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1000 tulosta hakusanalla David W Erickson

Doug Peters

Doug Peters

David W Peters

FriesenPress
2020
sidottu
Doug Peters was one of the most prominent business economists in Canada between 1966 and 1992 in his role as chief economist of the Toronto Dominion Bank. He was an outspoken critic of the economic policies of the Progressive Conservative government during the last part of his career. Instead of retiring peacefully in 1992, he decided he wanted to help change economic policy in Canada, and ran for parliament in 1993. From 1993 to 1997, he was the parliament member for Scarborough East and secretary of state for international financial institutions in the Liberal government. Doug Peters: Bay Street Economist on Parliament Hill is the life story of Doug Peters, written by his son, David Peters, but largely based on Doug's unpublished memoirs. Doug did not follow a conventional career path for a business economist. As a teenager, Doug flunked out of university twice. He then spent ten years working in retail banking. With a more serious, mature attitude in his thirties, Doug went back to university. He was the top student in his Commerce class when he graduated in 1963. He then went on to graduate studies at the University of Pennsylvania, where he received a PhD in 1969. This book tells many interesting stories from Doug's life. Some of the stories are quite amusing, while other stories tell about important decisions that Doug was involved in....
Moral Gravity

Moral Gravity

David W. Hill

Bristol University Press
2022
sidottu
Thinking about climate change can create a paralysing sense of hopelessness. But what about the idea of a planetary exodus? Are high-tech solutions like colonizing other planets just another distraction from taking real action? This radical book unsettles how we think about taking responsibility for environmental catastrophe. Going beyond both hopelessness and false hope in his development of a ‘sociology of the very worst’, David W. Hill debunks the idea of a society that centres around human beings and calls for us to take responsibility for sustaining a coexistence of animals, plants and minerals bound by one planet. We would then find the centre of our moral gravity here together on earth.
The Ladder: Part 1

The Ladder: Part 1

David W. Hodges

Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2016
nidottu
Man is the most fearful animal of all. When Hazel Lewin sees the chance for an adventure after her older brother Cameron's forbidden lover is abducted, she takes it, secretly following him onto a mysterious estate in Derbyshire where she learns that she and Cameron are Athraithe- the Changed, a secret race with the ability to harness the extraordinary traits of animals. Hazel and Cameron learn that the abduction was intended to lure them to the vast estate which shelters the Changed in an ancient hidden village, so that they could be changed by the Ladder, an artifact that gives Athraithe their gifts. The abductor hopes to usurp Hazel's long lost grandfather, the owner of the estate. To do so, he must take control of the Blood of the Ladder, produced by three precious spheres, and the key to allowing Athraithe to animate plain objects with the traits of animals. It is up to Hazel and Cameron to find a hidden sphere and keep it from the abductor and his incognito supporters within the village. When Hazel finally finds the hidden sphere, her alluring new world is turned upside down.
American Pies, Happy Lives, Blue Skies & Other Lies: The First Play of a Vietnam Trilogy

American Pies, Happy Lives, Blue Skies & Other Lies: The First Play of a Vietnam Trilogy

David W. Christner

Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2016
nidottu
"American Pies, Happy Lives, Blue Skies & Other Lies" is the first play of a Vietnam War trilogy which includes "Bui-Doi: The Dust of Life" and "The Wall." The story unfolds at the home of decorated Vietnam veteran Sam Adams and his wife Angel in Cambridge, Massachusetts nine years after Sam and his boyhood friend Tom Charles left for Vietnam. The year is 1977. Sam returned a hero after his tour of duty and married Angel, Tom's former fianc e. Sam has made a pile of dough as a big time stockbroker in Boston's financial district and is living good life. Tom comes home many years later, a battered but not broken man. What starts out as a friendly reunion deteriorates into a savage battle for supremacy and survival as Tom and Sam clash over the our country's attempt to spread the American dream into Asia with an excess of democratic rhetoric, economic clout, carpet bombing agent orange, and a half million boots on the ground, most of them bogged down in rice paddies. This is a story of how the Vietnam War changed all of us whether we were directly or indirectly involved.
Distributism Basics: An Explanation

Distributism Basics: An Explanation

David W. Cooney

Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2016
nidottu
An introduction to the economic system known as Distributism, comparing it to both socialism and capitalism. Distributism does not advocate government "redistribution" of wealth, which many assume based on the name alone. The name refers to the idea that justice and power in both the economic and political realms should be distributed throughout society.Distributism, also known as Distributivism, has been around as a named and distinct system for over 100 years, but remains relatively unknown because it is ignored by professional and academic economists. The basic premise is that people in society as a whole are better off if the means of production are privately owned by a lot of people rather than having the majority of that ownership in the hands of a small percentage of society. Locally owned small businesses and farms are the bedrock of a strong and stable economy. Distributism also advocates strong local government over the centralization of government authority.
Fever

