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1000 tulosta hakusanalla J. Edwards

Play Winning Craps Serious Player

Play Winning Craps Serious Player

J. Edward Allen

Pagina förlags AB
2005
nidottu
New edition! The most in-depth work ever written on craps features 25 complete winning strategies with full explanations! Includes strategies from both sides of the layout, for 2, 3 and 10 times odds, for conservative, aggressive and super-aggressive players. Hard-hitting coverage of all bets and the best ones for winning strategies. Includes advanced bankrolling, money management, getting credit, table image, odds charts and pro glossary.
Basics of Winning Slots

Basics of Winning Slots

J. Edward Allen

Pagina förlags AB
2005
nidottu
This excellent primer has already sold over 500,000 copies. Why so popular? Slots is the casino's most popular casino game and their largest source of profit. Readers learn the basics of play, how to find the machines and casinos with the most frequent and largest payoffs, the different types of machines and the history of slots. Includes lots of insider advice on how to avoid losing machines (in airports, by show lines) and how to find the most profitable machines. Includes a glossary and money management advice. Readers are just 64 pages and one lucky pull of the handle away from a million-dollar jackpot.
Beat the Odds

Beat the Odds

J. Edward Allen

Pagina förlags AB
2005
nidottu
The best-seller is back with a major redesign and update. 64 comprehensive but easy-to-read chapters show how to play and win at blackjack, video poker, craps, poker, roulette, slots and keno. Readers learn the rules of the games, the different bets available, the payoffs, the odds, and all of Allen's inside secrets and strategies for beating the casino. There's tons of powerful information packed into this fast-reading and handy winning book – in all, 320 pgs of solid winning techniques. This travel-ready primer is one of the best-selling gambling books ever written, and one of the most respected. 500,000 sold!
Basics of Win CarStud/Let Ride

Basics of Win CarStud/Let Ride

J. Edward Allen

Pagina förlags AB
2005
nidottu
15 chapters outline the rules of play, player's options, payout schedules, overall house odds, plus the best winning strategies. In Caribbean Stud, the object of the game is to have an original poker hand without drawing cards, and like blackjack, to beat the dealer. Let it Ride is essentially a 5 card stud poker game with high tournament bonus payments These games are especially popular for they're easy to play, and they offer players the familiarity of table games with the possibilities of millions of dollars in jackpots!
The Basics of Winning Roulette

The Basics of Winning Roulette

J. Edward Allen

CARDOZA PUBLISHING
2015
nidottu
Designed for players who want to learn now, this great primer can be read in one quick setting. You'll learn how to make every one of the 150 possible bets with illustrations accompanying every explanations. You'll also learn about betting systems, money management, and payoffs. Glossary included. Illustrations. 64 pages
Understanding Affirmative Action

