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Arguably, the most eloquent, powerful portrayal of Native Americans are written or narrated by Natives themselves. In Native Hermitage, authentic accounts of Natives voices are bought together, some for the first time, for readers who want an informed, authentic perspective about Native Americans. This work is significant because until recent times the literature has been largely devoid of firsthand perspectives. The need for accurate, authentic materials on native Americans has never been greater.
"...Gianakos has done for television what Roget did for the Thesaurus and Bartlett did for Familiar Quotations. He has codified the industry, brought order out of chaos, made sense of what for decades was insensible. He is a pioneer, and his works will have a significant effect for generations."-From the Introduction by Allan Kalmus For more than a decade, Gianakos' truly comprehensive chronicles of American television have been considered classic references. Here is the long-anticipated volume six. While nominally covering the television seasons 1984-1986, in fact the volume's six much amplified appendixes-on Pulitzer Prize fiction and plays, Nobel literature laureates, classical Greek dram...
This is the story of the Ministerial Code, the secret Cabinet document previously known as Questions of Procedure for Ministers. This code acts as a formal job description for Ministers and they ignore it at their peril.
Meet the Kings of Sin . . . The must-read billionaire romance from the bestselling author of the Twisted series. Read King of Pride now for a steamy opposites attract romance. She's his opposite in every way . . . and the greatest temptation he's ever known. Reserved, controlled, and proper to a fault, Kai Young has neither the time nor inclination for chaos - and Isabella, with her purple hair and inappropriate jokes, is chaos personified. With a crucial CEO vote looming and a media empire at stake, the billionaire heir can't afford the distraction she brings. Isabella is everything he shouldn't want, but with every look and every touch, he's tempted to break all his rules . . . and claim h...
Daniel Morgan was born in Norwich, Connecticut, ca. 1770-1774, son of William and Martha Morgan. He married Polly Frost (born 1776), daughter of Ebenezer Frost and Luthena Cady, in 1795. They moved to Schoharie County, New York in the early 1800's and later to Gennessee County. Daniel died after 1830. Frost ancestors are traced to Edmund Frost who came to Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1635. Other Frost ancestral families are the Pratts, Danas, Waterhouses, and Cadys. Descendants lived in New York, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Kansas, Iowa, Michigan, Colorado, Nebraska, and elsewhere.
Francis McCleland was christened in Longford, Ireland, in 1793, and was ordained a priest in 1819. He came to the Cape in 1820, married Elizabeth Clarke and lived in Clawilliam and Port Elizabeth. He died in 1853.