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Coral and Concrete, Greg Dvorak's cross-cultural history of
Kwajalein Atoll, Marshall Islands, explores intersections of
environment, identity, empire, and memory in the largest inhabited
coral atoll on earth. Approaching the multiple "atollscapes" of
Kwajalein's past and present as Marshallese ancestral land,
Japanese colonial outpost, Pacific War battlefield, American
weapons-testing base, and an enduring home for many, Dvorak delves
into personal narratives and collective mythologies from
contradictory vantage points. He navigates the tensions between
"little stories" of ordinary human actors and "big stories" of
global politics-drawing upon the "little" metaphor of the coral
organisms that colonize and build atolls, and the "big" metaphor of
the all-encompassing concrete that buries and co-opts the past.
Building upon the growing body of literature about militarism and
decolonization in Oceania, this book advocates a layered, nuanced
approach that emphasizes the multiplicity and contradictions of
Pacific Islands histories as an antidote to American hegemony and
globalization within and beyond the region. It also brings
Japanese, Korean, Okinawan, and American perspectives into
conversation with Micronesians' recollections of colonialism and
war. This transnational history-built upon a combination of
reflective personal narrative, ethnography, cultural studies, and
postcolonial studies-thus resituates Kwajalein Atoll as a pivotal
site where Islanders have not only thrived for thousands of years,
but also mediated between East and West, shaping crucial world
events. Based on multi-sited ethnographic and archival research, as
well as Dvorak's own experiences growing up between Kwajalein, the
United States, and Japan, Coral and Concrete integrates narrative
and imagery with semiotic analysis of photographs, maps, films, and
music, traversing colonial tropical fantasies, tales of victory and
defeat, missile testing, fisheries, war-bereavement rituals, and
landowner resistance movements, from the twentieth century through
the present day. Representing history as a perennial struggle
between coral and concrete, the book offers an Oceanian paradigm
for decolonization, resistance, solidarity, and optimism that
should appeal to all readers far beyond the Marshall Islands.
In the modern age of urbanisation, the mass population is becoming
progressively reliant on technical infrastructures. These
industrial buildings provide integral services to the general
public including the delivery of energy, information and
communication technologies, and maintenance of transport networks.
The safety and security of these structures is crucial as new
threats are continually emerging. Safety and Security Issues in
Technical Infrastructures is a pivotal reference source that
provides vital research on the modernisation of occupational
security and safety practices within information technology-driven
buildings. While highlighting topics such as explosion process
safety, nanotechnology, and infrastructural risk analysis, this
publication explores current risks and uncertainties and the
raising of comprehensive awareness for experts in this field. This
book is ideally designed for security managers, safety personnel,
civil engineers, architects, researchers, construction
professionals, strategists, educators, material scientists,
property owners, and students.
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Baptism (Hardcover)
Gordon L. Heath, James D. Dvorak
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R1,129
Discovery Miles 11 290
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The papers in this volume cover a large range of questions
concerning the dynamics of objects of the solar system, from
theoretical Hamiltonian mechanics to the study of the dynamical
behaviour of specific objects, with a strong emphasis on the
detection, causes and effects of chaotic behaviour. Several papers
describe contributions in two topics which are considered as a
major breakthrough in numerical dynamics: symplectic methods of
numerical integration of Hamiltonian systems, and methods for
spectral analysis of numerically computed orbits leading to refined
tools for the detection and evaluation of chaos. The dynamics of
the asteroid belt and other small objects, a fast-moving topic with
important implications for the origin and evolution of the Solar
System, is also extensively covered.
This book on recent investigations of the dynamics of celestial
bodies in the solar and extra-Solar System is based on the
elaborated lecture notes of a thematic school on the topic, held as
a result of cooperation between the SYRTE Department of Paris
Observatory and the section of astronomy of the Vienna University.
