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Showing 1 - 25 of
63 matches in All Departments
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2014 (Hardcover)
Paul C. Gardner
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R734
R503
Discovery Miles 5 030
Save R231 (31%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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On the thirteenth anniversary of the 9/11 terror attack on the
World Trade Center and Pentagon, America is violently assaulted
again. Muslim terrorists appear responsible for a deadly blast in
San Francisco. After state police uncover weapons and explosives
stored in mosques they gather up Muslims throughout California,
Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas. Those detainees are eventually
expelled into other states and mosques left behind are burned and
demolished.
Muslims riot and attack police and civilians in Newark, Detroit,
Toledo, New York City, and Washington DC. Faced with the
realization that Muslim facilities nationwide are being used as the
focus points of terrorism, the President of the United States
orders the military, Homeland Security, and local police to seize
the remaining mosques and to incarcerate or deport all Muslims who
are not citizens.
When tourist destinations, sporting venues and shopping malls
are savagely struck by murderous revolutionaries and Latino
separatists seize control of the southwest United States President
James Burns orders the nation on Code Red terror alert. The round
up of Muslims is expanded to include illegal immigrants, and
gangsters with foreign connections. As the country slowly returns
to normal another destructive development, the most diabolical,
unfolds.
An expressive dialogue between Deleuze's philosophical writings on
cinema and Beckett's innovative film and television work, the book
explores the relationship between the birth of the event - itself a
simultaneous invention and erasure - and Beckett's attempts to
create an incommensurable space within the interstices of language
as a (W)hole.
A D-day survivor tells how he later became commander of the
just-liberated Buchenwald Concentration Camp, and how that
experience set him on a journey of spiritual exploration-in an
effort to understand what we can say about God after the Holocaust.
Meeting the Russian prisoners at Buchenwald, and learning of
Stalin's similar camps, he decided to make Russia's problems his
own. That decision eventually took him to the Kremlin where he met
Gorbachev and Sakharov. Throughout, he describes his discovery of
"a down-to-earth spirituality," one that offers a new approach to
reconciling science and religion.
This comprehensive reference explores the current and future state
of biobehavioral markers in family resilience research, with
special focus on linking biological and physiological measures to
behavioral and health outcomes. It brings together the latest
biobehavioral data on child-parent and couple relationships,
adversity, and other key areas reflecting new technological
advances in biobehavioral studies and translates these findings
into implications for real-world practice and policy. The
contributors' insights on biomarkers apply to emerging topics of
interest (e.g., molecular genetics) as well as familiar ones (e.g.,
stress). Their interdisciplinary perspective helps to elaborate on
risk and resilience factors for those creating the next generation
of evidence-based interventions. Among the topics covered: The
immune system as a sensor and regulator of stress: implications in
human development and disease The psychobiology of family dynamics:
bidirectional relationships with adrenocortical attunement
Intergenerational transmission of poverty: how low socioeconomic
status impacts the neurobiology of two generations The influence of
teacher-child relationships on preschool children's cortisol levels
Challenges and strategies for integrating molecular genetics into
behavioral science Besides its worth to researchers and
practitioners studying and working with families at risk,
Biobehavioral Markers in Risk and Resilience Research also has
utility as a training text, offering a highly accessible
presentation and discussion questions suited to classroom use.
Lyndon Johnson brought to the presidency a political outlook
steeped in New Deal liberalism and the idea of government
intervention for the public good at home or abroad. Seeking to
fulfill John Kennedy's pledge in Southeast Asia, LBJ constructed a
fatal coupling of the Great Society and the anti-Communist
imperative. Pay Any Price is Lloyd Gardner's riveting account of
the fall into Vietnam; of behind-the-scenes decision-making at the
highest levels of government; of miscalculation, blinkered
optimism, and moral obtuseness. Blending political biography with
diplomatic history, Gardner has written the first book on American
involvement in the Vietnam War to use the full resources and newly
declassified documents of the Johnson Library, and to tell whole
the story of Johnson and Vietnam. The book is filled with fresh
interpretations, brilliantly incisive portraits of the president
and his men, and new perspectives on America's most divisive
foreign war. Gardner describes for the first time how, as tragedy
swirled around the deliberations in Washington, Clark Clifford and
Dean Rusk struggled for the president's soul, culminating in the
bombing halt of 1968 and the Johnson decision not to run. The war
finally sundered the liberal cold war consensus, Gardner argues,
and brought to an end the New Deal politics that had dominated
American political life since 1933. Pay Any Price is a major work
of history by one of our most distinguished historians."
