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1000 tulosta hakusanalla D Ben Miller

Methods of Using the Club for Self-Defense and Exercise in 19th Century Germany
Since the dawn of human history, the club has been popularly regarded as the most primitive of weapons-the first that early man was able to crudely fashion using his own two hands, for the purposes of self-defense, hunting, and war. However, as the millennia progressed, the club developed a romantic allure, becoming associated with heroic figures such as Hercules, medieval fencing masters, and European strongmen as well as strongwomen. Later, the use of the club was also advocated by military authors of fencing treatises as physical conditioning for saber fencing. In this book, we examine the use of the club as both a weapon of self-defense and an exercise tool-with particular regard to its use in the nineteenth century Germanic speaking world-and examine a number of obscure technical sources that have hitherto escaped the notice of modern scholars and historians. Among the most interesting, and reprinted in a full bilingual version within this book, is a concise fencing treatise detailing the use of the massive, two-handed club. Published in 1855 in Germany, but with Scandinavian roots, this method looks at the use of the club for its serviceability as a tool of both self-defense and self-development (i.e., the cultivation of body, mind, and spirit). This club-method was part of a larger, holistic fencing system, that was intended to inculcate in the practitioner a knowledge of fencing theory and mechanics that could be applied to any weapon. As the author of the treatise explains: "The mere technical or regulatory exercises in the use of the club would indeed appear to be useful, in that one would be practicing the appropriate handling of that two-handed and massive cutting weapon and, in the event of an emergency, a club (or a club-like weapon), such as may be at hand, would then be able to be used with skill and safety... at the same time, they contain aesthetic elements which the trained gymnast can easily make use of." Methods of Using the Club contains extensive footnotes, more than sixty-five drawings, paintings, and photographs from history, and both an English translation and the original German version of the aforementioned treatise. CONTENTS Acknowledgments - viiI: Introduction - 1II: Notes on the Treatise - 47III: Treatise (English Translation) - 61IV: Treatise (German Transcription) - 89V: Additional Club Exercises - 103VI: Epilogue - 109Bibliography - 111About the Author - 115Additional Works - 116
Readability Research

Readability Research

Sofie Beier; Sam Berlow; Esat Boucaud; Zoya Bylinskii; Tianyuan Cai; Jenae Cohn; Kathy Crowley; Stephanie L. Day; Tilman Dingler; Jonathan Dobres; Jennifer Healey; Rajiv Jain; Marjorie Jordan; Bernard Kerr; Qisheng Li; Dave B. Miller; Susanne Nobles; Alexandra Papoutsaki; Jing Qian; Tina Rezvanian; Shelley Rodrigo; Ben D. Sawyer; Shannon M. Sheppard; Bram Stein; Rick Treitman; Jen Vanek; Shaun Wallace; Benjamin Wolfe

Now Publishers Inc
2022
nidottu
From the moment we wake up to the moment we end our day, we use interfaces built out of the written word. Textual information remains now, as it has for centuries, the cornerstone of human information acquisition. The wide adoption of smartphone, tablets, e-readers and personal computers has shifted the bulk of this reading from inflexible paper to digital content. The control provided by digital displays over how visual information is presented to readers has the potential to improve reading for each and every reader, regardless of ability or diagnosis. This represents a profound shift in how we think about reading because text is no longer rendered immutable by writers, designers, or publishers at a single stage, and human-computer interaction research is key to realizing its potential. Readability research takes a fundamentally individual approach to what each reader needs. Each reader has their own individual needs. Meanwhile, adapting the written word to the individual reader has never been easier, and the goal of maximizing individual reading efficacy is increasingly attainable. No one discipline or field has all the tools or answers, and readability work is inherently interdisciplinary. The authors of this monograph include vision scientists, technology experts, educators, designers, typographers, and data scientists. Together they represent voices from academia, the tech industry, and non-profit institutions, driven by common goals to improve the reading interfaces of today. In this review, they provide a comprehensive introduction to interdisciplinary methodologies, tools, and materials required for readability research focused on the individual reader. They call on the HCI community to contribute to the growing understanding of readers’ needs; to study the interactions between text, user, and task; and to build the tools and interfaces needed to improve reading outcomes for all.
Plough Quarterly No. 43 – Why We Work

Plough Quarterly No. 43 – Why We Work

James Rebanks; Benoit Gautier; Tish Harrison Warren; Adam Nicolson; Alister McGrath; Cristian Wiman; Shira Telushkin; Alastiar Roberts; Norann Voll; Bobbie Jamieson; Brian D. Miller; Ben Wray; William P. Hyland

