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Experienced and novice hikers alike will benefit from the
information in this updated and expanded edition of the
best-selling The Hikers Guide to O'ahu. The author describes in
detail 52 trails that will take you to O'ahu's lush valleys,
cascading waterfalls, windswept ridges, and remote seacoasts.
Although 8 trails from the previous edition are no longer open to
the public, 10 new hikes have been added. Included for each hike
are directions for reaching the trailhead, a detailed route
description, and information on the length of the hike, degree of
difficulty, and trail conditions. For GPS users, UTM coordinates
have been added for the midpoint or endpoint of each route. An
expanded notes section will help readers identify geological
features, historical points of interest, and commonly encountered
plants and birds along the trail.
This is a provocative collection of timely reflections on the state
of social democracy and its inextricable links to crime and
justice. Authored by some of the world's leading thinkers from the
UK, US, Canada and Australia, the volume provides an understanding
of socially sustainable societies.
Bankruptcy law is a major part of the American legal landscape.
More than a million individuals and thousands of businesses sought
relief in the United States' ninety-three bankruptcy courts in
2014, more than twenty-seven thousand of them in the Eastern
District of Michigan. Important business of great consequence takes
place in the courts, yet they ordinarily draw little public
attention. In Adversity and Justice: A History of the United States
Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Michigan, Kevin Ball
takes a closer look at the history and evolution of this court.
Using a variety of sources from newspaper accounts and interviews
to personal documentation from key people throughout the court's
history, Ball explores not only the history of the court from its
beginning in the late nineteenth century but also two major
courthouse scandals and their significant and long-lasting effects
on the court. The first, in 1919, resulted in the removal of a
court referee for a series of small infractions. The second was far
more serious and resulted in the resignation of a judge and
criminal convictions of the court's chief clerk, one of his
deputies, and one of Detroit's most prominent lawyers. The book
culminates with a comprehensive account of the city of Detroit's
own bankruptcy case that was filed in 2013. Drawing on the author's
expertise as both a longtime bankruptcy attorney and a political
scientist, the book examines this landmark case in its legal,
social, historical, and political contexts. Anyone with an interest
in bankruptcy, legal history, or the city of Detroit's bankruptcy
case will be attracted to this thorough case study of this court.
'There is a science of the aspects of things, as well as of their
nature' - if this dictum of Ruskin is central to his aims in Modern
Painters it points also to the remarkable affinity of creative
effort to record and to interpret the natural world that links him
with Coleridge at the beginning and with Hopkins in the latter half
of the nineteenth century. But the three writers stand in no simple
relation of mere sequence and in this essay, which continues the
exploration of the Romantic and Victorian imagination begun in her
previous book, The Central Self, Dr Ball follows the complex
interrelationships, clash and resolution of ideas by which a
profound shift in nineteenth-century creative vision was effected.
The notebooks and diaries of the three writers together with the
literary work that grew out of or paralleled this material form the
foundation for this illuminating essay, but Dr Ball's enquiry is
necessarily wide-ranging and branches into such wider questions as
the whole critical theory of the pathetic fallacy and the influence
on Coleridge, Ruskin and Hopkins of contemporary science and the
visual arts.
In Imagining America, historian Alan M. Ball explores American
influence in two newborn Russian states: the young Soviet Union and
the modern Russian Republic. Ball deftly illustrates how in each
era Russians have approached the United States with a conflicting
mix of ideas-as a land to admire from afar, to shun at all costs,
to emulate as quickly as possible, or to surpass on the way to a
superior society. Drawing on a wide variety of sources including
contemporary journals, newspapers, films, and popular songs, Ball
traces the shifting Russian perceptions of American cultural,
social, and political life. As he clearly demonstrates, throughout
their history Russian imaginations featured a United States that
political figures and intellectuals might embrace, exploit, or
attack, but could not ignore.
