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Table 2. African Transport Costs for Exports to the United States Compared with Competing Nations.
"... In PAGE 13: ... As such, the United States transport cost information should provide a useful quot;base quot; for assessing the importance of the comparative level and changes in African freight costs. Table2 provides summary statistics on 1993 tariffs and transport costs for African exports to the United States. In the interest of brevity the data are compiled for specific regional-income level country groups employed by the World Bank (i.... In PAGE 15: ...countries apos; transport cost profiles are substantially different from their competitors. The key points reflected in Table2 are as follows. First, average ad valorem transport costs for all sub-Saharan countries exports (about 8.... In PAGE 15: ... Seemingly, very different values and stowage factors for the goods being exported explain some of the cross-country variation in African freight costs. A third point reflected in Table2 is that average nominal freight rates for African exports are consistently higher, with the exception of the oil exporters, than those on similar goods shipped from other countries. quot; apos; For all sub-Saharan countries combined, ad valorem freight costs are about 20 percent higher on average.... In PAGE 15: ... However, these aggregate figures conceal the true importance of adverse freight rates 9The sub-Saharan totals reported here, and in the subsequent tables, exclude the African oil exporting countries (Angola, Congo, Gabon and Nigeria) since their relative importance in global energy trade may have lead to the development of transport systems and infra-structure that was significantly different from other African countries. A second point is that some of the tariff averages reported in Table2 warrant explanation. The 11.... In PAGE 36: ...Table2 . Air and Vessel Freight Rates for Low Income West Africa apos;s Major Export Products to the United States Exports by Air Exports by Vessel All Exports HS Exports ($000) Freight African Freight African Freight African Code Description Air Vessel Rate Margin Rate Marein Rate Margin 01 Live animals 1,599.... ..."
Table 1. National hierarchy of ecological units and corresponfing polygon sizes [2, pages 184 and 186, modified]
2004
"... In PAGE 3: ... The main purpose of the framework is to provide support for ecosystem management at various geographic scales. This frame- work organizes terrestrial ecosystems into eight scale levels depending upon their size and delineation factors ( Table1 ). Each scale level is intended for a certain group of management and analytical purposes.... In PAGE 15: ... At the same time individual Arctic Tundra Province is a part of the individuals Tundra Division and Polar Domain . In the case of ecosystem classification classes of ecological units at the upper scale levels (Global, Continental, Regional and Subregional scales in Table1 ) have only a single instance, e.g.... ..."
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Table 5: Alternative Inequality Measures (GMM levels estimation) Homicides Data Source: World Health Organization Mortality Statistics (WHO) Robbery Data Source: United Nations (UN) World Crime Surveys (t-statistics are presented below their corresponding coefficients) Dependent Variable (in logs):
"... In PAGE 14: ...choose to maintain our basic levels specification, which allows the largest possible sample in the context of a dynamic model. The results are presented in Table5 . In columns 1 and 4 the ratio of the income shares of the 1st to the 5th quintile is substituted for the Gini coefficient in the basic regressions for homicides and robberies, respectively.... In PAGE 14: ... Following the principles proposed by Esteban and Ray, we constructed a polarization index from data on national income shares by quintiles (see Appendix C for details). The results concerning polarization presented in Table5 are similar to those obtained with the other inequality indicators. The effect of 7 Appendix Table B3, panel B, shows the bivariate correlations between the Gini index and the these three alternative indicators of inequality.... ..."
Table 3: Basic Economic Model (OLS estimation) Homicides Data Source: World Health Organization Mortality Statistics (WHO) Robbery Data Source: United Nations (UN) World Crime Surveys (t-statistics are presented below their corresponding coefficients)
"... In PAGE 9: ...detailed description of the data sources for these and the other variables used in this article.2 The basic OLS multivariate regression results are shown in Table3 . The homicide and robbery regressions were run on the same data dimensions as in Table 1.... ..."
Table 6: Additional Control Variables (GMM levels estimation) Homicides Data Source: World Health Organization Mortality Statistics (WHO) Robbery Data Source: United Nations (UN) World Crime Surveys (t-statistics are presented below their corresponding coefficients) Dependent Variable (in logs):
"... In PAGE 15: ... Additional Controls This section focuses on the potential role played by additional control variables in the crime- inducing effect of income inequality.8 The regression results are presented in Table6 . Columns 1 and 5 show the results for the regression on the basic explanatory variables, with the addition of a measure of ethnic diversity.... ..."
Table 1: Duration of MAC FDDI Protocol Data Units (ladd = 48) 4American National Standards Institute.
