EXTENSIONS of REMARKS February 28, 1991 EXTENSIONS of REMARKS
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CENTENNIAL: Grand Prairie, Texas 1909-2009
CENTENNIAL: Grand Prairie, Texas 1909-2009 Foreword “Centennial” is a window into the growth and development of Grand Prairie, Texas, USA Compiled from City Documents and Public Records, the information presented is representative of actions and events in the City of Grand Prairie during its first 100 years. Grand Prairie was given its name by the Texas and Pacific Railroad based on its location on the southern edge of a geological region called “Grand Prairie” that is composed of Eagleford Shale stretching from Texas north through the Dakotas and into Canada. Compiled and Written as a Public Service by Katherine L. Houk May 1, 2008 (The author receives no compensation from sales of this book) CENTENNIAL: Grand Prairie, Texas 1909-2009 CENTENNIAL 2009! 100 YEARS OF GROWTH—GRAND PRAIRIE, TEXAS FOREWORD CHAPTER 1 GRAND PRAIRIE TODAY CHAPTER 2 THE CITY: 1980-2000 CHAPTER 3 THE CITY: 1960-1980 CHAPTER 4 THE CITY: 1940-1960 CHAPTER 5 THE CITY: 1920-1940 CHAPTER 6 THE CITY: 1909-1920 CHAPTER 7 PRE-1909 CENTENNIAL: Grand Prairie, Texas 1909-2009 CHAPTER 1: 2000-2009 GRAND PRAIRIE TODAY Grand Prairie, Texas, is celebrating its 100th birthday as an incor- porated city in 2009. With a population approaching 170,000 people, the city is no longer a stagecoach stop between Dallas and Fort Worth. In fact, Grand Prairie is the 7th largest city in North Central Texas, enjoying an international economy, with a tax base in excess of $10 Billion. In 2007, the City was the 6th fastest growing municipality in the United States. More than 20% of single family homes have no mortgage. -
The Federal Minimum Wage and American Samoa
The Federal Minimum Wage and American Samoa (name redacted) April 8, 2008 Congressional Research Service 7-.... www.crs.gov RL34013 CRS Report for Congress Prepared for Members and Committees of Congress The Federal Minimum Wage and American Samoa Summary In 1938, when the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) was adopted, Congress appears to have given little consideration as to how its provisions might affect the various possessions and territories of the United States. The first off-shore jurisdiction to request exception from the FLSA was Puerto Rico, which, in 1940, along with the Virgin Islands, was given an exception under the act. Special industry committees were appointed to visit the Caribbean islands and to recommend minimum wage rates consistent with the insular economies. In the wake of World War II, new attention was focused upon the Pacific islands. American Samoa, basically, had no industry other than harvesting of copra, the dried meat of the coconut, and an economy very different from the mainland. In the early 1950s, the Department of the Interior contracted with the Van Camp Sea Food Company to move onto the island and develop a fish processing plant. However, the FLSA minimum wage was regarded as too high to be competitive and, in 1956, Van Camp appealed to Congress to extend the Puerto Rican special industry committee (SIC) model to American Samoa. Thereafter, the Secretary of Labor would review economic conditions and establish minimum rates. The SICs were admonished to reach “as rapidly as is economically feasible without substantially curtailing employment” the American standard under the FLSA. -
Foreign Consular Offices in the United States
United States Department of State Foreign Consular Offices in the United States Summer 2007 FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICES IN THE UNITED STATES, 2007 i PREFACE This publication contains a complete and official listing of the foreign consular offices in the United States, and recognized consular officers. Compiled by the U.S. Department of State, with the full cooperation of the foreign missions in Washington, it is offered as a convenience to organizations and persons who must deal with consular representatives of foreign governments. It has been designed with particular attention to the requirements of government agencies, state tax officials, international trade organizations, chambers of commerce, and judicial authorities who have a continuing need for handy access to this type of information. Trade with other regions of the world has become an increasingly vital element in the economy of the United States. The machinery of this essential commerce is complicated by numerous restrictions, license requirements, quotas, and other measures adopted by the individual countries. Since the regulations affecting both trade and travel are the particular province of the consular service of the nations involved, reliable information as to entrance requirements, consignment of goods, details of transshipment, and, in many instances, suggestions as to consumer needs and preferences may be obtained at the foreign consular offices throughout the United States. Note: Changes occur daily. Status of persons listed in this publication should be verified with the Office of Protocol. IMMUNITIES ACCORDED TO CONSULAR OFFICERS Consular officers should be accorded their respective privileges, rights, and immunities as directed by international and domestic law. These foreign officials should be treated with the courtesy and respect befitting their positions. -
