|
Showing 1 - 25 of
42 matches in All Departments
Imagine: if we could combine dreams and reality in a world where we
live forever.Oliver believes his life to be one of disappointment
and failure. Haunted by the memory of a mysterious woman he
encountered thirty years ago, and obsessed with finding her, he
embarks on a journey embracing grief, hope, myths and legends to
find her. He is drawn into diverse worlds, from ancient rural
beliefs and traditions to emerging medical science, as he and the
reader are led to question the boundaries between dreams, reality
and imagination. This original speculative fiction title has been
described as 'It's a Wonderful Life for the 21st Century' "Another
Life is a beautiful and thought-provoking meditation on the meaning
and purpose of life, seen through the lens of a mystery story
steeped in English folklore...The book's narrative voice and its
depiction of details from the natural world are outstanding."
British Fantasy Society
The first part of my book is about growing up in South Carolina.
Included are some of the adventures and misadventures of my youth.
I grew up in the small rural town of Harleyville, which is about 40
miles from Charleston, SC. My young life was strongly influenced by
my parents, grandparents, grammar school and Sunday school
teachers. I was seven or eight years old before I saw my first
television program, so we played a lot of outdoor sports and games.
It was lots of fun going to a small school and growing up around my
grandparent's dairy farm. Hunting, cars, sports, and girls took
priority over studying when I was in high school. College didn't
seem the right thing for me when I graduated, so I joined the Army
and became a paratrooper. The Army put some discipline and maturity
in my life, but after three years of military service, I was ready
for college. However, I started working for the Federal Government
at the beginning of my senior year and had to put completing my
degree on hold for a few years. The book is also about my wife, my
children and some of the activities that are a part of my life. One
chapter is about stories that my father told me about World War II.
It finishes with some of the entries from the diary that he kept
during that time of his life. The second part of the book is about
my career with the U. S. Customs Service and the Federal Law
Enforcement Training Center. I started my career in 1971 as a Sky
Marshall. When the government went to a sterile concourse concept,
the Sky Marshals were transferred to other jobs within the federal
government. When I was transferred to Savannah, I started the
second part of my career as a Customs Patrol Officer. The
PatrolDivision was established in 1973 as a highly trained drug
interdiction unit. The unit's primary responsibility was to stop
the flow of illegal drugs and narcotics entering the United States.
Commissioner William Von Raab started phasing out the Patrol in the
mid 1980s. At that time, I was transitioned to a position as a
Customs Special Agent where I investigated other violations of the
Custom laws, such as fraud and child pornography. I finished my
career with Customs as a firearms and use of force trainer and
supervisor with the Customs National Firearms Program Staff at Fort
Benning, Georgia. My positions with the U.S. Customs Service were
interesting and challenging. I had an action packed job that I
still miss today. After I retired, I took a contract job as an
instructor with the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center at
Glynco, Georgia, teaching firearms and the use of force. It is a
rewarding job that I hope I can continue for several more years.
The United Nations is at a critical juncture. It is faced with two distinct choices: to remain a "decision frozen in time" or to develop a long-term adaptation agenda (and strategy) that would allow it to be a relevant institution of global governance for the 21st century. Reform and reflexive institutional adjustments have failed to address underlying problems facing this organization. After 55 years of existence it is still considered an inefficient and ineffective world body. Worse yet, its relevance is being questioned. This study offers a critique of existing UN change processes and then shifts to considerations of institutional learning strategies that would allow the UN to maintain relevance amidst the evolution of global governance arrangements.
This book addresses the central theme of adjusting the United Nations system in light of the broadening definition of security, a perceived shift from modernity to post-modernity, and the contemporary debate about reform, adaptation, and institutional learning in multilateral institutions during transitional periods. The authors in this study focus on the lessons learned from the organization's recent performance in collective security, preventive diplomacy and deployment, and peacekeeping, among other things.
