R Media Brokerage Specialist Radio and TV

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

R Media Brokerage Specialist Radio and TV California -San Bernardino (Los Angeles) KERN 0 Delano :s SAN BERNARDINO KHOF-TV WascO Ridgecresto ero Ch. 30 Oildales Bakersfield® ris Obispo Technical Facilities: Channel No. 30 °Lamont Arvin° (566 -572 MHz). Authorized power: or.hachapi horizon- 1120 -kw max. & 269 -kw SANTA BARSARA tal visual, 112 -kw max. & 26.9 -kw a ()Barstow VENTURA horizontal aural. Antenna: 2340 - 1poc ft. above ay. terrain, 143 -ft. above caster Santa Barbara ground, 5533 -ft. above sea level. almdale° ADE B GRADE A Latitude 34° 11' 15" Ventura San Fernando Longitude 117` 41' 58" 0 Oxnar e Glendale Transmitter: Sunset Ridge, 5.5 -mi. ;r 1 Port Huene 4 Bt rbank ®®PaSaden N of Claremont, Cal. omona Los Wiles® von 0 E TV tape: Recording facilities. Long Beach ORANGE Riverside *Santa Ana Pa Color: Live, film, slide & tape. Costa Mea ° aguna Hemet° Newport Bea News Wire Service: AP. Beach FM Affiliate: KHOF, 100 -kw, 99.5 MHz (No. 258), 240 -ft. O Oceans! ()Vista Arbitron Data: Not available. Carlsba oEs Ido oCalir Leucadi Map Note: Contours calculated by re- oBrc vised Sec. 73.699 of FCC Rules not available. ^oop El EI Centro® San Ding Cajon Lemon Grove Coronado +rion Cit SCALE OF MILES Imperial Beach r. a Vista Me 0 50 loo guano KHOF -TV Ref: FCC File No. BMPCT -6656 Granted 5/10/65 c0 American Map Co., Inc., N.Y., No. 14244 KHOF -TV Began Operation: Oct. 12, 1969. Network Service: None, independent. Represented (legal) by Cohen & Berfield. Licensee: Faith Center, 1615 S. Glendale Ave., Glendale, Cal. Personnel: (91205). DR. W. EUGENE SCOTT, president & general manager. Studio: 1615 S. Glendale Ave. Telephone: 213- 245 -7575. W. BERNARD MARSTON, director of engineering. Ownership: A church corporation, Dr. W. Eugene Scott, pres.; JIM ELLIOTT, sales manager. W. T. Scott, secy. -treas. Faith Center also owns KHOF (FM), SUZANNE DECIN, program manager. Los Angeles; WHCT -TV, Hartford, Conn. & KVOF -TV, San Francisco. Highest Hourly Rate: $150. THEZ Media Brokerage Specialist Radio and TV HOW P. O. Box 42401, Cincinnati, Ohio 45242 C Telephone (513) 791 -8730 J 1979 Edition 99 -b California -San Bernardino (Los Angeles) Bakersfield s Obispo °Lamont Arvin° KSCI dahochop Ch. 18 SANTA SA/WM Borstow Technical Facilities: Channel No. 18 Inc Lancaster (494 -500 MHz). Authorized power: 3334.264 -kw visual, 666.80 -kw Santo Barbara aural. Antenna: 2393 -ft. above ay. terrain, 144 -ft. above ground, San Fernando Ventur ra 5573 -ft. above sea level. Oxn e Glendale Bern enem aurbank °pPasaden Latitude 34° 11' 15.0" Redlands Longitude 117° 41' 53.5" s Ades® °manoo olton Banning Riverside o Transmitter: Sunset Ridge, 5 -mi. NE Long Beach ®Santa Ana Palm Springs of Claremont. oi io GRADE A Costa Me Hemet° Laguna Color: Live & tape. Newport Boo Beach GRADE B Clement News Wire Service: UPI. San IMPERIAL News Film Service: UPI. Oceonsid Represented (engineering) by Robert Carlsb E. Bullock. Leucad Arbitron Data: Not available. El Centro on Son Die on Grove Corona eó°I tCity,e eel Huta Vista ruana Ensenada SCALE OF MILES 0 50 100 14244 KSCI Ref : FCC File No. RMPCT- -7646 Granted 7/9/76 @American Map Co.. Inc.. N.Y.. No. KSCI Network Service: None, independent. Licensee: