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A Study on Characterization & Treatment of Laundry Effluent
IJIRST –International Journal for Innovative Research in Science & Technology| Volume 4 | Issue 1 | June 2017 ISSN (online): 2349-6010 A Study on Characterization & Treatment of Laundry Effluent Prof Dr K N Sheth Mittal Patel Director Assistant Professor Geetanjali Institute of Technical Studies, Udaipur SVBIT, Gandhi Nagar (Gujarat) Mrunali D Desai Assistant Professor Department of Environmental Engineering ISTAR, Vallabh Vdyanagar (Gujarat) Abstract It is a substantial fact that specific disposal standard for laundry effluent have not been prescribed by Gujarat pollution Control Board (GPCB). Laundry waste uses soap, soda, detergents and other chemicals for removal of stains, oil, grease and dirt from the soil clothing. The laundry waste is originated in the residential zone on account of manual cleaning, cleaning by domestic washing machines as well as large amount of effluents are generated by commercial washing including dry-cleaning. An attempt has been made in the present investigation to generalize the characteristics of laundry effluent generated by various sources in Vadodara (Gujarat). It has been found during the laboratory studies, that SS, BOD and COD of laundry waste are high. Treatability studies were carried out in the environmental engineering laboratory of B.V.M. Engineering College, V.V.Nagar for removal of these contaminants. The coagulation-flocculation followed by dual media filtration was found to be most suitable sequence of the treatment. Keywords: Laundry effluent, soil clothing, coagulation-flocculation, dual media filtration _______________________________________________________________________________________________________ I. INTRODUCTION Laundry industry is a service industry, In other words, laundry industry is not a manufacturing industry. [1] The State Pollution Control Board has, therefore, not framed standards for specific contaminant levels for the disposal of Laundry waste. -
The Cloud Washerwoman the Cloud Washerwoman
The Cloud Washerwoman The Cloud Washerwoman In this fantasy, an energetic old woman complains that it always rains on wash day. At first, she thinks the answer is to fix the weather. However, her granddaughter has a better idea. Will it work? 8.8 9.2 Other Fantasy titles in Springboard 4: Sammy Stevens Sings Finbar and the Long Trek Springboard Written by Ben Smith 4 Illustrated by Sandra Cammell TheCloudWasherwoman_COV_MEA_SI.i2-3 2-3 15/3/06 4:36:20 PM For inspection teachers' The Cloud Washerwoman ONLY Contents Chapter One. 4 Chapter Two . 12 Chapter Three . 18 Chapter Four . 22 For inspection teachers' ONLY Chapter One Monday is washday 4 For inspection teachers' Once upon a time there was a wrinkly old woman. She was so old and wrinkly most people thought she must be at least 101. Even though she was old and wrinkly, sheONLY was a healthy woman. She ran two marathons a year. She swam in the ocean every day – summer and winter, rain, hail, or shine. She went skiing on the highest mountains, and she rode a fast motorbike with handlebars like antlers. The old woman lived in the home she had always lived in. She did her own gardening. She did her own housework. She baked her own bread. And every Monday morning, come rain, hail, or shine, she stoked up the fire under her big shiny copper tub. When the water was heated, she did the week’s laundry. 5 For inspection teachers' Now the old woman had always fancied herself as a folk singer. -
