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Tark (Paperback)
Octavious Sage; Edited by Marcus Miller; Mark Miller
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R454
Discovery Miles 4 540
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Miller and Henthorne give U.S. investors and entrepreneurs the
insights they need to capitalize upon the rapidly expanding, but
still open, Cuban tourism industry--the island's major industry.
This authoritative examination of the market for Cuban tourism
provides comprehensive information on Cuban contacts and data
sources that are accessible to foreigners; insights into the
competition and possible competitive strategies, plus the general
background on Cuba and its economy that investors must have for an
understanding of Cuba's potential. With its lists of references and
contacts, Miller and Henthorne's study will be invaluable to
international tourism executives, particularly specialists in
strategic planning and the development of strategic business
alliances as well as international marketers and business
development officers.
Miller and Henthorne have written their book for the day when
relations and travel ties are reestablished between Cuba and the
United States--a day that in their opinion will soon come. From
their personal visits and interviews with Cuban officials in
banking, finance, investment, politics, and the tourist industry
itself, Miller and Henthorne have compiled material that is
unavailable from any other single source. Here is detailed, first
hand, timely information on Cuba's tourism resources,
opportunities, infrastructure, competitors and competition,
peculiarities, and historical and regional background for the
benefit of investors in the United States and worldwide.
How do we create more economic opportunities in the low-income
communities of the developing world? How can these communities
build greater resilience against economic uncertainties, natural
disasters, wars, and the growing threats of climate change? This
book reviews the research literature of economic development in
low-income communities of the developing world-from rural villages
to neighborhoods in the largest cities on earth. This book is
unique in gathering, organizing, and synthesizing research on
economic development at the community level, across the developing
world, drawing from multiple disciplines, publications,
methodologies, regions, and countries. Part I provides an overview
and context of the many challenges facing the developing world
today, as well as the often-heated debates over what "development"
is and how to make it happen. Part II reviews the extensive
research literature in major fields of community economic
development including education and human capital, overcoming the
"curse of natural resources," entrepreneurship and micro-finance,
tourism, and sustainability. The audience includes undergraduate
students interested in development and sustainability, graduate
students and other young researchers in a wide range of disciplines
who are finding their own focuses, and established researchers who
wish to expand their agendas. An expanded bibliography accompanies
the book as a downloadable supplement.
Covering the time period from 1807, when John Colter first
discovered the wonders of the Yellowstone Plateau to the 1920s when
tourists sped between luxury hotels in their automobiles, these
tales of Wonderland come from the letters, journals, and diaries
kept by early visitors and later tourists. The earliest stories
recount mountain men's awe at geysers hurling boiling water
hundreds of feet into the air and their encounters with the native
inhabitants of the region. The latest stories reflect the
"civilizing" of the park and reveal the golden age of tourist
travel in the area.
How do we create more economic opportunities in the low-income
communities of the developing world? How can these communities
build greater resilience against economic uncertainties, natural
disasters, wars, and the growing threats of climate change? This
book reviews the research literature of economic development in
low-income communities of the developing world-from rural villages
to neighborhoods in the largest cities on earth. This book is
unique in gathering, organizing, and synthesizing research on
economic development at the community level, across the developing
world, drawing from multiple disciplines, publications,
methodologies, regions, and countries. Part I provides an overview
and context of the many challenges facing the developing world
today, as well as the often-heated debates over what "development"
is and how to make it happen. Part II reviews the extensive
research literature in major fields of community economic
development including education and human capital, overcoming the
"curse of natural resources," entrepreneurship and micro-finance,
tourism, and sustainability. The audience includes undergraduate
students interested in development and sustainability, graduate
students and other young researchers in a wide range of disciplines
who are finding their own focuses, and established researchers who
wish to expand their agendas. An expanded bibliography accompanies
the book as a downloadable supplement.
