1,359,680 research outputs found
Howard Flaherty
"Howard Flaherty SX25132 27th Battalion Scottish Regiment Darwin 1941-43".Date:199
Lynn Ahrens and Stephen Flaherty - NY - Interviewers: Jackson R. Bryer and Richard A. Davison (two cassettes), December 8, 2003
Lynn Ahrens and Stephen Flaherty interviewed by University of Maryland professor Jackson R. Bryer and Richard A. Davison on December 8, 2003
The national service framework for children: the views of chief children's nurses
A nominal group technique was used to elicit the views of the most senior children's nurses in the UK on service, workforce and education issues for the NSF. Julie Flaherty and Alan Glasper report
Agnes E. Flaherty, interviewed by Melissa Piselli, Part 2
Agnes E. Flaherty, interviewed by Melissa Piselli, February 22 and April 26, 2005, South Portland, Maine. Flaherty, born in Portland, Maine, talks about her parents, Anna and Mark Flaherty; her family’s involvement in nursing; enlisting in the military during WWII as a nurse in the Army Air Core; working out of Grenier Field in Manchester, New Hampshire; her experiences and favorite memories as a flight nurse; early medications; experiences with the Women’s Army Core (WAC); patriotism during WWII; serving in the Pacific as a flight nurse; working out of Hickam Air Field in Oahu, Hawaii; relationship between nurses and doctors then and now; G.I.’s teasing the nurses; transporting psychiatric patients; landings at Tarawa and Canto; experiences with patients suffering from head trauma; Elaine McCarty, a nurse during the Vietnam War; working at Maine Medical Center and Mercy Hospital; serving as president of the Maine State Nurses Assoc.; how nursing has changed since. Also included: WWII Flight Nurses Association Pamphlet; reservation request form for World War II Flight Nurses Association; mailed article “No Time for Fear”; pamphlet. Text: 33 pp. transcript, 3 pp. index, summary for interview #2, 38 pp. supplemental content. Time: 01:04:38
Listen:
Part 1: mfc_na3327_cd0949_01 Part 2: mfc_na3327_cd0949_02https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mf144/1078/thumbnail.jp
Agnes E. Flaherty, interviewed by Melissa Piselli, Part 1
Agnes E. Flaherty, interviewed by Melissa Piselli, February 22 and April 26, 2005, South Portland, Maine. Flaherty, born in Portland, Maine, talks about her parents, Anna and Mark Flaherty; her family’s involvement in nursing; enlisting in the military during WWII as a nurse in the Army Air Core; working out of Grenier Field in Manchester, New Hampshire; her experiences and favorite memories as a flight nurse; early medications; experiences with the Women’s Army Core (WAC); patriotism during WWII; serving in the Pacific as a flight nurse; working out of Hickam Air Field in Oahu, Hawaii; relationship between nurses and doctors then and now; G.I.’s teasing the nurses; transporting psychiatric patients; landings at Tarawa and Canto; experiences with patients suffering from head trauma; Elaine McCarty, a nurse during the Vietnam War; working at Maine Medical Center and Mercy Hospital; serving as president of the Maine State Nurses Assoc.; how nursing has changed since. Also included: WWII Flight Nurses Association Pamphlet; reservation request form for World War II Flight Nurses Association; mailed article “No Time for Fear”; pamphlet. Text: 33 pp. transcript, 3 pp. index, summary for interview #2, 38 pp. supplemental content. Time: 01:04:38
Listen:
Part 1: mfc_na3327_cd0949_01Part 2: mfc_na3327_cd0949_02https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mf144/1077/thumbnail.jp
Flaherty Film Seminar 2024: To Commune
To Commune
How does cinema enable us to commune? We’re interested in the potential of groups gathering around a screen over a period of time. We approach documentary filmmaking as that which brings together bodies, minds and spirits across different spaces, worlds and temporalities.
Beyond self-organizing and community-building, to commune is to communicate with mystical, animistic, and ritualistic capacities. Beyond affirming commonality, to commune is to connect with others and to be in touch with the unknowable. We turn to the fundamental value of cinema as an encounter with beings and worlds very different from our own.
Our programme seeks to explore how contemporary filmmakers and moving image artists are expanding the imaginative possibilities of communing through documentary forms. We want to highlight how filmmakers and artists, especially those connected to the Global South, are inheriting surprising legacies of historical efforts to commune. We’re intrigued by artistic explorations of communal capacities in spaces and situations such as the classroom, the ritual, the carnival, the film set, the potent site, the gathering and the protest.
Within the immediate context of the Flaherty Seminar, we’re interested in exploring the latent communal capacities of its format, apparatus, and institutional infrastructure. Our curatorial approach seeks to explore the tensions and the sparks of efforts to commune. Not to gather to recognise an identity or a common concern, but to make relations on grounds of radical differentiation.
Curatorial proposition for the 69th Flaherty Semina
Osgoode Building Opening: The Honourable Jim Flaherty, Minister of Finance
Jim Flaherty (Osgoode 1973), Canada\u27s Minister of Finance and Minister Responsible for the Greater Toronto Area, reminisced about his days as a student at Osgoode Hall Law School at the official opening April 18, 2012 of the Law School\u27s new building. The project received a 32 million was contributed by York University, partners, donors and friends of the university and Osgoode
Frank Flaherty
BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION: Frank Flaherty is a white man born on February 28th, 1956. He lived with his parents, three brothers and five sisters in the St. Mark\u27s area, Saint Paul. Flaherty’s dad was a litho plate maker. His mom didn’t have to work. Flaherty is Irish Catholic. SUBJECTS DISCUSSED: Flaherty talks about what it was like to grow up in a large Irish Catholic family, discussing church and school, family vacations, chores, and mealtimes. Flaherty talks about his father\u27s job and how he was able to provide for a family of nine. He describes the liberal values held by his parents and the welcoming and inclusive attitude they had towards others. Flaherty talks about his neighborhood and recalls some memorable figures from his neighborhood growing up. Flaherty goes on to talk about the values shared in his neighborhood including treating everyone right, not looking down on anybody, and taking responsibility for your actions. Flaherty brings up leisure time with family, particularly sports. He mentions playing baseball, step ball, wiffle ball, football, and basketball, as well as participating in neighborhood games of chase. Flaherty talks about discipline from Catholic school and military school and some figures that left an impact on him. Lastly, Flaherty goes into the global issues of the times: Vietnam War, Kent State, riots, political assassinations, and the hippie generation.https://digitalcommons.csp.edu/tc-ohp_interviews_stp/1022/thumbnail.jp
Dr. George Flaherty, retiring veterinarian
A portrait of Dr. George Flaherty, retiring veterinarian. Mr. Flaherty is seated in a chair.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1950s/21728/thumbnail.jp
Robert Flaherty
Robert Flaherty in basketball uniform posing with a basketball.https://scholarworks.uni.edu/uniphotos/1510/thumbnail.jp
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