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Summer Adventures With Grandma: A Cross-Cultural Review of Psychokinesis (PK)
Published in Paperback by AuthorHouse (2003-04-17)
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Average review score: 

an enjoyable time.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-25
Review Date: 2003-10-25
I happen to know Marilyn Freeman, she is my grandmother, and a great one at that. This is the first book that she has published in her career but I bet it won't be her last. This is a great book about twins that spend a summer with their grandma and have alot of laughs. Be sure to read it, cause when your done you'll want to go back and read it again, believe me, I've read it 3 times and I still cant get over it.
Quality Together-Time
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-17
Review Date: 2003-10-17
I read this book with my kids, ages 7 and 9, a chapter a night for a bedtime story. We got many laughs out of Grandma's adventures with the twins and often couldn't resist the urge to stay up and read an extra chapter. It made for some great snuggle/giggle time.
Funny Read for Anyone
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-02
Review Date: 2003-10-02
This is a great book filled with humorous stories centered around a summer spent with Grandma. Twins Amy and Allen decide to teach their grandmother how to surf the web. Why does Grandma put on her bathing suit for this? What happens when Grandma gets in the wrong line at the Water Park? Will she go down the giant slide? Grandma is a wonderful sport about everything! All ages will love reading about her. I know I did.

The Surgical Review: An Integrated Basic and Clinical Science Study Guide
Published in Paperback by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins (2001-01-15)
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Average review score: 

Moving to the USA from Europe
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-02
Review Date: 2008-05-02
Its rather important to understand how another health system thinks about disease. This book written by residents give an excellent initial insight into the US surgical resident's thinking. I was trained in Ireland and there are some interesting differences that this book highlights.
Intense absite review
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-27
Review Date: 2001-06-27
This book is the first of its kind to prepare you in total for the Absite examination. This book incorporates basic science with the clinical science in order to allow you to review for the tests in a short text version without having to decipher through large textbooks. It has references to O'leary, the basic science book used during my residency, as well as to other major textbooks. This book seems to cut out the redundency of larger books and includes small facts that they love to ask on the exam. A must for those with weak scores or those looking to gain extra points... who isn't.
A terrific review for the ABSITE
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-28
Review Date: 2003-07-28
I read this book and my in-training exam score went up by over sixty points. It's not exactly a quick read at over 500 pages, but it's very readable and it contains all the information covered in the ABSITE exam. I highly recommend it as a review book for surgery residents looking to improve their scores.

Thoracic Imaging: Case Review
Published in Paperback by Mosby (2001-01-15)
List price: $49.95
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Average review score: 

Great
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-30
Review Date: 2007-08-30
Good case selection and pictures.
Highly recommended just like all the others books from this series.
Highly recommended just like all the others books from this series.
Great Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-27
Review Date: 2001-06-27
Its an excellent companion to the Chest requisites. It is the best book in the case review series based on the requisites. Combined with the requisites its more than enouch for the chest section of the residency boards. A must buy for the residents!
Excellent case review book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-24
Review Date: 2003-07-24
Presents broad range of common (and some rare) diseases/pathology with pithy, relevant discussion. Questions highlight important pearls. Quality of the images is sometimes less than desirable for demonstrating the findings, but this is a minor complaint.

Todd's CV Review CD
Published in CD-ROM by Cardiac Self Assessment (2001-02-01)
List price: $160.00
Average review score: 

wonderful cd
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-16
Review Date: 2007-02-16
I love this CD. I wish that I would've had this on my first day in the cath lab. It is beyond my expectations.
Awesome study guide
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-08
Review Date: 2006-03-08
I am currently using this disc to study for the RCIS exam and am finding it to be an outstanding tool. The amount of information on the disc on the wide variety of subjects more than makes up for the cost; you could easily spend 4 or 5 times that amount on the various books listed as references in order to get the same amount of necessary knowledge. The graphics and various games and tests are not only a great way to judge your comprehension of the material, but they actually make studying fun. I highly recommend this disc to anyone studying for the various interventional examination or as a great way to bone up on this type of material.
Awesome CD
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-25
Review Date: 2001-05-25
This CD makes studying for the RCIS exam fun! And it's fast. I can scan hundreds of questions in an hour.
The CD appears to be professionally done, with color graphics, sound effects, different types and levels of questions, and sophisticated scoring and saving routines. One hardly knows that these are the same questions that are in Todd's acclaimed review books - they appear so much more colorful and interactive.
Although it is designed to award CEU credits upon completion of a chapter they do not appear to be available yet. Perhaps after the nursing organizations see how educational one of these chapters is this Todd will get this worked out.

