Blues in the dark / Count Basie
- OTUFM 69-A-1-008
- File
- 1943
Part of Harry and Ida Culley fonds
File consists of two copies of the same solo piano sheet music in cover page from Bregman, Vocco and Conn, Inc. with title added by typewriter.
2886 results directly related Exclude narrower terms
Blues in the dark / Count Basie
Part of Harry and Ida Culley fonds
File consists of two copies of the same solo piano sheet music in cover page from Bregman, Vocco and Conn, Inc. with title added by typewriter.
Blythe, Scott. “Tournament debaters talk and talk…” The Varsity, Vol. 100, No. 17, October 17, 1979
Part of Geoffrey E. Buerger fonds
Boisen and the case method: roots of the case method in the work of Richard Cabot
Part of Henri Nouwen fonds
This item is a 21 page article by Henri Nouwen entitled, ‘Boisen and the Case Method’, published in The Chicago Theological Seminary Register, Boisen Centennial Issue, Winter 1977, Vol. LXVII No.1. The first section entitled ‘ Roots of the Case Method in the work of Richard Cabot’, outlines Boisen’s meeting with Dr Richard C. Cabot, MD at the Andover Theological Seminary. Nouwen states, ‘The meeting of Cabot and Boisen not only made the start of the clinical training movement possible, but also offered him the model for the theology through living human documents’. Nouwen discusses Cabot’s teaching and training methods and his idea for a clinical year for theological students. Nouwen discusses Cabot’s Clinicopathological Conferences. This work and the volume which resulted from it ‘gave Boisen the clue for much of his later work: the case study method. This method moved from the theoretical learning found in seminaries to the ‘investigation of living human documents’. When Boisen moved to be Chaplain at the Worcester State Hospital he insisted that he be allowed to do research and to have ‘free access to the case records, the right to visit patients on all the wards, to attend staff meetings where the cases being discussed and to be recognized as part of the therapeutic team’. Nouwen suggests that this was the beginning of the acceptance of Chaplains as an important part of the therapeutic program for patients. Nouwen describes Boisen’s core idea for the use of the case system, ‘that certain types of mental disorder and certain types of religious experience are alike attempts at reorganization…’ Nouwen then speaks of Boisen’s limitations in his understanding and use of the case system as relating to his own personal experience of mental illness. He then outlines a case history of ‘Jonah’ that Boisen frequently used in his teaching and as a tool for training. In conclusion, Nouwen says, ‘ …his idea of training is based on the theoretical principle that theology should derive it authority not from books, but as in every science worth of its name, from observable and controllable data…[Boisen says] I wanted them to learn to read human documents as well as books’.
Bonds of love: Father Henri Nouwen shares special message of L'Arche community
Part of Henri Nouwen fonds
Boogie-woogie upstairs / Ray Sinatra
Part of Harry and Ida Culley fonds
File consists of two copies of the solo piano sheet music.
Part of Harry and Ida Culley fonds
File consists of six solo piano arrangements: Ragamuffin / Jesse Greer; Sapphire / Rube Bloom; Rhythmic ripples / Emil Velasco ; Pins and needles / Donald Thorne; Futuresque / Cecil Norman; That's a plenty / Lew Pollack. Manuscript piano part is for "That's a plent."
Part of Fulton Anderson fonds
Part of Marshall McLuhan Collection
McLuhan, Marshall. "Noble Purpose but to What End?" Review of The Revolution of Hope: Toward a Humanized Technology by Erich Fromm, The Washington Post: Book World, vol. 2, no. 45, 10 Nov 1968, p. 4.
[Book Review] Our Mass Communications
Part of Marshall McLuhan Collection
Fox, C. J. "Our Mass Communications." Review of Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man by Marshall McLuhan, The Commonweal, vol. 81, no. 4, 1964, pp. 105-106.
[Book Review] Our Unofficial Education
Part of Marshall McLuhan Collection
Anderson, Violet. "Our Unofficial Education." Review of The Mechanical Bride: Folklore of Industrial Man by Herbert Marshall McLuhan, Food for Thought, vol. 12, no. 5, 1952, pp. 28-31, 35.
[Book Review] Revolutions in Communication, M. McLuhan’s The Gutenberg Galaxy
Part of Marshall McLuhan Collection
Emery, Tony. "Revolutions in Communication." Review of The Gutenberg Galaxy,by Marshall McLuhan. Canadian Literature,no. 14, Autumn, 1962, pp.65-67.
[Book Review] The curvature of typographic man
Part of Marshall McLuhan Collection
Velde, Paul. " The Curvature of Typographic Man." Review of The Gutenberg Galaxy by Marshall McLuhan, Jubilee, vol. 11, no. 3, 1963, pp. 42-45.