Understanding Affirmative Action

J. Edward Kellough

Georgetown University Press
2006
pokkari
For some time, the United States has been engaged in a national debate over affirmative action policy. A policy that began with the idea of creating a level playing field for minorities has sparked controversy in the workplace, in higher education, and elsewhere. After forty years, the debate still continues and the issues are as complex as ever. While most Americans are familiar with the term, they may not fully understand what affirmative action is and why it has become such a divisive issue. With this concise and up-to-date introduction, J. Edward Kellough brings together historical, philosophical, and legal analyses to fully inform participants and observers of this debate. Aiming to promote a more thorough knowledge of the issues involved, this book covers the history, legal status, controversies, and impact of affirmative action in both the private and public sectors - and in education as well as employment. In addition, Kellough shows how the development and implementation of affirmative action policies have been significantly influenced by the nature and operation of our political institutions. Highlighting key landmarks in legislation and court decisions, he explains such concepts as "disparate impact", "diversity management", "strict scrutiny", and "representative bureaucracy". "Understanding Affirmative Action" probes the rationale for affirmative action, the different arguments against it, and the known impact it has had. Kellough concludes with a consideration of whether or not affirmative action will remain a useful tool for combating discrimination in the years to come. Not just for students in public administration and public policy, this handy volume will be a valuable resource for public administrators, human resource managers, and ordinary citizens looking for a balanced treatment of a controversial policy.
Persons and Values in Pragmatic Phenomenology
This book brings together the author's overall research trajectory of the last five years of his life and the questions he has been asking himself: What is the person? And, what are values? In answering the latter question, Hackett arrived at an answer within the boundaries of Max Scheler, the German phenomenologist, but consequently started to explore the depths of which Scheler's value ontology was predicated on certain assumptions about the person. From these questions, Hackett started to draw upon philosophical approaches that thematize experience--pragmatism and phenomenology. Rooted in the philosophical contributions of Scheler and the American philosopher, William James, this book guides the reader through a fascinating exploration of these philosophical approaches in relation to the person and values. Through thematizing experience, this book reveals that the ontology of value for Scheler resides not only in a person's intentionality but also in the being-of-an-act. As such, this book argues that the deficit of an ontology of value in Scheler rests on interpreting his affective intentionality in much the same way that Heidegger employed phenomenology to discern the ontological care structure of Dasein. In other words, for Scheler, the ontology of value rests on the manner in which values were realized by a person's intentionality. Moreover, this book goes further to reveal that the intentional act life is the source of participation and can be understood as a process-based account of value, otherwise known as account participatory realism. Importantly, within participatory realism Hackett addresses how values have their origin in the process of intentionality since intentionality is generative of meaning. As an important contribution to the field of moral metaphysics, Hackett's critical reflection on the person and values provides a stimulating insight into some of the key debates surrounding pragmatism and phenomenology that will be of great interest to both experienced scholars and researchers, alike.
The Banker and the Blackfoot: An Untold Story of Friendship, Trust, and Broken Promises in the Old West
During the last decades of the nineteenth century in the Old West, cowboys and Indians, lawmen and outlaws, ranchers and farmers shared the border between Canada and the United States--and mostly ignored it. American traders and cowboys with their cattle came north to the territory that later became Alberta, and the Blackfoot traveled south to Montana to visit their kinfolk there. Bull trains regularly carried supplies from Fort Benton, on the Missouri River, across the border to Fort Macleod, a small ramshackle town in the foothills of the Rockies. The Banker and the Blackfoot conjures up vividly the never-before-told story of Fort Macleod, the surrounding Blackfoot territory, and the foothills during roughly two decades, 1885 to 1905, when the people living there--First Nations and M tis, rancher and farmer--respectfully set out to accommodate Blackfoot sovereignty and new settlement--before the Canadian government broke its Treaty promises to the Indians. There were many friendships in this time and place, both among town residents and foothills settlers and the police, and between many of them and the Blackfoot. It was here that the self-made banker John Cowdry--J. Edward Chamberlin's grandfather--met Crop Eared Wolf, the legendary Blackfoot warrior and brilliant horseman, and their friendship and trust formed a lasting bond. Cowdry later became the town's first mayor, and Crop Eared Wolf succeeded his father, the great statesman Red Crow, as head chief of the Blood tribe. Fort Macleod embraced it all--Sun Dances and social dances, bibles and medicine bundles, drums and piano recitals, horse races and polo matches, and rodeos to celebrate both the horse culture of the Blackfoot and the skills of the cattle range. The town was full of great characters, including Madame Kanouse (Natawista), admired for both her influential intelligence and her stunning fashion sense; Kamoose Taylor, hospitable patron of the Macleod Hotel--where Francis Dickens, son of the great novelist Charles Dickens, and the Sundance Kid himself were found at the bar; Colonel James Macleod, commander of the North-West Mounted Police; the taciturn Jerry Potts, unequaled M tis guide and interpreter; John Ware, a successful black cowboy and rancher; and the renowned Peigan chief Big Swan. Full of wisdom, passion, and insight, The Banker and the Blackfoot compellingly portrays a time when many people in that part of the Old West looked for ways of getting along with each other and getting on with the things that mattered to them all. Their remarkable story offers hope for all of us today.
Miracle at Maggie's Bluff: Adventures of Tripper and Tag

