of poor and homeless patrons. This paper describes the demographics and characteristics of homelessness, explores legal and ethical issues with regard to library services, identifies selected model library programs that serve this population effectively, and provides practical guidance and recommendations to public libraries and librarians struggling with this matter, including how to draft patron codes of behavior that are consistent with legal guidelines. Serving the poor and homeless is both a challenge and an opportunity to put the American Library Association’s core values into practice. In so doing, public libraries model the democratic principles they would have their patrons emulate, not only demonstrating but creating the kind of society for which they stand
The teaching of civics in the public schools
Thesis (M.A.)--Boston Universit
Male Behavior in \u3ci\u3eEvagetes Subangulatus\u3c/i\u3e (Hymenoptera: Pompilidae)
Males of Evagetes subangulatus patrolled primarily among shrubs in an area where females dug in soil. Twenty-nine individually-marked males were seen from 0 to 16 days after marking. They shared a home range space of about 400 m3. Although they did not exhibit territoriality, they chased and pounced upon one another and upon unmarked, conspecific males and females
Testing the Theory of Trade Policy: Evidence from the Abrupt End of the Multifibre Arrangement
Quota restrictions on United States imports of apparel and textiles under the multifibre arrangement (MFA) ended abruptly in January 2005. This change in policy was large, predetermined, and fully anticipated, making it an ideal natural experiment for testing the theory of trade policy. We focus on simple and robust theory predictions about the effects of binding quotas, and also compute nonparametric estimates of the cost of the MFA. We find that prices of quota constrained categories from China fell by 38% in 2005, while prices in unconstrained categories from China and from other countries changed little. We also find substantial quality downgrading in imports from China in previously constrained categories, as predicted by theory. The annual cost of the MFA to U.S. consumers was about $90 per household.
A Novel Decomposition for Control of DC Circuits and Grid Models with Heterogeneous Energy Sources
The way in which electric power depends on the topology of circuits with
mixed voltage and current sources is examined. The power flowing in any
steady-state DC circuit is shown to depend on a minimal set of key variables
called fundamental node voltages and fundamental edge currents. Every
steady-state DC circuit can be decomposed into a voltage controlled subcircuit
and a current controlled subcircuit. In terms of such a decomposition, the I^2R
losses of a mixed source circuit are always the sum of losses on the voltage
controlled subcircuit and the current controlled subcircuit. The paper
concludes by showing that the total power flowing in a mixed source circuit can
be found as critical points of the power expressed in terms of the key voltage
and current variables mentioned above. The possible relationship to topology
control of electric grid operations is discussed
Land Grant Application- Barrows, Abraham (Cornish)
Land grant application submitted to the Maine Land Office on behalf of Abraham Barrows for service in the Revolutionary War, by their widow Margaret.https://digitalmaine.com/revolutionary_war_me_land_office/1068/thumbnail.jp
THE FEDERAL ROLE IN LAND USE POLICY: ARGUMENTS FOR AND AGAINST FEDERAL INVOLVEMENT
Land Economics/Use,
Prototype thin-film thermocouple/heat-flux sensor for a ceramic-insulated diesel engine
A platinum versus platinum-13 percent rhodium thin-film thermocouple/heat-flux sensor was devised and tested in the harsh, high-temperature environment of a ceramic-insulated, low-heat-rejection diesel engine. The sensor probe assembly was developed to provide experimental validation of heat transfer and thermal analysis methodologies applicable to the insulated diesel engine concept. The thin-film thermocouple configuration was chosen to approximate an uninterrupted chamber surface and provide a 1-D heat-flux path through the probe body. The engine test was conducted by Purdue University for Integral Technologies, Inc., under a DOE-funded contract managed by NASA Lewis Research Center. The thin-film sensor performed reliably during 6 to 10 hr of repeated engine runs at indicated mean surface temperatures up to 950 K. However, the sensor suffered partial loss of adhesion in the thin-film thermocouple junction area following maximum cyclic temperature excursions to greater than 1150 K
Behavior at a Nesting Site and Prey of \u3ci\u3eCrabro Cribrellifer\u3c/i\u3e (Hymenoptera: Sphecidae)
In Michigan, Crabro cribrellifer tends to show nest clumping within a nest aggregation. Its nesting behavior is similar to that of other Crabro, and it preys on Neoitamus flavofemoratus (Diptera: Asilidae) on warm days in July. Miltogrammine flies Metopia campestris are active at the nesting site
- …