Global Television Inc., 1950 Cotner Ave., Los Angeles, Cal. (90025). Studios: 1950 Cotner Ave., Los Angeles (90025); 280 South "I" St., San Bernardino (92410). Telephones: 213- 479 -8081; 714- 884 -6801. ON TOP Ownership: Non -profit, non -stock corp. Walter L. Koch, pres.; Tom Factor, v.p.; Robert Doane, v.p.; Dr. Barry Charles, secy.; Howard Lewinson, treas. ... a position in the industry Began Operation: June 30, 1977. maintained by those who read Represented (legal) by Dow, Lohnes & Albertson. Represented (sales) by Art Doty & Associates (Los Angeles). Television Digest regularly. Personnel: For Details Use Order Card #8 Stations Volume WALTER L. KOCH, president & general manager. TOM FACTOR, vice president. DOUGLAS LUNG, chief engineer. Highest 30 Sec. Rate (April 20, 1978): $130. 100 -b TV Factbook No. 48 SIERRA Sparks California- Modesto evil le ®° ()Fallon YUeA Reno NEVADA COU13A N E KLOC-TV Yuba Ci Marysville arson City ORMSBY PLACER Ch. 19 Linda DOUGLAS CMINERAL SUTTER O YOLD i ° W .4//h?0oß+oRoséville ' bn(LORADO WoWdlS d0 4M, Fnds °Placerville ,1` 'So NAPA c tosa ®demAr° Technical Facilities: Channel No. 19 o Hawthorne O Vac ÓSac ament° (500 -506 MHz). Authorized power: frpitruro.us. paitMn o duma Na . AMADOR 3520 -kw max. & 417 -kw horizon- G pFai Id tal visual, 356 -kw max. & 41.7 - UNO TUOLUMNE vato G ejo ®Lodi (SUE kw horizontal aural. Antenna: MARIN J SAN JOAQUIN GRADE B 1300 -ft. above ay. terrain, 160 -ft. 4. 'afael® ch n CONTRA GRADE A above ground, 2840 -ft. above sea eleyCOSTA 0Stodcton level. l I.nd Tracy O Manteca Latitude 37° 28' 48" ANCISCO ALAMEDA @Modesto MAMPOSA Mate .@) ward Longitude 121° 21' 02" dise° °South M esto Turlock° Holds CP for change to 5000 -kw SANTA , c(o INTO Palo Alt ANISLAUS max. & 794 -kw horizontal visual, SAN ar° MADERA °Bishop ATE0 ®San Jose 89.1 -kw aural, 1877 -ft. above ay. o Merced ,- terrain, 346 -ft. above ground, SANTA Los Gatos CRUZ oChowchillo 3086 -ft. above sea level, lat. 38° °Gilroy Madera Santa Cruz°.+ FRESNO 07' 08 ", long. 120° 43' 21 ", \\e transmitter to Bear Mtn., approx. Watsot`N\ Clovis 5.8 -mi. SW of San Andreas. Salin a @m Fresno® ganger BMPCT -7686. Pacific Grov RAN SENITO Raedla Seaside A TuLARE Selma° Transmitter: Mt. Oso, Patterson, Cal. Monterey Dinuba TV tape: Recording facilities. MONTEREY GVisalia Color: Network, live, film, slide & Hanford tape. o King City Coalinga OF MILES MGM SCALE Arbitron Data: Not available. 0 50 100 N.Y., No. 14244 KLOC -TV Ref: FCC File No. B1'CT -4771 Granted l/21/75 e0 A rican Map Co., Inc., CP: BMI'C1' -7686 Granted 6/27/78 KLOC-TV DAVID GARCIA, national /local sales manager. LOREN FOSTER, chief engineer. Network Service: Spanish International Network. PAUL O'BRIEN, operations director. Licensee: I<LOC Broadcasting Co., Box 3689, Modesto (95352). Highest 30 Sec. Rate (Dec. 1977): $100. Studio: 2842 Iowa Ave., Modesto. Telephone: 209 -529 -2024. AM Affiliate: KLOC, Ceres & Modesto, .5 -kw, 920 kHz. Ownership: Chester Smith, pres., 51 %; Melvin Querio, 12 %; Enoch Christoffersen, 12 %; Pauline Davis, 6 %; several others with 5% or less. Homi1 -Feld 11u 1111, I11(;. Began Operation: Aug. 26, 1966. (77 MEDIA BROKERS CONSULTANTS Represented (legal) by Fletcher, Heald & Hildreth. 