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Mickey Rooney Was Right is D.W. Paone's autobiography with the
emphasis on his quest to achieve success as both a writer and
assistant cameraman in the entertainment industry. However, no
matter how hard he tried, and he tried very hard, long-term success
in both these aspects of the industry continued to elude him. While
he had the opportunity to work on Law & Order and a handful of
other high-profile jobs, and even sold a joke to Jay Leno, his
career was a roller coaster ride of highs and lows in a fickle
industry with no rhyme or reason. This book is for anyone who has
attempted, or even considered a career in the entertainment
industry, or followed a dream even when logic and those around him
said to stop.
Directly applicable to practice, Group Activities for Latino/a
Youth allows helping professionals such as human service workers,
social workers, and school and community mental health counselors
to select and apply a series of group sessions with topics relevant
to today's Latino/a youth. Each session contains detailed
directions, suggested discussion questions, and additional readings
on specific topics, with topic examples including grief, identity
development, and conflict resolution. Sessions draw on Latino/a
cultural norms and strengths to build culturally-informed
communication and coping skills in an effort to improve
educational, social, and career outcomes. A developmental
perspective is used, and sessions are designed to be creative and
interactive in order to appeal to the high energy and playfulness
of youth at any age. Group Activities for Latino/a Youth helps
professionals to better engage and retain Latino/a clients, a group
that traditionally experiences one of the largest drop-out rates in
therapy, often due to interventions largely informed by dominant
Anglo norms and traditions.
Directly applicable to practice, Group Activities for Latino/a
Youth allows helping professionals such as human service workers,
social workers, and school and community mental health counselors
to select and apply a series of group sessions with topics relevant
to today's Latino/a youth. Each session contains detailed
directions, suggested discussion questions, and additional readings
on specific topics, with topic examples including grief, identity
development, and conflict resolution. Sessions draw on Latino/a
cultural norms and strengths to build culturally-informed
communication and coping skills in an effort to improve
educational, social, and career outcomes. A developmental
perspective is used, and sessions are designed to be creative and
interactive in order to appeal to the high energy and playfulness
of youth at any age. Group Activities for Latino/a Youth helps
professionals to better engage and retain Latino/a clients, a group
that traditionally experiences one of the largest drop-out rates in
therapy, often due to interventions largely informed by dominant
Anglo norms and traditions.
The author explains why North Korea, though impoverished,
nevertheless feels compelled to spend enormous amounts of its
scarce resources on developing nuclear bombs and missiles capable
of being delivered to the US, or at least to US allies. To most
Americans this seems slightly bizarre. But Paone's conclusion is
that North Korea is quite rational - it simply wants to DETER the
US from doing the same thing as it did during the Korea War:
killing three to six million Koreans; burning down hundreds of
villages, towns and cities; and leaving behind tens of thousands to
live the rest of their lives without limbs or with napalm deformed
bodies. We in the US may have only vague recollections of the
36,000 Americans killed or the 93,000 wounded in that war; but the
Koreans vividly remember their millions of dead and the countless
deformed survivors. Paone sets forth his explanation primarily
through American military-oriented sources; the diaries of US
Generals; over 200 photos of war scenes taken by US Army and US Air
Force personnel; daily Press Releases from General Douglas
MacArthur's Command in Tokyo and finally American newspaper
accounts.
At the beginning of the economic crisis in 2007, housing became a
central commodity in the short-circuit system of mortgages granted
to private individuals and businesses. In the aftermath of the
crisis, and in the wake of the COVID-19 Pandemic, housing-as a
right, in its most radical form-re-emerged due to local housing,
migration, and health emergencies. In light of an eclipse of a
general discourse on housing, a new secular and international
ethics arose, both foreign and superior to nation states. This book
returns to a broader notion of housing: using metaphors of sanitary
and salvific reinstatement, it retrieves case studies from the
1950s for re-conceptualizing the housing question in contemporary
architecture and visual arts.
The personal letters of Americans during the Civil War preserve
first-person records of news, people, and emotions that humanize
the horrific events of the war and provide unique insights into the
conflict's effects on individuals, families, communities, and
America. Often, however, only the letters sent home survived,
leaving half of the story missing. Between Home and the Front
presents previously unpublished letters from the Walters family's
collection held by the Smithsonian's National Postal Museum, which
include the exchange of correspondence between the home front and
front line, a perspective not often seen. Between Home and the
Front gives us a glimpse into the poignant questions, answers, and
sentiments Private David Walters of the 5th Indiana Calvary and his
wife Rachel shared in their correspondence. The letters from David
give details about some of the lesser-known actions of the western
theater of combat, such as Morgan's Raid. The letters by Rachel
Walters record how she managed the household and a young child
while becoming hub of communication for the family, often receiving
missives from David's brothers, Isaac and John Wesley, both of whom
served with Indiana units, and relaying the information to others.
From the early letters describing a Civil War soldier's enlistment
to his widow's struggle in the aftermath of the war, the letters of
the Walters family add incomparable details to the study of the
Civil War. Between Home and the Front offers not only unique
first-person accounts from those that experienced the Civil War but
also meticulous annotations that provide valuable historical
context for the events, people, and material culture described in
the letters.
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Hacksaw Jim (Paperback)
Joseph Michael DiMartino; Dawn Marie Paone DiMartino
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R147
Discovery Miles 1 470
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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