Print Version (Pdf)
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Tower of London World Heritage Site Management Plan
Tower of London World Heritage Site Management Plan Published by Historic Royal Palaces © Historic Royal Palaces 2007 Historic Royal Palaces Hampton Court Palace Surrey KT8 9AU June 2007 Foreword By David Lammy MP Minister for Culture I am delighted to support this Management Plan for the Tower of London World Heritage Site. The Tower of London, founded by William the Conqueror in 1066-7, is one of the world’s most famous fortresses, and Britain’s most visited heritage site. It was built to protect and control the city and the White Tower survives largely intact from the Norman period. Architecture of almost all styles that have since flourished in England may be found within the walls. The Tower has been a fortress, a palace and a prison, and has housed the Royal Mint, the Public Records and the Royal Observatory. It was for centuries the arsenal for small arms, the predecessor of the present Royal Armouries, and has from early times guarded the Crown Jewels. Today the Tower is the key to British history for visitors who come every year from all over the world to relive the past and to enjoy the pageantry of the present. It is deservedly a World Heritage Site. The Government is accountable to UNESCO and the wider international community for the future conservation and presentation of the Tower. It is a responsibility we take seriously. The purpose of the Plan is to provide an agreed framework for long-term decision-making on the conservation and improvement of the Tower and sustaining its outstanding universal value. -
Legislative Branch: FY2016 Appropriations
Legislative Branch: FY2016 Appropriations Ida A. Brudnick Specialist on the Congress February 1, 2016 Congressional Research Service 7-5700 www.crs.gov R44029 Legislative Branch: FY2016 Appropriations Summary The legislative branch appropriations bill provides funding for the Senate; House of Representatives; Joint Items; Capitol Police; Office of Compliance; Congressional Budget Office (CBO); Architect of the Capitol (AOC); Library of Congress (LOC), including the Congressional Research Service (CRS); Government Publishing Office (GPO); Government Accountability Office (GAO); the Open World Leadership Center; and the John C. Stennis Center. The legislative branch FY2016 budget request of $4.528 billion was submitted on February 2, 2015. By law, the President includes the legislative branch request in the annual budget without change. A budget amendment was transmitted by the President to Congress on April 14, 2015. The House and Senate Appropriations Committees’ Legislative Branch Subcommittees held hearings in February and March to consider the FY2016 legislative branch requests. The House subcommittee held a markup of its bill on April 23, 2015. The full committee met on April 30, 2015, and agreed to (1) a manager’s amendment; (2) an amendment establishing a House Technology Task Force; and (3) an amendment increasing the funding for Open World (offset from funding from the Architect of the Capitol, Capitol Power Plant). All were adopted by voice vote. One additional amendment was defeated (21-29) and two were withdrawn. The bill would have provided $3.341 billion (not including Senate items), equivalent to the FY2015 level. It was ordered reported by voice vote (H.R. 2250, H.Rept. 114-110). -
Gold of the Gods
THE GOLD OF THE GODS By Erich Von Daniken (1972) Swiss Born - Erich Anton Paul von Däniken (14 April 1935 - Currently Alive) This material has been reconstructed from various unverified sources of very poor quality and reproduction CMG Archives http://campbellmgold.com --()-- 1 Contents Contents .................................................................................................................................................. 2 Inside Cover ............................................................................................................................................ 