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         Dixon Thomas:     more books (100)
  1. Carbon Shift: How Peak Oil and the Climate Crisis Will Change Canada (and Our Lives) by Thomas Homer-Dixon, 2010-04-13
  2. The Foolish Virgin by Thomas Dixon, 2010-07-06
  3. West Virginia Railroads: Railroading in the Mountain State by Thomas W Dixon Jr, 2010-02-15
  4. The Man in Gray (Webster's Spanish Thesaurus Edition) by Thomas Dixon, 2008-06-04
  5. Immanence & Transcendence in Thomas Pynchon's Mason & Dixon: A Phenomenological Study (Acta Universitatis Stockholmiensis, Stockholm Studies in English, 97) by Joakim Sigvardson, 2002-12
  6. The Life and Times of Thomas Dixon 1805-1871 by Stafford Linsley, 2006-11-15
  7. A description of the environs of Ingleborough, and principal places on the banks of the river Wenning. Attempted by Thomas Dixon, of Bentham; ... by Thomas. Dixon, 2010-05-28
  8. The Life of Thomas Dixon: A Memorial by Samuel Crothers Logan, 2010-03-01
  9. Baltimore & Ohio's Magnificent 2-8-8-4 EM-1 Articulated Locomotive by Thomas W. Dixon Jr, Bob Withers, 2008-11-15
  10. The One Woman: A Story of Modern Utopia by Thomas Dixon Jr., 2007-10-27
  11. Electrical Measurement and the Galvanometer: Its Construction and Uses by Thomas Dixon Lockwood, 2010-03-09
  12. Thomas Brown: Selected Philosophical Writings (Library of Scottish Philosophy)
  13. The life worth living, a personal experience by Thomas Dixon, 2010-09-04
  14. The One Woman by Thomas Dixon, 2004-07-01

21. Thomas Homer-Dixon
Ecoviolence Links among Environment, Population, and Security Scholarly ArticlesHypotheses, Conceptual Framework, and Methodology HomerDixon, Thomas.
http://www.homerdixon.com/academic.html
Books Published
Environment, Scarcity and Violence

Ecoviolence: Links among Environment, Population, and Security

Scholarly Articles
Hypotheses, Conceptual Framework, and Methodology:

Homer-Dixon, Thomas. " On the Threshold: Environmental Changes as Causes of Acute Conflict. International Security, vol. 16, no. 2 (Fall 1991) pp. 76 -116.
Homer-Dixon, Thomas. " Environmental Scarcities and Violent Conflict: Evidence from Cases International Security, vol. 19, no. 1 (Summer 1994) pp. 5 - 40.
Homer-Dixon, Thomas. " The Ingenuity Gap: Can Poor Countries Adapt to Resource Scarcity? Population and Development Review, 21, no. 3 (September 1995) pp. 1-26.
Homer-Dixon, Thomas. Strategies for Studying Causation in Complex Ecological-Political Systems . EPS, June 1995.
Project on Environment, Population and Security (EPS)
Thematic Reports:
Barbier, Edward and Homer-Dixon, Thomas. Resource Scarcity, Institutional Adaptation, and Technical Innovation: Can Poor Countries Attain Endogenous Growth? EPS, May 1996. Gizewski, Peter and Homer-Dixon, Thomas. Urban Growth and Violence: Will the Future Resemble the Past?

22. The Ingenuity Gap
Thomas HomerDixon's study of a world becoming too complex and too fast-paced to manage. Includes forum, a writing contest, suggested readings and links.
http://www.ingenuitygap.com
Can we solve the problems of the future? Thomas Homer-Dixon tackles this question in a groundbreaking study of a world becoming too complex and too fast-paced to manage. The challenges we face converge, intertwine, and often remain largely beyond our understanding. Most of us suspect that the "experts" don't really know what's going on and that as a species we've released forces that are neither managed nor manageable. This is the ingenuity gap, the critical gap between our need for ideas to solve complex problems and our actual supply of those ideas. Poor countries are particularly vulnerable to ingenuity gaps, but our own rich countries are no longer immune, and we're all caught dangerously between a soaring requirement for ingenuity and an increasingly uncertain supply. As the gap widens, the result can be political disintegration and violent upheaval. With riveting anecdotes and lucid argument, Thomas Homer-Dixon uses his ingenuity theory to suggest how we might approach these problems in our own lives, our thinking, our businesses, and our societies.
To receive regular updates and articles by Thomas Homer-Dixon about issues raised in The Ingenuity Gap, send your email address to

