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Have you ever felt lost and hoped that someone would help you find your way? Perhaps you are living a fun-filled exciting life, yet unable to feel and experience closeness with others. Have you ever wondered if life could be better? Inside the covers of this book lies the story of two such people who, on a bet, take a trip to the country. An unexpected storm thrusts them into a country inn where they encounter three unusual old people. Forced to deal with their pasts and take responsibility for the present, they begin to feel more alive and at peace. Their trip was meant to be a pleasant distraction from their frenzied lives, but instead became a journey to Wholeness. Whole is the first installment of a trilogy.
Beth Spencer's Pea Soup: Recipes for Body, Mind, and Spirit from a 'Kitchen Table Gourmet, ' is a veritable feast of family favorite recipes-recipes full of life and love, recipes to wrap your mouth around and savor, recipes for foods that for years Beth thought she couldn't eat as part of everyday meals-normal foods using normal ingredients, foods that were on her forbidden food list-foods that she's happily invited back into her daily life. While writing Pea Soup, Beth learned how to be a competent eater...and learned to accept her body at its natural weight, after over 40 years of yo-yo dieting and disordered eating. From appetizers to desserts and everything in between, Pea Soup, fairly brims with wonderful, wholesome recipes-quick and easy recipes for when you're pressed for time, as well as classic recipes that require a little more time (and flour) on the hands, yet yield delicious and joyous results. Bon Appetit
Cases decided in the United States district courts, United States Court of International Trade, and rulings of the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation.
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Abstracts of dissertations available on microfilm or as xerographic reproductions.
Examining the wide range of feminist research methods, Shulamit Reinharz explains the relationship between feminism and methodology, and challenges existing stereotypes. Concluding that there is no one correct feminist method, but rather a variety of perspectives, Reinharz argues that this diversity of methods has been of great value to feminist scholarship. With an extensive bibliography cataloguing the important work accomplished over the last two decades, Feminist Methods in Social Research is an essential resource for students of sociology and women's studies.