Miracle at Maggie's Bluff: Adventures of Tripper and Tag

J. Edward Corley

Independently Published
2018
nidottu
Maggie's Bluff and the lighthouse located on it, are fictitious, as are the characters protrayed in the story. The town of Fairhope, Alabama is real. The late 1940's and early 1950's provide the setting. The ghost of Maggie Abbot haunts the Bluff and nearby waters. She acts as a guardian angel to the children who play there. John Arthur III, "Tripper" and his younger sister Chelsea, "Tag," find it to be a place of beauty and adventure as they grow up. The abandoned lighthouse plays a part in the miracle at the bluff. I chose Fairhope Alabama because of its quaint beauty and seaside location. It is however located on Mobile Bay and not the Gulf of Mexico as depicted in my story. Feeling the need to document my memories of a simpler, less complicated time, I wrote this book. I have read this book in local public schools in our area and used it as a teaching tool to teach the chidren not to bully and live cleaner more wholesome lives.
Cry of the Grey Wolf

Cry of the Grey Wolf

J. Edward Corley

Independently Published
2018
nidottu
Adventure stories which take place during the 1860's with a pioneer family who live in the Black Water Region of the pan handle of Florida. Jed Jackson is away fighting the war while his wife Emily and their three children try to survive and maintain the family homestead in his absence. A big black dog (Paladin) protects her and the children in Jed's absence. For history lovers a detailed, factual account of the days leading up to and including the Battle of Mobile Bay. The stories include an Indian prophecy told to Jed as a boy by an old Medcine Man which comes to pass in later years. The stories span 100 years from 1845 to 1945. My accounts of these stories were told to me as a child as I sat spellbound listing to my Native American grandmother tell of her childhood adventures. The site of the homestead in the novel takes place in the beautiful Black Water Forest Region which is the place where many Muscogee Creek settled. I am a proud member of the Santa Rosa County Creek Indion Tribe in that area. The Novel is a combination of fiction stories and actual events. I hope you enjoy -Cry of the Grey Wolf- J. Edward Corley (John Three Bears)
Portal

Portal

J. Edward

Simply Inspired Words Publishing
2019
nidottu
People wonder if there is life after death. In the story, "The Portal," it appears that there is something beyond life on Earth, and it isn't as peaceful of existence as most believe. A man named Gangus greets Jack as he goes through a portal and enters into a strange land. Jack might have been a simple country boy from North Dakota, but when Gangus tells him where he was and the reason he was there, it seemed impossible to believe. Every explanation only created more questions for Jack. Yes, he was a simple country boy, but he knew there was something very odd going on.Why was he selected to come to this new place? Who was this figure that Gangus referred to as the Overseer? Jack's head filled with endless questions. Then he was informed of the purpose of all the people who had arrived on this planet. He and the other's had been selected to recapture and take control of Earth For a moment, Jack wondered if he was having a nightmare, but the more facts that Gangus shared with him, the more he realized it was real. The details were too specific for this to be a dream. His biggest question was, Why had he been chosen to play a role in this mission? What was his purpose here? There was something very troubling about the entire arrangement, but he would never guess how twisted this new world was.
Storylines

