Results 1 to 6 of 6
- Police beat. by High Point Enterprise.;
Page: A4-3.
- Subjects: Gugdel Emily Lousie.; Davis, James Issac.; Hulin, Angela Aline.; Stone, Christopher Jay.; Smith, Craig Alan.; Brown, Adam Blake.; Grimsley, Melissa Marie.; Powers, Jeffrey Wayne.; Beckom, Christina Marie.; Clark, Marcus Christopher.; Wright, Jaleel Tyrie.; Wright, Jacques Lamar.; Hood, Jarvis Malik.; Turner, Cinciere Markeith.; Dumas, Warren Dale.; Fields, Codi Allen.; Garner, Alexander Daniel.; Ullah, Ilyas.; Holdren, Katherine Geneva.; Wilfoung, Aramis Rashawn.; Terry, Edward Brendon.; Shepard, Christopher Brittain.; Jones, Casey Glenn.; Tucker, Donna Rae.; Sharpe, Montique.; Phillips, Brandon Lee.; Caudill, Melissa Ann.; Turner, Eugene Perry.; Crockett, Steven Lloyd.; Hall, Mark Ellison.; Hopkins, Harriett.; Smith, Justin Lee.; Whitfield, Taneka Nicole.;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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- Design and analysis of ecological experiments / by Scheiner, Samuel M.,1956-(CARDINAL)333479; Gurevitch, Jessica.(CARDINAL)333478;
Includes bibliographical references (pages 399-425) and indexes.Exploratory data analysis and graphic display / Aaron M. Ellison -- ANOVA : Experiments in controlled environments / Catherine Potvin -- ANOVA and ANCOVA : Field competition experiments / Deborah E. Goldberg and Samuel M. Scheiner -- MANOVA : Multiple response variables and multispecies interactions / Samuel M. Scheiner -- Repeated-measures analysis : growth and other time-dependent measures / Carl N. von Ende -- Time-series intervention analysis : unreplicated large-scale experiments / Paul W. Rasmussen [and others] -- Nonlinear curve fitting : predation and functional response curves / Steven A. Juliano -- Multiple regression : herbivory / Thomas E. Philippi -- Path analysis : pollination / Randall J. Mitchell -- Population sampling and bootstrapping in complex designs : demographic analysis / Mark A. McPeek and Susan Kalisz -- Failure-time analysis : emergence, flowering, survivorship, and other waiting times / Gordon A. Fox -- The bootstrap and the jackknife : describing the precision of ecological indices / Philip M. Dixon -- Spatial statistics : analysis of field experiments / Jay M. Ver Hoef and Noel Cressie -- Mantel tests : spatial structure in field experiments / Marie-Josée Fortin and Jessica Gurevitch -- Model validation : optimal foraging theory / Joel S. Brown -- Meta-analysis : combining the results of independent experiments / Jessica Gurevitch and Larry V. Hedges.
- Subjects: Ecology; Experimental design.;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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- How Lovely the Ruins : Inspirational Poems and Words for Difficult Times / by Alexander, Elizabeth,1962-author.(CARDINAL)334691; Alexander, Elizabeth,1962-writer of foreword.(CARDINAL)334691;
"In our tumultuous cultural and political climate, many Americans are finding hope and meaning in poetry and inspirational quotes, as noted by numerous media outlets such as The Atlantic, The Guardian, and NPR, and as evidenced by the frequent posting of poetry online. Like many of us, the editors at Spiegel & Grau were inspired by the shared poems, and put together this collection of poems and words for difficult times. Contributors include Maya Angelou ("Still I Rise"), W.H. Auden, Danez Smith, Naomi Shihab Nye, Maggie Smith, Alice Walker, Langston Hughes, Elizabeth Alexander, and many others. This is an uplifting volume that will be read for years to come by anyone facing challenging circumstances"--"This wide-ranging collection of inspirational poetry and prose offers readers solace, perspective, and the courage to persevere. In times of personal hardship or collective anxiety, words have the power to provide comfort, meaning, and hope. The past year has seen a resurgence of poetry and