Tolkien on Film: Essays on Peter Jackson's the Lord of the Rings.
Published in Paperback by Mythopoeic Press (2005-01-01)
List price: $19.95
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Average review score: 

The best book on the book/film contrasts
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-06
Review Date: 2007-08-06
I found this book enormously helpful in figuring out what I had seen and how the material had been adapted for the screen. The authors of this book have a deep knowledge of the Tolkien texts and they have also viewed the films and DVDs very carefully. The assessments are balanced, well informed, and not likely to be surpassed as a commentary on the transformation.
very useful
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 26 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-26
Review Date: 2005-10-26
Very interesting read, well written and witty. Recommend especially for people studying Lord of the Rings.
Brilliant and balanced
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-16
Review Date: 2006-08-16
This highly recommended title explores Tolkien's Lord of the Rings vs. Peter Jackson's film adaptation of it. The several essays chosen by the editors are all very convincing and well-researched. They're also immensely enjoyable to read for those who've read Tolkien and seen the film (or vice versa) and love to compare the two. The editors were also careful in presenting a balanced view, for both pros and cons are represented (sometimes even within the same essay.) And there are even some essays on Tolkienian fan-fiction (and slash) that's proliferated on the net. Truly an engrossing study of Tolkien's work and Jackson's successes and failures in adapting it! I hope a second volume is being considered...

Touch Me, I'm Sick: The 52 Creepiest Love Songs You've Ever Heard
Published in Paperback by Chicago Review Press (2008-05-01)
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Average review score: 

