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Janet M. Buche 3-19-2005 Women's Studies 398 Interviewed by Jason P. Buche SIDE I 0-6 6-11 11-17 17-45 45-54 54-65 65-73 73-87 87-127 127-140 Introductions Explains where she is born, where she grows up, and where she goes to school. Also mentions her parents. Goes into her career, how she got started, and how long she's worked at her salon. Tells about all of the clubs and organizations she has been a part of and how long she has participated in all of those. she describes her community involvement. Explains how and why she got involved with these organizations and her involvement with her children. Her schooling and class experience. Tells about their farm and her husbands logging business. She delivers papers when she is little with her siblings. Describes the town she grew up in, the relationship with the school and community. It used to be a much more close knit community. She decides to go to cosmetology school when her oldest daughter is five. She opened her shop in Springdale in 1983. 1 140-141 Thank you and good bye. 2
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Buche, Janet Oral History Interview, 2005 |
Interviewer | Buche, Jason |
Date | 2005-04-30 |
Description | 31 minute oral history with Janet Buche, conducted for a Women in the West (HIST 398 course at Washington State University). She talks about her early childhood in Springdale, Washington in a large family of six children. After high school, she married and raised four children. After the birth of her first child, she received a cosmetology degree and opened a beauty shop that she still runs. She remains active in her community and also works as bookkeeper for her husbands logging company. |
Subject | Rural women; Economic & social conditions; Housewives; Working mothers |
Coverage | North and Central America--United States--Washington (State)--Stevens County--Chewelah; North and Central America--United States--Washington (State)--Stevens County--Springdale |
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 | ua262b07f78 |
Source | Is found in Archives 262, Women in the West Oral Histories https://libraries.wsu.edu/masc/finders/ua262.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. Print documents were scanned to pdf format using a Xerox Workcentre 5030 copier/scanner. |
Description
Title | ua262b07f78_Abstract |
Full Text | Janet M. Buche 3-19-2005 Women's Studies 398 Interviewed by Jason P. Buche SIDE I 0-6 6-11 11-17 17-45 45-54 54-65 65-73 73-87 87-127 127-140 Introductions Explains where she is born, where she grows up, and where she goes to school. Also mentions her parents. Goes into her career, how she got started, and how long she's worked at her salon. Tells about all of the clubs and organizations she has been a part of and how long she has participated in all of those. she describes her community involvement. Explains how and why she got involved with these organizations and her involvement with her children. Her schooling and class experience. Tells about their farm and her husbands logging business. She delivers papers when she is little with her siblings. Describes the town she grew up in, the relationship with the school and community. It used to be a much more close knit community. She decides to go to cosmetology school when her oldest daughter is five. She opened her shop in Springdale in 1983. 1 140-141 Thank you and good bye. 2 |
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