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Outcome evaluation of inmate recovery program : follow-up evaluations of a jail-based substance abuse treatment program over a five year periodHughey, Raymond W. 08 May 1996 (has links)
Overcrowding is a serious problem in prisons and jails. Most
people who are in prison and jail have substance abuse
problems. Long-term, intensive, therapeutic community,
substance abuse treatment in prison has proven effective in
reducing arrests, amounts of incarceration and time until
first arrest. Jails, with their shorter times of
incarceration, make long-term treatment impossible and
therapeutic communities or milieu therapy difficult. There
are few substance abuse treatment programs in jails and even
fewer outcome evaluations to determine effectiveness so it is
not known if jail treatment is effective. Graduates of the
Inmate Recovery Program (a short term, day treatment style,
jail-based substance abuse treatment program) were compared
four years before and up to five years after treatment with a
nontreated control group and a treatment drop-out group. The
IRP group had fewer arrests, less time incarcerated, a bigger
drop in rates of incarceration and a longer time lapse until
first arrest than the drop-outs. The IRP group had less
arrests, a longer time lapse until first arrest, a bigger drop
in rate of incarceration and less incarceration in two out of
five years than the control group. IRP produced a
conservative net avoided cost of incarceration of $786,593.89
alone. This is equivalent to an average savings of $3,480.50
per client for the average three and a half years after
treatment. Experiences prior to IRP also impacted treatment
results. Subjects with fewer previous prison sentences; fewer
prior arrests; less time incarcerated the year of treatment;
more prior alcohol and drug related arrests; a job, or another
legal source of income; who were older; and had more DUII
arrests before treatment were associated with fewer arrests
and less time incarcerated after treatment. This information
may help improve future IRP performance. Therefore the Inmate
Recovery Program has a variety of favorable impacts and
appears to also be a cost-effective program. / Graduation date: 1996
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Habitat use and population characteristics of bighorn sheep on Hart Mountain National Antelope Refuge, OregonPayer, David Carl 15 May 1992 (has links)
Graduation date: 1993
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Video on the rocks : use of a video lander platform as a survey tool for a high-relief nearshore temperate rocky reefEaston, Ryan Reid 30 November 2012 (has links)
The nearshore waters off the Oregon coast (< 73 meters) are a region of high productivity and economic value, with a variety of habitats that include rock outcrops. Temperate reef habitats are important to many commercially important fishes inhabiting the Pacific coast, including canary rockfish (Sebastes pinniger) and yelloweye rockfish (Sebastes ruberrimus), which are currently listed as "overfished" by the Pacific Fishery Management Council. Along the Pacific coast of North America, nearshore rocky reefs have been designated as essential fish habitat (EFH), while comprising approximately just seven percent of Oregon's territorial sea. Despite this EFH designation, the use of visual (SCUBA, remotely operated vehicles (ROVs), human occupied vehicles (HOVs)) and non-visual (bottom trawl) survey methods within this region has been infrequent and scattered, providing limited information on species-habitat associations and species assemblages within nearshore waters. It is logistically difficult and costly to survey nearshore reefs. The factors that
have led to the paucity of surveys include the depth (too deep for SCUBA surveys but too shallow for larger survey vessels), high seas limiting available days for field work, and the high-relief nature of the habitat (precluding the use of bottom trawls).
In an effort to better understand species-habitat associations and community structure of Oregon's nearshore reefs, an autonomous underwater drop-camera termed the "video lander" was employed at the Three Arch Rocks reef, a nearshore reef off of Oceanside, Oregon. Video lander footage was used to identify and groundtruth habitat types, as well as species assemblages over two distinct seasons: spring/summer (n=272) and winter (n=108). Many species-habitat associations were statistically significant: yelloweye rockfish (large boulder p<0.0073), canary rockfish (small boulder p<0.0006), kelp greenling (Hexagrammos decagrammus) (bedrock outcrop p<0.0162), and quillback rockfish (Sebastes maliger) (large boulder p<0.0016). Summer and winter surveys revealed similar habitat associations and distributions for these species.
I found no significant difference in species composition between the northern and southern regions of the reef (Bray-Curtis dissimilarity index (BCDI) = 71.71, ANOSIM p>0.1447), but a significant difference between spring/summer and winter seasons was identified on the outer section of the reef, due to the presence of spotted ratfish (Hydrolagus colliei) in the winter (BCDI =76.41, ANOSIM p < 0.0155). My study shows that data provided by the video lander can fill existing gaps in our understanding of nearshore distribution and habitat associations of temperate rocky-reef fishes off the Oregon coast. / Graduation date: 2013
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Geology and mineral deposits of the Coyote Hills mining district, Lake County, OregonThomas, Thomas Holbeck 02 February 1981 (has links)
The Coyote Hills are located about 46 kilometers north-northwest
of Lakeview, Oregon, within the Basin and Range physiographic province.