[Book Review] The Mechanical Bride; Christen the Folklore of Industrial Man
Part of Marshall McLuhan Collection
Ong, Walter J. Review of The Mechanical Bride: Folklore of Industrial Man, by Herbert Marshall McLuhan, Social Order, vol. 2, no. 2, 1952, pp. 79-85.
Part of Malcolm William Wallace fonds
Part of A.F.W. Plumptre fonds
File includes two books: Test Pattern: Instructional Television at Scarborough College, University of Toronto by John A. Lee (1971); A History of Scarborough edited by Robert B. Bonis. The first is signed by Plumptre on the front end paper (1965).
Part of Anne Murray Fonds
Titles include:
Part of UTSC Photographic Services fonds
File contains 1 book, 2 booklets, 1 poster; 3 artifacts and 1 book in total. First material is a book called "Decade Book"; highlights years of history of Scarborough College from 1962-1972; book by William E. Beckel, first dean of Scarborough College; book in B&W. First artifact is a booklet titled "University of Toronto Scarborough College" ; shows original diagrams and photos of Scarborough College; outlines college's educational philosophy, design philosophy, site features, use of the site and project order; complete booklet in B&W; middle portion of booklet has been torn from binding; no date or markings on booklet. Second artifact is poster with title "U of T Co-op, University of Toronto Scarborough; outlines co-op programs in Management and Computer Science; poster is in colour; picture of student on computer; no date or markings on poster. Third artifact is a booklet, titled "Scarborough college, University of Toronto"; contains photos and diagrams of Scarborough College similar to ones included in first booklet; contains information about Scarborough College's beginning, the site, the concept and the building; no year or date on booklet; no markings; booklet in perfect condition.
This subseries includes books surrounding the topic of Blissymbols, Blissymbolics and other methods of augmentative and alternative communication which were not published by BCIC.
Books and offprints, W.Lash Miller
Part of Miller Family fonds
Books, correspondence, artifacts certificates. W. Lash Miller
Part of Miller Family fonds
Books, Guides & Symbol Dictionaries
This subseries contains books published by Blissymbolics Communication Institute - Canada for the purpose of educating others in using and teaching Blissymbolics.
Border regions of faith: an anthology of religion and social change
Part of Henri Nouwen fonds
Item consists of a book in which Nouwen has written Chapter 42, beginning on p. 347, titled: "Christ of the Americas." The article was first published in America, 102 (April 21, 1984), and reflects, in part, on his feeling that "in order to come to know the living Christ among the people in the northern part of the Americas, I had to be willing to expose myself to the way the living Christ reveals Himself in the southern part of the Americas."
Bourée de la 2e. Sonate de violon / J.S. Bach, transcription par C. Saint-Saëns
Part of Harry and Ida Culley fonds
File consists of an annotated score with fingering and expressions marked in pencil for a student.
Brieven aan Marc: over Jezus en de zin van het leven
Part of Henri Nouwen fonds
Item consists of a book of seven letters; the translated title is: Letters to Marc About Jesus. Nouwen wrote this book in response to a publisher friend named Herman Pijfers, and his suggestion that Nouwen write a book in Dutch. As well, the book was written in collaboration with Marc van Campen, Nouwen's nephew, who agreed to share a 'book of letters' about the spiritual life. The book has been divided into the following: Preface; Letter 1. Jesus: the Heart of Our Existence; Letter 2. Jesus: the God Who Sets Us Free; Letter 3. Jesus: the Compassionate God; Letter 4. Jesus: the Descending God; Letter 5. Jesus: the Loving God; Letter 6. Jesus: the Hidden God; Letter 7. Listening to Jesus; Index of Biblical Quotations.
Part of Henri Nouwen fonds
Item consists of an article which criticizes Nouwen's article "Toekomstige parkeerplaats tussen de sterren" [according to a brief translation].
British Association for the Advancement of Science fonds
Fonds consists of 2 accessions
B1987-0045: Photo of 1924 meeting of the Association; the University of Toronto professors represented are Charles Ryle Fay and Robert Morrison MacIver.
B2009-0026: Bound volume of printed programmes, tickets, blank forms, published notices etc. re activities at the Toronto meeting of the Association in August 1897.
