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2021 ◽  
pp. 1-16
Author(s):  
Laura G. Barron ◽  
Imelda D. Aguilar ◽  
Mark R. Rose ◽  
Thomas R. Carretta

2021 ◽  
pp. tobaccocontrol-2021-056984
Author(s):  
Amanda Y Kong ◽  
Shelley D Golden ◽  
Kurt M Ribisl ◽  
Rebecca A Krukowski ◽  
Sara M Vandegrift ◽  
...  

IntroductionIn March 2017, the US Department of Defense (DoD) implemented a policy requiring all military stores to set tobacco prices equal to ‘prevailing prices’ in the ‘local community’ adjusted for state and local taxes. We compared tobacco product prices in a sample of retailers located on five Air Force Bases (AFBs) in Texas and Mississippi with those sold in nearby off-base stores.MethodsWe constructed a list of on-base and off-base tobacco retailers. Off-base retailers included stores that were located within a 1.5-mile road network service area from main AFB gates. Between July and September 2019, a trained auditor visited 23 on-base and 50 off-base retailers to confirm tobacco product sales, and documented the price of cigarettes and Copenhagen smokeless tobacco. For each area, the median price for each product, as well as the difference in median prices by on-base versus off-base status, was calculated.ResultsThe median price of cigarettes and smokeless products was cheaper at on-base retailers. All products were cheaper at on-base stores in Fort Sam Houston and Lackland AFB. Similarly, all products were cheaper in on-base stores at Keesler AFB, with the exception of Marlboro Red packs ($0.22 more), and at Sheppard AFB with the exception of cheapest cigarette cartons ($6.26 more).ConclusionDespite the implementation of the new DoD policy, tobacco products are cheaper in on-base retailers compared with off-base retailers. Refining of the definitions used and improved compliance with the new DoD policy are needed.


2021 ◽  
Vol 19 (December) ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
Melissa Little ◽  
Xin-Qun Wang ◽  
Margaret Fahey ◽  
Kara Wiseman ◽  
Kinsey Pebley ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 65 (12) ◽  
pp. 1254-1264
Author(s):  
I. V. Kuzmenko

Abstract Several solar events with different types of negative microwave bursts have been studied using data from different spectral ranges. The total radio flux data obtained at the Ussuriysk Observatory, the Nobeyama Observatory, the US Air Force Radio Solar Telescope Network (RSTN), and the spectropolarimeter of the Institute of Solar–Terrestrial Physics, Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences (ISTP SB RAS) were used. The images were analyzed using data from the SDO/AIA space observatory in the 304 Å channel and the Nobeyama radio heliograph at a frequency of 17 GHz. It was shown that the “isolated” depressions of radio emission were caused by the absorption of radiation from radio sources and/or vast regions of the quiet Sun by low-temperature material of a large eruptive filament in the absence of flares. This confirmed the conclusions of the previous studies. It was revealed that the cause of negative bursts of the “pre-burst depression” type was the screening of a near-limb radio source by the material of coronal jets. In the case of a weak flare accompanying the jet, the negative burst could also be of the “isolated” type. A case of a previously unreported occurrence of a deeper depression of radio emission at high frequencies as compared to low frequencies was considered. It was shown that negative bursts are not as rare phenomena as previously thought.


2021 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 77-92
Author(s):  
Richard Johnston

Published in 1790, Edmund Burke’s Reflections on the Revolution in France triggered a pamphlet war whose major players included Mary Wollstonecraft, Thomas Paine, and the artist James Gillray. The debate that ensued about the French Revolution, which Percy Shelley called “the master theme of the epoch in which we live,” was fundamentally a debate between past and present, between tradition and the needs of a living culture, and between the status quo and innovation. This essay describes an attempt by the author to reenact the Pamphlet War at the US Air Force Academy to help cadets negotiate these tensions at their institution and, in doing so, participate in the work of Romanticism. The essay also suggests ways Romanticists could harness the Pamphlet War to engage political and cultural debates in our own age of upheaval and turmoil. Finally, it offers the Pamphlet War as a vehicle for debating the state of the field and the work of the Romantic classroom itself.


2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. e210202
Author(s):  
Joseph E. Marcus ◽  
Dianne N. Frankel ◽  
Mary T. Pawlak ◽  
Theresa M. Casey ◽  
Robert J. Cybulski ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. 163-167
Author(s):  
Jennie Germann Molz

Meredith and Wes Armer had their lives all planned out. Wes was a rising star in the US Air Force. Meredith embraced her role as a military wife and mother to their three young girls. Moving from base to base as Wes climbed the career ladder was a small price to pay for a growing salary, secure benefits, and what the couple imagined would be an early retirement spent on a farm somewhere in North Carolina. However, that was still several years off, and Wes faced the very real possibility of multiple deployments in the meantime....


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