File includes photographs of Jeanne Randolph, Bernie and Jones Miller, Edward and Elizabeth Randolph.
File includes photographs of Bernie and Jones Miller, Jeanne Randolph, Elizabeth Randolph and Tai Lee.
Photographs of Jeanne Randolph, Bernie Miller, Tai Lee and his parents in Italy.
Series consists of records related to Don Simpson's years teaching at the University of Western Ontario (UWO); as professor of comparative education at the Althouse Faculty of Education, 1965-1967 and 1977-1980; and as Executive Secretary of the new Office of International Education, 1969-1972. There are also several files pertaining to his years as a high school teacher at Sir Adam Beck Secondary School (1957-1965). At Althouse, Simpson taught courses on international education, cross-cultural education and education in Africa. At the Office of International Education, he led the creation and operation of the Computerized Cross-cultural Learner Centre (CCLC), which supported integrated, individual-based learning. It was initially conceived of by Simpson in order to prepare CUSO volunteers for work in West Africa. Later, it was used to prepare government advisors and trainers going to the Third World, to prepare business people going to new cultures, and to educate Canadians about Africa, international development, and Caribbean, Black and Aboriginal communities in Canada. The records in the series include handwritten lecture cards, essays, articles, and other course materials; newsletters and bulletins; clippings; correspondence; and notes. Three large hardcover volumes contain the "documentary record of the years 1969-1974" of the Cross-cultural Learner Centre. These volumes, as well as several files on the CCLC, include proposals for the Centre, reports, minutes, essays, clippings, Centre newsletters, summaries, memoranda, assessments and calendars. In addition to the Native Peoples Resource Centre that was associated with the CCLC, the steering committees for Africa, Asia, Latin America, the Caribbean, Black studies, and "Canadian mainstream" are also documented. Also notable in the series are textual files and two posters on Canada's centennial and Expo67. Simpson was on the Education committee of London's Centennial Celebration Committee, and his brother-in-law, Brian Hawkins, was involved in the promotion of Expo67. Among other records, these files contain promotional material and photographic slides of the buildings planned for the Expo. Finally, the series contains materials from the course Simpson taught at Memorial University, Newfoundland, in the summer of 1978, when he helped with the creation of the Institute for Native Education.
File includes a letter regarding the London South Secondary School ambassadorship, a clipping about students at Central Secondary School, two brochures on Expo '67 and a fact sheet on the "universal and international exhibition" in Montreal.
Collection consists of archival material included in the Wyndham Lewis Collection. Consisting of batches of letters from Lewis' widow, Anne Wyndham Lewis (Froanna), news clippings on various aspects of Lewis' public activities (book reviews, criticism, artwork, obituaries), and promotional material relating to his publications (publishers' advertisements, inserts, and other ephemera).
Lewis, Wyndham, 1882-1957Fonds consists of records pertaining to the personal life of Jeanne Randolph and to her work as an art theorist and psychiatrist. These records, which date from the early 1940s to 2014, document Randolph's relationships with friends, family and colleagues as well as the progression of her medical career, her art writing and lecturing. Included in the fonds are correspondence, photographs, research materials, draft manuscripts, notes, journals, day planners, personal memorabilia and ephemera created and accumulated by Randolph, as well as photographs and memorabilia pertaining to the early life of Randolph's mother, Elizabeth Bryant Randolph, and the Bryant and Randolph families.
Randolph, JeanneFile includes a photograph of Jeanne Randolph with a group of women at a tea held in Toronto on 26 November 1994.
File consists of correspondence from friends and family.
File consists of correspondence from friends and family and photographs of Randolph's father, Edward.
File includes photographs of Jeanne Randolph, Bernie Miller, and Randolph's parents and grandmother on vacation in Florida.
File consists of Randolph's letters to Suzanne Mantell and Elizabeth Randolph.
File consists of correspondence from Alan J. Berger and photographs of Berger's son, Neil Berger, and his paintings.
Included are photographs of Jeanne Randolph and her mother, Elizabeth.
Included are photographs of Jeanne Randolph, Bernie Miller, Jones Miller, Suzanne Mantell and Peter Friedman.
File includes photographs of Randolph, her parents, Neil Berger, as well as correspondence from Alan Berger.
File includes a copy of Randolph's 1984 US passport.
File includes correspondence with Vera Frenkel and Sigrid Dahle.
File includes correspondence with Sigrid Dahle and Frances Dyson.
File includes a photograph of Bernie Miller.