Literary Societies in Republican China provides a new and
comprehensive perspective on the fascinating literary world of the
most turbulent period in recent Chinese history: the Republican era
of 1911-1949. Wedged between the fall of the Empire and the
founding of the Communist state, the Republican period witnessed
enormous social, political, and cultural changes. Traditionally the
period is seen as one of transition: from the country being
partially colonized and occupied to being an independent
nation-state, from Confucianism to socialism, from writing in
classical Chinese to writing in the everyday vernacular. Modern
scholarship, however, has become suspicious of such attempts to
analyze history, including cultural history, as a journey from A to
B via C. Instead, attention has turned to the "thick description"
of complex historical phenomena without worrying about whether or
not they fit into some neat linear scheme. Inevitably, such
scholarship benefits from collaboration and teamwork, from the
juxtaposition of different insights and different materials in
order to gain in overall breadth. Literary Societies in Republican
China represents such teamwork and such breadth. The thirteen
essays by eleven scholars from North America, Europe, and Asia
present detailed discussions of particular literary groups active
on the Republican-era literary scene. Some of these groups are
familiar representatives of what used to be considered the
"mainstream," while others represent literary styles that have
hitherto been considered "marginal" or that have been ignored
altogether. Each of the essays in this volume looks in detail at
literary societies both as producers of literary views and texts
and as organizations with sometimes very complex social structures.
The result is a unique blend of literary, cultural, and social
history, unrivalled in any English-language scholarship on China to
date.
In the Nineteenth Century people could gain fame and fortune by
"discovering" and documenting things that were already known to
exist like the source of the Nile and the North Pole. For decades
trappers and prospectors had told about the wonders of the area
that became Yellowstone Park, but no credible person had written
about the falls canyons and geysers there. An ambitious politician,
Nathaniel P. Langford, decided to make his name by promoting an
expedition and publicizing its activities in 1870. An army
lieutenant named Gustavus Doane maneuvered to lead the expedition's
army escort for the same reason. Their written accounts of the big
"discovery" of Wonderland were the basis for the park's founding in
1872.This book brings together the words of these men and provides
historical context for the exploration and for the founding of
America's first national park.
For millions of Americans, the COVID shock has brought retirement
saving to an abrupt halt-now it's time to get back on track. Even
before the pandemic, a large share of households by Americans over
age 50 faced the threat that their living standards would decline
sharply in retirement. In the wake of COVID-19, these numbers will
surely worsen. In Retirement Reboot: Commonsense Financial
Strategies for Getting Back on Track, finance writer and regular
New York Times retirement contributor Mark Miller offers practical
strategies for Americans to improve their retirement prospects. If
you're nearing retirement age and worry you haven't saved enough,
Retirement Reboot will walk you through the core decisions to make
now to improve your retirement outcomes-even if retirement is just
a few years away. You'll learn how to make a plan, think through
the timing of retirement, optimize Social Security, navigate
Medicare, build savings, and tap home equity. You'll also explore
ongoing strategies, such as careful budgeting, generating income
from work even after retirement, planning for long-term care, and
leveraging special assistance aimed at low-income workers. If you
have low savings, or none at all, Miller's simple steps can help
you make the most of your remaining working years and reboot the
retirement you always imagined.
This anthology of first person-accounts by women who toured
Yellowstone Park more than a century ago includes tales of high
adventure, raucous humor, and glorious sights of the late
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Including a wide range of
stories by women who visited from all over the world and at all
ages, these accounts reveal their wonder at the interior of the
park, the weeks they traveled on horseback through the roadless
wilderness, and the later luxuries of well-maintained roads,
comfortable carriages, and fancy hotels.
Mark Miller's innovative study argues that Chaucer's Canterbury
Tales represent an extended mediation on agency, autonomy and
practical reason. This philosophical aspect of Chaucer's interests
can help us understand what is both sophisticated and disturbing
about his explorations of love, sex and gender. Partly through
fresh readings of the Consolation of Philosophy and the Romance of
the Rose, Miller charts Chaucer's position in relation to the
association in the Christian West between problems of autonomy and
problems of sexuality and reconstructs how medieval philosophers
and literary writers approached psychological phenomena often
thought of as distinctively modern. The literary experiments of the
Canterbury Tales represent a distinctive philosophical achievement
that remains vital to our own attempts to understand agency, desire
and their histories.
