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Kinds of Corners Terms modified by Corners Selected AbstractsDOES CRIME JUST MOVE AROUND THE CORNER?CRIMINOLOGY, Issue 3 2006A CONTROLLED STUDY OF SPATIAL DISPLACEMENT AND DIFFUSION OF CRIME CONTROL BENEFITS Recent studies point to the potential theoretical and practical benefits of focusing police resources on crime hot spots. However, many scholars have noted that such approaches risk displacing crime or disorder to other places where programs are not in place. Although much attention has been paid to the idea of displacement, methodological problems associated with measuring it have often been overlooked. We try to fill these gaps in measurement and understanding of displacement and the related phenomenon of diffusion of crime control benefits. Our main focus is on immediate spatial displacement or diffusion of crime to areas near the targeted sites of an intervention. Do focused crime prevention efforts at places simply result in a movement of offenders to areas nearby targeted sites,"do they simply move crime around the corner"? Or, conversely, will a crime prevention effort focusing on specific places lead to improvement in areas nearby,what has come to be termed a diffusion of crime control benefits? Our data are drawn from a controlled study of displacement and diffusion in Jersey City, New Jersey. Two sites with substantial street-level crime and disorder were targeted and carefully monitored during an experimental period. Two neighboring areas were selected as "catchment areas" from which to assess immediate spatial displacement or diffusion. Intensive police interventions were applied to each target site but not to the catchment areas. More than 6,000 20-minute social observations were conducted in the target and catchment areas. They were supplemented by interviews and ethnographic field observations. Our findings indicate that, at least for crime markets involving drugs and prostitution, crime does not simply move around the corner. Indeed, this study supports the position that the most likely outcome of such focused crime prevention efforts is a diffusion of crime control benefits to nearby areas. [source] REFERENCE AND DESCRIPTION FROM THE DESCRIPTIVISTS' CORNERANALYTIC PHILOSOPHY, Issue 1 2007Frank Jackson First page of article [source] RURAL HEALTH RESEARCH: HAVE WE TURNED THE CORNER?AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF RURAL HEALTH, Issue 5 2000Professor Roger Strasser First page of article [source] The Elephant in the Corner?GEOGRAPHY COMPASS (ELECTRONIC), Issue 2 2010Reviewing India-Africa Relations in the New Millennium As countries of the ,global South' seek to challenge existing uneven architectures of economic, political and institutional power, now under different circumstances to those prevailing during the Cold War, relations between African countries and various ,Rising Powers' have drawn a great deal of academic and public attention. This scrutiny has been heavily tilted towards analysis of China's African activities. This paper aims to partially redress this balance with an introductory review of India's contemporary relations with sub-Saharan Africa. A number of analysts suggest that in the longer term, India may well achieve a more prosperous and stable economy than China, while in the shorter term, its economic and political profile may result in a more productive relationship for many different African countries, sectors and constituencies. But India will also bring its own challenges in its African commercial interactions, bilateral relations and through its part in shaping the multilateral polity and global economy. This paper therefore aims to critically review contemporary India-Africa relations on four broad thematic points. 1Changing geographies of Indo-African relations; 2Trade and foreign direct investment; 3Development cooperation; and 4Geopolitics and diplomacy. India's confidence as a global political and economic actor is apparent in its African diplomacy and economic engagements, but claims to exceptionalism (relative both to Chinese and Western actors) in such relations are not as self-evident as some have asserted. Whether recent shifts in relations between African nations and India will work in the interests of less privileged citizens, workers and consumers in Africa and in India also remain unclear. [source] Editor's Corner: Considerations in the Rise of Empirical Legal ScholarshipAMERICAN BUSINESS LAW JOURNAL, Issue 3 2010Daniel R. Cahoy No abstract is available for this article. [source] Editor's Corner: Elisha "Malcolm" Abel II, November 14, 1948,December 13, 2009AMERICAN BUSINESS LAW JOURNAL, Issue 2 2010Daniel R. Cahoy Editor in Chief No abstract is available for this article. [source] Editor's