16255 Ventura Boulevard, Suite 219 Represented (sales) by Spanish International Network. Encino, California 91436 Personnel: (213) 986 -3201 CHESTER SMITH, president & general manager. NAOMI SMITH, co- manager. 1979 Edition 101 -b California -Palm Springs ° Lamont reino 1 dohochopi \ KMIR-TV ®Barstow Needles Ch. 36 LOS ARGeLEs ®Lancaster Technical Facilities: Channel No. 36 Palmdale® Paula (602 -608 MHz). Authorized power: San Fernando 547 -kw max. & 164 -kw horizontal Rio 9 Glendale Fon q; visual, 109 -kw max. & 32.8 -kw Burbank ®0e Pasadena `04á110 e09 horizontal aural. Antenna: 680 -ft. S AèIes ®onion ° o above ay. terrain, 124 -ft. above tco RIVERSIDE long Wachs o ORANGE Riverside ground, 1703 -ft. above sea level. *Santa Ana Costa Me Latitude 33° 52' 00" Laguna Heme Newport Bea Longitude 116° 25' 56" Beach BlytheoJ San Clement Transmitter: 7 -mi. ENE of center of RIAL Palm Springs. GRADE B Oceansid - ®Vista TV tape: Recording facilities. Carlsba Leucadi ®Escondido oCallpotrio Color: Network, live, film, slide & eBrawley tape. (o \1 0E1 Cajon El Centro® \er..co / News San Dieg Wire Service: UPI. Lemon Grove Coronad 4i " 6uma Imperial Beach hual .---® e Vista Mexicali pane /` i SCALE OF MILES Total Households: © MSI Ensenada Consumer Market Data as of 1/1/78. o So l00 TV Homes: TVÇ, and Circulation 1 I O 1978 American Research Bureau. County coverage based on Arbitron study (see page 4 -b). KMIR -TV Ref: FCC File No. BAIPCT -6880 Granted 8/30/68 © American Map Co., Inc., N.Y., No. 14244 KMIR-TV DIGEST OF RATE CARD NO. 7- (Sept. 1, 1974) Hour 30 Min. 5 Min. Min. 30 Sec. 10 Sec. Network Service: NBC. Class AA -11 p.m., daily. Licensee: Desert Empire TV Corp., P. 0. Box 1506, Palm Springs, -7 Cal. (92263). $600 $500 $225 $170 $85 $51 Studio: 72920 Park View Dr., Palm Desert, Cal. (92260). NETWORK BASE HOURLY RATE: $100. Telephone: 714- 568 -3636. TWX No.: 910- 332 -1292. Net Weekly State Total TV Households Ownership: John Conte, pres.; Sirpuhe Philibosian Conte, secy. -treas. Circulation County Households Households % Mr. & Mrs. Conte hold 100% jointly. CALIFORNIA Began Operation: Oct. 26, 1968. Riverside Represented (sales) by Katz Television. 50% & Over Central 44,700 42,600 95 Represented (legal) by Koteen & Burt. CALIFORNIA Represented (engineering) by Jules Cohen & Associates. Between 5 -24% Imperial 28,200 25,800 91 Personnel: Station Totals 72,900 68,400 93 JOHN CONTE, president & general manager. Net Weekly Circulation (1976 -77) 38,600 DURRY JONES, program director. Average Daily Circulation (1976 -77) 21,700 MAX KIRKLAND, chief engineer. 102-b TV Factbook No. 48 California -Palm Springs -Indio Delano SAN BERNARDINO Ridgeeresta KESQ-TV tales tldO (formerly KPLM-TV) alamont 1 Ch. 42 Arvin° oTehochapi (Also serves Hemet, Yucca Valley & 29 Palms Area) ®Barstow Needles LOB ANGELES Technical Facilities: Channel No. 42 Lancaster (638 -644 MHz). Authorized power: Palmdale® 316 -kw max. & 154 -kw horizontal Santa Paula San Fernando visual, 45.8 -kw aural. Antenna: )0E1 Rio Glendale Fair 630 -ft. above ay. terrain, 130 -ft. 9 A'ai Burbank O Pasadena aaaocesu mardin above ground, 1650 -ft. above sea Redo Los A i les° t, RIVERSIDE level. omor`d.. 9 Long Belch ORANGE Rive Latitude 33° 51' 58" *Santo Ana Longitude 116° 26' 02" Costa Me3a °Indio GRADE B Laguna BlytheoJ Newport Bea Beach Transmitter: Edom Hill.
