Hand and foot industrial safety campaign
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1973
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 129 KB
- Volume
- 4
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0003-6870
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β¦ Synopsis
Confidence in the success of Department of Trade and Industry policies to reduce aircraft noise disturbance was expressed by Mr Michael Heseltine, Minister for Aerospace and Shipping, opening the annual conference of the Aerodrome Owners' Association in Blackpool, on 17 October, 1973. DTI was devoting a lot of effort to finding ways of reducing this noise. For example, results of the study and testing of noise-reducing techniques using as a basis the Rolls Royce M45 engine and the Dowty Rotol variable pitch fan should be applicable to a wide range of aircraft. This programme is budgetted to cost Β£2ΒΌ million, of which the Government is contributing Β£1-4 million. Other aspects were the programme for the development of a 'hushkit' to quieten the engines in the BAC One-Eleven aircraft, and the improved levels of sound proofing grant available under the Heathrow Noise Insulation Grants Scheme with the new similar scheme at Gatwick.
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The aim of this work was to test whether postaxial hexadactyly had different clinical and epidemiological characteristics depending on hand or foot involvement. In the period 1967-1993, the Latin-American Collaborative Study of Congenital Malformations (ECLAMC) enrolled 1,582,289 births, and 2,271