Unique Book Takes a Hard Look at the Lyrics of Truly Sick, Yet Very Successful Songs Often Played onVery Inappropriate Occasions
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-25
Review Date: 2008-05-25
With the huge success of Reynold's first dissection of modern music's bad lyrics I HATE MYSELF AND WANT TO DIE: THE 52 MOST DEPRESSING SONGS YOU'VE EVER HEARD there was bound to be an encore and this fascinating read doesn't disappoint. In Touch Me, I'm Sick Reynolds tackles those songs about love, but not the mutually consenting romantic love, no these songs are about obsessive stalking, sleeping with kids, sleeping with parents, pleasuring yourself, jilted lovers, bad break ups as well as basically anything else that you'd be serving serious jail time or even get the chair if the lyrics were real.
The amazing thing is many of these songs are highly popular and requested to be played and set the mood at inappropriate places like wedding receptions and graduations. Which means those who request these songs for these occasions are either sick in the head or have never actually listened to the lyrics and do not know what they are actually about.
Most of these songs spent time in the top ten of the UK or US charts (Reynolds tells you at the start of the dissection of each song) and there's also a few you may not have heard of. Even with the ones you've never heard of Reynolds gives a detailed account of what the song is about then tells the reader why it is creepy. For those of us who were not around in the 70's or earlier when some of these songs were hits you'll also learn interesting facts such as I never knew Michael Jackson's Ben was being sung to an injured human flesh eating rat.
Tom Reynolds certainly is a very funny writer, you'll be laughing out loud at many an observation such as on Paula Cole (p145 if you've got this with you) "She doesn't just have issues, she has lifetime subscriptions". On You're Beautiful by James Blunt (p69) being one of the most requested songs at weddings "makes absolutely no sense because it's about a guy who's too stoned to approach a girl he saw for a few seconds on a subway platform and so he just repeats over and over again how beautiful she is but won't ever see her again" On you're body is a Wonderland by John Mayer "he reassures her that he'll never let her head hit the bed without my hand behind it. I'm completely at a loss as to what this means other than the girl is a pillow chasing nut who likes to ram her skull into the headboard" (p92). These are just three examples of the gems of dissection you'll find in here. His dissection of the life of Kevin Federline is also a must read.
The whole book is actually a must read for any fan of music especially the lyrics. Artists who appear inside include Air Supply, Kylie Minogue, The Offspring, The Beatles (and Reynolds recount of a chat room conversation with a Lennon fan nut who blames every bad Beatles thing on Paul is hilarious), The Police, Pearl Jam, Jennifer Lopez, George Michael, Divinyls, Fergie, Christina Aguilera, Sarah McLaughlan, Alanis Morissette, Sinead O'Connor, Eminem, Jewel, Radiohead, Melissa Etheridge and Motley Crue.
Can't wait for the next dissecting music book by Reynolds, if it's even half as good as the first two I won't be disappointed.
The amazing thing is many of these songs are highly popular and requested to be played and set the mood at inappropriate places like wedding receptions and graduations. Which means those who request these songs for these occasions are either sick in the head or have never actually listened to the lyrics and do not know what they are actually about.
Most of these songs spent time in the top ten of the UK or US charts (Reynolds tells you at the start of the dissection of each song) and there's also a few you may not have heard of. Even with the ones you've never heard of Reynolds gives a detailed account of what the song is about then tells the reader why it is creepy. For those of us who were not around in the 70's or earlier when some of these songs were hits you'll also learn interesting facts such as I never knew Michael Jackson's Ben was being sung to an injured human flesh eating rat.
Tom Reynolds certainly is a very funny writer, you'll be laughing out loud at many an observation such as on Paula Cole (p145 if you've got this with you) "She doesn't just have issues, she has lifetime subscriptions". On You're Beautiful by James Blunt (p69) being one of the most requested songs at weddings "makes absolutely no sense because it's about a guy who's too stoned to approach a girl he saw for a few seconds on a subway platform and so he just repeats over and over again how beautiful she is but won't ever see her again" On you're body is a Wonderland by John Mayer "he reassures her that he'll never let her head hit the bed without my hand behind it. I'm completely at a loss as to what this means other than the girl is a pillow chasing nut who likes to ram her skull into the headboard" (p92). These are just three examples of the gems of dissection you'll find in here. His dissection of the life of Kevin Federline is also a must read.
The whole book is actually a must read for any fan of music especially the lyrics. Artists who appear inside include Air Supply, Kylie Minogue, The Offspring, The Beatles (and Reynolds recount of a chat room conversation with a Lennon fan nut who blames every bad Beatles thing on Paul is hilarious), The Police, Pearl Jam, Jennifer Lopez, George Michael, Divinyls, Fergie, Christina Aguilera, Sarah McLaughlan, Alanis Morissette, Sinead O'Connor, Eminem, Jewel, Radiohead, Melissa Etheridge and Motley Crue.
Can't wait for the next dissecting music book by Reynolds, if it's even half as good as the first two I won't be disappointed.
Very Entertaining
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-13
Review Date: 2008-05-13
This is a very funny book. Even if the songs are obscure, the stories can stand up on their own. It will stimulate debate among boomers about woeful contributions over the years. Sorry.... But hands down winner has to be "Havin' My Baby". I dare you to deny it!!
Funny stuff
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-12
Review Date: 2008-04-12
Hillarious, snarky jabs at 52 creepy songs. This includes the weird, the annoying and the icky. People familiar with popular music (from the 1970s forward) will appreciate it the most. There's a certian vindication in discovering a song you've long considered stupid/eerie/scary has made the cut. Includes some obscure but too-weird-to-ignore numbers too.

