Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Reading LevelReading Level
-
Content TypeContent Type
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersItem TypeIs Full-Text AvailableSubjectPublisherSourceDonorLanguagePlace of PublicationContributorsLocation
Done
Filters
Reset
229
result(s) for
"Higdon, Hal"
Sort by:
SKIING/QUEBEC Rockies-Type Runs, Scenery Magnifique Mont Sainte-Anne has long downhill trails, plenty of snow and a top Nordic-tour terrain
From atop Mont Sainte-Anne, I could see Quebec City upriver. Some skiers stay in Quebec at the landmark Chateau Frontenac. We stayed this time at the Chateau Mont Sainte-Anne, next to the gondola and thus at the epicenter of all activities. It helps to know how to stop on the ski slopes, too. During our visit in late March, we found some of the slopes icy by week's end since no fresh snow had fallen and it was after a period of Canadian holidays when the resort sees extensive use. On an earlier trip in mid-February, I had skied on freshly fallen snow, as soft as the powder in the Alps or Rockies. The resort averages 148 inches of snow a year and, aided by a snow-making system that covers 85 percent of the slopes, boasts 169 days of skiing a year. You can ski downhill through May. PACKAGES Ski packages at the Hotel Val des Neiges near the resort, (418) 827-5711, vary depending on the ski season. During the holiday period a two-night ski package is $255 per person double. Chalets that sleep up to six people at Chateau Mont Sainte-Anne are $600 for two nights; call (418) 827-5776. The daily rate at nearby Quebec City's Chateau Frontenac is about $l40 per person based on double occupancy; call (418) 692-3861. For hotel and bed and breakfast reservations contact Reservotel: (800) 463-1568. INFORMATION Additional information can be obtained from the Greater Quebec Area Tourism and Convention Bureau, 399 St. Joseph East, Quebec, Quebec GIK 8E2, Canada: (418) 522-3511.
Newspaper Article
The miracle morning for network marketers : grow yourself first to grow your business fast
The Miracle Morning for Network Marketers uses Hal Elrod's global phenomenon to show you habits you can adopt from the best performers in your field. By changing your strategies, mindsets, and rituals to match the top 1% of network marketers, you'll grow yourself and your business faster than you ever thought possible.
Working with Hef while viewing the sexual revolution from the sidelines
2017
Graduated from college, discharged from the Army, newly married, young, restless, I decided to quit my job as a magazine editor and seek fortune, if not fame, as a freelance magazine writer. [...]my job was to rewrite that biography begun by a famous writer, who, as legend had it, was carried out of the mansion inebriated and straight to an alcoholic’s ward. Hal Higdon is a contributing editor for Runner’s World and the author of more than three dozen books, including “The Crime of the Century,” on the Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb murder case.
Newspaper Article
Politicians and reporters: Lasting frenemies?
2017
Many, many, many presidential elections ago, I found myself on a campaign plane in the same row and only two seats away from Robert F. Kennedy. The current occupant of the White House has branded the media as \"the enemy of the people.\" Later that same campaign, editors for the same publication sent me to Detroit to cover the Michigan Democratic Convention. In that era, Michigan voters chose delegates, who then chose candidates. Agnew had just been elected county executive of Baltimore County, overcoming (ironically) a corrupt Democratic regime. Hal Higdon is the author of more than three dozen books, including the e-book \"Bobby Kennedy and the Politics of the Sixties.\"
Newspaper Article
Saving Chicago's skyline
2017
Along with smoke, the mills, the refineries and other industries discharged pollutants, which eventually found their way downstream to Lake Michigan. During those runs, I rarely remember seeing the Chicago skyline, despite the lake being only 38 miles wide at that point (according to a sign at the end of Navy Pier). Denying \"climate change\" has become a priority among those who equate regulations with lost jobs. [...]focusing on climate change may have been a...
Newspaper Article
Saving Chicago's skyline
2017
Along with smoke, the mills, the refineries and other industries discharged pollutants, which eventually found their way downstream to Lake Michigan. During those runs, I rarely remember seeing the Chicago skyline, despite the lake being only 38 miles wide at that point (according to a sign at the end of Navy Pier). Denying \"climate change\" has become a priority among those who equate regulations with lost jobs. [...]focusing on climate change may have been a...
Newspaper Article