You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
On Christmas Day in 1914 a remarkable game of football was played out across the no-man's land trenches. Outside Ypres, German and British soldier laid down their weapons for a friendly kickabout before returning to war the next day. The matches continued on until 1917 when fate meant the game could not be played. 100 years on, museums and forces of those two nations aim to replay the match that did not end and the prize is the whistle used to referee those epic WW1 kickabouts. Only one side can win the battle that has remained unsettled for 100 years.
A totally revised and updated edition of the first book to offer a holistic approach to slowing the progression of MS • Provides guidance on special diets and nutritional supplements, exercise, alternative therapies, and the effects of negative and positive thoughts on MS • Explains how to reduce toxic overload from mercury and chemicals • Includes life wisdom and coping strategies from others who suffer with MS Judy Graham is an inspiration. Diagnosed with multiple sclerosis when she was just 26 years old, 35 years later Judy Graham is still walking, working, and has successfully birthed and raised a son who is now an adult. In this totally revised and updated edition of her groundbre...
Buster Keaton told an interviewer in 1965, "When I'm working alone, the cameraman, the prop man, the electrician, these are my eyes out there.... They knew what they were talking about." Drawn from film trade magazines, newspapers, interviews and public records, this book tells the previously unpublished stories of the behind-the-scenes crew who worked on Keaton's silent films--like Elgin Lessley, who went from department store clerk to chief cameraman, and Fred Gabourie, who served as an army private in the Spanish American War before he became Keaton's technical director. "I'd ask, 'Did that work the way I wanted it to?' and they'd say yes or no," Keaton said of his crew. He couldn't have made his films without them.
None
None