Recommended publications
  • Hagerman National Wildlife Refuge Comprehensive Conservation Plan
    U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Hagerman National Wildlife Refuge Comprehensive Conservation Plan April2006 United States Department of the Interior FISH AND Wll...DLIFE SERVICE P.O. Box 1306 Albuquerque, New Mexico 87103 In Reply Refer To: R2/NWRS-PLN JUN 0 5 2006 Dear Reader: The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) is proud to present to you the enclosed Comprehensive Conservation Plan (CCP) for the Hagerman National Wildlife Refuge (Refuge). This CCP and its supporting documents outline a vision for the future of the Refuge and specifies how this unique area can be maintained to conserve indigenous wildlife and their habitats for the enjoyment of the public for generations to come. Active community participation is vitally important to manage the Refuge successfully. By reviewing this CCP and visiting the Refuge, you will have opportunities to learn more about its purpose and prospects. We invite you to become involved in its future. The Service would like to thank all the people who participated in the planning and public involvement process. Comments you submitted helped us prepare a better CCP for the future of this unique place. Sincerely, Tom Baca Chief, Division of Planning Hagerman National Wildlife Refuge Comprehensive Conservation Plan Sherman, Texas Prepared by: United States Fish and Wildlife Service Division of Planning Region 2 500 Gold SW Albuquerque, New Mexico 87103 Comprehensive conservation plans provide long-term guidance for management decisions and set forth goals, objectives, and strategies needed to accomplish refuge purposes and identify the Service’s best estimate of future needs. These plans detail program planning levels that are sometimes substantially above current budget allocations and, as such, are primarily for Service strategic planning and program prioritization purposes.
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  • In Memoriam I Met Ralph in 1989 When I Moved to Wolverhampton, Through Our Involvement with the Wolverhampton Mountain- Eering Club
    Obituaries Matterhorn. Edward Theodore Compton. 1880. Watercolour. 43 x 68cm. (Alpine Club Collection HE118P) 399 I N M E M ORI am 401 Ralph Atkinson 1952 - 2014 In Memoriam I met Ralph in 1989 when I moved to Wolverhampton, through our involvement with the Wolverhampton Mountain- eering Club. Weekends in Wales The Alpine Club Obituary Year of Election and day trips to Matlock and the (including to ACG) Roaches became the foundation for extended expeditions to the Ralph Atkinson 1997 Alps including, in 1991, a fine Una Bishop 1982 six-day ski traverse of the Haute John Chadwick 1978 Route, Argentière to Zermatt, John Clegg 1955 and ascents in 1993 of the Mönch Dennis Davis 1977 and Jungfrau. Descending the Gordon Gadsby 1985 Jungfrau in a storm, we could Johannes Villiers de Graaff 1953 barely see each other. I slipped David Jamieson 1999 in the new snow and had to self- Emlyn Jones 1944 arrest, aided by the tension in the Brian ‘Ned’ Kelly 1968 rope to Ralph. It worked, and I Neil Mackenzie Asp.2011, 2015 Ralph Atkinson climbing on the slabs of Fournel, was soon back on the ridge, but Richard Morgan 1960 near Argentière, Ecrins. (Andy Clarke) when we dropped below the John Peacock 1966 Rottalsattel and could speak to Bill Putnam 1972 each other again, he had no idea that anything untoward had happened. Stephanie Roberts 2011 I recall long journeys by car enlivened by his wide-ranging taste in music. Les Swindin 1979 The keynote of many outings was his sense of fun. There were long stories, John Tyson 1952 jokes or pithy one-liners.