Trashproof Resumes (The Princeton Review)
Published in Paperback by Princeton Review (1995-03-21)
List price: $12.00
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Average review score: 

Excellent book for 20-somethings
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-13
Review Date: 2001-12-13
Most candidates have trouble starting to write a resume and the 20 pages of resume samples short-circuit that stumbling block. It shows numerous "actual" sample resumes in Chapter 8 and highlights sections that are good and WHY. In addition, Chapter 5 answers common questions by job candidates about what to include and provides evidence by polling recruiters and job counselors. Overall, a superb resource for the 1 to 5 year candidate and a great one for anyone looking to brush up their resume.
The book I would have written...
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-14
Review Date: 2001-02-14
Having been an employment counsellor with University students for the past 25 years I have read many books on Resume writing... This book is the culmination of my views on how a resume should be written in today's ever evolving labour market. I only wish that this book would be translated into other languages (French, Spanish, and German) so that many would benefit from it's wealth of resouces in resume building. As I said...a book I would have written, is well worth the purchase... a job hunter should combine this book with Richard N. Bolles "What Color is your Parachute - 2001" and would have all he or she needed in their job hunt...Good luck and good read.
Trashproof Resumes
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-22
Review Date: 2000-06-22
This book is very well written, and addresses its subject in an easy to follow way.
It's definitely a number one trashproof reference for people seeking help designing resumes.
Trial on Trial: The Great Sedition Trial of 1944
Published in Paperback by Inst for Historical Review (1984-06)
List price: $9.98
Collectible price: $20.00
Average review score: 

