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The Counsellor (DVD)
Michael Fassbender, Brad Pitt, Cameron Diaz, Dean Norris, Penélope Cruz, …
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R59
R41
Discovery Miles 410
Save R18 (31%)
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Ships in 10 - 20 working days
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In director Ridley Scott's fast-paced thriller, a lawyer discovers
he's bitten off more than he can chew when he becomes involved in
the cocaine trade.
In need of some extra money to finance his
burgeoning lifestyle, The Counsellor (Michael Fassbender) decides
to try dabbling in some cocaine trafficking across the Mexican
border with the help of rich business acquaintance Reiner (Javier
Bardem) and shifty facilitator Westray (Brad Pitt).
But when a
large shipment is mysteriously hijacked and disappears without
trace, all three men find themselves facing their worst nightmare
as the out-of pocket suppliers seek to exact their revenge in a
hailstorm of blood and bullets.
The comprehensive "Dr. Spock"-like reference that is both
reassuring and realistic--now updated to reflect the many advances
in neonatology.
P "reemies, Second Edition" is the only parents' reference resource
of its kind--delivering up-to-the-minute information on medical
care in a warm, caring, and engaging voice. Authors Dana Wechsler
Linden and Emma Trenti Paroli are parents who have "been there."
Together with neonatologist Mia Wechsler Doron, they answer the
dozens of questions that parents will have at every stage--from
high-risk pregnancy through preemie hospitalization, to homecoming
and the preschool years--imparting a vast, detailed store of
knowledge in clear language that all readers can understand.
"Preemies, Second Edition" covers topics related to premature
birth, including:
What are your risk factors for having a premature baby?
Can you do something to delay early labor?
What do doctors know about you baby's outlook during her first
minutes and days of life?
How will your preemie's progress be monitored?
How do you cope with a long hospitalization?
Are there special preparations for you baby's homecoming?
What kind of stimulation during the first year gives your baby the
best chance?
Will your preemie grow up healthy? Normal?
David and Mady Segal analyze the adaptation of American soldiers
assigned to the Multinational Force and Observers (MFO) in the
Sinai Desert in support of the Camp David Accords, in the context
of the evolution of multinational peacekeeping forces as mechanisms
for achieving international security. The reactions of soldiers and
their wives to the peacekeeping assignment are considered from the
perspective of the social construction of reality, in which the
role of the military has been defined as war-fighting. The press
has ignored peacekeeping until very recently, and it falls to
military organizations, to soldiers and their families, to make
sense of the mission. Lessons learned from the Sinai MFO experience
should be used to help U.S. troops better prepare for their
increasing role in multinational peacekeeping.
Surgical Research: Basic Principles and Clinical Practice, Third
Edition is an excellent source book for the young surgical
investigator as well as the senior investigator in surgery. It is
divided into nine sections: The Surgeon as Investigator, Reading
and Writing, Speaking and Listening, Design and Methods, Funding,
Implementation, Analyzing Outcomes, Ethical Issues and
Perspectives. The Third Edition has been updated and added to with
43 new chapters. This book is of special interest to those surgeons
interested in doing research. However, it also has many very
interesting chapters that would help all surgeons in approaching
their practice in a more scientific way. With many of the foremost
surgical investigators contributing, this book is an excellent
collection of chapters covering the entire gamut of surgical
research.
A critical review of the most up-to-date research on purines and
myocardial protection. The role of purines in reversible myocardial
stunning' and irreversible (myocardial infarction) ischemic injury,
ventricular arrhythmias, and ischemic preconditioning is discussed
in detail, by experts. All reviews address recent and rather
controversial issues on purines and myocardial protection.
Mechanisms of cardioprotection of exogenous versus endogenous
purines are discussed in detail. The contribution of
internationally recognized experts in the field of purines and
cardiovascular physiology and in myocardial protection makes this a
unique and interesting book for clinicians, basic scientists and
students.
• Reveals and unpacks 6 key findings about effective principal
preparation and development. • Vignettes throughout illustrate
what the recommendations look like in practice. • The research
synthesis in this book adds to the findings on effective practice,
but also reveals gaps in the available research and methodological
weaknesses; the authors include recommendations for future research
and policy recommendations. • Authored by renowned scholar &
bestselling author Linda Darling-Hammond.