These hills represent a complex volcanic center of bimodal
calc-alkaline igneous activity.
The oldest rocks recorded in the Tertiary succession are horn-blende-
bearing andesite and aphanitic basalt flows, laharic breccias,
conglomerates, tuffaceous sandstones, and lithic wackes of the late
Eocene to early Oligocene Lower Andesite formation. During middle
to early late Oligocene time, voluminous eruptions of predominately
basaltic andesite formed a large shield volcano. This unit, the
Upper Basalt formation, was followed, after a short hiatus, by the
Coyote Hills rhyolite of late Oligocene to early Miocene age. The
Coyote Hills rhyolite represents a complex spectrum of multi-phase
silicic volcanism and comagmatic near-surface plutonism. Magma
compositions varied from dacite to rhyolite and include lava flows,
volcanic plugs, a flow dome complex, and a hypabyssal quartz monzonite
intrusion. Volcanic activity that post-dates formation of the
bimodal Coyote Hills complex culminated with the lower slopes of
the shield volcano onlapped by the middle Miocene Steens Basalt, the
late middle to early late Miocene Plush tuff, and the late Miocene
to early Pliocene Upper basalt.
A prominent northwest and northeast-trending fault and fracture
system formed after emplacement of the Coyote Hills rhyolite, and as
early as late Oligocene to early Miocene in time. Basin and Range
faults post-date the Steens Basalt and have caused some minor displacement
of the younger rocks.
Penecontemporaneous with silicic volcanism of the Coyote Hills
rhyolite was a period of hydrothermal activity. Fluids ascended
favorable structures, altered the surrounding country rocks, and
deposited minor quantities of epithermal gold-silver-copper-mercury-molybdenum(?)-
lead(?), and zinc(?) in structurally controlled quartz-pyrite
veinlets and as disseminations. Because of the association
of mineralization with silicic volcanics in time and space, it is
concluded that the two processes were genetically related.
The hydrothermal system in the Coyote Hills is related to the
late stages of silicic volcanism. Evidence for a genetic relation
includes the close association of rock type, and chemical and mineral
zonations within the district. Geological and geochemical evidence
that includes rock type and alteration patterns, and mineral and
trace element zonations, collectively suggest that only the highest
level of the hydrothermal system has been exposed. It is entirely
possible that a large vein or disseminated-type deposit containing
both base and precious metals is present at depth. / Graduation date: 1981
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Distribution of Pacific herring spawn in Yaquina Bay, Oregon, and observations on mortality through hatchingSteinfeld, James David 02 September 1971 (has links)
Studies were conducted during late winter and spring of 1970 to
establish the extent of spawning of Pacific herring (Clupea harengus
pallasi Valenciennes) in the Yaquina estuary, and to define the degree
of egg mortality on certain substrates. Routine surveillance of the
north shore of the estuary provided information on the length of the
spawning season, the number of separate spawnings which occurred,
the extent of spawning into brackish water, and the types of substrates
utilized for spawn deposition.
Random sampling of egg deposits at specific locations within the
estuary, and at frequent intervals following deposition provided estimates
of spawn mortality on two commonly used plant substrates,
Fucus sp. and Zostera sp. These included estimates of the amount of
eggs removed from the substrates prior to commencement of hatching,
and estimates of the mortality among eggs which remained attached
to the substrates. One series of samplings of a deposit of eggs on
Fucus was designed to establish the extent of bird predation on the
eggs.
Results from the spawn survey indicated that at least five
separate spawnings occurred during the season. Initial spawning took
place on February 5 in the lower estuary (from the south jetty to a
point three miles upriver from the mouth). Subsequent spawnings
occurred in the third, fifth, sixth, and seventh weeks following this
initial deposition, and appeared to take place exclusively in the middle
and upper estuary (from three and one half miles to ten miles upriver
from the mouth). Among the substrates observed with eggs Fucus
appeared to be the most extensively utilized, while localized deposits
were noted on Zostera, bare rocks and pilings. Spawning was predominantly
located on substrates lying above mean lower low water.
Analysis of the samples collected from four populations of eggs
deposited on Fucus, and one population deposited on Zostera revealed
that egg removal was extreme during the period of incubation. Recorded
losses from initially sampled populations of eggs on Fucus
ranged from 78% to 1OO% based on sample means. A 9l% loss was recorded
for the one Zostera population sampled.
A comparison of a protected with an unprotected segment of a
sampled population on Fucus indicated that birds contributed at least
80% to the removal of eggs from the unprotected segment. The observed
presence of birds on all of the sampling areas when eggs were
present suggests that predators accounted for the extensive losses
from these areas.
