Rare Books
Gamma knife
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Henry Scamman letter to Francesca B. Allen
Manuscripts
Letter from Henry Scamman to Francesca Allen, providing comments about Scamman's family, his varied activities, and his hopes that Francesca would visit him in the spring. Scamman also writes about going to Sacramento to fight a tax-related bill and hunting quail. With envelope.
mssHM 83979
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Eminent authorities on China
Rare Books
A really conclusive book on the subject of China has not yet appeared; perhaps, because most authors think they know too much about their subject. Final judgments are passed by almost every writer--deliberate, definite, unequivocal judgments. Yet when comparison is made they are found to be bewilderingly diverse and not infrequently flatly contradictory. It is the aim of this book to deal with these judgments by the more important writers and the premises on which they rest; to arrange them in juxtaposition and by so doing to extract some sort of satisfying truth--to allow the several authors, so to speak, to form a Parliament and each one have his say. -- Preface.
654350
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Oblivion
Rare Books
"The term 'shadowland' that Maisel uses when discussing the Oblivion photographs is appropriate. When you cast a shadow on a fact, you create doubt. When you shadow someone, you follow them invisibly. Shadowland is what the military calls those blacked-out areas where they wish to operate unseen, whether they are testing an experimental aircraft or interrogating people beyond lawful means. It is a land of spies and spooks, a place where ghosts live, and what Los Angeles looks like in Oblivion. The city is almost recognizable in Maisel’s negative prints and yet not quite, as if we are seeing both more of what we know and less"--Publisher's description.
653254
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Retrospective two
Rare Books
"How can a sustained thirty-year career be an aberration? This is a time of turbulence and edge, but should we dismiss someone who knows that and yet consciously chooses to make pictures that offer order, harmony, and respite? The energy that critics may wish to be in his work is expended in the doing, in the creation of over a dozen separate, coherent projects and thousands of single images. With the same discipline that he applies to long distance running, Kenna distills and refines. He is not turning off his critical faculties, but rather employs them to pay homage. The rebel in Kenna responds, 'I derive so much satisfaction from photography precisely because I've had the luxury of not caring what the art world thinks of my work. I have been able to use the medium as a way to help choose my personal journey or pilgrimage through this life. Most of the places I've photographed I chose because I wanted to acknowledge them and indeed pay homage to them...I haven't tried to be different or break any rules. I couldn't care less what the rules are anyway.'"--From introduction.
653194

First Raymond Hotel, South Pasadena
Visual Materials
Exterior view of the multi-story Raymond Hotel in Pasadena, California (in what is now South Pasadena), with a porch that wraps around entire building, in the final stages of construction. An individual in a hat, sits at the top of a stone stairway leading up the hill to the hotel. Grounds are not yet landscaped.
photPF 595
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The lost art of healing
Rare Books
Never Before has medicine had the capacity to do so much good, yet never have people been so disenchanted with their doctors. The problem is that doctors have lost the art of healing, which involves much more than diagnostic skills and the ability to mobilize technology. At its core is the doctor-patient relationship, and in this provocative book one of our most distinguished physicians draws on forty years of experience to show how vitally important that relationship.
658119