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Appendix If Nec- 2105 Federal Liabilities: Other
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY NATIONAL NUCLEAR SECURITY gram’s account, and program direction for Secure Transpor- ADMINISTRATION tation Asset remains in Weapons Activities. Federal Funds Object Classification (in millions of dollars) General and special funds: Identification code 89–0313–0–1–053 2005 actual 2006 est. 2007 est. OFFICE OF THE ADMINISTRATOR Personnel compensation: 11.1 Full-time permanent.................................................. 160 153 176 For necessary expenses of the Office of the Administrator in the 11.3 Other than full-time permanent ............................... 3 5 5 National Nuclear Security Administration, including official reception 11.5 Other personnel compensation .................................. 7 7 7 and representation expenses not to exceed $12,000, ø$341,869,000¿ $386,576,000, to remain available until expended. (Energy and Water 11.9 Total personnel compensation .............................. 170 165 188 Development Appropriations Act, 2006.) 12.1 Civilian personnel benefits ............................................ 41 46 46 13.0 Benefits for former personnel ........................................ 3 3 3 Program and Financing (in millions of dollars) 21.0 Travel and transportation of persons ............................ 13 11 12 22.0 Transportation of things ................................................ 1 ................... ................... Identification code 89–0313–0–1–053 2005 actual 2006 est. 2007 est. 23.1 Rental payments to GSA ................................................ .................. -
Federal Libraries/Information Centers Chronology
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS THE FEDERAL LIBRARY AND BICENTENNIAL INFORMATION CENTER 1800 - 2000 COMMITTEE American Federal Libraries/Information Centers Chronology 1780 Military garrison at West Point establishes library by assessing officers at the rate of one day’s pay per month to purchase books—arguably the first federal library since it existed when the country was founded (predecessor to U.S. Military Academy Library) 1789 First official federal library established at the Department of State 1795 War Department Library established in Philadelphia as a general historical military library by Henry Knox, the first Secretary of War 1800 The Navy Department Library established on March 31 by direction of President John Adams to Secretary of the Navy Benjamin Stoddert 1800 Library of Congress (LoC) founded on April 24 1800 War Department Library collections destroyed in fire at War Office Building on November 8, soon after relocation to Washington 1802 The President and Vice President authorized to use LoC collections 1812 Supreme Court Justices authorized to use LoC collections 1812 Congress appropriates $50,000 for the procurement of instruments and books for Coast Survey 1814 British burn both State Department Library and LoC collections during War of 1812 1815 Congress purchases Thomas Jefferson’s private library to replace LoC collections and opens collections to the general public 1817 Earliest documentation of book purchasing for Department of Treasury library 1820 Army Surgeon General James Lovell establishes office collection of books -
FY 1982 Submission Provided
DRAFT DOE/FE-0033 Previous No. DOE/ER-0102 ENERGY MATERIALS COORDINATING COMMITTEE (EMACC) Fiscal Year 1982 March 1983 ANNUAL TECHNICAL REPORT U.S. Department of Energy Washington, D.C. 20545 DRAFT DOE/FE-0033 Previous No. DOE/ER-0102 ENERGY MATERIALS COORDINATING COMMITTEE (EMACC) Fiscal Year 1982 March 1983 ANNUAL TECHNICAL REPORT U.S. Department of Energy TABLE OF CONTENTS Page No. INTRODUCTION ........................................................ 1 Fiscal Year 1982 Activities ....................................... 2 Materials Funding Trends in the Department of Energy .............. 6 PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS ................................................ 11 - Office of Conservation and Renewable Systems .................... 14 * Office of Building Energy Research Development .............. 14 * Energy Conversion and Utilization Technologies .............. 15 * Division of Energy Storage Technology - Electrochemical Storage Branch .............................. 16 * Office of Vehicle and Engine R&D ............................ 17 * Office of Industrial Programs ............................... 18 * Biomass Energy Technology Division - Biological Hydrogen Program .......................................... 18 * Division of Ocean Energy Technology - Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion Program ................................. 19 * Office of Solar Energy/Photovoltaics Energy - Technology - Materials Research ........................... 20 * Wind Energy Technology Division - Large Wind Turbine Research and Technology Development ........................ -
Federal Register/Vol. 69, No. 162/Monday, August 23, 2004
