Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Quinns Rocks

Thursday, November 20th, 2008

Quinns Rocks
Perth, Western Australia

Quinns Beach looking south
Population: 7,991 (2006)
Postcode: 6030
Location: 38 km (24 mi) NNW of Perth
LGA: City of Wanneroo
State District: Mindarie
Federal Division: Pearce
Suburbs around Quinns Rocks:
Jindalee Butler
Quinns Rocks Merriwa
Mindarie Clarkson

Coordinates: 31°40?16?S 115°41?53?E? / ?-31.671, 115.698

Quinns Rocks is a suburb of Perth, Western Australia. It is located within the City of Wanneroo.

Contents

  • 1 History
    • 1.1 1867–1930
    • 1.2 1930–1959
    • 1.3 1959 onwards
  • 2 References

History

1867–1930

Quinns Rocks takes its name from the offshore reef first noted during a coastline traverse by Assistant Surveyor James Cowle in 1867. Cowle was continuing a survey begun by Robert Quin who had reached a spot about 4 kilometres south-east of the rocks in 1866. Although spelt with a double ‘n’, the rocks are thought to have been named after Quin, who emigrated to Western Australia in 1863 and was appointed as an Assistant Surveyor on his arrival. He occupied this position for 22 years, carrying out most of his surveys in the Gingin-Moore River area. He died in July 1886.The general area on the coast opposite the rocks was referred to as Quinns Rocks by the Wanneroo Road Board when they requested the survey of a road that led there in November 1925. Later the place also came to be called “Wanneroo Beach”.

1930–1959

In 1930 the whole beachfront came under the control of the Wanneroo Road Board, which issued “boatshed and campsite permits” to holiday makers at a rental of $4.20 per annum. The first permanent residents appear to have been in 1942. During the 1950s an increasing number of shacks lined the ocean front. Leasing of the beachfront reserve was phased out towards the end of that decade and most shacks had been removed by August 1959.

1959 onwards

In 1958 Lot 223 was purchased and subdivided the following year. Four applications to build were approved in March 1959 and a major sale on 10 June saw nearly 300 blocks purchased. The subdivision was extended northwards in the early 1960s and Quinns Rocks was declared a townsite under the Local Government Act on 27 July 1962. Further extensions took place in 1964 and 1972. The locality encompassing this Local Government townsite, gazetted as “Quinns” in 1974 for future postal services, was changed to Quinns Rocks in 1977, so as to coincide with the townsite name.

Right Weight

Trapeza, Achaea

Thursday, November 20th, 2008

Trapeza
???????
Statistics
Prefecture: Achaia
Province: Aigeira
Municipality: Diakopto
Municipal district: Trapeza (seat)
Number of subdivisions: 2 (Trapeza Beach)
Location:
Latitude:
Longitude:
38.172 (38° 10′ 20″) N
22.2243 (22° 13′ 33″) E
Area: 2.8 km²
Population: (2001)
-Municipal district
-Village
-Percent of the municipality
361
310
14.63%409.64/km²
Altitude:
 -lowest:
 -centre:
about 10 m (north)
50 m
about 300 m (south)
Postal code: GR-251 00
Area/distance code: 11-(00)30-26940
Car designation: AX

Trapeza (Greek: ???????) (also with the first a accented) is a Greek town located nearly 60 km southeast by the old road and east of Patras, about 10 km west of Aigio, west of Corinth, about 154 km west of Athens and north-northwest of Kalavryta. Trapeza had a population of 210 in 2001. Trapeza is in the municipality of Diakopto. Its older name was Nea Voura (??? ?????)

Trapeza is located in a mountainous area. The mountains cover the southern and the central portions and are made up grasslands and bushes, farmlands cover the rest of the area. The Gulf of Corinth is located to the north and has a beach which makes the village famous. Its main crop are fruits and vegetables, cattle, olive, dairy and a few others. Its panorama includes the mountains to the south, the Panachaiko to the southwest and the mountains of Phokida to the north.

In the area is where the ancient city of Bura may be located. In the village, it has a beautiful beach called Pounta or Pounda (??????).

Contents

  • 1 Subdivision
  • 2 Population
  • 3 Other
  • 4 External links
  • 5 See also

Subdivision

  • Paralia Trapezis or Trapeza Beach (??????? ????????)

Population

Year Municipal population Change Percent of the municipality
1981 271 - -
1991 252 -19 or -7.01% -
2001 310 +58 or +23.02% 14.63%

Other

Trapeza has a school, churches, a post office, and a square (plateia). Its nearest lyceum (middle school) and its gymnasia (secondary school) are in Diakopto. Its nearest hospital is at Aigio.

External links

  • Trapeza on GTP Travel Pages
  • Trapeza on www.ediakopto.gr
  • Map and aerial photos:
    • Street map information from: Mapquest, LiveLocal or Google orYahoo! Maps
    • Satellite images: Google or Microsoft Virtual Earth - image now available
  • Coordinates: 38°10?20?N 22°13?33?E? / ?38.17222, 22.22583Coordinates: 38°10?20?N 22°13?33?E? / ?38.17222, 22.22583

Ideal 7228

8th Division (Imperial Japanese Army)

Thursday, November 20th, 2008

8th Infantry Division
Active 1898- 1945
Country Empire of Japan
Branch Imperial Japanese Army
Type Infantry
Garrison/HQ Hirosaki, Aomori, Japan
Nickname Cedar Division
Engagements Russo-Japanese War
Manchurian Incident
Pacific War
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Tatsumi Naofumi
Jinzabur? Mazaki
Toshinari Maeda

IJA Eighth Division (???8?? Hohei Dai-hachi Shidan?) was an infantry division in the Imperial Japanese Army. Its call-sign was the Cedar Division (??? Sugi-heidan?).

Contents

  • 1 History
  • 2 Organization
  • 3 See also
  • 4 References

History

The 8th Infantry Division was formed on 1 October 1898, as one of the six new reserve divisions created after the First Sino-Japanese War. It consisted of troops from the T?hoku region of Japan, primarily Aomori Prefecture, Akita Prefecture and Yamagata Prefecture. Its first commander was General Tatsumi Naofumi, formerly commander of the Sendai Garrison.

The 8th Infantry Division became infamous in history over the Hakk?da Mountains incident in January 1902, where 199 of 210 members of the 5th Infantry Regiment froze to death. The story was immortalized in a novel by the famous author Jir? Nitta.

During the Russo-Japanese War, the 8th Infantry Division distinguished itself at the Battle of Sandepu and the subsequent Battle of Mukden. From 1910, it was assigned to garrison duties in Korea, and it also participated in the Siberian Intervention.

After the Manchurian Incident of 1931, the 8th Infantry Division sent its 4th Brigade to participate in the Invasion of Manchuria with the main body joining it in 1932 when it was stationed in Manchuria under the control of the Kwangtung Army. There it participated in the pacification of the newly formed Manchukuo. Its 32nd Infantry Regiment was transferred to the newly formed 24th Division in 1937.

In September 1944, the 8th Infantry Division was re-assigned to the Philippines under the command of General Yamashita Tomoyuki’s 14th Area Army, where it was divided between Luzon and Leyte islands. Following the Battle of Leyte and the Battle of Manila by joint Filipino and American troops, the 8th Infantry Division was almost completely annihilated and ceased to exist as an operational unit.

Noteworthy commanders in the history of the 8th Division included Tatsumi Naofumi, Jinzabur? Mazaki, and Toshinari Maeda.

Organization

The 8th Division was first raised as a square Division in 1895.

