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57:58
Mary Emeny and Steve Long

One Small Step partners Mary Emeny (78) and Steve Long (69) talk about travel (Mary's experiences), prolife/prochoice issues, religious/spiritual beliefs, immigration and how people in the middle of the country are viewed by politicians and East and West Coast population.

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51:36
Paul Jackson and Danny Lawson

One Small Step conversation partners Danny Ellis Lawson (63) and Paul Jackson (60) talk about homelessness, mental health, service projects, and being sold a message of 'sidedness' in our country.

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35:29
Marta Matthews and David Waddle

Friends Marta Matthews (66) and David Waddle (67) talk about dance and life in Amarillo, Texas. Marta shares about her family history and remembers her father, a man David describes as a dancing rebel Methodist minister, who desegregated his church...

mby020216
38:37
Lou Seabourn and Cathy Shofner

Friends Cathy "Ann" Shofner [no age given] and Lou Ann Seabourn (64) remember the first time they met, talk about the summer they spent working at the theater, and share about their educational background and careers.

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50:21
Sandy Fowler-Jones and Barbara Hershafft

Childhood friends and One Small Step conversation partners Sandy Fowler-Jones (67) and Barbara "Bobbie Jean" McLenny Herrschaft (67) talk about the importance of their friendship in 1960s North Carolina.

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58:07
Jenny Tan and Cherese Brauer

KIPP educators and colleagues Jenny Tan (43) and Cherese Brauer (42) discuss equitability in their model of education, share personal stories from when they were students, and aspirations for the organization.

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55:03
Emily Forest and Nate Davis
September 26, 2022 One Small Step

One Small Step conversation partners Emily Forest (49) and Nate Davis (38) talk about different walks of life, juvenile detention, the influence of faith, and wealth disparities.

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48:10
Tabitha Jacques, Susan Murad, and Kira Avery

Tabitha Jacques (37) talks to her friend and colleague, Susan Murad (61), about deaf art and culture, the De'VIA movement, and how the hearing community can be better advocates and allies to the deaf community.