Academic literature on the topic 'Jack WARD'

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Journal articles on the topic "Jack WARD"

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Stephenson, Jane Baucom. "Marshall Ward: Master Teller of Jack Tales." Appalachian Heritage 14, no. 2 (1986): 52–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/aph.1986.0064.

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Mitcheson, Barrie. "John ‘Jack’ Livingstone Ward: 1 October 1920 – 15 September 2013." Australian Library Journal 63, no. 3 (June 20, 2014): 247–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00049670.2014.915500.

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Healy, William M. "Jack Ward Thomas: The Journals of a Forest Service Chief." Journal of Wildlife Management 69, no. 3 (July 2005): 1305. http://dx.doi.org/10.2193/0022-541x(2005)069[1305:br]2.0.co;2.

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Schneiders, Robert. "Book Review: Jack Ward Thomas: The Journals of a Forest Service Chief." Agricultural History 80, no. 1 (January 2006): 135–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/ah.2006.80.1.135.

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Ward, Julie, Helen Frances Mills, and Alan Anderson. "Drama in the Dale: Transformation Through Community Drama." Harvard Educational Review 83, no. 1 (March 26, 2013): 54–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.17763/haer.83.1.k746345q366v0023.

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During the winter of 2011-2012, Weardale, England, was the setting for an ambitious informal adult education project. In this rural area in the northeast part of the country, the local arts collective, Jack Drum Arts, established a community play project entitled The Bonny Moorhen. This dramatic undertaking aimed to retell the story of the infamous Battle of Stanhope, a local lead miners’ uprising. The project took place in a converted barn and involved a group of sixty learners of all ages and from all walks of life. The troupe formed the choir, band, backstage crew, and company of actors who, with the support of professional artists, built a temporary theater space. Each member of this collective made a personal journey. Here Helen Mills and Alan Anderson, in association with Julie Ward, cofounder and project producer at Jack Drum Arts, offer their personal testimonies from the project.
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Humphries, Mark. "Late Antiquity and World History." Studies in Late Antiquity 1, no. 1 (2017): 8–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/sla.2017.1.1.8.

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The flourishing of late-antique studies in the last half-century has coincided with the rise of “world history” as an area of academic research. To an extent, some overlap has occurred, particularly with Sasanian Persia being considered alongside the late Roman Empire as constituting an essential component in what we think of in terms of the “shape” of late antiquity. Yet it is still the case that many approaches to late antiquity are bound up with conventional western narratives of historical progress, as defined in Jack Goody's The Theft of History (2006). Indeed, the debate about whether late antiquity was an age of dynamic transformation (as argued by Peter Brown and his disciples) or one of catastrophic disruption (as asserted, most recently, by Bryan Ward-Perkins) can be regarded as representing two different faces of an essentially evolutionary interpretation of western historical development. This article argues, however, that we can challenge such conventional narrative frameworks by taking a world historical perspective on late antiquity. It shows, first, that our interpretation of late antiquity depends on sources that themselves are representative of myriad local perspectives. Secondly, it argues that since Gibbon's time these sources have been made to serve an essentially western construct of and debate about history. The final section considers how taking a more global perspective allows us to challenge conventional approaches to and narratives of late antiquity.
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Hathaway, Rosemary. "Shovelful of Sunshine by Stacie Vaughn Hutto, and: Appalachian Toys and Games From A–Z by Linda Hager Pack, and: Young Ray Hicks Learns the Jack Tales by Lynn Salsi, and: Appalachian Jack Tales Told by Hicks, Ward and Harmon Families by Lynn Salsi." West Virginia History: A Journal of Regional Studies 10, no. 1 (2016): 80–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/wvh.2016.0014.

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Hansen, Robert S., and M. Victor Bilan. "Height Growth of Loblolly and Slash Pine Plantations in the Northern Post-Oak belt of Texas." Southern Journal of Applied Forestry 13, no. 1 (February 1, 1989): 5–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sjaf/13.1.5.

