|
Showing 1 - 19 of
19 matches in All Departments
Originally published in 1984, Privatisation and the Welfare State
brings together a distinguished set of experts on the Welfare State
and its main policy areas of health care, housing, education and
transport. Each chapter provides some much-needed analysis of
privatisation policies in areas where, too often, political
rhetoric is allowed to dominate discussion. The book makes a major
contribution to the reader's understanding of the complex issues
involved in this controversial area of social policy. As the first
systematic evaluation of a broad range of welfare state
privatisation proposals, it is essential reading for economists,
social administrators, and political scientists.
Originally published in 1984, Privatisation and the Welfare State
brings together a distinguished set of experts on the Welfare State
and its main policy areas of health care, housing, education and
transport. Each chapter provides some much-needed analysis of
privatisation policies in areas where, too often, political
rhetoric is allowed to dominate discussion. The book makes a major
contribution to the reader's understanding of the complex issues
involved in this controversial area of social policy. As the first
systematic evaluation of a broad range of welfare state
privatisation proposals, it is essential reading for economists,
social administrators, and political scientists.
A collection of the notable last recorded words of the dying,
"Famous Last Words" is, unexpectedly, bursting with life, hope,
wisdom, and often laughter. Here are writers, philosophers,
athletes, gangsters, kings, queens, movie stars, and politicians,
in all sorts of moods and states of preparedness. Some merely want
to say goodbye to loved ones, others want to create a legacy. And
some are caught completely off guard, like Civil War general John
Sedgwick, answering his troops' urgings to take cover: They
couldn't hit an elephant at this dist-.There's the droll: It's the
wallpaper or me. One of us has to go (Oscar Wilde); the blase How
are the Mets doing today? (Moe Berg); the cranky: It wasn't worth
it (Louis B. Mayer); the wistful: That was the best ice cream soda
I ever tasted (Lou Costello); the optimistic: I shall hear in
heaven (Beethoven); and the overly optimistic: I've never felt
better (Douglas Fairbanks).Ultimately, every one of these parting
statements is a reflection of the person behind it. Each is
accompanied by a mini-biography of the speaker, including the
context of death, from the golf course (That was a great game of
golf, fellers Bing Crosby) to a favorite armchair (Go on, get out.
Last words are for fools who haven't said enough-Karl Marx).
Midwinter. As former farmhand Jake, a widower in his seventies,
wanders the beautiful, austere moors of North Yorkshire trying to
evade capture, we learn of the events of his past: the wife he
loved and lost, their child he knows cannot be his, and the
deep-seated need for revenge that manifests itself in a moment of
violence. On the coast, Jake's friend, Sheila, receives the
devastating news. The aftermath of Jake's actions, and what it
brings to the surface, will change her life forever. But how will
she react when he turns up at her door? As beauty and tenderness
blend with violence, this story transports us to a different world,
subtly exploring love and loss in a language that both bruises and
heals.
In a mere twelve years, Rockne's "Fighting Irish" won 105 games, including five astonishing undefeated seasons. But Rockne was more than the sum of his victories--he was an icon who, more than anyone, made football an American obsession. The book gives us colorful descriptions of such Rockne teams as the undefeated 1924 eleven led by the illustrious Four Horsemen, and the 1930 squad, Rockne's last and greatest. A renowned motivator whose "Win one for the Gipper" is the most famous locker-room speech ever, Rockne was also football's most brilliant innovator, a pioneer of the forward pass, a master of the psychological ploy, and an early advocate of conditioning. In this balanced account, Rockne emerges as an exemplary and complex figure: a fierce competitor who was generous in victory and defeat; an inspiring father figure to his players; and a man so revered nationwide that when he died in a plane crash in 1931, at the height of his career, he was mourned by the entire country. "A solid portrait of one of football's most solid figures."--The New York Times Book Review
When all-time pitching great Christy Mathewson died of tuberculosis
in 1925 at the age of 45, it touched off a wave of national
mourning that remains without precedent for an American athlete.
The World Series was underway, and the game the day after
Mathewson's death took on the trappings of a state funeral:
officials slowly lowered the flag to half-mast, each ballplayer
wore a black armband, and fans joined together in a chorus of
"Nearer My God to Thee." Newspaper editorials recalled Mathewson's
glorious career with the New York Giants, but also emphasized his
unstinting good sportsmanship and voluntary service in World War I.
The pitcher known to one and all as "Matty" or "Big Six" was as
beloved for the strength of character he brought to the national
pastime, as for his stunning 373 career victories. "I do not expect
to see his like again," said his best friend and former manager,
John McGraw. "But I do know that the example he set and the imprint
he left on the sport that he loved and honored will remain long
after I am gone."
In Matty, Ray Robinson tells the story of a man who became
America's first authentic sports hero. Until Mathewson, Robinson
reveals, Americans loved baseball, but looked down on ballplayers
and other athletes as hard-drinking, skirt-chasing ne'er-do-wells.
