Name Must
August 12, 2009 by admin

God Must Be Busy
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5 Truly Wonderful Michael Jackson Domain Names Must See $9,999,999.00 |
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MUST SEE !!! AWESOME DOMAIN NAMES !!! FOR SALE !!! $99,000.00 |
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22 Domain Name Lot - .COM TLD Must Go! $199.99 |
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Secret List of 333 Domain Names! A Must See! $50.00 |
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BRAND-NAME SOFTWARE LOT - FIFTY 50 NEW CDS - MUST READ $24.99 |
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Name Brand Beautiful Jackets Blazers Coat MUST SEE! $24.89 |
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Name Brand Beautiful Jackets Blazers Coat MUST SEE! $24.89 |
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Name Brand Beautiful Jackets Blazers Coat MUST SEE! $24.89 |
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THE WORST BABY NAME BOOK EVER - A MUST READ!! NEW! $2.99 |
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~SIZES 3-5~BRAND NAMES ARE A MUST SEE~ $0.99 |
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They Must Be Stopped $27.48 They Must Be Stopped is New York Times bestselling author Brigitte Gabriel’s warning to the world: We can no longer ignore the growth of radical Islam--we must act soon, and powerfully. Gabriel challenges our western and politically-correct notions about Islam, demonstrating why radical Islam is so deadly and how we can halt its progress. Brigitte Gabriel speaks her mind:*Fundamentalist Islam is a religion rooted in 7th century teachings that are fundamentally opposed to democracy and equality.*Radical Islamists are utterly contemptuous of all “infidels” (non-Muslims) and regard them as enemies worthy of death.*Madrassas in America are increasing in number, and they are just one part of a growing radical Islamic army on US soil.*Radical Islam exploits the US legal system and America’s protection of religion to spread its hatred for western values.*America must organize a unified voice that says “enough” to political correctness, and demands that government officials and elected representatives do whatever is necessary to protect us.Brigitte Gabriel has fearlessly faced down critics, death threats, and political correctness, and is one of the most sought after terrorism experts in the world. They Must Be Stopped is her clarion call to action. Gabriel thoroughly addresses the historical and religious basis of radical Islam, its frightening encroachment into societies around the world, and its abuses of democracy in the name of religion. |
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The Name of the Tree $15.48 When a drought spreads through the land of the short grass, the animals set out across the great plain to find food. Their only hope for survival is a tree with a variety of colorful fruit. The problem is its branches are too high. To reach them, the wise old turtle says, one must know the name of the tree, something only King Lion is privy to. In this Bantu folktale retold by Celia Barker Lottridge, the hero is not the most cunning or the strongest but the one that tries the hardest. Ian Wallace’s striking illustrations of desert landscape and luscious fruit help bring this tale to life. |
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The Making of a Name $25.48 How do brand names differ from other names, and what goes into making a good name great and a bad name ghastly? Knowing this can spell the difference between bankruptcy and marketplace triumph. In this indispensable guide, the authors share the secrets of successful brand names--how they've indelibly stamped cultures around the world; who makes them; why they're made; and how they're compiled, bought, sold, and protected. The book outlines what kind of names exist--the initialized, descriptive, allusive, and coined. How namers surf on brainwaves. The do's, don'ts, and nevers of naming, how the structure of names is built from the ground up and how their sounds are engineered. Why names symbolize benefits. Where in the world brands may be found, and what will become of them. Fast-paced, illustration-packed, gazing at the past and probing into the future, this is the definitive book on naming. The Making of A Name is the one book anyone interested in "owned words" must have. |
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In the Name of Help $3.98 Cathryn Silberg knew that her marriage was doomed. But as she seeks help, she finds herself betrayed by the very people who claim to have her best interests at heart. Trapped by the mental health system and the courts, she finds she is no longer struggling to save a marriage, -- now she must save her own life! IN THE NAME OF HELP is a gripping story, chilling in its insight into the sinister motivations that can drive our social institutions. Before you, or anyone you know seek professional help, you must read this book! IN THE NAME OF HELP is the startling story of a woman caught in the mindless, uncaring snarl of America's mental health and judicial systems, and how, with real help from two caring friends, she fights her way back to reclaim her dignity and self-respect, from an institutional insanity that cruelly only promised to do something for her. After you read this book, you'll pray that this never happens to you or anyone you love. IN THE NAME OF HELP is about a once beautiful and intelligent woman, whose marriage evolves into a kind of fatal attraction, then she suffers years of abusive and ultimately destructive psychiatric treatment, finally becoming totally dependent on those around her for her safety and survival. This, in spite of enormous wealth that is due her. Through a series of medical and judicial actions, which are revelatory of some startling sore spots in our current society, she finds herself at the mercy of uncaring strangers, despite efforts of her friends to