Books by "Kenneth E. Buck"

5 books found

The Sources and Sitz Im Leben of Matthew 23

The Sources and Sitz Im Leben of Matthew 23

by Kenneth G. C. Newport

1995 · A&C Black

Imperial Japan's Allied Prisoners of War in the South Pacific

Imperial Japan's Allied Prisoners of War in the South Pacific

by C. Kenneth Quinones

2021 · Cambridge Scholars Publishing

Three weeks after Imperial Japan’s surrender, five men dressed in baggy khaki uniforms stared at the camera. They and two colleagues were the only survivors out of the 210 Allied airmen which Imperial Japan had imprisoned in “paradise.” Joining them were 18 British soldiers, the only survivors of 600 of their countrymen similarly but separately imprisoned. Another 10,000 Allied soldiers and civilians were also imprisoned on the South Pacific island of New Britain. More than half died before liberation. What motivated such inhumane treatment? This book’s quest for an answer traces the genesis of Bushido, Imperial Japan’s martial code, and surveys the prisoners’ recollections of their ordeal as the Battle for Rabaul raged around them from 1942 to March 1944.

Dayton Aviation

Dayton Aviation

by Kenneth M. Keisel

2012 · Arcadia Publishing

Hallowed skies blanket Dayton, Ohio, a city once known as the "Cradle of Aviation"--and with good reason. It was in Dayton that two brothers became the unlikely creators of the world's first airplane, but that is just the start of the story. Dayton Aviation: The Wright Brothers to McCook Field examines Dayton's civil and military aviation history from its start with the Wright Brothers to the founding of Wright and Patterson Fields in the 1930s, a period that saw the construction of the world's first airport, the Huffman Flying Prairie. Dayton was home to the first airplane factory and, later, the world's largest aircraft factory. The city introduced the world to crop dusting, landing lights, free-fall parachutes, pressurized cabins, night aerial photography, the first private-cabin plane, and the first strategic bomber. In downtown Dayton, office workers could look out windows and watch history unfold as pilots broke one world record after another in the skies over the city. Dayton was, and still is, the airplane capital of the world. These images, captured by the founding fathers of aviation, show that from 1904 through the 1930s, if it was happening in the air, it was happening in Dayton.

The Whiteware Industry of West Virginia

The Whiteware Industry of West Virginia

by Walter Allos Koehler, E. K. Koos, Kenneth E. Buck

1929

The Strength of Concrete-steel Bridge Floor Slabs

The Strength of Concrete-steel Bridge Floor Slabs

by Lewis Van Carpenter, Roland Parker Davis, Charles Elmer Lawall, Dennis Lee McElroy, George Paul Boomsliter, John Leroy Schroder, Lyle Kermit Herndon, Walter Allos Koehler, West Virginia University. Engineering Experiment Station, Willard Wellington Hodge, William Smith Downs, Charles Thomas Holland, E. K. Koos, Edward Joseph Niehaus, Richard Newton, Kenneth E. Buck

1929