- CHC5611
- Colección
The collection contains scrapbooks, clippings, photographs, negatives, programs, audio reels, 8mm and Super 8 film, and theater ephemera related to the career of actress and singer Nattacha Amador.
Sin título
13 resultados con objetos digitales Muestra los resultados con objetos digitales
The collection contains scrapbooks, clippings, photographs, negatives, programs, audio reels, 8mm and Super 8 film, and theater ephemera related to the career of actress and singer Nattacha Amador.
Sin título
Paul Nagel was a professor at the School of Communication at the University of Miami, as well as a writer, producer, director, and actor in non-theatrical "sponsored films."
The collection includes University of Miami radio tapes and video cassettes, scripts, and publications including Tempo, UM Bulletin, UM School of Music, UM Ballet, UM School of Communication; a series of historical photographs depicting students at work in the Radio, Television and Motion Pictures department of the School of Communication; and clippings, scripts, playbills and programs from the Coconut Grove Playhouse, Parker Playhouse, the Ring Theatre, Players State Theatre, the Cannes Film Festival, Mayfair Theatre, and the Carillon Hotel.
Sin título
This growing collection consists of cassettes, vinyl records, and documents pertaining to the Miami underground music community. The music in this collection was assembled by the WVUM staff and mostly dates to the 1990s.
Focus: America radio talk show audio recordings
"Focus: America" radio talk show was created by Richard (Ric) Arenstein and Larry Wallenstein, both juniors in the Communications Department, University of Miami in 1975. The show originally started as a local program "Focus: Miami" and was produced at the UM's campus radio station WVUM-FM where Arenstein interviewed local personalities and celebrities visiting Miami.
After the successful first season, the tapes of the talk show were mailed to more than 70 college stations across the country under the name "Focus: America." In his senior year, Arenstein and his new associate, Chuck Bortunick, traveled under a grant from the Burger King Corp. to tape interviews of celebrities in other parts of the country. The show ended because of Arenstein's graduation.
Sin título
Community Justice Project records
The records contain legal cases, research files, correspondence, audio-visual materials (VHS, CD-ROM, audiocassettes, microcassettes), and trial notes from the Miami Community Justice Project. Topics covered include development for low income housing, gentrification, public housing, and privately run detention centers. In particular, the materials discuss the Scott Homes/Hope VI housing revitalization plan and the Reese v. Miami-Dade County court case; the Sawyer's Walk (Overtown) and Crosswinds (Overtown) redevelopment projects; the Manuel et al. v. city of Lake Worth court case; and the Miami Workers Centers Transit HUB. Other organizations mentioned in the files include Power U Center for Social Change and Florida Immigrant Coalition (FLIC).
Sin título
The David Ewen Collection consists of materials which pertain to several aspects of music, ranging from composers to opera houses and festivals, as well as his personal life and work. The papers follow the original order established by David Ewen.
The bulk of the collection contains information and some correspondence pertaining to American and foreign composers and serious and popular performers such as George Gershwin, Charles Ives, Igor Stravinsky, Gustav Mahler, Maria Callas, Bing Crosby, and other notable 20th century composers and performers.
Sin título
Dr. I. A. Richards (1893-1979) was an influential English literary critic and rhetorician. His books on literary criticism, especially The Meaning of Meaning, Principles of Literary Criticism, Practical Criticism, and The Philosophy of Rhetoric, are taken to be founding influences for the New Criticism. Richards is also considered one of the founders of the contemporary study of literature in English.
The I. A. Richards Collection at the Special Collections department contains a large selection of Richards' work in language learning and literacy, in the form of textbooks, workbooks, brochures, audio-visual materials, index cards, phonograph records, and slides.
Sin título
Contains one phonograph of Eisenhower presidential campaign spots and newspaper clippings regarding World War II.
Sin título
Gregory Bush Florida Community Studies Oral Histories
Professor Gregory Bush (History Department) and the Institute for Public History (IPH) have recorded a series of interviews around the issue of public spaces in South Florida. Participants, who are representative of the diverse cultural milieu of the region, reflect and provide insights on migration, gentrification, the history of individual neighborhoods, housing, and community services.