8th Division

  • 4th Infantry Brigade
    • 5th Infantry Regiment
    • 31st Infantry Regiment
  • 16th Infantry Brigade
    • 17th Infantry Regiment
    • 32nd Infantry Regiment
  • 8th Mountain Artillery Regiment
  • 8th Cavalry Regiment
  • 8th Engineer Regiment
  • 8th Transport Regiment

Later in 1937 this division was reorganized as a triangular division:

8th Division

  • 5th Infantry Regiment (Aomori)
  • 17th Infantry Regiment (Akita)
  • 31st Infantry Regiment (Hirosaki)
  • 8th Artillery Regiment
  • 8th Recon Regiment
  • 8th Engineer Regiment
  • 8th Transport Regiment

See also

  • List of Japanese Infantry Divisions

Over Weight Date

Borthwick

Thursday, November 20th, 2008




















Borthwick

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Borthwick is a small village in Midlothian, Scotland. To the west of the village is the Borthwick Castle.

  This Midlothian location article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

Retrieved from “http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Borthwick”
Categories: Lothians geography stubsHidden category: United Kingdom articles missing geocoordinate data

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brown brand

Horse slaughter

Thursday, November 20th, 2008

Horse slaughter is the practice of slaughtering horses for meat. (See article at horse meat.) These animals come from auctions, private sellers, and from wild herds. Sometimes these horses are sick and injured but they can also be for sale by their owners. Most are brought to the slaughterhouses by contract buyers who collect horses from all across the country, also known as kill buyers. Horses that are killed for reasons other than human consumption go to the renderer’s or pet food(US) or the knacker’s yard (UK).

Slaughter of horses is sometimes dissaproved of, horses being perceived as companion animals like cats and dogs, or deserving special status like sacred cows in Hinduism. Horse meat is often praised for its relative low cholesterol content and high iron content, low fat content, even suggested as red meat for people with heart problems. Horse meat is a quite dry meat to cook, it is common to add some extra fat from other animals (like bacon) to increase its softness when roasted.

Postmortem alternatives to slaughter are rendering, burial and cremation.

Contents

  • 1 Slaughtering
  • 2 United States
    • 2.1 The underlying issue in the United States
    • 2.2 Legislation in the United States
    • 2.3 Judicial Ruling in the United States
    • 2.4 Controversy in the United States
    • 2.5 Lobbying Efforts to Stop Horse Slaughter in the United States
  • 3 United Kingdom
  • 4 Rest of European Union
  • 5 See also
  • 6 References
  • 7 External links

Slaughtering

In most countries where horses are slaughtered for food, they are processed in a similar fashion to cattle, i.e., in large-scale factory slaughterhouses (abbatoirs). The animals are rendered unconscious by being shot in the brain with a metal rod, using a captive bolt stunner - pneumatically or cartridge driven. They are then killed by being exsanguinated (”bled out”) by severing the jugular vein or carotid artery while suspended by the rear leg by a heavy chain shackle. Horse slaughter is similar to beef slaughter except for the fact that the overhead rail that the dressed horse carcasses ride on during process is two foot higher than a feedlot beef dressing line to suit the varying sizes of the carcasses. These are then dismembered, that is, butchered, cut into smaller pieces for easier handling. The residue may be rendered to make the fats usable.

Blood of the Beasts (Le Sang des bêtes) is a 1949 short French documentary film written and directed by Georges Franju featuring the slaughter of a horse (and other animals).

In Kazakhstan villages, horses are still slaughtered by local butchers in a pre-industrial way.

United States

Sale and consumption of horse meat is illegal in California and Illinois. Horse meat supplied by three abattoirs in the U.S. was sold to zoos to feed their carnivores, and was exported to Europe and Japan for human consumption. In 2007 two horse meat abattoirs in Texas were ordered closed. Later that year, an abattoir in Illinois, reported to be the last horse meat abattoir in the U.S., was closed.

There is an effort in the United States to create a law, the American Horse Slaughter Prevention Act, designed to stop the slaughter of horses for human consumption. On September 8, 2006, the House of Representatives passed a bill which, had it also passed the Senate and been signed by the President, would have made killing horses for human consumption an illegal practice in the United States.

Most people in the US are not aware that horses are slaughtered there for human consumption in other countries. According to some of these polls, in New York, 64% of people polled believed that slaughtering horses for meat was illegal, while in Indiana, 91% believe that horse slaughter should be banned. In Texas 89% of voters are unaware that horse slaughter was then going on in their own state.

Prior to 2007, three major equine slaughterhouses operated in the United States: Dallas Crown, Inc. in Kaufman, Texas; Beltex Corporation in Fort Worth, Texas; and Cavel International, Inc. in DeKalb, Illinois. All with Belgian ownership, although Multimeat NW has also been listed as French and Dutch owned. Velda NV owns Cavel, Multimeat NV owns Beltex and Chevideco owns Dallas Crown.

The slaughterhouses exported approximately 42 million dollars worth of horse meat per year. Since the human consumption of horse meat is generally considered unacceptable by the majority of the United States populace (see Taboo food and drink) and is illegal in several states, most of the horses slaughtered for this purpose in the United States were exported to other countries, such as France, Belgium and Japan, where the meat is considered a delicacy. As prominently stated on their website, Dallas Crown “provides Carnivore Diet for zoos and wildlife centers across the United States”.

The Department of Transportation have officers at the enforcement points to ensure proper transportation of the horses, but has no jurisdiction beyond transportation matters. Horses that are severely lame or disabled are not accepted at the plants. Haulers are supposed to be fined for horses that arrive with any sign of abuse. Horses are transported in trailers that are straight, gooseneck or double-decked meant for cows and pigs, making it impossible for the average sized horse to stand properly. A 1998 survey commissioned by the USDA/APHIS to determine where welfare problems occur during horse transport to slaughter found severe welfare problems in 7.7% of the transported horses, with a majority from conditions caused by owner neglect or abuse rather than transportation.

Most Americans oppose the slaughtering of horses for meat consumption.

The underlying issue in the United States

Legislation in the United States

There are US Department of Agriculture (USDA) laws governing the transportation of horses to processing plants.

Two bills, H.R. 503 in the House and S. 1915 in the Senate, were introduced last session to prevent the slaughter of horses for human consumption in the United States. H.R. 503 was passed in the House on September 7, 2006. The bill was anonymously blocked from a vote in the Senate, so both bills died at the end of the session. H.R. 503 and S. 311 were introduced January 17, 2007. The text of the bill reads:

A bill to amend the Horse Protection Act to prohibit the shipping, transporting, moving, delivering, receiving, possessing, purchasing, selling, or donation of horses and other equines to be slaughtered for human consumption, and for other purposes.

A separate bill ensures that none of America’s wild mustangs are sent to slaughter.

On February 22, 2007, Rep. Robert Molaro introduced a bill, HB1711, to the Illinois General Assembly to prohibit the transportation of horses into the State for the sole purpose of slaughter for human consumption.

On March 28, 2007, the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia ruled that it was illegal for horse slaughterhouses to pay the USDA for their own health inspections. The next day USDA pulled their inspectors from Cavel, effectively ending slaughter of horses for human consumption in the United States.

Judicial Ruling in the United States

On January 19, 2007, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans overturned a lower court’s 2006 ruling on a 1949 Texas law that banned horse slaughter for the purpose of selling the meat for food on grounds that the Texas law was invalid because it had been repealed by another statute and was pre-empted by federal law. However, a panel of three judges on the 5th Circuit disagreed, saying the law still stood and was still enforceable. On March 6, 2007, without comment or dissent, the 19 judges of United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit rejected a petition by three foreign-owned slaughter plants seeking full court review of a three-judge panel’s January 19, 2007 decision.

