Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Book_Author - United States Dept Of The Army
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 4     61-80 of 99    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         United States Dept Of The Army:     more books (70)
  1. A Compilation of the Laws of the United States Relating to and Affecting the Ordnance Department: As Enacted From April 2, 1794, to June 10, 1872 (1872 ) by United States. Army. Ordnance Dept., 2009-10-21
  2. Report of the Tests of Metals and Other Materials Made at the United States Testing Laboratory at Watertown Arsenal, Massachusetts, During the Fiscal Year Ended ..., Part 2 by Watertown Arsenal, 2010-03-25
  3. Report of the Tests of Metals and Other Materials Made at the United States Testing Laboratory at Watertown Arsenal, Massachusetts, During the Fiscal Year Ended ...
  4. Report of the Tests of Metals and Other Materials Made at the United States Testing Laboratory at Watertown Arsenal, Massachusetts, During the Fiscal Year Ended ..., Issue 1
  5. The Ordnance Manual for the Use of the Officers of the United States Army by Alfred Mordecal, 2010-03-05
  6. Reports of experiments with small arms for the military services, by officers of the Ordnance Department, U.S. Army
  7. Manual of the Construction Division of the Army. Section C, Engineering Division, 1918 by United States. War Dept. Army, 2010-03-28
  8. Statement of the Disposition of Some of the Bodies of Deceased Union Soldiers and Prisoners of War Whose Remains Have Been Removed to National Cemeteries ... and Western States: (V.1-4 ) (1868-1869) by United States. Army. Quartermaster's Dept, 2009-07-08
  9. U.S. Army research and development problems guide by United States. Dept. of the Army, 1961-01-01
  10. Index of Army motion pictures, film strips, slides, and phono-recordings
  11. Visitor protection services at Corps of Engineers lakes: A report to the Congress from the Secretary of the Army by United States. Dept. of the Army, 1975-01-01
  12. Report of the Department of the Army review of the preliminary investigations into the My Lai incident : volume I: The report of the investigation by United States. Dept. of the Army, 1970-01-01
  13. The Department of the Army manual by United States. Dept. of the Army, 1979-01-01
  14. Medical Dept., United States Army ( Preventive Medicine in WW2) Volume 5; Communicable Diseases: Transmitted through Contact or by an Unknown Means

61. Subpart 29.4—Contract Clauses
United States Department of the Army; United States Department of Energy; UnitedStates Department of Health and Human Services; United States Department of
http://www.arnet.gov/far/current/html/Subpart 29_4.html
Insert the clause at 52.229-1, State and Local Taxes, in solicitations and contracts for leased equipment when— (a) A fixed-price indefinite-delivery contract is contemplated; (b) The contract will be performed wholly or partly in the United States or its outlying areas; and (c) The place or places of delivery are not known at the time of contracting.
(1) The contract is to be performed wholly or partly in the United States or its outlying areas; (2) A fixed-price contract is contemplated; and (3) The contract is expected to exceed the simplified acquisition threshold.
(a) Definition (b) Contract clause (1) The contractor will be performing a cost-reimbursement contract. (2) The contract directs or authorizes the contractor to acquire tangible personal property as a direct cost under a contract and title to such property passes directly to and vests in the United States upon delivery of the property by the vendor. (3) The contract will be for services to be performed in whole or in part within the State of New Mexico. (c) Participating agencies.

62. Virtual Naval Hospital - Medical Management Of Chemical Casualties Handbook
United States Army Medical Research Institute of Chemical Defense Chemical CasualtyCare Division Aberdeen Proving Ground, MD 210105400
http://www.vnh.org/CHEMCASU/titlepg.html
Medical Management of Chemical Casualties Handbook
Third Edition, August 1999 United States Army
Medical Research Institute of Chemical Defense
Chemical Casualty Care Division
Aberdeen Proving Ground, MD 21010-5400 Peer Review Status: Internally Peer Reviewed
Creation Date: September 1995
Last Revision Date: August 1999
The purpose of this Handbook is to provide concise supplemental reading material for attendees of the Medical Management of Chemical Casualties Course. Every effort has been made to make the information contained in this Handbook consistent with official policy and doctrine. This Handbook, however, is not an official Department of the Army publication, nor is it official doctrine. It should not be construed as such unless it is supported by other documents. Next Page Virtual Naval Hospital Home Help Search ... Contact Us
URL: http://www.vnh.org/

