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3011Washington: U. S. Government 1869. . 8vo self wrappers Senate 2nd Session Miscellaneous Doc. No. 18 Washington: U. S. Government, 1869. unknown
183230467Washington DC: United States Government 1832. First Edition. Pamphet. Very good. 36p. and 24p respectively. The "Tariff of Abominations' infuriated Southern States whose reactions led to South Carolina's Ordinance of Nullification. Spotted trimmed removed with initials of J.S. Brown in ink. One physical copy of either in holdings at Brown; none in trade. <br/><br/>Spotting otherwise intact United States Government unknown
198075308Washington DC: U. S. Government Printing Office 1980. Presume first edition/first printing thus. Wraps. Good. xi 1 420 pages. Important Dates. Tables. Fold-out. This document is a compilation of the constitutional provisions Federal and State laws and rules of the two major political parties governing the nomination and election of the President and Vice President of the United States. It lists the States holding presidential preference primaries and the dates of such primaries; it also describes the manner of selection delegates to the national conventions the dates such selections are to be made and the number of delegates to be selected. Two surveys of the roles of the major political parties and of the election laws of the fifth States and the District of Columbia are included related to the selection of delegates to the national nominating conventions and to the nomination and election of electors of the President and Vice President. Abstracts of the laws relating to minor and new parties independent candidates and corrupt practices are also included. The information contain is based on the laws in effect as of January 8 1980. The Foreword noted that there were a number of changes since the 1960 presidential election. This 1980 edition reflects the many changes in the election laws of the several states since the 1976 election. Various State laws referred to in this document may be amended subsequent to publication; similarly political party constitutions rules and delegate selection plans may also be amended. Every effort had been made to provide the latest statutes party rules and delegate selection plans. This is an essential reference work for understanding and analyzing the rules and practices in effect for the Presidential election of 1980. U. S. Government Printing Office paperback
19662081402109703197Not Available 1966. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Not Available paperback
191363008Washington D. C.: Government Printing Office. VG. 1913. Paperback. Paperback in Very Good condition. 8vo 8" - 9" tall. 718 pages. Volume 1: House of Representatives Sixty-Third Congress First Session On Bills H. R. 1739 H. R. 1806 and H. R. 2145. July 9 10 11 14 15 16 25 26 29 and 30 1913. Volume 2: Hearings Before the Committee on Territories United States Senate Sixty-Third Congress First Session on S. 48 A Bill to Authorize the President of the United States to Locate Construct and Operate Railroads in the Territory of Alaska and for Other Purposees and S. 133 A Bill to Provide for the Construction of Railroads in Alaska and for Other Purposes. With Addenda and Index . Quick shipping excellent customer service. All books carefully packaged in boxes and ship with tracking information. . Government Printing Office paperback
1844006801Washington: Gales and Seaton 1844. Document includes Journal of the Senate List of Acts Passed During the Second Session of the Twenty-Eighth Congress Proceedings of a Session Specially Called Executive Proceedings of the Senate of the United States from which the Injunction of Secrecy Has Been Removed Index and Table of Bills of the Senate and House of Representatives Twenty-Eighth Congress--Second Session. 387 pp. Leather covers in Good- condition with corners bumped and rubbed to boards edges bumped and rubbed tears to leather on cover faces with sections missing pencil writing '448' on front cover joints rubbed spine ends bent and torn. Bookplate from the Library of the Paymaster General's Office adhered on front inside cover. Front hinge broken back hinge loose. Endpapers browning along edges. Interior pages also browning along edges some foxing spots text is easily legible. Ex. library stamp on back inside cover. Book in overall Good condition. Leather. Good. Illus. by Tables. Size: Approx. 5 3/4" x 9 1/4". U.S. Government Document. Gales and Seaton Hardcover
