Books on the topic 'Visitor arrivals'

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1

Board, New Zealand Tourism. International visitor arrivals. [Wellington]: [New Zealand Toursim Board], 1994.

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2

Alaska. Department of Community and Economic Development. Alaska visitor arrivals and profile. Anchorage, Alaska: Northern Economics Inc., 2002.

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3

Indonesia. Department of Tourism, Posts and Telecommunications. Research and Development Centre. Statistical report on visitor arrivals to Indonesia. Jakarta: Central Bureau of Statistics, 1996.

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4

Authority, Palau Visitors. Palau Visitors Authority visitor arrivals -- April 1998: By country of citizenship & purpose of entry. Koror, Palau: Palau Visitors Authority, 1998.

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5

(Group), Nouvelle-Calédonie tourisme. Tourist arrivals in New Caledonia. New Caledonia: Tourisme, 2000.

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6

Lim, Ellen. New Zealand international visitor arrival forecasts 1990 to 1994: Interim report. Wellington: New Zealand Touristand Publicity Department, 1989.

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7

Lim, Ellen. New Zealand international visitor arrival forecasts 1990 to 1994: Final report. Wellington: New Zealand Tourist and Publicity Department, 1990.

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8

Lim, Ellen. New Zealand international visitor arrival forecasts 1991 to 1995, 2000: Interim report. Wellington: New Zealand Tourism Department, 1990.

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9

Savage, Joanna. New Zealand international visitor arrival forecasts, 1991 to 1995, 2000 (December year): Final report. Wellington, N.Z: Research Services, New Zealand Tourism Dept., 1991.

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10

Batey, Jackie. Anxious homes: Cursory cleaning for the imminent arrival of visitors : or how to give the impression of a clean house in under 20 minutes. 2nd ed. [Brighton]: Damp Flat Productions, 2004.

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11

Martin, Adrian. Mysteries of Cinema. NL Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789462986831.

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The major essays of the distinguished and prolific Australian-born film critic Adrian Martin have long been difficult to access, so this anthology, which collects highlights of his work in one volume, will be welcomed throughout film studies. Martin offers indepth analysis of many genres of films while providing a broad understanding of the history of cinema and the history of film criticism and culture. These vibrant, highly personal essays, written between 1982 and 2016, balance breadth across cinema theory with almost encyclopedic detail, ranging between aesthetics, cinephilia, film genre, criticism, philosophy, and cultural politics. Mysteries of Cinema circumscribes a special cultural period that began with the dream of critique as a form of poetic writing, and today arrives at collaborative experiments in audiovisual essays. Throughout these essays, Martin pursues a particular vision of what cinema has been, what it is, and what it still could be.
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12

Bureau, Fiji Visitors, ed. Statistical report on visitor arrivals into Fiji. Suva,Fiji: Fiji Visitors Bureau, 1997.

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13

Tourism, Alaska Division of, and McDowell Group, eds. Alaska Visitor Statistics Program II: AVSP : Alaska visitor arrivals, summer 1990. [Juneau]: Alaska Division of Tourism, Dept. of Commerce & Economic Development, State of Alaska, 1990.

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14

New Zealand Tourism Board. Market Research., ed. New Zealand international visitor arrivals annual report 1992. Wellington: Market Research, New Zealand Tourism Board, 1993.

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15

Association, Hong Kong Tourist, ed. Visitor arrival statistics. [Hong Kong]: Research Department, Hong Kong Tourist Association., 1992.

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16

New Zealand. Tourist and Publicity Dept. Research Section., ed. New Zealand international visitor arrival forecasts, 1989 to 1993. Wellington, N.Z: Research Section, New Zealand Tourist and Publicity Dept., 1988.

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17

Office, Pohnpei Tourism, ed. Tourists/visitors annual arrival statistics to Pohnpei State, 1999-2002. Kolonia, Pohnpei: Pohnpei Tourism Office, 2002.

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18

Office, Pohnpei Tourism, ed. Tourists/visitors annual arrival statistics to Pohnpei State, 1999-2002. Kolonia, Pohnpei: Pohnpei Tourism Office, 1999.

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19

Tourists/visitors arrival statistics to Pohnpei State fiscal years, 1992-1997. Kolonia, Pohnpei: Pohnpei Tourism Office, 1997.

