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This is a moving account of one mans fight for his rights as a father and to protect his young daughter from her abuser. An explosive narrative of events that will draw you into the authors mind and heart, as he describes his shocking story. Fatherless is also a story of triumph and fortitude. Dean Brown's journey from hopeful optimism to the brink of insanity, and back, is a moving tribute to his relationship with Christ and the Power of Prayer and Sacrifice. Expect to be taken through a journey that will leave you wondering, Have we all gone mad? Have we completely lost grasp, as a society, on the importance of fathers in the family? Deans story has given birth to The Fatherless Project. While he mentors and conducts weekly classes for inmates on Rikers Island, Mr. Brown has dedicated this project to enlighten and encourage fathers to reconcile with their childrenmothers to seek and defend relationships between fathers and their childrenfamily courts to place the needs of children before politics, and to promote healing for our families all across America and the world. It starts with a single voice This is Dean Browns voiceMay his story help you find yours!
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In April 1998, legendary southern jam band Widespread Panic held a free open-air record release show in downtown Athens, Georgia. This book recounts that event and what inspired nearly 100,000 spectators to take part.
A promising blue-sky holiday drew celebrated detective, Devin Langhar, to the pristine beaches of Maldives. The ultra-luxury Embassy Island resort with its exclusive over-water private villas, Michelin-star restaurant and a cosmopolitan guest list, fulfilled the conditions of excellent wine and fascinating company. But when millionaire, Jeffrey Dale, turns up dead, it becomes clear that all that glitters is not gold. Surrounded by the Indian Ocean on all sides, and a killer in their midst, it is now in the hands of detective Devin Langhar to solve the Murder in Maldives.
Early in the twentieth century, for-profit companies such as Duke Power and South Carolina Electric and Gas brought electricity to populous cities and towns across South Carolina, while rural areas remained in the dark. It was not until the advent of publicly owned electric cooperatives in the 1930s that the South Carolina countryside was gradually introduced to the conveniences of life with electricity. Today, electric cooperatives serve more than a quarter of South Carolina's citizens and more than seventy percent of the state's land area, bringing not only power but also high-speed broadband to rural communities. The rise of "public" power—electricity serviced by member-owned cooperatives and sanctioned by federal and state legislation—is a complicated saga encompassing politics, law, finance, and rural economic development. Empowering Communities examines how the cooperatives helped bring fundamental and transformational change to the lives of rural people in South Carolina, from light to broadband. James E. Clyburn, the majority whip of the U.S. House of Representatives from South Carolina, provides a foreword.