Police lieutenant Karl Genesko and his fiance, computer pro Anneke Haagen, are finally tying the knot. But when Karl is called away to investigate a mail-bomb murder, the victim turns out to be one of the computer gamers in Anneke's on-line chats. As both Karl and Anneke are suspected, they create a murder game to catch a killer on-line. Martin's Press.
Strange lights in the Michigan sky. The gathering horde of psychics, alien abductees, and millennialists swear it's an authentic UFO hovering over UM, but to student and Daily sports reporter Zoe Kaplan, the sightings look like a group of fireflies mating. The controversy deepends when history professor Thomas Edison Stempel, a dedicated ufologist, suspects that someone is trying to discredit his extensive research. His archenemy, biochemistry professor Conrad deLeeuw, thinks Stempel set the whole thing up, and fanatic Jarvis McCray claims documented proof of alien/government conspiracy. Was it a hoax, or a cleverly designed plot to kill? Police lieutenant Karl Genesko is stymied, while his fiancee, computer consultant Anneke Haagen, is amused, and Zoe is thrilled at the chance to string the story for the AP. But when Professor Stempel turns up electrocuted on a wide swath of burned field, the silly summer season turns deadly. Genesko's out to trap the killer-with a trap so dangerous he may not survive to tell the tale.
Strange lights in the Michigan sky. The gathering horde of psychics, alien abductees, and millennialists swear it's an authentic UFO hovering over UM, but to student and Daily sports reporter Zoe Kaplan, the sightings look like a group of fireflies mating. The controversy deepends when history professor Thomas Edison Stempel, a dedicated ufologist, suspects that someone is trying to discredit his extensive research. His archenemy, biochemistry professor Conrad deLeeuw, thinks Stempel set the whole thing up, and fanatic Jarvis McCray claims documented proof of alien/government conspiracy. Was it a hoax, or a cleverly designed plot to kill? Police lieutenant Karl Genesko is stymied, while his fiancee, computer consultant Anneke Haagen, is amused, and Zoe is thrilled at the chance to string the story for the AP. But when Professor Stempel turns up electrocuted on a wide swath of burned field, the silly summer season turns deadly. Genesko's out to trap the killer-with a trap so dangerous he may not survive to tell the tale.
When football and greed collide, the result is sudden death... In football-obsessed Ann Arbor, the University of Michigan President's Weekend is the biggest event of the season. And this year, computer consultant Anneke Haagen is swept up in the festivities-- her boyfriend, police lieutenant Karl Genesko, is set to be honored as one of Michigan's brightest former football stars. But the weekend quickly sours when Zoe Kaplan, a Michigan Daily student sportswriter, breaks the story of an NCAA probe of UM recruiting...and hours later the agency's investigator turns up murdered on the sacred turf of the stadium end zone. Genesko finds himself at the head of the investigation, and Anneke can't resist applying her computer skills and analytical mind to the mystery herself. What she finds is a tangle of secrets, lies, and shady deals, with the deepest alumni pockets in the thick of it. And with the university's reputation and big money program at stake, she'd better find the killer's playbook, before she's the next to be sacked...
Ann Arbor, Michigan-home of a famous football team, a university full of experts and egomaniacs, and a lot of aging hippies, mellowing radicals, and art-school eccentrics. It is also the home of Anneke Haagen, a computer consultant who spends one spring morning on the garage-sale circuit. For Anneke, it's a day of scrounging through other people's musty junk for the Big Score-until she stumbles on an antiques dealer who has been brutally attacked, and whose last words are as baffling as they are politically incorrect. When the suspicion of murder falls on her friend, Ellen Nakamura, Anneke must prove her innocence. That means not only working alongside a hunky, ex-professional football player turned detective who she's starting to fall for, but searching for the one garage-sale find that wasn't just a Big Score, it was to die for...
In San Francisco for their honeymoon, newlyweds Anneke Haagen and Police Lieutenant Karl Genesko find themselves dragged into the investigation of the murder of a Michigan graduate student. Their friend, owner of a local sports bar, becomes the prime suspect because the victim had interviewed his patrons about their urges to overeat, which made her very unpopular. But was it reason enough to kill her? Martin's Press. (July)
When football and greed collide, the result is sudden death... In football-obsessed Ann Arbor, the University of Michigan President's Weekend is the biggest event of the season. And this year, computer consultant Anneke Haagen is swept up in the festivities-- her boyfriend, police lieutenant Karl Genesko, is set to be honored as one of Michigan's brightest former football stars. But the weekend quickly sours when Zoe Kaplan, a Michigan Daily student sportswriter, breaks the story of an NCAA probe of UM recruiting...and hours later the agency's investigator turns up murdered on the sacred turf of the stadium end zone. Genesko finds himself at the head of the investigation, and Anneke can't resist applying her computer skills and analytical mind to the mystery herself. What she finds is a tangle of secrets, lies, and shady deals, with the deepest alumni pockets in the thick of it. And with the university's reputation and big money program at stake, she'd better find the killer's playbook, before she's the next to be sacked...
