4,131 research outputs found

    Letter from Ryo Munekata to Bishop James Chamberlain Baker, November 12, 1942

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    Handwritten correspondence from Ryo Munekata to Bishop James Chamberlain Baker. Munekata expresses his gratitude to Bishop James Chamberlain Baker for Baker's assistance in relocating him to a different college and asks for Baker's help in getting an honorable dismissal so his college application can be cleared.The Bishop James Chamberlain Baker Collection includes letters, documents, and articles about Japanese Americans during World War II. Subjects in the collection include Japanese Americans mass removal, Pearl Harbor and the aftermath, religion, and support from the non-Japanese American community. The collection was digitized and made accessible online by CSUDH Gerth Archives and Special Collections

    Letter from Lorne W. Bell to Bishop James Chamberlain Baker, May 31, 1943

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    Typed correspondence from Lorne W. Bell, Chief Community Services Division, to Bishop James Chamberlain Baker discussing the reasoning for Rev. Mr. Goto leave from the Center.The Bishop James Chamberlain Baker Collection includes letters, documents, and articles about Japanese Americans during World War II. Subjects in the collection include Japanese Americans mass removal, Pearl Harbor and the aftermath, religion, and support from the non-Japanese American community. The collection was digitized and made accessible online by CSUDH Gerth Archives and Special Collections

    Letter from Lester E. Suzuki to Bishop James Chamberlain Baker, December 28, 1941

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    Typed correspondence from Lester E. Suzuki to Bishop James Chamberlain Baker from the Japanese Methodist Church English Speaking Division in Los Angeles, California. Lester expresses his gratitude to Bishop James Chamberlain Baker for his recent letter and interest in interviewing Japanese Americans about their current situation. He goes on to discuss the actions already taken by the Japanese Church Federation, Nisei Church Federation, and Japanese American Citizens League after Pearl Harbor.The Bishop James Chamberlain Baker Collection includes letters, documents, and articles about Japanese Americans during World War II. Subjects in the collection include Japanese Americans mass removal, Pearl Harbor and the aftermath, religion, and support from the non-Japanese American community. The collection was digitized and made accessible online by CSUDH Gerth Archives and Special Collections

    Letter from Lester E. Suzuki to Bishop James Chamberlain Baker, June 23, 1942

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    Typed correspondence from Lester E. Suzuki to Bishop James Chamberlain Baker describing the living conditions at the San Anita Assembly Center. Suzuki includes details about religious and recreational activities, meals, laundry, housing, work, and schooling.The Bishop James Chamberlain Baker Collection includes letters, documents, and articles about Japanese Americans during World War II. Subjects in the collection include Japanese Americans mass removal, Pearl Harbor and the aftermath, religion, and support from the non-Japanese American community. The collection was digitized and made accessible online by CSUDH Gerth Archives and Special Collections

    Ribbon Cutting at James A. Baker, III Hall opening ceremonies

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    Group of men witnessing the ribbon cutting at the opening ceremony of James A. Baker, III Hall. Original resource is a color photograph.James A. Baker, III Hall is home to the Baker Institute for Public Policy

    The Total Light Process: New & Selected Poems

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    Nationally acclaimed poet, photographer, filmmaker, and novelist James Baker Hall has long been regarded as one of Kentucky’s most profound artists. Hall’s growing body of work is an essential part of Kentucky’s literary tradition, and yet his poetry in particular transcends the borders of the Commonwealth. The Total Light Process collects poems spanning Hall’s celebrated career as well as new poems that have never before been published. The subjects of Hall’s poems range from humorous and revealing portraits of his fellow writers and friends Wendell Berry, Ed McClanahan, and Gurney Norman, to the traumatic experience of his mother’s suicide when he was eight years old, to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the tragic murder of Matthew Shepherd. James Baker Hall, the former Kentucky Poet Laureate and a native of Kentucky, has taught creative writing at the University of Kentucky since 1973. He is the recipient of numerous awards, including a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship in poetry and a Wallace Stegner Fellowship in creative writing at Stanford. Hall is the author of five volumes of poetry, two novels, and four collections of photography. His works include Praeder’s Letters; Yates Paul, His Grand Flights, His Tootings; and Tobacco Harvest. “Demonstrates clearly why James Baker Hall deserves to be considered one of the region\u27s finest poets. —Appalachian Heritage “The spirits of James Wright and William Stafford live in the work of James Baker Hall. —Bloomsbury Review The Total Light Process finds Hall marrying new work with older poems that mesh to produce a broad canvas filled with varying perspectives that demonstrate how his work has evolved over years of travel, writing and remembering. —Lexington Herald-Leader “Hall is a serious poet and a comic poet in almost the same breath. . . . Through six books, across 40 years, this collection charts the brilliant progress of one of Kentucky\u27s signature poets. —Louisville Courier-Journalhttps://uknowledge.uky.edu/upk_creative_writing/1001/thumbnail.jp

    Groundbreaking for James A. Baker, III Hall: Malcolm Gillis, James Baker, III, Gerald Ford, George Bush, and Charles Duncan

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    From left to right: Malcolm Gillis, James Baker, III, Gerald Ford, George Bush, and Charles Duncan, together for the Groundbreaking of James A. Baker, III Hall. Original resource is a color photograph

    Georgian projections of French Revolutionary madness

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    In this article James Baker explains how James Gillray (1756-1815) engraved the classic image of revolutionary madness. Baker compares and discusses how Gillray and Cruikshank represented madness

    James A. Baker, III Hall, Rice University, exterior view from quadrangle with fountain

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    An exterior view of James A. Baker Hall, taken from the quadrangle with a view of the fountain. Original resource is a color photograph.James A. Baker, III Hall is home to the Baker Institute for Public Policy

    [Angled view of West Hall, 1930s-1]

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    Photograph of an angled view of West Hall taken in the late 1930s. West Hall was the first men's dormitory built on the campus of Texas Technological College
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