You cannot count on properly cemented PVC conduit being waterproof ? I have heard of O-ring jointed PVC failing in expansive soil but not cemented conduit.
Volatile is a term used to described substances that evaporate quickly at normal temperatures. Cobalt is a metal that melts at 1500 C, so it is not volatile at all unless you compare it to Tungsten..... Radionuclides with a short half life generally are more active as far as emissions go. From what I read, the thieves removed the Cobalt pellets from the device, so they at least were in close proximity to it. How fast they die / if they die depends on the level of contact as well as how old the Cobalt is.
shares an address with the address on Kleargear.com, so it would be simple to put her name on their site. Google Maps for that address doesn't list Kleargear as being there at all. Nice....
I'm looking at one I bought long ago "The Internet Directory" - by Eric Braun - Mailing Lists-200 pages, Newsgroups-75 pages, OPACS-75 pages, Archie Servers-3 pages, FTP-40 pages, Gopher-80 pages, WAIS-40 pages, WWW-2 pages.....
I would refer you to California Health & Safety Code 11550, part of which reads:
11550. (a) No person shall use, or be under the influence of any
controlled substance which is (1) specified in subdivision (b), (c),
or (e), or paragraph (1) of subdivision (f) of Section 11054,
specified in paragraph (14), (15), (21), (22), or (23) of subdivision
(d) of Section 11054, specified in subdivision (b) or (c) of Section
11055, or specified in paragraph (1) or (2) of subdivision (d) or in
paragraph (3) of subdivision (e) of Section 11055, or (2) a narcotic
drug classified in Schedule III, IV, or V, except when administered
by or under the direction of a person licensed by the state to
dispense, prescribe, or administer controlled substances.
I know someone personally that was arrested for violating 11550a, they were a passenger in a car that crashed, someone else had drugs in their possession, of course that person was also arrested, but for possession.
http://www.abeeco.co.nz/shop/Bee+Venom+Products.html
"To extract the Bee Venom a pane of glass is placed along side the hive and a small electrical current is run through it, which encourages the bees to sting the surface. The bees are not harmed in the process."
Quick search shows Sharpies in 0.2, 0.3, and 0.4 mm, they will bleed slightly on crappy paper but on decent stock they are great. My top choice for many years.
$900,000 in compliance costs for what ? Certainly not a standard hearing aid. I worked at a X-Ray device refurbisher for a dozen years, X-Ray devices are Class II. We had to furnish the FDA with a written description of our "Good Manufacturing Practices" (Copy of our ISO procedures) and submit yearly leakage reports (X-Rays that are not contained by the inner lead shielding). They sent a guy out once, he stayed and observed for two days and said thanks, good job, see ya........ Standard (Air Conduction) Hearing Aids are Class I and are nowhere nearly as regulated as anything that emits X-Rays. When you into implants, it gets complicated.
It is expensive because it is essentially guaranteed coverage. The company I worked for (50 employees) from 1998 to 2010 tried to set a cap at $10,000 per employee per year. At first, it was no problem even with a low deductible policy, by 2007, they had to go to a $5000 deductible and by 2010 they raised the cap to $12,000 per year and kept the 5000/10000 deductible. My wife is on guaranteed coverage now because she has Mild Gastritis, treatable with OTC medicines and a slightly painful shoulder, possibly from a lousy Rotator Cuff repair, that needs cortisone shots 3 or 4 times a year at approximately $200 per visit. "Normal" ins for her is around $400/mo. and guaranteed coverage is almost $900. Except for the year of the surgery, she has never met the deductible but still, is deemed unsuitable for "normal" coverage.
You can stream video also, as long as it is around 80x60 resolution.
So is warm alum solution.
There actually is a Journal of Vibration and Control. Must be some thrilling stuff to read.
30% ? - I'm thinking double that.
precisely.
You cannot count on properly cemented PVC conduit being waterproof ? I have heard of O-ring jointed PVC failing in expansive soil but not cemented conduit.
I read that the theater has signs conspicuously posted that say "This is private property and no firearms are allowed".
So, was there a specific announcement in the trailers similar to "Please do not shoot anyone" ?
