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Volume 59, Issue 1
Volume 60, Issue 4 Page 1023 Stanford Law Review THE SURPRISINGLY STRONGER CASE FOR THE LEGALITY OF THE NSA SURVEILLANCE PROGRAM: THE FDR PRECEDENT Neal Katyal & Richard Caplan © 2008 by the Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University, from the Stanford Law Review at 60 STAN. L. REV. 1023 (2008). For information visit http://lawreview.stanford.edu. THE SURPRISINGLY STRONGER CASE FOR THE LEGALITY OF THE NSA SURVEILLANCE PROGRAM: THE FDR PRECEDENT Neal Katyal* and Richard Caplan** INTRODUCTION.....................................................................................................1024 I. THE NSA CONTROVERSY .................................................................................1029 A. The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act................................................1029 B. The NSA Program .....................................................................................1032 II. THE PRECURSOR TO THE FDR PRECEDENT: NARDONE I AND II........................1035 A. The 1934 Communications Act .................................................................1035 B. FDR’s Thirst for Intelligence ....................................................................1037 C. Nardone I...................................................................................................1041 D. Nardone II .................................................................................................1045 III. FDR’S DEFIANCE OF CONGRESS AND THE SUPREME COURT..........................1047 A. Attorney General -
The Mountaineer
The Mountaineer 145 ture and making explorations, he was cherishing a plan to examine the Columbia River "from snowflake to brine." He did that very thing and it is claimed that he is the first man to make the entire journey. His adventures, his descriptions of the varying features of the great river, his references to historic explorers of the past, all these combine to make his book a worth while addition to the literature of the Pacific Northwest. The Mountaineer. Edited by MISS LULIE NETTLETON. (Seattle: The Mountaineers, 1921. Pp. 90.) Mazama. Edited by MISS ELLA P. ROBERTS. (Portland: The Mazamas, 1921. Pp. 89.) Mountain climbers in the Pacific Northwest await longingly each year for the appearance of these two books. Always the cen ter of interest in each book is the record of the club's outing during the summer of that year. Other records of mountaineering are in cluded and completed files of these publications are highly prized by librarians and other discriminating collectors. In the summer of 1921, The Mountaineers visited Glacier Peak and Lake Chelan. The story of the outing is told by Robert Walkinshaw and the illustrations are from photographs by members of the party. Other articles include the folowing: "Some Birds and Mammals of Mount Rainier" by Walter P. Taylor, of the Unit ed States Biological Survey; "Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes", by Rodney L. Glisan; "An Ascent of Mount Olympus in Thessaly", by Francis P. Farquhar; "A Mountaineer's Pilgrimage to Pales tine", by William B. Remey; "Light Weight Commissary for Back Packing", by Stuart P. -
(JASPUL) Symposium
The Emerging Global Research Library and Library Assessment Japan Association of Private University Libraries (JASPUL) Symposium Lizabeth (Betsy) A. Wilson Dean of University Libraries University of Washington Seattle, USA Tokyo, Japan February 26, 2008 SLIDE: TITLE Good afternoon! It is a pleasure and an honor to speak with you today on the “Emerging Global Research Library and Library Assessment.” I would like to thank everyone from the Japan Association of Private University Libraries and Kunokuniya who helped make my visit possible. I understand that some of you will be visiting my library next week, and I look forward to welcoming you to Seattle. SLIDE: MISSION Whenever I talk about libraries, I like to start with mission, since libraries are mission-critical organizations. The mission of libraries around the world is to enrich the quality of life and