Kei’s finally used to being around guys, and she no longer loses her lunch when interacting with them. This has led to her and Kousuke becoming closer friends. However, now Yui’s mood seems to have soured. Kei speaks her mind on a topic she believes to be the root of Yui’s bitterness, but instead of smoothing things out she ends up making things worse. In the midst of their arguments, Yui reveals that he and Kei knew each other in the past. Confusion overwhelms Kei because she thought she’d only met Yui when she’d enrolled at Houou High. Did Kei forget something important or is Yui spouting more lies? How can she even think about the past when the present is in peril? She’s too busy battling Yui’s mind-games and keeping her secret from being exposed! Can’t a girl catch a break?!
Surrounded by boys, Kei was certainly having the time of her life in Houou High. But soon after she enrolls, troubles are thrown at her from every direction! Will her roommate, Yui, help her get along or will he be the evil villan that he already is? Or will her classmate, Kousuke, be the true saviour?
Houou High is a famous and incredibly prestigious all-boys school. It's also the stomping grounds for the sons of the most well-renowned families from all walks of life, which gives rise to rumors that it holds a monopoly on money and power. Our protagonist, Kei Saeba, ends up enrolling in this veritable garden of blooming amateurs due to her mother's guile. Now she must pretend she's a boy for three years or she "will be erased"!
Kei’s secret is out: Houou High’s chairman knows she’s a girl! Desperate to keep girls out of his male-only school, Chairman Ooshima will stop at nothing to edge Kei out of Houou High. Kei’s overprotective father is only too happy to agree, and gladly submits his daughter's withdrawal application. Kei always thought she’d be happy when the time came for her to jump back into a blissful life full of girls, and escape from her servitude to Yui, but a revelation about her past — and regarding Yui — has her asking: “Do I really want to leave Houou High?” In light of these revelations, Kei tries to help Yui confront his feelings toward his father, while she is forced to acknowledge her own feelings for her roommate. Now she must decide what she will do, whether it be challenging the system or returning to the comforts of her old life, to find happiness.
Kei’s secret is out: Houou High’s chairman knows she’s a girl! Desperate to keep girls out of his male-only school, Chairman Ooshima will stop at nothing to edge Kei out of Houou High. Kei’s overprotective father is only too happy to agree, and gladly submits his daughter's withdrawal application. Kei always thought she’d be happy when the time came for her to jump back into a blissful life full of girls, and escape from her servitude to Yui, but a revelation about her past — and regarding Yui — has her asking: “Do I really want to leave Houou High?” In light of these revelations, Kei tries to help Yui confront his feelings toward his father, while she is forced to acknowledge her own feelings for her roommate. Now she must decide what she will do, whether it be challenging the system or returning to the comforts of her old life, to find happiness.
Surrounded by boys, Kei was certainly having the time of her life in Houou High. But soon after she enrolls, troubles are thrown at her from every direction! Will her roommate, Yui, help her get along or will he be the evil villan that he already is? Or will her classmate, Kousuke, be the true saviour?
Kei’s finally used to being around guys, and she no longer loses her lunch when interacting with them. This has led to her and Kousuke becoming closer friends. However, now Yui’s mood seems to have soured. Kei speaks her mind on a topic she believes to be the root of Yui’s bitterness, but instead of smoothing things out she ends up making things worse. In the midst of their arguments, Yui reveals that he and Kei knew each other in the past. Confusion overwhelms Kei because she thought she’d only met Yui when she’d enrolled at Houou High. Did Kei forget something important or is Yui spouting more lies? How can she even think about the past when the present is in peril? She’s too busy battling Yui’s mind-games and keeping her secret from being exposed! Can’t a girl catch a break?!
Coastal Acoustic Tomography begins with the specifics required for designing a Coastal Acoustic Tomography (CAT) experiment and operating the CAT system in coastal seas. Following sections discuss the procedure for data analyses and various application examples of CAT to coastal/shallow seas (obtained in various locations). These sections are broken down into four kinds of methods: horizontal-slice inversion, vertical-slice inversion, modal expansion method and data assimilation. This book emphasizes how dynamic phenomena occurring in coastal/shallow seas can be analyzed using the standard method of inversion and data assimilation. The book is relevant for physical oceanographers, ocean environmentalists and ocean dynamists, focusing on the event being observed rather than the intrinsic details of observational processes. Application examples of successful dynamic phenomena measured by coastal acoustic tomography are also included. Provides the information needed for researchers and graduate students in physical oceanography, ocean-fluid dynamics and ocean environments to apply Ocean Acoustic Tomography (OAT) to their own fields Presents the benefits of using acoustic tomography, including less disturbance to aquatic environments vs. other monitoring methods Includes the assimilation of CAT data into a coastal sea circulation model, a powerful tool to predict coastal-sea environmental changes
“Children of the A-Bomb” is a collection of 67 testimonies of Hiroshima survivors culled from a total of more than 2,000, detailing the experiences of these innocent victims on 6th August 1945, as painfully remembered six years later, on what, in the Japanese way of counting, was the seventh anniversary of the event. The book is divided into four sections, according to the grade of the writers in 1951: from grammar to junior, senior and high school, including three undergraduate college students. The length of the testimonies varies from one to ten pages, the longer ones of course being concentrated in the latter half of the book. And though much of the material focuses on the immediate aftermath of the bombing, some of the writers also cover the days and sometimes weeks that followed, insofar as they were affected by the bomb, or perpetuated the victims’ misery with their litany of typhoons, starvation, and radiation sickness and death.—Jean-Francois Virey
Houou High is a famous and incredibly prestigious all-boys school. It's also the stomping grounds for the sons of the most well-renowned families from all walks of life, which gives rise to rumors that it holds a monopoly on money and power. Our protagonist, Kei Saeba, ends up enrolling in this veritable garden of blooming amateurs due to her mother's guile. Now she must pretend she's a boy for three years or she "will be erased"!
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