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Centro Cultural De La Raza Archives CEMA 12
http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt3j49q99g No online items Centro Cultural de la Raza Archives CEMA 12 Finding aid prepared by Project director Sal Güereña, principle processor Michelle Wilder, assistant processors Susana Castillo and Alexander Hauschild June, 2006. Collection was processed with support from the University of California Institute for Mexico and the United States (UC MEXUS). Updated 2011 by Callie Bowdish and Clarence M. Chan UC Santa Barbara Library, Department of Special Collections University of California, Santa Barbara Santa Barbara, California, 93106-9010 Phone: (805) 893-3062 Email: [email protected]; URL: http://www.library.ucsb.edu/special-collections © 2006 Centro Cultural de la Raza CEMA 12 1 Archives CEMA 12 Title: Centro Cultural de la Raza Archives Identifier/Call Number: CEMA 12 Contributing Institution: UC Santa Barbara Library, Department of Special Collections Language of Material: English Physical Description: 83.0 linear feet Date (inclusive): 1970-1999 Abstract: Slides and other materials relating to the San Diego artists' collective, co-founded in 1970 by Chicano poet Alurista and artist Victor Ochoa. Known as a center of indigenismo (indigenism) during the Aztlán phase of Chicano art in the early 1970s. (CEMA 12). Physical location: All processed material is located in Del Norte and any uncataloged material (silk screens) is stored in map drawers in CEMA. General Physical Description note: (153 document boxes and 5 oversize boxes). creator: Centro Cultural de la Raza (San Diego, Calif.). Access Restrictions None. Publication Rights Copyright resides with donor. Copyright has not been assigned to the Department of Special Collections, UCSB. All Requests for permission to publish or quote from manuscripts must be submitted in writing to the Head of Special Collections. -
TOOLBOX of FAITH a Tapestry of Faith Program for Children Grades
TOOLBOX OF FAITH A Tapestry of Faith Program for Children Grades 4-5 BY KATE TWEEDIE COVEY © Copyright 2008 Unitarian Universalist Association. This program and additional resources are available on the UUA.org web site at www.uua.org/re/tapestry . 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS ABOUT THE AUTHORS ....................................................................................................................... 3 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ....................................................................................................................... 3 THE PROGRAM ................................................................................................................................... 4 SESSION 1: FAITH (TOOLBOX AND RULER) .................................................................................. 15 SESSION 2: QUESTIONING (MAGNIFYING GLASS) ....................................................................... 27 SESSION 3: INTEGRITY (COMPASS) ............................................................................................... 40 SESSION 4: FLEXIBILITY (DUCT TAPE) .......................................................................................... 54 SESSION 5: REFLECTION (MIRROR) .............................................................................................. 68 SESSION 6: EXPRESSION (PAINTBRUSH) ..................................................................................... 79 SESSION 7: DEMOCRATIC PROCESS (CHALK) ............................................................................ -
04-01-1921.Pdf
CA s s CITY CHR ONICL, E Vol. 16, No. 46., CASS CITY, MICH., FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 1921 10 PAGES I I,~ , ,q Beach. This camp site is furnished for many milestones of contented, with electric lights, city water, nice b~issnfdU:.travelisthewish°fah°st°f TWO 80HOOL8 - driveway encircling the park and is The Garden Plot BILL P[}ST[R CU, only five hours trip from Detroit on gravel roads. A rustic casino with DIVIDE HONOlt] fine dancing pavilion on the ~second AUCTION ~ CALENDAI~. i; IN;O POR TED / floor, huge cement stoves under roof are erected, boating facilities are pro~ Wm. Parrish has sold his farm 21~ RUBA MARSHALL WINS ORA- vided and a free bath house will be at miles west of Cuss City and will have S. CHAMPION ADMITS PAR.T= TORICAL CONTEST AT the disposal of the tourists. County an auction sale on Wednesday, April NERS AND ENLARGES CROSWELL. League baseball games will be played 6. Full particulars are printed on on the ball grounds adjoining and the page 9. BUSINESS. rocky rip rap of the north pier fur- Dr. J. T. Redwine has sold ~is resi- nishe,~ a wonderful haven for black dence property and wilt sell his CroswelI School Representative Suc- Company Will Extend Working Field bass. household goods at auction on Satur- cessful in Declamatory Contest day, April 9. The list of articles i,s to A|ma, St. Louis, Mr. Pleasant, Friday Evening. )tinted on page 8. Ithaca and Other Points.' Alex McPhait wiil hold an auction sale Of live stock and implements on Miss Ruba Marshall, the represen- 12 STATESPt88[D the McPhail farm lb~ miles'north of When Gee. -
