Research Books
Related Subjects: Juvenile Justice Victimology Corrections Money Laundering United States
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Used price: $25.96

The definitive study!Review Date: 2005-03-05
An excellent air defense bookReview Date: 2007-12-01
Top notch- not for everyoneReview Date: 2006-11-16
German flak defence reviewReview Date: 2006-03-23


Excellent Health InformationReview Date: 2005-08-19
Food, Mood and MoneyReview Date: 2005-08-10
first copy of Food, Mood and Money five years ago, I was excited to find how all the pieces of the puzzle fell into place. I was excited to learn how what we eat affects our moods and our ability to reach our full potential in today's world. It made perfect sense to me and I found it to be true and effective. After my first purchase of Food, Mood and Money I went back to
school and have achieved so much more in these last five years than I ever believed was possible. It still amazes me when I think of it. I have just bought my second copy, and I heartily recommend this book to anyone who wants to become a dynamic, successful human being by overcoming anxiety, apathy and shyness.
Food, Mood and MoneyReview Date: 2005-08-02
Why live long if you live unhealthy and unhappily?Review Date: 2003-05-18

Used price: $60.09

D. Friedman Chicago, ILReview Date: 2001-07-13
The Forsaken ChildReview Date: 2001-07-13
Refreshingly well-writtenReview Date: 2001-05-01
Reflections on D. Patrick Zimmerman's "The Forsaken Child"Review Date: 2001-04-30

Used price: $81.00

Great product, great serviceReview Date: 2008-10-03
Good FoundationReview Date: 2008-07-07
An excellent overview of the underlying theories that have guided the evolution in marketing over time. A great reference book for graduate students in the field and anyone with an interest in why we market to consumers the way we do.
Book reviewReview Date: 2008-02-10
One of a kindReview Date: 2007-05-29
The exposition is clear and expounds a very useful framework for scholars in marketing. A must have for marketing academics.

Used price: $136.23

Must have for free radical researchersReview Date: 2008-06-18
Notes from an OxymoronReview Date: 2001-09-25
An excellent book for scientistsReview Date: 2000-05-28
Notes from an OxymoronReview Date: 2001-09-25

Used price: $3.39
Collectible price: $20.00

Interesting studyReview Date: 2006-04-07
A Captivating Account of Charter School SuccessReview Date: 2006-05-09
Well written and insightful analysis combined with engaging personal storiesReview Date: 2006-02-19
The Definitive Book on Charter SchoolsReview Date: 2006-06-13

