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inauthor:"Charles A. Murray" from books.google.com
The seminal book about IQ and class that ignited one of the most explosive controversies in decades, now updated with a new Afterword by Charles Murray Breaking new ground and old taboos, Richard J. Herrnstein and Charles Murray tell the ...
inauthor:"Charles A. Murray" from books.google.com
A startling long-lens view, "Coming Apart" shows how class--not race or ethnicity--is putting the great tensions on the seams of American society.
inauthor:"Charles A. Murray" from books.google.com
Addresses serious problems with the American educational system and introduces four simple truths that parents and educators need to confront.
inauthor:"Charles A. Murray" from books.google.com
Describes how a group of men and women accomplished the feat of landing men on the moon and returning them to earth.
inauthor:"Charles A. Murray" from books.google.com
Using data from the National longitudinal Study of Youth, argues that intelligence quotient has an important effect on income independent of family background.
inauthor:"Charles A. Murray" from books.google.com
In this volume, originally published in 1988, Murray presents a persuasive and practical argument that reconsiders commonly held beliefs of what constitutes success in social policy by examining the scope of government and its role in ...
inauthor:"Charles A. Murray" from books.google.com
"In this provocative book, acclaimed social scientist and bestselling author Charles Murray shows us why we can no longer hope to roll back the power of the federal government through the normal political process.
inauthor:"Charles A. Murray" from books.google.com
Murray and Cox provide a dramatic, behind-the-scenes account of America's 10-year race to the moon. A highly satisfying tale, rich, densely packed and beautifully told.--Washington Post Book World. 16 pages of black-and-white photographs.
inauthor:"Charles A. Murray" from books.google.com
Most people are baffled by such views. Don't we realize that this is post-industrial America, not Jefferson's agrarian society? This book tries to explain how we can believe the less government, the better. It contains no footnotes.