Deprived of real-life role models, millions of readers followed the
serialized exploits of Frank Merriwell, a fictional hero who
excelled at sports from baseball to billiards and never drank,
smoke, or swore. Robinson shows how an eager public greeted
Mathewson as a flesh-and-blood version of Merriwell from his first
year at Bucknell University, where he shone as star pitcher,
premier field-goal kicker, and class president. Lured into the big
leagues before he could graduate, the tall, handsome pitcher soon
won over men, women and children with his sense of fair play and
his arsenal of blazing fastballs, sweeping curves, and infamously
deceptive fadeaway pitches. Robinson skillfully details the
highlights of Mathewson's career, including his showdowns against
the great batters of his day and his encounters with the young
Brooklyn, Chicago, Pittsburgh and St. Louis teams. Here are the six
remarkable days in October, 1905 when Mathewson became the only
pitcher ever to hurl three straight shutouts in a World Series, and
the afternoon at West Point when he won $50 in a bet that he could
throw 20 of his best pitches to exactly the same spot. Robinson
does not underplay Mathewson's occasional failings, but the most
surprising aspect of this fascinating portrait is just how close
America's first Hall of Fame pitcher came to living up to his
image.
Drawing on rare interviews, press clips, and long overlooked
eyewitness accounts, Matty brings baseball's golden age to
life--not only the great teams and the early superstars, but the
long train trips between games, with cramped berths and no air
conditioning; the small town ballplayers let loose amidst big city
vice; and the two-bit gambling that eventually led to the infamous
Black Sox Scandal of the 1919 Series (a scandal that might have
escaped detection if the sportswriters in the press box with
Mathewson had not been able to rely on his experienced eye for
clues to how ballplayers might throw games). Offering rare insight
into the making of an early twentieth century American hero, Matty
is must reading for anyone who loves baseball.
Will Rogers played a prominent role in American culture and society in the 1920s and 1930s. Star of Broadway, radio, and film; political pundit and newpaper columnist - Rogers was one of the most successful and best loved figures in entertainment in this period.
This book is in relations to anyone who's going through
difficult seasons in their lives. Just believe in the word of God
for what ever is taking place in your life.
This is also to encourage your spirit that you are not alone
with the many burdens of life.
Electricity is now a film starring Agyness Deyn. Lily's epilepsy
means she's used to seeing the world in terms of angles - you look
at every surface, you weigh up every corner, and you think of your
head slamming into it - but what would she be like without her
sharp edges? Prickly, spiky, up-front honest and down-to-earth
practical, Lily is thirty, and life's not easy but she gets by.
Needing no-one and asking for nothing, it's just her and her
epilepsy: her constant companion. But then Lily's long-estranged
mother dies, and Lily is drawn back into a world she thought she'd
left behind. Forced to renegotiate the boundaries of her life, she
realises she has a lot to learn - about relationships, about the
past, and about herself - and some difficult decisions ahead of
her.
This book explores the controversial dilemmas which meet at the
intersection of medicine philosphy and law - questions concerning
killing and not killing which are faced daily in health care. They
embrace euthanasia abortion the care of the elderly and the
demented the care of the mentally ill children and those in a
persistent vegative state. Who Owns our Bodies? identifies a crisis
both in ethics and in empowerment as people face often neccessarily
wretched choices. It seeks a framework of guidance for practical
decision-making and focuses on two key issues. First who decides on
an individual's quality of life and thus on their health care
treatments? Second how can patients be empowered with a structure
to enable choice self-realization self-reflection and
self-responsibility? John Spiers with characteristic clarity and
verve offers a fundamental choice between health care experienced
as hierarchy and control and the alternative of choice and
self-responsibilty. He argues that health care must rely on
patients deciding how much power they have not on professionals
deciding how much to grant them.
Hailed by critics as a long-overdue portrait of Sugar Ray Robinson,
a man as elusive outside the ring as he was magisterial in it,
Pound by Pound is a lively and nuanced profile of an athlete who is
arguably the best boxer the scene has ever seen. But the same
discipline that Robinson brought to the sport eluded him at home,
leading him to emotionally and physically abuse his family.
Exposing Robinson's flaws as well as putting his career in the
context of his life, this book tells for the first time the full
story of a truly complex man.
Lou Gehrig will go down in history as one of the best ballplayers
of all time; he was elected to the Hall of Fame and played in a
record-setting 2,130 consecutive games. ALS known today as "Lou
Gehrig's Disease" robbed him of his physical skills at a relatively
young age, and he died in 1941. Ray Robinson re-creates the life of
this legendary ballplayer and also provides an insightful look at
baseball, including all the great players of that era: Babe Ruth,
Ty Cobb, Walter Johnson, and more. 16 photographs."
"All these many years down the road, Lou Gehrig's reputation still
holds up--as does Ray Robinson's elegant biography."--Bob Costas
Lou Gehrig will go down in history as one of the best ballplayers
of all time; he was elected to the Hall of Fame and played in a
record-setting 2,130 consecutive games. ALS--known today as "Lou
Gehrig's Disease"--robbed him of his physical skills at a
relatively young age, and he died in 1941. Ray Robinson re-creates
the life of this legendary ballplayer and also provides an
insightful look at baseball, including all the great players of
that era: Babe Ruth, Ty Cobb, Walter Johnson, and more. 16
photographs.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
The Creator
John David Washington, Gemma Chan, …
DVD
R312
Discovery Miles 3 120
|