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The Eagle Forum Education and Legal Defense Fund was organized in 1981 as a non-profit wing of Eagle Forum. [11] It is a tax deductible charity under Internal Revenue Service (IRS) code. In 1994, the Eagle Forum’s political action committee raised $250,000 for Senate and House of Representatives candidates.
His awards include a regional Emmy for Achievement in Screenwriting with Brent Davis for a documentary on Alabama writer William Bradford Huie.Noble was the recipient of the 2000 Eugene Current-Garcia Award, [6] the 2013 Wayne Greenhaw Service Award from the Alabama Humanities Alliance, [7] and the 2017 Governor’s Arts Award given by the Alabama State Council on the Arts.
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Not In Our Town is a project that uses documentary film, new media, and organizing to stop hate, address bullying, and build safe, inclusive communities. Not In Our Town is the primary program of The Working Group, an Oakland, California-based nonprofit media production company founded in 1988.
She moves to live with her father’s family in Alabama. There, she finds a town filled with the supernatural and family secrets. [32] [33] Set in the fictional town of Darling, Alabama, Susan Wittig Albert’s 2010 novel, The Darling Dahlias and the Cucumber Tree, tells the story of a group of women in their Depression-era town filled with ...
Right Side Broadcasting Network (RSBN), also known as Right Side Broadcasting, is an American conservative media company founded by Joe Seales in 2015. They are best known for their live stream coverage of Donald Trump's rallies, town halls, and public events on their YouTube and Rumble channels.
Zora Neale Hurston (January 7, 1891 [1]: 17 [2]: 5 – January 28, 1960) was an American writer, anthropologist, folklorist, and documentary filmmaker.She portrayed racial struggles in the early-20th-century American South and published research on Hoodoo and Caribbean Vodou. [3]
Coyote (2002) is a science fiction novel by American writer Allen Steele, [1] [2] the first in a series of eight books. It is a fixup of several of Steele's previously-published short stories, beginning with Stealing Alabama in the January 2001 issue of Asimov's Science Fiction.