Analysis of the ratios of dead eggs to the total number of eggs in
samples collected from Fucus substrates provided estimates of natural
mortality. Low rates of mortality (about 20%) were recorded for two
populations sampled during a period in which the weather was cool and
moist, while considerably higher rates (about 50%) were observed in
samples from a population exposed to a dry and relatively warm climate.
Dessication of eggs was therefore indicated as a significant
cause of mortality of eggs remaining attached to substrates exposed to
drying conditions in the atmosphere.
In addition to these field studies, a study was conducted in the
laboratory to define the effects, on the survival of herring eggs to
hatching, of combinations of three environmental parameters: temperature,
salinity, and exposure to air. Groups of artificially fertilized
eggs were incubated in the 18 test environments provided by the different
combinations of three temperatures, three salinities, and exposure
and non-exposure to air. Survival of eggs to hatching remained
high (from 60% to 86% of total eggs in each environment) except for
eggs incubated in the highest temperature ( 11 °C.) and subjected to
eight hour exposure periods. Average survival in these environments
was 5.2% and 24.2% (for two replicates). These observations lend
support to the findings from the field sampling studies that survival
of herrings eggs can be tenuous when subjected to exposure to air. / Graduation date: 1972
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816 |
Managing urban development : a simulation approach for coping with change at a municipal parking structureWhite, Stephen James 22 April 1991 (has links)
Public construction projects are frequently presented as
occurring in complex social, political and economic settings
described as being uncertain. In public administration, this
uncertainty is cited as a cause for shifting from the so
called "rational-comprehensive" model of policy and decision
making toward an "incremental" or "mixed-scanning" approach.
None of these models provides a panacea for dealing with the
influences of the diverse and dynamic social and political
attitudes, ethics and values that are inherent in urban
settings. Where such uncertainty becomes unmanageable
scientific experts are called upon to translate the problem
into technical or economic language that lends itself to
consideration by traditional management science analysis.
This thesis describes one such translation of an urban
transportation development project in the context of the
political and philosophical exigencies which required its
undertaking. A computer simulation approach to modelling the
operation of a two-story underground parking structure, named
the Capitol Mall Parking Structure, is described as well as
the model's results and sensitivity in coping with various
uncertainties posed by the project's decision makers. / Graduation date: 1992
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817 |
Lifestyle changes as related to the risk of coronary heart disease in Chinese students at Oregon State UniversitySong, Lin, 1960- 22 April 1993 (has links)
This study examined lifestyle changes as related to the risk of coronary heart disease (CHD) in Chinese students at Oregon State University (OSU). The study population included male students or scholars from the People's Republic of China who were attending OSU during spring term 1992. Fifty subjects were interviewed using a structured questionnaire.
The questionnaire included eight categories of information: (1) bodyweight and blood pressure, (2) diet,
(3) alcohol consumption, (4) cigarette smoking, (5) physical activity, (6) psychological stress, (7) acculturation factors, and (8) demographic factors.
Results indicated that for this group of Chinese students, bodyweight, consumption of dietary fat, dairy products, soft drinks, and psychological stress had increased significantly during their stay in the US. Meanwhile, the level of physical activity had decreased. These changes, especially if continued, may have the potential to increase their risk of developing CHD.
On the other hand, there were no significant changes in blood pressure and alcohol consumption. For cigarette smokers, smoking had decreased.
In their responses to the open-ended questions, the reasons given for bodyweight changes included diet, decreased physical activity, and increasing age. Diet changes were attributed to food availability, relative price, and convenience. For decreased cigarette smoking, lack of smoking environment was considered to be the most important factor. Automobile use, limited spare time, and no friend to play with were the reasons for decreased physical activity. Finally, pressure in school, financial difficulty, and worrying about future were considered to be the reasons for increased psychological stress.
Multiple regression analysis indicated that the length of US stay and decreased physical activity were significant predictors for bodyweight gain. The length of US stay was also a significant predictor for changes in total dietary fat. Having financial aid from school was associated with decreased physical activity. Living as single was significantly associated with increased psychological stress. This study failed to identify any significant associations between acculturation factors and changes in the CHD risk factors. / Graduation date: 1993
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The biodiversity of ectomycorrhizal fungi associated with Quercus garryana /Valentine, Lori Lisa. January 2002 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.S.)--Southern Oregon University, 2002. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 37-43). Also available via Internet as PDF file through Southern Oregon Digital Archives: http://soda.sou.edu. Search Bioregion Collection.
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819 |
Study of multi-criteria decision-making : development of a decision model to determine when to conduct nighttime construction road work /Park, Sang-Bin. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Oregon State University, 2003. / Typescript (photocopy). Includes bibliographical references (leaves 117-127). Also available via the World Wide Web.
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820 |
Oregon politics and the evolution of the Populist movement in Portland, 1890-1898 /Boyer, William Haas. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Oregon, 2003. / Typescript. Includes vita and abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 474-491). Also available for download via the World Wide Web; free to University of Oregon users.
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