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The passengers of United Airlines Flight 93 on September 11, 2001
have earned their rightful place among the pantheon of American
heroes. Flight 93 provides a riveting narrative based on
interviews, oral histories, transcripts, recordings, personal tours
of the crash site, and voluminous trial evidence made public only
in recent years. There also is plenty of chilling new detail for
readers who think they know the story of the flight. Utilizing
research tools that were not available in the years immediately
after the crash, the book offers the most complete account of what
actually took place aboard United 93 - from its delayed takeoff at
Newark International Airport to the moment it plunged upside-down
at 563 miles per hour into an open field in rural Somerset County,
Pennsylvania.
In a war of brother versus brother, theirs has become the most
famous broken friendship: Union general Winfield Scott Hancock and
Confederate general Lewis Armistead. Michael Shaara's The Killer
Angels (1974) and the movie Gettysburg (1993), based on the novel,
presented a close friendship sundered by war, but history reveals
something different from the legend that holds up Hancock and
Armistead as sentimental symbols of a nation torn apart. In this
deeply researched book, Tom McMillan sets the record straight. Even
if their relationship wasn't as close as the legend has it, Hancock
and Armistead knew each other well before the Civil War. Armistead
was seven years older, but in a small prewar army where everyone
seemed to know everyone else, Hancock and Armistead crossed paths
at a fort in Indian Territory before the Mexican War and then
served together in California, becoming friends - and they
emotionally parted ways when the Civil War broke out. Their lives
wouldn't intersect again until Gettysburg, when they faced each
other during Pickett's Charge. Armistead died of his wounds at
Gettysburg on July 5, 1863; Hancock went on to be the Democratic
nominee for president in 1880, losing to James Garfield. Part dual
biography and part Civil War history, Armistead and Hancock: Behind
the Gettysburg Legend clarifies the historic record with new
information and fresh perspective, reversing decades of
misconceptions about an amazing story of two friends that has
defined the Civil War.
Neurobehavioural disability (NBD) follows many forms of serious
brain injury and is a major constraint on social independence. This
book brings together a group of leading academics and practising
clinicians to provide an overview of the nature of NBD, considering
how it translates into social handicap, and what can be done to
address associated problems, through social and behavioural
rehabilitation, vocational training and family education. This
fully revised edition takes into account advances in the field,
exploring the range of cognitive, emotional, and behavioural
effects of brain damage most commonly associated with damage to the
frontal and associated structures of the brain that govern social
behaviour. This edition also features increased emphasis on
psychological interventions, as well as new chapters on brain
imaging, pharmacotherapy and assistive technology for disability.
Neurobehavioural Disability and Social Handicap Following Traumatic
Brain Injury is essential reading for clinical psychologists,
psychiatrists and neurologists working in brain injury
rehabilitation. The book will also be of interest to relatives of
those with brain injury seeking better knowledge to understand
neurobehavioural disability, as well as the growing number of
therapy care assistants, case managers, support workers, and social
workers responsible for the day to day care of brain injured people
in the community.
Neurobehavioural disability (NBD) follows many forms of serious
brain injury and is a major constraint on social independence. This
book brings together a group of leading academics and practising
clinicians to provide an overview of the nature of NBD, considering
how it translates into social handicap, and what can be done to
address associated problems, through social and behavioural
rehabilitation, vocational training and family education. This
fully revised edition takes into account advances in the field,
exploring the range of cognitive, emotional, and behavioural
effects of brain damage most commonly associated with damage to the
frontal and associated structures of the brain that govern social
behaviour. This edition also features increased emphasis on
psychological interventions, as well as new chapters on brain
imaging, pharmacotherapy and assistive technology for disability.
Neurobehavioural Disability and Social Handicap Following Traumatic
Brain Injury is essential reading for clinical psychologists,
psychiatrists and neurologists working in brain injury
rehabilitation. The book will also be of interest to relatives of
those with brain injury seeking better knowledge to understand
neurobehavioural disability, as well as the growing number of
therapy care assistants, case managers, support workers, and social
workers responsible for the day to day care of brain injured people
in the community.
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