Four Ana and One Modem House: a Spatial Ethnography of Kathmandu's Urbanizing Periphery
I Four Ana and One Modem House: A Spatial Ethnography of Kathmandu's Urbanizing Periphery Andrew Stephen Nelson Denton, Texas M.A. University of London, School of Oriental and African Studies, December 2004 B.A. Grinnell College, December 2000 A Disse11ation presented to the Graduate Faculty of the University of Virginia in Candidacy for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Department of Anthropology University of Virginia May 2013 II Table of Contents Introduction Chapter 1: An Intellectual Journey to the Urban Periphery 1 Part I: The Alienation of Farm Land 23 Chapter 2: From Newar Urbanism to Nepali Suburbanism: 27 A Social History of Kathmandu’s Sprawl Chapter 3: Jyāpu Farmers, Dalāl Land Pimps, and Housing Companies: 58 Land in a Time of Urbanization Part II: The Householder’s Burden 88 Chapter 4: Fixity within Mobility: 91 Relocating to the Urban Periphery and Beyond Chapter 5: American Apartments, Bihar Boxes, and a Neo-Newari 122 Renaissance: the Dual Logic of New Kathmandu Houses Part III: The Anxiety of Living amongst Strangers 167 Chapter 6: Becoming a ‘Social’ Neighbor: 171 Ethnicity and the Construction of the Moral Community Chapter 7: Searching for the State in the Urban Periphery: 202 The Local Politics of Public and Private Infrastructure Epilogue 229 Appendices 237 Bibliography 242 III Abstract This dissertation concerns the relationship between the rapid transformation of Kathmandu Valley’s urban periphery and the social relations of post-insurgency Nepal. Starting in the 1970s, and rapidly increasing since the 2000s, land outside of the Valley’s Newar cities has transformed from agricultural fields into a mixed development of planned and unplanned localities consisting of migrants from the hinterland and urbanites from the city center. -
Management Problems and Practices of Asian Graduate Students at Oregon State University
AN ABSTRACT OF THE THESIS OF FELITA NACINO SALCEDO for the MASTER OF SCIENCE (Name) (Degree) in HOME MANAGEMENT presented on May 5, 1967 (Major) (Date) Title: MANAGEMENT PROBLEMS AND PRACTICES OF ASIAN GRADUATE STUDENTS AT OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY Abstract approved Redacted for Privacy Martha Plonk This study explored the management problems and practices of 41 Asian graduate students at Oregon State University. The stu- dents were asked to indicate their management problems and practices of food, clothing, and money, their housing conditions, their problems in finding recreation and transportation, and their problems in their academic work and in practicing their religion. All students were enrolled in the University at the time of the interview. Of the group, 25 were males and 16 were females. Twenty -eight were working for their Master's degrees and 10 were working for a Doctor's degree; three students were taking graduate courses but not working for degrees. When the students were asked about their food managment problems and practices, 35 students indicated that they prepared their own meals, while three students ate with American families, two ate in boarding houses, and one in a cooperative. More than half of the 35 students who cooked their own meals planned them depending on what they had on hand in kitchen cabinets and in the refrigerator. Over one -half of these 35 students shopped for food once a week; however 19 made no shopping list of groceries to buy. Twenty -one of the 41 students had received or were receiving native foods from their own countries . -