Table 10. Potential proxies for national-level vulnerability to climate change. The data sources are: the World Bank (WB); Human Development Index (HDI); UNEP/GRID-Geneva (GRID); Kaufmann, Kray and Zoido-Lobaton governance dataset; Center for International Earth Sciences Information Network (CIESIN) at Columbia University; United Nations World Income Inequality Database (WIID).
"... In PAGE 74: ... Lists of suggested proxies for each grouping are given, based on a both the nature of the factors and processes to be represented and the availability of data. A complete list of the proxy data used, and alternative proxy variables, is given in Table10 . at the end of this section, along with details of the data sources.... In PAGE 85: ...l. (2001). The question of weighing is obviously crucial if we are to follow such a procedure. While the proxies listed in Table10 . have been chosen because they are applicable to all countries, the nature of vulnerability to climate change will differ from country to country, and a given proxy is likely to be more important for some countries than for others.... ..."
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Table 26Total roundwood output by species group, survey unit, and ownership, North Carolina, 1997 Species group National Other Forest Nonindustrial
1999
"... In PAGE 40: ...Table26 Total roundwood output by species group, detailed species group, and ownership, North Carolina, 1997 Ownership Species group and National Other Forest Nonindustrial detailed species group Total forest public indusw private Thousand cubic feet Cedar 3,297 10 92 343 2,852 Longleaf-slash pine 29,063 84 1,1 12 8,734 19,133 White pine 13,019 228 172 1,775 10,844 Loblolly-shontleaf pine 432,457 3,316 12,261 99,305 3 17,576 Other yellow pines 80,870 1,359 1,749 12,066 65,695 Cypress 14,115 11 130 2,738 1 1,235 Hemlock 1,449 27 0 0 1,423 Total softwoods 574,271 5,035 15,517 124,961 428,758 Hardwood Soft maple 47,162 2,073 957 4,298 39,833 Hard maple 419 0 0 0 419 Other birch 4,986 893 8 2 56 3,955 Yellow birch 68 27 3 3 0 8 Hickory 16,249 440 188 595 15,026 Beech 3,718 830 109 318 2,462 Ash 7,244 111 106 829 6,199 Black walnut 898 158 5 22 7 13 Sweetgum 59,032 119 678 5,268 52,968 Yellow-poplar 75,478 2,536 955 5,910 66,077 Blackgum-tupelo 25,296 152 490 2,964 21,688 Sycamore 1,204 0 5 2 1,198 Cottonwood 103 0 25 20 57 Black cherry 1,960 206 157 148 1,449 Select white oaks 47,722 1,333 1,054 3,017 42,3 19 Other white oaks 15,758 2,055 256 1,545 11,901 Select red oaks 18,135 3,254 256 873 13,752 Other red oaks 64,062 3,011 1,204 5,120 54,727 Basswood 125 23 0 0 102 Elm 3,999 0 43 315 3,640 Other Eastern hardwoods 18,32 1 1,302 742 1,006 15,271 Total hardwoods 41 1,939 18,522 7,346 32,306 353,765 AII species 986,2 10 23,557 22,842 157,267 782,523 ... ..."
Table 1: Countries Profiles (Albania, FYROM, Serbia) (*) In reading the table above, the following should be noted: The position of the Hellenic Republic and, consequently all organizations of the wider Greek public sector is that the choice of the name Macedonia by FYROM directly raises the issue of usurpation of the cultural heritage of a neighbouring country 10 and thus such name is not recognized. The issue is still among those in the list of the United Nations pending resolution (Relevant UN reference: UN Security Council Resolution 817 (1993)).11
"... In PAGE 4: ...econd only the basic sections).................................................................................................................29 LIST OF TABLES Table1 : Countries Profiles (Albania, FYROM, Serbia) .... ..."
Table 7: English-Spanish parallel corpus. The original text from which this was taken is a portion of United Nations proceedings [Gra 94]. The alignment was done by Clara Cabezas using MXTERMINATOR [RR97]. The English text was tokenized using a script included in the Egypt distribution [WS99], written by Dan Melamed and Yaser Al-Onaizan. The Spanish text was tokenized using a program written by Nizar Habash and Bonnie Dorr, with kind permission of the authors.
1
"... In PAGE 27: ... Machine: English-Spanish A similar experiment was carried out on English-Spanish data to verify that these ndings might be generalizable. Table7 shows data about the corpus used. 14For this task, however, this information may be useful nonetheless, since collocated, translationally inequivalent words may tend to collocate frequently.... ..."
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