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OPENING AN EMBASSY IN SEOUL: SOME REFLECTIONS
GORDON LONGMUIR 계명대학교 한국학연구원 2005 Acta Koreana Vol.8 No.1
Though Canada established formal diplomatic relations with the Republic of Korea in 1964, there was no embassy in Seoul until 1973. That year D. Gordon Longmuir was dispatched to Seoul to help open that embassy and serve as First Secretary and Consul, as well as Chargé d’Affaires until a resident ambassador arrived early in 1974. He stayed in Seoul until 1976. Among the more pressing duties of the embassy while he was stationed there was ensuring adequate safeguards for a nuclear reactor Korea was considering buying from Atomic Energy of Canada Limited (AECL). At first Canada, somewhat distrustful of President Park Chung Hee, was uncertain whether or not to provide Park with such a nuclear power plant. However, after the ROK agreed to ratify the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty, the deal was signed and Korea eventually went on to purchase a total of four Canadian-designed CANDU nuclear reactors. As a representative of the Canadian government, Longmuir was in the audience on August 15, 1974, when a disgruntled Korean-Japanese attempted to assassinate Park but shot and killed Park’s wife instead. He also watched as, under Park’s leadership, the Korean economy began its rapid march to modernization while the government resisted pressure for democratization. The embassy occasionally had to intervene on behalf of some activist Canadian missionaries who felt that urban workers were being asked to pay too heavy a price for Korea’s economic progress.
Reversible Dysphasia and Statins
Gordon Robert Wyndham Davies 대한의학회 2012 Journal of Korean medical science Vol.27 No.4
This paper presents a case of reversible dysphasia occurring in a patient prescribed atorvastatin in combination with indapamide. A milder dysphasia recurred with the prescription of rosuvastatin and was documented on clinical examination. This resolved following cessation of rosuvastatin. The case highlights both a need for a wider understanding of potential drug interactions through the CYP 450 system and for an increased awareness, questioning and reporting of drug side-effects.
A model for an adaptable axisymmetric extrusion die with a bearing length
Gordon, W.A.,Van Tyne, C.J.,Moon, Y.H. Elsevier 2007 Journal of materials processing technology Vol.191 No.1-3
The adaptable design method uses upper bound models to determine die shapes that meet specified criteria, such as minimizing distortion in the product. This method has been developed for the axisymmetric extrusion process. In order to extend the methodology to the three-dimensional extrusion of a non-axisymmetric shape, the deformation zone in the upper bound model would need to be extended into the bearing region of the extrusion die. The necessary equations and conditions needed to make such an extension are presented in this paper. Finite element modeling (FEM) is used to compare the results of extrusion through dies designed by the adaptable die design method, for a model with the deformation zone extended into the bearing region, to a model without such an extension. The results indicate that the upper bound model incorporating a bearing length provides a realistic flow field. The results also demonstrate that the upper bound model can be used to analyze a multi-sectioned die, so long as: (1) the die surface and first derivative of the surface are continuous between sections, and (2) calculation of the internal power of deformation is made for each section separately. The results provide further support for the findings that the average effective strain and the volumetric effective strain rate deviation are robust criteria, which can be used to determine optimal adaptable die shapes with an upper bound model.
Additive time-dependent hazard model with doubly truncated data
Gordon Frank,Minwoo Chae,김용대 한국통계학회 2019 Journal of the Korean Statistical Society Vol.48 No.2
For doubly truncated data, i.e. the variables of interest are only observable if they lie in a certain random interval, an additive hazard model with time-dependent regression coefficients is investigated. Consistency and asymptotic normality are proven under mild assumptions. A simulation study investigates the finite sample properties and the influence of the truncation distribution on the estimation error. Finally, the method is applied to a doubly truncated data set of German companies, where the age at insolvency is of interest.
( Gordon E. Slethaug ) 서울대학교 미국학연구소 2010 미국학 Vol.33 No.1
In commenting on the huge accumulation of wealth in America, Larry Samuel (Rich: The Rise and Fall of American Wealth Culture) marvels that, even with the current Great Recession, there has never before been so much real wealth in the world and so many rich people in America. In 1861 there were only three millionaires in the USA, but by 2007 “there were 9.9 million millionaire households.” With that fantastic increase, “the democratization of wealth in America has diluted the social signifiers or markers of elitism-sense of privilege and entitlement, discreetness, understatedness, noblesse oblige, snobbery-that once were assigned to the rich.” Rich calls this a “social downfall” of the current wealthy elite because they are no longer respected the way their rich forbears were. However, the wealthy elite in America always had to take an extra step to demonstrate that they were not merely rich, but deservedly wealthy. Early members of the Puritan community needed to demonstrate that getting wealthy was part of God`s providential plan. In the 18th- and 19th centuries, the wealthy needed to show that they were well connected with good breeding. Unconnected, upstart members of the Gilded Age like the Vanderbilts and Morgans needed to show that they had social graces and could mingle with and marry aristocrats. Other robber barons such as John D. Rockefeller. Sr. who bridged the 19th and 20th centuries and who were regarded as unscrupulous pariahs needed to demonstrate that they could attain special worthiness. This presentation, using the example of John D. Rockefeller. Sr. and his children and grandchildren in New York City, explores the ways that richelite have always needed to prove themselves rightful beneficiaries of wealth and worthy of social approval.