63. FindArticles Search For "United States. Army / Human Resource Management"
Shortage SF MOSs have greater promotion potential United States Army SpecialForces Military Occupational Specialty - Brief Article
http://www.findarticles.com/p/search?tb=art&qt=United States. Army / Human resou

64. United States Army Air Forces (USAAF)
The great Congress of the United States, that makes laws for the organization This was caused by an arrangement between the Navy and Army that the Navy
http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/2WWusaaf.htm
United States Army
Air Forces (USAAF)

Spartacus
USA History British History Second World War ... Email
In 1940 Henry Stimson , the US Secretary of War, and General George Marshall , the Chief of Staff of the US Army, decided to reorganize the air force. The Air Corps that had been responsible for training and procurement, and the Air Force Combat Command, were merged to become the United States Army Air Forces (USAAF). General Henry Arnold was appointed as commander of the USAAF. In 1941 the USAAF had 25,000 personnel and about 4,000 aircraft. This included the fighters, Seversky P-35 and Curtis P-36 , and the bombers, Lockhead Hudson Douglas SBD-3 and the B-25A Mitchell This USAAF suffered badly during the Japanese Air Force attack on Pearl Harbor on 7th December, 1941. A total of 178 aircraft were destroyed on the ground and 159 were damaged. An estimated 2,403 men were killed and a further 1,778 were injured. After the United States entered the Second World War aircraft production rose dramatically. In 1942 10,769 fighters and 12,627 bombers were built. The following year this was increased to 23,988 fighters and 29,355 bombers. The peak was reached in 1944 with 38,873 fighters and 35,003 bombers being built.

65. Codes Of Ethics Online:United States Government
United States Government. Date on which the source of the code was verified by the Department of the Army, United States of America,. 1962. 1. Purpose.
http://www.iit.edu/departments/csep/codes/coe/US_Government_Army_Volunteers_as_S
Organization: United States Government Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/ Previous Version(s) in our Codes of Ethics Online collection: None USE OF VOLUNTEERS AS SUBJECTS OF RESEARCH Army Regulation NO- 70-25.
Department of the Army, United States of America,
1. Purpose.
These regulations prescribe policies and procedures governing the use of volunteers as subjects in Department of the Army research, including research in nuclear, biological, and chemical war. fare, wherein human beings are deliberately exposed to unusual or potentially hazardous conditions. These regulations are applicable world-wide, wherever volunteers are used as subjects in Department of the Army research. Definition. For the purpose of these regulations, unusual and potentially hazardous conditions are those which may be reasonably expected to involve the risk, beyond the normal call of duty, of privation, discomfort, distress, pain, damage to health, bodily harm, physical injury, or death. 3. Exemptions.

66. AllRefer.com - Army, United States Department Of The (U.S. Government) - Encyclo
AllRefer.com reference and encyclopedia resource provides complete informationon Army, United States Department of the, US Government.
http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/X/X-Army-USD.html
AllRefer Channels :: Health Yellow Pages Reference Weather September 12, 2005 Medicine People Places History ... Maps Web AllRefer.com You are here : AllRefer.com Reference Encyclopedia U.S. Government ... Army, United States Department of the
By Alphabet : Encyclopedia A-Z A
Army, United States Department of the, U.S. Government
Related Category: U.S. Government Army, United States Department of the: see Defense, United States Department of
Topics that might be of interest to you: Defense, United States Department of
Related Categories: Social Sciences and the Law Political Science and Government
History
United States and Canada
More articles from AllRefer Reference on Army, United States Department of the
SITE MAPS Encyclopedia US Gazetteer:
US States A-C

US States D-H

US States I-L

US States M
... Countries A-Z Content on this web site is provided for informational purposes only. We accept no responsibility for any loss, injury or inconvenience sustained by any person resulting from information published on this site. We encourage you to verify any critical information with the relevant authorities. About Us Contact Us Privacy Links Directory ... Link to AllRefer.com

