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One of the many grace gifts received by sinners when they become
saints through the miracle of a spiritual birth is the gift of
glory. The Apostle Paul rejoiced in this truth when he declared,
"For I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not
worthy to be compared with the glory to be revealed to us (Romans
8: 15)." He further explains that this glory will be realized when
believers will be "conformed to the image of His Son (Romans 8: 29)
and is unconditionally guaranteed by God to come to pass (Romans 8:
30)." Thus, being glorified is a journey from the new birth in
Christ to the New Jerusalem. In this book, this journey takes place
in a series of seven "days": Day One- Day Two- Day Three- Day Four-
Day Five- Day Six- Day Seven- Dear reader: don't miss any longer
the spiritual joy and comfort of God's future glory plans for His
children.
"Mama's Boy" describes the life of author Robert Hood: his early
years in a coal-mining village during the Depression, his life in
the navy during World War II, and his later professional success.
At the heart of Hood's memoir is his proud and talented mother, who
is determined that her headstrong son will become somebody. But the
impish boy is more interested in sports than poetry recitations or
declamation contests. Anxious to enter the war, seventeen-year-old
Hood enlists in the U.S. Navy in 1944 and serves on Guam. He
returns, attends college, and eventually ends up in New York City
as the editor-in-chief of "Boys' Life Magazine." As Hood achieves
success, he meets some of the distinguished artists and authors of
the twentieth century. He lunches with Andre Kertesz, Alex Haley,
and Isaac Asimov; takes tea with Salvador Dali and Philippe
Halsman; and chats on the phone with Margaret Coit, Catherine
Drinker Bowen, and Margaret Bourke-White. He also interviews great
athletes such as Hank Greenberg, Mickey Mantle, and Willie Mays.
But most important to Hood are those people in his family who
mentored him so well. "Mama's Boy" pays tribute to his parents,
grandparents, siblings, uncles, and aunt. His love for them bears
witness to the endurance of human memory.
Archetypal images, Carl Jung believed, when elaborated in tales and
ceremonies, shape culture's imagination and behavior.
Unfortunately, such cultural images can become stale and lose their
power over the mind. But an artist or mystic can refresh and revive
a culture's imagination by exploring his personal dream-images and
connecting them to the past. Dante Alighieri presents his Divine
Comedy as a dream-vision, carefully establishing the date at which
it came to him (Good Friday, 1300), and maintaining the perspective
of that time and place, throughout the work, upon unfolding
history. Modern readers will therefore welcome a Jungian
psychoanalytical approach, which can trace both instinctual and
spiritual impulses in the human psyche. Some of Dante's innovations
(admission of virtuous pagans to Limbo) and individualized scenes
(meeting personal friends in the afterlife) more likely spring from
unconscious inspiration than conscious didactic intent. For modern
readers, a focus on Dante's personal dream-journey may offer the
best way into his poem.
Attention has recently turned to using plants as hosts for the
production of commercially important proteins. The twelve case
studies in this volume present successful strategies for using
plants to produce industrial and pharmaceutical proteins and
vaccine antigens. They examine in detail projects that have
commercial potential or products that have already been
commercialized, illustrating the advantages that plants offer over
bacterial, fungal or animal cell-culture hosts. There are many
indications that plant protein production marks the beginning of a
new paradigm for the commercial production of proteins that, over
the next decade, will expand dramatically.
For over 10 years, TMV -based vectors have been used as plant
expression tools to examine gene regulation and function, protein
processing, pathogen elicitors, to manipulate biosynthetic
pathways, and to produce high levels of enzymes, proteins, or
peptides of interest in different locations in a plant cell. TMV
vectors often exhibit genetic stability of foreign RNA sequences
through multiple passages in plant hosts. Foreign coding sequences
can be expressed in plants where the stability, intracellular fate
and enzymatic or biological activities of the recombinant proteins
can be rapidly evaluated and optimized. These properties make viral
vectors attracti ve expression vehicles for testing and production
of a wide variety of recombinant peptides and proteins, for
structural analyses of post-translational modifications and for
assessing gene function and metabolic control. Finally, the utility
of both CP fusion and dual subgenomic vectors has extended beyond
the laboratory and greenhouse to field-scale production and
purification of recombinant products for commercial use (Grill,
1992; Grill, 1993; Turpen et at. , 1997). REFERENCES Copeman RJ,
Hartman IR and Watterson IC. 1969. Tobacco mosaic virus in
inoculated and systemically infected tobacco leaves. Phytopathology
59: 1012-1013. Dawson WO, Beck DL, Knorr DA and Grantham GL. 1986.