Corner: Improving Internal Governance in Unincorporated Business EntitiesAMERICAN BUSINESS LAW JOURNAL, Issue 2 2009Stephanie M. Greene Editor-in-Chief No abstract is available for this article. [source] Brief communication: Restricted geographic distribution for Y-Q* paragroup in South AmericaAMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY, Issue 3 2009Graciela Bailliet Abstract We analyzed 21 paragroup Q* Y chromosomes from South American aboriginal and urban populations. Our aims were to evaluate the phylogenetic status, geographic distribution, and genetic diversity in these groups of chromosomes and compare the degree of genetic variation in relation to Q1a3a haplotypes. All Q* chromosomes from our series and five samples from North American Q* presented the derivate state for M346, that is present upstream to M3, and determined Q1a3* paragroup. We found a restrictive geographic distribution and low frequency of Q1a3* in South America. We assumed that this low frequency could be reflecting extreme drift effects. However, several estimates of gene diversity do not support the existence of a severe bottleneck. The mean haplotype diversity expected was similar to that for South American Q1a3* and Q1a3a (0.478 and 0.501, respectively). The analysis of previous reports from other research groups and this study shows the highest frequencies of Q* for the West Corner and the Grand Chaco regions of South America. At present, there is no information on whether the phylogenetic status of Q* paragoup described in previous reports is similar to that of Q1a3* paragroup though our results support this possibility. Am J Phys Anthropol, 2009. © 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Rural Health Research: Have we Turned the Corner?AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF RURAL HEALTH, Issue 5 2000Professor Roger Strasser First page of article [source] Have Unions Turned the Corner?BRITISH JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS, Issue 2 2006New Evidence on Recent Trends in Union Recognition in UK Firms This paper reports results from a recent survey conducted on unionization in over 650 firms in the private sector in the UK. The survey shows that since 1997 there has been a slight fall in derecognition, but a relatively large increase in union recognition. This increase in new recognition agreements is consistent with the idea that the incoming Labour government had a positive effect on the ability of unions to gain recognition, either through the 1999 legislation or more indirectly through changing the political climate. [source] ChemInform Abstract: First-Principles Electronic Structure Calculations of BaSi7N10 with Both Corner- and Edge-Sharing SiN4 Tetrahedra.CHEMINFORM, Issue 24 2002C. M. Fang Abstract ChemInform is a weekly Abstracting Service, delivering concise information at a glance that was extracted from about 100 leading journals. To access a ChemInform Abstract of an article which was published elsewhere, please select a "Full Text" option. The original article is trackable via the "References" option. [source] A Troubled Corner: the ruined and rebuilt environment of a Central American barrio In post-Rodney-King-riot Los AngelesCITY & SOCIETY, Issue 2 2002Elana Zilberg First page of article [source] ParentLink: A Model of Integration and Support for Parents,FAMILY RELATIONS, Issue 3 2000Carol Mertensmeyer ParentLink represents a collective of Missouri organizations and agencies striving to simplify parents' access to research-based information, services, and problem-solving support pertaining to parenting. It is based on systems theory (von Bertalanffy, 1981) and, more specifically, the ecology of human development (Bronfenbrenner, 1979). A comprehensive array of technologies augments ParentLink professionals' outreach to parents and other citizenry. For parents, the access can be as simple as a telephone call to ParentLink's WarmLine professionals. Other doorways for information and support include ParentLink's Web site, other Web applications, media campaigns, and forthcoming neighborhood-based Parenting Corners. Information gathered from parents and communities about parenting issues will in turn shape future programs and policies. [source] Thirty-year durability of a 20-mil PVC geomembraneJOURNAL OF VINYL & ADDITIVE TECHNOLOGY, Issue 4 2004E. J. Newman In 1971, twenty circular aquaculture ponds were constructed for the W. K. Kellogg Biological Research Station in Hickory Corners, Michigan. The 30.5-m-diameter research ponds were lined using a 0.51-mm-thick fish-grade PVC geomembrane. Over the years the ponds became congested with dense, persistent stands of cattails, trees, and other vegetation, which required the ponds to be cleared and relined in September 2000 in order to allow the initiation of new experiments. The lack of holes in the exhumed geomembrane suggests that it resisted biological attack from microorganisms and also root penetration. Laboratory testing shows that the tensile behavior of the nearly 30-year-old PVC geomembrane is within current specifications for new 0.51-mm-thick PVC geomembranes. Test results also indicate that performing laboratory tests at in-situ moisture conditions provides a better estimate of the field properties of PVC geomembranes than desiccating the material prior to testing, as is required by ASTM Standard Test Methods. J. Vinyl Addit. Technol. 