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Susan X Meagher was born in southern Illinois and grew up in East St Louis. She attended college in Chicago and started her working career there. She and her partner moved to the Los Angeles area in the late 80's. It was there that she started to write. Her first few books were simply posted on the web and became the I Found My Heart in San Francisco series.
In 2002 she moved to New York and divides her time between Manhattan and the Jersey Shore. She has published eighteen books in the series and has gone on to write many individual books as well. She has partnered with other authors on two short story books and has written many stories that have been published in other mainstream anthologies.
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Good folks all over the world are sheltering in place, our healthcare workers and first responders are overburdened, financial markets are plummeting, and people everywhere are out of work. And worst of all, bookstores, restaurants, borders, and libraries are all closed.
She discovered lesbian fiction when she was 19. Radclyffe and Karin Kallmaker soon became favourite authors and she spent a large part of her hard earned income on shipping books from Amazon.com to her home in South Africa.
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33. Olmsted to Pierce, December 31, 1910. Theearliest draft is quoted in Olmsted's letter. Similar to this version ofthe national parks' purpose, Congress would declare in a law passed in1978 that the parks were to be protected and managed in a manner thatavoids \"derogation of the values and purposes for which the parks wereestablished.\" Redwood National Park Expansion Act, sec. 101b, Public Law95-250, 16, United States Code. See also Michael A. Mantell, ed.,Managing National Park System Resources: A Handbook on Legal Duties,Opportunities, and Tools (Washington, D.C.: Conservation Foundation,1990), 14-15.
34. In 1921 Mather reiterated much of the LaneLetter's policy statements in Stephen T. Mather, \"The Ideals and Policyof the National Park Service Particularly in Relation to YosemiteNational Park,\" in Ansel Hall, ed., Handbook of Yosemite NationalPark (New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1921), 77-86. Hubert Work,\"Statement of National Park Policy,\" memorandum for the Director, March11, 1925, typescript, NPS-HC. Perhaps because Lane's message was athreshold policy statement, it remained by far the better remembered andmore influential of the two secretarial policy letters.
118. U.S. Office of National Parks, Buildings andReservations, \"Instructions for Superintendents of Eastern National ParkECW Camps and CW Projects Concerning Roadside Clean-up, Fire HazardReduction, Brush Disposal,\" chapter 9, 3, supplement no. 7 to ForestTruck Trail Handbook (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Forest Service, 1935);George M. Wright to the Director, February 28, 1934, Central ClassifiedFile, RG79.
136. A 1936 internal report stated that theService had \"sponsored\" the legislation. National Park Service, \"Growthof the National Park Service under Director Cammerer,\" 5. See alsoAnnual Report of the Secretary of the Interior (1935), 183.Conrad Wirth mentions in his autobiography that the act (reprinted inthe book) was passed \"at the request of the National Park Servicethrough the Department of the Interior.\" Wirth, Parks, Politics, andthe People, 166-168; Unrau and Willis, Expansion of the NationalPark Service, 109-120.
46. National Park Service, Information Handbook:Questions and Answers Relating to the National Park Service and theNational Park System, In-Service Training Series (Washington, D.C.:National Park Service, 1957), 54; Stephen J. Pyne, Fire in America: ACultural History of Wildland and Rural Fire (Princeton: PrincetonUniversity Press, 1982), 302; Bruce M. Kilgore, \"Restoring Fire toNational Park Wilderness,\" American Forests 81 (March 1975), 17.
146. Wilderness Society, The Wilderness ActHandbook (Washington, D.C.: Wilderness Society, 1984), 5-6; HilloryA. Tolson, Laws Relating to the National Park Service, the NationalParks and Monuments (Washington, D.C.: Department of the Interior,1933), 10.
41. George Sprugel, Howard Stagner, and Robert M.Linn, \"National Parks as Natural Science Research Areas,\" Trends inParks and Recreation 1 (July 1964), n.p.; Marietta Sumner et al.,\"Remembering Lowell Sumner,\" George Wright Forum 6, no. 4 (1990),37; comments by Robert M. Linn, in \"Proceedings of the Meeting ofResearch Scientists and Management Biologists of the National ParkService,\" April 6-8, 1968, 19; Garrett A. Smathers, \"Historical Overviewof Resources Management Planning in the National Park Service,\" 1975,typescript, 10-11, NPSHC; and National Park Service, \"Natural ResourcesManagement Handbook,\" July 1968, part 1, chapter 2, 1; Roland H. Wauer,\"Natural Resource Management—Trend or Fad\" George WrightForum 4, no. 1 (1984), 27.
