August 2006
Monthly Archive
General30 Aug 2006 01:05 pm
Why Ray Williams is still my hero
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We wouldn t be able to do any of the stuff we do with kids if it
wasn t for the support we get from local business people in our
community. This is not a shameless plug for our sponsors, just
recognition of the fact that whatever we ve been able to achieve
in Dulwich Hill has been a team effort between church and
community.
People often ask me, “I suppose the church pays for all this, do
they”. I tell them straight, that our little church in Dulwich
Hill has never been able to properly afford even the minimum wage
for their priest, and that the Church with a capital C (ie. the
Anglican Diocese of Sydney) has contributed next to nothing. No.
Almost all our support comes from the three local pubs - the
Gladstone, the Royal Exchange, and the Henson Park Hotel - and
from the local RSL club (Petersham). The rest of it we pick up
through the Christians vs. Lions fight nights we put on, and
through other community events (eg. the Mayor s golf day, the
annual community Street Fair, etc.).
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It wasn t always this easy. In the early years we really
struggled to keep the Youth Centre open. Then we caught the
attention of one corporate benefactor, who was able to keep us
going long enough for us to put the other support in place. That
benefactor was Ray Williams, former chief executive of HIH
insurance - one of the most gentle, caring, and humble men I have
ever met, and currently one of the least popular men in the
country.
It amazes me when I think about it. Some of the best people I
have ever met are people with terrible reputations. In each case
of course their reputations have been largely media-generated.
When my mate Jim got shot, one of the major Sydney newspapers ran
story entitled “Evil Villain Gunned Down”. It featured a picture
of Jim carrying an automatic weapon. The picture had been taken
many years earlier during Jim s time with the Australian Army. I
thought You bastards! That s not the man I know.
When Morde was on trail in Israel I read a variety of articles
that spoke about him as being a sophisticated spy - working for
the Arabs and out to destroy his country. I thought You
bastards! You have no idea who you are talking about.
Now I read stories about Ray - about how he manipulated the
market to line his own pockets and how he deliberately defrauded
millions of people, and I think again You bastards .
Ray was sent by God to help us. I have no doubt about that. I
first met him through a fight I took, though Ray himself was no
fan of boxing.
The story of that fight was in itself quite bizarre.
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I had been sitting with the Archdeacon in my office one
afternoon. He was wagging his finger at me and telling me that
I d have to close down the Youth Centre. “You just don t have
enough money to keep it going” he said. And he was right. We were
exactly $1000 short of being able to pay our youth worker s wage
for the next month. I was feeling rather nonchalant about it all
and was telling him to have more faith. At exactly that moment
Kon, my trainer, came to the door.
“Dave, do you want to take a pro fight?” he asked. “No” was my
knee-jerk reaction. I d just completed my fight career (I d
thought) with a shot at the NSW super-welterweight title in
kickboxing. The law in this state at the time was that you had to
hang up your gloves when you turned 35. I was 34 and nine months
at that stage. “How much are they offering?” I asked Kon. “$1000″
he said. I told him I d take it. We raised close to $50,000 for
the Youth Centre through that fight. More than half of that money
came through Ray.
A guy by the name of Jeff Wells wrote an article about my fight
that was published in the Sydney Morning Herald one Saturday.
After that, cheques for as much as $1000 started arriving in the
mail! Then one morning a courier turned up with two cheques - one
for $10,000 in the name of HIH insurance, and another for $15,000
in the name of a Mr R. Williams. I remember trembling when I
received these cheques. I d never seen that much money before in
my life.
I had never heard of Ray Williams, but his business card was
attached, so I rang the number and got one of those classic
receptionist voices, saying “Mr Williams is busy at the moment.
Can I take a message?” Then I mentioned my name and all of a
sudden I was speaking to Ray.
“Ah … hi … do I know you?” I started. “No. I don t think so,”
he said. “You ve just sent me cheques for $25,000″ I said. “Yes”
he said. “Um … are you a local from around here? Have you been
watching our work?” I asked. “No” he said. “Well … are you
connected with the church or with youth work around here?” “No”
he said. “Well … are you a fight fan?” I asked, scratching for
some point of connection. “Not at all” he said. “I read an
article about you in the Herald and it looked like you needed
some help.” “Yeah, I do” I said. “Well, will that help?” he
asked. “Oh yeah” I said, “that ll help.”
That s how our relationship began. Over the years that followed
Ray took a keen interest in our work. As things at HIH became
tighter, we didn t receive any further support from the company,
but Ray himself would generally turn up to our fundraiser fight
nights, and he wouldn t leave before slipping us a cheque from
out of his own funds. It s what kept us going while we searched
for more stable sponsorship from the local community. We owe a
lot to Ray.
And it wasn t just the money. It was the man too. He was
inspiring in his humility.
At the time of the first donation we had a guy in our church who
worked as one of the chief accountants in the public hospital
system. “Oh yeah” he said to me one Sunday. “If it wasn t for Ray
Williams, half the hospitals in Sydney might be closed.” And then
he added “but he never likes to have his name mentioned. He hates
the limelight”
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We found this to be entirely true. We managed to get him on stage
once to present a trophy to one of our fighters, but it was a
tough job. He really hated being at the centre of attention. It s
one of the things that makes this Royal Commission so odious to
him.
I still can t believe the way the media have gone after him -
vigorously attacking him for his generosity to hospitals and
charities. It s not as if he was giving away money that should
have gone to insurance claimants. If he hadn t given it away, I
guess it would have slightly increased the dividend paid to the
shareholders, and he himself must have been one of the largest
shareholders. I still find it preposterous to think that the
media should have acted so self-righteously indignant about the
fact that the poor shareholders were losing potential income
because it had gone to the children s hospital. It s just
ridiculous.
