These poems are from the heart, and are inspired from my spiritual life. I enjoy writing them and others in my church do also. They are the ones who talked me into haveing them put down in a book. the story in the back is a true story that was really a hair rasing experance.
If you listen closely in the school lunchroom, you will hear many stories just like these! After 7 years of telling his tales to thousands of children and adults, Jim Flanagan has put several in a book. Many of the stories came from a journal he kept as a principal, teacher, counselor and coach. The original tales are about kids of all ages dealing with the adventures of life. The book contains many character education stories that can be used for classroom discussion. The tales are a combination of humorous and thoughtful moments. The stories are never preachy. The reader will take away from the story what they want with a smile on their face. Many children have comment that the stories really make you think. Jim says, " you may not remember of the stories but you will remember how the stories made you feel. Students of all ages easily relate to the stories, characters and plots. The stories are from real life and kids will automatically think the tale happened in their school or neighborhood or in their own luchroom. NAPPA 2004: Books for Ages 9 & Up By Helen Foster James, Ed.D., Kathleen Krull and Peter Neumeyer, Ph.D. Honors Award Winners Stories Heard Around the Lunchroom, by Jim Flanagan, illustrated by Dale Herron; 1st Books, 2004; $9. Funny, sad, thought-provoking - these true stories are told with verve by a real-life principal who took notes during his 30 years on the job.
Packing for Retirement is a must-read for anyone who is planning on retiring or who has recently retired. This easy-to-read book is complete with information that everyone needs to know about retirement planning, what this life transition means now and what it is likely to mean in the future . Packing for Retirement provides you with a roadmap to planning a successful and happy retirement. Longevity is changing the way we live the later part of life and as a result, we need the financial tools and resources to live our best lives. The author identifies the 10 most critical questions any retiree must answer, and helps the reader to understand the biggest risk in retirement - health, then demonstrates the ways in which a person can protect what they have worked for with insurance strategies and sound estate planning advice. This book includes self-assessments, check lists, sample form templates and most importantly, an action plan for every person planning to retire or navigating retirement. If you are between the ages of 50-70 and want to know about the inner workings of health care, taxes, IRAs, income planning and long-term care you must read this book. WARNING! The contents of this book have the possibility to change your life. Implement a few of these strategies and enjoy your ability to earn more, worry less while capitalizing on your longevity bonus.
The Phoenix Park in Dublin holds a special place in the collective memory of Irish people. From the assassinations of 1882 and the destruction of several imperial monuments, to the arrival of Douglas Hyde as Ireland's first president and Pope John Paul's 1979 visit, it has been at the centre of Irish society for centuries. But the park is also part and parcel of daily life for many Dubliners - none more so than the Flanagan family, who have been lighting the gas lamps within its walls since 1890. Here, historian Donal Fallon speaks to brothers Frank and James Flanagan, lamplighters of the park, to give us a snapshot of a fading tradition, and a unique history of one of Ireland's most beloved places. With stunning photographs, historical events and personal stories, The Lamplighters of the Phoenix Park shines a light on the park at the centre of our national identity, through the prism of this singular family, whose histories have been intertwined for more than 150 years.
An international conspiracy in 1919. The killing of children in a Spanish village in 1937. Distant events come back to haunt the lives of Clare O'Dwyer and Michael Walters a young couple unborn at the time of either. It is the early summer of 1994. Clare has inherited the fortune of her grandfather, US Senator James O'Dwyer: war hero, rogue politician and last living survivor of the Flanagan Plot. Even after seventy years the truth would cause a fatal breach in relations between the United States and Britain. Clare finds herself threatened by security services and terrorists. To escape she flees to sea in her yacht Quadra with her English lover, Michael Walters. Their voyage takes them to France, Dorset, Cornwall and finally West Cork. They are abducted by terrorists and survive a force ten gale near the Fastnet rock. In a dramatic climax the truth of the plot emerges and Clare discovers something about her grandfather that will change her life for ever.
