Wednesday 31 December 2014

Wasicu at Chankpe Opi: A White Man at Wounded Knee I


This long essay, initially published in Books and Culturetells the story of the Wounded Knee Massacre, 
December 30, 1890, on the Pine Ridge Reservation of South Dakota.

Think of it as a tawny ocean stopped in time, a vast landscape of grass, here and there mustache-like strips of trees darkening creek beds or running along the ridges like an old headdress unfurled in wind. Today, the place where the Wounded Knee Massacre took place looks remarkably similar to what it did in early winter of 1890, a featureless, shallow valley in a seemingly unending field of prairie grass that, on a gray day, weaves itself almost inconspicuously into the cloudy sky at its reaches.

On December 28, 1890, four Hotchkiss guns—the Sioux called them the guns that fire in the morning and kill the next day—stood on a small, whitecap hill amid this arid ocean, all four aimed down into the camp of a Minneconjou chief named Sitanka, or Big Foot. There, three hundred men, women, and children were camped, hoping to reach Pine Ridge Agency the next day.

More than a century later, it is almost impossible to stand on that small hill and look down into the valley of Wounded Knee Creek and imagine what the place must have looked like so full of people.

But try. Today, a single battered billboard offers the only available outline of the story, the word “battle” crossed out and “massacre” scribbled in roughly above it. Otherwise, there is little to mark the spot. But try to imagine what this yawning, empty space must have looked like, a couple hundred Lakota just beneath the promontory where we’re standing, their worn and ripped tipis thrown up quickly, campfires floating thin plumes of smoke. These folks have been hungry for days—and tired, having just marched hundreds of miles south towards Chief Red Cloud at the Pine Ridge Agency, where they thought they’d be safe.

But there’s more, far more. Across the ravine west—maybe a half mile away on another hill sits is a sprawling encampment of several hundred troops under the command of Colonel James W. Forsyth, the largest military encampment since the Civil War. The scene is remarkable. Doubtless, that many people assembled at this remote spot on the Dakota prairie has not happened frequently, if ever, since. If it’s difficult for you to imagine, just picture a campground of nearly a thousand people in tents, then cut down all the trees.

Big Foot’s people were dancers, Ghost Dancers, strong believers in a frenetic, mystic ceremony, a hobgoblin of Christianity, mysticism, Native ritual, and sheer desperation. If they would dance, they thought Christ would return because he’d heard their prayers and felt their suffering. When he’d come for them, he’d bring with him the old ones (hence, the Ghost Dance). And the buffalo would return. Once again the people could take up their beloved way of life. If they would dance, a cloud of dust from the new heaven and the new earth would swallow the wasicu, all of them. If they would dance, their hunger would be satiated, desperation comforted.
___________________ 

Tomorrow: the Ghost Dance

Tuesday 30 December 2014

Geometry assignment; Feb. 6

We continued working on similarity among right triangles today, going over how to use the geometric mean to solve problems with right triangles.  The three formulas that involve the geometric mean were introduced and used for the first time.

Short quiz tomorrow on perfect squares and working with radical expressions.

Assignment:  page 288;  section 8-1;  #16-26 all

Monday 29 December 2014

Reviews for Signpost Cute Fashion Women Ladies Girls Rucksack Backpack Canvas Blue Stripe Leisure Travel Book Bag *Black and Blue*

Signpost Cute Fashion Women Ladies Girls Rucksack Backpack Canvas Blue Stripe Leisure Travel Book Bag *Black and Blue*


Signpost Cute Fashion Women Ladies Girls Rucksack Backpack Canvas Blue Stripe Leisure Travel Book Bag *Black and Blue*


Brand : Signpost

Sales Rank : 37610

Color : Blue

Amazon.com Price : $21.99




Features Signpost Cute Fashion Women Ladies Girls Rucksack Backpack Canvas Blue Stripe Leisure Travel Book Bag *Black and Blue*


No need to fumble around looking for a pen, your phone, or sunglasses when you have this backpack.
Main compartment is spacious enough to hold your books, wallet, and school supplies.
Soft adjustable shoulder straps promise hassle-free hauling.
Multiple organizational pockets keep your gear in place and organized.
Built with durable polyester fabric, this striped backpack comes in quite handy when you're running errands, heading to the gym, or navigating your schools crowded hallways.

Descriptions Signpost Cute Fashion Women Ladies Girls Rucksack Backpack Canvas Blue Stripe Leisure Travel Book Bag *Black and Blue*


Product Overview


Timeless yet trendy, this striped backpack keeps your stuff secure whenever you're off to class. It's designed with 1 big front pocket, while cool allover stripes offer coveted, casual appeal. It's really a must lunches, snacks,bike riding, gym, walking, hiking, travel or kids bag.


The products including blue and black backpack, we will send the item in random.



Specifications


100% Brand New! High Quality!

Material:Canvas

Pattern: Stripe

Applicable:Women

Size: 43*30*16CM


Package Includes


1 x Girl School Backpack


Note


The real color of the item may be slightly different from the pictures shown on website caused by many factors such as brightness of your monitor and light brightness.


