182,341 research outputs found
[Letter from J. W. Mann to Robert M. Johnson, October, 1837]
Letter from J. W. Mann to Robert M. Johnson introducing an attorney by the name of John Patterson Osterhout. Mr. Mann regards John Osterhout highly and informed Mr. Johnson that he was going to Arkansas to practice law
CLDF dataset derived from Mann's "Phonological Reconstruction of Proto Northern Burmic" from 1998
Cite the source of the dataset as:
Mann, Noel W. 1998. A phonological reconstruction of Proto Northern Burmic. (PhD Thesis)
Mann, W R, NX58549
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/401303Surname: MANN. Given Name(s) or Initials: W R. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: NX58549. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 18086.220949
Item: [2016.0049.33596] "Mann, W R, NX58549
Mann, W A, QX16755
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/401308Surname: MANN. Given Name(s) or Initials: W A. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: QX16755. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 43998.220954
Item: [2016.0049.33601] "Mann, W A, QX16755
Mann, R W, 411357
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/401290Surname: MANN. Given Name(s) or Initials: R W. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: 411357. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 49067.220936
Item: [2016.0049.33583] "Mann, R W, 411357
Mann, W J, 437274
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/401293Surname: MANN. Given Name(s) or Initials: W J. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: 437274. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 57104.220939
Item: [2016.0049.33586] "Mann, W J, 437274
Anatomia dekadencji (Tomasz Mann, Śmierć w Wenecji)
Tekst jest próbą odczytania przedstawionego przez T. Manna w Śmierci w Wenecji obrazu dekadencji w kategoriach Nietzscheańskiej interpretacji fenomenu dekadencji okresu modernizmu, którą Mann znał i w swej noweli znakomicie zrekonstruował
Musikstädte as real and imaginary soundscapes: urban musical images as literary motifs in twentieth-century German modernism
PhDThis study examines German literary images of musical life as part of the wider sound identity of the modern German city at the turn of the twentieth century. Focussing on a forty-year period from 1890 to 1930, synonymous with the emergence of the modern German metropolis as an aesthetic object, the project assesses, compares and contrasts how musical life in the Musikstädte was perceived and portrayed by writers in an increasingly noisy urban environment. How does urban musical life influence and condition city writings? What are the differences and similarities between the writings on various musical cities? Can an urban textual sound identity be derived from these differences and similarities? The approach employed to answer these questions is a new, cross-disciplinary one to urban sound in literature, moving beyond reading the key sounds of the urban soundscape using urban musicology, sensorial anthropology and cultural poetics towards a literary contextualisation of the urban aural experience.
The literary motifs of the symphony, the gramophone and urban noise are put under the spotlight through the analysis of a wide range of modernist works by authors who have a special relationship with music. At the centre of this analysis are the Kaffeehausliteratur authors Hermann Bahr, Alfred Polgar and Peter Altenberg, the then Munich-based author Thomas Mann and the lesser known René Schickele. The analysis of these particular works is framed in the music-geographical context of the Musikstadt and literary underpinnings of this topos, ranging from Ingeborg Bachmann to Hans Mayer and, once again, Thomas Mann. In analysing these texts, the methodological approach devised by Strohm, who identifies the blending of a range of urban sounds as a definition of urban space and identity, is applied. His ideas combine historical literary
analysis, musical history and urban sociology. They are rarely used in the analysis of the auditory environment.Arts and Humanities Research Council
Westfield TrustWestfield Trust Studentship
Arts and Humanities Reseach Council (AHRC
Junior Recital, Christianna Casey, soprano and Kevin Mann, baritone
Junior RecitalChristianna Casey, soprano / Kevin Mann, baritoneCharles Lindsey, pianoTuesday, April 30, 2019 at 8pmRecital Hall / James W. Black Music Center1015 Grove Avenue / Richmond, Va.The presentation of this junior recital will fulfill in part the requirements for the Bachelor of Music degree in Performance for Christianna Casey and the Bachelor of Arts degree in Music for Kevin Mann. Christianna Casey studies voice with Michelle Harman Gulick. Kevin Mann studies voice with Dr, Kenneth Wood. Both students receive vocal coaching from Melanie Kohn Day
Grady Mann
Grady Mann oral history interview as conducted by Dorothe Norton.