2 Chapter 1 - The Gold of The Gods ......................................................................................................... 3 Chapter 2 - The War of The Gods ........................................................................................................ 35 Chapter 3 - Traces of the Gods in China, Too ...................................................................................... 48 Chapter 4 - Temuen, The Iseland They Call Nan-Madol ...................................................................... 64 Chapter 5 - On The Trail of The Indians ............................................................................................... 83 Chapter 6 - Rarities, Curiosities and Speculations ............................................................................... 97 Chapter 7 - 'IT' .................................................................................................................................... -
Capitol Buildings and Grounds
CAPITOL BUILDINGS AND GROUNDS UNITED STATES CAPITOL OVERVIEW OF THE BUILDING AND ITS FUNCTION The United States Capitol is among the most architecturally impressive and symbolically important buildings in the world. It has housed the chambers of the Senate and the House of Representatives for more than two centuries. Begun in 1793, the Capitol has been built, burnt, rebuilt, extended, and restored; today, it stands as a monument not only to its builders but also to the American people and their government. As the focal point of the government’s legislative branch, the Capitol is the centerpiece of the Capitol complex, which includes the six principal congressional office buildings and three Library of Congress buildings constructed on Capitol Hill in the 19th and 20th centuries. In addition to its active use by Congress, the Capitol is a museum of American art and history. Each year, it is visited by millions of people from around the world. A fine example of 19th-century neoclassical architecture, the Capitol combines function with aesthetics. Its design was derived from ancient Greece and Rome and evokes the ideals that guided the nation’s founders as they framed their new republic. As the building was expanded from its original design, harmony with the existing portions was carefully maintained. Today, the Capitol covers a ground area of 175,170 square feet, or about 4 acres, and has a floor area of approximately 161⁄2 acres. Its length, from north to south, is 751 feet 4 inches; its greatest width, including approaches, is 350 feet. Its height above the base line on the east front to the top of the Statue of Freedom is 288 feet; from the basement floor to the top of the dome is an ascent of 365 steps. -
New York City Department of Transportation
INNOVATIONS & ACCOMPLISHMENTS East River Bridges A $3.14 billion reconstruction program is underway to rehabilitate all four East River crossings. In 2005, these bridges carried some 498,213 vehicles per day. In 2002, working in coordination with the NYPD and other law enforcement agencies, the Division implemented enhanced security measures on these bridges. This work is ongoing. BROOKLYN BRIDGE The Brooklyn Bridge carried some 132,210 vehicles per day in 2005. The $547 million reconstruction commenced in 1980 with Contract #1, and will continue with Contract #6, currently in the design phase and scheduled for completion in 2013. This contract will include the rehabilitation of both approaches and ramps, the painting of the entire suspension bridge, as well as the seismic retrofitting of the structural elements that are within the Contract #6 project limits. Engineering Landmark Plaque. (Credit: Russell Holcomb) 1899 Plaque Near the Franklin Truss of the Bridge, Marking the Site of George Washington’s First Presidential Mansion, Franklin House. (Credit: Hany Soliman) Historic Landmark, 1954 Reconstruction, and Two Cities Plaques. (1954 & Cities Credit: Michele N. Vulcan) 44 2006 BRIDGES AND TUNNELS ANNUAL CONDITION REPORT INNOVATIONS & ACCOMPLISHMENTS The fitting of the remaining bridge elements requiring seismic retrofitting will be carried out under a separate contract by the end of 2013. Work completed on the bridge to date includes reconditioning of the main cables, replacement of the suspenders and cable stays, rehabilitation of the stiffening trusses, and the replacement of the suspended spans deck. The next work scheduled for the bridge is a project to replace the existing travelers with a state of the art technology system. -
