4,615 research outputs found

    Interview with Wayne Cashin on Harbour Grace Railway Station

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    Interview with Wayne Cashin conducted by Katherine Harvey. Interview about Wayne's father, Harold Cashin, the Harbour Grace Railway Station and his career working with the railway.(00:24) Father's career with railway/growing up; (02:35) Previous agents; (03:23) station agent house; (06:03) Wayne's career/training at Harbour Grace; (09:59) layout of station; (13:35) packages coming through the station; (14:25) railway station colours; (16:18) train schedule; (18:07) benefits of working with the railway; (20:01) people that worked with the railway; (23:17) after the railway closed/career afte

    Recording of interview with Wayne Muller

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    Muller is an author, psychotherapist and minister living in Fairfax, CA. Muller met Nouwen as a student at Harvard Divinity School (Cambridge, MA) from 1982-1985; Muller took Nouwen's Introduction to the Spiritual Life course in the Spring semester of 1983.1 audio cassette (1 hr., 30 mins.)Title based on contents of the item. ; Reference copies of the audio cassettes are available (located with originals). ; Located in audio cassettes box 13. ; No reproduction of this material without permission of the Archivist. ; The interview has been transcribed and is available electronically and in hard copy. ; Digitized February 3, 2011.For more information please contact Special Collections, the University of St. Michael's College.Item consists of one audio cassette (SR2007 66 66 53) of an interview with Wayne Muller conducted by Sue Mosteller, csj on October 31, 2004 at the San Damiano Retreat Centre in Danville, CA. Themes present in Muller's interview include death, grief, Buddhism, fundamentalism and Nouwen's legacy

    <i>End-of-life decision making: A cross-national study</i>, edited by Robert H. Blank and Janna C. Merrick

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    Robert H. Blank and Janna C. Merrick, End-of-life decision making: A cross-national study, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2005, reviewed by Katherine Wayne </jats:p

    Wayne Sawchuk Photography

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    Wayne Sawchuk is an photographer, conservationist, and author. Wayne Sawchuk's cameras are constant companions on his long journeys through northeast British Columbia's Muskwa-Kechika wilderness area. His photos reflect his broad diversity of wildlife and wilderness subjects, and have been widely published in Canadian Geographic, Beautiful BC, The National Post, Explorer Magazine and BC Oudoors, among others

    In researching the history of rum and rum cocktails, author Wayne Curtis bought

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    In researching the history of rum and rum cocktails, author Wayne Curtis bought an out-of-print copy of Trader Vic\u27s Book of Food & Drink that once belonged to Maine author Kenneth Roberts (1885-1957). On a blank page, Curtis discovered Roberts\u27 well-crafted description of inventing a recipe, with scratched out and recast words

    Letter from W. [Wayne] M. Collins to Hajime Kishi, January 8, 1952

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    This letter from Wayne M. Collins, a lawyer, explains that Katsumi Kishi and Masao Kishi are native born Peruvian citizens and therefore cannot be deported to Japan. Mr. Wayne Collins goes on to explain that there should be no cause for alarm at any potential deportation.Collection of notes, articles, correspondence, photographs, and term papers collected by Yukio Mochizuki, a student at CSU Dominguez Hills, while researching Japanese American incarceration and Japanese Peruvian internment during World War II

    Art and society: a consideration of the relations between aesthetic theories and social commitment with reference to Katherine Mansfield and Oscar Wilde

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    PhDThe chief purpose of this project is to discuss Katherine Mansfield's aesthetic ideas in connection with those of Oscar Wilde and fin de siècle Aestheticism. The proposed study will also analyse her Modernist technique in Symbolist terms, and consider her major themes from aesthetic and political points of view. The primary, underlying concern of this study is to negotiate two, often opposing critical values: the aesthetic and the political. The artist's negotiation of the conflict between aesthetics (art) and politics (society) is a controversial 'modern' critical issue: the issue all serious artists and critics have been facing and consciously dealing with since the late nineteenth century. Fin de siècle Aestheticism and Symbolism form a dominant stream of Modernism because of this intensified shared concern over the delicate relationship between art, life and society. Wilde's stress on the autonomy of art is related to his notion of an ideal relationship between art, life and society: he shows a keen awareness that the autonomy of art and the aesthetic self-realization of the artist could be realized only in a society without any social, cultural or moral hegemony, that is, in a society without moral, social or political oppression. The Wildean 'poeticization' of society lies in his politicization of art; and this aesthetic influences Mansfield's. French Symbolism suggested to Wilde and Mansfield an aesthetic which enabled them to realize their Aestheticism. Wildean and Mansfieldian Symbolism attempt to 'shock' the reader: they aim at breaking the reader's reading habit, and his or her stereotypic point of view and fixed sense of values. Here lie not only the political potential of Symbolism as a Modernist aesthetic but also the aesthetic and political link between their Symbolism and avant-garde Modernism

    Wayne Ude, 12th Annual ODU Literary Festival

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    Wayne Ude is the author of Buffalo and Other Stories, 1975; Becoming Coyote, 1981; and Three Coyote Tales, due out this fall. His current project is a novel-in-slow-progress, tentatively titled Home Place. He is the director of Creative Writing at Old Dominion University, and also director of the ODU Literary Festival

    Wayne York

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    Wayne York is pictured his eighth grade at Uintah High School. He was born to Asa Marion and Leona Gurr York on November 17, 1927. He served in World War II. He married Katherine Batt. He died January 17, 1985

    Letter from Wayne M. Collins to Hayao (Sam) Chuman, March 20, 1958

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    A letter from Wayne M. Collins to Hayao (Sam) Chuman regarding a questionnaire for him to fill out for a supplemental affidavit. The back of the letter has a handwritten note for Wayne by Hayao.The Chuman (Hayao "Sam" and Toshiko) Papers documents the World War II experiences of Hayao "Sam" and Toshiko Chuman, who were Kibei Nisei born in the United States but grew up and completed school in Japan, and then returned to the U.S. prior to the war. It chronicles the Chuman's incarceration from the Santa Anita Assembly Center, through Jerome, Rohwer, Tule Lake camps, and the Santa Fe and Crystal City internment camps as well as their struggle for restoring their U.S. citizenships in the 1960s. The digital collection consists of mostly textual material, including correspondence, affidavits, incarceration camp records, lease agreements, financial documents, receipts, pamphlets, and booklets
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