Mos Handbook

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Mos Handbook

Handbook for Women Travellers by Maggie Moss, Gemma Mos Handbook for Women Travellers by Maggie Moss, Gemma Mos Paypal US $9.95 18d 12h 58m
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MOS 2010 Study Guide for Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook MOS 2010 Study Guide for Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook
List Price: $44.99
Sale Price: $24.29

Demonstrate your expertise with Microsoft Office 2010! This all-in-one guide is designed to help you practice and prepare for the four core Microsoft Office Specialist (MOS) exams. With the MOS 2010 Study Guide, you get full, objective-by-objective coverage for:Exam 77-881: Microsoft Word 2010 Exam 77-882: Microsoft Excel 2010 Exam 77-883: Microsoft PowerPoint 2010 Exam 77-884: Microsoft Outlook 2010 Use the book’s easy-to-follow procedures and illustrations to review the essential skills measured by the MOS exams. And you can apply what you’ve learned hands-on—using the downloadable files for all the book’s practice tasks.

Pressure Vessel Design Manual, Third Edition Pressure Vessel Design Manual, Third Edition
List Price: $190.00
Sale Price: $149.76

Picking up where the success of the previous editions left off, this book is an accumulation of design procedures, methods, techniques, formulations, and data for use in the design of pressure vessels, their respective parts and equipment. It's written specifically for designers and engineers involved in designing and specifying or manufacturing of pressure vessels. The book also has broader applications to chemical, civil and petroleum engineers who construct, install or operate process facilities, and would be a valuable aid to those who inspect the manufacturing of pressure vessels or review designs. The format of this book continues to differ from most technical ones, as there are many handy visual aids throughout the text. It is not just a reference book, but a practical guideline, that aids designers and engineers to solve practically every design problem that an engineer might encounter with pressure vessels. As an easy-to-use reference, the book provides the user with a logical step by step approach to the design of ASME (American Society of Mechanical Engineers) Code vessels, such as the method for determining the Minimum Design Metal Temperature (an ASME requirement for all pressure vessels). * Covers a collection of design and analysis methods, all presented with the use of visual aides.* New edition includes 26 new procedures, giving the engineer 83 different procedures to use as tools in solving design issues.* Works not just a reference tool, but a practical guideline for every design problem.

68W Advanced Field Craft: Combat Medic Skills 68W Advanced Field Craft: Combat Medic Skills
List Price: $118.95
Sale Price: $191.04

The Combat Medic of today is the most technically advanced ever produced by the United States Army. Such an advanced technician requires an advanced teaching and learning system. 68W Advanced Field Craft is the first textbook designed to prepare the Combat Medic for today s challenges in the field. The ability to save lives in war, conflicts, and humanitarian inventions requires a specific skill set. Today s Combat Medic must be an expert in emergency medical care, force health protection, limited primary care, evacuation, and warrior skills. 68W Advanced Field Craft combines complete medical content with dynamic features to support instructors and to prepare Combat Medics for their missions.


Mos Handbook

Ironwork

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Gate of the Winter Palace in St Petersburg.
Ironwork is any weapon, artwork, utensil or architectural feature made of iron especially used for decoration. There are two main types of ironwork wrought iron and cast iron. While the use of iron dates as far back as 4000BC, it was the Hittites who first knew how to extract it (see iron ore) and develop weapons. Use of iron was mainly utilitarian until the Middle Ages, it became widely used for decoration in the period between the 16th and 19th century.
Wrought ironwork
Wrought ironwork is forged by a blacksmith using an anvil. The earliest known ironwork are beads from Jirzah in Egypt dating from 3500 BC and made from meteoric iron with the earliest use of smelted iron dates back to Mesopotamia. However, the first use of iron dates back to the Hittites from 2000BC.
Knowledge about the use of iron spread from the Middle East to Greece and the Aegean region by 1000BC and had reached western and central Europe by 600BC. However, its use was primarily utilitarian for weapons and tools before the Middle Ages. Due to rusting, very little remains of early ironwork.
From the medieval period, use of ironwork for decorative purposes became more common. Iron was used to protect doors and windows of valuable places from attack from raiders and was also used for decoration as can be seen at Canterbury Cathedral, Winchester Cathedral and Notre Dame de Paris. Armour also was decorated, often simply but occasionally elaborately.
From the 16th century onwards, ironwork became highly ornate especially in the Baroque and Rococo periods. In Spain, elaborate screens of iron or rejer were built in all of the Spanish cathedrals rising up to nine metres high.
In France, highly decorative iron balconies, stair railings and gateways were highly fashionable from 1650. Jean Tijou brought the style to England and examples of his work can be seen at Hampton Court and St Pauls Cathedral. Wrought ironwork was widely used in the UK during the 18th in gates and railings in London and towns such as Oxford and Cambridge. In the US, ironwork features more prominently in New Orleans than elsewhere due to its French influence.
As iron became more common, it became widely used for cooking utensils, stoves, grates, locks, hardware and other household uses. From the beginning of the 19th century, wrought iron was being replaced by cast iron due to the latter's lower cost. However, the English Arts and Crafts Movement produced some excellent work in the middle of the 19th century. In modern times, much modern wrought work is done using the pneumatic hammer and the acetylene torch. A number of modern sculptors have worked in iron including Pablo Picasso, Julio Gonzez and David Smith.
Cast ironwork