Grady Mann worked for the Minnesota Conservation Department. He then worked in the Lower Sauris NWR. In Waubay SD, he did a waterfowl production study. He was Assistant Regional Wetlands Supervisor when the Regional office was in Fergus Falls, Minnesota.
Organization: FWS
Name: Grady Mann
Years: 1948-1972
Program: Refuges
Keywords: History, Biography, Wetlands, Ponds, Wetland restoration, Water management, Fergus Falls Wetland Management District, J. Clark Salyer National Wildlife Refuge, Waubay Wetland Management DistrictORAL HISTORY
Of
Wetland Manager (Retired)
Fergus Falls, Minnesota
Interviewed by
Dorothe Norton
On April 19, 2005
Oral History Project
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
National Conservation Training Center
Shepherdstown, West Virginia Oral History – Grady Mann
FWS Position: Wetland Manager, Fergus Falls, MN
Interviewed by: Dorothe Norton
Interview Date: April 19, 2005
DN: Well Grady, you have a very nice place here, and I am happy that I was able to get up here and you would have time to do this interview this morning.
GM: Plenty of time, plenty of time to do the interview.
DN: When you are retired you have a lot of time. OK. So we are going to start out. I want to know where and when you were born.
GM: Let’s see. I was born September 8, 1919, in Clarksburg, West Virginia.
DN: West Virginia?
GM: Yep.
DN: Wow, was that anywhere near where our training center is?
GM: It is down there--
DN: Pretty far south?
GM: --, as they call it, West “By God” Virginia.
DN: OK. So what were your parents’ names?
GM: Ah. Parents’ names. My dad’s was John L. and my mother’s name was Jessie. Jessie Pearl… And she was a McDonald.
DN: OK.
GM: So we really-- go back quite a ways. Quite a few McDonalds on both sides of the family.
DN: Well good, OK. And did your parents have education? And what were their jobs?
GM: Oh, my dad—of course, we were in the middle of the depression—he had been in the banking business all the while, and during the depression days, the bank closed. OK, he was out of a job. So he was appointed by the banking commission in West Virginia to— a bank to bring in all their-receiverships,. All his job was to get all the debts back up so they could pay off all the depositors, which he did over a seven-year period.
DN: Oh, very good.
GM: So, in the process, we lived in an almost semi-rural town, about 1500 people, near the Ohio River. Yeah, it was a very good experience. High school days.
Page 1
Oral History – Grady Mann
FWS Position: Wetland Manager, Fergus Falls, MN
Interviewed by: Dorothe Norton
Interview Date: April 19, 2005
.
GM: Good times.
DN: And your mom just raised the kids,?
GM: Yep.
DN: OK. So you spent all your early years, then, in the West Virginia part of –the country.
GM: I finished the high school days right there in Middlebourne, West Virginia.
DN: OK.
GM: Then, the major aim of the parents of course that three kids were going to go to college. So, I shipped out to West Virginia University.
DN: Which is in …?
GM: That’s Morgantown.
DN: Yes.
GM: And completed four years of training in agriculture, animal husbandry, and that sort of thing. And then went directly into the army for about 4-1/2 years.
DN: OK.
GM: So, that took care of the first part.
DN: Well, while you were a kid did you ever have any jobs before you graduated from high school, like a paper route, or work in a store, or anything like that?
GM: Oh yeah, we had a variety. We worked in greenhouses, and we worked did a little farm work, and on agronomy farms. We had variety.,
.
DN: OK.
GM: Plus my dad kept me busy. There were two boys in the family, and he had about three rental properties, and ---we were the maintenance crews.
Page 2
Oral History – Grady Mann
FWS Position: Wetland Manager, Fergus Falls, MN
Interviewed by: Dorothe Norton
Interview Date: April 19, 2005
.
GM: That took care of the summer months.
DN: Did you have any hobbies or anything?
GM: Oh, I did---at that time, I did a lot of fishing and
: --played lots of tennis, and , played baseball and basketball in high school.
