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    Robert M. Rennick Kentucky Place Name Collection

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    See http://scholarworks.moreheadstate.edu/robert_rennick_collection/ for digital collections related to the Robert M. Rennick Kentucky Place Name Collection

    Podcast: Youth Trajectories in Conflict with Sarah Anne Rennick

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    Sarah Anne Rennick is Deputy Director at the Arab Reform Initiative. In this episode, she discusses how youth navigates conflict, and how it affects their whole lives. She uses on-ground surveys from the Middle East region

    Podcast: Youth Trajectories in Conflict with Sarah Anne Rennick [Elektronisk resurs]

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    Sarah Anne Rennick is Deputy Director at the Arab Reform Initiative. In this episode, she discusses how youth navigates conflict, and how it affects their whole lives. She uses on-ground surveys from the Middle East region

    Talk: About Holly's Mother; Biography

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    Collected by Judy Kinslow and Alan Rennick for M.C. Parler Transcribed by Nathaniel Lucy Told by Holly Hodges Prairie Grove, Arkansas December 17, 1960 Reel 368 Talk: About Holly's Mother Alan Rennick: Hey, tell us something about your mother Mrs. Hodges. How was your mother? When . . . where was she born? Was she born around here . . . or where? Holly Hogdes: No. She was born in Texas. Rennick: Texas. You know what year? Hodges: No I don't. Rennick: How long has she been dead? Hodges: 22 years. Rennick: 22 years. Judy Kinslow: You know approximately how old she was when she died? Hodges: 71. Rennick: Did she know a lot of songs like yourself? Hodges: Yes she did. Rennick: You learned a lot of them from her? Hodges: Um-hm. That's right. Kinslow: About how old are you Mrs. Hodges? Hodges: 68. Kinslow: 68. Rennick: And you've lived around here, around Prairie Grove, most all your life I suppose? Hodges: Ever since I was eleven years old.Rennick: You lived in Texas before that? Hodges: No. I lived in Montgomery County, Arkansas below Mena. Kinslow: Oh, is that where you were born? Hodges: I was borned in Polk County, close to Mena, Arkansas. Rennick: Your mother, did she sing a lot? Hodges: Well she just sang a lot at home. Rennick: Yeah. Kinda had a singing tradition in your family I suppose. HJodges: Well most of them sang.Funding for digitization provided by the Arkansas Humanities Council and the Happy Hollow Foundation

    Talk: Autobiography

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    Collected by Judy Kinslow and Alan Rennick for M.C. Parler Transcribed by Nathaniel Lucy Told by Holly Hodges Prairie Grove, Arkansas December 17, 1960 Reel 368 Talk Alan Rennick: That linkerin' green. It took Judy a while. I had to explain to her what linkerin green was. (laughs) Holly Hodges: Didn't know what it was? Judy Kinslow: No, but he explained it. Hodges: Oh well. Kinslow: I guess I haven't had that kind of money. (laughs) Rennick: Well your mother must have been quite a . . . Hodges: Well she sang lots of songs, couldn't she Bud? She sung all night and never . . . maybe half of that and never sang the same song. Rennick: Really? Hodges: Yeah! Rennick: Well how many children did she have then? There was you and Bud and how many more? Hodges: Oh she just had twelve. Rennick: Just twelve huh? Hodges: Twelve. Rennick: You had a small family then. Hodges: Yeah. Kinslow: Dirty dozen huh? Hodges: I'm the mother of eleven.Rennick: Beg your pardon? Hodges: I'm the mother of eleven. Rennick: You had eleven children? Hodges: That's right. Rennick: Is that right? Rennick: Do most of them live - No! Some of them live in California. Hodges: I've got nine of eleven and two dead. Rennick: And are they all- where do they live? Now do they live around mostly around your folks? Hodges: Well part of them's here. I've got one in New Jersey. I've got one, two, three in California. Rennick: Three in California. Hodges: The rest of them's around here. Rennick: You got 'em spread out. Hodges: Oh yeah. They're from coast to coast, east to the west. Rennick: You hear from them every Christmas? Hodges: Yeah. (mumbles) Rennick: Do they most of them write you pretty well? Hodges: I had one letter this morning, Delmer, youngest one. Kinslow: How old? Hodges: My baby's 24. (mumbles a question) (laughs) Rennick: You don't think we'd fill that tape up with songs, do you?Hodges: Well I'd rather just talk anyway. Kinslow: You got another one there? Rennick: Wait, we don't have enough tape. (multiple people taking at once) Kinslow: You got a short one? Rennick: We got to get your brother on this next tape to help you out with . . . Hodges: You know, I just get out of breath. You know with false teeth you can't sing like you could if you had your own teeth. When you get old you ain't got no wind anyway. Rannick: You do so well I can't see how you'd expect to be much better. Hodges: Yeah. That'd do so good . . . [Bud Hodges speaks in the background but is to quiet to make out]Funding for digitization provided by the Arkansas Humanities Council and the Happy Hollow Foundation
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