Remarks of Senator Bob Dole Gop Leadership Dinner Great Hall - Library of Congress November 20, 1986
This document is from the collections at the Dole Archives, University of Kansas http://dolearchives.ku.edu REMARKS OF SENATOR BOB DOLE GOP LEADERSHIP DINNER GREAT HALL - LIBRARY OF CONGRESS NOVEMBER 20, 1986 GOOD EVENING, MR. PRESIDENT, MRS. REAGAN, MR. VICE PRESIDENT, MRS. BUSH: ON BEHALF OF MY COLLEAGUES IN THE COLLEGE OF CARDINALS, I'D LIKE TO WELCOME YOU TO THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. UNFORTUNATELY, THE SISTINE CHAPEL WAS ALREADY BOOKED FOR THE EVENING. BUT I THINK YOU'LL AGREE, THIS IS THE NEXT BEST ROOM IN TOWN. I'M AFRAID WE'VE HAD TO ECONOMIZE A BIT ON THIS YEAR'S ENTERTAINMENT. GRAMM, RUDMAN AND DOMENIC! RULED OUT ANY GEORGIAN CHANTS. AND IF YOU MISSED THE SWISS GUARDS AT THE DOOR, WELL, THERE'S A LOGICAL EXPLANATION. IT SEEMS THAT ADMIRAL POINDEXTER BORROWED THEM FOR HIS OWN PROTECTION FOR A MISSION OF HIS OWN. Page 1 of 50 This document is from the collections at the Dole Archives, University of Kansas http://dolearchives.ku.edu - 2 - SEEMS HE HOPES TO ESTABLISH CONTACTS WITH CERTAIN MODERATE MEMBERS OF THE WASHINGTON PRESS CORPS. MR. VICE PRESIDENT, I'M ESPECIALLY PLEASED TO SEE YOU HERE THIS EVENING. TOWARD THE END OF THE CAMPAIGN, I WAS KIND OF HOPING TO SEE A LOT OF YOU AROUND HERE THE NEXT TWO YEARS. AFTER ALL, WHO WANTS TO SPEND TIME IN HOLIDAY INNS, GOING TO MEETINGS, BEING INTRODUCED TO DELEGATES - WHEN HE COULD STAY HERE AND BREAK THE TIE OVER NATIONAL NASTURTIUM MONTH? MR. PRESIDENT, WE ALL KNOW OF YOUR FONDNESS .FOR CALVIN COOLIDGE. -
Fort Point Digital Brochure
The key to the whole Pacific coast Sentinel at the Golden Gate Planning Your Visit At the outbreak of the Civil War, newly constructed The entrance to San Fran cisco Bay of 10 followers, stormed the castil- Fort Point and the Civil War System forts (see diagram on the ed. In 1882 Fort Point was officially Preserving Fort Point Fort Point Na tion al Historic Site has long been the site of human lo and spiked the cannons. They dis- The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers other side of this brochure). In named Fort Winfield Scott after In 1926 the American Institute stands beneath the southern Fort Point stood as a prime example of the U.S. Army’s habitation. The earliest residents, covered that the fort ress was empty. began work on Fort Point in 1853. 1854 Inspector Gen. Joseph F.K. the famous hero from the war of Architects proposed preserv- end of the Golden Gate Bridge most sophisticated coastal fortifications. Military offi- ancestors of the Ohlone and It was sited to defend the maxi- Mansfield de clared “this point as against Mexico. The name never ing the fort for its outstanding (see below). Parking is limited. Miwok peoples, de pended on the After the United States prevailed mum amount of harbor area. Plans the key to the whole Pacific Coast caught on and was later applied to military architecture. Funds were For public bus information call cials de clared its position at the Golden Gate as the bay’s waters for food and trans- in the war against Mexico in 1848, specified that the lowest artillery . -
Capitol Buildings and Grounds
