Valentina Tereskova Valentina Vladimirovna Tereshkova · Born: 6 March 1937 (age 81) · The first woman to go into space · Retired Russian cosmonaut, engineer, and politician · The only woman ever to have been on a solo space mission Valentina Tereshkova · June 16, 1963 · Vostok 6 · Time in space: 2 days, 23 hrs, and 12 mins · Orbited Earth 48 times in her space capsule · Only trip into space Before · Inspired by Gagarin · Volunteered for the Soviet space program · No experience as a pilot, but was accepted into the program because of her 126 parachute jumps. · 18 months of training · Of the five women, only Tereshkova went into space. After · Never flew in space again. · Later became a test pilot and instructor · Politician · Earned a doctorate in technical sciences. Honours and awards · Was honored with the title Hero of the Soviet Union. · She received the Order of Lenin
organization is not supporting their sense of calling, or because the firm might be undermining the individual's vision for successfully enacting their calling. Example Zookeepers. Prof. Jeff Thompson from Brigham Young University conducted research about work as a calling through the Zoo. Results shown that: average income is under 25000$ per year; about 63% rely on another source of income; about 73% of Zookeepers have a bachelor's degree or higher; nearly half of 1330 keepers surveyed volunteered for at least a year before getting hired. Summarizing all this, only 6,5% are seriously thinking of leaving the profession. Some qoutes from interviews with keepers: "There's not much taht they could do to get me to quit"; "I can't think what would cause me to leave"; I don't think there's anything they could do to me that would make me leave". How they explain their choise: "It's a calling for me just because my whole life I've just been interested in animals animals
- Olympics - Sculptures- more lifelike, human figures come out of the stone - Greek liked physical beauty - Development of medicine - Greeks are pirates, they steal- high technology - Bad tempered people Men's progress towards freedom. (Hegel) Persia is under emperor Xerxes- slaves, fighting for Xerxes and their country, but it does not mean anything to them Greece cities- Patriotism, they are fighting for their freedom and for their country, you can quit, because you volunteered, individuality. o Zeus (son of Chronos Time and Gaia Earth) · Moira- Fate, An underlying order which not even the Gods can alter · Transmigration of Souls- souls leave the bodies · Psyche- the mind · Morality and psychology might be important Miletus Underlying principle of the universe- H20 Milesian or Ionian School · Thales circa 624-546 BC
personality as I would if I were 8G Biography page 72 · Remind students that the order of sitting right across from them. I 1 1 grew up 4 company the information on the audio does volunteered in the past in a face-to- 2 graduated 5 website not always match the order of the face mentoring program, but online 3 designed 6 launched statements. They have to listen mentoring saves me the trouble of
As the letter from one of the missionary pro- grams stated, the packet of greeting cards I had been sent was not to be directly paid for but was designed "to encourage your [my] kindness." If we look past the READER'S REPORT 2.2 From a Male College Student ast year, on my way home for Thanksgiving break, I felt the pull of recipro- L cation firsthand when I blew a tire. A driver in a nurse's uniform stopped and volunteered to take me home. I told her several times that my house was still 25 miles away and in the opposite direction that she was heading; but she insisted on helping me anyway and wouldn't take any money for it. Her refusal to let me pay her created the uneasy uncomfortable feeling you discuss in Influence. The days following the incident also caused anxiety for my parents. The
I breathed slowly in and out through my mouth. "Bella, are you all right?" Mr. Banner asked. His voice was close to my head, and it sounded alarmed. "I already know my blood type, Mr. Banner," I said in a weak voice. I was afraid to raise my head. "Are you feeling faint?" "Yes, sir," I muttered, internally kicking myself for not ditching when I had the chance. "Can someone take Bella to the nurse, please?" he called. I didn't have to look up to know that it would be Mike who volunteered. "Can you walk?" Mr. Banner asked. "Yes," I whispered. Just let me get out of here, I thought. I'll crawl. Mike seemed eager as he put his arm around my waist and pulled my arm over his shoulder. I leaned against him heavily on the way out of the classroom. Mike towed me slowly across campus. When we were around the edge of the cafeteria, out of sight of building four in case Mr. Banner was watching, I stopped. "Just let me sit for a minute, please?" I begged.
"Thank you, Angus." He tipped his hat. "My pleasure." I slid through the back door he opened for me and as I settled into the seat, I caught a glimpse of the handgun he wore in a shoulder holster beneath his jacket. It appeared that Angus, like Clancy, was both bodyguard and driver. We pulled away from the curb and I asked, "How long have you been working for Mr. Cross, Angus?" "Eight years now." "Quite a while." "I've known him longer than that," he volunteered, catching my gaze in the rearview mirror. "I drove him to school when he was a boy. He hired me away from Mr. Vidal when the time came." Once again, I tried to picture Gideon as a child. No doubt he'd been beautiful and charismatic even then. Had he enjoyed "normal" sexual relationships when he was a teenager? I couldn't imagine that women weren't throwing themselves at him even then. And as innately sexual as he was, I imagined he'd been a horny teen.
Wheatstone and Playfair explained the cipher to the Under Secretary of the Foreign Office, no doubt pointing out its chief advantage—that two plaintext pairs that have a letter in common may not display the slightest resemblance in ciphertext, as le and te above were enciphered to MP and NL. Further, once mastered, it rolls along with remarkable ease and rapidity. When the Under Secretary protested that the system was too complicated, Wheatstone volunteered to show that three out of four boys from the nearest elementary school could be taught it in 15 minutes. The Under Secretary put him off. "That is very possible," he said, "but you could never teach it to attaches." Playfair, reasoning that this reflected more on the diplomats than on the cipher, remained enthusiastic about it. There were good grounds for enthusiasm. In the first place, the cipher's being digraphic obliterates the