This Week in BlogTalkRadio, 11/30-12/6

With Thanksgiving behind us and Christmas and Hanukah up ahead, it’s been a lively week ...

Partying with Cosby on BlogTalkRadio

Have you heard about Bill Cosby’s LISTENing parties? The New York Times just reviewed ...

Celebrating ‘The Twilight Saga: New Moon’

In honor of the opening day of New Moon, the latest film in The Twilight Saga, we thought we ...

 

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Shaman Marie

http://diamondstar11.webs.com/


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Language: English

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The Divine Prince

The Divine Prince

Divine Gratitude and Thanksgiving!

Zaradia - 2013

Zaradia - 2013

Thank you for the Friend Request.

HOK Productions

HOK Productions

MAY YOUR AWAKENING COME IN PEACE, AS YOU WALK DOWN YOUR GREAT ROAD IN LIFE, INCOPORATE THIS VALUABLE INSIGHT, SELF REFLECTION IS THE KEY TO IGNITE THE SELF TRANSFORMATION YOU NEED TO GO TO NEW STAGES AND MAKE NEW CHANGES IN YOUR LIFE. SELF REFLECTION ENABLES YOU TO ACCOUNT FOR THE ACTIONS YOU DO. SELF REFLECTION EMPOWERS YOU TO KNOW THE MOTIVES OF YOUR HEART, SPIRIT AND SOUL.

HOK Productions

HOK Productions

May you always soar on the wings of Ra with the inner knowledge of who you are. Heptep Brother TemuRa.

Andrew Aloha

Andrew Aloha

Thanks for stopping by.....hvae a Goddess one.....ciao! Andrew Aloha

The Divine Prince

The Divine Prince

Divine Joy and Prosperity!

The Divine Prince

The Divine Prince

Divine Light and Illumination Goddess-One!

Divine Human Radio

Divine Human Radio

I have a picture with Don Alejandro.....it truly is a time for planetary transformation

Lauren Galey

Lauren Galey

Hi Shaman Marie - Thank you for your comment on my page! I just returned from Mesa Verde and so it was a wonderful sight to see Carlos Nakai's video here on your page. Synchronicity!We are meant to talk...I am enjoying your page! Much love to you! Lauren

Mind-Body Connection

Mind-Body Connection

Thanks for joining us for the Mind-Body Connection show. Keep listening and be well!

D.A. (WDKK RADIO)

D.A. (WDKK RADIO)

Thanks for stopping in. Hope you enjoyed the show.

RayvenWolffe

RayvenWolffe

Thank you for adding Your Guide To The Future Talk Radio Show to your friends circle! May love and light Guide you! -Rayven Wolffe

D.A. (WDKK RADIO)

D.A. (WDKK RADIO)

Thanks for tuning into the show. Listen in again. Peace, Power, Preservation and Prosperity belong to YOU. DA Williams

mt1

mt1

just wanted to stop by to send some love your way.

Sierra on SR Radio

Sierra on SR Radio

thanks for tuning into SR radio last night:) I hope you are having a awesome afternoon:) Love and Light Sierra Sky

Ann Marie

Ann Marie

Sending blessings your way! Love, Ann Marie

ATWU: The Re-Up

ATWU: The Re-Up

Thank you for accepting our friend invitation. The Re-Up look forward to hearing from you and we are grateful that you’re a part of our network. Please feel free to add us as a favorite host and we will do that same that way we can know when each other has an upcoming show this way we can listen in. Thanks and much love.

angelicways

angelicways

Happy Friday! May your weekend be blessed in abundance. In light, Lynn

centreoflight

centreoflight

Beloved Sister of Light, I am looking arownd and do not see many people with me. There is so much going on here, that sometimes it is overwelming. I am with you George

Jewel Of The South

Jewel Of The South

Hi Marie! Thank you fo your lovely post and for your wonderful light and energy! I'd like to also thank you for all of your support for the shows I have. Thank you so much! ~Gentle Hugs~ Julie

tmwtta

tmwtta

Thank you my new Friend for joining me at Connections with The Man Who Talks To Angels ~;~

Jewel Of The South

Jewel Of The South

Thank you so much for listening to our show last night! You are welcome anytime! We appreciate your support and glad you were there with us! ~Julie~