We define our conscious experience by constructing narratives about ourselves and the people with whom we interact. Narrative pervades our lives--conscious experience is not merely linked to the number and variety of personal stories we construct with each other within a cultural frame, but is subsumed by them. The claim, however, that narrative constructions are essential to conscious experience is not useful or informative unless we can also begin to provide a distinct, organized, and empirically consistent explanation for narrative in relation to consciousness. Understanding the role of narrative in determining individual and collective consciousness has been elusive from within traditional academic frameworks. This volume argues that addressing so broad and complex a problem requires an examination from outside our insular disciplinary framework. Such an open examination would be informed by the inquiries and approaches of multiple disciplines. Recognition of the different approaches to examining personal stories will allow for the coordination of how narrative seems (its phenomenology), with what mental labor it does (its psychology), and how it is realized (its neurobiology). Only by overcoming the boundaries erected by multiple theoretical and discursive traditions can we begin to comprehend the nature and function of narrative in consciousness. Narrative and Consciousness brings together essays by exceptional scholars and scientists in the disciplines of literary theory, psychology, and neuroscience to examine how stories are constructed, how stories structure lived experience, and how stories are rooted in material reality (the human body). The specific topics addressed include narrative in the development of conscious awareness; autobiographical narrative, fiction and the construction of self; trauma and narrative disruptions; narrative, memory and identity; and the physiological and neural substrate of narrative. It is the editors' hope that the multidisciplinary nature of this collection will challenge the reader to move beyond disciplinary confines and toward a coherent interdisciplinary dialogue.
Electrochemical Detection in HPLC: Analysis of Drugs and Poisons is the first monograph devoted to the application of this mode of analysis to the assay of exogenous compounds such as drugs in biological fluids and associated areas. The introductory chapters provide information on basic electrochemistry and HPLC-ED, and on trouble-shooting. The specialized area of thiol analysis is also discussed in detail. Salient practical details of published applications of the technique in analytical toxicology and related areas are provided in a standard format. Alternative techniques are suggested throughout. The emphasis is on the analysis of exogenous compounds, although catecholamines and other endogenous species are discussed in so far as they may be used as drugs. The practical nature of this book will make it useful to professionals working in the field. It will also be of benefit to analysts wishing to use HPLC-ED in the analysis of biological samples for analytes not specifically covered in the volume.
Since 2001, the United States has endured a tumultuous period, one dominated by the 9/11 attacks and all that has followed: the war on terrorism, the Afghan and Iraqi campaigns, looming confrontations with known or suspected proliferators of weapons of mass destruction, and episodic explosions of mass violence in chronically unstable regions. In this second half of the decade, these and related strategic challenges will test the skill, tenacity, and imagination of the current and the next U.S. administration and the American public. How well these challenges are managed then, or mastered, will greatly influence whether future historians look back upon this decade as a dangerous passage toward a more peaceful, globally connected order or as a descending path into an ever more fragmented, violent world. This volume explores seven looming, as yet unmastered strategic challenges facing the United States. Each chapter tackles one of the following challenges: tackling global terrorism, stopping WMD proliferation, undertaking defense transformation, protecting the homeland, strengthening relations with allies and partners, engaging other major powers, and defusing conflicts in unstable regions. Each chapter takes a similar approach: defining the problem at hand (i.e., a short discussion of relevant trends); explicating current U.S. efforts to master the challenge (i.e., U.S. objectives, methods, degree of success or setbacks); and analyzing looming choices that U.S. policymakers will face in the next decade and, as appropriate, the consequences of alternative courses of action. Strategic Challenges capitalizes on the great regional and topical expertise of the INSS professional research staff to present an authoritative overview of the global strategic environment facing the United States.
This book has its origin in a letter. In November of 1959, the late Prof. Dr. WERNER MEYER-EpPLER wrote to me, asking if I would contribute to a series he was planning on Communication. His book " Grundlagen und Anwendungen der Informationstheorie" was to serve as the initial volume of the series. After protracted consideration, I agreed to undertake the job provided it could be done outside my regular duties at the Bell Telephone Laboratories. Shortly afterwards, I received additional responsibilities in my research organization, and felt that I could not conveniently pursue the manuscript. Consequently, except for the preparation of a detailed outline, the writing was delayed for about a year and a half. In the interim, Professor MEYER-EpPLER suffered a fatal illness, and Professors H. WOLTER and W. D. KEIDEL assumed the editorial re sponsibilities for the book series. The main body of this material was therefore written as a leisurc time project in the years 1962 and 1963. The complete draft of the manuscript was duplicated and circulated to colleagues in three parts during 1963. Valuable comments and criticisms were obtained, revisions made, and the manuscript submitted to the publisher in March of 1964. The mechanics of printing have filled the remaining time. If the reader finds merit in the work, it will be owing in great measure to the people with whom I have had the good fortune to be associated.
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.