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The aim of the conference, which took place in the context of a grave general economic situation and a critical time for the forestry industry, was to see how important wood production industry might be promoted in reconciliation with the needs of nature conservation and amenity, and to what extent these objectives might be achieved within the framework of current and adumbrated taxation legislation.

The conference was a contribution to the United Kingdom programme of activities to mark European Wetlands Campaign Year 1976. The aim of the conference was to bring together representatives of as many as possible of the main users of wetlands, in order to expound their various demands on wetlands to discover conflicts of interest between them, in the hope that such conflicts could be minimised and harmony promoted.

The aim of the conference was to provide an opportunity for consideration of how patterns of work and population in small towns and the countryside were likely to change over the next two or three decades and what the consequences might be for the environment. The conference was related to the two previous conferences: 'Work: Changing Patterns and Place' (24 June 1981) and 'Homes and the Countryside'' (26 November 1981).

Report and introduction folders of the Environmental Design Workshop on Ecodesign in the Telecommunications Industry 3-4/3/1994.\nThis report was intended to stimulate further debate on environmental design issues within the telecommunications industry and beyond. It offers a basic primer on the subject both for telecommunications specialists and for those seeking to extend the thinking to other trade sectors.\n

RSA/PR/ED/100/17/199 · Stuk · 1966-1969
Part of Royal Society for the encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce (RSA)

School Commercial Certificate - instituted in 1927\nSchool Technical Certificate - instituted in 1957 (extended in 1958 to include some 'domestic' subjects)\n\nThe groupings of the subjects offered for the School Commercial Certificate and the School Technical Certificate are prescribed in the regulations. For the School Certificate the selection of the subjects (except English Language) is left to the discretion of the school.\n\nThe certificates awarded did not provide any sort of vocational qualification. In 1970 the School Certificate was replaced by the Secretarial/Clerical Examinations Stage 1, which sought to offer a more vocational qualification. In recent years prior to this decision the numbers of candidates for the School Certificate Examinations saw a decline due to the introduction of the Certificate for secondary Education.