These voices help to articulate the ongoing discourse on public space as it applies to South Florida’s History of development. The recordings and accompanying transcripts of the oral history collection document the unique experiences of the region’s inhabitants. In addition, the collection serves as a repository of primary source materials for students, faculty and the general public.
Sin título
Dr. Behram Kursunoglu was the Chairman of the Board for the Center for Theoretical Studies at the University of Miami. The papers consist of letters of communication between Kursunoglu and the professors that lectured at the Center to faculty and students, research plans, video-cassettes and audio-cassettes of the lectures, and publications containing the text of the lectures. Many of the lectures concerned high energy physics, theoretical chemistry, neurosciences, nuclear physics, and issues pertaining to energy problems. Among notable participants were the physicists and Nobel Laureates Albert Einstein, Richard Feynman, Robert Oppenheimer, Francis Crick, and Murray Gell-Mann; the member of the Florida House of Representatives Dante Fascell; and Richard Kennedy, the U.S. Ambassador At Large for Nuclear Energy.
The following is a list of visiting professors that are represented in the collection:
(*=Nobel Laureate
The numbers after the names signify the number of files. )
*Nikolai Basov, Russian Academy of Sciences, Lebedev Institute
*Hans A. Bethe, Cornell University
Gregory Breit, Yale University
Nikolai Bogolubov, Soviety Academy of Sciences, Moscow University
*Walter H. Brattain, Columbia University
Jocelyn Bell Burnell, Cambridge University
H.B.G. Casimir, Phillips, Eindhoven, Netherlands
Britton Chance, University of Pennsylvania
*Leon Cooper, Brown University
Jean Couture, Former Sec. of Energy for France
*Francis H.C. Crick, Salk Institute
Richard Dalitz, Oxford University
*Hans G. Dehmelt, University of Washington
*Max Delbruck, of California Tech
*P.A.M. Dirac (16), Cambridge University
Freeman Dyson (2), Institute for Advance Studies, Princeton
*John C. Eccles, University of Buffalo
*Gerald Edelman, Rockefeller University, NY
*Manfred Eigen, Max Planck Institute Gottingen
*Albert Einstein (2), Institue for Advance Studies, Princeton
*Richard Feynman, of California Tech
*Paul Flory, Stanford University
*Murray Gell-Mann, of California Tech.
*Donald Glaser, Berkeley, UniversityCal
Thomas Gold, Cornell University
Marvin Goldberger, Princeton University
Gerson Goldhaber, Berkeley, University of California
Maurice Goldhaber, Berkeley, University of California
*Gerhard Herberg, NRC of Canada
*Robert Hofstadter, Stanford University
Fred Hoyle, Cambridge University
Erdal Inonu, Ankaro University, Turkey, Currently Foreign Minister of Turkey
Leopold Infeld, Warsaw, Poland
D. Ivanenko, Moscow University
Max Jammer, Bar Ilan University, Israel
Nicolas Kemmer, University Edinburgh
Richard Kennedy, US Ambassador At Large for Nuclear Energy
*Tjallinq Koopmans, Yale University
Alan D. Krisch, University of Michigan
*Willis Lamb, Jr. (2), Yale University
Joseph E. Lannutti, Fla. State University
*Leon Lederman, Ferni Laboratory
Benjamin W. Lee, Ferni Laboratory
J.G. Linhart, ISKRA, Italy
Bernard Lipman (2), Harvard University
Franklin Long, Yale University
Sydney Meshkov, US Bureau of Standards
Elliott Montroll, Rochester University, NY
*Robert S. Mulliken, University of Chicago
Yoichiro Nambu, University of Chicago
*Louis Neel, Grenoble University, France
Kazuhiko Nishijima, Chuo University, Japan
*Lars Onsager, Yale University
Robert Oppenheimer, Former Director of Institute for Advance Studies, and principal architect of the first US atomic bomb
Henry Primakoff(2), University of Pennsylvania
*A.M. Prokhorov, Russian Academy of Sciences, Lebedev Institute
*Theodore I. Rabi, Columbia University
George Rathjens, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
*Norman F. Ramsey, Harvard University
Dixie Lee Ray, Former Governor of the State of Washington, former Chairman of U.S. Atomic Energy Commission
Frederick Reines, University of California, Irvine
Tullio Regge, University Torino, Italy
*Abdus Salam (3), Director, Int'l Center for Theoretical Physics, Trieste, Italy
Edwin E. Salpeter, Cornell University
*Arthur Shavlow, Stanford University
*Julian Schwinger (2), Harvard University
Dennis W. Sciama, Cambridge University