This book, first published in 1990, examines the origins and
evolution of the security police, considering the continuities as
well as changes in its function as guardian of the regime's
security. It analyses the KGB's involvement in Kremlin politics,
the structure and organisation of the KGB, its formal tasks and
legal prerogatives as set forth by the Party leadership, and the
actual functions it performs on behalf of the Soviet regime.
Underlying this analysis is an attempt to assess the power and
authority of the KGB relative to other political institutions and
to explain the crucial dynamics of the Party- KGB relationship.
This book, first published in 1990, examines the origins and
evolution of the security police, considering the continuities as
well as changes in its function as guardian of the regime's
security. It analyses the KGB's involvement in Kremlin politics,
the structure and organisation of the KGB, its formal tasks and
legal prerogatives as set forth by the Party leadership, and the
actual functions it performs on behalf of the Soviet regime.
Underlying this analysis is an attempt to assess the power and
authority of the KGB relative to other political institutions and
to explain the crucial dynamics of the Party- KGB relationship.
The Caribbean area projects an image-not entirely accurate-of
instability, and it is within that context that the United States
and Cuba, the region's chief protagonists, struggle. This book
explores in detail the history and nature of Cuba's influence in
the Commonwealth Caribbean, Mexico, and Central and South America,
as well as its relations wi
Practical Channel Hydraulics is a technical guide for estimating
flood water levels in rivers using the innovative software known as
the Conveyance and Afflux Estimation System (CES-AES). The stand
alone software is freely available at HR Wallingford's website
www.river-conveyance.net. The conveyance engine has also been
embedded within industry standard river modelling software such as
InfoWorks RS and Flood Modeller Pro. This 2nd Edition has been
greatly expanded through the addition of Chapters 6-8, which now
supply the background to the Shiono and Knight Method (SKM), upon
which the CES-AES is largely based. With the need to estimate river
levels more accurately, computational methods are now frequently
embedded in flood risk management procedures, as for example in ISO
18320 ('Determination of the stage-discharge relationship'), in
which both the SKM and CES feature. The CES-AES incorporates five
main components: A Roughness Adviser, A Conveyance Generator, an
Uncertainty Estimator, a Backwater Module and an Afflux Estimator.
The SKM provides an alternative approach, solving the governing
equation analytically or numerically using Excel, or with the short
FORTRAN program provided. Special attention is paid to calculating
the distributions of boundary shear stress distributions in
channels of different shape, and to appropriate formulations for
resistance and drag forces, including those on trees in
floodplains. Worked examples are given for flows in a wide range of
channel types (size, shape, cover, sinuosity), ranging from small
scale laboratory flumes (Q = 2.0 1s-1) to European rivers (~2,000
m3s-1), and large-scale world rivers (> 23,000 m3s-1), a ~ 107
range in discharge. Sites from rivers in the UK, France, China, New
Zealand and Ecuador are considered. Topics are introduced initially
at a simplified level, and get progressively more complex in later
chapters. This book is intended for post graduate level students
and practising engineers or hydrologists engaged in flood risk
management, as well as those who may simply just wish to learn more
about modelling flows in rivers.
The Caribbean area projects an image-not entirely accurate-of
instability, and it is within that context that the United States
and Cuba, the region's chief protagonists, struggle. This book
explores in detail the history and nature of Cuba's influence in
the Commonwealth Caribbean, Mexico, and Central and South America,
as well as its relations wi
Practical Channel Hydraulics is a technical guide for estimating
flood water levels in rivers using the innovative software known as
the Conveyance and Afflux Estimation System (CES-AES). The stand
alone software is freely available at HR Wallingford's website
www.river-conveyance.net. The conveyance engine has also been
embedded within industry standard river modelling software such as
InfoWorks RS and Flood Modeller Pro. This 2nd Edition has been
greatly expanded through the addition of Chapters 6-8, which now
supply the background to the Shiono and Knight Method (SKM), upon
which the CES-AES is largely based. With the need to estimate river
levels more accurately, computational methods are now frequently
embedded in flood risk management procedures, as for example in ISO
18320 ('Determination of the stage-discharge relationship'), in
which both the SKM and CES feature. The CES-AES incorporates five
main components: A Roughness Adviser, A Conveyance Generator, an
Uncertainty Estimator, a Backwater Module and an Afflux Estimator.
