94,802 research outputs found

    An Evaluation by Recovered Alcoholics of Those Who Tried to Help

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    33 leaves.The problem. It was the purpose of this study to ask recovered alcoholics for their opinions on what worked to help them achieve sobriety. Procedure. After reviewing current literature, an opinionnaire wae prepared. The opinionnaire asked the respondents, recovered alcoholics, for a rating of the Help and Understanding they reoeived from the following six groups: 1-Physicians. 2-Spouse. 3-Clergy. 4-Psychiatrists and Psychologists. 5-Members of the court, attorneys, and legal officials. 6-Recovered Alcoholios. The opinionnaire was validated by colleagues of the writer who work in the field of alcoholism treatment and by members of the Drake University faculty. The opinionnaire was presented to the members of five Alcoholics Anonymous clubs in Iowa and to twenty residents of the North Central Alooholism Research Foundation in Fort Dodge,lowa. Copies and addressed envelopes were also left in the Carroll, Fort Dodge, and Webster City referral offices of the North Central Alcoholism Research Foundation. Findings. On the basis of one hundred completed opinionnaires and the results thereof validated through F ratio tests and t-tests, it is the conclusion of this study, that of those who responded to the opinionnaire, they felt that the greatest source of Help and Understanding that they had received while drinking was from Recovered Alcoholics. The amount of Help and Understanding received from the group of Recovered Alcoholics was significantly greater than it was from each of the other five groups. In addition, no one of the other five groups was significantly more effective in Help or Understanding than any other groups out of this five

    Drake Passage summary report: Cruises on RRS "James Clark Ross", 1993-2000. Drake Passage repeat hydrography: WOCE Southern Repeat Section 1b - Elephant Island to Burdwood Bank.

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    This report documents five early cruises in the Drake Passage annual repeat series conducted by Southampton Oceanography Centre in collaboration with the British Antarctic Survey. The series began under the auspices of the World Ocean Circulation Experiment as southern repeat section SR1b with a SeaSoar (towed undulating profiler) occupation in 1992. We document cruises from 1993 (JR0a), 1994 (JR0b), 1996 (JR16), 1997 (JR27) and 2000 (JR47). The cruises were all hydrographic CTD sections across Drake Passage between Burdwood Bank and Elephant Island, comprising 30 stations. One cruise (JR27) was occupied at higher resolution with 52 stations; also additional chemical measurements were made. On two cruises (JR16 and JR27), a lowered acoustic Doppler current profiler (ADCP) was introduced to provide full-depth water velocity profiles. Other measurements (vessel-mounted ADCP, sample salinity, navigation, expendable athythermographs, etc.) are described in context

    Deep boundary current disintegration in Drake Passage

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    The fate of a deep boundary current that originates in the Southeast Pacific and flows southward along the continental slope of South America is elucidated. The current transports poorly ventilated water of low salinity (a type of Pacific Deep Water; PDW), into Drake Passage. East of Drake Passage, the boundary current breaks into fresh anticyclonic eddies, nine examples of which were observed in mooring data from December 2009 to March 2012. The observed eddies appear to originate mainly from a topographic separation point close to 60°W, have typical diameters of 20–60 km and accompanying Rossby numbers of 0.1–0.3. These features are likely to be responsible for transporting PDW meridionally across the ACC, explaining the near-homogenization of Circumpolar Deep Water properties downstream of Drake Passage. This mechanism of boundary current breakdown may constitute an important process in the Southern Ocean overturning circulation

    Drake family photographs: group 1, image 2

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    In the foreground, two black horses are hitched to a phaeton with 2 rows of upholstered seats, with a light whip stowed upright; in the front seat, an older man who is likely a Drake family member wearing a hat; in the back seat, an older woman who is likely a family member in a formal black dress with an elaborate hat and 2 children also family; in the background to the viewer's left, a large white barn, to the viewer's right a smaller shed with a black pig rooting about. The photograph is the same subject as image 64 and 185. The same Drake family members appear in 3 groups in this subcollection of images: 64, 71, 185; 69, 72, 124, 167; 159, 161, 182. The negative is black and white with no number visible

    Drake family photographs: group 1, image 1

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    In the foreground, two black horses are hitched to a phaeton with 2 rows of upholstered seats, with a light whip stowed upright; in the front seat, an older man who is likely a Drake family member wearing a hat; in the back seat, an older woman who is likely a family member in a formal black dress with an elaborate hat and 2 children also likely family; in the background to the viewer's left, a large white barn, to the viewer's right a smaller shed with a black pig rooting about. The photograph is the same subject as image 71 and 185. The same Drake family members appear in 3 groups in this subcollection of images: 64, 71, 185; 69, 72, 124, 167; 159, 161, 182. The negative is black and white with no number visible

    Charles Drake and Lucy Collins, Evergreen residents, 1979

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    This is an interview with Charles F. Drake and Lucy Jane Collins. They talk about the Evergreen Community and the changes it experienced while growing up there. They also mention different locations and memories they have of Evergreen

    Drake family photographs: group 3, image 1

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    An older woman and two young girls pose at the foot of a sequoia. Same subjects and place as 159 and 161. The same Drake family members appear in 3 groups in this subcollection of images: 64, 71, 185; 69, 72, 124, 167; 159, 161, 182. The negative is black and white with no number visible; the negative has a portrait orientation and is further away; the negative has a landscape orientation

    Drake family photographs: group 3, image 3

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    An older woman and two young girls pose at the foot of a sequoia. Same subjects and place as 159 and 161. The same Drake family members appear in 3 groups in this subcollection of images: 64, 71, 185; 69, 72, 124, 167; 159, 161, 182. The negative is black and white with no number visible; the negative has a portrait orientation and is further away; the negative has a portrait orientation and is further away

    Drake family photographs: group 3, image 2

    No full text
    An older woman and two young girls pose at the foot of a sequoia. Same subjects and place as 159 and 161. The same Drake family members appear in 3 groups in this subcollection of images: 64, 71, 185; 69, 72, 124, 167; 159, 161, 182. The negative is black and white with no number visible; the negative has a portrait orientation and is further away; the negative has a landscape orientation and is closer to the subjects
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