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The harrowing, and inspiring, story of the capture of one of
Britain's top SOE agents in World War Two, his refusal to crack
under the most horrific torture, and his final imprisonment in a
concentration camp. 'The White Rabbit' was the code name of Wing
Commander F.F.E. Yeo-Thomas when he parachuted into France in 1942
as a member of the Special Operations Executive with the
Resistance. For the next eighteen months he was responsible for
organising all the separate factions of the French Resistance into
one combined 'secret army'. On three separate missions into
occupied France he met with the heads of Resistance movements all
over the country, and he spoke personally with Winston Churchill in
order to ensure they were properly supplied. His capture by the
Gestapo in March 1944 was therefore a terrible blow for the
Resistance movement. For months he was submitted to the most
horrific torture in an attempt to get him to spill his unparalleled
knowledge of the Resistance, but he refused to crack. Finally he
was sentenced to death, and sent to Buchenwald, one of the most
infamous German concentration camps. The story of his endurance,
and survival, is an inspiring study in the triumph of the human
spirit over the most terrible adversity.
This volume is a synthesis of current knowledge about the growth,
development and functioning of plant canopies. The term canopy is
taken to include not only the upper surface of woodland, as in the
original definition, but also analogous surfaces of other plant
communities. Although much research has been carried out on single
leaves, canopies are much more than just a collection of individual
leaves, and so exhibit properties of their own. It can be argued
that it is primarily at the canopy rather than the leaf level that
solutions to many practical problems about the growth of plants in
the field can be found. In this volume, canopy properties are
considered in terms of the processes, such as transpiration and
photosynthesis, by which the canopy and its environment interact.
Topics discussed include the meaning of canopy structure,
interception of solar radiation, exchange processes, nitrogen
nutrition, leaf demography and heliotropism. Key principles are
illustrated by examples from a wide range of plant community types
and geographical locations. This book will be of interest to
advanced students and research workers in agriculture, botany, crop
sciences, ecology and forestry.
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