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Central Kurdish (کوردیی ناوەندی) Haitian Creole (Haitian Creole) 1 M US Little Kid 1 W US Little Kid 1.5 M US Little Kid 1.5 W US Little Kid 1.5 2W US Little Kid 2 M US Little Kid 2 W US Little Kid 2 2W US Little Kid 2.5 M US Little Kid 2.5 W US Little Kid 2.5 2W US Little Kid 3 M US Little Kid 3 W US Little Kid 3 2W US Little Kid 4 M US Toddler 4 W US Toddler 4 2W US Toddler 4.5 M US Toddler 4.5 W US Toddler 4.5 2W US Toddler 5 M US Toddler 5 W US Toddler 5 2W US Toddler 5.5 W US Toddler 5.5 2W US Toddler 5.5 M US Toddler 6 M US Toddler 6 W US Toddler 6 2W US Toddler 6.5 M US Toddler 6.5 W US Toddler 6.5 2W US Toddler 7 M US Toddler 7 W US Toddler 7 2W US Toddler 7.5 M US Toddler 7.5 2W US Toddler 7.5 W US Toddler 8 M US Toddler 8 W US Toddler 8 2W US Toddler 8.5 M US Toddler




8.5 W US Toddler 8.5 2W US Toddler 9 M US Toddler 9 W US Toddler 9 2W US Toddler 9.5 W US Toddler 9.5 2W US Toddler 9.5 M US Toddler 10 M US Toddler 10 W US Toddler 10 2W US Toddler 10.5 M US Little Kid 10.5 W US Little Kid 10.5 2W US Little Kid 11 M US Little Kid 11 W US Little Kid 11 2W US Little Kid 11.5 M US Little Kid 11.5 W US Little Kid 11.5 2W US Little Kid 12 M US Little Kid 12 W US Little Kid 12 2W US Little Kid 12.5 M US Little Kid 12.5 W US Little Kid 12.5 2W US Little Kid 13 M US Little Kid 13 W US Little Kid 13 2W US Little Kid 13.5 M US Little Kid 13.5 W US Little Kid 13.5 2W US Little Kid Stride Rite Made 2 Play Cannan Sneaker (Toddler/Little Kid) The Made2Play collection is built to withstand kids’ muddiest adventures – while still being easy on parents. That’s why every pair is 100% machine washable.




Easy On & Off Effortless hook & loop closures mean kids’ shoes go on fast so you can be out the door in seconds. Every jump, sprint, and skip will be cushioned with a soft, supportive landing thanks to the cozy memory-foam insoles on every pair. Made2Play shoes are crafted with a breathable anti-microbial lining designed to keep shoes odor free all day. Hook and loop running shoe Stride Rite designs and engineers footwear specifically to meet the needs of growing children. Stride Rite's mission is to encourage kids and support parents by developing and marketing products that help children embrace life's possibilities and adventures with confidence. Stride Rite shoes aren't like any other shoes you'll buy. With more than 85 years of experience, they've learned a few things about their craft. Stride Rite is the one company that's been helping kids run, jump, leap, grow, and playfully express themselves since 1919. 6.1 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)




Amazon Best Sellers Rank: in Clothing, Shoes & Jewelry > Girls > Shoes > Athletic > Girls' in Clothing, Shoes & Jewelry > Boys > Shoes > Athletic > Boys' in Clothing, Shoes & Jewelry > Girls > Shops Visit Amazon's Stride Rite Store Amazon's Stride Rite Store. 5 star70%4 star5%3 star15%1 star10%See all verified purchase reviewsTop Customer ReviewsVery pleased with this shoe purchase!|||Runs small/narrow, thin mesh.|||Perfect shoes for a messy kid!||| Stride Rite Made 2 Play Myra Sneaker (Toddler/Little Kid) Saucony Baby Ride Sneaker (Toddler/Little Kid) Stride Rite Leepz Light Up Sneaker (Toddler/Little Kid) Stride Rite Disney Frozen A/C Light-Up Sneaker (Toddler/Little Kid)The requested URL /products/list.php?brand=384 was not found on this server.Campus & Community  >  Staff & Administration At Herbaria, a new career blossoms Curatorial assistant left the art world for the natural world Rose Lincoln/Harvard Staff Photographer




Last July, Danielle Hanrahan made a big career leap by leaving a world of fine arts at Harvard Art Museums to taking a temporary job at the Harvard Herbaria, mounting new specimens, and was then brought on permanently. “I decided to jump off the edge of the cliff and see where I was going to land,” she said. Careful not to disturb her colleagues, Danielle Hanrahan leads a visitor through winding stacks of storage containers housing hundreds of thousands of plant specimens. As the newest curatorial assistant at the Harvard University Herbaria (HUH), she’s still a bit deferential to the staff’s old hands. But Hanrahan isn’t a recent college graduate in her first job, or even a newcomer to Harvard. Rather, as she tells two co-workers in an apology for a reporter’s unplanned interruption, hers is a tale of starting over. “I’m part of a story about old people making a comeback,” she says with a self-deprecating shrug. Going from head of exhibition design and installation at the Harvard Art Museums to a curatorial assistant at an herbarium — from handling the works of major artists to carefully preserving and cataloging humble leaves and twigs — might seem an unusual move.




But landing a job at the Herbaria allowed Hanrahan, a longtime lover of both art and science, to pursue the career path not taken. After 30 years in the art world, 22 of them at the Fogg Museum, she resolved to try something new. “I decided to jump off the edge of the cliff and see where I was going to land,” she said. In 2008, the Fogg (which shared a home with the Busch-Reisinger Museum) closed in preparation for a move to a new building, projected to open in the fall of 2014. The next year, Hanrahan was offered the option of working half-time or being laid off. “It seemed like a really good transition point in my life,” she said. “Things were ending, and I wanted to go down that other road I didn’t go down as a youngster, to pursue something in the natural world.” She left the museum in 2009 with a plan: to stay at Harvard, to find a job in natural history, and to work in a fun environment. She took classes on plant identification at the Arnold Arboretum (which houses one of the six herbaria that make up the HUH consortium) to familiarize herself with the plant world’s complex taxonomy.




“I sure wish I’d taken Latin in school,” she joked. She’d long been involved with conservation projects as a volunteer, most recently by acting as a weekend ranger and tending to bluebird boxes at Appleton Farms, one of the oldest continually operating farms in the country. (Just like Harvard, it was established in 1636.) Last July, she took a temporary job at the Herbaria, mounting new specimens, and was then brought on permanently. She is now working on a collaborative project with the University of California, Berkeley, building a database of California plants that will help scientists track the effects of climate change on different plants’ dispersal across the state. The job offers constant learning opportunities, she said. The work combines history, geography, and botany, and requires an archivist’s attention to detail. With more than 5 million specimens in the HUH collections, some of them hundreds of years old, nothing can be mishandled or misplaced.




“My colleagues are very generous with sharing their vast knowledge about the plant world,” she said. “They’re supportive and kind. I think that’s really important in a work environment.” She recognizes how rare her opportunity was. The recession, she said, exposed the difficulties of job seekers like herself: too young and energetic to truly retire, but often viewed by prospective employers as too old to start over in a new field. “I feel lucky,” she said. “I really do think that a lot of it was being in the right place at the right time. But you have to put the energy out there for anything to come back.” Hanrahan still makes time for art. She runs her own design and color consulting business, makes and sells bluebird nesting boxes, and serves on the board of Mobius, a local, artist-run nonprofit that supports experimental work. “I think it’s important to follow your passions,” she said. “They’ll lead you to where you need to be.”

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