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This funny showgirl's memoir takes readers behind the curtain, and
straight into the dressing room. Mary Lee DeWitt Baker started out
as a flat-chested dreamer competing in the world of show business,
where perfection is the norm. She endured and overcame battles with
bullying and repeated rejection. She shares her most intimate and
epic wardrobe malfunction, which led to a life-changing decision.
This author loves to share a good laugh, and gives witty inside
tips like how to survive a five-show day, balance an oversized
headdress, and audition do's and don'ts. And, above all, in the
event of a missing bear paw, runaway sheep, or chronic bronchitis,
Ladies and Gentlemen...THE SHOW MUST GO ON
"In high school I was known as the girl whose father took
pictures of naked women. Boys wanted to hang out at my house,
hoping to glimpse Peter Gowland photographing a Playboy centerfold.
Or perhaps they'd get to see Jayne Mansfield or Raquel Welch or
another Hollywood celebrity."
What authors have said about Mary Lee's previous books
Tender Bough
I am happy to say I find a simplicity, a beauty, a tenderness
which is so lacking today and which is not old-fashioned, as some
may think, but perpetually new and refreshing, inspiring to young
and old alike. - Henry Miller
Tender Bough is beautiful. There's the freshness I mean, the
child's wild eye. (and not only beautiful, but successful, man), -
Ben Massalink
The Guest of Tyn-y-Coedcae
Because of the directness and simplicity, the wistfulness which
underlies the moods touches one more deeply than the louder wail of
sorrow in some of the screaming poets. It is a poetry of moods,
shared with gentleness and precision of color and the feelings
issued from human experience. One feels with her. - Anais Nin
This volume features a variety of research projects at the
intersection of mathematics and public policy. The topics included
here fall in the areas of cybersecurity and climate change, two
broad and impactful issues that benefit greatly from mathematical
techniques. Each chapter in the book is a mathematical look into a
specific research question related to one of these issues, an
approach that offers the reader insight into the application of
mathematics to important public policy questions. The articles in
this volume are papers inspired by a Workshop for Women in
Mathematics and Public Policy, held January 22-25, 2019 at the
Institute for Pure and Applied Mathematics and the Luskin Center at
the University of California, Los Angeles. The workshop was created
to promote and develop women at all levels of their careers as
researchers in mathematics and public policy. The idea was modeled
after other successful Research Collaboration Conferences for
Women, where junior and senior women come together at week-long
conferences held at mathematics institutes to work on pre-defined
research projects. The workshop focused on how mathematics can be
used in public policy research and was designed to foster
collaborative networks for women to help address the gender gap in
mathematics and science.
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Hubert's Wife (Hardcover)
Minnie Mary Lee; Edited by 1stworld Library
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R584
Discovery Miles 5 840
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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As Mr. Harewood was one evening sitting with his wife and children,
he told them that he expected soon to receive among them the
daughter of a friend, who had lately died in the West Indies. Mr.
Harewood's family consisted of his wife, two sons, and a daughter:
the eldest, named Edmund, was about twelve years of age; Charles,
the second, was scarcely ten; and Ellen, the daughter, had just
passed her eighth birthday: they were all sensible, affectionate
children, but a little different in disposition, the eldest being
grave and studious, the second lively and active, and as he was
nearer to Ellen's age, she was often inclined to romp with him,
when she should have minded her book; but she was so fond of her
mamma, and was educated with such a proper sense of the duty and
obedience she owed her, that a word or a look never failed to
restrain the exuberance of her spirits.
This volume provides insights into the organizational dynamics of
libraries. Topics discussed include: decision making in libraries,
bureaucratic structure and personality, controlling and
reappraising, the handling of staff problems, communication, and
the library and politics.
Few people have made greater contributions to protecting and
improving the environment than the scientist, teacher, activist Dr.
Barry Commoner. For half a century, Dr. Commoner has been an
international leader in the environmental movement. On the occasion
of his eightieth birthday, a symposium was held at which invited
speakers discussed his contributions to a wide range of
environmental issues. This book, collecting many of the invited
papers, provides fascinating insights into the life and work of one
of the twentieth century's most influential scientists and social
activists. Chapters contributed by other activists, scientists, and
scholars including Ralph Nader, Tony Mazzocchi and Peter Montague
cover many of Dr. Commoner's major contributions.
Mary Lee Stubbs (Chief of the Organizational History Branch of the
O.S. Office of the Chief of Military History) and Stanley Russell
Connor (Deputy Chief of the U.S. Organizational History Branch,
OCMH) wrote the 1968 Armor-Cavalry Part I: Regular Army and Army
Reserve, part of the Army Lineage Series, which was "designed to
foster the esprit de corps of United States Army units."
The rise and spread of Covid-19 in the beginning of 2020 presents a
once-in-a-century challenge and opportunity for decision makers,
managers, scholars, and citizens to understand the risks, mitigate
its impact and prepare for future crises. Drawing on a global
network of scholars, this book presents a comparative analysis of
ten nations' response to a global pandemic, while operating
nominally under the framework of the World Health Organization. The
book introduces the concept of 'collective cognition' as an
analytic lens for examining the nations' response to Covid-19
during the first six months of the emerging pandemic (January -
June 2020) and draws out insights for improving systems of global
risk management. This book addresses four primary audiences:
policy-makers and leaders in nations struggling to contain viruses
while guiding their societies under threat; academic researchers,
students, and educators engaged in preparing the next generation of
professionals committed to investigating emerging risk: managers of
non-profit and private organizations that operate and maintain the
networks of social, technical, and economic services that are
essential to functioning communities; and the informed general
public interested in understanding this extraordinary sequence of
events and in managing the novel risk of COVID-19 in a more
informed, responsible way.
What do you call the ones you love the most? Acclaimed author Mary
Lee Donovan and illustrator Brizida Magro’s Let Me Call You
Sweetheart is a playful, sometimes silly, and always cozy picture
book that features more than fifty terms of endearment from around
the world. Perfect for bedtime, for building vocabulary, for baby
showers, and for gift-giving all year long. A confectionary of
affection! Mi cielito, my angel, my pumpkin, my bean. My kitten, my
sweetheart, my darling sweet pea. Everyone has a special term of
endearment for those they love. What do you call your loved ones?
Let Me Call You Sweetheart is an irresistible picture book to share
with the ones you love—no matter what their age! Mary Lee
Donovan’s rhythmic text keeps readers turning the pages, and
Brizida Magro’s remarkable, sun-drenched illustrations present a
cast of playful and charming children and animals, and an
enchanting world full of friendship, love, and affection. Featuring
more than fifty terms of endearment and expressions of love from
around the world, Let Me Call You Sweetheart is perfect for baby
showers and bedtime. Includes a note to readers about the origin of
the terms of endearment featured in the book, as well as source
notes.
This book reframes theoretical, methodological and practical
approaches to public administration by drawing on complexity theory
concepts. It aims to provide alternative perspectives on the
theory, research and practice of public administration, avoiding
assumptions of traditional theory-building. The contributors
explain both how ongoing non-linear interactions result in macro
patterns becoming established in a complexity-informed world view,
and the implications of these dynamics. Complexity theory explains
the way in which many repeated non-linear interactions among
elements within a whole can result in processes and patterns
emerging without design or direction, thus necessitating a
reconsideration of the predictability and controllability of many
aspects of public administration. As well as illustrating how
complexity theory informs new research methods for studying this
field, the book also shines a light on the different practices
required of public administrators to cope with the complexity
encountered in the public policy and public management fields. This
book was originally published as a special issue of the Public
Management Review journal.
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