4,065 research outputs found
President Houston Cole Congratulates 1957 Commissioned Cadets
Dr. Houston Cole, President of Jacksonville State College, congratulates future regular Army Officers of the institution. These cadets earned their commissions. Shown from left are Lesley E. Oden, J. Thomas McManus, Clarence B. Oaks, Jr., Leon D. Staggs, Robert E. Rogan, Dr. Houston Cole, Fred H. Casey, Billy E. Nale, Jerry N. Cole, William S. Powell, Joe L. Currie, Larry E. Lee, James F. Ford, and Major Dillard F. Jones, PMS&T.https://digitalcommons.jsu.edu/rotc_photos/1023/thumbnail.jp
Lipid-soluble Vitamins A, D, and E in HIV-Infected Pregnant women in Tanzania.
There is limited published research examining lipid-soluble vitamins in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected pregnant women, particularly in resource-limited settings. This is an observational analysis of 1078 HIV-infected pregnant women enrolled in a trial of vitamin supplementation in Tanzania. Baseline data on sociodemographic and anthropometric characteristics, clinical signs and symptoms, and laboratory parameters were used to identify correlates of low plasma vitamin A (<0.7 micromol/l), vitamin D (<80 nmol/l) and vitamin E (<9.7 micromol/l) status. Binomial regression was used to estimate risk ratios and 95% confidence intervals. Approximately 35, 39 and 51% of the women had low levels of vitamins A, D and E, respectively. Severe anemia (hemoglobin <85 g/l; P<0.01), plasma vitamin E (P=0.02), selenium (P=0.01) and vitamin D (P=0.02) concentrations were significant correlates of low vitamin A status in multivariate models. Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate (ESR) was independently related to low vitamin A status in a nonlinear manner (P=0.01). The correlates of low vitamin D status were CD8 cell count (P=0.01), high ESR (ESR >81 mm/h; P<0.01), gestational age at enrollment (nonlinear; P=0.03) and plasma vitamins A (P=0.02) and E (P=0.01). For low vitamin E status, the correlates were money spent on food per household per day (P<0.01), plasma vitamin A concentration (nonlinear; P<0.01) and a gestational age <16 weeks at enrollment (P<0.01). Low concentrations of lipid-soluble vitamins are widely prevalent among HIV-infected women in Tanzania and are correlated with other nutritional insufficiencies. Identifying HIV-infected persons at greater risk of poor nutritional status and infections may help inform design and implementation of appropriate interventions
Author Index- Social and Technical Issues in Testing: Implications for Test Construction and Usage
Author Index pp. 173-178
A-Z (6 pages)
Numbers in italics indicate pages with complete bibliographic information.
A Acker, S. R., 65 , 86 Ackoff, R. L. , 21, 35 Adair, F. L., 122, 125 Adkins, D. c. , 148 , 153 Aisner, D. J ., 32, 35 Alderman, D. L. , 148 , 153 Anastas i, A., 9 1, 99, 107, 129 , 130, 132, 134, 139, 164 , 168 , 169 Anderson, G. E. , Jr. , 2 1, 35 Anderson , 1. R. , 46 , 57 Anderson, R. C. , 142, 153, 157, 169 Arnoff, S. L., 2 1, 35 Ausubel, D. P., 165, 169
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Zedeck, S., 72, 86Ziskin , J. , 96, 10
Author Index- Social and Technical Issues in Testing: Implications for Test Construction and Usage
Author Index pp. 173-178
A-Z (6 pages)
Numbers in italics indicate pages with complete bibliographic information.
A Acker, S. R., 65 , 86 Ackoff, R. L. , 21, 35 Adair, F. L., 122, 125 Adkins, D. c. , 148 , 153 Aisner, D. J ., 32, 35 Alderman, D. L. , 148 , 153 Anastas i, A., 9 1, 99, 107, 129 , 130, 132, 134, 139, 164 , 168 , 169 Anderson, G. E. , Jr. , 2 1, 35 Anderson , 1. R. , 46 , 57 Anderson, R. C. , 142, 153, 157, 169 Arnoff, S. L., 2 1, 35 Ausubel, D. P., 165, 169
...