Search Result :

girls large backpack | eBay - Electronics, Cars, Fashion ...
Find great deals on eBay for girls large backpack and boys large backpack. Shop with confidence.
Canvas Backpack Girls | eBay - Electronics, Cars, Fashion ...
GK Fashion Women Korean version Canvas Backpack Shoulders Bag BG174. * Item Material: Canvas. Please check the size carefully before buying the bag.
girls school rucksack | eBay - Electronics, Cars, Fashion ...
Find great deals on eBay for girls school rucksack and girls school rucksacks hello kitty. Shop with confidence.
school bag girls | eBay - Electronics, Cars, Fashion ...
Find great deals on eBay for school bag girls and school bags girl new. Shop with confidence.
tribal print backpack | eBay - Electronics, Cars, Fashion ...
Find great deals on eBay for tribal print backpack and aztec backpack. Shop with confidence.
backpacks on Wanelo - Wanelo - Want, Need, Love
Thanks for the report! We will review it and take appropriate action. Thanks for helping to maintain extreme awesomeness on Wanelo.
Search results for " backpack " - backpack on Wanelo
Shop the latest backpack products on Wanelo, the world's biggest shopping mall.
eBay Australia | Women's Handbags | Fashion
Visit eBay, Australia's online marketplace for cars, clothing, electronics, digital cameras, sports, DVDs, toys and more. Buy and sell almost anything on .au now
Canvas & Beach Tote Bags: Luggage
dolce & gabbana light blue white ladies beach bag ,large * new
CashCashPinoy - Best Deals Online, Discount Vouchers ...
Get the best deals online from Fashion, Home & Decor, Electronics, Lifestyle, Beauty, Dining, Travel & more at . Save up to 95% Discount now!

Sunday 28 December 2014

Best Offers for Trendy World Natsume Yuujinchou Mr Cat Backpack Japanese Anime Cartoon Bookbag Cosplay Shoulders Bag

Trendy World Natsume Yuujinchou Mr Cat Backpack Japanese Anime Cartoon Bookbag Cosplay Shoulders Bag


Trendy World Natsume Yuujinchou Mr Cat Backpack Japanese Anime Cartoon Bookbag Cosplay Shoulders Bag


Brand : Lando

Sales Rank : 49120

Color :

Amazon.com Price : $23.33




Features Trendy World Natsume Yuujinchou Mr Cat Backpack Japanese Anime Cartoon Bookbag Cosplay Shoulders Bag


Trendy World Natsume Yuujinchou Backpack
Material: thicken nylon canvas
Size: 45*30*15cm
Thicken and adjustable belt
Backpack pattern: Japanese anime

Descriptions Trendy World Natsume Yuujinchou Mr Cat Backpack Japanese Anime Cartoon Bookbag Cosplay Shoulders Bag


Positive level off, not wrinkle, not deformation.

Material: thicken nylon canvas


Thicken and adjustable belt


Convenient to carry you necessities when you go outdoor to have a travel.


Search Result :

YouTube - Broadcast Yourself. | |
Share your videos with friends, family, and the world. Get reviews, whois and traffic for youtube OR . Is a scam or a fraud? Coupon for
Website Design Company India, Logo Agency India, Indore ...
The Complete solution for your Business... For all type design solution Design Zone is the first name in Indore (India)

Saturday 27 December 2014

Algebra 10-12 assignment; March 14

After answering some final review questions before the test, the students took the exponents and polynomials test in class today.  Once they finished, they then got started on their homework for the weekend, which was a review worksheets dealing with adding and subtracting polynomials.


Assignment:  adding and subtracting polynomials worksheet

Friday 26 December 2014

Best Offers for Eshow Men's Canvas Travel Drawstring Bag, Black

Eshow Men's Canvas Travel Drawstring Bag, Black


Eshow Men's Canvas Travel Drawstring Bag, Black


Brand : Eshow

Sales Rank : 613961

Color : Black

Amazon.com Price : $24.81




Features Eshow Men's Canvas Travel Drawstring Bag, Black


Material: Premium quality cotton canvas
Surrounded by two additional pockets on both sides
Adjustable shoulder straps
Dimensions: 9.4" W x 18.9" H x 3.1" D
Style: Casual, Retro, Outdoor

Descriptions Eshow Men's Canvas Travel Drawstring Bag, Black


Men's Retro Canvas Hiking Rucksack by Eshow
Main compartment with string contains zipped pocket
Weight: 1.1 pounds
A spacious main compartment is surrounded by two additional pockets on both sides for top-quality organization
Feel free to enjoy a bike ride or weekend travel


Search Result :

Thursday 25 December 2014

Morning Thanks--on his birthday


There was family here, somewhere out south of Ireton, somewhere around a town that barely exists anymore, a town with an odd, Irish name, a place called McNally. There was family here, and that's why his grandfather chose northwest Iowa as the place he'd take his own family when immigration became his dream. They left Gelderland, the Netherlands, and came to Iowa, a name and a place they must have found terribly hard to pronounce.

His father came with, was an immigrant too, but he himself was born here on the emerald eastern edge of the Great Plains so he has no old country memories. Which is not to say he grew up like some ordinary American kid. Dutch was spoken exclusively in the home, and it was, I'm sure, the language of the street in Orange City (named after "the House of," after all), where he and his father's family eventually worshiped when they moved four north and two east of town.