Shaman Marie  

Infinite Blessings From Shaman Marie! For more profile information about me.please click all of my links. I hope you will enjoy my blog plus my little extras, Enjoy!!! Om Shanti Shanti Shanti Om. Peace beyond to you peace beyond all things. Love and peace, Shaman Marie :0)

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    African Dynamo

    Masitala Villiage How a Malawian teenager harnessed the power of the wind. William Kamkwamba’s parents couldn’t afford the $80 yearly tuition for their son’s school. The boy sneaked into the classroom anyway, dodging administrators for a few weeks until they caught him. Still emaciated from the recent deadly famine that had killed friends and neighbors, he went back to work on his family’s corn and tobacco farm in rural Malawi, Africa William Kamkwanba With no hope of getting the funds to go back to school, William continued his education by teaching himself, borrowing books from the small library at the elementary school in his village. One day, when William was 14, he went to the library searching for an English-Chichewa dictionary to find out what the English word “grapes” meant, and came across a fifth-grade science book called Using Energy. Describing this moment in his autobiography, The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind (co-written with Bryan Mealer), William wrote, “The book has since changed my life.” Using Energy described how windmills could be used to generate electricity. Only two percent of Malawians have electricity, and the service is notoriously unreliable. William decided an electric windmill was something he wanted to make. Illuminating his house and the other houses in his village would mean that people could read at night after work. A windmill to pump water would mean that they could grow two crops a year rather than one, grow vegetable gardens, and not have to spend two hours a day hauling water. “A windmill meant more than just power,” he wrote, “it was freedom.” For an educated adult living in a developed nation, designing and building a wind turbine that generates electricity is something to be proud of. For a half-starved, uneducated boy living in a country plagued with drought, famine, poverty, disease, a cruelly corrupt government, crippling superstitions, and low expectations, it’s another thing altogether. It’s nothing short of monumental Dynamo Wind Mill William scoured trash bins and junkyards for materials he could use to build his windmill. With only a couple of wrenches at his disposal, and unable to afford even nuts and bolts, he collected things that most people would consider garbage—slime-clogged plastic pipes, a broken bicycle, a discarded tractor fan—and assembled them into a wind-powered dynamo. For a soldering iron, he used a stiff piece of wire heated in a fire. A bent bicycle spoke served as a size adapter for his wrenches. Months later, in front of a crowd of disbelievers who had scoffed at him for behaving strangely, William lashed his machine to the top of a 16-foot tower made from blue gum tree branches. As the blades began turning in the breeze, a car light bulb in William’s hand started to glow. In the weeks that followed, William went on to wire his house with four light bulbs and two radios, installing switches made from rubber sandals, and scratch-building a circuit breaker to keep the thatch roof of his house from catching fire. He begged his parents to send him to school—he had big dreams for modernizing his village and needed to learn more math, physics, and electricity to realize them—but they barely had enough money to feed him and his five sisters. William and his windmill remained a local curiosity for a number of months, until the head of a national teacher’s organization saw the windmill and recognized the boy’s accomplishment as something extraordinary. A media firestorm ensued, with newspaper articles, blog posts, radio stories, and a presentation at TED Africa in Tanzania (TED stands for Technology Entertainment Design), where William, who didn’t know about laptop computers and had never heard of Google, discovered airplanes, mattresses, hotels, air conditioning, and the mind-boggling concept of having as much food as you wanted whenever you wanted it. Befriended by Tom Rielly, TED’s irrepressible and well-connected partnership director, William was taken on a tour of the United States, where he met many high-tech millionaires who were charmed by the instantly likable underdog who never complained about the lousy cards he got dealt in the game of life. They happily contributed to William’s plans to electrify, irrigate, and educate his village, as well as pay his tuition at the prestigious African Leadership Academy in Johannesburg. With so many tales of bloody hopelessness coming out of Africa, The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind reads like a novel with a happy ending, even though it’s just the beginning for this remarkable young man, now 21 years old. I have no doubt that William—who is rapidly becoming a symbol of promise and possibility for the people of Africa—will be leading the way. LEARN MORE Watch a short documentary about William Kamkwamba here. http://www.amazon.com/Boy-Who-Harnessed-Wind-Electricity/dp/0061730327 Find The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind by William Kamkwamba and Bryan Mealer on Amazon. Mark Frauenfelder is the editor-in-chief of Make magazine and the founder of Boing Boing. He is currently writing a book on the do-it-yourself movement for Portfolio, an imprint of Penguin. Photos by Tom Rielly

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