UserWiki:Kirk: Difference between revisions
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I am using this as a sample to show others how their "UserWiki" pages can be edited it is like your Home page on Facebook. And can appear in other user's feeds if they request it. | I am using this as a sample to show others how their "UserWiki" pages can be edited it is like your Home page on Facebook. And can appear in other user's feeds if they request it. | ||
"At the age of 11 (a few sources say 12), Elizabeth “Libba” Cotten wrote a song called ”Freight Train,” which would go on to become a folk classic. Yet she didn’t reap the benefits of her lifelong talent until she was 66 years old and a great-grandmother. | |||
Rhiannon Giddens was born Feb. 21, 1977, in Greensboro, North Carolina. A recipient of the prestigious MacArthur Fellowship in 2017, she tells her own story in this short video, including her desire to reclaim the banjo as a key instrument in African American music history." | |||
[https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2020/5/17/1944048/-From-Libba-Cotten-to-Rhiannon-Giddens-the-North-Carolina-Black-folk-tradition-persists Article About Libba Cotten and Rhiannon Giddens] |
Revision as of 15:03, 23 May 2020
I am using this as a sample to show others how their "UserWiki" pages can be edited it is like your Home page on Facebook. And can appear in other user's feeds if they request it.
"At the age of 11 (a few sources say 12), Elizabeth “Libba” Cotten wrote a song called ”Freight Train,” which would go on to become a folk classic. Yet she didn’t reap the benefits of her lifelong talent until she was 66 years old and a great-grandmother. Rhiannon Giddens was born Feb. 21, 1977, in Greensboro, North Carolina. A recipient of the prestigious MacArthur Fellowship in 2017, she tells her own story in this short video, including her desire to reclaim the banjo as a key instrument in African American music history."