180,917 research outputs found

    Box 46, Neg. No. 54301-B: Oren Satterlee

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    This black and white photograph features a portrait of Oren Satterlee - he is sitting and is wearing a suit. Oren Satterlee ordered the photograph. - Macksville High School, Junior, 1923https://scholars.fhsu.edu/stafford_county/6405/thumbnail.jp

    Investigating College Student Misconduct: Understanding the Internal Investigation Process in Higher Education

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    All colleges and universities grapple with the complexities of student misconduct. How can these institutions conduct efficient fact-finding investigations and disciplinary proceedings? What best practices should administrators and legal counsel follow when student behavior interferes with a university’s mission or poses a campus safety threat? Oren R. Griffin answers these questions and more in Investigating College Student Misconduct, an essential resource for student affairs professionals and university administrators.https://digitalcommons.law.utulsa.edu/books/1048/thumbnail.jp

    Investigating College Student Misconduct: Understanding the Internal Investigation Process in Higher Education

    No full text
    All colleges and universities grapple with the complexities of student misconduct. How can these institutions conduct efficient fact-finding investigations and disciplinary proceedings? What best practices should administrators and legal counsel follow when student behavior interferes with a university’s mission or poses a campus safety threat? Oren R. Griffin answers these questions and more in Investigating College Student Misconduct, an essential resource for student affairs professionals and university administrators.https://digitalcommons.law.utulsa.edu/books/1048/thumbnail.jp

    Rhizosphere water content drives hydraulic redistribution : Implications of pore-scale heterogeneity to modeling diurnal transpiration in water-limited ecosystems

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    Trees typically survive prolonged droughts by absorbing water from deeper layers. Where soils are shallow, roots may be extract water from the underlying fractured bedrocks. In dry seasons, surface-soil moisture dynamics reflect hydraulic redistribution (HR). HR is usually estimated based on the gradient of mean, or bulk, soil water potential among layers in the rooting zone (HRB). This approach neglects the potential effect of spatial heterogeneity of water content at the millimeter scale between the rhizosphere and bulk soil. We proposed to account for the rhizosphere water balance, estimating HR to the rhizosphere (HRR) of the dry surface soil from the underlying fractured rock. The model was evaluated using a 15-year dataset collected in Sardinia. When the typical approach, based on moisture gradients among bulk soil layers, was used for estimating HRB, tree transpiration was underpredicted in all seasons, especially in spring and summer. Forcing the model with measured tree transpiration, HRB decreased during spring and summer, while the contribution of the underlying rock layer to tree transpiration was threefold that estimated using HRR-based model. The average water content of the bulk surface soil layer was very low, reaching 0.06 in the driest summers while showing little diurnal dynamics; however, concentrating water in roughly estimated rhizosphere volume, produced rhizosphere water content appreciably higher (approximate to 0.16), and much more dynamic. Predicted HRR dominated evapotranspiration (60% - 65%) in dry springs and summers reaching 80% of tree transpiration. Most importantly, the proposed rhizosphere-HR model correctly predicts the diurnal dynamics of tree transpiration year-round, and the grass transpiration in its active spring period. Eco-hydrological models operating at sub-daily scale should consider partitioning the soil to rhizosphere volume, thus allowing both diagnostic and prognostic estimates of diurnal biosphere-atmosphere mass and energy exchanges.Peer reviewe

    Replication package for: Outside Options in the Labor Market

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    <p>Replication package for "Outside Options in the Labor Market" by Sydnee Caldwell and Oren Danieli. Contains Stata files, R files, and instructions for replication and data access. </p&gt

    Appropriate Similarity Measures for Author Cocitation Analysis

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    We provide a number of new insights into the methodological discussion about author cocitation analysis. We first argue that the use of the Pearson correlation for measuring the similarity between authors’ cocitation profiles is not very satisfactory. We then discuss what kind of similarity measures may be used as an alternative to the Pearson correlation. We consider three similarity measures in particular. One is the well-known cosine. The other two similarity measures have not been used before in the bibliometric literature. Finally, we show by means of an example that our findings have a high practical relevance.information science;Pearson correlation;cosine;similarity measure;author cocitation analysis

    A study of the great meadows area Lexington, Massachusetts

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    Thesis: B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Geology and Geophysics, 1958by Philip Oren Banks.B.S.B.S. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Geology and Geophysic

    Teaching the Doctrine of Perseverance to the Great Lakes Bible Church of Holly, Michigan

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    TEACHING THE DOCTRINE OF PERSEVERANCE TO THE GREAT LAKES BIBLE CHURCH OF HOLLY, MICHIGAN Paul Nathaniel Vanaman, D.Ed.Min. The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, December, 2017 Faculty Supervisor: Dr. Oren R. Martin This project sought to equip the members of Great Lakes Bible Church of Holly, Michigan, with a knowledge and discipline of the Doctrine of Perseverance. Chapter 1 gave the context of ministry, demonstrating strengths and weaknesses, and why this project was necessary. Chapter 2 provided a theological basis for perseverance. This was a biblical theology of Revelation 5:5 and demonstrated how God’s plan has prevailed throughout redemptive history in spite of Satan’s efforts to destroy it. Chapter 3 discussed how God’s plan perseveres through his people. This chapter dealt with the perseverance of the saints, and provided examples of individuals throughout church history and in our modern day who have prevailed in the faith through difficulty and death. The objective of this project was to increase our people’s understanding of the magnitude of God’s plan, how that plan has unfolded within redemptive history, that they are included in God’s prevailing plan, and that they too can, will, and must prevail in God’s eternal plan. Chapter 4 described the project itself, detailing the sermon preparation, teaching methodology, and curriculum development. Chapter 5 evaluated the effectiveness of the project based on a completion of specified goals. Ultimately, this project pursued the equipping of Christians with the knowledge of perseverance and a mind set to endure in their own faith
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