4,034 research outputs found

    Interview with Ty Rowell

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    Bryan Sandala and Sean Ahlum interview Ty Rowell about the history of UNCW residence halls. Mr. Rowell served the university for 30 years. He retired from the Division of University Advancement in 2004. Bryan Sandala and Sean Ahlum are both staff members in the UNCW Office of Housing and Residence Life

    Sharon Bryan 03-15-1990

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    Reading List "Breaking and Entering" from "Objects of Affection" (0:35) "Viewing the Body" "from Salt Air" (16:08) "Theory" from "Flying Blind: Poems" (38:27) "Trimmings" from "Flying Blind: Poems" (39:47) Abstract Sharon Bryan Reads "Breaking and Entering" from "Objects of Affection" (0:35). Stan Saville Rubin interviews Sharon Bryan. Bryan was born in Salt Lake City, Utah and educated at the University of Utah where she studied philosophy, Cornell University where she received an MA in anthropology, and The University of Iowa Writers Workshop where she earned her MFA. She's the author of two collections of poetry, "Salt Air" published in 1983, and "Objects of Affection" published in 1987 by Wesleyan University Press. She has received awards including The Academy of American Poets Prize, the Discovery the Nation Award, and the Governor's Award from the State of Washington, and has held NEA fellowships. At the time of filming Bryan is a Professor of English at the Memphis State University and editor of the literary magazine River City. Stan opens the conversation with an invitation to discuss the origin and nature of the opening poem. Bryan outlines the story and the influences that aided her creation of the poem. Expanding further into the content of "Objects of Affection", they discuss the heavy handed artistic and literary influences that are found in a number of the collected poems. Bryan talks about why the unaddressed epitaph is at the beginning of "Objects of Affection" and what informed her decision to put it there. Stan asks her about the careful organization of the collection but Bryan reveals that the organization wasn't as deeply considered as it appears. They talk about the style of her poems and how she tends not to use prose. Stan moves the conversation to "Salt Air" which was written 6 years after leaving Iowa. Bryan talks about how so much of her life was leaving behind Salt Lake. Bryan reads "Viewing the Body" "from Salt Air" (16:08). Bryan speaks on when she first knew she wanted to write and how she meandered through her education because, as far as she was aware, creative writing as an occupation wasn't available until she had arrived at Cornell and then why she chose to go to the Iowa Writers Workshop. Stan asks Bryan to speak at length about her role as Editor of the River City literary magazine and how she looks at poetry through that editor's lens. They discuss the social significance of poetry and address critiques about poetry's place for speaking on difficult issues of the time. Bryan talks about the major influences on her writing and her push to publish her poetry for public consumption and how she found out her first collection was going to be printed. Bryan reads "Theory" from her upcoming collection of poems "Flying Blind: Poems" (38:27) and "Trimmings" also from "Flying Blind: Poems" (39:47).Archived web conten

    JCCC Hosts \u27Public Enemies\u27 Author, Bryan Burrough

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    Best-selling author Bryan Burrough will present \u27Public Enemies: The True Story\u27 at 11 a.m. Monday, November 2, in Craig Community Auditorium

    Sean Andres on: "If I Had Made the World" by Sarah Morgan Bryan Piatt

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    Reading by Sean E. Andres, 15 March 2023, recorded in Cincinnati, OH. Andres is a marketer, a writer, and a former educator who holds a B.S. in secondary English and language arts education (with a focus on women writers during the Civil War) and a Master’s degree in marketing (with a focus on diversity marketing and applied feminist and race theory). He works on an array of public history projects, especially in the Cincinnati area, centered on preserving and empowering the voices of historically marginalized populations. His work on Piatt has been published in The New Territory Magazine’s Literary Landscapes and Paideuma, the National Poetry Foundation journal. In this recording, Sean reads aloud and explores Sarah Piatt’s poem “If I Had Made the World,” the poem that spurred his initial interest in her work. “If I Had Made the World” was published in the rare Washington, D.C. newspaper The Capital on 5 Nov. 1876. The reading is preceded by a short lecture on the historical context of the poem provided by Dr. Elizabeth Renker from the Department of English at The Ohio State University, recorded in Columbus, OH on 20 September 2023

    Employment and housing problems of migratory workers in New York and New Jersey canning industries, 1943

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    Based on a survey conducted by Helen Bryan Sater and Caroline Manning, this report presents issues involving the employment and housing of migrant laborers in the New York and New Jersey canning industries (especially the tomato-canning industry in producing food for armed services) during World War II. The issues discussed include false promises to migrant workers concerning wages, available facilities and housing costs. Another issue discussed is the low standard of living and working conditions that government agencies uphold for migrant laborers. At this time there was an influx of African American and West Indian migrants to the area to occupy positions within the canning industry. Also, a great number of laborers were women and children. Polish, Italian, and white migrants from the South are also mentioned as significant populations within the industry. This report was issued by the United States Women's Bureau of the United States Department of Labor in 1943

    Book review: the great broadening: how vast expansion of the policymaking agenda transformed American politics by Bryan D. Jones, Sean M. Theriault and Michelle Whyman

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    In The Great Broadening: How Vast Expansion of the Policymaking Agenda Transformed American Politics, Bryan D. Jones, Sean M. Theriault and Michelle Whyman set out to prove that the period from the 1960s to the 1980s witnessed a ‘Great Broadening’ of the US government’s involvement in areas that had previously been off limits. Mining rich sources of data to provide insight into what caused this expansion and its consequences, the book should be read by anyone interested in Congress, policymaking and US political developments, writes Kyle Scott. The Great Broadening: How Vast Expansion of the Policymaking Agenda Transformed American Politics. Bryan D. Jones, Sean M. Theriault and Michelle Whyman. University of Chicago Press. 2019

    Gold nanoparticle dimers for SERS-based targeted detection of human glioblastoma cells

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    Gold nanospheres are linked by a Raman active dithiolated linker molecule forming dimer and trimer assemblies. These nanoparticles are capped with polyethylene glycol for stability and functionalized with peptides for glioblastoma cell targeting and penetration. Results show stability in vitro and cellular uptake of the nanoparticles. After endocytosis, a surface enhanced Raman scattering signal from the nanoparticles can be detected from inside the cells. Such a nanoparticle systems sets the ground work for developing versatile Raman-based tools designed for a range of biomedical applications.M.S.Includes bibliographical referencesby Bryan Paladin

    A Personal Visit with Ashley Bryan

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    Dunkley describes her meeting with Ashley Bryan, children\u27s author, illustrator, and historian
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