23. Welcome To The Thomas Nygard Gallery
Bozeman, MT gallery specializing in 19th 20th century American Western art. Featuring works by Charles M. Russell, Frederic Remington, William R. Leigh, Joseph H. Sharp, Dixon, Dunton, Rungius, Farny, Fechin, Bierstadt, Moran, Frank T. Johnson and Ernest M. Hennings.
http://www.nygardgallery.com
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24. Mason & Dixon - Thomas Pynchon
The Governor of the East India Company in its first decade, Sir Thomas Smyth, wasalso the first Governor of the Virginia Company founded in 1606, and the two
http://www.hyperarts.com/pynchon/mason-dixon/extra/eic.html
Alpha Index A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W XYZ
East India Company Contributed by John Mascaro The East India Company in North America Although its Charter only gave the East India Company a monopoly on trade to the east of the Cape of Good Hope, the sheer scale of its enterprise meant that the Company had a significant influence on the newly emerging American colonies. Indeed the American historian Henry Newton Stevens maintained that the Mayflower which participated in the third voyage of the Company was the same ship that later was to take the Pilgrim Fathers on their voyage from Plymouth. The Virginia Company In the early days of the seventeenth century the small circle of influential merchants in the City of London who formed the East India Company in 1600 had their fingers in a number of other trading pies. The Governor of the East India Company in its first decade, Sir Thomas Smyth, was also the first Governor of the Virginia Company founded in 1606, and the two Companies shared their headquarters in Smyth's house, along with that of the Levant Company. The Virginia Company was the first British colonial enterprise in North America, following on the naming of that state after the Virgin Queen, Elizabeth I. The Virginia Company founded the colonial port of Jamestown on Chesapeake Bay, now a Colonial Heritage site. Captains from Hudson to Kidd The Yale brothers The second-generation American bothers, Elihu and Thomas Yale, forged notable careers for themselves in the Company's service. Elihu rose to become Governor of Madras, and from there in 1689 he sent Thomas on what was the Company's first direct trading mission to China, paving the way for the eventual opening up of that unknown country to the Company's traders. Although his brother was later disgraced, Elihu returned to America with the fortune that he had earned in India, donating part of it to his old school, which, in gratitude, renamed itself "Yale College" in 1718.

25. Thomas Dixon, 1864-1946 And Arthur I. Keller (Arthur Ignatius), 1866-1924, Illus
Thomas Dixon, 18641946. The Clansman An Historical Romance of the Ku Klux Klan Biographical Information. About Thomas Dixon. Subjects. United States Race relations Fiction
http://docsouth.unc.edu/dixonclan/menu.html
Thomas Dixon, 1864-1946 and Arthur I. Keller (Arthur Ignatius), 1866-1924, illustrated by
The Clansman: An Historical Romance of the Ku Klux Klan.
Funding from a Chancellor's Grant for Instructional Technology supported the electronic publication of this title. Return to "Library of Southern Literature" Home Page Return to "The North Carolina Experience, Beginnings to 1940" Home Page Return to Documenting the American South Home Page Feedback URL: http://docsouth.unc.edu/dixonclan/menu.html Last update April 27, 2004

26. Thomas Dixon, 1864-1946 And C. D. Williams, Illustrated By The Leopard's Spots:
The Leopard s Spots A Romance of the White Man s Burden, 18651900. By Thomas Dixon,1864-1946 and CD Williams, illustrated by. Learn More About Thomas Dixon.
http://docsouth.unc.edu/dixonleopard/menu.html
Thomas Dixon, 1864-1946 and C. D. Williams, illustrated by
The Leopard's Spots: A Romance of the White Man's Burden, 1865-1900.
Funding from a Chancellor's Grant for Instructional Technology supported the electronic publication of this title. Return to "Library of Southern Literature" Home Page Return to "The North Carolina Experience, Beginnings to 1940" Home Page Return to Documenting the American South Home Page Feedback URL: http://docsouth.unc.edu/dixonleopard/menu.html Last update April 27, 2004

