Word: cruz
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...investigation, to be conducted by O'Connor, the Cambridge police and fire chiefs, was sparked by a report sent to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) by Daniel Hirsch, an authority on research reactors at the University of California at Santa Cruz. The report stated that security for nuclear reactors must be improved substantially to protect such facilities from fuel-theft and sabotage...
...Joaquin kit foxes, yellow- bellied marmots, California bighorn sheep and mountain lions patrol the high mountains and hidden valleys; bald eagles and hawks, herons and condors find their lonesome rookeries. Some of Tupper Ansel Blake's photographs--a grove of bishop pines at Point Reyes, the promontories of Santa Cruz Island fading into the mist--evoke Japanese prints. All eloquently plead the book's cause: save the wilderness...
...between past and present and between the diverse elements of Mexican culture. Fuentes' first novel "Where the Air is Clear" (1958) is a mythical history of Mexico City. In this novel Mexico's mythical past of rituals and sacrifices appears parallel with the present. In "The Death of Artemio Cruz" (1962), the story is narrated by the revolutionary turned opportunist of the book's title as he lies on his death bed. The story is told by multiple voices with a constantly shifting narrative and chronological viewpoint...
...does the reader fit into this complex structure of interwoven times and multiple voices? "Terra Nostra," for example, has often been considered unreadable by critics. Yet Fuentes emphasizes that in spite of its difficulty, it is a novel which does not go unread. "The Death of Artemio Cruz" and "Where the Air is Clear" were both considered extremely difficult and complicated when they first appeared. Fuentes tells of one critic who suggested that "The Death of Artemio Cruz" served no better purpose than to be flushed down the drain. "Today," Fuentes says, "these novels are read by 15 year-olds...
...scientists, the great quake and its aftershocks were not surprising. Karen McNally, a geophysicist at the University of California, Santa Cruz, had warned in 1981 that substantial seismic activity was likely in the area. "Everything we had seen," she says, "could not allow us to exclude the possibility of a major earthquake...