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Page "Walrus" ¶ 38
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Commercial and harvesting
Commercial harvesting is typically done with large potato harvesters, which scoop up the plant and surrounding earth.
In 1870, the now-American owned Alaska Commercial Company ( formerly the Russian-American Company ) was awarded a 20-year sealing lease by the U. S. Government, and provided housing, food and medical care to the Aleuts in exchange for seal harvesting.
Commercial harvesting on St. Paul ceased in 1985.
Commercial scallops harvesting companies have warned that protests could endanger lives if the protesters engaged in dangerous manoeuvres, while the Ministry of Fisheries has also noted that only 6 % of the sounds are set aside for the dredging, though this had been much more extensive in the past.
Commercial enterprises were established by foreign companies, and the skills of Miskito turtlemen were utilized to facilitate intensive harvesting of green turtle populations.
Commercial gillnet fisheries are still an important method of harvesting salmon in Alaska, British Columbia, Washington, and Oregon.
Commercial cultivars mostly only grow to about 5 m, and are frequently trimmed as low as 2 m to facilitate harvesting.
Commercial activities in the non-wilderness sections of the forest include timber harvesting, two downhill ski resorts and a small amount of cattle grazing.

Commercial and is
Commercial interest is chiefly in this type of treatment, as is military interest under peacetime conditions.
Commercial telescopes are available new and used, but in some places it is also common for amateur astronomers to build ( or commission the building of ) their own custom telescope.
Capitalised, BASIC is sometimes taken as an acronym that stands for British American Scientific International Commercial.
But this is one more demonstration of the point mentioned above ( Commercial economies ), that the newly independent states recognized the importance of a predictable and established body of law to govern the conduct of citizens and businesses, and therefore adopted the richest available source of law.
Examples of common law being replaced by statute or codified rule in the United States include criminal law ( since 1812, U. S. courts have held that criminal law must be embodied in statute if the public is to have fair notice ), commercial law ( the Uniform Commercial Code in the early 1960s ) and procedure ( the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure in the 1930s and the Federal Rules of Evidence in the 1970s ).
Commercial trade in wild-caught specimens of these species is illegal ( permitted only in exceptional licensed circumstances ).
This period is also associated with the Commercial Revolution.
Commercial DDT is a mixture of several closely – related compounds.
The Volkswagen Commercial Vehicles Transporter ( VWN ) factory at Hannover-Stöcken is the biggest employer in the region and operates a huge plant at the northern edge of town adjoining the Mittellandkanal and Motorway A2.
Karachi is not only Commercial, Industrial and Educational center, It is also a tourist destination for domestic and International tourists.
In the United States, " merchant " is defined ( under the Uniform Commercial Code ) as any person while engaged in a business or profession or a seller who deals regularly in the type of goods sold.
Commercial nitrogen is often a byproduct of air-processing for industrial concentration of oxygen for steelmaking and other purposes.
Commercial fishing and fish processing is the fastest-growing sector of the Namibian economy in terms of employment, export earnings, and contribution to GDP.
* Military, Industrial, or Commercial grade ( for example: the LM301 is the commercial grade version of the LM101, the LM201 is the industrial version ).
There is a general recognition that there is a need for an international law of contracts: for example, many nations have ratified the Vienna Convention on the International Sale of Goods, the Rome Convention on the Law Applicable to Contractual Obligations offers less specialized uniformity, and there is support for the UNIDROIT Principles of International Commercial Contracts, a private restatement, all of which represent continuing efforts to produce international standards as the internet and other technologies encourage ever more interstate commerce.
The application of the statute of frauds to dealings between merchants has been modified by provisions of the Uniform Commercial Code, which is a statute that has been enacted at least in part by every state ( Louisiana has enacted all of the UCC except for Article 2, as it prefers to maintain its civil law tradition governing the sale of goods ).
Uniform Commercial Code § 1-206 sets out a " catch-all " statute of frauds for personal property not covered by any other specific law, stating that a contract for the sale of such property where the purchase price exceeds $ 500 is not enforceable unless memorialized by a signed writing.
Commercial speech is speech done on behalf of a company or individual for the purpose of making a profit.
Commercial nuclear power plants use fuel that is typically enriched to around 3 % uranium-235.

Commercial and now
Most of the docks themselves have survived and are now used as marinas or watersports centres ( the major exception being the Surrey Commercial Docks, now largely filled in ).
It also extended trade regulation of the 1940 German – Soviet Commercial Agreement until August 1, 1942, increased deliveries above the levels of year one of that agreement, settled trading rights in the Baltics and Bessarabia, calculated the compensation for German property interests in the Baltic States now occupied by the Soviets and other issues.
Commercial screen printing now uses sensitizers far safer and less toxic than bichromates.
The first Internet exchange point was the Commercial Internet Exchange ( CIX ), formed by Alternet / UUNET ( now Verizon Business ), PSI, and CERFNET to exchange traffic without regard for whether the traffic complied with the acceptable use policy ( AUP ) of the NSFNet or ANS ' interconnection policy .< REF > Cybertelecom :: Internet History 1990s :: CIX </ REF > The CIX infrastructure consisted of a single router, managed by PSI, and was initially located in Santa Clara, California.
Commercial systems are now available in each category.
The Air Force Office of Commercial Communications Management ( now the Defense Information Technology Contracting Organization ), the White House Signal Agency ( now the White House Communications Agency ), and the DoD Damage Assessment Center ( now the Joint Staff Support Center ) all became a part of DCA.
The first known hospital-based ambulance service operated out of Commercial Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio ( now the Cincinnati General ) by 1865.
Some of the old industrial and wharfside heritage remains at the now defunct Surrey Commercial Docks now Surrey Quays, including Greenland Dock and Baltic Quay, where major residential schemes were developed in the 1980s and 1990s.
Image: Limehouse development 3. jpg | Construction of apartments on Commercial Road ( now complete ).
The Builder of December 4, 1897, said The New Cambridge Music Hall in Commercial Street, Bishopsgate, is now nearing completion.
In 2001, in order to improve and expand its infrastructure, the airport was concessioned by the Peruvian government to Lima Airport Partners ( LAP ), now composed of Fraport and two other minor partners, retaining the air traffic control managed by the Peruvian Corporation of Airports and Commercial Aviation ( CORPAC ).
The old Jack Sprat Food Store, now Ed's Museum, in the Gold Street Historic Commercial District
With Ambridge now over 100 years old, revitalization is beginning to occur along Merchant Street in the Downtown Commercial District.
By the early 20th century the Wenatchee Commercial Club, now the Wenatchee Valley Chamber of Commerce, was advertising the region as the " Home of the World's Best Apples.
Wheeler then read from the Commercial, ( an Ohio newspaper ), " We are not in favor of retaking the property of the United States now in possession of the seceders.
The GPO was at first located in a small building on the site of where the Commercial Buildings used to be ( now the Central Bank building ) off Dame Street, and was afterwards removed to a larger house opposite the Bank of Ireland building on College Green.
Commercial broadcasting now also exists in most of these countries ; the number of countries with only public broadcasting declined substantially during the latter part of the 20th century.
The Princes Freeway ( A1 ) bypasses the town to the south while the old Princes Highway which once passed through east-west through its centre is now Princes Drive and Commercial Road.
No judges are now appointed for the local courts, and the judicial functions of the Lord High Admiral have been passed to the Queen's Bench Division of the High Court, where they continue to be exercised by the Admiralty Judge and other Commercial Court judges authorised to sit in Admiralty cases.
Commercial development now promises reinvestment in the form of shopping and related consumer services.

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