advance intellectual discovery by connecting people with knowledge. Research, scholarship, and discovery have been transformed by the Internet across all sectors on a global basis. The rapid dissemination of findings, the creation of new tools and platforms for information manipulation, and open access to research data have rendered the more traditional institution-based library approaches to fulfilling this mission inadequate. How can libraries ensure we can meet our mission in this new world? How can we anticipate and meet the evolving needs and expectations of students, faculty, researchers and scholars within the context of the emerging global research library? Today, I would like to share with you collective choices and strategies needed to move collections and services to a global scale, and the pivotal role library assessment plays in achieving the promise of the 21st century library. -
1922 Elizabeth T
co.rYRIG HT, 192' The Moootainetro !scot1oror,d The MOUNTAINEER VOLUME FIFTEEN Number One D EC E M BER 15, 1 9 2 2 ffiount Adams, ffiount St. Helens and the (!oat Rocks I ncoq)Ora,tecl 1913 Organized 190!i EDITORlAL ST AitF 1922 Elizabeth T. Kirk,vood, Eclttor Margaret W. Hazard, Associate Editor· Fairman B. L�e, Publication Manager Arthur L. Loveless Effie L. Chapman Subsc1·iption Price. $2.00 per year. Annual ·(onl�') Se,·ent�·-Five Cents. Published by The Mountaineers lncorJ,orated Seattle, Washington Enlerecl as second-class matter December 15, 19t0. at the Post Office . at . eattle, "\Yash., under the .-\0t of March 3. 1879. .... I MOUNT ADAMS lllobcl Furrs AND REFLEC'rION POOL .. <§rtttings from Aristibes (. Jhoutribes Author of "ll3ith the <6obs on lltount ®l!!mµus" �. • � J� �·,,. ., .. e,..:,L....._d.L.. F_,,,.... cL.. ��-_, _..__ f.. pt",- 1-� r�._ '-';a_ ..ll.-�· t'� 1- tt.. �ti.. ..._.._....L- -.L.--e-- a';. ��c..L. 41- �. C4v(, � � �·,,-- �JL.,�f w/U. J/,--«---fi:( -A- -tr·�� �, : 'JJ! -, Y .,..._, e� .,...,____,� � � t-..__., ,..._ -u..,·,- .,..,_, ;-:.. � --r J /-e,-i L,J i-.,( '"'; 1..........,.- e..r- ,';z__ /-t.-.--,r� ;.,-.,.....__ � � ..-...,.,-<. ,.,.f--· :tL. ��- ''F.....- ,',L � .,.__ � 'f- f-� --"- ��7 � �. � �;')'... f ><- -a.c__ c/ � r v-f'.fl,'7'71.. I /!,,-e..-,K-// ,l...,"4/YL... t:l,._ c.J.� J..,_-...A 'f ',y-r/� �- lL.. ��•-/IC,/ ,V l j I '/ ;· , CONTENTS i Page Greetings .......................................................................tlristicles }!}, Phoiitricles ........ r The Mount Adams, Mount St. Helens, and the Goat Rocks Outing .......................................... B1/.ith Page Bennett 9 1 Selected References from Preceding Mount Adams and Mount St. -
Seismic Stability of the Duwamish River Delta, Seattle, Washington
Seismic Stability of the Duwamish River Delta, Seattle, Washington Professional Paper 1661-E U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey Other than this note, this page left intentionally blank. Earthquake Hazards of the Pacific Northwest Coastal and Marine Regions Robert Kayen, Editor Seismic Stability of the Duwamish River Delta, Seattle, Washington By Robert E. Kayen and Walter A. Barnhardt The delta front of the Duwamish River valley near Elliott Bay and Harbor Island is founded on young Holocene deposits shaped by sea-level rise, episodic volcanism, and seismicity. These river-mouth deposits are highly susceptible to seismic soil liquefac- tion and are potentially prone to submarine landsliding and disintegrative flow failure. Professional Paper 1661-E U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey ii U.S. Department of the Interior DIRK KEMPTHORNE, Secretary U.S. Geological Survey Mark D. Myers, Director U.S. Geological Survey, Reston, Virginia: 2007 This report and any updates to it are available at: http://pubs.usgs.gov/pp/pp1661e/ For product and ordering information: World Wide Web: http://www.usgs.gov/pubprod Telephone: 1-888-ASK-USGS For more information on the USGS — the Federal source for science about the Earth, its natural and living resources, natural hazards, and the environment: World Wide Web: http://www.usgs.gov Telephone: 1-888-ASK-USGS Manuscript approved for publication, May 29, 2007 Text edited by Peter Stauffer Layout by David R. Jones Suggested citation: Kayen, R.E., and Barnhardt, W.A., 2007, Seismic stability of the Duwamish River delta, Seattle, Washington: U.S. -