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  • Fashion Arts. Curriculum RP-54. INSTITUTION Ontario Dept
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 048 223 SP 007 137 TITLE Fashion Arts. Curriculum RP-54. INSTITUTION Ontario Dept. of Education, Toronto. PUB LATE 67 NOTE 34p. EDRS PRICE EDRS Price MF-$0.65 HC-$3.29 DESCRIPTORS Clothing Instruction, *Curriculum Guides, Distributive Education, *Grade 11, *Grade 12, *Hcme Economics, Interior Design, *Marketing, Merchandising, Textiles Instruction AESTRACT GRADES OR AGES: Grades 11 and 12. SUBJECT MATTER: Fashicn arts and marketing. ORGANIZATION AND PHkSTCAL APPEARANCE: The guide is divided into two main sections, one for fashion arts and one for marketing, each of which is further subdivided into sections fcr grade 11 and grade 12. Each of these subdivisions contains from three to six subject units. The guide is cffset printed and staple-todnd with a paper cover. Oi:IJECTIVE3 AND ACTIVITIES' Each unit contains a short list of objectives, a suggested time allotment, and a list of topics to he covered. There is only occasional mention of activities which can he used in studying these topics. INSTRUCTIONAL MATERIALS: Each unit contains lists of books which relate either to the unit as a whole or to subtopics within the unit. In addition, appendixes contain a detailed list of equipment for the fashion arts course and a two-page billiography. STUDENT A. ,'SSMENT:No provision. (RT) U $ DEPARTMENT OF hEALTH EOUCATION & WELFARE OFFICE OF THIS DOCUMENTEOUCATION HAS BEEN REPRO DUCED EXACT' VAS RECEIVED THE PERSON OR FROM INAnNO IT POINTSORGANIZATION ()RIG IONS STATED OF VIEW OR DO NUT OPIN REPRESENT OFFICIAL NECESSARILY CATION
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  • Introductions to Heritage Assets: Shielings
    Shielings Introductions to Heritage Assets Summary Historic England’s Introductions to Heritage Assets (IHAs) are accessible, authoritative, illustrated summaries of what we know about specific types of archaeological site, building, landscape or marine asset. Typically they deal with subjects which have previously lacked such a published summary, either because the literature is dauntingly voluminous, or alternatively where little has been written. Most often it is the latter, and many IHAs bring understanding of site or building types which are neglected or little understood. This IHA provides an introduction to shielings (huts that served as temporary, summer, accommodation for people involved in transhumance, that is the removal of stock from permanent dwellings to exploit areas of summer pasture some distance away from the main settlement). Descriptions of the asset type and its development as well as its associations and a brief chronology are included. A list of in‑depth sources on the topic is suggested for further reading. This document has been prepared by Rob Young and edited by Joe Flatman and Pete Herring. It is one of a series of 41 documents. This edition published by Historic England October 2018. All images © Historic England unless otherwise stated. Please refer to this document as: Historic England 2018 Shielings: Introductions to Heritage Assets. Swindon. Historic England. HistoricEngland.org.uk/listing/selection-criteria/scheduling-selection/ihas- archaeology/ Front cover Shielings at Shiels Brae, Bewcastle in the valley of the River White Lynne, Cumbria. Plan shows at least three phases of construction. Introduction A shieling is a hut, found singly or in small groups, usually in upland areas which today we would consider as agriculturally marginal land.
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  • DNPA's Detailed Responses to Comments
    Dartmoor National Park Authority Local Plan Review 2018 - 2036 Full report on Regulation 19 representations (by respondent) Respondent Number: 0002 Name: John Penny Organisation: Devon Stone Federation On behalf of: Rep Number: 7 Local Plan Section: 1 Paragraph / Policy: Strategy Is the Local Plan sound?: Yes Is the Local Plan legally compliant?: No Is the Local Plan compliant with the duty to co-operate?: Yes Hearing session(s)?: Yes, I wish to participate in hearing session(s) Why?: to ensure the Plan is consistent with national policy Did respondent comment on Reg 18 Local Plan?: Yes Detail of Representation: plan needs to be consistent with national policy Modifications necessary: The paragraph states "Major development will not take place in the National Park other than in exceptional circumstances". The use of the word 'will' is not appropriate and does not reflect the definition given on page 9 under "Understanding the Local Plan". The sentence about Major development is supposed to reflect para 172 of the NPPF 2018. This uses the word 'should', as in "Planning permission should be refused for major development other than in exceptional circumstances". Therefore, the sentence in the Local Plan should be changed to: "Major development should not take place in the National Park other than in exceptional circumstances". We suggest that the use of the word 'will' is reviewed elsewhere in the Draft Local Plan. Authority response: The wording is considered consistent with the NPPF, ‘should’ in the NPPF allows local policy a degree of flexibility in the application of the policy and the possibility of introducing other criteria which could allow major development to occur in a National Park, other than the exceptional circumstances stated in NPPF para 172.
