2,120 research outputs found

    A Souvenir of Bar Harbor, Mount Desert Island, Maine

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    Bunker Hill Songster, Containing National and Patriotic Songs, as Sung by the Principal Vocalists

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    A pamphlet of lyrics to popular songs, circa 1850. Without music

    The Employment, Earnings, and Income of Less-Skilled Workers over the Business Cycle

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    In this paper, I examine the effect of business cycles on the employment, earnings, and income of persons in different demographic groups. I classify individuals by sex, education, and race. The analysis uses data from the Current Population Survey’s Outgoing Rotation Group data, covering the period 1979–1992, and March Annual Demographic File data, covering the period 1975–1997. Many different individual and family outcome measures are considered, including employment to population ratios, weekly earnings, hourly earnings, annual hours, annual earnings, family earnings, family transfer income, and total family income. The regression model is specified such that the key parameters measure how the labor market outcomes of less-skilled workers vary with the business cycle relative to the variability for high-skill groups. The analysis uses variation across MSAs in the timing and severity of shocks. The results consistently show that individuals with lower educational levels, nonwhites, and low-skill women experience greater cyclical fluctuation than high-skill men. These results are the most striking when examining comprehensive measures of labor force activity such as the likelihood of full-time, full-year work. Government transfers and the earnings of other family members decrease the differences between groups, resulting in more skill-group-neutral effects of business cycles on family income than on individual earnings. The paper examines the stability of these results by comparing evidence across the 1982 and 1992 recessions. The evidence suggests that the 1992 recession led to more uniform effects across skill groups than did earlier cycles.

    Constitution of the original Hawaiian church

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    Caption title. "Originally formed in America and composed partly of home-born members of American churches and partly of natives of the Sandwich Islands."--Page [1]. The original church organized by the Sandwich Islands Mission in 1820 was the Kawaiahao Church. Signed on p. 3-4: Oct. 15, 1819. Hiram Bingham [and fifty-four others]. The last signatories were members of the third company of missionaries who arrived at Honolulu on March 30, 1828. Signatures of the fourth company which arrived on Dec. 28, 1830, are not included but are added in ms. to the original manuscript copy held by the Hawaiian Mission Children's Society. UHM: This must have been printed about 1828 because it is signed by the members of the third company of American missionaries, which arrived that year. -- Hawaiian Mission Children's Society

    TENTH ANNUAL REPORT OF THE FACULTY OF THE FREE ACADEMY, TO THE BOARD OF EDUCATION, [1861]

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    A third report from ninth bound volume of ten which documents in part the first nineteen years of The Free Academy, the predecessor of the educational institution, City College of New York. This selection from Faculty Reports. Free Academy. College of the City of New York. 1860-78 , includes 6 individual reports. At a time when municipal education constituted primary schooling, citizens united in response to arguments presented by a merchant and Board of Education President, Townsend Harris, for the necessity of an institution that would provide advanced training for future generations of citizens to fully engage in the professions advantageous to an expanding urban center. Includes preliminary reports that commented on the application of resources for the creation of the institution and the annual reports of the faculty, demonstrating accountability to the Board of Education with regard to the operation of the facility., TENTH ANNUAL REPORT OF THE FACULTY OF THE FREE ACADEMY, TO THE BOARD OF EDUCATION, [1861], RG

    Optimising power transmission options for marine energy converter farms

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    AbstractThis paper introduces a techno-economic analysis framework to assess different transmission options for marine energy converter (MEC) farms. On the technical front, the feasibility of the transmission options considering supply quality constraints and the optimal sizing of reactive power compensation to allow maximum real power transfer capability in the subsea transmission cable have been considered. The economic viability of different transmission options are measured based on component costs and the costs associated with the transmission losses. A case study has been presented in the paper, which demonstrates the application of this techno-economic analysis framework on a range of MEC farm sizes and distances from the shore. The results characterise the performance of different transmission system options with respect to three key design parameters – distance to shore, array power and transmission voltage – and provide guidance for system design

    Windblown Lead Carbonate as the Main Source of Lead in Blood of Children from a Seaside Community: An Example of Local Birds as “Canaries in the Mine”

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    Background: In late 2006, the seaside community in Esperance, Western Australia, was alerted to thousands of native bird species dying. The source of the lead was thought to derive from the handling of Pb carbonate concentrate from the Magellan mine through the port of Esperance, begun in July 2005. Concern was expressed for the impact of this process on the community. Objective: This study was designed to evaluate the source of Pb in blood of a random sample of the community using Pb isotope ratios. Methods: The cohort comprised 49 children (48 20 years of age) with a bias toward higher blood lead (PbB) values to facilitate source identification. Results: Mean PbB level of the children was 7.5 ÎŒg/dL (range, 1.5-25.7 ÎŒg/dL; n = 49; geometric mean, 6.6 ÎŒg/dL), with four children whose PbB was > 12 ÎŒg/dL. The isotopic data for blood samples lay around two distinct arrays. The blood of all children analyzed for Pb isotopes contained a contribution of Pb from the Magellan mine, which for young children ranged from 27% up to 93% (mean, 64%; median, 71%). Subtraction of the ore component gave a mean background PbB of 2.3 ÎŒg/dL. Several children whose PbB was > 9 ÎŒg/dL and most of the older subjects have complex sources of Pb. Conclusions: The death of the birds acted as a sentinel event; otherwise, the exposure of the community, arising from such a toxic form of Pb, could have been tragic. Isotopic data and mineralogic and particle size analyses indicate that, apart from the recognized pathway of Pb exposure by hand-to-mouth activity in children, the inhalation pathway could have been a significant contributor to PbB for some of the very young children and in some parents.7 page(s
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