Invisible Seasons

Invisible Seasons
Title Invisible Seasons PDF eBook
Author Kelly Belanger
Publisher Syracuse University Press
Pages 490
Release 2017-01-03
Genre Sports & Recreation
ISBN 0815653824

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In 1979, a group of women athletes at Michigan State University, their civil rights attorney, the institution’s Title IX coordinator, and a close circle of college students used the law to confront a powerful institution—their own university. By the mid-1970s, opposition from the NCAA had made intercollegiate athletics the most controversial part of Title IX, the 1972 federal law prohibiting discrimi nation in all federally funded education programs and activities. At the same time, some of the most motivated, highly skilled women athletes in colleges and universities could no longer tolerate the long-standing differences between men’s and women‘s separate but obviously unequal sports programs. In Invisible Seasons, Belanger recalls the remarkable story of how the MSU women athletes helped change the landscape of higher education athletics. They learned the hard way that even groundbreaking civil rights laws are not self-executing. This behind-the-scenes look at a university sports program challenges us all to think about what it really means to put equality into practice, especially in the money-driven world of college sports.

Wild Ones

Wild Ones
Title Wild Ones PDF eBook
Author Jon Mooallem
Publisher Penguin Books
Pages 353
Release 2014-05-27
Genre History
ISBN 0143125370

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"Wild Ones is a tour through our environmental moment and the eccentric cultural history of people and wild animals in America that inflects it. With propulsive curiosity and searing wit, and without that easy moralizing and nature worship of environmental journalism's older guard, [Jon] Mooallem merges reportage, science, and history into a humane and endearing meditation on what it means to live in, and bring life into, a broken world."--Back cover.

Selection Adapted to the Seasons of the Ecclesiastical Year from the Parochial and Plain Sermons ...

Selection Adapted to the Seasons of the Ecclesiastical Year from the Parochial and Plain Sermons ...
Title Selection Adapted to the Seasons of the Ecclesiastical Year from the Parochial and Plain Sermons ... PDF eBook
Author Saint John Henry Newman
Publisher
Pages 500
Release 1920
Genre Anglican Communion
ISBN

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Selection Adapted to the Seasons of the Ecclesiastical Year from the Parochial & Plain Sermons

Selection Adapted to the Seasons of the Ecclesiastical Year from the Parochial & Plain Sermons
Title Selection Adapted to the Seasons of the Ecclesiastical Year from the Parochial & Plain Sermons PDF eBook
Author John Henry Newman
Publisher
Pages 530
Release 1886
Genre Sermons, English
ISBN

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Selection Adapted to the Seasons of the Ecclesiastical Year from the Parochial and Plain Sermons ...

Selection Adapted to the Seasons of the Ecclesiastical Year from the Parochial and Plain Sermons ...
Title Selection Adapted to the Seasons of the Ecclesiastical Year from the Parochial and Plain Sermons ... PDF eBook
Author John Henry Newman
Publisher
Pages 534
Release 1920
Genre Anglican Communion
ISBN

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Selection Adapted to the Seasons of the Ecclesiastical Year from the Parochial & Plain Sermons of John Henry Newman

Selection Adapted to the Seasons of the Ecclesiastical Year from the Parochial & Plain Sermons of John Henry Newman
Title Selection Adapted to the Seasons of the Ecclesiastical Year from the Parochial & Plain Sermons of John Henry Newman PDF eBook
Author Saint John Henry Newman
Publisher
Pages 612
Release 1878
Genre Church year sermons
ISBN

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Invisible Ink

Invisible Ink
Title Invisible Ink PDF eBook
Author Guy Stern
Publisher Wayne State University Press
Pages 320
Release 2020-08-04
Genre History
ISBN 0814347606

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Invisible Ink is the story of Guy Stern’s remarkable life. This is not a Holocaust memoir; however, Stern makes it clear that the horrors of the Holocaust and his remarkable escape from Nazi Germany created the central driving force for the rest of his life. Stern gives much credit to his father’s profound cautionary words, "You have to be like invisible ink. You will leave traces of your existence when, in better times, we can emerge again and show ourselves as the individuals we are." Stern carried these words and their psychological impact for much of his life, shaping himself around them, until his emergence as someone who would be visible to thousands over the years. This book is divided into thirteen chapters, each marking a pivotal moment in Stern’s life. His story begins with Stern’s parents—"the two met, or else this chronicle would not have seen the light of day (nor me, for that matter)." Then, in 1933, the Nazis come to power, ushering in a fiery and destructive timeline that Stern recollects by exact dates and calls "the end of [his] childhood and adolescence." Through a series of fortunate occurrences, Stern immigrated to the United States at the tender age of fifteen. While attending St. Louis University, Stern was drafted into the U.S. Army and soon found himself selected, along with other German-speaking immigrants, for a special military intelligence unit that would come to be known as the Ritchie Boys (named so because their training took place at Ft. Ritchie, MD). Their primary job was to interrogate Nazi prisoners, often on the front lines. Although his family did not survive the war (the details of which the reader is spared), Stern did. He has gone on to have a long and illustrious career as a scholar, author, husband and father, mentor, decorated veteran, and friend. Invisible Ink is a story that will have a lasting impact. If one can name a singular characteristic that gives Stern strength time after time, it is his resolute determination to persevere. To that end Stern’s memoir provides hope, strength, and graciousness in times of uncertainty.