963 resultados para United States. Marine Corps. Division, 3rd.
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Officers saluting; includes Lt. General Holland M. Smith (second from left), Major General Harry Schmidt (fourth from left), Major General Clifton B. Cates, Major General Graves B. Erskine, and Major General Keller E. Rockey. Caption; "The Island was OURS."
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Three Marines in pith helmets with a Browning machine gun. Official Photograph, U.S. Marine Corps, No. 8900-113. (Appears to be different from Iwo Jima photgraphs taken by Douglas H. Page.)
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Image of Jack D. Cheesman (on left, wearing shoulder insignia of V Amphibious Corps) and unidentified Marine sitting outside a masonry building
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Image of Jack D. Cheesman (on left) and unidentified Marine standing outside a masonry building
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Digitized version of a Japanese map of Iwo Jima. Includes location of mountatins, air strips, and roads; may also indicate defensive positions. Titles, legend, and place names all in Japanese characters.
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Shipping list no.: 87-209-P (v. 3).
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Mode of access: Internet.
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El interés de esta monografía es analizar la transformación de relación bilateral colombo – estadounidense en materia de seguridad y defensa durante el periodo 2002 – 2014, y cómo dicha transformación puede incidir en la formulación de la política exterior colombiana. Se analizará la política exterior de Álvaro Uribe Vélez y la del actual presidente Juan Manuel Santos. Esto se llevará a cabo bajo dos de las teorías de Relaciones Internacionales, el realismo subalterno y neoclásico, las cuales ayudarán a entender el porqué del cambio de la política exterior de colombiana.
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UANL
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Suspended J1.1, 1921-Jan. 1, 1922.
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Prepared and published under the direction of Brigadier General C. Angus Fraser, the adjutant general of North Dakota. By authority of Legislative Assembly of North Dakota.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Bennett Champ Clark, chairman of subcommittee.
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One goal of Gray’s Reef National Marine Sanctuary (NMS) is to protect the unique community found within the Sanctuary’s boundaries. An understanding of the ecological interactions, including trophic structure, among these organisms is necessary to realize this goal. Therefore, diet information for 184 fish species was summarized from 113 published studies. Among the fish included are 84 fish species currently known to reside in Gray’s Reef NMS. The locations of these studies ranged from the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of the northeast United States to northern Brazil, the Gulf of Mexico, and the Caribbean. All of the species described in this bibliography occur in the southeast United States and are, therefore, current or potential residents of Gray’s Reef National Marine Sanctuary. Each entry includes the objectives, brief methods, and conclusions of the article. The bibliography is also indexed by species. (PDF contains 64 pages.)
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Dataq uantifying the area of habitat affected by Federal programs that regulate development in coastal zones of the southeastern United States are provided for 1988. The National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) made recommendations on 3,935 proposals requiring Federal permits or licenses to alter wetlands. A survey of 977 of these activities revealed that 359,876 acres of wetlands that support fishery resources under NMFS purview were proposed for some type of alteration or manipulation. Almost 95 percent of this acreage was for impounding andl/or manipulation of water levels in Louisiana marshes. The NMFS did not object to alteration of 173,284 acres and recommended the conservation of 186,592 acres. To offset habitat losses, 1,827 acres of mitigation were recommended by the NMFS or proposed by applicants and/or the Corps of Engineers (COE). From 1981 to 1988 the NMFS has provided in depth analyses on 8,385 projects proposing the alteration of at least 656,377 acres of wetlands. A follow-up survey on the disposition of 339 permits handled by the COE during 1988 revealed that the COE accepted NMFS recommendations on 68 percent. On a permit-by-permit basis, 13 percent of NMFS recommendations were partially accepted, 17 percent were completely rejected, and 2 percent were withdrawn. The permit requests tracked by the NMFS proposed the alteration of 2,674 acres of wetlands. The COE issued permits to alter 847 acres or 32 percent of the amount proposed.