Storylines

J. Edward Chamberlin

Douglas McIntyre
2023
pokkari
A brilliant and timely exploration of the power of stories and songs--from both the distant past and today's news--counters despair and disillusionment with hope and possibility. Stories are our first and last survival strategy. For tens of thousands of years, they have told humanity what we know and what we don't know, what to wonder about and what to watch out for. We draw comfort from our great myths, and from the storytelling of our contemporaries (including members of our families). Storytelling holds us together. And sometimes it keeps us apart.From the stories we tell children, to literary works, to pop music, stories take many forms and give shape and substance to things we believe, perpetuating ideals and identities and provoke controversy and conflict. They include explanations of the origin and purpose of things, of causes and effects and sequences of events, and of our relationships to the forces that surround us. They also shape the institutions we establish, the ways in which we constitute ourselves as communities, and the covenants we enter into with secular as well as spiritual powers. Stories that celebrate growth and development and "civilized" progress can be a hazard when we use them to destroy Indigenous homelands and heritages and the environment.Stories can also provide a form of resistance to the overpowering realities of the everyday, empowering our imaginations to create a sense of possibility. It is within storytelling, and by understanding how stories work, that we can find a way to bring sympathy and judgment back into the centre of our conversations about what we can--and what we must--do. Stories and songs, ours and those of others, can help us. They can save us.
Excerpting American History from 1492 to 1877
Excerpting American History from 1492 to 1877: Primary Sources and Commentary provides students with a fresh and engaging exploration of key themes in America's past via a collection of documents and narratives. The text examines the themes of cultural interaction, the growth of the American Empire, freedom, and violent arguments over human bondage.This volume, the first in a two-book series, analyzes the period from 1492 to 1877. Each chapter features an introductory essay by the author to provide readers with critical context and perspective, excerpts from primary documents, and questions to stimulate reflection and deep learning. The book also includes five maps, which serve as critical references.Throughout the text, readers explore frozen Beringia, encounter historical figures such as Thomas Jefferson, Abigail Adams, and Benjamin Franklin, and learn about the Bostonians who helped toss East Indian tea into the harbor in 1773. They read the arguments of women fighting for gender equality at Seneca Falls, perspectives on freedom from emancipated slaves, and ideas surrounding Reconstruction.Excerpting American History from 1492 to 1877 is an enlightening text for courses in American history. Students can continue their exploration of American history in the second volume in the series, which features primary sources and commentary chronicling 1877 to 2001.
Excerpting American History from 1877 to 2001
Excerpting American History from 1877 to 2001: Primary Sources and Commentary provides students with a collection of government documents, newspaper accounts, manuscripts, letters, diaries, speeches, and more to provide them with an immersive and intimate exploration of the United States from the dawn of the Gilded Age to the harrowing events of September 11, 2001.This volume, the second in a two-book series, analyzes American history from 1877 to 2001. Each chapter features an introductory essay by the author to provide readers with critical context and perspective, excerpts from primary documents, and questions to stimulate reflection and deep learning. Readers learn about the industry, invention, and economic growth that boomed during the Gilded Age, but which also excluded many Americans, including new immigrants, farmers, African Americans, and women. They read about the progressive policies of Theodore Roosevelt, William Taft, and Woodrow Wilson. Select primary sources share perspectives on the Great War, the Second World War, the Jazz Age, the Harlem Renaissance, the Great Depression, the economic challenges of the 1970s, and more.Excerpting American History from 1877 to 2001 is an exemplary text for courses in American history. Students can rewind their exploration of American history and revisit the past in the first volume in the series, which features primary sources and commentary chronicling 1492 to 1877.
Excerpting American History from 1492 to 1877: Primary Sources and Commentary
Excerpting American History from 1492 to 1877: Primary Sources and Commentary provides students with a fresh and engaging exploration of key themes in America's past via a collection of documents and narratives. The text examines the themes of cultural interaction, the growth of the American Empire, freedom, and violent arguments over human bondage.This volume, the first in a two-book series, analyzes the period from 1492 to 1877. Each chapter features an introductory essay by the author to provide readers with critical context and perspective, excerpts from primary documents, and questions to stimulate reflection and deep learning. The book also includes five maps, which serve as critical references.Throughout the text, readers explore frozen Beringia, encounter historical figures such as Thomas Jefferson, Abigail Adams, and Benjamin Franklin, and learn about the Bostonians who helped toss East Indian tea into the harbor in 1773. They read the arguments of women fighting for gender equality at Seneca Falls, perspectives on freedom from emancipated slaves, and ideas surrounding Reconstruction.Excerpting American History from 1492 to 1877 is an enlightening text for courses in American history. Students can continue their exploration of American history in the second volume in the series, which features primary sources and commentary chronicling 1877 to 2001.
Excerpting American History from 1877 to 2001: Primary Sources and Commentary
Excerpting American History from 1877 to 2001: Primary Sources and Commentary provides students with a collection of government documents, newspaper accounts, manuscripts, letters, diaries, speeches, and more to provide them with an immersive and intimate exploration of the United States from the dawn of the Gilded Age to the harrowing events of September 11, 2001.This volume, the second in a two-book series, analyzes American history from 1877 to 2001. Each chapter features an introductory essay by the author to provide readers with critical context and perspective, excerpts from primary documents, and questions to stimulate reflection and deep learning.Readers learn about the industry, invention, and economic growth that boomed during the Gilded Age, but which also excluded many Americans, including new immigrants, farmers, African Americans, and women. They read about the progressive policies of Theodore Roosevelt, William Taft, and Woodrow Wilson. Select primary sources share perspectives on the Great War, the Second World War, the Jazz Age, the Harlem Renaissance, the Great Depression, the economic challenges of the 1970s, and more.Excerpting American History from 1877 to 2001 is an exemplary text for courses in American history. Students can rewind their exploration of American history and revisit the past in the first volume in the series, which features primary sources and commentary chronicling 1492 to 1877.
Island