Used price: $11.26

Geospatial Reading - Fun With GPS hits the mark!Review Date: 2005-10-28
Jumping right in, the book provides the reader with an introduction to GPS along with a useful primer on mapping and the proper use of a GPS. The "meat" of the book is really from Chapters 3 onward. This is where Cooke provides numerous informative, educational, and interesting examples of real-life uses and applications of GPS. Even better, each example explains (in detail) a fun use, detailed instructions, photos/images, useful web links, and interesting commentary.
Particularly useful (and educational) small sections devoted to mapping, GIS, accuracy, and GPS concepts & terminology are included. After all, simply capturing and storing GPS coordinates is hardly of use, particularly to the layman. It's the understanding of the data, along with integration of maps and/or GIS that really makes GPS fun! A particularly interesting and "bang on" quote from the book that really struck a cord with me... "GIS really does put the fun into GPS". My take... indeed it does!
So who should buy or read Fun With GPS? If you happen to be one of millions of users of a GPS or a GPS-enabled mobile device then you'll no doubt find this book to be a valuable addition to your library. Can the book provide specific examples that apply to your lifestyle? Likely so since numerous specific examples and applications of GPS uses have been provided. These include:
Geocaching
Degree confluence chasing
GIS/mapping
Ice skating
Hockey
Skiing
Racing (auto)
Hiking
Sailing
Polo
Camping
Golf
Rowing
Sky diving
If you happen to have a hobby included above then Don has provided a detailed example application of how you will find GPS to be useful and fun.
Finally, the heart of the book comes in chapters 2 and 8. Chapter 2 offers an awesome primer on mapping. Cooke uses the free ArcExplorer GIS data viewer from ESRI and the complimentary (and free) DNR Garmin program from the Minnesota DNR as the focus of a tutorial on using your GPS data with a GIS without spending a dime. Both programs are totally free and detailed instructions for use have been provided to get you up and running and help get your GPS data off the device and used within a real application.
Chapter 8 is devoted to the use of GPS in schools and in the community. Interesting sample uses focus on the use of GPS by a museum to track visitors, mapping of a restored cemetery by grade school students, and even how to write your name with a GPS track log. Students attempting any of these sample projects will no doubt get a great introductory education to mapping and geospatial concepts, but will still have some addictive fun with their GPS as well... they may also even solve a community problem or address a local conservation issue.
Fun with GPS is truly a fun read. I admit, I have a dusty, 2 year old Garmin somewhere on my desk, however, it wasn't until I read this book that I had much interest in turning it on! I plan on locating a geocache in the near future and I also plan on capturing a degree confluence or two!
[...]
fun and cool ideasReview Date: 2005-09-10
You might wish to thumb through his suggestions. See if any catch your fancy. Or, if you like these ideas, try also looking up the magazine "Make" published by O'Reilly. It has the same freewheeling spirit seen here.
Maps and photos come with each outlined project for hobbyists, athletes, drivers, teachers and moreReview Date: 2005-09-05
delightful and practical!Review Date: 2005-11-23

Used price: $1.31

Great.Review Date: 2007-01-09
R CohenReview Date: 2002-10-01
YawnReview Date: 2005-10-08
okayReview Date: 1999-03-09

An Inspiring BookReview Date: 2001-11-12
Raoul Wallenberg:A Hero Allowed To Slip Through a Russian Sewer GrateReview Date: 2006-02-23
January 17,1945.The last 97 pages deal with the world's apathy in securing his release from the Gulag.Thousands of Jews and some non-Jews owe their lives to Wallenberg's intervention on
"behalf of the Swedish government"-which dealt with the Wallenberg kidnapping issue as buroucracies tend to do.Bierman's Wallenberg book was published in 1981-and there were credible reports that Wallenberg was still vegetating in the Soviet prison system.The sin of allowing this to happen-is beyond unforgivable.
fitting tribute to a great heroReview Date: 2002-01-02
This is a great and inspiring story, and "Righteous Gentile" does justice to it. Bierman doesn't really succeed in explaining the origins of the idealism that led Wallenberg to volunteer for this job in the first place, but probably nobody could. What he does show is the skill and energy with which Wallenberg executed the task assigned to him. Actually "skill and energy" are ludicrously inadequate terms. Wallenberg not only distributed his passports, he tirelessly roamed around pulling Jews out of death marches and off trains bound for Auschwitz, he bossed Nazi thugs around in impeccable Hochdeutsch (and they listened), and he confronted Adolf Eichmann himself, all the while taking the most extraordinary risks. I can't say that Wallenberg was the greatest hero in recorded history, since I'm not familiar with all of it; suffice to say that he is by a very large margin the greatest hero I've ever read of, in fiction or history, and it is an inspiring and hopeful fact that someone like him ever existed. I am grateful to John Bierman for bringing this figure to such luminous and memorable life.
The only problem I have with the book is that half of it consists of speculations and rumor-cataloguing to the effect that Wallenberg was alive in the Gulag until about 1980. I believe that most authorities now think he was murdered by the Soviets long before this, perhaps after they failed to recruit him for espionage. This part of the book is therefore something of an anachronism. However, it doesn't detract from the general value of the book, which should be required reading for everybody, period.
Sweden's greatest samaritanReview Date: 2003-05-22
The second world war threw-up some gigantic figures but ironically Raoul Wallenberg from neutral Sweden towers over all the rest.
Like the Good Samaritan he didn't pass on by but instead left his safe homeland to assist others by putting himself in danger day after day in the inferno that was Hungary during the dreadful days of 1944-45.
The man who saved a 100,000 jews from the clutches of Adolf Eichmann, the SS, and the Hungarian facists, the Arrow Cross ultimately fell foul of the Russian 'liberators.' He was never seen again as a free man after being taken into 'protective custody' by the Reds on 17 January 1945.
I read John Bierman's excellent book some 20 years ago and he charts the extraordinary crusade of his subject with a deft touch.
This is a book that will both inspire you, with Wallenberg's humanity and courage, and anger you that such a man could lose his liberty after fighting so hard for the freedom and safety of others.
In the pantheon of heroes Raoul Wallenberg-the righteous gentile-would have to be at the very top