Mark Miller's innovative study argues that Chaucer's Canterbury
Tales represent an extended meditation on agency, autonomy, and
practical reason. This philosophical aspect of Chaucer's interests
can help us understand what is both sophisticated and disturbing
about his explorations of love, sex, and gender. Partly through
fresh readings of the Consolation of Philosophy and the Romance of
the Rose, Miller charts Chaucer's relation to the association in
the Christian West between problems of autonomy and problems of
sexuality, and reconstructs how medieval philosophers and poets
approached psychological phenomena often thought of as the
exclusive province of psychoanalysis. The literary experiments of
the Canterbury Tales represent a distinctive philosophical
achievement that remains vital to our own attempts to understand
agency, desire, and their histories.
The COVID-19 pandemic has emphasized the need for health
professionals to communicate more clearly about what public health
is and why it matters. Public health in the United States has been
underfunded, undervalued, and misunderstood largely because of the
unclear and inconsistent way health leaders talk about it. Talking
Health is intended to help public health and allied professionals
communicate about public health more effectively - whether they
need to reach policymakers, community partners, the media, or the
public. Many people who are trained in medicine or public health
have never had to "sell" ideas or policies to uninformed or
skeptical partners, but the insights, tools, and resources included
in this book can provide a first step toward better communications
and stronger partnerships. This book is based on original research
and insights by social scientists and seasoned communications
professionals at the FrameWorks Institute and Hattaway
Communications. It provides practical tools such as tested
messaging and effective metaphors to help professionals avoid
messages that backfire, answer challenging questions, reframe
public health assumptions, and draw on the power of anecdotes while
sharing important data. Drawing together leading experts across
media and public health, Talking Health is a practical and powerful
starting point for those ready to change how public health is
viewed and valued in our nation.
Publisher's Note: Products purchased from Third Party sellers are
not guaranteed by the publisher for quality, authenticity, or
access to any online entitlements included with the product. Ace
the Major HVAC Licensing Exams! Featuring more than 800 accurate
practice questions and answers, HVAC Licensing Study Guide, Third
Edition, provides everything you need to prepare for and pass the
major HVAC licensing exams. This highly-effective, career-building
study resource is filled with essential calculations,
troubleshooting tips for the job site, hundreds of detailed
illustrations, and information on the latest codes and standards.
You will get brand-new coverage of troubleshooting for small motors
and electrical equipment for HVAC. This thoroughly revised study
guide helps you: *Master the material most likely to appear on the
ARI, NATE, ICE, RSES, and HVAC licensing exams *Improve your
test-taking ability with 800+ true-false and multiple-choice
questions and answers *Learn about current refrigerant usage and
regulations *Keep up with the most recent codes and standards
*Acquire the confidence, skills, and knowledge needed to pass your
exam Covers key HVAC topics, including: *Heat sources *Heating
systems *Boilers, burners, and burner systems *Piping systems
*Ductwork sizing *Refrigerants *Cooling and distribution systems
*Refrigeration equipment and processes *Filters and air flow
*Maintenance, servicing, and safety *Humidification,
dehumidification, and psychrometrics *EPA-refrigerant reclaimers
*Heating circuits *Safety on the job *Trade associations and
codes*Troubleshooting for small motors*Electrical equipment for
HVAC
If you work with SharePoint, you may have discovered that there
are countless tricks for using this platform to solve real-world
problems--and you certainly wouldn't mind learning some of them.
That's the purpose behind EndUserSharePoint, a community site that
lets end users share ingenious new ways for putting SharePoint to
work.
