BETH REED is just an average college student looking to earn some money when she meets Dr. Sidney Moscowitz. A professor at the University of Chicago, Dr. Moscowitz threatens to expose her shady business dealings if she refuses to join his ethics study. Beth, along with a few other study participants soon discover that Moscowitz isn't who he claims to be. Following a trail of victims and government reports dating back decades, the group uncovers a conspiracy with the power to create anarchy in the streets, but they have to move fast before Moscowitz makes them destroy the evidence and everything surrounding it.
A study of the work of Jessie Willcox Smith, the most popular and successful woman illustrator of her time, examines and reproduces many of her paintings of children which appeared in children's books and on the cover of Good Housekeeping magazine
In the early decades of the 19th century, Indigenous Australians suffered devastating losses at the hands of British colonists, who largely ignored their sovereignty and even their humanity. At the same time, however, a new wave of Christian humanitarians were arriving in the colonies, troubled by Aboriginal suffering and arguing that colonists had obligations towards the people they had dispossessed. These white philanthropists raised questions which have shaped Australian society ever since. Did Indigenous Australians have rights to land, rationing, education and cultural survival? If so, how should these be guaranteed, and what would people have to give up in return? Would charity and paternalism lead to effective government or dismal failure - to a powerful defence of an oppressed people, or to new forms of oppression? In Good Faith? paints a vivid picture of life on Australia's first missions and protectorate stations, examining the tensions between charity and rights, empathy and imperialism, as well as the intimacy, dependence, resentment and obligations that developed between missionary philanthropists and the people they tried to protect and control. In this work, Mitchell brings to life hitherto neglected moments in Australia's history, and traces the origins of dilemmas still present today.
Achievement engenders pride, and the most significant accomplishments involving people, places, and events in black history are gathered in Black Firsts: 4,000 Ground-Breaking and Pioneering Events.
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