remove her and prevent her from further damaging treatments, and manipulation for monetary gain. This is a story of intrigue, a battle between the forces of good and evil, and a strong tale of love. It is shocking and powerful. Not since Ken Kesey's, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, in 1962, has a novel dealt such a formidable blow to the atrocities that exist in what we call our mental health system. Not in the past three decades has a story dealt more straightforwardly with the criminal practices of administering electric shock treatments, which cause severe, irreversible brain damage, and treatment with psychotropic substances, which though they are called medications, alter brain chemistry, function and structure and can have devastating effects on the central nervous system. These things are happening every day, especially to our children and our elderly; the practitioners and advocates of these actions are reaping enormous financial profits. IN THE NAME OF HELP is one story of how these things can happen in our society, and what two decent people decided to do about these crimes. |
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In the Name of Love $19.48 IN THE NAME OF LOVE is a luninescent love story about two people who discover a deep and compelling love, but first must endure heartbreak and the terror of facing a madman. It is about losing hope and trust, finding it again only to have it crumble like ashes in their hands. Learning that her son was not fathered by some unknown number in a sperm bank, but by her deceased husband's best friend, Jessica Riley is shocked to the depths of her being. She doesn't think that she can ever trust again, but when a psychopathic killer kidnaps her son, she has no one to turn to except his real father. Cole Flanagan is undercover FBI who has struggled for years to keep his love for his best friend's widow under control. There is no doubt that if she discovers her son's real paternity and learns that Cole is not who she thinks she is, she will turn him out of her life. The story will touch the corners of your heart as Cole and Jessica find their way through a labyrinth of fear, distrust and tragedy before they end up in each others arms. |
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You Must Be Born Again $11.98 Of all the commands in Scripture, one of the most important and most demanding is that "You must be born again." We can ignore this command, but only at our own eternal peril. Jesus Christ said that you cannot "see" or "enter" the Kingdom of God unless this New Birth has occurred. John 1:12-13 define the conditions for the New Birth; first, to receive Jesus Christ as Savior and Lord; second, to believe in His name. As a result of those two interrelated actions, we have the power, the liberty, to become children of God, because we are born of God. Only the "born again" possess eternal life. Those who experience the new birth also have new life and belong to God. |
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Human Cloning: Must We Sacrifice Medical Research in the Name of a Total Ban? $21.63 No Synopsis Available |
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A Name in the Fire $16.48 Romance blossoms between a village corporal, Amman, and a beautiful widow, Sunita, when she and her children go to the police station to report suspicions of their neighbor?s murder. Even though Sunita is reluctant to fall in love, after the injustices of her former husband, Amman gradually captures her heart. Many women have tried to seduce Amman, but he has been waiting for the right lady. His heart is for Sunita. While he is investigating the gruesome murder, he is guilty that his thoughts are on love and not wholly on the murder. To resolve the murder, he must arrest the village obeahman who deals with the devil to accomplish mysterious murder by calling people?s names over fires. |
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Name Games $13.98 In Dumont, Wisconsin, the upcoming exhibition of the Midwest Minatures Society is considered big news. But even bigger news is Carroll Cantrell, an major figure in the world in miniatures who came to Dumont to judge the exhibition but was instead found murdered in his room on the eve of the show. With the closeted local sheriff Doug Pierce widely believed to have been responsible, and conservative elements in town trying to exploit the murder for their own ends, Mark Manning, owner and publisher of the Dumont Register, with the help of his lover, staff, and friends, starts his own investigation. But time is running out and, if Mark is to learn the truth before it is too late, he must uncover and expose some of the close-knit town's most deeply held secrets. |
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Code Name $3.48 Ex-cop Gina Ryan traded in her Smith & Wesson to follow a dream. Now she's creating decadent desserts aboard a luxury cruise ship in the Caribbean. But a gorgeous passenger is about to send her perfect world up in smoke.— Trace O'Halloran is a hard-edged navy SEAL, under strict orders to take some high seas R & R. There's a shipload of women in bikinis eager to help him unwind, so why can't he take his mind off the stubborn pastry chef with an attitude the size of Montana? When a dangerous assassin from Trace's past appears, Gina and Trace must join forces to save the ship's guests. The clock's ticking, and they'll need every weapon at hand— from body armor to chocolate ganache! |
