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1000 tulosta hakusanalla John O'Bryan
Alas Sweet Lethe begins in the tumultuous years of the mid-1800's and follows the lives of a rural Kentucky family living along the Ohio River. Two young boys, Adam, son of a land owner, and Reuben, son of a trapper, grow up in this era. Nearly brothers when young, they become competitors for the same woman as they grow older. Their friendship turns into acrimony and revenge on the evening of Adam's wedding to Helen. While on a river boat bound for St. Louis, the two men fight until they break a railing. Helen and Reuben both fall overboard. She drowns, but Reuben recovers and eventually makes his way to St. Louis. Forty years after his departure, Reuben returns to Kentucky. When Adam learns he is back in town, he executes a plan to drown him in the old chapel where the wedding had taken place.
Lords of Smashmouth: The Unlikely Rise of an American Phenomenon
John Baskin; Michael O'Bryant
Orange Frazer Press
2021
sidottu
Criado em South Central, regi o de Los Angeles assolada pela pobreza e infestada de gangues, Bryant viu por si mesmo como as institui es norte-americanas abandonaram os pobres. Ele explica em detalhes como os empr stimos de neg cios, o cr dito imobili rio e os investimentos financeiros sumiram de suas comunidades. Depois de d cadas de priva o, os pobres carecem de conta banc ria, de pontua o de cr dito decente e de qualquer experi ncia pessoal sobre como funciona um sistema saud vel de livre iniciativa. Bryant redefine radicalmente o significado de pobreza e riqueza (n o apenas uma quest o de finan as; tamb m uma quest o de valores). Ele exp e por que as tentativas de ajudar os pobres n o atingiram resultados at agora e oferece um caminho a ser seguido: o Plano HOPE, uma s rie de medidas diretas e exequ veis para construir o letramento financeiro e expandir as oportunidades, de modo que os pobres possam aderir classe m dia. Um total de 70% da economia norte-americana impulsionada pelos gastos do consumidor, mas cada vez mais pessoas ficam sem dinheiro bem antes do fim do m s. John Hope Bryant aspira "expandir a filosofia da livre iniciativa para incluir todos os filhos de Deus" e criar uma economia pujante que funcione n o apenas para 1%, nem mesmo para 99%, mas para os 100%. Essa uma abordagem de livre iniciativa para resolver o problema da pobreza e promover uma nova Am rica.
General Motors Engineering Journal, V6, No. 2, April-June, 1959
General Motors Corporation; John Bryant; Ronald O. Woods
Literary Licensing, LLC
2013
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The Decline of Substance Use in Young Adulthood
Jerald G. Bachman; Patrick M. O'Malley; John E. Schulenberg; Lloyd D. Johnston; Alison L. Bryant; Alicia C. Merline
Psychology Press Ltd
2013
nidottu
This book is intended as a thoughtful extension to Bachman et al.'s well-received monograph Smoking, Drinking, and Drug Use in Young Adulthood. That volume showed that the new freedoms of young adulthood lead to increases in substance use, while the responsibilities of adulthood--marriage, pregnancy, parenthood--contribute to declines in substance use. The Decline of Substance Use in Young Adulthood examines how the changes in social and religious experiences and in attitudes toward substance use observed among young adults are related to changes in substance use, family transitions, living arrangements, college experience, and employment. The research uses a variety of analysis techniques and is based on the nationwide Monitoring the Future surveys of more than 38,000 young people followed from high school into adulthood. The research covers the last quarter of the 20th century, a period when drug use and views about drugs underwent many important changes. In spite of these shifts, the overall patterns of relationships reported in this book are impressive in their consistency across time and in their general similarity for men and women.Specific questions addressed include the following: *As young adults experience new freedoms and responsibilities, do their attitudes about drugs change? *Do their religious views and behaviors shift? *Do their new freedoms and responsibilities affect the amount of time they spend in social activities, including going to parties and bars? *And how are any of these changes linked to changes in cigarette use, alcohol use, marijuana use, and cocaine use?
