955 research outputs found

    Wild Wild Archive: Analog Videotape of the Rajneesh Movement at the Oregon Historical Society

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    In 1989, local Portland television station KGW donated 512 U-matic videotapes to the Oregon Historical Society (OHS). Shot between 1983 and 1985, the collection consists of more than 300 hours of footage related to the Rajneesh movement in Oregon—when followers of the spiritual teacher Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh set up an intentional community three hours southeast from Portland. The donation included minimal documentation and no finding aid. The tapes were the end result of several years’ worth of work by local camera operators and reporters at the news station. Ranging in location from downtown Portland to Berlin discos to the building of the town of Rajneeshpuram in Wasco County, the tapes are a thorough documentation of a specific moment in history. For Oregon, it was an engaging story—one which the stations recognized as newsworthy almost immediately, though no one at the time could imagine how it would end. By the time the tapes were donated in 1989, the story of the Rajneesh movement was a recent memory. Rajneeshpuram no longer existed, the ranch had been sold, and many of its followers had moved on. KGW, in looking to maximize the physical space at its station as well as ensure that the tapes wouldn’t be erased for re-use, reached out to OHS to provide long-term access. The tapes were accessioned and moved to an environmentally-controlled storage facility for long-term care

    Basic calculation proficiency and mathematics achievement in elementary school children

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    The relation between skill in simple addition and subtraction and more general math achievement in elementary school is well established but not understood. Both the intrinsic importance of skill in simple calculation for math and the influence of conceptual knowledge and cognitive factors (working memory, processing speed, oral language) on simple calculation and math are plausible. The authors investigated the development of basic calculation fluency and its relations to math achievement and other factors by tracking a group of 259 United Kingdom English children from second to third grade. In both grades the group did not retrieve the solutions to most problems, but their math achievement was typical. Improvement in basic calculation proficiency was partially predicted by conceptual knowledge and cognitive factors. These factors only partially mediated the relation between basic calculation and math achievement. The relation between reading and math was wholly mediated by number measures and cognitive factors

    Improving the seasonal prediction of Northern Australian rainfall onset to help with grazing management decisions

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    The development of the Australian Community Climate and Earth-System Simulator-Seasonal prediction system version 1 (ACCESS-S1) signifies a major step towards addressing predictive limitations in multi-week to seasonal forecasting throughout Australia. It is anticipated that moving to ACCESS-S1 will provide improved skill in rainfall prediction during the dry to wet season transition period across tropical northern Australia. This is an important time for northern Australian livestock producers in terms of the decisions they make around pasture and livestock management. This study quantifies the hindcast skill of ACCESS-S1 for the northern rainfall onset (NRO), defined as the date when 50 mm of precipitation has accumulated at a given location from the 1st of September, heralding the shift towards greener pastures. We evaluate the raw model hindcasts, and compare them to hindcasts corrected for mean biases and those calibrated against observations. It is found that the raw ACCESS-S1 hindcasts broadly replicate the observed median NRO over the period 1990–2012, despite a ten- dency for earlier than observed onsets. In terms of forecasting the interannual variability of the NRO, the ca- librated hindcasts show the greatest skill, with the largest improvements over a climatological forecast in their probabilistic forecasts of an earlier or later than usual onset, with a large portion of northern Australian showing more than 10% improvement. With real-time NRO forecasts now generated by ACCESS-S1, it is expected that the calibrated predictions will help northern Australian graziers make better informed decisions around livestock management prior to the wet season

    The Hobby-Eberly Telescope Chemical Abundances Of Stars In The Halo (CASH) Project. I. The Lithium-, s-, And r-Enhanced Metal-Poor Giant HKII 17435-00532

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    We present the first detailed abundance analysis of the metal-poor giant HKII 17435-00532. This star was observed as part of the University of Texas long-term project Chemical Abundances of Stars in the Halo ( CASH). A spectrum was obtained with the High Resolution Spectrograph (HRS) on the Hobby-Eberly Telescope with a resolving power of R similar to 15,000. Our analysis reveals that this star may be located on the red giant branch, red horizontal branch, or early asymptotic giant branch. We find that this metal-poor (Fe/H = -2.2) star has an unusually high lithium abundance [log epsilon(Li) +2.1], mild carbon (C/Fe = +0.7) and sodium (]Na/Fe] = +0.6) enhancement, as well as enhancement of both s-process ([Ba/Fe] = +0.8) and r-process ([Eu/Fe] = +0.5) material. The high Li abundance can be explained by self-enrichment through extra mixing that connects the convective envelope with the outer regions of the H-burning shell. If so, HKII 17435-00532 is the most metal-poor star in which this short-lived phase of Li enrichment has been observed. The Na and n-capture enrichment can be explained by mass transfer from a companion that passed through the thermally pulsing AGB phase of evolution with only a small initial enrichment of r-process material present in the birth cloud. Despite the current nondetection of radial velocity variations (over similar to 180 days), it is possible that HKII 17435 - 00532 is in a long-period or highly inclined binary system, similar to other stars with similar n-capture enrichment patterns.NASA AAS Small Research Grant ProgramGALEX GI 05-GALEX05-27Italian MIUR-PRIN06 ProjectNSF AST 06-07708, AST04-06784, AST 07-0776, PHY 02-15783JINA AST 07-07447Astronom

    Attitudes of US Obstetricians Toward a Combined Tetanus-Diphtheria-Acellular Pertussis Vaccine for Adults

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    Objective. To describe obstetricians' perspectives related to tetanus-diphtheria-acellular pertussis (Tdap) vaccination of mothers and other adults in close contact with infants. Methods. Mail survey of national random sample of 400 obstetricians . Results. Response rate was 54%. Most respondents would likely recommend Tdap for women during the postpartum hospital stay (78%) or during pregnancy (69%) if a national recommendation was issued. Expected barriers were knowing the date of patients' most recent Td booster (74%) and patient resistance (46%). Most felt that obstetricians have a role in promoting and administering Tdap vaccine to adults other than mothers likely to come in close contact with infants. Conclusion. Obstetricians are likely to agree with the recent provisional US recommendation to administer Tdap to postpartum mothers and other adults expected to come in close contact with infants. Obstetricians would also be likely to support a potential recommendation to administer Tdap during pregnancy. Barriers to adoption of new Tdap vaccine recommendations should be monitored
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