67. CIA Stalling State Department Histories On Indonesia
TO INDONESIAN Army, WHICH KILLED AT LEAST 105000 IN 196566 Sukarno s confrontationWith the United States December 1964- September 1965 .
http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB52/
Related Links Indonesia's 1969 Takeover of West Papua Not by "Free Choice"
Document Release Marks 35th Anniversary
of Controversial Vote and Annexation East Timor Revisited
Ford, Kissinger and the Indonesian Invasion, 1975-76 Indonesia/East Timor Documentation Project Homepage
For immediate release, 27 July 2001 For more information:
Tom Blanton, 994-7000 CIA STALLING STATE DEPARTMENT HISTORIES ARCHIVE POSTS ONE OF TWO DISPUTED VOLUMES ON WEB STATE HISTORIANS CONCLUDE U.S. PASSED NAMES OF COMMUNISTS
TO INDONESIAN ARMY, WHICH KILLED AT LEAST 105,000 IN 1965-66

WASHINGTON, D.C., 27 July – George Washington University’s National Security Archive today posted on the Web ( www.nsarchive.org ) one of two State Department documentary histories whose release the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency is stalling, even though the documents included in the volumes were officially declassified in 1998 and 1999, according to public State Department records. The two disputed State Department volumes cover Indonesia-Malaysia-Philippines in the years 1964-68 and Greece-Turkey-Cyprus in the same period. The CIA, as well as action officers at the State Department, have prevented the official release of either volume, already printed and bound by the Government Printing Office. The National Security Archive obtained the Indonesia volume posted today when the GPO shipped copies to various GPO bookstores; but the Greece volume is still locked up in GPO warehouses.

68. Army Technical Intelligence Chronology, Chapter 6: Bibliography
DA Pamphlet 2101, United States Army Installations and Major Activities in the Technical Manual 20-205, Dictionary of United States Army Terms,
http://www.unl.edu/Bolin_resources/TI/biblio.html
Army Technical Intelligence Chronology
Chapter 6: Bibliography Robert L. Bolin University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Lincoln, NE
This chapter is part of a larger web document.
For more information, see the Title Page and Contents Chapter 6, Bibliography
This chapter listing laws, books, manuals, and articles which are cited but which are not primarily about technical intelligence. It is divided into two sections:
  • Official publications such as laws, regulations, manuals, etc.
  • Published books including official histories. NOTE:
    • Chapter 4, Official Documents, contains a list of official, published manuals, orders, directives, and regulations directly concerning Army technical intelligence organizations and activities.
    • Chapter 5, Unpublished References, lists manuscript histories, unit data cards, and similar material.
    • Appendix C, Alphabetic Title List, lists all books, official documents, and other material cited in Chapters 4, 5, or 6.
    • Official Publications
      • Annual Report of the Secretary of the Army . This report contains a good description of the formal organization of the Department of the Army.
        Superintendent of Documents Classification Number
      • Army Organization Act, June 28, 1950
  • 69. United States Army Flag
    The United States Army Flag was officially adopted by order of President Dwight The new United States Army flag is designed to meet the need for a flag
    http://www.qmfound.com/United_States_Army_Flag.htm

    QM Web
    Quartermaster Museum
    Quartermaster Foundation
    Sword and Key Gift Shop ... Heraldry United States Army Flag Short history of Army Flag FACT SHEET Office of The Quartermaster General
    Washington D.C.
    1 June 1957 The United States Army Flag was officially adopted by order of President Dwight D. Eisenhower through Executive Order No. 10670, on June12, 1956. The newly adopted flag was presented by Vice President Richard Nixon to Secretary of the Army Wilber M. Brucker in a ceremony at the Capitol, Washington DC, on June 13, 1956. On the following day, June 14, Flag Day and also the 18lst anniversary of the establishment of the Army the United States Army Flag was unfurled at Independence Hall, Philadelphia, in connection with public a public address by Secretary Brucker. The United States Army came into being by action of the Continental Congress on June 14, 1775, and two years later, on June 14, 1777, the Continental Congress officially adopted the Stars and Stripes as the Flag of the United States. Although various elements of the Army, from groups and corps down to separate battalions, have their own colors and distinguishing flags, none has previously served for the Army as a whole. The new United States Army flag is designed to meet the need for a flag which will represent the entire Army on appropriate occasions.

