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1000 tulosta hakusanalla Freda M Higgins

Happy Hour Cookbook Caribbean Bar Foods and Drinks

Happy Hour Cookbook Caribbean Bar Foods and Drinks

Freda M. Gore

Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2018
nidottu
Plantains. Jerk chicken. Callaloo, Curry Chicken, Rum Punch, Every true connoisseur of Caribbean food knows these names, but there is so much more. The Caribbean is also known for its Scrumptious Finger Foods And Tropical Flavored Cocktails, For some, gathering recipes and making them your own is a passion. Freda Gore brings you her passion for Caribbean Cooking with her Cookbook the Happy Hour Cookbook Caribbean Finger Foods and Drinks.Chef Freda Gore is a staple of Caribbean cuisine. For 30 years she has not only collected recipes like breads, cakes, Bar Snacks, Easy Party Foods, and desserts but created succulent dishes of her own. Her passion for cooking is laid out for you in this easy to follow cookbook that will make everyone feel like a top chef. Turn the pages for such delights as Pina Colada popcorn, Jerk Peanuts, Mini Beef patties, and her own special touch on Curry Chicken Cup CakesPlantains. Jerk chicken. Callaloo, Curry Chicken, Rum Punch, Every true connoisseur of Caribbean food knows these names, but there is so much more. The Caribbean is also known for its Scrumptious Finger Foods And Tropical Flavored Cocktails, For some, gathering recipes and making them your own is a passion. Freda Gore brings you her passion for Caribbean Cooking with her Cookbook the Happy Hour Cookbook Caribbean Finger Foods and Drinks.Chef Freda Gore is a staple of Caribbean cuisine. For 30 years she has not only collected recipes like breads, cakes, Bar Snacks, Easy Party Foods, and desserts but created succulent dishes of her own. Her passion for cooking is laid out for you in this easy to follow cookbook that will make everyone feel like a top chef. Turn the pages for such delights as Pina Colada popcorn, Jerk Peanuts, Mini Beef patties, and her own special touch on Curry Chicken Cup Cakes and much more tropical delights
African Archaeology Without Frontiers

African Archaeology Without Frontiers

Chapurukha M Kusimba; Santores Tchandeu; Dirk Seidensticker; Adrianne Daggett; Marilee Wood; Laure Dussubieux; Forssman Tim; Kate Smuts; Nick Wiltshire; Akin Ogundiran; Davies Matthew; Caleb Adebayo Folorunso; Timothy Kipkeu Kipruto; Freda M’Mbogori; Henrietta L Moore; Emubosa Orijemie; Schoeman Alex; Festo W Gabriel; Elinaza Mjema; Philip de Barros; Gabriella Lucidi

Wits University Press
2016
nidottu
Confronting national, linguistic and disciplinary boundaries, contributors to African Archaeology Without Frontiers argue against artificial limits and divisions created through the study of `ages’ that in reality overlap and cannot and should not be understood in isolation. Papers are drawn from the proceedings of the landmark 14th PanAfrican Archaeological Association Congress held in Johannesburg in 2014, nearly seven decades after the conference planned for 1951 was relocated to Algiers following the National Party’s rise to power in South Africa. Contributions by keynote speakers Chapurukha Kusimba and AkinOgundiran encourage African archaeologists to practise an archaeology that collaborates across many related fields of study to enrich our understanding of the past. The nine papers cover a broad geographical sweep by incorporating material on ongoing projects throughout the continent, including South Africa, Botswana, Cameroon, Togo, Tanzania, Kenya and Nigeria. Thematically, the papers included in the volume address issues of identity and interaction, and the need to balance cultural heritage management and sustainable development derived from a continent racked by social inequalities and crippling poverty. Edited by three leading archaeologists, the collection covers many aspects of African archaeology, and a range of periods from the earliest hominins to the historical period.
Population and Ceramic Traditions: Revisiting the Tana Ware of Coastal Kenya (7th-14th Century AD)
This research is a departure from the traditional archaeological pottery analysis in Kenya, where emphasis has been on decorations and forms. It uses a technological approach to offer additional information on Bantu pottery. Pottery decorations and forms are still powerful instruments in defining the spatial and temporal distributions of prehistoric populations, but the ability of these attributes to mark social boundaries is limited by their obvious visibility on the finished product. Whilst this explicit visibility is an advantage for archaeologists who seek to explore temporal and spatial distributions of different wares, it is problematic, since it is possible for socially, ethnically, and linguistically distinct communities to copy from each other, making salient pottery features unreliable indicators of social boundaries. Therefore, this study emphasises the production stage, which is not as obvious on the finished product and must be learnt by apprenticeship only through kinship. This study sought to establish the social boundaries for makers of Tana ware; an Iron Age pottery attributed by some to Bantu speakers, whilst others attribute it to Cushitic speakers. Chaine operatoire was used as an analytical tool for archaeological data collected from Manda and Ungwana site assemblages. Ethnographic reference data was collected from Cushitic and Bantu speakers from the Coastal and Highland regions of Kenya. Ethno-historical data was derived from library resources, while experimental data were obtained from the field.
Chief Justice Fred M. Vinson of Kentucky