In June of 2007, a federal judge refused a request from the nation’s last operating horse slaughterhouse, located in Illinois, to remain open. As of July of 2007, a legal dispute over an Illinois state ban on killing horses for food remains unresolved .

The last remaining horse slaughter plant in the country was effectively shut down Sept. 21 when a three-judge panel on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit ruled an Illinois law banning horse slaughter for human consumption is constitutional.

The ruling comes four months after Gov. Rod Blagojevich signed the law, overwhelmingly passed by the Illinois State Senate earlier this year.

Belgian-owned Cavel International immediately filed a federal lawsuit contesting the ban. While the lawsuit was pending, the slaughter plant was allowed to operate, killing hundreds of horses a week.

Cavel has the option to appeal to the United States Supreme Court, but it is likely that the justices will refuse to hear the case, as they did earlier this year when two Texas slaughter facilities appealed their respective closures.

As of September 2007, bills introduced in the U.S. Congress (H.R.503 and S.311), known informally as the “American Horse Slaughter Prevention Act”, are being considered by congressional committees. The description of these bills is “To amend the Horse Protection Act to prohibit the shipping, transporting, moving, delivering, receiving, possessing, purchasing, selling, or donation of horses and other equines to be slaughtered for human consumption, and for other purposes.” These bills can be viewed and their status tracked via a Library of Congress to follow Legislation in Current Congress.

According to the AVMA, banning slaughter will require an additional 2700 rescue facilities to care for the between 90,000 and 100,000 unwanted horses that will no longer be able to be slaughtered, the first year alone. With the current policy, horses must also travel outside the protection of national regulations to be slaughtered. Such travel can happen without food or water for days, and packed tightly in large trailers places enormous levels of stress on the horse.

Controversy in the United States

There are 200 organizations that oppose the proposed ban on horse slaughter. Included in this group are the American Quarter Horse Association (AQHA), the largest breed association in the world; the American Association of Equine Practitioners (AAEP); the American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA);; and numerous animal agriculture groups. Included in the animal agriculture groups are organizations representing the interests of traditional food animal industries, such as cattle, sheep, and pork, who are concerned that banning any animal for slaughter will lead to endangering their industries.

An argument is that abuse would multiply if the horses were not slaughtered. According to a report from UC Davis referenced in a 2002 issue of Horse Illustrated, there was no increase in cases of horse abuse in California when horse slaughter was banned. However, the director of Equine Protection for the Humane Society of the US subsequently reported in the LA Times seizing large numbers of horses and the horse rescues were taking in more horses that ever before, despite the record number of horses shipped to Mexico for slaughter. This leads into another argument that banning horse slaughter in the US will result in that the horses instead have to endure a long trip to either Canada or Mexico to be slaughtered.

There are many organizations such as the Animal Welfare Institute and Sterling Silver Farm Equine Rescue that support the abolition of horse slaughter. The Thoroughbred and Standardbred racing industry strongly oppose horse slaughter. Other equine organizations in favor of the slaughter ban are the National Show Horse Registry, National Steeplechase Association, Palomino Horse Association, Int., and United States Eventing Association. Many equine adoption and rescue groups also oppose slaughter for human consumption.

Horses in the United States are not raised or treated as meat. Almost all equine medications and treatments are labeled “not for horses intended for human consumption.” In the European Union, horses intended for slaughter cannot be treated with many medications commonly used for U.S. horses. For horses going to slaugther, there is no period of withdrawal between the time it leaves home and the time it is butchered. Because of this higher risk of contamination horses that go to American Slaughter facilities are stringently monitored by the USDA for drug residues and disease, and are held to the same quality standards as any other food animal.

Since the closure of the USA’s facilities, those horses who have outlived their usefulness are now sent to Mexico. The process for slaughter is a totally unregulated matter. What was attempted in the passage of law, the inhumane treatment of equines, has been circumvented and may now been worse than before the practice was “outlawed”.

Lobbying Efforts to Stop Horse Slaughter in the United States

In 2006 slaughterhouses in Texas and Illinois slaughtered 100,000 horses each year to produce horsemeat that was sold in France, Belgium, and Japan as a delicacy and American Oilman T. Boone Pickens is a strong opponent of the slaughter of horses for human consumption. Pickens lobbyied for the American Horse Slaughter Prevention Act (HR 503) which would prohibit the slaughter for human consumption and the trade and transport of horseflesh and live horses intended for human consumption. NBC5 reported on November 9, 2006 that Pickens was among those who opposed the slaughter of horses. “The whole thing, it’s a boondoggle on the American people,” said Pickens. “People that are for the slaughter should be forced to go down on that kill floor.” Equestrian Magazine reported on July 24, 2006 that Pickens would be testifying on July 25, 2006 to support the American Horse Slaughter Prevention Act (H.R. 503). “The brutal slaughter of horses for consumption by wealthy diners in Europe and Japan cuts against our moral and cultural fiber — it’s just plain un-American,” said Pickens. During his testimony before Congress Pickens criticized Texas for being home to two horse slaughter plants. “This is a black eye on our state and nation that demands action,” Pickens said. Pickens added that nearly all the horses sent to the plants are healthy young horses that the USDA has classified in “good to excellent” condition.

Time Magazine reported in its July 25, 2006 issue that Pickens was pushing for passage of the bill to bar the slaughter of horses for human consumption and that he was being opposed by many of his friends in the cattle business. “I don’t like it,” says Pickens, “and I’m going to do everything I can to stop it.” Pickens says that many horse sellers have no idea that their horses are going to be slaughtered after they are sold. “They’re thinking their horse will go to some nice family. But those killer buyers, when they buy at auction, it’s just a matter of hours before the horse is slaughtered,” Pickens says. “You know they are killing a lot of stolen horses.” Pickens finds it even more outrageous that the three horse slaughterhouses in the United States are all owned by a Belgian businessman. “We don’t eat horsemeat here, so it does seem peculiar that someone from Belgium owns the kill plant and the meat is sent to Europe,” Pickens says. “Why not in their own countries? Why come to America to do the dirty deal?” Pickens also notes that the USDA spends millions of dollars supervising the slaughterhouses. “Paula Bacon (the mayor of Kaufman, Texas) told me the kill plant had $12 million in gross revenues and only pays $5 in taxes but it clogs the sewage system up.”

As of March 2008, Cavel, the last horse abbatoir in Illinois and the US, has closed down., thereby ending horse slaughter in the United States.

United Kingdom

According to The Daily Mail, up to 5,000 horses are slaughtered annually in the United Kingdom — not, they report, for domestic consumption but rather for export, mostly to France. UK law effectively forbids the export of live animals for slaughter .

Rest of European Union

The Daily Mail reports that 100,000 horses are transported annually into and around the European Union, for human consumption in France, Italy, Belgium and other countries, where horse meat is commonly accepted.

