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Krikor Garabed Koltukian, affectionately known to his children and grandchildren as Pop, Grandpop, and Grandpops, was born in 1892 in the village of Efkere, Armenia, 8 miles northeast of Talas, which is 5 miles northwest of present-day Kayseri, Turkey. He attended the Talas American College, in Talas, and taught there for one year after graduating, until leaving for America in 1912, to study architecture at Penn State University in State College, PA, finally marrying and settling his family in Richmond, VA.His artistic talent has been digitally scanned from one of his sketchpads and reproduced within this book. Grandpop loved to capture classical subjects, nudes, and everyday people in his sketches, bringing him an inner peace from the horrific loss of his entire family, in the Armenian Genocide, except for his brother, Zenon, who simultaneously left Armenia for Montevideo, Uruguay.The Beyond the Sketches section presents scans of a few of his remaining color artwork, using oils, pastels, and watercolors.Lastly, the Photo Archive section contains the few remaining portrait and scenic photos from his treasured Armenia, and several from his college years and beyond.
This book should have been completed, but along came the virus, so I held up with it. I said, "Well, I guess this is the way God wants it done." I wanted the story to be enjoyable for all. Yes, it's a children's book, but many that have read it say it's very enjoyable. Once Upon A Kimono is about a new kimono designer, Hana. They got the material from a delivery man named Akihiko, which means prince. It is funny because Hana always said someday her prince would come. It shows in this story how when God puts your friends together, just what good friends do for each other. This book (yes again, a children's book) is going to bring the child out of, yes, the adults. After all this world has been through, this book will make you smile again.
Self-harm/injury is something that impinges on the lives of a significant number of people. It has become an issue that now attracts a range of attitudes and assumptions, not all of which are positive.Despite the vast amount of information that is now available through a range of different sources there is still a limited understanding of what self-harm/injury represents and how people who self-harm/injure should be most effectively supported.Differences that exist in the acknowledgement of what self-harm/injury is, why people engage in it and how they should be supported include:¿ A frequent link in 'professional' literature with other concepts such as mental illness, suicide¿ Self-injury as different to self-harm or self-harm considered as an 'umbrella' term for a range of different activities including self-injury¿ Why people self-harm/injure¿ Interventions that support individuals including who might be best placed to offer these
The poems in this book are from the heart.911 poem and tears for Dad have brought many a tear from people.His warmth and sincerity makes you feel like you know the author.A relaxing way to unwind after a stressfulday.
Patterns of Neotropical Plant Species Diversity . 5 Sample Sites . Sites and Communities Studied . Evolution on a Petri Dish: The Evolved fJ-Galactosidase System as a Model for Studying Acquisitive Evolution in the Laboratory . 85 Approaches to Molecular Evolution . 97 The EBG System a s a Model for Acquisitive Evolution .
Presents detailed discussions on the systematic, ecological, and evolutionary implications of the pollination of terrestrial orchids of Southern Australia and the Mediterranean; variation and diversity in deep-sea echinoids; the molecular evolution of the alcohol dehydrogenase genes in Drosophila;
From Gregor Mendel's experiments on garden peas to the mammoth Human Genome Project of today-how did we get where we are in the science of genetics? In this intriguing book, Bruce Wallace examines the concept of the gene and recounts the history of...
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