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Jerry Rose, a young journalist and photographer in Vietnam, exposed
the secret beginnings of America's Vietnam War in the early 1960s.
Putting his life in danger, he interviewed Vietnamese villagers in
a countryside riddled by a war of terror and intimidation and
embedded himself with soldiers on the ground, experiences that he
distilled into the first major article to be written about American
troops fighting in Vietnam. His writing was acclaimed as "war
reporting that ranks with the best of Ernest Hemingway and Ernie
Pyle," and in the years to follow, Time, The New York Times, The
Reporter, New Republic, and The Saturday Evening Post regularly
published his stories and photographs. In spring 1965, Jerry's
friend and former doctor, Phan Huy Quat, became the new Prime
Minister of Vietnam, and he invited Jerry to become an advisor to
his government. Jerry agreed, hoping to use his deep knowledge of
the country to help Vietnam. In September 1965, while on a trip to
investigate corruption in the provinces of Vietnam, he died in a
plane crash in Vietnam, leaving behind a treasure trove of
journals, letters, stories, and a partially completed novel. The
Journalist is the result of his sister, Lucy Rose Fischer, taking
those writings and crafting a memoir in "collaboration" with her
late brother-giving the term "ghostwritten" a whole new meaning.
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The Ginger Cure (Hardcover)
William Ganson B 1878 Rose, Rose Publishing Company Pbl, J B Savage Company Prt
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R740
Discovery Miles 7 400
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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A Contemporary Cowboy Ranch Romance story. For Miranda, Newark has
nothing to offer except a dead-end job, a crummy apartment, and an
abusive boyfriend. But when her younger sister signs her up for an
online dating website to prove to her the kinds of guys who would
be interested in her, she starts an online connection with the
perfect guy. He's handsome, he's a real-life cowboy, and...he's in
his seventies Miranda steps off the bus to find the man of her
dreams waiting for her, only he doesn't know it. His elderly
father, concerned that his six sons are isolated on their highly
prosperous 800,000-acre ranch signed up one of his oldest boys and
did a little matchmaking behind their backs. Now Miranda and Casey
have a choice to make, but will they be willing to put aside their
mistrust and give this a shot, or go their separate ways?
It is every person's--particularly every parent's--worst nightmare.
For a loved one to walk out through the front door and never to
return is one of the most heartbreaking, terrifying, and harrowing
experiences someone can go through. Not to know the fate of a
person close to you is simply agonizing--did they choose to
disappear, were they involved in an accident, or did something even
worse befall them? Every day, staggering numbers of people go
missing. Most return within 72 hours but there many are never seen
again. Some are students who take off to distant countries without
telling their parents and then disappear; some are husbands who
have left to come to terms with their own problems; some are
runaways, others missing parents. In this compelling book,
journalist Rose Rouse is granted exclusive access to the mothers,
brothers, sons, wives, sisters, and daughters of those who have
vanished without trace. Rouse shares in the turmoil that they have
endured in their quest to be reunited with those who have
disappeared from their lives. These are amazing stories of people
who have moved heaven and earth to find their loved ones.
An examination of the complex interrelationship between charity
birth control clinics and the commercial marketplace in the United
States through the 1970s. The Birth Control Clinic in a Marketplace
World is the first book to chart the origins and evolution of the
charity birth control clinic movement in the United States from the
1910s through the 1970s, a period that witnessed dramatic
transformation in the goods and services such clinics provided.
Rose Holz uncovers the virtually unexamined relationship between
Planned Parenthood and the commercial marketplace sphere.
Challenging more thanthirty years of historiography on birth
control, Holz sheds new light on battles over reproductive rights
through her analysis of the Planned Parenthood Federation of
America within the context of the commercial birth control world.
Revealing that it would be Planned Parenthood's engagement to
charity -- the argument the organization once used to discredit the
presumed profit-driven exploitation of the marketplace -- that
would put precisely those women ithoped to assist in dangerous
situations, she asks such probing questions as: What were the
meanings attached to the provision of birth control and its
commercial distribution? How in turn were these meanings used as
sources of power? The project draws on rich primary sources to
answer these questions and to examine the historical role of the
local birth control clinic in modern America. Rose Holz earned her
PhD in history from the University ofIllinois at Urbana-Champaign.
She is associate director of and associate professor of practice in
the Women's and Gender Studies Program at the University of
Nebraska-Lincoln.
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