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Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
Isolated Cells and Perfused Organs 1. O. Kaplan, P.C.M. van Zijl,
J.S. Cohen, Washington, DC/USA NMR Studies of Metabolism of Cells
and Perfused Organs Individual Nuclei 2. S.R. Williams, London, UK
In Vivo Proton Spectroscopy: Experimental Asoects and Potential 3.
N. Beckmann, Basel, Switzerland In Vivo 13C Spectroscopy in Humans
4. M.J.W. Prior, R.J. Maxwell, J.R. Griffiths, London, UK Fluorine
- 19F NMR Spectroscopy and Imaging In Vivo 5. J.S. Ingwall, Boston,
MA/USA Measuring Cation Movements Across the Cell Wall Using NMR
Spectroscopy: Sodium Movements in Striated Muscle 6. M. Rudin, A.
Sauter, Basel, Switzerland In Vivo Phosphorus-31 NMR: Potential and
Limitations
Today's presidents enter office having campaigned on an ambitious
policy agenda, eager to see it enacted, and willing to push so that
it is. The central question of presidents' legislative leadership,
therefore, is not a question of resolve, it is a question of
strategy: by what means can presidents build winning coalitions for
their agenda? Pushing the Agenda uncovers the answer. It reveals
the predictable nature of presidents' policy making opportunities
and the systematic strategies White House officials employ to
exploit those opportunities. Drawing on an eclectic array of
original evidence - spanning presidents from Dwight Eisenhower to
George W. Bush and issues ranging from education to energy, and
healthcare to taxes - Matthew N. Beckmann finds modern presidents'
influence in Congress is real, often substantial, and - to date -
largely underestimated.
Today's presidents enter office having campaigned on an ambitious
policy agenda, eager to see it enacted, and willing to push so that
it is. The central question of presidents' legislative leadership,
therefore, is not a question of resolve, it is a question of
strategy: by what means can presidents build winning coalitions for
their agenda? Pushing the Agenda uncovers the answer. It reveals
the predictable nature of presidents' policy making opportunities
and the systematic strategies White House officials employ to
exploit those opportunities. Drawing on an eclectic array of
original evidence - spanning presidents from Dwight Eisenhower to
George W. Bush and issues ranging from education to energy, and
healthcare to taxes - Matthew N. Beckmann finds modern presidents'
influence in Congress is real, often substantial, and - to date -
largely underestimated.
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