The SKM provides an alternative approach, solving the governing
equation analytically or numerically using Excel, or with the short
FORTRAN program provided. Special attention is paid to calculating
the distributions of boundary shear stress distributions in
channels of different shape, and to appropriate formulations for
resistance and drag forces, including those on trees in
floodplains. Worked examples are given for flows in a wide range of
channel types (size, shape, cover, sinuosity), ranging from small
scale laboratory flumes (Q = 2.0 1s-1) to European rivers (~2,000
m3s-1), and large-scale world rivers (> 23,000 m3s-1), a ~ 107
range in discharge. Sites from rivers in the UK, France, China, New
Zealand and Ecuador are considered. Topics are introduced initially
at a simplified level, and get progressively more complex in later
chapters. This book is intended for post graduate level students
and practising engineers or hydrologists engaged in flood risk
management, as well as those who may simply just wish to learn more
about modelling flows in rivers.
This volume addresses the central theme of adjusting the United Nations system in light of, firstly, the broadening definition of security, secondly, a perceived shift from modernity to postmodernity; and finally, the contemporary debate about reform, adaptation and institutional learning in multilateral institutions during transnational periods. The UN has not been successful in learning appropriate lessons that could facilitate requisite changes to its structure and operations. Thus the authors in this study focus on the lessons learned from the organizations' recent performance in collective security, preventative diplomacy, preventative deployment, peacekeeping, peacemaking, peace maintenance, and international legal, environmental and trade regulation.
The rise of evangelical feminism challenges traditional Christian
beliefs related to gender roles in society, the home, and the
church. This comprehensive defense of complementarianism
contributes to the debate with systematic argumentation and
exegetical analysis.
According to The National Eye Institute, more Americans are
visually impaired than ever before, and the numbers are expected to
greatly increase over the next thirty years as Baby Boomers age,
and eyestrain from computer use continues to have an effect among
all generations.
In this context, the KJV Super Giant Print Bible Dictionary and
Concordance is unique as a Bible reference tool. The 18-point
"APHont" type, created by the American Publishing House for the
Blind, is designed specifically for persons who are visually
impaired.
This edition features more than five thousand dictionary entries
and forty thousand Scripture references based on one of the world's
most beloved and popular Bible translations.
The United Nations is at a critical juncture. It is faced with two
distinct choices: to remain a 'decision frozen in time' or to
develop a long-term adaptation agenda (and strategy) that would
allow it to be a relevant institution of global governance for the
twenty-first century. Reform and reflexive institutional
adjustments have failed to address underlying problems facing this
organization. After fifty-five years of existence it is still
considered an inefficient and ineffective world body. Worse yet,
its relevance is being questioned. This study offers a critique of
existing UN change processes and then shifts focus to
considerations of institutional learning strategies that would
allow the UN to maintain relevance amidst the evolution of global
governance arrangements.
Offering a rare pan-Caribbean perspective on a region that has
moved from the very center of the western world to its periphery,
The Caribbean: The Genesis of a Fragmented Nationalism journeys
through five centuries of economic and social development,
emphasizing such topics as the slave-run plantation economy, the
changes in political control over the centuries, the impact of the
United States, and the effects of Castro's Cuban revolution on the
area. The book integrates social analysis with political narrative,
providing a unique perspective on the problems of nation-building
in an area of dense populations, scarce resources, and an explosive
political climate. New to this Edition * A fresh contextualization
of Caribbean history * Up-to-date and revised scholarship, bringing
the history to 2010 * New information on indigenous societies and
the contact period * A short bibliography of suggested readings for
each chapter * Expanded discussion on the Haitian and Cuban
Revolutions and their universal impact * Revised and updated
chronology and informational tables on the Caribbean
Jane Addams was the first American woman to receive the Nobel Peace
Prize. Now "Citizen," Louise W. Knight's masterful biography,
reveals Addams's early development as a political activist and
social philosopher. In this book we observe a powerful mind
grappling with the radical ideas of her age, most notably the
ever-changing meanings of democracy.
