Grapes Of Hunger

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Grapes Of Hunger

Author: Hassan Mourabiti; Lynn Rosen
language: en
Publisher: Author House
Release Date: 2011-08-25
Hunger kills as men fight a war Strips away our dignity Gives us nothing worth fighting for Let's educate and teach the mother She will teach the sisters and brothers Hassan and Lynn believe that education is the key to knowledge.They are fighting together to make this a better world.Lynn's Kids Foundation is a non profit organization for the advancement of underpriviledged children.We are funding 23 camps locally and internationally. a child cries do we ignore? mothers scream we shut our doors NO MORE HUNGER
The Hungry Brain

Author: Susan Augustine
language: en
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Release Date: 2015-04-28
Feed the brain first to make the nutrition/cognition connection! Focusing on nutrition's role in promoting learning, the author calls on educators to model good food choices for their students. Building on a simple three-part framework of plant foods, animal foods, and junk foods, and incorporating exercise, the text shows educators how: Healthy eating provides a powerful link to learning Childhood obesity, food allergies, and other disorders may be related to eating habits Breakfast is still the most important meal of the day Brain-jogging exercises enhance brain activity, improve physical health, increase clarity, and reduce stress
The Universe Bends Toward Justice

In these passionate and wide-ranging essays Obery Hendricks offers a challenging engagement with spirituality, economics, politics, contemporary Christianity, and the abuses committed in its name. Among his themes: the gap between the spirituality of the church and the spirituality of Jesus; the ways in which contemporary versions of gospel music "sensationalize" today's churches into social and political irrelevance; how the economic principles and policies espoused by the religious right betray the most basic principles of the same biblical tradition they claim to hold dear; the domestication of Martin Luther King's message to foster a political complacency that dishonors King's sacrifices. He ends with a stinging rebuke of the religious right's idolatrous "patriotism" in a radical manifesto for those who would practice "the politics of Jesus" in the public sphere.