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Name-Dropping $3.98 John Kenneth Galbraith, the noted economist, joined Franklin Delano Roosevelt and the New Deal in 1934 and served that administration during World War II in the crucial role of deputy head of the Office of Price Administration in charge of price control. His service to FDR and his relationship with Eleanor Roosevelt began a long involvement with the leaders who would define much of the course of the twentieth century: Truman, Stevenson, John F. and Jacqueline Kennedy, Nehru, Lyndon Johnson, and others at home and abroad. Drawing on a lifetime of access to many of the greatest public figures, Galbraith creates a rich and uniquely personal history of the century -- a history he helped to shape. We are invited to hear FDR on the Great Depression and World War II; Albert Speer, the Third Reich's architect and armaments minister, on the boorishness and incompetence of the Nazi leadership; John F. Kennedy, from youth to the presidency; Jacqueline Kennedy's shrewd judgments of the White House inner circle. In this clear-eyed, unsparing, and amusing look back at the world and the people he has known, Galbraith tells what these leaders did -- how they looked to him then and how they look to him now -- with unforgettable reminiscences and a rich infusion of engaging anecdotes. Name-Dropping charts the political landscape of the past sixty-five years with the dazzling insight, humor, and literary skill that mark Galbraith as one of the most distinguished writers of our time. Just some of the portraits . . . Eisenhower's brother remembered a meeting in the Oval Office at which some difficult and potentially very unpopular decision was reached. Reflecting on the expected adverse reaction, Ike had said, "It's all right. When I've explained it to the press, no one will have any clear idea what we intend to do." Kennedy's preference for plain talk did not spare his friends. Before I left for New Delhi in April 1961, we had a farewell breakfast at the White House. That morning the New York Times had a piece on the new ambassador to India; Kennedy asked how I liked it. It had been generally favorable, and I said it was all right, but I didn't see why they had to call me arrogant. "I don't know why not," said Kennedy. "Everybody else does." Nehru said that one day at Gandhi's ashram in Ahmedabad a friend and supporter sought to ease a conflict with the British Viceroy by saying, "Mahatma, you must know that Lord Irwin never makes a decision without praying over it first." Gandhi reflected on this for some minutes. Then he said, "And why do you suppose God so consistently gives him the wrong advice?" Johnson once said to me, "Did it ever occur to you, Ken, that making a speech on economics is a lot like pissin' down your leg? It seems hot to you, but it never does to anyone else." Not since have I given a speech on economics without having that metaphor in mind. |
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A Wounded Thing Must Hide $3.48 A vibrant, deeply personal portrait of the wife of General Custer.Brilliant, inventive, but not in any conventional sense a biography, A Wounded Thing Must Hide is Jeremy Poolman's first foray into nonfiction, taking as its subject the fascinating wife of General Custer. He relates key scenes in Libbie's extraordinary life-her brushes with Empress Elizabeth of Austria, Tsar Alexander III, and Henry James, to name a few-each episode proving rich in relishably surreal detail. We see Libbie ferrying dung from Vienna to St. Petersburg (a present from empress to tsar, to ward off cholera and typhus); taking delivery of the present of a bear from Alex himself; stumbling into a soldier who might perhaps be the great-great-grandfather of Bob Dylan. Throughout it all, we catch glimpses of the glorious, wayward career of the General himself, culminating in the famous slaughter at Little Big Horn.Far from an aridly factual outline of who did what where, Poolman offers us a vividly, tangibly real re-creation of historical events. He gets to places other biographies can't reach, bleeding, at times, into autobiography. Haunted by the death of his own wife, the narrator follows Libbie's itinerary in search of something unnamed in himself. Through exploring a widow's determination to protect her husband's damaged reputation, he hopes to find a way to deal with his personal loss. By exploring Libbie's and Custer's enduring love and devotion, he finds a form for his own. |
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Xuxub Must Die $24.98 Today, foreigners travel to the Yucatan for ruins, temples, and pyramids, white sand beaches and clear blue water. One hundred years ago, they went for cheap labor, an abundance of land, and the opportunity to make a fortune exporting cattle, henequen fiber, sugarcane, or rum. Sometimes they found death. In 1875 an American plantation manager named Robert Stephens and a number of his workers were murdered by a band of Maya rebels. To this day, no one knows why. Was it the result of feuding between aristocratic families for greater power and wealth? Was it the foreseeable consequence of years of oppression and abuse of Maya plantation workers? Was a rebel leader seeking money and fame—or perhaps retribution for the loss of the woman he loved? For whites, the events that took place at Xuxub, Stephens’s plantation, are virtually unknown, even though they engendered a diplomatic and legal dispute that vexed Mexican-U.S. relations for over six decades. The construction of "official" histories allowed the very name of Xuxub to die, much as the plantation itself was subsumed by the jungle. For the Maya, however, what happened at Xuxub is more than a story they pass down through generations—it is a defining moment in how they see themselves. Sullivan masterfully weaves the intricately tangled threads of this story into a fascinating account of human accomplishments and failings, in which good and evil are never quite what they seem at first, and truth proves to be elusive. Xuxub Must Die seeks not only to fathom a mystery, but also to explore the nature of guilt, blame, and understanding. |
