Quality Management Grantee will:
Xxxxxxx and X Xxxx¨cker. A detailed account of Xxxxx Xxxxxx’ version of the standard model. IV. Rev. Math. Phys. 8 (1996) 205–228.
Xxxxxxxx and X X. Xxxxx. 1930. Checklist of the fishes and fishlike vertebrates of North and Middle America north of the northern boundary of Venezuela and Columbia. Rept. U.S. Fish Comm. 1928(2):1-670. Jordan, D.S. and X.X. Xxxxxxxx. 1896. The fishes of North and Middle America. Part 1. U.S. Natl. Mus. Bul. 47:1-1240. Xxxxx, S. and X. Xxxxxx. 2005..Hydrogeologic setting of the snake valley hydrologic basin, Xxxxxxx County, Utah, and White Pine and Lincoln Counties, Nevada – implications for possible effects of proposed water xxxxx. Report of investigation 254, Utah Geological Survey. Xxxxxxx, M.C. 1982. Status report of three Bonneville basin endemic fishes. Prepared for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. 27 pp. May, B. E. and X. X. Xxxxx. 1981. Comparative effects of sheep and cattle grazing on the Xxxxx Creek drainage. Transactions of the Bonneville Chapter American Fisheries Society. 1981:48-62. Xxxxx, X.X. 1985. Predation and species replacement in American Southwestern fishes: a case study. Southwestern Naturalist. 30:173-187. Xxxxxx, X. X. and X. X. Xxxxxx. 1985. Two New Intergeneric Cyprinid Hybrids from the Bonneville Basin, Utah. Copeia, 1985(2):509-515. Xxxxxx, X.X. 1972. Threatened freshwater fishes of the United States. Trans. Amer, Fish. Soc. 101(2):239-252.
CONTRACTOR California Department of General Services Use Only CONTRACTOR’S NAME (if other than an individual, state whether a corporation, partnership, etc.) BY (Authorized Signature) ✍ DATE SIGNED (Do not type) PRINTED NAME AND TITLE OF PERSON SIGNING ADDRESS STATE OF CALIFORNIA AGENCY NAME BY (Authorized Signature) ✍ DATE SIGNED (Do not type) PRINTED NAME AND TITLE OF PERSON SIGNING Exempt per: ADDRESS Exhibit A Project Summary & Scope of Work
Xxxxxx and X Xxx, “A unified monotonic approach to generalized linear fractional programming,” Journal of Global Optimization, vol. 26, no. 3, pp. 229–259, 2003. [14] X. X. Xxxx, X. X. Xxxxx, and X. Xxxxx, “Xxxxx: Achieving global optimality for a non-convex wireless power control problem,” IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications, vol. 8, no. 3, pp. 1553–1563, Mar 2009. [15] X. Xxxxxxxx and X. Xxxxxxx, “Common randomness in information theory and cryptography - part I: Secret sharing,” IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, vol. 39, no. 4, pp. 1121–1132, Jul. 1993. [16] I. Safaka, X. X. Xxxxxxxxxx, X. Xxxxxxx, E. Atsan, C. Fragouli, X. Xxxxxxxx, and X. Xxxxxxx, “Exchanging Secrets without Using Cryptography,” arXiv:1105.4991 [cs, math], May 2011, arXiv: 1105.4991. [Online]. Available: xxxx://xxxxx.xxx/abs/1105.4991 [17] I. Safaka, C. Fragouli, X. Xxxxxxxx, and X. Xxxxxxx, “Exchanging pairwise secrets efficiently,” in 2013 Proceedings IEEE INFOCOM, Apr. 2013, pp. 2265–2273. [18] E. Atsan, I. Safaka, X. Xxxxxx, and X. Xxxxxxxx, “Low cost security for sensor networks,” in 2013 International Symposium on Network Coding (NetCod), Jun. 2013, pp. 1–6. [19] X. Xxxxxxxx, X. Xxxxxxx, X. Xxxxxx, X. Xxxxxxxx, X. Xxxxxxxxx, and X. Xxxxxxxxxxx, “Creating Secrets out of Erasures,” in Proceedings of the 19th Annual International Conference on Mobile Computing & Networking, ser. MobiCom ’13. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2013, pp. 429–440. [Online]. Available: xxxx://xxx.xxx.xxx/10.1145/2500423.2500440 [20] X. X. Xxxx and X. Xxxxxxxxxxxx, Convex Optimization. Cambridge University Press, Mar. 2004. [21] X. X. Xxxxxxxxx, X. Xxxxx, and X. X. Xxxxxxxx, Convex Analysis and Optimization. Athena Scientific, 2003. [22] X. Xxxx, X. X. Xxxxxxxxxxx, X. Xxxxxxxx, and X. X. Xxxxxxx, “Secret communication over broadcast erasure channels with state-feedbac,” IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, vol. 61, pp. 4788–4808, Sep. 2015. [23] X. X. XxxXxxxxxxx, The Theory of Error-Correcting Codes, 2nd ed. Amsterdam; New York; New York: North Holland Publishing Co., 1978. [24] C. Fragouli and X. Xxxxxxxx, Network Coding Fundamentals. Hanover, MA: Now Publishers Inc, Jun. 2007.
Best Management Practices 1. Contractor shall conduct operations under this Contract so as to assure that pollutants do not enter municipal storm drain systems which systems are comprised of, but are not limited to curbs and gutters that are part of the street systems ("Stormwater Drainage System"), and to ensure that pollutants do not directly impact "Receiving Waters" (as used herein, Receiving Waters include, but are not limited to, rivers, creeks, streams, estuaries, lakes, harbors, bays and oceans).
Quality Management System Supplier hereby undertakes, warrants and confirms, and will ensue same for its subcontractors, to remain certified in accordance with ISO 9001 standard or equivalent. At any time during the term of this Agreement, the Supplier shall, if so instructed by ISR, provide evidence of such certifications. In any event, Supplier must notify ISR, in writing, in the event said certification is suspended and/or canceled and/or not continued.
Monitoring and Evaluation a. The AGENCY shall expeditiously provide to the COUNTY upon request, all data needed for the purpose of monitoring, evaluating and/or auditing the program(s). This data shall include, but not be limited to, clients served, services provided, outcomes achieved, information on materials and services delivered, and any other data required, in the sole discretion of the COUNTY, that may be required to adequately monitor and evaluate the services provided under this Contract. Monitoring shall be performed in accordance with COUNTY’S established Noncompliance Standards, a copy of which is attached hereto and incorporated by reference as Attachment “C”.