Sentences with phrase «early history reads»

Papa John's early history reads like many pizza franchises: A young John Schnatter figures he can make a better pizza and begins delivering pies from a glorified broom closet in his father's Jeffersonville, Ind., bar.

Not exact matches

There has also been only one case in history in which a currency generally recognized as the dominant reserve currency was replaced by another, and this was the replacement of sterling with the dollar, some time in the 1930s or early 1940s, again depending on your read of history.
Martyrs and Martyrologies edited by Diana Wood Blackwell, 497 pages, $ 64.95 The story of Christian martyrs of the twentieth century is yet to be told, and one of the merits of this collection of learned essays, consisting of papers read at the Summer 1992 and Winter 1993 meetings of the Ecclesiastical History Society, is that they not only deal with early, medieval, and early - modern martyrs (and ideas about martyrdom), but include several original essays on latter - day martyrs.
For most of the Church's history (the early Church, the Church during medieval times, and the Reformation era), the Old Testament was read in this way — as a book about Christ and the Church.
From what I've read about those earliest times, it seems more likely that Paul and Peter were at odds, Paul won and (his followers) got to write the history as they saw fit.
Some additional readings and understanding about basic fallacies might also help you to see that your religious beliefs aren't any different from earlier supersti - tions and god stories that humans have invented in their history.
For the early explorers, and certainly for those in Europe reading their first reports, the specificity and detail of America's native flora and fauna, and even more, its aboriginal Indian cultures, which by 1492 had already completed a long and distinguished history in this hemisphere, were swallowed up in a generalized feeling of newness which replaced that specificity and detail with the blank screen of an alleged «state of nature.»
Reading the teachings of Jesus and studying early Church history shows - Christians were Socialists in the best possible way.
Read the history of the BS mormon church, especially J.smith's early life.
The early history of this movement reads like a case study in Nietzschean «will to power» psychology.
One scholar believes that the reading of 1 Thessalonians was an «event which contributed to the formation of the Christian church at Thessalonica.118 First Thessalonians is an example in early church history where an act of public reading «allowed the believers at Thessalonica to come into existence as the church of God.
Or they just plain don't want to read the Bible, or our history, or perhaps not even the Big Book and its earlier manuscripts (Compare the facts in: Turning Point: A History of Eahistory, or perhaps not even the Big Book and its earlier manuscripts (Compare the facts in: Turning Point: A History of EaHistory of Early AA.
Hegel's position shows clearly how the idea of the state can act almost as a prophetic principle over against the extremes of totalitarianism or materialism, and how such a state might lie within the «divine strategy,» though only if, as we said earlier, we may be permitted to read his philosophy of history in a more flexible way than he may have intended it himself.
«When we read the history of the early centuries, here in Rome, we read about so much cruelty to Christians.
Goodspeed holds the opinion that the letters were carefully kept by the churches to which they were addressed, perhaps read and reread from time to time, but that there was no attempt made at collecting them until after the appearance of Luke's early history of the church, the Acts of the Apostles, and that it was this which gave the impulse to a revival of interest in Paul, and led to a search for and collection of his extant writings.
No one reading the Church History of Eusebius can fail to be impressed by the gaps in his information about the early Church.
Don't Start Too Early «The idea that parents should hurry reading, spelling, writing, or math ahead of children's normal development is not supported by a single replicable research study in the world or by any clinical experience in history...» - so read this to find out what you should do, when and how to start.
Additionally, my mom just found out she has breast cancer (non-invasive) and I've read how breastfeeding is a protective factor against breast cancer and since I have several other risk factors (started my period early, had my first baby over 30, family history), I feel like I should breastfeed as long as possible.
«They are really early baby blogs,» says Janet Golden, a historian at Rutgers - Camden, who read the baby book of Charlie Flood and those of countless other babies in her research on the history of babies in modern America.
It's a fascinating read, particularly if you, like me, are not entirely au fait with the early history of Pixar and computer animation.
If you've never seen the previous adaptations, or read Christie's novel, you don't have to; Branagh establishes relationships and histories early on and does so in an efficient, concise manner, no doubt helped by Michael Green's script.
If they choose a first lady from earlier U.S. history, students might read some literature of the time to learn about the role of women in politics of the day.
