Cabinet Hardware
Picture Frames Thank you browsing our Book store
We hope you have found a book or 2.
Please come back again
as our Book list continues to grow.
Woodworking
Tool Woodworking
Book Store





Tool Book Store > Tool books beginning with B

A Book of the Basques (Basque Series)

Rodney Gallop

ToolA Book of the Basques (Basque Series)
Published: 01 August, 1998
Our price:
List price:

As of: July 24th, 2008 09:15:17 AM

Author: Rodney Gallop

Search for products like

A Book of the Basques (Basque Series)


Search:
Keywords:
Amazon Logo

Two faces of evil (USATODAY.com)
USATODAY.com - At the height of his power in the 1990s, the Serb leader Radovan Karadzic was disdainful, bombastic and vain. That he was credentialed as a psychiatrist and poet mattered little. No one who met him then would be surprised to find that he orchestrated mass murder.


Our view on the economy: Helping Fannie, Freddie also aids 'the little guy' (USATODAY.com)
USATODAY.com - A question comes up these days as a common refrain: Why is the government so eager to bail out big institutions but not the proverbial little guy?


Opposing view: No blank check (USATODAY.com)
USATODAY.com - Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson's latest bailout proposal for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac is not only misguided, it is downright threatening to the American taxpayer and the free market.


Serbia's catalyst for stability (The Christian Science Monitor)
The Christian Science Monitor - With the arrest at long last of Radovan Karadzic on charges of genocide, Serbia has finally chosen 21st-century Europe over 19th-century chauvinism. We can all cheer, Serbs most of all, and thank the magnetic attraction of the European Union for this long overdue shift.


The (democratic) ties that bind (The Christian Science Monitor)
The Christian Science Monitor - Two countries. Two starkly different events. But one thread ties together this week's arrest in Serbia of war-crimes suspect Radovan Karadzic and, in desperate Zimbabwe, a welcome agreement to start political power-sharing talks. That connection is the fiber of democratic freedoms.


Why an Older Autism Mom Wishes Life Was as Simple as Mike Savage (HuffingtonPost.com)
HuffingtonPost.com - I swore I wouldn't waste a lot of time dealing with Michael Savage, the radio talk show scold, who recently made the ridiculous claim that the autism epidemic is caused by bad parenting. But perhaps there is one more thing that needs to be said: Mr. Savage, if only you were right. If only it was true that the kids are mere brats and all we need is a visit from The Nanny.


Fox News Attacked by Rapper, Blackroots & Colbert (The Nation)
The Nation - The Nation -- It might be Fox News' worst nightmare: liberal bloggers and black hip hop.


Obama Sets the Right Middle East Peace Timeline (The Nation)
The Nation - The Nation -- When I interviewed former President Carter about how to pursue and achieve peace in the Middle East, he made two essential points.


Obama Under the Microscope in Israel (RealClearPolitics.com)
RealClearPolitics.com - Tomorrow, Barack Obama will step off his plane into Israel and under a microscope. While he is there, American voters - Jews, Evangelical Christians and others - who factor a presidential candidate's policies toward Israel into their electoral choice, will watch Obama's every step and listen to his every word very, very closely.


Hard to Be Humble (RealClearPolitics.com)
RealClearPolitics.com - For a while now, one of the strongest narratives working against Barack Obama has been the notion that he is an elitist and too full of himself.


BUT WILL THEY RESPECT HIM IN THE MORNING? (Ann Coulter)
Ann Coulter - Back before the Republican Party was saddled with John McCain as its nominee, The New York Times called him "the only Republican who promises to end the George Bush style of governing from and on behalf of a small, angry fringe." The paper praised him for "working across the aisle to develop sound bipartisan legislation" and predicted that he would appeal to "a broader range of Americans than the rest of the Republican field."


The Future of Iraq (The Weekly Standard)
The Weekly Standard - BaghdadI?have made four trips to Iraq since May 2007.


Editorial Roundup (AP)
AP - Excerpts from recent editorials in newspapers in the United States and abroad:


OBAMA FAKING IT (Maggie Gallagher)
Maggie Gallagher - Obama has a problem: What do you do when you're a lightly accomplished one-term senator, a former state legislator from Illinois, a Harvard law graduate who has no substantive record of accomplishments, and you are running against a war hero whom polls show that Americans overwhelmingly view as far more fit to be commander in chief?


HOSANNA FOR POLAND'S UNSUNG HERO (Georgie Anne Geyer)
Georgie Anne Geyer - WASHINGTON -- When Bronislaw Geremek was tragically killed in a car crash in Poland in mid-July, most Americans did not recognize his name. Geremek, who? Bronislaw, what? Oh yes, we do know where Poland is -- more or less.


Where the Ducks Are (Pat Buchanan)
Pat Buchanan - "You go hunting where the ducks are," said Barry Goldwater.


'Stunningly Shameful' (The Weekly Standard)
The Weekly Standard - On January 23, 2008, during her keynote speech at the glitzy World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Condoleezza Rice made a surprisingly friendly gesture to the Iranian regime. She said, in this final year of the Bush administration, Iran and the United States could move towards a "new, more normal relationship."


Over to You, Speaker Pelosi (The Weekly Standard)
The Weekly Standard - Gas is still at $4 a gallon, but the good news is there's an emerging consensus on a measure that would help:


REDUNDANCY GOOD, REDUNDANCY BAD (James Kilpatrick)
James Kilpatrick - Every critic of the writing art, most memorably Professor William Strunk of Cornell, has inveighed against redundancy. E.B. White quoted him in "The Elements of Style." Let us listen up.


HUMPHREY GAVE GREATEST CONVENTION SPEECH YOU'VE NEVER HEARD (David Shribman)
David Shribman - MINNEAPOLIS -- If you have an eye for these things, you might have noticed that Sen. Barack Obama is going to deliver his acceptance speech in a football stadium on Aug. 28. The last man to deliver an acceptance speech in a stadium was John F. Kennedy. The last important speech to be delivered on an Aug. 28 was given by the Rev. Martin Luther King 45 years ago.