DN: --That’s good.
GM: --Of course, the long-term major hobby has been canoeing.
DN: Alright.
GM: Particularly since I came to Minnesota, and we have been doing that actively with long-term friends. In fact, I’ve canoed with them 50 years. So we’ve kept that old beat-up canoe out there in the backyard pretty busy.
DN: You graduated from--what high school was it?
GM: The Tyler County High School.
DN: In what year did you graduate?
GM: 1937.
DN: OK. And then what college did you go to?
GM: West Virginia University.
DN: Oh, that’s right! Morgantown.
GM: I graduated there in 1941.
DM: OK. And your degree was in? Page 3
Oral History – Grady Mann
FWS Position: Wetland Manager, Fergus Falls, MN
Interviewed by: Dorothe Norton
Interview Date: April 19, 2005
GM: The degree was a B.S. in Agriculture.
DN: So then you went in the army, where did you have your basic training?
GM: bBasic training—Fort Knox, Kentucky. Maneuvers in Louisiana and then we went to Ireland and England and the North African campaign, then into Italy, and on to the Anzio beaches.
DN: And so did you ever get any medals or decoration?
GM: Oh no. I was no hero. We did our job, but we had, particularly at Anzio, we had lots of activity there, which made it kind of interesting and not boring. Kind of touchy at times.
DN: So what was your job in the army?
GM: I was kind of a company motor officer, so we had a group of mechanics, and I was no mechanic myself, but at the same time, I knew who in that crew were mechanics, and they knew what they were doing.
DN: Oh, that’s good.
GM: We had a good crew and our job was to keep the vehicles coming in at the end of the day. But we had come up to the mess truck pretty late at night sometimes, and our meals consisted of one cup of coffee and a big slice of spam! That was about it!
DN: You know, my husband likes Spam.
GM: Oh he does?
DN: Yeah, well, and you know, sometimes I just get a can and slice it up and fry it with some fried potatoes and beans. He just thought that was a good supper. [Laughter] The kids liked it too, so I guess it wasn’t too bad.
GM: Better than C-rationing anyway…
DN: So you just got a B.S., you didn’t go on for a masters or anything, and then when you got out of the service, did you go back to school at all? Page 4
Oral History – Grady Mann
FWS Position: Wetland Manager, Fergus Falls, MN
Interviewed by: Dorothe Norton
Interview Date: April 19, 2005
GM: This is the interesting part. I came to Minnesota, and I thought I’d look around a little bit and cut some of the rough edges off of my army life, and so I decided to go to graduate school at the University of Minnesota.
DN: OK.
GM: And I, met my wife at the University of Minnesota, from Duluth. And, since then we have been married 57 years.
DN: That’s wonderful.
GM: So I made a good choice, .Yes, a very good choice.
DN: Did you get a master’s degree then?
GM: I completed a master’s degree in Wildlife Management.
DN: OK.
GM: And I’ve often commented, it looks like I shifted from Agriculture to Wildlife Management.
.
GM: I used to kid my Wildlife Management coworkers. I’d say, “Well, that agricultural degree has been a real plus for me, because we were working with farmers, and you know what? I could tell the difference between a Holstein and a Hereford.
GM: Ah, if you can back up there is one other little wrinkle.—
DN: --Oh sure, that’s fine.
GM: I actually came to Minnesota because I was serving as a best man at a wedding. One of our fellow officers was marrying a Minneapolis girl.
GM: --so, in the process, I thought, well, maybe I better check in over here in Minnesota and see what they have going for graduate work.
DH: Sure.
Page 5
Oral History – Grady Mann
FWS Position: Wetland Manager, Fergus Falls, MN
Interviewed by: Dorothe Norton
Interview Date: April 19, 2005
GM: And the interesting thing, to me, was the University of Minnesota professor was brand new – well, he had just come from the field. So this was almost his first job teaching at the University level. And he said, “Well, why don’t you go down to the University of Wisconsin and talk to this fellow Aldo Leopold down there, be.. So I cranked up and went down to talk to this fellow Aldo Leopold. At that time, I wouldn’t have known from one of our mechanics working on flat tire. . I spent a full afternoon talking with Aldo Leopold, as we walked around the campus with his dog, and all the time he was kind of checking me out, academically, I’m sure, to see whether I could cut the mustard under his academic regime at Wisconsin. At the same time, I was weighing my chances at being able to reach that academic standard. So we were kind of jockeying a little bit there, but it was a pleasant experience. But the big thing---I wouldn’t have known Aldo Leopold from, well, most anybody down the street.