27. Dixon, Thomas, 1864-1946. "The Leopard's Spots: A Romance Of The White Man's Bur
The leopard s spots a romance of the white man s burden, 18651900,by Thomas Dixon, Jr., 1864-194. Dixon, Thomas, 1864-1946. The
http://docsouth.unc.edu/dixonleopard/illustr4.html
Dixon, Thomas, 1864-1946
The Leopard’s Spots:
a Romance of the White Man’s Burden
New York : Doubleday, Page, 1902
"A DAZZLING VISION OF BEAUTY."" Return to Menu Page for The Leopard's Spots by T. Dixon
Return to "A Digitized Library of Southern Literature, Beginnings to 1920" Home Page
Return to Documenting the American South Home Page
Feedback

URL: http://docsouth.unc.edu/dixonleopard/illustr4.html
Last update March 23, 2004

28. Dixon, Thomas. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001. Dixon, Thomas. 1864–1946,American novelist, b. Shelby, NC, grad. Wake Forest College.
http://www.bartleby.com/65/di/Dixon-Th.html
Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia Cultural Literacy World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations Respectfully Quoted English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Columbia Encyclopedia PREVIOUS NEXT ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Dixon, Thomas

29. Dixon, Thomas. "The Clansman"
The clansman an historical romance of the Ku Klux Klan, by Thomas Dixon, Jr., 18641946 Dixon, Thomas, 1864-1946. The Clansman Return to Menu Page for The Clansman by T. Dixon. Return to "A
http://docsouth.unc.edu/dixonclan/dixontp.html

30. Buy Appalachian Coal Mines And Railroads By Dixon, Thomas, Jr. At
Appalachian Coal Mines and Railroads by Dixon, Thomas, Jr. in Paperback. ISBN 1883089085.
http://rdre1.inktomi.com/click?u=http://na.link.decdna.net/n/3532/4200/www.walma

31. Fnac.com  - Livres  - Thomas Homer-Dixon
Thomas Homer-Dixon» . Voir tous les résultats pour « Thomas Homer-Dixon » en Livres.
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32. Primera Vista - Homer-Dixon, Thomas
Translate this page Ficha de autor, Homer-Dixon, Thomas Thomas Homer-Dixon es director delPrograma de Estudios sobre Paz y Conflictos y profesor adjunto
http://www.primeravistalibros.com/fichaAutor.jsp?codigo=685

33. Dixon Family
Capt. Thomas Dixon / Judith Wingfield. 1705 1763 / 1707 - 1772 m abt1720. Thomas Dixon. The parentage for Thomas seems to be unknown.
http://wolves.dsc.k12.ar.us/cyberace/sbgone/gen/fam1/dixon/thomas.htm
Capt. Thomas Dixon / Judith Wingfield
m abt 1720 Thomas Dixon
  • The parentage for Thomas seems to be unknown. One source has him as the son of Adam Dixon who came to US in 1699. There was a Thomas Dixon in Isle of Wight who left orphans Thomas and Henry, raised by Henry Martin, their stepfather. Lived in Prince George County , Virginia where he is believe to have been born and died
Judith Wingfield Children: Martha, Mary, Thomas, Frederick, John, Henry
Henry Dixon Sr. /Elizabeth Abernathy
Henry Dixon
  • Born in Prince George Co., Va List of Tithables Taken by John Dix in Pittsylvania County , Va for the year 1767: Henry Dixon, Jas. Durough, Jas. Borough Enty Record Book. 1737-1770. (Land entries in the present Virginia Counties of Halifax, Pittsylvania, Henry, Franklin, and Patrick) listed below: 1764.15th Novr. Henry Dixson 400 Ac Beg. at Robt. Wynns upper Line where it Crosses Rutledge Cr. Th. e up both sides. Also the same persons 400 Ac on matrimoney Cr. Beg. at a Black Jack.