But it wasn t only the media that crucified Ray. Once the news
about HIH s collapse became public knowledge, former colleagues
deserted him, old friends and associates turned their backs on
him, and charities that he d been supporting for years all of a
sudden didn t want to know him. Ray had been on the board of the
Children s Hospital for as long as anybody could remember. They
sent him a letter saying thank you but your services are no
longer required . Nobody waited for the results of the Royal
Commission. Nobody waited to see if perhaps he wasn t the real
villain in the piece. Everyone distanced themselves, not wanting
their own reputations to be tarnished.
I seriously can t understand that attitude. I know I m capable of
doing some stupid and selfish things, but deserting a mate in his
time of need is not one of them. When I think about all the
people that Ray must have helped over the years, I just can t
believe that none of them thought to ring him up and say How are
you going, Ray. Perhaps it s my turn to give you some support?
Anyway, my point here is not to spit my dummy. And I ll be the
first to admit that I don t have a clue about big business,
insurance laws, or anything of the sort. But I know a good man
when I meet one, and Ray Williams is a good man and someone whom
I m proud to call my friend. And I ll be buggered if I m going
stand by and listen to people pouring crap out on a mate of mine
without saying anything.
To be truthful, I don t expect that Ray will ever fully regain
his former reputation or standing. I know too much about how the
media works and about how our court system works to ever expect
real justice. As with my friends Jim and Morde, I m not holding
my breath waiting for the truth to come out. No. I ll look to the
day when the kingdom of this world will become the kingdom of our
Lord and Christ. When that day comes, all the crap will be sorted
out.
About the Author
‘Fighting’ Father Dave Smith - Parish Priest, community worker,professional fighter, father of three. Dave is the only Australian in Holy Orders to turn pro boxer to help fund his work. He is Parish Priest in Dulwich Hill, Sydney,and has received numerous awards for his work with young people
Get a free preview of his book, ‘Sex, the Ring & the Eucharist’ when you sign up for Dave’s newsletter at www.fatherdave.org
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General22 Aug 2006 01:01 pm
Why More Priests Need To Train As Fighters(And Why We Don't See Many Boxers in Church)
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“Therefore I do not run like a man running aimlessly; I do not
fight like a man beating the air. No, I beat my body and make it
my slave so that after I have preached to others, I myself will
not be disqualified for the prize.”
(1 Corinthians 9:26-27)
St Paul was a fighter. I don’t think he ever competed in the
ring, but that wasn’t because he lacked the discipline or was
afraid of the pain.
I always say that to be a fighter you need to have two things
going for you. Firstly you need to have a lot of energy inside
that needs release. Secondly, you need to be not too concerned
about your own health. This fits the profile of most of our young
men perfectly - on the edge of the drug culture, full of
testosterone, and with no thought for the future. It also fits
perfectly the profile of another group - single fathers,
struggling to gain access to their children.
That was how I got into the fight game. I hadn’t taken it up as a
teenager, and I certainly hadn’t been born into it. My dad was a
priest for God’s sake, and an academic. Fighting had not been my
birthright. I came in through the back door of pain and
loneliness and bitter struggle.
Separated, and struggling for the right to see my daughter, I had
made one half-hearted attempt at suicide already by that stage.
And I had met with my bishop the following day and he had told me
not to ‘trade off’ my situation (in other words, not to get too
comfortable). I appeared to be losing my family, my vocation, and
most of my friends at the same time. Full of emotional energy,
obsessed with thoughts of self-destruction, and drinking way too
much, I managed to find my way to the Mundine gym. It was my
decision not to go under, but to fight back.
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Mundine’s is situated in the middle of Everleigh Street, Redfern
- the roughest street in one of the roughest neighborhoods in our
city. Redfern is a largely Aboriginal suburb on the outskirts of
central Sydney. In recent years the government has come through
and ‘cleaned it up’ somewhat, which meant pushing a lot of the
local residents further out west. Even so, it is still a rough
area.
I had grown up in the vicinity of Everleigh Street. My dad had
been a lecturer at the Anglican seminary located only a few
blocks from this dark heart of Aboriginal Sydney. It was always
an odd location for the seminary. The ecclesiastical community
never had anything to do with the adjoining aboriginal enclave.
On the contrary, most persons associated with the religious
community dealt with their black neighbours by practising the
same sort of avoidance strategy that I’d learnt as a kid
scurrying quickly past the end of Everleigh Street and its
environs whenever circumstances put us unavoidably within its
reach.
Ironically this strategy had to be invoked every time you got off
a train from Redfern station. The platforms seemed to be designed
to feed directly into Everleigh Street! Of course I never made
the mistake of straying down that way myself, and as a youngster,
I had heard many a nasty story about the price paid by some of
the less wary.
None of this is to suggest that the reputation of Everleigh was
based on hearsay. I had seen plenty with my own eyes.
Countless times I had seen young toddlers and their slightly
older siblings wandering the streets at night while their parents
got drunk at the local. One night I watched as a stupid woman
stopped her car after these kids had thrown rocks at it. She got
out and tried to confront the kids about what they had done. The
result of course was that they found some bigger rocks and a
couple of bricks. They made quite a mess of that car.
My brother told me that he had witnessed a roll take place from
the top of the street in broad daylight. Some boys had pulled a
knife on a university student who had handed them his wallet. The
student had then located a nearby policeman and had pointed out
the boys to him, but the copper did nothing about it. He said he
didn’t want to start a riot!
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I had seen the bonfires that would be lit when the new phone
books or Yellow Pages directories were delivered. I had seen the
shells of burnt out cars in the street. I had seen plenty, and
had plenty of good reasons to never deliberately venture down
that street, which is why my first walk to the Mundine gym was
like wading through water - every step being a slow and
deliberate effort. But I was determined to become a fighter, and
I’d just as soon lose my life in Everleigh Street than give up on
my dream to have my day in the ring.
