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Now in it's fourth edition and thoroughly updated to ensure all
content is mapped to the new 2018 NMC standards, this book is a
practical and readable guide to undertaking a research project plan
or a literature review for final year assessment. The book guides
readers from start to finish, beginning with choosing a nursing
topic and developing questions about it, then accessing and
critically reviewing research literature, considering ethical
issues, proposing research where applicable, and finally, writing
up and completing the literature review or research proposal. The
authors also explore how to translate evidence into practice and
how this can improve day to day decision-making, as well as feeding
into assessments.
Now in it's fourth edition and thoroughly updated to ensure all
content is mapped to the new 2018 NMC standards, this book is a
practical and readable guide to undertaking a research project plan
or a literature review for final year assessment. The book guides
readers from start to finish, beginning with choosing a nursing
topic and developing questions about it, then accessing and
critically reviewing research literature, considering ethical
issues, proposing research where applicable, and finally, writing
up and completing the literature review or research proposal. The
authors also explore how to translate evidence into practice and
how this can improve day to day decision-making, as well as feeding
into assessments.
Gambling played a major role in the lives of the men that drove the
western movement of Americans across the continent during the
nineteenth century. Wherever there were men with money there was
gambling. Saloons and gambling halls had a large array of games to
entice customers to take a chance of walking out a winner - a very
little chance. The soft slap of cards, the click of dice, and the
rattle of a roulette wheel greeted players as they walked into the
top saloons of the 1880's. But what were the games of that era? How
were they played and why are most of the games not found in casinos
today? Ante up and find out in this concise, compact book that
takes you inside the frontier gambling saloons and gambling halls.
Card games, dice games, and wheel games are vividly described with
plenty of vintage photographs to illustrate how the games were
played.
Gambling in the Old West Hip-Pocket History of the Old West
(Series) Informative, yet entertaining, the Hip-Pocket History
series provides little nuggets without having to wade through a
400-page book of dry academic ostentatiousness. Gambling played a
major role in the lives of the men that drove the western movement
of Americans across the continent during the nineteenth century.
Games of chance were dear to the hearts of not only cowboys, but
also gold miners, plantation owners, bankers, merchants, soldiers,
trappers, buffalo hunters, mule skinners, and most of the other men
of the American West, even including some preachers. Wherever there
were men with money there was gambling - and most of it was
crooked. Whether it was rigged, fixed, double-dealt, cold-decked,
braced or otherwise manipulated - very little was left to luck and
skill.
This the true story of Willis Newton and his outlaw gang who robbed
trains and over seventy banks-more than Jessie James, the Daltons,
and all of the rest of the Old West outlaws-combined. They robbed a
number of banks at gunpoint, but their specialty was hitting banks
in the middle of the night and blowing the vaults with
nitroglycerine. One frigid night in January of 1921 they even hit
two banks, back to back, in Hondo, Texas. Their biggest haul
occurred in 1924 when they robbed a train outside of Rondout,
Illinois-getting away with $3,000,000. They still hold the record
for the biggest train robbery in U.S. history. G.R. Williamson
interviewed Willis Newton in 1979 at his home in Uvalde, Texas. A
few months later the outlaw died at age 90. With a tape recorder
running, Newton rattled off the well-practiced account of his life
in machine gun fashion-rationalizing everything he had done,
blaming others for his imprisonments, and repeatedly claiming that
he had only stolen from "other thieves." Speaking in a high-pitched
raspy voice, Willis was quite articulate in telling his stories-a
master of fractured grammar. He spoke in a rapid fire jailhouse
prose using a wide range of criminal jargon that was sometimes
difficult to follow but Williamson kept his tape recorder running,
changing cassettes as fast as possible. The taped interview
revealed the quintessence of a criminal mind. Everything he had
done was justified by outside forces, "Nobody ever give me nothing.
All I ever got was hell " Over the course of the interview, Willis
told how he was raised as a child in the hard scrabble of West
Texas and how he was first arrested for a crime "that they knowed I
didn't do." He went into detail about his first bank holdup, how he
"greased" safes with nitroglycerine, robbed trains, and evaded the
lawmen that came after him. Willis described robbing banks
throughout Texas and a large number of mid-western states,
including another back-to-back bank heist in Spencer, Indiana.
Eventually he recounted the events of the Toronto Bank Clearing
House robbery in 1923 and finally the great train robbery outside
of Rondout, Illinois. He went into great detail about the beatings
he and his brothers took from the Chicago police when they were
later captured. As he told the story his face reddened and his
voice rose to a high pitched screech until he had to pause to catch
his breath. Then lowering his voice he described how he had managed
to negotiate a crafty deal with a postal inspector for reduced
prison sentences for himself and his brothers by revealing where
the loot was hidden. He told about his prison years at Leavenworth
and his illegal businesses he ran in Tulsa, Oklahoma, after he got
out of prison in 1929. He complained bitterly about being sent back
to prison in McAlester, Oklahoma, for a bank robbery "they knowed I
didn't do," in Medford. Willis took great pride in saying that, "We
never killed nobody, we was just in it for the money. Sure, we shot
a few people but we never killed a single man." During his
extensive research, Williamson uncovered evidence to dispel this
myth that Willis insisted upon until his death. Now Williamson,
using transcripts from his interviews with Willis and others who
knew the outlaw, first-hand accounts from eye witnesses, newspaper
articles, police records, and trial proceedings, tells the true
story of The Last Texas Outlaw-Willis Newton.
Frontier Gambling: The Games, The Gamblers, and the Great Gambling
Halls of the Old West is an entertaining look at one of the
integral facets of the American West - gambling. Rich in detail and
jargon, yet written in an easy to understand style, the book tells
how the games were played, legitimately and otherwise; it provides
sketches of some of the infamous gamblers and con men of the era;
and it covers the notorious saloons and gambling houses where
fortunes were wagered night and day in the untamed West.
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