cDNA cloning of the complete genome of tobacco mosaic virus and
production of infectious transcripts. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. (USA)
83: 1832-1836. Dawson WO and Lehto KM. 1990. Regulation of
tobamovirus gene expression. Ad. Virus Res. 38:307-342. Dawson WOo
1992. Tobamovirus-Plant Interactions. Virology 186:359-367.
First Published in 1995. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
First Published in 1995. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
Attention has recently turned to using plants as hosts for the
production of commercially important proteins. The twelve case
studies in this volume present successful strategies for using
plants to produce industrial and pharmaceutical proteins and
vaccine antigens. They examine in detail projects that have
commercial potential or products that have already been
commercialized, illustrating the advantages that plants offer over
bacterial, fungal or animal cell-culture hosts. There are many
indications that plant protein production marks the beginning of a
new paradigm for the commercial production of proteins that, over
the next decade, will expand dramatically.
For over 10 years, TMV -based vectors have been used as plant
expression tools to examine gene regulation and function, protein
processing, pathogen elicitors, to manipulate biosynthetic
pathways, and to produce high levels of enzymes, proteins, or
peptides of interest in different locations in a plant cell. TMV
vectors often exhibit genetic stability of foreign RNA sequences
through multiple passages in plant hosts. Foreign coding sequences
can be expressed in plants where the stability, intracellular fate
and enzymatic or biological activities of the recombinant proteins
can be rapidly evaluated and optimized. These properties make viral
vectors attracti ve expression vehicles for testing and production
of a wide variety of recombinant peptides and proteins, for
structural analyses of post-translational modifications and for
assessing gene function and metabolic control. Finally, the utility
of both CP fusion and dual subgenomic vectors has extended beyond
the laboratory and greenhouse to field-scale production and
purification of recombinant products for commercial use (Grill,
1992; Grill, 1993; Turpen et at. , 1997). REFERENCES Copeman RJ,
Hartman IR and Watterson IC. 1969. Tobacco mosaic virus in
inoculated and systemically infected tobacco leaves. Phytopathology
59: 1012-1013. Dawson WO, Beck DL, Knorr DA and Grantham GL. 1986.
cDNA cloning of the complete genome of tobacco mosaic virus and
production of infectious transcripts. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. (USA)
83: 1832-1836. Dawson WO and Lehto KM. 1990. Regulation of
tobamovirus gene expression. Ad. Virus Res. 38:307-342. Dawson WOo
1992. Tobamovirus-Plant Interactions. Virology 186:359-367.
A step-by-step guide to making babyfood at home. Begin making
healthful, flavorful, cost-saving meals for infants and toddlers
with the simple recipies and instructions found in this "must-have"
book for new parents.
A whole host of motivations are driving the development of the
"renewables" industry- ranging from the desire to develop
sustainable energy resources to the reduction of dangerous
greenhouse gases that contribute to global warming. All energy
utilized on the earth is ultimately derived from the sun through
photosynthesis-the only truly renewable commodity. As concerns
regarding increasing energy prices, global warming and renewable
resources continue to grow, so has scientific discovery into
agricultural biomass conversion. Plant Biomass Conversion addresses
both the development of plant biomass and conversion technology, in
addition to issues surrounding biomass conversion, such as the
affect on water resources and soil sustainability. This book also
offers a brief overview of the current status of the industry and
examples of production plants being used in current biomass
conversion efforts.