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The exterior of Mundine’s Gym is not designed to draw attention
to itself. You’d walk right past it if you didn’t know it was
there. It’s missing entirely that glittering windowed street
frontage with the sleek bodies of well-groomed athletes on
display for passers-by - the type that we associate with the
sorts of gyms where you pay a costly membership fee. Mundine’s
has no membership fee. I don’t remember there even being a sign
out the front. Mundine’s looks like just another
housing-commission block, with its inglorious entrance at the
bottom of a stairwell. But you pick up that it’s a gym long
before you reach the top of those stairs. The smell of liniment
hits you half way up - that manly smell that mingles so
harmoniously with the melodic whir of the skipping rope tap, tap,
tapping its way through another round.
This is what makes a real gym the smell of liniment, the sound of
the rope, the less rhythmical thwacking of glove to bag, and of
course the fighting. When you step inside Mundine’s, you know
you’re in a real gym. No pretty boys. No glamour workouts. No
white-collar boxercise sessions for indulgent professionals. Just
bodies, sweat, testosterone and blood.
They play hard at Mundine’s. That’s governed by the sort of guys
that show up there of course, but it’s also embedded in the
architecture of the gym to some extent. The ring stands in the
centre of the building and it’s a small ring, made for brawlers.
There is a small assortment of bags strung around the sides, but
no fancy speedballs or floor-to-ceiling bags, such that you could
justify turning up just to have a workout on the bags. There are
a few pieces of weights equipment too, but again not enough to
allow them to become a serious point of focus. No. The whole
structure is designed to channel you into the ring. Everything
else is just padding. That’s the way it should be in a real gym.
I wore my clerical shirt and collar the first time I went there.
Even now I don’t think it was an entirely stupid thing to have
done. I wanted to be up-front about who I was and where I was
coming from. Even so, I hadn’t really thought through the effect
that this was going to have on the other boys at the gym, most of
whom were, initially, very reluctant to hit me. They got over it
though, particularly after they realised that I had no qualms
about hitting them. Within a couple of weeks I was coming home
each night bruised and bleeding from head to toe, and I knew I
was one of the lads.
Is it just me, or does every man need to go through something
like this at some time in his life - to know the joy of falling
into your bed aching with the wounds that your sparring partner
has inflicted on you that evening, and sleeping soundly in the
knowledge that your ring brother is likewise doing his best to
sleep off the impression that you made on him? I had many a
glorious sparring session during those first weeks and months at
Mundine’s. They weren’t pretty to watch I suppose, but they were
epic struggles of the human spirit so far as I was concerned.
There are few things in life more deeply satisfying than a good
fight. A hard night in the ring is an enormous catharsis for a
man who is struggling with life, but it’s more than that too.
When you step into a ring you’re making a decision to take
control of your own destiny. The forces that oppose you are no
longer vague powers that threaten to overwhelm you from a
distance - the law, the courts, the system. No. Your opposition
takes on a clear material form in the shape of the other man
advancing on you from the other corner. To get into that ring and
to stay in that ring is to make a decision to give it a go - to
put your body on the line and to stand up to the punishment like
a man. Fighting is more than a sport. It’s a way of life. It is
the defiant decision to confront your pain directly and not to be
overcome by it. Mundine’s gym taught me that, or at least it
played a significant role.
There was another vital lesson I learnt at Mundine’s - perhaps
even more important than what I learned about fighting. I learnt
to respect the fight community.
The fight community is a culture all of its own, and was
certainly spawned on an entirely different planet to the church
community. I’m sure that some Anglican church-goers must have
wondered why there are so many doctors and accountants in their
congregations and so few fighters. The truth is that most church
people just don’t speak the same language as fighters.
The converse is also true. The fight community, as far as I can
see, has very little idea of what the church is on about. I don’t
mean that fighters aren’t spiritual guys. On the contrary, some
of the most godly and inspirational men I have met have been
fighters. And yet they have no point of contact with the
established church. The two groups just don’t understand each
other at all. Never was this made clearer to me than on my fourth
visit to Mundine’s gym.
I had turned up quietly in my tracksuit and was wandering over to
the bench at the side of the ring where we tended to leave our
gear while we were training. A group of guys were huddled there
talking, and there was nothing particularly private about the
volume of their conversation. I think they were discussing
relationship problems, though I didn’t overhear everything. What
I couldn’t help hearing was one guy say very clearly ‘So I
grabbed her, and I punched her in the fuckin’ head’. He said it
loudly and enacted a downwards punching motion as he said it.
Then he noticed me standing nearby and suddenly felt very
self-conscious. ‘Oh, sorry Father’ he said. And then he corrected
himself. ‘I punched her … (and he said it very slowly and
deliberately) … in the head’.
If I’d had my wits about me that night I would have said
something clever like ‘I don’t think the Lord really gives a fuck
about your language brother, but I think He does care about your
wife.’ As it was, I didn’t say anything. I think I responded with
a feeble smile. At the time, I just couldn’t work out how this
guy had ever got it into his head that, as a priest, I would be
more concerned about the fact that he swore than I would be about
the fact that he beat his wife? Nowadays I take that sort of
perception for granted.
I think it’s the church that has to bear the responsibility for
the communication breakdown. So much of the church nowadays reeks
of a sort of insipid middle-class moralism that really does care
more about smoking and swearing than it does about domestic
violence or world hunger. I don’t think the Lord Jesus or St Paul
ever intended to spawn any of these Christianized golf clubs that
call themselves churches. Personally, I suspect that Jesus and
the apostles would feel more at home in the average boxing gym
today than they would in the average church. Of course they
wouldn’t like the threats and the violence, but they would love
the honesty. Fighters are very honest people.
