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List Of University Of Alabama People
The following is a list of notable people associated with the University of Alabama, located in the American city of Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Notable alumni Arts and humanities Business Entertainment Politics and government Journalism Science and technology Sports Basketball = Active NBA players = * JaMychal Green, Golden State Warriors * Herbert Jones, New Orleans Pelicans * Kira Lewis Jr., New Orleans Pelicans * Collin Sexton, Utah Jazz = Retired NBA players = International league players * Donta Hall, AS Monaco Basket of the LNB Pro A * Richard Hendrix, Niigata Albirex BB of the B.League * Retin Obasohan, ASVEL of the LNB Pro A * Levi Randolph, Hapoel Jerusalem of the Israeli Basketball Premier League = WNBA players = * Dominique Canty, Detroit Shock, 29th pick overall, 1999 Football = Active NFL players = =Former NFL players= =Retired CFL players= * Trevis Smith, Saskatchewan Roughriders =Pro Football Hall of Fame= =NFL ...
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University Of Alabama
The University of Alabama (informally known as Alabama, UA, or Bama) is a public research university in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Established in 1820 and opened to students in 1831, the University of Alabama is the oldest and largest of the public universities in Alabama as well as the University of Alabama System. It is classified among "R1: Doctoral Universities – Very high research activity". The university offers programs of study in 13 academic divisions leading to bachelor's, master's, education specialist, and doctoral degrees. The only publicly supported law school in the state is at UA. Other academic programs unavailable elsewhere in Alabama include doctoral programs in anthropology, communication and information sciences, metallurgical engineering, music, Romance languages, and social work. As one of the first public universities established in the early 19th century southwestern frontier of the United States, the University of Alabama has left a cultural impr ...
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John Martin Finlay
John Martin Finlay (January 24, 1941 – February 17, 1991) was an American poet and writer of essays, reviews, fiction, letters, and diaries. Finlay is best known for his posthumously published poetry collection, ''Mind and Blood: The Collected Poems of John Finlay''. Life Early years John Finlay was born in Ozark, Alabama. One of five children, Finlay grew up on a peanut and dairy farm owned by his parents, Tom Coston Finlay and Jean Sorrell Finlay, near Enterprise, Alabama. Jean Finlay belonged to the established gentry in Ozark; her father, Martin Sorrell, was a lawyer. According to Finlay biographer Jeffrey Goodman: "John Finlay never liked farming. Enterprise to him meant only the dull, hard life of farm chores, like milking cows or driving the tractor in the Alabama sun. Weekends in Ozark, however, meant his grandmother's library of classics and sweet hours in her leisurely and educated company. Annie Laurie Cullens, an old family fiend, observed Finlay's bright m ...
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To Kill A Mockingbird
''To Kill a Mockingbird'' is a novel by the American author Harper Lee. It was published in 1960 and was instantly successful. In the United States, it is widely read in high schools and middle schools. ''To Kill a Mockingbird'' has become a classic of modern American literature, winning the Pulitzer Prize. The plot and characters are loosely based on Lee's observations of her family, her neighbors and an event that occurred near her hometown of Monroeville, Alabama, in 1936, when she was ten. Despite dealing with the serious issues of rape and racial inequality, the novel is renowned for its warmth and humor. Atticus Finch, the narrator's father, has served as a moral hero for many readers and as a model of integrity for lawyers. The historian Joseph Crespino explains, "In the twentieth century, ''To Kill a Mockingbird'' is probably the most widely read book dealing with race in America, and its main character, Atticus Finch, the most enduring fictional image of racia ...
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Harper Lee
Nelle Harper Lee (April 28, 1926February 19, 2016) was an American novelist best known for her 1960 novel ''To Kill a Mockingbird''. It won the 1961 Pulitzer Prize and has become a classic of modern American literature. Lee has received numerous accolades and honorary degrees, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2007 which was awarded for her contribution to literature. She assisted her close friend Truman Capote in his research for the book ''In Cold Blood'' (1966). Capote was the basis for the character Dill Harris in ''To Kill a Mockingbird''. The plot and characters of ''To Kill a Mockingbird'' are loosely based on Lee's observations of her family and neighbors, as well as an event that occurred near her hometown in 1936 when she was 10. The novel deals with the irrationality of adult attitudes towards race and class in the Deep South of the 1930s, as depicted through the eyes of two children. It was inspired by racist attitudes in her hometown of Monroeville, Ala ...
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Tanner Latham
Tanner Latham is a writer and podcaster from Alabama. Latham is a graduate from the University of Alabama, where he studied English and theater. While at Alabama he performed in theater productions, but after graduation got a job as a travel writer and assistant travel editor for ''Southern Living'', covering the southern United States: his job was described as "travel ngaround the South and eat ngfor a living". In 2009 he and fellow "Tales of the Road" writer Taylor Bruce won the bronze award in the Lowell Thomas Travel Journalism Competition, named for Lowell Thomas and awarded by the Society of American Travel Writers. By 2011, he had left the magazine and become an independent writer (reporting for NPR affiliate WFAE WFAE (90.7 MHz) is a non-commercial public radio station in Charlotte, North Carolina. It is the main NPR news and information member in the Charlotte region. The station's main studios and offices are at One University Place in the University ...'s show ''Au ...
