3,029 research outputs found
[Field Division Policy Supervisors and Clerical Audit Supervisors, Selective Service Headquarters in Austin, Texas]
A photograph of Field Division Policy Supervisors and Clerical Audit Supervisors of the Selective Service Headquarters in Austin, Texas, standing on the Travis County Court House steps, circa World War II. Photographer identification: PHOTO BY NEAL DOUGLAS, P. O. BOX 567, AUSTIN, TEXAS is stamped onto the back of the photograph. First Row (Policy Supervisors): Major John W. Lipscomb (Austin, Texas), Major Lloyd M. Fellbaum (Austin, Texas), Capt. Beverly C. Caldwell (Austin, Texas). Second Row (Clerical Audit Supervisors): Peter W. Baker, Jr. (Carthage, Texas), Charlie A. Foster (Dallas, Texas), Ben H. Wigand (Dallas, Texas), Charles H. Ehlert (LaGrange, Texas), Floyd V. Stewart (Grand Saline, Texas), Arch F. Parnum (Fort Worth, Texas), Jno. W. Shultz (Alvarado, Texas), Jewell R. Stephens (Dallas, Texas), T. N. Carswell (Abilene, Texas), Sidney P. Smith (Austin, Texas.Third Row (Clerical Audit Supervisors): Kenneth L. Walter (Fredericksburg, Texas), Clarence C. Deen (Tulia, Texas), Wilburn M. McKnight (Paris, Texas), Lloyd A. Wicks, Jr. (Ralls, Texas), Thomas P. Lindley (Seminole, Texas), Kelly M. Patterson (Amarillo, Texas), James R. Dalrymple (Kilgore, Texas), Ernest A. Vernon (Vernon, Texas), William M. Booth (Luling, Texas), Terrel E. Sharp (Port Arthur, Texas
Cwbr Author Interview: Thunder At The Gates: The Black Civil War Regiments That Redeemed America
Interview with Douglas Egerton, author of Thunder at the Gates: The Black Civil War Regiments That Redeemed America Interviewed by Tom Barber Civil War Book Review (CWBR): Today the Civil War Book Review is pleased to speak with Douglas Egerton, Professor of History at Le Moyne College and...
Deformation of the Douglas till, northwestern Wisconsin
The bed-deformation model asserts that a glacier can move by pervasively shearing its bed to strains sufficiently large to account for most glacier motion (>100). Although commonly invoked, this hypothesis has never been unequivocally tested using the geologic record. In this study, laboratory fabric-strain calibrations are used to evaluate strain magnitude and shear direction in the Douglas till of northwestern Wisconsin and to thereby test elements of the bed-deformation hypothesis. The Douglas till is a clay-rich basal till deposited by a late-Wisconsinan advance of the Superior lobe of the Laurentide ice sheet. This till contains unusual pebble fabrics that lie transverse (NW-SE) to the regional ice-flow direction (NE-SW), as indicated by flutes.;Anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS) was measured along eight vertical profiles through the Douglas till at 0.2 m intervals, and AMS fabrics were computed from principal directions of magnetic susceptibility. Sand-particle fabrics and microshear orientations were also measured in one of these profiles. AMS data were interpreted using results of ring-shear experiments, which demonstrated that strong, flow-parallel fabrics (steady-state S1 eigenvalue of 0.83) develop in the Douglas till at a shear strain of ∼20.;AMS fabrics are generally strong (63% of S1 ≥ 0.83), indicating that most of the till has been sheared to a strain ≥ ∼20. Sand-particle and AMS fabrics were similarly oriented, and microshears indicate fabric development was subglacial, rather than in shearing basal ice. Major variations in fabric orientation and strength occur laterally over distances of a few meters and with depth over decimeters, indicating that the till deformed heterogeneously, probably during progressive accretion of till to the bed by lodgement. Strong fabrics transverse to the regional glacier-flow direction are interpreted to reflect shear divergence or convergence in a heterogeneously deforming bed, resulting in local flow directions commonly perpendicular the regional one. These measurements indicate that deep, unidirectional, simple shear of the bed, as is usually assumed in models, was unlikely.</p
sj-docx-1-dst-10.1177_19322968221098057 – Supplemental material for Predicting Response to Bolus Insulin Therapy in Patients With Type 2 Diabetes
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-dst-10.1177_19322968221098057 for Predicting Response to Bolus Insulin Therapy in Patients With Type 2 Diabetes by Elizabeth L. Eby, Neal R. Kelly, Jeffrey K. Hertzberg, Moira C. Blodgett, Callie Stubbins, Raja H. Patel, Eric S Meadows, Brian D. Benneyworth and Douglas E. Faries in Journal of Diabetes Science and Technology</p
Douglas College Human Anatomy & Physiology II
This textbook is a project under development by our Biology faculty to ultimately provide students with all the factual information they need to succeed in the BIOL 1203 and BIOL 1209 courses at Douglas College in BC, Canada. It was developed initially as an adaptation of the OpenStax Anatomy & Physiology textbook, freely available online at http://cnx.org/content/col11496/latest/. The original adaptations of that OpenStax textbook for Douglas College are accessible online at https://pressbooks.bccampus.ca/dcbiol11031109/ and https://pressbooks.bccampus.ca/dcbiol12031209/ In the first edition of the Douglas College adaptations the chapter and section numbers were left as they were in the version of the OpenStax A&P textbook, from which they were largely drawn. However, this second edition has been more extensively edited and rearranged to correspond with the curriculum used at Douglas College, so chapter and section numbers are no longer aligned specifically with the OpenStax A&P textbook.publishe
The cyclic Douglas–Rachford algorithm with r-sets-Douglas–Rachford operators
The Douglas–Rachford (DR) algorithm is an iterative procedure that uses sequential reflections onto convex sets and which has become popular for convex feasibility problems. In this paper we propose a structural generalization that allows to use r-sets-DR operators in a cyclic fashion. We prove convergence and present numerical illustrations of the potential advantage of such operators with r>2 over the classical 2-sets-DR operators in a cyclic algorithm.The first author was supported by MINECO of Spain and ERDF of EU, as part of the Ramón y Cajal program (RYC-2013-13327) and the Grant MTM2014-59179-C2-1-P. The second author’s work was supported by research grant no. 2013003 of the United States-Israel Binational Science Foundation (BSF). The third author’s work was supported by the EU FP7 IRSES program STREVCOMS, grant no. PIRSES-GA-2013-612669
Natural heritage resources of Douglas County and their conservation
A report to the Douglas County Dept. of Planning and community Development.1 June, 1996.Includes bibliographical references
Review of the book Unbegrenzte moglichkeiten: Amerikanisierung in Deutschland und Frankreich (1900-1933) by Egbert Klautke
Dr. Jeff R. Schutts (Douglas College) reviews the book Unbegrenzte Moglichkeiten: Amerikanisierung in Deutschland und Frankreich (1900-1933) by Egbert Klautke (2005).Final article published
Marlene R. Hancock : A biographical statement:
A statement from Marlene Hancock describing her academic interest in the Middle East, and her experience as the organizer and faculty advisor of the Douglas College Internationl Model United Nations (DOUGIMUN)
Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity
W. Griffith, R. Mueller, R. Markin, S. White, S. Cariappa, S. Douglas, T. Heise, B. Brayman, J. Blodgett, B. Rolofson, D. Horacek, J. Neal, D. O'Brien, S. Griffith, R. Shupe, B. Baasch
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