His education consisted of eight years of grade school; but then, in a family of ten kids, he the oldest boy, his traipsing off to school every day was simply not an option. After all, he'd already gotten his share of reading, writing, and arithmetic. I'm sure he didn't squawk. Leaving school after the eighth grade was a way of life out in the country back then. Besides, he loved to farm.

Still, if you ask him about regrets today, he'd say that he wished he'd have had more schooling because he thinks schooling would have made him smoother, more nimble in conversation, more conversant about things. He'd have been taught more about life.

Instead, he got his education elsewhere, when driving a team of horses, for instance. Once upon a time, he says, his own team went berserk, got wild on him, and took off through the ditches in an awful panic. He tried to hold them back but couldn't, and actually thought for a moment or two, bouncing over culverts, that he was going to die. When he told the story, I saw a level of fear in his eyes I'd never really seen before.

He remembers talking with friends about this perplexing idea that God has already chosen the righteous, that there's nothing we can do about it if we're among 'em, that maybe--just maybe--there's no such thing as free will. He says he remembers mulling that over beneath the stars when he was a kid, a teenager.  After all, it's what he'd been taught in catechism, what everyone around him believed.

In the early 1940s, he went to war with literally dozens of other catechumins from First CRC, Orange City, almost forty men from just one church in town. Soon enough, the army noticed this farm kid could fix just about anything, and they assigned him to mechanic school, where he learned how to bring sputtering tanks and jeeps and whatever else back to life.

He spent some time with thousands of other GIs in England in the spring of 1944; then, a couple weeks after D-Day, went over to Normandy just like so many others had before him. Their landing craft weren't shot at. Earlier waves of troops had taken out the Nazi shore batteries in the greatest sea invasion of all time. Thousands died right there in the water, on the sand beneath his feet. 

He and his unit lugged their tools along and became part of the motor pool, basically followed the front from the shores of Normandy all the way to Berlin. It's almost impossible today to think of him, wrench in hand, working over a Sherman tank, but he likely did--there were 5000 of them over there after D-Day. The deep friendships that grew out of all that grunt work didn't die until his friends did. We took him to his last reunion when the ranks had already thinned deeply. I don't know that anyone but a veteran can describe what we saw when those old men were reunited.

While he was somewhere in France or Holland or Germany, his brother Charles, another GI, died in the Philippines.

His own motor pool unit was bound for the South Pacific once the Nazis threw in the towel, but Truman sent a couple of planes over Japan carrying cargo that changed the world, and that was that. Instead, he came home.

A couple years later, he married one of the prettiest girls in Orange City, a farm girl who'd moved to town when her father died, a tall, dark-haired beauty who'd been a Tulip Queen, a woman who had herself lost another soldier, a man killed right there on Omaha Beach.



The first year they were married, they lived out on a farm near the home place. They put in a crop, watched it grow green and strong, then one hot July day lost it all to hail. In order to get back on his feet, he went into town and worked at a garage for a couple of years. After all, the man had real skills with engines. He could fix anything.

Some years later, he went to the bank and took out a loan to buy some Iowa farm land of his own. It was a risky venture, five or six hundred an acre. His father, then retired, was pitching horseshoes in the Orange City park when one of the old geezers mentioned that he'd heard Randall had bought some land out there around the home place.

Fifteen minutes later, Grandpa was there on the yard shaking his head at his son, telling him he didn't know what he was doing. Today, he says, he wishes he'd have bought more at those prices.

He and his Tulip Queen had one child, a girl, just as pretty as her mom. That child is my wife.

I'm talking about my father-in-law, who today celebrates 95 years of life out here on the eastern emerald edge of the Great Plains, with just a few years absence during a stint in Europe that no one can take away from him.

He's a quiet man with sharp sense of humor and a capacity to love that's extraordinary. If, as some think, old men simply get cranky, then I got news: this one, my father-in-law, at 95 years old, is still really a kid. 

And that's a blessing.

As is he.




Tuesday 23 December 2014

Algebra 10-12 assignment; March 3

We went over our exponents quiz from last Friday as well as our homework over the weekend.  We will continue working with exponents as we progress through this week.  Today's topic dealt with scientific notation and exponents.  Converting between standard notation and scientific notation were the skills that were worked on today.  The students got started on their homework before finishing up the period.

Assignment:  Scientific notation worksheet and exponent review worksheet

Sunday 21 December 2014

Best Price for Latest Vintage Women Girl Retro Rucksack College School Students Backpack Bag

Latest Vintage Women Girl Retro Rucksack College School Students Backpack Bag


Latest Vintage Women Girl Retro Rucksack College School Students Backpack Bag


Brand : buytra

Sales Rank :

Color : USBR

Amazon.com Price : $13.83




Features Latest Vintage Women Girl Retro Rucksack College School Students Backpack Bag


100% Brand New and High Quality
Material: Canvas
size: Height:37cm,Length:33cm,Depth:13cm?
1 Inch = 2.54 cm

Descriptions Latest Vintage Women Girl Retro Rucksack College School Students Backpack Bag


Feature:
100% Brand New and High Quality

Material: Canvas

Color??US flag brown

size: Height:37cm,Length:33cm,Depth:13cm?