34. Browse Top Level > Texts > Project Gutenberg > Authors > D > Dixon, Thomas
Foolish Virgin, The, 1999. There is no description available for this text. AuthorDixon, Thomas Keywords Authors D Dixon, Thomas; Titles F ; Literature.
http://www.archive.org/texts/textslisting-browse.php?collection=gutenberg&cat=Au

35. Publications In Print
HomerDixon, Thomas. International Security, vol. 16, no. 2 (Fall 1991), 10.00. Homer-Dixon,Thomas. International Security, vol. 19, no. 1 (Summer 1994), 10.00.
http://www.library.utoronto.ca/pcs/print.htm
Publications in Print
The publications listed below have been generated by research projects associated with the Trudeau Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies at the University of Toronto. Some are available free of charge on the Web Mail orders must be prepaid . We require prepayment on all orders by cash, certified cheque, money order or institutional cheque, made payable to the University of Toronto . We cannot process credit card charges or purchase orders. Please include your mailing address with the order. Charges are calculated on a cost-recovery basis, including photocopying, postage, staff costs and applicable taxes. To place an order, print this form and send it with your payment to: Trudeau Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies
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phone: (416) 978 8148
fax: (416) 978 8416 (Prices listed in Canadian dollars) Price Copies Subtotal
GENERAL - CORE PAPERS
On the Threshold: Environmental Changes as Causes of Acute Conflict. Homer-Dixon, Thomas. International Security, vol. 16, no. 2 (Fall 1991)

36. Publications On The Web
Hypotheses, Conceptual Framework, and Methodology HomerDixon, Thomas. 16,no. 2 (Fall 1991) pp. 76 -116. Homer-Dixon, Thomas.
http://www.library.utoronto.ca/pcs/catalog.htm
Publications on the Web
The publications listed below have been generated by research projects associated with the Trudeau Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies at the University of Toronto. If you cannot locate an item in this catalogue, it may be available in print
Hypotheses, Conceptual Framework, and Methodology:
Homer-Dixon, Thomas. "On the Threshold: Environmental Changes as Causes of Acute Conflict." International Security , vol. 16, no. 2 (Fall 1991) pp. 76 -116.
Homer-Dixon, Thomas. "Environmental Scarcities and Violent Conflict: Evidence from Cases." International Security , vol. 19, no. 1 (Summer 1994) pp. 5 - 40.
Homer-Dixon, Thomas. "The Ingenuity Gap: Can Poor Countries Adapt to Resource Scarcity?" Population and Development Review , 21, no. 3 (September 1995) pp. 1-26.
Homer-Dixon, Thomas. Strategies for Studying Causation in Complex Ecological-Political Systems. EPS, June 1995.
Project on Environment, Population and Security (EPS)
Thematic Reports:
Barbier, Edward and Homer-Dixon, Thomas.

