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1

Berne, Emma Carlson. Hummingbirds: Faster than a jet! New York: PowerKids Press, 2014.

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2

Zeldin, Isaiah. What this modern Jew believes. Los Angeles: Isaac Nathan Pub. Co., 1996.

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3

Wilson, Skip. This is "jest" for you. Port Washington, N.Y: Ashley Books, 1986.

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4

Simonsen, Erik. This is Stealth: The F-117 and B-2 in color. London: Greenhill Books, 1992.

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5

Jensen, Maria Kirstine Dorothea. Jeg længes--: Fra Thit Jensens dagbøger 1891-1927. København: G.E.C. Gad, 1991.

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6

Thin ice: Money, politics and the demise of an NHL franchise. Halifax, N.S: Fernwood, 1996.

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7

Marcelo J.S. de Lemos. Turbulent Impinging Jets into Porous Materials. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2012.

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8

Twiss, Peter. Faster than the sun. London: Grub Street, 2005.

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9

Schochet, Jacob Immanuel. Who is a Jew?: 30 questions and answers about this controversial and divisive issue. New York, N.Y: Shofar Association of American, 1987.

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10

Hizak, Shlomo. Building or breaking: What does a Jew think when a Christian says "I love you". Jerusalem: Jerusalem Center for Biblical Studies and Research, 1985.

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11

Gretchen, Reynolds, ed. The play's the thing: Teachers' roles in children's play. New York: Teachers College Press, 1992.

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12

Woodard, Chiquita. It's just what I've always wanted!: More than 2,000 imaginative and unique gifts--from a ride in a MiG jet to a singing telegram. New York: Hyperion, 1998.

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13

Klyber, Arthur B. This Jew: A book for Christians and Jews about the Crucifixion of Jesus for friendship and understanding. 5th ed. New Hope, KY: Remnant of Israel, 1988.

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14

Better a shrew than a sheep: Women, drama, and the culture of jest in early modern England. Ithaca, N.Y: Cornell University Press, 2003.

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15

Office, General Accounting. C-17 aircraft: Cost of spare parts higher than justified : report to the Honorable Charlie Rose, House of Representatives. Washington, D.C: The Office, 1996.

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16

Office, General Accounting. C-17 aircraft: Cost of spare parts higher than justified : report to the Honorable Charlie Rose, House of Representatives. Washington, D.C: The Office, 1996.

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17

Gans, Evelien, and Remco Ensel, eds. The Holocaust, Israel and 'the Jew'. NL Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789089648488.

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This book is the first comprehensive study of postwar antisemitism in the Netherlands. It focuses on the way stereotypes are passed on from one decade to the next, as reflected in public debates, the mass media, protests and commemorations, and everyday interactions. The Holocaust, Israel and 'the Jew' explores the ways in which old stories and phrases relating to 'the stereotypical Jew' are recycled and modified for new uses, linking the antisemitism of the early postwar years to its enduring manifestations in today's world. The Dutch case is interesting because of the apparent contrast between the Netherlands' famous tradition of tolerance and the large numbers of Jews who were deported and murdered in the Second World War. The book sheds light on the dark side of this so-called 'Dutch paradox,' in manifestations of aversion and guilt after 1945. In this context, the abusive taunt 'They forgot to gas you' can be seen as the first radical expression of postwar antisemitism as well as an indication of how the Holocaust came to be turned against the Jews. The identification of 'the Jew' with the gas chamber spread from the streets to football stadiums, and from verbal abuse to pamphlet and protest. The slogan 'Hamas, Hamas all the Jews to the gas' indicates that Israel became a second marker of postwar antisemitism. The chapters cover themes including soccer-related antisemitism, Jewish responses, philosemitism, antisemitism in Dutch-Moroccan and Dutch- Turkish communities, contentious acts of remembrance, the neo-Nazi tradition, and the legacy of Theo van Gogh. The book concludes with a lengthy epilogue on 'the Jew' in the politics of the radical right, the attacks in Paris in 2015, and the refugee crisis. The stereotype of 'the Jew' appears to be transferable to other minorities. Now also available as paperback!
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18

Gans, Evelien, and Remco Ensel, eds. The Holocaust, Israel and 'the Jew'. NL Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789462986084.

