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Page "Battle of Buna–Gona" ¶ 37
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book and Our
Our book of etiquette
The contemporary historian James W. Loewen agrees with the oral traditions in his book, Lies Across America: What Our Historic Markers and Monuments Get Wrong ( 1999 ), but there is not a consensus within the professional academic community.
In 1893 the same printer brought several more drawings for Weatherly ’ s Our Dear Relations, another book of rhymes, and the following year Potter successfully sold a series of frog illustrations and verses for Changing Pictures, a popular annual offered by the art publisher Ernest Nister.
Its practical implementation in the form of local cooperatives has recently been documented by Race Mathews in his 1999 book Jobs of Our Own: Building a Stakeholder Society.
Patrick described details of some of his abductions in his book Let Our Children Go!
* Fritz Leiber's novella Our Lady of Darkness revolves around the secret occult studies of fictional author / occultist Thibaut de Castries and his book Megapolisomancy: A New Science of Cities.
In his book On the Vocation of Our Age for Legislation and Jurisprudence, Friedrich Carl von Savigny argued that Germany did not have a legal language that would support codification because the traditions, customs and beliefs of the German people did not include a belief in a code.
An early triumph of Luthor's first term occurs during the Our Worlds at War comic book crossover, in which he coordinates the U. S. Army, Earth's superheroes, and a number of untrustworthy alien forces to battle the main villain of the story arc, Imperiex.
In his 1997 book The Gender Knot: Unraveling Our Patriarchal Legacy, sociologist Allan G. Johnson stated that accusations of man-hating have been used to put down feminists and shift attention onto men in a way that reinforces male-centered culture.
Margaret Singer, who also spent time studying the political brainwashing of Korean prisoners of war, agreed with this conclusion: in her book Cults in Our Midst she describes six conditions which would create an atmosphere in which thought reform is possible.
Singer's book Rethinking Life and Death: The Collapse of Our Traditional Ethics offers further examination of the ethical dilemmas concerning the advances of medicine.
In 2001, Canadian rock band Our Lady Peace released an album, titled Spiritual Machines, based on Kurzweil's book.
In the book With All Our Strength: The Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan '
Michael Azerrad reported, in the book Our Band Could Be Your Life, that at Minor Threat's second gig, each of the seven bands on the roster performed its version of a Wire song.
* Post-rock band, Deadhorse, refer their 2010 album release We Can Create Our Own World to be directly influenced by the book and Ray Bradbury's vision in evoke imagination in his readers.
* Italian philosopher Giambattista Vico delivers his inaugural lecture to the University of Naples, published as his first book, On the Study Methods of Our Time, in 1709.
She is the author of the book Cults in Our Midst.
In the 5th century, Saint Augustine began his book Our Lord's Sermon on the Mount by stating:
Laforgue put three of the " complaints " of his first published volume of poems ( 1885 ) into " Lord " Pierrot's mouth — and dedicated his next book, The Imitation of Our Lady the Moon ( 1886 ), completely to Pierrot and his world.
Spock addressed these accusations in the first chapter of his 1994 book, Rebuilding American Family Values: A Better World for Our Children.
The book is a parody of the Whiggish style of history teaching in English schools at the time, in particular of Our Island Story.
" His book, Our Threatened Values, ( London, 1946 ) Gollancz described the conditions Sudeten German prisoners faced in a Czech concentration camp: " They live crammed together in shacks without consideration for gender and age ...
A 1996 criminology and urban sociology book, Fixing Broken Windows: Restoring Order and Reducing Crime in Our Communities by George L. Kelling and a co-author Catharine Coles, is based on the article but develops the argument in greater detail.
Aviezer Tucker has offered a range of criticism of this approach to the study of the past both in his review of Ferguson's Virtual History in History and Theory and in his bookOur Knowledge of the Past: A Philosophy of Historiography ‬.
He and his wife, Pamela Mason, co-authored the book The Cats in Our Lives, which was published in 1949.

book and Jungle
Baden-Powell's personal experiences in India led him to adopt Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book as a major influence for the Cub Scouts ; for example, the name used for the Cub Scout leader, Akela ( whose name was also appropriated for the Webelos ), is that of the leader of the wolf pack in the book.
Notable exposés of sweatshop conditions include Jacob Riis ' photo documentary How the Other Half Lives and Upton Sinclair's book, The Jungle about the meat packing industry.
Only five years after the first publication of The Jungle Book, E. Nesbit's The Wouldbegoods ( 1899 ) included a passage in which some children act out a scene from the book.
* The Jungle Book Collection and Wiki: a website demonstrating the variety of merchandise related to the book and film versions of The Jungle Books, now accompanied by a Wiki on the Jungle Books and related subjects
According to the Mark Bowden book upon which the film is based, when the soldiers were preparing for the actual 1993 mission, Guns N ' Roses ' " Welcome to the Jungle " was playing on the loudspeakers ; however, Axl Rose refused to let the song be used in the film, so " Falling to Pieces " was used as a substitute.
First serialized by Rolling Stone in 1999, the book has drawn comparisons to Upton Sinclair's classic muckraking novel The Jungle.
During that period he produced his first comic book as a complete author, both writing and illustrating Anna della jungla (" Ann of the Jungle "), which was followed by the similar Capitan Cormorant and Wheeling.
The tales in the book ( and also those in The Second Jungle Book which followed in 1895, and which includes five further stories about Mowgli ) are fables, using animals in an anthropomorphic manner to give moral lessons.
The Jungle Book, because of its moral tone, came to be used as a motivational book by the Cub Scouts, a junior element of the Scouting movement.
This story has also been published as a short book in its own right: Night-Song in the Jungle
* Bill Willingham's Eisner Award-winning comic book series Fables, published by Vertigo Comics, features the Jungle Book's Mowgli, Bagheera and Shere Khan ; though their characterisation remains true to Kipling's stories, Willingham and artist Mark Buckingham also make oblique references to the 1967 Disney animation in dialogue and artwork.
* The Jungle Book Collection: a website demonstrating the variety of merchandise related to the book and film versions of The Jungle Book.
The best-known of these accounts is provided by the opening paragraph of his 1918 book Jungle Peace:
Beebe described his experiences at Rancho Grande in his 1949 book High Jungle, which was the last of Beebe's major books.
* The Third Jungle Book, 1992 book by Pamela Jekel, consisting of new Mowgli stories, in an imitation of Kipling's style.
* The Jungle Book Collection: a website demonstrating the variety of merchandise related to the book and film versions of The Jungle Books
Also recommended is Sabine Kuegler's ( 1980 ) book Child of the Jungle: The True Story of a Girl Caught Between Two Worlds about a " German " girl who grew up in the Fayu tribe in West Papua with her missionary parents and what happened to her when she " returned " to Europe at age 17.
Ramar inspired a book called Jungle to Stage.
Upton Sinclair gave the title The Jungle ( 1906 ) to his famous book about the life of workers at the Chicago Stockyards portraying the workers as being mercilessly exploited with no legal or other lawful recourse.
The term " The Law of the Jungle " is also used in a similar context, drawn from Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book ( 1894 )-though in the society of jungle animals portrayed in that book and obviously meant as a metaphor for human society, that phrase referred to an intricate code of laws which Kipling describes in detail, and not at all to a lawless chaos.

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