3,853 research outputs found
Computer program conducts facilities utilization and occupancy survey
Computer program identifies the uses of all facilities and provides information on the net area in each room as well as the number and classification of people occupying them. The system also provides a means to indicate unsatisfactory work areas and may be able to be updated each month
Boyd County - Civil War
Two manuscripts written by Stuart S. Sprague in 1980 on Boyd County during the Civil War
Floyd County
A manuscript written by Stuart S. Sprague on the history of Floyd County circa 1972
Johnson County - Oil Production
Manuscript written by Stuart S. Sprague on the history of oil production in Johnson County, Kentucky circa 1980
Rowan County - 1930s
Manuscript titled Rowan County saw much Construction during the Thirties written by Stuart S. Sprague in 1980
The Rowan County War: The Anatomy of a Mountain Fued
Manuscript written by Stuart S. Sprague on the Rowan County War in 1976
Perry County - Bobby Davis Park
A history of Bobby Davis Park in Hazard, Perry County, Kentucky written in 1982 by Stuart S. Sprague
Rowan County - Courthouse
A manuscript written by Stuart S. Sprague titled Rowan County\u27s Court House has been Twice Decapitated: Had Predecessors which describes the history of the Rowan County courthouse
The Message From The U. S. A.
https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mmb-vp/4892/thumbnail.jp
Coexistence and exclusion between humans and monkeys in Japan: Is either really possible?
The Japanese people face a cultural and ecological challenge in seeking a new relationship between themselves and the Japanese monkeys (Macaca fuscata). Monkeys are a major agricultural pest. Monkey habitat often lies within a short distance from fields and villages, and vice versa, especially in mountainous areas. The idealized solution is a form of coexistence where humans and monkeys somehow negotiate a harmonious compromise. A word used often in Japanese is kyosei, to live in common, implying a more intimate relation than mere side-by-side coexistence. In practice, kyosei is a word used by policy makers or scholars, but less often used by primatologists and agricultural officials. Primatologists aid agricultural extension programs that encourage farmers to implement practical measures to reduce the attractiveness of farmland and villages as feeding sites to monkeys. However, agricultural extension programs may be operationalizing kyosei by encouraging rural communities to reformulate their relationship with monkeys
- …