1,746,677 research outputs found
Food and Restaurants - Interview with Randall Yip
Randall Yip remembers his favourite childhood restaurants
Family Values - Interview with Randall Yip
Randall Yip shares a story about his grandfather
Vibrant Chinatown - Interview with Randall Yip
Randall Yip talks about the highlights of Chinatown as he was growing up
Wing Sang Building - Interview with Randall Yip
Randall Yip talks about recent history concerning the Rennie Museum, also known as the Wing Sang Building
Joseph W. Yip to Viktor Hamburger, May 13, 1982
Letter accompanying two diagrams by Yip on cell degeneration.Handwritten. Attached two diagrams.3-page letterCorrespondenc
Joseph W. Yip to Viktor Hamburger, May 17, 1983
On Hamburger's argument that DM neuroms innervate the limbs exclusively. On a paper by Yip related to NGF.Handwritten.1-page letterCorrespondenc
Viktor Hamburger to Joseph W. Yip, March 8, year unknown
On NGF findings.Copy of handwritten letter. Maybe enclosed a 5-paged CV with list of publications of Joseph W. Yip, received September 30, 19867-page letterCorrespondenc
Traced by Language
These two digital prints are from a series called Traced by Language which were made as a result of a performance by Yip entitled Written Movement (2017). Through a series of movements and sounds the artist attempted to travel cognitively between physical and mental states. She began recording her journey via mark making, using black charcoal as a physical trace of her movement. Although the physicality of her body never changes, it is consciousness that travels between the two dimensions. Yip’s work is inspired by the poetics of consciousness explored by French philosopher, Gaston Bachelard
Ngai Yin Yip
Ngai Yin Yip, Columbia Universityhttps://digitalcommons.montclair.edu/sust-seminar-headshots/1011/thumbnail.jp
Kew Dock Yip ’45 (1906-2001)
Kew Dock Yip was Canada’s first Chinese Canadian lawyer. Born in 1906, he was the 17th of 23 children of Vancouver businessman Yip Sang. After graduating from Osgoode Hall Law School in 1945, Dock Yip, as he was known, worked with Jewish civil rights lawyer Irving Himel and activists from across Canada to repeal the Chinese Exclusion Act. Dock Yip was a leader within Toronto’s Chinese Canadian community, working out of his office in Chinatown for 47 years until his retirement in 1992. In 1998, he was awarded the Law Society Medal from the Law Society of Upper Canada.https://digitalcommons.osgoode.yorku.ca/catalysts/1006/thumbnail.jp
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