Missing ships

When a query generates too many hits -- but the research demands the use of a search engine -- I suggest you try a utility like Google that focuses on relevancy. missing ships Cancun information. Netscape users may simply enter "interstate commerce act" without quotations in the address line of their browser. This calls on Google to perform a search on the phrase. Internet Explorer users may also enter the phrase in the address line of their browser, but the command calls on MSN Search instead. missing ships Free-birth-record-searches. Both engines prove helpful using this technique as both retrieve links to encyclopedia articles on the Act. When I applied this technique using Internet Explorer, the first link it returned led me to the Microsoft Encarta article on the Act. The article informs that the first enactment of the Interstate Commerce Act created the Interstate Commerce Commission (now abolished). missing ships Missing-sync. Remember that I suggested the federal agency responsible for the Act might be a potential source of the Act? With that in mind, I followed the Encarta article's suggested reference for the Interstate Commerce Commission. The link leads to another Encarta article on the Commission. Here I learn that Congress abolished the Commission during 1995. The Surface Transportation Board of the Department of Transportation now "perform[s] the small number of regulatory tasks" previously conducted by the ICC. To connect to the Web site of the Department of Transportation, I guess (correctly) its domain: dot. gov. Had I guessed incorrectly, I would have connected to the U. S. Federal Government Agencies Directory to locate it. A link to the Surface Transportation Board appears on the home page. I follow it to find another link to the Board's publications.

Missing ships



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