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Elizabeth R. Nov. 17, 1988 Interviewed by Debbie Nakata SIDE I 1-3 33~-42 42-47 Introduction was born in 1914 and grew up in of the Valley. It was primarily a growing area with orchards everywhere. She, however, didn't on a a spacious home which bordered an orchard on which was about a block na=d.e~d to 10 to 11 and an a "delightful" childhood. children. She and still standing ..-rv,:::>u a very loving, caring They were supportive and she attributes accomplishments to There was security and friendship within the - a very happy time. "bit of a maverick" with her father's switch. would get together for dinner. Grandparents and came west from ......... ,.. ..... ~.,._, ..... "" 1900's. Her grandfather was the reclaimation company in Sunnyside which was Yakima irrigation system. Her store. trouble whole the Her father was on a and finished the c.J..•""u•w grade. Her :rrother spent one or two years at the They then Her at horre to look ::.+'1-,::::,r main her to pursue a career in into as a not of not seem 122-125 courses. even :rrore 166-173 174-186 She was a for an at 381-389 429-443 444-457 458-464 464-478 Bene was 1 Bene Betty spring break, to teach. so would accommodate Bene's Se.,:>teJ:nbE!r 1, 1963. '-<'-"''~"'-""'"'"' to try and make as worked out Bene was it was so much work "Cad". had a to all of the helpful with Bene. went on to a SIDE 1-14 went to see "The to a lot of to attend the , went to too much once knew it v1as drove been a ,....,..,,,.,n,-,..-+- '-'T"rTY-.:T of how Bene Bene was how Bene 1980. Bene Bene was care of and cro,f-ov-+- dust most of the 51-61 61-65 65-71 to in some of students at WSU. to ease out. 266-276 276-278 She then Ut;:::<..;..t.UOU She was Cougars once. events an 367-375 376-385 394~-426 on her the Depression. ..~~'"-~ have to an ~ID, but ' s much happier she went microbiology. '"""""" ..... ';;;"'~'..~..'-'" and she was at eve:rybody "was in the sane boat" and She contrasts it to students cars, places to , activities, etc. money up to just to go to a concert. She had to save to get home for vacations. nc:>T"'n that she might get not be was very homesick her "nnor~~~,,, She had to plan ahead and IIDI1ev never been that way 'When she was young. 1 ,.,..,Y:lV" UU..'-'1.'-<.-L'- '-'.l.C~.::>i:> until the it not She now than to used to inferiority complex. Enthusiasm, family fairness, and high standard of values are important. "Do unto others as would them to do unto you" is essentially her philosophy of
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Hall, Elizabeth "Betty" Rose Oral History Interview, 1988 |
Interviewer | Nakata, Debbie |
Date | 1988-12-14 |
Description | 86 minute oral history with Elizabeth Rose Hall, conducted for a Women in the West (HST 398) course at Washington State University. Discusses her college schooling opportunities, working part-time jobs, hardships, and her study of medicine in microbiology. She received her doctorate degree from Washington State University and continued teaching for 24 years; she faced many discriminatory actions because she was a woman. She was active throughout her whole life in the Public Health industries. |
Subject | Medical education; Teachers |
Coverage | North and Central America--United States--Washington (State)--Whitman County--Pullman; North and Central America--United States--Washington (State)--Clark County--Sunnyside; North and Central America--United States--Oklahoma |
Type | Sound |
Genre | Interviews |
Publisher | Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections, Washington State University Libraries: https://libraries.wsu.edu/masc |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ |
Rights Notes | In copyright. Item is in copyright until 95 years after 2011 publication date. |
Identifier | ua220b03f16 |
Source | Is found in Archives 220, Women in the West Oral Histories https://libraries.wsu.edu/masc/finders/ua220.htm at Washington State University Libraries' Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections (MASC) https://libraries.wsu.edu/masc |
Holding Institution | Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections, Washington State University Libraries |
Contributors | Digitization and description funded through a National Endowment for the Humanities We the People grant for Washington Womens History to the Washington Womens History Consortium, a part of the Washington State Historical Society. |
Language | English |
Digitization | Original audio cassettes were converted to wav files using Audacity and a USBPre interface. Mp3 files were then created from the wav files for online access. Film clips were created as mpeg-4 files using Adobe Premiere Elements 9 to add selected images to the wav audio files, and then converted to flv files for online display. Print documents were scanned to 300dpi pdf format using a Xerox Workcentre 5030 copier/scanner. |
Description
Title | ua220b03f16_Abstract |
Full Text | Elizabeth R. Nov. 17, 1988 Interviewed by Debbie Nakata SIDE I 1-3 33~-42 42-47 Introduction was born in 1914 and grew up in of the Valley. It was primarily a growing area with orchards everywhere. She, however, didn't on a a spacious home which bordered an orchard on which was about a block na=d.e~d to 10 to 11 and an a "delightful" childhood. children. She and still standing ..-rv,:::>u a very loving, caring They were supportive and she attributes accomplishments to There was security and friendship within the - a very happy time. "bit of a maverick" with her father's switch. would get together for dinner. Grandparents and came west from ......... ,.. ..... ~.,._, ..... "" 1900's. Her grandfather was the reclaimation company in Sunnyside which was Yakima irrigation system. Her store. trouble whole the Her father was on a and finished the c.J..•""u•w grade. Her :rrother spent one or two years at the They then Her at horre to look ::.+'1-,::::,r main her to pursue a career in into as a not of not seem 122-125 courses. even :rrore 166-173 174-186 She was a for an at 381-389 429-443 444-457 458-464 464-478 Bene was 1 Bene Betty spring break, to teach. so would accommodate Bene's Se.,:>teJ:nbE!r 1, 1963. '-<'-"''~"'-""'"'"' to try and make as worked out Bene was it was so much work "Cad". had a to all of the helpful with Bene. went on to a SIDE 1-14 went to see "The to a lot of to attend the , went to too much once knew it v1as drove been a ,....,..,,,.,n,-,..-+- '-'T"rTY-.:T of how Bene Bene was how Bene 1980. Bene Bene was care of and cro,f-ov-+- dust most of the 51-61 61-65 65-71 to in some of students at WSU. to ease out. 266-276 276-278 She then Ut;:::<..;..t.UOU She was Cougars once. events an 367-375 376-385 394~-426 on her the Depression. ..~~'"-~ have to an ~ID, but ' s much happier she went microbiology. '"""""" ..... ';;;"'~'..~..'-'" and she was at eve:rybody "was in the sane boat" and She contrasts it to students cars, places to , activities, etc. money up to just to go to a concert. She had to save to get home for vacations. nc:>T"'n that she might get not be was very homesick her "nnor~~~,,, She had to plan ahead and IIDI1ev never been that way 'When she was young. 1 ,.,..,Y:lV" UU..'-'1.'-<.-L'- '-'.l.C~.::>i:> until the it not She now than to used to inferiority complex. Enthusiasm, family fairness, and high standard of values are important. "Do unto others as would them to do unto you" is essentially her philosophy of |
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