Annexure V - Caste Codes State Wise List of Castes
ANNEXURE V - CASTE CODES STATE WISE LIST OF CASTES STATE TAMIL NADU CODE CASTE 1 ADDI DIRVISA 2 AKAMOW DOOR 3 AMBACAM 4 AMBALAM 5 AMBALM 6 ASARI 7 ASARI 8 ASOOY 9 ASRAI 10 B.C. 11 BARBER/NAI 12 CHEETAMDR 13 CHELTIAN 14 CHETIAR 15 CHETTIAR 16 CRISTAN 17 DADA ACHI 18 DEYAR 19 DHOBY 20 DILAI 21 F.C. 22 GOMOLU 23 GOUNDEL 24 HARIAGENS 25 IYAR 26 KADAMBRAM 27 KALLAR 28 KAMALAR 29 KANDYADR 30 KIRISHMAM VAHAJ 31 KONAR 32 KONAVAR 33 M.B.C. 34 MANIGAICR 35 MOOPPAR 36 MUDDIM 37 MUNALIAR 38 MUSLIM/SAYD 39 NADAR 40 NAIDU 41 NANDA 42 NAVEETHM 43 NAYAR 44 OTHEI 45 PADAIACHI 46 PADAYCHI 47 PAINGAM 48 PALLAI 49 PANTARAM 50 PARAIYAR 51 PARMYIAR 52 PILLAI 53 PILLAIMOR 54 POLLAR 55 PR/SC 56 REDDY 57 S.C. 58 SACHIYAR 59 SC/PL 60 SCHEDULE CASTE 61 SCHTLEAR 62 SERVA 63 SOWRSTRA 64 ST 65 THEVAR 66 THEVAR 67 TSHIMA MIAR 68 UMBLAR 69 VALLALAM 70 VAN NAIR 71 VELALAR 72 VELLAR 73 YADEV 1 STATE WISE LIST OF CASTES STATE MADHYA PRADESH CODE CASTE 1 ADIWARI 2 AHIR 3 ANJARI 4 BABA 5 BADAI (KHATI, CARPENTER) 6 BAMAM 7 BANGALI 8 BANIA 9 BANJARA 10 BANJI 11 BASADE 12 BASOD 13 BHAINA 14 BHARUD 15 BHIL 16 BHUNJWA 17 BRAHMIN 18 CHAMAN 19 CHAWHAN 20 CHIPA 21 DARJI (TAILOR) 22 DHANVAR 23 DHIMER 24 DHOBI 25 DHOBI (WASHERMAN) 26 GADA 27 GADARIA 28 GAHATRA 29 GARA 30 GOAD 31 GUJAR 32 GUPTA 33 GUVATI 34 HARJAN 35 JAIN 36 JAISWAL 37 JASODI 38 JHHIMMER 39 JULAHA 40 KACHHI 41 KAHAR 42 KAHI 43 KALAR 44 KALI 45 KALRA 46 KANOJIA 47 KATNATAM 48 KEWAMKAT 49 KEWET 50 KOL 51 KSHTRIYA 52 KUMBHI 53 KUMHAR (POTTER) 54 KUMRAWAT 55 KUNVAL 56 KURMA 57 KURMI 58 KUSHWAHA 59 LODHI 60 LULAR 61 MAJHE -
Proceedings of the Second Annual Textile Conference
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE BUREAU OF STANDARDS S. W. STRATTON, Director MISCELLANEOUS PUBLICATIONS—No. 19 PROCEEDINGS OF THE SECOND ANNUAL TEXTILE CONFERENCE HELD AT THE BUREAU OF STANDARDS, WASHINGTON MAY 21-22, 1917 WASHINGTON GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 1918 DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE BUREAU OF STANDARDS S. W. STRATTON, Director MISCELLANEOUS PUBLICATIONS—No. 19 PROCEEDINGS OF THE SECOND ANNUAL TEXTILE CONFERENCE HELD AT THE BUREAU OF STANDARDS, WASHINGTON MAY 21-22, 1917 WASHINGTON GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 1918 CONTENTS Pag9 List of persons who attended the conference 5 FIRST SESSION Opening address, by S. W. Stratton 7 The results of a new method of combining fibers, by William D. Hartshome. 8 Humidity in cotton mills, by F. Gordon Cobb 11 The difference between commercial grading of cotton and grading for spinning purposes, by F. Gordon Cobb 13 A key to the nomenclature of textiles, by Louis Harmuth 15 Cotton wastes, by William N. Randle 18 The conservation of garments in laundering, by H. G. EUedge 22 Present and future textile laboratories in western land-grant colleges, by Ruth O 'Brien 30 Modem methods of testing blankets for heat transmission, by George B. Haven . 33 Comparative service tests of cotton and wool bunting, by Walter S. Lewis and Charles J. Cleary 41 SECOND SESSION Opening address, by William C. Redfiield 46 Classification of raw silks and standardization of tests, by J. A. Scheibli 48 Classification of raw silks and standardization of tests, by Warren P. Seem. ... 55 A plan for the valuation of dyes, by Frederick Dannerth 63 Plea for a standard nomenclature for organic dyes, by Frederick Dannerth. -