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Clinical Pharmacology of Anti-Epileptic Drugs - Workshop on the Determination of Anti-Epileptic Drugs in Body Fluid II (WODADIBOF II) Held in Bethel, Bielefeld, Germany, 24 - 25 May, 1974 (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1975)
H. Schneider, D. Janz, C Gardner-Thorpe, H. Meinardi, A L Sherwin
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R2,831
Discovery Miles 28 310
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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"He who is faithfully analysing ... epi lepsy is doing far more
than studying epilepsy" Hughlings Jackson Modifying this well-known
statement by Jackson, one could say today: "He who is faithfully
analysing anti-epileptic drugs is doing far more than studying
anti-epileptic drugs." For these drugs not only serve to prevent
epileptic fits and thus advance the treatment of epilepsy, they are
also effective in the treatment of cardiac arrhythmias and
trigeminal neuralgia. Furthermore, clinical pharmacologists
consider anti-epi leptic drugs as model drugs in pharmacokinetics
and pharmocodynamics, since reliable methods are available for
their determination and their effects and side effects can be
defined. The methods of estimating of drugs in body fluids provide
a tool that enables us to throw light on many obscure relationships
in pharmaceutical treatment. Now that we can study the
pharmacokinetics and interaction of drugs in man, many hypotheses
based on clinical experience alone may well be eliminated or
corroborated. The grow ing body of knowledge will make us more
careful about the administration of drugs in combination. Now that
we can study how biological parameters interfere with drug action,
we may perhaps proceed to the scientific analysis of many clinical
observations that suggest the importance of such factors as age,
sex, menstrual cycle, pregnancy, fever, diet, stress, sport,
climate, and altitude."
Presenting new perspectives on the Vietnam War, its global repercussions, and its role in modern history, this volume reveals "America's War" as an international event that reverberated worldwide. The essays address political, military, and diplomatic issues and the cultural and intellectual consequences of "Vietnam." They compare the Vietnam War to other major conflicts in world history. "America's War" is depicted as a global event whose origins and characteristics deserve an interdisciplinary treatment.
The war within the war was the struggle among Roosevelt, Churchill,
and Stalin for the shape of the world that would follow World War
II. That delicate diplomacy is spelled out in Lloyd Gardner's
brilliant reinterpretation of the negotiations that divided Europe
and laid the foundations of the cold war. Mr. Gardner begins his
story not conventionally in 1941 but with the British attempt to
appease Hitler at Munich in 1938. Here, the author argues, were the
roots of the territorial agreements that culminated at Yalta-the
"spheres of influence" which the Americans sought to avoid as an
Old World curse on the possibilities of a freer and more liberal
world economy. Using the most recently opened sources, including
those from Soviet archives, Mr. Gardner captures the heady
atmosphere of these momentous events in deft glimpses of the major
personalities and a persuasive analysis of the course of events. He
shows how Roosevelt tried to avoid the partition of Europe that
Churchill and Stalin wanted, but ultimately settled for it in the
hope of keeping the Allies together to make a more lasting peace.
Playing for time, FDR ran out of it. The result was the cold
war-which Mr. Gardner concludes may have been preferable to World
War III.
Presenting new perspectives on the Vietnam War, its global repercussions, and its role in modern history, this volume reveals "America's War" as an international event that reverberated worldwide. The essays address political, military, and diplomatic issues and the cultural and intellectual consequences of "Vietnam." They compare the Vietnam War to other major conflicts in world history. "America's War" is depicted as a global event whose origins and characteristics deserve an interdisciplinary treatment.
An expressive dialogue between Deleuze's philosophical writings on
cinema and Beckett's innovative film and television work, the book
explores the relationship between the birth of the event - itself a
simultaneous invention and erasure - and Beckett's attempts to
create an incommensurable space within the interstices of language
as a (W)hole.
What are the most effective methods to code and analyze data for a
particular study? This thoughtful and engaging book reviews the
selection criteria for coding and analyzing any set of data-whether
qualitative, quantitative, mixed, or visual. The authors
systematically explain when to use verbal, numerical, graphic, or
combined codes, and when to use qualitative, quantitative, graphic,
or mixed-methods modes of analysis. Chapters on each topic are
organized so that researchers can read them sequentially or can
easily "flip and find" answers to specific questions. Nontechnical
discussions of cutting-edge approaches-illustrated with real-world
examples-emphasize how to choose (rather than how to implement) the
various analyses. The book shows how using the right analysis
methods leads to more justifiable conclusions and more persuasive
presentations of research results. Useful features for teaching or
self-study: * Chapter-opening preview boxes that highlight useful
topics addressed. * End-of-chapter summary tables recapping the
'dos and don'ts' and advantages and disadvantages of each analytic
technique. * Annotated suggestions for further reading and
technical resources on each topic. See also Vogt et al.'s When to
Use What Research Design, which addresses the design and sampling
decisions that occur prior to data collection.
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The Calling
Dean C Gardner
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R336
R286
Discovery Miles 2 860
Save R50 (15%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Throughout western history, the societies that have made the
greatest contributions to the spread of freedom have created iconic
works of art to celebrate their achievements. Yet despite the
enduring appeal of works from the Parthenon to Michelangelo's David
to Picasso's Guernica, histories of both art and democracy have
ignored this phenomenon. Millions have admired the works of art
covered in this book but relatively few know why they were
commissioned, what was happening in the culture that produced them,
and what they were meant to achieve. Even scholars who have worked
on these objects for decades often miss the big picture as these
objects have been traditionally studied in isolation.
The goal of this book is to integrate the pursuits of creative
excellence and human freedom on the grounds that this synthetic
approach will bring a fresh, new perspective into both lines of
inquiry. "David's Sling" places into context ten canonical works of
art executed to commemorate the successes of free societies that
exerted political and economic influence far beyond what might have
been expected of them. The book thus fuses political and art
history with a judiciously-applied dose of creative reconstruction
to craft a lively narrative around each key work of art and the
free system that inspired it. "David's Sling" tells their story.
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