Federal Register / Vol. 69, No. 162 / Monday, August 23, 2004 / Notices 51825 Format (PDF) on the Internet at the Energy, 1000 Independence Avenue, and oxidation process). Other following site: http://www.ed.gov/news/ SW., Washington, DC 20585; e-mail: corrections include: B&T Metals (OH) fedregister. [email protected]; toll free: (the DOE designation was in error and To use PDF you must have Adobe 1–877–447–9756; URL: http:// has been removed), Foote Mineral (PA) Acrobat Reader, which is available free www.eh.doe.gov/advocacy/. (the BE designation has been on the at this site. If you have questions about SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: program’s Web site (noted below) since using PDF, call the U.S. Government inception, but was inadvertently Printing Office (GPO), toll free, at 1– Purpose missing from the Federal Register 888–293–6498; or in the Washington, The Energy Employees Occupational notice), Swenson Evaporator (is located DC, area at (202) 512–1530. Illness Compensation Program Act of in Harvey, not Chicago, IL) and C.H. 2000 (‘‘Act’’), Title 36 of Public Law Schnorr, PA (previously Schnoor). This Note: The official version of this document 106–398, establishes a program to is the document published in the Federal notice also deletes the listing for Ledoux Register. Free Internet access to the official provide compensation to individuals (NY) entirely because it was learned that edition of the Federal Register and the Code who developed illnesses as a result of no radioactivity was used at that of Federal Regulations is available on GPO their employment in nuclear weapons location. -
The United States Navy Looks at Its African American Crewmen, 1755-1955
“MANY OF THEM ARE AMONG MY BEST MEN”: THE UNITED STATES NAVY LOOKS AT ITS AFRICAN AMERICAN CREWMEN, 1755-1955 by MICHAEL SHAWN DAVIS B.A., Brooklyn College, City University of New York, 1991 M.A., Kansas State University, 1995 AN ABSTRACT OF A DISSERTATION submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Department of History College of Arts and Sciences KANSAS STATE UNIVERSITY Manhattan, Kansas 2011 Abstract Historians of the integration of the American military and African American military participation have argued that the post-World War II period was the critical period for the integration of the U.S. Navy. This dissertation argues that World War II was “the” critical period for the integration of the Navy because, in addition to forcing the Navy to change its racial policy, the war altered the Navy’s attitudes towards its African American personnel. African Americans have a long history in the U.S. Navy. In the period between the French and Indian War and the Civil War, African Americans served in the Navy because whites would not. This is especially true of the peacetime service, where conditions, pay, and discipline dissuaded most whites from enlisting. During the Civil War, a substantial number of escaped slaves and other African Americans served. Reliance on racially integrated crews survived beyond the Civil War and the abolition of slavery, only to succumb to the principle of “separate but equal,” validated by the Supreme Court in the Plessy case (1896). As racial segregation took hold and the era of “Jim Crow” began, the Navy separated the races, a task completed by the time America entered World War I. -
Black Sailors, White Dominion in the New Navy, 1893-1942 A
“WE HAVE…KEPT THE NEGROES’ GOODWILL AND SENT THEM AWAY”: BLACK SAILORS, WHITE DOMINION IN THE NEW NAVY, 1893-1942 A Thesis by CHARLES HUGHES WILLIAMS, III Submitted to the Office of Graduate Studies of Texas A&M University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF ARTS August 2008 Major Subject: History “WE HAVE . KEPT THE NEGROES’ GOODWILL AND SENT THEM AWAY”: BLACK SAILORS, WHITE DOMINION IN THE NEW NAVY, 1893-1942 A Thesis by CHARLES HUGHES WILLIAMS, III Submitted to the Office of Graduate Studies of Texas A&M University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF ARTS Approved by: Chair of Committee, James C. Bradford Committee Members, Julia Kirk Blackwelder Albert Broussard David Woodcock Head of Department, Walter Buenger August 2008 Major Subject: History iii ABSTRACT “We have . kept the negroes’ goodwill and sent them away”: Black Sailors, White Dominion in the New Navy, 1893-1942. (August 2008) Charles Hughes Williams, III, B.A., University of Virginia Chair of Advisory Committee: Dr. James C. Bradford Between 1893 and 1920 the rising tide of racial antagonism and discrimination that swept America fundamentally altered racial relations in the United States Navy. African Americans, an integral part of the enlisted force since the Revolutionary War, found their labor devalued and opportunities for participation and promotion curtailed as civilian leaders and white naval personnel made repeated attempts to exclude blacks from the service. Between 1920 and 1942 the few black sailors who remained in the navy found few opportunities. The development of Jim Crow in the U.S. -
DEPARTMENT of ENERGY NATIONAL NUCLEAR SECURITY 11.3 Other Than Full-Time Permanent