Autozone OFFERING MEMORANDUM San Antonio, Texas
AutoZone OFFERING MEMORANDUM San Antonio, Texas Cassidyu Andrew Bogardus Christopher Sheldon Douglas Longyear Ed Colson, Jr. 415-677-0421 415-677-0441 415-677-0458 858-546-5423 [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] Lic #00913825 Lic #01806345 Lic #00829911 TX Lic #635820 Disclaimer The information contained in this marketing brochure (“Materials”) is proprietary The information contained in the Materials has been obtained by Agent from sources and confidential. It is intended to be reviewed only by the person or entity receiving believed to be reliable; however, no representation or warranty is made regarding the the Materials from Cassidy Turley Northern California (“Agent”). The Materials are accuracy or completeness of the Materials. Agent makes no representation or warranty intended to be used for the sole purpose of preliminary evaluation of the subject regarding the Property, including but not limited to income, expenses, or financial property/properties (“Property”) for potential purchase. performance (past, present, or future); size, square footage, condition, or quality of the land and improvements; presence or absence of contaminating substances The Materials have been prepared to provide unverified summary financial, property, (PCB’s, asbestos, mold, etc.); compliance with laws and regulations (local, state, and and market information to a prospective purchaser to enable it to establish a preliminary federal); or, financial condition or business prospects of any tenant (tenants’ intentions level of interest in potential purchase of the Property. The Materials are not to be regarding continued occupancy, payment of rent, etc). A prospective purchaser must considered fact. -
The Pacific Coast and the Casual Labor Economy, 1919-1933
© Copyright 2015 Alexander James Morrow i Laboring for the Day: The Pacific Coast and the Casual Labor Economy, 1919-1933 Alexander James Morrow A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy University of Washington 2015 Reading Committee: James N. Gregory, Chair Moon-Ho Jung Ileana Rodriguez Silva Program Authorized to Offer Degree: Department of History ii University of Washington Abstract Laboring for the Day: The Pacific Coast and the Casual Labor Economy, 1919-1933 Alexander James Morrow Chair of the Supervisory Committee: Professor James Gregory Department of History This dissertation explores the economic and cultural (re)definition of labor and laborers. It traces the growing reliance upon contingent work as the foundation for industrial capitalism along the Pacific Coast; the shaping of urban space according to the demands of workers and capital; the formation of a working class subject through the discourse and social practices of both laborers and intellectuals; and workers’ struggles to improve their circumstances in the face of coercive and onerous conditions. Woven together, these strands reveal the consequences of a regional economy built upon contingent and migratory forms of labor. This workforce was hardly new to the American West, but the Pacific Coast’s reliance upon contingent labor reached its apogee after World War I, drawing hundreds of thousands of young men through far flung circuits of migration that stretched across the Pacific and into Latin America, transforming its largest urban centers and working class demography in the process. The presence of this substantial workforce (itinerant, unattached, and racially heterogeneous) was out step with the expectations of the modern American worker (stable, married, and white), and became the warrant for social investigators, employers, the state, and other workers to sharpen the lines of solidarity and exclusion. -
Savings Bank of Manchester Reily the Latest ABC-Washington Post Get More Time Here I Would Have Zoning Changed to Planned Resi and Organization Department
20 - MANCHESTER HERALD. Saturday, March 31, 1984 BUSINESS Marvin Gaya’s father Private coalition plans Math team charged with murder waste cleanup program leads state Decisions on housing piague the elderiy .. page 4 page 20 ... page 10 The newspapers and magazines these days are so But the bright side is that the variety of resources to house: the stairs, kitchens and bathrooms. loaded with ads (or both new and already help the elderly solve these dilemmas is increasing — For a free phone consultation, you call the centerm well-developed retirement communities that you and is to some extent keeping pace with the huge Washington. D.C. (202) 466-6896 or you can request tte- might conclude that our nation's elderly plan to pack Your growth of our population age 65 and over'. publications list of the Barrier-Free Environment by. w writing Suite 700, 1015 15th St., N.W., Washington,* up and move the day after retirement begins. • Several states and localities have reduced Not so. An overwhelming “ 70 percent of Americans Money's property taxes or created a sliding scale of D.C. 20005. Enclose a self-addressed, stamped,, Sunny today; Manchester, Conn, age 65 and over will die at the same address where abatements for the elderly on limited incomes. Local business-size envelope. ' they celebrated their 65th birthday,” says Leo Worth tax assessors will know whether yours is such a Based on your queries, the staff can d evi» a warm Tuesday Monday, April'2, 1984 customized information packet for you, says John Baldwin, housing coordinator of the American Sylvia Porter community. -