20909Washington: Government Printing Office 1914. Cloth bound tri-coloured spine labels red dark green and black with gilt lettering -- 'Senate Docs Vol. 7' on red label; No. 379 Florida Everglades' on green label; and '63d Cong. 2d Sess. 1913-1914' on black label at bottom. 148pp includes index. Numerous tables and plates with fold-out diagrams and maps. Library bookplate and stamp on front endpapers. Front board moderately bowed and a bank of plates from Pp125-136 has become detached else a very good copy. 440 grams. All books in stock and available for immediate shipment from Winnipeg Manitoba. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1914 hardcover
190645681Washington: Government Printing Office. 1906. First Edition Thus. Hardcover. Very Good. 8vo; 508 pages; Original green library buckram red leather gilt-lettered label on the spine and the 1906 date of publication stamped in the center of the spine. There is a gilt-lettered stamping at the center of the front cover: "HON. CHARLES W. FULTON / CHAIRMAN COMMITTEE ON CLAIMS/ UNITED STATES SENATE." There is an oval rubber stamp on the title page: "Private Library of / Reed Paige Clark." The text is divided into three parts with three tabs of gilt-lettered brown leather glued to the fore-edges of sheets of pale blue stiff paper. The portions of the facing pages which touched any of these leather tabs is stained brown from contact with the acid which which the leather tabs were tanned. Otherwise an unmarked and well preserved copy. Senator Charles Fulton 1853-1918 served as a United States Senator from Oregon for a single term 1903-9. As stated on the front cover of this volume Fulton served as Chairman of the Senate Committee on Claims from 1905-9 Fifty-ninth and Sixtieth Congresses. Fulton left the Senate in 1909 and was succeded as Chairman of the Claims Committee by Senator Henry E. Burnham of New Hampshire 1844-1917 -- served as U.S. Senator 1901-1913. The eventual owner of this copy Reed Paige Clark 1878-1958 was born in New Hampshire and attended secondary schools in that state. He came to Washington at the end of the nineteenth century and became a student in the Columbian College now George Washington University in 1895. He took an A.B. degree from the College and an LLB from the Columbian Law School in 1901. He joined the U.S. Senate staff in that year serving as private secretary to Senator Burnham of N.H. Clark also served as Clerk to the Senate Committees on Claims -- also Industrial Exhibitions Cuban Relatons Agriculture and Forestry. It is not clear whether Senator Burnham or outgoing Claims Committee Chairman Fulton presented this copy to Reed Paige Clark. Clark left the staff of the Senate in 1911 to accept a Commission as General Receiver of Customs for the Republic of Liberia. He had a full and varied career in the U.S. Customs and Diplomatic Services. He was briefly in charge of the U.S. Embassy in Vienna Austria when the Ambassador was recalled after the Anschluss in 1938. He retired in 1944. . Government Printing Office hardcover
200261975Washington DC: U. S. Government Printing Office 2002. Presumed first edition/first printing. Wraps. Very good. No dust jacket as issued. vi 558 p. Includes illustrations. S. Hrg. 107-315. These hearings were on the interaction between our environmental regulations and our nation's energy policy. U. S. Government Printing Office paperback
200658747Washington DC: U. S. Government Printing Office 2006. Presumed First Edition First printing. Wraps. Very good. v 1 390 pages. Illustrations. Footnotes. References. Tabular Data. No dust jacket as issued. S. Hrg. 108-504. This hearing examined very high levels of lead in the public water supply of the District of Columbia with particular emphasis to the risk posed to children. From the hearing remarks by Senator Warner the acting Chair "My constituents particularly in Arlington County and the city of Falls Church because they are the primary customers of the Washington Aqueduct System along with the District of Columbia. The facts of this situation as they have unfolded over the past 2 months are really very disturbing. It is even more disturbing however that we and the public became aware of this ongoing problem only after reports in the local media. Every one of the government officials sitting before us on the first panel the EPA the Corps the Water and Sewer Authority had some measure of knowledge that testing showed some level of lead. That level we will hear more about today and that that water was used for drinking. The levels we understand here on the committee exceeded the Federal action levels. The rest we know there was no immediate action taken even though that knowledge was in the hands of responsible government officials. We will have the opportunity today to give a full explanation of that. While performing research into premature pipe corrosion for the District of Columbia Water and Sewer