FEDERAL REGISTER VOLUME 35 • NUMBER 249 Thursday, December 24,1970 • Washington, D.C
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
December 20, 2003 (Pages 6197-6396)
Pennsylvania Bulletin Volume 33 (2003) Repository 12-20-2003 December 20, 2003 (Pages 6197-6396) Pennsylvania Legislative Reference Bureau Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/pabulletin_2003 Recommended Citation Pennsylvania Legislative Reference Bureau, "December 20, 2003 (Pages 6197-6396)" (2003). Volume 33 (2003). 51. https://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/pabulletin_2003/51 This December is brought to you for free and open access by the Pennsylvania Bulletin Repository at Villanova University Charles Widger School of Law Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Volume 33 (2003) by an authorized administrator of Villanova University Charles Widger School of Law Digital Repository. Volume 33 Number 51 Saturday, December 20, 2003 • Harrisburg, Pa. Pages 6197—6396 Agencies in this issue: The Governor The Courts Department of Aging Department of Agriculture Department of Banking Department of Education Department of Environmental Protection Department of General Services Department of Health Department of Labor and Industry Department of Revenue Fish and Boat Commission Independent Regulatory Review Commission Insurance Department Legislative Reference Bureau Pennsylvania Infrastructure Investment Authority Pennsylvania Municipal Retirement Board Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission Public School Employees’ Retirement Board State Board of Education State Board of Nursing State Employee’s Retirement Board State Police Detailed list of contents appears inside. PRINTED ON 100% RECYCLED PAPER Latest Pennsylvania Code Reporter (Master Transmittal Sheet): No. 349, December 2003 Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Legislative Reference Bu- PENNSYLVANIA BULLETIN reau, 647 Main Capitol Building, State & Third Streets, (ISSN 0162-2137) Harrisburg, Pa. 17120, under the policy supervision and direction of the Joint Committee on Documents pursuant to Part II of Title 45 of the Pennsylvania Consolidated Statutes (relating to publication and effectiveness of Com- monwealth Documents). -
The Erector Set
THE ERECTOR SET 2 0 0 3 An alumni newsletter for graduates of the Construction Engineering curriculum at Iowa State University, Ames, IA. Cover photo by Manop Kaewmoracharoen (Lim) Gerdin Business Building construction site ISU campus Construction Engineering Curriculum Department of Civil and Construction Engineering Iowa State University April Franksain Editor Volume XXXV Number 1 September 1, 2003 Iowa State University does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, age, religion, national origin, sexual orientation, sex, marital status, disability or status as a U.S. Vietnam Era Veteran. Any persons having inquiries concerning this may contact the Director of Equal Opportunity and Diversity, 3680 Beardshear Hall, 515-294-7612. 2 Table of Contents Construction Engineering Personnel ............................................................................................ 5 Construction Engineering Industry Advisory Council .................................................................. 7 ConE Reunion ............................................................................................................................ 9 Greetings Chuck Jahren ................................................................................................................... 10 April Franksain................................................................................................................ 13 John & Susan Russo ........................................................................................................ 14 Thomas -
FEDERAL REGISTER VOLUME 30 • NUMBER 87 Thursday, May 6,1965 ' • Washington, D.C
FEDERAL REGISTER VOLUME 30 • NUMBER 87 Thursday, May 6,1965 ' • Washington, D.C. Pages 6325-6376 Agencies in this issue— Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service Air Force Department Alien Property Office Army Department Civil Aeronautics Board Civil Service Commission Commodity Credit Corporation Consumer and Marketing Service Delaware River Basin Commission Federal Aviation Agency Federal Communications Commission . Federal Maritime Commission FederalPower Commission Federal Reserve System Fiscal Service Fish and Wildlife Service Food and Drug Administration Forest Service Interior Department Internal Revenue Service interstate Commerce Commission Land Management Bureau Securities and Exchange Commission Detailed list of Contents appears inside. Just Released CODE OF FEDERAL REGULATIONS (As of January 1, 1965) Title26—Internal Revenue (Part 1, § 1.861-End, to Part 19) $1.50 (Pocket Supplement) Title 26—Internal Revenue (Parts 30-39) _ _ $0.50 (Pocket Supplement) Title 35—Panama Canal _ _ $0.40 (Pocket Supplement) Title 49—Transportation (Parts 0-70) _ — $0.40 > (Pocket Supplement) A cumulative checklist of CFR issuances for 1965 appears in the first issue of each month under Title 1. Order from Superintendent of Documents, United-States Government Printing Office, Washington, D.G. 20402 f XPublished VUW6daily,Jf-9 “Tuesday UvwVlUJf ViUV/UgUthrough K/UIVMAMwJSaturday yuv(no publication on Suhdwygr^ , i y M^pal on the day after an official Federal holiday), by the Office of the Federal Reg s > ^ ^ 1 FEDEMLM®ISTER Archives and Records Service, General Services Administration (mail ada,„ine£j m tbe Area Code 202 Phone 963-3261 Archives Building, Washington, D.C. 20408), pursuant to the authority con Federal Register Act, approved July 26, 1935 (49 Stat. -