Do you wish you had more to show for all the time you've spent
earning a living? Are you tired of living one or two paychecks away
from financial disaster? Do you worry about having enough money
when you retire? If you long for true financial security but don't
know where to start, let Money For Life be your guide. Presented in
a straight forward, relevant manner, Money for Life will equip you
with the information and tools you need to understand how to build
wealth and create a secure financial future. Personal finance
expert and educator Marilynn E. Hood starts with the basics of
money management and simplifies even complex wealth-management
issues. The examples and references included in Money for Life will
help you make informed decisions about debt, saving and investing,
insurance, retirement accounts, estate planning and more. This
practical book will quickly become your go-to resource for all your
personal finance questions. This is the real-world information you
wish you had learned in school You ll learn: How to monitor your
finances and build up cash reserves How compounding works and how
to use it your advantage How debt works and how to pay it down How
insurance works and why you need it How stocks, bonds, funds and
retirement accounts work Why everyone should plan for their estate
One of the many grace gifts received by sinners when they become
saints through the miracle of a spiritual birth is the gift of
glory. The Apostle Paul rejoiced in this truth when he declared,
"For I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not
worthy to be compared with the glory to be revealed to us (Romans
8: 15)." He further explains that this glory will be realized when
believers will be "conformed to the image of His Son (Romans 8: 29)
and is unconditionally guaranteed by God to come to pass (Romans 8:
30)." Thus, being glorified is a journey from the new birth in
Christ to the New Jerusalem. In this book, this journey takes place
in a series of seven "days": Day One- Day Two- Day Three- Day Four-
Day Five- Day Six- Day Seven- Dear reader: don't miss any longer
the spiritual joy and comfort of God's future glory plans for His
children.
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Mama's Boy (Paperback)
Robert E. Hood
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R585
R508
Discovery Miles 5 080
Save R77 (13%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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"Mama's Boy" describes the life of author Robert Hood: his early
years in a coal-mining village during the Depression, his life in
the navy during World War II, and his later professional success.
At the heart of Hood's memoir is his proud and talented mother, who
is determined that her headstrong son will become somebody. But the
impish boy is more interested in sports than poetry recitations or
declamation contests. Anxious to enter the war, seventeen-year-old
Hood enlists in the U.S. Navy in 1944 and serves on Guam. He
returns, attends college, and eventually ends up in New York City
as the editor-in-chief of "Boys' Life Magazine." As Hood achieves
success, he meets some of the distinguished artists and authors of
the twentieth century. He lunches with Andre Kertesz, Alex Haley,
and Isaac Asimov; takes tea with Salvador Dali and Philippe
Halsman; and chats on the phone with Margaret Coit, Catherine
Drinker Bowen, and Margaret Bourke-White. He also interviews great
athletes such as Hank Greenberg, Mickey Mantle, and Willie Mays.
But most important to Hood are those people in his family who
mentored him so well. "Mama's Boy" pays tribute to his parents,
grandparents, siblings, uncles, and aunt. His love for them bears
witness to the endurance of human memory.
In part this book is an issue of justice, of reverencing the
autonomy and integrity of peoples whose non-Western values and
thought patterns need not be jettisoned by their Christian
commitment. In part it is a question of liberation, of
Christianity's siding with marginalized Christians in their
struggles against oppressive structures introduced by colonialism.
Gray Love narrates stories about the most common themes –
searching for and (perhaps) finding love. Forty-five men and women
between ages 60 and 94 from diverse backgrounds talk about dating,
starting or ending a relationship, embracing life alone or enjoying
a partnered one. The longing for connection as old age encroaches
is palpable here, with more and more senior singles searching
online. Those who find new partners explore issues that most
relationships encounter at any age, as well as some that are unique
to elder relationships. These include having had previous partners
and a complicated and deep personal history; family and friends’
reactions to an older person’s dating; alternative models to
marriage (such as sharing space or living apart); having more than
one partner at the same time; one’s aging body, appearance, and
sexuality; and the pressure of time and the specter of illness and
death.
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