Recommended publications
  • Historical Range of Variability and Current Landscape Condition Analysis: South Central Highlands Section, Southwestern Colorado & Northwestern New Mexico
    Historical Range of Variability and Current Landscape Condition Analysis: South Central Highlands Section, Southwestern Colorado & Northwestern New Mexico William H. Romme, M. Lisa Floyd, David Hanna with contributions by Elisabeth J. Bartlett, Michele Crist, Dan Green, Henri D. Grissino-Mayer, J. Page Lindsey, Kevin McGarigal, & Jeffery S.Redders Produced by the Colorado Forest Restoration Institute at Colorado State University, and Region 2 of the U.S. Forest Service May 12, 2009 Table of Contents EXECUTIVE SUMMARY … p 5 AUTHORS’ AFFILIATIONS … p 16 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS … p 16 CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION A. Objectives and Organization of This Report … p 17 B. Overview of Physical Geography and Vegetation … p 19 C. Climate Variability in Space and Time … p 21 1. Geographic Patterns in Climate 2. Long-Term Variability in Climate D. Reference Conditions: Concept and Application … p 25 1. Historical Range of Variability (HRV) Concept 2. The Reference Period for this Analysis 3. Human Residents and Influences during the Reference Period E. Overview of Integrated Ecosystem Management … p 30 F. Literature Cited … p 34 CHAPTER II. PONDEROSA PINE FORESTS A. Vegetation Structure and Composition … p 39 B. Reference Conditions … p 40 1. Reference Period Fire Regimes 2. Other agents of disturbance 3. Pre-1870 stand structures C. Legacies of Euro-American Settlement and Current Conditions … p 67 1. Logging (“High-Grading”) in the Late 1800s and Early 1900s 2. Excessive Livestock Grazing in the Late 1800s and Early 1900s 3. Fire Exclusion Since the Late 1800s 4. Interactions: Logging, Grazing, Fire, Climate, and the Forests of Today D. Summary … p 83 E. Literature Cited … p 84 CHAPTER III.