Report Details Irregularities
IN USA TODAY: 10 new shows that are worth your time C1 D FALL FEAST 09/21/17 from 6-9pm at usc sumter PRESENTING SPONSOR SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2017 | Serving South Carolina since October 15, 1894 $1.75 SUMTERGREEN.ORG SUMTER SCHOOL DISTRICT Report details irregularities Audit: Program had DOCUMENTS ONLINE District already View the official State Department of Eduction trail of deficiencies report of Sumter School District’s use of Child paid back $177K Early Reading Development and Education BY BRUCE MILLS Program money and the district’s corrective action BY BRUCE MILLS [email protected] plan with this story at theitem.com. [email protected] According to the state Department Sumter School District has of Education, program money used ment says, for the program – which made more information avail- in school districts’ Early Childhood is relatively new and was formed able on its Early Childhood Education programs should provide after the state’s Read to Succeed Act Education Program and em- PHOTO PROVIDED services in 4-year-old kindergarten was passed in 2014. ployees after the state Depart- Vince Johnson has been named as the fifth classrooms that focus on the devel- Many items purchased in recent ment of Education released Publisher of The Sumter Item in its 123- opmental and learning support the years by Sumter School District’s last week to The Sumter Item year history. He is the former publisher of children must have to be ready for Early Childhood Education program its audit findings on the pro- the Forsyth (Cumming, Ga.) County News. -
Recommended Forestry Best Management Practices for Louisiana
Recommended Forestry Best Management Practices for Louisiana CONTENTS ABOUT THE MANUAL ............................................................................................ lvii USING THE MANUAL .............................................................................................lviii INTRODUCTION .......................................................................................................1 PLANNING FOR FOREST OPERATIONS...................................................................... 3 FOREST ROADS .........................................................................................................5 Overview ..................................................................................................................5 Permanent Roads ......................................................................................................5 Temporary Roads ....................................................................................................10 TIMBER HARVESTING ..............................................................................................13 Pre-harvest Planning ............................................................................................... 13 Streamside Management Zones .............................................................................. 14 Felling & Skidding Techniques ................................................................................ 19 Landings, Log Decks & Sets ................................................................................... -
Estimation of Pier Scour and Channel Stability for Highway Crossings of the Red River in Louisiana
ESTIMATION OF PIER SCOUR AND CHANNEL STABILITY FOR HIGHWAY CROSSINGS OF THE RED RIVER IN LOUISIANA By J. Josh Gilbert and Paul A. Ensminger U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Open-File Report 96-574 Prepared in cooperation with the: LOUISIANA DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION AND DEVELOPMENT Baton Rouge, Louisiana 1996 U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR BRUCE BABBITT, SECRETARY U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Gordon P. Eaton, Director For additional information Copies of this report can be write to: purchased from: District Chief U.S. Geological Survey U.S. Geological Survey Branch of Information Services 3535 S. Sherwood Forest Blvd., Suite 120 Box 25286 Baton Rouge, LA 70816 Denver, CO 80225-0286 E-mail: [email protected] Telephone: (504) 389-0281 CONTENTS Abstract.................................................................................................................................................................. 1 Introduction......................................................................................................^^ 1 Purpose and Scope...................................................................................................................................... 2 Description of Study Area.......................................................................................................................... 2 Acknowledgments...................................................................................................................................... f Hydrology and Hydraulics.................................................................................................................................... -