inspiring quotes--posted on social media, appearing on bestseller lists, shared from friend to friend. Honoring this communal spirit, How Lovely the Ruins is a timeless collection of both classic and contemporary poetry and short prose that can be of help in difficult times--selections that offer wisdom and purpose, and that allow us to step out of our current moment to gain a new perspective on the world around us as well as the world within. The poets and writers featured in this book represent the diversity of our country as well as voices beyond our borders, including Maya Angelou, W. H. Auden, Danez Smith, Rumi, Emily Dickinson, Naomi Shihab Nye, Alice Walker, Adam Zagajewski, Langston Hughes, Wendell Berry, Anna Akhmatova, Yehuda Amichai, and Robert Frost. And the book opens with a stunning foreword by Elizabeth Alexander, whose poem "Praise Song for the Day," delivered at the inauguration of President Barack Obama, ushered in an era of optimism. In works celebrating our capacity for compassion, our patriotism, our right to protest, and our ability to persevere, How Lovely the Ruins is a beacon that illuminates our shared humanity, allowing us connection in a fractured world. Includes poetry, prose, and quotations from: Elizabeth Alexander Marcus Aurelius Karen Armstrong Matthew Arnold Ellen Bass Brian Bilston Gwendolyn Brooks Elizabeth Barrett Browning Octavia E. Butler Regie Cabico Dinos Christianopoulos Lucille Clifton Ta-Nehisi Coates Leonard Cohen Wendy Cope E. E. Cummings Charles Dickens Mark Doty Thomas Edison Albert Einstein Ralph Ellison Kenneth Fearing Annie Finch Rebecca Foust Nikki Giovanni Stephanie Gray John Green Hazel Hall Thich Nhat Hanh Joy Harjo Vaclav Havel Terrance Hayes William Ernest Henley Juan Felipe Herrera Jane Hirshfield John Holmes A. E. Housman Bohumil Hrabal Robinson Jeffers Georgia Douglas Johnson James Weldon Johnson Paul Kalanithi Robert F. Kennedy Omar Khayyam Emma Lazarus Li-Young Lee Denise Levertov Ada Limon Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Nelson Mandela Masahide Khaled Mattawa Jamaal May Claude McKay Edna St. Vincent Millay Pablo Neruda Anaïs Nin Olga Orozco Ovid Pier Paolo Pasolini Edgar Allan Poe Claudia Rankine Adrienne Rich Rainer Maria Rilke Alberto Ríos Edwin Arlington Robinson Eleanor Roosevelt Christina Rossetti Muriel Rukeyser Sadhguru Carl Sandburg Vikram Seth Charles Simic Safiya Sinclair Effie Waller Smith Maggie Smith Tracy K. Smith Leonora Speyer Gloria Steinem Clark Strand Wisława Szymborska Rabindranath Tagore Sara Teasdale Alfred, Lord Tennyson Vincent van Gogh Ocean Vuong Florence Brooks Whitehouse Walt Whitman Ella Wheeler Wilcox William Carlos Williams Virginia Woolf W. B. Yeats Saadi Youssef Javier Zamora Howard Zinn"--
- Subjects: Literature.; Poetry.; Inspiration; Inspiration;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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- The American Revolution : a historical guidebook / by Kennedy, Frances H.(CARDINAL)198222;
Includes bibliographical references (pages 363-369) and indexes.Machine generated contents note: -- Foreword -- To the Reader -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: From the Treaty of Paris to the Occupation of Boston -- Places of the American Revolution -- 1. Boston Common, Massachusetts -- 2. Faneuil Hall, Massachusetts -- 3. Old State House, Massachusetts -- 4. Old South Meeting House, Massachusetts -- 5. Carpenters' Hall, Pennsylvania -- 6. Old North Church, Massachusetts -- 7. Buckman Tavern, Massachusetts -- 8. Colonel James Barrett Farm, Massachusetts -- 9. Lexington and Concord, Massachusetts -- 10. Fort Ticonderoga, New York -- 11. Crown Point, New York -- 12. Independence Hall and Yard, Pennsylvania -- 13. Bunker Hill, Massachusetts -- 14. Old Cambridge, Massachusetts -- 15. Cambridge Common Encampment, Massachusetts -- 16. Gloucester, Massachusetts -- 