One guy, again from the Mundine gym, summed it up for me. ‘Around
here nobody stabs anybody in the back’, he said to me. Then he
pointed to his heart and added emphatically: ‘You stab here!’
That’s why I have so much respect for the fight culture. I know I
can trust fighters. I know they won’t stuff me round - smiling to
my face but stabbing me in the back when I turn around. I wish
the same could be said for all church people.
St Paul was a fighter. ‘I do not fight like a man beating the
air’ he says. They had the ancient Pankration fighting in his day
- a vicious form of no rules combat that was concluding event in
the original Olympics. Those guys certainly didn’t ‘beat the
air’. When Ulysses came home from the Trojan War, legend has it
that his own mother didn’t recognise him. According to my friend
and former trainer Kon, legend has it that when the Pankration
champion came home from the Olympic Games, his own dog couldn’t
recognise him! Those guys knew what real fighting is about.
St Paul would have made one tough bugger as a fighter. What I
wouldn’t give to be able to jump into the old Pankration ring
with him to go a couple of rounds! You’d never knock him down
though. I suspect most of the apostles would have been like that
- warm big-hearted men, but as hard as nails in the ring.
I have a secret hope that when I get to heaven I’ll be able to
take on some of those boys and try my luck. I guess it’s not
everyone’s idea of heaven, but it is mine.
About the Author
‘Fighting’ Father Dave Smith - Parish Priest, community worker,professional fighter, father of three. Dave is the only Australian in Holy Orders to turn pro boxer to help fund his work. He is Parish Priest in Dulwich Hill, Sydney,and has received numerous awards for his work with young people
Get a free preview of his book, ‘Sex, the Ring & the Eucharist’ when you sign up for Dave’s newsletter at www.fatherdave.org
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General21 Aug 2006 01:04 pm
The Baby Stroller- How To Choose
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The Baby Stroller- How To Choose
by: Martin Smith
You will need to begin gathering the things your baby will need, now that you got the news that you are expecting a bundle of joy. You may feel overwhelmed if this is your first baby with all the decisions that need to be made.
Deciding on the type of stroller you will use for your baby is one of the biggest decisions you will need to make. You need to determine your budget first before you begin choosing from among the many different types of strollers. The cost of strollers can range from $10 to $400 and higher.
The lower end strollers are generally the lightweight umbrella strollers. Easy folding and storage give these strollers an advantage. High prices for a stroller could indicate greater quality and better features. You should know which of the variety of features that come with strollers is important to you?
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Which would you want a convertible travel system or a stroller and a car seat? A travel system has a stay in the car base, a stroller frame to which the infant carrier/ car safety seat is attached. These are wonderful especially for your newborn baby.
A play tray that has places for a bottle or juice cup come with strollers. Many strollers come with canopies that have vinyl windows to let you keep an eye on the baby. Easily applied foot brakes that are attached to both rear wheels and a wrist strap brake that can be used together are included on most strollers.
While you have the strap on it gives you extra safety while you are stopped because the stroller can’t roll away. Strollers are now coming with a parent tray that fits over the handle bar as well as a large storage basket that fits under the seat(s). It has a holder for a cup of coffee or a soda, your cell phone, snack, and your keys.
Reversible handlebars that can be moved from front to rear or vice versa and are height adjustable are now on most strollers. The reversible handlebars can help you to see your baby while he rides if necessary and the height adjustable feature is a great back saver.
Next to be considered is the seat. Will the seat recline enough, if it reclines, to allow your newborn to lie almost flat? Will the seat be comfortable for your baby and well padded? Can the seat padding be removed so it can be washed? Blankets that can be attached with snaps to the seat come on most upper end strollers
Your baby’s stroller becomes like a bunting on wheels with these blankets. Your baby is protected from wind and harsh sunlight with the use of these detachable rain hoods. Another twist comes with your decision about a baby stroller. You can have for free a stroller that is almost brand new from your friend. She promises to get the stroller ready for you and cleaned.
Is it a safe choice for your baby to have a used stroller? Before you place your baby in it you will need to look over some things and it could be a very good choice for you and your baby. No gaps, dents, or cracks should be found in the frame. Bolts and screws must all be in place.
If it were anything less your baby could be seriously hurt in an accident. Are there any sharp spots on the frame? Can your baby be cut by screws sticking out or are there loose screws? Is the frame and handle bar properly joined?
Do you need to look over the wheels for leaks in air pressure or are they solid?
The wheels; are they worn?
Do the wheels need replacement?
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Are the wheels turning appropriately?
Are the axels crooked?
Are the brakes holding when applied and working properly?
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No matter if the seat is in straight us position or reclining position, does the seat hold?
Your baby could be seriously hurt if the seat does not hold the position well. Is the seat lining fitting the frame properly and is it clean? Strollers have a variety of options, types, and styles. Multi-seated strollers are available for two children or more.
There is a variety of seating arrangements including tandem and side by seating as well as stadium seating which a variation of tandem seating where the rear seat is higher than the front allowing the second child to see more than just the back of a head.
Jogging strollers have a triangular wheelbase with one large one out in front and two in the rear. Jogging strollers also come with multiple seating. Used or new enjoy your outings with your baby or children.
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About The Author
Martin Smith is a successful freelance writer providing advice for consumers on purchasing a variety of Baby strollers and more! His articles provide a wonderfully researched resource of interesting and relevant information. http://www.1st-babies.com
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General20 Aug 2006 01:03 pm
An Introduction To Online Colleges
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An Introduction To Online Colleges
by: Tawee Subsomboon
Online colleges make obtaining a degree a possibility for anyone with access to the internet. If you have always dreamt of obtaining a degree or other certificate then online colleges are a great way to make that dream come true. One of the main benefits of studying with online colleges rather than conventional campus-based colleges is that you can work on your chosen subject at your own pace and at a time that suits you. Instead of having to attend classes and lectures you can fit your study in around work and family commitments. In particular, many stay-at-home moms are finding that online colleges offer course that they can take while the kids are at school in preparation for returning to work when the kids are older.