CAPITOL BUILDINGS AND GROUNDS UNITED STATES CAPITOL OVERVIEW OF THE BUILDING AND ITS FUNCTION The United States Capitol is among the most architecturally impressive and symbolically important buildings in the world. It has housed the meeting chambers of the Senate and the House of Representatives for almost two centuries. Begun in 1793, the Capitol has been built, burnt, rebuilt, extended, and restored; today, it stands as a monument not only to its builders but also to the American people and their government. As the focal point of the government's Legislative Branch, the Capitol is the centerpiece of the Capitol Complex, which includes the six principal Congressional office buildings and three Library of Congress buildings constructed on Capitol Hill in the 19th and 20th centuries. In addition to its active use by Congress, the Capitol is a museum of American art and history. Each year, it is visited by an estimated seven to ten million people from around the world. A fine example of 19th-century neoclassical architecture, the Capitol combines function with aesthetics. Its designs derived from ancient Greece and Rome evoke the ideals that guided the Nation's founders as they framed their new republic. As the building was expanded from its original design, harmony with the existing portions was carefully maintained. Today, the Capitol covers a ground area of 175,170 square feet, or about 4 acres, and has a floor area of approximately 161¤2 acres. Its length, from north to south, is 751 feet 4 inches; its greatest width, including approaches, is 350 feet. Its height above the base line on the east front to the top of the Statue of Freedom is 287 feet 51¤2 inches; from the basement floor to the top of the dome is an ascent of 365 steps. -
Media Kit HDWN 2013
How Democracy Works Now: Twelve Stories Media Kit CONTACT INFORMATION Address: 143 West 20th Street, Suite 11SN Phone: 212-594-2127 New York, NY, 10011 Email: [email protected] Web: http://howdemocracyworksnow.com Twitter: @hdwn FB: http://facebook.com/howdemocracyworksnow ABOUT THE SERIES How Democracy Works Now: Twelve Stories is a multi-part documentary film series that chronicles the inside and outside fight for immigration reform, on Capitol Hill and across the country, with unprecedented access and intimacy. Each feature-length film stands alone, but together they create one very big story - a story that’s only visible at the end of the arc. In August 2001, it seemed the stars were about to align for a sweeping overhaul of America’s troubled immigration system. The gathering signs of a societal shift on the scale of the Civil Rights Movement were unmistakable. Out of public view, the Bush administration and key leaders in Congress were thinking along similar lines. In response, a dozen crucial, engaging characters - a think tank expert, a union leader, a non-profit lobbyist, a Latino activist, business executives, politicians and Capitol Hill staffers - crafted an audacious new plan to reform the national immigration policy. Their "Grand Bargain" promised to change the lives of tens of millions of immigrants and affect every citizen and every state in the union. Veteran filmmakers Shari Robertson and Michael Camerini determined to record history in the making, negotiating exclusive, intimate and unprecedented access to drill deep into the lives and strategies of principal players. They reached the private offices of numerous Senators and Congressmen, including Ted Kennedy and Sam Brownback, and listened in on the phone calls of dozens of Hill staffers, lobbyists, and immigration activists. -
Wordsworth and France
LITTERARIA PRAGENSIA Studies in Literature and Culture Vol. 27, No. 54 2017 WORDSWORTH AND FRANCE Edited by David Duff, Marc Porée and Martin Procházka LITTERARIA PRAGENSIA Studies in Literature and Culture Department of Anglophone Literatures and Cultures, Faculty of Arts, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic EDITORS Martin Procházka (Chief Editor), Zdeněk Hrbata, Ondřej Pilný, Louis Armand EDITORIAL BOARD Jan Čermák (Charles University, Prague), Milan Exner (Technical University, Liberec), Anna Housková (Charles University, Prague), Andrew J. Mitchell (Emory University, Atlanta), Jiří Pelán (Charles University, Prague), Miroslav Petříček (Charles University, Prague), Sam Slote (Trinity College, Dublin), Jiří Stromšík (Charles University, Prague), Clare Wallace (Charles University, Prague) ADVISORY BOARD Ellen Berry (Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, Ohio), Christoph Bode (Ludwig-Maximilian-Universität München), Arthur Bradley (University of Lancaster), Rui Carvalho