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Leonidas Polk is one of the most fascinating figures of the Civil
War. Consecrated as a bishop of the Episcopal Church and
commissioned as a general into the Confederate army, Polk's life in
both spheres blended into a unique historical composite. Polk was a
man with deep religious convictions but equally committed to the
Confederate cause. He baptized soldiers on the eve of bloody
battles, administered last rites and even presided over officers'
weddings, all while leading his soldiers into battle. Historian
Cheryl White examines the life of this soldier-saint and the legacy
of a man who unquestionably brought the first viable and lively
Protestant presence to Louisiana and yet represents the politics of
one of the darkest periods in American history.
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Wicked Shreveport (Paperback)
Bernadette Jones Palombo, Gary D Joiner, W. Chris Hale, Cheryl H. White
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In the rough and tumble days of the nineteenth century Shreveport
was on the very edge of the country's western frontier. It was a
city struggling to tame lawlessness, and its streets were rocked by
duels, lynchings, and shootouts. A new century and Prohibition only
brought a fresh wave of crime and scandal. The port city became a
haunt for the likes of notorious bank robbers Bonnie and Clyde and
home to the influential socialite and madam, Annie McCune. From
Fred Lockhart, aka "Butterfly Man," to serial killers Nathanial
Code and Danny Rolling, Shreveport played reluctant host to an even
deadlier cast of characters. Their tales and more make up the
devilish history of the Deep South in Wicked Shreveport.
"[White] revolutionized the art of political reporting." --William
F. BuckleyA national bestseller, The Making of the President 1964
is the critically acclaimed account of the 1964 presidential
campaign, from the assassination of JFK though the battle for power
between Lyndon B. Johnson and Barry Goldwater. Author Theodore H.
White made history with his Pulitzer Prize-winning The Making of
the President series--detailed narrative histories that
revolutionized the way presidential campaigns were reported. Now
back in print with a new foreword by fellow Pulitzer Prize-winning
author Jon Meacham, The Making of the President 1964 joins The
Making of the President 1960, 1968, and 1972, as well as Theodore
Sorensen's Kennedy and other classics, in the burgeoning Harper
Perennial Political Classics series.
This book (hardcover) is part of the TREDITION CLASSICS. It
contains classical literature works from over two thousand years.
Most of these titles have been out of print and off the bookstore
shelves for decades. The book series is intended to preserve the
cultural legacy and to promote the timeless works of classical
literature. Readers of a TREDITION CLASSICS book support the
mission to save many of the amazing works of world literature from
oblivion. With this series, tredition intends to make thousands of
international literature classics available in printed format again
- worldwide.
Societies throughout the world depend on food, fiber and forest
products. Continuity and security of agricultural and forest
production are therefore of paramount importance. Predicted changes
in climate could be expected to alter, perhaps significantly, the
levels and relative agricultural and forestry production of
different nations over the next few decades. Agriculture and
forestry are also likely to influence the rate and magnitude of
such change, as they can be both significant sources and sinks of a
number of greenhouse gases. Adaptive management strategies
therefore need to be formulated and implemented for these sectors,
to enable them to both adapt to future environmental change, and to
limit greenhouse gas emissions. This book arose from an
international workshop held in Canberra, Australia, under the
auspices of the former IPCC Working Group III - Agriculture,
Forestry and Other Human Activities Sub-Group (AFOS). A number of
leading speakers at the workshop were approached to encapsulate the
concepts discussed and developed at this workshop. The resulting
papers make up this volume. The book promotes a greater
understanding of the major sources and sinks of greenhouse gases
within intensive and extensive cropping and animal production
systems, and of agroforestry. It highlights the need to adopt a
holistic systems approach to monitoring and reducing greenhouse gas
emissions and assessing impacts, and to integrate climate
change-related goals and activities with other issues, such as
biodiversity, desertification, and sustainable agriculture and
forestry.
