9 research outputs found

    Seabrook: A new beginning

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    This pamphlet offers an introduction to the history of Seabrook Farms and the people who worked and lived there. "Among the cultures represented in Seabrook Village or in the workplace were (in alphabetical order): Asia (Chinese, Indian, Japanese, Korean), Europe (Austrian, Bulgarian, Czechoslovakian, Danish, Dutch, Estonian, German, Hungarian, Italian, Jewish, Latvian, Lithuanian, Norwegian, Polish, Romanian, Russian, Scots-Irish, Swedish, Ukranian, Yugoslavian), Africa (African American), Caribbean (Bahamian, Barbadian, Jamaican, Puerto Rican, St. Kittsian, St. Lucian, Trinidadian)." "The "Seabrook Farms: A New Beginning" was prepared in conjunction with the construction of the Seabrook Educational and Cultural Center and the preparation of its first exhibition.

    I remember playing Sunday sandlot baseball at Seabrook

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    In this "I remember" memoir, Rei Noguchi recalls playing baseball during the summer months at Seabrook. Some families provided the equipment for everyone to use. Players on one team would share their baseball gloves with the players on the other. Each team kept its own score, as well as designated an umpire. Rei found that it worked very well. Often, the adults would play against the kids, and Rei remembers the kids winning more games. The games were usually community events, and people would stop by to watch while doing errands around the town. The Seabrook Educational and Cultural Center has been soliciting current and past residents of Seabrook Farms for an "I remember" project. Residents are asked to create narratives regarding their experiences at Seabrook Farms. These memories help preserve the history and multi-cultural heritage of Seabrook Farms

    Grammar and the teaching of writing : limits and possibilities /

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    The Financial Policy in the Later Meiji Era

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    A search for resonant and nonresonant pair production of Higgs bosons in the b¯bτ+τ− final state is presented. The search uses 36.1  fb−1 of pp collision data with √s=13  TeV recorded by the ATLAS experiment at the LHC in 2015 and 2016. Decays of the τ-lepton pairs with at least one τ lepton decaying to final states with hadrons and a neutrino are considered. No significant excess above the expected background is observed in the data. The cross-section times branching ratio for nonresonant Higgs boson pair production is constrained to be less than 30.9 fb, 12.7 times the standard model expectation, at 95% confidence level. The data are also analyzed to probe resonant Higgs boson pair production, constraining a model with an extended Higgs sector based on two doublets and a Randall-Sundrum bulk graviton model. Upper limits are placed on the resonant Higgs boson pair production cross-section times branching ratio, excluding resonances X in the mass range 305  GeV<mX<402  GeV in the simplified hMSSM minimal supersymmetric model for tanβ=2 and excluding bulk Randall-Sundrum gravitons GKK in the mass range 325  GeV<mGKK<885  GeV for k/¯MPl=1

    Erratum: Search for Resonant and Nonresonant Higgs Boson Pair Production in the bb[over \uaf]\u3c4^+\u3c4^- Decay Channel in pp Collisions at sqrt[s]=13\u2009\u2009TeV with the ATLAS Detector [Phys. Rev. Lett. 121, 191801 (2018)]

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    This corrects the article DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.121.191801

    Outcomes in Newly Diagnosed Atrial Fibrillation and History of Acute Coronary Syndromes: Insights from GARFIELD-AF

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    BACKGROUND: Many patients with atrial fibrillation have concomitant coronary artery disease with or without acute coronary syndromes and are in need of additional antithrombotic therapy. There are few data on the long-term clinical outcome of atrial fibrillation patients with a history of acute coronary syndrome. This is a 2-year study of atrial fibrillation patients with or without a history of acute coronary syndromes
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