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    Nancy Michael Shukaitis spent her first twenty-one years on the Delaware River at her parent's farm. When utility interests proposed a dam in 1947 they were met with a protest petition she provided for the Federal Power Commission.  Tocks Island Dam was approved without public Congressional hearings in 1962, and thus prompted yearly input in House and Senate Public Works and Interior hearings from 1964 to 1978 when the Wild & Scenic Rivers Act precluded damming the Middle Delaware River. She and many others worked to coordinate citizen knowledge and research that led to formation of the Save the Delaware Coalition. It took 30 years to remove Tocks Island Dam from the Congressional list of projects awaiting construction.

    Lavishly illustrated with numerous photographs, illustrations, and maps, Lasting Legacies of the Lower Minisink  introduces readers to a sampling of over 100 residents whose lives were interrupted by the 1962 and 1965 federal declarations of eminent domain.   Through historical research it explores the dynamic colonial history of an otherwise scenic, demure portion of Americana.  It is a worthy read which very aptly presents the case for Delaware River as a free-flowing body of water.




SCREEN SAVERS: 40 REMARKABLE MOVIES AWAITING REDISCOVERY, has just been published. Book signing with Author John DiLeo at the Mill Run Booksellers on Saturday, December 8th, at 2pm 150 Water Street in Milford PA(570-296-2665)

American Corpocracy: Corporate Ownership of America’s Politicians is Destroying Democracy and The Societal Wealth of Nations, by Douglas D. Lloyd, Phd, July 2004,

“ Dr. Lloyd provides a framework for the issues affecting the world today. By embracing and hiding behind outdated free market principles, politicians benefit by placing corporations above humanity....political corruption is destroying the societal wealth of nations, particularly through governmental support of the practices of international corporations which gobble up democracy, a process which can be called “Corpocracy”. 

Douglas D. Lloyd, MBA Harvard and American University PhD, has experience in US government think tanks and international corporations. He has a lifetime of interest in politics and world history. A resident of the Poconos, Dr. Lloyd is the Director of the Institute for Sociental Economics, and can be reached at dlloyd@enter.netmailto:dlloyd@enter.netshapeimage_3_link_0
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