How the American left invented "McCarthyism".
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-01
Review Date: 2008-07-01
This is a great book that exposes one of the greatest judicial farces in American history.During WWII,lead mainly by pressure from Jewish and Communist groups,the US government attempted to railroad a bunch of anti-communists and isolationists.The trial turned out to be a complete farce,thanks mainly to the book's author Lawrence Dennis.In many ways this trial saw the invention of "McCarthyism".(But don't expect your history professor to mention it,or Hollywood to make a movie about it.)It's all there,smears,innuendo,guilt by association,etc.,etc.Maybe it should be called Biddlism,after the Attorney General at the time.Or even more accurately Rooseveltism.
An Unjust Prosecution vs. A Brilliant Defense
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-28
Review Date: 2006-02-28
Lawrence Dennis and Maxmillian St. George wrote a classic book explaining how to proceed against bogus government charges and kangaroo trials. These men not only give the reader an explanation of their defense, but they clearly indicate that dissenting views are not the same as sedition and conspiracy.
The brief background to the trial gives the reader the diverstiy of the defendents and their plan of attack in court. Dennis refused to cooperate in any plea agreements because, as he correctly saw, the government had no case. Rather than argue the legal definitions of the law, Dennis and St. George argued that no crime had been committed, and there was absolutely no case. Admittedly some of the defendents were rabid anti-semites which could have proved embarrassing, but this was not a crime defined by statue.
Government prosecutors probably thought that because many of the defendants were poor and had few resources, these prosecutors may have thought this would be an easy case to win. What they did not anticipate was the fact that some of the defendants were intelligent, and their intelligence more than compensated for lack of resources.
One of the charges brought against the defendants was attempting to cause mutiny in the armed forces. Yet, the government could not present one shred of credible evidence to sustain such a charge. In fact, one of the defendants lost his son fighting against the Germans during the trial. As for the accusation that these defendents posed a serious threat, one of the defendants died during the trial with about fifty cents in his pocket.
Basically, the defense, especially Dennis, challenged every introduction of government "evidence." Dennis remarked that the evidence was obviously weak, but to wait until the prosecution was finished would have been an error. The jurors would be tired and give more weight to the prosecution's evidence and might be too tired or bored to carefully listen to the defense's refutation of the goverment's "evidence." By challenging the presecution's evidence as it was presented, jurors had a better chance to see just how weak the government's case was.
The diagnois of the trial was also enlightening. This trial was compared to Stalin's "Show Trials" of the 1930s. There were no criminal acts, and the charges amounted to unpopular opinions. Some of the journalists who first thought they were reporting on a fameous trial became bored with the whole event as they too saw the government's case as weak and frivolous. In other words, what was supposed to be a show trial soon became almost a non-event in the view of the media.
Basically, the government prosecutors ran into vigorous defense which they never anticipated. After months of claiming there were records in Germany and Italy that would prove a conspiracy, no such evidence was found. Government prosecutors asked for delays and still no such evidence was presented because there was none.
What began as a showcase trial ended as a dismal failure for the government. The judge died during the trial, and due to the stinging rebuke from the defense, the case was adriotly dropped. There was no crime and no evidence to prove there was. Intelligent defendants made a shambles out of the trial to the dismay of those who promoted the trial. One should also realize that the trial was a victory for civil libertarians.
Dennis and St. George wrote a long but masterful book on the corrupt and illegal operations of the U.S. "Justice" system. A careful reading of this book will show that quite often government legal "experts" are giants with feet of clay.
The brief background to the trial gives the reader the diverstiy of the defendents and their plan of attack in court. Dennis refused to cooperate in any plea agreements because, as he correctly saw, the government had no case. Rather than argue the legal definitions of the law, Dennis and St. George argued that no crime had been committed, and there was absolutely no case. Admittedly some of the defendents were rabid anti-semites which could have proved embarrassing, but this was not a crime defined by statue.
Government prosecutors probably thought that because many of the defendants were poor and had few resources, these prosecutors may have thought this would be an easy case to win. What they did not anticipate was the fact that some of the defendants were intelligent, and their intelligence more than compensated for lack of resources.
One of the charges brought against the defendants was attempting to cause mutiny in the armed forces. Yet, the government could not present one shred of credible evidence to sustain such a charge. In fact, one of the defendants lost his son fighting against the Germans during the trial. As for the accusation that these defendents posed a serious threat, one of the defendants died during the trial with about fifty cents in his pocket.
Basically, the defense, especially Dennis, challenged every introduction of government "evidence." Dennis remarked that the evidence was obviously weak, but to wait until the prosecution was finished would have been an error. The jurors would be tired and give more weight to the prosecution's evidence and might be too tired or bored to carefully listen to the defense's refutation of the goverment's "evidence." By challenging the presecution's evidence as it was presented, jurors had a better chance to see just how weak the government's case was.
