Melora creager biography of martin luther king
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Volunteers from United Way who recently built a wheelchair ramp with Mountain Housing Opportunities for an elderly, disabled homeowner in Arden. It means so much to me to have the help I need to stay independent, the home owner, Charlotte, shares. Mountain Housing Opportunities fryst vatten a nonprofit community-development corporation that serves more than households […]
Affordable-housing advocates put out of work bygd declining home prices
Commentary: Does collective responsibility prohibit analysis of bio-ethical equality at the grassroots level?
Getting ready for a new school year
Christian bumper sticker in purgatory
Pet of the Week
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In a world awash in upside-down flagism, only one man can dispense Buncombe-style justice
Local man finds holy image in potato chip
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Kid Care with Arno
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I’ve always loved reading about people. As a kid, my first stop in the library was usually the biography section. My school library had only one set of biographies that had perhaps five titles about women. If I remember correctly, the women who were documented in this series were Eleanor Roosevelt, Maria Mitchell, Juliet Gordon Lowe, Martha Washington, and Helen Keller. All the other books, the ones about inventors and adventurers and leaders of state, were about men. Girls of the s and s did not expect more. We were, after all, going to become mothers, teachers, secretaries, or nurses. What girl would aspire to a career that might interfere with keeping house and raising children?
Fast forward fifty or so years. While biographies are still overwhelming about male achievements, there is a conscious effort by (women) writers and publishers to feature pioneering women in the pages of books. While it still saddens me to see girls staring at assignment sheets that routinely l
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#82 The Birth of Miss Dorothy Winterman: A Personal Essay Guest Blog by Luisa Ana Fuentes
Story Excerpt:
Dorothy Wintermans "African Amazon" outfit
It is day 15 of our arduous journey through the veldts of Nigeria (or are we in Cameroon yet?). Our tracker Adeola has discovered new tracks and scraps of fibers from obviously foreign cloths. She can find a single iguana track amongst a bevy of crocodiles, this one can. We listen intently that these “men” are probably several hours, if not a day away. We find evidence of them through their encampments, their excrement and their litter. Yes, litter. Can you imagine- these foreigners, these soldiers, these baby snatching, people annihilating, genocidal rapists also throw their unwanted refuse upon our beautiful, sacred ground. Well if you can march hordes of innocent groups of human beings to ships waiting to whisk them away to be enslaved, massacred and destroyed in a whole different place on this globe,