Z
Zedeck, S., 72, 86Ziskin , J. , 96, 10
Greeley Police Department Uniform Patrol
A group photograph of police officers of Uniform Patrol of the Greeley Police Department standing in front of the police department building. All the men are wearing uniforms. On the wall behind the officers 'POLICE' is spelled out in dark letters.; Verso In black Ink, 'Front Row L-R. Asst. Chief Carrol Long, Sgt. Robert Staggs, Lester Davison, Wm. Rhoads, Ray Neihaus, Don O'Leary, Larry Carpenter, Wm. Hood, Roger Wallgren, Chief Earl D. Towning. Second Row From Front L-R, Lt. Leo D. Malcom, Sgt. Charles Arvas, Ray Thomas, Clarence Oliver, Joe Martinez, Ted Sonis, James Stewart, Daryol Barker, Wayne Hubble, Lab Tech Don Hughes. Third Row From Front L-R, Sgt. Edward Gormley, William Riggs, Wayne Curry, Bart Schlichting, Richard McNamara, Jack Van Arsdol, James Coleman, Richards. Fourth Row From Front L-R, Sgt. William Ross, Dan LePore, Clifford Land, Wm. Mitchell, Wesley Hall, Richard Brown, Richard Hirsch Jr., Wm. Franks. Uniform Patrol Greeley Police Dept. March, 1969.
North Alabama Seed Co.
The North Alabama Seed Company located in Tuscumbia, AL with delivery trucks and workers in foreground.https://roar.una.edu/mcdonald_images/1005/thumbnail.jp
Measurement of the D+/- production asymmetry in 7 TeV pp collisions
The asymmetry in the production cross-section \sigma of D+/- mesons, A_P = (\sigma(D+) - \sigma(D-))/(\sigma(D+) + \sigma(D-)), is measured in bins of pseudorapidity \eta and transverse momentum p_T within the acceptance of the LHCb detector. The result is obtained with a sample of D+ -> K_S pi+ decays corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 1.0 fb^-1, collected in pp collisions at a centre of mass energy of 7 TeV at the Large Hadron Collider. When integrated over the kinematic range 2.0 K_S pi+ decay is negligible. No significant dependence on \eta or p_T is observed
Evidence for the decay B0→J/ψω and measurement of the relative branching fractions of meson decays to J/ψη and J/ψη′
First evidence of the B 0 → J / ψ ω decay is found and the B s 0 → J / ψ η and B s 0 → J / ψ η ′ decays are studied using a dataset corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 1.0 fb -1 collected by the LHCb experiment in proton-proton collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of sqrt(s) = 7 TeV. The branching fractions of these decays are measured relative to that of the B 0 → J / ψ ρ 0 decay:frac(B (B 0 → J / ψ ω), B (B 0 → J / ψ ρ 0)) = 0.89 ± 0.19 (stat) - 0.13 + 0.07 (syst),frac(B (B s 0 → J / ψ η), B (B 0 → J / ψ ρ 0)) = 14.0 ± 1.2 (stat) - 1.5 + 1.1 (syst) - 1.0 + 1.1 (frac(f d, f s)),frac(B (B s 0 → J / ψ η ′), B (B 0 → J / ψ ρ 0)) = 12.7 ± 1.1 (stat) - 1.3 + 0.5 (syst) - 0.9 + 1.0 (frac(f d, f s)), where the last uncertainty is due to the knowledge of f d / f s, the ratio of b-quark hadronization factors that accounts for the different production rate of B 0 and B s 0 mesons. The ratio of the branching fractions of B s 0 → J / ψ η ′ and B s 0 → J / ψ η decays is measured to befrac(B (B s 0 → J / ψ η ′), B (B s 0 → J / ψ η)) = 0.90 ± 0.09 (stat) - 0.02 + 0.06 (syst)
Inclusive decays B->DX and B->D*X