GM: So I came back to Minnesota then, and decided to do the work at the University of Minnesota, which was, the right thing to do.
DN: Well, good.
GM: It worked out that way. In fact, it seems that in everything I’ve done, there has been a factor of faith as far as I can see, that said, “Hey, its better this way.” And it’s worked out, worked out fine.
DN: Good.
GM: It’s a lot like Yogi Berra says, “When you come to a fork in the road, you take it.”. In this case, I took a fork in the road, but the fork in the road always seemed to have worked out just fine.
DN: That’s good, that’s good Grady. So you and Lois, then, you met her when she was a student too?
GM: Yep. We both finished in ’48, so it worked out just fine
.
DN: And how many children do you have?
GM: tTwo children, two girls.
Page 6
Oral History – Grady Mann
FWS Position: Wetland Manager, Fergus Falls, MN
Interviewed by: Dorothe Norton
Interview Date: April 19, 2005
DN: And what are they doing now?
GM: The oldest is an occupational therapist, in a hospital in Spokane, Washington.
DM: OK.
GM: The youngest is an administrator in a large engineering firm in Seattle
DN: OK, so we are going now to your career.
GM: OK.
DN: So, did you ever have any reason you really wanted to work for Fish and Wildlife Service?
GM: Well, I started working with the Minnesota Conservation Departmt.
DN: Now DNR
GM: And, had three summers of seasonal work. I had a temporary assignment in southwestern Minnesota with the department. I really wanted to keep in waterfowl work and I wanted to be able to work on an area where I could see what they did in management all four seasons of the
GM: So, as it worked out, I ended up on an assignment to the Lower Souris National Wildlife Refuge in U, North Dakota, now known as the J. Clark Salyer Refuge. Anyway, they changed the name, but at that time it was Lower Souris.
GM: I worked there two years.
DN: OK. And then did you hear about an opening in the Fish and Wildlife, or how did you happen to come to Fish and Wildlife?
GM: It was by choice.
DN: OK.
GM: I applied and accepted and started employment at the end of the two years at Lower Souris. I shifted down to the Waterfowl Production Study at W, South Dakota for two summers, 1951-52, probably.
Page 7
Oral History – Grady Mann
FWS Position: Wetland Manager, Fergus Falls, MN
Interviewed by: Dorothe Norton
Interview Date: April 19, 2005
DN: OK.
GM: It was good duty.
.
GM: And then I moved into the regional office, because, at that time, this study was under river basin studies.
DN: Alright. They don’t call it that anymore.
GM: No.
DN: So, did you think that the pay and benefits were OK when you started with Fish and Wildlife?
GM: I never thought of it.
DN: Never thought of it. Because you were just interested in the type of the position you were getting.
DN: OK, so you had promotion opportunities then, too, as you went along, but you weren’t even concerned about that?
GM: I wasn’t too concerned about that either.
DN: So you came into the regional office--
GM: --That’s what happened.
DN: --in ’53?
GM: There were about three years in the regional office while we were working on the national wetland inventory.
DN: OK.
GM: So W --this was the key –the National Wetland Inventory
.
Page 8
Oral History – Grady Mann
FWS Position: Wetland Manager, Fergus Falls, MN
Interviewed by: Dorothe Norton
Interview Date: April 19, 2005
GM: So W and I, as a two-man team, covered intensively all of Minnesota, all of Wisconsin, Michigan, and then I worked in Iowa. So, we covered four states on a broad basis.
DN: OK
GM: OK, that took care of that, then, from that, the prairie pothole region was delineated, based that inventory. So, then they set up the at Fergus Falls to explore the possibilities of saving marshlands in the prairie pothole region.
