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A continuing saga of love, life, family and friends. Now get the first four romances in a single volume. ALL FOR HOPE: A stolen baby. A secret romance. Sometimes the safest distance between two hearts is no distance at all... JUSTICE FOR ALL: She was his student. Now he's her boss. Sometimes the road you're on is just a detour to your heart's destination... ALL FOR FAMILY: One joyous occasion. Years of bitter memories. Forgiveness may be the key, but the first step is finding the locked heart that needs it... ALL IN THE TAKEOFF: Two lonely hearts. One smoldering night. Sometimes love just needs a little spark to takeoff...
The demise of the newspaper has long been predicted. Yet newspapers continue to survive globally despite competition from radio, television, and now the Internet, because they serve core social functions in successful cultures. Initial chapters of this book provide an overview of the development of modern newspapers. Subsequent chapters examine particular societies and geographic regions to see what common traits exist among the uses and forms of newspapers and those artifacts that carry the name newspaper but do not meet the commonly accepted definition. The conclusion suggests that newspapers are of such core value to a successful society that a timely and easily accessible news product will succeed despite, or perhaps because of, changes in reading habits and technology.
She was his student. Now he's her boss. Sometimes the best-laid plans are so much better when they go astray... Kay Rawley has plans. She might be the second child of an earl, but she wants to break away from her father's estate in New Durma. Intending to build a life apart from her family's name, becoming a lawyer was a bright, shiny object she just couldn't resist grabbing. Her classes are complete, and all she has to do is pass the bar to turn her internship at a Dallas Law firm into permanent employment. Kay's been on Audrick Van Buren's radar since the day she walked into his classroom two years ago. That admiration only grew when she came to work for his firm. But if there's anything he recognizes, it's a woman who's driven--and Kay is definitely one. It's all he can do to keep his distance and allow her the chance to come into her own. What Van doesn't know is that someone else is watching Kay, too, and if he doesn't step between them, that person might not only derail her career but threaten her very life. Previously published as Justice for All (by Olivia Hardin), and rewritten in first-person and "closed door" for re-release as a Rawley Family Romance...
In this highly original and personal book, Ruben J. Garcia argues forcefully that we must center the minimum wage as a tool for fighting structural racism. Employing the lessons of critical race theory to show how low minimum wages and underenforcement of workplace laws have always been features of our racially stratified society, Garcia explains why we must follow the leadership of social movements by treating increases in minimum wage levels and enforcement as matters of racial justice. Offering solutions that would benefit all workers, especially the immigrants and people of color most often made victims of wage theft, Critical Wage Theory is essential reading for anyone who seeks a more just future for the working class.
The brothers George, Tilman and Jonathan Helms and other relatives are believed to have migrated from Bethlehem, Bucks Co., Pa. to Anson County, North Carolina about 1747. Tilman (1716-d.ca. 1800) married Rachel Craig 1744 in Gloucester Co., West New Jersey. George (1720-d.ca. 1800) married Mary Margaret Fortenbury (1730-d. after 1800) 1744 in New Jersey. Jonathan (ca. 1722-bef. 1790) married Elizabeth Smith? (b. ca. 1730). They were all sons of Isaac Helms (b. ca. 1695) and his wife, Miss Tilghman?. Descendants live in North Carolina, Texas, Kentucky, Virginia, India- na, Tennessee, Alabama, Illinois, Michigan and elsewhere.
Edward Fitz Randolph (1607-1675/1676) immigrated from England to Scituate, Massachusetts in 1630, and married Elizabeth Blossom in 1637. Descendants lived throughout the United States, and some continued to use the last given name of "Fitz."
Samuel Dabney Groom was born 13 Sep 1821 in Louisa County, Virginia. Lucinda Thompson was born 25 May 1823 in Ohio. They married on 13 Sep 1843 in Cole County, Missouri. After the birth of two children, the family moved from Missouri and settled in Peoria, Illinois. Samuel died on 22 Jan 1892 and Lucinda died on 13 Feb 1901.