5,254 research outputs found
Crisis Airlift Management: Effective Scheduling
This is a report on the basis, data, findings, and models developed for US Transportation Command and Headquarters Air Mobility Command. Focusing on the dynamic scheduling problem that arises during management of airlift assets into space-constrained airfields during a crisis, this research explains the conditions surrounding this event, discusses several areas of potential cross-functional applications, presents analysis of current performance, and provides several modeling possibilities for schedule efficiency. Past research in the Flow Management Problem (an airline flow control issue) is extensive, but specific applications in crisis airlift are long in coming, primarily due to the complexity of the environment. This complexity is restricted in this initial research with an iterative approach providing for relaxation of those restrictions to present a more representative model. The model presented in this research is a variable set of feeding channels into a single queue with interaction and stochastic behavior serviced by a variably capacitated server. Initial findings include a high variance to mean ratio resulting in poor schedule performance. The products of this research are several tables and charts designed to aid planners in the development of executable schedules
Disability in young people and adults one year after head injury: prospective cohort study
OBJECTIVE: To determine the frequency of disability in young people and adults admitted to hospital with a head injury and to estimate the annual incidence in the community.
DESIGN: Prospective, hospital based cohort study, with one year follow up of sample stratified by coma score.
SETTING: Five acute hospitals in Glasgow. SUBJECTS: 2962 patients (aged 14 years or more) with head injury; 549 (71%) of the 769 patients selected for follow up participated.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Glasgow outcome scale and problem orientated questionnaire.
RESULTS: Survival with moderate or severe disability was common after mild head injury (47%, 95% confidence interval 42% to 52%) and similar to that after moderate (45%, 35% to 56%) or severe injury (48%, 36% to 60%). By extrapolation from the population identified (90% of whom had mild injuries), it was estimated that annually in Glasgow (population 909 498) 1400 young people and adults are still disabled one year after head injury.
CONCLUSION: The incidence of disability in young people and adults admitted with a head injury is higher than expected. This reflects the high rate of sequelae previously unrecognised in the large number of patients admitted to hospital with an apparently mild head injury
More than one Adam? Revelation and philology in nineteenth-century China
From Marco Polo to Richard Nixon, narratives
of the encounter between Chinese and
Westerners have been defining texts of
European cultures and their descendants.
Successive but sporadic reports from
travellers, missionaries, diplomats, traders
and others have provided a model of an
alternative way of arranging people, of
organizing their lives, of thinking about
the state of being human; one that described
a government that was, or at least
was represented as being, as authoritative
as anything at home, with military power
that could challenge any other, and with
cultural achievements as profound. Traditionally
labelled âinscrutableâ, China
nonetheless possessed a written literature,
an esteemed bureaucracy, technological
achievements, complex financial systems,
codes and courts of law, and religions that
had texts, buildings and hierarchies of
priests. In other words, though not like
us at all, they were exactly like us
Taking Away Joss: Chinese religion and the Wesleyan mission in Castlemaine, 1868
On October 1, 1868 three Chinese men
appeared before His Honour, Judge
Forbes at the Castlemaine County Court in
Victoria. One Goon Cheum was the
plaintiff in âan action to recover the value
of Chinese Temple taken down by the defendantsâ,
namely Hoa Ah Pang and Laong
Oun Hung ... What I will present takes the form
of microhistory, but perhaps cases such as
this enable us to ground our conclusions
about cross-cultural encounters in the
minutiae of quotidian experience and historical
specificity
Study of high altitude plume impingement
Computer program has been developed as analytical tool to predict severity of effects of exhaust of rocket engines on adjacent spacecraft surfaces. Program computes forces, moments, pressures, and heating rates on surfaces immersed in or subjected to exhaust plume environments. Predictions will be useful in design of systems where such problems are anticipated
A search for starlight reflected from HD 75289 b
We have used a doppler tomographic analysis to conduct a deep search for the
starlight reflected from the planetary companion to HD 75289. In 4 nights on
VLT2/UVES in January 2003, we obtained 684 high resolution echelle spectra with
a total integration time of 26 hours. We establish an upper limit on the
planet's geometric albedo p < 0.12 (to the 99.9% significance level) at the
most probable orbital inclination i ~ 60 degrees, assuming a grey albedo, a
Venus-like phase function and a planetary radius R_p = 1.6 R_Jup. We are able
to rule out some combinations of the predicted planetary radius and atmospheric
albedo models with high, reflective cloud decks.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, MNRAS accepted 12 Oct 200
The Public Papers of Governor Brereton C. Jones, 1991-1995
In his inaugural address, Governor Brereton C. Jones proclaimed, This administration is committed to having the most positive, progressive, exciting four years in our state\u27s history.