The diagnois of the trial was also enlightening. This trial was compared to Stalin's "Show Trials" of the 1930s. There were no criminal acts, and the charges amounted to unpopular opinions. Some of the journalists who first thought they were reporting on a fameous trial became bored with the whole event as they too saw the government's case as weak and frivolous. In other words, what was supposed to be a show trial soon became almost a non-event in the view of the media.
Basically, the government prosecutors ran into vigorous defense which they never anticipated. After months of claiming there were records in Germany and Italy that would prove a conspiracy, no such evidence was found. Government prosecutors asked for delays and still no such evidence was presented because there was none.
What began as a showcase trial ended as a dismal failure for the government. The judge died during the trial, and due to the stinging rebuke from the defense, the case was adriotly dropped. There was no crime and no evidence to prove there was. Intelligent defendants made a shambles out of the trial to the dismay of those who promoted the trial. One should also realize that the trial was a victory for civil libertarians.
Dennis and St. George wrote a long but masterful book on the corrupt and illegal operations of the U.S. "Justice" system. A careful reading of this book will show that quite often government legal "experts" are giants with feet of clay.
The Great Sedition Trial of 1944 Farce.
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-24
Review Date: 2004-02-24
Many Americans today worship at the feet of FDR, regarding him as the father of social security. However, as this book shows, FDR was a virtual tyrannt able to manipulate this country into a war entangling us in European affairs against the better advice of all the Founding Fathers, including George Washington in his Farewell Address of 1796. And, to accomplish this manipulation he and his government were not afraid to resort to some of the most vicious forms of propaganda, including staging a "Moscow show trial" in which political dissidents and "crackpots" (the phrase used by the prosecution) were rounded up and accused of encouraging members of the U.S. armed forces to mutiny. One of these individuals who brought upon himself the ire of the Roosevelt administration and of other powerful forces within government was Lawrence Dennis, writer of several famous books dealing with the fascist revolution in America.
It was in light of his theories that Dennis got himself into trouble with the current powers that be. Indeed, approximately 40 dissidents and "crackpots" were hauled up by the government in a great show trial on charges of sedition in 1944. What was the purpose of this trial? Dennis argues that it was purely for propaganda purposes by the Roosevelt administration and refers to it as a farce and a waste of the taxpayer's money in this book _A Trial on Trial_. In fact, the trial did not attempt to prove the charge that the defendants had tried to make members in the armed forces mutiny, but rather instead alleged a "worldwide Nazi conspiracy" in which the defendants took part. Dennis argues that this trial was done in the tradition of Moscow, in which the government attempted to "educate" the public on the evils of "anti-Semitism, isolationism, and anti-communism" by means of a trial. For Dennis, he certainly could not be charged with the noxious anti-Semitic charge (still used so often today against those who propose another perspective) because his writings specifically showed the foolishness of anti-Semitism. Dennis argued that it was particularly ironic that the defendants were often referred to by the prosecution as "crackpots", because according to the dictionary a "crackpot" is a "harmless lunatic" but in the same breath the prosecution would call them all "dangerous".
But why was this trial staged at all? According to Dennis these individuals (the "crackpots") were easy targets. They were dissidents and quite frequently agitators who rebelled against the present order. However, many "respectable" Americans (including certain famous "isolationist" Congressmen such as Senator Nye, John T. Flynn, and the elder Lindhbergh) also shared the views of these "agitators" but were unable or unwilling to admit this in public or to take nearly such a radical stance. Indeed, according to Dennis it was not really the "crackpots" who were the target of the trial at all. Rather it was the dissident but respectable Americans who Roosevelt and his cronies were after. Afterall, by going after the "crackpots" the message to the rest of America was clear: if you share these views you'd best keep quiet because we'll go after you next, best just to parrot the Roosevelt line in times of war.
In addition, powerful Jewish groups including the freemasonic B'nai B'rith wanted the defendants prosecuted on the charge of anti-Semitism. While many of the defendants including the individual writing under the pen name Major-General Count Cherep-Spiridovich, claiming to be a Russian general of Aryan descent, were indeed virulent anti-Semites, the majority were not. (Interestingly, the chess player Bobby Fisher attempting to understand the Judeo-Bolshevik conspiracy behind international chess professionals has recommended the book by Count Cherep-Spiridovich entitled _The Secret World Government_, currently available from the Booktree publishers.) Indeed, anti-Semitism has always existed and can hardly be called a crime, certainly not by any legal standard within the United States and certainly not supported by the Constitution of the United States. While it may be understandable that these Jewish groups wanted to stamp out anti-Semitism, their methods for doing so were truly Machievellian and completely without regard to civil liberties. The same applies to the manner in which the ideologies of "isolationism" and "anti-communism" were being eradicated.
It is common for those among the communists to refer to every single opponent of the official "Moscow line" as a fascist. Indeed, the word fascist is a term of such abuse that it no longer has any meaning whatsoever. Indeed, when the fellow communist Trotsky deviated from the official Stalin-line he suddenly became a "fascist". So, the fascist smear is really old news and of course the left was playing this up in the sedition trial. However, many of those who certainly could not be referred to as part of the left wing extreme or communists continued to parrot the "fascist line" unaware that they were in fact unwitting pawns for Moscow.
