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Decorate your junk journal and relieve stress at the same time with
these 300 vintage-inspired botanical cutouts (plus stickers).
Relieve stress and express your creative side with junk journaling!
Decorate your junk journal with 300+ vintage-inspired botanical cut
outs and such as butterflies, herbs, flowers, plants, and more.
Create your own journal for traveling, writing, or just inspiration
with all the themes, colors, and aesthetics you love! This
collection has everything you need to create the junk journal of
your dreams.
The Wall Street Journal presents its beloved number puzzles in book
form for both at-home relaxation and brain training. Sharpen your
brain and your pencils and relax your mind with the second book of
number puzzles from The Wall Street Journal. A weekly staple of the
paper is now in book form for puzzle fanatics to try and solve the
most elegant, adventurous, and addictive number puzzles on the
market, featuring killer sudoku, cell blocks, and suko.
Designed to make complicated woodworking techniques easier, faster,
and safer, this collection is filled with 25 projects selected from
the pages of "Woodworker's Journal," and includes tips to help
woodworkers make the most of both their machinery and their time.
Focusing on techniques applicable for table saws and routers, this
book is filled with innovative projects, each including detailed
plans, full-color photography, and the expert instruction needed to
build with confidence. Projects include precision cross-cut jig for
the table saw, circle cutting jig for the router, and adjustable
box joint jig for the table saw, among others. In this essential
reference guide are helpful shop tips and other practical
woodworking information.
Starting in 1996, a sequence of articles appeared in the Journal of
Nonlinear Science dedicated to the memory of one of its original
editors, Juan-Carlos Simo, Applied Me chanics, Stanford University.
Sadly, Juan-Carlos passed away at an early age in 1994. We lost a
brilliant colleague and a wonderful person. These articles are
collected in the present volume. Many of them are updated and
corrected especially for this occasion. These essays are in areas
of scientific interest of Juan-Carlos, including mechanics
(particles, rigid bodies, fluids, elasticity, plastic ity, etc.),
geometry, applied dynamics, and, of course, computation. His
interests were extremely broad-he did not see boundaries between
computation, mathematics, me chanics, and dynamics, and, in that
sense, he ideally reflected the spirit of the journal and many of
the most exciting areas of current scientific interest. Juan-Carlos
was one of those select and gifted people who could cross
interdisci plinary boundaries with extremely high quality and
productive interactions of lasting value. His contributions,
ranging from concrete engineering problems to fundamental
mathematical theorems in geometric mechanics, are remarkable. In
current conferences as well as in scientific books and articles,
and over a wide range of subjects, one frequently hears how his
ideas as well as specific results are often used and quoted-this is
one indication of just how profound and fundamental his work has
impacted the community.
The Wall Street Journal presents its beloved number puzzles in book
form for both at-home relaxation and brain training. Sharpen your
brain and your pencils and relax your mind with the first book of
number puzzles from The Wall Street Journal. A weekly staple of the
paper is now in book form for puzzle fanatics to try and solve the
most elegant, adventurous, and addictive number puzzles on the
market, featuring killer sudoku, cell blocks, and suko.
This compendium is made up of a selection of the best and most
representative papers from a group of Elsevier's structural
engineering journals. Selections were made by the journal's
editorial teams.
The papers appeared in the following journals during 2000:
Journal of Constructional Steel Research P.J. Dowling, J.E.
Harding, R. Bjorhovde
Thin Walled Structures J. Loughlan, K.P. Chong
Engineering Structures P.L. Gould
Computers and Structures K.J. Bathe, B.H.V. Topping
Construction and Building Materials M.C. Forde
Journal of Wind Engineering & Industrial Areodynamics N.P.
Jones
Marine Structures P.A. Frieze, A. Mansour, T. Yao
Each paper appears in the same format as it was published in the
journal; citations should be made using the original journal
publication details.
It is intended that this compendium will be the first in a series
of such collections. A compendium has also been published in the
area of geotechnical engineering.
The Metropolitan Museum Journal is issued annually and publishes
original research on works of art in the Museum's collection.
Highlights of volume 53 include an exquisite pair of 17th-century
Chinese birthday-gift portraits of an elderly couple, a hidden
painting of a Rococo-inspired nude underneath Manet's 1862 Portrait
de Mlle. V. ... en Espada, and a new identification of the central
figures in Daumier's The Third-Class Carriage.
The Columbia Journalism Review's Second Read series features
distinguished journalists revisiting key works of reportage.
Launched in 2004 by John Palattella, who was then editor of the
magazine's book section, the series also allows authors address
such ongoing concerns as the conflict between narrative flair and
accurate reporting, the legacy of New Journalism, the need for
reporters to question their political assumptions, the limitations
of participatory journalism, and the temptation to substitute
"truthiness" for hard, challenging fact. Representing a wide range
of views, Second Read embodies the diversity and dynamism of
contemporary nonfiction while offering fresh perspectives on works
by Norman Mailer, Tom Wolfe, Rachel Carson, and Gabriel Garcia
Marquez, among others. It also highlights pivotal moments and
movements in journalism as well as the innovations of award-winning
writers. Essays include Rick Perlstein on Paul Cowan's The Tribes
of America; Nicholson Baker on Daniel Defoe's A Journal of the
Plague Year; Dale Maharidge on James Agee's Let Us Now Praise
Famous Men; Marla Cone on Rachel Carson's Silent Spring; Ben Yagoda
on Walter Bernstein's Keep Your Head Down; Ted Conover on Stanley
Booth's The True Adventures of the Rolling Stones; Jack Shafer on
Tom Wolfe's The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test; Connie Schultz on
Michael Herr's Dispatches; Michael Shapiro on Cornelius Ryan's The
Longest Day; Douglas McCollam on John McPhee's Annals of the Former
World; Tom Piazza on Norman Mailer's Armies of the Night; Thomas
Mallon on William Manchester's The Death of a President; Miles
Corwin on Gabriel Garcia Marquez's The Story of a Shipwrecked
Sailor; David Ulin on Joan Didion's Slouching Toward Bethlehem; and
Claire Dederer on Betty MacDonald's Anybody Can Do Anything.
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