Trade Marks Journal No: 1965, 14/09/2020
Trade Marks Journal No: 1965, 14/09/2020 Reg. No. TECH/47-714/MBI/2000 Registered as News Paper p`kaSana : Baart sarkar vyaapar icanh rijasT/I esa.ema.raoD eMTa^p ihla ko pasa paosT Aa^ifsa ko pasa vaDalaa mauMba[mauMba[---- 400037400037400037 durBaaYa : 022 24101144 ,24101177 ,24148251 ,24112211. Published by: The Government of India, Office of The Trade Marks Registry, Baudhik Sampada Bhavan (I.P. Bhavan) Near Antop Hill, Head Post Office, S.M. Road, Mumbai-400037. Tel: 022 24101144, 24101177, 24148251, 24112211. 1 Trade Marks Journal No: 1965, 14/09/2020 Anauk/maiNakaAnauk/maiNakaAnauk/maiNaka INDEX AiQakairk saucanaaeM Official Notes vyaapar icanh rijasT/IkrNa kayaakayaa----layalaya ka AiQakar xao~ Jurisdiction of Offices of the Trade Marks Registry sauiBannata ko baaro maoM rijrijaYT/araYT/ar kao p`arMiBak salaah AaoOr Kaoja ko ilayao inavaodna Preliminary advice by Registrar as to distinctiveness and request for search saMbaw icanhsaMbaw icanh Associated Marks ivaraoQa Opposition ivaiQak p`maaNa p`p`~~ iT.ema.46 pr AnauraoQa Legal Certificate/ Request on Form TM-46 k^apIra[T p`maaNa p`~ Copyright Certificate t%kala kayat%kala kaya-kaya--- Operation Tatkal saavasaavasaava-saava---jainakjainak saucanaaeM Public Notices iva&aipt Aavaodna Applications advertised class-wise: 2 Trade Marks Journal No: 1965, 14/09/2020 vagavagavaga-vaga--- /// Class - 1 11-122 vagavagavaga-vaga--- /// Class - 2 123-163 vagavagavaga-vaga--- /// Class - 3 164-607 vagavagavaga-vaga--- /// Class - 4 608-662 vagavagavaga-vaga--- / Class - 5 663-2319 vagavagavaga-vaga--- -
VOCATIONAL TRAINING INSTITUTE DHOBI GHAT Government of the Punjab
VOCATIONAL TRAINING INSTITUTE DHOBI GHAT Government of the Punjab Dhobi Ghat TERMS & CONDITIONS FOR PURCHASES / PROCUREMENTS UNDER TENDERING / BIDDING: Firm Name: M/s__________________________________________________________________________________ NIC Proprietor Name:______________________________ #._____________________________________ NTN #:_______________________________________ Sales Tax #.____________________________ Address:_____________________________________________________________________________ Ph. #:__________________Cell # ______________ Conditions: 1- General i. Any offer which is not received as per terms and conditions of the tender enquiry is liable to be ignored. No offer shall be considered if: a. Received without earnest money. b. It is received after the time and date fixed for its receipt. c. The tender is unsigned d. The offer is ambiguous e. The offer is conditional f. The offer is from a black listed firm. g. The offer is received by fax or e-mail h. Offer received with shorter validity than required. i. The offer is not conforming to specifications indicated in the tender enquiry. j. The tender documents are not signed by the supplier or his authorized person(s). ii. Offer must remain valid for at least 90 days from the date of opening the tender. iii. The covering letter should indicate particulars of tender, and date of opening. The envelope must be properly sealed. iv. The purchaser reserves the right to purchase full or part or ignore / scrap / cancel the tender without assigning any reason(s). The earnest money / security shall be forfeited if: a. The acceptance of tender is not issued during the validity period by the successful bidder within stipulated time period. Address: Opposite B.C Tower Jinnah Colony Faisalabad Tel No.041-9201121; [email protected] Page 1 1 of 4 VOCATIONAL TRAINING INSTITUTE DHOBI GHAT Government of the Punjab Dhobi Ghat b. -
