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The definitive research paper guide, Writing Research Papers
combines a traditional and practical approach to the research
process with the latest information on electronic research and
presentation. This market-leading text provides students with
step-by-step guidance through the research writing process, from
selecting and narrowing a topic to formatting the finished
document. Writing Research Papers backs up its instruction with the
most complete array of samples of any writing guide of this nature.
The text continues its extremely thorough and accurate coverage of
citation styles for a wide variety of disciplines. The fourteenth
edition maintains Lester's successful approach while bringing new
writing and documentation updates to assist the student researcher
in keeping pace with electronic sources.
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Autumn 1943 (Hardcover)
James Lester Clark
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R983
R832
Discovery Miles 8 320
Save R151 (15%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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By autumn 1943 in Danton, Kentucky, the government has converted
the small town's college into an Army Air Corps pre-preflight
facility, the nearby state mental hospital into a treatment center
for soldiers suffering battle-fatigue, and installs a satellite POW
camp in the south end of town. Major Sam Ross, a fighter pilot shot
down and badly wounded in Tunisia, arrives to take command of the
school. Ross, also an excellent musician, has a chance encounter
with a widowed schoolteacher with whom he falls in love but faces
possible rejection because of her teenage son. Woven into the story
are the accounts of an anti-Nazi German prisoner of war who,
fearing for his life, escapes one POW camp and tries to get to the
Danton POW facility; attempts to heal battle fatigue, especially a
case involving a heinous crime perpetrated by German captors on a
U.S. soldier later liberated; an itinerant evangelist gassed in
France in WWI and his musically gifted wife; the wisdom of a
one-legged, railroad-crossing watchman, a veteran of the
Spanish-American War; the searching for meaning by a ministerial
student; a night-club/big-band songstress; and how it was in
small-town U.S.A. in the precise time-frame of autumn 1943.
Environmental Injustice in the United States provides systematic
insight into the social, economic, and political dynamics of
environmental decision-making, and the impacts of those decisions
on minority communities. The first part of the book examines
closely the history of the environmental justice movement and the
scholarly literature to date, with a discussion about how the issue
made the public agenda in the first place. The second part of the
book is a unique quantitative analysis of the relationship among
race, class, political mobilization, and environmental harm at
three levels-- state, county, and city. Despite the initial
skepticism of the authors, their study finds both race and class to
be significant variables in explaining patterns of environmental
harm. The third part of the book then offers policy recommendations
to decisionmakers, based on the book's findings. It was named a
Choice Outstanding Academic Book of 2001.
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Interactive Storytelling - 4th International Conference on Interactive Digital Storytelling, ICIDS 2011, Vancouver, Canada, November 28-1 December, 2011, Proceedings (Paperback, 2011)
Mei Si, David Thue, Elisabeth Andre, James Lester, Joshua Tanenbaum, …
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R1,495
Discovery Miles 14 950
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 4th
International Conference on Interactive Digital Storytelling, ICIDS
2011, held in Vancouver, Canada, in November/December 2011. The 17
full papers, 14 short papers and 16 poster papers were carefully
reviewed and selected from 72 paper and poster submissions. In
addition, the volume includes 6 workshops descriptions. The full
and short papers have been organized into the following topical
sections: interactive storytelling theory, new authoring modes,
virtual characters and agents, story generation and drama
managment, narratives in digital games, evaluation and user
experience reports, tools for interactive storytelling.
"Environmental Injustice in the United States" provides systematic
insight into the social, economic, and political dynamics of
environmental decision-making, and the impacts of those decisions
on minority communities. The first part of the book examines
closely the history of the environmental justice movement and the
scholarly literature to date, with a discussion about how the issue
made the public agenda in the first place. The second part of the
book is a unique quantitative analysis of the relationship among
race, class, political mobilization, and environmental harm at
three levels-- state, county, and city. Despite the initial
skepticism of the authors, their study finds both race and class to
be significant variables in explaining patterns of environmental
harm. The third part of the book then offers policy recommendations
to decisionmakers, based on the book's findings. It was named a
Choice Outstanding Academic Book of 2001.
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Intelligent Virtual Agents - 8th International Conference, IVA 2008, Tokyo, Japan, September 1-3, 2008, Proceedings (Paperback, 2008 ed.)
Helmut Prendinger, James Lester, Mitsuru Ishizuka
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R1,552
Discovery Miles 15 520
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Welcome to the Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on
Intelligent Virtual Agents, which was held on September 1-3, 2008
in Tokyo, Japan. - telligent virtual agents (IVAs) are autonomous,
graphically embodied agents in a virtual environment that are able
to interact intelligently with human users, otherIVAs,
andtheirenvironment. TheIVAconferenceseriesisthemajorannual meeting
of the intelligent virtual agents community, attracting
interdisciplinary minded researchers and practitioners from
embodied cognitive modeling, art- cial intelligence, computer
graphics, animation, virtual worlds, games, natural language
processing, and human-computer interaction. The origin of the IVA
conferences dates from a successful workshop on - telligent Virtual
Environments held in Brighton, UK, at the 13th European Conference
on Arti?cial Intelligence (ECAI 2008). This workshop was followed
by a second one held in Salford in Manchester, UK in 1999.
Subsequent events took place in Madrid, Spain in 2001, Irsee,
Germany 2003 and Kos, Greece in 2005. Starting in 2006, IVA moved
from being a biennial to an annual event and became a full-?edged
international conference, held in Marina del Rey, Calif- nia, USA
in 2006, and Paris, France in 2007. From 2005, IVA also hosted the
Gathering of Animated Lifelike Agents (GALA), an annual festival to
showcase the latest animated lifelike agents created by university
students and academic or industrial research groups. IVA 2008wasthe
?rsttime thatIVA wasorganizedinAsia andwearehappy to report that a
large number of papers were submitted. IVA 2008 received 99
submissions from Europe, the Americas, and Asia
Art Tatum was the greatest virtuoso performer in the history of jazz piano; his technique overwhelmed almost every jazz player who heard him and caused classical virtuosos to take notice. Through extensive interviews with Tatum's friends and fellow musicians, James Lester captures the complexities of this remarkable talent and the vibrant jazz world of the 1930s and 1940s in which he played.
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Autumn 1943 (Paperback)
James Lester Clark
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R719
R624
Discovery Miles 6 240
Save R95 (13%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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By autumn 1943 in Danton, Kentucky, the government has converted
the small town's college into an Army Air Corps pre-preflight
facility, the nearby state mental hospital into a treatment center
for soldiers suffering battle-fatigue, and installs a satellite POW
camp in the south end of town. Major Sam Ross, a fighter pilot shot
down and badly wounded in Tunisia, arrives to take command of the
school. Ross, also an excellent musician, has a chance encounter
with a widowed schoolteacher with whom he falls in love but faces
possible rejection because of her teenage son. Woven into the story
are the accounts of an anti-Nazi German prisoner of war who,
fearing for his life, escapes one POW camp and tries to get to the
Danton POW facility; attempts to heal battle fatigue, especially a
case involving a heinous crime perpetrated by German captors on a
U.S. soldier later liberated; an itinerant evangelist gassed in
France in WWI and his musically gifted wife; the wisdom of a
one-legged, railroad-crossing watchman, a veteran of the
Spanish-American War; the searching for meaning by a ministerial
student; a night-club/big-band songstress; and how it was in
small-town U.S.A. in the precise time-frame of autumn 1943.
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