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All Message Boards : more on cranes
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Recommend  Message 1 of 4 in Discussion 
From: la gentilesse  (Original Message)Sent: 9/7/2002 12:04 AM
While not as brilliant as susie at this sort of stuff I traced paper crane stories through children's lit as I have the Sadako story by Junko Morimoto, a Sydney children's lit (we have an amazing traidtion of children's lit in this country, if ever visiting just go curl of in Gleebe Books children's books or some other specialist and be amazed...as much as anything else by the confrontation of a lot of the work) the White Crane

I was wondering how many people were aware of how this White Crane origami tradition has danced

http://www2.milwaukee.k12.wi.us/pt3/voices/sadako.htm

may help with any further development of this theme

la g


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Recommend  Message 2 of 4 in Discussion 
From: susieSent: 9/7/2002 12:53 AM
thanks for the webpage, jen.
answers a lot of questions.
 
and for those who can't paste it in their browser's Address bar, here's the hyperlink:
 
susan

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Recommend  Message 3 of 4 in Discussion 
From: DrLucky#3Sent: 9/7/2002 1:55 AM
October of 1955, Sasako folded her last crane-number 644,and she quietly became another of the many casualties of a war that had ended ten years earlier
 
and 1000 and wish would be granted
sometimes
tragedy
is
unyielding

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Recommend  Message 4 of 4 in Discussion 
From: la gentilesseSent: 5/16/2003 12:20 PM
bump

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