Each chapter corresponds to a lecture of several hours given by its
author(s). The book therefore represents a necessary and very
precious document for teachers, students, and researchers in the
?eld. The ?rst two chapters by A. Lema ?tre and H. Skokos deal with
standard topics of celestial mechanics: the ?rst one explains the
basic principles of resonances in mechanics and their studies in
the case of the Solar System. The differences between the various
cases of resonance (mean motion, secular, etc. ) are emphasized
together with resonant effects on celestial bodies moving around
the Sun. The second one deals with approximative methods of
describing chaos. These methods, some of them being classical, as
the Lyapounov exponents, other ones being developed in the very
recent past, are explained in full detail. The second one explains
the basic principles of resonances in mechanics and their studies
in the case of the Solar System. The differences between the
various cases of resonance (mean motion, s- ular, etc. ) are
emphasized together with resonant effects on celestial bodies
moving around the Sun. The following three chapters by A. Cellino,
by P. Robutel and J.
It is now a well-established tradition that every four years, at
the end of winter, a group of 'celestial mechanicians' from all
over the world gather in the Austrian Alps at the invitation of R.
Dvorak. This time the colloquium was held at Badhofgastein from
March 19 to March 25, 2000 and was devoted to the 'New Developments
in the Dynamics of Planetary Systems'. The papers covered a large
range of questions of current interest: t- oretical questions
(resonances, KAM theory, transport, ... ) and questions about
numerical tools (synthetic elements, indicators of chaos, ... )
were particularly well represented; of course planetary theories
and Near Earth Objects were also quite popular. Three special
lectures were delivered in honor of deceased colleagues whom, to
our dismay, we will no longer meet at the 'Austrian Colloquia'. W.
Jefferys delivered the Heinrich Eichhorn lecture on 'Statistics for
the Twenty-first Century Astrometry', a topic on which Heinrich
Eichhorn was a specialist. A. Roy delivered a lecture honoring
Victor Szehebely on 'Lifting the Darkness: Science in the Third
Millenium', in which in wove anecdotes and remembrances of Victor
which moved the audience very much. A. Lemaitre spoke in honor of
Michele Moons on 'Mech anism of Capture in External Resonance'. The
end of her talk was devoted to a short and moving biography of
Michele illustrated by many slides."
This volume contains the papers presented at the Third Alexander
von Humboldt Colloquium on Celestial Mechanics. The papers cover a
large range of questions, from the behaviour of dust particles to
the stability of the solar system as a whole. The motions of
asteroids and their classification into families are also
discussed. Specific topics addressed are KAM theory, chaotic
motions, resonances, Lyapunov characteristic exponents,
perturbation theory and numerical integration.
The term wearables encompasses a wide spectrum of devices, services
and systems for wireless communications and the web. Moving
Wearable Technology into the Mainstream discusses the
characteristics and design elements required for wearable devices
and systems to be widely adopted by the mainstream population for
use in their everyday lives. This book introduces concepts such as
Operational Inertia that form a mindset conducive to designing
wearables suitable for adoption by the mainstream. Wearables are by
their nature closely associated with the person, and their use
generates many social and even legal issues that have little to do
with specific technologies. This book discusses these implications,
which can pose the greatest impediment to the successful adoption
of the technology. This volume is structured to meet the needs of
researchers and practitioners in industry. It can also be used as a
secondary text in advanced-level courses in computer science and
electrical engineering.
Basophils and mast cells are similar but unique secretory cells
with a well-documented role in immediate-hypersensitivity
reactions. The presence of these cells in various cell mediated
hypersensitivity reactions, in tissues of multiple diseases, and as
a component of the host reaction to injury and repair in numerous
circumstances is well known. Release of stored and newly generated
mediators of inflammation from basophils and mast cells contributes
to the cascade of pathogenetic events in circumstances under which
these release reactions occur. Despite insights acquired through
studies of these pathologic events, the role of basophils and mast
cells and their secretory products in health is not known. In this
book, I review much of the structural information regarding
basophils and mast cells of multiple species. Ultrastructural
studies of rat mast cells historically precede and quantitatively
exceed similar studies of basophils and mast cells of other
species. Therefore, I first review these background studies as an
entity. Then I discuss the contents of two prominent
organelles-granules and lipid bodies-in basophils and mast cells of
several species. The ultrastructural morphology of basophils and
mast cells in three species is presented in detail to establish
appropriate guidelines for their recognition and to provide general
rules for analysis which are appropriate for the identification of
these cells in other species as well."