Founded by a former teacher in the early 1900s and expanded by a prosperous community over the years, the Reading Public Museum today includes a natural history collection and planetarium that Paul Roedel, the museum's treasurer, says is «worth millions.»
«The general knowledge kids build in those early years is a crucial predictor of not only their later ability to do history and science and work in the disciplines, but their ability to read more complex text, because they gain a vocabulary and a knowledge that enables them to learn more difficult things,» said Coleman.
What's clear is that earlier in our history silent reading was considered a rare achievement.
In history, they could read about early settlers» impact on the environment in Changes in the Land: Indians, Colonists, and the Ecology of New England.
That organization is making the case that if we want to teach kids to understand what they read — and prepare them for high school, college, and life — we need to teach them history, science, and the arts beginning in the early elementary grades.
Earlier setbacks had taught proponents to stay away from history or social studies, to avoid identifying which books or authors students should read, and to cling to the safe ground of «skill - based» standards.
The early morning event was organized and led by three 8th grade student leaders who were inspired by a school in Vermont that flew a Black Lives Matter flag and included discussion of how the school community is working to deepen the cultural relevancy of its practices to make sure every student sees themselves reflected in the faculty, in the books they read and in the history they learn.
Mike Taylor tells the story / 1898 Daimler: A True Horseless Carriage — David Burgess-Wise recounts the history of one of the very earliest Coventry Daimlers and describes its recent meticulous restoration by Fairbourne Carriages / The Architectural Heritage of the Motor Car — Ahead of the publication of Carscapes, John Minnis highlights some motoring - related buildings recently listed / Colin Chapman's Goggomobil — Edited for publication by Sandy Skinner, this is Robin Read's full account of the birth of what is known as the Chapman Strut
Everyone interested in early American history should read this book.
As I read some of the earlier responses to this question, I was thinking of the fact that people put too much stock in historical fiction as history.
A USA Today Bestseller Winner of a National Jewish Book Award Winner of the Association of Jewish Libraries Jewish Fiction Award An Amazon Best Book of the Year One of Ms. Magazine's «Bookmark» Titles One of The Jewish Exponent's «2017's Top Reads» Set in London of the 1660s and of the early twenty - first century, The Weight of Ink is the interwoven tale of two women of remarkable intellect: Ester Velasquez, an emigrant from Amsterdam who is permitted to scribe for a blind rabbi, just before the plague hits the city; and Helen Watt, an ailing historian with a love of Jewish history.
Offering a rich oral history, this collection is read by 13 outstanding narrators, including Kevin R. Free, Michael Early, Patricia R. Floyd, Dion Graham, Robin Miles, and others, reciting more than 50 first - person poems.
Although these early chapters are easy to read and interesting, Carey's emphasis on the history of research into learning and memory in the first half did leave me wondering where the «surprising truth» that the title suggests, would appear.
The Pope and Mussolini is a fascinating must - read for anyone interested in history who would like to learn more about the backstory of the origins of Fascism and the role of the Catholic Church in the early to mid-20th century.
After announcing Ace of the Diamond, All - Rounder Meguru, and Giant Killing at Emerald City Comic Con earlier this month, we've got more series making their Volume 1 digital - first debuts, keeping up our 2017 ramp - up of digital titles: Natsumi Eguchi's hellfire comedy Hozuki's Coolheadedness, Kotono Kato's alternate - history medieval war - drama Altair: A Record of Battles, Ryosuke Tomoe's disturbing serial - killer thriller Museum, and a surprising parody - sidestory set in the Read More»
[For a history of this strange entity please read my earlier two posts on SPLP, here and here.]
But I love reading about market history, and Bull is a great book filled with interesting stories from the bull market that started in 1982 and culminated in early 2000.
For more on the history of this bill and the earlier version, read Animal Law Coalition's reports below.
I was thrilled to read Matt Leone's An Oral History of Final Fantasy VII piece when it was published earlier this year, so when he emailed us a week later, wondering if Read - Only Memory would consider publishing a «director's cut» print edition, my answer was an immediate and enthusiastic «Yes!&raread Matt Leone's An Oral History of Final Fantasy VII piece when it was published earlier this year, so when he emailed us a week later, wondering if Read - Only Memory would consider publishing a «director's cut» print edition, my answer was an immediate and enthusiastic «Yes!&raRead - Only Memory would consider publishing a «director's cut» print edition, my answer was an immediate and enthusiastic «Yes!»