1 Inch = 2.54 cm

Package Included:

??1 x women's bag


Search Result :

Unique & Cute Clothes, Accessories & Decor | ModCloth
Shop the latest selection of cute & unique women's clothes at ModCloth! Get free shipping & easy returns on fab dresses, shoes, accessories and home decor
ASOS | Shop women's fashion & men's clothing | Free ...
Discover the latest in women's fashion and men's clothing online. Shop from over 40,000 styles, including dresses, jeans, shoes and accessories from ASOS and over 800 ...
TOPMAN USA - Mens Fashion - Mens Clothing - Topman
ABOUT US Topman is the UK’s largest men’s fashion retailer and with you can get some serious men’s style delivered to your door in the USA quickly ...
U.S. News | National News - ABC News
ABC News reports on United States politics, crime, education, legal stories, celebrities, weather, the economy and more
Clothing, Shoes & Jewelry
Online shopping from a great selection at Clothing, Shoes & Jewelry Store.
Shop American Apparel Online | Free Shipping for Orders ...
Shop American Apparel - Find fashionable basics for men, women, children, and babies. Made in USA clothing. Sweatshop Free.
Topshop USA - Women's Clothing: dresses, tops, jeans, etc ...
Fashion chain offers online shopping, style advisor service, store locator and customer information.
Shop Forever 21 for the latest trends and the best deals ...
Forever 21 is the authority on fashion & the go-to retailer for the latest trends, must-have styles & the hottest deals. Shop dresses, tops, tees, leggings & more.
eBay Buying Guides - Electronics, Cars, Fashion ...
Check out our helpful guides to get the most out of eBay Deals!
Staten Island, NY Local News -
Get Staten Island, NY latest news. Find photos and videos, comment on the news, and join the forum discussions at

Geometry assignment; Jan. 31

We took the chapter 7 test on similarity today in class.

Homework:  none

Saturday 20 December 2014

Book Review--Entering the Wild


Give her parents credit--they gave her the option. When Jean Janzen was a sixth grader, she landed a part, a significant part, in the school play. But her Mennonite heritage warned against theater, so little Jean found herself in an unholy quandary. Her heart said she wanted the part; her head told her that the theater was not a place to be found when Christ would come again.

Tough stuff. Even though the school play was elementary and no more ribald than “Hansel and Gretal,” she determined she would not go on stage. “This was too much like the forbidden theater; I would be a brave soldier for Jesus and give it up,” she says in her memoir, Entering the Wild: Essays on Faith and Writing.

That childhood memory draws in the conflicts in this little book of meditations—for these essays are really meditations, even though they weren’t written for your or my rituals. They’re meditations because Jean Janzen, a Mennonite by pedigree and will, is what Roman Catholics might call a “religious,” even though she is not bound by monastic rules. Her tradition holds her, as does the God she worships, in its loving hand. And she holds it that way too.

Which is to say she doesn’t begrudge her Mennonite roots for keeping her from a starring roles in the school play. In Entering the Wild she offers some criticism of her tradition, but she doesn't stamp the Mennonite dust off her feet, doesn't even leave.  What's unique about the memoir is that Janzen looks back and finds an abundant life of mystery in her distinct ethnic and religious roots.

Most of the essays detail the detective work she did on her family's past. Her father emigrated from Russia in 1909, left behind brothers and sisters who would suffer immensely, even die, at the hands of Stalin.  Among the poignant stories Jean Janzen tells in this family chronicle of hers is what she's discovered about her grandmother’s suicide, an event her father never spoke of, an event she discovered only after his death.

There’s no anger in the memoir, just wonder and awe and mystery.  That too makes the book devotional.  Janzen’s several books of poetry--Snake in the Parsonage (1995), Tasting the Dust (2000), Piano in the Vineyard (2004) and Paper House (2008)—spread themselves over a similarly biographical landscape in a very similar way, by paying attention to things, to events, to human lives altogether too easy to miss. Our finest spiritual writers make life itself a sacrament. That's what Jean Janzen does.

Some of the most enchanting essays are those near the end where Janzen the memoirist unpacks the poems of Janzen the poet, even rewrites them, adding a line in the last essay, “My Mother in Venice,” a line that, to my mind, completes the original poem more wondrously.

Entering the World is about exodus, Jean Janzen’s liberation into the world of art and imagination, a world in which traditionally approved answers and conventional responses to experience itself couldn't cover the questions because those traditional paths were not where the art she herself was creating was leading her. Taking that jump--away from tradition and into imagination, in poetry, in theology, and culture—is "entering the wild," what Janzen says her story is all about.


The irony, or so it seems to me, is that that her liberation doesn’t require walking away from her roots but digging down to find them. The more she learns about the mysteries of her own life and the lives of her ancestors, the more happily she can dwell in the world of the spirit, the world of music, the world of art, the world of imagination.