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Many employees are overlooked for promotion at work because they lack formal qualifications but this is where online colleges come in. Instead of having to take time off work to be able to attend a regular college you can continue working your normal hours and access your course in your free time. If you have been with a company for a while and see no opportunity for advancement you can also study with any of the online colleges to enable you to find a new job whilst you are still earning.
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Online colleges offer a wide range of course and have no time restriction in which you have to complete the modules. This gives you the freedom to study where and when you want to and a number of online colleges will allow you to take lengthy study breaks. Some courses do not require a formal exam at the end to obtain a diploma but consist of a number of assignments that are to be completed throughout the course. Most online colleges have specialist tutors who can communicate with the students by email or other means to give support and guidance to them throughout the course. Quite often the online colleges will also have facilities to link students with each other so that they can discuss assignments.
There are online colleges based all around the globe and there are usually no residency restrictions applied. If you want to learn about French art then why not choose one of the online colleges based in France or one of the many Japanese online colleges to obtain a certificate in business management techniques then you can. Finding the right course is the easy part but deciding which of the online colleges you want to study it with is probably going to be the hardest choice to make. This is because there are literally millions of courses available through online colleges around the globe.
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General19 Aug 2006 01:03 pm
Captain Ahab joins the Canadian Navy
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Captain Ahab joins the Canadian Navy
by: Gary Whittaker
Canada s military has been a long-standing joke for decades. On October 5th, that joke turned deadly serious when a crew member of the HMCS Chicoutimi died from injuries sustained onboard from smoke inhalation. Lieut. Chris Saunders, who leaves behind a wife and two children, will become known as the 1st Canadian to die aboard a submarine will on duty in approx. 50 years. The HMCS Chicoutimi was on its maiden voyage to Canada when the fire broke out. It was the last one of 4 vessels purchased second hand from the UK, to be brought to Canada for use in its Navy. The total price tag for the 4 submarines was 750 million dollars. All four submarines reported problems of varying degrees, with this latest incident being the most serious. They were actually purchased in 1998, and that was considered a bargain at the time. 2 more crewmembers remain hospitalized as a result of injuries sustained during the incident.
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All three crewmembers were transported to a hospital in Ireland, close to where the submarine was when the fire broke out. In doing so, the Canadian government was sparred further embarrassment from the incident by not having the injured personnel not wait for medical attention in a Canadian hospital with depleted resources due to cuts over the last decade. The Liberals are already trying to deflect blame thrown at them from the opposition, claiming that the problems reported on the purchased subs where all normal, and that the inspection teams did all they could prior to allowing the subs to leave dock. Meanwhile, the Navy insists that these submarines were needed in their plans for defence.
We now have to ask ourselves what exactly that plan could be. Canadians have to be realistic. There is absolutely no point in trying to develop a strategic plan against any nation. There is no way the most powerful nation in history will allow Canada to be invaded, and there is no way Canada would be able to defend its self if ever the American lose their minds and attack Canada.
The submarines would also present a target for terrorists. They attack with vans, plans and cargo containers (okay, this last one I got only from movies, but you never know ). There is little a diesel-fuelled submarine will be defend against known terrorist capabilities, so that s rules them out.
That leaves foreign fishing boats, Green Peace and Whales as they only potential targets left for the Canadian Navy. Do we have a Captain Ahab leading the Canadian Navy? Doubtful, since there are some Canadian boat tours that add Whale sightseeing as an incentive to pay good money for a three-hour tour.
That leaves the Spanish fishing boats. They have continuously ignored warning by the Canadian government about fishing in their waters. The fishing industry is in decline, with the Maritime Provinces being the most affected, as they have become Canada s own 3rd world nation. Could Canadians have paid 750 million dollars to deter the Spanish? There own version of a new cold war? There is no other explanation for it. No other reason for it, other than to scare away the Spanish boats, or the fish from under the Spanish boats and drive them to Canadian nets. Either way, after a quarter of a billion dollars in initial cost, with hundreds of millions more in maintenance and repair costs, and now 1 human life, Canadians are paying dearly. To be insulted for your national defense is one thing, but to have a government force Canadians pay for the upkeep of those insults is more than just a slap in the face, it is a reason to fight back.
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About The Author
Gary is editor of T.E.N Magazine. Check out more social commentary on various issues at http://www.tenwebzine.com.
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General18 Aug 2006 01:03 pm
Cell Phones for Kids - How Young is Too Young?
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Cell Phones for Kids - How Young is Too Young?
by: Barry Nagassar
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Take a random tween, age 8-12, place them in front of a rotary phone and observe at the blank stare of bewilderment. Yes, gone are the days of the landline, pushed aside by the next wave of technological advancement. Mobile phones are fast displacing landlines in many homes; accompanying this movement is the fact kids regularly use and know how to use these cell phones. The mobility of cell phones means you can be anywhere and have the necessity, or should I say the convenience, of a phone.
Cellular service providers and manufacturers would enjoy nothing more than exploiting the vastly untapped tween market. However, is it necessary to provide cell phones to kids age 8-12? What makes it necessary today? Is the simple the notion of having the technology enough reason to equip younger and younger customers with phones? Where do we draw the line when it comes to tweens owning cell phones, and when should we be restricting use? The remainder of this article will discuss the pros and cons of purchasing cell phones for kids. It will discuss the social aspects, health concerns, and cost issues.