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Abstract Age accounted for over 70% of the variation in tree height of 10- to 44-year-old loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.) and slash (Pinus elliottii Engelm.) plantations established on deep sands, moderate sands, and nonsandy soils in the Northern Post-Oak Belt of Texas. Climatic and edaphicfactors, relating either directly or indirectly to the amount of moisture available for tree use, explained up to 17% of height growth variation. Height growth of the plantations was comparable to that of plantations growing in the pine-mixed hardwood forest cover type of East Texas. The NorthernPost-Oak Belt of Texas is an area approximately 50 to 100 miles wide located between the pine-mixed hard-wood forest type to the east and the black-land prairie to the west. Soils within the belt belong primarily to the Alfisol or Ultisol soil orders. The western-most areas of the belt receiveup to 20% less annual rain fall than the pine-mixed hardwood type of East Texas (U.S. Environmental Data and Information Service 1949-1982). The present forest of this area is dominated by post oak (Quercus stellata Wang.), black-jack oak (Quercus Marilandica Muench.), bluejack oak (Quercusincana Bartr.), and black hickory (Carya texana Buckl.) (Ward 1984). Loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.) and shortleaf pine (Pinus echinata Mill.) occur naturally only in scattered locations (Wilson and Hacker 1986). South. j. Appl. For. 13(1):5-8.
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Fletcher, Ian Christopher. "Paul Ward. Red Flag and Union Jack: Englishness, Patriotism and the British Left, 1881-1924. (Studies in History.) Rochester, N.Y.: Boydell & Brewer. 1998. Pp. viii, 232. $63.00. ISBN 0-86193-239-0." Albion 32, no. 1 (2000): 160–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0095139000064723.

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Kipnis, Marina, Frank Schwab, Tobias S. Kramer, Miriam S. Stegemann, Caroline Isner, Georg Pilarski, Nayana Märtin, et al. "Incidence of healthcare-associated Clostridioides difficile infections and association with ward-level antibiotic consumption in a German university hospital: an ecological study." Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy 74, no. 8 (May 16, 2019): 2400–2404. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jac/dkz195.

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Abstract Objectives Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) is one of the most important healthcare-associated infections. We aimed to describe the incidence density of healthcare-associated CDI (HA-CDI) in Germany’s largest hospital and to identify associations with ward-level antimicrobial consumption. Methods We used surveillance data on CDI and antimicrobial consumption from 2014 to 2017 and analysed a potential association by means of multivariable regression analysis. Results We included 77 wards with 404998 admitted patients and 1850862 patient-days. Six hundred and seventy-one HA-CDI cases were identified, resulting in a pooled mean incidence density of 0.36/1000 patient-days (IQR = 0.34–0.39). HA-CDI incidence density on ICU and haematological–oncological wards was about three times higher than on surgical wards [incidence rate ratio (IRR) = 3.00 (95% CI = 1.96–4.60) and IRR = 2.78 (95% CI = 1.88–4.11), respectively]. Ward-level consumption of third-generation cephalosporins was the sole antimicrobial risk factor for HA-CDI. With each DDD/100 patient-days administered, a ward’s HA-CDI incidence density increased by 2% [IRR = 1.02 (95% CI = 1.01–1.04)]. Other risk factors were contemporaneous community-associated CDI cases [IRR = 1.32 (95% CI = 1.07–1.63)] and CDI cases in the previous month [IRR = 1.27 (95% CI = 1.07–1.51)]. Furthermore, we found a significant decrease in HA-CDI in 2017 compared with 2014 [IRR = 0.68 (95% CI = 0.54–0.86)]. Conclusions We confirmed that ward-level antimicrobial use influences HA-CDI and specifically identified third-generation cephalosporin consumption as a risk factor.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Jack WARD"

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Reeder, Connie. "Jack is Dead." ScholarWorks@UNO, 2008. http://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/669.

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Allen, Chris W. "Coast to coast and border to border : the influence of Jack Shelley on broadcast journalism /." free to MU campus, to others for purchase, 1996. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/mo/fullcit?p9809666.

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Robertson, Megan Allison. "Environments of memory : bio-geography in contemporary literary representations of Canada and the Great War." Thesis, University of British Columbia, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/2739.

