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George J. Hill

Personal Information

Born January 1, 1932 (94 years old)
Cedar Rapids
Also known as: George James Hill, George J Hill
10 books
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1 readers
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Professor of Surgery Emeritus at the New Jersey Medical School, Rutgers University, author of books on leprosy, malaria, toxicology, public health, cancer, and surgery, history, genealogy

Books

Newest First

American dreams

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It's vacation time again and all the English Roses have exciting plans. Nicole and Amy are off to attend a creative arts camp in Wales. And Charlotte's off to her family's villa in the south of France. And Grace has invited Binah to come to Atlanta and visit her cousins. Binah is so excited for her first holiday overseas, and she can't wait to meet her friend's family. But her trip gets off to a bad start, with a terrible bout of motion sickness on the flight across, followed by jet lag and homesickness once she's on the ground. Can Grace and her brothers save Binah's vacation? The English Roses are excited about trips, camp, and other fun. When Binah's plans fall through, Grace invites her to Atlanta, Georgia, with her family, but Binah's delight turns to dread when she has trouble adjusting to life in America. Book #11

Proceed to Peshawar

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"Proceed to Peshawar is a story of adventure in the Hindu Kush Mountains and of a previously untold military and naval intelligence mission during World War II by two American officers along 800 miles of the Durand Line, the porous border between Afghanistan and Pakistan. They passed through the tribal areas and the princely states of the North-West Frontier Province, and into Baluchistan. This appears to be the first time that any American officials were permitted to travel for any distance along either side of the Durand Line. Many British political and military officers believed that India would soon be free, and that the Great Game between Russia and Britain in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries would then come to an end. Some of them thought that the United States should, and would, assume Britain's role in Central Asia, and they wanted to introduce America to this ancient contest. "--