5,713 research outputs found

    Liverpool Central School District and Liverpool Association of Middle Managers

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    In the matter of the fact-finding between the Liverpool Central School District, employer, and the Liverpool Association of Middle Managers, union. PERB case no. M2010-362. Before: Peter A. Korn, fact finder

    The ownership of indivisible inputs and the agglomeration of resources

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    Agglomeration factors and ownership of indivisible economic resource

    Management Skills for the Contemporary College President: A Critical Review

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    This review of the literature related to the contemporary college president attempted to describe changes to the presidential role during the past 30 years. In addition to describing changes to the role, the review explores the personal, organizational, interpersonal, and leadership skills required for leading a contemporary university. The findings particularly note that with the changing demands for accountability in higher education, presidents are being forced to spend more of their time and be more focused on issues of finance, law, and public interactions. These issues tend to collide in discussions of public policy and within the framework of state legislative proposals. Continued professional development for college presidents is recommended, especially in terms of aligning work place priorities with the institution’s mission

    Planetary circulations in the presence of transient and self-induced heating

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    The research program focuses on large-scale circulations and their interaction with the global convective pattern. An 11-year record of global cloud imagery and contemporaneous fields of motion and temperature have been used to investigate organized convection and coherent variability of the tropical circulation operating on intraseasonal time scales. This study provides a detailed portrait of tropical variability associated with the so-called Madden-Julian Oscillation (MJO). It reveals the nature, geographical distribution, and seasonality of discrete convective signal, which is a measure of feedback between the circulation and the convective pattern. That discrete spectral behavior has been evaluated in light of natural variability of the ITCZ associated with climatological convection. A composite signature of the MJO, based on cross-covariance statistics of cloud cover, motion, and temperature, has been constructed to characterize the lifecycle of the disturbance in terms of these properties. The composite behavior has also been used to investigate the influence the MJO exerts on the zonal-mean circulation and the involvement of the MJO in transfers of momentum between the atmosphere and the solid Earth. The aforementioned observational studies have led to the production of two animations. One reveals the convective signal in band-pass filtered OLR and compares it to climatological convection. The other is a 3-dimensional visualization of the composite lifecycle of the MJO. With a clear picture of the MJO in hand, feedback between the circulation and the convective pattern can be diagnosed meaningfully in numerical simulations. This process is being explored in calculations with the linearized primitive equations on the sphere in the presence of realistic stability and shear. The numerical framework represents climatological convection as a space-time stochastic process and wave-induced convection in terms of the vertically-integrated moisture flux convergence. In these calculations, frictional convergence near the equator emerges as a key to feedback between the circulation and the convective pattern. At low latitudes, nearly geostrophic balance in the boundary layer gives way to frictional balance. This shifts the wave-induced convection into phase with the temperature anomaly and allows the attending heating to feed back positively onto the circulation. The calculations successfully reproduce the salient features of the MJO. They are being used to understand the growth and decay phases of the composite lifecycle and the conditions that favor amplification of the MJO

    S01RS SGB No. 30 (SEAC)

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    A BILL To appropriate three hundred eighty-seven dollars and fifty cents ($387.50) to the Student Environmental Action Coalition (SEAC) to help defer the costs of stage and table setup, sound equipment, and publicity for their Earth Day Vegetarian Dinner and Concert

    Jim Murry\u27s statement on the right to work

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    Jim Murry\u27s statement on the right to work to the Public Health, Welfare, Labor and Industry Committee.https://scholarworks.umt.edu/montanaconstitution/1423/thumbnail.jp

    Hypohydration and Glucose Regulation in Adult Males with Type II Diabetes Mellitus

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    Daily total water intake (TWI) has been linked to a number of chronic diseases, such as urolithiasis and chronic kidney disease. Additionally, epidemiological and animal model data have tied low TWI to impaired blood glucose regulation. However, the effect of a fluid intake intervention on blood glucose regulation has not yet been observed in humans. PURPOSE: Thus, the purpose of the current investigation is to determine if the response to an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) is altered by manipulation of hydration status in people with diabetes. METHODS: Nine men (53±9 y, 94.9± 23.8 kg, 1.75± 0.11 m, 30.0± 4.3 m∙kg-2, 31.5± 6.5 %BF) who had previously been diagnosed with type II diabetes mellitus (T2DM) (hemoglobin A1C; 6.8±0.9 %) were recruited to take part. Participants completed two OGTTs in a euhydrated and hypohydrated state one week apart in a counterbalanced order. Euhydration was achieved by standard water prescription in line with the dietary reference intakes for water, and hypohydration was achieved through progressive water restriction over three days leading up to the OGTT. Blood samples were taken at time points 0, 15, 30, 45, 60, 90, 120 min of the OGTT. RESULTS: The changes in TWI in the three days before each trial resulted in significantly lower body mass (-1.5±1.5 kg; p = 0.017) and increased urine specific gravity (0.017±0.009; p = 0.001), and plasma osmolality (10±8 mmol∙kg-1). Repeated measures analysis of variance identified a main effect of condition for blood glucose concentration F[1,48] = 10.772, p = 0.011, but not for insulin concentration F[1,48] = .657, p = 0.441. Insulin sensitivity calculated with the Matsuda index revealed attenuated insulin sensitivity during the hypohydrated trial (3.59±3.28) versus the euhydrated trial (4.10±3.78; t[8] = 2.834, p = 0.022) CONCLUSION: Hypohydration elicits an acute, negative effect on the blood glucose response to OGTT in men with T2DM. Although, blood insulin did not change, blood glucose and insulin sensitivity were reduced during the euhydrated trial. This suggests that inadequate TWI can negatively impact blood glucose regulation via decreased insulin sensitivity

    Owning Genes: Disputes Involving DNA Sequence Patents

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    Greco-Roman Paganism and Women Leaders: The Foundation of Early Christian Art

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    In this thesis, I explore the impact of Greco-Roman pagan motifs as well as women leaders and officials on the development of Early Christian art by analyzing catacomb paintings, sarcophagi, and minor arts such as finger rings and carved gemstones. I also discuss surviving primary sources written by Tertullian, Eusebius, St. Jerome, and Clement of Alexandria, to gain a better understanding of anti-art views in the first few centuries of the Church’s rise to power. These anti-art sentiments were often rooted in attempts to disassociate themselves from pagan practices while Early Christian art was emerging amongst the lower classes who were influenced by ubiquitous pagan artistic traditions and imagery. I also refute the common claim that Christians did not produce artworks prior to 200 CE by examining minor and non-traditional arts and by discussing the social and artistic impact of gender, class, and power dynamics in the Early Christian period. Minor arts and works produced for and by lower and middle classes, women, children, and people of color are almost always overlooked in the study of Late Antiquity. My goal is to shed some light on these perspectives and influences which will provide a more comprehensive, and accurate, perception of the timeline and development of Early Christian art

    Intervention to Prevent Religious Persecution in International Law

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