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20

Zealand, New. New Zealand International Visitor Arrival Forecasts, 1989 to 1993 (Nztp Economic Research (i.e. Research) Series,). Research Section New Zealand Tourist and Publ, 1988.

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21

Wodziński, Marcin. Leadership. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190631260.003.0003.

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This chapter attempts to add yet another perspective to the already extensive scholarship on the tsadikim, which has been based so far mainly on elitist, rabbinical sources of a normative, rather than a descriptive, nature. It asks what simple pilgrims expected to achieve from their visits to a Hasidic court and how they expressed it. By analyzing a mass source of popular petitions brought to one Hasidic leader by thousands of his followers, the chapter arrives at the conclusion that the simple pilgrims expected from the tsadik mainly intervention in the matters of health, income, and family matters, most typically connected to fertility and business problems. It also shows inroads of a modernizing vision of the world in the way the image of the tsadik and his powers were constructed in the petitions.
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22

Manchester Metropolitan University. Department of Hotel, Catering and Tourism Management. and Greater Manchester Visitorand Convention Bureau., eds. La Cite ́de l'avenir: Towards providing French visitors to Manchester with the best quality experience in a welcoming leaflet : en arrivant a Manchester ... . Manchester: Department of Hotel, Catering and Tourism Management, 1993.

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23

Martin, Graham R. What Drives Bird Senses? Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199694532.003.0008.

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Many tasks could drive the evolution of bird sensory systems. Key candidates are flight, foraging, predator detection, and reproduction. Comparative analysis of visual fields and retinal structures shows functionally significant differences in the vision of even closely related species. These are best explained by foraging being the primary driver of vision in birds, and this is traded-off against the demands of predator detection. The key task is the control of bill position and timing its arrival at a target. This is achieved by the extraction of information from the optic flow-field which expands symmetrically about the bill when it is travelling towards a target. The provision of such flow-fields is the prime function of binocular vision. Informational demands for flight control are met within constraints determined by those for precise bill control. Other sensory capacities also appear to be driven primarily by the informational demands of foraging.
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24

Christoforidis, Michael. Dueling Carmens in Madrid. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195384567.003.0004.

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The notion that Spanish audiences and critics rejected Carmen as an exoticist abomination is interrogated in Chapter 3, which investigates the opera’s arrival in Madrid during the 1887–88 season, and its ultimate embrace by local audiences. Carmen’s debut in the Spanish capital was surrounded by controversies, including a protracted legal dispute over performance rights between Madrid’s two leading lyric theaters, the Teatro Real and the Teatro de la Zarzuela. These events coincided with significant debates over Spanish cultural identity, and the translation of Carmen into Spanish for adaptation as a zarzuela exposed the fault lines between Bizet’s vision of Spain and local concerns about self-representation.
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25

Payne, Andrew. The Teleology of Action in the Ascent Passage of the Symposium. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198799023.003.0002.

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This chapter is concerned with the ascent passage of the Symposium, which describes the development of eros or love in a single lover. The lover desires the beauty of bodies, souls, customs and laws, and sciences, and finally arrives at the vision of the Form of Beauty. The recognized varieties of teleological explanation, intentional teleology and natural teleology, will not support Plato’s claim that the vision of the Form of Beauty is the end or purpose for the sake of which all the previous stages took place. An account of the function of eros, giving birth in the beautiful, is presented. The concept of function allows Plato to claim in the ascent passage that particular actions are carried out for the sake of an unintended end, namely the vision of the Form of Beauty. This is an instance of the functional teleology of action.
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26

Schabas, William A. Kaiserdämmerung. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198833857.003.0003.

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As the war ends, Kaiser Wilhelm leaves Berlin for German military headquarters in Spa, Belgium, where his generals tell him that the troops will not follow him and that his life may even be threatened. He flees to the Netherlands in his private train, possibly after receiving an ‘all clear’ from Queen Wilhelmina. The Dutch Government persuades a local aristocrat, Count Bentinck, to take him in for a few days to his castle in Amerongen, but the visit ends up lasting nearly eighteen months. Britain’s Ambassador to The Hague sends his wife to spy on the Kaiser’s arrival, but attempts without success to conceal her identity from the Foreign Office.
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27

Verne, Jules. Journey to the Centre of the Earth. Translated by William Butcher. Oxford University Press, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/owc/9780199538072.001.0001.