    70. NEJM -- Making Antimalarial Agents Available In The United States
    Dr. Magill is science director of the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Malaria among United States troops in Somalia. Am J Med 1996;1004955.
    http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/353/4/335
    HOME SEARCH CURRENT ISSUE PAST ISSUES ... HELP Please sign in for full text and personal services Previous Volume 353:335-337 July 28, 2005 Number 4 Next Making Antimalarial Agents Available in the United States
    Alan Magill, M.D., and Claire Panosian, M.D.
    PDF
    PDA Full Text
    Add to Personal Archive
    Add to Citation Manager ... PubMed Citation
    "Shooting pains in my head were just one hint that my antimalarial medication couldn't stand up to the mosquitoes of Sierra Leone. The pains weren't bad at first, just faraway flashes like heat lightning. There were other signs, such as dizziness, but I thought I was just reacting to the stifling humidity. The muscle spasms in my right calf must be lack of exercise. I'd been in Freetown a month. After a 9-year civil war, the capital city of the West African country barely has electricity, much less Pilates. It does however have a malaria rate among the highest in the world." Tales of malaria abound among travelers to Africa, and this account is typical. Someone who is far away from reliable health care is suddenly flattened by heat and a raging headache. Even

    71. United States Historical Maps - Perry-Castañeda Map Collection - UT Library Onl
    The maps above are from The National Atlas of the United States of America (Arch C . The map shows locations of Army, Navy and commercial radio stations,
    http://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/histus.html
    @import url("/utlol-2nd.css"); Skip to Content Home Sitemap Help
    SEARCH: choose an area to search Library Web Site Library Catalog How Do I...? Web

    72. United States Historical Maps - Perry-Castañeda Map Collection - UT Library Onl
    United States Army Center of Military History, 1989 (194K) The maps aboveare from The National Atlas of the United States of America (Arch C.
    http://www.lib.utexas.edu/Libs/PCL/Map_collection/histus.html
    @import url("/utlol-2nd.css"); Skip to Content Home Sitemap Help
    SEARCH: choose an area to search Library Web Site Library Catalog How Do I...? Web

    73. U.S. Pacific Command: An Official Military Website Mon, Sep. 12, 2005
    Change of command for US Army Corps of Engineers, Pacific Senior Army leadersfrom AsiaPacific and Indian Ocean regions meet to foster cooperation,
    http://www.pacom.mil/
    Mon, Sep. 12, 2005
    HOME
    PACOM Staff Leadership
    Image Archive
    ...
    Department of Defense Hurricane Katrina Relief Information

    Friday, Sept. 9, 2005 Change of leadership at Misawa Air Base
    Hi-Resolution Screen Resolution MISAWA AIR BASE, Japan Rear Adm. Arthur J. Johnson salutes at the outset of Wednesday morning's change-of-command ceremony for Patrol and Reconnaissance Force 7th/5th Fleet (Task Force 72/57) at Naval Air Facility Misawa in northern Japan. Johnson took command from Rear Adm. Kenneth W. Deutsch, who is headed to the Pentagon. See related story at right This week in PACOM Wednesday, Sept. 7 Adm. Fallon in china to bolster ties Tuesday, Sept. 6
    End of WWII remembered in Philippines
    Friday, Sept. 2
    WWII remembered aboard USS Missouri
    Thursday, Sept. 1
    Final days remembered

    Special Sections Joint Air Sea Exercise (JASEX) 2005
    Tsunami/Earthquake Relief Archive
    Combating Terrorism in the Philippines Leyte Disaster Relief coverage ... Hawaii Schools Survey Results Today's Stories Bangladesh Police Seize Bombs in Raid Associated Press DHAKA, Bangladesh - Police seized about 200 small bombs, some explosives, dozens of detonators and leaflets on jihad, or holy war, during a raid on a house in Bangladesh's capital, police said Friday.