Washington, Wednesday, February 27, 1957 TITLE 3—THE PRESIDENT , CONTENTS
FEDERAL REGISTER VOLUME 22 ' V / . '9 3 4 NUMBER 39 Washington, Wednesday, February 27, 1957 TITLE 3— THE PRESIDENT DONE at the City of Washington this , CONTENTS twenty-ffrst day of February in the year PROCLAMATION 3170 of our Lord nineteen hundred THE PRESIDENT [ seal] and fifty-seven, and of the In Pan American D ay and P an American dependence of the United States Executive Order Pa^e W eek, 1957 of America the one hundred and eighty- Further Providing for the Opera BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES first. tions Coordinating Board_____ 1111 OF AMERICA D wight D. Eisenhower Proclamation A PROCLAMATION By the President: Pan American Day and Pan Amer ican Week, 1957______________ 1111 WHEREAS on April 14, 1890, the J ohn F oster D ulles, American Republics founded a bureau Secretary of State. EXECUTIVE AGENCIES for inter-American cooperation which [F. R. Doc. 57-1525; Filed. Feb. 25, 1957; now, as the Pan American Union, is an 4:41 p. m.] Agricultural Marketing Service organ and the general secretariat of the Proposed rule making: Organization of American States; and Milk; in marketing areas: WHEREAS the twenty-one Republics New York metropolitan and of the Western Hemisphere wiil cele EXECUTIVE ORDER 10700 northern New Jersey_____ 1128 brate April 14, 1957, the sixty-seventh Washington, D. C__________ 1116 anniversary of that historic action, as F urther P roviding for the Operations Watermelons grown in Florida, Pan American Day, at the end of a week Coordinating B oard Georgia, and South Caro of commemorative ceremonies; and By virtue of the authority vested in me lina____________________ I__1128 WHEREAS the American Republics by the Constitution and statutes, and as Agriculture Department continue to work together harmoniously President of the Únited States, it is here See Agricultural Marketing Serv in furtherance of their mutual objective by ordered as follows: ice. -
FEDERAL REGISTER V O L U M E 33 NUMBER 57 Friday, March 22, 1968 Washington, D.C
FEDERAL REGISTER V O L U M E 33 NUMBER 57 Friday, March 22, 1968 Washington, D.C. Pages 4867-4908 Agencies in this issue— Atomic Energy Commission Business and Defense Services Administration Civil Aeronautics Board Civil Service Commission Coast Guard Commerce Department Consumer and Marketing Service Federal Aviation Administration Federal Communications Commission Federal Highway Administration Federal Power Commission Food and Drug Administration Foreign Assets Control Office General Services Administration Health, Education, and Welfare Department Interstate Commerce Commission Land Management Bureau Securities and Exchange Comihission State Department Detailed list o f Contents appears inside. Just Released CODE OF FEDERAL REGULATIONS (As of January 1, 1968) Title 12— Banks and Banking (Part 400-End) (Re vised)________ ____________________________________ $1.00 Title 41— PuBlic Contracts and Property Management (Chapters 5-5D ) (Revised)________________________ 1.00 Title 47—Telecommunication (Parts 70-79) (Revised). 1.00 [A cumulative checklist of CFR issuances for 1968 appears in the first issue of the Federal Register each month under Title 2] Order from Superintendent of Documents, United States Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 20402 r m r n M l I M D C f ’ I C T r iT D PuBlished daily, Tuesday through Saturday (no puBlication on Sundays, Mondays, tTMlrllftl lWl4lrlFl> I til on the day after an official Federal holiday), By the Office of the Federal Register, Nations £ Archives and Records Service, General Services Administration (mail address Nations Area Code 202 Phone 962-8626 Building, Washington, D.C. 20408), pursuant to the authority contained in t e Federal Register Act, approved July 26, 1935 (49 Stat. -
Estimation of Pier Scour and Channel Stability for Highway Crossings of the Red River in Louisiana
Estimation of Pier Scour and Channel Stability for Highway Crossings of the Red River in Louisiana LOUISIANA DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION AND DEVELOPMENT Water Resources Technical Report No. 67A Hosston SHREVEPORT R E D Coushatta Grand Ecore R IV E R Moncla Boyce ALEXANDRIA ON AND D TI EV TA E R L O O P P S M STATE OF LOUISIANA N E N A T DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION AND DEVELOPMENT R T DOTD F PUBLIC WORKS AND WATER RESOURCES DIVISION O T N E WATER RESOURCES SECTION M T R A P E in cooperation with the D U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY 1999 STATE OF LOUISIANA DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION AND DEVELOPMENT PUBLIC WORKS AND WATER RESOURCES DIVISION WATER RESOURCES SECTION In cooperation with the U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY WATER RESOURCES TECHNICAL REPORT NO. 67A Estimation of Pier Scour and Channel Stability for Highway Crossings of the Red River in Louisiana By J. Josh Gilbert and Paul A. Ensminger U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Published by the LOUISIANA DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION AND DEVELOPMENT Baton Rouge, Louisiana 1999 STATE OF LOUISIANA M.J. “MIKE”F FOSTER,LO JR., GovernorU O IS E JU I T N S A DEPARTMENTO OF TRANSPORTATION AND DEVELOPMENTT I N A KAM K. MOVASSAGHI, Secretary I PUBLICN WORKS AND FLOOD CONTROL DIRECTORATEC T A Curtis G. Patterson, Director U E S HYDRAULICS SECTION Jack C. Manno, Hydraulics Engineer Adminstrator C Cooperative project with the U.S.O DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIORE NBRUCE BABBITT, SecretaryNC U.S. GEOLOGICALFIDE SURVEY Charles G. Groat, Director Any use of trade, product, or firm names in this report is for descriptive purposes only and does not imply endorsement by the U.S. -