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It Must Be Magic [Bonus Tracks] $9.98 The last of Teena Marie's four albums for Motown, It Must Be Magic found the songstress continuing to do all of her own writing, producing, and arranging, with magnificent results. Irons in the Fire proved that she didn't need the input of a big-name producer in order to deliver first-class albums, and Marie provided additional evidence of that fact on an album that offered such gems as the playful "Square Biz" (one of her biggest hits, and an early example of an R&B artist incorporating rap), the thought-provoking "Revolution" (inspired by the assassination of John Lennon and filled with references to the Beatles), and the gritty title song. Marie has periodically shown a strong love of jazz, which is exactly what happens on the ballad "Yes Indeed" and the sexy "Portuguese Love." It Must Be Magic was Marie's highest-charting album in the pop market, and thanks to a largely black following, the gold-seller just missed topping the R&B charts. The 2002 reissue employs the 12" single version of "Square Biz" (its fade-out is 17 seconds longer), adds the instrumental version that originally appeared on the B-side of that single, and concludes with a 14-minute excerpt from Marie's July 30, 1981, concert in Long Beach, CA, on a tour promoting the album, during which she performed a brief rendition of Donny Hathaway's "Someday We'll All Be Free" and an extended rendition of her own "Déjà Vu (I've Been Here Before)." Listeners may well be reminded of another R&B-influenced Caucasian female, Laura Nyro. A. Scott Galloway's liner notes, including comments from Marie, add historical perspective. ~ Alex Henderson & William Ruhlmann, All Music GuidePerformers: Gerald Albright - Flute (Tenor), Saxophone; Clifford J. Ervin - Piccolo Trumpet; Roy Poper - Piccolo Trumpet; Tony Brockert - Voices; Pattie Brooks - Vocals (Background); Arnell Carmichael - Vocals (Background); Darren Carmichael - Vocals (Background); Phillip Ingram - Vocals (Background); Rick James - Vocals (Background), Voices; |
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In the Name of Progress $14.48 ?Christian?s writing presents a compelling case for conservative values.??Mary Lou Weggenmann, delegate, California Republican Party Columnist Christian Hartsock is not your typical conservative. He is ready to stand up for the church and against the liberal spin machine, whose beliefs attract many to the church but leave many more wanting more than tolerance, diversity, and community. Hartsock believes Christians must stop being so comfortable and start seeking the truth. He teaches that we should prepare our children for the future by providing them with traditional wisdom, intellectual empowerment, and protection against evil. Hartsock delves into such controversial subjects as the definition of ?progressive Christians?, why he feels liberalism is the religion of feelings, and the stigma of fundamentalism. As an added bonus, he includes two columns and an interview from fellow author and conservative Hans Zeiger. No matter what your current spiritual or political beliefs, Hartsock provides the light to help you find your way through confusion and darkness to the truth and wisdom of God?s word. |
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Women Must Weep $22.98 women must weep- 1891 - JUST where West Eleventh street is so queerly deflected into a southward course by the cross-cut of Greenwich avenue and the abrupt birth of Seventh, you may find, among the plain brick dwellings, a sprinkling of smaller structures, two-storied, and even plainer still. Into one of these, death had of late entered, and his coming had been marked by many tears. Isaac Trask had just died and lay now in his own little plot at Greenwood, beside the wife who had gone years before. His three daughters felt the awful loneliness that followed his loss, walking about the rooms of theirlittle home and staring at one another now and then with wide, womed, tearless eyes. At intervals, they xvould meet and talk of him, after each - had pretended to busy herself with some task else where. Eunice, the eldest of them, was young, and . Annette, the youngest, was a mere slip of agirl. They looked so strange to one anotherin their black robes, and the house was so still, with that queer stillness C which seems always listening for a step At almost any time of day, he was wont to come in from the 7 store, which stood just a stone-throw off, in Greenwich avenue, and which flared behind its big polished window two monstrous bottles of red and of blue liquid, in the old-fashioned style that Broadway and Fifth avenue apothecaries have long since chosen to desert. Hundreds called him Doctor Trask, though he had no right to the title, and not seldom would declare that he had none but it had often been said of him that he deserved this form of address far more than many practitioners-and no doubt with excellent truth. It had grown clear, too, that he was excessively beloved in the neighborhood, and that his medical help among the poor had been the chief cause of this devotion. But there had been other causes, l as the keen, popular cry of dismay and grief at his death surely showed. Girls Where are you, girls his great blithe voice would call, at any hour when he chanced to dr6p in at the house and always one of the three would answer Here, pa, and come to him, for a word, perhaps a stroke of the hair, perhaps a kind of drolly perfunctory kiss, behind which lay a world of paternal love. No wonder that these three orphaned maidens now missed him as they did. His going had been so horribly sudden. In the twinkling of an eye, he hadbeen torn from them, this robust man, with his dark beard but faintly silvered and his body such a seeming oak of strength. Only think, murmured Dora, the second sister, after the girls had drifted together again that after-. noon in the little back parlor, and had each sunk droopingly into the first seat that ogered, he took me sleighing a week ago this rery day And Ivenever seen him jollier-never He never knew the name of low spirits, declared Eunice, who said nearly everything with emphasis, and had arepute for intellect and force of character. She was not pretty at all her color was nearly always too high, and her feat... |