17. Edmund Fowle House, Massachusetts -- 18. Fort Western, Maine -- 19. Williamsburg Powder Magazine, Virginia -- 20. Great Bridge, Virginia -- 21. Marblehead Town House, Massachusetts -- 22. Dorchester Heights, Massachusetts -- 23. Moores Creek, North Carolina -- 24. Halifax, North Carolina -- 25. Nikwasi, North Carolina -- 26. Charleston, South Carolina -- 27. Independence Hall and Yard, Pennsylvania -- 28. Bentley/Conference House, New York -- 29. Pell's Point, New York -- 30. Valcour Island, New York -- 31. Newport, Rhode Island -- 32. Fort Washington, New York -- 33. Fort Lee, New Jersey -- 34. Mount Holly, New Jersey -- 35. Thompson-Neely House, Pennsylvania -- 36. Trenton, New Jersey -- 37. Trenton Barracks, New Jersey -- 38. Princeton, New Jersey -- 39. Nassau Hall, New Jersey -- 40. Morristown, New Jersey -- 41. Ridgefield and Compo Hill, Connecticut -- 42. Keeler Tavern, Connecticut -- 43. Fort St. Mark, Florida -- 44. Thomas Creek, Florida -- 45. Fort Tonyn and Alligator Creek Bridge, Florida -- 46. Fort Ticonderoga, New York -- 47. Mount Independence, Vermont -- 48. Hubbardton, Vermont -- 49. Elijah West's Tavern, Vermont -- 50. Skenesborough, New York -- 51. Fort Ann, New York -- 52. Fort Edward, New York -- 53. Bennington, New York -- 54. Fort Stanwix, New York -- 55. Oriskany, New York -- 56. Fort Ticonderoga and Lake George, New York -- 57. Freeman's Farm at Saratoga, New York -- 58. Forts Clinton and Montgomery, New York -- 59. Abraham Van Gaasbeek/Senate House, New York -- 60. Bemis Heights at Saratoga, New York -- 61. The Siege of Saratoga, New York -- 62. Hale-Byrnes House, New Jersey -- 63. Brandywine, Pennsylvania -- 64. Paoli, Pennsylvania -- 65. Occupation and Evacuation of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania -- 66. Peter Wentz Homestead, Pennsylvania -- 67. Fort Mercer, New Jersey -- 68. Fort Mifflin, Pennsylvania -- 69. Fort Randolph, West Virginia -- 70. Valley Forge, Pennsylvania -- 71. Fort Roberdeau, Pennsylvania -- 72. Monmouth, New Jersey -- 73. Newport, Rhode Island -- 74. Beavertail Light and Conanicut Battery, Rhode Island -- 75. Fort Barton, Rhode Island -- 76. Butts Hill Fort, Rhode Island -- 77. Bedford-Fair Haven, Massachusetts -- 78. Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts -- 79. Old Tappan, New Jersey -- 80. Lake Champlain, Vermont -- 81. Cherry Valley, New York -- 82. The Capture of the HMS Hinchinbrooke and Sloop Rebecca, Georgia -- 83. Fort Morris, Georgia -- 84. Savannah, Georgia -- 85. Kettle Creek, Georgia -- 86. Camp Reading Cantonment, Connecticut -- 87. Hopewell Village and Furnace, Pennsylvania -- 88. Cornwall Furnace, Pennsylvania -- 89. Jerusalem Mill, Maryland -- 90. Fort Frederick, Maryland -- 91. Fort Laurens, Ohio -- 92. Vincennes, Indiana -- 93. Verplanck's Point, New York -- 94. Stony Point, New York -- 95. New Town, New York -- 96. Penobscot Bay and River, Maine -- 97. Morristown, New Jersey -- 98. The Siege of Charleston, South Carolina -- 99. Powder Magazine, South Carolina -- 100. The Exchange, South Carolina -- 101. Waxhaws, South Carolina -- 102. Logan's Fort, Kentucky -- 103. Fort Boonesborough, Kentucky -- 104. Ruddell's Station, Kentucky -- 105. Martin's Station, Kentucky -- 106. Piqua, Ohio -- 107. Oneida Castle, NY -- 108. Canajoharie District, New York -- 109. Johnson Hall, New York -- 110. Stone Arabia, New York -- 111. Klock's Field, New York -- 112. Fort St. George, New York -- 113. Ramsour's Mill, North Carolina -- 114. Hanging Rock, South Carolina -- 115. Camden, South Carolina -- 116. Musgrove's Mill, South Carolina -- 117. DeWint House, New York -- 118. Overmountain Victory National Historic Trail, South Carolina -- 119. Kings Mountain, South Carolina -- 120. Blackstock's Plantation, South Carolina -- 121. Cowpens, South Carolina -- 122. Cowan's Ford, North Carolina -- 123. Wilmington, North Carolina -- 124. Pyle's Defeat, North