Sunday, October 31, 2004

The Sun News | 10/17/2004 | Life Story Teacher's lessons reached beyond North Myrtle Beach classrooms

Life Story Teacher's lessons reached beyond North Myrtle Beach classrooms

By Gina Black Story

The Sun News


Toni Pruitt Edge was an award-winning teacher with 28 years of service in North Myrtle Beach schools, but she taught more than math, history and language arts. She taught compassion, community involvement and the value of friendship.

Edge, 53, died Sept. 11, 2004, at home after a battle with cancer.

Horry County Schools "definitely lost an advocate for children, a true pioneer for children," said teacher and friend Melissa Spearman.

Edge had a degree in art from Winthrop College but had the heart of a teacher. After a short time teaching an underfunded art class, it was easy to talk her into getting her teaching certification.

Once certified, Edge taught in North Myrtle Beach schools, educating students and, years later, teaching their children.

Edge's students were foremost in her mind.

"Everything she did around her whole life she was thinking about her kids," said friend and fellow teacher Kim Phillips.

"She went beyond what she had to do always," Phillips said.



Quotes - Famous Quotes
Quotes
Famous Quotes

Monday, October 25, 2004

Dive Bars, Loose Women, Writing Workshops! Join John Victory on His Quest for Anything!

Dive Bars, Loose Women, Writing Workshops! Join John Victory on His Quest for Anything!
Monday October 25, 10:01 am ET
New Comic Book Series Explores One Man's Desire to Become the Greatest Writer/Drinker of His Time


SAN JOSE, Calif., Oct. 25 /PRNewswire/ -- John Victory is on a quest for anything. Following in the footsteps of Poe, Wilde and Hemingway, he's set out to become one of the great writer/drinkers of all time. Cocopiazo, the new comic book series from SLG Publishing, follows him -- at times in bizarre fantasy worlds; at others, in the all-too-mundane world of dive bars and writing workshops. All the while, John must ask himself just how much he can invent himself, how important creativity is and, perhaps most daunting of all, how to get it right with women.
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While admitting that he has some lofty thematic goals, Daniel Warner, who both writes and draws Cocopiazo, admits an ambition that is less about literary legacy and more about personal fulfillment: "Cocopiazo is really just an excuse for me to have my way with a private universe," said Warner. "The overriding goal of the series is to create a rich fantasy that will totally absorb me and the reader."

This simultaneously literary-minded, self-indulgent and reader-friendly perspective is one of the qualities that made Cocopiazo so attractive, said SLG's editor-in-chief Jennifer de Guzman. "Cocopiazo, as a creative work about creativity, has a certain postmodern edge to it, but it isn't impenetrable or pompous. The amount of thought he's put into Cocopiazo is impressive, but what's more impressive is how he pulls all of what he's thought about together into an entertaining, compelling story. And the hip, clean art just brings it all together."

Warner's been mulling over, writing and drawing Cocopiazo for five years and landed a Xeric Foundation grant in 2001, enabling him to publish the Cocopiazo short story "A Bright Sunny Day." The one-shot was named one of the top ten comics of 2001 in Wizard Magazine.

The publication of Cocopiazo is another important moment in Warner's relationship with the comic book form. Even before creating the Cocopiazo mini-comics, he turned in a comic book as his final project at the Massachusetts College of Art, where he earned his BFA in 1996. "Comics at their best are about being transported for a short time into a world that enriches your life in some way," he said. "A successful comic book leaves readers feeling rewarded rather than temporarily distracted. So that's what I'm trying to do."

Issue one of Cocopiazo is scheduled for release in October 2004 and will be published quarterly. A preview of Cocopiazo is available at the SLG Publishing website, www.slavelabor.com.

Established in 1986, SLG Publishing is a San Jose, CA-based publisher of comics books and graphic novels. Operating under its imprints Slave Labor Graphics and Amaze Ink, SLG Publishing has distributed the work of such notable cartoonists as Jhonen Vasquez, Evan Dorkin and Andi Watson. More information about the company can be found at its website at www.slavelabor.com.



Quotes - Famous Quotes
Quotes
Famous Quotes

Sunday, October 10, 2004

Storage Systems

Garage Storage Cabinets by SLIDE-LOK - Garage Storage Dealers Wanted! Garage Systems Distributors Wanted! Garage Cabinets Installers wanted!

Thanksgiving Recipes
Thanksgiving Recipes

Christmas Recipes
Christmas Recipes

Halloween Recipes
Halloween Recipes


Payday Loans

Christmas Music

Friday, October 08, 2004

Christmas Music - Christmas Sheet Music Sale

Christmas Music - Christmas Sheet Music Sale
Christmas Music

Tuesday, October 05, 2004

Thunder Storms

Thunderstorms

Monday, October 04, 2004

Chicken Soup

PRESS RELEASE: Chicken Soup for the African-American Soul. New Book Features Life Story Writing Discussion Forum Member, Air Force Veteran, Retired Firefighter, and Author Herchel Newman (Herm Newman)

Sunday, October 03, 2004

Appetizer Recipes

Appetizer Recipes
Appetizer Recipes