    [Show full text]
  • Chapter W-9 - Wildlife Properties
    07/15/2021 CHAPTER W-9 - WILDLIFE PROPERTIES Index Page ARTICLE I GENERAL PROVISIONS #900 REGULATIONS APPLICABLE TO ALL WILDLIFE 1 PROPERTIES, EXCEPT STATE TRUST LANDS ARTICLE II PROPERTY SPECIFIC PROVISIONS #901 PROPERTY SPECIFIC REGULATIONS 8 ARTICLE III STATE TRUST LANDS #902 REGULATIONS APPLICABLE TO ALL STATE TRUST LANDS 53 LEASED BY COLORADO PARKS AND WILDLIFE #903 PROPERTY SPECIFIC REGULATIONS 55 ARTICLE IV STATE FISH UNITS #904 REGULATIONS APPLICABLE TO ALL STATE FISH UNITS 71 #905 PROPERTY SPECIFIC REGULATIONS 72 ARTICLE V BOATING RESTRICTIONS APPLICABLE TO ALL DIVISION CONTROLLED PROPERTIES, INCLUDING STATE TRUST LANDS LEASED BY COLORADO PARKS AND WILDLIFE #906 AQUATIC NUISANCE SPECIES (ANS) 72 APPENDIX A 74 APPENDIX B 75 Basis and Purpose 81 Statement CHAPTER W-9 - WILDLIFE PROPERTIES ARTICLE I - GENERAL PROVISIONS #900 - REGULATIONS APPLICABLE TO ALL WILDLIFE PROPERTIES, EXCEPT STATE TRUST LANDS A. DEFINITIONS 1. “Aircraft” means any machine or device capable of atmospheric flight, including, but not limited to, airplanes, helicopters, gliders, dirigibles, balloons, rockets, hang gliders and parachutes, and any models thereof. 2. "Water contact activities" means swimming, wading (except for the purpose of fishing), waterskiing, sail surfboarding, scuba diving, and other water-related activities which put a person in contact with the water (without regard to the clothing or equipment worn). 3. “Youth mentor hunting” means hunting by youths under 18 years of age. Youth hunters under 16 years of age shall at all times be accompanied by a mentor when hunting on youth mentor properties. A mentor must be 18 years of age or older and hold a valid hunter education certificate or be born before January 1, 1949.
    [Show full text]
  • Summits on the Air – ARM for USA - Colorado (WØC)
    Summits on the Air – ARM for USA - Colorado (WØC) Summits on the Air USA - Colorado (WØC) Association Reference Manual Document Reference S46.1 Issue number 3.2 Date of issue 15-June-2021 Participation start date 01-May-2010 Authorised Date: 15-June-2021 obo SOTA Management Team Association Manager Matt Schnizer KØMOS Summits-on-the-Air an original concept by G3WGV and developed with G3CWI Notice “Summits on the Air” SOTA and the SOTA logo are trademarks of the Programme. This document is copyright of the Programme. All other trademarks and copyrights referenced herein are acknowledged. Page 1 of 11 Document S46.1 V3.2 Summits on the Air – ARM for USA - Colorado (WØC) Change Control Date Version Details 01-May-10 1.0 First formal issue of this document 01-Aug-11 2.0 Updated Version including all qualified CO Peaks, North Dakota, and South Dakota Peaks 01-Dec-11 2.1 Corrections to document for consistency between sections. 31-Mar-14 2.2 Convert WØ to WØC for Colorado only Association. Remove South Dakota and North Dakota Regions. Minor grammatical changes. Clarification of SOTA Rule 3.7.3 “Final Access”. Matt Schnizer K0MOS becomes the new W0C Association Manager. 04/30/16 2.3 Updated Disclaimer Updated 2.0 Program Derivation: Changed prominence from 500 ft to 150m (492 ft) Updated 3.0 General information: Added valid FCC license Corrected conversion factor (ft to m) and recalculated all summits 1-Apr-2017 3.0 Acquired new Summit List from ListsofJohn.com: 64 new summits (37 for P500 ft to P150 m change and 27 new) and 3 deletes due to prom corrections.
    [Show full text]
  • Pioneers, Prospectors and Trout a Historic Context for La Plata County, Colorado
    Pioneers, Prospectors and Trout A Historic Context For La Plata County, Colorado By Jill Seyfarth And Ruth Lambert, Ph.D. January, 2010 Pioneers, Prospectors and Trout A Historic Context For La Plata County, Colorado Prepared for the La Plata County Planning Department State Historical Fund Project Number 2008-01-012 Deliverable No. 7 Prepared by: Jill Seyfarth Cultural Resource Planning PO Box 295 Durango, Colorado 81302 (970) 247-5893 And Ruth Lambert, PhD. San Juan Mountains Association PO Box 2261 Durango, Colorado 81302 January, 2010 This context document is sponsored by La Plata County and is partially funded by a grant from the Colorado State Historical Fund (Project Number 2008-01-012). The opinions expressed in this report do not necessarily reflect the opinions or policies of the staff of the Colorado State Historical Fund. Cover photographs: Top-Pine River Stage Station. Photo Source: La Plata County Historical Society-Animas Museum Photo Archives. Left side-Gold King Mill in La Plata Canyon taken in about1936. Photo Source Plate 21, in U.S.Geological Survey Professional paper 219. 1949 Right side-Local Fred Klatt’s big catch. Photo Source La Plata County Historical Society- Animas Museum Photo Archives. Table of Contents Introduction ................................................................................................................... 1 New Frontiers................................................................................................................ 3 Initial Exploration ............................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Plants & Natural Communities of Concern
    Appendix A—Plant and Natural Communities at the Subregional Scale Page 1 of 39 Table A-1. Plant species of concern identified by the Colorado Natural Heritage Program within the Colorado portion of the Subregional Scale. The plant species are arranged in alphabetical order by scientific name within the counties in which they occur.