This is the quintessential first-person combat memoir of a special
forces soldier at war. Edward Dvorak joined the 173rd Airborne
Brigade in Vietnam in the summer of 1967. He then joined Company F,
51st Infantry, Long Range Patrol, Airborne. For Dvorak and his
buddies of Company F, LRP, their real training started with the
MACV (Military Assistant Command Vietnam) Recondo School at the 5th
Special Forces Compound in Nha Trang, South Vietnam. That training
culminated with an actual Combat LRP mission. If you lived through
the patrol, you graduated. Dvorak would remain with Company F for
19 months going on dozens of combat patrols deep behind enemy
lines.
Learn how to be a rigorous social researcher with this incisive and
engaging book for students studying A level Sociology or starting
sociology at university. Examine each major sociological method
where research into crime, family life and education is explored in
depth, and illustrated using classic and contemporary sociological
studies. Easy to weave into current courses to make the study of
Sociology more relevant, cutting edge and inclusive Explore the
array of research methods sociologists use to understand how
society shapes personal troubles, truths and triumphs. Discover how
sociological research studies (classic and contemporary) showcase
the application of these methods, and learn about the advantages
and disadvantages of the different methods. Packed with case
studies and opportunities to reflect and challenge readers, How to
be a Social Researcher will appeal to anyone with an interest in
sociology as well as supporting those studying it at school,
college, or university. The perfect companion to How to be a
Sociologist and other Sociology A level texts, this book supports
and celebrates the enduring value and importance of social research
methods. Contents Chapter 1: What is social research? Chapter 2:
How to be a social researcher Chapter 3: Doing your own social
research Chapter 4: Official statistics Chapter 5: Social surveys
Chapter 6: Interviews Chapter 7: Observations Chapter 8:
Documentary methods Chapter 9: Experiments Chapter 10: Mixed
methods: society as a kaleidoscope Chapter 11: Shaking up methods:
new sociological mixologies Chapter 12: A final turn of the
kaleidoscope: the enduring importance of social research
Bad Hofgastein who made the very successful Salzburger Abend with
indi- nous music from Salzburg possible. Special thanks also to the
former director of the Institute of Astronomy in Vienna, Prof. Paul
Jackson for his generous private donation. We should not forget our
hosts Mr. and Mrs. Winkler and their employees from the hotel who
made the stay quite enjoyable. None of us will forget the very last
evening, when the staff of kitchen under the le- ership of the cook
himself came to offer us as farewell the famous Salzburger
Nockerln, a traditional Austrian dessert. Everyone got a lot of
scienti?c input during the lectures and the discussions and, to
summarize, we all had a spl- did week in Salzburg in the Hotel
Winkler. We all hope to come again in 2008 to discuss new results
and new perspectives on a high level scienti?c standard in the
Gasteinertal. Rudolf Dvorak and Sylvio Ferraz-Mello Celestial
Mechanics and Dynamical Astronomy (2005) 92:1-18 (c) Springer 2005
DOI 10. 1007/s10569-005-3314-7 FROM ASTROMETRY TO CELESTIAL
MECHANICS: ORBIT DETERMINATION WITH VERY SHORT ARCS (Heinrich K.
Eichhorn Memorial Lecture) 1 2 ? ' ANDREA MILANI and ZORAN KNEZEVIC
1 Department of Mathematics, University of Pisa, via Buonarroti 2,
56127 Pisa, Italy, e-mail: milani@dm. unipi. it 2 Astronomical
Observatory, Volgina 7, 11160 Belgrade 74, Serbia and Montenegro,
e-mail: zoran@aob. bg. ac.
