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Outdoor Furnishing Parks: Parks and Zoos. Detroit has many parks, play-fields, and playgrounds covering more than 6,000 acres (2,400 hectares). These facilities, as well as golf courses, driving ranges, artificial ice-skating rinks, Outdoor furnishing parks swimming pools, and recreation centers are under the jurisdiction of Detroit's Parks and Recreation Department. Ken¬sington Metropolitan Park, 35 miles (56 km) to the northwest, Stoney Creek Metropolitan Park, 30 miles (48 km) to the north, and six other parks operated by the Five-County Huron-Clinton Metropolitan Authority provide recreational fa¬cilities for the metropolitan area. Metropolitan Beach, on Lake St. Clair, is one of the largest freshwater public beaches in the world.
Such parks located in parts of a city and connected by a system rkways and boulevards became the ideal city system of the late 19th and early 20th period. Examples are found in Boston, Kansas City, Minneapolis, and West¬er County in New York.second phase of park development began Jly before 1900 with the establishment of n's play areas. Begun as adjuncts to so-; settlement houses, such areas soon found• way extensively into municipal parks. Play-nds, Outdoor furnishing parks gymnasiums, athletic fields, courts, and all manner of sports facilities parks that had originally been designed .uiet retreats.See Also Outdoor Furnishing There:What the association had achieved for the Outdoor furnishing There industry in the service field was dupli¬cated for the selling portion of the business with the creation in 1931 of Outdoor furnishing There Advertising In¬corporated. This centralized unit, a non-profit organization owned and controlled by the plant operators, is the national selling representative of the Outdoor furnishing There industry, and has given the business a cohesion of sales activity unparalleled in ad¬vertising. Outdoor furnishing There Advertising Incorporated sells advertisers and agencies the policy of using Outdoor furnishing There advertising and gives them technical, art, and copy assistance in using the medium in the most effective way.
When the Outdoor furnishing There temperature rises to about 60° F (16°C), the relative humidity may rise above the 30- to 40-percent level that some con¬sider to be desirable. If excessive moisture re¬lease occurs inside a house, the relative humidity may remain at levels higher than desired, es¬pecially in mild weather. The indoor moisture level can be reduced by opening windows and doors and allowing drier Outdoor furnishing There air to replace the moist indoor air. When the Outdoor furnishing There air temperature is between 60° F and 80° F (16° C and 27° C), this ventilation process may fail be¬cause the moisture content of the Outdoor furnishing There air may be as high as that of the indoor air. During these periods some humidity control can be pro¬vided by an air cooling unit.
On The Other Hand See Outdoor Furnishing Terms:Indicative of the application of a more scientific approach to the problems of Outdoor furnishing terms advertising was the establishment in 1933 of the Traffic Audit Bureau under the direction of Dr. Miller Mc-Clintock, one of the world's foremost traffic au¬thorities. The Traffic Audit Bureau, created through the joint efforts of the Association of National Advertisers, the American Association of Advertising Agencies, and the Outdoor furnishing terms indus¬try, evaluates the circulation of Outdoor furnishing terms advertis¬ing so that an advertiser is assured of a net cir¬culation of certified value for his investment in poster advertising. The Traffic Audit Bureau also publishes studies of Outdoor furnishing terms circulation pat¬terns.
NAVAL TERMS. In the following glossary of naval terms an effort has been made to cover briefly the terms that are likely to be of the greatest interest to the general public, and par¬ticularly terms of World War II origin. Because the great revival of interest in sailing, a number of sailing terms have been included. As the ter¬minology of warfare is in many cases the same for all of the armed services, an effort has been made not to duplicate the definition of such terms. It is suggested that if a term is not found here, the article on MILITARY TERMS be consulted.
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