8,166 research outputs found

    Preserving Hope Through Youth Attendance at New Canaan Baptist Church

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    The biblical perspective of training up a child in the way to go provides the foundation for mentoring to influence youth success. This thesis project applies a needs analysis to fulfill the effort to preserve hope through youth attendance at New Canaan Baptist Church. No secular or spiritual mentorship program exists for African American male youth in Chester, Georgia. This qualitative study used surveys to query the beliefs of African American youth, church leaders, and parents about the need for a mentorship program. Findings from analyses of survey data from almost thirty participants implied the need for a community-based mentorship program for African American male youth. Participants volunteered to participate in six project meetings. These meetings discussed low church attendance among African American male adolescents due to the lack of mentoring. The mentor and mentee were trained and paired based on commonalities. Data collected through mentorship meetings, including strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats, will be used to develop a permanent community-based mentorship program inclusive to all youth. This thesis project proposes grooming African American male youth based on the discipleship principles found in Scripture, also evident in African American culture, to mentor men. Church as a community leader should work diligently with church leaders, parents, and African American male youth to reignite the flame of ancestry hope. The spiritual light of God gives endurance to those who accept His Great Commission. The mentorship program’s mission is to restore hope through Jesus Christ’s everlasting hope

    How Black Students are Saving Higher Education

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    Student reflections on racial (in)justice in higher educatio

    Spectral Type and Radial Velocity Variations in Three SRC Variables

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    SRC variables are M supergiants, precursors to Type II supernovae, that vary in brightness with moderately regular periods of order 100-1000 days. Although identified as pulsating stars that obey their own period-luminosity relation, few have been examined in enough detail to follow the temperature and spectral changes that they undergo during their long cycles. The present study examines such changes for several SRC variables revealed by CCD spectra obtained at the Dominion Astrophysical Observatory (DAO) during 2005-2009, as well as by archival spectra from the DAO (and elsewhere) for some stars from the 1960s to 1980s, and Cambridge radial velocity spectrometer measures for Betelgeuse. Described here is our classification procedure and information on the spectral type and radial velocity changes in three of the stars. The results provide insights into the pulsation mechanism in M supergiants.Comment: To appear in the Odessa Variable Stars 2010 conference proceedings (see http://uavso.org.ua/?page=vs2010), edited by I. Andronov and V. Kovtyuk

    Strains for studying Spore killer elements in four Neurospora species

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    This note gives a comprehensive list of stocks useful for working with Spore killer elements, including reference strains for use as testers, genetically marked derivatives, and strains sensitive and resistant to killing by Sk-1K, Sk-2K, and . Geographical site of origin is indicted for the various killer alleles. Many of the strains are newly deposited in FGSC. Some are listed also under other categories. Updated versions of the list will appear in future FGSC Stock Lists (Part IV, Special Purpose Stocks)

    Salt balance analysis

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    December 1983.Bibliography: page 79.Project no. A-051-COLO, agreement no. 14-34-0001-1106, 14-34-0001-2106; partially funded by the U.S. Dept. of the Interior, as authorized by the Water Research and Development Act of 1978

    International and Interstate Approaches to Taxing Business Income

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    In the United States, many states have sought the objective of uni- formity by enacting the Uniform Division of Income for Tax Purposes Act (UDITPA). In addition, many of those same states have entered into the Multistate Tax Compact (MTC). The salutary objective of both the UDITPA and the MTC is to provide uniform rules for the allocation and apportionment of income, in order to facilitate both compliance and enforcement, as well as to reduce the likelihood of double taxation. The promised uniformity, however, has been at the same time both illusive and elusive. Experience with the UDITPA and the MTC in the United States has demonstrated that a multilateral treaty would not achieve uni- formity amongst the numerous sovereign countries of the world, primarily because there is no paramount supervisory body in the international arena. At the same time, uniformity could be achieved within the United States by pre-emptive federal legislation uniformly interpreted and ap- plied to all of the states. The uniform application of an apportionment formula to distribute the tax base of a multijurisdictional unitary enter- prise would avoid many of the problems of the separate entity approach, producing a fair, equitable determination of the tax base for state income taxes. Part II of this article will examine the treatment of business income of multinational enterprises under tax treaties, and Part III discusses the determination of the tax base of such enterprises. Part IV examines the evolution of the law pertaining to state imposed taxes on, or measured by, the net business income of multistate unitary enterprises, the issues of jurisdiction and the determination of the tax base. Part V addresses vari- ous attempts to achieve uniformity in state taxation. Part VI suggests that in the international setting, the goal of uniformity is unlikely to be achieved by a multilateral treaty, but that within the United States, pre- emptive federal legislation should be enacted

