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Based on a true story when WWI Veteran Dr. Frank Boston, along with his team of volunteers, sprang into action to save lives during a massive flood. Doc Boston is a new type of hero, an African American doctor, surgeon, and veteran who accomplished heroic things almost 100 years ago and leads a team of diverse volunteers, including an Asian, Middle Eastern, African, and European as they all work together under the leadership of Doc Boston. Marvel and DC Comics Illustrator, Khoi Pham (The Mighty Avengers, X-Men, Daredevil, Teen Titans) along with Heather Wilson Pham, a therapist, and George Whitehair, researcher, developed a fun, yet inspiring comic book. Perfect for middle schoolers, Doc Boston Adventures promotes STEM, teamwork, problem-solving, and shows that all of us can become heroes.
In the latest high-stakes political thriller from "New York Times"-bestselling author Rosenberg, a Russian president feverishly consolidates power, silencing his opposition, and plotting a brazen and lightning-fast military strike that could rupture the NATO alliance and bring Washington and Moscow to the brink of nuclear war.
The Legacy of Herbert Marcuse: A Critical Reader is a collection of brand new papers by seventeen Marcuse scholars, which provides a comprehensive reassessment of the relevance of Marcuse's critical theory at the beginning of the 21st century. Although best known for his reputation in critical theory, Herbert Marcuse's work has had impact on areas as diverse as politics, technology, aesthetics, psychoanalysis and ecology. This collection addresses the contemporary relevance of Marcuse's work in this broad variety of fields and from an international perspective. In Part One, veteran scholars of Marcuse and the Frankfurt school examine the legacy of various specific areas of Marcuse's thought,...
Introductory, theory-practice balanced text teaching the fundamentals of databases to advanced undergraduates or graduate students in information systems or computer science.
In publishing Fire Up the Poems, the Poet Laureate Program of Bucks County Community College provides a valuable resource for teachers and students of writing. Written by working poets recognized for their art, this book of ready-to-use poetry prompts offers teachers novel and accessible lesson plans to enhance creative writing strategies. In advancing poetry in the classroom, Fire Up the Poems inspires creative expression, demonstrates the power of poetry to create change, and enables a wider understanding of ideas.
In the 1960s and early 1970s, countercultural rebels decided that, rather than confront the system, they would create the world they wanted. The natural foods movement grew out of this contrarian spirit. Through a politics of principled shopping, eating, and entrepreneurship, food revolutionaries dissented from corporate capitalism and mainstream America. In Food for Dissent, Maria McGrath traces the growth of the natural foods movement from its countercultural fringe beginning to its twenty-first-century "food revolution" ascendance, focusing on popular natural foods touchstones—vegetarian cookbooks, food co-ops, and health advocates. Guided by an ideology of ethical consumption, these institutions and actors spread the movement's oppositionality and transformed America's foodscape, at least for some. Yet this strategy proved an uncertain instrument for the advancement of social justice, environmental defense, and anti-corporatism. The case studies explored in Food for Dissent indicate the limits of using conscientious eating, shopping, and selling as tools for civic activism.
Questions about access to scholarship have always raged. The great libraries of the past stood as arguments for increasing access. John Willinsky describes the latest chapter in this ongoing story - online open access publishing by scholarly journals and makes a case for open access as a public good.
The Story of Bucks County, Pennsylvania told with 70+ original illustrations. History, Geography, and Folklore in the American Megalopolis. Suburbs and exurbs, from Levittown to New Hope. The Peaceable Kingdom of the Quakers to later-day paperback sleaze ... with just a touch of the Satanical. Farms and barns to today's problems and prospects.
"Newswriting on Deadline" is filled with real-world newswriting exercises that prepare students for the stories they will cover on the job. Many of the exercises are based on actual events and most are designed to be written on a real deadline - in an hour or less. Each chapter focuses on a particular newspaper beat - police, courts, city hall - and opens with a set of tips for covering that specific beat. This is followed by a series of news writing exercises with a suggested deadline - anywhere from 30 minutes to an hour. Features Newswriting exercises give student the opportunity to write news stories based on actual events on a real deadline. Tips at the beginning of every chapter provide students with practical information on how to cover a specific newspaper beat. Profiles of real reporters give students a chance to hear from a professional journalist about how they cover their beat and write news stories on a tight deadline. Internet exercises allow students to use the Internet to do their own reporting and news writing. "Beyond the Classroom" feature in every chapter gives students examples of real-world stories they can cover.