PLOUGH PUBLISHING HOUSE
2025
nidottu
Is our work merely a way to put food on the table, or does it have inherent value? Should our work define us? Does it play too large a role in our lives? Does it make us feel more human, or less so? This issue explores the realities of work for people with various jobs, but also probes the reasons people work and what they hope to gain from their labor. From warehouse workers to poets, food delivery specialists to cloistered nuns, farmers to police officers, this issue considers personal, spiritual, and social aspects of one of the most basic human activities. On this theme: James Rebanks prepares to pass on the farm to his children. Benoit Gautier rides a shuttlebus with dislocated French warehouse workers. Shira Telushkin asks why young women today are becoming cloistered nuns. Ben Wray talks to food-delivery riders in three countries about their attempts to organize. John Clair, a police chief, wants policing to be about relationships, not statistics. Norann Voll tells how her father taught her to embrace her blue-collar roots. Maureen Swinger honors the unpaid and unheralded work of caring for an aging loved one. Alastair Roberts recommends the divine rhythm of work and Sabbath rest God established in Genesis. Also in this issue: Adam Nicolson finds a different sort of freedom sailing a sixteen-foot wooden boat. Alister McGrath explores the connection between detective fiction and the spiritual quest. Tish Harrison Warren introduces Stanley Hauerwas to new audiences. Christian Wiman shares a new poem about a glass-eyed monk. Plough Quarterly features stories, ideas, and culture for people eager to apply their faith to the challenges we face. Each issue includes in-depth articles, interviews, poetry, book reviews, and art.
Cyd-ddyheu a'i Cododd Hi

Cyd-ddyheu a'i Cododd Hi

D Ben Rees

Melin Bapur
2024
pokkari
(A history of the Labour party in Welsh by one of its longest standing activists)A hithau wedi dominyddu Gwleidyddiaeth Cymru ers dechrau'r ugeinfed ganrif, y Blaid Lafur Gymreig yw un o'r pleidiau gwleidyddol fwyaf llwyddiannus mewn unrhyw wlad, ac mae ganddi ran hollol ganolog yn hanes Cymru dros y ganrif a hanner ers ei sefydlu. Mae gan Gymru ei hun lle hynod bwysig yn hanes y Blaid Lafur, gan mai yng Nghymru yr ennillodd y Blaid ei buddugoliaethau etholaethol cyntaf, a Chymru fu ei chadarnle hynaf a chryfaf erioed.Serch hynny, cyn nawr ni fu ymdrech i olrhain a chrynhoi hanes cyflawn y Blaid Lafur yng Nghymru yn yr Iaith Gymraeg, o'i rhagflaenwyr ymysg Cristnogion sosialaidd fel Robert Owen drwy at fuddugoliaethau ffurfiol cyntaf y blaid ar ddechrau'r ugeinfed ganrif, cyfnodau cythryblus mewn llywodraeth ac fel gwrthblaid, a'i chyfnodau o lwyddiant ac o fethiant yn ystod ail hanner yr ugeinfed ganrif. Telir sylw teilwng i ffigyrrau Cymreig blaenllaw'r blaid ac i'r cwestiynau hynny oedd o ddiddordeb neilltuol iddynt megis datganoli a'r Iaith Gymraeg. Mae D. Ben Rees wedi bod yn weithgar gyda'r Blaid Lafur ers y 1950au ac eisoes wedi cyhoeddi bywgraffiadau i amrywiaeth o unigolion ag iddynt ran flaenllaw yn y gyfrol hon, fel Cledwyn Hughes a Jim Griffiths.
Jimmy Wilde ( 1892-1969)

Jimmy Wilde ( 1892-1969)

D Ben Rees

Workbook Press
2022
pokkari
There is no doubt among the experts that Jimmy Wilde of Wales in the United Kingdom must be the greatest fighting man between 1911 and 1923, indeed some maintain that he was the greatest boxer that has ever lived. He was a huge sensation and the various names that were bestowed on him tell a fascinating story. The best known of these must be THE MIGHTY ATOM and THE GHOST WITH A HAMMER. Brought up in a miner's cottage in the Rhondda Valley he was taught his craft while working as a coal miner with his father and in the evenings in the boxing booth . He was fortunate in his family, his wife Elizabeth, his father-in-law Dai Davies and his trainer Ted Lewis. Jim Driscoll, another boxing giant from Cardiff taught him the finer points of the craft As he was so thin and never exceeded seven stones he always fought with great deal disadvantage before heavy boxers . Wilde provided every boxing venue from Edinburgh to Dublin, London to New York, Philadelphia to Liverpool with drama and excitement . The fans were dazzled by his speed, skill and dexterity. Seen in action in his Army service in the First World War, he travelled everywhere with plenty of energy Wilde would never shirk from his challenger and exhibited at all times superb courage and knock out punches He was unique in his day . Professor Dr. D Ben Rees has produced a readable, well produced account which will be of a huge interest to those who love reading of the golden age of boxing, and how Wilde was able to show his ability in the home of boxing, the United States of America.
Analysis of the Air Force Logistics Enterprise

Analysis of the Air Force Logistics Enterprise

Ben D. Roo; Manuel Carrillo; John G. Drew; Thomas Lang; Amy L. Maletic

RAND
2011
pokkari
This technical report describes the benefits of reallocating certain maintenance activities between mission-generation locations and a repair network, options to support the C-130, and consolidating repair network activities to centralized repair facilities. The report also provides an initial assessment of maintenance concepts that integrate wing-level and depot-level maintenance processes.