• Reveals and unpacks 6 key findings about effective principal
preparation and development. • Vignettes throughout illustrate
what the recommendations look like in practice. • The research
synthesis in this book adds to the findings on effective practice,
but also reveals gaps in the available research and methodological
weaknesses; the authors include recommendations for future research
and policy recommendations. • Authored by renowned scholar &
bestselling author Linda Darling-Hammond.
A comprehensive history of the barriers faced by students from
marginalized racial, ethnic, and religious groups to gain access to
predominantly white colleges and universities-and how these
students responded to these barriers. Affirmative action in college
admission is one of the most contested initiatives in contemporary
federal policy, from its beginnings in the 1960s through the 2014
lawsuit alleging that Harvard discriminates against Asian American
applicants. Supporters point out that using race and ethnicity as a
criterion for admission helps remediate some of the effects of
racist practices on minorities, including restrictions on college
admissions. Opponents insist that the practice violates civil
rights laws that prohibit racial discrimination and that it
reenacts the historic racial bias of colleges. In Unwelcome Guests,
Harold S. Wechsler and Steven J. Diner argue that discrimination in
college admissions has a long and troubling history in the United
States. Institutions of higher learning have vigorously sought to
shape their mission and the experiences of their undergraduate
students by paying careful attention to race and religion in
admissions decisions. Post-World War I institutions devised
exclusionary mechanisms that disadvantaged African Americans and
other minority students for much of the century. Wechsler and Diner
explore how American colleges and universities sought to restrict
enrollment of students they considered undesirable. How, they ask,
did these practices change over time? And how did underrepresented
students cope with this discrimination-and with the indifference,
bare tolerance, or outright hostility of some of their professors
and peers? Tracing the efforts of people from underrepresented
racial, ethnic, and religious groups to attend mainstream colleges,
Wechsler and Diner also look at how these students fared after
graduation, paying particular attention to Black women and men.
Unwelcome Guests illuminates a critically important aspect of the
history of American colleges and universities but also addresses
policy debates about affirmative action and racial/ethnic diversity
in colleges today. This profound history of the limits on college
access over decades of discrimination will help readers recognize
and understand the central role of race in the history of American
higher education.
Mobile biometrics - the use of physical and/or behavioral
characteristics of humans to allow their recognition by
mobile/smart phones - aims to achieve conventional functionality
and robustness while also supporting portability and mobility,
bringing greater convenience and opportunity for its deployment in
a wide range of operational environments from consumer applications
to law enforcement. But achieving these aims brings new challenges
such as issues with power consumption, algorithm complexity, device
memory limitations, frequent changes in operational environment,
security, durability, reliability, and connectivity. Mobile
Biometrics provides a timely survey of the state of the art
research and developments in this rapidly growing area. Topics
covered in Mobile Biometrics include mobile biometric sensor
design, deep neural network for mobile person recognition with
audio-visual signals, active authentication using facial
attributes, fusion of shape and texture features for lip biometry
in mobile devices, mobile device usage data as behavioral
biometrics, continuous mobile authentication using user phone
interaction, smartwatch-based gait biometrics, mobile four-fingers
biometrics system, palm print recognition on mobile devices,
periocular region for smartphone biometrics, and face anti-spoofing
on mobile devices.
This insightful book considers the phenomenon of the transformation
of enforcement in European economic law while adopting a distinct
global perspective. The editors identify and respond to the need
for reflection on transformation processes in the area of
enforcement by bringing together the leading international and
European scholars in a variety of disciplines to share and compare
experiences and learning in different areas of law. Rooted in a
wide and regulatory understanding of enforcement, this book
showcases the transformation of enforcement with reference to both
European economic law (especially transnational commercial law,
competition law, intellectual property law, consumer law) and to
the current context of significant global economic challenges.
Comparative perspectives facilitate the formation of a holistic
perspective on enforcement that reaches beyond distinct theoretical
accounts, political agendas, regulatory systems, institutional
patterns, particular remedies, industry sectors, and stakeholder
perspectives. As the first comprehensive and comparative analysis
of the enforcement of European economic law that reaches beyond
closely confined areas of law, it constitutes a crucial
contribution to the theoretical and policy questions of how to
design a coherent European enforcement architecture in accordance
with essential principles and objectives of the EU economic order
This unique study will have broad appeal. By exploring enforcement
transformations from a legal and a cross-disciplinary perspective,
it will be essential reading for scholars, practitioners and
policymakers from different disciplines.