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Journey to the Centre of the Earth has been consistently praised for its style and its vision of the world. It explores the prehistory of the globe, but can also be read as a psychological quest, for the journey itself is as important as arrival or discovery. Professor Lidenbrock and his nephew Axel travel across Iceland, and then down through an extinct crater towards a sunless sea where they enter a living past and are confronted with the origins of man. A classic of nineteenth-century French literature, the novel's distinctive combination of realism and Romanticism has marked figures as diverse as Sartre and Tournier, Mark Twain and Conan Doyle. This new translation of the complete text is faithful to the lyricism, verve, and humour of the original.
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28

Paxman, Andrew. Coming of Age in Tennessee. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190455743.003.0002.

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In 1890s Tennessee, Jenkins came of age in Bedford County, with its small farms and benign race relations, while his future bride Mary Street grew up in neighboring Lincoln County, a place of plantations and social rigidities. This contrast helps explain the Street family’s disdain for Jenkins, whose origins were modest, and it foreshadows the tensions that would fester between William and Mary in Mexico, where he would readily adapt but she would not. This chapter traces the Jenkins family history, from their arrival in Tennessee to William’s adolescence, including what he likely learned about Mexico. Jenkins won a scholarship to Vanderbilt University but dropped out to elope with Mary after her guardians threatened to send her away “for her health.” From San Antonio they visited Monterrey, where they heard that Mexico was a land of opportunity. It was 1901, and Jenkins would never again live in the United States.
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29

Lower, Michael. The Diversion. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198744320.003.0004.

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In July 1269, King Louis IX of France was planning a campaign in Egypt or the Holy Land. One year later, his fleet landed on Sardinia, and in a war council held on July 13 Louis declared Tunis the target of the crusade. What happened between July 1269 and July 1270 to send the expedition in this unexpected direction is shrouded in secrecy. By expanding the narrative to incorporate Mediterranean‐wide networks of interaction, this chapter identifies several key turning points: the visit of the Dominican linguist Ramon Martí to Tunis in 1269; the attendance of Tunisian envoys at the baptismal ceremony of a French Jew at Saint‐Denis in October; the arrival of a Mongol embassy in Paris toward the end of the year; and the dispatch of an Angevin envoy to Tunis the following April, a month after Louis had lifted the oriflamme at Saint Denis to launch the campaign.
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30

Dutton, George E. Waiting for Bỉnh in Tonkin and Macao. University of California Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520293434.003.0007.

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This chapter shifts the angle of vision from the men in Lisbon back to those they left behind in Macao and Tonkin. It discusses the ways in which both sides exchanged letters to provide updates of their respective situations. In particular it describes the increasing desperation of the community in Tonkin, suffering both from political turmoil and growing ecclesiastical precariousness as their remaining clergy aged and died. It also discusses the plight of the two Vietnamese clerics in Macao, who struggled with poverty and the pressure from ecclesiastical authorities to give up their residence and return to Tonkin to accept the apostolic vicars. The chapter concludes with the arrival of Bishop Galdino in Macao, and his lengthy, but ultimately successful efforts to dislodge the Tonkinese in the Portuguese enclave, and then to put pressure on the remaining members of the Padroado community in Tonkin itself. It concludes by noting that this combination of pressures led the remaining holdouts to surrender to the apostolic vicars by about 1805, marking the end of the Vietnamese Padroado community.
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31

Nelson, Claudia, and Anne Morey. Topologies of the Classical World in Children's Fiction. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198846031.001.0001.

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This book draws upon cognitive poetics and uses an assortment of works written in Britain and the US for preteen and adolescent readers from 1906 to 2018 to argue that authors typically employ a limited and powerful set of spatial metaphors to organize the classical past for young readers. Popular models include palimpsest texts, which see the past as a collection of strata in which each new era forms a layer superimposed upon a foundation laid earlier; map texts, which use the metaphor of the mappable journey to represent a protagonist’s process of maturing while gaining knowledge of the self and/or the world; and fractal texts, in which small parts of the narrative are thematically identical to the whole in a way that implies that history is infinitely repeatable. While a given text may embrace multiple metaphors in presenting the past, we argue for associations between dominant metaphors, genre, and outlook. Map texts highlight problem-solving and arrival at one’s planned destination; they model an assertive, confident outlook. Palimpsest texts position character and reader as occupying one among many equally important temporal layers; they emphasize the landscape’s continuity but the individual’s impermanence, modeling a more modest vision of one’s place in time. Fractal texts work by analogy, denying difference between past and present and inviting readers to conclude that significant change may be impossible. Thus each model uses the classical past to urge and thus perhaps to develop a particular approach to life.
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32

Durham, William H. Exuberant Life. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197531518.001.0001.

