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Looking for a gift for women, men, girls or boys? This notebook (120 blank white pages, 6x9 inches) will be the perfect present for everyone who loves their hometown Atlanta. It can be used as a composition book, exercise book, journal, diary or planner. This beautifully designed notebook has a matte, sturdy paperback cover, perfect bound, for a gorgeous look and feel. PERFECT gift under 10$
Looking for a gift for women, men, girls or boys? This notebook (120 checkered white pages, 6x9 inches) will be the perfect present for everyone who loves their hometown Atlanta. It can be used as a composition book, exercise book, journal, diary or planner. This beautifully designed notebook has a matte, sturdy paperback cover, perfect bound, for a gorgeous look and feel. PERFECT gift under 10$
Looking for a gift for women, men, girls or boys? This notebook (120 dot grid white pages, 6x9 inches) will be the perfect present for everyone who loves their hometown Atlanta. It can be used as a composition book, exercise book, journal, diary or planner. This beautifully designed notebook has a matte, sturdy paperback cover, perfect bound, for a gorgeous look and feel. PERFECT gift under 10$
Looking for a gift for women, men, girls or boys? This notebook (120 college ruled white pages, 6x9 inches) will be the perfect present for everyone who loves their hometown Atlanta. It can be used as a composition book, exercise book, journal, diary or planner. This beautifully designed notebook has a matte, sturdy paperback cover, perfect bound, for a gorgeous look and feel. PERFECT gift under 10$
"This book is about a young boy who struggles with acceptance from his peers. He is a victim of being constantly bullied at home and at school. His musical gift is his saving grace. He is asked by his teacher to sing in a school program, and it changes his entire school life."
Born into a blue-collar family in the Jim Crow South, Herman J. Russell built a shoeshine business when he was twelve years old—and used the profits to buy a vacant lot where he built a duplex while he was still a teen. Over the next fifty years, he continued to build businesses, amassing one of the nation’s most profitable minority-owned conglomerates. In Building Atlanta, Russell shares his inspiring life story and reveals how he overcame racism, poverty, and a debilitating speech impediment to become one of the most successful African American entrepreneurs, Atlanta civic leaders, and unsung heroes of the civil rights movement. Not just a typical rags-to-riches story, Russell achieved his success through focus, planning, and humility, and he shares his winning advice throughout. As a millionaire builder before the civil rights movement took hold and a friend of Dr. King, Ralph Abernathy, and Andrew Young, he quietly helped finance the civil rights crusade, putting up bond for protestors and providing the funds that kept King’s dream alive. He provides a wonderful behind-the-scenes look at the role the business community, both black and white working together, played in Atlanta’s peaceful progression from the capital of the racially divided Old South to the financial center of the New South.
An electric and intimate story of 1970s gay Atlanta through its bedazzling drag clubs and burgeoning rights activism. Coursing with a pumped-up beat, gay Atlanta was the South's mecca—a beacon for gays and lesbians growing up in its homophobic towns and cities. There, the Sweet Gum Head was the club for achieving drag stardom. Martin Padgett evokes the fantabulous disco decade by going deep into the lives of two men who shaped and were shaped by this city: John Greenwell, an Alabama runaway who found himself and his avocation performing as the exquisite Rachel Wells; and Bill Smith, who took to the streets and city hall to change antigay laws. Against this optimism for visibility and rights, gay people lived with daily police harassment and drug dealing and murder in their discos and drag clubs. Conducting interviews with many of the major figures and reading through deteriorating gay archives, Padgett expertly re-creates Atlanta from a time when a vibrant, new queer culture of drag and pride came into being.
Atlanta Notebook and the perfect Diary for real patriots of Atlanta.You are proud to be born in Atlanta.Yes this city is great! Additional details: This notebook has the size of 6x9 inches! The notebook contains 120 blank lined pages. Examples of use: diary notebook creative logbook sketchbook homework diary fitness planner / sports
When you are lost and confused, it usually starts at a young age Youre not who you are solely on what happen to you on yesterday. You are who you are on, what happen to you on all the other days But The days that lead yu up to yesterday, are the days to tale, tale(Debbie Lewis)From the beginning || Now The way I view life, is shared with others in our everyday life. From a child until the day we are depending on ourselves to provide for ourselves (semi-never). We have experienced things that leave different emotions in our mind, body, heart and soul. Believe me the family and friends who are around in our mind, body, heart and soul. Believe me the family and friends who are around you in those days of you are witnessing your life but each of you doesnt know what the other goes through in the middle of the night Dont hide; Hold on and tell you tale right. Help is coming as well as help is there so (TYLJCATHG) for your loving care. Big smiles from Debbie Lewis family and friends.
Before packing away his robes, Simon Glustrom was a practicing rabbi for forty-three years. One of the compelling reasons for deciding to write a memoir was in response to the endless variety of questions about the interior life of a rabbi: Who influenced him to enter the rabbinate? Can a rabbi have religious doubts and still be true to his calling? Would he repeat such a rigorous life if he knew from the beginning the demands that would be made upon him? This book provides the reader with some uncommon answers. The author does not hesitate to reveal some of his lingering doubts, regrets and fears even as he refers with pride to his skills and strengths. Rabbi Glustrom reaches back to his early youth in Atlanta. He recalls some of the unheralded personalities who influenced him during his most impressionable years and impacted on his life in college, in rabbinical school and in the broader community. The author feels the need to sing on behalf of his unsung heroes. Much of this memoir deals with the human and spiritual problems the author encountered in a new suburban congregation in Fair Lawn, New Jersey where he served as the first rabbi. Nostalgically he recalls those pioneering years in the Fifties and documents some of the monumental changes that took place over four decades, including some of the unresolved crises, such as the problem of egalitarianism in synagogue life. Clergy and lay people will identify with much of the rich anecdotal material, from the humorous to the pathetic, that is so candidly expressed in this memoir.