Hotel/Motel Laundry Planning File
HOTEL/MOTEL LAUNDRY PLANNING FILE B22SL05006/20072 Laundry Systems for hotels and motels WHY INSTALL AN ON-PREMISES LAUNDRY? 1. Launder everything on premises. A Milnor on-premises laundry can handle all of a hotel/motel's clean fabric needs in a simple manner. Milnor washer-extractors can process bath and bed linens, blankets, pillows, restaurant and banquet napery, and kitchen linen, plus such items as employee uniforms, slip covers and cleaning rags and mops. Many types of rugs and drapes can also be processed in a Milnor on-premises laundry. 2. Distinctive linens build prestige. Many hotel and motel operators have enhanced their image of quality through tasteful fabric selection. Everything from linen to drapes can be selected in the colors and patterns of your choice. 3. Get more use from less inventory. An on-premises laundry provides more use from less inventory. Table napery, bath linen, and other goods can be laundered immediately after use and be ready again in about an hour if necessary. Smaller inventories mean less storage space and more money for investment elsewhere. 4. You won't be caught short. On-premises laundering eliminates "caught short" situations. It gives you a ready supply of towels, sheets, napkins, tablecloths, and uniforms. This is especially important during weekends and holidays, when outside services are not available. 5. Control quality, sanitation. On-premises laundering assures quality processing because you are in control. You can prolong fabric life by using a distinct formula for the specific degree of soil. Milnor's E-P Plus® washer-extractors make this easy, with several specific formulas developed and field-tested by chemists for hotels and motels. -
India Detergent: Goldilocking
Vol 6. Issue 3. 1 - 31 MAY 2019 | For Private Circulation Only pg 4. India Detergents: Goldilocking Premiumisation pg 33. Interview – Mr. Rajnikant Sabnavis pg 35. Indian Economy – Trend Indicators pg 37. Valuation Summary Ground View - Previous Issues GROUND VIEW Vol 6. Issue 3. 1 - 31 MAY 2019 MANAGING DIRECTOR & CEO IT SERVICES Vineet Bhatnagar Vibhor Singhal Shyamal Dhruve EDITORIAL BOARD Manish Agarwalla INFRASTRUCTURE Kinshuk Bharti Tiwari Vibhor Singhal Deepika Bhandari DESIGN, ILLUSTRATION Chaitanya Modak LOGISTICS, www.inhousedesign.co.in TRANSPORTATION Vikram Suryavanshi EDITOR Roshan Sony MEDIA, CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY 1st February 2018 Issue 1 1st April 2018 Issue 2 RESEARCH Ankit Kedia AUTOMOBILS Saksham Kaushal METALS Vipul Agrawal Vikash Singh AGRI INPUTS MIDCAP Deepak Chitroda Deepak Agarwal Akshay Mokashe BANKING, NBFCs Manish Agarwalla REAL-ESTATE Pradeep Agrawal Vaibhav Agarwal Sujal Kumar Dhaval Somaiya CONSUMER STRATEGY Vishal Gutka Anjali Verma Preeyam Tolia Neeraj Chadawar CEMENT TECHNICALS Vaibhav Agarwal Subodh Gupta st 1st November 2018 Issue 4 ECONOMICS PRODUCTION MANAGER 1 September 2018 Issue 3 Anjali Verma Ganesh Deorukhkar Aditi Mohol EQUITY SALES & EVENTS ENGINEERING, Rosie Ferns CAPITAL GOODS Jonas Bhutta SALES & DISTRIBUTION Vikram Rawat Ashka Gulati Archan Vyas HEALTHCARE, Jignesh Kanani SPECIALTY CHEMICALS Sneha Baxi Surya Patra Amarinder Sabharwal Mehul Sheth Rishita Raja CORPORATE COMMUNICATIONS Zarine Damania FOR EDITORIAL QUERIES PhillipCapital (India) Private Limited. No. 1, 18th Floor, Urmi Estate, 95 Ganpatrao Kadam Marg, Lower Parel West, Mumbai 400 013 1st January 2019 Issue 1 1st February 2019 Issue 2 [email protected] 2 GROUND VIEW 1 - 31 May 2019 1 - 31 May 2019 GROUND VIEW 3 Letter from the MD CONTENTS There is less than a fortnight left for the 17th Lok Sabha elections results, which will decide the destiny of Indians for the next five years. -
