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Maidens Rock (Paperback)
Dan McLaughlin; Illustrated by A C LaFollette; Margit Elland Schmitt
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R418
Discovery Miles 4 180
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Here are 690 questions about the history of Pasadena derived from
the headlines of Pasadena newspapers, as displayed in the Pasadena
Pubic Library's Pasadena News Index (PNI). It started when the then
head of Children's Department of the Pasadena Public Library asked
the author, the local history librarian at the Library for over 20
years, to put something together for children coming to the library
needing some information on the history of Pasadena. Because he
felt very strongly that history is a process to be explored, rather
than facts to be regurgitated, he conceptualized the work as a
series of questions that would both teach some interesting facts
about Pasadena, as well as give the students the skills to further
explore topics that interest them on their own. Thus attached to
each question is a search strategy to get a more complete answer
online through the PNI and then at the library. Drawing upon the
extensive newspaper archives of the Pasadena Public Library, the
PNI is a comprehensive online resource of Pasadena newspaper
headlines and subject headings. It provides a unique window into
the history of Pasadena as seen by contemporary citizens of
Pasadena. Go through all 690 questions and you will be proficient
at online searching AND knowledgeable about the history of
Pasadena. While the book was initially intended as an aid to
teachers and home school parents to find innovative ways to teach
Pasadena history, many of the facts and incidents will appeal to
readers of all ages. Because each question has a larger story
behind it: an 11-year-old boy who helped uncover an Indian burial
ground in Pasadena; a Pasadena African-American who passed as white
and served as an officer in World War One; a Pasadena woman who won
a world chess championship. And 697 other stories waiting to be
explored. Enjoy.
"Oh No Not Emily" is a Gilbert & Sullivan-like operetta based
very loosely on actual events. It is the story of Molly
Writerblock, an aspiring poet, as she enters a graduate English
program at a very large public university located next to an ocean.
There she meets another newcomer to the department who is
attempting to sell a hitherto unknown original poem by Emily
Dickinson to the same English Department. There are also supportive
parents; older, helpful grad students who have been there a very
long time who willingly share how to be a successful grad student;
an extremely knowledgeable professor who willingly shares his
brilliance and an unseen Dean who communicates entirely through
memos. In the end, only one newcomer will remain. With "Oh No, Not
Emily " you have the recipe for a show that will have your entire
campus buzzing. With "Oh No Not Emily" you get a show that has: 8
strong characters all of whom get their own songs and "time in the
sun." A musical score that is continually rich and inventive. One
song actually combines each of the chord triads based on the 11
semitones of the Western Musical scale (really). A show that
lovingly, yet satirically, through song and dance examines academic
life from the inside. People who will especially be attracted by
this script are: People who have spent time in an English
department. People who know what a paradigm is. People who exist in
large bureaucracies. People who are in grad school and need to
laugh about it. People who are thinking of going to grad school and
want to know what is is really like. People who are paying for grad
school and are curious about what they are spending all that money
for. In short, a show with something for everyone.
It is 2012 and the Republican Party is about to nominate a mime for
President, and the Secret Service has 90 minutes to figure out who
in his inner circle wants him dead. Brad Tapelson is the perfect
candidate. Good looking, and able to project empathetic anger in a
non-threatening way, he shows voters only enough so that they are
convinced that he thinks like they do. And now that his long-shot
candidacy is about to be successful, the people around him are
having serious second doubts about the whole enterprise. Among
those who have murder in their heart are: His best friend with him
since the beginning. Clynell Daggett struggling with Brad's sudden
fame and Clynell's equally sudden submersion in the shadows. His
corporate handler. Belton Beming struggling with Brad's sudden
fortune and Belton's losing control of the image Brad projects. His
political team. Dorothy Barrymore struggling with Brad's sudden
success and her dawning realization that she could be responsible
for the most disastrous President ever. They all know that he would
make an awful President. But who is willing to do something about
it? More than just voting their conscience. So in order to keep
this crime from the public, Secret Service agent John W. Singer has
gathered the all suspects together in one room. On the eve of the
Republican National Convention, he knows there's only one chance to
solve this mystery, cut through the lies and broken dreams, and
deal with the one person who could actually silence the Mime. It's
time to elect, or kill, the first mime President.
This is the story of an 8 1/2 foot penguin, who is a goddess, who
is pursued by two people, who are bureaucrats, through today's
America, including Hollywood. This is a comedy. More specifically,
this is a fantasy satire of the modern world. A world where a
powerful bureaucracy mediates disputes between different gods and
their followers. The book introduces two InterDeitific Conflict
Resolution Agents (IDCRAs) who spend their days processing requests
for personal blessings and curses. But when the resolution agents
mix up requests, a Deity No Longer Worshiped Anymore Resulting in
Curtailment (DIONWARIC) is summoned to the world to resolve a grade
dispute in a religious studies class. To complicate this processing
error even further, the ignored goddess comes to Earth in the form
of an eight-and-a-half-foot penguin. Armed with their new VOCERA
device (Vocal Oversight with Continuously Explained Rules for
Action), the two agents venture forth to bring back the oversized,
flightless bird. They track her through modern academia where the
goddess serves as inspiration, and modern Hollywood where the
Goddess proves to be remarkably effective as both an entertainer at
children's parties and as a consultant on sword and sorcery movies.
They also pass through a modern high school, pie baking competition
and an airplane crash. "In a world where religion is seen as a
'wedge' issue, this play finds humor and room for thought for
people of all persuasions," author Dan McLaughlin says. "It also
looks at what happens to people when filling out forms becomes
their life." The book's inspiration comes from questioning of what
happens when people of different religious faiths pray for varying
results to the same event and why people even bother to pray. "Gott
Mit Uns," reflects on a problematic world where powerful
bureaucracy exists between different gods and what it does to the
people who work there.
This Just in Nominated Best Storytelling 2009 Just Plan Folks
Thanks to Hans Christian Anderson, you already know the story of
the Little Match Girl who froze to death selling matches on a
street-corner on New Year's Eve. But what about the managers who
woke up the next morning (their day off ) to deal with the mess?
How did they get in the situation in the first place? More
importantly, how did they get out of it? What is the role
"Brainstorming Sessions" and is there really no such thing as a bad
idea? Is it possible to be TOO fawning to a boss? How can blaming
foreigners for one's problems solve one's crisis? All of these
questions are answered in "ICE Girls: What Managers Can Learn from
the Story of the Little Match Girl by One Who Was There."
This is a story about language. No. Of language. Of. About. About.
Of. Language. Crap. Ok this is NOT a story of grammar. Nor is it a
story about grammar. This is a story about the language we use in
relationships with friends, family, and lovers. This story
highlights the curious phenomena that we are far more polite to
people we are socially distant from and can be far nastier to those
we supposedly are close to. This is the story of Riley and the
language in his life. Fortunately Riley has sense of humor, a
verbally sophisticated family and rides the bus. He meets an
equally verbally adept lady named Rachel and we read the words used
by Riley and Rachel as they meet, fall in love, descend into
screaming fights and move, perhaps, beyond. Why bother with Riley?
Well this book also reveals to its female readership the long
guarded male secret of why men never do what they PROMISE they say
they are going to do. Guys get basketball tips.
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