The inspirational true story of a high school football coach who
motivates and encourages ordinary kids to do extraordinary things
on and off the field He’s called simply “Coach.” But Louie
Cook of Notre Dame High School in Crowley, Louisiana, is much more
than that. He’s a father figure to his players, regardless of
their race, ethnicity, or religion; the mentor players can turn to
for discerning advice; the man students and parents go to for
comfort in challenging times; and most of all, a caring leader with
a servant’s heart. Coach of a Lifetime: The Story of Lewis Cook
Jr, Legendary High School Football Coach recounts the inspiring,
selfless path Cook has traveled as a football coach and, more
importantly, as a leader in a small Louisiana town. While other
high school coaches have won more games and sent more players to
the NFL, none have proven better at developing the raw talents of
high school kids from a handful of farming communities and turning
them into champions on the football field and in life. The story of
Louie Cook is about much more than football. It’s about
developing and motivating young people, about putting faith and
family ahead of wins and losses, and about building relationships
that will last a lifetime. Cook may be one of the winningest high
school coaches in the nation, but he will be the first to tell you,
“Winning isn’t everything; winning the right way is.”
In recent years, resilience has become a near ubiquitous cultural
phenomenon whose influence extends into many fields of academic
enquiry. Though research suggests that religion and spirituality
are significant factors in engendering resilient adaptation,
comparatively little biblical and theological reflection has gone
into understanding this construct. This book seeks to remedy this
deficiency through a breadth of reflection upon human resilience
from canonical biblical and Christian theological sources. Divided
into three parts, biblical scholars and theologians provide
critical accounts of these perspectives, integrating biblical and
theological insight with current social scientific understandings
of resilience. Part 1 presents a range of biblical visions of
resilience. Part 2 considers a variety of theological perspectives
on resilience, drawing from figures including Thomas Aquinas,
Martin Luther, and Dietrich Bonhoeffer. Part 3 explores the
clinical and pastoral applications of such expressions of
resilience. This diverse yet cohesive book sets out a new and
challenging perspective of how human resilience might be
re-envisioned from a Christian perspective. As a result, it will be
of interest to scholars of practical and pastoral theology,
biblical studies, and religion, spirituality and health. It will
also be a valuable resource for chaplains, pastors, and clinicians
with an interest in religion and spirituality.
"White unites a novelist's knack of dramatization and a historian's
sense of significance with a synthesizing skill that grasps the
reader by the lapels." --NewsweekThe third book in Theodore H.
White's landmark series, The Making of the President 1968 is the
compelling account of the turbulent 1968 presidential campaign, the
assassinations of Robert F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King, Jr.,
and election of Richard Nixon. White made history with his
groundbreaking The Making of the President 1960, a narrative that
won the Pulitzer Prize for revolutionizing the way that
presidential campaigns were reported. Now, The Making of the
President 1968--back in print, freshly repackaged, and with a new
foreword by Chris Matthews--joins Theodore Sorensen's Kennedy,
White's The Making of the President 1960, 1964, and 1972, and other
classics in the burgeoning Harper Perennial Political Classics
series.
Produced throughout the first fifteen years of Hayek's career, the
writings collected in Capital and Interest see Hayek elaborate upon
and extend his landmark lectures that were published as Prices and
Production and work toward the technically sophisticated line of
thought seen in his later Pure Theory of Capital. Illuminating the
development of Hayek's detailed contributions to capital and
interest theory, the collection also sheds light on how Hayek's
work related to other influential economists of the time.
Highlights include the 1936 article 'The Mythology of Capital'
presented here alongside Frank Knight's criticisms of the Austrian
theory of capital that prompted it - and 'The Maintenance of
Capital', with subsequent comments by the English economist A. C.
Pigou. These and other familiar works are accompanied by
lesser-known articles and lectures, including a lecture on
technological progress and excess capacity. An introduction by the
book's editor, leading Hayek scholar Lawrence H. White, places
Hayek's contributions in careful historical context, with ample
footnotes and citations for further reading, making this a
touchstone addition to the University of Chicago Press's Collected
Works of F. A. Hayek series.