    74. West Virginia History Volume 50
    On four separate occasions between 1919 and 1921 the United States Army was With the absence of state military forces, the United States Army was called
    http://www.wvculture.org/history/journal_wvh/wvh50-1.html
    Home Arts Historic Preservation Museums ... Where We Are Entire Site Arts Goldenseal Historic Preservation Museums
    Comments or Questions about our site? E-Mail our Webmaster
    The United States Army and the Return to Normalcy in Labor Dispute Interventions: The Case of the West Virginia Coal Mine Wars, 1920-1921 By Clayton D. Laurie Volume 50 (1991), pp. 1-24 Although intervention in labor disputes was a relatively routine duty for army personnel by 1920, the interventions in West Virginia represented a watershed in the history of the army role in suppressing domestic disorders. The Constitution and Revised Statutes of 1874 clearly defined the procedures for state authorities to gain federal military assistance and the Posse Comitatus Act The first army interventions in the West Virginia coal mine wars were carried out under these wartime policies. In the final federal intervention in West Virginia in 1921, however, the federal government moved to restore the procedures that existed before the war, having come to fear potential abuses of federal military power by overzealous, inept, or corrupt state or local officials. The West Virginia disturbances were significant as they closed a chapter involving extraordinary extra-legal procedures in the domestic employment of federal troops and in effect restored the provisions of the pre-war statutes and the Posse Comitatus Act . In other respects, however, the deployments in West Virginia resembled other wartime interventions in labor disputes as federal regulars were sent in to suppress what were deemed by local, state and federal officials as radical and foreign-inspired labor uprisings and challenges to legally constituted civil authority. The army, therefore, closely cooperated with state and local officials and mine owners and operators. In this respect, the West Virginia interventions more closely followed the labor disputes of the 1890s than those of the Progressive Era when federal neutrality was more strongly emphasized. Within the army itself, duty in West Virginia, following a four-year period of extensive civil disturbance intervention, gave impetus to army leaders to make significant preparations to systematically deal with expected future radical disorders of even greater magnitude.

    75. The Online Books Page: Books By United States Army Department Of The Treasury
    United States Army Department of the Treasury Union Pacific Railroad Letterfrom the Secretary of the Treasury in Answer to a Resolution of the House of
    http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/book/lookupname?key=United States Ar

    76. Agreement Between The Government Of The United States And The Government Of The
    The Department of the Army shall provide the Government of the Federated States of United States personnel and their dependents who are present in the
    http://www.paclii.org/pits/treaty_database/1989/9.html
    Home Databases WorldLII Search ... Feedback
    Pacific Islands Treaty Series
    You are here: PacLII Databases Pacific Islands Treaty Series [1989] PITSE 9 [Database Home Page] Database Search Database Document Name Search Recent Documents ... Help
    AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED STATES AND THE GOVERNMENT OF THE FEDERATED STATES OF MICRONESIA CONCERNING CERTAIN TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TO BE PROVIDED BY THE DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY PURSUANT TO SECTION 226 OF THE COMPACT OF FREE ASSOCIATION
    (Honolulu, 21 September 1989)
    ENTRY INTO FORCE: 21 SEPTEMBER 1989
    STATUS REPORT

    This Agreement is entered into by the Government of the United States and the Government of the Federated States of Micronesia to record their agreement and undertakings with respect to the implementation of certain aspects of Section 226 of the Compact of Free Association concerning the provision of certain water resource and infrastructure development projects within the Federated States of Micronesia.
    Article I Definitions
    1. The Definition of Terms set forth in Article VI of Title IV of the Compact and the Definitions set forth in paragraph 2 of Article I of the Status of Forces Agreement Concluded Pursuant to Section 323 of the Compact (the Status of Forces Agreement) are incorporated by reference into this Agreement.
    2. In this Agreement, the following definitions also apply:

