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I have been writing poems since I was seventeen, it is my passion.
For four days now, eleven-year old Shirley Brown has been having the same dream. Each night, a little more has been added. Tonight, she didn't want to think about tonight. Nothing like that will ever happen. Will it? Bonus: Hidden in Plain Sight excerpt.
The Northern Territory remains a 'must see' destination for all visitors. However the grandeur and beauty of the scenery is only half the story. The people who ventured into this vast outback, lived their lives and made its history their own are an equally colourful part of this unique and special place. This book records the stories of some these resourceful and unique individuals and families.
March, September, and December issues include index digests, and June issue includes cumulative tables and index digest.
Henry E. Frye came of age just as the South was beginning a transformational change. When he graduated from college in 1953, African Americans like him could only hope that the future would be different from the past. At the close of his public career in 2001, he was chief justice of the North Carolina Supreme Court--the head of the state's third branch of government. Throughout their lives, Frye and his wife, Shirley, were in the vanguard of the advances that shaped the lives of African Americans. His election to the state legislature in 1968 was the beginning of steady, determined efforts to expand opportunities for African Americans in politics, business and society at large. This book traces, along with his career, the growing participation of African Americans in the civic, political and social life of North Carolina.
What can the killing of a transgender teen can teach us about the violence of misreading gender identity as sexual identity? The Life and Death of Latisha King examines a single incident, the shooting of 15-year-old Latisha King by 14-year-old Brian McInerney in their junior high school classroom in Oxnard, California in 2008. The press coverage of the shooting, as well as the criminal trial that followed, referred to Latisha, assigned male at birth, as Larry. Unpacking the consequences of representing the victim as Larry, a gay boy, instead of Latisha, a trans girl, Gayle Salamon draws on the resources of feminist phenomenology to analyze what happened in the school and at the trial that fo...