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  • Like a Ton of Bricks Here’S a Ton of 7-Letter Bingos About BUILDINGS, STRUCTURES, COMPONENTS Compiled by Jacob Cohen, Asheville Scrabble Club
    Like a Ton of Bricks Here’s a ton of 7-letter bingos about BUILDINGS, STRUCTURES, COMPONENTS compiled by Jacob Cohen, Asheville Scrabble Club A 7s ABATTIS AABISTT abatis (barrier made of felled trees) [n -ES] ACADEME AACDEEM place of instruction [n -S] ACADEMY AACDEMY secondary school [n -MIES] AGOROTH AGHOORT AGORA, marketplace in ancient Greece [n] AIRPARK AAIKPRR small airport (tract of land maintained for landing and takeoff of aircraft) [n -S] AIRPORT AIOPRRT tract of land maintained for landing and takeoff of aircraft [n -S] ALAMEDA AAADELM shaded walkway [n -S] ALCAZAR AAACLRZ Spanish fortress or palace [n -S] ALCOVES ACELOSV ALCOVE, recessed section of room [n] ALMEMAR AAELMMR bema (platform in synagogue) [n -S] ALMONRY ALMNORY place where alms are distributed [n -RIES] AMBONES ABEMNOS AMBO, pulpit in early Christian church [n] AMBRIES ABEIMRS AMBRY, recess in church wall for sacred vessels [n] ANDIRON ADINNOR metal support for holding wood in fireplace [n -S] ANNEXED ADEENNX ANNEX, to add or attach [v] ANNEXES AEENNSX ANNEXE, something added or attached [n] ANTEFIX AEFINTX upright ornament at eaves of tiled roof [n -ES, -, -AE] ANTENNA AAENNNT metallic device for sending or receiving radio waves [n -S, -E] ANTHILL AHILLNT mound formed by ants in building their nest [n -S] APSIDAL AADILPS APSE, domed, semicircular projection of building [adj] APSIDES ADEIPSS APSIS, apse (domed, semicircular projection of building) [n] ARBOURS ABORRSU ARBOUR, shady garden shelter [n] ARCADED AACDDER ARCADE, to provide arcade (series of arches)
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  • Lessons from Iraq and Afghanistan: Is It Time for the United States to Sign the Ottawa Treaty and End the Use of Landmines?
    RIZER FORMATTED POST PROOF EDIT.DOC 2/1/2013 1:19 PM LESSONS FROM IRAQ AND AFGHANISTAN: IS IT TIME FOR THE UNITED STATES TO SIGN THE OTTAWA TREATY AND END THE USE OF LANDMINES? ARTHUR RIZER* TABLE OF CONTENTS I. INTRODUCTION ............................................................................... 36 II. HISTORY ......................................................................................... 37 A. History of Landmines Warfare ........................................... 37 1. The First Silent Killers .................................................. 37 2. The Revolution of Landmines ...................................... 40 3. With Sticks and Duct Tape: IEDs ................................. 42 B. History of the Law .............................................................. 43 1. Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons ............ 43 2. Ottawa Treaty ............................................................... 46 3. The United States’ Role in Landmine Law .................. 49 C. Reconciling the Law and the Weapons ............................... 53 III. A NEW DIRECTION: SECURITY PRAGMATISM ................................ 54 A. Morality is Not Relative ..................................................... 55 B. Military Effectiveness ......................................................... 63 C. Power in Numbers ............................................................... 66 IV. THE OTHER SIDE: COUNTERARGUMENTS ...................................... 68 * Arthur Rizer is a prosecutor with the United States
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  • BEACH HUTS Selling Secrets – Everything You Need to Know About Selling Your Property on the Prom …
