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| Articles about Chandler |
| Amelia Joe-Chandler | | 2008-04-03 14:14:37 | | Navajo Jewelry ArtistAmelia Joe-Chandler combines traditional cultural elements with a contemporary sense of design. Amelia doesn't use any polish on her silver, which makes her work very distinctive. She is a teacher, a metalsmith, and an artist. She was named Artist of the Year for 2006-2007 by the Indian Arts and Crafts Association. Though her work is beautifully contemporary, her designs never completely shift from more traditional Diné (Navajo) designs."Beauty on one side, beauty on the other side," to paraphrase a Navajo prayer – Amelia's work exemplifies that traditional outlook in her reversible pendants.Sagebrush and Hummingbird Reversible Pendant Sterling Silver, Picture Agate.On one side, the natural beauty of picture jasper, where the distribution of minerals in the stone resembles landscape forms. On the reverse, a hummingbird hovering over wild desert plants. Either side is beautiful, so you have twice the wardrobe choice. The soft gleam of brushed sterling silver sets... | | By: Designing Divas Handcrafted Jewelry Independent De | | |
| | Pray for Chandler Reguarding his Spleen | | 2007-08-11 02:35:30 | | I was on Daily Provision and saw that a boy named Chandler needs prayer for his spleen. Right now I ask that you stop whatever you are doing. That is right, stop right now and pray for Chandler that Jesus intervenes and moves out in Supernatural grace on Chandler. Lord Jesus, you are almighty and [...]... | | By: Prayers Online | | |
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| HEDGING WAR by Sherry Chandler | | 2007-05-11 06:45:00 | | I have been very slowly reading my way through Chris Hedges' War Is A Force That Gives Us Meaning (Public Affairs, 2002). I find it very slow going because every page seems to rip my heart out. Hedges is a great writer; the book is riveting. It's a portrait of humankind at its most brutal.I am slow in getting to this book because its publicity and its release date made me misconstrue what kind of book it is. Hedges was a war correspondent for The New York Times for 15 years, seeing action in South America, the Balkans, and the Middle East. But he studied English literature and Christian theology at Colgate University and Harvard Divinity School. He is a man who counted on memorized poems from Shakespeare and Yeats to keep him sane while held hostage during Iraq-the-first, who quoted to himself W. H. Auden's "Epitaph on a Tyrant" while watching a woman and two small children drinking water from muddy puddles outside Kuwait City (pp 90-91). (See Michael Parker's Journal for a comment... | | By: The Peace Tree | | |
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