10:168,173, 2004. © 2004 Society of Plastics Engineers. [source] DOES CRIME JUST MOVE AROUND THE CORNER?CRIMINOLOGY, Issue 3 2006A CONTROLLED STUDY OF SPATIAL DISPLACEMENT AND DIFFUSION OF CRIME CONTROL BENEFITS Recent studies point to the potential theoretical and practical benefits of focusing police resources on crime hot spots. However, many scholars have noted that such approaches risk displacing crime or disorder to other places where programs are not in place. Although much attention has been paid to the idea of displacement, methodological problems associated with measuring it have often been overlooked. We try to fill these gaps in measurement and understanding of displacement and the related phenomenon of diffusion of crime control benefits. Our main focus is on immediate spatial displacement or diffusion of crime to areas near the targeted sites of an intervention. Do focused crime prevention efforts at places simply result in a movement of offenders to areas nearby targeted sites,"do they simply move crime around the corner"? Or, conversely, will a crime prevention effort focusing on specific places lead to improvement in areas nearby,what has come to be termed a diffusion of crime control benefits? Our data are drawn from a controlled study of displacement and diffusion in Jersey City, New Jersey. Two sites with substantial street-level crime and disorder were targeted and carefully monitored during an experimental period. Two neighboring areas were selected as "catchment areas" from which to assess immediate spatial displacement or diffusion. Intensive police interventions were applied to each target site but not to the catchment areas. More than 6,000 20-minute social observations were conducted in the target and catchment areas. They were supplemented by interviews and ethnographic field observations. Our findings indicate that, at least for crime markets involving drugs and prostitution, crime does not simply move around the corner. Indeed, this study supports the position that the most likely outcome of such focused crime prevention efforts is a diffusion of crime control benefits to nearby areas. [source] Design as Advantage No. 1: The Design + Identity 50DESIGN MANAGEMENT REVIEW, Issue 1 2000Tom Peters FOR TOM PETERS, design is a resource,perhaps the resource,essential to differentiating an organization from its competition. The 501 insights he presents here celebrate the meaning and value of design. They point to the companies, products, communications, and services that have most effectively taken advantage of this asset. And they memorably drive home the principle that outstanding design should be pervasive,an attribute found in every activity, in every corner of the corporation, and in everything the corporation creates. [source] Morphodynamics of the exit of a cutoff meander: experimental findings from field and laboratory studies,EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS, Issue 3 2010J. Le Coz Abstract The morphological evolution of the entrances and exits of abandoned river channels governs their hydrological connectivity. The study focusses on flow and sediment dynamics in the exit of a cutoff meander where the downstream entrance is still connected to the main channel, but the upstream entrance is closed. Two similar field and laboratory cases were investigated using innovative velocimetry techniques (acoustic Doppler profiling, image analysis). Laboratory experiments were conducted with a mobile-bed physical model of the Morava River (Slovakia). Field measurements were performed in the exit of the Port-Galland cutoff meander, Ain River (France). Both cases yielded consistent and complementary results from which a generic scheme for flow patterns and morphological evolution was derived. A simple analogy with flows in rectangular side cavities was used to explain the recirculating flow patterns which developed in the exit. A decelerating inflow deposits bedload in the downstream part of the cavity, while the upstream part is eroded by an accelerating outflow, leading to the retreat of the upstream bank. In the field, strong secondary currents were observed, especially in the inflow, which may enhance the scouring of the downstream corner of the cavity. Also, fine sediment deposits constituted a silt layer in a transitional zone, located between the mouth of the abandoned channel and the oxbow-lake within the cutoff meander. Attempts at morphological prediction should consider not only the flow and sediment conditions in the cavity, but also the dynamics of the main channel. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd [source] Spatial patterns of water surface topography at a river confluenceEARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS, Issue 9 2002Dr Pascale M. Biron Abstract Understanding flow structures in river confluences has largely been the product of interpretations made from measured flow velocity data. Here, we turn the attention to the investigation of the patterns of both the average and standard deviations of the micro-topography of the water surface at an asymmetrical natural discordant confluence for different flow conditions. Water surface topography is measured using a total station to survey the position of a reflector mounted on a custom-built raft. To limit error problems related to changes in the water level, measurements are taken and analysed by cross-stream transects where five water surface profiles are taken before moving to the next transect. Three-dimensional numerical simulations of the flow dynamics at the field site are used to examine predicted water surface topography for a steady-state situation. The patterns are interpreted with respect to flow structure dynamics, visual observations of boils, and bed topography. Results indicate that coherent patterns emerge at the water surface of a discordant bed confluence for different flow conditions. The zone of stagnation and the mixing layer are characterized by super-elevation, a lateral tilt is present at the edge of the mixing layer, and a zone of super-elevation is present on the tributary side at the downstream junction corner. The latter seems associated with periodical upwelling and is not present in the numerical simulations that do not take into account instantaneous velocity fluctuations. Planform curvature, topographic steering related to the tributary mouth bar, and turbulent structures associated with the mixing layer all play a key role in the pattern of both the average and standard deviation of the water surface topography at confluences. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] A CASE FOR REFORM OF THE CHILD WELFARE SYSTEMFAMILY COURT REVIEW, Issue 4 2007Miriam Aroni Krinsky There are more than half a million children in our nation's foster care system. While foster care is intended to provide a temporary safe harbor for abused and neglected children, too many of these youth spend years in foster care limbo,experiencing a turbulent life in motion as they move from placement to placement, community to community, and school to school. Youth in foster care commonly fail to receive basic health and psychological care, and nearly 20,000 youth age out of foster care every year to an adult path of homelessness, unemployment, and despair. Our entire community must work together to more responsibly parent these youth. This article will address how lawyers and child advocates can advocate for new approaches and enhanced support on behalf of the voiceless and most vulnerable members of our community. It will address existing hurdles and systemic challenges that have helped to create the current disheartening status quo. The article will then discuss strategies that advocates can employ to turn the corner on behalf of these youth at risk. [source] Fatigue life prediction and failure analysis of a gas turbine disc using the finite-element methodFATIGUE & FRACTURE OF ENGINEERING MATERIALS AND STRUCTURES, Issue 9 2004R. A. CLÁUDIO ABSTRACT A numerical prediction of the life of a gas turbine model disc by means of the finite-element technique is presented and the solution is compared with an experimental rim-spinning test. The finite-element method was used to obtain the K solution for a disc with two types of cracks, both at the notch root of the blade insert and located in the corner and in the centre. A crack aspect ratio of (a/c) = 1 was assumed. The fracture mechanics parameters J -integral and K were used in the assessment, which were computed with linear elastic and elastic,plastic material behaviour. Using a crack propagation program with appropriate fatigue-creep crack growth-rate data, previously obtained in specimens for the nickel-based superalloy IN718 at 600 °C, fatigue life predictions were made. The predicted life results were checked against experimental data obtained in real model discs. The