1,764,743 research outputs found
Philadelphia Immigration Attorney - Beverly A. Black
Beverly A. Black is an honest attorney. She has been licensed in Pennsylvania since 1992 and continues to be a lawyer in good standing. Although she passed the New Jersey bar in 1992, she never practiced in that state and never finalized her license with NJ. If you need <a href="https://www.gproslaw.com/immigration/"><strong>Immigration attorney in Philadelphia</strong></a>, give a call at 215-543-7220 to discuss your case
Interview with Beverly Tetterton
Beverly Tetterton is the Special Collections Librarian at the New Hanover County Public Library's downtown branch. Tetterton has served on the Historic Properties Commission and the board of directors of the North Carolina Genealogical Society, among other groups. She is an author, lecturer, and historian, and has published, with her husband Glenn, two volumes of her North Carolina Factbooks
Open doors presents Beverly Singer
The Open Doors series presents Beverly Singer, author of ""Wiping the Warpaint off the Lens,"" to discuss native americans as producers of and their representation in film in video
Beverly James
Beverly James was a graphic designer who dedicated her life to art and artists. She served as trustee of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco for nearly 20 years, and as trustee of the San Francisco Art Institute, serving a term as chairman of the board. She earned an A.B. in fine arts at San Francisco State University in 1961. Beverly was born in San Francisco in 1938 and grew up in Redwood City, where she went to Sequoia High School. She was the fifth generation of a Peninsula family which settled in California in the 1850s. In fact, her mother graduated from Palo Alto High School in 1932. Beverly was a longtime resident of both Palo Alto and San Francisco. For most of her adult life, Beverly remained active in the arts as a freelance professional. After college, she trained as a graphic designer at the Museum School of the Fine Arts Museum of Boston, and at the Academy of Art College in San Francisco. She produced designs for family, friends, clubs, schools and local organizations. She was never happier than when working in the art studio at her house in Palo Alto. She decorated her home with her own paintings and those of the West Coast figurative school, which she greatly admired. In person, Beverly always seemed to understand the reasons why the world is ordered as it is, and what could be done to make it more beautiful. After her children had left for college in the 1980s, Beverly increased her personal involvement in supporting other artists and art institutions. She was elected to the board of trustees of the San Francisco Art Institute in 1985. Over many years there, she served as board secretary, vice chair and chairman of the board. She was also chair of both the Development Committee and the Committee on Trustees, and became a trustee emerita in 2010. In 2012, the Art Institute recognized Beverly with a Special Award for her extraordinary service to the institution. In addition, since 1996 Beverly served as a trustee of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francis
Oral History Interview with Beverly Bagley, May 3, 2018
The National Museum of the Pacific War presents an oral interview with Beverly Bagley of Fullerton, California. She discusses where she was when Pearl Harbor was bombed and recalls hearing President Roosevelt's speech about the incident. Mrs. Bagley also talks about how her father wanted to volunteer for the military, but her mother refused to sign off on it, so he was barred from joining the war. Mrs. Bagley recalls having to save everything from aluminum cans to chewing gum wrappers and the war time rationing that occurred. She also recounts her time spent in the hospital during the war, in 1943, due to Polio. Mrs. Bagley tells the interviewer that there was no celebration when Germany surrendered, but there was one when the bombs were dropped over Japan and the peace treaty signed, signifying the real end of World War 2. She also talks about her cousins and her husband who were enlisted in the U.S. Navy
Oral History Interview with Beverly Bagley, May 3, 2018
The National Museum of the Pacific War presents an oral interview with Beverly Bagley of Fullerton, California. She discusses where she was when Pearl Harbor was bombed and recalls hearing President Roosevelt's speech about the incident. Mrs. Bagley also talks about how her father wanted to volunteer for the military, but her mother refused to sign off on it, so he was barred from joining the war. Mrs. Bagley recalls having to save everything from aluminum cans to chewing gum wrappers and the war time rationing that occurred. She also recounts her time spent in the hospital during the war, in 1943, due to Polio. Mrs. Bagley tells the interviewer that there was no celebration when Germany surrendered, but there was one when the bombs were dropped over Japan and the peace treaty signed, signifying the real end of World War 2. She also talks about her cousins and her husband who were enlisted in the U.S. Navy
Beverly Mader, Pianist, March 10, 1959
Concert program for Beverly Mader, Pianist, March 10,
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Beverly Aarts
Beverly Aarts passed away peacefully July 7, 2019 surrounded by her family, after 12 years of living gracefully with Multiple Myeloma
Beverly Hartman, Junior Recital, May 21, 1969
Concert program for Beverly Hartman, Junior Recital, May 21,
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Beverly Kosarek in washtub, ca. 1947
Photograph shows Beverly Kosarek, age about 18 months, standing in metal washtub on farm - either the Kosarek farm or neighboring farm of her aunt
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