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Academic Journals
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From:Air & Space Power History (Vol. 69, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThis Issue's Quiz: In the summer of 1941, the U.S. appeared to be on the brink of being thrust into a world war. Germany had conquered the majority of the Europe. Japan continued to expand throughout the Pacific. On July...
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From:Parameters (Vol. 52, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedDavid P. Colley's 2021 book, The Folly of Generals: How Eisenhower's Broad Front Strategy Lengthened World War II, examines Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force (SHAEF) military actions and missed...
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From:International Journal of Cuban Studies (Vol. 14, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThis article analyses the history of the Cuban economy over a very long period. Its first part (last edition) was devoted to the period extending from 1492, when the island was "discovered", to 1898, when the War of...
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From:The Journal of Values-Based Leadership (Vol. 15, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedIsaac Newton once wrote, "If I have seen farther, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants." I recently enjoyed conducting an interview with the Republican freshman U.S. Representative from Michigan's 3rd...
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From:Naval War College Review (Vol. 75, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedTower of Skulls: A History of the Asia-Pacific War, July 1937-May 1942, by Richard B. Frank. New York: W. W. Norton, 2020. 751 pages. $40. Historian and Vietnam veteran Richard Frank (Downfall, Guadalcanal) is on a...
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From:China Media Research (Vol. V. 18, Issue NO. 3) Peer-ReviewedThe premise of this essay is that Ukraine is a pawn caught between the US/NATO and Russia in the US's attempt to uphold a monopolar global system. Its two rivals in this sought-for hegemony are Russia and China. NATO'S...
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From:Michigan Law Review (Vol. 120, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedFor me, the annual Book Review issue is a time for reflection. It provides an opportunity to take stock of scholarly trends, reassess conventional wisdom, and gather new insights to apply to the practice of law. The...
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From:Issues in Science and Technology (Vol. 38, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedA half-century since his death, Vannevar Bush is best known for his formative role in the rise of computing and for conceiving of and helping birth, the National Science Foundation, the leading supporter in the United...
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From:TLS. Times Literary Supplement (Issue 6180)WHY THE NEW DEAL MATTERS ERIC RAUCHWAY 219pp. Yale University Press. 20 [pounds sterling] (US $26). The stakes could not have been higher for Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal. Livelihoods, indeed lives, depended on...
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From:CHOICE: Current Reviews for Academic Libraries (Vol. 59, Issue 1)Goldfield, Michael. The southern key: class, race, and radicalism in the 1930s and 1940s. Oxford, 2020. 432p bibl index ISBN 9780190079321 cloth, $49.95; ISBN 9780190079345 ebook, contact publisher for price [cc]...
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From:TLS. Times Literary Supplement (Issue 6222)THE LORDS OF EASY MONEY How the Federal Reserve broke the economy CHRISTOPHER LEONARD 384pp. Simon and Schuster. 20 [pounds sterling] (US $30). THE MONEY ILLUSION Market monetarism, the Great Recession, and the...
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From:Twentieth Century Literature (Vol. 68, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedNo longer read mainly as a reticent poet of private insights, Elizabeth Bishop is now often understood as a politically engaged writer. Stimulated by Adrienne Rich's essay "The Eye of the Outsider" (1983), and in keeping...
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From:Air & Space Power History (Vol. 69, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedFollowing Japan's bombing of Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1942, the Army Air Forces (AAF) strategic goals intersected with Great Falls, Montana's economic needs. As the war in Europe intensified from 1938-1941, President...
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From:Journal of Folklore Research (Vol. 59, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedA volume of songs with tunes, The Pocket Companion for the Guittar (n.d.), issued in London by the Scottish composer and music publisher James Oswald, contains nine songs from the poems of Ossian that were purportedly...
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From:Michigan Law Review (Vol. 120, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedThe political convulsions of the past decade have fueled acute interest in constitutional norms or "conventions." Despite intense scholarly attention, existing accounts are incomplete and do not answer at least one or...
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From:Harvard Law Review (Vol. 135, Issue 8)This Review examines the relationship between progressivism and constitutionalism. In doing so, it considers three different ways of thinking about a constitution's role in a political system. First is constitutionalism...
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From:Mathematical Problems in Engineering (Vol. 2022) Peer-ReviewedTraditionally, economic data of power supply is often analyzed through the count regression model due to the type of empirical data in the decision-making process. However, in reality, it is difficult to use count data...
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From:Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society (Vol. 58, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedTo better understand Peirce's practical conservatism, this paper examines Peirce's views on a liberal arts education and the political potential of the university. Peirce's views on education raise a puzzle for his...
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From:Educational Foundations (Vol. 35, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedWhile there are many difficulties faced by world language educators, both teachers and students of certain languages--languages commonly identified with countries and cultures deemed to be hostile to the United...
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From:Journal of Parasitology Research (Vol. 2022) Peer-ReviewedIntestinal parasitic infections are a global concern owing to elevated rates of morbidity and mortality in many parts of the world. Increased rates of intestinal parasitic infections are observed in developing and...