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Rosalind McKnight was one of the first, and most successful, researchers to work with Robert Monroe and The Monroe Institute in Virginia. She spent eleven years doing research in a laboratory setting. With the help of Monroe and his Hemi-Sync technology that put her into altered states of consciousness, she explored and reported on various levels of non-physical reality. Her first book, Cosmic Journeys, described a visitation that she had in her earlier life by an energy form that she calls Radiant Lady. When Radiant Lady first appeared forty years ago, she said nothing, leaving McKnight wondering about the purpose of her visit. In 2003, Radiant Lady suddenly reappeared, announcing to McKnight that they had a mission to accomplish together. Radiant Lady acts as "tour guide" into other dimensions where McKnight meets non-physical energies who share their own personal experiences of the dimensions which they inhabit. Written for every soul on the planet, these unforgettable adventures emphasize that all of us have angels and spirit guides waiting to help us discover the inner workings of the multiple worlds in which we exist and to which we will all one day journey.
This narrative unfolds the life of Ernst, a young German soldier during World War II, caught at the crossroads of duty and family loyalty, stretched between Germany and England. At nineteen, Ernst navigates the tumult of his own moral dilemmas against the backdrop of a war-torn landscape, accompanied by an officer who has vowed to see him safely home. As we journey through the pages, we’re drawn into the visceral experiences of war-torn Germany. Nightly, as Ernst and his comrades traverse the roads under the cover of darkness, the ominous hum of bombers overhead is palpable, each man acutely aware that their loved ones are in the crosshairs. In the daybreak’s light, the crimson hue of th...
Effectively, yet gently written...Sara Ernst has taken her internationally-heard song, "Shout No" and created a book from it for young visual learners and early readers everywhere. This is Sara Ernst's fourth children's book, but the one she considers her most influential. Children of every age have voices and have the right to use them! NO ONE should EVER do something to a child that makes them feel uncomfortable...or that isn't right! Not a stranger. Not a friend. Not a family member. NO ONE! The knowledge in this book could potentially save a child from an unsafe situation! The charming illustrations will engage young readers while keeping the emphasis on the important words they will see...
This new addition to the popular guidebook series explores women's experiences and the impact of their activities on the history and landscape of St. Louis. When the city was founded, most St. Louisans believed that "a woman's place is in the home," in the house of her father, husband, or master. Over the years, women pushed out the boundaries of their lives into the public arena, and in doing so they changed the face of St. Louis. In Her Place is a guide to the changing definition of a woman's place in St. Louis, beginning with the colonial period and ending with the 1960s. Each chapter explores the experiences of women during a specific time period and identifies the sites of some of their...
Biography of twentieth-century poet Sara Teasdale, drawing from personal papers that had been withheld from publication for nearly fifty years after her death to reconstruct her tragic history, and including samples of her poetry and prose.
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Women in the Arts: Eccentric Essays in Music, Visual Arts, and Literature is a multi-disciplined celebration of past and present women creators. It marks a new departure in women’s studies, for it presents an interdisciplinary emphasis on the long-neglected area of women’s contributions to the various genres of the arts. Because of its unique historical approach, this pioneering collection of essays is useful in the areas of humanities and women’s studies as scholarly or pleasure readings. Many “firsts” are included in this anthology. There are chapters by three prominent award-winning living composers that discuss the plight of women in this male-dominated field and the pioneering...
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Christian Carl Ludwig Hilling/Hilgen (1768-1821) was born at Kirchhatten, Oldenburg, Germany, the son of Gerhard Hilling (d. 1800). He married Anna Sophia Schroeder (1765-1842) in 1795. They had seven children, 1795-1807. Christian and Anna are buried at Kirchhatten, Oldenburg. Two of their sons, Johann Gerhard Hilgen (1795-1859) and Johann Friedrich Hilgen (1805-1878); and a granddaughter, Catherine Margarete Hilgen Schuette (1823-1906), only child of Christian Hilgen (1798-1825) and wife of Johann Schuette (1819-1903), immigrated to the United States and settled at Cedarburg, Wisconsin. Their descendants live in Wisconsin and elsewhere.