For service in English, text “Hello” to 435-3-FINDER for service in Spanish, text “Hola” to 218-3-BUSCAR. Abortion Finder is also available via text message. Abortion Finder is operated by Bedsider, a project of Power to Decide.I Need An A: I Need An A can give you the abortion information most relevant to your individual circumstances, including local and telemedicine providers, how to find financial assistance, and info for people under 18 years old.Abortion Resolution Workbook is a downloadable workbook to guide your emotional and spiritual resolution.We are not affiliated with these websites and we are not responsible for the accuracy or content of the external sites or for any actions you take based on information you find on the sites. Note: These links will take you to outside websites. If you are looking for abortion support in Indiana, learn more about our Hoosier Abortion Fund. Whatever your story or situation, our All-Options Talkline is here to listen and support you - before, during, and after your abortion experience. You are not alone! More than one million abortions occur every year in the U.S., and people who have abortions come from every community, age group, political party, religion, race, gender identity, and sexual orientation. If you are considering abortion, or have already had an abortion, your call to All-Options can help you get the support you need.
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Unemployed workers and cash-strapped farmers defaulted on their debts, including mortgages. The needy drew down whatever savings they had, turned to their families, and sought out charities for public assistance. Food rotted in the fields of a starving nation. Farmers could not make enough money from their crops to make harvesting worthwhile. With so many people out of work and without income, shops sold even less, dropped their prices lower still, and then shed still more workers, creating a vicious downward cycle.įour years after the crash, the Great Depression reached its lowest point: nearly one in four Americans who wanted a job could not find one and, of those who could, more than half had to settle for part-time work. Retailers lowered prices and, when that did not attract enough buyers to turn profits, they laid off workers to lower labor costs. Industries built on debt-fueled purchases sold fewer goods. People suddenly stopped borrowing and buying. After nearly a decade of supposed prosperity, the economy crashed to a halt. Hard times had hit the United States before, but never had an economic crisis lasted so long or inflicted as much harm as the slump that followed the 1929 crash. Franklin Delano Roosevelt and the “First” New Deal The Lived Experience of the Great Depression Herbert Hoover and the Politics of the Depression I remember paying close attention to the acoustics of our one hundred year old sanctuary. I did learn a lot about the power of the human voice, especially as it entered that amazing invention called the microphone. I didn't learn a great deal about the Bible when I was a girl. I sang in the children's choir for several years. Both my parents were raised in religious households but not heavily religious. We were not a family who stayed in church all day, as some families in our small town did. We went to Church once a week, at the standard time, and on the traditional holy day of Sunday but not in between. My parents were not Born Again people or heavy-handed Christians. Nikky Finney: God was all around but not everywhere. The poets were queried about their religious upbringing, current practices, and how these may or may not have influenced their writing, as well as general questions related to faith, doubt, and meaning, and more specific questions related to each poet's work.ĭianne Bilyak: What was the role of organized religion in your childhood and in what ways did it encourage you to write? The interviews began as her master's thesis for The Institute of Sacred Music & Arts at Yale Divinity School. "Questions of Faith" is a selection of excerpts from interviews that Dianne Bilyak has conducted over the past decade. Patients looking for hope, a path to put tragic childhoods into perspective and find happiness and success beyond their wildest dreams, will not be disappointed. Psychotherapists will recognize the narratives as teaching stories, the kind they heard and read in graduate school, and find valuable insights for treating their own patients-and, if they are reflective, to learning about themselves. Readers with a general interest in psychology and human development will appreciate well-told stories of five pseudonymously named patients over the span of many years as they move from victimhood to heroes. Good Morning, Monster functions on several levels. With gentle humor and welcome candor about her own therapeutic shortcomings, she draws us into patients’ lives, then helps us let them go, both of which she had to do as their therapist. Gildiner, a seasoned clinical psychologist and acclaimed author, knows how to provide readers with just enough detail to get them hooked into rooting for each patient, but not so much to make them recoil from their gut-wrenching histories. Oddly enough, quite the opposite is true. If the title of Catherine Gildiner’s Good Morning, Monster: A Therapist Shares Five Heroic Stories of Emotional Recovery does not imply that the real-life psychological horror stories within it actually had happy endings, it might be almost unbearable to read. However, the notion of writing fiction for a living never occurred to the author because she spent her childhood on a farm in the country. She spent hours consuming stories filled with action, adventure, and romance. She bought a computer and printer for her business because she wanted to get a tax deductionīut then she realized that a computer would make writing so much easier. Writing only entered the picture when the author started her freelance graphic design company in Baltimore. The New Internationalist Magazine was just starting at the time, and Putney appreciated the opportunity it gave her to interact with idealistic designers and artists. As such, while her friend attended graduate school, she looked for work. Putney had years of experience as a designer. The author was living in Oxford with a friend when she landed the position. Putney worked for The New Internationalist Magazine (London) as an art editor. At the time, she had no intention of pursuing writing as a career, so she was more than happy to dedicate her life to design. Putney doesn’t regret the decision because she fell in love with design. But then the author met an industrial design student that was seemingly having more fun than her, so she changed majors. She pursued the subject because she loved reading. As they come to help each other, they find strength in the bond that ties women together.