"We also need that every computer has a kill password" - No forensic lab in the world could ever get around that, right ?
Volatile is a term used to described substances that evaporate quickly at normal temperatures. Cobalt is a metal that melts at 1500 C, so it is not volatile at all unless you compare it to Tungsten..... Radionuclides with a short half life generally are more active as far as emissions go. From what I read, the thieves removed the Cobalt pellets from the device, so they at least were in close proximity to it. How fast they die / if they die depends on the level of contact as well as how old the Cobalt is.
And of course the Lions, even if hungry, understand that those people are courteous and respectful. What a crock.
Hello, I am the CEO of a giant company. Regarding your comment, can you explain the term "good faith" ? I have never heard this term before. Thanks.
shares an address with the address on Kleargear.com, so it would be simple to put her name on their site. Google Maps for that address doesn't list Kleargear as being there at all. Nice....
I'm looking at one I bought long ago "The Internet Directory" - by Eric Braun - Mailing Lists-200 pages, Newsgroups-75 pages, OPACS-75 pages, Archie Servers-3 pages, FTP-40 pages, Gopher-80 pages, WAIS-40 pages, WWW-2 pages.....
I would refer you to California Health & Safety Code 11550, part of which reads:
11550. (a) No person shall use, or be under the influence of any
controlled substance which is (1) specified in subdivision (b), (c),
or (e), or paragraph (1) of subdivision (f) of Section 11054,
specified in paragraph (14), (15), (21), (22), or (23) of subdivision
(d) of Section 11054, specified in subdivision (b) or (c) of Section
11055, or specified in paragraph (1) or (2) of subdivision (d) or in
paragraph (3) of subdivision (e) of Section 11055, or (2) a narcotic
drug classified in Schedule III, IV, or V, except when administered
by or under the direction of a person licensed by the state to
dispense, prescribe, or administer controlled substances.
I know someone personally that was arrested for violating 11550a, they were a passenger in a car that crashed, someone else had drugs in their possession, of course that person was also arrested, but for possession.
insert hope please
People like that are the ones you the plague doesn't miss.
If someone is shooting at you and your lower receiver " cracks or outright falls apart" - you may indeed get seriously injured.
I first read the headline as "Lessons From the Paypal Conclave About Election Security"
Home > PCs & Laptops (x) > Laptops / Notebooks (x) > Text Search Terms: windows 7 (x) (1-20 of 1266 Results)
http://www.abeeco.co.nz/shop/Bee+Venom+Products.html
"To extract the Bee Venom a pane of glass is placed along side the hive and a small electrical current is run through it, which encourages the bees to sting the surface. The bees are not harmed in the process."
Quick search shows Sharpies in 0.2, 0.3, and 0.4 mm, they will bleed slightly on crappy paper but on decent stock they are great. My top choice for many years.
$900,000 in compliance costs for what ? Certainly not a standard hearing aid. I worked at a X-Ray device refurbisher for a dozen years, X-Ray devices are Class II. We had to furnish the FDA with a written description of our "Good Manufacturing Practices" (Copy of our ISO procedures) and submit yearly leakage reports (X-Rays that are not contained by the inner lead shielding). They sent a guy out once, he stayed and observed for two days and said thanks, good job, see ya........ Standard (Air Conduction) Hearing Aids are Class I and are nowhere nearly as regulated as anything that emits X-Rays. When you into implants, it gets complicated.
It is expensive because it is essentially guaranteed coverage. The company I worked for (50 employees) from 1998 to 2010 tried to set a cap at $10,000 per employee per year. At first, it was no problem even with a low deductible policy, by 2007, they had to go to a $5000 deductible and by 2010 they raised the cap to $12,000 per year and kept the 5000/10000 deductible. My wife is on guaranteed coverage now because she has Mild Gastritis, treatable with OTC medicines and a slightly painful shoulder, possibly from a lousy Rotator Cuff repair, that needs cortisone shots 3 or 4 times a year at approximately $200 per visit. "Normal" ins for her is around $400/mo. and guaranteed coverage is almost $900. Except for the year of the surgery, she has never met the deductible but still, is deemed unsuitable for "normal" coverage.
$200 for a juniper srx ? Furnish a link please.