8,793 research outputs found

    Does Low-Density Grazing Affect Butterfly (Lepidoptera) Colonization of a Previously Flooded Tallgrass Prairie Reconstruction?

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    Conservation of wildlife in managed landscapes can be facilitated by partnering with livestock producers to introduce grazing disturbances. The effects of grazing in grassland systems, however, are often a function of other disturbances that may occur simultaneously. The goal of this study was to determine how grazing and flooding disturbances interacted to affect butterfly communities on wetland reserve program easements. We sampled butterflies from 2008-2011 in two large grassland habitats, one exposed to low density cow-calf grazing and one maintained as a control. Both grassland habitats were severely flooded in 2008. Repeated-measures ANOVA suggested that time since flooding and the interaction between flooding and grazing were important predictors of butterfly richness at these sites. Grazing may have delayed the post-flood recolonization by butterflies, but by 2011, the grazed system contained a slightly higher species richness of butterflies than the ungrazed system. The grazed and ungrazed grasslands converged in butterfly species composition over the course of four years. Our results suggest that grazing may be a useful tool for managing wetland reserve program easement habitats and that both flood- ing and grazing did not appear to have lasting negative impacts on butterfly communities at our sites

    Asset Price Shocks, Real Expenditures, and Financial Structure: A Multi-Country Analysis

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    This paper examines the responses of private consumption, residential investment, and business investment in 11 EU countries, Japan, and the United States to shocks in housing and equity prices. The effects are assessed with a Structural Vector Auto Regressive (SVAR) model, and four key findings emerge. First, the impacts of asset price shocks are heterogeneous across countries. Second, these heterogeneous responses are systematically related to cross-country variation in financial structure. We are thus able to document the importance of a wealth/balance sheet channel for private consumption and residential investment and an equity finance channel for business investment. Third, for a given country, housing shocks have a much greater impact than equity shocks. Fourth, variance decompositions indicate that monetary policy reacts to equity price shocks but not to housing price shocks. These results highlight the important role played by asset prices on real activity and fuel the debate about the inclusion of asset prices in the formulation of monetary policy.monetary policy, asset prices, structural VAR

    Asset Price Shocks, Real Expenditures, and Financial Structure:A Multi-Country Analysis

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    This paper examines the response of the economies of 11 EU countries, Japan, and the United States to shocks in housing and equity prices. The effects are assessed with a Structural Vector Auto Regressive (SVAR) model, and four key findings emerge. First, the impacts of asset price shocks are heterogeneous across countries. Second, these heterogeneous responses are systematically related to cross-country variation in financial structure, and we are thus able to document the importance of a wealth/balance sheet channel for consumption and an equity finance channel for investment. Third, for a given country, housing shocks have a much greater impact than equity shocks. Fourth, variance decompositions indicate that monetary policy reacts to equity price shocks but not to housing price shocks. These results highlight the important role played by asset prices on real activity, and fuel the debate about the inclusion of asset prices in the formulation of monetary policy.

    Efficient Management of a Concrete Machinery Manufacturing Concern in the State of Wisconsin

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    Efficient management is a subject which has been extensively treated - volumes upon volumes have been writ­ten treating the subject in general, as it relates to the shop, to the office, to individual departments. And yet, when one has once worked in a shop or in an office he be­gins to realize how industries merely attempt to follow ef­ficient methods, but utterly fail. Either because of the wrong system or methods employed, or because of inefficient executives, or because of a wrong kind of manager at the head of a certain department who may be responsible for the entire lack of unity; -and then again it may be the fault of the employees who are refusing to co-operate with the man­agement because of some misunderstanding or unjust prejudices. In this treatise on efficient management, it is my purpose to set forth my idea as to what I believe to be the beet way in securing efficient management, not in gen­eral, but in relation to the concrete machinery manufactur­ing industry in the State of Wisconsin which will work out to the beet interests of both employer and employee. My discussion, however, will be confined only to the managerial and office end including the various departments, although in doing so I may at times bring in discussions on. or pertaining to the shops as related to the department under discussion. Shop and labor management are subjects on in themselves deserving of separate and special attentio. I am basing my discussion on the ideas which I have formulated during five years of work, of personal ex­perience, working in various parts of the shop and office in the largest concrete machinery industry of its kind in the world; upon the knowledge gained through special study of all departments in this concern and others; upon the knowledge and information secured through reading text books on the subject; and lastly, but not least in import­ance, upon the knowledge gained as a student in the Business Administration Department of Marquette University

    Alien Registration- Bateman, Elmer S. (Veazie, Penobscot County)

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    https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/10469/thumbnail.jp

    Alien Registration- Cowan, Elmer S. (Waterville, Kennebec County)

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    https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/15514/thumbnail.jp

    Constitutional Law - Qualifications of Congressmen

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    The Supreme Court of the United States has held that Congress, in judging the qualifications of its members, is limited to the standing qualifications prescribed by the Constitution. Powell v. McCormack, 89 S. Ct. 1944 (1969)
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