Authority WASA in 2001 Marc Edwards an expert in plumbing corrosion discovered lead levels in the drinking water of Washington D.C. at least 83 times higher than the accepted safe limit. He found that the decision to change from chlorine to chloramine as a treatment chemical had caused the spike in lead levels. The contamination has left thousands of children with lifelong health risks and led to a re-evaluation of the use of monochloramine in public drinking-water systems. After the Washington Post ran a series of front-page articles about Edwards's findings resulting in widespread public concern the United States House of Representatives conducted an investigation. The House found that the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention CDC had made "scientifically indefensible" claims in a report that had indicated there was no risk from the high lead levels. The Post investigation uncovered evidence of widespread misreporting of lead levels at water agencies across the United States leading to regulatory crackdowns and changes in Environmental Protection Agency policies. The problem was addressed in 2004 by adding additional treatments to the water preventing the chloramine from dissolving lead in the water mains solder joints and plumbing fixtures. U. S. Government Printing Office paperback
194562738Washington DC: United States Government Printing Office 1945. Presumed first edition/first printing. Wraps. Fair. No dust jacket as issued. Stamps on front cover. Front cover worn torn and missing bottom right corner no loss of text. Tear at staple on last page. iii 29-141 p. This was one of several fact-finding hearings on the economic base for German aggression. Senator Kilgore stated that "Germany must be deprived of the devices and techniques whch she has used to menace world peace. Effective elimination of German econoic warfare is not only a first step toward national security but is indespensible to world prosperity. " United States Government Printing Office paperback
197861976Washington DC: U.S. Government Printing Office 1978. Presumed first edition/first printing. Wraps. Good. No dust jacket as issued. Cover has some wear and soiling. Some corner creasing. iv 452 p.; 24 cm. Illustrations. These hearings addressed flexible and compressed work schedule options. U.S. Government Printing Office paperback
199863288Washington DC: U.S. Government Printing Office 1998. Presumed first edition/first printing. Wraps. Very good. No dust jacket as issued. iv 179 p. Illustrations. Occasional footnotes. S. Hrg. 105-703. This hearing looked at the effect of the measures taken after the first World Trade Center bombing of February 26 1993. This was about 3 and a half years before the Al Qaeda simultaneous attacks on New York City and Washington DC. U.S. Government Printing Office paperback
197962008Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office 1979. Presumed first edition/first printing. Wraps. Very good. No dust jacket as issued. Item has light wear and soiling. Part I ONLY. iii 381. 23 cm. Illustrations. Maps. Serial No. 96-H9. The purpose of this hearing was to herar from people who have been directly affected by several different toxic waste dumps. In addition the Committee also heard from scientific and medical experts on the long-term consequences of such environmental 'catastrophes'. Then officers form the Environmental Protection provided their perspection on the socpe of the problem nationally. U.S. Government Printing Office paperback
199462364Washington DC: U. S. Government Printing Office 1994. Presumed first edition/first printing. Wraps. Very good. No dust jacket as issued. 428 p. 103d Congress 2d Session Senate Report 103-317. Calendar No. 525. U. S. Government Printing Office paperback
197667803Washington DC: U.S. Government Printing Office 1976. Presumed first edition/first printing. Wraps. Good. Letter J written in ink on front cover. Cover soiled and scuffed. VOLUME 1 ONLY. iv 245 pages. 24 cm. Title continues: "Storage of Toxic Agents September 16 17 and 18 1975." From a United States Senate website: "In 1973 CIA Director James Schlesinger told Senate Armed Services Chairman John Stennis that he wished to brief him on a major upcoming operation. No no my boy responded Senator Stennis. Don t tell me. Just go ahead and do it but I don t want to know. Similarly when Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman J.W. Fulbright was told of the CIA subversion of the Allende government in Chile he responded I don t approve of intervention in other people s elections but it has been a long-continued practice. Late in 1974 investigative reporter Seymour Hersh revealed that the CIA was not only destabilizing