File consists of a photograph of Maeve Quaid, an Associate Professor in the School of Business at Trent University.
File consists of photographs of Andrew Pyper a former writer-in-residence at Trent University.
This collection consists of a copy of the pamphlet "Deed of Settlement of Pugets Sound Agricultural Society" [printed in 1912], a photocopy of pages of an article with the title "Exile in the Wilderness" by Jean Murray Cole, University of Washington Press, 1979, which refers to this Society, and a letter dated January 6, 1994 from Anne Morton to Hugh Anson-Cartwright with enclosures which establish the date of printing of the pamphlet as approximately 1912.
Puget Sound Agricultural SocietyFile consists of Prof. John Wadland’s subject file on publishing books. This file contains newspaper clippings, copied articles, handwritten notes, and review articles. Topics in this file include the difficulty of successfully publishing a novel in Canada, cultural politics, and the English language publishing in Canada.
File consists of Prof. John Wadland’s subject file on publishing file 3. This file consists of newspaper clippings, written papers, and some student papers. Topics within this file include Mel Hurtig and the business of publishing in Canada, the exits of Canadian publishers from the industry such as Jack McClelland, other topics include the role of media in pushing book publishing.
File consists of Prof. John Wadland’s subject file on publishing (file 2 of 3). This file consists of photocopied materials including book excerpts, review papers, student papers, as well as booklets. Topics within this file include cultural policy in novel publications, magazine logs, and annual reports from Harlequin Enterprises Limited on publishing for the year 1975.
File consists of Prof. John Wadland’s subject file on publishing (file 1 of 3). This file includes newspaper clippings, magazine articles, and some correspondence. This file consists of topics including the competition of small and large publishing companies, the parting of Methuen staff upon closure, the fade of the printing industry, and new Canadian tax laws forces hardship on Time and Readers Digest.