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Why is Galápagos so endlessly fascinating, whether to read about, to visit, or both? Reasons include its menagerie of truly unusual organisms (like tree daisies, marine iguanas, and flightless cormorants), its relatively low human impact (most of its endemic biodiversity is still extant), and its unrivalled role in the history of science ever since Charles Darwin. Exuberant Life offers a contemporary synthesis of what is known about the evolution of the curiously wonderful organisms of Galápagos, of how they are faring in the tumultuous world of human-induced change, and how evolution can guide efforts today for their conservation. In eight case-study chapters, the book looks at each organism’s ancestry, at how and when it came to Galápagos, and how and why it changed since its arrival, all with an eye to its conservation today. Such analysis often provides surprises and suggestions not previously considered, like the potential benefits to joint conservation efforts with tree daisies and tree finches, for example, or ways that a new explanation for peculiar behaviors in Nazca and blue-footed boobies can benefit both species today. In each chapter, a social-ecological systems framework is used, because human influence is always present, and because it allows an explicit link to evolution. We see how the evolutionary fitnesses of Galápagos organisms are now a product of both ecological conditions and human impact, including climate change. Historically, Galápagos has played a central role in the understanding of evolution; what it now offers to teach us about conservation may well prove indispensable for the future of the planet.
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33

Paiva, Wilson Alves de. A Fontana de Lutécia: Contos Virais. Brazil Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.31012/978-65-5861-566-8.

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A fictional book with five short stories that address the main pandemics in the world. The first story takes place in Ancient Greece, in 428 BC at the time of the Peloponnesian War. Tavros, the main character flees the plague by traveling to Gaul and discovers a mysterious water spring near the village of the Parisii. In AD 166, when Rome, is devasted by the plague, Marcus Aurelius sends out soldiers to the North. One of them, Lucius, arrives in the region of Lutecia and finds the same fountain that Tavros had been to. The water from this spring gives him strength to escape from the persecution of Christians and Jews. In his old age, Lucius becomes a Church elder and writes letters. One of them was read, many centuries later, by a Franciscan Parisian monk during the Middle Ages, who decides to pilgrimage to Jerusalem but is surprised by the Black Death. Back home, he is saved by the water spring, builds an orphanage and has his life converted into a book - which is red by a young journalist who takes the ship Demerara with his fiancée to Brazil in order to avoid the World War I, the Spanish flu and some Russian spies. The last story is about a Brazilian professor, called Lucius Felipe who, in 2019, travels to Paris to develop his postdoctoral studies. Unfortunately he has to return to Brazil due to the COVID-19 pandemic. But not before having visited Lutetia’s fountain and felt its power and the memories it holds.
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34

Costa, Maria Adélia da. Formação de Professores para Educação Profissional: normatizações, metodologias e práticas. Brazil Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.31012/978-65-5861-160-8.

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The teacher training in Professional and Technologic Education (PTE) has been done by streamlined, fragmented and discontinuous government programmes. Notwithstanding, law No. 13415/2017 has established notorious knowledge, which the trend is to consolidate the precarious policies of teacher training for PTE. In this paper, I have the purpose of discussing the norms for teaching method considering the recurrent and historical gap in the effective policies of the obligation of training for the degree level or pedagogy complementation for the practice of the teacher profession. Moreover, my experience in the training and development of teachers of PTE substantiated the debate about teaching and learning methodologies and provided testimonies which might be appreciated for interested in deepening their knowledge in this subject. After the discussion about norms aspects, we will board to the education and its nuances station. The first stop is in the applied neurosciences station, where the passengers can do a fast visit to cognitive aspects important for understanding how young people learning. The driver whistles announcing the departure and soon he arrives in the station of active methodologies of learning (AML). Although it is not the end, might the passengers give up to continue the trip because in this station the tour is prolonged and interesting, thus take more time and dedication of tourists. The guide announces that the guided tour starts by theoretical concepts of AML and will finish by testimonies which collaborate for the interaction of the theory and practice.
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