numerical method, based on experimental fatigue data obtained in small laboratory specimens, shows great potential for development, and may be able to reduce the enormous costs involved in the testing of model and full-size components. [source] Full-scale study on combustion characteristics of an upholstered chair under different boundary conditions,Part 1: Ignition at the seat centerFIRE AND MATERIALS, Issue 6 2009Q. Y. Xie Abstract The objective of this work is to investigate the effects of boundary conditions on the combustion characteristic of combustible items in a room. A series of full-scale experiments were carried out in the ISO 9705 fire test room with an upholstered chair at four typical locations, i.e. at the middle of side wall, at the center of the room with the seat toward the door, at the center of the room with the seat toward inside of the room, at the room corner, respectively. Ignition was achieved through a BS No.7 wooden crib at the geometric center of the seat surface for each test. Besides the heat release rate (HRR), four thermocouple trees were placed around the chair to monitor detailed temperature distributions during the combustion process of an upholstered chair. The results indicated that the boundary conditions had some effects on the combustion behavior of a chair in a room. It was shown that there were clearly two main peak HRRs for the cases of a chair being clung to the side wall or at the corner. However, there was only one main peak HRR when the chair was placed at the center of the room, either outwards or inwards. In addition, the results of the two cases of chairs being at the center indicate that the maximum HRR (about 829,kW) for the chair seat toward the door was relatively larger than the maximum HRR (about 641,kW) for the chair seat toward inside of the room. It was suggested that the special complex structure of a chair was also a considerable factor for the effect of boundary conditions on the combustion behavior of a chair in an enclosure. Furthermore, the measured temperature distributions around the chair also illustrated the effects of boundary condition on the combustion behavior of a chair in a room. It was suggested that although HRR was one of the most important fire parameters, HRR mainly represented the comprehensive fire behavior of a combustible item. In order to develop more suitable room fire dynamic models, more detailed information such as the surrounding temperature distributions measured by the thermocouple trees are useful. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Numerical determination of 3D temperature fields in steel jointsFIRE AND MATERIALS, Issue 2-4 2004Jean-Marc Franssen Abstract A numerical study was undertaken to investigate the temperature field in steel joints and to compare the temperatures in the joints with the temperatures of the adjacent steel members on the hypothesis that the thermal protection is the same on the joint and in the members. Very brief information is given on the numerical model, supplemented with parametric studies made in order to determine the required level of discretization in the time and in the space domain. A simplified assumption for representing the thermal insulation is also discussed and validated. Different numerical analyses are performed, with a variation of the following parameters: (i) type of joints, from very simple to more complex configurations, with welds and/or bolts, all of them representing joints between elements located in the same plane; (ii) unprotected joints or protected by one sprayed material; (iii) ISO, hydrocarbon or one natural fire scenario. The fact that the thermal attack from the fire might be less severe because the joints are usually located in the corner of the compartment is not taken into account. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Analysis of the distribution of Phytophthora cinnamomi in soil at a disease site in Western Australia using nested PCRFOREST PATHOLOGY, Issue 2 2009N. Williams Summary The oomycete plant pathogen Phytophthora cinnamomi has infected a very large area of native vegetation in the south western corner of Australia. An important aspect of effective disease management depends on being able to accurately map areas of infestation. For this purpose, we have developed a nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR) protocol for the detection of P. cinnamomi in soil. The test uses two sets of primers developed from the rRNA ITS sequences of P. cinnamomi and can detect as little as 1 pg DNA. The degree of sensitivity was reduced with DNA extracted from soil although this depended on the type of soil. Soils with a high organic content, such as eucalypt forest soil and potting mix were more inhibitory than sandy