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Canadian remembrance of the Great War (1914-1918) in the early twenty-first century is often associated with grand gestures at national monuments like the opening of the new Canadian War Museum in 2005 and the restoration of the Vimy Ridge Memorial in 2007. However, these sites of memory, what Pierre Nora terms lieux de mémoire, are not part of the everyday environments of memory, the milieux de mémoire, of most Canadians. In my investigation of three contemporary works of Canadian literature: The Danger Tree by David Macfarlane, Broken Ground by Jack Hodgins, and Unity (1918) by Kevin Kerr, locally-based storytellers describe the continued influence of the Great War on their individual Canadian communities. The fictionalized narrating personas in these three works create what I refer to as bio-geographies: first-person accounts of the narrator’s particular social and memory environments. While the bio-geographers in these three texts lack first-hand experience of the Great War, their writing reflects the continued repercussions of the conflict in the weeks, years, and decades after the 1918 armistice. The Great War differentially affected thousands of communities in Canada and Newfoundland. Constructing a coherent national narrative that accounts for the multiple lived experiences of individuals in communities across North America is virtually impossible. Turning to local representations of the Great War (in the case of the three bio-geographic texts: depictions of communities in Newfoundland, British Columbia, and Saskatchewan) provides a sense of the nation as a diverse landscape of memory with multiple vantage points. Negotiating the complex terrain of self, place, and memory, the bio-geographers in the three works I examine create representations of the past that reveal how sites of memory, lieux de mémoire, come to be firmly embedded in the ongoing lived experiences of comunity members, the milieux de mémoire.
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Ekstrand, Julian. ""A Nakedness of Mind": Gender, Individualism and Collectivism in Jack Kerouac's On the Road." Thesis, Stockholms universitet, Engelska institutionen, 2014. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-100041.

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This essay focuses on gender roles, individualism and collectivism in Jack Kerouac’s classic road-trip novel On the Road. In order to put the discussion into a meaningful context, I look at the novel from a historical perspective and examine how it relates to post-war American society. I argue that the novel is, in many ways, representative of a society existing in a field of tension between individualism and collectivism, and that its notion of individual freedom, at the time revolutionary, can be seen as retrogressive with regard to the book’s portrayal and treatment of women. The essay features a discussion of what kind of individual freedom is presented in On the Road and how this freedom relates to typical American individualism as well as American post-war societal norms, the norm of the nuclear family in particular. This is followed by a brief analysis of how the novel influenced future generations, specifically in terms of sexual liberation. This analysis introduces a discussion of the way in which women are portrayed in the book and how this portrayal both represents collective progress in post- war America—women are often described as financially independent—and a phallocentric type of individualism. I then show that this individualism is connected to an unthinking optimism which, I argue, is one of the key causes of the retrogressive view of women exemplified by the book. My study ultimately demonstrates that the novel’s notion of individualism—an individualism which was highly influential for future generations and is usually viewed as progressive—can arguably be seen as retrogressive in terms of Kerouac's representation of gender roles.
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Mitchell, Taylor Joy. "Cold War Playboys: Models of Masculinity in the Literature of Playboy." Scholar Commons, 2011. http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/3249.

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"Cold War Playboys: Models of Masculinity in the Literature of Playboy" emphasizes the literary voices that emerged in response to the Cold War's redefinitions of space and sexuality and, thus, adds to the growing national discourse of Cold War literary and masculinity studies. I argue that the literature Playboy includes has always been a necessary feature to creating its masculinity model; however, that very literature often destabilizes the magazine's grand narrative because it presents readers with alternative models of masculinity. To make that argument, I presume five things: 1) masculinity, like femininity, is a construct; 2) the mid-century masculinity crisis should be attributed to redefinitions of space and sexuality; 3) the crisis generated a variety of masculinity models; 4) Playboy presents its own, unified model of masculinity through its editorial features; and 5) finally, that Playboy should be considered an early Cold War artifact because the space Playboy magazine represents, dually domestic and privatized, is hardly trivial--decade after decade, it has absorbed society's shifts and reflected them back to readers. Citing biographical, historical, critical, and textual evidence, I consider how the literature of Playboy magazine responds to the construction of Cold War discourses regarding sexuality and space. In particular, I examine how Playboy contributions from Jack Kerouac, Vladimir Nabokov, and James Baldwin detail models of masculinity informed by Cold War culture. Playboy's emphasis was obviously Playmates, but fiction always appeared in its pages. As its largest component, fiction became the backbone of Playboy. Therefore, Hefner's educated, sexual male identity included, and still includes, reading a wide array of literature--from Ian Fleming to Ursula le Guin. "Cold War Playboys" asks: How did literature gain primacy in Hefner's ideal male identity? What purposes does reading this literature serve when appealing to a particular masculinity? Answering these questions allows me to explore how one mass-produced magazine and specific literary figures participated in and resisted the construction of Cold War discourses regarding space and sexuality.
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Ratcliffe, Gavin M. "Parental Advisory, Explicit Content: Music Censorship and the American Culture Wars." Oberlin College Honors Theses / OhioLINK, 2016. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=oberlin1467141078.