DN: OK.
GM: And that’s where I wanted to go, and did, and stayed until the youngest daughter was out of high school.
DN: When was that established there in Fergus Falls? What year, approximately?
GM: 1954
GM: It’s all right in this report.
DN: Right,
GM: It’s kind of a history of the Fergus Falls office--
DN: And you don’t have to dwell on that on this tape because it’s all right here. But you may say whatever you’d
GM: OK, all of the material here will be in that paper that Ethel Peterson sent you..
DN: Yes, OK.
GM: And Ethel Peterson is one of those prized, prized people
She could read my writing.
.
Page 9
Oral History – Grady Mann
FWS Position: Wetland Manager, Fergus Falls, MN
Interviewed by: Dorothe Norton
Interview Date: April 19, 2005
GM: So she typed it up and put it in order. OK. We set up the office here, and then equivalent offices were set up in in Benson, Minnesota, Devil’s Lake, Nort Dakota and Aberdeen, South Dakota—later there were several others.
GM: But, this is a current—reasonably current map from Fergus Falls to show you how the distribution of the initial effort started to spread.
DN: OK.
GM: Green spots were the key areas--
DN: Wow
DN: It was plenty to keep you busy?
GM: It was quite a crew there between the realtors and the engineers and the biologists,.
DN: So you spent the rest of your career then at Fergus Falls?
GM: Let me think.
GM: Not quite.
GM: They shipped me off to the regional office--
GM: They started reshuffling. OK. Shaking things down. A new broom, sweeps clean. So I, really, I didn’t have much alternative except to go in and work under Burt Rounds as an —something like that.
DN: When I think of Burt Rounds I think of a hat and the cowboy boots.
GM: Yep. The hat.
DN: OK. Page 10
Oral History – Grady Mann
FWS Position: Wetland Manager, Fergus Falls, MN
Interviewed by: Dorothe Norton
Interview Date: April 19, 2005
GM: So, anyway… I lasted. Yeah, that’s right. I lasted. Having been in the field all the time, working with the local people, I knew how they thought, knew what was going on in the land. I said, “Hey, I can’t cut this.” So, at that time, the early retirement option came along and I said I think I better go.
DN: Is that when you retired? When did you retire?
GM: 1972.
DN: 1972.
GM: So I was in the regional office only about, It might have been a month. [chuckle]. It might have been less than that.
DN: OK, so you started with us in 1948 or ’49 at W?
.
DN: Oh, ’51 at Waubay.
GM: I started with the Fish and Wildlife Service in Lower Souris in1948.
DN: And what grade did you start on there?
GM: Oh, as low as you can go.
DN: Seven? Five? Probably a five.
GM: I think it was lower than that.
DN: With your college education? Well, all the way back then maybe it was. Five?
GM: Well, give it some benefit of the doubt.
DN: OK, well that’s alright. And, uh, you retired as… What was your title?
GM: I retired from that position in Minneapolis office, so I would have been an assistant regional supervisor of wetlands or something like that.
DN: What grade? 12? 13?
GM: Let’s see… I think I retired as a 13.
Page 11
Oral History – Grady Mann
FWS Position: Wetland Manager, Fergus Falls, MN
Interviewed by: Dorothe Norton
Interview Date: April 19, 2005
DN: So, when you were working at the office up in Fergus Falls, let’s say, because you were there the longest. Did you socialize then too, some, with the people you worked with?
GM: I’m a freelancer. No.
DN: OK.
.
GM: Social affairs with people in the office, that wasn’t my cup of tea.
DN: OK, that’s fine.
DN: So, how did your career affect your family? Or did it?
GM: You better check with Lois.
GM: I think it really worked out alright. I mean she put up with with a lot, you know?
DN: Well, you still had to travel a lot when you were out working on these wetlands.
GM: On the wetlands we were out three weeks at a time.
.
LOIS: I learned to become independent.
LOIS: Essentially, I was raising our daughters and Grady would come home on weekends, or sometimes once a month, depending upon what he was doing. But, that was OK. I became active in the children’s’ youth activities and church, and then very active in League of Women Voters.