This insightful and entertaining book presents a compilation of
popular, well-written articles from the site, published by
contributors for people who use SharePoint at their companies but
don't have access to its technical server side. Each engaging story
puts you into the narrative as a participant, rather than a passive
observer, so you can easily visualize the situation and share the
"aha " solution with the author. Learn some tricks, gain some
insight--and have fun doing it.
These articles will help you: Build a documented framework for
evaluating whether your company is getting the most value from
SharePoint Create documentation and script management with OneNote
and a SharePoint library Use the Data View Web Part to create
hyperlinks from existing SharePoint data Implement data
visualization in SharePoint without access to the server Creating
document libraries with mixed content sources in any SharePoint
version Pull information from disparate site collections into a
single navigation system
Contributors include: Sadalit Van Buren Kerri Abraham Jim Bob
Howard Marc D. Anderson Laura Rogers Waldek Mastykarz Alexander
Bautz Dessie Lunsford Eric Alexander Peter Allen
"What a fantastic resource. No other book in the SharePoint
community hits this 'power user' or 'end user' audience like this
book does. There are powerful examples in here that will really
solve business problems and set the reader on the right track."
--Joel Oleson, Global SharePoint Evangelist, and one of the first
SharePoint architects
This short, easy-to-read fable reveals the five habits that
underlie leadership character and that determine leaders' success -
and teaches leaders how to develop these habits. Like Mark Miller's
previous books, this one follows the life, learning, and influence
of Debbie Bruster. Here she finds herself mentoring Blake Brown,
the son of her former mentor. Rather than answer Blake's questions
about leadership directly, Debbie introduces him to other leaders,
each of whom shares a unique perspective on what really makes a
leader successful. As Blake puts the pieces together, he discovers
his problem is not one of skills but of character, that leadership
is more about the heart of the leader than the head or hands. In
fact, Miller summarized these traits with the acronym HEART: Hunger
for Wisdom, Expect the Best, Accept Responsibility, Respond with
Courage, and Think Others First. With the help of his new friends
and mentors, Blake is able to build a plan to transform his heart.
The good news for all of us: leadership is not just the purview of
the few - it is within reach for millions of aspiring leaders
around the world. This book is the road map they need to get their
lives and careers on track.
Toronto was Lonnie Johnson's last stop in a career of stops, at
least the eighth city in which he lived for any length of time. The
influential African-American singer and guitarist, a formative
figure in the history of blues and jazz dating back to the 1920s,
travelled north for a brief appearance at the New Gate of Cleve in
May 1965 and returned for a longer engagement at the Penny Farthing
in June. Over the next five years - the last five years of his life
- he rarely left the city again. Way Down That Lonesome Road:
Lonnie Johnson in Toronto, 1965-1970, the tenth book from noted
Canadian jazz historian Mark Miller, reclaims Johnson from the
realm of legend and brings him back to life. In part a biographical
study and in part a social history, Way Down That Lonesome Road
follows Johnson from the generous welcome that he received from
Toronto's critics on his arrival and the successes and failures
that followed.
As organizations grow, the demands on leadership change. The same
old moves won't cut it any more. In Chess Not Checkers, Miller
tells the story of Blake Brown, newly appointed CEO of a company
troubled by poor performance and low morale. Nothing Blake learned
from his previous job seems to help him deal with the issues he now
faces. The problem, his new mentor points out, is Blake is playing
checkers - he needs to play chess or he's going to lose. The early
days of an organization are like checkers: a quick game with mostly
interchangeable pieces. Everybody does a little bit of everything,
the leader included, and things are so frantic you just have to
react as fast as you can. But as the organization expands, you
can't just keep jumping from activity to activity. You have to
think strategically, look ahead, leverage every employee's specific
talents. That's chess. And this approach creates unprecedented
levels of performance. Adapting four strategies from the game of
chess, Miller reveals four moves high-performance organizations
make. They bet on leadership, act as one, win the heart, and excel
at execution. Chess Not Checkers is an accessible and easily
applied guide to help leaders elevate their own leadership and the
performance of their entire team.
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