    [Show full text]
  • December 2018
    The Magazine for TV and FM DXers December 2018 Photo by Nam Nguyen (Wikipedia) AUSTRALIA CHECKS IN WITH SOME TROPO REMEMBER, THIS IS THE WORLDWIDE TV-FM DX ASSOCIATION SEND THOSE INTERNATIONAL REPORTS IN! THIS IS RYAN'S LAST VUD AS EDITOR (BUT I'LL STILL BE AROUND) The Official Publication of the Worldwide TV-FM DX Association INSIDE THIS VUD CLICK TO NAVIGATE 02 The Mailbox 21 FM News 33 Photo News 03 TV News 30 Southern FM DX 36 Brisbane Tropo 17 FM Facilities DX REPORTS/PICS FROM: Ryan Leigh Donaldson (QLD), Chris Dunne (FL), Fred Nordquist (SC), Doug Speheger (OK) THE WORLDWIDE TV-FM DX ASSOCIATION Serving the UHF-VHF Enthusiast THE VHF-UHF DIGEST IS THE OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF THE WORLDWIDE TV-FM DX ASSOCIATION DEDICATED TO THE OBSERVATION AND STUDY OF THE PROPAGATION OF LONG DISTANCE TELEVISION AND FM BROADCASTING SIGNALS AT VHF AND UHF. WTFDA IS GOVERNED BY A BOARD OF DIRECTORS: DOUG SMITH, KEITH McGINNIS, JIM THOMAS AND MIKE BUGAJ. Editor and publisher: Ryan Grabow Treasurer: Keith McGinnis wtfda.org/info Webmaster: Tim McVey Forum Site Administrator: Chris Cervantez Editorial Staff: Jeff Kruszka, Keith McGinnis, Fred Nordquist, Nick Langan, Doug Smith, John Zondlo and Mike Bugaj DECEMBER 2018 DUES RECEIVED think that day was around 15 years ago. George DATE NAME S/P EXP resides in Duxbury, MA. It’s nice to have you back 10/31/2018 Doug Speheger OK 10-19 again! Imagine how the Boston FM dial has 11/5/2018 Scott Levitt PA 10-19 changed in that time.
    [Show full text]
  • Code of Colorado Regulations
    DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES Colorado Parks and Wildlife CHAPTER W-9 - WILDLIFE PROPERTIES 2 CCR 406-9 [Editor’s Notes follow the text of the rules at the end of this CCR Document.] _________________________________________________________________________ ARTICLE I - GENERAL PROVISIONS #900 - REGULATIONS APPLICABLE TO ALL DIVISION PROPERTIES, EXCEPT STATE TRUST LANDS A. DEFINITIONS 1. "Aircraft" means any machine or device capable of atmospheric flight, including, but not limited to, airplanes, helicopters, gliders, dirigibles, balloons, rockets, hang gliders and parachutes, and any models thereof. 2. "Water contact activities" means swimming, wading (except for the purpose of fishing), waterskiing, sail surfboarding, scuba diving, and other water related activities which put a person in contact with the water (without regard to the clothing or equipment worn). 3. "Youth mentor hunting" means hunting by youths under 18 years of age. Youth hunters under 16 years of age shall at all times be accompanied by a mentor when hunting on youth mentor properties. A mentor must be 18 years of age or older and hold a valid hunter education certificate or be born before January 1, 1949. B. Public Access to State Wildlife Areas 1. Only properties listed in this chapter are open for public access. The Director may open newly acquired properties for public access for a period not to exceed nine (9) months pending adoption of permanent regulations. In addition, the Director may establish and post restrictions based upon consideration of the following criteria: a. The location and size of the area. b. The location, type and condition of roads, vehicle parking areas and the number and type of sanitary facilities available.