foreign governments but was also conducting illegal intelligence operations against thousands of American citizens. On January 27 1975 an aroused Senate voted overwhelmingly to establish a special 11-member investigating body along the lines of the recently concluded Watergate Committee. Under the chairmanship of Idaho Senator Frank Church with Texas Senator John Tower as vice-chairman the select committee was given nine months and 150 staffers to complete its work. The so-called Church Committee ran into immediate resistance from the Ford administration concerned about exposing American intelligence operations and suspicious of Church s budding presidential ambitions. The committee interviewed 800 individuals and conducted 250 executive and 21 public hearings. At the first televised hearing staged in the Senate Caucus Room Chairman Church dramatically displayed a CIA poison dart gun to highlight the committee s discovery that the CIA directly violated a presidential order by maintaining stocks of shellfish toxin sufficient to kill thousands. Lacking focus and necessarily conducting much of its work behind closed doors the panel soon lost any hope of becoming a second Watergate Committee. Critics from Bing Crosby to Paul Harvey accused it of treasonous activity. The December 1975 assassination of a CIA station chief in Greece intensified the public backlash against its mission. The panel issued its two-foot-thick final report in May 1976 without the support of influential Republican members John Tower and Barry Goldwater. Despite its shortcomings the inquiry demonstrated the need for perpetual surveillance of the intelligence community and resulted in the creation of the permanent Select Committee on Intelligence. Historian Henry Steele Commager assessed the Committee s legacy. Referring to executive branch officials who seemed to consider themselves above the law he said It is this indifference to constitutional restraints that is perhaps the most threatening of all the evidence that emerges from the findings of the Church Committee. " From Wikipedia: "The Church Committee was the United States Senate Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities a U.S. Senate committee chaired by Senator Frank Church D-ID in 1975. A precursor to the U.S. Senate Select Committee on Intelligence the committee investigated intelligence gathering for illegality by the Central Intelligence Agency CIA National Security Agency NSA and Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI after certain activities had been revealed by the Watergate affair. By the early years of the 1970s the unpopularity of the Vietnam War and the unfolding Watergate scandal brought the era of minimal oversight to an abrupt halt. The United States Congress was determined to rein in the Nixon administration and to ascertain the extent to which the nation's intelligence agencies had been involved in questionable if not outright illegal activities. A series of troubling revelations started to appear in the press concerning intelligence activities. First came the revelations of Christopher Pyle in January 1970 of the U.S. Army's spying on the civilian population and Sam Ervin's Senate. U.S. Government Printing Office paperback
194470408Washington DC: United States Government Printing Office 1944. Presumed first edition/first printing. Wraps. Good. Cover has some wear and soiling/foxing. Pencil erasure residue on t-p. v 1 581 1 p. Tables. Title continues: "of the National Defense Program: Third Annual Report Reported under authority of the order of the Senate of March 3 legislative day February 7 by Mr. Truman". 78th Congress 2d Session Senate Report No. 10 Part 16. United States Government Printing Office paperback
198062324Washington DC: U.S. Government Printing Office 1980. Presumed first edition/first printing. Wraps. Very good. No dust jacket as issued. v 685 p. 24 cm. This hearing was in part driven by the recommentation of the Privacy Protection Study Commission that legislation was needed to better protect the confidentiality of health records. U.S. Government Printing Office paperback
197862301Washington DC: U.S. Government Printing Office 1978. Presumed first edition/first printing. Wraps. Good. No dust jacket as issued. Sticker residue on front cover. iv 542 p.; 24 cm. Exhibits. This hearing was held on the premise that "The Inspector General bill focuses attention on the fact that Federal departments and agencies ahve long been deficient in the way they manitain financial accounts and records and in failing to audit them properly. A report was prepared for this subcommittee by the General Accounting Office. This report found that approximately one-third of the agencies it surveyed did not receive a proper financial audit during fiscal years 1974 1975 or 1976. " U.S. Government Printing Office paperback