Chief Justice Fred M. Vinson of Kentucky

James E. St. Clair; Linda C. Gugin

The University Press of Kentucky
2002
sidottu
Fred M. Vinson, the thirteenth Chief Justice of the United States, started his political career as a small-town Kentucky lawyer and rose to positions of power in all three branches of federal government. Born in Louisa, Kentucky, Vinson earned undergraduate and law degrees from Centre College in Danville. He served 12 years in the U.S. House of Representatives, where he achieved acclaim as a tax and fiscal expert. President Roosevelt appointed him to the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia and later named him to key executive-branch positions. President Truman appointed him Secretary of the Treasury and then Chief Justice. The Vinson court was embroiled in critical issues affecting racial discrimination and individual rights during the cold war. Chief Justice Fred M. Vinson of Kentucky: A Political Biography offers a wealth of insight into one of the most significant and highly regarded political figures to emerge from Kentucky.
High Field Superconducting Magnets

High Field Superconducting Magnets

Fred M. Asner

Clarendon Press
1999
sidottu
This book provides the reader with a modern, up-to-date reference on the physics and technology of superconducting magnets in a period of significant advancement in this area. The main feature of the book is the combination of superconductivity, electromagnetic field theory, and the thermodynamics of helium cooling on the one hand with the technological aspects of high performance superconducting materials and mechanical engineering on the other hand. It will provide the reader with the necessary expertise for reliably designing, manufacturing, and testing complex high field superconducting magnets of predictable performance. Particular emphasis has been given to beam transport and accelerator magnets in high energy particle physics.
Special Care

Special Care

Fred M. Frohock

University of Chicago Press
1986
sidottu
Intensive care medicine today is as close to the miraculous as most of us are likely to see in our lifetime. Nowhere is this magic more effectively practiced than in neonatal nurseries. Infants who are born prematurely at twenty-four weeks gestation and who weigh less than a pound can now be treated successfully. No other type of medicine has a more dramatic payoff, for the infants who survive can look forward to seventy or more years of life. But there is a dark underside to the exercise of these skills. A growing number of babies live only to be tethered to life-support systems, unconscious or suffering incessant pain for years and sometimes for the duration of their lives. The ethical issues raised by these children are among the most difficult in our society. Should life be maintained no matter what its quality? Or is there a point at which treatment should be stopped on humane grounds? Who is to make decisions on continuing or ending therapy for damaged children? Is the law a suitable instrument for regulating medical decisions in intensive care nurseries? Should the growing cost of intensive care influence therapy decisions? Special Care explores the moral and legal issues in neonatal intensive care. Fred M. Frohock spent four months in a special care nursery, observing the daily actions of doctors and nurses and interviewing staff and parents of patients. This engaging, human drama is told through the author's own journal entries interspersed with generous excerpts from taped interviews that display the practical reasoning of staff and parents as they address the moral problems raised by intensive care medicine. Several case studies of infants highlight the often contradictory directions in which medical staffs are pulled and the painful decisions that doctors and parents together are often called upon to make. The result is a book that reconstructs the ordinary life of a neonatal nursery and presents the moral views of those who are most intimately involved in therapy decisions. This book is an urgently needed entry in the current discussions of treatment for badly damaged babies. Frohock argues that our tradition of rights language, which rests on the premise that we know what a human being is, is inappropriate when dealing with the paradoxes of decision making in neonatal nurseries. Calling for a new moral vocabulary better adapted to the world of medicine, he introduces the notion of harm in place of rights, a concept drawn from medicine's Hippocratic oath that pledges to "do no harm," as a way to begin framing questions and making decisions. Special Care will interest anyone who wants to understand medical decisions at the margins of human life.
Healing Powers

Healing Powers

Fred M. Frohock

University of Chicago Press
1992
sidottu
The personal testimony of individuals engaged in healing practices and the opposing voices of orthodox and alternative medicines are the center of Healing Powers. Focusing on medical norms and practices and on competing philosophies of the mind, the body, reality, and rationality across radically different "belief systems", Fred Frohock clarifies the social and legal dilemmas represented by "scientific medicine" and "alternative care."
Healing Powers – Alternative Medicine, Spiritual Communities, and the State
The personal testimony of individuals engaged in healing practices and the opposing voices of orthodox and alternative medicines are the center of Healing Powers. Focusing on medical norms and practices and on competing philosophies of the mind, the body, reality, and rationality across radically different "belief systems", Fred Frohock clarifies the social and legal dilemmas represented by "scientific medicine" and "alternative care.""Frohock goes beyond the often irreconcilable differences between scientific biomedicine and alternative care by clarifying the social and legal dilemmas they present. . . . A noteworthy contribution forcing us to rethink what medical care is all about."—Jeffrey Michael Clare, Journal of the American Medical Association"The book does more and better than simply provide a social-scientific proposal. It also gives not only a hearing but a voice to those who follow alternative therapies. . . . Frohock's accounts of their stories—along with the stories of the medical professionals—are eloquent and fascinating."—Allen Verhey, Medical Humanities Review"Contains a storehouse of valuable information about the historical, philosophical, and psychological bases of alternative approaches to healing."—Marshall B. Kapp, New England Journal of Medicine"Frohock introduces us to the scientific naturopaths and to physicians who believe in the mind's power to heal, to charismatics who believe in but cannot explain their powers, to those who test God and those who merely accept. He writes so well that I felt I had met these people."—Arthur W. Frank, Christian Century