British Association for the Advancement of Science
Part of Henri Nouwen fonds
This item is a 5- page article by Henri Nouwen entitled, ‘Broken’ published in ‘Living Prayer’ by Living Prayer Inc., Barre, VT, Vol. 26, No. 2, March – April 1993, pp. 3 – 7. This item is a slightly abbreviated chapter from Nouwen’s book ‘Life of the Beloved’. Nouwen is writing this as a letter to a secular friend. Nouwen begins by saying ‘Our sufferings and pains are not simply bothersome interruptions of our lives; rather they touch us in our uniqueness…the way I am broken tells you something unique about me’. Nouwen goes on to suggest that the most painful brokenness in society is what he calls ‘inner brokenness – a brokenness of the heart’. He suggests that the reaction of many is to feel rejected, alone and cast out by God. Nouwen offers two ways we may respond to our brokenness: befriending it and second, putting it under the blessing. Nouwen suggests that though looking the brokenness in the eye and befriending it is counter-cultural because we want to move away from pain, it is the way to healing. Nouwen then goes on to write about putting brokenness under the blessing as in fact, a precondition for befriending it. ‘Then our brokenness will gradually come to be seen as an opening toward the full acceptance of ourselves as the Beloved’. Nouwen concludes with some comments about how the music of Leonard Bernstein has helped him to understand what he is now writing about.
Part of Harry and Ida Culley fonds
File consists of two copies of the solo piano sheet music. The title has been crossed out on both copies.
File consists of 1 broadside of Buddhist axioms with no attribution. 'Dreadnaught Broadside' is printed in the middle of the broadside.
Part of Harry and Ida Culley fonds
File consists of the solo piano sheet music and a manuscript copy of the same.
Bugle call rag : fox trot / Jack Pettis, Irving Mills, and Elmer Schoebel, arranged by Jimmy Dale
Part of Harry and Ida Culley fonds
File consists of parts for orchestra, and one manuscript part for 1st violin.
Bukkyo Tozen: A History of Jodo Shinshu Buddhism in Canada, 1905-1995
Part of Michael Murakami fonds
By Terry Watada, published by the Toronto Buddhist Church.
Part of Fulton Anderson fonds
Burnin' sticks / Toots Mondello
Part of Harry and Ida Culley fonds
File consists of the score and part for a piece for E-flat saxophone and piano. Sheet music stamped "Feb 19 1940."
Part of Henri Nouwen fonds
This item is a one page article by Henri Nouwen entitled ‘But what then can we do?’ published in Alive Now! November-December, 1991, p. 47. It is the second article by Nouwen featured in this publication. The first article is entitled 'There's a lot of pain...' The theme of this issue is ‘Loneliness’ and this article is identified as an excerpt from Nouwen’s ‘Reaching Out’. Nouwen begins by asking ‘But what then can we do with our essential aloneness which so often breaks into our consciousness as the experience of a desperate sense of loneliness?’ Nouwen goes on to speak of the need to convert our loneliness into a fruitful solitude.
By the river Sainte Marie = Près de la rivière Ste. Marie
Part of Harry and Ida Culley fonds
File consists of the vocal sheet music with piano and ukelele accompaniment.
Part of Harry and Ida Culley fonds
File consists of the solo piano sheet music and a manuscript copy of the same.
Part of Henri Nouwen fonds
This item is a 7 page talk given by Henri Nouwen entitled ‘Called from Darkness’ given to a Lutheran Worship Celebration in support of the Second Special Session on Disarmament of the United Nations at Jazz Vespers, published in Sermons at St. Peter’s Church, Sunday, June 13, 1982. Nouwen identifies his intention in this talk to reflect on a ‘spirituality of peacemaking’ using three key words: prayer, resistance and community. In his discussion of prayer Nouwen first speaks of the difference between speaking out of our needs: for affection, attention, power and speaking from our relationship with God rooted in prayer. ‘Now prayer is that slow process in which we move away from that dark sticky place of our needs into the light of Christ’. Nouwen also identifies prayer as an act of resistance, ‘resistance against this needy, sucking and frightening go-around’. Nouwen then reflects on the word resistance. ‘Resistance means to say No! No! No! against all the forces of death’. Nouwen speaks about the power then of life and our resistance to it and that is our struggle not just in the big things in life but the small. Nouwen goes on to suggest that resistance is not just to say No! but even more to say yes. ‘Resistance in the deepest sense means to continuously proclaim that God is a God of the living, that God is a God of life’. Nouwen also states that ‘Resistance is prayer because it is a proclamation and a confession of the living God’. In discussing the third word ‘community’, Nouwen identifies community as the place of prayer and resistance. The person who acts towards peace with the support of community is rooted in a place of acceptance and forgiveness. Nouwen concludes the talk by saying that he believes the most important point is that ‘community is to be a Eucharistic community’.
Part of Henri Nouwen fonds
This item is a 2 page article by Henri Nouwen entitled: Called to be Hosts, published in Faith/At/Work, September, 1976, p 30-31. Nouwen begins the article by stating ‘The call to ministry is the call to be a host to the many strangers passing by. In this world full of strangers…we search for a hospitable place, where life can be found’. Nouwen speaks then of our ambivalent feelings towards the stranger of both fear and attraction and suggests that ‘during the last years strangers have become more subject to hostility than to hospitality’. Nouwen then goes on to speak of the way in which a minister is to offer healing hospitality to the stranger. He speaks of the need to offer a space where the stranger can grow to be himself. ‘This will come to pass only when ministry is undergirded by spirituality, that is, when the outer movement from hostility to hospitality is supported by an inner movement from property to poverty. Poverty means that my identity in the final analysis is not determined by what I can do or think, but by what God’s Spirit can do, say, and think in me.’ Nouwen concludes, ‘When poverty enables us to create a friendly space for the stranger and to convert hostility into hospitality, then the stranger might be willing to show his real face’.