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I Must Confess $8.98 A stinging satire of tell-all showbiz memoirs starring a self-deluded gay icon who has managed to ride every pop culture trend of the last forty years.Marc LeJeune has had a remarkable career in the entertainment business. Despite the carping of critics, cruel twists of fate, and the treachery of former friends who were blind to his exceptional dramatic and musical talents, he has remained true to his unique artistic vision. From his early days as the face of Swinging London, to the late 1960s avant garde theater scene, through the sexually liberated cinema of the 1970s, to his current status as a much-loved household name and TV favorite, he tells all in this, his own astonishing story.Through this fabulous parody of the showbiz confession, Rupert Smith has created a witty and scathing satire of popular culture and entertainment over the last forty years. Marc LeJeune is a brilliant comic creation, inspired by Smith’s many years of interviewing celebrities for Time Out and writing about showbiz in The Guardian (U.K.). |
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HENDERSON,BUGS: HAVE BLUES MUST ROCK $10.98 Full performer name: Bugs Henderson & The Shuffle Kings. |
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No Name (Penguin Classics) $12.48 Condemned by Victorian critics as immoral, but regarded today as a novel of outstanding social insight, No Name shows William Wilkie Collins at the height of his literary powers. It is the story of two sisters, Magdalen and Norah, who discover after the deaths of their dearly beloved parents that their parents were not married at the time of their births. Disinherited and ousted from their estate, they must fend for themselves and either resign themselves to their fate or determine to recover their wealth by whatever means. |
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No Name (Oxford World's Classics) $12.98 Condemned by Victorian critics as immoral, but regarded today as a novel of outstanding social insight, No Name shows William Wilkie Collins at the height of his literary powers. It is the story of two sisters, Magdalen and Norah, who discover after the deaths of their dearly beloved parents that their parents were not married at the time of their births. Disinherited and ousted from their estate, they must fend for themselves and either resign themselves to their fate or determine to recover their wealth by whatever means. |
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A...My Name's Amelia (Unabridged) $14.59 Deafened at a young age, her natural-born means of expression taken from her, Amelia Anne Polley must learn to communicate all over again.... |
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The Music in Your Brother's Name $13.98 The Music in Your Brother's Name is the poignant insight into one mother's grief following the sudden death of her oldest child. Through poems and letters, the author addresses each of her five children and details how their three-year old brother's death impacted their lives. The author's candid and personal account takes the reader through the very raw emotions in the beginning of the grief process and through some very powerful spiritual visions she had which eased her pain. A must read for every parent who has ever lost a child. |
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NBC: A Soundtrack of Must See TV $17.98 One of the more impressive collections of TV music released in recent memory, NBC: A Soundtrack of Must See TV collects the themes from virtually all of the network's noteworthy shows, spanning five decades' worth of television. Unlike some TV music compilations, which seem to take no consideration in how their songs are ordered, this collection is almost absurdly organized. The themes are grouped into very specific show categories -- "The Best Themes from a Sitcom (Adult/Workplace)" or "The Best Themes from a Drama (Police/Detective)"; while this might be a little too rigid, it does ensure a consistent mood and good flow from track to track, which is important considering that the longest themes only clock in at just over a minute. Some of the tracks here, such as the theme to "Saved by the Bell" and "Access Hollywood (Theme 2002)," were probably included more for the shows' popularity instead of the themes' musical merit, but by and large the collection offers a very strong collection of TV themes, including some all-time classics. Many of these come from the "Best Themes from a Drama (Police/Detective)" category, which boasts the "Hill Street Blues," "Rockford Files," "Dragnet (Danger Ahead)," "Peter Gunn," "Night Rider," and "Miami Vice" themes alone. "The Best Themes From a Sitcom (Adult/Workplace)" also feature some of the collection's most memorable themes, including "Seinfeld," "Cheers (Where Everybody Knows Your Name)," "I Dream of Jeannie," and "Get Smart." As expected from almost any TV music collection, the work of television composer extraordinaire Mike Post is well-represented, with his themes for "L.A. Law," "Law & Order," and the aforementioned "Hill Street Blues" and "Rockford Files" themes making him the most prolific composer on the album. Quincy Jones' cutting-edge theme for "Ironside" and excellently funky "Sanford and Son (The Streetbeater)" are also standouts. As nice as it is to have these classic and more current TV themes collected, the album's real finds are the slightly less well-known songs, like José Feliciano's "Chico and the Man" theme, as well as the themes to "The NBC Sunday Mystery Movie" and "Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color." Both comprehensive and diverse, NBC: A Soundtrack of Must See TV plays less self-serving than the title implies, and ends up being a strong collection of pop culture memories. ~ Heather Phares, All Music Guide |
