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Nan (other)
Nan or NAN may refer to: Places China * Nan County, Yiyang, Hunan, China * Nan Commandery, historical commandery in Hubei, China Thailand * Nan province ** Nan, Thailand, the administrative capital of Nan province * Nan River People Given name * Nan A. Talese (born 1933), American retired editor *Nan Achnas (born 1963), Indonesian film director * Nan Agle (1905-2006), American children's book writer * Nan Allely, Irish former lawn- and indoor bowler *Nan Aron (born 1948), American lawyer *Nan Aspinwall (1880–1964), American oriental dancer, horsewoman, sharpshooter, and roper * Nan Aye Khine (born 1976), Burmese weightlifter *Nan B. Frank (1886–1980), American social worker and women's suffrage leader *Nan Baird (1911–1993), Scottish amateur golfer *Nan Baker (born 1954), American Republican politician *Nan Bangs McKinnell (1913–2012), American ceramicist and educator * Nan Bentzen Skille (born 1945), Norwegian biographer and columnist *Nan Bernstein Ratner, American pro ...
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Nan County
Nan County, or Nanxian () is a counties of China, county in the Provinces of China, Province of Hunan, China, it is under the administration of the prefecture-level city of Yiyang. Located in the northern margin of the province, the county is bordered to the north by Shishou, Shishou City of Hubei, to the northeast by Huarong County, to the east by Yueyang County, to the south by Yuanjiang County, to the southwest by Hanshou County and Dingcheng District of Changde, Changde City, to the northwest by Anxiang County. Nan County covers , as of 2015, it had a registered population of 683,500 and a permanent resident population of 632,800. onanxian.gov/ref> The county has 14 towns of China, towns and 1 townships of China, township under its jurisdiction, the county seat is Nanzhou, Nan County, Nanzhou (). Administrative divisions Through the amalgamation of township-level divisions in Nan County on November 26, 2015, Nan County had 13 towns and 2 townships under its jurisdiction.the di ...
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Nan Bernstein Ratner
Nan Bernstein Ratner is a professor in the Department of Hearing and Speech Sciences at the University of Maryland, College Park. Ratner is a board-recognized specialist in child language disorders. Her primary areas of research are fluency development and disorder, psycholinguistics, and child language development. She has published numerous research articles, chapters, and edited texts, as well as co-authored textbooks in her areas of research. Education Ratner received her Ed.D. in Applied Psycholinguistics from Boston University in 1982, her M.A. in Speech-Language Pathology/Audiology from Temple University in 1976, and her B.A. in Child Study/Linguistics from Tufts University in 1974.Ratner, N. (2019). Curriculum Vitae. Retrieved from https://hesp.umd.edu/sites/hesp.umd.edu/files/cv/apt_Ratner_cv_Aug%202019.docx Career In 1993, Ratner was appointed Professor at the University of Maryland and served as Chairman of the Department of Hearing and Speech Sciences (1993-2014). ...
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Nan Dunbar
Nan Dunbar (18 July 1928 – 3 April 2005) was Fellow and Tutor in Classics at Somerville College, Oxford. She is known for her 1995 edition of Aristophanes' '' The Birds''. Early life and education Dunbar was born in Glasgow in 1928, where she attended Hutcheson's Girls School. She was the first in her family to attend university, graduating from the University of Glasgow with a first class honours degree and numerous awards including 'Most Distinguished Arts Graduate' in 1950. She then went on to study at Girton College, Cambridge, where she completed a second degree, achieving a first in both part of the Classical tripos. Career Dunbar was appointed to a lectureship at the University of Edinburgh in 1952. Subsequently, she returned to Girton College, Cambridge, where she was a fellow and lecturer in Classics from 1952 to 1957. In 1957 she moved to the University of St Andrews, and in 1965 became a fellow of Somerville College, Oxford. At Somerville, she was heavily invo ...
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Nan Doak-Davis
Nanette ("Nan") Doak-Davis (born March 7, 1962) is a former American long-distance runner who is a United States national champion in the marathon. Doak-Davis attended University of Iowa where she was a six-time All-American in track and field Track and field is a sport that includes athletic contests based on running, jumping, and throwing skills. The name is derived from where the sport takes place, a running track and a grass field for the throwing and some of the jumping eve ... and cross country. She won the 1989 California International Marathon in a time of 2:33:11. Doak-Davis married Olympian Barry Davis in 1986.http://www.desmoinesregister.com/article/20070731/SPORTS0205/707310408/Nan-Doak-Davis-and-Barry-Davis--Univ.-of-Iowa--2005 Achievements References External linksProfile at www.hawkeyesports.com
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Nan Dirk De Graaf
Nan Dirk de Graaf (born 1958) is a Dutch sociologist working in Nuffield College, University of Oxford. He is known for his work on social stratification, religion (with a focus on secularisation), political sociology, the impact of social mobility on a variety of social issues (e.g., health, cultural consumption, and political preferences), pro-social behaviour, as well as his books. Biography Nan Dirk de Graaf joined Nuffield College in 2007 and is an Official Fellow and a Professor in Sociology. He obtained his PhD at Utrecht University (1988) and was a post-doc researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Education and Human Development in Berlin (1988-1989). De Graaf was a research fellow of the Royal Netherlands Academy (1990-1995) and a full Professor in Sociology at Nijmegen University (2001-2007). Between 2003 and 2007 he was the chair of the Inter-university Centre for Social Science Theory and Methodology (ICS). Research ''Social Stratification'' De Graaf’s work ...