Complete Author List: Gibbons L, Johnson SD, Kwon Y, Roberts S, Thorndike EH, Jessop CP, Lingel K, Marsiske H, Perl ML, Schaffner SF, Ugolini D, Wang R, Zhou X, Coan TE, Fadeyev V, Korolkov I, Maravin Y, Narsky I, Shelkov V, Staeck J, Stroynowski R, Volobouev I, Ye J, Artuso M, Efimov A, Frasconi F, Gao M, Goldberg M, He D, Kopp S, Horwitz N, Moneti GC, Mountain R, Mukhin Y, Schuh S, Skwarnicki T, Stone S, Thulasidas M, Viehhauser G, Xing X, Bartelt J, Csorna SE, Jain V, Marka S, Freyberger A, Godang R, Kinoshita K, Lai IC, Pomianowski P, Schrenk S, Bonvicini G, Cinabro D, Greene R, Perera LP, Barish B, Chadha M, Chan S, Eigen G, Miller JS, OGrady C, Schmidtler M, Urheim J, Weinstein AJ, Wurthwein F, Asner DM, Bliss DW, Brower WS, Masek G, Paar HP, Sharma V, Gronberg J, Kutschke R, Lange DJ, Menary S, Morrison RJ, Nelson HN, Nelson TK, Qiao C, Richman JD, Roberts D, Ryd A, Witherell MS, Balest R, Behrens BH, Cho K, Ford WT, Park H, Rankin P, Roy J, Smith JG, Alexander JP, Bebek C, Berger BE, Berkelman K, Bloom K, Cassel DG, Cho HA, Coffman DM, Crowcroft DS, Dickson M, Drell PS, Ecklund KM, Ehrlich R, Elia R, Foland AD, Gaidarev P, Gittelman B, Gray SW, Hartill DL, Heltsley BK, Kandaswamy J, Katayama N, Kim PC, Kreinick DL, Lee T, Liu Y, Ludwig GS, Masui J, Mevissen J, Mistry NB, Ng CR, Nordberg E, Ogg M, Patterson JR, Peterson D, Riley D, Soffer A, Ward C, Athanas M, Avery P, Jones CD, Lohner M, Prescott C, Yang S, Yelton J, Zheng J, Brandenburg G, Briere RA, Gao YS, Kim DYJ, Wilson R, Yamamoto H, Browder TE, Li F, Li Y, Rodriguez JL, Bergfeld T, Eisenstein BI, Ernst J, Gladding GE, Gollin GD, Hans RM, Johnson E, Karliner I, Marsh MA, Palmer M, Selen M, Thaler JJ, Edwards KW, Bellerive A, Janicek R, MacFarlane DB, McLean KW, Patel PM, Sadoff AJ, Ammar R, Baringer P, Bean A, Besson D, Coppage D, Darling C, Davis R, Hancock N, Kotov S, Kravchenko I, Kwak N, Anderson S, Kubota Y, Lattery M, ONeill JJ, Patton S, Poling R, Riehle T, Savinov V, Smith A, Alam MS, Athar SB, Ling Z, Mahmood AH, Severini H, Timm S, Wappler F, Anastassov A, Blinov S, Duboscq JE, Fisher KD, Fujino D, Fulton R, Gan KK, Hart T, Honscheid K, Kagan H, Kass R, Lee J, Spencer MB, Sung M, Undrus A, Wanke R, Wolf A, Zoeller MM, Nemati B, Richichi SJ, Ross WR, Skubic P, Wood M, Bishai M, Fast J, Gerndt E, Hinson JW, Menon N, Miller DH, Shibata EI, Shipsey IPJ, Yurko M</p
The significance of Magnus L. Robinson and the national leader to the black community, 1880-1891, 1981
In this paper the writer has undertaken the task of bringing to the forefront the contributions of Magnus L. Robinson and his paper, The National Leader, to the Black community during the period of 1880 to 1891. A large part of the paper is based upon data obtained from The National Leader and letters of Frederick Douglass and his son, Frederick Douglass, Jr., to Robinson. Magnus L. Robinson was a black Republican who lived during the period termed by some historians as the "Nadir." He and his paper were situated in the Alexandria, Virginia and Washington, D. C. area. Because of his allegiance to the Republican party, he was appointed to many political offices. This study shows how Robinson used these political appointments to elevate and advance the conditions of Blacks. Another phase of the study analyzes the newspaper, The National Leader. It will show how this black Republican newspaper kept members of the Black community aware and abreast of current day issues that directly or indirectly affected their lives. Some of these issues were lynchings, disfranchisement, education, health and women suffrage. Finally, this study contends that Magnus L. Robinson and his paper, The National Leader, have both been neglected in the study of Afro- American History; and that they deserve recognition along with other Black Americans who devoted their lives to the advancement of the Black race
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