See also

  • Horse meat

References

  1. ^ Americans squeamish over horse meat, St. Petersburg Times, http://www.sptimes.com/2002/09/04/Columns/Americans_squeamish_o.shtml 
  2. ^ Deseret News: Editorial: They eat horses, don’t they?
  3. ^ Secretary of State of South Dakota: Sacred Horses
  4. ^ Clarifying the notion of horsemeat, Viande Richelieu Meat, http://www.vianderichelieu.com/en/cheval/content.htm, retrieved on 20 February 2008 
  5. ^ Horse Slaughter Human Consumption Need Declared Illegal, encyclocentral.com, http://www.encyclocentral.com/19682-Horse_Slaughter_Human_Consumption_Need_Declared_Illegal.html, retrieved on 20 February 2008  “Scientifically seeing, horse meat is appreciated for its high iron content, relative low cholesterol content and low fat content. It is highly favored in Italy and France.”
  6. ^ Horse Meat, Europmeat (Italy), http://www.europemeat.it/prod-uk.html, retrieved on 20 February 2008 
  7. ^ Food Safety of GOAT and HORSE, International Generic Horse Association, February 1997, http://www.igha.org/USDA.html, retrieved on 20 February 2008  (republished USDA report, now obsolete and withdrawn)
  8. ^ Once an ersatz beef of the poor, horse meat has morphed into a high-end fare of discerning European carnivores., February 1, 2005, http://www.tristateobserver.com/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=3566&mode=thread&order=0&thold=0, retrieved on 20 February 2008 
  9. ^ Carnitine: Have a Taste of Nature’s Medicine, November 1, 2007, http://wfcinc.com/?p=98, retrieved on 20 February 2008 
  10. ^ New York Times article
  11. ^ a b c Tara Burghart (June 29, 2007). “Last US Horse Slaughterhouse to Close”, The Huffington Post. Retrieved on 16 July 2007. 
  12. ^ Animal Welfare Institute: American Horse Slaughter Prevention Act
  13. ^ Science.qj.net: New US Bill Makes Killing Horses for Meat Illegal in US
  14. ^ Equine Protection Network - Polls
  15. ^ Society for Animal Protective Legislation: Survey Shows Texans Strongly Oppose Horse Slaughter
  16. ^ Time: Horse—It’s What’s for Dinner
  17. ^ Dallas Crown, Inc.: Carnivore Diet Products
  18. ^ FSIS Docket 98-074-2 issued Dec 7, 2001 made transport of horses in double deckers illegal as of Dec 7, 2006U.S. Department of Agriculture Veterinary Services: Horse Transport (from internet archive)
  19. ^ Dr. Temple Grandin: Survey of Trucking Practices and Injury to Slaughter Horses
  20. ^ Poll Finds Most Americans Against Horse Slaughter
  21. ^ BELTEX CORPORATION; DALLAS CROWN, INC., v. TIM CURRY, District Attorney Tarrant County, 05-11499 (January 19, 2007).
  22. ^ “Federal Court of Appeals Affirms Ruling Declaring Horse Slaughter Illegal in Texas”. The Humane Society of the United States (March 6, 2007). Retrieved on 2007-07-16.
  23. ^ Illinois Ruling Stops Horse Slaughter in U.S. | bloodhorse.com
  24. ^ Unwanted horses and the AVMA’s policy on horse slaughter - Frequently asked questions, AMVMA, http://www.avma.org/issues/animal_welfare/unwanted_horses_faq.asp 
  25. ^ American Veterinary Medical Association: Testimony of Bonnie V. Beaver, DVM
  26. ^ Chicago Sun-Times: Don’t ban horse slaughter in Illinois
  27. ^ a b c Equestrian Magazine. “T. Boone Pickens Takes on Horse Slaughter Issue with Congress” July 24, 2006.
  28. ^ http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/headline/nation/4171519.html
  29. ^ a b c NBC5. “Illinois Horse Slaughter Makes Way To Senate” November 9, 2006.
  30. ^ a b c CBS11.tv “T. Boone Pickens Joins Horse Slaughter Fight” by Brooke Richie. July 25, 2006.
  31. ^ a b c d e f g h i Time Magazine. “T. Boone Pickens To the Rescue” by Cathy Booth Thomas. July 25, 2006.
  32. ^ a b c Tom Rawstone (May 19, 2007). “The English horses being sent to France to be eaten”. Daily Mail. Retrieved on 2007-10-04.

Help Me Lose Weight

Whiskered Treeswift

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

Whiskered Treeswift
Conservation status

Least Concern (IUCN 3.1)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Apodiformes
Family: Hemiprocnidae
Genus: Hemiprocne
Species: H. comata
Binomial name
Hemiprocne comata
(Temminck, 1824)

The Whiskered Treeswift (Hemiprocne comata) is a species of bird in the Hemiprocnidae family. It is found in Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand. Its natural habitats are subtropical or tropical moist lowland forests, subtropical or tropical mangrove forests, and subtropical or tropical moist montanes.

charriol black cable

Selfridge Field, Michigan

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

Selfridge Air National Guard Base


USGS aerial photo as of 28 March 1999

IATA: MTC – ICAO: KMTC – FAA: MTC
Summary
Airport type Military
Owner United States Air Force
Location Mount Clemens, Michigan
Built 1917
In use 1917 - present
Commander Brig. Gen. Michael Peplinski
Occupants 127th Wing
Elevation AMSL 580 ft / 177 m
Coordinates data for 42°36?30?N 082°50?08?W”>42°36?30?N 082°50?08?W? / ?42.60833, -82.83556
Website www.127wg.ang.af.mil
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
01/19 9,000 2,743 PEM
Source: FAA and official website

Selfridge Air National Guard Base or Selfridge ANGB (IATA: MTC, ICAO: KMTC, FAA LID: MTC) is a joint Air Force Reserve and Air National Guard installation located in Harrison Township, Michigan, near Mount Clemens. The host organization is the 127th Wing (127 WG) of the Michigan Air National Guard, but a variety of Air Force, Navy, Marine Corps, Coast Guard and Army reservists and national guardsmen use the facility as well. In 1971, Selfridge ANG Base became the largest and most complex Reserves Forces base in the United States.

The airfield was named for Lieutenant Thomas Selfridge, the first U.S. military officer to die in an aviation accident while flying with Orville Wright at Fort Myer, Virginia on 17 September 1908. It was an active Air Force base from the 1940s throughout the 1960s, but it always had a significant Reserve and National Guard presence. It became a wholly reserve facility in the 1980s.

The Army leased the 640 acres (2.6 km²) of land from Henry B. Joy for $190,000. On July 1, 1917 Selfridge Field was opened. During the period when the field was a base of the Air Service and Army Air Corps, Selfridge was the home of the 1st Pursuit Group, the oldest combat group in the Air Force. After World War II, Selfridge Field expanded to its present size of 3,600 acres (15 km²). In 1947, Selfridge Field became Selfridge Air Force Base.

On 1 July 1971, Selfridge Air Force Base was transferred to the Michigan Air National Guard, becoming the first major active Air Force base to come under control of the Air National Guard. Today Selfridge Air National Guard Base is the home of many diversified units of all the armed services.

The 127th Wing (127 WG) of the Michigan Air National Guard was established at Selfridge ANG Base on April 1, 1996, by consolidating the former 127th Fighter Wing and the 191st Airlift Group. The flying units, the 171st Airlift Squadron which flies the C-130 Hercules, and the 107th Fighter Squadron which flies the F-16 Fighting Falcon, retained their original designations.

The 927th Air Refueling Wing (927 ARW), an Air Force Reserve Command wing, is also headquartered at Selfridge Air National Guard Base, Michigan. The 927 ARW comes under Fourth Air Force (4 AF), headquartered at March Air Reserve Base, California. The mission of the 927 ARW is to organize, equip and train to provide air refueling support to fighter, bomber and airlift aircraft under widely varying situations ranging from small movements in battle to large movements over long distances. The mission also encompasses the movement of cargo and support of aeromedical and special support operations. Pursuant to recent BRAC action, the 927 ARW is slated to transfer their KC-135 aircraft to the Michigan Air National Guard and relocate to MacDill AFB, Florida in the 2008 time frame. Once at MacDill, the 927 ARW will become an Air Force Reserve “Associate” wing to MacDill’s 6th Air Mobility Wing, with both organizations flying the KC-135R PACER CRAG variant of the Stratotanker.

