Charlie goes on an adventure with Kangu, the kangaroo, through a magical world. They arrive on a shore with mermaids and seahorses who were pushed out of the sea. The mermaids explain to Charlie that a powerful octopus is destroying the sea and they have nowhere to live. Charlie and Kangu take on the challenge of finding this octopus and put a stop to his plan. On their way to search for the octopus, they are faced with dangerous sea creatures. Will Charlie and Kangu make it? Are they brave enough to defeat the octopus?
Charlie uses a magical wall in his basement to enter a magical world and meet his best friend Kangu, the kangaroo. Kangu jumps fast creating a portal that takes him and Charlie to a sandy island where they get to explore the inside of a pyramid. As they try to avoid traps, Charlie breaks a crystal which releases many critters. Charlie and Kangu run as fast as they can trying to escape the pyramid, and once they are outside, they face a huge sandstorm. Will Charlie and Kangu escape the storm? What other obstacles will they face?
Descriptions and illustrations of gorgets (breastplates) held by the National Museum of Australia; history of king plates; list of references to Aboriginal people wearing gorgets and known Aboriginal gorgets.
This guide draws together, on a regional basis, vital data on the wide range of artefacts, photographs, films, botanical samples and manuscript material which make up the collections of Aboriginal heritage material held at Museum Victoria.
A New York Times Bestseller "A beautiful blend of history and prose and proves again Mr. Toll’s mastery of the naval-war narrative." —Wall Street Journal This masterful history encompasses the heart of the Pacific War—the period between mid-1942 and mid-1944—when parallel Allied counteroffensives north and south of the equator washed over Japan's far-flung island empire like a "conquering tide," concluding with Japan's irreversible strategic defeat in the Marianas. It was the largest, bloodiest, most costly, most technically innovative and logistically complicated amphibious war in history, and it fostered bitter interservice rivalries, leaving wounds that even victory could not heal. Often overlooked, these are the years and fights that decided the Pacific War. Ian W. Toll's battle scenes—in the air, at sea, and in the jungles—are simply riveting. He also takes the reader into the wartime councils in Washington and Tokyo where politics and strategy often collided, and into the struggle to mobilize wartime production, which was the secret of Allied victory. Brilliantly researched, the narrative is propelled and colored by firsthand accounts—letters, diaries, debriefings, and memoirs—that are the raw material of the telling details, shrewd judgment, and penetrating insight of this magisterial history. This volume—continuing the "marvelously readable dramatic narrative" (San Francisco Chronicle) of Pacific Crucible—marks the second installment of the Pacific War Trilogy, which will stand as the first history of the entire Pacific War to be published in at least twenty-five years.
Braithwaite's argument against punitive justice systems and for restorative justice systems establishes that there are good theoretical and empirical grounds for anticipating that well designed restorative justice processes will restore victims, offenders, and communities better than existing criminal justice practices. Counterintuitively, he also shows that a restorative justice system may deter, incapacitate, and rehabilitate more effectively than a punitive system. This is particularly true when the restorative justice system is embedded in a responsive regulatory framework that opts for deterrence only after restoration repeatedly fails, and incapacitation only after escalated deterrence fails. Braithwaite's empirical research demonstrates that active deterrence under the dynamic regulatory pyramid that is a hallmark of the restorative justice system he supports, is far more effective than the passive deterrence that is notable in the stricter "sentencing grid" of current criminal justice systems.