Another cast iron grille in St Petersburg
Cast iron is produced in a furnace stoked with alternate layers of coking iron then poured into molds. After the iron cools off, the sand is cleaned off. The Chinese were the first to use cast iron from the 6th century AD using it as support for pagodas and other buildings.
It was introduced into Europe by the 15th century with its main decorative uses being as firebacks and plates for woodburning stoves in Germany, the Netherlands and Scanindavia. By the end of the 18th century, cast iron was increasing used for railings, balconies, banisters and garden furniture due to its lower cost.
See also
Look up ironwork in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Blacksmith
Scrollwork
References
John Starkie Gardner Ironwork Victoria & Albert Museum London 1978 Volume 1 ISBN 0-905209-00-1 Volume 2 ISBN 0-905209-01-X Volume 3 ISBN 0-905209-02-8 first published 1893
Dona Z. Meilach, Decorative & Sculptural Ironwork: Tools, Techniques, Inspiration 2nd edition Schiffer Atglen PA 1999 ISBN 0-7643-0790-8
Otto H?ver A Handbook of Wrought Iron from the Middle Ages to the end of the Eighteenth Century translated by Ann Weaver Thames and Hudson London 1962
Edward Graeme Robinson and Joan Robinson Cast Iron Decoration: A World Survey 2nd Edition Thames and Hudson 1994 ISBN 0-500-27756-7
Gerald K. Geerlings, Wrought Iron in Architecture:; Wrought Iron Craftsmanship; Historical Notes and Illustrations of Wrought Iron in Italy, Spain, France, Holland, Belgium, England, Germany, America Bonanza Books 1957
Theodore Menten, Art Nouveau Decorative Ironwork Dover Publications New York 1981 ISBN 0-486-23986-1
Notes
External links
Encyclopedia.com article on Ornamental ironwork
Wrought ironwork
Cemetery fence ironwork
Columbia Encyclopedia article on ornamental ironwork
Encyclop?dia Britannica article on metalwork
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About the Author

Professional editor working for Hydraulic Clutch Pump.

Ground Intelligence Officer MOS?

Ok, so during college, I plan to enroll in Marine Corps PLC and get my commission as an officer. I was reading about the Ground Intel MOS, because I want to be a Federal Agent after I am done in the Marines, and they love Intel, but I still want some combat arms experience so I can be on the HRT. The Ground Intel MOS seemed like the best option for all of this, since they say that the first billet you get as a Ground Intel officer is command of a scout sniper platoon, and later you can lead a Recon Platoon, so what I am wondering is this: If I choose this MOS, will I really be able to get these positions, or are they just trying to make the MOS sound good and shaft me at a CP interpreting reports? And if you are a civilian who is going to attempt to answer this by just giving me an excerpt from the MOS handbook, please don't. I've read it.

If you can get that MOS *in writing* in a contract, best of luck. One thing the marines love to do though is hand out MOS's to people who didn't want them, so beware.

If you want intel... go army/navy/air force... they have great intel sections, and army intel is an excellent stepping stone to that agency job you want to land.

Join the marines if you want to kick doors in.... look elsewhere for an intel job

Reaching out with hope
Coping strategies for caregivers.

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