In “Going Home” (Paper House), Janzen traces the path her life has taken, the path outlined in Entering the World. I begins in a childhood memory:

Seven of us crowded into our small
Chevy, the year ’40 or ’41,
I on a little stood on the floor,
baby in mother’s lap, and a mouse
loose in the car. We had traveled
for baptism to Lake Okoboji,
three older siblings in full immersion
under the blinding sun as we sang,
“The cleansing stream, I see, I see.”

Yet, there’s more to the story than what meets the eye:

And then the mood rolled over us
as we drove home, my tilting stool,
my head resting against my sister’s
cleansed thigh, and the little mouse,
unbaptized and unaccountable, like me,
all of us driving with father behind
the wheel toward thunderclouds that rose
in the west, promising everyone salvation.

That last line is just wide enough to make us wonder, as it likely did Jean Janzen herself, when she discovered the line waiting for her at the end of the poem. There’s mystery in a thundercloud "promising everyone salvation," mystery just as there is in sacrament, and in the incarnation.

The beauty of the pilgrimage at the heart of Entering the World is that Jean Janzen doesn’t need to leave something precious behind in order to find herself in a brave new world.

Wednesday 17 December 2014

Algebra 10-12 assignment; March 7

We used our entry task to review scientific notation conversion and calculation.  We also spent some time reviewing the rules of exponents together before taking our final exponents quiz.  After the quiz, the students got started on the assignment dealing with more practice of combining like terms.


Assignment:  combining like terms worksheet

Monday 15 December 2014

Hell to pay (2)


Not so long ago, I told myself I should really change the little picture that identifies me somehow on Google+. It is a shot like this one, a silhouette on a winter morning in a pasture, a kind of self-portrait. It was cold and crisp and pure that morning, and my shadow formed a dark outline against the snowbanks shouldering a creek. It like this one. (It shows up mysteriously if I make a comment below--check it out.)

I saw myself in this picture, even though neither subject nor setting is the same.  Why would someone take it? One answer is "because we can."  Digital photography makes three-year-olds into photographers. But why this particular shot? Some kind of mystery, maybe?--after all, there's something both real and insubstantial about a shadowy silhouette. It's as if we're there and not there simultaneously.

I think I was 17 or so when I sensed something of the odd brevity of life for the very first time. There was no sudden death, no lingering disease, no horrible accident; it was nothing more than a walk on some lonely section of Lake Michigan beach, my footsteps disappearing behind me. Something felt astonishing, the eternal beauty of the lake shore erasing, oddly enough, and in seconds, whatever trace of me I'd left behind.

I stole this silhouette picture from a Facebook site, same one as this picture, the first installment of what appears to be a series documenting a project--the rehabilitation of a backyard.  Look for yourself.



Obviously--I hope you can see it--it was raining or maybe snowing, long white lines veering toward the wet earth. Some work is being accomplished, a couple of tarpaper-covered holes have been dug in the ground.

Then, there's this one. Same backyard, same holes, one of them now holding a kid in a New York jersey, work tools slung hither and yon. Something's going forward here.



And then there's this one, thick with the pride that issues from accomplishment. Same two butterflies on the wall, but flowers everywhere around a little grassy infield.  Seagulls maybe?--on a big portrait hung from what looks to be a patio screen. The backyard is done, finished, and now livable. That's the story.



I don't know if it's legal to lift pictures from a Facebook site that isn't yours, but if it isn't, FB shouldn't make it as easy as they do. I know, I know--I'm blaming FB for my thievery, and I shouldn't. I'm the one who clicked the copy button. 

Here's the woman whose site I raided.



And here she is with her son.


I don't know her life story. It seems there was no husband. At least no appropriately-aged male appears in her photos, only her son.

And even though Facebook doesn't tell us that this big kid is her son, we know as much today because we know that the two of them (big-time travelers, by the way, if you look at more of her pictures), were on their way to Malaysia for some kind of conference for single parents and their children, just the two of them and 296 others aboard a jet zooming along at 33,000 feet in the air when it was shot out of the sky by a damned Russian missile. 

Her name is Petra H. van Langeveld and her son is Gary Slok. They're citizens of the Netherlands. He's 15. Was. They're both gone, no longer with us.

The sudden tragic loss of 298 lives in a plane crash perpetuated by drunken, mindless murderers is a devastating horror that makes us all reach for revenge. 

But they were 298 men and women and children, each with separate lives, individual human beings who loved and won and lost and laughed and cried together, who redid back yards to make their homes more warm and inviting, human beings who smiled on mountain tops and saw something worth remembering in sandy silhouettes. And they were, each of them, somehow cast in the image of their Creator, no matter where they stood and how they were clothed. 

Evil erased their footsteps. Once they were us; now they are gone. 

John McCain wasn't all wrong. There should be hell to pay.

Saturday 13 December 2014

Algebra 10-12 assignment; 9/4

After going over the homework and entry task, we went through our lesson today on the distributive property.  The concepts of factoring and combining like terms was also covered.

the students got started on their homework at the end of the period.

Assignment:  section 1-5;  page 27-28;  #2-60 even,  #77-87 odd

Friday 12 December 2014

Sunday Morning Meds--Essays to do good


“Turn from evil and do good; then you will dwell in the land forever.”
           
