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The Three Mile Island and Chernobyl nuclear incidents emphasized the need for the world-wide nuclear community to cooperate further and exchange the results of research in this field in the most open and effective manner. Recognizing the roles of heat and mass transfer in all aspects of fission-product behavior in sever reactor accidents, the Executive Committee of the International Centre for Heat and Mass Transfer organized a Seminar on Fission Product Transport Processes in Reactor Accidents. This book contains the eleven of the lectures and all the papers presented at the seminar along with four invited papers that were not presented and a summary of the closing session.
A Robert Flynn Novel Robert Flynn abandoned a sterling military career when his best friend and fellow soldier, Wesley Pike, died under his command. More than a decade later, Flynn's quiet life is disturbed by the troubles of a fledgling CIA and Alexander Grant, a flashy agent with a lot to prove. As the space race between the United States and the Soviets heats up and the body count rises, the two men fight to find common ground. Grant knows Flynn believes in the cause, but all Flynn sees is the opportunity to fail someone like he failed Wes. An attack by a Soviet agent spurs Flynn to action and a reluctant association with the agency, and tilts Flynn's world on its axis with a shocking discovery: Wesley Pike may be alive and operating as a Soviet assassin. With Grant to bankroll the operation, his superiors looking the other way, and Flynn's hard-earned peace officially forfeit, Flynn reunites his old team with the singular goal of finding Wes. But they get more than they bargained for—Wes is amnesiac and dangerous, brainwashed into becoming the perfect weapon. Flynn struggles to reach his friend, lead his team, and navigate his charged relationship with Grant—something neither of them expected and aren't sure how to parse—while coming to grips with his long-buried feelings for Wes.
This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages, poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We believe this work is culturally important, and despite the imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book. ++++ The below data was compiled from various identification fields in the bibliographic record of this title. This data is provided as an additional tool in helping to ensure edition identification: ++++ Foliage Diseases Of The Apple: Report On Spraying Experiments In 1910 And 1911; Issue 195 Of Bulletin (Virginia Agricultural Experiment Station) Howard Sprague Reed, J. T. Rogers, Jacquelin Smith Cooley Virginia Polytechnic Institute. Agricultural Experiment Station, 1912 Technology & Engineering; Agriculture; Agronomy; Crop Science; Apples; Technology & Engineering / Agriculture / Agronomy / Crop Science; Technology & Engineering / Agriculture / General
As a middle-aged American academic who desperately needs to publish
a book in order to gain tenure, Jack Exley leaps at the chance to
go to Rwanda to write about his old college classmate Dr. Joseph
Gasana, who has in the intervening years has specialized in
treating children stricken by AIDS. But when Jack, along with his
African-American second wife, Linda, and his disaffected teenage
son, Geoffrey, arrive in Kigali in the fall of 1994, they are not
only unable to find Joseph, they are unable to find anyone who will
even admit to having known the Tutsi doctor. Befriended by both a
cynical American diplomat and a perhaps too-helpful Hutu political
powerbroker, Jack and his family slowly, then urgently, become
enmeshed in the tension and terror, the professional risks and
personal betrayals, that they ultimately realize mark the start of
a genocidal war--a horror that they can sense but cannot comprehend
or control.
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