Foreign Consular Offices in the United States
United States Department of State Foreign Consular Offices in the United States Spring/Summer2011 STATE DEPARTMENT ADDRESSEE *IF YOU DO NOT WISH TO CONTINUE RECEIVING THIS PUBLICATION PLEASE WRITE CANCEL ON THE ADDRESS LABEL *IF WE ARE ADDRESSING YOU INCORRECTLY PLEASE INDICATE CORRECTIONS ON LABEL RETURN LABEL AND NAME OF PUBLICATION TO THE OFFICE OF PROTOCOL, DEPARTMENT OF STATE, WASHINGTON, D.C. 20520-1853 DEPARTMENT OF STATE PUBLICATION 11106 Revised May 24, 2011 ______________________________________________________________________________ For Sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office Washington, D.C. 20402 FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICES IN THE UNITED STATES i PREFACE This publication contains a complete and official listing of the foreign consular offices in the United States, and recognized consular officers. Compiled by the U.S. Department of State, with the full cooperation of the foreign missions in Washington, it is offered as a convenience to organizations and persons who must deal with consular representatives of foreign governments. It has been designed with particular attention to the requirements of government agencies, state tax officials, international trade organizations, chambers of commerce, and judicial authorities who have a continuing need for handy access to this type of information. Trade with other regions of the world has become an increasingly vital element in the economy of the United States. The machinery of this essential commerce is complicated by numerous restrictions, license requirements, quotas, and other measures adopted by the individual countries. Since the regulations affecting both trade and travel are the particular province of the consular service of the nations involved, reliable information as to entrance requirements, consignment of goods, details of transshipment, and, in many instances, suggestions as to consumer needs and preferences may be obtained at the foreign consular offices throughout the United States. -
Pacific Island History Poster Profiles
Pacific Island History Poster Profiles A Note for Teachers Acknowledgements Index of Profiles This Profiles are subject to copyright. Photocopying and general reproduction for teaching purposes is permitted. Reproduction of this material in part or whole for commercial purposes is forbidden unless written consent has been obtained from Queensland University of Technology. Requests can be made through the acknowldgements section of this pdf file. A Note for Teachers This series of National History Posters has been designed for individual and group Classroom use and Library display in secondary schools. The main aim is to promote in children an interest in their national history. By comparing their nation's history with what is presented on other Posters, students will appreciate the similarities and differences between their own history and that of their Pacific Island neighbours. The student activities are designed to stimulate comparison and further inquiry into aspects of their own and other's past. The National History Posters will serve a further purpose when used as a permanent display in a designated “History” classroom, public space or foyer in the school or for special Parent- Teacher nights, History Days and Education Days. The National History Posters do not offer a complete survey of each nation's history. They are only a profile. They are a short-cut to key people, key events and the broad sweep of history from original settlement to the present. There are many gaps. The posters therefore serve as a stimulus for students to add, delete, correct and argue about what should or should not be included in their Nation's History Profile. -
The American Legion Magazine J
//'//// V AUGUST 1942 *" •- - • ' in "Fli*" " --mtl «'i n^^iii»iiiiii»A»i^aM^» SO YOU'KE GOING TO JAPAN . A Here's-How for Our Soldiers, Sailors and Marines *YOUR NEW * EMBLEM DIVISION, The American Legion, Indianapolis, Indiana Write it Zoday! for Please rush my 1942 Legion catalog. Your copy of the new 1942 Legion catalog Name is ready to mail — write for it today. A postcard or letter will bring your copy by Street return mail. City. Serial number of my 1942 Legion membership card is State Let's blast Japan — and Germany — and Italy — with the chain lightning of destruction that can be built from the scrap in our cellars, attics and garages, on our farms and in our places of business. America is calling for your help and the Legion's in the biggest home job yet — rounding up quickly 6,000,000 extra tons of scrap iron and steel alone, as well as vast quantities of rubber and other materials. The Legion can set the pace for your community. As a of the Legion, your ev*ry member work with tanker*"? of ^TT^^^S Post Commander in guiding or assisting the local collection agency for scrap in your town. And as an individual, round up your own scrap. Sell it to a Junk dealer — give it to the Legion or a charity — or take it yourself to the nearest col- lection point. If you live on a farm, get in touch with your County War Board or your farm im- plement dealer. gUnS Throw YOUR scrap into the fight! WASTE™«5TE Co"COHUIus. -