Country Comparison • 1587. Two Young Japanese Men Named
Country comparison Japan United Kingdom Population 127,769,994 (2005 census) 60,975,400 (2007 estimates) Area 377,873 km (145,883 sq mi) 244,820 km (94,526 sq mi) Population 338/km (875.8/sq mi) 249/km (645/sq mi) density Capital Tokyo London Largest city Tokyo – 8,652,700 (12,790,000 Metro) London – 7,556,900 (13,063,441 Metro) Parliamentary system and Parliamentary system and Government Constitutional monarchy C Constitutional monarchy Official Japanese English (other languages recognised) languages Head of state Emperor Akihito Queen Elizabeth II Head of Prime Minister Naoto Kan Prime Minister David Cameron government GDP $4.886 trillion ($38,341 Per Capita) $2.772 trillion ($45,845 Per Capita) (nominal) Chronology of Anglo-Japanese relations 1587. Two young Japanese men named Christopher and Cosmas sailed on a Spanish galleon to California, where their ship was seized by Thomas Cavendish. Cavendish brought the two Japanese men with him to England where they spent approximately three years before going again with him on his last expedition to the South Atlantic. They are the first known Japanese men to have set foot in England. William Adams (1564–1620). 1600. William Adams, a seaman from Gillingham, Kent, was the first Englishman to arrive in Japan. Acting as an advisor to the Tokugawa Shogun, he was renamed Miura Anjin, granted a house and land, and spent the rest of his life in his adopted country. 1605. John Davis, the famous English explorer, was killed by Japanese pirates off the coast of Thailand, thus becoming the first Englishman to be killed by a Japanese.[1] 1623. -
Commodore Park Assumes Its Name from the Street Upon Which It Fronts
\\\\. M !> \v ri^SS«HV '/A*.' ----^-:^-"v *//-£ ^^,_ «•*_' 1 ^ ^ : •'.--" - ^ O.-^c, Ai.'-' '"^^52-(' - £>•». ' f~***t v~ at, •/ ^^si:-ty .' /A,,M /• t» /l»*^ »• V^^S^ *" *9/KK\^^*j»^W^^J ** .^/ ii, « AfQVS'.#'ae v>3 ^ -XU ^4f^ V^, •^txO^ ^^ V ' l •£<£ €^_ w -* «»K^ . C ."t, H 2 Js * -^ToT COMMODOR& P V. KIWAN/S MEMORIAL ru-i «.,- HISTORY: PARK When "Indian Charlie" made his summer home on the site now occupied by the Locks there ran a quiet stream from "Tenus Chuck" (Lake Union) into "Cilcole" Bay (Salmon Bay and Shilshole Bay). Salmon Bay was a tidal flat but the fishing was good, as the Denny brothers and Wil- liam Bell discovered in 1852, so they named it Salmon Bay. In 1876 Die S. Shillestad bought land on the south side of Salmon Bay and later built his house there. George B. McClellan (famed as a Union General in the Civil War) was a Captain of Engineers in 1853 when he recommended that a canal be dug from Lake Washington to Puget Sound, a con- cept endorsed by Thomas Mercer in an Independence Day celebration address the following year which he described as a union of lakes and bays; and so named Lake Union and Union Bay. Then began a series of verbal battles that raged for some 60 years from here to Washington, D.C.! Six different channel routes were not only proposed but some work was begun on several. In §1860 Harvey L. Pike took pick and shovel and began digging a ditch between Union Bay and Lake i: Union, but he soon tired and quit. -
Washington State National Maritime Heritage Area Feasibility Study for Designation As a National Heritage Area
Washington State National Maritime Heritage Area Feasibility Study for Designation as a National Heritage Area WASHINGTON DEPARTMENT OF ARCHAEOLOGY AND HISTORIC PRESERVATION Washington State National Maritime Heritage Area Feasibility Study for Designation as a National Heritage Area WASHINGTON DEPARTMENT OF ARCHAEOLOGY AND HISTORIC PRESERVATION APRIL 2010 The National Maritime Heritage Area feasibility study was guided by the work of a steering committee assembled by the Washington State Department of Archaeology and Historic Preservation. Steering committee members included: • Dick Thompson (Chair), Principal, Thompson Consulting • Allyson Brooks, Ph.D., Department