37. Bio, Dixon, Thomas J.
Dixon, Thomas J. Name Thomas J. Dixon Rank/Branch Civilian Unit Glomar Java SeaDate of Birth Home City of Record Date of Loss 25 October 1983 Country of
http://www.pownetwork.org/bios/d/dg01.htm
DIXON, THOMAS J. Name: Thomas J. Dixon Rank/Branch: Civilian Unit: Glomar Java Sea Date of Birth: Home City of Record: Date of Loss: 25 October 1983 Country of Loss: South Vietnam Loss Coordinates: Status (in 1973): Category: Acft/Vehicle/Ground: Personnel in Incident: Herman Arms; Jerald T. Battiste; Sebe M. Bracey; Patrick B. Cates; Wei Chen; Xiong Chen; Shu Guo Cheng; Jacob K. J. Chong; David P. Clifton; James F. Cusick; Thomas J. Dixon; Shao Jien Feng; Jerald J. Flanagan; Nigel Furness; Leonard E. Ganzinotti; La Juan A. Gilmore; Henry M. Gittings; James K. Gittings; Terance C. Green; Jun Tian Guan; David Higgins, Jr.; Tyronne Higgins; Hong Xi Huang; Rui Wen Huang; Yong Liang Huang; Timothy Jarvis; John W. Jennings Jr.; Thomas J. Kofahl; Fan Xiang Kong; Guo Zhen Lai; John W. Lawrence; Tong L. T. Lee; Chong Chang Li; Xuan Qiu Li; Zhan Jun Liang; Jie Feng Lin; Bing Guang Liu; Edgar S. Lim; Gary Looke; Robert M. McCurry; Jerry L. Manfrida; Raymond D. Miller; Xie Yi Mo; Tian Xue Mo; Kenneth W. Myers; Larry K. Myers; Donald J. Ouellet; John D. Pierce; Peter Popiel; Clarence Reed; Jewell J. Reynolds; E.J. Russell Reynolds; Walter T. Robinson; Kenneth B. Rogers; Lawrence M. Salzwedel; William R. Schug; Richard E. Shoff; Christopher J. Sleeman; Delmar A. Spencer; George G. Sullivan; Chong Jian Sun; Gustaf F. Swanson; Kevin C. Swanson; Guo Dong Tang; Michael W. Thomas; Jiang Wang; Yu Fang Wang; Dong Cai Wang; Guo Rong Wu; jing Sheng Xia; Xing Xing; Hui Xu; Ming Rui Xu; Mua Guang Yuan; Xing Zhen Zhang; Yi Hua Zhang; Ji Chang Zhen; Shu Rong Zhou; Yao Wu Zhou; Jie Fang Zhou; Da Huai Zhu. Source: Compiled by Homecoming II Project 10 December 1990 from one or more of the following: raw data from U.S. Government agency sources, correspondence with POW/MIA families, published sources, interviews. Updated by the P.O.W. NETWORK 1998. REMARKS: SYNOPSIS: The 5,930-ton American drilling ship, "Glomar Java Sea" was owned by Global Marine of Houston, Texas, and leased to Atlantic Richfield Company (ARCO). In the fall of 1983, the vessel was on duty about 200 miles east of the Vietnamese coast. The ship was drilling for oil in the South China Sea in a joint venture of ARCO and China Naitonal Offshore Oil Corporation, a state-owned concern. The "Glomar Java Sea" is a sister ship of the "Glomar Explorer," which, under the guise of being utilized by the late Howard Hughes in a deep sea mining operation in the Paficic, was really being used by the CIA and Navy in a $350 million project to retrieve a sunken Soviet Golf-class submarine. A large part of the submarine was in fact recovered in 1974 before details of the project were publicly revealed. The Glomar Java Sea, with its crew of 81, began drilling operations on January 9, 1983 and was the first American wildcat operaton off the Chinese coast. On October 25, 1983, the vessel was sunk during Typhoon Lex. Documents removed from the ship by a crewman before the disaster indicate that the vessel was being shadowed by armed Vietnamese naval craft and that there were submarine mines beneath the "Glomar Java Sea," placed there and retrievable by its crew. Another document indicates that the ship was damaged prior ot the typhoon when a Chinese supply boat rammed into its side, causing some $320,000 damage to the vessel. The Glomar Java Sea did not leave its post for repairs. Communications between ARCO and Global Marine, as well as telegraphic and radio communications of the U.S. Western Pacific Rescue Coordination Center (WESTPAC) reveal information about the search for the crew of the Glomar Java Sea. The documents indicate that a number of survivors from the stricken vessel were floundering in the water off the coast of Vietnam for hours after the disaster. There is also indication that the men were picked up by Vietnamese coastal patrols and are held captive of the Hanoi regime. The crew of the Glomar Java Sea included 37 Americans, 35 Chinese, four British, two Singaporeans, one Filipino, one Australian, and one Canadian. From a transcript of a radio communicaton between WESTPAC and Global Marine on October 28, three days after the sinking, WESTPAC was told: "We are informed that the SOS transmission could not have been transmitted except by human operators..." There were two 64-man lifeboats aboard the drilling ship, plus smaller lifeboats. In an October 29 communicaton from WESTPAC to Global Marine, it is clearly stated that five strobe lights were sighted by rescue aircraft in the vicinity of 17-30 North 107-45 East. The aircraft were dispatched to the area because strobe lights had been previously sighted. Lifejackets from the Glomar Java Sea were equipped with strobe lights to signal rescuers. Another October 29 communication between ARCO and Global Marine states that ARCO's search aircraft had spotted survivors in the water at 17.27 North 107.54 East, and had attempted to divert surface vessels to this location. The communication expressed the urgency to rescue the men before dark. At 8:01 a.m. on October 29, ARCO had dropped a rescue raft to survivors. Pickup would be delayed for several hours, but the "Salvanquish," a Singapore-based salvage ship, was within one half-mile of the site. At 8:38 a.m search aircraft reported pinpointing the survivors' positions by dye markers released by the survivors into the water. Two survivors were confirmed with a possible third some distance away. Plans were also made to return to the downed vessell to offlift survivors. Another document shows that on nine different occasions radio transmissions were picked up from a lifeboat. They ranged from "very strong" to "weak" with most being described as "strong." Inexplicably, despite the successful search, no rescue was made of the survivors. Later that day, the Chinese Navy picked up a Vietnamese broadcast reporting that the Vietnamese had sighted a lifeboat near their coast. The location of the lifeboat was not confirmed by friendly search parties. ARCO-Global Marine determined that this sighting was in the vicinity of Hon Gio Island, located about 80 miles up the Vietnamese coast from the old U.S. base at Da Nang and about 14 miles offshore, which placed it in Vietnamese territorial waters. It appears that rescue craft were