    77. Sons Of Union Veterans Of The Civil War
    Preserving the Memory of the Grand Army of the Republic In 1881 the GAR formedthe Sons of Veterans of the United States of America (SV) to carry on its
    http://suvcw.org/
    Preserving the Memory of the Grand Army of the Republic
    and our Ancestors who Fought to Preserve the Union
    (The largest GAR and SUVCW resource on the Web with over 1,700 pages of information)
    PCinC Steve Michaels shakes the hand of newly elected CinC Donald E. Darby at the conclusion of the 124th National SUVCW Encampment, held in Nashua, New Hampshire, August 4-7.
    2005 Remembrance Day
    Parade and Ceremonies
    Gettysburg, Penn.
    November 19, 2005
    National Headquarters
    National Civil War Museum
    Harrisburg, Pennsylvania In 1866, Union Veterans of the Civil War organized into the Grand Army of the Republic (GAR) and became a social and political force that would control the destiny of the nation for more than six decades. Membership in the veterans' organization was restricted to individuals who had served in the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, or Revenue Cutter Service during the Civil War, thereby limiting the life span of the GAR. The GAR existed until 1956. In 1881 the GAR formed the Sons of Veterans of the United States of America (SV) to carry on its traditions and memory long after the GAR had ceased to exist. Membership was open to any man who could prove ancestry to a member of the GAR or to a veteran eligible for membership in the GAR. In later years, men who did not have the ancestry to qualify for hereditary membership, but who demonstrated a genuine interest in the Civil War and could subscribe to the purpose and objectives of the SUVCW, were admitted as Associates. This practice continues today.

    78. 22 July 2005 Source Http//www.access.gpo.gov/su_docs/aces/fr
    The regulation prescribes policies for the Department of the Army to obtain the Active Army, the Army National Guard of the United States (ARNGUS)/Army
    http://cryptome.org/doa072105.txt
    . Follow the instructions for submitting comments. E-mail: james.crumley@hqda-aoc.army.pentagon.mil

    79. United States Army Recruiting Command
    Gold Triangle Bullet, USAAC Information on the United States Army AccessionsCommand. Gold Triangle Bullet, The United States Army www.Army.mil
    http://www.usarec.army.mil/
    Welcome to the Headquarters of the United States Army Recruiting Command (USAREC). This public information web site provides the background information of the various organizations that make up USAREC. Located in Fort Knox, Kentucky USAREC provides the command, control, and staff support to the recruiting force.
    For more info. Station Search Utility USAREC Homepage Contact Us ...
    USAREC Family Information
    NEW! SRAP
    Special Recruiter Assistance Program

    Information on the Special Recruiter Assistance Program
    SRAP FAQ

    NEW! Accessions Support Brigade
    The U.S. Army Accessions Support Brigade provdes a single headquarters for command and control of three unique units providing strategic outreach to the accessions' effort. NEW! Protocol
    Providing advice in support of visits and ceremonies involving governments and nations and their representatives to USAREC HQ, its Brigades and Battalions across the U.S. Warrant Officer Recruiting
    Information on becoming a Warrant Officer. Recruit The Recruiter
    Information on the Volunteer Recruiter Program.

    80. United States Army Regulations (AR-290-5): General Regulations 1.0
    United States Army Regulations (AR290-5), Arlington National Cemetery, Under Department of the Army policy, proffered donations or gifts for
    http://www.arlingtoncemetery.net/ar290-5general1.0.htm
    United States Army Regulations (AR-290-5)
    Arlington National Cemetery General Subtopics: Purpose
    1.1 Purpose
    This regulation states the authority and assigns the responsibilities for the development, operation, maintenance, and administration of the Arlington and Soldiers' Home National Cemeteries, a civil works activity of the Department of the Army. Army national cemeteries.
    1.2 Army national cemeteries.
    The Army national cemeteries, consisting of the Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, Virginia, and Soldiers' Home National Cemetery, Washington, DC, are under the jurisdiction of the Department of the Army. The Assistant Secretary of the Army for Civil Works is directly responsible to the Secretary of the Army for policy formulation in the administration of these cemeteries. The Personal Affairs Directorate, an element of The Adjutant General Center, is responsible for their day-to-day administration, operation, and maintenance.
    Statutory authority. Scope and applicability.
    1.3 Statutory authority.

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 4     61-80 of 99    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

    free hit counter