Ben Franklin says in his Autobiographythat he was deeply influenced by Cotton Mather’s Essays to Do Good. Wow.

In the early years of this republic, it would be a chore to find two human souls more different than those two . Cotton Mather was the child of theological giants, as predestined as any Calvinist ever was to take up the heavy lifting of the learned divines from whose loins he’d sprung.  No one else in American literature is quite as sober as Cotton Mather, but then who’s looking?

Ben Franklin, on the other hand, was anything but sober, which doesn’t mean to imply he hit the bottle.  Witty, urbane, sophisticated, Franklin the ambassador was the first American to charm European courts.  A new Franklin biography claims that the entire Autobiographyneeds to be read, as Emily Dickinson might say it, “at a slant.”  Franklin is, this new bio argues, tongue-in-cheek throughout. You really can’t always believe him.
           
I never dared to think that was true, even though I smelled it in the many times I’ve been through Franklin’s Autobiographyas a teacher.  I always had this odd sense of him pulling my leg. 

That’s heresy, I know. When pols fight, they always reverence “the founders,” those sagacious bewigged men whose brilliant energy churned out the Constitution.  Jefferson, Hamilton, John Adams, John Hancock, George Washington are American saints. And Franklin?—my word, he wrote the Declaration, igniting all the fireworks.  And we can’t take him seriously?

That is heresy.

Still, I’ve always suspected he was more cunning than we like to think him. So was he lying when he said that the imminently pious Cotton Mather was so influential in the life of a man who couldn’t have been less of a Puritan? 

Don’t know.  But I’m happy to read that I’m not the only one who’s thought Franklin was scratching out his life story with a wink and a smile.

Franklin liked Mather, he says, because Mather taught him morality, and the entire Autobiography, begun as a moral lesson to his son, proposes to teach his son to be good—if we can believe him.  I’m not sure.

But Franklin’s moral urgings, unlike Cotton Mather’s, promise that the way to wealth and happiness is sobriety and industry. Franklin tells his son that if he wants to get ahead in life, he should do so as his father had: take a good strong hold of his own blessed bootstraps and pulling the boots on himself: do it yourself and do it well.

That’s not what David says—David, remember, whose hands were too bloody for God’s own approval. And it’s not what Cotton Mather would have said either.

Doing good and living well are not a matter of bootstraps. David says God almighty promises that turning away from evil and doing good instead means a long and blessed life in the land.

There is a third party in the cause/effect sequence in this promise, and that third party, the creator of heaven and earth, isn’t talking about bootstraps. He’s talking instead about obedience.

Best Offers for kmbuy - Unique Vintage Preppy Style Unisex Casual Fashion Colleague School Travel Backpack Bags with 15 inch Laptop Lining (42cm*30cm*12cm) (black)

kmbuy - Unique Vintage Preppy Style Unisex Casual Fashion Colleague School Travel Backpack Bags with 15 inch Laptop Lining (42cm*30cm*12cm) (black)


kmbuy - Unique Vintage Preppy Style Unisex Casual Fashion Colleague School Travel Backpack Bags with 15 inch Laptop Lining (42cm*30cm*12cm) (black)


Brand : kmbuy

Sales Rank :

Color : Black

Amazon.com Price : $31.79




Features kmbuy - Unique Vintage Preppy Style Unisex Casual Fashion Colleague School Travel Backpack Bags with 15 inch Laptop Lining (42cm*30cm*12cm) (black)


Material: 90% nylon + 10% PU
Dim: 42CM(Height)*30CM(Width)*12CM(Thickness), shoulder straps adjuestable from 75CM to 95CM
Weight: 450g / Capacity: 16L (medium capacity)
Linings: 1*outer zipper bag, 1*side compartment, 1*laptop tablet Linings (27CM width for 15 inch laptop)
For the crowd: Male and Female with height 150CM to 190CM

Descriptions kmbuy - Unique Vintage Preppy Style Unisex Casual Fashion Colleague School Travel Backpack Bags with 15 inch Laptop Lining (42cm*30cm*12cm) (black)


Features
- The backpack made with high-grade lightweight canvas, simple but refining design.
- Mixmatch with qualify accessories, make the bag looks more elegant and fashionable
- Plenty capacity design, most of your living necessities can be fully loaded freely.
- Scientific and reasonable pocket and lining design will make your goods lay in the bag systematically
- Specially equiped with thicken laptop linings, provide fully protection for your laptop or tablet.
- The bottom finished with quality material craft, durable and strong for daily carring.
- Casual Easy style using for: School, Excursion, Going out, window shopping etc..

Package includes
- 1 X Durable Backpack

Important Note:
- The actual item's colour maybe slightly different from the picture shown due to the lightings of shots
- 1-2cm error of measuring is a reasonable range due to different method of measurments
- The backpack are packed immediately once produced, so sometimes the bags will arrive with some smells from original material.
- Please kindly suspend the bag in freely circulating air for 1 to 2 days to loose the smell.
- Each backpack will be double check carefully before shipping, but it's still very hard to guarantee there's no extra thread. please understand.