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Oakshott, Stephen Craig School of Information Library &amp Archives Studies UNSW. "The Association of Libarians in colleges of advanced education and the committee of Australian university librarians: The evolution of two higher education library groups, 1958-1997." Awarded by:University of New South Wales. School of Information, Library and Archives Studies, 1998. http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/18238.

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This thesis examines the history of Commonwealth Government higher education policy in Australia between 1958 and 1997 and its impact on the development of two groups of academic librarians: the Association of Librarians in Colleges in Advanced Education (ALCAE) and the Committee of Australian University Librarians (CAUL). Although university librarians had met occasionally since the late 1920s, it was only in 1965 that a more formal organisation, known as CAUL, was established to facilitate the exchange of ideas and information. ALCAE was set up in 1969 and played an important role helping develop a special concept of library service peculiar to the newly formed College of Advanced Education (CAE) sector. As well as examining the impact of Commonwealth Government higher education policy on ALCAE and CAUL, the thesis also explores the influence of other factors on these two groups, including the range of personalities that comprised them, and their relationship with their parent institutions and with other professional groups and organisations. The study focuses on how higher education policy and these other external and internal factors shaped the functions, aspirations, and internal dynamics of these two groups and how this resulted in each group evolving differently. The author argues that, because of the greater attention given to the special educational role of libraries in the CAE curriculum, the group of college librarians had the opportunity to participate in, and have some influence on, Commonwealth Government statutory bodies responsible for the coordination of policy and the distribution of funding for the CAE sector. The link between ALCAE and formal policy-making processes resulted in a more dynamic group than CAUL, with the university librarians being discouraged by their Vice-Chancellors from having contact with university funding bodies because of the desire of the universities to maintain a greater level of control over their affairs and resist interference from government. The circumstances of each group underwent a reversal over time as ALCAE's effectiveness began to diminish as a result of changes to the CAE sector and as member interest was transferred to other groups and organisations. Conversely, CAUL gradually became a more active group during the 1980s and early 1990s as a result of changes to higher education, the efforts of some university librarians, and changes in membership. This study is based principally on primary source material, with the story of ALCAE and CAUL being told through the use of a combination of original documentation (including minutes of meetings and correspondence) and interviews with members of each group and other key figures.
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Spoden, Elizabeth Christine. "Jack Tar Revealed: Sailors, Their Worldview, and Their World." Thesis, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/1805/2722.

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Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)
The sailors in the British Navy during the Napoleonic Wars are largely unknown to us. This thesis explores their worldview, as revealed through songs, memoirs, plays and broadsides. Through interactions with women and working-class men on shore and officers at sea, these men developed a collective identity rooted in working class masculinity. Ultimately, this thesis refutes the idea that sailors occupied a world completely removed from land and were, rather, actively influenced by ideologies and culture on shore.
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"Stand By the Union Jack: The Imperial Order Daughters of the Empire in the Prairie Provinces During the Great War 1914-1918." Thesis, 1988. http://hdl.handle.net/10388/5922.

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This study examines the activities of the Imperial Order Daughters of the Empire (lODE) in the Canadian prairie provinces during the Great War (1914-1918). Although the voluntary work of the lODE is mentioned briefly in most Canadian histories of the war period, the full extent and significance of the Order's wartime role has never been thoroughly examined. This study describes the various Great War interests of the Daughters of the Empire in the West and examines what motivated their successful war work. Furthermore, although Canadian imperialism has been the subject of intense study, the history of those Canadian imperialists who happened to be women has been neglected. Because they were women, the Daughters of the Empire expressed their patriotism in ways that differed from the patriotic expressions of men. The principal sources for this work were the lODE records held at the National Archives of Canada and the provincial archives of Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta, and a number of private collections of active lODE members and chapters. When Britain declared war against Germany and its allies in August, 1914, the Daughters of the Empire in the three prairie provinces were eager and prepared to play a major support role in order to ensure victory for the British Empire. Acting as an integral part of an efficient, well-organized national Order and energized by patriotic zeal, the IODE in the west made significant contributions to the Canadian and imperial war efforts. The Daughters of the Empire operated an extensive soldier support program and several large-scale wartime projects which they financed through successful fundraising endeavours. The Order also took stances on important political issues which were deemed fundamental to the successful prosecution of the war even though it meant ignoring the official IODE policy of political neutrality. Finally, fearing that there had been a decline in imperial interest and cultural standards amongst English-Canadians and anxious about the consequences of large-scale foreign immigration into the West, the war inspired the IODE to try and improve prairie society through various patriotic, educational, health, social welfare, and economic development programs. Ironically, the Great War brought an end to the imperial ideals that formed the base of lODE ideology, and the society that the Daughters of the Empire worked towards was never realized.
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Cesario, Bradley. "“Trafalgar Refought:” The Professional and Cultural Memory of Horatio Nelson During Britain’s Navalist Era, 1880-1914." Thesis, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2011-12-10407.