Carolina -- 125. Independence Hall and Yard, Pennsylvania -- 126. Guilford Courthouse, North Carolina -- 127. Fort Watson, South Carolina -- 128. Hobkirk Hill, South Carolina -- 129. Ninety Six, South Carolina -- 130. Eutaw Springs, South Carolina -- 131. Green Spring, Virginia -- 132. Joseph Webb House, Connecticut -- 133. The Burning of New London, Connecticut -- 134. Yorktown, Virginia -- 135. Sharon Springs, New York -- 136. Johnstown, New York -- 137. West Canada Creek, New York -- 138. Gnadenhutten, Ohio -- 139. Crawford's Defeat, Ohio -- 140. Bryan's Station, Kentucky -- 141. Blue Licks, Kentucky -- 142. Arkansas Post, Arkansas -- 143. New Windsor Cantonment, New York -- 144. John Ellison House, New York -- 145. Hasbrouck House, New York -- 146. Fraunces Tavern, New York -- Afterword: From the Treaty of Paris to the Ratification of the Bill of Rights -- Appendix A: The Declaration of Independence -- Appendix B: National Park Service Study -- Timeline -- About the Authors -- Additional Resources -- Bibliography.
- Subjects: Guidebooks.; Historic sites;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 3
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- Literature suppressed on social grounds / by Sova, Dawn B.(CARDINAL)753440;
Includes bibliographical references (pages 328-347) and index.In the night kitchen (Maurice Sendak) -- Invisible man (Ralph Ellison) -- Jake and Honeybunch go to heaven (Margot Zemach) -- James and the giant peach (Roald Dahl) -- Jaws (Peter Benchley) -- Junky (William S. Burroughs) -- King & King (Linda de Haan and Stern Nijland) -- Kingsblood royal (Sinclair Lewis) -- Last exit to Brooklyn (Hubert Selby, Jr.) -- Leaves of grass (Walt Whitman) -- Little Black Sambo (Helen Bannerman) -- Little house on the prairie (Laura Ingalls Wilder) -- Little Red Riding Hood (Charles Perrault) -- Lord of the flies (William Golding) -- Manchild in the promised land (Claude Brown) -- Married love (Marie Stopes) -- My house (Nikki Giovanni) -- The naked ape (Desmond Morris) -- Naked lunch (William S. Burroughs) -- Nana (Émile Zola) -- Never love a stranger (Harold Robbins) -- New dictionary of American slang, discussed with A dictionary of American slang (Robert L. Chapman) -- Of mice and men (John Steinbeck) -- Of time and the river (Thomas Wolfe) -- One flew over the cuckoo's nest (Ken Kesey) -- Ordinary people (Judith Guest) -- The ox-bow incident (Walter Van Tilburg Clark) -- The red pony (John Steinbeck) -- The scarlet letter (Nathaniel Hawthorne) -- A separate peace (John Knowles) -- Sister Carrie (Theodore Dreiser) -- Soul on ice (Eldridge Cleaver) -- Steppenwolf (Hermann Hesse) -- Strange fruit (Lillian Smith) -- Stranger in a strange land (Robert A. Heinlein) -- The sun also rises (Ernest Hemingway) -- To have and have not (Ernest Hemingway) -- To kill a mockingbird (Harper Lee) -- Unlived affections (George Shannon) -- We all fall down (Robert Cormier) -- Welcome to the monkey house (Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.) -- The well of loneliness (Radclyffe Hall) -- Whale talk (Chris Cutcher) -- Woman in the mists, discussed with Gorillas in the mist (Farley Mowat) -- Working : people talk about what they do all day and how they feel about what they do (Studs Terkel) -- A world I never made (James T. Farrell).The catcher in the rye (J.D. Salinger) -- The chocolate war (Robert Cormier) -- A clockwork orange (Anthony Burgess) -- The color purple (Alice Walker) -- Cujo (Stephen King) -- Daddy's roommate (Michael Willhoite) -- A day no pigs would die (Robert Newton Peck) -- Deliverance (James Dickey) -- A dictionary of American slang (Harold Wentworth) -- Dictionary of slang and unconventional English (Eric Partridge) -- Doctor Dolittle, series (Hugh John Lofting) -- Dog day afternoon (Patrick Mann) -- Down these mean streets (Piri Thomas) -- Dracula (Bram Stoker) -- The drowning of