of Archaeology and Historic Preservation • Chris Endresen, Office of Maria Cantwell • Leonard Forsman, Chair, Suquamish Tribe • Chuck Fowler, President, Pacific Northwest Maritime Heritage Council • Senator Karen Fraser, Thurston County • Patricia Lantz, Member, Washington State Heritage Center Trust Board of Trustees • Flo Lentz, King County 4Culture • Jennifer Meisner, Washington Trust for Historic Preservation • Lita Dawn Stanton, Gig Harbor Historic Preservation Coordinator Prepared for the Washington State Department of Archaeology and Historic Preservation by Parametrix Berk & Associates March , 2010 Washington State NATIONAL MARITIME HERITAGE AREA Feasibility Study Preface National Heritage Areas are special places recognized by Congress as having nationally important heritage resources. The request to designate an area as a National Heritage Area is locally initiated, -
Phase 1 Final Report
AMHS GOVERNANCE STUDY Phase 1 Final Report Prepared for: Southeast Conference • Juneau, AK Ref: 16086-001-030-0 Rev. - December 31, 2016 Southeast Conference AMHS Governance Study 12/31/16 PREPARED BY Elliott Bay Design Group 5305 Shilshole Ave. NW, Ste. 100 Seattle, WA 98107 McDowell Group 9360 Glacier Hwy., Ste. 201 Juneau, AK 99801 NOTES Cover photo courtesy of Alaska Floats My Boat. ELLIOTT BAY DESIGN GROUP Job: 16086 By: RIW AMHS Reform Final Report.docx Rev. - Page: i Southeast Conference AMHS Governance Study 12/31/16 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Project Overview Phase One of the AMHS Strategic Operational and Business Plan was developed by Elliott Bay Design Group (EBDG) and McDowell Group. The study identified alternative governance structures that could help the Alaska Marine Highway System (AMHS) achieve financial sustainability. This statewide effort was managed by Southeast Conference and guided by a 12- member steering committee of stakeholders from across Alaska. Project tasks included a high-level examination of six basic ferry governance models to assess their suitability for Alaska’s unique geography, markets, and transportation needs. More detailed case studies were conducted with three ferry systems to identify ideas and lessons applicable to AMHS: British Columbia Ferry System, Steamship Authority (Massachusetts), and CalMac Ferries (Scotland). The study also included review of relevant AMHS reports and interviews with key AMHS contacts including senior management and union representatives. The project incorporated extensive public involvement including convening a Statewide Marine Transportation Summit, solicitation of feedback through the project website, outreach to municipal governments and trade organizations throughout Alaska, and a presentation and discussion at Southeast Conference Annual Meeting. -
Jenny Parker Mccloskey, 215-409-6616 Merissa Blum, 215-409-6645 [email protected] [email protected]
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Jenny Parker McCloskey, 215-409-6616 Merissa Blum, 215-409-6645 [email protected] [email protected] NATIONAL CONSTITUTION CENTER TO BRING BACK PROHIBITION IN MARCH 2017 Original exhibit, American Spirits: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition, returns for a limited engagement Exhibit opens Friday, March 3 Philadelphia, PA (January 5, 2017) – The National Constitution Center is bringing back American Spirits: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition, its critically acclaimed exhibit that brings the story of Prohibition vividly to life. The exhibit, created by the National Constitution Center, originally debuted in 2012 and has since toured nationally, including stops at the Seattle’s Museum of History and Industry in Washington, Grand Rapids Public Museum in Michigan, and Peoria Riverfront Museum in Illinois. It will open to the public Friday, March 3 and run through July 16, 2017. An exclusive, members-only sneak preview opening party is planned for Thursday, March 2. The event will include an America’s Town Hall panel discussion on the constitutionality of Prohibition and its impact on American society today. “We are thrilled to have this superb exhibit back from its national tour,” said President and CEO Jeffrey Rosen. “American Spirits brings the U.S. Constitution to life. Visitors can educate themselves about the constitutional legacy of Prohibition and how to amend the Constitution today.” The exhibit uses a mix of artifacts and engaging visitor activities to take visitors back in time to the dawn of the temperance movement, through the Roaring ’20s, and to the unprecedented repeal of a constitutional amendment. -