DN: OK.
LOIS: One of the things that Grady has been doing, is writing up his own story about all this for his daughters. They said, ”We’re glad you’re doing this because we didn’t know what you were doing when we were young.”
Page 12
Oral History – Grady Mann
FWS Position: Wetland Manager, Fergus Falls, MN
Interviewed by: Dorothe Norton
Interview Date: April 19, 2005
DN: That’s wonderful.
GM: I’ve been working on that for five years.
LOIS: He’s been doing this for the girls. Just describing all the different people
that he has met and worked with and some of the kinds of things that he did. But, I think we have to divide the Fergus Falls time into two periods. The period when he was running the office by himself, that was about the first seven years that we were there. Essentially, our house was the communication center or clearinghouse..
GM: In other words, that was the dining room table..
LOIS: And so I was really in the center of all those. --and they were there for dinner and if they were in the area and Grady wasn’t in, they would come by and visit with me.
It was an interesting time.
DN: I think that it is kind of a family-oriented type of an agency anyways.
LOIS: Once he had an office staffed all the telephone work was there--
DN: Yes.
LOIS: So it’s was a change there.
DN: So his career did not have a negative effect then on the family.
LOIS: No.
Page 13
Oral History – Grady Mann
FWS Position: Wetland Manager, Fergus Falls, MN
Interviewed by: Dorothe Norton
Interview Date: April 19, 2005
GM: You asked if we socialized.
DN: Yes.
GM: Lois had her life, kind of, with her friends-good friends—and I had all the social life I needed when I was doing all the contact work with county boards and the scouting programs and all that. But within the office, uh huh, that was hands off.--
DN: Well, that’s OK.
GM: Because, well, I guess, serving as an officer I know that you usually maintain a little more respect if you just kept a tight line there, I guess that I maintained that. So, as a social life, I was not with the office folks outside of office hours .
LOIS: But we would certainly, you know, get acquainted with the families, and if they needed any help or if they had any problems, we were to help. It wasn’t that we were completely separate from them.. .
DN: Did you have an interest in your husband’s work.
LOIS: Oh yes.
DN: Because some people, you know, you talk to different married people and,, they say well, “Did you know your husband did this?” “No, I don’t know what he is doing as long as he gets a paycheck that’s OK.” You know, [Laughter] and they just aren’t that interested in what their
--husbands are doing. They know they are working hard. But that’s kind of good—
LOIS: I helped him with researching materials.
GM: Oh yes, she saved a lot of stuff that I would have missed, but she reads a lot, so I took up these key quotations and this and that and the other, and we had a presentation that looked halfway sensible.
DN: Well, that’s good.
GM: One little incident, we all can recall. In Fergus Falls, at that time, our dining room table was kind of the headquarters , before we had the big staff. OK. So our youngest daughter, who will be here this weekend, oh, what was she, three?
LOIS: About three or four.
Page 14
Oral History – Grady Mann
FWS Position: Wetland Manager, Fergus Falls, MN
Interviewed by: Dorothe Norton
Interview Date: April 19, 2005
GM: OK, here’s Mac McBro , river basin studies in Washington and one of his Bureau of the Budget men, and they were thinking about the funding, that would work for the wetland program, and they had all this money coming in from --
--Oil in the Gulf Coast area. They were talking about all this money and how to spend it, and how to use it. So this 3-year-old pops up—this is around the dining room table with all this high brass, as somebody called them, she said, “Well, I know what I’d do with all the money
GM: --I’d put it in the bank.
GM: This is a three-year-old.
DN: Oh boy, that’s pretty good.
LOIS: It stopped the conversation.
GM: I’d put it in the bank! Well that’s a sideline, but, but there was— humor in most of these situations. I can skip the bad parts, but I pick up the humor on some oddball remark and make hay out of it.
DN: So, what projects were you involved in, just the wetlands acquisition?
GM: I worked with the local scouting program on the troop programs, and many canoe. I worked at the district level and was on the Red River Council.
L
GM: I received the Silver Beaver Award, for whatever it’s worth.
-
DN: OK, so the major issues in your job, though, were the wetlands.
- …
