5,950 research outputs found

    Caroline Gordon Collection

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    Arrangement Description EXTENT Linear Feet: 2 linear feet Number of Containers: 2 boxes Series 1: Writings, 31 files Series 2: Lectures, 19 files Series 3: Courses, 10 files Series 4: Book Reviews, 5 files Series 5: About Caroline Gordon,8 files Series 6: Correspondence, 18 files Series 7: Books, 5 books Series 8: Media: 9 digital files, 9 cassettes, 2 reelsCOLLECTION DETAILS <---Please open FindingAid .pdf under "FILES" to see full collection details To request any materials from this collection please email: [email protected] BIOGRAPHICAL / Historical Note: Twentieth-century novelist Caroline Gordon was born into the Kentucky line of the extensive Meriwether family in 1895. Exploration of the family's past and its evolution is a major theme of her fiction. She grew up at Merry Mont in Todd County, near Clarksville where she received her early education. She earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from Bethany College in 1916. Her father is the idealized subject of Gordon's second novel, Alec Maury, Sportsman (1934), and the central character in her much-anthologized story, "Old Red." Gordon taught briefly; then, as a journalist, she became one of the first reviewers to comment favorably on a new Nashville-based magazine of poetry, The Fugitive. During the summer of 1924, Robert Penn Warren, a Todd County neighbor, introduced her to Allen Tate. Within a year they were married and living in New York City, where their daughter, Nancy Meriwether was born. With Tate, she began a period of life abroad, devoted to writing and sustained by various fellowships granted to one or the other. In London, Gordon was secretary to the influential British writer Ford Madox. In 1930 the Tates returned to the United States and settled in Clarksville in a house provided by Tate's brother Ben and called "Benfolly." Both Tates were exceptionally hospitable to friends and encouraging to younger writers. Both were prolific correspondents, generous with constructive criticism. (Gordon eventually became mentor to several writers, most notably Flannery O'Connor). Although she had to wrest time for her writing from domestic and social obligations, the eight Benfolly years were especially productive for Gordon, who published four novels and several stories before 1937. The first novel was Penhally (1931), followed by Alec Maury, Sportsman (1934), None Shall Look Back (1937), and The Garden of Adonis (1937), studies of the southern family during the Civil War and Great Depression. Academic appointments of the 1940s took the Tates throughout the Southeast and to Princeton, where they established a home near their daughter, who married psychiatrist Percy Wood in 1944. During this time Gordon published her fifth novel, Green Centuries (1941). Her second related group of novels, The Woman on the Porch (1944), which deals with a troubled marriage, The Strange Children (1951), based on life at Benfolly, and The Malefactors (1956), is informed by her conversion to Roman Catholicism. She and her husband wrote The House of Fiction (1950), which was followed by Gordon's How to Read a Novel in 1957. Gordon lived in Princeton until 1973, teaching, and writing: The Glory of Hera (1972). An appointment in the creative writing program drew her to the University of Dallas (Gordon was 77 years old when she proposed the new creative writing program at UD). When her health began to fail in 1978, she moved to San Cristobal de las Casas in Chapas, Mexico, with her daughter and family. She died there on April 11, 1981. COLLECTION DESCRIPTION Caroline Gordon (1895-1981) was an American author. This collection consists of manuscripts of Gordon's work, including novels, lectures, and poetry during her time at the University of Dallas. It also includes correspondence with authors and family members, writings of others, and photographs. Lectures and Commentary available here: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14026/2548University of Dalla

    Linden A. Mander writing for the Seattle Civic Unity Committee regarding the hostile atmosphere and issues of racism during the conflict with Japan in Seattle, 1944

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    Linden A. Mander was a Professor of Political Science at the University of Washington. He wrote several papers on global issues and was the co-director of the Institute of International Affairs. This document, titled The Seattle Civic Unity Committee, does not directly discuss the issues of Gordon Hirabayashi, but it does provide information regarding the atmosphere of Seattle in 1944 and contextual history during the time of Gordon's trial. The document begins, "For many months prior to the appointment of the Civic Unity Committee the Mayor of Seattle had been receiving letters and petitions which showed evidence of widespread anxiety over the increasing racial tensions which, if unchecked, might well embroil the city in the type of disorder which occurred in Detroit and later Philadelphia." Professor Mander died in 1968.Gordon Kiyoshi Hirabayashi (1918-2012) was an American sociologist and conscientious objector to the Japanese American internment during WWII. Born in the Sand Point area of Seattle, he grew up on the farmland surrounding Kent. In Japan, both of Hirabayashi's parents had become members of Mukyokai, or the "non-church" movement. Teaching Christian principles free from denominational issues, Mukyokai stressed an uncompromising stand against social injustice. When he was a student at the University of Washington, Hirabayashi became a Quaker and involved in social services. Hirabayashi refused to comply with the curfew imposed on Japanese Americans in the wake of the attack on Pearl Harbor, and later refused to report for relocation to the internment camps on the grounds that the directives were based solely on race and therefore were unconstitutional. After the last Japanese were forcibly removed from Seattle, Hirabayashi turned himself in to the FBI and was tried and convicted in the Federal District Court of Seattle. The case ultimately went to the Supreme Court, which ruled that the curfew was constitutional. Hirabayashi was sentenced to serve three months in a minimum security prison in Arizona. No funds were available to transport him, so Hirabayashi spent two weeks hitchhiking to get there. Later, he was tried and convicted of draft resistance and served nine months in the federal penitentiary on McNeil Island. When released, Hirabayashi returned to the University of Washington and received BA, MA and PhD degrees in sociology. Upon completeion of his education, he taught overseas at the American University in Beirut and the American University at Cairo. He retired from the University of Alberta in 1983. In the 1980s Hirabayashi and his legal team brought new evidence about the exclusion order's prejudice to the courts of government misconduct which then overturned his 1943 convictions based on the rarely used argument of coram nobis. In May 2012, four months after his death, Hirabayashi was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom

    Statement of Gordon Hirabayashi

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    Statement by Gordon Hirabayashi about his refusal to register for forced removal to an incarceration camp. He writes: "This order for the mass evacuation of all persons of Japanese descent denies them the right to live."The ACLU-Northern California case file records contain legal documents and correspondence pertaining to the case Ex parte Mitsuye Endo (1944), in which the United States Supreme court unanimously ruled that the federal government could not indefinitely detain United States citizens who were loyal to the government. Files include documents related to the Gordon Hirabayashi Supreme Court case Hirabayashi v. United States

    Author Gordon Henry reads his selected works at the Michigan Writers Series

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    Author Gordon Henry, MSU professor of English, reads selections of his poetry and fiction then answers questions from the audience. The event is convened by librarian Michael Rodriguez. Part of the Michigan State University Libraries' Michigan Writers Series

    Wolfang station shearing shed loading bales, Clermont, Queensland, ca. 1915 [picture] /

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    Accompanied by photographic print.; Glass negative no. 111.; Part of the Gordon Cumming Pullar collection of glass negatives of Clermont, Yeppoon and nearby locations, Queensland, ca. 1905-1932.; Photograph no. 219 in the book A shifting town : glass-plate images of Clermont and its people.; Wolfang Downs was established in 1863 by Augustus Kerrin and acquired by Oscar de Satge, author of Pages from the Journal of a Queensland Squatter; note the crane for lifting bales. .; Also available in an electronic version via the internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn4191848; Published in: A shifting town : glass-plate images of Clermont and its people / by G.C. Pullar ; compiled by Richard and Marguerite Stringer ; text by Marguerite Stringer. St. Lucia, Qld. : University of Queensland Press, 1986

    Interview with Robert Gordon

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    This interview with Robert Gordon, Illinois Tech architecture alumnus, architect, planner, artist, and author, was conducted on June 6, 2017 by Ralph Pugh and Adam Strohm

    Mr Gordon G Lockhart

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    Research School of Chemistry - Dr. Denis Evans, Prof. Alan Sargeson, Mr. Rod Rickards, Prof. Arthur Birch, Prof. Lew Mander, Prof. Stan Athel Beckwith, Prof. L. W. Nichol, Mr. Chris Tomkins, Mr. Gordon G. Lockhart, Dr. John Thompson, Mr. John Harper, Mr. Andrew McMurray & other

    Dr Denis Evans, Professor Alan Sargeson, Mr Rod Rickards, Professor Arthur Birch and Professor Lew Mander

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    Research School of Chemistry - Dr. Denis Evans, Prof. Alan Sargeson, Mr. Rod Rickards, Prof. Arthur Birch, Prof. Lew Mander, Prof. Stan Athel Beckwith, Prof. L. W. Nichol, Mr. Chris Tomkins, Mr. Gordon G. Lockhart, Dr. John Thompson, Mr. John Harper, Mr. Andrew McMurray & other

    Professor Alan Sargeson, Professor Lew Mander and Mr John Harper at his farewell

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    Research School of Chemistry - Dr. Denis Evans, Prof. Alan Sargeson, Mr. Rod Rickards, Prof. Arthur Birch, Prof. Lew Mander, Prof. Stan Athel Beckwith, Prof. L. W. Nichol, Mr. Chris Tomkins, Mr. Gordon G. Lockhart, Dr. John Thompson, Mr. John Harper, Mr. Andrew McMurray & other

    Proof sheet of Professor Alan Sargeson, Professor Lew Mander and Mr John Harper

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    Research School of Chemistry - Dr. Denis Evans, Prof. Alan Sargeson, Mr. Rod Rickards, Prof. Arthur Birch, Prof. Lew Mander, Prof. Stan Athel Beckwith, Prof. L. W. Nichol, Mr. Chris Tomkins, Mr. Gordon G. Lockhart, Dr. John Thompson, Mr. John Harper, Mr. Andrew McMurray & other
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