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This book is the first comprehensive study of postwar antisemitism in the Netherlands. It focuses on the way stereotypes are passed on from one decade to the next, as reflected in public debates, the mass media, protests and commemorations, and everyday interactions. The Holocaust, Israel and 'the Jew' explores the ways in which old stories and phrases relating to 'the stereotypical Jew' are recycled and modified for new uses, linking the antisemitism of the early postwar years to its enduring manifestations in today's world. The Dutch case is interesting because of the apparent contrast between the Netherlands' famous tradition of tolerance and the large numbers of Jews who were deported and murdered in the Second World War. The book sheds light on the dark side of this so-called 'Dutch paradox,' in manifestations of aversion and guilt after 1945. In this context, the abusive taunt 'They forgot to gas you' can be seen as the first radical expression of postwar antisemitism as well as an indication of how the Holocaust came to be turned against the Jews. The identification of 'the Jew' with the gas chamber spread from the streets to football stadiums, and from verbal abuse to pamphlet and protest. The slogan 'Hamas, Hamas all the Jews to the gas' indicates that Israel became a second marker of postwar antisemitism. The chapters cover themes including soccer-related antisemitism, Jewish responses, philosemitism, antisemitism in Dutch-Moroccan and Dutch- Turkish communities, contentious acts of remembrance, the neo-Nazi tradition, and the legacy of Theo van Gogh. The book concludes with a lengthy epilogue on 'the Jew' in the politics of the radical right, the attacks in Paris in 2015, and the refugee crisis. The stereotype of 'the Jew' appears to be transferable to other minorities.
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19

Office, General Accounting. C-17 aircraft: RM&A evaluation less demanding than initially planned : report to the Honorable Norman D. Dicks, House of Representatives. Washington, D.C: The Office, 1996.

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20

Office, General Accounting. C-17 aircraft: RM&A evaluation less demanding than initially planned : report to the Honorable Norman D. Dicks, House of Representatives. Washington, D.C: The Office, 1996.

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21

Office, General Accounting. C-17 aircraft: RM&A evaluation less demanding than initially planned : report to the Honorable Norman D. Dicks, House of Representatives. Washington, D.C: The Office, 1996.

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22

Office, General Accounting. C-17 aircraft: RM&A evaluation less demanding than initially planned : report to the Honorable Norman D. Dicks, House of Representatives. Washington, D.C: The Office, 1996.

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23

Office, General Accounting. C-17 aircraft: RM&A evaluation less demanding than initially planned : report to the Honorable Norman D. Dicks, House of Representatives. Washington, D.C: The Office, 1996.

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24

Peter, Vogel, and Lewis Research Center, eds. Emission FTIR analyses of thin microscopic patches of jet fuel residues deposited on heated metal surfaces: Final report. [Cleveland, Ohio]: The Center, 1986.

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25

Swartzwelter, Brad. Faster Than Jets. Alder Press, 2003.

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26

Jets: The Thing-on-two-legs (Jets). A & C Black (Publishers) Ltd, 1995.

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27

Woollings, Tim. Jet Stream. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198828518.001.0001.

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A number of extreme weather events have struck the Northern Hemisphere in recent years, from scorching heatwaves to desperately cold winters and from floods and storms to droughts and wildfires. Is this the emerging signal of climate change, and should we expect more of this? Media reports vary widely, but one mysterious agent has risen to prominence in many cases: the jet stream. The story begins on a windswept beach in Barbados, from where we follow the ascent of a weather balloon that will travel all around the world, following the jet stream. From this viewpoint we can observe the effect of the jet in influencing human life around the hemisphere, and witness startling changes emerging. What is the jet stream and how well do we understand it? How does it affect our weather and is it changing? These are the main questions tackled in this book. We learn about how our view of the wind has developed from Aristotle’s early theories up to today’s understanding. The jet is shown to be intimately connected with dramatic contrasts between climate zones and to have played a key historical role in determining patterns of trade. We learn about the basic physics underlying the jet and how this knowledge is incorporated into computer models which predict both tomorrow’s weather and the climate of future decades. We discuss how climate change is expected to affect the jet, and introduce the urgent scientific debate over whether these changes have contributed to recent extreme weather events.
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28

(Illustrator), Sue Heap, ed. Thing-in-a-box (Jets). A & C Black (Childrens books), 1992.

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29

United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration., ed. Jet aeroacoustics: Noise generation mechanism and prediction : progress report on NASA grant NAG1-1776, period covered by this report January 1, 1996 to December 31, 1996. [Washington, DC: National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 1996.