Social and Cost Issues:
Weighing in at a paltry 56 grams, designed with a smaller frame to accommodate smaller hands, measuring 88 x 44 x 20 mm, one of the leading cell phones targeted exclusively towards the 8-12 market, the Firefly. It offers up to 2.5 hours of talk time, and up to 100 hours of standby, basically it’s your bare bones cell phone that permits parent’s to limit outgoing calls to certain numbers and also sports ‘mom’ and ‘dad’ buttons for quick dialling. The Firefly is marketed with such catch phrases as “Parents of pre-teens understand that it’s time to start loosening the reins and letting their kids travel unsupervised to school, the library, or friends’ houses.”
Pro: Yes kids need a safety mechanism and having a cell phone handy does provide added protection in the form of determining whereabouts and phoning for help.
Con: Big safe mechanism, however, if any parent purchases a cell phone for their kid using the catchy marketing ploy directed to parents, ‘…start loosening the reins and let their kids travel unsupervised,’ they have the wrong perception regarding the purpose of a phone. Anybody who believes that providing a cell phone to a child automatically provides them with responsibility and ability to take care of themselves, when they were unable to do so before a cell phone, are relying too heavily on ‘parenting by technology’. Be mindful of such reasoning when thinking about buying a cell phone.
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Con: Another item to consider, are we turning our kids into internet and mobile phone junkies? One should question whether connecting kids 24/7 to their friends via cell phone will influence their social habits. Also, cell phones are quickly becoming the norm and the fashion. Kids will demand to be hip like their buddies from school who sport the latest cell phone, or any cell phone for that matter. Parents will be pressed to give in to ignescent demands of ‘everyone else has one’, or ‘I want to be cool like the other kids’. Sure it may be good to have your kid fit in, but since when is school primarily a popularity contest? Furthermore, when does fitting in cost so much?! The thing with cell phones is there are monthly costs attached — not a one time sunk cost. Chances are you will pay the monthly fees. Some options are available to have ‘pay-as-you-go’ options, you pay for whatever minutes you purchase, however, either or, the more your kid talks on the phone, the more you pay. Don’t forget too thatcell phones are more than phones. Almost all (the Firefly does not) have text messaging and more complicated communication tools included that have an attached cost as well. Boy, this is starting to get expensive!
Health Issues:
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The Firefly cell phone is designed to give the bare phone essentials. However, this phone is a candybar style, which means the antenna is located within the phone unit and does not protrude out. This means cellular frequencies are closer to the brain. The question now revolves around how early is too early for exposing kids to cellular frequencies on a regular basis? On one hand you don’t want to risk your child’s health, on the other hand scientific research is still inconclusive when it comes to cell phone ‘radiation’. The juror is still out on this one, be your own judge regarding the health impacts.
There you have it, some helpful reminders to consider before going out and dropping a couple hundred dollars and an additional twenty per month, minimum, on a cell phone for junior. One certainly cannot downplay the safety benefits, you never know when it could save a life, however, at the same time, there are many con items to consider before sending buying a a cell phone for junior. One thing is for sure, the little handset device will never replace supervision from an adult when supervision is due.
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About The Author
Barry Nagassar
Owner and operator of http://www.discusswireless.com/, visit for useful cell phone reviews, PDA reviews, consumer discussion on wireless news, and service provider issues. Also visit the shop section for price comparisons between competitors.
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General17 Aug 2006 01:03 pm
The Three Sure-Fire Ways to Teach Your Child About Safety
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The Three Sure-Fire Ways to Teach Your Child About Safety
by: Michelle Annese
We understand that for your child to be truly Kid Safe that they must understand and use two types of self defense. Physical, which gives them the tools needed to keep them safe. And mental self defense, which empowers them with the awareness and common sense to keep them safe. This article is geared toward educating parents on helping your child with the mental self defense to better make them Kid Safe .
Levels of Safety
By teaching our children there are different levels of safety and those levels depend on the situation they are in and the decisions they make in those situations, we can better train them to use their instincts, intuition, and even fear as safety tools. This is an easy way to explain to our children how to trust these instincts.
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Every time we travel through a busy intersection, there are traffic lights there to tell us if it is safe to pass through. If the light is green, that tells us it is safe to pass, if the light is yellow that means we must use caution and to be careful and to prepare to stop. If the light turns red, that means danger and do not proceed or you may become hurt in an accident.
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We can use these same lights, instead of traffic lights, as safety lights, to know when we are safe, to use caution, or to let us know we are in personal danger.
If our safety light is green .. This means we are safe and everything is normal.
If our safety light turns yellow ..This means that our intuition, instincts, or our gut feeling is telling us something is wrong!
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If your safety light turns red ..This means we are in immediate danger and have to act fast.
We have to train ourselves to recognize different situations we are in and be aware when that situation makes our safety light change from green to yellow or to red.
When our safety light turns yellow this is the time to slow down listen to our little voice inside of us called intuition, think about the situation we are in, and what is the best course of action to take to keep us safe and return us to a green light. For example,
We are swimming and we notice that the water is really deep and we are becoming tired…we should return to the shallow water and take a break, which would return us to our green light. But if we continue to swim in the deep water, we may become tired and find our self in a dangerous, red light situation.
Our head is beginning to hurt and mom is a sleep instead of waking and asking her for some medicine, we look in the medicine cabinet and find what appears to be the aspirin she normally gives us and we take it. This is defiantly a red light situation, because you could be taking the wrong medicine and become very sick. But if you had just woke mom up and told her you had a headache, you would have stayed safely in the green light.
Someone knocks on the door of your house. Anytime this happens, as a child you need to understand that this is a yellow safety light and you need to proceed with caution. First you never open the door unless you and your parents personally know the person. Like a friend of the family or a neighbor. If you do not know the person, which means have you never seen your parents speak to this person, you never open the door. Even if they say they are a policeman, fireman, or repairman. The decision that you should make to put yourself in the green light, would be to go find your parents and let them open the door. If you open the door, you could be putting yourself in a red light dangerous situation. If your parents are not home you should never, never, open the door for anyone. This is always a safety red light.