The Decline of Substance Use in Young Adulthood
Jerald G. Bachman; Patrick M. O'Malley; John E. Schulenberg; Lloyd D. Johnston; Alison L. Bryant; Alicia C. Merline
Psychology Press
2001
sidottu
This book is intended as a thoughtful extension to Bachman et al.'s well-received monograph Smoking, Drinking, and Drug Use in Young Adulthood. That volume showed that the new freedoms of young adulthood lead to increases in substance use, while the responsibilities of adulthood--marriage, pregnancy, parenthood--contribute to declines in substance use. The Decline of Substance Use in Young Adulthood examines how the changes in social and religious experiences and in attitudes toward substance use observed among young adults are related to changes in substance use, family transitions, living arrangements, college experience, and employment. The research uses a variety of analysis techniques and is based on the nationwide Monitoring the Future surveys of more than 38,000 young people followed from high school into adulthood. The research covers the last quarter of the 20th century, a period when drug use and views about drugs underwent many important changes. In spite of these shifts, the overall patterns of relationships reported in this book are impressive in their consistency across time and in their general similarity for men and women.Specific questions addressed include the following: *As young adults experience new freedoms and responsibilities, do their attitudes about drugs change? *Do their religious views and behaviors shift? *Do their new freedoms and responsibilities affect the amount of time they spend in social activities, including going to parties and bars? *And how are any of these changes linked to changes in cigarette use, alcohol use, marijuana use, and cocaine use?
Normal is a setting for washing machines, one of the things this Vietnam veteran learned after mismanaged health care at the VA hospital in Portland Oregon landed him in the Oregon State Hospital. Suffering from a temporary state of delirium brought on by inappropriate drug therapy, John ran away from the VA hospital and was shot in the chest by police in front of his home in an upper middle-class neighborhood in Dundee Oregon. The 45 caliber hollow point bullet did not kill John but rather started him on a journey to happiness. Traumatized by war and incarcerated for a crime he did not commit. John also learned that life is not fair or just but you can be happy in the mental hospital, jail, or anywhere else regardless of any mental illness diagnosis, even chronic and severe PTSD. this book shows the reader how the Bible can help you make sense of life. Focus on Jesus The truth will set you free
Otfried Hans Freiherr von Meusebach chose a life of hardship and freedom in Texas rather than a life of comfort and influence in his native Germany, where he had lived his formative years within a framework of unconstitutional government. In 1845 the young liberal relinquished his hereditary German title, left behind his close family ties and his various intellectual and political associations, and arrived in Texas as John O. Meusebach, commissioner-general for the Society for the Protection of German Immigrants. His background enabled him to assume an enlightened leadership of fellow immigrants who were pouring in from Germany. Lacking adequate financial backing, he nevertheless led the settling of some five thousand people in a land that was largely occupied by Indians. Irene Marschall King presents the full sweep of Meusebach's vigorous life: Meusebach as the young liberal in Germany, as the colonizer in the 1840s, as a Texas senator and, later, an observer of the Civil War, and as a Texan who devoted his later years to bringing the Texas soil to fruition-all set against a background of the immigration movement and frontier life. "Freedom is not free; it is costly," Meusebach believed. In Texas he found for himself and others freedom worth the price he paid. Rich in historic detail, King's story recounts the founding of Fredericksburg, the crippling effect of the Mexican War upon the mass of immigrants huddled in illness on the coast, the signing of the Indian Treaty, which opened to settlement over three million acres of land, and the final collapse of the Society for the Protection of German Immigrants. Also depicted is the colonists' influence on the land-the gardens and orchards of south central Texas, the "Easter Fires" that blaze on the hills surrounding Fredericksburg, the mixture of German custom with American necessity that created a unique culture. Throughout the narrative Mrs. King presents a fascinating cast of characters: the noble Prince Solms, who tries to establish a German military outpost in Texas; Henry Fisher, who attempts by devious methods to control the colonists and their land and finally incites a mob which tries to hang Meusebach; Philip Cappes, a special commissioner and Meusebach's assistant, who plots through intriguing correspondence with Count Castell, the executive secretary in Germany, to overthrow Meusebach; and the colorful and courageous Indian fighter and Texas Ranger, Colonel Jack Hays. Primarily, however, this is the story of a man who found strength in his family's motto, "Perseverance in Purpose," and gave of his energies to build Texas.
John O'Hara - American Writers 80 was first published in 1969. Minnesota Archive Editions uses digital technology to make long-unavailable books once again accessible, and are published unaltered from the original University of Minnesota Press editions.