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Acclaimed author Patrick Holford has spent the last 40 years exploring what it means to be 100% healthy. In The Chemistry of Connection he shares deep wisdom that will help you to feel fully alive and awake, and to live a purposeful life. This book explores elemental, chemical, psychological, social, philosophical, ecological, sexual, and spiritual avenues in the search for a deeper understanding and experience of connection, also finding connections between cultural, scientific, and spiritual traditions in the search for higher understanding. In this book you will discover how to: -Wake up from disconnection to connection -Develop your mind-body connection and heal your body -Generate vital energy and restore your vitality -Resolve emotional and relationship difficulties -Improve your mental alertness and intellectual clarity -Connect with the five elements that make us and our world -Explore and experience philosophies that make life worth living Including practical exercises, meditations, and contemplations, this book will help you enhance connection in all areas of your life.
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Meeting the Needs of Your Most Able Students in Art provides specific guidance on: Recognising high ability and multiple intelligences Planning, differentiation and extension/enrichment in Art Teacher questioning skills Support for more able pupils with learning difficulties Homework Recording and assessment Beyond the classroom: visits, residentials, competitions, summer schools, masterclasses, links with other institutions. The book features comprehensive appendices and an accompanying CD with: Useful contacts and resources Lesson plans Liaison sheets for Teaching Assistants Homework activities Monitoring sheets For secondary teachers, subject heads of departments, Gifted and Talented co-ordinators, SENCos and LEA advisers.
This work contains abstracts of the intestate records of the fifty-seven Georgia counties formed before the 1832 Land Lottery, plus those for Fulton (1853), White (1857), Dawson (1857), and Webster (1853) counties. Besides the name of the deceased and the dates of the various court papers, information in the abstracts includes the names of the administrators, sureties and guardians (often relatives of the deceased), names of the surviving spouse and children, the names of orphan children and heirs, and, where a will is recorded, the names of the legatees!
William Lawson (1731-1826) immigrated from Scotland to Halifax County, Virginia, married Jane (Rebecca Jane?) Banks in 1758, served in the Revolutionary War, and moved to Scott County, Virginia. Descendants lived in Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, Illinois, California and elsewhere.