Fever

David W. Kettlehake

Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2016
nidottu
The last thing Ari Van Owen expected to see that Saturday morning was his ex-girlfriend's furious husband on his front step. "Where is she?" Butch Brubaker demanded. "Where's Frankie?" Frankie Brubaker, the woman Ari loves but can never have, has been abducted from the hospital where she works. There's no ransom note, and no contact from the kidnappers. With his past experience working for the FBI, this type of investigation is right up Van Owen's alley. In no time he uncovers clues that point to Frankie being held outside of the country, somewhere in the Amazon Jungle. But what Van Owen can't determine is why. A few days later, a flight from Brazil crashes near Louisville when the pilot and first officer suffer from total paralysis en route. Just days after that, a popular South American baseball player is found dead in Cincinnati after succumbing to the same mysterious ailment. The FBI suspects the two high profile cases may be related, and they want Van Owen to do what he does best and connect the dots. The deeper Ari digs, the more it appears that Frankie's abduction is somehow linked to both the plane crash and the dead athlete. But before he can put the pieces together, the kidnappers are back - only this time they've targeted Van Owen, and their intentions are clear: they'll either take him, or they'll take him out. With its action, plot twists, and romance, David Kettlehake's second novel, Fever, will keep you riveted from the first page to the exciting, unexpected conclusion.
The Literary Devices in John's Gospel

The Literary Devices in John's Gospel

David W Wead

Wipf Stock Publishers
2018
pokkari
As an interdisciplinary forerunner of the new literary approaches to gospel narratives over the last four decades in New Testament scholarship, the revised and expanded monograph by David Wead makes a timely contribution to the advancement of those studies. Rooted in comparative analyses of contemporary Hellenistic and Jewish literary techniques, and drawing from the best of Continental scholarship, Wead not only points Johannine scholars to relevant ancient resources, but his analyses prepare the way for fresh interpretations of John's story of Jesus today. Published originally in Switzerland, this book was overlooked by many scholars, to the detriment of their work. However, in addressing such themes as John's post-resurrection point of view, the Johannine sign, the Johannine double meaning, irony in the Fourth Gospel, and metaphor in the Fourth Gospel, Wead's work is now available to new generations of scholars, who will find his work both instructive and provocative. This newly revised and expanded edition, edited by Paul Anderson and Alan Culpepper, not only includes a new epilogue by David Wead, featuring new reflections and insights, but it also includes an expansive overview of the literature--before and after Wead's work--including a helpful assessment of Wead's monograph in service to ongoing Johannine scholarship. No serious study of Gospel literary features, devices, and strategies can afford to overlook this important book ""Wead's work was a historic contribution to the field of New Testament studies, one of the very earliest sustained attempts to apply emerging narrative-critical models to established problems in biblical scholarship. Preceding Alan Culpepper's Anatomy of the Fourth Gospel by more than a decade, the book remains essential to any history of research in Johannine studies and also serves as a window into the dawn of literary-critical study of the Gospels."" --Tom Thatcher, Professor of Biblical Studies, Cincinnati Christian University ""This revised and expanded version of Wead's classic study showcases his prescient insights into John's connection to ancient methods of communication--particularly Greek drama--as well as how interpretation can be aided by means of more contemporary literary criticism. Propelling his work into a much-deserved place in the continuing conversation, this book shows how students of John's literary artistry are also in Wead's debt "" --Alicia D. Myers, Assistant Professor of New Testament and Greek, Campbell University Divinity School ""In this important but often overlooked volume, David Wead's analysis of Johannine literary devices beautifully articulates the Fourth Gospel's literary and theological distinctiveness while anticipating what would become foundational to Johannine critics working with narrative criticism in the decades that followed. I am delighted to see this revised and expanded edition from the Johannine Monograph series."" --Christopher W. Skinner, Associate Professor of New Testament and Early Christianity, Loyola University Chicago David Wead completed his PhD in New Testament at the University of Basel in 1968, under the supervision of Bo Reicke and Oscar Cullman, which this book represents. He also taught and served at a number of institutions, including Minnesota Bible College and Emmanuel School of Religion, and a number of churches in Tennessee.