After 6 months of unnecessary trial, the judge, worn thin from all the headache, had a heart attack and died. The trial was subsequently declared a mistrial and the defendants were all left off the hook. However, this trial had been a farce and a true perversion of American justice, attempting to cash in on the unanimous agreement of all Americans that fascism was a "bad thing" to persecute certain dissidents and "crackpots" who would not toe the interventionist/Roosevelt line. Dennis subsequently went back to his work and his writing.
This book, _A Trial on Trial_ presents the case point by point including the prosecutor's main arguments (or lack thereof) and sound rebuttal by the defense. The book is co-written by Lawrence Dennis who served as his own attorney and the defense attorney Maximilian St. George. This book is re-issued by the Institute for Historical Review and preserves one of the few accounts of revisionist scholarship dealing with the pre-World War II debacle of the Roosevelt "interventionist" administration.
It was in light of his theories that Dennis got himself into trouble with the current powers that be. Indeed, approximately 40 dissidents and "crackpots" were hauled up by the government in a great show trial on charges of sedition in 1944. What was the purpose of this trial? Dennis argues that it was purely for propaganda purposes by the Roosevelt administration and refers to it as a farce and a waste of the taxpayer's money in this book _A Trial on Trial_. In fact, the trial did not attempt to prove the charge that the defendants had tried to make members in the armed forces mutiny, but rather instead alleged a "worldwide Nazi conspiracy" in which the defendants took part. Dennis argues that this trial was done in the tradition of Moscow, in which the government attempted to "educate" the public on the evils of "anti-Semitism, isolationism, and anti-communism" by means of a trial. For Dennis, he certainly could not be charged with the noxious anti-Semitic charge (still used so often today against those who propose another perspective) because his writings specifically showed the foolishness of anti-Semitism. Dennis argued that it was particularly ironic that the defendants were often referred to by the prosecution as "crackpots", because according to the dictionary a "crackpot" is a "harmless lunatic" but in the same breath the prosecution would call them all "dangerous".
But why was this trial staged at all? According to Dennis these individuals (the "crackpots") were easy targets. They were dissidents and quite frequently agitators who rebelled against the present order. However, many "respectable" Americans (including certain famous "isolationist" Congressmen such as Senator Nye, John T. Flynn, and the elder Lindhbergh) also shared the views of these "agitators" but were unable or unwilling to admit this in public or to take nearly such a radical stance. Indeed, according to Dennis it was not really the "crackpots" who were the target of the trial at all. Rather it was the dissident but respectable Americans who Roosevelt and his cronies were after. Afterall, by going after the "crackpots" the message to the rest of America was clear: if you share these views you'd best keep quiet because we'll go after you next, best just to parrot the Roosevelt line in times of war.
In addition, powerful Jewish groups including the freemasonic B'nai B'rith wanted the defendants prosecuted on the charge of anti-Semitism. While many of the defendants including the individual writing under the pen name Major-General Count Cherep-Spiridovich, claiming to be a Russian general of Aryan descent, were indeed virulent anti-Semites, the majority were not. (Interestingly, the chess player Bobby Fisher attempting to understand the Judeo-Bolshevik conspiracy behind international chess professionals has recommended the book by Count Cherep-Spiridovich entitled _The Secret World Government_, currently available from the Booktree publishers.) Indeed, anti-Semitism has always existed and can hardly be called a crime, certainly not by any legal standard within the United States and certainly not supported by the Constitution of the United States. While it may be understandable that these Jewish groups wanted to stamp out anti-Semitism, their methods for doing so were truly Machievellian and completely without regard to civil liberties. The same applies to the manner in which the ideologies of "isolationism" and "anti-communism" were being eradicated.
It is common for those among the communists to refer to every single opponent of the official "Moscow line" as a fascist. Indeed, the word fascist is a term of such abuse that it no longer has any meaning whatsoever. Indeed, when the fellow communist Trotsky deviated from the official Stalin-line he suddenly became a "fascist". So, the fascist smear is really old news and of course the left was playing this up in the sedition trial. However, many of those who certainly could not be referred to as part of the left wing extreme or communists continued to parrot the "fascist line" unaware that they were in fact unwitting pawns for Moscow.
After 6 months of unnecessary trial, the judge, worn thin from all the headache, had a heart attack and died. The trial was subsequently declared a mistrial and the defendants were all left off the hook. However, this trial had been a farce and a true perversion of American justice, attempting to cash in on the unanimous agreement of all Americans that fascism was a "bad thing" to persecute certain dissidents and "crackpots" who would not toe the interventionist/Roosevelt line. Dennis subsequently went back to his work and his writing.
This book, _A Trial on Trial_ presents the case point by point including the prosecutor's main arguments (or lack thereof) and sound rebuttal by the defense. The book is co-written by Lawrence Dennis who served as his own attorney and the defense attorney Maximilian St. George. This book is re-issued by the Institute for Historical Review and preserves one of the few accounts of revisionist scholarship dealing with the pre-World War II debacle of the Roosevelt "interventionist" administration.