Used price: $17.02

A cross-culture treasury of legends, and a first-rate addition to mythology and folklore reference shelves.Review Date: 2007-06-10
Very pleasedReview Date: 2006-08-11
Gems in Myth, Legend and LoreReview Date: 2006-09-16
The second part of the book details 46 of the most common gemstones. Each gemstone entry includes a large photograph of the stone, minerological information and the gemstone lore. The lore is presented very respectfully with an acknowledgment that we do not know everything and that there are factual bases to many of these beliefs. As a bonus, there are numerous, well referenced footnotes for each of the stones.
In the third part of the book, he includes information that I have not found elsewhere such mythological gems and gems in literature. There is even a compete copy of a famous Lapidarium writen in the Middle Ages. This section also has some very useful and well done charts detailing things like birthstones through the ages and the significance of gemstone shape.
In my work as a jewelry designer, many of my customers ask my advice about which stones they should use for different forms of protection or as an aid to achieve their goals. In order to help them, I began researching gemstone history and lore. I have now read about 15 books on the subject and I have found that many of them offer contradictory explanations and/or information that is too general or too vague to be of much use. For my purposes, Knuth's book has been the most helpful.
Gems in Myth, Legend, and LoreReview Date: 2000-08-16
Related Subjects: Juvenile Justice Victimology Corrections Money Laundering United States
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Westermann masterfully weaves all aspects of the development of the 88 with the other less-well-known and understood defenses used by Germany such as smoke screens and decoy sites, the high-level of damage to bombers from Flak that increased fighter kills as they pounced on stragglers, the decrease in accuracy from bombers trying to evade Flak, the coordination with night-fighters (the Wild Boars), as well as the development of improved targeting devices such as radar.
Westermann shows that in the early days of the war and indeed into 1942, the Flak arm of the Luftwaffe was taking a heavy toll on Allied bombers. He discusses the evolution of bomber strategy in dealing with the Flak, as well as decisions made by the Luftwaffe that would lead to a decrease in Flak kill averages and a precipitous drop in the effectiveness of all ground-based air defenses from 1943 on due to material shortages, bomber technology, allied countermeasures, and less skilled Flak crews such as women and children replacing trained units.
The book is a dense study filled with graphs and charts that help show the effectiveness of Flak versus fighters (and indeed shows that both were most effective when used in tandem), yet it is an easy read that is very logically laid-out.
For myself this book was an eye-opener. My grandfather was in Flak from 1938-1945. He began as a range-finder (Entfernungsmesser) operator on 88s preparing for sea-lion, and later became a radar operator. This probably saved his life. As more and more Flak men were pulled into line units to fight on the ground in Russia and elsewhere, the skilled radar operators stayed on the Western Front to monitor the daily fleets of aircraft flying to Germany and they provided what little early-warning the Luftwaffe would have until everything collapsed. It gave me a better understanding of my grandfather's service as well as an appreciation for what Westermann terms the world's most advanced air-defense network at the time.