    T 01273 735237 59 Church Road F 01273 820592 Hove E [email protected] East Sussex BN3 2BD W www.callaways.co.uk Callaways Residential Sales & Lettings BEACH HUTS Selling Secrets – everything you need to know about selling your property on the prom … Heather Hilder-Darling Callaways est a te age nts Beach,, Huts, for a never-to-be- forgotten summer of seaside memories … ,, Award winning Estate & Lettings Agency 2009 – 2017 UK REAL ESTATE R E A L EST A T E in association with ««««« BEST REAL BEST REAL ESTATE ESTATE AGENCY AGENCY EAST SUSSEX UK BEST REAL ESTATE EAST SUSSEX AGENCY EAST SUSSEX Callaways Estate & Lettings Agent Callaways Estate Callaways by Callaways & Lettings Agent Callaways est a te age nts 59 Church Road, Hove BN3 2BD Tel: 01273 735237 B1 Yeoman Gate, Yeoman Way Worthing BN13 3QZ Tel: 01903 831338 [email protected] www.callaways.co.uk Thank you for downloading this guide from Callaways 1. Preparing to sell your Beach Hut Residential Sales & Lettings. 2. Useful documents and information We hope you find it helpful. 3. What to include in the sale If you have any questions or 4. Preparing your Beach Hut for Sale comments or you would like 5. Photography to organise a free saleability 6. Viewings and advice consultation, then 7. Agreeing a sale please click here. 8. Managing the sale to completion 9. Preparing for hand-over 10. Contact us page 2 sales ... lettings ... property management ... new homes August,, – children playing, lapping water, cups of tea and the sea … ,, Preparing to sell your Beach Hut How is the current value of current value, and what we recommend as local market and straight talking a marketing strategy that will help sell your good advice, which clients appreciate.
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  • MTSC 2007-07July**
    beechleaves Newsletter of the Manawatu Tramping and Skiing Club July 2007 Issue 6 mail: MTSC P.O. Box 245 Palmerston North web: www.mtsc.org.nz Carrying out the sofa’s from our Lodge at Whakapapa. Photo by Mike Sampson. ..! Upcoming club nights ..! Looking After Your Feet ! 7.30 pm, 1st and 3rd Tuesdays of the month at the Manawatu Aero Club Rooms, Airport Drive 3rd July - Looking after your Feet! Do you suffer from sore feet after several hours tramping? The solution could be as easy as the way you tie your boot laces! Murray McDonald from the Shoe Clinic will talk about foot care, tying of shoe/boot laces and answer all your questions. 17th July- Gliding in New Zealand John Brooks, a local glider pilot, will be giving us a look at our back country from a totally different perspective, including some spectacular south island scenery. 7th August- “Birds in Arabia” by John Cockrem 21st August- Photographic competition Time to dust off those slides and prints or go through that collection of digital photos on your computer as the annual club photo competition is coming. Photos can be entered in one of the following 5 categories with the one condition that photos shouldn’t have been entered in a previous photo competition. Alpine (NZ) Predominantly alpine scenery in NZ (i.e. above the bushline). Scenic (NZ) Pictorial interest in NZ hills etc (i.e. predominantly below the bushline). Natural History (NZ) NZ flora and fauna or detail (e.g. geology, ice formations etc). Topical (NZ) Peo- ple or detail related to tramping, climbing, or skiing related activities in NZ Overseas: Open From: Map 260-U22 (LINZ) 1 President’s Report by Howard Nicholson email [email protected] or phone (06) 357 6325 July 2007 Winter is starting with a bang this year!! As I was being snowed on at the Alice Nash Memorial Heri- VES tage Lodge carpark recently, I started thinking about the awesome tramping and skiing trips that are coming up on the trip card.
