1940 Census. Every 10 years, the Census Bureau takes a snapshot of life in our nation. We count our population while documenting living and working conditions. It's the largest and most–sophisticated national count in the world, and was mandated by our founders and enshrined in our Constitution. While aggregate results are released immediately, the details we work so diligently to document — such as names and addresses — are kept strictly confidential for 72 years, when they are finally made public. The National Archives will release the details of the 1940 Census on April 2, 2012. Taking the census is a daunting task that requires an enormous devotion of resources and years of planning — that much hasn't changed over the past 200 years.
However, the process of completing the form was much simpler in 2010 — the form had only 10 questions and took less than 10 minutes to fill out. Promotional efforts for both the 1940 and 2010 Censuses reflected the times. NUKEMAP by Alex Wellerstein. Starting up... You might also try:MISSILEMAP 1. Drag the marker to wherever you'd like to target.
Or type in the name of a city: 2. 3. Advanced options: 4. Note that you can drag the target marker after you have detonated the nuke. Created by Alex Wellerstein, 2012-2026. Other options: [?] The new book by Alex Wellerstein: The Most Awful Responsibility Interested in nuclear history? DOOMSDAY MACHINESPost-Apocalyptic Road Trips, End of the World-Building, and Interesting Times NUKEMAP's fees and development are sponsored by: Ploughshares Fund Stevens Institute of Technology,School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences Export to Google Earth (KMZ) (beta) No detonations to export!
Render objects Advanced display options [+] Debug log: Click anywhere to load visualization Loading... How long does it take to beat your favorite games? The Global Broadband Quality Test. Speedtest.net - The Global Broadband Speed Test.