This book seeks to comprehensively address the face recognition
problem while gaining new insights from complementary fields of
endeavor. These include neurosciences, statistics, signal and image
processing, computer vision, machine learning and data mining. The
book examines the evolution of research surrounding the field to
date, explores new directions, and offers specific guidance on the
most promising venues for future research and development. The
book's focused approach and its clarity of presentation make this
an excellent reference work.
In The Qualified Student Harold S. Wechsler focuses on methods of
student selection used by institutions of higher education in the
United States. More specifically, he discusses the way that college
and university reformers employed those methods to introduce higher
education into a broader cross-section of America, by extending
access to an increased number of students from nontraditional
backgrounds. Implicit in much of this book is an underlying social
and ethical question: How legitimate was and is higher education's
regulation of social mobility? Public concern over colleges' and
universities' practices became inevitable once they became
regulators between social classes. The challenging of colleges'
admissions policies in the courts augments similar concerns that
have been present in legislatures for decades. The volume is
divided into three main sections: Prerequisites, Columbia and the
Selective Function, and Implications. It focuses mainly on four
universities, The University of Michigan, Columbia University, the
University of Chicago, and the City University of New York.
Wechsler maintains that unlike other universities, these
institutions were pacesetters; they did not adopt a new policy
simply because some other college had already adopted it. A new
introduction brings the book, originally published in 1977, up to
date and demonstrates its continuing importance in today's academic
world of selective admissions.
In The Qualified Student Harold S. Wechsler focuses on methods
of student selection used by institutions of higher education in
the United States. More specifically, he discusses the way that
college and university reformers employed those methods to
introduce higher education into a broader cross-section of America,
by extending access to an increased number of students from
nontraditional backgrounds.
Implicit in much of this book is an underlying social and
ethical question: How legitimate was and is higher education's
regulation of social mobility? Public concern over colleges' and
universities' practices became inevitable once they became
regulators between social classes. The challenging of colleges'
admissions policies in the courts augments similar concerns that
have been present in legislatures for decades.
The volume is divided into three main sections: Prerequisites,
Columbia and the Selective Function, and Implications. It focuses
mainly on four universities, The University of Michigan, Columbia
University, the University of Chicago, and the City University of
New York. Wechsler maintains that unlike other universities, these
institutions were pacesetters; they did not adopt a new policy
simply because some other college had already adopted it. A new
introduction brings the book, originally published in 1977, up to
date and demonstrates its continuing importance in today's academic
world of selective admissions.
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Serena (DVD)
Toby Jones, David Dencik, Mark Oneal, Sean Harris, Ana Ularu, …
1
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R73
Discovery Miles 730
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Ships in 10 - 20 working days
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Romantic period drama starring Jennifer Lawrence and Bradley
Cooper. Set in depression-era North Carolina the film follows
timber magnate George Pemberton (Cooper) and his wife Serena
(Lawrence) as their marriage and the life they have built together
deteriorates. Following a devastating miscarriage and the news that
she cannot have children, Serena and George struggle with the fact
that she will not be able to provide him with an heir to his
empire. As they seek a solution to their woes, Serena becomes
increasingly jealous of the women involved with her husband as he
tries to create the child he so desires that he envisages will one
day take over his business. When Serena delves deeper into her
husband's extramarital affairs she becomes increasingly suspicious
that he may be harbouring more than just a single heir.
Disrupting Disruption shows how three racially and ethnically
diverse school districts-Union NJ, Union City OK, and Roanoke City
VA-have defied the demographic odds, boosting overall graduation
rates while shrinking or eliminating the opportunity gap. These
districts resemble many others in their student population. What
makes them distinctive is their relentless focus on developing and
supporting teachers and engaging students; constantly seeking ways
to do a better job; using data to enhance learning; developing
partnerships with parents and local organizations; and relying on
stable, supportive leadership. Disrupting Disruption demonstrates
that disruption-whether by inflicting a discipline-and-punish
regime on our nation's schools, or replacing them with charters or
vouchers-is not the best way forward.
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