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Dale Kennington
Dale Wilson Kennington (January 24, 1935 – May 2, 2017) was a Contemporary Artist working in the style of New American Realism. Life Kennington was born in Savannah, Georgia and lived most of her life in Dothan, Alabama. She received a B.A. in Art History and Design in 1956 from the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. She also married her husband, Don Kennington, in the same year. In her early 40s she studied portraits because she wanted to have portraits of her children. She practiced by creating portraits of local children, developing a client list with the parents of her models. In the mid-1980s she gave up portraiture-for-hire work and moved to studio work. She has received numerous accolades and awards for her work. In 2009, she was recognized by the Alabama State Council on the Arts with the Governor's Arts Award, and the Alabama Bureau of Tourism and Travel as one of Alabama's "Master Artists". Works Her imagery is often of anonymous, passive individuals e ...
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May Hyman Lesser
May Hyman Lesser (1927 – July 24, 2001) was an American artist and medical illustrator. Life and education Her father was a doctor. Growing up, she spent time looking through her father's medical books and this is when her fascination with sketching and etching developed. She graduated from with a Bachelor of Fine Arts from H. Sophie Newcomb College at Tulane University with honors in drawing. She then went on to receive her Master of Fine Arts from the University of Alabama. She did further post graduate work at Columbia University and Johns Hopkins University, where she studied anthropology and child psychiatry, respectively. She also studied printmaking at University of California, Irvine. In 1967, Lesser asked if she could observe and draw an anatomy class at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). She was intrigued by the shadow and lighting on the cadavers and how the medical students interacted with them. At the end of the anatomy lab after she asked i ...
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Honorée Fanonne Jeffers
Honorée Fanonne Jeffers (born 1967) is an American poet and novelist, and a professor of English at the University of Oklahoma. She has published five collections of poetry and a novel. Her 2020 collection ''The Age of Phillis'' reexamines the life of American poet Phillis Wheatley, based on years of archival research; it was long-listed for the 2020 National Book Award for Poetry, and she was the recipient in 2021 of a United States Artists fellowship. She published her debut novel, '' The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois'', in 2021. Biography Jeffers was born in Kokomo, Indiana, and raised Catholic in Durham, North Carolina, and Atlanta, Georgia. Her mother's family is from Eatonton, Georgia; her father's family, she recounted, was "black bourgeois and fair skinned" (her father, Lance Jeffers, was also a poet), and they were not happy when he married a working-class, darker-skinned woman. Jeffers wrote about her family background in ''Red Clay Suite'' (2007), and said in an interv ...
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Jim Hilgartner
Jim Hilgartner is an American author of poetry and fiction. He writes primarily short fiction, often composing longer stories from assembled shorter vignettes. He received his MFA from the University of Alabama. He taught at Alabama and at Alabama Southern Community College, and since 2006 has been teaching English at Huntingdon College in Montgomery, Alabama Montgomery is the capital city of the U.S. state of Alabama and the county seat of Montgomery County. Named for the Irish soldier Richard Montgomery, it stands beside the Alabama River, on the coastal Plain of the Gulf of Mexico. In the 202 .... Hilgartner has twice received the Fellowship in Literature from the Alabama State Council on the Arts: in 2001 and again in 2011. References {{DEFAULTSORT:Hilgartner, Jim Living people University of Alabama alumni University of Alabama faculty Writers from Alabama Year of birth missing (living people) Place of birth missing (living people) ...
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The Jacob Rader Marcus Center Of The American Jewish Archives
The Jacob Rader Marcus Center of the American Jewish Archives, founded in 1947, is committed to preserving a documentary heritage of the religious, organizational, economic, cultural, personal, social and family life of American Jewry. It has become the largest free-standing research center dedicated solely to the study of the American Jewish experience. History The American Jewish Archives (AJA) was founded by Dr. Jacob Rader Marcus (1896-1995), former graduate and professor at the Hebrew Union College, in the aftermath of World War II and The Holocaust. For over a half century, the American Jewish Archives has been preserving American Jewish history and imparting it to the next generation. Dr. Marcus directed the American Jewish Archives for forty-eight years until his death at which time the AJA’s name became The Jacob Rader Marcus Center of the American Jewish Archives. Dr. Gary P. Zola, one of Marcus’s students, became the second Executive Director on 1 July 1998. Co ...
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Doctor Of Divinity
A Doctor of Divinity (D.D. or DDiv; la, Doctor Divinitatis) is the holder of an advanced academic degree in divinity. In the United Kingdom, it is considered an advanced doctoral degree. At the University of Oxford, doctors of divinity are ranked first in "academic precedence and standing", while at the University of Cambridge they rank ahead of all other doctors in the "order of seniority of graduates". In some countries, such as in the United States, the degree of doctor of divinity is usually an honorary degree and not a research or academic degree. Doctor of Divinity by country or church British Isles In the United Kingdom and Ireland, the degree is a higher doctorate conferred by universities upon a religious scholar of standing and distinction, usually for accomplishments beyond the Ph.D. level. Bishops of the Church of England have traditionally held Oxford, Cambridge, Dublin, or Lambeth degrees making them doctors of divinity. At the University of Oxford, doc ...
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Sigmund Hecht
Sigmund Hecht (1849–1925) was a Hungarian-born American Reform rabbi. An immigrant to the United States, he served congregations in Alabama and Wisconsin before serving as the fifth rabbi of Congregation B'nai B'rith, the oldest synagogue in Los Angeles, California, from 1899 to 1919. Early life Sigmund Hecht was born on August 1, 1849, in Hlinik, Hungary.Rabbi Sigmund Hecht:1849-1925
, Jewish Museum Milwaukee
A Finding Aid to the Sigmund S. Hec ...
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