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Box 11

 Container

Contains 38 Results:

Fischer, Sonja J. - Thank You, I'm Just Browsing (#1), December 6, 1995

 File — Box: 11
Identifier: 1
Paper description The author uses a lively fictional conversation between friends to write about the newest information on the lymphatic system learned from Scientific American. She covers T-cells and B-cells, cure ideas for colds based on research, autoimmune disease (what is known and the evolution of), AIDs and ideas for cures, histocompatibility and histoincompatibility (and mate selection), Bagel injuries (with knives), travel and susceptibility to microbes, problems with over doing hygiene, disease...
Dates: December 6, 1995

Gately, Joan - Back for More, January 10, 1996

 File — Box: 11
Identifier: 1
Paper description June Naomi Bliven writes in the New York Times :Whatever happened to old ladies? Those gray-haired, bunned and shapeless women with ankle length hems and sensible shoes. At about age 40, they surrendered all pretension of youthful allure. after all the life span was 58. What do those ladies do now? Women have longer life spans and better health. In the 1970s they began returning to school, like the author did in 1981. She writes a history of schools opening their enrollments to older...
Dates: January 10, 1996

Hobart, Mary Ballard - Miracle in Schenectady, January 8, 1997

 File — Box: 11
Identifier: 1
Paper description

The author describes the experiences of an entire family after the diagnosis of a cancerous growth in the lung of her six year old grandchild. Medical treatment of the child and causes of cancer described as well as the impact of this shocking event on the child's sisters, parents, aunts and uncles and grandparents. It is a story of how family supports one another in many ways. Prognosis at the time good.

Dates: January 8, 1997

Johnston, Eleanor C. - Saudade, October 23, 1996

 File — Box: 11
Identifier: 1
Paper description Saudale is a Portuguese word that can mean several things. Homesickness, longing, or nostalgia are appropriate for the author's story. In July, 1968, Marie Helena dos Santos Oliveira Liberato (called Lena), age 18, arrived to live with the Johnston's as an AFS student and attend New Trier with their daughter Molly. She said little and wrote long letters home. She only seemed comfortable with the family's young son, who learned her family's tragic history during World War II, when her parents...
Dates: October 23, 1996

Phair, Nancy - Everybody's Muse: Misia Godebska, November 13, 1996

 File — Box: 11
Identifier: 1
Paper description

Misia Godebska, born in1872, was a pianist of Polish descent who hosted an artistic salon in Paris. She was a patron and friend of numerous artists, for whom she regularly posed. Her husband and his brothers founded the magazine, Revue blanche. during its 15 years of existence published some of the most important articles on modern thinking of any magazine of its time. The magazine strongly championed Dreyfus, wrongfully tried and imprisoned for treason in 1894.

Dates: November 13, 1996

Pettibone, Jean - Herewith Hangs a Tail or Hangs a Tale, December 11, 1996

 File — Box: 11
Identifier: 1
Paper description The author writes about a 16-day, August 1996 vacation to Thailand, where she rides an elephant with a swishing tail on her 70th birthday. She describes the history: geographical; original settlement by humans in the 13th century by Chinese; the only Southeast Asian island never ruled by the West; King Mongkut (as in Anna and the King of Siam) and other rulers. It is not a travelogue, but the author' story of a special experience, brought alive through the people they met, the rules of...
Dates: December 11, 1996

Fenninger, Jane - Friendship Hill, February 12, 1997

 File — Box: 11
Identifier: 1
Paper description The story of the author's connection to Friendship Hill, a house built in the 1760s at the confluence of the Allegheny and Monongahela Rivers. She concentrates on the story of Albert Gallatin, who came to the New World from Geneva and became a prominent American about whom we hear little in the present. He knew Voltaire, Napoleon, and Lafayette, among others. He was Secretary of the Treasury for both Jefferson and Madison, actually convinced Jefferson to purchase the Louisiana Purchase, and...
Dates: February 12, 1997

Barber, Margo - Legend?, January 22, 1997

 File — Box: 11
Identifier: 1
Paper description What is the truth of the unicorn, sometimes described as fierce, sometimes as gentle, sometimes only to be subdued by a virgin? In art and literature, it has been a part of the cultures of ancient China, Egypt, Greece and Rome, as well as Jewish and Christian religions. Included in this paper is James Thurber's "A Unicorn in the Garden", Anne Morrow Lindbergh's poem "The Unicorn in Captivity," and descriptions of the unicorn tapestries at the Cluny Museum in Paris and the Cloisters in New...
Dates: January 22, 1997

Plochman, Barbara - The Heretic, October 15, 1997

 File — Box: 11
Identifier: 1
Paper description The author uses a fictional setting to tell the stories of Galileo Galilei - his science, his writings, and his 17th century trial by the Catholic Inquisition. The fictional characters are reporters in Rome researching the pardon of Galileo (10/31/1992) by Pope John Paul II on the occasion of the 350th anniversary of his death. A French priest began the campaign for pardoning in the early 1960s. It took until the 1980s to gather all lost papers and to work through them to find the story...
Dates: October 15, 1997

Howland, Joan T. - Who is Sylvia?, April 23, 1997

 File — Box: 11
Identifier: 1
Paper description

Referring, of course, to Shakespeare's poem from "Two Gentlemen of Verona" and Schubert's lovely lieder, "Who is Sylvia", the author proceeds to tell the story of the Sylvia in her life, namely her mother. Her mother was born on a Sioux Indian reservation, educated in a French convent, a Midwest public school (American and Indian), and graduated from Smith College.

Dates: April 23, 1997

Nielsen, Patricia M. - Billy Byrd, May 14, 1997

 File — Box: 11
Identifier: 1
Paper description

The tale of a fictional nephew of Admiral Richard Byrd, who was the first to fly over the North Pole in 1926. The author weaves the fictional adventures of the boy and the historical facts of Adm. Byrd's achievement into one story. Both men are outstanding heroes and charming individuals.

Dates: May 14, 1997

Van Arsdale, Sally - For Learning and the Lord, May 28, 1997

 File — Box: 11
Identifier: 1
Paper description

Small, coed, liberal arts, Midwest colleges are proud of their old campuses and trees and of their high academic standards. Most began as religious colleges in the 19th century. Knox College (in Galesburg, Illinois), founded by George Washington Gale, was to founded to educate young ministers, especially poor ones who were accustomed to hardship, self discipline, and work - needed for living on the frontier. The author relates the history of its founding and the many obstacles.

Dates: May 28, 1997

Peck, Annette - Phineas Who?, September 24, 1997

 File — Box: 11
Identifier: 1
Paper description The author writes a biography of Phineas Staunton, an artist and scholar who died in 1867 at age 50. He began his career as an itinerant portrait painter. Through marriage he became involved with Ingham University in Le Roy, NY (his wife was the 1857 founder of this first all women's university in the U.S.) He painted famous people and people along the road during his travels. Staunton was Claude Peck's (the writer's husband) great uncle. Among famous sitters were Henry Clay and Chief...
Dates: September 24, 1997