This book contains papers contributed to the IUTAM Symposium on
Transformation Problems in Composite and Active Materials which was
held in Cairo, Egypt in March 1997. The chapters address uncoupled
and coupled transformation problems in composite and smart
materials and their structures. The book is organized into six
sections covering the following subjects: inelastic behaviour of
composite materials, shape memory effects, functionally graded
materials, transformation problems in composite structures,
adaptive structures, and elasticity issues. Although the field of
composite materials has seen substantial development in the past
two decades, new composite systems are continually being developed
for various applications. Among such systems are metal,
intermetallic, and superalloy matrix composites, carbon-carbon
composites, and polymer matrix composites. The field of smart
materials, on the other hand, is relatively new, but has also seen
important developments recently. These two seemingly different
fields have often been addressed in separate books, journals, and
technical meetings. The present book realizes and addresses the
similarities of the uncoupled and coupled transformation fields
involved in both composite and smart materials. Outstanding
researchers from the different groups active in mechanics of
composite and smart materials have contributed papers which explore
the common aspects of these materials and new directions in
micromechanics research in both areas. Researchers active in the
areas of mechanics of composite and smart materials will find this
book very useful in addressing recent developments in these areas.
The sixteen articles compiled here are devoted to individual prose
works published after 1970 that reflect the "Austrian tradition"
within the field of German literature. The works treated include
those of the popular and widely recognisable names of
world-renowned writers such as Peter Handke, Thomas Bernhard,
Ingeborg Bachmann, and Nobel Prize winner Elias Canetti as well as
of less well-known figures. Collectively these authors display a
distinctly Austrian point of view: they are the literary voice of
modern-day Austria, a country whose cultural and artistic
achievements are often too casually subsumed under the more general
"German" rubric. The authors and their works clearly demonstrate
that Austria has made and continues to make a unique contribution
to modern German-language literature and to world literature that
is greatly disproportionate to its modest size and population. The
essays in this volume have been written by experts in the field of
Austrian cultural and literary studies. With but one exception, the
works they present are readily available in English translation.
The essays reveal a variety of interpretative perspectives but all
share the common goal of explicating a single literary text for a
diverse readership interested in the modern literary scene.
Proceedings of the Alexander von Humboldt Colloquium on Celestial
Mechanics held in Ramsau, Austria, March 13-19, 1988
Perfect for fans of One Day You'll Thank Me and Capital Gaines, the
star of Southern Charm and cofounder and CMO of Sewing Down South
reveals how he turned his passion for sewing into a profitable
enterprise and a fulfilling life, while also taking us
behind-the-scenes of one of Bravo's most popular shows. As a young
boy sitting at a sewing machine in home economics class, Craig
Conover had no idea that this hobby would one day change his life
for the better. Growing up in Delaware, Conover experienced cruel
bullying and suffered from severe anxiety and obsessive-compulsive
disorder. But while law school in Charleston seemed to provide the
direction he needed, Conover spent years searching for meaning and
passion in life. The chance to become a cast member on Bravo's
Southern Charm promised to provide that. Though the show gave
Conover a shot at fame and fortune, it also offered destructive
temptations that fed his insecurities. As the show increased in
popularity, he sank deeper into self-doubt. Unable to take control
of his life, Conover quickly lost his job, his girlfriend, and his
motivation. Then, at his lowest point, Conover turned to his
passion-sewing-and slowly pulled himself out of the spiral. A
chance phone call from an old friend gave Conover the support he
needed to turn his hobby into a business. Soon after, Sewing Down
South was born and became an overnight success, with Conover
launching a multi-state "Pillow Party Tour," being featured on HSN,
and opening a retail store in downtown Charleston. Now, Conover
reveals the full story of the drama that swirled around him on the
show-both on screen and off-and how it led to the founding of
Sewing Down South. He also talks about how he was able to turn his
passion into his work and reclaim the direction of his life and
what lessons we can learn from his experience.
This book is intended as an introduction to the field of
planetary systems at the postgraduate level. It consists of four
extensive lectures on Hamiltonian dynamics, celestial mechanics,
the structure of extrasolar planetary systems and the formation of
planets. As such, this volume is particularly suitable for those
who need to understand the substantial connections between these
different topics.
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