Ĭall Your Daughter Home is a wrenching and heartfelt debut novel about three generations of women and the struggles they face in the South in the early part of the 20th century. These three women seemingly have nothing in common, yet they unite to stand up to the terrible injustices that have long plagued the small town. She must come to terms with the terrible truth that robbed her of her young son’s life and has ripped her two daughters from her side. Annie is the matriarch of the Coles family and owner of the Branchville Sewing Circle, a business left to her by her father when he passed. Retta is navigating a harsh world as a first-generation freed slave, still employed by the Coles, influential plantation proprietors who once owned her family. Gertrude, a mother of four, must make an unconscionable decision to save her daughters from starvation or die at the hands of an abusive husband. In South Carolina in 1924, hardship is commonplace as the region is still recovering from the infamous boll weevil infestation that devastated the land and the economy. The massive outpouring was “unbelievable,” Foote says, but was also proof that many Texas residents were eager to push back against right-wing efforts to control and suppress literature for children and teens. In one day alone, 13,000 tweets were sent. They quickly created the #Freadomfighters hashtag and mounted a Twitter storm, urging parents, teachers, students, librarians and concerned Texans to tweet their legislators with pictures of books that help children and teens navigate race, racism, gender, gender identity and sexuality. “We felt we needed to speak out, support the right to read, and uplift librarians who might be feeling pressured to remove books from their shelves,” Carolyn Foote, a retired Texas librarian and spokesperson for told Truthout. Concerned about threats to intellectual freedom, a small group of librarians reached out to one another to discuss how best to respond. Matt Krause, Republican chair of the House General Investigation Committee, sent a letter to state education authorities asking them if their school libraries stocked any of the 850 “divisive” books on a list he’d compiled. Which, especially for me right now (no, I'm not going to college but my youngest kid is!) and so that just. You know? And it was about all their stress going away to college. The boy is all, why? And so they disagree and have to discuss over and over again what they should do. The girl thinks it's best to go their separate ways. But it's their last night before they have to part for college the next day, and so we go with them through that crazy night as they relive their relationship, and decide how best to proceed from here. Our characters are happily together on page one. Because the premise of this one, instead of the story of blossoming new romance, this is one of breaking up. So I decided it's time to catch up on all the ones I've missed. We got to meet this author awhile back, and I've loved everything I've read by her. Book: Hello, Goodbye, and Everything in Between by Jennifer E. Tokyo Ghoul began serialization in Weekly Young Jump in 2011 and was adapted into an anime series in 2014. He is the author of Tokyo Ghoul and several Tokyo Ghoul one-shots, including one that won him second place in the Weekly Young Jump 113th Grand Prix award in 2010. About the Author Sui Ishida was born in Fukuoka, Japan. 1 Kindle & comiXology by Sui Ishida (Author) Format: Kindle Edition 5,823 ratings Part of: Tokyo Ghoul See all formats and editions Kindle & Comixology 8.99 Read on any device Paperback 14.62 1 Used from 12.69 16 New from 14.62 Shy Ken Kaneki is thrilled to go on a date with the beautiful Rize. When a morally questionable rescue transforms him into the first half-human half-Ghoul hybrid, Ken is drawn into the dark and violent world of Ghouls, which exists alongside our own. But it turns out that shes only interested in his body-eating it, that is. Shy Ken Kaneki is thrilled to go on a date with the beautiful Rize. Trapped between two worlds, he must survive Ghoul turf wars, learn more about Ghoul society and master his new powers. Ken Kaneki is an ordinary college student until a violent encounter turns him into the first half-human half-ghoul hybrid. Ghouls live among us, the same as normal people in every way-except their craving for human flesh. Book Synopsis Ghouls live among us, the same as normal people in every way-except their craving for human flesh. About the Book Ghouls live among us, the same as normal people in every way- except their craving for human flesh. BODEN who wrote Chapter 11 "Ion Propulsion," DR. FORBES who wrote Chapter 10 "Electric and Ion Propul sion," DR. McLAFFERTY who wrote Chapter 9 "Gaseous Nuclear Rockets," DR. Ross who wrote Chapter 8 "Advanced Nuclear Rocket Design," MR. SEIFERT who wrote Chapter 7 "Hybrid Rockets," DR. MARTIN SUMMERFIELD who wrote Chapter 6 "Solid Propellant Rockets," DR. SUTTON who wrote Chapter 5 "Rockets and Cooling Methods," DR. DUGGER who wrote Chapter 4 "Ram-jets and Air-Aug mented Rockets," DR. In addition to the undersigned who served as the course instructor and wrote Chapter I, 2 and 3, guest lecturers included: DR. It is written in such a way that it may easily be adopted by other universities as a textbook for a one semester senior or graduate course on the subject. Accordingly, this course is organized into seven parts: Part 1 Introduction Part 2 Jet Propulsion Part 3 Rocket Propulsion Part 4 Nuclear Propulsion Part 5 Electric and Ion Propulsion Part 6 Theory on Combustion, Detonation and Fluid Injection Part 7 Advanced Concepts and Mission Applications. But a book like this helps you recall, or learn, why the spacecraft are. Voyager’s imaging days are long behind it, its cameras inactive for decades as the spacecraft head into interstellar space. The purpose for offering this course is to make available to them these recent advances in theory and design. by Jens Bezemer, Joel Meter, Simon Phillipson, Delano Steenmeijer, and Ted Stryk teNeues, 2020 hardcover, 304 pp., illus. During the last decade, rapid growth of knowledge in the field of jet, rocket, nuclear, ion and electric propulsion has resulted in many advances useful to the student, engineer and scientist. |