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Also includes photocopy of obituary and biography of Francis William Schofield, 1889-1970, by D.L.T. Smith in "Veterinary Pathology", p. [282]-288; articles from the "Guelph Mercury" and "At Guelph" on Frank Schofield; photographs of him in 1965 and receiving the Korean Order of Merit in 1968; book "Dr. Frank W. Schofield: Veterinarian Extraordinaire" written and signed by D.C. Maplesden, 2005; biographical DVD and commemorative booklet for the groundbreaking ceremony for the Dr. Schofield Statue and Memorial Garden to be created at the Toronto Zoo, Dec. 1, 2007; meeting minutes and submission report of the Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada recommending that Dr. Schofield be designated a person of national historical significance; letter from Dr. Schofield written to Mrs. Neat in 1936 about her brother (Jim Neat) who was a patient at Whitby Hospital, 1935-1936; letter (1957) from F. Schofield to Dr. Timoney, a veterinary bacteriologist friend in Ireland, photograph of Schofield with a Korean orphan, printed quotation by F. Schofield Sr., and a newspaper clipping (with photo) of a ceremony about Schofield's return to Korea in 1957.
Also includes photocopy of obituary and biography of Francis William Schofield, 1889-1970, by D.L.T. Smith in "Veterinary Pathology", p. [282]-288; articles from the "Guelph Mercury" and "At Guelph" on Frank Schofield; photographs of him in 1965 and receiving the Korean Order of Merit in 1968; book "Dr. Frank W. Schofield: Veterinarian Extraordinaire" written and signed by D.C. Maplesden, 2005; biographical DVD and commemorative booklet for the groundbreaking ceremony for the Dr. Schofield Statue and Memorial Garden to be created at the Toronto Zoo, Dec. 1, 2007; meeting minutes and submission report of the Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada recommending that Dr. Schofield be designated a person of national historical significance; letter from Dr. Schofield written to Mrs. Neat in 1936 about her brother (Jim Neat) who was a patient at Whitby Hospital, 1935-1936; letter (1957) from F. Schofield to Dr. Timoney, a veterinary bacteriologist friend in Ireland, photograph of Schofield with a Korean orphan, printed quotation by F. Schofield Sr., and a newspaper clipping (with photo) of a ceremony about Schofield's return to Korea in 1957.
Writing critically about something you have come to regard with affection must provoke mixed emotions. As I learned more and more about the modern battleship's shortcomings, I found myself, like so many before me, falling under its spell. I have traveled hundreds of miles to visit these wonderful ships, reverently preserved like a necklace of talismans around our nation's coasts. I have stood in awe under the great guns, wondering what it must have been like to hear them fire. Perhaps it is true that their sound and fury signified very little in terms of actual destructive power. But most people thought they did, and that was and still is important. Besides, for the most part, we were proud of those ships. Now we live in a time of weapons so terrible that we must actually hide them-beneath the ground and below the surface of the sea. But, like battleships, they keep the peace precisely because of what others think they can do. All things being equal, who would not prefer the dreadnoughts?
During World War I, Britain's naval supremacy enabled it to impose economic blockades and interdiction of American neutral shipping. The United States responded by building 'a navy second to none', one so powerful that Great Britain could not again successfully challenge America's vital economic interests. This book reveals that when the United States offered to substitute naval equality for its emerging naval supremacy, the British, nonetheless, used the resulting two major international arms-control conferences of the 1920s to ensure its continued naval dominance.
World War II defined the 20th century and shaped the contemporary world; from the decolonization of Africa to the rise and fall of the Berlin Wall. This comprehensive series, edited by one of the worlds leading military historians, offers a focused overview of this complex and volatile era, taking into account the political, economic and social factors, as well as military circumstances of the road to war and its consequences. Augmented by a full length and detailed introduction by the editor, each volume gathers together the seminal articles on specific arenas of the war, providing a convenient and essential resource for researchers and general readers alike.
First published in 1963, Prelude to Pearl Harbor was the first of three books on naval topics for which Prof. Gerald E. Wheeler is remembered today. “During the years 1921 to 1931 American naval leaders faced a problem in some ways similar to the situation after 1947. They were convinced that the United States had a national enemy in Japan. But the United States Congress, like the public that elected it during the 1920’s, was less than impressed; in fact it was positively hostile to any suggestion that America might again go to war. The President and his executive departments—save perhaps the War Department—were also reluctant to accept the Navy’s conclusions or its premises. How the United States Navy solved its problem of preparing for war in an unsympathetic climate of opinion is the story here presented.”—Prof. Wheeler, Preface