    [Show full text]
  • Outing Description
    Day, Date, Rating, Departure Outing Description Total Time Fall 2015 Length & & Departure Printable .pdf version Elevation Place Gain If you have received this schedule by mail, please note that additions and changes are continually being made. Ask someone with internet access to inform you when these updates occur or go to a friends computer or the library to view updates at www.seniorsoutdoors.org. Participation in SO! activities by non-members is limited to two outings per year. Visitors who wish to actively participate are expected to join SO! Leaders: If you have changes to make to an outing please e-mail the amended outing to [email protected] with a copy to [email protected] Participants (new & old) as we start the fall season please review the Guidelines for Participants found on the SO! Web Site. It contains important information about our requirements and general alpine safety. Please note that many outings are listed At a moderate pace. This means the Leader sets a MODERATE pace and all participants should respect that no one should sprint ahead of the Leader without the Leaders okay. Avalanche Alpine Safety Reminder: Be aware that Outings in snow conditions in our area could involve avalanche exposure. SO! strongly recommends that participants in winter outings complete an avalanche safety course (Links to a few local ones are: http://www.avyschool.com/ & http://www.hesperusskipatrol.org/ and a free one at http://www.thesanjuans.org/2014/10/avalanche-awareness-class- schedule/). In addition, on some Outings, Trip Leaders may require you to carry a beacon, shovel and snow probe and know their use.
    [Show full text]
  • Colorado Agriculture Bibliography 2005 Subject Areas: History, Home Economics, & Rural Life Type of Materials: Monographs
    Colorado Agriculture Bibliography 2005 A Bibliography of Primary and Secondary Material Published 1820-1945 Subject Areas: History, Home Economics, & Rural Life Type of Materials: Monographs Produced by the Colorado State University Libraries Copyright by Colorado State University Libraries Applies Overview This portable document file (.pdf ) is part of the Colorado Agriculture Bibliography project and includes bibliographic information on a variety of topics related to Colorado’s agricultural and rural past. The topics covered in this project are varied but include agriculture, education, water, mining, tourism, recreation, and more. The bibliography contains information about but not full-text for books, journals, dissertations, theses, archival collections, maps, photos, pamphlets, and more. The Web site and bibliography reflects Colorado’s contribution to the Preserving the History of United States Agriculture and Rural Life Project. This nation-wide effort aims to identify and preserve state and locally significant literature. The project involves the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH), Cornell University, the United States Agricultural Information Network (USAIN), the National Agricultural Library (NAL), and other land-grant universities. The records in this bibliography may cover several subject areas and are listed alphabetically by author. A searchable website of the bibliography is also available if you would like to create searches and find information on other topics. The bibliography of Colorado history project was funded in part by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH). The project is part of the United States Agriculture Information Network (USAIN) Preservation Program. Cornell University coordinated the grant project. 1 1. _______ (1930s). Alamosa . Alamosa, Colo.: The Chamber.
