About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 33. Chapters: Ludwig von Bertalanffy, Dimitri Kitsikis, Fedir Bohatyrchuk, David Paciocco, Michel Chossudovsky, Jan Veizer, Merridee Bujaki, Peggy Kleinplatz, Cyril Dabydeen, Elmer Driedger, Shana Poplack, Keith Fagnou, Francoys Bernier, Steven Gellman, Michael Geist, Boulou Ebanda de B'beri, Arthur Carty, Norman Spector, Michel Chretien, Adolfo J. de Bold, Marc Lavoie, Pierre Levy, David J. Mitchell, Gustave Lanctot, David McCurdy Baird, Paul Yuzyk, John Erskine Read, William Kaplan, Ian Clark, Monique Frize, Richard J. Van Loon, Joseph Beaulieu, Maurice Lamontagne, Tito Scaiano, David Staines, Louise Charron, Susan Mann, Donald Hillman, Kenneth Lochhead, Jean-Paul Marchand, Sue Johnson, Stephane Emard-Chabot, Carlisle Adams, Michael D. Behiels, Roy Heenan, Gerald Bales, Vern Krishna, Michael Strangelove, Mona Nemer, Seraphin Marion, Marie-Francoise Guedon, Sheridan Scott, Juana Munoz-Liceras. Excerpt: Dimitri Kitsikis (Greek: ) (born 2 June 1935 in Athens, Greece) is a Greek Turkologist, Professor of International Relations and Geopolitics. He has also published poetry in French and Greek. D. Kitsikis is a Turkologist and Professor of International Relations and Geopolitics at the University of Ottawa in Canada since 1970, Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada; he received his doctoral degree in 1963 from the Sorbonne, Paris. He derives his origin from a notable Greek-Orthodox family of intellectuals and acclaimed professionals of 19th-century Greece. He holds both French and Canadian citizenships . During the Greek civil war, at the age of 12, he was sent to a boarding school in Paris, by Octave Merlier, the head of the French Institute in Athens, because his mother had been condemned to death as a communist fighter. He stayed in France for 23 years with his British wife Anne Hubbard, the daughter of a chief justice, whom he h...