31,445 research outputs found

    Earth Day with the Sunshiners

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    Musicians: - Kipyn Martin, Rick Sullivan, and Jeffrey WeisnerIHP 64 Earth Day with the Sunshiners Earth Day episode with The Sunshiners, a local band of climate activists debuting on the show their first album, Endangered Species. Kipyn Martin, Rick Sullivan, and Jeffrey Weisner bring their talents to the cause in the hope that music speaks louder than words alone. We play the full album. News update about political candidate shuffling and a war update from faraway Ukraine.https://open.spotify.com/episode/3EKG2sLaAtpltEGUoIIlt

    Lilly Martin Spencer letter

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    Letter from Lilly Martin Spencer to her father and friends from Cincinnati, March 31, 1842. In it, she discusses her artistic efforts and guidance from her mentors, as well as her decision to avoid the many social engagements to which she is invited until her father's return. Angelique Marie "Lilly" Martin was born in England in 1822 to French parents Gilles Marie Martin and Angelique Le Petit Martin. In 1830, her family left England for New York, where Gilles Martin taught French. The family eventually settled in Marietta, Ohio, three years after arriving to the United States. Spencer was home schooled by her mother and began drawing landscapes and portraits at a young age. She became famous for her domestic scenes, which she was commissioned to paint for housewives and prominent local businessmen in Marietta and later for middle class homes in New York City. During the Civil War, Spencer's work took on a more serious tone and in the later part of the 19th century she began to focus on rural life and detailed landscapes. She studied with Ohio artists Sala Bosworth, Charles Sullivan, and James Beard. Lilly married Benjamin Rush Spencer, an English tailor living in Cincinnati, soon after meeting him in 1844. The couple had 13 children, seven of whom survived. In 1848, the family moved to New York City, where Lilly showed her work at the National Academy of Design and the American Art-Union. Despite her popularity, she did not get enough commissions to support her family and began experimenting with lithographs, eventually becoming one of the most popular producers in New York City. After a brief time in New Jersey, the family moved to a farm in Highland, New York, in 1879, where they lived until Benjamin Spencer died in 1890. Lilly Martin Spencer continued her art career until her death on May 22, 1902

    Elizabeth Sullivan teaches children in her reading lab, Martin Luther King, Jr. School, approximately 1983-1984

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    A black and white snapshot of Elizabeth Sullivan, as she teaches children in her reading lab at Martin Luther King, Jr. Elementary School in Toledo, Ohio. Photo was taken around 1983 or 1984

    Other Voices piece by John J. Sullivan, a former inmate at the Maine State Pri

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    Other Voices piece by John J. Sullivan, a former inmate at the Maine State Prison in Thomaston. Sullivan\u27s lawsuit against former warden Martin Magnusson, now commissioner of the Maine Department of Corrections, was recently rejected

    Martin family deed

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    Document deeding property to Giles M. Martin and family in the village of Warren, Trumbull County, Ohio, February 24, 1863. Angelique Marie "Lilly" Martin was born in England in 1822 to French parents Gilles Marie Martin and Angelique Le Petit Martin. In 1830, her family left England for New York, where Gilles Martin taught French. The family eventually settled in Marietta, Ohio, three years after arriving to the United States. Spencer was home schooled by her mother and began drawing landscapes and portraits at a young age. She became famous for her domestic scenes, which she was commissioned to paint for housewives and prominent local businessmen in Marietta and later for middle class homes in New York City. During the Civil War, Spencer's work took on a more serious tone and in the later part of the 19th century she began to focus on rural life and detailed landscapes. She studied with Ohio artists Sala Bosworth, Charles Sullivan, and James Beard. Lilly married Benjamin Rush Spencer, an English tailor living in Cincinnati, soon after meeting him in 1844. The couple had 13 children, seven of whom survived. In 1848, the family moved to New York City, where Lilly showed her work at the National Academy of Design and the American Art-Union. Despite her popularity, she did not get enough commissions to support her family and began experimenting with lithographs, eventually becoming one of the most popular producers in New York City. After a brief time in New Jersey, the family moved to a farm in Highland, New York, in 1879, where they lived until Benjamin Spencer died in 1890. Lilly Martin Spencer continued her art career until her death on May 22, 1902

    Lilly Martin Spencer photograph

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    Photograph of Lilly Martin Spencer, ca. 1900. Angelique Marie "Lilly" Martin was born in England in 1822 to French parents Gilles Marie Martin and Angelique Le Petit Martin. In 1830, her family left England for New York, where Gilles Martin taught French. The family eventually settled in Marietta, Ohio, three years after arriving to the United States. Spencer was home schooled by her mother and began drawing landscapes and portraits at a young age. She became famous for her domestic scenes, which she was commissioned to paint for housewives and prominent local businessmen in Marietta and later for middle class homes in New York City. During the Civil War, Spencer's work took on a more serious tone and in the later part of the 19th century she began to focus on rural life and detailed landscapes. She studied with Ohio artists Sala Bosworth, Charles Sullivan, and James Beard. Lilly married Benjamin Rush Spencer, an English tailor living in Cincinnati, soon after meeting him in 1844. The couple had 13 children, seven of whom survived. In 1848, the family moved to New York City, where Lilly showed her work at the National Academy of Design and the American Art-Union. Despite her popularity, she did not get enough commissions to support her family and began experimenting with lithographs, eventually becoming one of the most popular producers in New York City. After a brief time in New Jersey, the family moved to a farm in Highland, New York, in 1879, where they lived until Benjamin Spencer died in 1890. Lilly Martin Spencer continued her art career until her death on May 22, 1902

    Convergence groups, Hausdorff dimension, and a Theorem of Sullivan and Tukia

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    We show that a discrete, quasiconformal group preserving Hopf n has the property that its exponent of convergence and the Hausdorff dimension of its limit set detect the existence of a non-empty regular set on the sphere at infinity to Hopf n. This generalizes a result due separately to Sullivan and Tukia, in which it is further assumed that the group act isometrically on Hopf n, i.e. is a Kleinian group. From this generalization we are able to extract geometric information about infinite-index subgroups within certain of these groups

    Le sens de l'argent. S. Freud, K. Marx, T. Bernhard.

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    Sullivan Pierre. Le sens de l'argent. S. Freud, K. Marx, T. Bernhard.. In: Communications, 50, 1989. L'argent, sous la direction de Martin Gorin. pp. 37-50
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