Section 106 Technical Report
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The-Myrkin-Papers-Lorenzo-Milam
Lorenzo W. Milam's brilliant first novel, Under A Bed of Poses, has received countless rejection slips from some of the finest publishing houses in New York. "Some novelists claim their works are like chil dren," he said recently, in an interview, "and that the act of writing is much like bringing a child into the world. I prefer the concept of Sherwood Ander son. He said that writing is like giving birth to a litter of pigs. If such is the case, considering all the essays, poems, and nov els I have burned, I should have a powerful lot of bacon by now." Milam likes to say that he was born with a silver foot in his mouth. When not writing (two hours a week), he spends most of his time with a small cadre of select friends playing Existential Monopoly and read ing out loud from The Book of Changes. Milam founded KRAB-FM (Seattle), KBOO (Portland). KDNA (St. Louis). and is part owner of KTAO (Los Gatos. California). He is exceedingly droll and a very bad speller. He was educated at Haverford Col lege and the University of Cali fornia at Berkeley long before student movements and even work were popular. He lives in Seattle within spitting distance of the Freeway, and drinks in ordinate quantities of beer. we MYRKIN PAPERS I \ flOe MYRKIN PAPERS by LORENZO W. MILAM DUCK PR ESS Bellevue, Washington COPYRIGHT 1969 by DUCK PRESS Box 355, Bellevue, Washington This book is set in Century Schoolbook, a type face designed by L. B. -
V. 19, N. 1, March 2003
Alki Up Front The Washington Library Association Journal C o n t e n t s The WLA President speaks 4016 First Avenue N.E. Seattle, WA 98105-6502 FEATURES Email: [email protected] Web: http://www.wla.org/ CAROL GILL SCHUYLER Alki Editorial Committee 5 WLA’s National IF Award Winner Candace Morgan Current Challenges Nicole Campbell Tami Echavarria Robinson, Whitworth College Cheryl Farabee to Intellectual Freedom Emily Hull 8 Bards, Rebels, and the Blue Moon Tami Echavarria Robinson Walt Crowley, HistoryLink Michael and I have just returned from Greece During the teleconference someone commented on how the Brian Soneda Bonnie Taylor 10 The Perils of Clicking ‘I Agree’: UCITA and Intellectual Freedom and Turkey. In our wanderings, we visited the ancient government loves acronyms (as do libraries). Here are the ones Mary Wise Jonathan Franklin, University of Washington libraries of Hadrian in Athens, Celsus in Ephesus, most impacting intellectual freedom. CIPA forces libraries to choose Jen Wolfe, Intern and Pergamum (where they began using parchment between reimbursement of communication funds and filtering of Carla McLean, Chair 13 Government Documents: We Do Not Want What We Haven’t Got Cameron Johnson, Alki Editor instead of papyrus and shared their volumes with Internet access. Washington libraries currently address Internet Mary MacKintosh, Link Editor Cass Hartnett, University of Washington Alexandria when its library burned). Libraries, in one access in many ways—parental choice for minor children, complete Troy Christenson, Judy Solomon, Seattle Public Library form or another, have existed for thousands of years open access, and choice between open and filtered access. -
Cruise Planners
Holly Marocchi [email protected] www.getupandgo2.com 1-866-673-3019 | 386-673-3019 SEATTLE, WA OVERVIEW Introduction The combination of water, hills and lush greenery in a mountain setting on the shores of Puget Sound make Seattle, Washington, one of the most beautiful urban areas in the U.S. With its efficient bus system, growing light-rail network and compact downtown district, Seattle is also user-friendly. Seattleites have plenty to brag about: There's the Space Needle and Pike Place Market, plus the Mariners, Seahawks and Sounders FC sports teams. There are fine restaurants, good museums and vigorous arts and music scenes. Even Seattle's infamous rainy winter weather has a good side. All that rain helps make Seattle the evergreen "Emerald City" and produces wonderful flowers. And Seattle is where Starbucks got its start, in 1971, at Pike Place Market. Sights—The spectacular variety of Pike Place Market; the view from the Space Needle; the view of Puget Sound from the decks of Washington State Ferries; the Volkswagen-crushing troll and other public art in Fremont; the historic buildings and galleries of Pioneer Square Historic District; the city skyline from Gas Works Park; the Hiram M. Chittenden Locks in Ballard. Museums—The interactive music exhibits at the Museum of Pop Culture and the adjoining Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame; Native American and African art at the Seattle Art Museum; the stunning Olympic Sculpture Park on the waterfront; the impressive holdings of the Seattle Asian Art Museum; cutting-edge contemporary art at the University of Washington's Henry Gallery; aviation and aerospace artifacts at the Museum of Flight; gorgeous glassworks at Chihuly Garden and Glass. -
2014 AWP Conference Schedule