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY NATIONAL NUCLEAR SECURITY 11.3 Other than full-time permanent ............................... 5 5 5 11.5 Other personnel compensation .................................. 5 3 3 ADMINISTRATION 11.9 Total personnel compensation .............................. 167 165 149 Federal Funds 12.1 Civilian personnel benefits ............................................ 36 36 35 General and special funds: 13.0 Benefits for former personnel ........................................ 3 4 3 21.0 Travel and transportation of persons ............................ 9 13 13 OFFICE OF THE ADMINISTRATOR 23.1 Rental payments to GSA ................................................ 4 4 4 23.3 Communications, utilities, and miscellaneous charges 5 9 9 For necessary expenses of the Office of the Administrator in the 25.1 Advisory and assistance services .................................. 38 38 38 National Nuclear Security Administration, including official reception 25.2 Other services ................................................................ 32 33 35 and representation expenses (not to exceed $12,000), ø$339,980,000¿ 25.3 Other purchases of goods and services from Govern- $333,700,000, to remain available until expended. (Energy and Water ment accounts ........................................................... 20 21 21 Development Appropriations Act, 2004.) 25.4 Operation and maintenance of facilities ...................... 5 9 9 25.5 Research and development contracts ........................... 1 1 1 Program and Financing (in millions -
DEPARTMENT of ENERGY ATOMIC ENERGY DEFENSE ACTIVITIES 70.00 Total New Budget Authority (Gross) 5,152 5,700 5,831 5,831
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY ATOMIC ENERGY DEFENSE ACTIVITIES 70.00 Total new budget authority (gross) 5,152 5,700 5,831 5,831 Federal Funds Change in unpaid obligations: 72.40 Unpaid obligations, start of year: Obli- General and special funds: gated balance, start of year .............. 1,120 1,356 1,527 1,604 WEAPONS ACTIVITIES 73.10 Total new obligations .............................. 5,194 5,746 5,831 5,831 73.20 Total outlays (gross) ............................... ±4,957 ±5,575 ±5,754 ±5,818 For Department of Energy expenses, including the purchase, con- 73.45 Adjustments in unexpired accounts ........ ±1 .................. .................. .................. struction and acquisition of plant and capital equipment and other 74.40 Unpaid obligations, end of year: Obli- incidental expenses necessary for atomic energy defense weapons ac- gated balance, end of year ................ 1,356 1,527 1,604 1,617 tivities in carrying out the purposes of the Department of Energy Organization Act (42 U.S.C. 7101 et seq.), including the acquisition Outlays (gross), detail: 86.90 Outlays from new current authority ........ 2,488 2,640 2,719 .................. or condemnation of any real property or any facility or for plant ø 86.93 Outlays from current balances ............... 1,465 1,635 1,735 1,799 or facility acquisition, construction, or expansion; the purchase of 86.97 Outlays from new permanent authority 1,005 1,300 1,300 4,019 not to exceed 1 fixed wing aircraft;¿ and the purchase of passenger motor vehicles (not to exceed ø32¿ 3 for replacement -
U.S. Department of Energy NOTICE Washington, D.C
U.S. Department of Energy NOTICE Washington, D.C. DOE N 473.4 Approved: 5-26-00 Expires: 12-31-00 SUBJECT: DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY BADGES 1. OBJECTIVE. To establish requirements for Department of Energy (DOE) badges. 2. CANCELLATION. None. 3. APPLICABILITY. a. DOE Elements. The requirements in this Notice apply to DOE, including the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA), and contractor facilities and operations on DOE-owned or -leased property. b. Contractors. Attachment 1 contains the Contractor Requirements Document (CRD). The requirements in the CRD apply to the extent set forth in a contract. c. Exclusions. (1) Consistent with the responsibilities identified in Executive Order 12344, the Director of the Naval Nuclear Propulsion Program will determine the applicability of this Notice for activities and facilities under his control. (2) The requirements in this Notice do not apply to DOE and contractor facilities and operations on DOE-owned or -leased property involving access of 30 or fewer people. 4. REQUIREMENTS. Requirements as stated in DOE M 5632.1C-1, MANUAL FOR PROTECTION AND CONTROL OF SAFEGUARDS AND SECURITY INTERESTS, for badging remain in effect. The following requirements are provided for clarification of DOE badge issues.CANCELED a. DOE badges shall be issued to each DOE Federal and contractor employee. The DOE security badge, or the Office of Science common badge are the only formats to be used. (1) Those individuals with an access authorization must be issued a DOE security badge. DISTRIBUTION: INITIATED BY: All Departmental Elements Office of Security and Emergency Operations 2 DOE N 473.4 5-26-00 (2) The DOE security badge will be accepted at all DOE facilities, including those facilities where the Office of Science common badge is issued, as listed in paragraphs 4.c and 4.d below. -
National Defense