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Fish on a First-Name Basis $19.48 “A book about fish that’s as fun as it is informative, and as easy to read as it is hard to put down.”--Alton Brown, creator and host of the hit Food Network show Good Eats and author of I’m Just Here for the Food The ultimate guide to fish and shellfish, from deep to dock to dinner plateWhat’s in a fish’s name? History, mythology, and marketing: You’ll find each in the names of everyday seafood, although sometimes it’s what you don’t find that’s most interesting. Consider the Patagonian toothfish. Never heard of it? That’s because it’s Chilean Sea Bass on menus, even though it’s not a bass, nor is it found primarily off the coast of Chile. Perhaps you’d prefer a nice Pacific red snapper fillet? Too bad, all fish sold using that name are actually rockfish. You could always order a jumbo shrimp . . . or would that be a colossal prawn? And if the menu says “dolphin,” what are you eating, really?Of course, knowing the name of a fish is just what comes before eating it, and Fish on a First-Name Basis contains more than a hundred mouthwatering recipes, from classic fish-and-chips, lobster rolls, and crab fritters to Scalloped Ceviche and Cinnamon Crunch Tilapia.With Fish on a First-Name Basis, author Rob DeBorde has also filled in the gaps most seafood cookbooks leave open by crafting an indispensable scrapbook of seafood science, fish-market full disclosures, essential cooking tips, and even the truth behind a few underwater urban legends. With more than two hundred illustrations, photographs, and diagrams showing you exactly where to cut, crack, or shuck, Fish on a First-Name Basis is a treat for the eyes as well as the stomach. Informative, witty, and easy to read, Fish on a First-Name Basis is a must-read whether you’re a seafood fanatic or a fish-phobic first-timer.“Terror struck the undersea community when Rob DeBorde wrote this book. Thanks to this grand fishing expedition, sea creatures everywhere will be forced to come out of their shells and onto our tables. A delight to read and cook from, Fish will cause a great many fish to be eaten.”--Steven A. Shaw, author of Turning the Tables |
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In the Name of Jesus, Amen $13.98 "Open your heart to the words of this book and your ministry will change. When I and a team of pastors visited Cypress Creek Church, one of the fastest growing and most exciting cell churches in North America, we saw and experienced the powerful Prayer Ministry that pastor Cecilia developed at CCC. This book not only teaches why prayer must be our number one priority, but it also spells out how to set up a dynamic prayer ministry in the local church. Cecilia's warm, encouraging style makes this book easy to read. I highly recommend it."--Joel Comiskey, Author--From Twelve to Three: How to Apply G-12 Principles in Your Church, Reap the Harvest, An Appointment with the King: Ideas for Jump-Starting Your Devotional Life "Cecilia Belvin has captured keys and testimonies to inspire, train, and motivate intercessors. It's the first book I've read that effectively demonstrates how intercessors and pastors work together in a local church context. Pastors, as well as intercessors, will value the wisdom and insight Cecilia so skillfully imparts."--Alice Patterson, Founder of "Pray Texas"; President, Justice At The Gate In the Name of Jesus, Amen, introduces nine foundational principles necessary for Prayer Ministry to be and remain healthy within the local church. In The Name Of Jesus, Amen is an intimate account of God's creation of a Prayer Ministry in a vibrant and growing church in Wimberley, TX. The Cypress Creek Church story is one prototype of God's heart for prayer within the church. Surrounding each principle are stories from individuals whose lives have been changed by a Prayer Ministry that has been protected by proper spiritual order and covering and by a Prayer Ministry that has been grounded in confidentiality and integrity. In addition, fourteen intercessors share personal insights into the "cost and basics" of Prayer Ministry. In the Name of Jesus, Amen is written especially to Pastors, Prayer Leaders and Intercessors in God's Church. It uncovers subtleties that often sabotage Prayer Ministry and offers practical safeguards to protect and ensure health in Prayer Ministry. |
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My Home Must Be a Special Place $13.59 On his last album, 1998's Twilight the Taj Mahal, David Massengill included two spoken word tracks in which he recited actual letters, one written by an ancestor and another by himself as a child. They turn out to have been something of a precursor to My Home Must Be a Special Place not so much in form -- this is a musical album, although it begins and ends with spoken remarks by Massengill's father, also named David Massengill -- as in content, in the sense that every song has been inspired directly by events in the songwriter's childhood or the lives of his relatives. Fans and critics of singer/songwriters long have agonized about the degree to which their songs are autobiographical, but here there seems to be no question at all (or very little, at least). Beginning with "The Girl from Nebraska," an account of the courtship of Massengill's parents, and ending with "My Hometown," in which he laments interesting characters he's left out ("O well, next time"), this is a concept album that is unafraid to name names, very much including the songwriter's own. "My First Kiss," for example, goes into such detail about the physical encounter between two second graders ("O there was just a touch of tongue") that it would be shocking to discover that a young David Massengill did not really plant one on Jane Keany. And "Aunt Fanny and the Yankees" (about an 11-year-old who tells off the invading army during the Civil War) has the quality of a family anecdote that has been passed down and only set to verse and music by this descendant. Massengill as usual sings in his courtly baritone over his own string dulcimer playing and some added instrumentation mostly courtesy of co-producer Mark Dann; background vocals by Maggie Roche and Lisi Tribble sweeten the proceedings. The stories are light and gently humorous, with a back-porch quality, and things never get too dark, even when Massengill's father goes lost in the woods at one point ("The Great Holston Mountain Rescue of 1954") and, at another, gets his fingers rapped by a baton-carrying music teacher ("Culture Hurts"). Still, despite their heart-warming nature, the songs often have a wistful quality, if only because the people and events they depict are mostly long in the past. Nothing terrible happens, for example, in "Cousin Jackie and Mamaw's Hedges," but the very idyllic nature of the reminiscence leads to sadness, as Massengill concludes, "Far away, long ago/I miss you so." ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music GuidePerformers: Seth Farber - Accordion, Piano; David Massengill - Dulcimer, Guitar, Spoken Word, Vocals; Tim Carbone - Violin; |
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His Name is One $16.98 When we read an English translation of the Bible we define the words within it according to our modern vocabulary allowing our culture and language to influence how we read and interpret the Bible. The Bible was written by ancient Hebrews whose culture and language was very different from our own and must be read and interpreted through their eyes. When we define the names of God using our culture and language we lose the Hebraic meanings behind the original Hebrew names of God. Consequently the true nature and character of God is hidden behind the veil of time and culture. By understanding the various names of God through the vocabulary and language of the ancient Hebrews, the nature and character of God is revealed to us in a new light. The prophet Zechariah described the character of God with the words "sh'mo ehhad" translated as His Name is One (Zechariah 14:9). This phrase beautifully describes the character of God from a Hebraic perspective that is lost to us through translation and unfamiliarity with ancient Hebrew culture. |
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Code Name Pigeon $12.98 Michael Pigeon, having just completed an elite school for executive security in Aspen, Colorado, is brought in for his first mission briefing. After the briefing is concluded, he and three other specially chosen SPOT agents set out for the beautiful country of Venezuela. Michael discovers that, although the country is rich and beautiful, someone has placed a bounty on his head. Michael realizes that he and the other SPOT agent?s lives have been sold for blood money. After crashing out at sea in the diplomat?s private plane, Michael wonders if anyone survived the mêlée at the airstrip. Bill Yancy impresses upon the diplomat that the contract negotiations must continue for the emerald, ruby and sapphire gemstones that are to be used in the U.S. laser industry. However, the diplomat and his wife are concerned about their kids. Michael understands his executive security job is two fold: First, keep himself alive. Second keep the kids alive until they can be reunited with their parents. Once this mission is completed, Michael wants to find out whom it was that sold them all out. Find out if Michael can put a large piece of the puzzle together in this second book of the Code Name Pigeon series. |
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In Their Name $3.98 In Their Name by Clive Irving 1st ed Published in 1995 by Random House, Inc. |
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No Name $26.98 No Name by Wilkie Collins Published in 2005 by Paperbackshop.Co.UK Ltd - Echo Library |
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In the Name of Osama Bin Laden $3.48 â??A must read for all who continue to grapple with the twin legacy of hatred and hope from September 11. . . â??*International terrorism expert Roland Jacquard’s In the Name of Osama bin Laden presents a dramatic portrait of the world's most wanted terrorist and his extensive brotherhood--the network of people who operate â??in his name.â? Published originally in France the very week of September 11, as events in the United States shook the world, the book has become an international bestseller. Jacquard details how bin Laden became an international emblem of fundamentalist, pan-Islamic, anti-U.S. fervor and the leader of a brotherhood so passionate that devotees who have never met him will act autonomously in his name. The author explains the global character of bin Laden’s organization, elaborating the extent of his sphere of influence in Europe and Asia. Jacquard reveals the construction of bin Laden’s networksâ??including a profile of his inner circleâ??and their collaboration with overlapping webs of banking, drug trafficking, religious, and terrorist organizations. He considers the brotherhood’s access to biological, chemical, and nuclear weapons and warns that, with or without bin Laden, this global terrorist force will remain a threat.Now in English, this edition has been substantially updated in light of recent world events and expanded to include previously unpublished materials, featuring a new introduction and afterword. New documents include an April 2001 interview by the author with bin Laden; a September 24 proclamation by bin Laden to Muslims in Pakistan; and a key page from Dr. Ayman al-Zawahiri’s book justifying eternal jihad, which was smuggled out of Afghanistan in October 2001. |
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When My Name Was Keoko $4.48 Sun-hee and her older brother Tae-yul are proud of their Korean heritage. Yet they live their lives under Japanese occupation. All students must read and write in Japanese and no one can fly the Korean flag. Hardest of all is when the Japanese Emperor forces all Koreans to take Japanese names. Sun-hee and Tae-yul become Keoko and Nobuo. Korea is torn apart by their Japanese invaders during World War II. Everyone must help with war preparations, but it doesn’t mean they are willing to defend Japan. Tae-yul is about to risk his life to help his family, while Sun-hee stays home guarding life-and-death secrets. |