26279 HON. JIM Mcdermott HON. SCOTT GARRETT
October 2, 2007 EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS, Vol. 153, Pt. 19 26279 throughout America, Gibson made history tress Phylicia Rashad (first to win a Tony vertising services to numerous political cam- once again—this time in magnificent fash- for best performance in a play), Essence paigns, voter initiatives, and labor unions. ion—by winning the 1956 French Open to be- chairwoman Susan L. Taylor (first recipient Walt also wrote articles for the Seattle come the first Black to win a Grand Slam of the Henry Johnson Fisher award), and Weekly and was brought further into the event. The next year, she won Wimbledon businesswoman Sheila Crump Johnson (first public eye when he was hired to conduct bi- and the U.S. Championships, then success- to have a stake in three professional sports weekly ‘‘Point-Counterpoint’’ debates with fully defended both titles the following year. franchises). conservative activist John Carlson on KIRO- Gibson teamed with Angela Buxton, a Jewish ‘‘Althea Gibson dreamed the impossible TV News. player from Briton, to win the 1956 doubles and made it possible,’’ said Johnson, who But it was the history muse that inspired championships at the French and was a BET founder. ‘‘She was one of the first Walt’s greatest creative output. His intro- Wimbledon. Both women experienced dis- African-American women in sports to say, duction to historical research came when he crimination by their fellow players, but after ‘Why not me?’ She empowered generations was hired to write a history of the Rainier their triumph at the All-England tennis [of Black women] to believe in themselves, Club. -
X-Ray Magazine | Issue 43
AquaCorps :: Dive Volunteerism :: UWPhoto Flash Photography British Columbia Port Hardy Sweden GLOBAL EDITION Tech Wreck July 2011 Number 43 Park Caribbean Southern Belize Ecology Mangroves China PACIFIC Qian Dao Lake Sharks Yap Broadnose Sevengill 1 X-RAY MAG : 43 : 2011 COVER PHOTO BY BARB ROY DIRECTORY X-RAY MAG is published by AquaScope Media ApS Frederiksberg, Denmark www.xray-mag.com PUBLISHER SENIOR EDITOR & EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Michael Symes, PhD Peter Symes [email protected] Hawksbill sea turtle, Southern Belize. Photo by Kate Clark [email protected] SECTION EDITORS PUBLISHER / EDITOR Michael Arvedlund, PhD contents & CREATIVE DIRECTOR - Ecology Gunild Symes Scott Bennett - Photo & Travel [email protected] Andrey Bizyukin, PhD - Features Mathias Carvalho - Wrecks ASSOCIATE EDITORS Wayne Fenior - Equipment & REPRESENTATIVES Simon Kong - News, Books Americas & Europe Kelly LaClaire - Whale Tales Arnold Weisz Catherine Lim - News, Books [email protected] Bonnie McKenna - Turtle Tales Cindy Ross - GirlDiver Russia Arnold Weisz - News, Features Andrey Bizyukin, PhD, Moscow [email protected] CORRESPONDENTS Robert Aston - CA, USA Svetlana Murashkina, PhD, Moscow Enrico Cappeletti - Italy [email protected] John Collins - Ireland Marcelo Mammana - Argentina South East Asia Nonoy Tan - The Philippines Catherine GS Lim, Singapore [email protected] CONTRIBUTORS THIS ISSUE Scott Bennett ASSISTANT EDITORS Daniel Brinckmann & REPRESENTATIVES Kate Clark UNITED KINGDOM Aaron Gekoski Roz Lunn, London Julia Golosiy [email protected] Wayne Grant Bob Halstead USA East Coast Tyge Dahl Hermansen Millis Keegan, Fort Lauderdale Scott Johnson [email protected] Brian Keegan Wayne Fenior, Orlando Millis Keegan [email protected] Elaine Kwee Kelly LaClaire USA Pacific Northwest/Canada Rosemary E Lunn Barb Roy, Vancouver Barb Roy [email protected] Don Silcock Kelly LaClaire, Oregon Gunild Symes [email protected] Peter Symes 18 26 34 60 plus..