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LA PREMIÈRE ENQUETE DE FRANK DECKER Frank Decker, sergent de police à Lincoln, Nebraska, capte sur sa radio de service un " Code 64 ", soit un avis de disparition : Hansen, Hailey Marie. Afro-américaine. Âgée de cinq ans. Un mètre six. Seize kilos huit. Cheveux bruns, yeux verts. Personne n'a rien vu, rien remarqué, rien entendu. Près de la moitié des enfants assassinés par leur ravisseur sont tués dans l'heure qui suit leur enlèvement et Decker sait juste que Hailey s'est volatilisée avec Magique, son petit cheval en plastique. Fouilles et interrogatoires, brigade cynophile, battues avec l'aide des flics des comtés voisins : la police fait de son mieux. Jusqu'à un certain poi...
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This collection consists of letters and documents relating to the placing of several historic markers and monuments in Onondaga County by a committee of the Syracuse Chapter of the Sons of the American Revolution. These monuments commemorate the relationships between the Onondaga Indians and the early European settlers.
Excerpt from Christ's Experience of God I know Frank Decker. It is a privilege to know him, but I can hardly call it a distinction. I am only one of several thousand millionaires and ministers and mulligans, of Pharisees and first citizens and tramps, of sinners and publicans and outcasts of various sorts who have the right to stand up in the streets of Providence at his side and say "I know you." Anybody can know Decker, provided, of course, that he is in trouble or need. If he has no troubles he may have to wait outside a while until Decker gets through. They that are well need no physician but they that are sick. Many men write lives of Jesus - how many you never know until you look at di...
This book presents the first full-length explanation in English of Heinsohn and Steiger's groundbreaking theory of money and interest, which emphasizes the role played by private property rights. Ownership economics gives an alternative explanation of money and interest, proposing that operations enabled by property lead to interest and money, rather than exchange of goods. Like any other approach, it has to answer economic theory's core question: what is the loss that has to be compensated by interest? Ownership economics accepts neither a temporary loss of goods, as in neoclassical economics, nor Keynes's temporary loss of already existing, exogenous money as the cause of interest. Rather, money is created as a non-physical title to property in a credit contract secured by a debtor's collateral and the creditor's net worth. This book is an edited English translation of a highly successful German text, and offers the first book-length treatment of a theory which has received much interest since its first appearance in articles in the late 1970s.