The company's president in the 1940s, Charles E. Wilson (“Electric Charlie”), a blustering for— mer boxer whose craggy face bore the traces of punches thrown long before, whipped up the crowd with pugilistic challenges to competitors ...
Willis, “Anatomy,” 103. Willis, “Two Discourses concerning the Souls of Brutes,” in Practice of Physick, 5,6. On the sensitive soul, see Rina Knoeff, “Reins of the Soul: The Centrality of the Intercostal Nerves to the Neurology of ...
From self-interest and contrariness through synchronic and diachronic layers of aggregation with ever-expanding complexity to an energized, prosperous self-organized polity: Knight's poem was a didactic primer in the diverse range of ...
A narrative account of the efforts of influential businessmen Lemuel Ricketts Boulware and Jasper Crane to roll back the New Deal outlines their dramatic campaign to promote an "ideological revolution" that ultimately supported conservative ...
Stephen Isaacs, “Coors Beer—and Politics—Move East,” Washington Post, May 4, 1975, 1; Lee Edwards, The Power of Ideas: The Heritage Foundation at 25 Years (Ottawa, Ill.: Jameson, 1997), 9. 7. Dan Baum, Citizen Coors: An American Dynasty ...
Sweeping in scope and rich in detail, these stories capture the interconnectivity of all people struggling to support themselves and their families.
Invisible Hands: Poems
In Invisible Hands, Jonathan Sheehan and Dror Wahrman trace the many appearances of the language of self-organization in the eighteenth-century West.
Sweeping in scope and rich in detail, these stories capture the interconnectivity of all people struggling to support themselves and their families.