Sentimental Appropriations: Contemporary Sympathy In
SENTIMENTAL APPROPRIATIONS: CONTEMPORARY SYMPATHY IN THE NOVELS OF GRACE LUMPKIN, JOSEPHINE JOHNSON, JOHN STEINBECK, MARGARET WALKER, OCTAVIA BUTLER, AND TONI MORRISON Jennifer A. Williamson A dissertation submitted to the faculty of the University of North Carolina in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of English and Comparative Literature Chapel Hill 2011 Approved by: Linda Wagner-Martin William L. Andrews Philip Gura Fred Hobson Wahneema Lubiano © 2011 Jennifer A. Williamson ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ii ABSTRACT JENNIFER A. WILLIAMSON: Sentimental Appropriations: Contemporary Sympathy in the Novels of Grace Lumpkin, Josephine Johnson, John Steinbeck, Margaret Walker, Octavia Butler, and Toni Morrison (Under the direction of Linda Wagner-Martin) This project investigates the appearance of the nineteenth-century American sentimental mode in more recent literature, revealing that the cultural work of sentimentalism continues in the twentieth-century and beyond. By examining working-class literature that adopts the rhetoric of “feeling right” in order to promote a proletarian ideology as well as neo-slave narratives that wrestle with the legacy of slavery, this study explores the ways contemporary authors engage with familiar sentimental tropes and ideals. Despite modernism’s influential assertion that sentimentalism portrays emotion that lacks reality or depth, narrative claims to feeling— particularly those based in common and recognizable forms of suffering—remain popular. It seems clear that such authors as Grace Lumpkin, Josephine Johnson, John Steinbeck, Margaret Walker, Octavia Butler, and Toni Morrison apply the rhetorical methods of sentimentalism to the cultural struggles of their age. Contemporary authors self-consciously struggle with sentimentalism’s gender, class, and race ideals; however, sentimentalism’s dual ability to promote these ideals and extend identification across them makes it an attractive and effective mode for political and social influence. -
Worth Their Salt, Too
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by DigitalCommons@USU Utah State University DigitalCommons@USU All USU Press Publications USU Press 2000 Worth Their Salt, Too Colleen Whitley Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/usupress_pubs Part of the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Whitley, C. (2000). Worth their salt, too: More notable but often unnoted women of Utah. Logan: Utah State University Press. This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the USU Press at DigitalCommons@USU. It has been accepted for inclusion in All USU Press Publications by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@USU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Worth Their Salt, Too More Notable but Often Unnoted Women of Utah WORTH THEIR SALT, TOO More Notable but Often Unnoted Women of Utah Edited by Colleen Whitley UTAH STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS Logan, Utah 2000 Copyright © 2000 Utah State University Press “Marion Davis Clegg: The Lady of the Lakes” copyright © 2000 Carol C. Johnson All rights reserved Utah State University Press Logan, Utah 84322-7800 All royalties from the sale of this book will be donated to support the Exhibits office of the Utah State Historical Society. Cover photos: Marion Davis Clegg, courtesy of Photosynthesis; Verla Gean FarmanFarmaian, courtesy of Gean FarmanFarmaian; Ora Bailey Harding, courtesy of Lurean S. Harding; Alberta Henry, courtesy of the Deseret News; Esther Peterson, courtesy of Paul A. Allred; Virginia Sorensen, courtesy of Mary Bradford Typography by WolfPack Printed in Canada Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Worth their salt, too : more notable but often unnoted women of Utah / edited by Colleen Whitley. -
Sentimental Appropriations