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Nan Dieter-Conklin
Nan Dieter-Conklin (1926 – November 16, 2014), also known as Nannielou Reier Hepburn Dieter Conklin, was an American radio astronomer. Early life Nannielou Reier was born in Springfield, Illinois, the daughter of Paul G. Reier. She attended Goucher College to study mathematics, but an astronomy course taught by Helen Dodson sparked her interest in that subject. Dieter spent summer internships at the Maria Mitchell Observatory, working under Margaret Harwood. She completed doctoral studies at Radcliffe College in 1958, using her own radio astronomy data in her dissertation on Galaxy M33. Her research involved the radio telescope at Harvard, and she took a Harvard course on variable stars from Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin.Ellen Bouton, Claire Hooker, and Miller Goss"Nannielou Reier Hepburn Dieter Conklin"National Radio Astronomy Observatory. Astronomers Frank Drake and May Kaftan-Kassim were in Dieter's astronomy cohort at Harvard. Career After college Nan Dieter worked f ...
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Nan Cuz
Nan Cuz (born Irmgard Cuz Heinemann; 6 January 1927 – 11 November 2019) was a German–Demographics of Guatemala, Guatemalan painter. Life Nan Cuz was born in 1927 in Secoyocte, in the ''municipio'' of Senahú in Alta Verapaz, Guatemala. Her mother was Kekchi, Q’eqchi' Maya peoples, Maya, her father German. While she was growing up with her mother and grandmother in the traditional Mayan way, her father returned to Germany and married there. When Cuz was seven years old, her German stepmother traveled to Guatemala to take her back to Germany to provide her with an education. Although the original agreement was that she would be returned to her mother when she completed her schooling, World War II and its aftermath prevented this. Her father was an accomplished photographer and taught her the craft, but she soon moved on to painting portraits. Cuz died at the age of 92 on 11 November 2019 in Panajachel, Guatemala. Artistic work The indelible impressions of her childhood â ...
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Nan Cross
Nan Cross (3 January 1928 – 14 July 2007) was a South African anti-apartheid and anti-conscription activist. Early life Cross was born in Pretoria, South Africa before the Apartheid era, when racial segregation was less formalised. Her father worked as a lawyer for the Pretoria City Council. Cross was a lifelong member of the Baptist Church, though the church had no history of social activism. She graduated from Pretoria Girls' High School. She graduated from Rhodes University with a degree in social science. Cross was a social worker by profession. Social activism Cross worked held a number of positions at various projects during her career as a social worker. She actively worked African Children's Feeding Scheme. On 16 June 1976, Cross was working in Soweto for the Johannesburg City Council, which ran the Orlando sheltered employment workshop. She became trapped by the start of the Soweto uprising against the Apartheid-era South African government. She described her ...
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Nan Cohen
Nan Cohen (born 1968) is an American poet and teacher. She has published two poetry collections, ''Rope Bridge'' and ''Unfinished City''. Life She was raised in Reisterstown, Maryland, and graduated from Yale University and the University of California, Los Angeles.
Web page titled "Nan Cohen", accessed November 19, 2006
Her poetry collections are ''Rope Bridge'' (Cherry Grove, 2005) and ''Unfinished City'' (Gunpowder Press, 2007). Cohen's poems have appeared in '' Tikkun (magazine), Tikkun'', '' Poetry International'', ''

Nan Chauncy
Nan Chauncy (28 May 1900 – 1 May 1970) was a British-born Australian children's writer. Early life Chauncy was born Nancen Beryl Masterman in Northwood, Middlesex (now in London), and emigrated to Tasmania, Australia, with her family in 1912, when her engineer father was offered a job with the Hobart City Council. She attended St Michael's Collegiate School in Hobart. In 1914, the family moved to the rural community of Bagdad, where they grew apple trees. The bush setting of Bagdad, including a bushranger's cave, would inspire some of her future writing, and also a lifelong involvement with the Australian Girl Guides movement. Initially organising Guide meetings and camps at her brother's Bagdad property, Chauncy started her own Guide troop in Claremont where she worked as a women's welfare officer at the Cadbury's Chocolate Factory from 1925.Berenice Eastman'Chauncy, Nancen Beryl (Nan) (1900–1970)' '' Australian Dictionary of Biography'', Volume 13, Melbourne Univers ...
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Nan Campbell
Nancy "Nan" Campbell (née Phelps; July 7, 1926 − November 19, 2013) was an American American(s) may refer to: * American, something of, from, or related to the United States of America, commonly known as the "United States" or "America" ** Americans, citizens and nationals of the United States of America ** American ancestry, pe ... politician. She was the first woman to be elected mayor in the city of Bellevue, Washington. Nan Campbell was born in Tacoma, Washington, on July 7, 1926, to Eva Janet (Cook) and Edgar Manley Phelps. Campbell grew up in Seattle where she graduated from Roosevelt High School in 1945 and the University of Washington in 1949. While in college, she was an active member of the Alpha Chi Omega sorority. From 1982 to 1989, Campbell served two terms on the Bellevue City Council, supporting actions that benefited both the business community and residential neighborhoods. In 1988, her fellow council members elected her to become the city's first femal ...
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Nan Brooks
Nan Brooks is a children's book illustrator who has illustrated numerous books from the 1970s onwards. Nancy Florence Earl-Brooks: Born: January 15, 1935 Died: February 25, 2018; Brooks grew up in Cape May, New Jersey, and studied advertising design in Philadelphia. After graduation, she soon moved on to freelance illustration. Her colorful style is partly influenced by her interest in the Eastern religions. Her most successful work is her contribution to the Little Golden Books, The Princess and the Pea "The Princess and the Pea" ( da, "Prinsessen paa Ærten"; direct translation: "The Princess on the Pea") is a literary fairy tale by Hans Christian Andersen about a young woman whose royal ancestry is established by a test of her sensitivity. .... Two of her recently successful works are As I Kneel by Bonnie Knopf, and Making Minestrone by Stella Blackstone. References Living people American women illustrators American illustrators People from Cape May, Ne ...
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