A person at school that is known to be a bully is standing at the end of the play ground. Knowing this your safety light immediately turns yellow. If you avoid that end of the playground your light will return to green, if you go to that end of the playground you may find your self in a safety red light.
By being aware of our surroundings and making smart decisions when we are in our yellow caution light, we can get back to our green safe light and avoid the red danger light.
Remember, it is OK to be afraid when our safety light turns yellow. Fear is what helps our intuition and instincts work. We should always trust our instincts and listen to our little voice inside. Remember, our little voice is always right.
Parents, by arming our children with mental safety so they can make quick, safe decisions, it gives them the confidence and focus to handle any type of situation and safeguard them for the future.
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About The Author
Michelle Annese is a self defense and security specialist teaching martial arts classes and seminars for over 15 years. She is the author of ‘SafeGuard System for Kids’ and ‘Protection For Women’. For more information on how to protect your child from strangers, bullies, and build them up with kid power and confidence go to http://www.michelleannese.com and check out other safety articles and sign up for a free safety tips e-newsletter.
michelle@michelleannese.com
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General14 Aug 2006 01:00 pm
Quality Time?
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Quality Time?
by: Gary E. Anderson
From the book Spider s Big Catch
Gary Anderson
www.abciowa.com
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There’s a phrase that s become popular over the past few years that fills me with wonder. That phrase is “quality time.” We’ve all heard it, and we all seem to accept it as a real concept. But to the average country person, that phrase is difficult to comprehend.
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Here’s what I mean. Last summer, my 10-year-old son Cody and I spent an entire day walking the fields, checking fences. When we saw a post that needed straightening or a strand of wire that needed to be tightened, we set right to work. Sweat poured across our faces, our shirts grew soaked from the hard work we were engaged in. But as we strained against the task at hand, we talked about his little league baseball team and how he could improve his hitting to the opposite field.
Then, as we walked a little farther down the fence line, we laughed till we cried when a covey of quail nearly gave us a heart attack as they exploded out of the grass in front of us. We heard the amazingly varied call of a cardinal in the woods off to our right. We saw two red-tailed hawks circling lazily over our heads, and marveled at how they could see field mice at such a height.
It was a typical day for us, father and son. We weren’t doing anything “special.” We were working. And yet, I know from similar experiences with my own dad when I was Cody’s age that days like these would be the ones that came to mind once he d grown up and had children of his own.
So I ask again: was that “quality time?”
Think back to your own childhood. What things do you remember most about your parents? Was it the fact that your dad worked 16 hours a day at the office, and fell asleep on the couch on the weekends because he was too exhausted to move? No, I’m willing to wager that’s not what you remember. More likely, you remember the time you went for a long walk along the country road in the rain and came home looking like not only something the cat had dragged in, but something he’d dragged in and forgotten under the refrigerator for a month.
It’s been said that kids spell “love” … t-i-m-e, and I couldn t agree more.
So the next time you hear yourself thinking that you’ll make it up to your daughter when she asks you to play “Chutes and Ladders” for the seven millionth time, remember: your kids are watching you, and it doesn’t matter how young they are; they know how to spell the word “quality,” too.
Strangely enough, to our kids, the word “quality” is spelled exactly the same as the word “love.”
They re both spelled T-I-M-E.
© 2004. Gary E. Anderson. All rights reserved.
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About The Author
Gary Anderson is a freelance writer, editor, ghostwriter, and manuscript analyst, living on a small Iowa farm. He s published more than 500 articles and four books. He s also ghosted a dozen books, edited more than 30 full-length manuscripts, produced seven newsletters, and has done more than 800 manuscript reviews for various publishers around the nation. If you need writing or editing help, visit Gary s website at www.abciowa.com.
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abciowa@alpinecom.net
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General11 Aug 2006 01:01 pm
Diaper Bags for Dads - Papa's Got a Brand New Bag
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Today s dads are more hands-on than ever before and their involvement is being rewarded with parenting gear designed with men in mind. Many items that have typically been designed for the maternal side of the parental equation are now being introduced in masculine styles, colors, and fabrics, including diaper bags, baby carriers, and strollers.
For many parents a diaper bag is such an essential part of baby s first years that it only makes sense to give daddy his due one simply cannot expect a man to tote around the little one s belongings in a feminine diaper bag with dignity and enthusiasm. In that scenario dad will spend more time trying not to be seen than attending to baby.
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The selection of a diaper bag for dad is dependant on many factors, but for those new to the game we offer these simple pointers:
If in doubt, go for function over form, but get as close to your idea of the perfect marriage of both as possible.
Consider where and when you ll be using you diaper bag most often trips to the park, for example, will require a more durable exterior, (water resistant is always a plus), than, say, daily trips to day care or indoor events.
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A changing pad is almost a requirement if you ll be out and about with baby. One diaper change without one in a public place and you ll know what we mean.
The number of pockets and compartments you ll want are dependant on your personal needs, (do you tend to take everything but the kitchen sink or travel light?), but we recommend at least one or two pockets on both the exterior and interior of the bag, and preferable at least one with a zipper or closure.
Determine the carrying style you are most comfortable with most men opt for a backpack or messenger style diaper bag, and some diaper bags convert from one to the other. We ve found that the backpack style bags and messenger bags worn across the body leave hands most free for dealing with baby. Adjustable straps allow you to get the most comfortable fit for your body.
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Consider the extras. Again, depending on your personal style and needs you may wish to look for these items in a diaper bag: wipe case, wipeable and/or washable bag for soiled items, insulated bottle holder(s), external pockets for baby bottles, sippy cups, or your own water bottle, carbiner clip for keys.
Designer diaper bags for men run the gamut from basic >black messenger style diaper bags for under $55 to sports-themed diaper bags such as celebrity favorite Timi & Leslie s Magic diaper bag made from authentic basketball leather to Diaper Dude s rock and roll guitar diaper bag and everything in between. With the growing array of choices on the market, isn t it time the papa in your life got a brand new bag of his own?
