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Table 3 - Trailer Parking Distribution (Kurahashi amp; Associates 1997) Trailer Parking Average Distribution

in Continuous Deflection Separation Of Stormwater Particulates
by Tracy Schwarz And, Tracy S. Schwarz, Scott A. Wells

Table 5. Relationship between Parking Location and Income Net Income /Month Parking Location

in Parking Behavior in Central Business District- A Case Study of Surabaya
by Kardi Teknomo, Kazunori Hokao 1997

Table 2: Parks Canada Framework Before and After Agency Status

in Exploring Organizational Commitment Following Radical Change: A Case Study Within The Parks Canada Agency
by Dawn Elizabeth Culverson, Dawn Elizabeth Culverson
"... In PAGE 13: ....8 Table2 : Parks Canada Framework Before and After Agency Status .... In PAGE 24: ... 1). Table2 outlines some of the fundamental changes that have taken place as a result of Agency status. One of the most important characteristics attributed to the new Parks Canada Agency is that it continued to embrace its long-standing mandate as well as the Guiding Principles and Operational Policies that were developed in 1994.... ..."

Table 6 The distribution of Pr(Park j #, #) for each tag.

in Syllable-Pattern-Based Unknown- Morpheme Segmentation and Estimation for Hybrid Part-of-Speech Tagging of Korean
by Gary Geunbae, Lee Jeongwon Cha, Jong-hyeok Lee
"... In PAGE 11: ... If the first position of this mor- pheme is a family name, the probability that MPN is the correct tag becomes higher than the probability that the other tags are correct. Table6 shows the distribution of Pr(Park j #, #) for each possible tag. In Equation (14), PrMPN (Park j #, #) represents the popularity of the tag MPN for the morpheme Park-jong-man.... ..."

Table 2. Theme Park Impacts: Limiting Case, No Spillovers, $m. Cluster

in By
by Major U. S, Theme Parks, Harry W. Richardson, Peter Gordon, James E. Moore Ii, Soojung Kim 2005
"... In PAGE 11: ... The No-Spillovers Case These results are very sensitive to the spillover effect assumptions. We do not believe that other theme parks in the country would be immune from the effects of an attack on a theme park in another State, but we can combine some of the data in Table 1 into another table ( Table2 ) to demonstrate the implications if this belief was incorrect. The data here show the results if the economic impacts are confined to the theme park(s) in the State subject to attack.... In PAGE 11: ... This is the limiting case of minimal impacts, and is useful from that perspective even if not very realistic. As shown in Table2 , the differences are very dramatic, with impacts varying from less than half a billion dollars in Virginia up to more than $11.28 billion in the Florida cluster.... In PAGE 22: ...Table2 . Theme Park Impacts: California, Cluster B, $m.... ..."

Table 4: Leibowitz-Nelson-Park Kinetic Model

in NOMENCLATURE
by Brian R. Hollis, Michael J. Wright, Naruhisa Takashima, Kenneth Sutton 2004
"... In PAGE 12: ...Note: Equations 10 and 11 in Table4 are one-step and two-step electron-impact ionization reactions for H Table 3: Nelson-Park Kinetic Model # C... ..."

Table 6: Results of the Parking Lot Con guration in a WAN Environment

in Acknowledgments
by Would Like To, Charles R. Duncan
"... In PAGE 36: ... 7.2 Parking Lot Table6 gives a summary of average rates and queue occupancy of the four simulations run in a WAN environment. The results were taken during the two-second time period from 1000-3000 msecs.... ..."

Table 6: Results of the Parking Lot Con guration in a WAN Environment

in Simulation and Analysis of Credit- and Rate-based Switch Interoperability in an ATM Network
by Charles R. Duncan
"... In PAGE 36: ... 7.2 Parking Lot Table6 gives a summary of average rates and queue occupancy of the four simulations run in a WAN environment. The results were taken during the two-second time period from 1000-3000 msecs.... ..."

Table 17. Changing of Walking Time From Parking Location To Destination

in Parking Behavior in Central Business District- A Case Study of Surabaya
by Kardi Teknomo, Kazunori Hokao 1997
"... In PAGE 18: ...8 minutes By improving the pedestrian facilities, such as provide lift or elevator, from parking location to the market or business center, it may decrease the walking time and increase the potential demand. If a lift or elevator may reduce the walking time from the parking place to the destination 10% to 100%, the change of potential number of parkers is shown in Table17 . The difference-reduction of walking time by 100% from the original value means that the walking time is reduced two times and it may increase the potential demand to 24 points because of better service of the facility.... ..."

Table 8 Type of State Park Facility Included in the 1987 Study

in unknown title
by unknown authors
"... In PAGE 20: ... An Update of TPWD apos;s 1987 Economic Impact Study of Texas State Parks In 1987, TPWD collected economic impact data from 44,117 respondents who were interviewed at 87 state park sites. The type of sites are listed in Table8 . These were convenience samples and interviews were conducted by park staff throughout the 1987 calendar year.... In PAGE 47: ...Table 7. Total Expenditures by All 70 Teams in the College Station Area Items Expenditures ($) Food and Beverages 52,242 Admission Fees 4,695 Night Clubs, Lounges, and Bars 775 Retail Shopping 16,030 Lodging Expenses 65,240 Private Auto Expenses 16,466 Commercial Transportation 4,108 Other Expenses 1,400 Total 160,956 Table8 . Sales Coefficients and Economic Impact Sales Coefficient Items Direct Indirect Induced Total Economic Impact ($) Food and Beverages 1 0.... ..."
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