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Presents a collection of experiments exploring the properties of heat.
The author's aim in writing this book has been to present in an elementary way the leading facts concerning the organization and activities of national, state, and local government in the United States. He has given rather greater emphasis than is customarily done in textbooks of this character to what may be called the dynamics of government, that is, its actual workings, as contradistinguished from organization. Likewise, the author has highlighted the activities and methods of political parties, party conventions, primaries, the conduct of political campaigns, the regulation of campaign methods, and the like. The increasing importance of citizenship has led the author to devote a chapter to that subject.
A history of the American international lawyers who strove to establish a world without war through their scholarship and activities.
International law and the world war by James Wilford Garner. This book is a reproduction of the original book published in 1920 and may have some imperfections such as marks or hand-written notes.
From the late nineteenth century until World War I, a group of Columbia University students gathered under the mentorship of the renowned historian William Archibald Dunning (1857--1922). Known as the Dunning School, these students wrote the first generation of state studies on the Reconstruction -- volumes that generally sympathized with white southerners, interpreted radical Reconstruction as a mean-spirited usurpation of federal power, and cast the Republican Party as a coalition of carpetbaggers, freedmen, scalawags, and former Unionists. Edited by the award-winning historian John David Smith and J. Vincent Lowery, The Dunning School focuses on this controversial group of historians and ...