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My True story about Russian scams, on the web..
Originally published in 1970 Social Planning Techniques for Town
Planners introduces social research methods for town planners. The
book places an emphasis on social research within the planning
process, and addresses the problem faced by the research worker at
successive stages of a research project. It outlines the major
conceptual and organizational problems likely to be encountered in
any social research for planning, and provides guidelines for
tackling these. The book's focus is on social science research
methods and the application of social and economic research to
issues of urban and regional planning and administration.
Originally published in 1970 Social Planning Techniques for Town
Planners introduces social research methods for town planners. The
book places an emphasis on social research within the planning
process, and addresses the problem faced by the research worker at
successive stages of a research project. It outlines the major
conceptual and organizational problems likely to be encountered in
any social research for planning, and provides guidelines for
tackling these. The book's focus is on social science research
methods and the application of social and economic research to
issues of urban and regional planning and administration.
"Droppin' Seeds" is a collection of self-identifying poetry that
is somewhat playful, yet no-nonsense, and down-to-earth. This
collection is about scattering enlightenment, sowing inspiring, and
shaking-off provocative truthful experiences through Spoken Word
Poetry. The literary work represented in this collection speaks for
itself.
A few well-known performed pieces are: "Criminal Conversation,"
"Kiss'n Up is Hard to Do," "Let's Get Acquainted with the Promise,"
"No Test Drives Allowed," "Red Kool-Aid," "Come Out Your Crazy
Cocoon," & "Yeah, We Be Loud ."
"A snake handler convicted of the attempted murder of his wife
by means of serpent bite is serving ninety-nine years in prison.
The reader is gradually pulled into an increasingly complex story
as Thomas Burton allows the many individuals involved in this event
to tell their stories. Readers are less likely to find themselves
concerned with what "really" happened than with larger issues they
too will become involved in. this is more than a story about the
headline 'preacher tries to murder wife - with rattlesnakes " it is
a story of individuals struggling with their faith and their fate
under the steady gaze of their God." --Ralph W. Hood Jr., winner of
the American Psychological Association's William James Award in the
psychology of religion
In this comprehensive, multilayered set of narratives, the story of
Glenn Summerford's fall from grace is told by its participants,
through interviews, court documents, and other primary sources.
Free of either prejudice against or romanticizing about the
snake-handling Holiness religion, this book presents an absorbing
story of a fascinating group of people, while allowing the reader
to draw his or her own conclusions about Summerford's guilt or
innocence. The Serpent and the Spirit is a startling commentary on
truth and its representation, religion and its expression, humanity
and its flaws.
Thomas Burton is professor emeritus of English at East Tennessee
State University. He is the winner of the Appalachian Consortium
Laurel Leaves Award.
In some remote churches in East Tennessee and nearby states, Jesus'
words in the sixteenth chapter of Saint Mark are taken literally:
"and they shall take up serpents; and if they drink any deadly
thing, it shall not hurt them."Members of these churches describe
themselves as Pentecostal-Holiness, autonomous groups of Christians
with strong traditional religious views and a fundamentalist
approach to biblical interpretation. Their strong faith is based
largely on personal experience. Handling serpents and fire, laying
on the hands of healing, speaking in tongues, and drinking poison
are seen as acts of Christian obedience that demonstrate the power
of the Holy Spirit. In the past these very religious people have
often been distorted by the media as members of a "snake religion"
or a "snake cult" because of their unorthodox beliefs and
practices. Thomas Burton seeks to present a more balanced view of
this generally misunderstood group in this in-depth study of
serpent handlers and their religious culture. Using both oral
history and scholarly research, Burton traces the evolution of
Christian serpent handling from its apparent beginning in East
Tennessee and explores legal and ethical issues associated with
this and other unorthodox practices, allowing participants to speak
for themselves through personal interviews. The result is both a
dramatic presentation, through vivid photography, and a thorough
analytical insight into the serpent handlers' culture.
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