Summary of Sexual Abuse Claims in Chapter 11 Cases of Boy Scouts of America
Summary of Sexual Abuse Claims in Chapter 11 Cases of Boy Scouts of America There are approximately 101,135sexual abuse claims filed. Of those claims, the Tort Claimants’ Committee estimates that there are approximately 83,807 unique claims if the amended and superseded and multiple claims filed on account of the same survivor are removed. The summary of sexual abuse claims below uses the set of 83,807 of claim for purposes of claims summary below.1 The Tort Claimants’ Committee has broken down the sexual abuse claims in various categories for the purpose of disclosing where and when the sexual abuse claims arose and the identity of certain of the parties that are implicated in the alleged sexual abuse. Attached hereto as Exhibit 1 is a chart that shows the sexual abuse claims broken down by the year in which they first arose. Please note that there approximately 10,500 claims did not provide a date for when the sexual abuse occurred. As a result, those claims have not been assigned a year in which the abuse first arose. Attached hereto as Exhibit 2 is a chart that shows the claims broken down by the state or jurisdiction in which they arose. Please note there are approximately 7,186 claims that did not provide a location of abuse. Those claims are reflected by YY or ZZ in the codes used to identify the applicable state or jurisdiction. Those claims have not been assigned a state or other jurisdiction. Attached hereto as Exhibit 3 is a chart that shows the claims broken down by the Local Council implicated in the sexual abuse. -
Stock Car Engineering
STOCKCAR AERODYNAMICS TESTING TIMES CALL FOR TOP FACILITIES Aero is fast becoming a more important factor in Sprint Cup, and teams are facing major changes in the way they work as a result SAM COLLINS A Generation 6 Chevrolet being put through its paces at the Aerodyn facility Engineers working on a Generation 6 Ford in the ARC tunnel in Indianapolis – in Mooresville, NC – a tunnel that was purpose-built for stockcars one of only two scale model wind tunnels used regularly by Cup teams t the 2014 Daytona team’s aero data it is hard to know of that there are a handful of especially when rule changes 500, the Hendrick- for sure but, it is certain that commercially available tunnels are introduced. Two of them – built Chevrolet SS aerodynamics are increasingly key largely dedicated to F1 testing, Aerodyn and A2 – are on the same Aof Dale Earnhardt Jr factor in top class stockcar racing. with more than 15 tunnels campus in Mooresville, NC, and was involved in a thrilling At first glance that may working on the open wheel both have been purpose-built for two-lap dash to the finish, but seem obvious, but over the designs. In comparison, in Sprint stockcars. The third – Windshear an engineer’s thoughts were years –despite substantial Cup there are only six facilities – was developed not only for inevitably drawn to a flapping bit investments in testing facilities in common use, including the stockcars, but also with IndyCar of tape on the front of the car. and technology – more effort Laurel Hill Tunnel. -
Meeting Agenda Final for September 04, 2018
PENNSYLVANIA TURNPIKE COMMISSION HIGHSPIRE, PENNSYLVANIA FORMAL TELEPHONE MEETING SEPTEMBER 4, 2018 10:00 A.M. AGENDA A. Roll Call Sunshine Announcement Public Participation B. Minutes-August 21, 2018 C. Communications-Memo received from the Chief Counsel D. Personnel E. Unfinished Business FORMAL AGENDA-SEPTEMBER 4, 2018 Page 2 of 4 F. NEW BUSINESS 1. Approve the negotiation and execution of Supplemental Agreement #1 for design services for the total reconstruction and widening project from MP A38.00 to MP A44.00 with Pennoni Associates, Inc., for an additional $4,500,000.00 to advance the final design from MP A38.00 to MP A42.00 and to begin the preliminary design of the Quakertown Interchange Project from MP A42.00 to MP A44.00; for a revised not-to-exceed amount of $22,500,000.00. 2. Approve the negotiation and execution of the Agreements, an Amendment and a Supplement for the items listed in memos “a” through “h”: a. Settlement Agreement and Release with William Clark, and authorize issuance of the workers’ compensation settlement payment; b. Agreement with Indiana Township Volunteer Fire Department to provide fire service coverage from MP 44.90 to MP 47.70 eastbound and from MP 39.10 to MP 43.70 westbound; c. Agreement with Emmaus Ambulance Corps for emergency medical service covers (EMS) from MP A50.30 to MP A55.50 northbound and from MP A43.80 to MP A52.20 southbound; d. Agreement with Scranton Fire Department to provide fire service coverage from MP A124.50 to MP A130.60 northbound and from MP A120.60 to MP A124.30 southbound; e.