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First-time author Peggy Cannon shares with readers her love for cooking and savory meals in her recipe compilation Peggy’s Carolina Recipes. Cannon has had a passion for cooking as far back as she can remember; she was earlier inspired by her mother who taught her the basics of cooking while she was still young. Now she peruses recipe books from celebrity chefs as well as watches their cooking shows. This fascination for good food and cooking has led the author to collect several recipes both from friends and herself, perfect them, and share them with any one else who may be interested in quick, simple, and easy-to-follow recipes for savory and satisfying dishes. The book Peggy’s Carolina Recipes contains several recipes that cover a wide range of dishes including cookies, cakes, pies, and main dishes including seafood and vegetable dishes.
The Congressional Record is the official record of the proceedings and debates of the United States Congress. It is published daily when Congress is in session. The Congressional Record began publication in 1873. Debates for sessions prior to 1873 are recorded in The Debates and Proceedings in the Congress of the United States (1789-1824), the Register of Debates in Congress (1824-1837), and the Congressional Globe (1833-1873)
Covers receipts and expenditures of appropriations and other funds.
Jimmy McGuire and the rest of the South County football team strive to win the state championship, bury old rivalries and solve a thrilling mystery.
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In the ten years since the publication of Do People Grow on Family Trees? (121,000 copies in print), the Internet has completely transformed genealogy, making family history the second most popular hobby in the U.S. after gardening and genealogy the second most searched for subject on the Web. Now completely revised, updated, retitled, and filled with detailed guidance on utilizing the Internet, Climbing Your Family Tree is the comprehensive, kid-friendly genealogical primer for the 21st century, and a dramatic story of how and why our ancestors undertook the arduous voyages of immigration to this nation. It teaches kids to track down important family documents, including ships' manifests, n...
If you can laugh at your ups & downs you will appreciate this book. It is a wannabee comedian's tumultuous ride through life. An uplifting story of how life's struggles sometimes make you stronger and funnier. It's the author's hilarious memoirs redux - first written in 2007 and now expanded years later. It describes his young days in Long Island City and his exciting career at People magazine, The New York Times and MMR, Inc. The author also relates his antics in school, his crazy friends, Army days, surviving cancer, dealing with retirement, and his experiences with several media darlings of publishing and television. If you know NYC, you will love the author's uproarious memories of life in "the concrete jungle".
That's the Way It "Wuz" Back Then is an overview about a particular period and a particular people in history with limited recorded information about their experiences. The information, gathered from interviews with others and my own experiences, provides a brief depiction of the hardship and suffering of black families during the early twentieth century, segregated schools in the south, and the unrest experienced in the south during the desegregation of schools. The main purpose for writing this book is record bits and pieces of history concerning African Americans in Lonoke County, Arkansas, to be placed in the Lonoke County Library. In keeping with that purpose, That's the Way It "Wuz" Ba...