During the 1956 baseball season in the city of Los Angeles, Mickey
Mantle's pursuit of Babe Ruth's single-season home run record was
matched only by the day-to-day drama of Steve Bilko's exploits in
the Pacific Coast League. While Mantle was winning the Triple Crown
in the American League, Bilko was doing the same in the highest of
all the minor leagues with the Los Angeles Angels. He led the
league hitters in eight categories, and the Angels romped to the
pennant. Bilko hit one mighty home run after another to earn Minor
League Player of the Year honors and inspire the team's nickname,
"The Bilko Athletic Club." The Bilko Athletic Club tells the story
of the 1956 Los Angeles Angels, a team of castoffs and kids built
around Steve Bilko, a bulky, beer-loving basher of home runs.
Author Gaylon H. White provides an intimate portrait of life in
minor league baseball in the 1950s and gives readers a glimpse
inside the heads and hearts of the players as they experience the
same doubts and frustrations many face in the pursuit of a dream.
The Angels' unforgettable season unfolds through stories told by
the players themselves, as they racked up runs and rolled to a
107-61 won-loss record, finishing sixteen games ahead of their
closest competitor. Featuring in-depth interviews with Steve Bilko
and twenty-five of his '56 Angels teammates, The Bilko Athletic
Club also includes several photos and is highlighted by
never-before-told anecdotes. A fascinating account of a season to
remember, The Bilko Athletic Club will take fans and historians of
the national pastime back to the golden era of baseball.
Literature is not only about aesthetics, but also almost equally
about economics. The successful marketing of an author and his
literary works is more dependent on the activities of cultural
merchants than on the particular words and phrases found in the
author s prose. Marketing Literature and Posthumous Legacies
focuses on the creation of symbolic capital for the literary
legacies of Leonid Andreev and Vladimir Nabokov that was eventually
exchanged by cultural merchants for financial and ideological
profit. Yuri Leving and Frederick H. White discuss the ways in
which certain cultural merchants created symbolic meaning for these
two authors through a process of collusion, consecration, and the
marketing of tangible and intangible products that lead to some
sort of transaction. The promotion and maintenance of posthumous
legacies involves an intricate network of personal interests that
drive the preservation of literary reputations."
The Crowley Millers were the talk of minor league baseball in the
1950s, with crowds totaling nearly 10 times Crowley's population
and earning Crowley the nickname of "The Best Little Baseball Town
in the World." The Best Little Baseball Town in the World: The
Crowley Millers and Minor League Baseball in the 1950s tells the
fun, quirky story of Crowley, Louisiana, in the fifties, a story
that reads more like fiction than nonfiction. The Crowley Millers'
biggest star was Conklyn Meriwether, a slugger who became infamous
after he retired when he killed his in-laws with an axe. Their
former manager turned out to be a con man, dying in jail while
awaiting trial on embezzlement charges. The 1951 team was torn to
pieces after their young centerfielder was struck and killed by
lightning during a game. But aside from the tragedy and turmoil,
the Crowley Millers also played some great baseball and were the
springboard to stardom for George Brunet and Dan Pfister, two
Crowley pitchers who made it to the majors. Interviews with players
from the team bring to light never-before-heard stories and inside
perspectives on minor league baseball in the fifties, including
insight into the social and racial climate of the era, and the
inability of baseball in the fifties to help players deal with
off-the-field problems. Written by respected minor-league baseball
historian Gaylon H. White, The Best Little Baseball Town in the
World is a fascinating tale for baseball fans and historians alike.
The Clash of Economic Ideas interweaves the economic history of the
last hundred years with the history of economic doctrines to
understand how contrasting economic ideas have originated and
developed over time to take their present forms. It traces the
connections running from historical events to debates among
economists, and from the ideas of academic writers to major
experiments in economic policy. The treatment offers fresh
perspectives on laissez faire, socialism, and fascism; the Roaring
Twenties, business cycle theories, and the Great Depression;
Institutionalism and the New Deal; the Keynesian Revolution; and
war, nationalization, and central planning. After 1945, the work
explores the postwar revival of invisible-hand ideas; economic
development and growth, with special attention to contrasting
policies and thought in Germany and India; the gold standard, the
interwar gold-exchange standard, the postwar Bretton Woods system,
and the Great Inflation; public goods and public choice; free trade
versus protectionism; and finally fiscal policy and public debt.
