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Fay Calkins

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Fay Gilkey Calkins Ala'ilima (24 September 1921 - 1 August 2010)[1] was an American academic and writer who lived in Samoa. She was the wife of Samoan politician Leiataualesa Vaiao Alailima.

Life and career

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Calkins was born in Auburn, New York and educated at Oberlin College, Ohio, and Haverford College, Pennsylvania.[1] She then worked for the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration assisting the survivors of Nazi concentration camps.[1] Later she worked as an organiser for the Textile Workers Union of America before completing a PhD at the University of Chicago. Her thesis was on The CIO and the Democratic Party, and was later published as her first book in 1952.[1] She married Leiataualesa Vaiao Alailima in 1952 while studying in Washington, D.C., and moved with him to what was then Western Samoa.[2] Their early life together is chronicled in her second book, My Samoan Chief.[1]

In Samoa she taught at Pesega College and Samoa College.[1] Following Leiataualesa's retirement as public service commissioner, they moved to Hawaii, where they worked for the East–West Center.[1] She also taught at Kamehameha Schools, Hawaii Loa College, and Leeward Community College.[1] In 1986, they returned to Samoa, where she worked as her husband's secretary while he served as a government minister.[1] She later worked for the National University of Samoa's Institute of Samoan Studies.[1] In 1995 she received a grant under the Fulbright Program for work on Samoan politics,[3] which later became her unpublished book, Samoa's Changing Chiefdom. After retiring from the NUS, she returned to Hawaii. She died on 1 August 2010.[2]

Works

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  • The CIO and the Democratic Party (University of Chicago Press, 1952)
  • My Samoan Chief (Doubleday, 1962)
  • Aggie Grey : a Samoan saga (Mutual Publishing, 1988)

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Fay Gilkey Calkins Ala-ilima". Western Friend. Retrieved 13 July 2022.
  2. ^ a b "DR. FAY GILKEY CALKINS ALA'ILIMA". Honolulu Star-Advertiser. Retrieved 20 July 2022.
  3. ^ "Fay Alailima". Fulbright Scholar Program. Retrieved 20 July 2022.