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  • The Effects of Nuclear War
    The Effects of Nuclear War May 1979 NTIS order #PB-296946 Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 79-600080 For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office Washington, D C, 20402 — Foreword This assessment was made in response to a request from the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations to examine the effects of nuclear war on the populations and economies of the United States and the Soviet Union. It is intended, in the terms of the Committee’s request, to “put what have been abstract measures of strategic power into more comprehensible terms. ” The study examines the full range of effects that nuclear war would have on civilians: direct effects from blast and radiation; and indirect effects from economic, social, and politicai disruption. Particular attention is devoted to the ways in which the impact of a nuclear war would extend over time. Two of the study’s principal findings are that conditions would con- tinue to get worse for some time after a nuclear war ended, and that the ef- fects of nuclear war that cannot be calculated in advance are at least as im- portant as those which analysts attempt to quantify. This report provides essential background for a range of issues relating to strategic weapons and foreign policy. It translates what is generally known about the effects of nuclear weapons into the best available estimates about the impact on society if such weapons were used. It calls attention to the very wide range of impacts that nuclear weapons would have on a complex industrial society, and to the extent of uncertainty regarding these impacts.
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  • Bob Farquhar
    1 2 Created by Bob Farquhar For and dedicated to my grandchildren, their children, and all humanity. This is Copyright material 3 Table of Contents Preface 4 Conclusions 6 Gadget 8 Making Bombs Tick 15 ‘Little Boy’ 25 ‘Fat Man’ 40 Effectiveness 49 Death By Radiation 52 Crossroads 55 Atomic Bomb Targets 66 Acheson–Lilienthal Report & Baruch Plan 68 The Tests 71 Guinea Pigs 92 Atomic Animals 96 Downwinders 100 The H-Bomb 109 Nukes in Space 119 Going Underground 124 Leaks and Vents 132 Turning Swords Into Plowshares 135 Nuclear Detonations by Other Countries 147 Cessation of Testing 159 Building Bombs 161 Delivering Bombs 178 Strategic Bombers 181 Nuclear Capable Tactical Aircraft 188 Missiles and MIRV’s 193 Naval Delivery 211 Stand-Off & Cruise Missiles 219 U.S. Nuclear Arsenal 229 Enduring Stockpile 246 Nuclear Treaties 251 Duck and Cover 255 Let’s Nuke Des Moines! 265 Conclusion 270 Lest We Forget 274 The Beginning or The End? 280 Update: 7/1/12 Copyright © 2012 rbf 4 Preface 5 Hey there, I’m Ralph. That’s my dog Spot over there. Welcome to the not-so-wonderful world of nuclear weaponry. This book is a journey from 1945 when the first atomic bomb was detonated in the New Mexico desert to where we are today. It’s an interesting and sometimes bizarre journey. It can also be horribly frightening. Today, there are enough nuclear weapons to destroy the civilized world several times over. Over 23,000. “Enough to make the rubble bounce,” Winston Churchill said. The United States alone has over 10,000 warheads in what’s called the ‘enduring stockpile.’ In my time, we took care of things Mano-a-Mano.
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  • Burial Crypts and Vaults in Britain and Ireland: a Biographical Approach
    19—43 Acta Universitatis Lodziensis. Folia Archaeologica 35(2020) https://doi.org/10.18778/0208-6034.35.02 Harold Mytum https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0577-2064 Burial Crypts and Vaults in Britain and Ireland: a Biographical Approach Various types of burial chamber in Britain belonging to the period from the Ref- ormation until the 19th century have long been investigated archaeologically, but their frequency was only appreciated with the extensive investigation of St. Au- gustine the Less, Bristol, for which unfortunately there is still only an interim report (Boore 1986). The initial classification of both coffins and burial spaces was produced by Julian Litten (1985), and the variability in coffin design was greatly expanded by the investigation of the communal crypt at Christ Church Spital- fields, London (hereafter Spitalfields) during 1984–1986 (Reeve, Adams 1993). The original classification and dating sequence for burial structures proposed by Litten (1985: 10) is still valid, and it is set out in Table 1. Mainly concentrating on elite burial spaces, Litten defined four categories of burial space in 1999: large dynastic vault, family vault, brick grave and extensive private and public vaults (Litten 1999: 115). This study defines the range of types that are most frequently encountered and the form of the evidence normally surviving in these burial spaces, building on these pioneering studies. This study considers for the first time the biography of the coffin, and of the various types of burial spaces, both in terms of successive interment and some of the subsequent taphonomic processes that subsequently affect the location of the coffins within these burial spaces.
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