Form 10-K AUTOZONE, INC
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION Washington, D.C. 20549 _____________ Form 10-K [X] Annual Report under section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 for the fiscal year ended August 28, 1999, or [ ] Transition report pursuant to section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 For the transition period from _____to _____. Commission file number 1-10714 AUTOZONE, INC. (Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter) Nevada 62-1482048 (State or other jurisdiction of (I.R.S. Employer Identification incorporation or organization) No.) 123 South Front Street, Memphis, Tennessee 38103 (Address of principal executive offices) (Zip Code) (901) 495-6500 Registrant's telephone number, including area code Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act: Title of each class Name of each exchange on which registered Common Stock New York Stock Exchange ($.01 par value) Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act: None Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days. Yes [X] No [ ] Indicate by check mark if disclosure of delinquent filers pursuant to Item 405 of Regulation S-K 0(§ 229.405 of this chapter) is not contained herein, and will not be contained, to the best of registrant's knowledge, in definitive proxy or information statements incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form 10-K or any amendment to this Form 10-K. -
H Azardous M Aterial S Ites in N Ational C Ity
A PPENDIX E H AZARDOUS M ATERIAL S ITES IN N ATIONAL C ITY ........................................................................................................................ ........................................................................................................................ APPENDIX B - Hazardous Material Sites in National City Unauthorized Database MAP_ID NAME ADDRESS CITY ZIP ENVID Release 37 (FORMER) NAT'L CITY JEEP 3000 NATIONAL CITY NATIONAL CITY 92050 S104745661 ,LUST,San Diego Co. SAM,EMI,HIST Cortese, Yes 37 1 DAY PAINT & BODY 1146 NATIONAL CITY BLVD NATIONAL CITY 91950 S102423363 ,LUST, Yes 37 1 DAY PAINT & BODY 1146 NATIONAL CITY NATIONAL CITY 92050 S104745546 ,LUST,San Diego Co. SAM,EMI,HIST Cortese, Yes 37 1 DAY PAINT AND BODY CENTERS INCORPORATED 1146 NATIONAL BOULEVARD NATIONAL CITY 91950 1000161033 ,FINDS,RCRA-SQG, No/Not Known 34 10 OSBORN ST 10 OSBORN ST NATIONAL CITY 0 2002617090 ,ERNS, Yes 81 10,000 AUTO PARTS 310 W 35TH ST NATIONAL CITY 91950 S106061394 ,HMMD San Diego, No/Not Known 37 1211 MCKINLEY AVE 1211 MCKINLEY AVE NATIONAL CITY 91950 93309418 ,ERNS, Yes 37 1240 HOOVER, 213 CIVIC CENTER DR, 1240 HOOVER, 213 CIVIC CENTER DR, NATIONAL CITY 91950 93333430 ,ERNS, Yes 37 1247 HIGHLAND AVE 1247 HIGHLAND AVE SAN DIEGO 92101 98460279 ,ERNS, Yes 37 1313 BAY MARINA DR. 1313 BAY MARINA DR. NATIONAL CITY 91950 2006793647 ,ERNS, Yes 37 1400 WEST 28TH STREET 1400 WEST 28TH STREET NATIONAL CITY 91950 98450983 ,ERNS, Yes 37 1420 NATIONAL CITY BLVD. 1420 NATIONAL CITY BLVD. NATIONAL CITY 92050 91230884 ,ERNS, Yes 37 1495 E. 8TH ST 1495 E. 8TH ST CHULA VISTA 96492363 ,ERNS, Yes 37 1539 PLAZA BLVD 1539 PLAZA BLVD SAN DIEGO 2006787476 ,ERNS, Yes 37 1601 E 8TH ST. -
Stand Up, Fight Back!
admin.iatse-intl.org/BulletinRegister.aspx Stand Up, Fight Back! The Stand Up, Fight Back campaign is a way for Help Support Candidates Who Stand With Us! the IATSE to stand up to attacks on our members from For our collective voice to be heard, IATSE’s members anti-worker politicians. The mission of the Stand Up, must become more involved in shaping the federal legisla- Fight Back campaign is to increase IATSE-PAC con- tive and administrative agenda. Our concerns and inter- tributions so that the IATSE can support those politi- ests must be heard and considered by federal lawmakers. cians who fight for working people and stand behind But labor unions (like corporations) cannot contribute the policies important to our membership, while to the campaigns of candidates for federal office. Most fighting politicians and policies that do not benefit our prominent labor organizations have established PAC’s members. which may make voluntary campaign contributions to The IATSE, along with every other union and guild federal candidates and seek contributions to the PAC from across the country, has come under attack. Everywhere from Wisconsin to Washington, DC, anti-worker poli- union members. To give you a voice in Washington, the ticians are trying to silence the voices of American IATSE has its own PAC, the IATSE Political Action Com- workers by taking away their collective bargaining mittee (“IATSE-PAC”), a federal political action commit- rights, stripping their healthcare coverage, and doing tee designed to support candidates for federal office who away with defined pension plans. promote the interests of working men and women.