| The first excerpt represents the past or something you must release, and is drawn from U. S. Project Trinity Report by Carl Maag and Steve Rohrer: 3 RADIATION PROTECTION AT PROJECT TRINITY
3.1 Organization
3.2 Site Monitoring Group
3.3 Offsite Monitoring Group
4 DOSIMETRY ANALYSIS OF PARTICIPANTS IN PROJECT TRINITY
4.1 Film Badge Records
4.2 Gamma Radiation Exposure
REFERENCE LIST
LIST OF FIGURES
1-1 Location of Alamogordo Bombing Range
1-2 TRINITY Site and Major Installations
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The second excerpt represents the present or the deciding factor of the moment, and is drawn from Philosophy 4 by Owen Wister: manuscript essays on Botticelli or Pico della Mirandola, or manuscript
translations of Armenian folksongs; read these to ecstatic, dim-eyed
ladies in Newbury Street, who would pour him cups of tea when it was
over, and speak of his earnestness after he was gone. It did not do the
ladies any harm; but I am not sure that it was the best thing for Oscar.
It helped him feel every day, as he stepped along to recitations with
his elbow clamping his books against his ribs and his heavy black curls
bulging down from his gray slouch hat to his collar, how meritorious he
was compared with Bertie and Billy--with all Berties and Billies. He
may have been. Who shall say? But I will say at once that chewing the
cud of one's own virtue gives a sour stomach.
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The third excerpt represents the future or something you must embrace, and is drawn from Historical Lecturers and Essays by Charles Kingsley: Linane says:
Red as the blood which flowed from stricken deer,
White as the snow on which that blood ran down,
Black as the raven who drank up that blood;
- and possibly, as in the case of Brian Boru's mother, had given his
fair-haired sister in marriage to some Irish prince, and could not
resist the spell of their new creed, and the spell too, it may be,
of some sister of theirs who had long given up all thought of
earthly marriage to tend the undying fire of St. Bridget among the
consecrated virgins of Kildare.
I am not drawing from mere imagination. That such things must have
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