    [Show full text]
  • Mesozoic Stratigraphy at Durango, Colorado Spencer G
    New Mexico Geological Society Downloaded from: http://nmgs.nmt.edu/publications/guidebooks/56 Mesozoic stratigraphy at Durango, Colorado Spencer G. Lucas and Andrew B. Heckert, 2005, pp. 160-169 in: Geology of the Chama Basin, Lucas, Spencer G.; Zeigler, Kate E.; Lueth, Virgil W.; Owen, Donald E.; [eds.], New Mexico Geological Society 56th Annual Fall Field Conference Guidebook, 456 p. This is one of many related papers that were included in the 2005 NMGS Fall Field Conference Guidebook. Annual NMGS Fall Field Conference Guidebooks Every fall since 1950, the New Mexico Geological Society (NMGS) has held an annual Fall Field Conference that explores some region of New Mexico (or surrounding states). Always well attended, these conferences provide a guidebook to participants. Besides detailed road logs, the guidebooks contain many well written, edited, and peer-reviewed geoscience papers. These books have set the national standard for geologic guidebooks and are an essential geologic reference for anyone working in or around New Mexico. Free Downloads NMGS has decided to make peer-reviewed papers from our Fall Field Conference guidebooks available for free download. Non-members will have access to guidebook papers two years after publication. Members have access to all papers. This is in keeping with our mission of promoting interest, research, and cooperation regarding geology in New Mexico. However, guidebook sales represent a significant proportion of our operating budget. Therefore, only research papers are available for download. Road logs, mini-papers, maps, stratigraphic charts, and other selected content are available only in the printed guidebooks. Copyright Information Publications of the New Mexico Geological Society, printed and electronic, are protected by the copyright laws of the United States.
    [Show full text]
  • Chapter 3. Affected Environment
    Chapter3: Affected Environment CHAPTER 3. AFFECTED ENVIRONMENT 3.1. Introduction This section describes the affected environment as it currently exists. The discussion is organized by the following major resource topics: air quality and noise, geology and minerals, paleontological resources, soils, water resources, vegetation, wildlife, special status species, land use and transportation, visual and recreation resources, cultural resources, Native American concerns, socioeconomics and environmental justice, and hazardous and solid waste. 3.1.1. Project Area 3.1.1.1. Proposed Pipeline ROW The proposed common carrier pipeline would extend approximately 399 miles from the cluster of five refineries in southern Davis and northern Salt Lake counties, including Holly’s Woods Cross Refinery, to the Apex Industrial Park northeast of Las Vegas, Nevada, with two short lateral pipelines, one in Salt Lake County from the mainline to the Salt Lake City Airport, the other from the mainline to a terminal in the Cedar City, Utah area (see Exhibit 1.1-1). In Utah, the proposed main pipeline would originate in Davis County and cross Salt Lake, Tooele, Juab, Millard, Beaver, Iron, and Washington counties. In Nevada, the main pipeline would cross Lincoln County and terminate in Clark County. The main pipeline route would primarily cross BLM (203.79 miles) and private (125.56 miles) lands. It would cross lesser amounts of state (35.84 miles), U.S. Forest Service (17.78 miles), Moapa Band of Paiute Indian Reservation (14.57 miles), and U.S. Department of Defense (2.35 miles) lands for a total of 399.89 miles. The main pipeline route would cross approximately 2 miles of water.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Testimony by Mayor Dean Brookie, City of Durango, Colorado, Regarding
    Testimony by Mayor Dean Brookie, City of Durango, Colorado, Regarding “Holding the EPA Accountable for Polluting Western Waters”, Committee on Science, Space & Technology, September 9, 2015 Summary I am Dean Brookie, Mayor of Durango, Colorado, a city of 18,000 residents at the base of the San Juan Mountains along the Animas River. I have lived, worked, and recreated in these mountains since 1980. Since our founding, our community has been dependent on the virtues of the natural environment as its lifeblood. Our mining heritage is important, but our current economy is not depending upon mining, rather our mining history, outdoor recreation, the arts, and other natural and cultural amenities. The August 5th mine waste release into the Animas River put a Technicolor spotlight on a massive and complex century-old problem that our communities have lacked the resources to address. The fact is that 3 million gallons of mine water were released out of the Gold King mine that day; however, this is not just a one-time incident. According to the EPA’ Internal Review of the August 5, 2015 Gold King Mine Blowout about 3 million gallons of mine water drain out of the Gold King each week, and four mines in immediate vicinity drain 330 million gallons per year into Cement Creek, the Animas River, the San Juan River and eventually, the Colorado River. A review of Durango’s newspaper archives reveals a long story of mine waste discharges dating to 1899 or before. That is the quiet but real catastrophe that has largely gone un-noticed by the public until now.
    [Show full text]