You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
None
In Playing With Fire, Theo Fleury takes us behind the bench during his glorious days as an NHL player, and talks about growing up devastatingly poor and in chaos at home. Dark personal issues began to surface, and drinking, drugs, gambling, and girls ultimately derailed a career that had him destined for the Hall of Fame. Fleury shares all in this raw, captivating, and honest look at the previously untold story of one the game's greatest heroes.
This study has grown out of an interest in French education and cul ture that dates from fondly remembered student days in France. Specifically, it is an attempt to explain the educational thought of Claude Fleury, a literate, responsible homme de leUres who analyzed the historical origins of public education as it existed in seventeenth-cen tury France and, on that basis, proposed what he considered to be a more generally useful program of studies. Generous space has been devoted to historical, social, and pedagogical background in an effort to place Fleury's thought in its proper cultural context; namely, that of the decline of the Classical Age and the dawn of the Age of Reason. This back...
Reprint of the original, first published in 1870.
Erwähnt zehn Handschriften der Burgerbibliothek Bern: Codd. 16 (S. 80), 101 (S. 79), 102 (S. 69), 120 (S. 56), 258 (S. 80, 104, 121, 193), 263 (S. 67), 336 (S. 163), 351 (S. 163), A 91.18 (S. 180, 190), B 56 (S. 70, 80, 118, 163-164).