Dr Ball offers an analysis and evaluation of a number of Victorian
long poems and groups of lyrics which trace the course of close
personal relationships. Her argument is that whereas Romantic
treatment of such material was limited, the Victorian poets not
only made this emotional territory their own but explored it with
vigour, variety and enterprise, and great technical resource. This
is apparent, as Dr Ball shows, whether the poets concern themselves
with crises such as loss through death - In Memoriam, Patmore's
odes of bereavement - or breakdown - Modern Love, Maud, James Lee's
Wife - or whether they portray the intricate flux of mutual
attraction and courtship, as in Amours de Voyage, The Bothie of
Tober-na-Vuolich and The Angel in the House. The Heart's Events
brings out strongly the experimental vitality and range of
Victorian poetry and, in particular, its sensitive imaginative
response to the subtleties of psychological time and change in its
records of the inner histories of love.
In this closely argued book Dr Ball is concerned to analyse the
imaginative process of self-understanding which emerged as a
characteristic feature of English Romantic poetry and, acquiring
fresh creative force in the Victorian period, has been transmitted
to our own times as a determining principle of the contemporary
imagination. Dr Ball relates her discussion to the distinction
between the poet speaking directly in his own voice and the impulse
to dramatised utterance - the two modes of poetic expression
conveniently summed up in Keats's contrasting terms 'egotistical
sublime' and 'chameleon'. She shows how these 'polar' tendencies
co-exist fruitfully in the work of Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron,
Shelley and Keats and from this standpoint supplies a coherent
appreciation of the little-regarded plays written by these poets.
Turning to Victorian critics and poets Dr Ball considers how the
Romantic inheritance fared at their hands. She sees in the poets,
notably Tennyson, Arnold, Browning, and Hopkins, a vital link by
which the Romantic commitment to the agency of self-consciousness
has been carried forward to the twentieth century and concludes
with a brief sketch of the creative role of self-exploration in T.
S. Eliot and W. B. Yeats.
Convex geometry is at once simple and amazingly rich. While the
classical results go back many decades, during that previous to
this book's publication in 1999, the integral geometry of convex
bodies had undergone a dramatic revitalization, brought about by
the introduction of methods, results and, most importantly, new
viewpoints, from probability theory, harmonic analysis and the
geometry of finite-dimensional normed spaces. This book is a
collection of research and expository articles on convex geometry
and probability, suitable for researchers and graduate students in
several branches of mathematics coming under the broad heading of
'Geometric Functional Analysis'. It continues the Israel GAFA
Seminar series, which is widely recognized as the most useful
research source in the area. The collection reflects the work done
at the program in Convex Geometry and Geometric Analysis that took
place at MSRI in 1996.
This is a provocative collection of timely reflections on the state
of social democracy and its inextricable links to crime and
justice. Authored by some of the world's leading thinkers from the
UK, US, Canada and Australia, the volume provides an understanding
of socially sustainable societies.
A traditional way to honor distinguished scientists is to combine
collections of papers solicited from friendly colleagues into
dedicatory volumes. To honor our friend and colleague Mort Gurtin
on the occasion of his sixty-fifth birthday, we followed a surer
path to produce a work of intrinsic and lasting scientific value:
We collected pa pers that we deemed seminal in the field of
evolving phase interfaces in solids, a field to which Mort Gurtin
himself has made fundamental contributions. Our failure for lack of
space to include in this volume every paper of major significance
is mitigated by the ma gisterial introduction prepared by Eliot
Fried, which assesses the contributions of nu merous works. We hope
that this collection will prove useful and stimulating to both
researchers and students in this exciting field. August 1998 JohnM.
Ball David Kinderlehrer Paulo Podio-Guidugli Marshall Slemrod
Contents Introduction: Fifty Years of Research on Evolving Phase
Interfaces By Eliot Fried. 0
************************************************ 0 ***** 1 I.
Papers on Materials Science Surface Tension as a Motivation for
Sintering By C. Herring 33 Two-Dimensional Motion of Idealized
Grain Boundaries By W. W. Mullins 0 *********** 0
******************* 70 Morphological. Stability of a Particle
Growing by Diffusion or Heat Flow By w. w. Mullins and R. F.
Sekerka 75 Energy Relations and the Energy-Momentum Tensor in
Continuum Mechanics By J. D. Eshelby 82 The Interactions of
Composition and Stress in Crystalline Solids By F. e. Larche and 1.
