617 research outputs found

    Indiana Governor, Warren T. McCray

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    Warren T. McCray was born near Kentland, Indiana and he served as governor from 1921 to 1924. A supporter of reforms for education and other state institutions, he also clashed with the KKK. Personal financial troubles forced him from office before completing his term.Newton County Journe

    Campus Events Honor A&T Four

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    Photograph of the surviving members of the A&T Fourhttps://digital.library.ncat.edu/atfour/1011/thumbnail.jp

    Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)

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    Letter from John H. McCray to members of Medical College Committee informing them of their unanimous appointment by the Board of Directors to the Medical College Committee for the year 1957. The letter expresses gratitude for their interest and assures them of the Chamber's full support in their programs

    Nitrogen Fertilizer Recommendations for Sugarcane Production for Sugar on Florida Sand Soils

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    Sands used in sugarcane production in Florida have low levels of organic matter, silt, and clay, and they provide little nitrogen (N) through mineralization of organic matter and possess a low capacity for N retention as a result. Because these soils are highly leachable, N must be managed well to ensure adequate nutrition for the crop as well as protection of groundwater. This new 4-page fact sheet is part of the Sugarcane Handbook, and it discusses sand soils used in sugarcane production, sugar yield response to nitrogen, and revised nitrogen recommendations. Written by J. Mabry McCray, Kelly T. Morgan, and Les Baucum, and published by the UF Agronomy Department, February 2016. SS-AGR-401/SC101: Nitrogen Fertilizer Recommendations for Sugarcane Production for Sugar on Florida Sand Soils (ufl.edu

    Nitrogen Fertilizer Recommendations for Sugarcane Production for Sugar on Florida Sand Soils

    No full text
    Sands used in sugarcane production in Florida have low levels of organic matter, silt, and clay, and they provide little nitrogen (N) through mineralization of organic matter and possess a low capacity for N retention as a result. Because these soils are highly leachable, N must be managed well to ensure adequate nutrition for the crop as well as protection of groundwater. This new 4-page fact sheet is part of the Sugarcane Handbook, and it discusses sand soils used in sugarcane production, sugar yield response to nitrogen, and revised nitrogen recommendations. Written by J. Mabry McCray, Kelly T. Morgan, and Les Baucum, and published by the UF Agronomy Department, February 2016. SS-AGR-401/SC101: Nitrogen Fertilizer Recommendations for Sugarcane Production for Sugar on Florida Sand Soils (ufl.edu

    Nitrogen Fertilizer Recommendations for Sugarcane Production for Sugar on Florida Sand Soils

    No full text
    Sands used in sugarcane production in Florida have low levels of organic matter, silt, and clay, and they provide little nitrogen (N) through mineralization of organic matter and possess a low capacity for N retention as a result. Because these soils are highly leachable, N must be managed well to ensure adequate nutrition for the crop as well as protection of groundwater. This new 4-page fact sheet is part of the Sugarcane Handbook, and it discusses sand soils used in sugarcane production, sugar yield response to nitrogen, and revised nitrogen recommendations. Written by J. Mabry McCray, Kelly T. Morgan, and Les Baucum, and published by the UF Agronomy Department, February 2016. SS-AGR-401/SC101: Nitrogen Fertilizer Recommendations for Sugarcane Production for Sugar on Florida Sand Soils (ufl.edu

    An Integrative Molecular Information System

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    Hofestädt R. An Integrative Molecular Information System. In: Cesnik B, McCray AT, Scherrer J-R, eds. MedInfo ’98. Studies in health technology and informatics. Vol 52. Amsterdam: IOS Press; 1998: 361-365

    Breaking Down the Fear\u27 -- John H. Mccray, Accommodationism and theFraming of the Civil Rights Struggle in South Carolina, 1940-1948

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    John H. McCray was a political activist who served as editor of South Carolina\u27s leading black newspaper from 1941 to 1954. After years of dormancy, the civil rights movement sprang to life in the state in the 1940s. A historian writing in the late 1950s called it \u27one of the South\u27s most dynamic and successful\u27 campaigns, and he cited McCray\u27s \u27hard-hitting\u27 weekly newspaper as one engine driving the effort. This study analyzed the available editions of the newspaper as well as the personal papers of McCray and his chief colleagues. Findings suggest the newspaper employed what Gamson has identified as a \u27collective action frame\u27 to spur black political engagement. The newspaper framed the civil rights struggle to emphasize African American agency and self-assertion during a time when strategies of accommodation and negotiation remained dominant in the Deep South. In the pages of their newspaper, McCray and his colleagues redefined the meaning of citizenship for black Carolinians and linked it directly to political protest and confrontation. In doing so, McCray\u27s newspaper helped overcome a culture of accommodation that had dominated black thought in the Deep South since the days of Booker T. Washington. This study explores the origins and legacy of accommodationism in the Deep South. It argues that McCray and his colleagues had to confront this culture directly before it could forge a new path for the black freedom movement in one Deep South state

    The evolution of competitive forces in the microcomputer industry and a comparative analysis of the competitive strategies employed by five dominant firms within the industry

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    Typescript (photocopy).A retrospective longitudinal analysis was conducted of the growth of the microcomputer industry from 1975 through 1983 and of the competition among five dominant firms in the industry from the summer of 1977 through 1983. Changes in the strategies of the dominant firms and changes in the industry forces were described, explained, and compared. The industry forces of threat of entry, competitive rivalry, power of buyers, and power of suppliers increased significantly from 1975 through 1983. Competitive rivalry became the most significant force by the end of 1983. The threat of substitute products was found to be a relatively insignificant industry force throughout the time period. Each of the five dominant firms in the microcomputer industry did not compete equally or directly with the other four dominant firms. Direct competition was most evident between Texas Instruments and Commodore as well as between International Business Machines and Apple Computer Corporation. Texas Instruments and Commodore engaged in direct competition with respect to several strategic dimensions in 1983. International Business Machines chose a strategy very similar to that of Apple Computer Corporation when it entered the microcomputer industry in November 1981. The Porter framework was operationalized. It was found to be effective for studying industry forces and firm competitive strategies over time within the microcomputer industry

    IMIA LaMB WG events: Summary (as an editorial in the Proceedings) of the IMIA WG 6 Vevey workshop, 1994

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    The International Medical Informatics Association Working Group 6 (IMIA WG 6) held its third working conference in Vevey on Lake Geneva from May 29-June 1,1994. This Editorial sums up and lists the workshop papers, is titled as "Concepts, Knowledge, and Language in Health-Care Information Systems", authored by A. T. McCray, J.-R. Scherrer, C. Safran, and G. Chute a, appeared in "Meth. Inform. Med., Vol. 34, No. 112, 1995
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