| J. Martin Rochester - Political Science - 1993 - 372 pages
...shaken by the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in August 1990. Although this event invited the smug observation that the more things change the more they stay the same, the experts (realists, neorealists, and virtually all other scholarly types) were generally no more prepared... | |
| Steven P. Dandaneau - Business & Economics - 1996 - 294 pages
...Critique is as much opposed to cliche as it is to positivist science. Where the former says, for example, that the more things change the more they stay the same, the latter proposes immutable social laws to explain why this must be so. In this, both approaches to the... | |
| Laurence Bergreen - Music - 1996 - 706 pages
...action. He would first appear in front of the Plaza Hotel in New York, philosophizing to the effect that the more things change, the more they stay the same. The story would then shift to a romance between one William Bladen, modeled on the broadcasting tycoon... | |
| Lisa Odham Stokes, Michael Hoover - Performing Arts - 1999 - 388 pages
...level, contrasts between past and present are balanced by comparisons, and the dual context reveals that the more things change, the more they stay the same. The film's deep structure is overdetermined by repetitions of major elements. For example, all songs taken... | |
| Kant Patel, Mark E. Rushefsky - Medical care - 1999 - 484 pages
...problem is too big and too complex for state-based solutions.110 Medicaid policy reflects the dictum that the more things change, the more they stay the same. The Medicaid policy process is driven to a significant extent by forces of federalism that often produce... | |
| Jack Utter - History - 2001 - 522 pages
...surprised to find out who wrote the passage and when. My informal survey tends to underscore the old adage that "the more things change the more they stay the same." The one thing, however, that bothered each of my listeners about the quotation was the possessiveness of... | |
| Stephen Quinn - Language Arts & Disciplines - 2005 - 228 pages
...continue to hold true. This may be the quintessential area that highlights the proposition of this chapter that "the more things change, the more they stay the same." The public relations practitioner needs to continue to enter every endeavor with research. This first step... | |
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