W. Cahn 120 II.
Convex geometry is at once simple and amazingly rich. While the
classical results go back many decades, during that previous to
this book's publication in 1999, the integral geometry of convex
bodies had undergone a dramatic revitalization, brought about by
the introduction of methods, results and, most importantly, new
viewpoints, from probability theory, harmonic analysis and the
geometry of finite-dimensional normed spaces. This book is a
collection of research and expository articles on convex geometry
and probability, suitable for researchers and graduate students in
several branches of mathematics coming under the broad heading of
'Geometric Functional Analysis'. It continues the Israel GAFA
Seminar series, which is widely recognized as the most useful
research source in the area. The collection reflects the work done
at the program in Convex Geometry and Geometric Analysis that took
place at MSRI in 1996.
The book explains why the real estate and construction industries
are organized in the ways they are, relating those characteristics
to long-term market behavior. Part One covers market dynamics:
supply and demand; the interaction of property development,
finance, and construction; and property cycles. Part Two examines
institutions and market structures.
The bankruptcy of the investment bank Lehman Brothers was the
pivotal event of the 2008 financial crisis and the Great Recession
that followed. Ever since the bankruptcy, there has been heated
debate about why the Federal Reserve did not rescue Lehman in the
same way it rescued other financial institutions, such as Bear
Stearns and AIG. The Fed's leaders from that time, especially
former Chairman Ben Bernanke, have strongly asserted that they
lacked the legal authority to save Lehman because it did not have
adequate collateral for the loan it needed to survive. Based on a
meticulous four-year study of the Lehman case, The Fed and Lehman
Brothers debunks the official narrative of the crisis. It shows
that in reality, the Fed could have rescued Lehman but officials
chose not to because of political pressures and because they
underestimated the damage that the bankruptcy would do to the
economy. The compelling story of the Lehman collapse will interest
anyone who cares about what caused the financial crisis, whether
the leaders of the Federal Reserve have given accurate accounts of
their actions, and how the Fed can prevent future financial
disasters.
The main goal of this book is to provide an overview of the state
of the art in the mathematical modeling of complex fluids, with
particular emphasis on its thermodynamical aspects. The central
topics of the text, the modeling, analysis and numerical simulation
of complex fluids, are of great interest and importance both for
the understanding of various aspects of fluid dynamics and for its
applications to special real-world problems. New emerging trends in
the subject are highlighted with the intent to inspire and motivate
young researchers and PhD students.
Written in the same accessible style and format as the highly
successful The Hikers Guide to O'ahu, this updated and expanded
volume includes the best day hikes and backpacks on the Big Island,
Kaua'i, Maui, and O'ahu. Each island is represented by thirteen
hikes, for a total of fifty-two in all. Together they offer
residents and visitors the essential information to safely explore
some of Hawai'i's most spectacular scenery. For each trip, the
author provides directions to the trailhead, a detailed route
description, a topographical map, and facts on the hike length,
elevation gain, and degree of difficulty. For GPS users, UTM and
latitude/longitude coordinates are added for the trailhead and
endpoint of each route. The expanded notes section helps readers
identify and appreciate geological features, historical points of
interest, and commonly encountered plants and birds along the
trail.
Very little is known about why and when African American elders
seek formal long-term care, or about the characteristics of
assisted living environments they consider most desirable. Drawing
on qualitative studies conducted between 1998 and 2001, the authors
of Communities of Care provide important information on historic
and current trends in assisted living systems serving African
Americans.
Focusing on six facilities that have become models of long-term
care for African Americans, the authors shed light on the daily
lives of the people who live, work, and visit these "communities of
care."With detailed profiles of the facilities, interviews, and
case histories of care recipients, the authors explore both the
institutional and personal characteristics of the facilities and
the issues central to their residents.
This definitive work brings to the forefront critical questions
about how race, gender, and culture affect the quality of, access
to, and cost of care. These questions have broad implications for
the policy, administration, and operation of assisted living.
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Briar Day (Paperback)
Peter M. Ball
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R228
R186
Discovery Miles 1 860
Save R42 (18%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Exile (Paperback)
Peter M. Ball
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R295
R247
Discovery Miles 2 470
Save R48 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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