Another activity at Selfridge is STARBASE, an Air National Guard initiative that engages in activity-based science and math lessons. The program uses an aviation theme to allow local children to excel, regardless of their economic situation. STARBASE traces its roots to the Air National Guard’s 127th Wing at Selfridge ANG Base, Mich., in 1991. The Department of Defense came on board with the STARBASE program in 1993.

Selfridge was also the home of Tuskegee Airmen units during WWII and has an active Tuskeegee Airmen Chapter in Detroit, Michigan. Selfridge is also known as the “Home of Generals” because so many officers assigned there were promoted to general the most famous, being General Curtis E. LeMay, perhaps the most famous Commander of the Strategic Air Command and a former Chief of Staff of the Air Force. Historically, Lieutenant LeMay was once fined $50 for flying through Hangar #6 at Selfridge in a bi-wing trainer.

Contents

  • 1 Selfridge Military Air Museum
  • 2 See also
  • 3 References
  • 4 External links

Selfridge Military Air Museum

The base also supports the on-base Selfridge Military Air Museum, which features outdoor displays of over 15 aircraft, many of types previously assigned to Selfridge. Exhibits includes photos and artifacts about aviation in American wars, including aerospace. The museum is operated by the Michigan Air Guard Historical Association.

See also

  • Michigan World War II Army Airfields
  • Central Air Defense Force (Air Defense Command)
  • 31st Air Division (United States)

References

This article incorporates text from the Air Force Historical Research Agency website which, as a United States government publication, is in the public domain.
  1. ^ FAA Airport Master Record for MTC (Form 5010 PDF), effective 2008-07-31
  2. ^ 127th Wing, Selfridge ANGB, official site

mx-25 regular graphite

Fred Vargas

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

Frédérique Audoin-Rouzeau

Fred Vargas at the Festival International du Roman Noir, 2007
Born June 7, 1957 (1957-06-07) (age 51)
Paris
Pen name Fred Vargas
Occupation Medieval historian and archaeologist
Nationality French
Genres Roman policier

Fred Vargas is the pseudonym of French historian, archaeologist and writer Frédérique Audoin-Rouzeau, born in 1957 in Paris.

Contents

  • 1 Career as archaeologist
  • 2 Career as novelist
  • 3 Principal characters
    • 3.1 Three Evangelists series
    • 3.2 Adamsberg series
  • 4 Bibliography
    • 4.1 The Three Evangelists
    • 4.2 Commissaire Adamsberg
    • 4.3 Other novels
    • 4.4 Essays and other works
  • 5 References
  • 6 External links

Career as archaeologist

She worked at the French National Scientific Research Centre (CNRS), which she joined in 1988. She later joined the Institut Pasteur, as a eukaryotic archaeologist. She has undertaken a project on the epidemiology of the Black Death and Bubonic plague, the result of which was a work considered definitive in the research area — Les chemins de la peste (2003).

Career as novelist

Fred is the diminutive of her given name, Frédérique, while Vargas derives from the Ava Gardner character in The Barefoot Contessa and is the pseudonym adopted by her twin sister, Joëlle Jo Vargas, a painter.

She mostly writes police thrillers (policiers). They take place in Paris and feature the adventures of Chief Inspector Adamsberg and his team. Her interest in the Middle Ages is manifest in many of her novels, especially through the person of Marc Vandoosler, a young specialist in the period. Seeking Whom He May Devour was shortlisted by the British Crime Writers’ Association for the last Gold Dagger award for best crime novel of the year, and the following year The Three Evangelists won the inaugural Duncan Lawrie International Dagger. She also won the award for the second year-running with Wash This Blood Clean From My Hand.

Fred Vargas took an important part in the defence of Cesare Battisti, a left-wing activist sought by Italian and French justice since 2004 for alleged assassinations committed in the 1970s, during the “years of lead”.

Principal characters

Three Evangelists series

  • Marc Vandoosler, known as Saint-Mark: Cleaning lady by day, medievalist by night
  • Lucien Devernois, known as Saint-Luke: Historian specialising in the Great War (inspired by Vargas’s brother Stéphane Audoin-Rouzeau)
  • Matthias Delamarre, known as Saint Matthew: Historian specialising in prehistory
  • These three characters, christened the Evangelists, live in the same house, the Rotten Hut with Old Man Vandoosler
  • Armand Vandoosler: former police Commissaire, Marc’s godfather, epicurean and oddball
  • Ludwig Kehlweiler: former policeman with a national network of informants and a toad Buffo

Adamsberg series

  • Commissaire Jean-Baptiste Adamsberg: peripatetic police chief, with Zen research methods
  • Adrien Danglard: methodical police inspector, Adamsberg’s deputy. Divorced, father of five children and conspicuous white wine consumer
  • Camille Forestier: a musician/plumber who has a turbulent relationship with Adamsberg.

Bibliography

The Three Evangelists

  • 1995 - Debout les morts; English translation: The Three Evangelists, 2006, (Prix Mystère de la critique)
  • 1996 - Un peu plus loin sur la droite
  • 1997 - Sans feu ni lieu

Commissaire Adamsberg

  • 1991 - L’Homme aux cercles bleus; English translation: The Chalk Circle Man
  • 1999 - L’Homme à l’envers; English translation: Seeking Whom He May Devour, 2004, (Prix Mystère de la critique)
  • 2000 - Les quatre fleuves; English translation: The Four Rivers. Graphic novel (with Edmond Baudoin).
  • 2001 - Pars vite et reviens tard; English translation: Have Mercy on Us All, 2003, (Prix des libraires)
  • 2002 - Coule la Seine (ill. by Edmond Baudoin). Collection of three novellas: Salut et liberté, La Nuit des brutes, and Cinq francs pièce.
  • 2004 - Sous les vents de Neptune; English translation: Wash This Blood Clean from My Hand, 2007
  • 2006 - Dans les bois éternels; English translation: This Night’s Foul Work, 2008
  • 2008 - Un lieu incertain; English translation: A Dubious Place

Other novels

  • 1986 - Les Jeux de l’amour et de la mort (Prix du festival de Cognac)
  • 1994 - Ceux qui vont mourir te saluent

Essays and other works

  • 2001 - Petit Traité de toutes vérités sur l’existence
  • 2003 - Critique de l’anxiété pure
  • 2004 - La Vérité sur Cesare Battisti

References

  1. ^ Longhito, Susan. “Vocation meets avocation”. The FASEB Journal. Retrieved on 2007-04-01.
  2. ^ Reisz, Matthew J.. “Digging up the past”. The Independent. Retrieved on 2007-04-01.

10 Ways To Lose Weight Fast

Sher Afghan Quli Khan

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

Ali Quli Istajlu, ‘Sher Afghan Khan’, also mentioned as Ali Quli Khan Istaju ‘Sher Afghan Khan’ was a Mughal courtier of Persian origin earlier serving in Persia, who became the jagirdar of Burdwan in West Bengal (1605-1607). He was also the first husband of Nur Jahan (Mehrunissa), who later married Jahangir and became empress in India.

He was given the title Sher Afghan Khan, by Prince Salim, Jahangir, after his meritorious actions, during a war with the Rana of Mewar . Ali Kuli Istaju, was educated under the instructions of Shah Ismail II of Safavid dynasty in Iran Like his wife, Sher Afghan was also an immigrant from Persia, who fled from Iran, to Kandahar, then in India .

He was the father of Mehrunissa’s only child, a daughter, also called Mehurinissa, like her mother, though later called Ladli Begum, after she married Prince Shahryar, the fifth and youngest son of Jahangir and rival to Shah Jahan .

