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Lillian and Smith
* Lillian Smith ( 1897 – 1966 ), author and civil rights activist
Chatterton was born in New York City, on Christmas Eve 1892, to Walter Smith and Lillian Reed Chatterton.
Gregory met his wife Lillian Smith at an African-American club ; they married in 1959.
Her brothers were William Jerrold " Jerry " Smith ( engineer, 1929 – 2003 ) and Murray Lee Smith ( teacher and minister, 1932 – 2003 ) and her sister is Lillian Allethea Smith Wall ( born 1936 ).
Locke also hired Lillian H. Smith, a Canadian graduate from the training school at the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh, to head the Children's department.
It won the Lillian Smith Book Award, bestowed by the University of Georgia Libraries and the Southern Regional Council, to authors who highlight racial and social inequality in their works.
His first publication Power and Powerlessness: Quesicience and Rebellion in an Appalachian Valley broke new theoretical and empirical ground in the study of social power, winning The Woodrow Wilson Foundation Book Award of the American Political Science Association, The V. O Key Book Award of the Southern Political Science Association, The Lillian Smith Book Award of the Southern Regiona Council, The W. D Weatherford Book Award, and earned co-runnerup in the first annual Robert F. Kennedy Book Award competition.
The interracial romance novel by Lillian Smith, Strange Fruit, was also banned by the Watch and Ward Society.
Daniels was the subject of University of Mississippi history professor Charles Eagles's 1993 book Outside Agitator: Jon Daniels and the Civil Rights Movement in Alabama, which won the Lillian Smith Award that year.
Councillors Jenny Gerbasi, Mike Pagtakhan, Harvey Smith, Lillian Thomas and Dan Vandal voted in opposition to this board because it is held behind closed doors.
* Lillian Smith ( 1897 – 1966 ) — Author and social critic ( two enrollments, no degree )
* Camacho, Roseanne V., " Race, Region, and Gender in a Reassessment of Lillian Smith.
* Smith, Lillian, Killers of the Dream.
He returned to Broadway to star in Strange Fruit, based on the novel by Lillian Smith.
Epps has written two novels, including The Shad Treatment, which won the Lillian Smith Book Award, as well as the nonfiction books To An Unknown God: Religious Freedom on Trial, which was published in 2001 and was a finalist for the ABA's Silver Gavel Award, and Democracy Reborn: The Fourteenth Amendment and the Fight for Civil Rights in Post-Civil War America, which was published in 2006 and is the first comprehensive history of the framing of the Fourteenth Amendment .. Democracy Reborn won the 2007 Oregon Book Award for non-fiction, and also was a finalist for the ABA Silver Gavel Award.
* Strange Fruit ( novel ) ( 1944 ), by Lillian Smith
* Lillian Smith studied at Piedmont from 1915-1916.
Loewen co-authored a United States history textbook, Mississippi: Conflict and Change ( 1974 ), which won the Lillian Smith Award for Best Southern Nonfiction in 1975.

Lillian and author
Professor Lillian C. Freudmann, author of Antisemitism in the New Testament ( University Press of America, 1994 ) has published a study of such verses and the effects that they have had in the Christian community throughout history.
Later, while medical-student / physician Julia ( Vanessa Redgrave ) attends Oxford and the University of Vienna and studies with such luminaries as Sigmund Freud, Lillian ( Jane Fonda ) suffers through revisions of her play with her mentor and sometime lover, famed author Dashiell Hammett ( Jason Robards ) at a beachhouse.
Lillian Florence " Lilly " Hellman ( June 20, 1905 – June 30, 1984 ) was an American author of plays, screenplays, and memoirs and throughout her life, was linked with many left-wing political causes.
Lillian Roxon ( 8 February 1932-10 August 1973 ) was a noted Australian journalist and author, best known for Lillian Roxon's Rock Encyclopedia ( 1969 ).
In August 2002, a biography of Lillian Roxon was published in Australia by Black Inc .: Lillian Roxon, Mother of Rock, written by the Sydney-based journalist and author Robert Milliken.
Supporting them were author James Baldwin and his brother David, and comedian Dick Gregory and his wife Lillian ( who was arrested for picketing with SNCC activists and local supporters ).
Released in July 1967, Triangle only reached number 197 on the Billboard 200 albums chart, but it was praised by critics, including Australian journalist and author Lillian Roxon in her 1969 Rock Encyclopedia.
Scotch Verdict: Miss Pirie and Miss Woods V. Dame Cumming Gordon ( 1983 ), by Lillian Faderman ( author of Odd Girls and Twilight Lovers ), recounts the historical incident on which Hellman based her play.
Quigley's first name may be a reference to Lillian Fox Quigley, author of The Blind Men and the Elephant, a children's book based on a poem of the same name discussed in The Penultimate Peril.
* Lillian Beckwith, English author
Lillian D. Wald ( March 10, 1867 – September 1, 1940 ) was a nurse ; social worker ; public health official ; teacher ; author ; editor ; publisher ; activist for peace, women's, children's and civil rights ; and the founder of American community nursing.
Jay Williams ( May 31, 1914 – July 12, 1978 ) was an American author born in Buffalo, New York, the son of Max and Lillian Jacobson.
Lillian Ross ( born June 8, 1926 ) is an American journalist and author who has been a staff writer at The New Yorker since 1945.
:* Lillian Too, Malaysian-Chinese author of 80 books on feng shui.

