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He is dubbed "a chunk full of dough", "crazy Dave", "the unfathomable" and every other name in the book! Others, at sixes and sevens, just shake their heads in bewilderment. They have the impression that he always seems to do the unthinkable, leaving everyone in his midst dumbfounded. There is however a consensus among his friends and co-workers upon which all agree: "Dave is one of a kind" a comment that is re-echoed throughout his acquaintances. It is a comment that describes him to a "T". Whereas some have the impression that a project is "impossible" and "perilous", they are concepts that…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
He is dubbed "a chunk full of dough", "crazy Dave", "the unfathomable" and every other name in the book! Others, at sixes and sevens, just shake their heads in bewilderment. They have the impression that he always seems to do the unthinkable, leaving everyone in his midst dumbfounded. There is however a consensus among his friends and co-workers upon which all agree: "Dave is one of a kind" a comment that is re-echoed throughout his acquaintances. It is a comment that describes him to a "T". Whereas some have the impression that a project is "impossible" and "perilous", they are concepts that do not exist in Dave's psyche. He has evidently substituted these concepts with the words "no problem". Indeed there isn't a quest or a project that according to this wizard is beyond the realms of possibility. Even the accessibility to the moon is feasible in this aspiring intrepid's mind. It is just a matter of latching firmly to each alternating star, stars that form a tarmac and lead you directly to your goal. You don't even need a shuttle! It's as simple as that! "No problem."
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Autorenporträt
Jeannette Evangeline Romaniuk (nee Gaumond) was born in the French community of Shell River, Saskatchewan on November 26, 1919. Much of her secondary education was done through correspondence. She went on to get in Bachelor of Education at the University of Alberta. Teaching became Jeannette's passion. After retirement in 1984 she continued to tutor many children at various levels. In more recent years her passion to write about her life experiences became an obsession. Her first published works was a poem entitled "In Memory of Mother Theresa and Princess Diana" in the mid 1980's.