The investigation analyzes the theories of Adam Smith and earlier
writers on economics when those antecedents are useful for readers.
F. A. Hayek s long-overlooked volume, was his most detailed work
in economic theory. Originally published in 1941 when fashionable
economic thought had shifted to John Maynard Keynes, Hayek s
manifesto of capital theory is now available again for today s
students and economists to discover.
With a new introduction by Hayek expert Lawrence H. White, who
firmly situates the book not only in historical and theoretical
context but within Hayek s own life and his struggle to complete
the manuscript, this edition commemorates the celebrated scholar s
last major work in economics. Offering a detailed account of the
equilibrium relationships between inputs and outputs in an economy,
Hayek s stated objective was to make capital theory "useful for the
analysis of the monetary phenomena of the real world. His ambitious
goal was nothing less than to develop a capital theory that could
be fully integrated into the business cycle theory.
There was a time when no town was too small to field a professional
baseball team. In 1949, the high point for the minor leagues, there
were 59 leagues and 464 cities with teams, two-thirds of them in
so-called bush leagues classified as C and D. Most of the players
were strangers outside the towns where they played, but some
achieved hero status and enthralled local fans as much as the stars
in the majors. Left on Base in the Bush Leagues: Legends, Near
Greats, and Unknowns in the Minors profiles some of the most
fascinating characters from baseball's golden era. It includes the
stories of players such as Ron Necciai, the only pitcher in history
to strike out 27 batters in a single game; Joe Brovia, one of the
most feared hitters to ever play in the Pacific Coast League (PCL),
who had to wait 15 years for a shot in the majors; and Pat Stasey,
a mellow Irishman who "Cubanized" minor league baseball in Texas
and New Mexico, helping to bring down the walls of segregation.
Compelling and timeless, their stories touch on many issues that
still affect the sport today. Left on Base in the Bush Leagues
provides an entertaining glimpse into a time when baseball was a
game and the players were regular guys who often held second jobs
off the field. Featuring hundreds of personal interviews with the
players, their teammates, managers, and opponents, this book
creates a colorful tapestry of the minor leagues during the 1950s
and 60s.
The question of free banking - or laissez-faire in money - raises
fundamental theoretical, historical and normative issues.
Discussions of free banking contemplate the consequences of
abolishing government central banks, and allowing unrestricted
money issue by private banks.Research on free banking questions has
expanded tremendously in the past two decades. These three volumes
collect the most important modern articles on the theory, history
and policy implications of free banking. The literature is marked
by a number of sharp intellectual controversies, and the editor has
included both sides of the most important debates. The editor's
introduction provides a fresh perspective on the developments in
monetary theory and in the real world that have stimulated the
several strands of research represented here.
Since RUTHERFORD MORISON left us with the concept of the Omentum
being the 'abdominal policeman', clinicians have tacitly assumed
that they know sufficient about the structure and function of this
organ. However interest in the omentum and its relationship to
clinical surgery has recently been develop ing. This book examines
all aspects with special reference to surgery and should provide a
welcome impetus in research and clinical practice. The editors and
contributors have produced a book which is comprehensive and well
illustrated and contains detailed refer ences to the important
original sources - so essential in a work of this nature. It is
written for those who wish to share the delight of acquiring
knowledge - even about a comparatively humble organ - as well as
for practical surgeons. Both will find ample information to arouse
their interest and expand their surgical horizons in exciting ways
of which they will almost certainly not have dreamt. I welcome a
book of this calibre on a subject which deserves our increasing
interest. I delight in the fact that it is dedicated to my friend
and colleague MARTIN ALLGOWER.
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