hampered in fully investigating the report due to its location and the hint of possible interference by the Vietnamese military. It is likely that survivors would have been picked up by the Vietnamese if they had in fact drifted within Vietnam's territory. In the years following the loss of the Glomar Java Sea, a number of reports, all unconfirmed by the U.S., indicate that survivors were seen in captivity in Vietnam. It is known that the Vietnamese had shown a hostile interest in the vessel, and the Glomar Java Sea had standing orders to be alert for Vietnamese vessels in the area. The Chinese Navy served as protection for the vessel and stood ready to take action should Vietnamese craft wander too close. The waters below the vessel were mined. A month after the Glomar Java Sea went down, Chinese divers went down to the wreckage and went through the ship with a video cameras. In March 1984, American divers were able to retrieve 31 bodies from the sunken vessel. Fifteen of the bodies were identified as Americans. In addition, three British and one Singaporean were identified. The bodies of another American and two Chinese were tentatively identified. Divers photographed two bodies they were unable to retrieve. They also found one of the Chinese divers that had explored the wreckage in November 1983, lashed to the deck of the ship. The American divers determined that one of the ship's large lifeboats was launched and that an attempt had been made to launch another. Their film was seen by the mother of one of the lost crewmen. She reported that the crack in the hull of the ship at one point was a hole 48 inches across, which was punctured inward, "as though the rig had been hit by something that exploded." This fueled additional speculation that the vessel had, in fact, been attacked rather that simply mortally damaged by the typhoon. The National Transportaton Safety Board officially determined in November 1984 that an "unexplained crack" in the hull of the Glomar Java Sea was responsible for its sinking during the typhoon. Apparently, the crack in the hull allowed two storage tanks to fill with water, causing the vessel to become off-balanced, making it vulnerable to the forces of the typhoon. Officials believed it was possible that survivors may have been able to abandon the ship before it sank. It was determined that the ship had been improperly prepared for the storm. During 1984, there were reports from Southeast Asia that between six and twelve survivors of the Glomar Java Sea were being held in prisoner of war camps in Vietnam. One of the survivors was identified by a Vietnamese refugee as American crewman John Pierce. Douglas F. Pierce, father of John Pierce, reported that the refugee had seen his son, five other Americans and eight Chinese when they were brought into a prison in Da Nang, where the refugee was being held. John Pierce gave the refugee his father's business card and two sticks of gum. Mr. Pierce gave the information to Defense Intelligence Agency who determined that the refugee had not been in the camp at all, but had received the business card by mail from a friend, not directly from Pierce. DIA further determined that the incident had occurred in late October 1983 (shortly after the Glomar Java Sea went down). The refugee gave Mr. Pierce the original letter, which contained the names and addresses of two mutual Vietnamese friends. No followup was conducted on the two names in the letter by DIA, and DIA discounted the information provided by the refugee. It was not until 1990 that it became apparent that the Defense Department felt no responsibility for the Americans lost on the Glomar Java Sea. At that time, DIA reported that the responsibility for these civilians belonged to the U.S. State Department. Mr. Pierce did not stop there. He uncovered a U.S. State Department document that revealed that Cheng Quihong, the secretary and wife of the Director of China's Visa Office, was overheard telling her companion at a Hong Kong dinner that survivors from the Glomar had been picked up and were held by the Vietnamese. Pierce also learned that a JCRC report sent to DIA dated November 6, 1984, reported that a former prisoner from Pleiku prison had been held with a Chinese man who claimed to have been off the Glomar. The man said he was one of three men who were captured, and that the other two were Americans. Pierce adds that to his knowledge, neither of these reports were followed up by U.S. officials, and Pierce has received no reply to his queries regarding them. In 1989 a Japanese monk named Yoshida was released from prison after being held for years by the Vietnamese. Yoshida was shown a photograph of John Pierce and stated that Pierce looked very familiar, and that he had either seen him or someone who looked very much like him. In November, 1990, Vietamese Foreign Minister Nguyen Co Thach traveled to the U.S. and spoke with U.S. officials on a variety of matters. At this time, he announced that there was a black American named Walter T. Robinson living illegally in Vietnam, and invited U.S. representatives to come and help find him. Thach provided a social security number and two photographs. The Pentagon told "The Washington Times" that the two photographs of Robinson provided by Thach are of a black man. However, the Pentagon has since admitted that the photos "are not very well developed" and appear to be of either a black man or a dark Asian. Photocopies of old newspaper articles concerning Robinson, obtained by Homecoming II, show a dark-haired man of relatively dark complexion. The Pentagon has not released the photographs to the press. The Defense Department determined that Walter T. Robinson had never been listed as missing in Vietnam. Thach had provided a social security number, and according to DOD, this information correlated to a white American living in the Midwest. They concluded that the Thach information, therefore, was in error. Later information indicated that a Walter T. Robinson was listed on the crew roster of the Glomar Java Sea. When queried, the Defense Department reported that they were aware of this Robinson, but that civilians were the responsibility of the State Department. It seems apparent that the U.S. is not vigorously looking for the men missing from the Glomar Java Sea, and that like the missing and prisoners who served in military and civilian capacities during the Vietnam war, they have been abandoned.