198667457Washington: U.S. G.P.O. 1986. Wraps. Good. Inkinitials on front cover. iv 681 p. 24 cm. Illustrations Maps. Title continues: "Ninety-ninth Congress First Session on S. 1517 and S. 1578 October 8 1985. S. Hrg. 99-349. This joint hearing was convened to address the serious issue of low-level radioactive waste disposal. The states had been negotiating regional compacts. The hearing was for the purpose of assisting the consideration of what courses of action the Congress should take with regard to those compacts that had been submitted to the Congress and to determine what interim measures might be taken to ensure that the remaining states moved forward to assume responsiblity for the wasts generated in their States. U.S. G.P.O. paperback
200562736Washington DC: U.S. Government Printing Office 2005. Presumed first edition/first printing. Wraps. Very good. No dust jacket as issued. v 535 p. Includes illustrations. Occasional footnotes. S. Hrg. 109-544. This hearing looked at the issues of waste fraud and abuse which were seen as threatening both the financial sustainability and the quality of health care provided by Medicaid. In 2003 Medicaid was listed by the Government Accountability Office as a high-risk program. This hearing record contains a significant amount of data and a variety of perspectives. U.S. Government Printing Office paperback
196870342Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office 1968. Presumed first edition/first printing. Wraps. Good. Signed by previous owner. Cover has some wear and soiling. iv 300 p. Title continued: "17 1968". From Wikipedia: "The Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons commonly known as the Non-Proliferation Treaty or NPT is an international treaty whose objective is to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons and weapons technology to promote cooperation in the peaceful uses of nuclear energy and to further the goal of achieving nuclear disarmament and general and complete disarmament. Opened for signature in 1968 the Treaty entered into force in 1970. On 11 May 1995 the Treaty was extended indefinitely. More countries have adhered to the NPT than any other arms limitation and disarmament agreement a testament to the Treaty's significance. A total of 191 states have joined the Treaty though North Korea which acceded to the NPT in 1985 but never came into compliance announced its withdrawal in 2003. Four UN member states have never joined the NPT: India Israel Pakistan and South Sudan. The treaty recognizes five states as nuclear-weapon states: the United States Russia the United Kingdom France and China also the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council." U.S. Government Printing Office paperback
198062537Washington DC: U.S. Government Printing Office 1980. Presumed first edition/first printing. Wraps. Fair. No dust jacket as issued. Cover has some tears/chips/scuffs at front. with minor damage to following page. Rear cover chipped and creased. v 653 p. 24 cm. Illustrations. This hearing focussed attention on regulatory reform specifically agency compliance with Executive Order 12044 and the two-part agency report card that had been released shortly prior to the hearing by the Office of Management and Budget. U.S. Government Printing Office paperback
200062779Washington DC: U.S. Government Printing Office 2000. Presumed first edition/first printing. Wraps. Very good. No dust jacket as issued. v 222 p. Includes illustrations. Footnotes. S. Hrg. 106-842. Medicare paid for medically necessary prescription drugs provided to inpatients of hospitals or skilled nursing facilities. At the time of the hearing Medicare was spending over $3 billion annually for this coverage. The Congress was interested in addressing Medicare outpatient prescription drug coverage. The Chairman wanted to be careful not to displace existing privately offered drug coverage. U.S. Government Printing Office paperback
199263485U.S. Government Printing Office 1992. Presumed first edition/first printing. Wraps. Good. No dust jacket as issued. Highlighting/underlining. Three letters written in red on front cover. Some yellow highlighting noted on page one. vii 577 p. Illustrations. S. Hrg. 102-721. This hearing addressed legislation proposed by Senators David Boren and Arlen Specter. The legislation would require the Government to release records to the American public which are relevant to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. The bill would have created a presumption on releasing documents. U.S. Government Printing Office paperback