    International and Interstate Approaches to Taxing Business Income

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    In the United States, many states have sought the objective of uni- formity by enacting the Uniform Division of Income for Tax Purposes Act (UDITPA). In addition, many of those same states have entered into the Multistate Tax Compact (MTC). The salutary objective of both the UDITPA and the MTC is to provide uniform rules for the allocation and apportionment of income, in order to facilitate both compliance and enforcement, as well as to reduce the likelihood of double taxation. The promised uniformity, however, has been at the same time both illusive and elusive. Experience with the UDITPA and the MTC in the United States has demonstrated that a multilateral treaty would not achieve uni- formity amongst the numerous sovereign countries of the world, primarily because there is no paramount supervisory body in the international arena. At the same time, uniformity could be achieved within the United States by pre-emptive federal legislation uniformly interpreted and ap- plied to all of the states. The uniform application of an apportionment formula to distribute the tax base of a multijurisdictional unitary enter- prise would avoid many of the problems of the separate entity approach, producing a fair, equitable determination of the tax base for state income taxes. Part II of this article will examine the treatment of business income of multinational enterprises under tax treaties, and Part III discusses the determination of the tax base of such enterprises. Part IV examines the evolution of the law pertaining to state imposed taxes on, or measured by, the net business income of multistate unitary enterprises, the issues of jurisdiction and the determination of the tax base. Part V addresses vari- ous attempts to achieve uniformity in state taxation. Part VI suggests that in the international setting, the goal of uniformity is unlikely to be achieved by a multilateral treaty, but that within the United States, pre- emptive federal legislation should be enacted

    Teleoperator Maneuvering System (TMS) Mission Applications and Benefits

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    The Teleoperator Maneuvering System (TMS) is a Shuttlelaunched, free-flying, remotely controlled, reusable orbital support vehicle capable of providing a wide range of placement, maneuvering, retrieval, and maintenance/repair user services for future satellites and for large space systems being planned for the late 80\u27s and beyond. The TMS will greatly extend the operating range and altitudes provided by the basic Space Transportation System (STS) in low Earth orbit; similar capabilities are also provided at geosynchronous altitudes when the TMS is delivered to that location with the Centaur or alternative upper stages. Basic TMS capabilities for both long duration and short term orbital missions, including Space Station support operations, will be described. The combined utilitarian, performance, and economic benefits offered to the user community by the TMS program will also be presented

    Occasional essay: upper motor neuron syndrome in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

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    The diagnosis of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) requires recognition of both lower (LMN) and upper motor neuron (UMN) dysfunction.1 However, classical UMN signs are frequently difficult to identify in ALS.2 LMN involvement is sensitively detected by electromyography (EMG)3 but, as yet, there are no generally accepted markers for monitoring UMN abnormalities,4 the neurobiology of ALS itself, and disease spread through the brain and spinal cord,.5 Full clinical assessment is therefore necessary to exclude other diagnoses and to monitor disease progression. In part, this difficulty regarding detection of UMN involvement in ALS derives from the definition of ‘the UMN syndrome’. Abnormalities of motor control in ALS require reformulation within an expanded concept of the UMN, together with the neuropathological, neuro-imaging and neurophysiological abnormalities in ALS. We review these issues here
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