501 resultados para American Baptist Publication Society
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Includes bibliographical references.
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"One hundred and seventy-five copies printed for the Walpole society on Aurelian all rag paper at the Wayside press, Topsfield, Massachusetts."
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Includes bibliographical references and index.
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Accompanied by "First supplement." (iv, 112 p. 28 cm.) Published: Philadelphia [c1963]--ASTM special publication no. 333A.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Papers of the school were ordinarily published in the American Journal of Archaeology, 2d. ser.; supplementary volumes wre authorized when material for publication either exceeded the space available in the journal, or when it was of such a nature as to make a different mode of publication advisable. (cf. v. 1, Prefatory note) The present volumes form the only collection of papers issued separately by the school in Rome. (Lists of the papers published in other journals, 1898-1907, may be found in the Supplementary papers, v. 1-2, Prefatory note) From 1909-12, the reports, etc., of the school were published in the Bulletin of the Archaeological Institute of America. On January 1, 1913, the American School of Classical Studies in Rome became a part of the American Academy in Rome.
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"Counterinsurgency (COIN) requires an integrated military, political, and economic program best developed by teams that field both civilians and soldiers. These units should operate with some independence but under a coherent command. In Vietnam, after several false starts, the United States developed an effective unified organization, Civil Operations and Revolutionary Development Support (CORDS), to guide the counterinsurgency. CORDS had three components absent from our efforts in Afghanistan today: sufficient personnel (particularly civilian), numerous teams, and a single chain of command that united the separate COIN programs of the disparate American departments at the district, provincial, regional, and national levels. This paper focuses on the third issue and describes the benefits that unity of command at every level would bring to the American war in Afghanistan. The work begins with a brief introduction to counterinsurgency theory, using a population-centric model, and examines how this warfare challenges the United States. It traces the evolution of the Provincial Reconstruction Teams (PRTs) and the country team, describing problems at both levels. Similar efforts in Vietnam are compared, where persistent executive attention finally integrated the government's counterinsurgency campaign under the unified command of the CORDS program. The next section attributes the American tendency towards a segregated response to cultural differences between the primary departments, executive neglect, and societal concepts of war. The paper argues that, in its approach to COIN, the United States has forsaken the military concept of unity of command in favor of 'unity of effort' expressed in multiagency literature. The final sections describe how unified authority would improve our efforts in Afghanistan and propose a model for the future."--P. iii.
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Accompanied by "Supplement" (no. 1-<2 >) published Madison, State Historical Society of Wisconsin, 1975-<196 > (Z6621.W772)
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Descriptive letterpress on versos of plates.
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Issued July 1953-1959 as the official publication of the American Horticultural Society.
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"Reprinted verbatim from the Tool engineers handbook, an official publication of the American Society of Tool Engineers."