Homem (University of Porto), Francis Claudon (Université Paris VII), Charles Crow (Emeritus, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, Ohio), Malcolm Kelsall (Emeritus, University of Wales, Cardiff), Mária Kurdi (University of Pécs), Randolph Starn (Emeritus, University of California at Berkeley), Timothy Webb (Emeritus, University of Bristol) Executive Editor Ondřej Pilný Editorial Assistant Petra Johana Poncarová Cover Design lazarus Litteraria Pragensia, Ústav anglofonních literatur a kultur, FFUK, Nám. J. Palacha 2, 116 38 Praha 1, Czech Republic. e-mail: [email protected] http://litteraria-pragensia.ff.cuni.cz Published twice a year, numbered continuously. Printed by HRG, s.r.o., Litomyšl. Subscription orders to Myris Trade Ltd., P.O. Box 2, V Štíhlách 1311, 142 01 Prague, Czech Republic, ph: +420-234035200, fax: +420-234035207, [email protected], or directly to the editors. -
Annex C ALPHABETIZED CONTENT LISTING of ALL FEATURES and ATTRIBUTES
The Digital Geographic Information Exchange Standard (DIGEST) Part 4 -Annex C ALPHABETIZED CONTENT LISTING of ALL FEATURES and ATTRIBUTES Edition 2.1 September 2000 Produced and issued by the Digital Geographic Information Working Group (DGIWG) DIGEST Part 4 Edition 2.1, September 2000 ANNEX C - ALPHABETIZED CONTENT LISTING OF ALL FEATURES AND ATTRIBUTES Feature/Attribute Page Absolute Ellipsoid Height Accuracy in Metres (WGS84) (AEH) B-2 Absolute Ellipsoid Height Accuracy in Metres - High End (WGS84) (AE1) B-1 Absolute Ellipsoid Height Accuracy in Metres – Low End (WGS84) (AE2) B-1 Absolute Horizontal Accuracy (AAH) B-1 Absolute Horizontal Accuracy in Meters (AHA) B-3 Absolute Latitude Accuracy in Metres (WGS84) (ALA) B-4 Absolute Longitude Accuracy in Metres (WGS84) (ALO) B-4 Absolute Orthometric Height Accuracy in Metres (WGS84) (AOH) B-5 Absolute Orthometric Height Accuracy in Metres – High End (WGS84) (AO2) B-4 Absolute Orthometric Height Accuracy in Metres – Low End (WGS84) (AO3) B-4 Absolute Vertical Accuracy (AAV) B-1 Absolute Vertical Accuracy in Meters (AVA) B-12 Access Zone (FA005) A-35 Accuracy Category (ACC) B-1 Accuracy of Obstruction Height Above Ground Level (AHO) B-3 Acoustic Station (BK010) A-28 Administrative Area (FA001) A-35 Administrative Boundary (FA000) A-35 US-Aerial Cableway Lines/Ski Lift Lines UK-Aerial Cableway Lines/Ski Lift Cables A-10 (AQ010) Aerial Cableway Pylon/Ski Pylon (AQ020) A-10 Aids to Navigation (ATN) B-7 Air Obstruction (GB220) A-42 Air Route Segments Length (ALN) B-4 Air Route Segments Width -
All Approved Premises
All Approved Premises Local Authority Name District Name and Telephone Number Name Address Telephone BARKING AND DAGENHAM BARKING AND DAGENHAM 0208 227 3666 EASTBURY MANOR HOUSE EASTBURY SQUARE, BARKING, 1G11 9SN 0208 227 3666 THE CITY PAVILION COLLIER ROW ROAD, COLLIER ROW, ROMFORD, RM5 2BH 020 8924 4000 WOODLANDS WOODLAND HOUSE, RAINHAM ROAD NORTH, DAGENHAM 0208 270 4744 ESSEX, RM10 7ER BARNET BARNET 020 8346 7812 AVENUE HOUSE 17 EAST END ROAD, FINCHLEY, N3 3QP 020 8346 7812 CAVENDISH BANQUETING SUITE THE HYDE, EDGWARE ROAD, COLINDALE, NW9 5AE 0208 205 5012 CLAYTON CROWN HOTEL 142-152 CRICKLEWOOD BROADWAY, CRICKLEWOOD 020 8452 4175 LONDON, NW2 3ED FINCHLEY GOLF CLUB NETHER COURT, FRITH LANE, MILL HILL, NW7 1PU 020 8346 5086 HENDON HALL HOTEL ASHLEY LANE, HENDON, NW4 1HF 0208 203 3341 HENDON TOWN HALL THE BURROUGHS, HENDON, NW4 4BG 020 83592000 PALM HOTEL 64-76 HENDON WAY, LONDON, NW2 2NL 020 8455 5220 THE ADAM AND EVE THE RIDGEWAY, MILL HILL, LONDON, NW7 1RL 020 8959 1553 THE HAVEN BISTRO AND BAR 1363 HIGH ROAD, WHETSTONE, N20 9LN 020 8445 7419 THE MILL HILL COUNTRY CLUB BURTONHOLE LANE, NW7 1AS 02085889651 THE QUADRANGLE MIDDLESEX UNIVERSITY, HENDON CAMPUS, HENDON 020 8359 2000 NW4 4BT BARNSLEY BARNSLEY 01226 309955 ARDSLEY HOUSE HOTEL DONCASTER ROAD, ARDSLEY, BARNSLEY, S71 5EH 01226 309955 BARNSLEY FOOTBALL CLUB GROVE STREET, BARNSLEY, S71 1ET 01226 211 555 BOCCELLI`S 81 GRANGE LANE, BARNSLEY, S71 5QF 01226 891297 BURNTWOOD COURT HOTEL COMMON ROAD, BRIERLEY, BARNSLEY, S72 9ET 01226 711123 CANNON HALL MUSEUM BARKHOUSE LANE, CAWTHORNE,