81. Jacob Hoogland, \"The National EnvironmentalPolicy Act,\" in Michael A. Mantell, ed., Managing National ParkSystem Resources: A Handbook on Legal Duties, Opportunities, andTools (Washington, D.C.: Conservation Foundation, 1990), 41; John W.Henneberger, interview with the author, June 18, 1989.
111. Udall's May 1963 declaration is cited in themanagement policy book, Compilation of the Administrative Policiesfor the National Parks and National Monuments of Scientific Signifi-cance (Natural Area Category) (Washington, D.C.: Government PrintingOffice, 1970), 23. (The administrative policies of the Service werecommonly referred to as management policies.) See also Hartzog,Battling for the National Parks, 102; Mackintosh, Shaping theSystem, 63-64; National Park Service, \"National Park WildernessPlanning Procedures,\" August 8, 1966, typescript, 3, NPS-HC; andNational Park Service, Wilderness Task Force, \"Report on ImprovingWilderness Management in the National Park Service,\" 15-16. The NationalPark Service's Denver Service Center library houses an extensivecollection of the handbooks.
33. Figures for Carlsbad Caverns National Parkprovide an example of the scope of tourismrelated management andeconomics in just one park. In 1991 the 46,766-acre park contained 76known caves and 33,125 acres of wilderness. Visits to the park that yeartotaled 679,450, with daily figures as high as 5,000—people mostlythere to see the vast cavern for which the park had been established in1923. To accommodate the public, the park had eleven miles of pavedroads, with pullouts and roadside exhibits; ten miles of gravel roads; apicnic area; thirty miles of backcountry trails; three miles of caverntrails; four elevators descending 750 feet into the caverns; arestaurant in the caverns; a large visitor center with exhibits,theater, restaurant, souvenir and book sales areas, a nursery, and akennel; and water, electrical, and sewage systems.
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In February 2018, Ingraham said NBA players LeBron James and Kevin Durant should \"shut up and dribble\" after James called comments by Trump \"laughable and scary\".[59] When her statement was criticized, Ingraham said there was \"no racial intent in my remarks\" and cited her 2003 book Shut Up & Sing and other intstances when she had said performers should \"shut up\" about politics.[60][59][61] In 2020, when Drew Brees, a white athlete, criticized protesters who kneeled during the U.S. national anthem, Ingraham was criticized for supporting his statements, which she had not done in the earlier case with the African-American athletes.[62]
During the coronavirus pandemic, Ingraham repeatedly pushed for the unproven drug hydroxychloroquine as treatment for coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).[113] She characterized it as a miracle drug and booked guests on her show to promote the drug.[113] She mocked Centers for Disease Control and Prevention director Robert R. Redfield after he cautioned against the drug.[113] After a study was released which tested the drug on 368 Veterans Affairs patients and showed that the drug was associated with an increased risk of death, she attacked the study as \"shoddy\", \"shockingly irresponsible\" and \"agenda-driven\".[113] She questioned whether attempts to \"disprove effectiveness\" of the drug was \"triggered by pure hatred of Trump Of Fox Of me\"[113] On June 15, 2020, the Food and Drug Administration revoked the Emergency Approval of hydroxychloroquine (and chloroquine). FDA said that a review of some studies showed that the drugs' potential benefits in treating COVID-19 did not outweigh the risks.[114]
Karen Koehler (art history) has received a publication grant from the Graham Foundation for Advanced Studies in the Visual Arts for Walter Gropius:From Exile to Occupation, forthcoming from Reaktion Books. This book incorporates the research Professor Koehler began in the Archives of American Art, the National Archives, and the Library of Congress during her fellowship at the Center for Advanced Studies in the Visual Arts (CASVA) at the National Gallery, in Washington, D.C., in 2017. 153554b96e