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Expansion of micro-technology applications and rapid advances in nano-science have generated considerable interest by the Air Force in how these developments will affect the nature of warfare and how it could exploit these trends. The report notes four principal themes emerging from the current technological trends: increased information capability, miniaturization, new materials, and increased functionality. Recommendations about Air Force roles in micro- and nanotechnology research are presented including those areas in which the Air Force should take the lead. The report also provides a number of technical and policy findings and recommendations that are critical for effective development of the Air Force's micro- and nano-science and technology program
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Includes: USDA press releases, CFR amendments, MPI bulletins, MPI directives, and changes to Manual of meat inspection procedures and Poultry inspectors' handbook.
In 2003, at the age of sixty-two, I thru-hiked the Appalachian Trail. This is the story about that hike. The Appalachian Trail starts on Springer Mountain, Georgia, and goes through fourteen states in a rather meandering way ending on Mount Katahdin, Maine, a distance of roughly 2,175 miles (depending on the source of information as to the exact distance). My hike started on April 5. I arrived at the base of Mount Katahdin on September 14 and waited in nearby Millinocket until September 21 to complete the hike and climb the final 5.2 miles to the summit. The final day, I was accompanied by our youngest son, Will, who had flown to Boston (from Salt Lake City), rented a car, and drove to Milli...
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"This is a partial record of Carter families that have played a part in the social, political, and military life of Virginia and other states of the South and West."--Pref. Carter immigrants to Virginia included the following: William Carter who patented more than two thousand acres in James City between 1635 and 1640; Col. Edward Carter who settled in Nansemond County prior to 1650; Col. John Carter who purchased land in Lancaster County ca. 1650; Capt. Thomas Carter who came to Virginia prior to 1652; and Giles Carter, Esq. who emigrated from England, arriving in Berkley in 1621.
Rohrer families of Maryland, Kentucky, Pennsylvania and elsewhere. Jacob Rohrer died 1758 in Hagerstown, Maryland. His wife's name was Feronica. They had two children: Jacob (b. 1744) and Barbary. Jacob's brother, Frederick Rohrer (b. ca. 1705), immigrated to Ameri- ca from Alsace ca. 1729. He settled in Pennsylvania in later years. He had one son, Samuel, who was born ca. 1730-1740 in Pleasant Valley, Md. He died in 1788.