Can you be intimate with more than one person?
Part of Henri Nouwen fonds
Part of Robert Allan Spencer fonds
Ruth Church was employed as the head librarian at Canada House in London from September 1945 to March 1950. She was the first permanent librarian hired by the Canadian High Commission and was tasked with building up the library almost from scratch, while serving the demands of the Canadian diplomatic corps and facilitating the use of the library by Canadians based in or travelling through London and interested members of the public.
She nearly lost her job when she married in 1948, as the Civil Service Commission’s policy was that once married, she would be supported by her husband and therefore would be replaced by an unmarried librarian as soon as possible. She appealed on the basis that she would be supporting her husband while he was a student at Oxford and was allowed to remain on with her full salary and allowances. In April 1949, her contract was renewed for six-months and, on request, for a further six months until 28 February 1950, which was extended to 31 March until her replacement arrived from Canada. During this period she fought back against the Department of External Affairs’ decision to reduce her allowance and the Receiver General’s clawback of portions of her salary. Forty-five years later she publicly objected to the closure of the Library and of Canada House and lived to attend its reopening in 1998.
The files in this series contain correspondence, salary stubs, poetry, reports, a manuscript, and articles.
Canada/Newfoundland Royal Commission on the Ocean Ranger Marine Disaster
Part of Omond McKillop Solandt fonds
When the Ocean Ranger oil rig tipped over in the Atlantic on 15 April, 1982, it set in motion an inquiry which involved two royal commissions, one federal and the other provincial (Newfoundland) which, due to a public outcry, were forced to amalgamate. David Grenville, secretary of the Commission, drew on advice from Dr. Solandt for the second volume of the report, which addressed safety on the oil rigs. An important part of this exercise was the convening of a conference in St. John
Canadian Buddhist. Spring (Vancouver)
Part of Jack Itsuo Hemmy fonds
Canadian Forestry Advisory Council
Part of Omond McKillop Solandt fonds
While Dr. Solandt was working on his report for the PPRIC, it became apparent that the amount of forestry research being done in Canada was declining every year. Pierre Gendron proposed that the CFAC should commission a quick survey of the volume of forestry research being done in every agency that could be located in Canada. A Steering Committee was created to execute the study, which was carried out by Dr. Solandt in 1979.
The correspondence, notes, minutes, memoranda, reports, drafts of reports, and replies to questionnaires document the procedures and methodology that Dr. Solandt undertook in preparing his report.
Part of Omond McKillop Solandt fonds
In the latter months of 1955, Omond Solandt began arranging his departure from the Defence Research Board to take up the position of Vice-President, Research and Development of Canadian National Railways, a position he held from 1 March, 1956 to 1 July, 1963.
This series contains correspondence, addresses, press clippings, reports, articles and photoprints (see Series 46) relating largely to the scientific research carried out by the Research and Development Department.
Part of Music Pedagogy collection
Series contains the following volumes, listed in alphabetical order by box and author:
Box 1:
Box 2:
Part of Omond McKillop Solandt fonds
Dr. Solandt was introduced to canoes at an early age but did not take up the sport seriously until he was 41. The group that assembled for the first canoe trip into Quetico Park in 1952 formed the core of what subsequently became the
Part of Henri Nouwen fonds
Item consists of a booklet featuring Nouwen's speech "Care and The Elderly" which he delivered on June 25, 1975 in Atlantic City, New Jersey, at the biennial luncheon sponsored by The Ministers and Missionaries Benefit Board of the American Baptist Churches.
Part of Henri Nouwen fonds
Care: spirituality and everyday life
Part of Henri Nouwen fonds
This item is a two page article by Henri Nouwen entitled, ‘Care’, published in Fellowship in Prayer, Vol. 38, No.6, December 1987, pp. 23 – 25. This item is a short excerpt from Henri Nouwen’s ‘Out of Solitude’. Nouwen begins by asking, ‘What does it mean to care?’ Nouwen then writes of the ambiguous ways in which the word ‘care’ is often used and the root meaning ‘Kara, which means lament’. Nouwen states, ‘Real care is not ambiguous. Real care excludes indifference and is the opposite of apathy’. Nouwen writes of different kinds of care and states, ‘The friend who cares makes it clear that whatever happens in the external world, being present to each other is what really matters. In fact, it matters more than pain, illness, or even death’.