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The mysterious power of anti-Zionism.(Pakistan earthquake) : An article from: Midstream
Published in Digital by Thomson Gale (2006-01-01)
List price: $5.95
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Average review score: 

A good article
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-13
Review Date: 2006-11-13
The Mystery of the Missing Red Mitten
Published in Hardcover by Dial (1974-01-01)
List price: $8.95
Used price: $2.82
Collectible price: $96.00
Collectible price: $96.00
Average review score: 

The Mystery of the Missing Red Mitten
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-02
Review Date: 2000-05-02
This was one of my favorite books from my childhood. I read this over and over again. Any Steven Kellogg book is a fantastic selection--he is a world class illustrator and I still enjoy reading his books as an adult.
Nancy Bannick: 2004 Philanthropist of the Year.: An article from: Hawaii Business
Published in Digital by Hawaii Business Publishing Co. (2004-12-01)
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Average review score: 

Nancy Bannick, Philanthropist of Honolulu
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-23
Review Date: 2008-02-23
Nancy passed away peacefully in her condo in February of 2008. She was an iron woman and loved Hawaii with all her heart and soul - having lived there since 1948. She wrote a book about her saving Chinatown in Honolulu. This is what brought me to this website (Amazon) but I don't think Amazon carries it yet. I would be very interested in purchasing her historical writings about this successful endeavor. Thank you - and God rest your soul Nancy.
Negotiating Outside the Law: Why Camp David Failed.(Book review) : An article from: Middle East Quarterly
Published in Digital by Thomson Gale (2006-03-22)
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Average review score: 

A very good review of a very bad book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-14
Review Date: 2006-08-14
This article is Joel Singer's excellent review of a truly terrible book, namely Raymond Helmick's "Negotiating Outside the Law." In that book, Helmick boasts of some horrible and unjust United Nations General Assembly resolutions, misrepresents some of them to make them even worse, and then pretends that they constitute international law! He then attributes the failure of Camp David negotiations in the year 2000 to failure to follow such laws.
Well, there may be something to this argument. Namely, the U.N. resolutions may indeed have inspired this atrocious book. And they may indeed have contributed to Arab intransigence, which has resulted in some violence that surely does not benefit anyone. Still, it is inexcusable to pretend that such resolutions were anything other than unjust, unreasonable, and counterproductive.
In addition, there is a risk that some of the nonsense the U.N. has come up with may one day find its way into international law. If so, it is easy to imagine how such laws will be written about by a variety of opponents of human rights.
In this review, Singer exposes some of Helmick's misstatements and misrepresentations. And he explains that Helmick was not writing as a true negotiator, but as one who was advising Arabs to open an "intifada" against Israel in the year 2000.
It may not seem to matter how negotiations come out, as long as there are signed agreements. But at Camp David, there were not even any signed agreements! Had there been a signed agreement I suspect that it would have been broken almost at once by the Arab side. In addition, I think Arab demands to steal land from land-poor Israel and ethnically cleanse it of its Jews were a threat to peace. And these were demands that Israel was prepared to accept!
Helmick wrote a very misleading book which implied that Israelis were the problem and that Arab thugs were basically non-violent and benevolent. Singer is to be congratulated for alerting us to this attack on reality.
Well, there may be something to this argument. Namely, the U.N. resolutions may indeed have inspired this atrocious book. And they may indeed have contributed to Arab intransigence, which has resulted in some violence that surely does not benefit anyone. Still, it is inexcusable to pretend that such resolutions were anything other than unjust, unreasonable, and counterproductive.
In addition, there is a risk that some of the nonsense the U.N. has come up with may one day find its way into international law. If so, it is easy to imagine how such laws will be written about by a variety of opponents of human rights.
In this review, Singer exposes some of Helmick's misstatements and misrepresentations. And he explains that Helmick was not writing as a true negotiator, but as one who was advising Arabs to open an "intifada" against Israel in the year 2000.
It may not seem to matter how negotiations come out, as long as there are signed agreements. But at Camp David, there were not even any signed agreements! Had there been a signed agreement I suspect that it would have been broken almost at once by the Arab side. In addition, I think Arab demands to steal land from land-poor Israel and ethnically cleanse it of its Jews were a threat to peace. And these were demands that Israel was prepared to accept!
Helmick wrote a very misleading book which implied that Israelis were the problem and that Arab thugs were basically non-violent and benevolent. Singer is to be congratulated for alerting us to this attack on reality.
Neurological medical malpractice.: An article from: Trial
Published in Digital by Association of Trial Lawyers of America (2000-05-01)
List price: $5.95
New price: $5.95
Average review score: 

