Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Canada travel

J. C. T. Kwak at Dalhousie University, Halifax, Canada. We gratefully acknowledge the Dutch Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) for a travel grant to S.O. Theo Rispens is most gratefully acknowledged for the synthesis and purification of 5.5a-c. [Pg.158]

Travelers to Canada, Western Europe, Japan, Australia, or New Zealand are at no greater risk for HAV infection than they are while... [Pg.287]

A year ago we moved back to Louisiana. I was well enough to travel, and my career with the sick school program really took off. I presented workshops in Canada, Nebraska, several locations in Illinois and Michigan, Faribaut and Bloomington, Minnesota. I was scheduled to be in Duluth in April, but I had to cancel due to my third massive exposure. [Pg.114]

In New Zealand I met a homeopathist who helped me. That s how I was able to travel and to get back to Canada. When I came back I tried to work and couldn t. [Pg.211]

Thanks are due to NATO for a travel grant, and to Dr K. U. Ingold for his hospitality at the Laboratories of the National Research Council of Canada in Ottawa where the preparation of this contribution was begun. [Pg.58]

Air pollution often travels from its source in one state to another state. In many metropolitan areas, people live in one state and work or shop in another air pollution from cars and trucks may spread throughout the interstate area. The Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 provide for interstate commissions on air pollution control, which are to develop regional strategies for cleaning up air pollution. The 1990 amendments also cover pollution that originates in nearby countries, such as Mexico and Canada, and drifts into the United States as well as pollution from the United States that reaches Canada and Mexico. [Pg.137]

Lapp, H. M. and L. C. Buchanan. Agriculture Canada, Ottawa (1978). A Travel Report on a Study of Methane Production From Animal Manure in the Midwestern United States. 44 p. [Pg.119]

The balloons were released from J apan one by one in the autumn of 1944 to be carried by easterly winds(prevailing at an altitude of ca 5 miles) toward Canada or the US. These balloons de-cended mostly in the Pacific coast area, such as Brit Columbia, Washington, Oregon a few in Calif. Some balloons were carried to central or even eastern parts of Canada and the US. Total number of recovered balloons was ca 300, but many unquestionably have remained undiscovered because of the vastness of uninhabited territory on this continent. Some of the balloons travelled 6000 miles in 4 days at an average speed of ca 70 mph... [Pg.11]

Another age-based segment is that referred to as the baby boomers. The term refers specifically to the cohort of people bom between 1945 and 1966 (Muller Cleaver, 2000). The expression baby boomers applies best to the countries of Canada, the United States of America, Australia and New Zealand where economic conditions after the Second World War were sound and families were encouraged. By way of contrast, war-affected countries in Europe and Asia and developing countries in other continents did not produce the same conditions for family life and did not experience such high birth rates. Nevertheless European and Japanese travellers, in particular, share some of the characteristics outlined in North American and Australian studies (You O Leary, 1999). [Pg.34]

There has been little effective challenge to their rule of these forces in Canada since 1910, when then-Prime Minister de Laurier attempted to organize a counterweight from within the British dominions, including support from then Prime Minister of South Africa, Botha. Lord Milner, whom we profiled earlier in Section 7, traveled to Canada in 1908 to avert what would have been a catastrophe in the eyes of the British monarchy. [Pg.173]

Taylor received an M.Sc. (Bristol) in 1910 and a D.Sc. (Bristol) in 1911. She then travelled to northern Ontario, Canada, a region where transportation was primitive and unaccompanied single-women visitors were unknown. Ever the academic, she wrote a monograph, The Mining Camps of Cohalt and Porcupine, describing her exploits. [Pg.201]

In 1922, Buchanan travelled extensively in Canada as the accredited representative of the Council and on her return, she submitted a detailed report on the requirements for qualification,... [Pg.403]

Outside of her professional life, Adams was a good musician, and she formed a quartet with her parents and her only sister (a professional cellist). She was an avid traveller, particularly to Canada and the Shetland Islands. After retirement, she moved to Brighton and became active with conservation groups, dying on 15 July 1994, aged 84 years. [Pg.491]

Contributions to the study were made by many scientific and technical members of this laboratory. In particular, we are grateful for the assistance of W. A. MacDonald for sample preparation and of D. M. Farrell and E. E. Berry for the research on reactions. The Sulphur Development Institute of Canada kindly provided monetary support for travel and the preparation of test specimens. [Pg.103]

Brown, University of Liverpool, and Dr. Lj. Manojlovic-Muir, University of Glasgow. Much of the credit belongs to them and to their graduate students whose names are given in the references. Dr. M.A. Thomson and Mr. R.H. Hill made major contributions to this work. We thank NSERC (Canada) for financial assistance and NATO for a travel grant. [Pg.195]

A total of 16,000 smallpox cases have been reported in 25 states (14,000 within the past 24 hours). One thousand people have died. Ten other countries report cases of smallpox believed to have been caused by international travelers from the United States. Vaccine supplies are depleted, and new vaccine will not be ready for at least 4 weeks. States have restricted nonessential travel. Food shortages are growing in some places, and the national economy is suffering. Residents have fled and are fleeing cities where new cases emerge. Canada and Mexico have closed their borders to the United States. The public demands mandatory isolation of smallpox victims and their contacts, but identifying contacts has become logistically impossible. [Pg.115]

As with travel, international commerce has had a profound effect on health. In recent years, the globalization of the food supply and the development of extensive food distribution networks have increased the risk of foodborne disease outbreaks. In particular, outbreaks associated with fresh produce have caused concern. In 1998, eight restaurant-associated outbreaks of shigellosis caused by a common strain of Shigella sonnet occurred in the United States and Canada. The source, contaminated parsley, was traced to a 1,600-acre farm in Mexico (Naimi et ah, 2003). [Pg.439]

This work was supported by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research (grant 89-0007). Manuel and Weber thank the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) for a travel grant. Chan and Horvath acknowledge the support of the Natural Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada and the Fond pour la Formation de Chercheurs et L aide a la Recherche of Quebec. [Pg.684]


See other pages where Canada travel is mentioned: [Pg.348]    [Pg.348]    [Pg.66]    [Pg.974]    [Pg.71]    [Pg.346]    [Pg.9]    [Pg.210]    [Pg.306]    [Pg.174]    [Pg.20]    [Pg.28]    [Pg.159]    [Pg.31]    [Pg.81]    [Pg.10]    [Pg.69]    [Pg.536]    [Pg.247]    [Pg.228]    [Pg.360]    [Pg.35]    [Pg.2]    [Pg.381]    [Pg.310]    [Pg.180]    [Pg.246]    [Pg.115]    [Pg.439]    [Pg.141]    [Pg.460]    [Pg.2778]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.132 ]




SEARCH



Travel

Traveling

Travelling

© 2024 chempedia.info