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Horatio Lord Nelson, Britain's most famous naval figure, revolutionized what victory meant to the British Royal Navy and the British populace at the turn of the nineteenth century. But his legacy continued after his death in 1805, and a century after his untimely passing Nelson meant as much or more to Britain than he did during his lifetime. This thesis utilizes primary sources from the British Royal Navy and the general British public to explore what the cultural memory of Horatio Nelson's life and achievements meant to Britain throughout the Edwardian era and to the dawn of the First World War. An introductory literature review provides a thorough explanation of how Nelson's legacy has been perceived by past historians and how this legacy will be examined throughout the thesis. The manner in which Nelson was viewed by both his naval contemporaries and the general British public during his lifetime is then surveyed, with a specific focus on the outpouring of national grief that followed Nelson's death at the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805. A major portion of the thesis explores how Nelson's legacy developed throughout the century following his death. Separate studies of Nelson's professional memory among his Royal Navy successors and his cultural memory in British society as it became ever more focused on naval concerns follow; these take the thesis chronologically up through the final decades of the nineteenth century and are then combined in a discussion of the degree to which Nelson's legacy permeated all Britons, regardless of profession, in the early years of the twentieth century. The thesis concludes with a brief discussion of the impact Nelson's legacy had on Britain during the early months of the First World War and a broader analysis of how the cultural and professional memory of Horatio Nelson's naval achievements in 1805 created an atmosphere in which a naval victory decisive enough to satisfy all aspects of British society was impossible in 1914.
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Books on the topic "Jack WARD"

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Evans, Jerry. Jack Ward. Stillwater, Okla: Magnum Press, 1991.

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Ward, John. Dales blacksmith: Jack Ward of Skipton : his craft and his fellow craftsmen. Leeds: M.T.D. Rigg, 1994.

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Kiwi wars: A fancy Jack Crossman adventure. Sutton: Severn House, 2008.

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Finding Jack. New York: St. Martin's Press, 2011.

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Jack: A novel. New York: Beaufort Books, 1987.

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Walker, Brian. Black Jack. [Belconnen, ACT, Australia: Banner Books, 1994.

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Ward, Ruth McRoberts (EDT)/ Chase, Richard/ Chase, Richard (EDT). The Jack tales: Told by R.M. Ward and his kindred in the Beech Mountain section of Western North Carolina and by other descendants of Council Harmon (1803-1896) elsewhere in the southern mountains; with three tales from Wise County, Virginia. New York, N.Y: Houghton Mifflin, 2003.

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Biros, Florence W. Dog Jack. New Wilmington, Pa: Sonrise Publications, 1990.

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Yaeger, Jack. Smiling Jack Yaeger. Tallahassee, FL (P.O. Box 3951, Tallahassee 32315): Educational Clearinghouse, 1997.

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Haig, David. My boy Jack. London: Nick Hern Books, 1997.

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Book chapters on the topic "Jack WARD"

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Land, Isaac. "Impressed: Becoming Jack Tar." In War, Nationalism, and the British Sailor, 1750–1850, 29–55. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230101067_3.

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Patterson, Eric. "The Texas Rangers, Yellow Jack, and Veracruz." In Just American Wars, 83–108. Milton Park, Abingdon ; New York, NY : Routledge, [2019] | Series: War, conflict and ethics: Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429457302-7.

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Berry, Dave. "The World Still Sings: Jack Howells." In Shadows of Progress: Documentary Film in Post-War Britain, 141–55. London: British Film Institute, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-92441-7_9.

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Land, Isaac. "Will the Real Jack Tar Please Stand Up?" In War, Nationalism, and the British Sailor, 1750–1850, 13–28. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230101067_2.

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Mercer, Erin. "Repression and Confession: Jack Kerouac’s On the Road." In Repression and Realism in Post-War American Literature, 167–81. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230119093_7.