Contents

  • 1 Biography
    • 1.1 death
  • 2 Nur Jahan’s remarriage
  • 3 References
  • 4 External llinks

Biography

Ali Quli Khan Istaju was the safarchi, or table-attendant, of Ismail II, the third Safavid Shah of Persia (1576-78), after whose death, he came to Kandahar, and at Multan met, Abdul Rahim Khan-I-Khana, who placed him amongst royal employees, while in the field. Later, on his recommendation, Ali Quli received a mansab, Thatta (in present day Pakistan), in the coming years during a war he rendered distinguished services to Akbar, and moved to the royal courts at Lahore . Soon after his arrival at the royal courts in 1594, Ain-e-Akbari suggests, Akbar married him to Mehrunissa (the future Nur Jahan), daughter of Mirza Ghias Beg, who was seventeen Ghias’s wife had access to the royal harem, and was on her visits often accompanied by her daughter, Mehrunissa, it here that Prince Salim (Jahangir) reportedly saw her, and fell in love with her, and Akbar, to avoid scandal, married her quickly to ‘Ali Quli’ . Though some historians suggest that at the time, her marriage was already fixed with a rising Persian soldier, Ali Quli Istajlu, and thus Jahangir couldn’t marry her on that account

When he revolted against Akbar, Ali Quli sides Akbar, this led to a fall out between the two, though when Jahangir finally ascended to the Mughal throne in 1605, he excused him along with all those who favoured Akbar instead of him, and Ali Quli was made a ‘jagirdaar’ and received the region of Burdwan in east Bengal as a tuyul.

death

Shaikh Khubu, Qutbuddin Khan Koka, (Khan-i-Chishti), was the foster-brother of Jahangir, as his mother was a daughter of Shaikh Salim. When Jahangir ascended the throne of Mughal Empire in 1605, Qutbuddin was made the ‘subedar’ (Governor) of Bengal, by replacing Raja Man Singh. Meanwhile Sher Afkan ‘Ali Quli Istajlu was tuyuldar of Burdwan, also in the province of Bengal, and as his wife Mehrunissa (Nur Jahan) was coveted by the emperor. Subsequently in 1607, Qutb was instructed to send Sher Afghan Khan to the court as he was accused of negligence and siding with Afghan rebels and transferred, which he refused to obey. Seeing this, Qutbuddin started off for Burdwan, while he sent Ghiasa, the son of his sister, in advance to pacify Sher Afghan and bring him to the court. So upon his arrival on May 30, 1607, Sher Afghan duly went to meet him, accompanied by two men, in that moment Qutb signaled his men to arrest Sher Afghan, this alarmed Sher Afghan, and he stepped forward questioning his motive, and attacked Qutbuddin sensing treachery. Qutbuddin was fatally wounded, and seeing this, his men, surrounded Sher Afghan a killed him instantly .

Qutbuddin, who was fatally wounded, died later in the night, causing much grief to Jahangir as he mentions in his memoirs, Tuzk-e-Jahangiri, where he also mentions his elation at the death of Ali Quli and hopes that “the blackfaced wretch will for ever remain in hell.” .

That he was killed because of the supposed love triangle, between Nur Jahan, Jahangir and Sher Afghan has been view as an assumption by many later historians, who cite the fact that if Jahangir had any such intentions, he wouldn’t have had ever bestowed upon Sher Afghan the aforesaid title, or pardoned him after he ascended the throne, or given him Burdwan .

Another historical writer, Khafi Khan mentions another extraordinary circumstance surrounding the circumstances of his death, which is said to have been related by Nur Jahan’s mother. According to her, Sher Afkan was not killed by Qutbuddin’s men, but, wounded as he was, managed to get to the door of his house, with the intention of killing his wife, Mehrunissa, whom he did not wish to fall into the emperor’s hands. But her mother would not let him enter, and told him to mind his wounds, especially as Mehrunissa had committed suicide by throwing herself into a well. “Having heard the sad news, Sher Afkan went to the heavenly mansions.” Though this story, seems far too improbable to be true .

His tomb is today, situated, within the shrine complex of the poet ‘Bahram Saqqa’, in present day city of Burdwan or Bardhaman in West Bengal , along with tomb, Qutbuddin

Nur Jahan’s remarriage

After Ali Quli’s death, his wife, Mehrunissa, and their young daughter, were send to the royal harem, where she spent next four years as lady-in-waiting to one of the Jahangir’s stepmothers, Sultana Begum, the mother of Khusrau Mirza at Agra. As the story progress, in March 1611, during the New Year day’s (Nauroz) celebrations, Prince Salim happened to see Mehrunissa, at Meena Bazar, Agra, and immediately fell in love with her. Mehrunissa and Prince Salim were married two months later, on May 25, 1611, , which made her Jahangir’s twentieth wife as Nur Mahal, ‘Light of the harem’, and in 1616, she was given the title Nur Mahal or Nur Jahan, ‘the Light of the World’ .

Ali Quli’s daughter, who, like her mother, was named Mehrunissa, later named Ladli Begum, was married to Prince Shahryar, Jahangir’s fifth son in 1620, , Shahryar went on to briefly occupy the Mughal throne at Lahore, under the maneuvering of Nur Jahan, after the death of Jahangir on October 27, 1627. He was later captured by Mughal forces led by Asaf Khan, and first blinded by the orders of Prince Dawar, was later executed by Asaf Khan, at the order of Shah Jahan, who finally ascend to the Mughal throne after executing all this remainder brothers. After Qutbuddin’s death, the next subedar of Bengal was Quli Khan (1607–1608) and when he died, Islam Khan (June 1608–died August 1613) .

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Ali Q (Beg, Istajlu, Sher Afghan Khan) Ain-i-Akbari, by Abul Fazl, tr. H. Blochmann, The Asiatic Society of Bengal., Calcutta, 1873. Volume I, chpt. 310, “‘Alí Q.’s daughter, who, like her mother, had the name of Mihrunnisa, was later married to Prince Shahryar, Jahángír’s fifth son.”. Istajlu (Ustajlu), an Turkmen tribe surname
  2. ^ From the Memoirs of the Wázírs, Iqbalnama The History of India, Sir H. M. Elliot, London, 1867–1877, Volume 6, chpt. 148.
  3. ^ History of Begum Nur Jahan, by Sugam Anand, 1992, Radha Publications, Queens. ISBN 8185484392. Page 34-36.
  4. ^ Nur Jahan Medieval India: From Sultanat to the Mughals Part – II, by Satish Chandra, 2000, Har Anand Publications. ISBN 8124110662. Page 237.
  5. ^ a b Mughal ladies in contemporary Politics Royal Mughal Ladies and Their Contributions: and Their Contributions, by Soma Mukherjee, 2001, Gyan Books, ISBN 8121207606. page 133. marriage, Page 171, “1616 Nur Jahan, 1622, Padshah Begum (the First Lady of the realm)
  6. ^ Shaikh Khubu, Qutbuddin Khan i Chishti of Fatehpur Sikri Ain-i-Akbari, by Abul Fazl, tr. H. Blochmann, The Asiatic Society of Bengal., Calcutta, 1873. Volume I, chpt. 299.
  7. ^ Ali Quli Istajlu Tuzk-i-Jahangiri, The Memoirs of Jahangir (Rogers), Volume 1, chpt. 27.
  8. ^ a b Ali Quli Istajlu The Mughal Empire: From Babar to Aurangzeb, by S. M. Jaffar, London, 1936, p. 195-196, marriage and thereafter. P. 197-198, death controversy.
  9. ^ The Journal of the United Service Institution of India, by United Service Institution of India, 1872, Page 171. “..the unusual story behind the adjacent tombs of Sher Afghan and Qutb-ud-din at Burdwan…”
  10. ^ The Marriage of Jahángír with Núr JahánThe History of India, Volume 6, chpt. 151.
  11. ^ Bengal under Mughals

Weight Fast Loose

List of liberal arts colleges in the United States

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008
This is an incomplete list, which may never be able to satisfy certain standards for completeness. Sourced additions are welcome and you can help by expanding it.