The Ultimate Widescreen DVD Movie Guide¿
Published in Paperback by Gary Reber (2000-11-15)
List price: $9.95
Average review score: 

Can't Live Without It
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-31
Review Date: 2001-01-31
If you're really into home theatre or are just getting started collecting DVDs, you have got to have this book! It lists almost 2,000 movies with a story and a picture of the DVD box, but best of all, it gives professional reviews of the picture and sound quality so you know which movies will show off best on your home theatre equipment. It also tells you about all the extra features that DVDs come with. There are articles about DVD software, reviews of DVD players, articles about how movies are made and a lot of other awesome stuff like DVD-ROM and the difference between widescreen and pan-and-scan movies.
It doesn't get any better!
Helpful Votes: 17 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-25
Review Date: 2001-01-25
The Ultimate Widescreen DVD Movie Guide is a must for everyone who loves to watch DVD. Widescreen Review has done a wonderful job to create an informative, technically brilliant and easy to read guide for every owner of a DVD-player. The 555 pages provides you with every data you can imagine: DVD reviews (technical data, a short story line, picture and sound rating), facts and inside looks on the DVD industry, a DVD-player buyer's guide, a DVD-ROM review section, complete listings of DTS- and THX-DVDs and a complete set of DVDs FAQs. For everyone new to this hobby it's great to get an explanation on the various aspect ratios movies do have. It simplifys things a lot just to open the magazine and show someone the facts when explaining why it's better to have a 16:9 TV set instead of a 4:3 or why on a normal TV the black bars are good things and not bad ones. Another interesting section is the 70mm movie list which shows every movie made in this format from 1929 until today. Complete with studio, soundtrack, original photography format and notes. Don't we movie buffs love things like this. The DVD FAQs are interesting stuff for beginners and even "experts" can learn a thing or two. All in all the issue, which is thicker than some telephone books I know of, is worth every penny spent. I'm really looking forward to get my hands on the next issue 2002. Congratulations to the staff for doing an excellent job.
An excellent reference guide
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-24
Review Date: 2001-01-24
The Ultimate Widescreen DVD Movie Guide is not just a guide...it is a complete reference for all that is widescreen DVD. There is nothing on the market that can compare to the extensive compilation that Widescreen Review has put together here. From a comparison of DVD players on the market to thousands of DVD reviews, this is definitely the guide for DVD enthusiasts and newcomers.

Ultrasound Physics Review: A review for the Ultrasound Physics & Instrumentation ARDMS Exam
Published in Plastic Comb by C. Davies (2000-08-30)
List price: $55.00
New price: $49.50
Used price: $48.50
Used price: $48.50
Average review score: 

ultrasoun tech
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-27
Review Date: 2008-05-27
this book is an excellant review book for the regestry. I highly recommend it to any of my fellow ultrasound techs that have to take the physic regestry.
Ultrasound Physics & Instrumentation ARDMS Exam
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-09
Review Date: 2007-01-09
This is a perfect study source for the test. Thank you for the quick delivery and protective packaging.
perfect for the ARDMS general physics and instrumentation exam
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-09
Review Date: 2007-01-09
I purchased this book in preparation for taking the ARDMS general physics and instrumentation exam. At first, I reviewed all my notes and re-read my entire textbook (Kremkau). I thought I was well prepared. Then I began this book's questions. I found SO many questions that just looked at situations differently than I had thought of them and really cemented in my mind, okay, if you do this, how will it affect not only this, but this as well? I passed the exam with a 90% and some of the questions I swear were right out of this book. GET IT!!
Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Literature-->Authors-->K-->Kipling, Rudyard-->Reviews-->72
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