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Land, Isaac. "Ships Without Sailors? Nostalgia for Jack Tar in the Industrial Age." In War, Nationalism, and the British Sailor, 1750–1850, 131–58. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230101067_7.

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Webb, Clive. "Jim Crow and Union Jack: Southern Segregationists and the British Far Right." In The Post-War Anglo-American Far Right, 67–83. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137396211_3.

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Gutierrez, Charlotte Paige. "The Narrative Style of Marshall Ward, Jack-Tale-Teller." In Arts in Earnest, 147–63. Duke University Press, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/9780822381617-009.

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Gutierrez, Charlotte Paige. "The Narrative Style of Marshall Ward, Jack-Tale-Teller." In Arts in Earnest, 147–63. Duke University Press, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv11hpq08.12.

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"8 The Narrative Style of Marshall Ward, Jack-Tale-Teller." In Arts in Earnest, 147–63. Duke University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9780822381617-010.

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Conference papers on the topic "Jack WARD"

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Bambó Naya, Raimundo. "The role of residential fabric in the configuration of the city in Spain in the 1940s and 1950s. The case of Jaca." In 24th ISUF 2017 - City and Territory in the Globalization Age. Valencia: Universitat Politècnica València, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/isuf2017.2017.6259.

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The housing problem was one of the fundamental concerns of the new State that emerged after the Civil War in Spain. Different official bodies were created to this end, facing the need for reconstruction of different cities and villages and the dwelling shortage. During the 1940s and 1950s there was a progressive shift of interest from rural housing to urban housing. A series of residential projects of different nature were developed in towns and cities, modifying their urban configuration. The objective of this work is to study different public housing projects carried out during the 1940s and 1950s in the city of Jaca by Lorenzo Monclús, municipal architect of the city, regional delegate of the National Housing Institute and urban planning technician. On the one hand, the study focuses on the theoretical models and international references on which they are based, the building types, the architectural language, and the design of the urban space. On the other hand, on the adaptability of these models to the existing city structure and its planning: a 1917 extension project according to nineteenth century models, carried out after the demolition of the city walls, and revised on successive occasions during the studied period. This analysis of a local experience is part of a wider debate: that of the urban culture in Spain during the postwar period. Despite all the limitations, modern functionalist urbanism was assimilated through public housing projects and urban extensions with open edification in smaller settlements, with techniques akin to those used in larger cities throughout the country.
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Novák, Balthasar, Vazul Boros, and Jochen Reinhard. "Strengthening strategies of highway viaducts in Germany." In IABSE Congress, Christchurch 2021: Resilient technologies for sustainable infrastructure. Zurich, Switzerland: International Association for Bridge and Structural Engineering (IABSE), 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2749/christchurch.2021.0245.

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<p>An entire generation of reinforced concrete highway bridges built in the post-war period in Germany meanwhile is approaching the end of their service life. The federal government and regional highway administrations have realized the need to repair, strengthen or to replace these structures and engage in extensive infrastructural investments to meet this challenge. It is not possible to replace those bridges in a short period, so that a guideline for reassessment of bridges has been developed to enable to prioritize the structures. Besides the replacement of the bridges, measures need to be taken in order to extend the lifespan of the decaying bridges until such replacement becomes available. Using the examples of four major highway viaducts near Frankfurt/Main and Hamburg efficient strategies to strengthen existing structures will be presented.</p><p>In the first example the efficient usage of external tendons to reduce the danger of a fatigue induced failure of a 50 years old prestressed concrete bridge will be presented.</p><p>A bridge of five spans with a total length of approximately 300 m showing inadequate shear resistance has been enhanced by installing inclined steel struts at the pillars. The struts are activated with a predefined force by built-in hydraulic jacks, while special spring elements used as supports reduce the effect of imposed deformations. Furthermore in critical areas of the webs additional shear reinforcement is mounted and subsequently covered by a concrete layer.</p><p>Another large viaduct was showing signs of fatigue at the coupling joints. A detailed analysis of the structure revealed, that the lifespan could be sufficiently prolonged by supporting the critical coupling joints with a predetermined force. The magnitude of the force is maintained constant by a balanced beam resembling a seesaw, which is mounted on a steel tower and fitted at its opposite end with counterweights.</p><p>The final example shows how to apply controlled uplift forces using an elastic bedded supporting beam construction.</p><p>These realized examples demonstrate, how with smart and intelligent measures critical bridges can be strengthened and an essential increase in lifespan can be achieved.</p>
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