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11 result(s) for "Brain Concussion Fiction."
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Lone stars
When Coach Coop, a former star player for the Dallas Cowboys, starts exhibiting side effects from the many concussions he suffered while playing professionally, twelve-year-old wide receiver Clay Hollis becomes determined to help him get through the football season until Thanksgiving, when Coach plans to attend a ceremony honoring him and his former Super Bowl-winning teammates.
Impact
Twenty-one women writers offer vital counter-narratives to \"one-size-fits-all\" descriptions of traumatic brain injuries and recovery.
Snapstreak : how my friends saved my social life
Told from multiple viewpoints, eighth graders Vee, Lulu, Megan, and Gwynneth enter a local television station's contest for the pair of students who can prove the longest-running \"snapstreak.\"
The San Diego Union-Tribune Chris Reed column
What were the Korean war, the Vietnam war, the Gulf war, the invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq or, for that matter, the meddling of the CIA in countries like Iran in 1953, which removed the legitimate PM Mosaddegh and returned the ousted shah, the Bay of Pigs landing in Cuba, etc., other than to serve the interests of the U.S.? These were not acts motivated by humanitarian concerns or driven by a sense of benevolence or selfless charity.
Albert Lea Tribune, Minn., Tim Engstrom column
When Ponder was selected 12th overall in the 2011 draft, much to the consternation of a few audible Minnesota Vikings fans who felt the team should have selected defensive line players Robert Quinn or Nick Fairley, I was glad. What I kept telling people is the Vikings need a young guy who shows promise, quickness and smarts and then develop him into a true NFL quarterback.
Orlando Sentinel Mike Bianchi column
[...]another coach from Duke -- new offensive coordinator Kurt Roper -- showed up on Saturday and unveiled his fast-breaking, touchdown-making offense, transforming a dried-up, scorched-earth Swamp into rollicking, frolicking joyride of points, pleasure and passion.
Chicago Tribune Nina Metz column
The Duplass brothers would go on to make their name with microbudget films (including the 2005 Sundance breakout hit \"The Puffy Chair\") before landing studio backing and name-brand actors for \"Cyrus\" (Jonah Hill as a clingy son) and \"Jeff, Who Lives at Home\" (Jason Segel and Ed Helms as brothers struggling with adulthood). Starring Nicolas Cage and Holly Hunter as a childless couple who kidnap a baby from a family with newborn quintuplets, Duplass describes the comedy as a \"family movie about desperate people who are trying to do good in the world and maintain a family, and also stay true to who they are and what they need in life to feel good about themselves as individuals.
Chicago Tribune John Kass column
According to Insley, Butterly told her the staff began asking such questions in October. \"Child health care professionals,\" the October report reads, \"can and should provide effective leadership in efforts to prevent gun violence, injury and death.\"