117 research outputs found
A Conversation with Cecelia Condit
In this audiovisual recording from Wednesday, March 24, 2010, as part of the 41st Annual UND Writers Conference: Mind the Gap: Print, New Media, Art, Cecelia Condit has a conversation with Laurel Reuter. There is also a screening of the film Annie Lloyd.
Conversation moderated by Laurel Reuter, Founding Director of the North Dakota Museum of Art.
A transcription of this recording is available here
Panel: Are Books Obsolete?
In this audiovisual recording from Tuesday, March 23, 2010, as part of the 41st Annual UND Writers Conference: Mind the Gap: Print, New Media, Art, Art Spiegelman, Cecelia Condit, and Deena Larsen participate in a panel called Are Books Obsolete? The panelists discuss how New Media has affected modern culture, how New Media affects Old Media (specifically comics), learning how to read New Media, and the possibilites of translating Old Media into New Media.
Moderated by Dr. Victor Lieberman, Department of History
Panel: Beyond the Screen
In this audiovisual recording from Thursday, March 25, 2010, as part of the 41st Annual UND Writers Conference: Mind the Gap: Print, New Media, Art, Nick Montfort, Cecelia Condit, Stuart Moulthrop, Mark Amerika, and Scott Miller participate in a panel called Beyond the Screen. The panelists discuss new media in art, music, literature, and culture.
Moderated by Joel Jonientz, Department of Art & Design.
A transcription of this recording is available here
Cecelia Hagen, 41st Annual ODU Literary Festival
Cecelia Hagen grew up in Norfolk, Virginia, and now lives in Eugene, Oregon. She is the author of Entering from Airlie Press and the chapbooks Fringe Living and Among Others. Her poems have appeared in many journals, including Christian Science Monitor, Poet & Critic, Rolling Stone, Seattle Review, Passager, Zócalo Public Square, and Natural Bridge. She has received awards and fellowships from Passager magazine, the MacDowell Colony, Soapstone, Literary Arts, and Playa. Most recently, 26 of her short poems were engraved in steel and affixed to the electrical cabinets at each stop of her hometown’s newest rapid-transit line
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Minnie and Cecelia Lapin. Date unknown – probably mid 1930s’ in her 60s’. Minnie shared small apartments with her daughter Cecelia until her death in 1950. Cecelia never married
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James Lapin was the first born son of George and Minnie Lapin. He was the older brother of Cecelia and George H. Lapin and the father of Jack and Irma Lapin. James Lapin was born in 1900 near Riga Latvia. It is believed that he emigrated to the area west of Edmonton, Alberta Canada with his mother Minnie and sister Cecelia in approximately 1910 at the age of 10. His sister Cecelia was 7 at that time. James Lapin was the first born son of George and Minnie Lapin. He was the older brother of Cecelia and George H. Lapin and the father of Jack and Irma Lapin. James Lapin was born in 1900 near Riga Latvia. It is believed that he emigrated to the area west of Edmonton, Alberta Canada with his mother Minnie and sister Cecelia in approximately 1910 at the age of 10. His sister Cecelia was 7 at that time (Circa 1920
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Cecelia Lapin (seated), Emma Mutzeneek (white dress) and Elsie Mutzeneek. Photo kept by Cecelia Lapin. Circa early 1920
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Minnie with Cecelia and her son George. Date unknown - probably in late 1940s’ in her 70s’
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Grandpa George Lapin. These photos had been in a box of Cecelia Lapin’s mementos. They were not identified. Circa 191
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