More Pages: Armstrong Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56


Romancing the history
Beautiful and perceptive
A very beautiful, perceptive book

Good review of techniques, limited subject matterHe demonstrates many techniques for building both metal figures and scenes to place them in. His techniques for building castle sections for figure displays was very interesting. He does not discuss painting techniques much except for burnishing and polishing armor.
All in all a good reference for those wishing to model British medieval subjects.
Finally a modelling book that is not about WW 2
An excellent buy

More confused dreams of Herbert Armstrong
One of the most important books you will ever readThis book unveils the truth scattered throughout the Bible ("here a little, there a little...precept upon precept") of the proclaimed soon-coming RULE of God's Kingdom over this earth through Jesus Christ and the then spirit-born brothers/sisters of Christ.
It does not say we will "rule over other god beings on other planets in outer space".
The late Herbert Armstrong ... lays out God's plan unrolling it like a scroll through each chapter and its subsections, constantly reiterating what has been said to keep you in remembrance.
The Bible was put together in such a way as to purposefully be confusing so those that would still be defiant / deceived by the ... fallen angels (aka spirits/demons) upon FULL knowledge of the truth, would not receive the ultimate sentencing of eternal [end of life]("God desires that all repent and come to a knowledge of the truth"). Mr Armstrong lays this all out clearly. Only in this human age is God calling a select few. Later others will know and see the beauty that God's Kingdom has wrought on this earth in the second resurrection.
This is a fine addition to anyone's Bible study library.
Incredible Insight

Umm....okay.Mary Mehan Awake ( I do like the title, though ) is about Irish Mary also Marie. She survived the Civil War, as a nurse, though she isn't herself anymore, after losing her brother and others. So she gets a job in the country being an assistant to a scientist- or a guy who just likes to experiment- something of the sort. Working there, she meets someone she can communicate with. But she has to communicate differently. Because the only person who can compare with what she went through is deaf.
A lovely story
Absolutely Wonderful

Interesting and telling view of life in the pelotonRecommended to all cyclists. It would be an interesting intro to the world of pro road racing.
A Look at the Past and a Window of the Future
The best and the brightest

SOLDIER BOY; GOOD BOOK WITH A BAD ENDING
Soldier Boy was exciting and wonderfully written.
A good book

Disappointed
Easy to read and many great tips!
110% by pat croceafter reading this book you will say I FEEL GREAT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


wonderful
This book is terrific!
Bully!! for Jennifer Armstrong

Difficult to use
Drug Information Handbook
A pharmacist's opinion

OR WHY COMPUTERS MAKE OLD-STYLE EDUCATORS FEEL INADEQUATEWe can presume this book's intended audience is the legion of teachers and education bureaucrats who cringe every time they hear the phrase "computers in the classroom".
Their biggest dilemma and their most justifiable concern are the expense of the hardware and the short-life of your typical PC. Educational dollars are finite and mistakes can be expensive. The big bonus though, is that as computers have become more powerful, they are at the same rate becoming cheaper.
Alison Armstrong and Charles Casement in their book make a fundamental mistake in their approach to the impact of computers on children's education. They focus predominantly on the hardware and human interface issue. Surely the power and impact of IT is not all about the box that sit on our desks but instead it is the world of knowledge and the creative tools that brings value, pleasure and rewards to all of us.
Since this book must have been written for an audience of educators, academics and "concerned parents", it sensibly provides us with a comprehensive set of footnotes and bibliography. Unfortunately, the index is useless. I thought I'd check out references to Yahoo! There are two, the second being on page 200. Nowhere is Yahoo mentioned on that page. Similarly references to Nicholas Negroponte. We found a couple of references to his "Being Digital" when reading the book, but the writers casually dismiss his ideas in a few lines . Whoever indexed their book should polish up their search tools since the index often leads us nowhere.
When you consider Yahoo searches are damned by the authors, and considered to be such a difficult and confusing task for a child, imagine how a serious reader of their book feels when references to Yahoo in their own index lead you astray.
[The writers] still see knowledge as a Cartesian world of library shelves and card index files. The new technology and its impact on education are not simple computer aided instruction tools or smartish auxiliary teachers. Instead, they offer a gateway into a whole new world. Cyberspace is all about a network of relationships; not a series of neatly catalogued and cross-referenced facts and figures.
The authors remind me of the guys who walked in front of the first steam locos waving a red flag. This time round its the youngsters who are driving the trains ( and designing and building them) , and its the parents and teachers who are cowering in fear of the new technology.
This book relies mainly on anecdotal accounts when developing their arguments about the dangers of computers in the classroom. There is very little objective statistics or fact-based research in this book. All this book succeeds in doing is reinforcing the prejudices of the anti-computer lobby. Its Canadian origins shine through with its none too subtle references to the tainted world of American commercialism.
To be more credible the writers could have broadened their field of research to the Scandinavians (particularly the Finnish) who are leaders in the application of IT in education.
Since the topic of this book deals with such an important area for all of us it is disappointing to see it treated in such a shallow and one-dimensional manner.
A must-read for anyone who cares about kids
Thoughtful Critique of Computers in Education
Heyen has his own vocabulary throughout the book and manages to make historical figures all fit into his special universe, like everybody turned up on his writingdesk and got special instructions from Heyen on how they should react to special things. The remarkable is that Heyen stays very true and close to historical facts and is accurate, as far as I can trace him, throughout the book.
Of course Heyen, through the two protagonists Custer and Crazy Horse, makes it almost a fight between industrialization and nature, civilisation against free spirit. Heyen knows well that in todays society Custer is the winner, but still the other part of us still want to be free, perhaps only in different ways than C.H.