If you are the editor of a community newsletter you'll find the images in this file of over 700 drawings a very useful tool. There are dozens of illustrations on aged care, health, community issues, education and children and many more.
The peace and quiet of Supercity has been shattered by the arrival of 33 evil villains and one massive robot dinosaur. What the city needs is a force of SUPERHEROES to help defend it. And, throwing off their secret identities, 29 superheroes are soon donning their costumes and masks, and flying to the rescue."--Back cover
... An adventure to the Delta System to explore a dozen strange and exciting planets. Visit the square planet, Squarex, the Bug Eyes and Big Brain. Can you escape from the pirates of the Pirate Asteroid? At the same time you must search out Professor Hozzlebrun and his Replica Ray."--Back cover
Come on a puzzlingly small adventure, as the crew and passengers of an aircraft shrink through worlds within worlds. As they become microscopic, they meet a Flea Circus, daredevil mites and many other strange creatures."--Back cover
Imagine a world where everything and everybody is confined to a wheelchair. In this picture book with no text, we find history told in a different way. See the first wheelchair on the moon and how scary Vikings in wheelchairs can be. This little book is a must for school and other libraries.
Image that we have discovered the joys of Time Travel. This book will guide the first time traveler on his/her trip back into the past, giving useful tips and information so your journey won't end badly, because the past can be a very dangerous place to visit. There is information on settling permanently in the past and how to avoid all the strange paradoxes you will encounter along the way. It's a must have book for anyone contemplating the simple joy of TIME TRAVEL
Diversity, Oppression and Change is an engaging and well-researched book about a timely and controversial topic. The authors unpack complex theory-based concepts related to oppression and privilege so that readers can identify their historically based impact on certain groups and communities. They use an easy to understand style, which makes cultural diversity concepts come to life through specific examples and notes from the field, often coming from their own practice, policy and research experiences. This book is essential reading for social workers and allied professionals committed to anti-oppressive practice. Diversity, Oppression and Change is also about hope and resiliency, and the miraculous ability of individuals and communities to bounce back from oppressive experiences and historical trauma to produce lasting social change and achieve social justice"--
It's a little known fact that cuttlefish are great storytellers, and here are two of Cuttlefish Joe's favourite stories, illustrated with photographic backgrounds.
Can you imagine a world where everybody is confined to a wheelchair? Witness the first wheelchair on the moon and see how scary Vikings can be even when in wheelchairs. This is a hardcover version of the book, slightly larger than the paperback version and designed for library use.
The story of Whyalla, South Australia, in the 1960s from the time the STANLEY family arrived in 1966 to the early 1970s when Stephen Stanley began to draw the STAN CARTOON and publish his comic strip LAFFERTY.
Cartoonist Stephen Stanley's account of growing up in the Toxteth (Liverpool 8.) district of Liverpool UK during the 1950s and 1960s. Illustrated with over forty sketches, cartoons and maps this light-hearted memoir brings to life a fondly remembered era in the city's recent past. Stephen also seems unique among Liverpudlians in freely admitting to letting the Beatles completely pass him by.
Rabbi or Messiah? Prophet or the Son of God? People have debated the identity of Jesus of Nazareth since the first century. But what if there was no Jesus? What if there was no Mary or Joseph, no twelve apostles? What if the story of Jesus was no more than a myth to convey spiritual truth? These claims have been around for hundreds of years and have become more prominent with well-known religion columnist Tom Harpur's recent book, The Pagan Christ. Harpur claims that Jesus was not a historical figure, but was one version of an ancient myth that can be traced from ancient Egyptian religion to the Roman mystery cults. Stanley Porter and Stephen Bedard tackle this radical claim by looking at the roots of the "pagan Christ idea," examining the supposed pagan parallels and presenting the evidence for the historical Jesus. The authors demonstrate that the suggestion of pagan origins for the Gospel story is not based on historical or textual evidence, but rather on a desire to create a universalistic spirituality revolving around a "Cosmic Christ" within each person. A fair examination of both the mythological and biblical texts reveal that the traditional understanding of an actual historical figure known as Jesus of Nazareth appearing two thousand years ago is indeed the only logical conclusion. Stanley E. Porter is President and Dean, and Professor of New Testament at McMaster Divinity College, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. Porter has M.A. degrees from Claremont Graduate School and Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, and the Ph.D. from the University of Sheffield. He has written widely on issues of concern in study of the New Testament, such as Jesus, Paul, the book of Acts, and John. He has a passion for education in the church, and preaches and teaches regularly. Stephen J. Bedard is the pastor of Woodford Baptist Church and First Baptist Church, Meaford, Ontario, Canada. He holds the M.Div. and M.Th. degrees from McMaster Divinity College, and is actively engaged in further graduate study. Bedard is an advocate of informed preaching and teaching, and is devoted to the ministry of the local church.
Tao Te Ching, also commonly known as Lao Tzu, is one of the most important Chinese classics and has had great influence on Chinese thought. It is regarded as the bible of Taoism and is by far the most frequently translated Chinese classic, with over thirty translations into English alone.
This is the first full-length philosophical study of the work of Stanley Cavell, best known for his seminal contributions to the fields of film studies, Shakespearian literary criticism, and the confluence of psychoanalysis and literary theory. It is not fully appreciated that Cavell's project originated in his interpretation of Austin's and Wittgenstein's ordinary-language philosophy and is given unity by an abiding concern with the nature and the varying cultural manifestations of the skeptical impulse in modernity. This book elucidates the essentially philosophical roots and trajectory of Cavell's work, traces its links with Romanticism and its recent turn toward a species of moral perfectionism associated with Thoreau and Emerson, and concludes with an assessment of its relations to liberal-democratic political theory, Christian religious thought, and feminist literary studies.
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