"Citizen" covers the first half of Addams's life, from 1860 to
1899. Knight recounts how Addams, a child of a wealthy family in
rural northern Illinois, longed for a life of larger purpose. She
broadened her horizons through education, reading, and travel, and,
after receiving an inheritance upon her father's death, moved to
Chicago in 1889 to co-found Hull House, the city's first settlement
house. "Citizen" shows vividly what the settlement house actually
was--a neighborhood center for education and social gatherings--and
describes how Addams learned of the abject working conditions in
American factories, the unchecked power wielded by employers, the
impact of corrupt local politics on city services, and the
intolerable limits placed on women by their lack of voting rights.
These experiences, Knight makes clear, transformed Addams. Always a
believer in democracy as an abstraction, Addams came to understand
that this national ideal was also a life philosophy and a mandate
for civic activism by all.
As her story unfolds, Knight astutely captures the enigmatic
Addams's compassionate personality as well as her flawed human
side. Written in a strong narrative voice, "Citizen" is an
insightful portrait of the formative years of a great American
leader.
"Knight's decision to focus on Addams's early years is a stroke of
genius. We knowa great deal about Jane Addams the public figure. We
know relatively little about how she made the transition from the
19th century to the 20th. In Knight's book, Jane Addams comes to
life. . . . "Citizen" is written neither to make money nor to gain
academic tenure; it is a gift, meant to enlighten and improve. Jane
Addams would have understood."--Alan Wolfe, "New York"" Times Book
Review"
"My only complaint about the book is that there wasn't more of it.
. . . Knight honors Addams as an American original."--Kathleen
Dalton, "Chicago"" Tribune
"
Fifty years after the arrival of Columbus, at the height of Spain's
conquest of the West Indies, Spanish bishop and colonist Bartolome
de las Casas dedicated his Brevisima Relacion de la Destruicion de
las Indias to Philip II of Spain. An impassioned plea on behalf of
the native peoples of the West Indies, the Brevisima Relacion
catalogues in horrific detail atrocities it attributes to the
king's colonists in the New World. The result is a withering
indictment of the conquerors that has cast a 500-year shadow over
the subsequent history of that world and the European colonization
of it. Andrew Hurley's daring new translation dramatically
foreshortens that 500 years by reversing the usual priority of a
translation; rather than bring the Brevisima Relacion to the
reader, it brings the reader to the Brevisima Relacion -- not as it
is, but as it might have been, had it been originally written in
English. The translator thus allows himself no words or devices
unavailable in English by 1560, and in so doing reveals the
prophetic voice, urgency and clarity of the work, qualities often
obscured in modern translations. An Introduction by Franklin
Knight, notes, a map, and a judicious set of
Imagine: if we could combine dreams and reality in a world where we
live forever. Oliver believes his life to be one of disappointment
and failure. Haunted by the memory of a mysterious woman he
encountered thirty years ago, and obsessed with finding her, he
embarks on a journey embracing grief, hope, myths and legends to
find her. He is drawn into diverse worlds, from ancient rural
beliefs and traditions to emerging medical science, as he and the
reader are led to question the boundaries between dreams, reality
and imagination. This original speculative fiction title has been
described as 'It's a Wonderful Life for the 21st Century'
In "Expanding Earth, Constant Mass," David Knight describes a
previously unknown form of matter which is much more dense than our
present-day earth, and presents a theory of earth's formation that
explains, for the first time, how our planet could have started out
much smaller and denser than it is today. This theory has profound
implications not just for our own planet but for the nature of the
cosmos.
|
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
|