ANOTHER SCROCHER FROM DR. HARVEY
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-04
Review Date: 2005-05-04
I have found in my years of sexual ambiguity that Harvery Wachsman is the only Immortal writer amongst merely impotent child molesting entrprenuers. In closing... "did i do that?????" -Jaleel White
The new anti-Semitism: first religion, then race, then what?(standards of judgment) : An article from: American Scholar
Published in Digital by Thomson Gale (2006-01-01)
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Average review score: 

A thought-provoking article
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-18
Review Date: 2006-04-18
Bernard Lewis makes a number of good points in this essay about anti-Semitism. One is that in previous centuries, persecution of Jews was linked to the fact that Jews, by not being Christian or Muslim, did not submit to the rulings of local Christian or Muslim authorities. Jews often escaped from this persecution simply by converting. Converted Jews could even join the persecutors. However, in the twentieth century, persecution took on a racial aspect. Conversion did not help.
Today, as Lewis explains, anti-Semitism has become more ideological than racial, so Jews can once again join the persecutors. And it's easy to see that some have indeed taken advantage of this opportunity. As a matter of fact, it is theoretically possible that a majority (or even almost all) will do just that.
Lewis mentions the fact that when the Levant has been divided between Arab and Jewish areas, it has been taken for granted that Jews must not be permitted to dwell in Arab regions and Arabs must be permitted to dwell in Jewish regions. Lewis regards this as symptomatic of anti-Semitism. But I prefer to, um, dwell on the arbitrariness of such a policy and note that in the long run, such policies are counterproductive.
Another point that Lewis makes is that while today, one may realize that it benefits a society to abide human rights for all sorts of minorities, such opinions were rare just a few hundred years ago. Back then, it was taken for granted that for a majority to give rights (or, as the author says more precisely, "equal opportunities") to a minority was a "dereliction of duty."
The author also notes that "Polytheism was essentially tolerant, each group worshipping its own God or Gods [the capitalization by me, not by Lewis], offering no objection to the worship of others."
One more point is the way some folks regard Jews not as people but more like some sort of Cosmic Evil. It is very rare for other groups to be thought of in such a manner, and as a result, this is considered by Lewis to be a major aspect of what he calls anti-Semitism.
There is also the question of dual loyalty. As the author explains, we rarely hear about this issue when the Irish complain about the British or the Armenians and Greeks complain about the Turks, but we often do when Israelis complain about their oppressors. In some cases, this can be explained in part by anti-Semitism. A simpler test is the reaction when people get killed in the Middle East. If the killers and victims are all Arabs, very few Westerners show much interest. If Jews are involved, or if Jews can be blamed, there is enormous interest. One can see the difference between the killing of tens of thousands of people at Hama (which had nothing to do with Jews and thus was almost disregarded in the West) and Sabra and Shatilla (where less than a thousand people were killed and once again, the actual murderers were almost ignored but the possibility of blaming the Jews excited a huge number of folks).
Lewis cautions us to be careful about obvious differences in standards applied to Jews and non-Jews. In some cases, there may be more going on than simple anti-Semitism. But I don't worry about what we call it. We're all humans, and we need to value truth and justice. If we're being unjust and arbitrary, we have a problem no matter what motivates our biases. And I think Lewis has supported that point rather well in this article.
Today, as Lewis explains, anti-Semitism has become more ideological than racial, so Jews can once again join the persecutors. And it's easy to see that some have indeed taken advantage of this opportunity. As a matter of fact, it is theoretically possible that a majority (or even almost all) will do just that.
Lewis mentions the fact that when the Levant has been divided between Arab and Jewish areas, it has been taken for granted that Jews must not be permitted to dwell in Arab regions and Arabs must be permitted to dwell in Jewish regions. Lewis regards this as symptomatic of anti-Semitism. But I prefer to, um, dwell on the arbitrariness of such a policy and note that in the long run, such policies are counterproductive.
Another point that Lewis makes is that while today, one may realize that it benefits a society to abide human rights for all sorts of minorities, such opinions were rare just a few hundred years ago. Back then, it was taken for granted that for a majority to give rights (or, as the author says more precisely, "equal opportunities") to a minority was a "dereliction of duty."
The author also notes that "Polytheism was essentially tolerant, each group worshipping its own God or Gods [the capitalization by me, not by Lewis], offering no objection to the worship of others."
One more point is the way some folks regard Jews not as people but more like some sort of Cosmic Evil. It is very rare for other groups to be thought of in such a manner, and as a result, this is considered by Lewis to be a major aspect of what he calls anti-Semitism.
There is also the question of dual loyalty. As the author explains, we rarely hear about this issue when the Irish complain about the British or the Armenians and Greeks complain about the Turks, but we often do when Israelis complain about their oppressors. In some cases, this can be explained in part by anti-Semitism. A simpler test is the reaction when people get killed in the Middle East. If the killers and victims are all Arabs, very few Westerners show much interest. If Jews are involved, or if Jews can be blamed, there is enormous interest. One can see the difference between the killing of tens of thousands of people at Hama (which had nothing to do with Jews and thus was almost disregarded in the West) and Sabra and Shatilla (where less than a thousand people were killed and once again, the actual murderers were almost ignored but the possibility of blaming the Jews excited a huge number of folks).
Lewis cautions us to be careful about obvious differences in standards applied to Jews and non-Jews. In some cases, there may be more going on than simple anti-Semitism. But I don't worry about what we call it. We're all humans, and we need to value truth and justice. If we're being unjust and arbitrary, we have a problem no matter what motivates our biases. And I think Lewis has supported that point rather well in this article.
The new antisemitism.: An article from: Midstream
Published in Digital by Theodor Herzl Foundation (2004-11-01)
List price: $5.95
New price: $5.95
Average review score: 

