1,724,828 research outputs found

    Everyday ecologies: the art of father-and-son Robert Williams and Jack Aylward-Williams

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    An interview with Robert Williams with David Michael Perez discussing the collaborative art projects with Williams' son, Jack Aylward-Williams

    Kaplan, David Michael : fiction reading; May 9th, 1994

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    Contents: All tracks   Fiction reading [complete] Track 01     Summer, 1959: Prologue to the Novel, "Gone from Me" Track 02     In the Night, from Skating in the DarkDescription on cassette : David Michael Kaplan - Fiction Reading Intro: Josip Novakovich; May 9, 1994Digital Projects SAN: Folder and disc location for wav file: 20121005/Disc 1. Folder and disc location for mp3 file: 20121005/Disc 6/mp3

    Mugshot of David Michael Jones

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    Mugshot of David Michael Jones taken by the McLennan County Sheriff's Departmen

    David Michael Karren and Patricia Marshall

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    Winning top ribbons at the Uintah County Fair for their music selections are David Michael Karren and Patricia Marshall

    [Obituary for David Michael Daigle]

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    Obituary for David Michael Daigle dated to 2010. A black and white close-up photograph of Mr. Daigle wearing glasses and a white button-up shirt appears at the top of the document. The obituary discusses his membership with the Turtle Creek Chorale, his career with American Airlines, and his marriage to Doug Frankel

    The last war we liked: American political culture and small war aversions

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    This research explores the sources that shape content, continuity, and change in U.S. foreign policy from the period of 1968 through 2006 with a focus on American Army doctrine, and specifically the tension between counterinsurgency and more traditional forms of warfare. Unlike previous assessments, I argue that although international, organizational, and bureaucratic contexts of action are important to understanding the origins of doctrine, they are insufficient without reference to policymakers’ understandings of dominant views of the American way of war in the public mind. And where analysts have examined continuity under a bipolar international system as well as organizational culture, I trace the origin of policymakers’ ideas and their assessments of domestic political and cultural contexts of action against the backdrop of external threats to the state and dominant groups within the Army. Consequently, this study argues that the American experience in war does not readily fit the maxim that armies tend to fight the next war as they did the last, rather the American historical context suggests we fight the next war as the last war we liked. Last, this study equally concerns itself with the responsibility of policymakers to articulate to the American public the nature of the international environment and the required means to achieve policy ends.Ph. D.Includes bibliographical referencesby David Michael Duda

    David Michael Walker

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    https://egrove.olemiss.edu/hall-of-fame/1146/thumbnail.jp

    Smart Contracts und ihre rechtliche Bedeutung

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    von David Michael JöstlDiplomarbeit Universität Innsbruck 202
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