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A true story of obesity and food addiction. Mikyla Dodd was a chubby child, a fat teenager and an obese young woman. This is the inspiring, moving story of how she battled her demons, beat her food addiction, and shed nine stone to reach a healthy weight today.
Mikyla Dodd was a chubby child, a fat teenager, and an obese young woman. This is the inspiring, moving story of how she made it as an actress in the superficial world of TV, overcame her food addiction, and shed 120 pounds to reach a healthy weight.
Social security rulings on federal old-age, survivors, disability, and supplemental security income; and black lung benefits.
The Lance Leftfoot Adventure continues as the travelers head towards the edge of the cliff where the sound of angels beckons them closer and closer still. Meet the Diva, a colossal person with three voices stuck in her throat ... The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly.
The year is 2305, and humans have long since found out that they are no longer the only sapient race in the universe. As humans join forces with other alien races to fight a common enemy known as the carians, two military mights emerge. Council Militia and sentinel fleet take up the fight, driving back the carians and slowing their attacks, but they are unable to completely stop them, thus having to always battle small factions throughout the galaxy. Six children, three humans and three aliens, having grown up with one another and later on as adults serving aboard two of sentinel fleet’s large battlecruisers, once again find themselves thrown together along with a derelict spaceship that they rebuild, and they will find as events start to unfold and secrets are revealed that it will be their strong connection to one another that will either carry them through to the end or destroy them and those they care about.
Senegal, like all African countries, needs better and more jobs for its growing population. The main message of Digital Senegal for Inclusive Growth is that broader use of productivity-enhancing technologies by households and enterprises can generate such jobs, including for lower-skilled people. Adoption of better technologies can support both Senegal’s short-term objective of economic recovery and its vision of economic transformation with more inclusive growth. But this is not automatic. This book leverages a novel survey instrument that measures adoption of technologies at the firm level. Results from this survey show that there is a large average technological gap in Senegal relative to firms in Brazil, in the range of 36 and 30 percent for extensive (whether firms use it at all) and intensive (the most frequently applied) uses of better technologies such as for business administration. Except for a small number of firms, enterprises still mostly use manual, analog technologies to perform general and sector specific business functions. Micro-size informal enterprises lag even further. The benefits from technology adoption are significant. Digital technologies are an enabler of economy-wide productivity and jobs growth by catalyzing adoption of complementary technologies, including many not accessible without digital infrastructure. For households, mobile internet coverage is associated with 14 percent higher total consumption, as well as a 10 percent lower extreme poverty rate—and jobs with higher earnings. Firms with better technologies have higher levels of productivity, generate more jobs, and increase the share of lower-skilled workers on their payroll, on average: an increase in technological sophistication across general business functions that the firm uses most intensively, such as using standard software rather than writing by hand for business administration, is associated with a 14 percent higher jobs growth rate. For these and other inclusive growth benefits to be realized, Senegal should focus on ensuring availability of affordable digital infrastructure and implementing targeted incentives to promote use by firms of better technologies as well as policies to narrow deepening digital divides across enterprises and households.
A riveting thriller from the acclaimed “King of South African crime” and the author of Blood Safari: “Deon Meyer is one of the unsung masters” (Michael Connelly). Deon Meyer is a world-class writer whose page-turning thrillers probe the social and racial complexities of his native country. In Cobra, a famous English mathematician is kidnapped and his two bodyguards are killed at a guesthouse in the beautiful wine country outside Cape Town. It’s clearly a professional hit, and the spent shell cases offer a chilling clue: each is engraved with the head of a spitting cobra. Meanwhile, in the city, a skilled thief is using his talents to put his sister through college. But he picks the wrong pocket, grabbing the wallet of a young American woman delivering something very valuable and dangerous to South Africa. The thief not only becomes the target of the deadly hit man known as the Cobra, but unwittingly holds the key to stopping a deadly international threat. It’s up to Captain Benny Griessel and his elite investigation team to find the pickpocket and track down the Cobra as the novel hurtles toward a brilliant, heart-stopping finale on the suburban commuter trains. “Mr. Meyer, the leading thriller writer in his native country, traffics in crime-novel situations familiar the world over: drunken cops, charming robbers, dangerous murderers, sudden violence—and sometimes, issues of race.” —The Wall Street Journal