Andrea Isham Voss
Andrea Isham Voss (Blondie) was born on November 18, 1955 in Chadron Nebraska to Robert W. Isham and Eleanor Joy (Norman) Isham. She attended Gordon High School until her junior year, ultimately graduating from Greeley High School in Colorado. She continued her education at Seattle University in Washington. Her junior year she studied abroad, keeping a family tradition alive by going on Semester at Sea, which also helped start the legacy for the Isham grandchildren. She went on to the University of Denver where she graduated Magnum Cum Laude.
She was united in Sacrament Holy Matrimony to Galen Voss in September 29,1984 in Chadron, NE. This union was blessed with two beautiful children: Jay Braddock Voss and Julianna Joy Voss.
Шагающий ДОТ из СССР: как зарубленные проекты могли изменить историю войны
pronedra.ru - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from pronedra.ru Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Шагающий ДОТ из СССР: как зарубленные проекты могли изменить историю войны
pronedra.ru - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from pronedra.ru Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
True West Magazine
Robert M. Utley (right), author of True West’s best Western history nonfiction book of 2020, The Last Sovereigns: Sitting Bull and the Resistance of the Free Lakotas (University of Nebraska Press), has been a Western history hero and mentor to fellow historian Paul Andrew Hutton (left) since their first meeting at Indiana University in 1977. Utley’s The Last Sovereigns is excerpted on pages 18-25, followed by Hutton’s profile of his mentor on pages 26-27.
– Courtesy Paul Andrew Hutton –
If 2020 taught us anything as readers of Western history and fiction, it was that we depend on our storytellers to help us endure hard times. Whether in person, curbside or from a bookseller’s website, we consumed Western history and fiction last year, not only because we love it but to help us through the isolation and remind ourselves of the strength and determination of those who came before us, all of whom overcame much greater odds and conditions than we endu
TULLY OLSON
With the arrival of the holiday season this year, the cardinal rule in Montana shines brighter than ever, like the star on top of my Christmas tree:
We help our neighbors and community in trying times of need.
A slight wave as two cars pass on the highway isnât just a friendly greeting to a stranger, but a promise that if I break down in a blizzard outside Two Dot, I wonât be stranded alone for long. And if Iâve been blessed to earn well and cover rent and bills, I know Iâm not the only one tipping 20, 30, 40% to a waiter, delivery driver or barista.