In This Issue
Money Matters for Mind, Body and Spirit
by Hillary Raimo
Our financial lives often reflect our inner lives, when we struggle with overspending, debt and bury ourselves in the stress and guilt of money matters, our lives become burdened and it effects every aspect of who we are. When you take a look at what your cycle and relationship to money is, it opens a door for personal growth and empowerment.
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Changing I(sh)tyle in Englis(h)
by Dr. V. K. Sunwani, PhD
Language/ bhasha/ bahasha/ zabaan /boli
Language is a fascinating thing, the most complex of human achievements, spontaneously evolved, one unique word or expression at a time, without control. By its nature, language is decentralized, independent.
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Body Language and (English) Language Teaching
by Vijay Kumar Sunwani, PhD
Introduction
Many teachers have a tendency to sit and teach making least use of their bodies. Teachers are the best teaching aids in the classroom. They are knowledgeable, living, loving, responsive to the needs of the students whose questions they try as best to answer. The teaching of English would benefit if we teachers made better use of body language in the classroom. This is what we wish to stress on in this paper, touching only some of the areas.
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The Feminist Scholar
by Jo Freeman
At first glance, there appears to be an inherent contradiction in the term "feminist scholar." The idea of the scholar implies one who sits back and dispassionately studies a topic; who seeks and objectively weighs all evidence, forming an opinion only after the data are in.
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Global Warming and Industrial Wind Energy Development
by Nina Pierpont, MD, PhD
As an ecologist, I’ve known about global warming since the 1970’s, especially in the work of certain marine scientists who began studying and modeling global carbon cycling forty years ago.
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Motherhood Stalls When Women Can't Work
by Stephanie Coontz
Over the past seven years, two small changes in the participation of mothers in the workforce have generated almost as much attention as the initial entry of wives and mothers into the working world in the 1960s.
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