A powerful article
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-28
Review Date: 2005-07-28
In the 1930s, Kalman Sultanik applied to the British Mandatory Power for a certificate that would allow him to find safe haven in the British Mandate. The British refused, of course, so the author wound up in a concentration camp where he was among the few who survived. He says he has no doubt that if the Jews had won their national independence before the war began, hundreds of thousands of European Jews could have been saved in much the same way that Israel later received hundreds of thousands of survivors.
The author continues by marvelling at the way Islam has become so distorted as to preach intolerance and murder. Actually, that does not surprise me. I'm not particularly enamored of monotheistic religions. But I have to agree with Sultanik that something is wrong when most of the world shrugs at the fact that many Arab countries are Judenrein, having accomplished in their nations no less than the Germans of the 1930s and 1940s attempted to achieve in Europe. They shrug when Arabs ask that the Jews all leave Israel "and take their graves with them." Why? Isn't such apartheid and bigotry worth commenting on? Or are they too busy accusing Israel (of all countries) of apartheid, bigotry, and racism?
The author says that he is concerned about this new antisemitism (by which he means anti-Zionism) in spite of its "modest numbers and the low caliber of its thinkers." After all, the new antisemites make up for this by being energetic. And it is Sultanik's impression that antisemitism is as popular in Arab nations today as it ever was in pre-war Europe. And he calls Israel the "testing ground of world-wide Muslim terrorism." This terrorism, according to the author, "has as its declared objective the destruction of Israel and its Jewish population."
As the author says, many people on college campuses who call themselves liberals are indulging in this new antisemitism, giving "blind support to the most reactionary and oppressive societies in the region that are fueled by medieval notions of hegemony and obscurantist religion." To some extent, this does not surprise me either. Many fascists and racists have claimed to be on the Left, whether they were supporting Stalin, or the Vichy government in France, or the "National Socialists" in Germany, or the anti-Israeli reactionaries of today.
To him, the problem of tomorrow is "Muslim antisemitism, buttressed by a devil's alliance with the Left."
He makes a strong argument for this conclusion.
The author continues by marvelling at the way Islam has become so distorted as to preach intolerance and murder. Actually, that does not surprise me. I'm not particularly enamored of monotheistic religions. But I have to agree with Sultanik that something is wrong when most of the world shrugs at the fact that many Arab countries are Judenrein, having accomplished in their nations no less than the Germans of the 1930s and 1940s attempted to achieve in Europe. They shrug when Arabs ask that the Jews all leave Israel "and take their graves with them." Why? Isn't such apartheid and bigotry worth commenting on? Or are they too busy accusing Israel (of all countries) of apartheid, bigotry, and racism?
The author says that he is concerned about this new antisemitism (by which he means anti-Zionism) in spite of its "modest numbers and the low caliber of its thinkers." After all, the new antisemites make up for this by being energetic. And it is Sultanik's impression that antisemitism is as popular in Arab nations today as it ever was in pre-war Europe. And he calls Israel the "testing ground of world-wide Muslim terrorism." This terrorism, according to the author, "has as its declared objective the destruction of Israel and its Jewish population."
As the author says, many people on college campuses who call themselves liberals are indulging in this new antisemitism, giving "blind support to the most reactionary and oppressive societies in the region that are fueled by medieval notions of hegemony and obscurantist religion." To some extent, this does not surprise me either. Many fascists and racists have claimed to be on the Left, whether they were supporting Stalin, or the Vichy government in France, or the "National Socialists" in Germany, or the anti-Israeli reactionaries of today.
To him, the problem of tomorrow is "Muslim antisemitism, buttressed by a devil's alliance with the Left."
He makes a strong argument for this conclusion.

