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After a gunfighter killed his father Jimmy Fanner became the most notorious, fearsome, formidable gunfighting machine that the West had ever seen. He searched throughout the West for gunfighters. He found them. He challenged them. He put them in their grave. If you are a gunfighter 'watch out'. The Fanner is coming to town and the undertaker is standing bye.
Leo Adams is a singularly talented artist and designer who has been a creative force in the Pacific Northwest for almost 50 years. Although firmly rooted in the Yakima Valley, where he is a member of the Yakama Nation, his influence has international resonance. Generations of artists, interior designers, and architects have been fascinated, enchanted, and inspired by his home, his art, and Leo himself. His deceptively modest abode just inside the boundary of the Yakama Reservation has been featured in many important architecture and design publications. This volume features a biography by noted author and arts writer Sheila Farr. Linda Tesner , director and curator of the Ronna and Eric Hoffman Gallery of Contemporary Art at Lewis & Clark College contributes an essay on his home and his painting. Michael Burns 's photos reveal Adams' ability to create Palladian elegance out of the humblest of materials, usually using his own craft and carpentry skills as well as his eye for finding beauty in the mundane.
This volume offers a timely collection of research-based studies that engage with contemporary conditions of precarity across an array of locations, exploring how it is understood, experienced, and acted upon by educators in schools, universities, and nonformal educational spaces. Precarity presents as layered, unpredictable, destabilizing, and rapidly shifting sociopolitical and economic dynamics, shown here in various forms, including the global pandemic, divisive populist politics, displacement of refugees and the landless, race and gender injustices, and neoliberal policies that constrain educational and social possibilities. Grouped around reflection, educational practice, and social activism, the authors show how educators engage these precarious conditions as they work toward a more interconnected, humane, and just society. This text will benefit researchers, academics, and educators with an interest in social foundations of education, multicultural and social justice education, educational policy, and international and comparative education, sociology and anthropology of education, and cultural studies within education, among other fields.
Author : Chad Heap Publisher : University of Chicago Press Page : 433 pages File Size : 41,75 MB Release : 2008-11-15 Category : Social Science ISBN : 0226322459
During Prohibition, “Harlem was the ‘in’ place to go for music and booze,” recalled the African American chanteuse Bricktop. “Every night the limousines pulled up to the corner,” and out spilled affluent whites, looking for a good time, great jazz, and the unmatchable thrill of doing something disreputable. That is the indelible public image of slumming, but as Chad Heap reveals in this fascinating history, the reality is that slumming was far more widespread—and important—than such nostalgia-tinged recollections would lead us to believe. From its appearance as a “fashionable dissipation” centered on the immigrant and working-class districts of 1880s New York through its spread to Chicago and into the 1930s nightspots frequented by lesbians and gay men, Slumming charts the development of this popular pastime, demonstrating how its moralizing origins were soon outstripped by the artistic, racial, and sexual adventuring that typified Jazz-Age America. Vividly recreating the allure of storied neighborhoods such as Greenwich Village and Bronzeville, with their bohemian tearooms, rent parties, and “black and tan” cabarets, Heap plumbs the complicated mix of curiosity and desire that drew respectable white urbanites to venture into previously off-limits locales. And while he doesn’t ignore the role of exploitation and voyeurism in slumming—or the resistance it often provoked—he argues that the relatively uninhibited mingling it promoted across bounds of race and class helped to dramatically recast the racial and sexual landscape of burgeoning U.S. cities. Packed with stories of late-night dance, drink, and sexual exploration—and shot through with a deep understanding of cities and the habits of urban life—Slumming revives an era that is long gone, but whose effects are still felt powerfully today.
United States. Congress. House Joint Commission to Investigate Indian Affairs
Author : United States. Congress. House Joint Commission to Investigate Indian Affairs Publisher : Page : 1000 pages File Size : 28,90 MB Release : 1914 Category : Indians of North America ISBN :
Leroy New is the real thing. His passions are his family and his music. This wholesome story will give you a lift. Carl Erskine Former All-star pitcher Brooklyn Dodgers Leroy New has lived the American Dream. He grew up in a small cabin in the hills of southern Kentucky, where he was raised by his grandparents. He attended a one room school house and often rode those four miles on horseback with his grandpa. Through dedication and hard work, he is today the "Guitar Wizard" of Branson, Missouri. He was voted Branson's guitarist of the year in 2010 and is a member of the Traditional Country Music Hall of Fame. Through it all he has maintained a warm, wholesome and genuine personality. It has been a joy to work with Leroy on his story, "A Man from Two Worlds". George E Pfautsch Author and Speaker
United States. Joint Commission to Investigate Indian Affairs. [from old catalog]
Author : United States. Joint Commission to Investigate Indian Affairs. [from old catalog] Publisher : Page : 1004 pages File Size : 23,76 MB Release : 1914 Category : Indians of North America ISBN :
United States. Joint Commission to Investigate Indian Affairs
Author : United States. Joint Commission to Investigate Indian Affairs Publisher : Page : 744 pages File Size : 14,2 MB Release : 1914 Category : Indians of North America ISBN :
Step into the world of Kurt Gödel: his life, his marriage, his friendship with Einstein, and his legacy in this internationally best-selling novel. Princeton University, 1980. Kurt Gödel, the most fascinating, though hermetic, mathematician of the twentieth century, has just died of anorexia. His widow, Adele, a fierce woman shunned by her husband’s colleagues because she had been a cabaret dancer, is now consigned to a nursing home. To the great annoyance of the Institute of Advanced Studies, she refuses to hand over Gödel’s precious records. Anna Roth is given the difficult task of befriending Adele and retrieving the documents from her. As Adele opens the gates of her memory, the two women travel back into the life she shared with her enigmatic husband: Vienna during the Nazi era, Princeton right after the war, the pressures of McCarthyism, the end of the positivist ideal, and the advent of nuclear weapons. Yannick Grannec brilliantly narrates the epic story of a genius who could never quite find his place in the world, and the determination of the woman who loved him.