Through speeches and press releases, this volume reflects the principal concerns of Jonesâs time in office. Thematically organized, the more than two hundred public statements included here present the public face of the Jones administration on such issues as health care, education, economic development, the environment, and governmental reform. Nowhere else has the full text of these speeches and press releases been printed.
Governor Jones, born in 1939, was elected to the West Virginia legislature in 1964, where he served for four years before retiring from politics. After moving to Kentucky and switching allegiance from the Republican to the Democratic Party, he re-entered politics with a successful campaign to become lieutenant governor in 1987. He was elected the Commonwealth\u27s fifty-fourth governor in 1991 by a record margin of nearly two to one.
Jones initiated a number of reforms once in office. He turned a 300 million surplus in four years, and he passed dramatic ethics reform in both the executive and legislative branches. Health-care issues were also of great importance to Jones, who spent the years before his election working with the Kentucky Health Care Access Foundation in addition to farming. After surviving a helicopter crash in 1992, he turned the main focus of his administration toward health-care reform and initiatives. Though he met with legislative opposition when he proposed universal health care for all Kentuckians, he did help pass legislation in 1994 that would serve as a solid beginning on the issue for future governors.
Penny M. Miller, a professor of political science at the University of Kentucky, is the author of Kentucky Politics and Government: Do We Stand United?, and the co-author of two other books, The Kentucky Legislature: Two Decades of Change and Political Parties and Primaries in Kentucky. Her articles have appeared in leading professional journals such as Journal of Politics, Western Politics Quarterly, Women & Politics, Kentucky Law Journal, and Political Science & Politics. She serves as a board member of the Kentucky Long-Term Policy Research Center and Kids Voting Kentucky. She also served as Chair of the Kentucky Commission on Women, and as a board member of the Kentucky Center for Public Issues and the White House Commission on Presidential Scholars.
A good starting point for those interested in late-twentieth-century Kentucky politics. It deserves a place on every Kentucky bookshelf. âFilson History Quarterly
Reflects the principal concerns of Jonesâs administration through speeches and press releases. âDocumentary Editing
A useful resource for anyone interested in the main issues during his term as governor. . . . A valuable reference tool. âNorthern Kentucky Heritage
Contains the essence of the legacy of Brereton C. Jones. It is indispensable to research libraries and all who would know it, while understanding the art of politics and the power of the spoken word. âRegister of the Kentucky Historical Societyhttps://uknowledge.uky.edu/upk_political_science_papers/1010/thumbnail.jp
Designing and Maintaining Serials Check-in Systems: Even If You Plan to Automate
Like most libraries, law libraries are anxious to install integrated library systems that, in addition to other functions, will provide effective online serials control. For some, these systems are a reality, for others, their installation is in various stages of planning. For most, however, they are merely something to read, hear and day-dream about. In small and medium size libraries, the daily struggle of maintaining control over growing serials collections will be left to manual systems for some time to come.
The information in this paper is intended to suggest ways that may ease the frustration of a manual system. Even for libraries that plan an automated system within the near future, redesigning the current manual system provides an opportunity to do some advance planning, to gather information and to clean up problems before going online. Although this document does not deal with online systems, libraries about to install one might find this helpful in their evaluation of the data elements to be included in their check-in records. Generally, the principles and suggestions here have been tried and proven to create a comprehensive and efficient check-in system.
This material was originally presented by Penny Hazelton at the 1979 AALL serials workshop, and revised by Dennis Benamati for presentation at the 1986 AALL program We Are Our Own Best Resource: A Dialogue with the Experts.https://digitalcommons.law.uw.edu/faculty-books/1051/thumbnail.jp
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