Refine
Date Range Clear
Recorded by Clear
Keywords Clear
- Family 36
- personal experiences 20
- memories of growing up 19
- immigration 11
- Atlanta Business League 8
- 1,302 more
Partnerships Clear
- City of Decatur, Georgia 5
- American Pilgrimage Project 4
- 2023 Mobile Tour 2
- Dartmouth College, Dialogue Project 2
- Chautauqua Institution 1
- El Paso, TX 1
- KHOL 1
- KUNR 1
- Marfa, TX 1
- Minot Sleeper Library 1
- Voices of Freedom 1
- Providence 1
- Providence Institute for Human Caring 1
- UT Austin: McCombs School of Business 1
- WVPE 1
Organizations Clear
- No matching terms.
Places Clear
Languages Clear
Initiatives Clear
Colleagues Dr. Kiesha Fraser Doh (48) and Dr. Terri McFadden (64) discuss their friendship and work together in pediatrics, public safety, and advocacy.
Friends and coworkers Moury Khan (29) and Stefan Weiner (33) learn more about each other by discussing their values, cultural backgrounds, and families.
Stephanie Dawson (43) and her husband, Mike Dawson (51), about their children and their experiences in Chautauqua.
Kiplyn Primus (62) talks with her friend Myrna Clayton [no age given] about their experiences growing up.
Kiplyn Primus (62) talks with her friend Wonya Lucas (62) about their shared experiences growing up together.
Elizabeth Loredo (42) interviews her friend Navneet Chaudhary (47) about growing up in India, moving to the United States, and eventually running her own business.
One Small Step conversation partners Juliette Landphair (56) and Sipi Gupta (43) discuss watching family members struggle, resilience, and the value of higher education.
Spouses Dharani Sridharan (34) and Sid Srivatsan (39) talk about their arranged marriage, reminisce on their first memories together, and share their secrets to a successful marriage.
Laura Peterson (52) of Delta Gamma Fraternity talks with alumnae Martha "Rigby" Duncan (83) about how she got started as an Alpha Xi Delta.
One Small Step conversation partners Denise Ellis (70) and Carol Burch (82) discuss Buddhism and yoga, growing older, and what about their own political "side" makes them uncomfortable.