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Carolina Digital Repository SENTIMENTAL APPROPRIATIONS: CONTEMPORARY SYMPATHY IN THE NOVELS OF GRACE LUMPKIN, JOSEPHINE JOHNSON, JOHN STEINBECK, MARGARET WALKER, OCTAVIA BUTLER, AND TONI MORRISON Jennifer A. Williamson A dissertation submitted to the faculty of the University of North Carolina in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of English and Comparative Literature Chapel Hill 2011 Approved by: Linda Wagner-Martin William L. Andrews Philip Gura Fred Hobson Wahneema Lubiano © 2011 Jennifer A. Williamson ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ii ABSTRACT JENNIFER A. WILLIAMSON: Sentimental Appropriations: Contemporary Sympathy in the Novels of Grace Lumpkin, Josephine Johnson, John Steinbeck, Margaret Walker, Octavia Butler, and Toni Morrison (Under the direction of Linda Wagner-Martin) This project investigates the appearance of the nineteenth-century American sentimental mode in more recent literature, revealing that the cultural work of sentimentalism continues in the twentieth-century and beyond. By examining working-class literature that adopts the rhetoric of “feeling right” in order to promote a proletarian ideology as well as neo-slave narratives that wrestle with the legacy of slavery, this study explores the ways contemporary authors engage with familiar sentimental tropes and ideals. Despite modernism’s influential assertion that sentimentalism portrays emotion that lacks reality or depth, narrative claims to feeling— particularly those based in common and recognizable forms of suffering—remain popular. It seems clear that such authors as Grace Lumpkin, Josephine Johnson, John Steinbeck, Margaret Walker, Octavia Butler, and Toni Morrison apply the rhetorical methods of sentimentalism to the cultural struggles of their age. -
William Kahan Discusses the Whole of His Career to Date, with Particular Reference to His Involvement with Numerical Software and Hardware Design
An interview with WILLIAM M. KAHAN Conducted by Thomas Haigh On August 5-8, 2005 In Berkeley, CA Interview conducted by the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics, as part of grant # DE-FG02-01ER25547 awarded by the US Department of Energy. [Version 1.1, revised March 2016 with corrections from Prof. Kahan] Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics 3600 University City Science Center Philadelphia, PA 19104-2688 Transcript donated to the Computer History Museum by the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics © Computer History Museum Mountain View, California ABSTRACT William Kahan discusses the whole of his career to date, with particular reference to his involvement with numerical software and hardware design. Kahan was born in Canada in 1933, growing up around Toronto. He developed an early interest in science and mathematics, tinkering with mechanical and electronic devices. Kahan earned a B.A. in mathematics from the University of Toronto in 1954. He discusses in detail his experiences with the FERUT computer from 1953 onward, including its operation and use and the roles of Kelly Gotlieb, Beatrice Worsley, Cecily Popplewell, Joe Kates, and others. During the summer of 1954 he worked with Kates to produce a prototype airline reservation system for Trans-Canada Airlines. Kahan then began work on a Ph.D. from Toronto, graduating in 1958 under the direction of Byron A. Griffith. He explains the state of its mathematics program and curriculum at this time, and outlines his own thesis work on successive overrelaxation methods and the beginning of his interest in backward error analysis. Kahan spent the summer of 1957 at the University of Illinois, where used the ILLIAC and met Dave Muller, Don Gillies and Gene Golub. -
Estancia News-Herald, 12-02-1915 J
University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository Estancia News, 1904-1921 New Mexico Historical Newspapers 12-2-1915 Estancia News-Herald, 12-02-1915 J. A. Constant Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/estancia_news Recommended Citation Constant, J. A.. "Estancia News-Herald, 12-02-1915." (1915). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/estancia_news/198 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the New Mexico Historical Newspapers at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Estancia News, 1904-1921 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ESTANCIA NEWS-HERAL- D Nowi BBtRbUshedlB04 (bounty, New Mexico, Thursday, December 2, 1915 Herald Established 1908 Estancia, Torrance Volume XII No. 7 in penitentiary and to pay costs, in order to enable them to market Mrs. Harvey Jackson left last BEANS AND BUTTER work together. Co operation DISTRICT COURT sentence suspended at discretion their products and visit the week to join her husband at and organization were essential Lordsburg, of court. county seat, and make their New Mexico. She to the best results, both from a How farms shipped their cows through. Ascension Chavez vs N accessible to the towns of Mountainair, N. M., Nov. 24. fraternal and business stand- ABOUT TOWN Mr. Jackson employment ard Thorpe et al, judgment for the county, instead of all funds has (Special correspondence) Beans point. being auto- there, and they plan to stay plaintiff aeainst N Howard expended on overland and butter will be the "War To accomplish this it was de- McGillivray mobile or there permanently. -
Worth Their Salt, Too