DEIRDRE MAULTSAID Washerwomen, Blessings
DEIRDRE MAULTSAID Washerwomen, Blessings 1. Catherine Parr Trail, in The Backwoods of Canada I am a washerwoman standing on unstable said that the process of making ground. soap was "mysterious" and a recipe that I see all in its proper place: aquifer, granite, dust, required a certain touch. How sweet the sideyard, water pump, washerwoman with her Castile soap for the lace a basin full, my own brawny arms, and her hard-working lye for the my washboard-abraded hands still wringing. britches and rags and flannels. Work is its own reward. Be Careful: contemplation could bring grief. 4. The world is. Statistics Canada has a study, "Households The world does not know me. unpaid work: measurement and valuation" (Catalogue No. 13-603-MPE95003.) 2. www.statcan.ca Ada Williams, says of her work, "The summer I Laundry is subject to public scrutiny. was 15, I went up to Halifax and earned a few dollars. I found a job doing 5. housework, where I had to wash a huge Last century, a bride was instructed in Mountain pile of clothes every day while the mistress sat Life and Work to wash the clothes and watched me. I stood it for one thus: "1. bild a fire in back yard to heat kettle of week, and left. She refused to pay me anything rain water. 2. set tubs so smoke and was very angry. I went down to won't blow in eyes if wind is pert. 3. shave one the waterfront and got on Cat Weston's vessel hole cake soap in bilin water. -
A Dwellers-Focused Design Tool for Upgrading Living Space in Dharavi, Mumbai
Commission for Development Studies at the Austrian Academy of Sciences FINAL REPORT Project number: 184 “Dharavi - Ground Up”: A Dwellers-Focused Design Tool for Upgrading Living Space in Dharavi, Mumbai AUTHORS: Univ.-Prof. Dr. Amita Bhide Arch. Mag.arch Martina Spies Research project conducted by the following partners: Centre for Urban Planning and Governance in the School of Habitat Studies, TATA Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai, India: Univ.-Prof. Dr. Amita Bhide Institute of Architecture, University of Applied Arts, Vienna, Austria: Ao.Univ.-Prof. Dipl.Ing. Dr. Karin Raith, DCOOP Mumbai, Shilpa Ranede and Quaid Doongerwala Univ.-Prof. Dr. Marie-France Chevron, Universität Wien Submitted 9 April, 2013 OUTLINE OF THE REPORT ABSTRACT 4 PART I BACKGROUND 5 Introduction PART II (A. Bhide) GROUND UP_ THE STUDY 6 2.1 Dharavi Through the Lens of Livelihoods 2.2 Slums and Livelihoods 7 2.3 The History of Dharavi 8 PART III METHODOLOGY 12 3.1 Combining research methods of architecture, urban morphology and sociology 12 3.2 Research methods of architecture and urban morphology 12 3.3 Research methods of sociology 13 PART IV and V (A. Bhide, M.Spies) FINDINGS 4. Research of architecture and urban morphology: The Different Scales of the System Dharavi : 4.1 The “City Scale” 15 4.2 The“ Intermediate Nagar Scale” 16 4.3 The “INagar Scale” 17 4.4 The“Quarter Scale” 19 4.5 The “Cell Scale” 21 Summary of the Architectural Research (M. Spies) 22 5. Research of Sociology: Study of the livelihoods within the communities (A. Bhide) 2 5.1 Broom makers 24 5.2 Dhobis 27 5.3 Papad makers 30 5.4 Recyclers 32 5.4.1 Scale 1: Kabadi walas (shop owners) 33 5.4.2 Scale 2: Waste picker 37 PART VI (A.