The New Architecture In Mexico By Esther Born
Published in Hardcover by Record, William Morrow & Co. (1937)
List price:
Average review score: 

This Is The Mexico, More Than Architech, No One Calculate
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-29
Review Date: 2008-01-29
Unless otherwise indicated, all photographs were taken by Esther Born.
Data and material were collected and arranged by Esther Born and Ernest Born.
(Esther Born and Ernest Born were both students of architecture at the University of CAlifornia under the distinguished teacher, John Galen Howard.
Disgusted with the amateur photographs she took during a trip to Europe, Esther Born studied photography as preparation for specialization and as an aid to her future architectural work.
Ernest Born is well known both in San Francisco and New York as a brilliant designer, and has been associated with THE ARCHITECTURAL RECORD and other publications in designing architecture, typographical layouts and editorial work.)
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
Schoold of Industrial Technics, Mexico City
The Pyramid of Cuicuilco
Editorial Foreword
Plan Development of Mexico City
Soil and Foundation Conditions in Mexico
Architect as Contractor in Mexico
The New Architecture in Mexico
Mexican Examples:
* Industrial
* Schools
* Institutions
* Hospitals
* Residential
* Markets
* Commercial
* Parks
* Public Works and Utilities
General Portfolio
Contemporary Painting and Sculpture:
* Mural Painting
* Other Painters
* Painting in General
* Sculpture
* Pottery
* Bibliography
[from the book]
"THIS IS THE MEXICO,
MORE THAN ARCHITECT,
NO ONE CALCULATE."
[from the experience]
Data and material were collected and arranged by Esther Born and Ernest Born.
(Esther Born and Ernest Born were both students of architecture at the University of CAlifornia under the distinguished teacher, John Galen Howard.
Disgusted with the amateur photographs she took during a trip to Europe, Esther Born studied photography as preparation for specialization and as an aid to her future architectural work.
Ernest Born is well known both in San Francisco and New York as a brilliant designer, and has been associated with THE ARCHITECTURAL RECORD and other publications in designing architecture, typographical layouts and editorial work.)
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
Schoold of Industrial Technics, Mexico City
The Pyramid of Cuicuilco
Editorial Foreword
Plan Development of Mexico City
Soil and Foundation Conditions in Mexico
Architect as Contractor in Mexico
The New Architecture in Mexico
Mexican Examples:
* Industrial
* Schools
* Institutions
* Hospitals
* Residential
* Markets
* Commercial
* Parks
* Public Works and Utilities
General Portfolio
Contemporary Painting and Sculpture:
* Mural Painting
* Other Painters
* Painting in General
* Sculpture
* Pottery
* Bibliography
[from the book]
"THIS IS THE MEXICO,
MORE THAN ARCHITECT,
NO ONE CALCULATE."
[from the experience]
New flag-folding script focuses on history, Air Force significance.(Round the Reserve: A brief look at what's happening throughout Air Force Reserve Command): An article from: Citizen Airman
Published in Digital by Thomson Gale (2005-10-01)
List price: $5.95
New price: $5.95
Average review score: 