This is a list of liberal arts colleges in the United States. These institutions place a particular emphasis upon undergraduate study in the liberal arts. Generally, a full-time, four-year course of study at a liberal arts college leads students to a Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science degree.

Liberal arts colleges are American institutions of higher education which have traditionally emphasized interactive instruction (although research is still a component of these institutions). They are known for being residential and for having smaller enrollment, class size, and teacher-student ratios than universities. These colleges also encourage a high level of teacher-student interaction at the center of which are classes taught by full-time faculty rather than graduate student TA’s (who teach the classes at Research I and other universities). The colleges are either coeducational, women’s colleges, or men’s colleges. Some are historically black colleges. Some are also secular (or not affiliated with a particular religion) while others are involved in religious education. Many are private. Some are public liberal arts colleges. In addition, colleges such as Hampshire College, Beloit College, Bard College at Simon’s Rock, Pitzer College, Sarah Lawrence College, Bennington College, New College of Florida, and Reed College offer experimental curricula.

Contents

  • 1 Alabama
  • 2 Arizona
  • 3 Arkansas
  • 4 California
  • 5 Colorado
  • 6 Connecticut
  • 7 Florida
  • 8 Georgia
  • 9 Idaho
  • 10 Illinois
  • 11 Indiana
  • 12 Iowa
  • 13 Kansas
  • 14 Kentucky
  • 15 Louisiana
  • 16 Maine
  • 17 Maryland
  • 18 Massachusetts
  • 19 Michigan
  • 20 Minnesota
  • 21 Mississippi
  • 22 Missouri
  • 23 Montana
  • 24 Nebraska
  • 25 Nevada
  • 26 New Hampshire
  • 27 New Jersey
  • 28 New Mexico
  • 29 New York
  • 30 North Carolina
  • 31 North Dakota
  • 32 Ohio
  • 33 Oklahoma
  • 34 Oregon
  • 35 Pennsylvania
  • 36 Rhode Island
  • 37 South Carolina
  • 38 South Dakota
  • 39 Tennessee
  • 40 Texas
  • 41 Utah
  • 42 Vermont
  • 43 Virginia
  • 44 Washington
  • 45 Washington, D.C.
  • 46 West Virginia
  • 47 Wisconsin
  • 48 References
  • 49 External links

Alabama

  • Birmingham-Southern College
  • Judson College (Alabama)
  • Huntingdon College
  • Miles College
  • Oakwood College
  • Spring Hill College
  • Stillman College
  • Talladega College
  • University of Montevallo

Arizona

  • Prescott College

Arkansas

  • Henderson State University
  • Hendrix College
  • John Brown University
  • Lyon College
  • Ouachita Baptist University
  • Central Baptist College

California

  • Chapman University, Orange
  • Claremont Colleges, Claremont
    • Claremont McKenna College, Claremont
    • Harvey Mudd College, Claremont
    • Pitzer College, Claremont
    • Pomona College, Claremont
    • Scripps College, Claremont
  • Deep Springs College
  • Holy Names University
  • Mills College
  • Menlo College
  • Mount St. Mary’s College
  • Occidental College
  • Point Loma Nazarene University
  • Soka University of America
  • Sonoma State University
  • St. Mary’s College of California
  • Thomas Aquinas College
  • Westmont College
  • Whittier College

Colorado

  • Adams State College
  • Colorado College
  • Fort Lewis College
  • Mesa State College
  • Western State College of Colorado

Connecticut

  • Albertus Magnus College
  • Connecticut College
  • Eastern Connecticut State University
  • Saint Joseph College (Connecticut)
  • Trinity College (Connecticut)
  • Wesleyan University

Florida

  • Eckerd College
  • Flagler College
  • Jacksonville University
  • New College of Florida
  • Rollins College
  • Stetson University

Georgia

  • Agnes Scott College in Decatur, Georgia
  • Berry College in Mount Berry
  • Covenant College in Lookout Mountain
  • Emmanuel College, Georgia
  • Georgia College & State University (public)
  • Morehouse College in Atlanta, Georgia
  • Morris Brown College
  • Oglethorpe University in Atlanta, Georgia
  • Reinhardt College
  • Shorter College
  • Southern Catholic College
  • Spelman College in Atlanta
  • Toccoa Falls College
  • Wesleyan College in Macon

Idaho

  • The College of Idaho
  • Northwest Nazarene University

Illinois

  • Augustana College
  • Blackburn College
  • Eureka College
  • Greenville College
  • Illinois College
  • Illinois Wesleyan University
  • Judson College, Illinois
  • Knox College (Illinois)
  • Lake Forest College
  • McKendree University
  • Monmouth College
  • North Central College
  • Rockford College
  • Shimer College
  • Trinity Christian College (Illinois)
  • Wheaton College, Illinois

Indiana

  • Bethel College (Indiana)
  • DePauw University
  • Earlham College
  • Franklin College
  • Goshen College
  • Grace College & Seminary
  • Hanover College
  • Marian College (Indiana)
  • Saint Joseph’s College, Indiana
  • Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College
  • Saint Mary’s College (Indiana)
  • University of Evansville
  • Wabash College

Iowa

  • Briar Cliff University
  • Central College
  • Coe College
  • Cornell College
  • Dordt College
  • Grand View University
  • Grinnell College
  • Iowa Wesleyan College
  • Loras College
  • Luther College (Iowa)
  • Morningside College
  • Mount Mercy College
  • Northwestern College (Iowa)
  • Saint Ambrose University
  • Simpson College
  • Waldorf College
  • Wartburg College

Kansas

  • Baker University
  • Benedictine College
  • Bethany College
  • Bethel College
  • Central Christian College
  • McPherson College
  • MidAmerica Nazarene University
  • Sterling College

Kentucky

  • Alice Lloyd College
  • Asbury College
  • Berea College
  • Centre College
  • Georgetown College
  • Kentucky Wesleyan College
  • Midway College
  • University of the Cumberlands (formerly Cumberland College)
  • Saint Catharine College
  • Thomas More College (Kentucky)
  • Transylvania University
  • Union College (Kentucky)

Louisiana

  • Centenary College of Louisiana
  • Dillard University
  • Louisiana College
  • Loyola University New Orleans

Maine

  • College of the Atlantic
  • Bates College
  • Bowdoin College
  • Colby College
  • Saint Joseph’s College of Maine
  • Unity College (Maine)
  • University of Maine at Farmington
  • University of Maine at Fort Kent

Maryland

  • College of Notre Dame of Maryland
  • Columbia Union College
  • Goucher College
  • Hood College
  • McDaniel College
  • Mount St. Mary’s University - The Oldest Independent Catholic University in America
  • St. John’s College (Annapolis)
  • St. Mary’s College of Maryland
  • Washington College

Massachusetts

  • Five Colleges (Massachusetts)
    • Amherst College
    • Hampshire College
    • Mount Holyoke College
    • Smith College
  • Assumption College
  • Bard College at Simon’s Rock
  • Bridgewater State College
  • Curry College
  • Eastern Nazarene College
  • Elms College
  • Emerson College
  • Emmanuel College, Boston
  • Gordon College (Massachusetts)
  • College of the Holy Cross
  • Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts
  • Merrimack College
  • Mount Ida College
  • Pine Manor College
  • Regis College
  • Simmons College (Massachusetts)
  • Stonehill College
  • Wellesley College
  • Wheaton College (Massachusetts)
  • Williams College