Island

J. Edward Chamberlin

Elliott Thompson Limited
2013
sidottu
Ever since the dawn of human history, islands have been at the heart of our desires - and our fears. Drawing on anthropology, literature, biology, art, philosophy and earth science, Island tells the groundbreaking story of humans and islands throughout history, and celebrates islands as a central part of the world we live in. With a unique cross-disciplinary approach, encompassing everything from the wonder of an island's flora and fauna, to the geological roots of island formations, via references to popular culture, poetry and literature (including Prospero, Gulliver, Robinson Crusoe and the Count of Monte Cristo), Chamberlin tells the vivid and absorbing story of how islands have shaped human history, society and culture. Island celebrates islands for all their worth, whether real or invented, literal or fictitious, as a central part of the human narrative. A marvellously ambitious book, Chamberlin's book provides a fascinating counterpoint to Judith Schalansky's Atlas of Remote Islands (total UK sales over 20,000 to date).
Fall from Grace Chronicles: War Stories

Fall from Grace Chronicles: War Stories

J. Edward Ritchie

Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2018
nidottu
Heaven is burning A world at war. A civilization in ruins. A family divided. History remembers champions and honors legends, but wars are not won on the wings of heroes alone. Though not every soldier becomes myth, every life has meaning. Every life has worth. Every life has a story to tell. While Michael and Satan spill blood for opposing visions of the Host's future, immortalized by the rivalry, their brothers fight in anonymity. The fate of Heaven and Mankind is built upon the nameless dead--ordinary people whose deeds have been eclipsed by the greatness of others...until now. A companion collection to the fantasy epic Fall From Grace, War Stories sheds light on the untold casualties of Heaven's rebellion. Loyalties are broken. Lives are sacrificed. Faith is lost. Angel or demon, soldier or refugee, war corrupts everyone it touches.
Meet my Momma: A Tribute to a Wonderful Lady

Meet my Momma: A Tribute to a Wonderful Lady

J. Edward Howell

Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2018
nidottu
This is a book that examines the genealogy and the history of the subject lady. It also takes notice of the trials and joys she experienced throughout her life.. The book is written as a tribute and with a greater appreciation by her son, who as a grown man is better able to understand just how amazing his mother really was.
101 Best Reasons to Break Up: True Life Tales of Splitsville

101 Best Reasons to Break Up: True Life Tales of Splitsville

J. Edward Neill

Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2018
nidottu
People love a good breakup story....especially if it's true. So here we go again. Readers of 101 Reasons to Break Up and 101 MORE Reasons to Break Up will find this to be the funniest (and perhaps most tragic) entry in the series. Newcomers might be shocked. Truth is, I had no intention of writing this.But readers kept sending me more and more breakup tales. And every time I mentioned the first two books at bars, hockey games, and on Facebook, people reacted by telling me the details of their own personal heartbreak. Who am I to say no?The following 101 stories are from real life. Contributed by strangers, friends, frenemies, and one tale from my own life, these are some of the funniest, harshest, and most absurd breakups you'll ever read. Have fun