public domain work for free!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-09
Review Date: 2007-07-09
Why pay somebody for what is free at af dot mil?
Air Force leaders recently approved a new script that can be read during flag-folding ceremonies.
Though there are no official ceremonies in the Air Force that require a script to be read when a flag is folded, unofficial ceremonies such as retirements often do, said Lt. Col. Samuel Hudspath, Air Force protocol chief.
"We have had a tradition within the Air Force of individuals requesting that a flag be folded, with words, at their retirement ceremony," he said. "This new script was prepared by Air Force services to provide Air Force recognized words to be used at those times."
There is no shortage of scripts available that can be read aloud during a flag folding, but many of those scripts are religious in nature and also ascribe meaning to the individual folds put into the flag. One of the oldest of those scripts is attributed to an anonymous chaplain at the U.S. Air Force Academy.
Individuals who hear those scripts end up attributing the contents of the script to the U.S. Air Force. But the reality is that neither Congress, nor federal laws related to the flag, assign any special meaning to the individual folds. Colonel Hudspath said that was the primary motive for creating a new flag-folding script.
"Our intent was to move away from giving meaning, or appearing to give meaning, to the folds of the flag and to just speak to the importance of the flag in U.S. Air Force history," he said.
The new script, approved in July, focuses on flag history and the significance of the flag within the Air Force: "Today, our flag flies on constellations of Air Force satellites that circle our globe, and on the fin flash of our aircraft in harms way in every corner of the world. Indeed, it flies in the heart of every Airman who serves our great nation. The sun never sets on our Air Force, nor on the flag we so proudly cherish," the new script reads.
The new script is available at base protocol offices for use by anybody who wants to lend significance to a flag folding, Colonel Hudspath said. The script will not be used at retreats or funerals, as those are silent ceremonies.
"These ceremonies are meaningful to individuals, especially at their retirement," he said. "We wanted to offer a script, containing factual information, that shows respect for the flag and expresses our gratitude for those individuals who protect our country, both at home and abroad."
By October, officials said the Air Force will make a video available to protocol offices and honor guard units that demonstrates a flag-folding ceremony using the new script.
Air Force leaders recently approved a new script that can be read during flag-folding ceremonies.
Though there are no official ceremonies in the Air Force that require a script to be read when a flag is folded, unofficial ceremonies such as retirements often do, said Lt. Col. Samuel Hudspath, Air Force protocol chief.
"We have had a tradition within the Air Force of individuals requesting that a flag be folded, with words, at their retirement ceremony," he said. "This new script was prepared by Air Force services to provide Air Force recognized words to be used at those times."
There is no shortage of scripts available that can be read aloud during a flag folding, but many of those scripts are religious in nature and also ascribe meaning to the individual folds put into the flag. One of the oldest of those scripts is attributed to an anonymous chaplain at the U.S. Air Force Academy.
Individuals who hear those scripts end up attributing the contents of the script to the U.S. Air Force. But the reality is that neither Congress, nor federal laws related to the flag, assign any special meaning to the individual folds. Colonel Hudspath said that was the primary motive for creating a new flag-folding script.
"Our intent was to move away from giving meaning, or appearing to give meaning, to the folds of the flag and to just speak to the importance of the flag in U.S. Air Force history," he said.
The new script, approved in July, focuses on flag history and the significance of the flag within the Air Force: "Today, our flag flies on constellations of Air Force satellites that circle our globe, and on the fin flash of our aircraft in harms way in every corner of the world. Indeed, it flies in the heart of every Airman who serves our great nation. The sun never sets on our Air Force, nor on the flag we so proudly cherish," the new script reads.
The new script is available at base protocol offices for use by anybody who wants to lend significance to a flag folding, Colonel Hudspath said. The script will not be used at retreats or funerals, as those are silent ceremonies.
"These ceremonies are meaningful to individuals, especially at their retirement," he said. "We wanted to offer a script, containing factual information, that shows respect for the flag and expresses our gratitude for those individuals who protect our country, both at home and abroad."
By October, officials said the Air Force will make a video available to protocol offices and honor guard units that demonstrates a flag-folding ceremony using the new script.

A New Mother's Guide - Surviving The First Year - Audio Book With Print Edition
Published in Audio CD by (2007)
List price:
Average review score: 

Survival Guide For New Moms
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-12
Review Date: 2007-11-12
Watch Video Here: http://www.amazon.com/review/R2J89JAT1PQ30Q Surving The First Year - A Guide For New Mothers.
Books-Under-Review-->Health-->Teen Health-->Articles-->43
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Well, as this article explains, it seems that Pakistan did indeed turn down serious and sincere offers of help, believing in (or at least doing a good job of pretending to believe in) its own demonology rather than gratefully accepting help that would save the lives of some of its citizens. It waited for days to even acknowledge Israel's immediate offer of help, and after that it said it would accept such support only through the United Nations or some other third party!
Now, Pakistan's leader had gone so far as to shake hands with Ariel Sharon less than a month earler. But it seems that accepting aid from an enemy is a more serious matter than shaking hands.
Jochnowitz asks why Pakistan ought to consider Israel an enemy at all. For that matter, he asks why of all the walls in the world, only the one used to defend Israelis from suicide bombers has merited the condemnation of the International Court of Justice, or the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. North Korea, a truly oppressive society, has a wall, but no one seems eager to condemn that!
I don't know why the fight against Israel is so much fun for so many people. But I do know that it is not doing anyone any good.
I recommend this article.