Oriental Empires invites players to take control of a city from early Chinese history to develop land, -LSB-...] Read more
From the Prefix Photo press release: «She notes that, since the early 1980s, most critical writing about Wall's work has ignored feminist readings of it, aligning it instead with cinematography, the historic avant - garde and a return to history painting.
These two approaches articulated very early on in its history this kind of work's almost paradoxical dynamic: that one can read a monochrome either as a flat surface (material entity or «painting as object») which represents nothing but itself, and therefore representing an ending in the evolution of illusionism in painting (i.e. Rodchenko); or as a depiction of multidimensional (infinite) space, a fulfillment of illusionistic painting, representing a new evolution — a new beginning — in Western painting's history (Malevich).
Kevin Beasley is an artist in his early 30s whose work with sculpture and sound has drawn on his upbringing in rural Virginia and, from his current home in New York, his communion with markers of African - American history, among other... Read More
Earlier this year in Manchester, he performed BigBoxIndustrialAction, for a three tonne steam engine, an object that can be read as a proxy for the industrial history of the city.
Oppenheim speaks of growing up in Washington and California, his father's Russian ancestry and education in China, his father's career in engineering, his mother's background and education in English, living in Richmond El Cerrito, his mother's love of the arts, his father's feelings toward Russia, standing out in the community, his relationship with his older sister, attending Richmond High School, demographics of El Cerrito, his interest in athletics during high school, fitting in with the minority class in Richmond, prejudice and cultural dynamics of the 1950s, a lack of art education and philosophy classes during high school, Rebel Without a Cause, Richmond Trojans, hotrod clubs, the persona of a good student, playing by the rules of the art world, friendship with Jimmy De Maria and his relationship to Walter DeMaria, early skills as an artist, art and teachers in high school, attending California College of Arts and Crafts, homosexuality in the 1950s and 1960s, working and attending art school, professors at art school, attending Stanford, early sculptural work, depression, quitting school, getting married, and moving to Hawaii, becoming an entrepreneur, attending the University of Hawaii, going back to art school, radical art, painting, drawing, sculpture, the beats and the 1960s, motivations, studio work, theory and exposure to art, self - doubts, education in art history, Oakland Wedge, earth works, context and possession, Ground Systems, Directed Seeding, Cancelled Crop, studio art, documentation, use of science and disciplines in art, conceptual art, theoretical positions, sentiments and useful rage, Robert Smithson and earth works, Gerry Shum, Peter Hutchinson, ocean work and red dye, breaking patterns and attempting growth, body works, drug use and hippies, focusing on theory, turmoil, Max Kozloff's «Pygmalion Reversed,» artist as shaman and Jack Burnham, sync and acceptance of the art world, machine works, interrogating art and one's self, Vito Acconci, public art, artisans and architects, Fireworks, dysfunction in art, periods of fragmentation, bad art and autobiographical self - exposure, discovery, being judgmental of one's own work, critical dissent, impact of the 1950s and modernism, concern about placement in the art world, Gypsum Gypsies, mutations of objects, reading and writing, form and content, and phases of development.
As a radical re-evaluation of art history from the early twentieth century to the late 1960s, this brilliant new account of American modernism is a must - read for students and scholars of art as well as all those interested in modernism and its wider cultural history.
Moore himself is strongly represented in the Collection (art historian Kenneth Clark, a critical figure in the history of the ACC, encouraged Moore to donate his early works), and 26 works — including sculptures, prints and drawings — are reproduced here in color, accompanied by critical commentary by Benedict Read.
BUY ONE TONIGHT, READ IT FOREVER; THE BEST IN WORDS AND PICTURES; YOU ARE THE STORY: With that earnest air of hucksterism indigenous to an earlier time in American history, Allen Ruppersberg spins new narratives from old ones in his bright, sizable 1985 collage Cover Art (Wonder Series)-- a pristine composite of pasted - up texts like the above (whether in adlike tag lines rendered with vintage label - maker tape or via disconnected words and numbers torn from paper) and mostly midcentury print images (including a depiction of the pope, one of a monkey wearing a lab coat, and several nature
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