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Evans, Burton R. – 1975
This manual gives general control principles and specific information on control of mosquitoes, flies, bedbugs, fleas, lice, cockroaches, venomous arthropods, ticks and chiggers, and rodents. The specific information includes life-cycles and habitats, public health importance, non-chemical control, and control with pesticides. (BB)
Descriptors: Disease Control, Entomology, Guides, Insecticides
Child Development Services Bureau (DHEW/OCD), Washington, DC. – 1973
This booklet provides source materials for the development of state and local regulations applicable to day care service facilities. Sections discuss: (1) the Model State Day Care Licensing Act, (2) Day care program and staffing, (3) Health and sanitation, (4) Fire and safety regulations, (5) Principles of zoning, and (6) Principles of…
Descriptors: Certification, Day Care, Guides, Models
Tebbutt, T. H. Y. – 1971
This book is designed as a text for undergraduate civil engineering courses and as preliminary reading for postgraduate courses in public health engineering and water resources technology. It is also intended to be of value to workers already in the field and to students preparing for the examinations of the Institute of Water Pollution Control…
Descriptors: Engineering, Environment, Environmental Education, Pollution
Peer reviewedJournal of Environmental Education, 1978
A report on a food workers certification program to test and teach sanitation knowledge. (BB)
Descriptors: Certification, Disease Control, Food, Food Service
Peer reviewedAllen, Jonathan – Environment, 1973
Descriptors: Environmental Influences, Farm Management, Recycling, Sanitation
Peer reviewedGoldsmith, Francis J. – Journal of Environmental Health, 1971
Descriptors: Community Change, Environmental Education, Health Education, Public Health
Manpower, 1971
This neighborhood medical care center serves 45,000 low income residents of the South Bronx with the help of area residents hired as health advocates to bridge communications gaps. (BH)
Descriptors: Clinics, Demonstration Programs, Economically Disadvantaged, Health Needs
Peer reviewedJournal of Environmental Health, 1977
An interview with Harriet Oyler, the first woman to be employed by Nabisco, Inc., as a sanitarian is detailed. Topics discussed include facility monitoring and inspection, industrial sanitation, and the role of the industrial sanitarian. (BT)
Descriptors: Careers, Employed Women, Employment, Females
Fitzgerald, Patricia L. – Principal, 2002
Describes what principals can do to protect children from food-related illness in school: Forming of food-safe school teams, developing food-safety procedures, including food safety in crises-management plans, educating staff on plans and procedures, encouraging hand washing, making sure the cafeteria works properly, and encouraging the hiring of…
Descriptors: Administrator Responsibility, Elementary Secondary Education, Food Service, Principals
Peer reviewedAbidoye, R. O. – Early Child Development and Care, 1995
Examined incidence of parasitic infections in school children in four contrasting areas of Lagos, Nigeria. Found that almost 40% of the infections identified were of the low socioeconomic status children. The 20 children from the higher socioeconomic status area, with the highest environmental sanitation, were without parasites. Twelve percent of…
Descriptors: Child Health, Foreign Countries, Preschool Children, Sanitation
Williams, Del – American School & University, 2002
Advises schools on how to identify and handle toxic mold in their buildings. Addresses the extent of the problem, offers a four-step approach toward remediation, and suggests questions to ask when mold has been identified. (EV)
Descriptors: Cleaning, Elementary Secondary Education, Hazardous Materials, Sanitation
Peer reviewedJournal of Chemical Education, 2004
The availability of abundant water resources in the Upper Midwest of the United States is nullified by their contamination through heavy commercial and industrial activities. Scientists have taken the responsibility of detecting the water quality of these resources through remote-sensing satellites to develop a wide-ranging water purification plan…
Descriptors: Water Quality, Water Pollution, Satellites (Aerospace), Sanitation
Hadjilambrinos, Constantine – Journal of Technology Studies, 2006
Since the dawn of the atomic age, the United States and every other nation that has chosen to use nuclear power have created hazardous substances that have the capacity to outlast human civilization, and possibly even the human species, and the potential to devastate the environment. The management of these substances that make up what has been…
Descriptors: Weapons, Sanitation, Nuclear Energy, Hazardous Materials
Siegel, Lenny – Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 2003
Military munitions are the silent giant of hazardous waste management and cleanup in the United States. Toward the end of the first Clinton administration, the Navy and Air Force prevailed upon the Army--the armed service with the biggest ordnance problem--to consider co-sponsoring a formal dialogue on military munitions facilitated by the…
Descriptors: Wastes, Hazardous Materials, Hearings, Federal Government
Allen, Jim – American School & University, 2006
When there's less rainfall, communities often restrict water use to conserve water. But as the U.S. population expands into more arid, drought-stricken areas, the increasing demand for water can stress water districts even in years that see average water supplies. As such, education facilities, which use large amounts of water, are placed under…
Descriptors: Conservation (Environment), Water, Educational Facilities Planning, Sanitation

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