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Table 6 Economic Impact of Out-of-State Anglers to Lake Fork on the State of Texas

in unknown title
by unknown authors
"... In PAGE 20: ...r out-of-state (15.4%). Table 5 reports the direct expenditures, personal income, sales value, and job measures of economic impact on the three county area in which Lake Fork is located from non-local and out-of-state visitors. Table6 shows the economic impact of out-of-state anglers at Lake Fork on the State of Texas. The magnitude of their impact is reinforced by the data reported in Table 7 which shows the relatively high expenditures of this out-of-state group.... In PAGE 42: ... Stage two was to extrapolate the data collected from the samples of respondents from these 13 teams, so that it represented the expenditures of all members of their teams. This was done in Table6 , which shows the extrapolated total expenditures associated with each team in each of the eight spending categories. Thus in Table 5, the average expenditure reported by each respondent on the Lady Warriors 86 Blue Team for food and beverages was $72.... In PAGE 42: ...7) in Table 6. Stage three was to extrapolate the average expenditures of the 13 teams shown in the last row of Table6 to the full complement of teams playing in the tournament. All teams came from outside the College Station-Bryan area; there were no local teams participating.... In PAGE 46: ... Table6 . Expenditures by Each Team ($) Team Name Food amp; Beverages Admission Fees Night Clubs, Lounges, Bars Retail Shopping Lodging Expenses Private Auto Expenses Commercial Transport.... ..."

Table 6: Utilization of Wireless Network in Texas State Agencies

in unknown title
by unknown authors 2004
"... In PAGE 25: ... Eighty-two percent of the agencies allocate less than 5 per- cent of their budget for acquiring, utilizing, and maintaining mobile technology. As Table6 shows, there is also a positive relationship between the number of full-time employees and the implemen- tation of a wireless network. The cross tabulation suggests that there is a positive association between staff size and network implementation: The larger the agency, the more likely it is to have a wireless network.... ..."

Table 3 Subjective level of natural disaster fatality risk for hurricane and not-hurricane statesa

in beliefs, self-interest
by W. Kip, Viscusi Richard, J. Zeckhauser, W. K. Viscusi, R. J. Zeckhauser
"... In PAGE 8: ... We identify the four high hurricane risk states: Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas,11 which between them hold over 13 percent of respondents in our sample. The risk belief summary in Table3 indicates that living in a hurricane state substan- tially alters risk beliefs. Based on the Wilcoxen rank sum test, these differences are highly significant (z = 5.... ..."

Table 6.3 3-level V cycle applied to two-dimensional linear elastic problem on domain shaped like the state of Texas. Matrix orders are 7966, 31358, and 124414, respectively.

in Cache Based Multigrid On Unstructured Grids
by Jonathan Hu 2000
Cited by 4

Table 5: Relative Burden of Current and Proposed Tax System by Family Income, Texas State and Local Taxes, Fiscal Year 1994

in Property Tax and Tax Reform in Texas: An Equity Concern
by Judith I. Stallmann, Judith I. Stallmann, Judith I. Stallmann, Judith I. Stallmann, Lonnie L. Jones, Lonnie L. Jones, Lonnie L. Jones, Lonnie L. Jones
"... In PAGE 21: ... The Congressional Budget office suggests that the Texas Business Tax will be regressive. A comparison of the relative burden of the current and proposed tax systems is given in Table5 . The proposed tax system is more regressive than the existing system.... ..."

Table 3: Current and Proposed Average Sales Tax Burden and Relative Burden by Family Income, Texas State and Local Taxes, Fiscal Year 1994

in Property Tax and Tax Reform in Texas: An Equity Concern
by Judith I. Stallmann, Judith I. Stallmann, Judith I. Stallmann, Judith I. Stallmann, Lonnie L. Jones, Lonnie L. Jones, Lonnie L. Jones, Lonnie L. Jones
"... In PAGE 18: ...he proposal increases the sales tax from 6.25 percent to 6.75 percent. The sales tax is a regressive tax. Increasing the sales tax increases the percentage of income going to the tax by all income groups ( Table3 ). The relative burden remains the same, because we assumed that there would be no change in total consumption dollars, only a change in the allocation of those dollars between taxes and purchases.... ..."

TABLE 2. Texas Export Zones and Foreign-Export Values ($/year)

in Tracking Land Use, Transport, and Industrial Production using Random-Utility-Based Multizonal Input-Output Models: Applications for Texas Trade
by Kara M. Kockelman, Clare Boothe, Luce Assistant, Professor Civil Engineering, Yong Zhao Transportation Modeller 2004
"... In PAGE 17: ...17 LIST OF TABLES AND FIGURES TABLE 1. Description of Economic Sectors in RUBMRIO Model TABLE2 . Texas Export Zones and Foreign-Export Values ($/year) TABLE 3.... ..."
Cited by 3