Utah State University DigitalCommons@USU All USU Press Publications USU Press 2000 Worth Their Salt, Too Colleen Whitley Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/usupress_pubs Part of the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Whitley, C. (2000). Worth their salt, too: More notable but often unnoted women of Utah. Logan: Utah State University Press. This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the USU Press at DigitalCommons@USU. It has been accepted for inclusion in All USU Press Publications by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@USU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Worth Their Salt, Too More Notable but Often Unnoted Women of Utah WORTH THEIR SALT, TOO More Notable but Often Unnoted Women of Utah Edited by Colleen Whitley UTAH STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS Logan, Utah 2000 Copyright © 2000 Utah State University Press “Marion Davis Clegg: The Lady of the Lakes” copyright © 2000 Carol C. Johnson All rights reserved Utah State University Press Logan, Utah 84322-7800 All royalties from the sale of this book will be donated to support the Exhibits office of the Utah State Historical Society. Cover photos: Marion Davis Clegg, courtesy of Photosynthesis; Verla Gean FarmanFarmaian, courtesy of Gean FarmanFarmaian; Ora Bailey Harding, courtesy of Lurean S. Harding; Alberta Henry, courtesy of the Deseret News; Esther Peterson, courtesy of Paul A. Allred; Virginia Sorensen, courtesy of Mary Bradford Typography by WolfPack Printed in Canada Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Worth their salt, too : more notable but often unnoted women of Utah / edited by Colleen Whitley. -
The Life, Letters and Labours of Francis Galton
THE LIFE, LETTERS AND LABOURS OF FRANCIS GALTON CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS C. F. CLAY, MANAOKR aonfton : FETTER LANE, E.C. Etmiturgti: 100 PRINCES STREET SMI lonoon: H. K. LKWIK, 131! fiOWER STREET, \V.C. lonoon: WILLIAM WESLEY & SO.V 18 I!SSI:\ STKKl"!'. STKANH Berlin: A. ASHER AND CO. 1Ui|>>i8: F. A. BROCKHADS jStni Borfe: G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS Sombnp nnli (Tnlmtln : MACMILT-AN AND CO., LTD. (Toronto: J. M. WENT AND SONS, Lin. rok(i: Till! MAJM'/KX-KABX'SHIKI-KAISHA All rights rfnerved FRANCIS GALTON in I'.WW. From ;i |)hot.>jrrii|>li Ipy tin- Antlior of tlio inifinislii-il pictuiv l,y (. \\'. Fursc ;it ( laverdon. THE LIFE, LETTERS AND LABOURS OF FRANCIS GALTON BY KARL PEARSON GALTON PROFESSOR, UNIVERSITY OK LONDON VOLUME I BIRTH 1822 TO MARRIAGE 1853 Cambridge : ^' at the University Press / x l l%/ \fl\ 1914 Q 114-3 v. I Cnnibtitigr PKINTEI) BY JOHN CLAY, M.A. AT THE UNIVERSITY PBE88 PREFACE delay that has attended the issue of this Life of Francis THEGalton, of which even now only the first volume appears, is largely due to three causes. In the first place the writer has so many other duties that the time to sort out, peruse and abstract the large amount of available material has only been obtained in odd holiday intervals or by postponing the claims of students and workers in the Galton Laboratory on his attention and energy. I trust that they will for the sake of this account of the life of the man, to whom we alike owe so much, pardon the delays, which have so often been inflicted on the I that publication of their own researches. -
MOSAIC Engagement Resource Guide
Engagement Resource Guide Engagement Resource Guide Azura Living Copyright 2014 Engagement Resource Guide MOSAIC Engagement Resource Guide The contents of the MOSAIC Engagement Resource Guide are based off of the Azura Memory Care Engagement Supply List and should be used as a reference with the required items that each home has in their on-site inventory. By participating in these suggested engagements with residents, we are able to meet their Core Psychological Needs to boost self-esteem, have the power to choose, to be needed and useful, to care for others, to share joy and laughter, and to love and to be loved. In addition, each item on the Engagement Supply List to work on reminiscing therapy, cognitive therapy, active therapy, chore therapy, and creative therapy. Although many of these items may be very simple through our MOSAIC Connections training we are able to use innovative approaches to create many magical MOSAIC Moments of personalized joy! Azura’s 5 Core Values 1. We treat our guests and coworkers with the utmost RESPECT. 2. We help people to RECOVER physically, mentally and spiritually. 3. We encourage INNOVATION and creativity 4. We hire and RETAIN the finest people. 5. Be EXCEPTIONAL! Azura Living Copyright 2014 Engagement Resource Guide Azura Living Copyright 2014 Engagement Resource Guide Table of Contents MOSAIC Approaches & Communication Techniques: 12 Steps Current House Engagement Supply List Music Therapy Cognitive Therapy General Music BINGO Sing-a-Long Checkers Musical Instruments: Chess Music CD’s and