Lillian and 1944
Other familiar titles are: Anzio by Edward Dmytryk, in 1968, his last Hollywood film appearance ; The North Star ( 1943 ), directed by Lewis Milestone with a script by playwright Lillian Hellman, with Erich von Stroheim ; Edge of Darkness ( 1943 ), also by Milestone, his first film role, where he played his first film German soldier role, opposite Judith Anderson ; Wilson ( 1944 ), where he played the German ambassador to Washington, D. C. during World War I, Count von Bernstorff ; The Cross of Lorraine ( 1943 ), with Gene Kelly ; The Hitler Gang, playing the Nazi official Alfred Rosenberg and Romanoff and Juliet ( 1961 ), written, directed and starring Peter Ustinov, and an Italian-American adaptation of Homer's Iliad, Helen of Troy ( 1956 ), directed by Robert Wise, with Rossanna Podesta, Jacques Sernas, and in two featured roles, Tonio Selwart playing opposite a then almost unknown Brigitte Bardot, in 1956.
Eddie Foy Jr. appeared as his father in several films — Frontier Marshal ( 1939 ), Lillian Russell ( 1940 ), Yankee Doodle Dandy ( 1942 ), and Wilson ( 1944 )— as well as a television version of The Seven Little Foys with Mickey Rooney ( 1964 ).
Other similar psychiatric diagnoses of Germany took place at the same time, such as Richard Max Brickner's Is Germany Incurable ( 1943 ), Paul Winkler's The thousand-year conspiracy: secret Germany behind the mask ( 1943 ), Fredrick Martin Stern's The Junker Menace ( 1945 ), Sebastian Haffner's Germany: Jekyll and Hyde: An Eyewitness Analysis of Nazi Germany ( 1941 ) and Sigrid Lillian Schultz's Germany will try it again ( 1944 ).
* Guns of the Law ( 1944 ) .... Lillian Wilkins

Lillian and was
His second wife, Lillian, was the mother of John H. Mercer.
During World War I, Eastman was one of the founders of the Woman's Peace Party, soon joined by Jane Addams, Lillian D. Wald, and others.
Dahomey was chosen for some of the filming locations in the movie, The Comedians ( 1967 film ), with an all-star cast that included Richard Burton, Elizabeth Taylor, Lillian Gish, James Earl Jones, Roscoe Lee Brown, Alec Guinness, Raymond St. Jacques, Gloria Foster, Zakes Mokae, Paul Ford, Georg Stanford Brown, Peter Ustinov, Douta Seck and Cicely Tyson.
Lillian Russell had been engaged to create the title role, but Gilbert did not believe that she was dedicated enough, and when she missed a rehearsal, she was dismissed.
Two particular examples are Lillian, an eccentric ( and very nearsighted ) old lady with odd quirks, and Greta, a muscle bound woman who was hired to look after the pets during New Years.
" Lillian Hoddeson, a University of Illinois historian who wrote a book on Bardeen, said that because he " differed radically from the popular stereotype of genius and was uninterested in appearing other than ordinary, the public and the media often overlooked him.
This film was financed by Archibald MacLeish, Fredric March, Florence Eldridge, Lillian Hellman, Luise Rainer, Dudley Nichols, Franchot Tone and other Hollywood movie stars, moguls, and writers who composed a group known as the Contemporary Historians.
Abdul-Jabbar was born Ferdinand Lewis Alcindor, Jr., on April 16, 1947, and grew up in Manhattan in New York City, the only child of Cora Lillian, a department store price checker, and Ferdinand Lewis Alcindor, Sr., a transit police officer and jazz musician .< ref >
Lillian Faderman argues that Western society was threatened by women who rejected their feminine roles.
Lillian Hellman's play The Children's Hour was converted into a heterosexual love triangle and retitled These Three.
Lillian Gross, described as a " Mixed Blood " by the Smithsonian source, was of Cherokee and European-American heritage.
He was the second of four children ( older brother Garrett, younger brother Walter, and younger sister Lillian ).
Lillian Gish was a major star of the silent era with one of the longest careers, working from 1912-1987
Historian Lillian Faderman calls the riots the " shot heard round the world ", explaining, " The Stonewall Rebellion was crucial because it sounded the rally for that movement.
The demo produced from this session, and the group ’ s live performances, generated more attention from the industry, including rave reviews from critic Lillian Roxon, and soon A & M Records was interested in the band as well.
Originally named " Mortimer ", the mouse was later re-christened " Mickey " by Lillian Disney who thought that the name Mortimer did not fit.
Lillian Evelyn Moller Gilbreth ( May 24, 1878 – January 2, 1972 ) was an American psychologist and industrial engineer.
In addition to having twelve children, writing books, helping companies with their management skills, and managing women consumers, Lillian was instrumental in the design of a desk in 1933 ( in cooperation with IBM ) for display at the Chicago World ’ s Fair.
Lillian first met her future husband Frank Bunker Gilbreth, Sr. in June 1903 in Boston, Massachusetts, en route to Europe with her chaperone, who was Frank's cousin.
He was the only child of Michael and Lillian Daley, whose families had both arrived from the Old Parish area, near Dungarvan, County Waterford, Ireland during the Great Famine.
Before women obtained the right to vote in 1920, Lillian Daley was an active Suffragette, participating in marches.
Hoffman was born in Los Angeles, the second son of Lillian ( née Gold ) and Harry Hoffman.
Benson was born Mildred Augustine in Ladora, Iowa to Lillian and Dr. J. L.
Writing in the New York Times, Carter B. Horsley said of the River House: " Erected in 1931 when its area still teemed with tenements, it was mocked in the famous and popular 1936 movie, ' Dead End ' that was Lillian Hellman's adaptation of Sidney Kingsley's play.

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