TABLE 1. EXTENT OF CONSERVATION TILLAGE IN TEXAS1

in Conservation Tillage:
by Today Andtomorrow Southern, Southern Region, No-till Conference, Thomas J. Gerik, Thomas J. Gerik, Bill L. Harris, Bill L. Harris
"... In PAGE 15: ... TABLE1 . CROPPING SEQUENCE AND N RATE Tillage VARIABLES 8 Applied Crop to: N Rate __ Continuous Wheat Wheat 0, 34, 68, 102 Wheat-Soyhean Wheat 0, 34, 68, 102 ________.... In PAGE 22: ... Tillage had no effect on water use efficiency in monocrop soybeans, possibly because of the small quantlty of residue produc ed by this sequence. No-tillage soybeans in the sorghum- wheat-soybean sequence exhibited the greatest water use TABLE1 . TILLAGE AND CROPPING SEQUENCE EFFECTS ON SOYBEAN YIELDS AND WATER USE EFFICIENCY, BURLESON COUNTY, TEXAS, 1985 Cropping Tillage Water use sequence treatment Yield efficiency 1 Sorghum-wheat- No-till 1.... In PAGE 33: ...66 Mg ha apos; average during the six years by no-till. This yield increase would allow an TABLE1 . ESTIMATED COSTS AND PROFITS FROM IRRIGATED SORGHUM WITH ALTERNA TIVE TILLAGE PRACTICES IN AN IRRIGATED WHEAT/SORGHUM/FALLOW ROTATION, TEXAS HIGH PLAINS Conventional Item Tillage apos; No-till apos; Yield, Mg ha- apos; 6.... In PAGE 46: ...TABLE1 . SOME SOIL INPUT DATA USED IN EPIC SIMULATION.... In PAGE 63: ...TABLE1 . EXAMPLE OF GENERATION OF PLANTING MACHINE FOR SPECIFIC FARM AND CROPPING CONDITIONS Conditions: Location-Henry County, Illinois Soil-Catlin Slope-4.... In PAGE 65: ... Soil-borne mosaic virus survives in the soil, and tillage has little to do with its survival. The life cy- TABLE1 . TILLAGE PRACTICES FOR RESIDUE MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS STUDIES System Residue level Tillage practices Plow minimal moldboard plow, disk as needed, harrow, mulch tread Disk low disk as frequently as needed, mulch tread Subsurface intermediate blade with 6-foot v-blade with treader No-till maximum no tillage Department, Oklahoma State University and Plant Science and Water Conservation Lab USDA-ARS, Stillwater Oklahoma cle of Septoria leaf blotch fungus is not well understood; therefore, the relationship with residue levels left by dif ferent tillage systems was unknown.... In PAGE 70: ...TABLE1 . AVERAGE EFFECTS OF TILLAGE ON SOIL WATER CONTENT, CHEMICAL COMPONENTS, AND SOIL MICROBIAL BIOMASS AS A FUNCTION OF SOIL DEPTH AT SIX (FOUR CONTINUOUS CORN, TWO WHEAT/FALLOW) LONG-TERM (6-13 YEAR) TILLAGE EXPERIMENTS IN THE USA.... In PAGE 74: ...TABLE1 . CROP ROTATION RESULTS AT THE TEXAS AGRICULTURALEXPERIMENT STATION, HALFWAY, TEXAS, 1984-85 Irrigated Beginning Dryland Beginning Cotton Soil Cotton Soil Yield Moisture apos; Yield Moisture Year (kg/ha) (kg/ha) (cm) 1984 -Cotton-Wheat Rotation Continuous Cotton 453.... In PAGE 78: ... Ksand I from rainfall simula tion are reported in Table 2. The effect of antecedent OF A TABLE1 . PROPERTIES OF THE TOP 150 MILES FINE SANDY LOAM (FINE-LOAMY, MIXED, THERMIC UDIC PALEUSTALF) AND AN ABILENE SANDY LOAM SOIL (FINE, MIXED, THERMIC PACHIC ARGUISTOLL) Miles Abilene % % Sand 72.... ..."

Table 10. Comparison of GMDH Predictions and Texas Compensatory Weighting

in Predicted Costs And Performance Expectations: Questioning Assumptions Of Linearity With Gmdh Neural Networks
by Bruce D. Baker, Montreal Qe
"... In PAGE 19: ... Conversely, if the magnitude of GMDH predicted differences were greater than the Texas allocation, the implication would be that districts are systematically providing supplements attributable to the needs of economically disadvantaged students (or at least associated with their existence) above and beyond state supplements. Table10 provides a more concrete comparison of the outcomes of the GMDH simulation with the current Texas compensatory weighting. In the GMDH simulation an additional 10% economically disadvantaged students yields an additional 1.... ..."

Table 10. Comparison of GMDH Predictions and Texas Compensatory Weighting

in unknown title
by unknown authors 1999
"... In PAGE 19: ... Conversely, if the magnitude of GMDH predicted differences were greater than the Texas allocation, the implication would be that districts are systematically providing supplements attributable to the needs of economically disadvantaged students (or at least associated with their existence) above and beyond state supplements. Table10 provides a more concrete comparison of the outcomes of the GMDH simulation with the current Texas compensatory weighting. In the GMDH simulation an additional 10% economically disadvantaged students yields an additional 1.... ..."
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