Stephan Jones (Bette Greene) -- East of Eden (John Steinbeck) -- Elmer Gantry (Sinclair Lewis) -- End as a man (Calder Willingham) -- Esther Waters (George Moore) -- Fahrenheit 451 (Ray Bradbury) -- Fallen angels (Walter Dean Myers) -- A farewell to arms (Ernest Hemingway) -- Final exit (Derek Humphry) -- The fixer (Bernard Malamud) -- Fruits of philosophy : the private companion of married couples (Charles Knowlton) -- Gargantua and Pantagruel (François Rabelais) -- Gentleman's agreement (Laura Z. Hobson) -- The giver (Lois Lowry) -- Go ask Alice (Anonymous) -- Gone with the wind (Margaret Mitchell) -- Gorillas in the mist (Dian Fossey) -- Go tell it on the mountain (James Baldwin) -- Grendel (John Gardner) -- Heather has two mommies (Leslea Newman) -- A hero ain't nothin' but a sandwich (Alice Childress) -- Howl and other poems (Allen Ginsberg) -- I know why the caged bird sings (Maya Angelou).Works discussed in this volume : The adventures of Huckleberry Finn (Mark Twain) -- The adventures of Sherlock Holmes (Sir Arthur Conan Doyle) -- The adventures of Tom Sawyer (Mark Twain) -- Alice's adventures in Wonderland (Lewis Carroll) -- The amboy dukes (Irving Shulman) -- The American Heritage dictionary of the English language -- Am I blue? (Marion Dane Bauer) -- And still I rise (Maya Angelou) -- Anne Frank : the diary of a young girl (Anne Frank) -- Annie on my mind (Nancy Garden) -- Another country (James Baldwin) -- Aphrodite (Pierre Louÿs) -- Appointment in Samarra (John O'Hara) -- As I lay dying (William Faulkner) -- The autobiography of Benjamin Franklin (Benjamin Franklin) -- The autobiography of Malcolm X (Malcolm X, with Alex Haley) -- The autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman (Ernest J. Gaines) -- Baby Be-bop (Francesca Lia Block) -- The basketball diaries (Jim Carroll) -- Being there (Jerzy Kosinski) -- The bell jar (Sylvia Plath) -- The best short stories by Negro writers (Langston Hughes, ed.) -- Black like me (John Howard Griffin) -- Bless the beasts and children (Glendon Swarthout) -- Blubber (Judy Blume) -- Brave new world (Aldous Huxley) -- Bridge to Terabithia (Katherine Paterson) -- Cain's book (Alexander Trocchi) -- Camille (Alexandre Dumas, Jr.) -- The Canterbury tales (Geoffrey Chaucer) -- Captain Underpants, series (Dav Pilkey) -- Catch-22 (Joseph Heller).
- Subjects: Censorship; Prohibited books; Social problems; Social problems; Social problems in literature.; Censorship.;
- Available copies: 3 / Total copies: 3
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- Zombies! zombies! zombies! / by Penzler, Otto.(CARDINAL)351801;
"Zombies ain't what they used to be. Not so long ago, they were safely ensconced on Haiti so the rest of the world could merely scoff at the bizarre myth of the living dead on one relatively small Caribbean island. Well, they have proliferated at an alarming rate, invading the rest of the world, and it seems unlikely that they have any intention of going away anytime soon. W.B. Seabrook, in his 1929 book, The Magic Island, recounted "true" tales of voodoo magic on Haiti bringing the recently dead back to life as slow-moving, virtually brain-dead creatures who would work tirelessly in the fields without pay and without complaint. These stories introduced the zombie to much of the world, though most national folklores have similar tales and legends. A decade after Seabrook's groundbreaking volume, Zora Neale Hurston researched Haitian folklore and told similar stories of eyewitness accounts of zombies, as have subsequent anthropologists, sociologists, and others not prone to imaginative fancies. If zombie literature began with the reportage of Seabrook, it had powerful ancestral works on which to draw"--
- Subjects: Short stories.; Zombies; Zombiism; Horror tales, American.;
- Available copies: 3 / Total copies: 4
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