National Defense of 32 code PARTS 700 TO 799 Revised as of July 1, 1999 CONTAINING A CODIFICATION OF DOCUMENTS OF GENERAL APPLICABILITY AND FUTURE EFFECT AS OF JULY 1, 1999 regulations With Ancillaries Published by the Office of the Federal Register National Archives and Records Administration as a Special Edition of the Federal Register federal VerDate 18<JUN>99 04:37 Jul 24, 1999 Jkt 183121 PO 00000 Frm 00001 Fmt 8091 Sfmt 8091 Y:\SGML\183121F.XXX 183121f PsN: 183121F 1 U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE WASHINGTON : 1999 For sale by U.S. Government Printing Office Superintendent of Documents, Mail Stop: SSOP, Washington, DC 20402±9328 VerDate 18<JUN>99 04:37 Jul 24, 1999 Jkt 183121 PO 00000 Frm 00002 Fmt 8092 Sfmt 8092 Y:\SGML\183121F.XXX 183121f PsN: 183121F ?ii Table of Contents Page Explanation ................................................................................................ v Title 32: Subtitle AÐDepartment of Defense (Continued): Chapter VIÐDepartment of the Navy ............................................. 5 Finding Aids: Table of CFR Titles and Chapters ....................................................... 533 Alphabetical List of Agencies Appearing in the CFR ......................... 551 List of CFR Sections Affected ............................................................. 561 iii VerDate 18<JUN>99 00:01 Aug 13, 1999 Jkt 183121 PO 00000 Frm 00003 Fmt 8092 Sfmt 8092 Y:\SGML\183121F.XXX pfrm04 PsN: 183121F Cite this Code: CFR To cite the regulations in this volume use title, part and section num- ber. Thus, 32 CFR 700.101 refers to title 32, part 700, section 101. iv VerDate 18<JUN>99 04:37 Jul 24, 1999 Jkt 183121 PO 00000 Frm 00004 Fmt 8092 Sfmt 8092 Y:\SGML\183121F.XXX 183121f PsN: 183121F Explanation The Code of Federal Regulations is a codification of the general and permanent rules published in the Federal Register by the Executive departments and agen- cies of the Federal Government. -
FORGING a TOTAL FORCE the Evolution of the Guard and Reserve
FORGING A TOTAL FORCE The Evolution of the Guard and Reserve Col. Forrest L. Marion, USAFR (ret.) Col. Jon T. Hoffman, USMCR (ret.) Foreword by Lt. Gen. Dennis M. McCarthy, USMC (ret.) former Assistant Secretary of Defense for Reserve Affairs Forging a Total Force FORGING A TOTAL FORCE The Evolution of the Guard and Reserve Col. Forrest L. Marion, USAFR (ret.) Col. Jon T. Hoffman, USMCR (ret.) Historical Office • Office of the Secretary of Defense • 2018 This volume is cleared for public release. The views expressed or implied within are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the Department of Defense, the Office of the Secretary of Defense, or any other agency of the federal government. Portions of this work may be quoted or reprinted without permission, provided that a standard source credit line is included. The Historical Office of the Office of the Secretary of Defense would appreciate a courtesy copy of reprints or reviews. Use of ISBN This is the official U.S. Government edition of this publication and is herein identified to certify its authenticity. Use of 978-0-16-094388-1 is for the U.S. Government Publishing Office editions only. The Superintendent of Documents of the U.S. Government Publishing Office requests that any reprinted edition clearly be labeled a copy of the authentic work with a new ISBN. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Marion, Forrest L., author. | Hoffman, Jon T., 1955– author. Title: Forging a total force : the evolution of the Guard and Reserve / Forrest L. -
Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Act of 2000; List of Covered Facilities
6450-01-p DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Act of 2000; List of Covered Facilities AGENCY: Department of Energy. ACTION: Notice of Listing of Covered Facilities SUMMARY: The Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Act of 2000 (“Act”), Public Law 106-398, establishes a program to provide compensation to individuals who developed illnesses as a result of their employment in nuclear weapons production- related activities and certain other federally-owned facilities in which radioactive materials were used. On December 7, 2000, the President issued Executive Order 13179 (“Order”) directing the Department of Energy (“Department” or “DOE”) to list covered facilities in the Federal Register. This notice responds to both the Act and the Order. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Office of Worker Advocacy, 1-877-447- 9756. ADDRESSES: The Department welcomes comments on this list. Individuals who wish to suggest additional facilities for inclusion on the list, indicate why one or more facilities should be removed from the list, or provide other information may contact: Office of Worker Advocacy (EH-8) U.S. Department of Energy 1000 Independence Avenue, SW Washington, DC 20585 email: [email protected] toll-free: 1-877-447-9756 SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 1 Purpose: The Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Act of 2000 (“Act”), Public Law 106-398, establishes a program to provide compensation to individuals who developed illnesses as a result of their employment in nuclear weapons production-related activities and certain other federally-owned facilities in which radioactive materials were used. On December 7, 2000, the President issued Executive Order 13179 (“Order”) directing the Department of Energy (“Department” or “DOE”) to list covered facilities in the Federal Register.