Search Result :

Wednesday 10 December 2014

Algebra 10-12 assignment; March 25

We reviewed the special cases of multiplying polynomials today with our entry task and going over the homework.  The last topic in our unit on polynomials focused on multiplying any polynomial, and today that included binomials and trinomials.  We used a grid method ( 2x3, and 3x3) to accomplish our goal today, and the students saw several examples before getting started on their homework.

Tomorrow we will go through a review sheet in preparation for their test on Thursday.

Assignment:  Multiplying more polynomials worksheet  1-21 odd, 25-34 all

Test on Thursday

Monday 8 December 2014

Algebra 10-12 assignment; Feb. 12

We went over our review sheet at the beginning of the period to make sure the kids didn't have any more questions.  We then spent the rest of the period taking the systems of equations test.

Once the students were done, they had the chance to work on an extra credit worksheet if they chose to.

Assignment:  none;  extra credit possibility

Auto Draft

Friday 5 December 2014

Remembering Frederick Manfred, 1912-1994 (xi)


Frederick Manfred was dying, even though he didn’t believe it himself. Harold Aardema, his long-time friend from Doon, called me and asked if I’d like to ride up to Luverne with him and visit, so we did.

On the way up, Harold told me that he’d been a bit disappointed with Fred because his youngest brother, Ed, a life-long resident of Doon, a man who was as people once said, somewhat "slow," had recently died after a long illness. Harold lamented the fact that Fred hadn’t really paid significant attention to his younger brother during that time, hadn’t visited him as he should have. I could tell that Harold was hurt by what he thought was Fred’s inattention to his brother.

Harold knew Fred as a man, not just as a lion. I remember Harold telling me how Fred had stopped at his home in Doon and wept when his marriage broke down. Fred had just picked out a burial site in the Doon Cemetery, where he wanted to be buried, “guts and all,” as he instructed his children later. That day, on our way up to Luverne, Harold, in a mission of mercy, admitted that, in not paying attention to his youngest borther, Fred had let him down.

We spent an hour or so in the hospital, Harold on one side of the bed, me on the other, and Fred loved the visit—I know he did. But when the topic of Brother Ed came up, Fred turned to me and said, “You know, Jim, I always wanted to write a story from the point of view of someone like Ed—you know, someone not totally there. To get the voice right, you know? To get that right—wouldn’t that be something?”

Freya Manfred claims that her father told her that his brother Ed’s death affected him deeply, and I have no doubt that it did. But that day, at that moment in time, with Harold sitting just across the bed, Fred’s brother’s death seemed to me to mean very little to Frederick Manfred.

Throughout his life, he taught me so many things that I don’t know that I can possibly remember them all. But that moment I’ll not forget, coming as it did in the wake of Harold Aardema’s lament. When Fred looked at me and talked to me as a writer, I couldn’t help think of what I was already coming to understand about the process of writing fiction—how it is that sometimes writers who so carefully breathe their souls into their work can begin to love the worlds of their novels more than the worlds in which they live. Storytellers—the really great ones—can and sometimes do abide more comfortably in the neighborhoods they create than they do in the here and now.

“Writing,” the essayist and historian John Milton writes in his book, Conversations with Fred Manfred, “is the absorbing purpose of Fred Manfred’s life.”

That realization made me uncomfortable, and still does. But I wonder too, whether that very passion isn’t essential to creating really great fiction, really great art.

I know another story about Fred, about his drive, his passion, something which sometimes I believe is its own species of monomania. He gave his all to his work, everything—writing was a calling/obsession. I may well be writing these words right now because it was. He was a gargantuan figure, an immense presence, a writer first of all. If he weren’t, we all might not be remembering.

A friend of his told me this story. After fielding successive rejections and suffering the resulting pain, Fred rose up in anger. “I will not be stopped,” he told this friend. “I will not be stopped.” He was fiercely angry.

Such Promethean will, admirable as it can appear from afar, feels, in the wrong place and time, like the a cousin of whatever it was that pushed along Ahab, the Captain.

Once upon a time, one of my students, young and female, an aspiring writer, took it upon herself to visit Manfred’s house on her own. I don’t know what happened between them, but she told me, brimming with anger and bitterness, that she would never go back, accompanied or unaccompanied. He was, at the time, sixty years older—or more—than she was.

Frederick Manfred taught me some things that he didn’t think of as lessons in craft. He was, without doubt, my literary father; but I’ve come to understand, for better of for worse, that I’d never give up so much of what he did to be a writer. That too is a lesson I learned from him.

______________________
Tomorrow: conclusion

Thursday 4 December 2014

Best Price for Girl's Leisure Canvas Backpack for Student

Girl's Leisure Canvas Backpack for Student


Girl's Leisure Canvas Backpack for Student


Brand : HAPPY BAG

Sales Rank :

Color : stripe

Amazon.com Price : $11.38




Features Girl's Leisure Canvas Backpack for Student


Dimensions: 38*30*16 cm
Suit for:Packing books, mobile phone, wallet, computer
Material: Canvas ; Inner: Nylon
Weight: 0.5 KG
Handbag design: Geometric pattern

Descriptions Girl's Leisure Canvas Backpack for Student


Positive level off, not wrinkle, not deformation.

It's more efficient to widen the shoulder belt thickening, easily.