Police lieutenant Karl Genesko and his fiance, computer pro Anneke Haagen, are finally tying the knot. But when Karl is called away to investigate a mail-bomb murder, the victim turns out to be one of the computer gamers in Anneke's on-line chats. As both Karl and Anneke are suspected, they create a murder game to catch a killer on-line. Martin's Press.
Make Yourself a Teacher is a teaching book and a book about teaching. It discusses three dramatic, well-known stories about the student and teacher Rabbi Eliezer ben Hyrcanus from the Oral Torah. The stories of R. Eliezer serve as teaching texts and models for reflection on the teacher/student relationship in the Jewish tradition and in contemporary culture with special emphasis on the hevruta mode of Jewish learning, a collaborative process that invites the reader into a dialogue with teachers past and present. Susan Handelman considers how teacher/student relations sustain and renew the Jewish tradition, especially during troubled times. As a commentary on historical and contemporary educational practices, she asks a range of questions about teaching and learning: What is it that teachers do when they teach? How do knowledge, spirituality, and education relate? What might Jewish models of study and commentary say about how we teach and learn today? Handelman not only presents pedagogical issues that remain controversial in today's debates on education but she also brings the stories themselves to life. Through her readings, the stories beckon us to sit among the sages and be their student
Offers national and international coverage of major art exhibitions at more than 400 museums in the US and abroad, using the resources of The New York Times. It also features essential information on permanent collections, hours, museum websites, and amenities.
In San Francisco for their honeymoon, newlyweds Anneke Haagen and Police Lieutenant Karl Genesko find themselves dragged into the investigation of the murder of a Michigan graduate student. Their friend, owner of a local sports bar, becomes the prime suspect because the victim had interviewed his patrons about their urges to overeat, which made her very unpopular. But was it reason enough to kill her? Martin's Press. (July)
After a fire destroys her home, Anneke Haagen moves into a cottage at charming Mackinac Court, hoping to put her life back together, but while her boyfriend investigates the murder of a local resident, Anneke herself suddenly becomes the target of a murderer. Reprint. AB. LJ.
In Black Diamond, Holtzer has created a deeper, more complex work that retains and further enriches the characters of her protagonists, computer maven Anneke Haagen and her lover, police lieutenant Karl Genesko. It also brings back the enchanting student Zoe Kaplan, the Michigan Daily reporter who was introduced in Holtzer's last book, Bleeding Maize and Blue. Zoe is enlisted by a hapless fellow student for moral support in her family's dissension over a will. In the process, the two young women come upon an intriguing series of letters written by the student's ancestor (a well-born lady brutally treated by her logging-baron husband) and a barely literate prostitute (a camp follower of the logging crews), who find a common chord in their unhappy lives. By unraveling the correspondence, with the help of computer-knowledgeable Anneke, the two students unearth a tale of arson, murder, and lost treasure that reaches out to touch their own lives.
In exchange for some missed class notes, University of Michigan student and sports reporter Zoe Kaplan agrees to drive drab dorm-mate Clare Swann to her eccentric late aunt's estate for the sorting of her possessions. When the will is read, Clare is handed the mysterious "Black Diamond," a porcupine quill-covered black box filled with seemingly meaningless mementos. But when Zoe and Clare return to Clare's dorm after a trip to the library, they find the place ripped apart, the Black Diamond missing, and a man with a gashed throat lying dead on Clare's floor-a a man whom Clare recognizes as her father, assumed dead years ago. Enlisting her friend, clear-minded computer expert beneath the layers of a logging family's dark past-and into a present rife with murderous ambition.
This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work was reproduced from the original artifact, and remains as true to the original work as possible. Therefore, you will see the original copyright references, library stamps (as most of these works have been housed in our most important libraries around the world), and other notations in the work. This work is in the public domain in the United States of America, and possibly other nations. Within the United States, you may freely copy and distribute this work, as no entity (individual or corporate) has a copyright on the body of the work. As a reproduction of a historical artifact, this work may contain missing or blurred pages, poor pictures, errant marks, etc. Scholars believe, and we concur, that this work is important enough to be preserved, reproduced, and made generally available to the public. We appreciate your support of the preservation process, and thank you for being an important part of keeping this knowledge alive and relevant.
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