2014 AWP Conference Schedule Saturday, March 1, 2014 8:00 am to 12:00 pm S100. Conference Registration Registration Area, Washington State Convention Center Attendees who have registered in advance may pick up their registration materials in AWP’s preregistered check-in area, located in the registration area on level 4 of the Washington State Convention Center. If you have not yet registered for the conference, please visit the unpaid registration area, also in the registration area on level 4. Please consult the bookfair map in the conference planner for location details. Students must present a valid student ID to check-in or register at our student rate. Seniors must present a valid ID to register at our senior rate. A $50 fee will be charged for all replacement badges. 8:30 am to 6:00 pm S101. AWP Bookfair, Sponsored by Hollins University: Jackson Center for Creative Writing North & South Exhibit Halls, Washington State Convention Center With more than 650 literary exhibitors the AWP bookfair is the largest of its kind. A great way to meet authors, critics, and peers, the bookfair also provides excellent opportunities to find information about many literary magazines, presses, and organizations. Please consult the bookfair map in the conference planner for location details. 9:00 am to 10:15 am S105. Novels-in-Stories or Story Cycles Aspen Room, Sheraton Seattle, 2nd Floor ( Garry Craig Powell, Sybil Baker, Xu Xi, Clifford Garstang, Kelly Cherry) Ever since Sherwood Anderson’s Winesburg, Ohio, story cycles have been a major feature of the American literary landscape; in recent years examples by Louise Erdrich, Sandra Cisneros, Tim O' Brien, Robert Olen Butler, Jennifer Egan, and others have kept them at the forefront. -
Interview with Jenijoy La Belle
JENIJOY LA BELLE (b. 1943) INTERVIEWED BY HEIDI ASPATURIAN February – May 2008, April 2009 ARCHIVES CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY Pasadena, California Subject area English literature, humanities Abstract Interview in eight sessions, February 2008–April 2009, with Jenijoy La Belle, professor of English, Caltech. La Belle talks about her childhood, education, and family influences growing up in Olympia, Washington, and her early love of literature and poetry. She recalls her undergraduate years at the University of Washington (B.A. 1965), including studying with poet Theodore Roethke, who became the subject of her doctoral thesis (Ph.D. 1968) at UC San Diego. She describes her early years (1969–1975) as Caltech's first female professor, her Humanities and Social Sciences (HSS) colleagues, including division chair H. Smith and J. K. Clark, her friendship with physicist R. P. Feynman, her initial impressions of Caltech students, and her research on poet/artist William Blake. She discusses HSS's shift in emphasis toward the social sciences in the 1970s, the impact on the division, and the appointment of economic historian R. Huttenback as division chair in 1972. In 1975, La Belle's landmark Caltech tenure case begins when Huttenback overrules the English department's recommendation that she be granted tenure. She relates chronology and conduct of the case, detailing the involvement of HSS and other faculty, Caltech provost R. Christy, trustee L. Wasserman, numerous campus committees, and outside referees. She describes events leading to her http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechOH:OH_LaBelle_J decision to file an official complaint with the EEOC, the agency's investigation and subsequent citing of Caltech for gender discrimination in faculty hiring, Caltech's reaction, and her satisfactory resolution of the case with Caltech in 1977. -
The Cultural Landscape Foundation Pioneers of American Landscape Design
The Cultural Landscape Foundation Pioneers of American Landscape Design ___________________________________ LAURIE OLIN ORAL HISTORY INTERVIEW TRANSCRIPT ___________________________________ Interviews Conducted June 1‐6, 2012 By Charles A. Birnbaum, FASLA, FAAR Gina M. Angelone, Director The Cultural Landscape Foundation Pioneers of American Landscape Design® Oral History Series: Laurie Olin Interview Transcript PRELUDE ........................................................................................................ 5 BIOGRAPHY .................................................................................................... 5 Childhood ....................................................................................................................... 5 Living in Many Places ......................................................................................................... 5 Prosser, Washington ....................................................................................................... 5 Vancouver, Canada ......................................................................................................... 8 Seattle, Washington ...................................................................................................... 10 Fairbanks, Alaska .......................................................................................................... 11 Formative Education ..................................................................................................... 19 Elementary School Memories