Luggage bag opening way: Belt buckles.

Convenient to carry when you go outdoor to have a travel.


Search Result :

girl school backpack | eBay - Electronics, Cars, Fashion ...
Find great deals on eBay for girl school backpack and jansport backpack. Shop with confidence.
canvas vintage backpack | eBay - Electronics, Cars ...
Find great deals on eBay for vintage canvas backpack and vintage backpack. Shop with confidence.
girls backpack | eBay - Electronics, Cars, Fashion ...
Find great deals on eBay for girls backpack and aztec backpack. Shop with confidence.
Canvas Backpack | eBay - Electronics, Cars, Fashion ...
Men's Vintage Canvas Backpack Rucksack school bag Satchel Hiking bag B1022G. Can be use as backpack,handbag and shoulder bag. Material:High quality cotton canvas.
school backpacks girls: Clothing, Shoes & Jewelry
Unisex Fashionable Canvas Backpack School Bag Super Cute Stripe School College Laptop Bag for Teens Girls Boys...
Backpack - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A backpack (also called rucksack, knapsack, packsack, pack, or bergen) is, in its simplest form, a cloth sack carried on one's back and secured with two straps that ...
School Backpacks | eBay - Electronics, Cars, Fashion ...
Find great deals on eBay for School Backpacks in Unisex Bag and Backpacks. Shop with confidence.
backpack | eBay - Electronics, Cars, Fashion, Collectibles ...
Find great deals on eBay for backpack and rucksack. Shop with confidence.
Girls Backpacks for Kindergarten – My Favorites!
Crocodile Creek Backpacks for Kindergarten Girls A Popular Brand ~ Designs that will be popular every year
Lands' End | Quality Outerwear, Sweaters, Jeans & More
Lands' End has great values on fall fashions for the entire family. Shop coats, jackets, boots, accessories, home goods & much more. Guaranteed. Period.®.

Best Offers for Retro Canvas Leather Casual Travel School College Hiking Daypack Laptop Backpack Rucksack

Retro Canvas Leather Casual Travel School College Hiking Daypack Laptop Backpack Rucksack


Retro Canvas Leather Casual Travel School College Hiking Daypack Laptop Backpack Rucksack


Brand : Dealkiller

Sales Rank : 95611

Color : Brown

Amazon.com Price : $46.98




Features Retro Canvas Leather Casual Travel School College Hiking Daypack Laptop Backpack Rucksack


Thicker canvas material.
13''3/4L x 6''3/4W x 17''3/4H
Genuine Leather.
Brass hardware.

Descriptions Retro Canvas Leather Casual Travel School College Hiking Daypack Laptop Backpack Rucksack


This kind of bag is made from pure cotton water canvas,texture is soft, strong and durable, carry comfortable, very suitable for photography lovers do for short trips, also can be uesd in the daily travel. If you are not satisfied, please don't leave us negative or neutral feedback right away. Please contact us via email. We promise to provide 100% fine customer service and try best to make every customer get good mood with fine shopping experience here. Due to monitor variations colors may appear slightly different. More fashion bags@Dealkiller


Search Result :

vintage leather backpack | eBay - Electronics, Cars ...
Find great deals on eBay for vintage leather backpack and handmade leather backpack. Shop with confidence.
vintage canvas rucksack | eBay - Electronics, Cars ...
Find great deals on eBay for vintage canvas rucksack and canvas rucksack. Shop with confidence.
vintage backpack | eBay - Electronics, Cars, Fashion ...
Find great deals on eBay for vintage backpack and canvas backpack. Shop with confidence.
vintage rucksack | eBay - Electronics, Cars, Fashion ...
Find great deals on eBay for vintage rucksack and aztec rucksack. Shop with confidence.
Vintage Backpacks - Collector Information | Collectors Weekly
Large Vtg Cognac Colombia Leather Backpack Mmm Satchel Rucksack Vintage 1970's Lowe Alpine Systems Internal Frame Hiking Mountaineering Backpack Vintage Jansport ...
Louis Vuitton Outlet-Louis Vuitton Handbags Online ...
Delight your life with the chic and authentic Louis Vuitton handbags online from Louis Vuitton outlet,welcome to the Louis Vuitton official website.
Jansport Superbreak Backpack (Navy): Clothing
600 Denier Polyester; Imported; 13" wide; Ultra-functional school backpack/daypack with 600-denier construction; Single main compartment and front pocket with ...
Search results for " backpack " - backpack on Wanelo
SlimACC New Top Trendy Cute Korean Lace Backpack College Style Leisure Backpack Gilr's Lovely Bow Vintage Floral Print School Bag Retro Sweet Fashionable Outdoor ...
Military Bags & Packs - Galaxy Army Navy Store: camouflage ...
For the lowest and cheapest price buy wholesale Military Bags & Packs from the Galaxy Army Navy store with free shipping over $99.

Tuesday 2 December 2014

Algebra 10-12 assignment; 9/3

We went over an entry task today before taking an SMI math inventory test in class.  This test was online and is used for proper class placement.  The testing took the entire period.

No homework assignment was given.

Algebra 10-12 assignment; 9/1

Labor Day today;  no school