- 2022-02-17/2295
- Item
- 1992
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Poster advertising the 1992 commencement exhibition at the University of Miami School of Architecture Gallery
Architecture Research Center, University of Miami Libraries
Part of:
Poster advertising the 1992 commencement exhibition at the University of Miami School of Architecture Gallery
Architecture Research Center, University of Miami Libraries
26° N 80° W, newsletter of the University of Miami's Dorothy H. and Lewis Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science. The first issue of this newsletter was published in January 1970. Final issue published in 1980s.
The name of this newsletter, 26° N 80° W gives the position of Virginia Key, Florida and the campus of the University of Miami's Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science is located.
University of Miami. Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science
A Colloquium: The Reality of Architecture's Three Facets
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Oversized advertisement for the Miami Design Alliance Lecture Series from Spring 1996, March 29th - May 17th. Held at the Wolfsonian, Miami Beach.
The Miami Design Alliance
The A. Curtis Wilgus Papers document the pioneering efforts by historian and author A. Curtis Wilgus (1898-1981) in the area of Latin American studies and the emergence of "Pan Americanism." The correspondence, writings, research files, photographs and other materials also document the evolution of a trend in higher education during the 1920's and the 1970's, an increase in global awareness reflected in the introduction of "area studies" programs at many universities.
Wilgus, A. Curtis (Alva Curtis), 1897-1981
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Mississippi Renewal Forum.
Urban Design Associates
A Sense of Place, a Sense of Time
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Source: Design Quarterly , Spring, 1995, No. 164, Sprawl (Spring, 1995), pp. 24-27
Jackson, John Brinckerhoff
A Small City for the School of Architecture at the University of Miami Designed by Aldo Rossi
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Rossi, Aldo, 1931-1997
A Tale of Two Cities: Lessons from Two Coasts
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Source: Architectural Record, Section: OBSERVATIONS; Vol. 184, No. 3; Pg. 23
Katz, Peter, 1954-
The Abel Sierra Madero collection comprises a selection of periodicals curated by Sierra Madero for his book "Fidel Castro: El Comandante Playboy: Sexo, Revolución y Guerra Fría."
This collection includes pulp fiction, Cold War print culture, and magazines on masculine culture and gossip. These periodicals document the portrayal of Fidel Castro as a significant figure in U.S. entertainment culture, reflecting the intersections of politics, sexuality, and media during the Cold War era.
Sierra Madero, Abel
The Abner T. Allen Papers consist primarily of Allen's correspondence with family in New England during the mid- to late-1800s.
The papers of Abner T. Allen reflect his life as a farmer and merchant in the state of Ohio during the 1800's. The correspondence is typical of this period as the letter itself is folded to form the envelope, the address is printed on the outside, and the fold sealed with a wax seal. The majority of the correspondence was to Abner T. Allen from his parents, brothers and sister. These letters concerned all aspects of family affairs and travel between Chagrin Falls, Ohio, South and Western Warren, Massachusetts and New Hartford, Connecticut, where each of the families resided. The collection includes the following documents: leaf of cash transactions, booklet of expenses and revenues, an award. and two Last Will and Testaments; also included are invitations to social affairs.
Allen, Abner T., 1813-1901
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Abreu, a leader in the underground and guerrilla movements in Cuba in the early 1960s, was instrumental in setting up training camps for anti-Castro exile’s forces in Central America. Prominent in Cuban exiles organizations in Miami, at 75 infiltrated Cuba trying to stir up resistance against Castro’s dictatorship, captured, imprisoned and later released.
Agencia Latinoamericana records
The papers of the ALA (Agencia Latinoamericana) are divided in 3 major categories: the articles written by the contributors to the ALA (collected during almost 40 years), their correspondence, and the newspaper clippings of those articles.
The writers are mainly from Latin American countries and Spain, but with a few American and British writers also included, such as Waldo Frank and Hugh Thomas. The articles provide information on literature, journalism, sociology, economics and political history of the major powers of the world of that period, and in many cases relating to the Latin American countries.
The bulk of the collection is comprised of contributions from Víctor Alba, Marco A. Almazán, Luis Araquistain, Paul Andrade, Germán Arciniegas, Carlos Alberto Montaner, Ramón Gómez de la Serna, Julian Marias, Cristina Martin, Alberto Luis Sanchez, Salvador de Madariaga, Ramón Sender and Arturo Uslar Pietri. There are also articles by other distinguished authors, such as Miguel Angel Asturias, Alberto Baeza Flores, Alejandro Casona, Pablo Neruda and Alfonso Reyes.
Included among the ALA papers are articles written by Joaquín Maurín, who used the pen names of W.K. Mayo and Félix R. Anderson. He also wrote under the pen names of John Andersen and Julio A. Roy, but these articles ore not included in this collection. When signing correspondence, he used his own name, Joaquín Maurín, as well as J.M. Juliá and Ray Campbell. Joaquín Maurín's son, Mario, wrote some articles under the same pen name as his father, John Andersen.