About the Author
Kim Ciliberto is the owner of Tutti Bella, an online boutique featuring diaper bags for men.
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General10 Aug 2006 01:01 pm
SmartStart: Home-Based Cognitive and Language Remediation Program for Internationally Adopted Children
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SmartStart: Home-Based Cognitive and Language Remediation Program for Internationally Adopted Children
by: Boris Gindis Ph.D.
Children of different ages adopted internationally are often at risk educationally. Deprived of essential learning experiences in orphanages, children are indeed disadvantaged and may have cognitive and language problems moving to more advanced levels of learning after adoption. What can be done to put these children on a fast track to catch up with their peers?
The answer in many cases is an early, well-planned, focused, and systematic cognitive and language remediation at school, in the community, and at home.
The SmartStart program, created for children ages 3 to 8 by an educational psychologist Dr. Carol Lidz (www.bgcenterschool.org/Instructors/CarolLidz.shtml) with participation of Dr. Boris Gindis (www.bgcenter.com/drGindis.htm), is a useful tool for any family with young children. It offers traditional family activities and games, which parents are invited to make more meaningful and remedial for their children without taking the fun out. These activities are not randomly picked; they are selected to reflect what is currently known about best practices in promoting cognitive and social development of young children.
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What makes this program unique is that it bears in mind the specificity of international adoptees and introduces basic cognitive concepts and skills that might not have been formed in the adopted child s earlier development. It systematically stimulates academic language development and at the same time, it promotes attachment by providing parents and children with shared enjoyable activities. The SmartStart program stresses the utmost importance of adult mediation, missed in the early stages of an adopted child’s learning. The prominent feature of each unit is a vocabulary section: which words to introduce and how to explain an activity to the child in order to make it more remedially meaningful. For international adoptees, learning their new language is a major adjustment activity. They learn English and the American lifestyle as a by-product of everyday interactions with their adoptive parents. Based on that, the SmartStart gives adoptive parents a large set of activities and provides the language that mediates these activities.
Unit 1: Introduction.
The explanation of specificity of cognitive remediation in internationally adopted child.
Unit 2: Noticing our world.
The goal of this unit is to teach the child how to look and what to notice; develop a vocabulary to share our experiences; detect pattern and make groups based on a shared characteristic.
Example: With crayons and paper, encourage your child to fill the whole page with different patterns (i.e., a row of circles then a row of crosses). Repeat these rows in a different pattern. Create patterns within a row. Model the making of a “pattern page” for your child.
Unit 3: Let’s make a plan.
The goal of this unit is to teach the child systematically explore and organize, think ahead about the desired result and plan steps to reach it.
Example: Suggest that your child invites a friend over to play. Help your child think through the toys and how to get them ready, and what might be a good snack to have with the friend. Afterwards, talk with her about how it went: what the friend seemed to enjoy the most, what could have gone better, what to think about next time.
Unit 4: That’s fantastic!
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The goal of this unit is to teach the child differentiate between real and imagined, develop hypothetical thinking and think of alternatives.
Example: Encourage your child to play thematic games with toys and household objects: “In the airport”, “In a supermarket”, “At school”, etc., imagining being a pilot, doctor, or teacher and transforming toys into the necessary props. Take the role of someone who is interested, watching, and describing, but not directing. Encourage him to interact with the toys and just add enough to help the flow of action or conversation. If he wants you to take a more active part, encourage him to be “the director” and follow his lead.
Unit 5: The nimble symbol.
The goal of this unit is to develop the ability to create symbols and use them and to develop positive attitude and readiness for literacy.
Example: Suggest a “measuring game” to your child. The aim is to find all the different ways something can be measured. Give an example, such as “See this table? I can measure it with my hands. Let’s see how many hands long it is! Now, I think I’ll measure it with this pencil. Let’s see how many pencils it is!” Then ask your child to pick something to use for measuring, and, once done, to think of another way to measure the same thing.
Unit 6: What’s the big idea?
The goal of this unit is to teach the child to get the main idea from listening and learn to appreciate, apply, and make up rules and general principles.
Example: Make up your own games with rules, for example, a ball game: decide how long to hold the ball, who can throw to whom, or a different way to move the ball (for example, with your hands, with your feet, with your nose, with your knee…).
Unit 7: Who is in charge?
The goal of this unit is to teach the child to control movements and learn to control attention and feelings.
Example: Tell your child, “This is a special kind of ball game. We’re going to sit on the floor and roll this ball. We’ll try to hit one of those toys with the ball. But, FIRST, you have to say which toy you are going to touch. THEN you roll the ball and try to hit it. Watch me do it first.”
Unit 8: Making connections: understanding the past, facilitating the future.
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The goal of this unit is to help the child to build awareness of new culture and new family and develop cause and effect relationships.
Example: Let your child know that the ancestors of most people in this country used to live somewhere else. Make it interesting and fun to think about where all the different people came from, especially your own family.
As educators and adoptive parents, we have learned that love and good nutrition are not enough to accelerate cognitive development and promote thinking, learning, and literacy in children who had been victims of deprivation, neglect, and institutionalization. The SmartStart program, available as on online class and as a CD at www.bgcenterschool.org, is your essential aid in the remediation of internationally adopted children.
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About The Author
Dr. Boris Gindis is known in the United States as a prominent child psychologist specializing in psycho-educational issues of older internationally adopted children. He is a chief psychologist at the Center for Cognitive-Developmental Assessment and Remediation (BGCenter) at www.bgcenter.com, the author of many publications on international adoption issues and frequent presenter at conferences and workshops. Anyone can reprint this article provided the links to the authors’ web pages and info is maintained.
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