945 resultados para United States. Army. Infantry Regiment, 3rd.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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pt.1. From Chicago in Arkansas post, October, 1861 to January, 1863 / by Lucian B. Crooker -- pt.2. From Young's Point to Atlanta, January, 1863 to November, 1864 -- pt.3. From Atlanta to Chicago, November, 1864 to August, 1865 / by John G. Brown.
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"Containing the marches, events and battles of the army commanded by Gen. Sherman, from the commencement of the campaign against Atlanta, Georgia, to the arrival at Washington, D.C. : also, the return of the regiment from Washington to Chicago, Ills., and events on the route and in Chicago."
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Mode of access: Internet.
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For roster see New Hampshire. Adjutant-General. Complete roster of the 8th Regt. (189-?)
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"Published by authority of the Regimental Association."
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"A history of the
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Contains information of the marches and other activities of the First Regiment of the United States Dragoons between the years 1833 and 1850 with in the boundaries of the Iowa country. Written by Louis Pelzer.
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Indenture between Hamilton Killaly Woodruff and the United States Trust Company of New York. This is listed as the 3rd trust deed. The proceeds would be paid to successors (2 copies). Most of the first page of copy no. 2 is torn away which does affect the text. These 2 documents are in an envelope marked "vouchers", June 20, 1899.
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UANL
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UANL
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A case-control study has been conducted examining the relationship between preterm birth and occupational physical activity among U.S. Army enlisted gravidas from 1981 to 1984. The study includes 604 cases (37 or less weeks gestation) and 6,070 controls (greater than 37 weeks gestation) treated at U.S. Army medical treatment facilities worldwide. Occupational physical activity was measured using existing physical demand ratings of military occupational specialties.^ A statistically significant trend of preterm birth with increasing physical demand level was found (p = 0.0056). The relative risk point estimates for the two highest physical demand categories were statistically significant, RR's = 1.69 (p = 0.02) and 1.75 (p = 0.01), respectively. Six of eleven additional variables were also statistically significant predictors of preterm birth: age (less than 20), race (non-white), marital status (single, never married), paygrade (E1 - E3), length of military service (less than 2 years), and aptitude score (less than 100).^ Multivariate analyses using the logistic model resulted in three statistically significant risk factors for preterm birth: occupational physical demand; lower paygrade; and non-white race. Controlling for race and paygrade, the two highest physical demand categories were again statistically significant with relative risk point estimates of 1.56 and 1.70, respectively. The population attributable risk for military occupational physical demand was 26%, adjusted for paygrade and race; 17.5% of the preterm births were attributable to the two highest physical demand categories. ^