16,328 research outputs found

    Nancy Lee in a Guest Artist Recital

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    This is the program for the guest artist recital featuring pianist Nancy Lee. Evelyn Bowden assisted the performance on a second piano. This recital took place on February 13, 1964, in the Mitchell Hall Auditorium

    Nancy Lee (Morin) Huff Interview

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    Nancy Lee Huff was born Nancy Lee Morin to Lucien and Mary Adams Morin in 1945. In this interview with her sister, Peggy Plapis, she recounts her discoveries about the family history through talking to her uncle, Davila Dave Morin and genealogical research.https://digitalcommons.usm.maine.edu/fac-interviews-and-lectures/1023/thumbnail.jp

    Nancy Lee Brock

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    Nancy Lee Brock of Mississippi City, the newly selected Miss America of Ruykyus, shown after her coronation in Okinawa, 1960.https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/mss-rand-papers/1199/thumbnail.jp

    Oral History Interview with Nancy Lieberman, November 8, 2012

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    Interview with Nancy Lieberman, a sports broadcast journalist. The interview includes biographical information about her life growing up in New York, her time on the first women's Olympic basketball team, and her career as a coach, author, and journalist on ESPN

    Promoting Adult Learning Through Civil Discourse in the Public Library

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    This chapter investigates the adult learning through civil discourse within public library settings. Crucial to the success of a working democracy, the author traces the history of libraries as locations for the development of an engaged and knowledgeable citizenry.This is the pre-peer reviewed version of the following article: Kranich, Nancy. "Promoting Adult Learning Through Civil Discourse in the Public Library." New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, no. 127, Fall 2010: 15-24, which has been published in final form at http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ace.377/pdf.Peer reviewe

    Nancy Lee

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    Black and white photograph of bay mare, Nancy Lee, wearing head number four, Holden up for the first half of the daily double, the 2.15 Bar Pace, on Wednesday, October 11, 1939 at the Topsham Fair in Topsham, Maine.https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/kendall_images/3891/thumbnail.jp

    Can the First Amendment Coexist with Civility? Response to ‘What Is the Role of Law in Promoting Civility? What Are Its Limits?'

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    Rancorous rhetoric has taken over the public square, causing many citizens to retreat from democratic work. Although self-governance and human dignity benefit when citizens express their views, it takes more than diverse voices to make democracy strong. It takes civility--reasoned public discourse where respect, restraint, responsibility, and empathy coexist with free expression so that fellow citizens can hear each other. And it also takes safe spaces—public forums like those in libraries, where communities come together at the intersection of law and civility and strike their own balance between the boundaries and norms of civil discourse.Originally published in Insights on Law & Society

    Nancy Lee

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    [Verse 1] Of all the wives as e\u27er you know, Yeo ho! lads! ho! Yeo ho! yeo ho! There\u27s none like Nancy Lee I trow, Yeo ho! lads! ho! yeo ho! See there she stands an\u27 waves her hand upon the quay, An\u27 ev\u27ry day when I\u27m away She\u27ll watch for me, An whisper low when tempests blow, for Jack at sea; Yeo ho! lads! ho! yeo ho! The sailor\u27s wife, the sailors\u27 star shall be, Yeo ho! we go across the sea, The sailor\u27s wife, the sailor\u27s star shall be, The sailor\u27s wife his star shall be. [Verse 2] The harbor\u27s past, the breezes blow, Yeo ho! lads! ho! yeo ho! Yeo ho! yeo ho! \u27Tis long ere we come back I know; Yeo ho! lads! ho! yeo ho! But true an bright from morn till night my home will be, An\u27 all so neat an sung an\u27 sweet, for Jack at sea, An\u27 Nancy\u27s face to bless the place, an\u27 welcome me; Yeo ho! lads! ho! yeo ho! The sailor\u27s wife, the sailors\u27 star shall be, Yeo ho! we go across the sea, The sailor\u27s wife, the sailor\u27s star shall be, The sailor\u27s wife his star shall be. [Verse 3] The Boa\u27s\u27n pipes the watch below; Yeo ho! lads! ho! Yeo ho! yeo ho! Then here\u27s a health afore we go, Yeo ho! lads! ho! yeo ho! A long, long, life to my sweet wife, and mates at sea, An\u27 keep our bones from Davy Jones where\u27er we be, An\u27 may you meet a mate as sweet as Nancy Lee; Yeo ho! lads! ho! yeo ho! The sailor\u27s wife, the sailors\u27 star shall be, Yeo ho! we go across the sea, The sailor\u27s wife, the sailor\u27s star shall be, The sailor\u27s wife his star shall be

    Lee Last, Steve Smith, Nancy Pace

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    Black and white photograph of Lee Last, Steve Smith, and Nancy Pace during a Utah Heritage Foundation event at the Brigham Street Inn in 1982

    Arapaho Indians Including Nancy Lee (North)

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    Portrait photograph of a group of Arapaho Indians. There is a woman and three children. The woman is Nancy Lee (North)
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