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30

Nihoyannopoulos, Petros, Gustavo Restrepo Molina, and André La Gerche. Right ventricular dilatation and function. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198726012.003.0048.

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Assessing the right ventricle by any imaging modality is a challenge because of the thin wall and crescent shape that wraps around the left ventricle. Structured echocardiographic examination using two-dimensional imaging provides a detailed regional and global qualitative assessment for routine evaluation. Quantitation is possible using one or more methods including tricuspid annulus plane systolic excursion, fractional area change, and myocardial performance index but speckle tracking deformation imaging and three-dimensional echocardiography are emerging as more robust quantitative methods. Right ventricular pressures should also be estimated routinely as long as a clear tricuspid regurgitant jet is identified.
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31

(Illustrator), Sue Heap, ed. The Thing-in-a-box (Jets). Collins, 1993.

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32

(Illustrator), Sue Heap, ed. The Thing-on-two-legs (Jets). Picture Lions, 1996.

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33

Ortaçgil, Ercüment H. The Universal Jet Groupoids. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198821656.003.0018.

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The group-theoretic constructions of Chapter 16 can be carried out using jets in the universal setting. This fact both simplifies and clarifies Chapter 16 and also suggests a natural definition of a geometric structure.
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34

Our story: Jets & Sharks : then and now. Denver, CO: Outskirts Press, 2011.

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35

Lemos, Marcelo J. S. de. Turbulent Impinging Jets into Porous Materials. Springer, 2012.

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36

Faster Than the Sun. Grub Street, 2000.

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37

Pillai, Vivek, and Christopher L. Drake. Shift work sleep disorder and jet lag. Edited by Sudhansu Chokroverty, Luigi Ferini-Strambi, and Christopher Kennard. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199682003.003.0021.

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Some of the most devastating catastrophes in the modern world, such as the Chernobyl and Three Mile Island nuclear accidents, the Bhopal gas tragedy, and the Exxon Valdez oil spill, occurred during the night shift. These incidents serve as a painful reminder of the high individual and societal costs associated with sleep–wake schedules that oppose the endogenous physiological regulation of sleep and wakefulness across the 24-hour day. Insomnia-like symptoms during the sleep period and excessive sleepiness during the wake period are among the most common consequences of such circadian misalignment, and form the basis of shift work sleep disorder (SWD). Rapid jet travel across multiple time zones can similarly disrupt circadian synchrony, and trigger a variety of adverse health outcomes, including sleep disturbance, impaired wakefulness, and gastrointestinal complications. This chapter reviews the state of the science on SWD and jet lag, with a special emphasis on clinical evaluation and management.
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38

World Air Power Journal: Focus Aircraft: The Black Jet - a Complete Analysis of This Oustanding Technological Triumph. Aerospace Publishing, 1994.

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39

Veer, Yogini Shubh. Yoga -- the Optimal Lifestyle: More Than 1250 Yoga Postures, with a Supplement on Jet -- the Miracle Pet. Troubador Publishing Limited, 2020.

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40

World Air Power Journal: Focus Aircraft: The Black Jet - a Complete Analysis of This Oustanding Technological Triumph. Aerospace Publishing, 1994.

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41

Ortaçgil, Ercüment H. Embeddings of Klein Geometries into Universal Jet Groupoids. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198821656.003.0019.

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In this chapter, the group-theoretic flat case studied in Chapter 16 is embedded into the jet-theoretic universal case studied in Chapter 17 in order to single out the geometric meaning of the curvature of a geometric structure.
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42

Silver, Jim. Thin Ice: Money, Politics and the Demise of a NHL Franchise (Basics from Fernwood Publishing). Fernwood Publishing Co., Ltd., 1996.

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43

Klavan, Andrew. Great Good Thing: A Secular Jew Comes to Faith in Christ. Nelson Incorporated, Thomas, 2016.

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44

Swartzwelter, Brad. Faster Than Jets: A Solution to America's Long-Term Transportation Problems. Alder Press, 2003.

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45

The great good thing: A secular Jew comes to faith in Christ. Thomas Nelson, 2016.

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46

Shaughnessy, Robert. The Time Is Out of Joint. Edited by James C. Bulman. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199687169.013.31.