Michigan

  • Adrian College
  • Albion College
  • Alma College
  • Aquinas College (Michigan)
  • Calvin College
  • Concordia University, Ann Arbor, Michigan
  • Cornerstone University
  • Hillsdale College
  • Hope College
  • Kalamazoo College
  • Madonna University
  • Marygrove College
  • Olivet College
  • Siena Heights University

Minnesota

  • Associated Colleges of the Twin Cities
  • Augsburg College
  • Bethany Lutheran College
  • Carleton College
  • College of St. Catherine
  • Concordia College, Moorhead
  • Concordia University, Saint Paul
  • Gustavus Adolphus College
  • Hamline University
  • Macalester College
  • College of Saint Benedict/Saint John’s University
  • St. Olaf College
  • University of Minnesota Morris
  • University of St. Thomas (Minnesota)

Mississippi

  • Blue Mountain College
  • Millsaps College
  • Rust College
  • Tougaloo College

Missouri

  • College of the Ozarks
  • Columbia College of Missouri
  • Culver-Stockton College
  • Drury University
  • Kansas City Art Institute
  • Missouri Valley College
  • Stephens College
  • Truman State University
  • Westminster College, Missouri
  • William Jewell College

Montana

  • Carroll College (Montana)

Nebraska

  • Dana College
  • Doane College
  • Hastings College
  • Midland Lutheran College
  • Nebraska Wesleyan University

Nevada

  • College of Liberal Arts at the University of Nevada

New Hampshire

  • Colby-Sawyer College
  • Franklin Pierce College
  • Keene State College
  • New England College
  • Rivier College
  • Saint Anselm College
  • Thomas More College of Liberal Arts

New Jersey

  • Caldwell College
  • College of Saint Elizabeth
  • Drew University
  • Monmouth University
  • Ramapo College (public)

New Mexico

  • College of Santa Fe
  • St. John’s College (Santa Fe)

New York

  • Adelphi University, College of Arts and Sciences
  • Bard College
  • Barnard College
  • Cazenovia College
  • Colgate University
  • Concordia College, Bronxville
  • C.W. Post Campus of Long Island University, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
  • Elmira College
  • Empire State College
  • Eugene Lang College The New School for Liberal Arts
  • Hamilton College
  • Hartwick College
  • Hobart and William Smith Colleges
  • Houghton College
  • Ithaca College
  • Le Moyne College
  • Keuka College
  • Manhattan College
  • Manhattanville College
  • Marist College
  • Marymount Manhattan College
  • Medaille College
  • Mercy College
  • Mount Saint Mary College
  • College of Mount Saint Vincent
  • The New School for General Studies
  • Nyack College
  • St. John Fisher College
  • St. Lawrence University
  • St. Thomas Aquinas College
  • Sarah Lawrence College
  • Siena College
  • Skidmore College
  • State University of New York at Fredonia
  • State University of New York at Geneseo
  • State University of New York at Plattsburgh
  • Union College
  • Vassar College
  • Wagner College
  • Wells College

North Carolina

  • Barton College
  • Belmont Abbey College
  • Bennett College
  • Brevard College
  • Catawba College
  • Davidson College
  • Elon University
  • Guilford College
  • High Point University
  • Lenoir-Rhyne College
  • Mars Hill College
  • Meredith College
  • Montreat College
  • Mount Olive College
  • North Carolina Wesleyan College
  • Peace College
  • Salem College
  • University of North Carolina at Asheville
  • University of North Carolina at Pembroke
  • Warren Wilson College

North Dakota

  • Jamestown College

Ohio

  • Antioch College
  • Baldwin-Wallace College
  • Bluffton University
  • College of Mount St. Joseph
  • Denison University
  • Mount Union College
  • Heidelberg College
  • Hiram College
  • John Carroll University
  • Kenyon College
  • Oberlin College
  • Ohio Wesleyan University
  • Otterbein College
  • Mount Vernon Nazarene University
  • Muskingum College
  • The College of Wooster
  • Urbana University
  • Wittenberg University

Oklahoma

  • University of Science and Arts of Oklahoma
  • Bacone College – Muskogee, Oklahoma
  • Southern Nazarene University – Bethany, Oklahoma

Oregon

  • George Fox University
  • Gutenberg College
  • Lewis & Clark College
  • Linfield College
  • Reed College
  • Southern Oregon University
  • Warner Pacific College
  • Western Oregon University
  • Willamette University

Pennsylvania

  • Albright College
  • Allegheny College
  • Bryn Mawr College
  • Bucknell University
  • Cedar Crest College
  • Chatham College
  • Dickinson College
  • Elizabethtown College
  • Franklin & Marshall College
  • Geneva College
  • Gettysburg College
  • Grove City College
  • Haverford College
  • Juniata College
  • King’s College, Pennsylvania
  • Lafayette College
  • Lebanon Valley College
  • Lycoming College
  • Mercyhurst College
  • Messiah College
  • Misericordia University
  • Moravian College
  • Muhlenberg College
  • Saint Vincent College
  • Susquehanna University
  • Swarthmore College
  • Thiel College
  • The University of the Arts
  • Ursinus College
  • Washington & Jefferson College
  • Waynesburg College
  • Westminster College, Pennsylvania
  • Wilson College (Pennsylvania)
  • York College of Pennsylvania
  • (Point Park University) Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Rhode Island

  • Providence College

South Carolina

  • Allen University
  • Benedict College
  • Columbia College (Columbia, South Carolina)
  • College of Charleston
  • Coker College
  • Converse College
  • Erskine College
  • Francis Marion University
  • Furman University
  • Limestone College
  • Morris College
  • Newberry College
  • Presbyterian College
  • Wofford College

South Dakota

  • Augustana College
  • Mount Marty College
  • University of Sioux Falls

Tennessee

  • Belmont University
  • Carson-Newman College
  • Fisk University
  • Hendrix College
  • Lane College
  • Lipscomb University
  • Maryville College
  • Martin Methodist College
  • Milligan College
  • Rhodes College
  • Sewanee, The University of the South
  • Union University
  • Bethel College

Texas

  • Austin College
  • College of Saint Thomas More
  • Dallas Baptist University
  • University of Dallas
  • Midwestern State University
  • Southwestern University
  • Trinity University
  • Wayland Baptist University
  • University of St. Thomas (Houston)
  • St. Edward’s University

Utah

  • Westminster College, Salt Lake City

Vermont

  • Bennington College
  • Burlington College
  • Castleton State College
  • Green Mountain College
  • Johnson State College
  • Lyndon State College
  • Marlboro College
  • Middlebury College
  • Saint Michael’s College
  • Southern Vermont College

Virginia

  • Bridgewater College
  • Christendom College
  • Christopher Newport University
  • Emory and Henry College
  • Founders College
  • Hampden-Sydney College
  • Hollins University
  • James Madison University
  • Lynchburg College
  • Mary Baldwin College
  • University of Mary Washington
  • Randolph-Macon College
  • Randolph College
  • University of Richmond
  • Roanoke College
  • Southern Virginia University
  • Sweet Briar College
  • University of Mary Washington
  • University of Virginia’s College at Wise
  • Virginia Wesleyan College
  • College of William & Mary
  • Washington and Lee University
  • Liberty University

Washington

  • Evergreen State College
  • Pacific Lutheran University
  • University of Puget Sound
  • Walla Walla University
  • Whitman College
  • Whitworth University

Washington, D.C.

  • American University
  • Catholic University of America
  • Gallaudet University
  • George Washington University
  • Georgetown University
  • Howard Unive