170,144 research outputs found

    Henry C. Hackley Portrait

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    Text on photo: Henry C. Hackley, age 17 yhttps://nwcommons.nwciowa.edu/lecocqfamilyphotos/1006/thumbnail.jp

    Henry C. Hackley and (?)

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    Text on photo: Henry C. Hackley - age 17 yearshttps://nwcommons.nwciowa.edu/lecocqfamilyphotos/1005/thumbnail.jp

    Application of Raman Spectroscopy as Thermal Maturity Probe in Shale Petroleum Systems: Insights from Natural and Artificial Maturation Series

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    Raman spectroscopy was studied as a thermal maturity probe in a series of Upper Devonian Ohio Shale samples from the Appalachian Basin spanning from immature to dry gas conditions. Raman spectroscopy also was applied to samples spanning a similar thermal range created from 72-hour hydrous pyrolysis (HP) experiments of the Ohio Shale at temperatures from 300 to 360°C and isothermal HP experiments lasting up to 100 days of similar Devonian-Mississippian New Albany Shale. Raman spectra were treated by an automated evaluation software based on iterative and simultaneous modeling of signal and baseline functions to decrease subjectivity. Spectra show robust correlation to measured solid bitumen reflectance (BRo) values and were therefore used to construct logarithmic regression relationships for calculation of BRo equivalent values. Raman spectra show considerable differences between natural samples and HP residues with similar measured BRo values, indicating as-yet undetermined differences in carbon chemistry. We speculate this result may be due to differences in the sampling interactions of Raman vs. reflectance measurements, and the incomplete nature of maturation reactions in the time-limited hydrous pyrolysis residues. Samples used in this study are similar in organic assemblage (dominantly solid bitumen) to other commonly exploited North American shale petroleum systems, i.e., Bakken, Barnett, Duvernay, Fayetteville and Woodford shales. Therefore, results presented herein may be broadly applicable to other important shale plays. However, caution is suggested and Raman spectroscopy as a thermal probe may need individual calibration in each shale play due to differences in solid bitumen carbon chemistry

    Rethinking advertising as paratextual communication

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    Book synopsis: Providing new insights into the textual and paratextual character of brands and advertising, this innovative book showcases an extensive selection of vivid and topical case examples that assist the practical understanding of advertising paratexts. Chris Hackley and Rungpaka Amy Hackley draw on many examples of creative advertisements to illustrate the key features of paratextual advertising and all types of brand communication, practice, strategy and research. The book examines the idea of an advertisement as something that is read and interpreted as a text by an audience, drawing on some of the pioneering research literature that introduced literary forms of analysis into business, management and related fields of scholarship. The authors utilise ideas from literary theory to examine how advertising can be understood, as well as consider semiotic and anthropological perspectives on advertising and digital media. Aiming to change the way advertising is understood by students, scholars, and by media and management professionals, this book will be a valuable resource for those with an interest in advertising and promotion, marketing, communication, business management, and branding

    Federal Employee is Entitled to Trial De Novo on Employment Discrimination Claim and Not Merely Judicial Review of Agency Record. Hackley v. Roudebush, 520 F.2d 108 (D.C. Cir. 1975).

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    Ralph Hackley, an African American, was employed as an investigator within the Veteran Administration\u27s Investigation and Security Service Division. He had served for one year at the GS-12 level when he was denied promotion. Hackley complained that this denial was based solely upon his race. The charge was investigated and he was afforded a hearing before a complaints examiner, who ruled that there had been no discrimination. This finding was adopted by the Veteran\u27s Administration. Upon appeal, the Board of Appeals and Review of the Civil Service Commission affirmed. Having thus exhausted his administrative remedies, plaintiff commenced a civil action in the District Court for the District of Columbia pursuant to section 717(c) of the Equal Employment Opportunity Act of 1972 (EEOA). He sought injunctive relief, retroactive promotion, and back pay, plus a declaratory judgment to the effect that he was to be free from discrimination. The district court, in Hackley v. Johnson (Hackley 1), granted the government\u27s motion for summary judgment, holding that it only had jurisdiction to consider whether Hackley had been afforded administrative due process before the Civil Service Commission and that he had, in fact, received due process during the administrative hearing. In Hackley v. Roudebush (Hackley II), the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit reversed, remanding Hackley\u27s claim of discrimination for trial, concluding, inter alia, that section 717(c)\u27s grant of a private right of action requires the district court to conduct a trial de novo in civil actions filed under the section. In so ruling, the court fell into line with several other jurisdictions which had held that the vindication of a federal employee\u27s rights under EEOA required more than mere review of the administrative record

    sj-docx-2-han-10.1177_15589447221077363 – Supplemental material for On the Road Again: Return to Driving Following Minor Hand Surgery

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    Supplemental material, sj-docx-2-han-10.1177_15589447221077363 for On the Road Again: Return to Driving Following Minor Hand Surgery by Mary C. Frazier, Darren T. Hackley, Tonja M. Locklear, Ariel E. Badger and Peter J. Apel in HAND</p

    sj-docx-1-han-10.1177_15589447221077363 – Supplemental material for On the Road Again: Return to Driving Following Minor Hand Surgery

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    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-han-10.1177_15589447221077363 for On the Road Again: Return to Driving Following Minor Hand Surgery by Mary C. Frazier, Darren T. Hackley, Tonja M. Locklear, Ariel E. Badger and Peter J. Apel in HAND</p

    sj-docx-3-han-10.1177_15589447221077363 – Supplemental material for On the Road Again: Return to Driving Following Minor Hand Surgery

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    Supplemental material, sj-docx-3-han-10.1177_15589447221077363 for On the Road Again: Return to Driving Following Minor Hand Surgery by Mary C. Frazier, Darren T. Hackley, Tonja M. Locklear, Ariel E. Badger and Peter J. Apel in HAND</p

    sj-docx-4-han-10.1177_15589447221077363 – Supplemental material for On the Road Again: Return to Driving Following Minor Hand Surgery

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    Supplemental material, sj-docx-4-han-10.1177_15589447221077363 for On the Road Again: Return to Driving Following Minor Hand Surgery by Mary C. Frazier, Darren T. Hackley, Tonja M. Locklear, Ariel E. Badger and Peter J. Apel in HAND</p
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