Team USA has its benefits. Take advantage of partnership travel discounts.
Flying America’s Team for 30 Years.
United has flown Team USA for over 30 years, and we strive to be the airline of choice for Olympic family members as well. That’s why we offer discounted fares for USOC/NGB associated events. Visit united.com/USOC to book your flight, or to learn more.
answers to the same question will impact differently an audi- ence’s perception of your ethos, logos and pathos. While both an- swers are accurate, the second will greatly enhance your cred- ibility and elevate your stature with the media.
Michael Sabbeth is a lawyer in Denver, Colorado. He lectures on ethics and rheto- ric to law asso-
ciations and civic and business groups. He is the author of the The Good, The Bad & The Differ- ence: How to Talk with Children About Values. Please visit his website at www.kidsethicsbook. com.
Following is an excerpt from Michael Sabbeth’s book, “The Good, The Bad & The Difference. How to talk With Children about Values” –
As they further ponder the values that underlie their selections, children say they respect people that impact- ed them directly, such a doctor that saved their life or the life of a friend or family member. As the minutes in class tick by, children increasingly acknowledge that the people they respect the most and view as heroes are the people that help them every day, their parents. Parents are the folks that sacrifi ce for them, devote so much of their lives and resources caring for them, feeding them, clothing them, taking them to soccer practice and music lessons and generally instructing them to be responsible participants in society. “I know they could have more stuff if they didn’t have to raise me,” many a child has said. But of all the reasons they respect their parents, the most honored is that
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parents help them become stronger, better people. “They have more experience,” Tulley explained. “They may have made mistakes so they can give advice to help us avoid them.” But it was Samantha, a second grader, who described parents’ highest virtue. “Parents teach us how to live right.”