soils. Inhibition by soil DNA could be reduced by the addition of bovine serum albumin and formamide to the reaction. Taq DNA polymerase was very sensitive to inhibitors compared with Tth+ or TaqF1*. In comparison with baiting (0,10% positive samples), nested PCR proved to be a very much more efficient (90,100% positive samples) method for the detection of P. cinnamomi in soil. [source] Embryo medley from the Woods Hole Embryology Course of 2008GENESIS: THE JOURNAL OF GENETICS AND DEVELOPMENT, Issue 10 2008Article first published online: 17 OCT 200 Top edge: Body wall of the annelid Pristina leidya (Jesse Meik and Ian Swinburne). Right edge: Embryo of the grasshopper, Schistocerca americana (R'ada Massarwa). Bottom edge: Drosophila melanogaster embryo (Courtney Karner). Bottom left corner: Mouse embryo (Marie-Therese Noedl). Left upper row: Adult annelid Pristina leidyi (Michelle Collins and Stephanie Lepage). Middle upper row: Embryo of the squid Loligo pealii (Andrew Chervenak). Right upper row: larva of the colonial ascidian, Botrylloides (Jessica Gray). Left lower row: Chick embryo (Benjamin Schlager). Middle lower row: Xenopus laevis (Brooke Armfield and Zacharias Kontarakis). Right lower row: Third instar CNS and disks of Drosophila melanogaster (Jenna Judge). For more information on the Woods Hole Embrylology Course, visit http://www.mbl.edu/education/courses/summer/course_embryo.html [source] Mesozoic,Paleogene sedimentary facies and paleogeography of Tibet, western China: tectonic implicationsGEOLOGICAL JOURNAL, Issue 3 2002Kai-Jun Zhang Abstract In Early,Middle Triassic time, an abyssal sea covered most of the Songpan,Ganzi area, whereas a Central Tibetan Landmass, up to 400,km wide, may have stretched across the Lhasa and Western Qiangtang terrains. In Late Triassic time, the Songpan,Ganzi sea closed, the Central Tibetan Landmass receded westwards away from southern Western Qiangtang, a littoral environment dominated Eastern Qiangtang, middle Western Qiangtang, and southeastern Lhasa, a shelf environment existed only in northern and southeastern Western Qiangtang and northwestern Eastern Qiangtang, and abyssal flysch was spread along the eastern Bangonghu,Nüjiang zone. In Early,Middle Jurassic time, Songpan,Ganzi had become part of the Eurasian continent, abyssal flysch sediments stretched throughout the Bangonghu,Nüjiang zone, the Central Tibetan Landmass was only locally present in southwestern Lhasa, and the Tethyan epicontinental sea nearly covered all Tibet southwest of the Jinsajiang suture. In Late Jurassic time, oceanic flysch deposition existed only along the westernmost Bangonghu,Nüjiang zone, nearly all of Tibet was covered by coastal deposits, and shelf deposits existed only in northern Western Qiangtang and westernmost Lhasa. In the early stage of Early Cretaceous time, the majority of Qiangtang had become dry land, and a supralittoral environment dominated across the entire Lhasa terrain. However, during the late stage of the Early Cretaceous time, platform,shelf carbonates prevailed on southern Western Qiangtang and northern Lhasa. In Late Cretaceous time, the majority of Qiangtang had become emergent land, and a supratidal environment dominated Lhasa, the western rim of Western Qiangtang, and Tarim. In Paleogene time, the majority of Tibet became emergent land, and a supratidal environment existed only on the southern and western rims. The dominance of Upper Triassic,Jurassic shelf carbonates on the northwestern Eastern Qiangtang corner and the northern Western Qiangtang rim suggests a diachronous closing of the Jinsajiang paleo-Tethys ocean, first during latest Triassic time when the Eastern Qiangtang terrain collided with Asia and finally in Jurassic time when the Western Qiangtang terrain was amalgamated to Asia. Rich picotites in Upper Triassic sandstones of middle Qiangtang suggest that the Shuanghu suture could have extended along the middle of Qiangtang, and stable shelf sedimentation during Late Triassic,Middle Jurassic time in the Western Qiangtang terrain shows that the suture probably could not have formed until Middle Jurassic time. The opening time of the Bangonghu,Nüjiang mid-Tethys ocean could be Late Triassic time due to the existence of the Central Tibetan Landmass across Western Qiangtang and Lhasa during Early,Middle Triassic time. However, its opening was diachronous, at Late Triassic time in the east and at Early,Middle Jurassic time in the west. Furthermore, its closing was also diachronous, first in the east at the beginning of Late Jurassic time and later in the west in latest Jurassic to earliest Cretaceous time. Widespread upper Lower Cretaceous limestone up to 5,km thick over the northern half of Lhasa indicates that southern Tibet could have undergone an extensive backarc subsidence during late Early Cretaceous time. Continuous shallow marine sedimentation through the entire Cretaceous time over much of southern Tibet indicates that southern Tibet was intensely elevated only after the end of Paleogene time, its high topography being the product of the Indo-Asian collision. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] The Deukalion and Pyrrha Myth in Paul Celan and Christoph RansmayrGERMAN LIFE AND LETTERS, Issue 2 2003Scott G. Williams This article examines the rewriting of Ovid's version of the Deukalion and Pyrrha myth by Paul Celan and Christoph Ransmayr. The myth relates how Jupiter destroys the world by deluge and how Deukalion and Pyrrha repopulate the earth. This myth of destruction and renewal finds resonance in the poetry of Celan and the novel Die letzte Welt by Ransmayr, one at the start of the literature of the post-war years, the other closing the second half of the century. In the case of Celan, this article highlights a connection to the classical tradition little noticed in the critical literature. In turn, it also helps lift a corner of the veil on some of his enigmatic poetry. Ransmayr's version of the myth is embedded in his rewriting of Ovid's Metamorphoses. The analysis of that version also elucidates the sparse reference to the Holocaust in the novel. There are similar metaphoric responses to the myth in both contemporary writers. Furthermore, the critical response to both writers reflects the tumultuous relationship of German-language literature and history since 1945. [source] Functional reconstruction of the lateral face after ablative tumor resection: Use of free muscle and musculocutaneous flapsHEAD & NECK: JOURNAL FOR THE SCIENCES & SPECIALTIES OF THE HEAD AND NECK, Issue 10 2001Tugrul Maral MD Abstract Background Wide resection of tumors of the middle third of the face often results in complex three-dimensional defects and facial paralysis either due to removal of the facial nerve within the tumoral tissue or to extensive resection of the facial muscles. Methods We report the cases of three patients who underwent wide excision of tumors of the cheek region, operations that resulted in tissue defects and facial palsy. Defect reconstruction and facial reanimation was accomplished in one stage through functional muscle transplantation. Results Follow-up of more than 1 year showed good symmetry at rest and reanimation of the corner of the mouth in all cases, but one patient, in which the ipsilateral facial main trunk was used as motor nerve supply to the transplanted muscle, developed significant muscle contracture and binding of the cheek skin. Conclusions Every effort should be made to optimize the functional and cosmetic outcomes of neurovascular muscle transfers through precise planning and careful execution of the intricate details of the surgical technique for muscle transplantation. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Head Neck 23: 836,843, 2001. [source] Three-Dimensional Bi-Chiral Photonic CrystalsADVANCED MATERIALS, Issue 46 2009Michael Thiel Four different types of bi-chiral photonic crystals are experimentally realized and characterized (see figure). In these 3D bi-chiral photonic crystals one type of handedness stems from the motif (the spirals in our case) and the other one from the corner, that is, from the fictitious skeleton onto which the motif is arranged. In nature only two of these types of bi-chiral photonic crystals exist. We realized all four bi-chiral combinations for the first time. [source] Creating In-Plane Metallic-Nanowire Arrays by Corner-Mediated ElectrodepositionADVANCED MATERIALS, Issue 35 2009Bo Zhang A novel template-assisted electrochemical approach to fabricate in-plane arrays of copper nanowires with tunable width varying from 25,nm to more than 200,nm, which is realized by successive nucleation of copper at the concave corner of the polymer template and the substrate, is reported. We demonstrate that this method can be applied for fabricating complicated structures. [source] Trade union recognition in Britain, 1995,1902: turning a corner?INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS JOURNAL, Issue 3 2004Gregor Gall ABSTRACT This paper examines developments in union recognition in Britain between 1995,1902 and assesses the influence of the statutory provisions for gaining recognition contained in the Employment Relations Act 1999. The paper details the significant increase in new agreements, concluding that the new law is one important factor explaining this growth. Analysis is made of the nature and circumstances of the new agreements. Finally, the paper considers whether these developments indicate the turning of a corner for trends in recognition coverage. [source] |