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One of the culturally dominant means through which time is conceptualized as space, and vice versa, jet lag has increasingly become a metaphor we live by. It has particular resonances for Shakespearean performance, a phenomenon that is, by definition, perpetually out of time. Taking as a point of departure Brian Cox’s 1991 account of his experience of the National Theatre’s touring productions of King Lear and Richard III, this chapter aligns the predicament of the jet -lagged traveller, the off-form actor, and the jet-lagged, off-form travelling actor to argue that their mutual predicament offers an under-explored frame of reference for performance in general and for Shakespeare in performance in particular. It examines how mechanisms of synchrony (or entrainment) shape the actor’s work in performance and with the audience. It also examines the implications of theatrical good and bad timing, and the sometimes unexpected consequences of time getting out of joint.
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47

Lavezzo, Kathy. The Accommodated Jew. Cornell University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501703157.001.0001.

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England during the Middle Ages was at the forefront of European antisemitism. It was in medieval Norwich that the notorious “blood libel” was first introduced when a resident accused the city's Jewish leaders of abducting and ritually murdering a local boy. This book rethinks the complex and contradictory relation between England's rejection of “the Jew” and the centrality of Jews to classic English literature. Drawing on literary, historical, and cartographic texts, the book charts an entangled Jewish imaginative presence in English culture. It tracks how English writers from Bede to John Milton imagine Jews via buildings—tombs, latrines and especially houses—that support fantasies of exile. Epitomizing this trope is the blood libel and its implication that Jews cannot be accommodated in England because of the anti-Christian violence they allegedly perform in their homes. In the Croxton Play of the Sacrament, Marlowe's The Jew of Malta, and Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice, the Jewish house not only serves as a lethal trap but also as the site of an emerging bourgeoisie incompatible with Christian pieties. In the book's epilogue, the chapters advance the inquiry into Victorian England and the relationship between Charles Dickens (whose Fagin is the second most infamous Jew in English literature after Shylock) and the Jewish couple that purchased his London home, Tavistock House, showing how far relations between gentiles and Jews in England had (and had not) evolved.
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48

Jay, Gregory S. Jew Like Me. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190687229.003.0004.

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The discourse on racial liberalism at mid-century involved the debate over antisemitism, made more urgent by Hitler’s rise in Germany. Born Jewish but largely assimilated, Hobson protested the complicity of liberals with antisemitism in her post–WW II best seller, which featured a gentile journalist passing for Jewish to write his expose. This novel’s reliance on a discourse of empathy ties it closely back to Stowe’s and looks forward to the philosophy at the heart of Lee’s Mockingbird. Here the protagonist, Philip Greene, passes as a Jew to learn how antisemitism feels. Meanwhile his liberal girlfriend hesitates to rent her cottage in a restricted neighborhood to Philip’s Jewish war buddy. Both protagonists exhibit the limitations of liberalism as they confront systemic as well as emotional biases that threaten their idealism.
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49

Mann, Peter. Autonomous Geometrical Mechanics. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198822370.003.0022.

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This chapter examines the structure of the phase space of an integrable system as being constructed from invariant tori using the Arnold–Liouville integrability theorem, and periodic flow and ergodic flow are investigated using action-angle theory. Time-dependent mechanics is formulated by extending the symplectic structure to a contact structure in an extended phase space before it is shown that mechanics has a natural setting on a jet bundle. The chapter then describes phase space of integrable systems and how tori behave when time-dependent dynamics occurs. Adiabatic invariance is discussed, as well as slow and fast Hamiltonian systems, the Hannay angle and counter adiabatic terms. In addition, the chapter discusses foliation, resonant tori, non-resonant tori, contact structures, Pfaffian forms, jet manifolds and Stokes’s theorem.
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50

Escudier, Marcel. Engineering applications of the linear momentum equation. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198719878.003.0010.

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In this chapter a method is shown for applying the linear momentum equation, together with the continuity equation and either Bernoulli’s equation or some other information about static pressure, to the analysis of a diverse range of practical problems. A key aim is to demonstrate that it is possible to establish a relatively simple theoretical basis which can give quite accurate and useful information about the performance of such complex machines as jet and rocket engines, the jet pump, and the Pelton turbine. Other examples include flow through a sudden enlargement, a convergent nozzle, a pipe bend, a pipe junction, and a cascade of guidevanes. For each example it is shown how to define a suitable control volume.
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