*Glenn T. Seaborg, Former Chairman of US Atomic Energy Commission
Frederick Seitz, Rockafellar University, Former President of the National Academy of Sciences
Robert Serber, Colombia University
Lord Charles P. Snow (4), distinguished author, London
E.C.G. Sudarshan, University of Texas
Edward Teller (4), Known as the father of the hydrogen bomb
*Charles H. Townes, University ofCalifornia at Berkeley
Stanislav Ulam, University Colorado
Georges A.Vendryes, One of the principal architects of the Nuclear Energy Program for France
*George Wald, Harvard University
*Steven Weinberg, University of Texas
Victor F. Weisskopf, Massachusetts Institue of Technology
John A. Wheeler, Princeton University
*Eugene P. Wigner (3), Princeton University
*Kenneth Wilson, Cornell University
Lord Solly Zuckerman, former Chief Scientist to British Government, and distinguished zoologist
Vladimir Zworykin (3), Inventor of TV picture tub, Honorary Vice President of RCA
Sin título
Williams, Paul Book collection
The Paul Williams Book Collection consists of books written by Paul Williams as well as various cassettes and magazines.
Sin título
This collection contains various tape reels from the Richter Library Information Management and Systems Division.
Sin título
Coconut Grove Playhouse records
The Coconut Grove Playhouse records contain playbills, promotional/marketing material, posters, press releases, news clippings, financial files, grant files, personnel files, show and production files, play scripts, and audio-visual materials (photographs, CDs, vinyl records, floppy disks, VHS, film reels, betacam tapes, audiocassette tapes) pertaining to the theater's operation from the 1970s to its closing in 2006.
Sin título
Plymouth Congregational Church records
The Plymouth Congregational Church records contains historical records created and maintained by the church from around the 1910s through 2010s. The collection contains (but is not limited to) church records on baptisms, weddings, and funerals; architectural drawings of the building and grounds (including the Little Schoolhouse); church bulletins; educational materials; organizational records, including minister files, records maintained by church organizations (eg. Music Committee, Women's Fellowship Circles), and information on governance; ephemera related to events; press clippings; scrapbooks, photographs; and sermons and memorial tapes.
Sin título
The collection contains clippings from the 1960s related to homosexuality in Cuba and its place in the Cuban Revolution from publications such as Mella and Juventud Rebelde; political and cultural pamphlets; theater and art exposition programs; 60 posters from the Consejo Nacional de Cultura, ICAIC, and the Comisión de Orientación Revolucionaria; political posters from OSPAAAL; postage stamps from 1963 to 1978; and LP records.
Sin título
This collection contains manuscripts, poems, journals, printouts from online chapbooks and collaborations, reviews, clippings, promotional posters and fliers, audiovisual materials, and other writings by the well-renowned and award-winning poet and writer Michael Hettich (1953-).
Sin título
This collection contains drawings, sketches, photographs, research materials, clippings, audio-visual materials (CDs and audiocassette tapes), periodicals, ephemera, and other archival materials created and collected by the noted Miami and New York artist Naomi Fisher (1976-).
Sin título
This collection consists of 128 vinyl phonograph records documenting mostly Cuban and Afro-Caribbean popular music, collected by Miami-born musician and composer Raúl Murciano (b.1957). Many of the records included in the collection were manufactured in Cuba. Other styles of music represented in the collection: Brazilian music, Latin American Folk music, and Jazz.
Sin título
University of Miami University Communications collection
This collection contains photographs, video recordings, university publications, and press clippings of University of Miami's schools, departments, programs, and events, created by the University Communications during the 1980s through the 2000s.
Sin título
Howard Davis-Artifacts Artist Group collection
A collection of papers, photographs, scrapbooks, ephemera and other objects that document various cultural scenes in Miami from the 1980s to the present, with an emphasis on the art, nightclub and drag subcultures.
Sin título