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My Name Is Asher Lev $3.98 "Memorable...A book profound in its vision of humanity, of religion, and of art."THE WALL STREET JOURNALHere is the original, deeply moving story of Asher Lev, the religious boy with an overwhelming need to draw, to paint, to render the world he knows and the pain he feels, on canvas for everyone to see. A loner, Asher has an extroardinary God-given gift that possesses a spirit all its own. It is this force that must learn to master without shaming his people or relinquishing any part of his deeply felt Judaism. It will not be easy for him, but he knows, too, that even if it is impossible, it must be done...."A novel of finely articulated tragic power...Little short of a work of genius."THE NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEWFrom the Paperback edition. |
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The Name $3.48 Before offering a prayer at the inauguration of President George W. Bush, Franklin Graham was asked by a fellow participant if he intended to pray in the name of Jesus Christ. Graham assured him that he would and encouraged this pastor to do the same. As Graham reminded him, "That's the only thing we've got." In days of religious confusion and cultural relativism, Franklin Graham reminds us that there are absolutes in the kingdom of God. The Name explains the significance of names in the Hebrew culture, centering on the meaningfulness of the name Jesus. Chapters focus on the different aspects of power in the Lord's name, such as "Healing in the Name" and "Salvation in the Name." |
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You Must Remember This: From Roy G. Biv to How Never to Forget a Name . . . Tips, Tricks, and Techniques of the Memory Masters $15.27 No Synopsis Available |
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Once They Hear My Name $12.98 A testament to the more than 100,000 Korean adoptees who have come to the United States since the 1950s, this collection of oral histories features the stories of nine Korean Americans who were adopted as children and the struggles they’ve shared as foreigners in their native lands. From their early confrontations with racism and xenophobia to their later-in-life trips back to Korea to find their roots (with mixed results), these narratives illustrate the wide variety of ways in which all adoptive parents and adoptees—not just those from Korea—must struggle with issues of identity, alienation, and family. |
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I Will Survive in Jesus' Name! $3.48 How Three Women, who are fighting for their lives, use the Word of God to Triumph over Domestic Violence Kim rededicated her life to Christ about three years ago and had been sold out for Jesus every since. She was young and full of life and energy. The only thing missing was companionship. Then she met Conrad, a young minister on fire for the Lord. It was a whirlwind courtship. They spent every free moment they had together. It got to the point that they hated leaving one another. Late nights soon turned into days, weeks, months, until they were living together. That?s when the trouble began... Gloria is saved, sanctified, and filled with the Holy Ghost! She is the youth leader at her church. She is a virtuous woman of God. When she meets David, she is immediately captivated. Not only is he good looking, but he?s laid back, well-educated, hard working, and established. He only has one problem, he doesn?t know Jesus... Veronica has been with Mike since the ninth grade. He is the only man that she has ever known intimately. The last four years have been extremely difficult for Veronica. The loss of her mother to a fatal car crash last year and the stress of having three children at the age of twenty-four has taken a toll on her. However, money is no object as Mike?s ?hustle? is at its peak. Of course, with money comes power and Mike has no problem exerting his power over his young girlfriend... Each woman?s life takes unexpected turns as they overcome the sense of betrayal, emotional pain, and spiritual damage created by and resulting from domestic violence. Follow along as Kim, Gloria, and Veronica stand on God?s Word, find the courage to leave, and learn to forgive on the way to their path of peace! "I Will Survive in Jesus' Name!" gives women the hope and encouragement needed to face and overcome domestic violence. It is a "Woman's Handbook." There are 15 informative, God-inspired, relevant chapters to help women identify how they got themselves into their current situation, how to find the courage to leave, how to forgive, and how to live a life of peace. It is a must read for women who are in troubled relationships, newly married, recently engaged, and adolescent girls that are contemplating dating. |
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1001 Golf Holes You Must Play Before You Die $14.48 1001 Golf Holes You Must Play Before You Die: This hardcover book features over 500 full color photographs of the most beautiful, challenging and memorable golf holes in the world chosen by a team of international writers and golf experts. Whether you play for fun, or for serious sport, this guide will encourage you to live your ultimate golfing fantasy at the world s premier courses. 1001 Golf Holes You Must Play Before You Die gives insight into how to play the hole, the designer s intention, and the history of the greats who have played there. Each hole highlighted has been selected for its interest either as a challenge to play, a place of outstanding beauty, a famous occurrence, or the brilliance of its design. Fact boxes provide course name, location, hole number, length, par, designer and course comments. The holes are all indexed in the back of the book by course, name, designer and location. |


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