38. Project Gutenberg Titles By Dixon, Thomas
Project Gutenberg Titles by. Thomas Dixon.
http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/gutbook/author?name=Dixon, Thomas

39. Mason & Dixon, Thomas Pyhchon
Dixon. Roman. Thomas Pynchon, Rowohlt 2001 (TB). Ein Triumph? Mason Dixon , neuestes Werk des Mysteriums Pynchon, Autor
http://www.literatur-fast-pur.de/0mason.html
Roman.
Thomas Pynchon , Rowohlt 2001 (TB)
Ein Triumph ? "Mason & Dixon", neuestes Werk des "Mysteriums" Pynchon, Autor des berühmten "Die Enden der Parabel", eines Buches, das hart an der Grenze zur Unlesbarkeit laviert, während andere Werke wie "Die Versteigerung von No. 49", "V." und "Vineland" in dieser Hinsicht keine Fragen offen lassen.
Irgendwo in Amerika sitzt ein "genialer Satiriker", oder vielleicht doch nur ein schriftsprachbegabter Soziopath, der in unregelmäßigen Abständen Bücher abliefert, die den Leser das Fürchten lehren, inhaltlich weder nachvollziehbar sind, noch irgendeinen anderen Anreiz liefern, gelesen zu werden. Während "V.", "Vineland" oder, als Exponent, "Die Versteigerung von No. 49" bereits auf den Versuch einer nachvollziehbaren Handlung verzichten, fußt "Mason & Dixon" zumindest in gewisser Hinsicht auf chronologischem Geschehen, sogar - oder wieder - mit historischem Bezug.
Genaugenommen ist das aber völlig egal, denn dieses nicht verstehbare Buch gibt dem geneigten Leser nur wenig Möglichkeiten, Hintergründe, Zusammenhänge oder eine irgendwie geartete Charakterisierung der Protgagonisten zu verstehen. Blasse Figuren, ohne jede Kontur, ohne Motivation, schwätzend und sinnlos handelnd, oder plötzlich im Chor singend, jedenfalls sich in einem breiigen, mystisch-naiven Kontext bewegend, was sich Pynchon beim Schreiben erschlossen haben mag, mir jedenfalls nicht beim Lesen. Die "FAZ" nennt das Buch - laut Klappentext - einen Triumph, und in gewisser Hinsicht kann ich mich diesem Urteil nur anschließen.

40. Dixon, Thomas
Site Map. encyclopediaEncyclopedia Dixon, Thomas. Dixon, Thomas, 1864–1946,American novelist, b. Shelby, NC, grad. Wake Forest College.
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Encyclopedia

Dixon, Thomas Dixon, Thomas, , American novelist, b. Shelby, N.C., grad. Wake Forest College. A militant Southerner, he is best known for his novel The Clansman (1905), on which the movie The Birth of a Nation (1915) was based. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia,
Dixon
Dix, Otto
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