Agencia Latinoamericana
The Agrupación Abdala collection contains materials and posters documenting the Cuban student activist group Agrupación Abdala (also known as Agrupación Estudiantil Abdala). The group was founded on January 28, 1968, as a student organization committed to fight communism and to gain the release of Cuban political prisoners.
The posters commemorate special events held by Abdala, as well as the Congresses they sponsored. The information found on the verso of each poster was provided by Edgar Garrastaza and Jaime Guiú, members of Abdala. Other materials include correspondence, conference proceedings, scripts and outlines for radio and television communications, pamphlets, and organizational statutes and by-laws.
Agrupación Abdala
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whose mother, Lourdes Aguila, founded the Miami-based charity Liga Contra el Cancer.
The Alpha 66 Records document the political, propaganda, paramilitary, and administrative activities of the organization as collected by Andrés Nazario Sargén, one of it's founders and longtime leaders. The Records include correspondence, circular letters, financial records, clippings, maps, photographs, press releases, proclamations, programs, propaganda, and reports.
Nazario Sargén, Andrés, 1916-2004
Ambassador Paul L. Cejas collection
The Ambassador Paul L. Cejas collection contains manuscripts related to the Cuban War of Independence, collected by Ambassador Paul L. Cejas. Books and pamphlets have been cataloged separately.
Cejas, Paul L.
American Association of University Women records
The American Association of University Women records contains the records of the Florida Division from the years 1928 to 1991, in the form of minutes, reports, correspondence, press releases, charters, scrapbooks, and other documentation.
American Association of University Women
American Play Company collection
The American Play Company collection includes approximately two thousand and five hundred (2,500) play scripts from the American Play Company of New York City. The files include published and unpublished plays from the nineteenth century through the 1950s. The collection is a donation of Sheldon Abend, President of the American Play Company. Playwrights represented in this gift include sir James M. Barrie, David Belasco, Clare Boothe, George M. Cohan, John Colton, Clyde Fitch, John Galsworthy, Ruth Gordon, Oscar Hammerstein, Moss Hart, Ben Hecht, George S. Kaufman and many others.
The play scripts include original typescripts, carbon copies of typescripts, and printed texts of plays. Many scripts contain handwritten annotations such as dialogue insertions, corrections, and deletions. The play scripts includes productions of all genre and type, for a period of approximately one hundred and fifty years. Scripts contain production annotations for stage, lighting, sound, and casting purposes. The collection offers scholars and students the opportunity to examine play scripts with the personal annotations of production personnel, facts that provide unique information on the original production of plays. Notations for costumes, sets, and stage props offer insights to production styles and techniques, information not generally available in many published versions of plays.
The Andrés Vargas Gómez Papers are comprised of material provided by A. Vargas Gómez which includes manuscripts, correspondence, transcripts of conferences and radio commentaries, photographs, and publications. This collection also contains material on human rights, various associations and institutions, and on Generalísimo Máximo Gómez.
These papers were given to the Otto G. Richter Library in 1989 by Vargas Gómez. The Library will continue to receive material from Mr. Vargas Gómez.
Gómez, Andres Vargas
The Ángel Guido Peña Papers contain manuscripts and typescripts of plays, poems and newsletters authored by Cuban exile Ángel Guido Peña.
Peña, Ángel Guido
Architectural Club of Miami Collection
Compilation of records, memos, and lists of Architectural Club of Miami events and members.
The Architectural Club of Miami was founded in October 1977 as a not-for-profit corporation registered in the state of Florida. Created as forum for promoting and challenging architectural ideas, the Club sponsored lectures, exhibits, and events that featured prominent architects, urbanists, critics, and theoreticians from around the world. Membership was open to professionals, students and patrons of architecture.
Architectural Club of Miami
Architectural Lecture and Exhibit Series: Projections
Part of:
Event bill for an architectural lecture and exhibit series, October 7th - November 18th, 1994, at the Miami-Dade Community College Kendall Campus. Speakers were J Mikael Kaul, Francois Lejeune, Carlos Zapata, and Rocco Ceo.
Miami-Dade Community College
Aristides J. Millas - Architecture and Art Book Collection
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Aristides J. Millas - Florida Guides, Pamphlets, Maps and Ephemera
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Ari Millas Florida Ephemera collection contains travel brochures, event invitations, maps and other Florida related materials.
Aristides J. Millas - Guidebooks
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Aristides J. Millas - Journals and Journal Articles FLORIDA
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Santana, Gilda B.
Aristides J. Millas - Student Work
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Aristides J. Millas Postcard Collection
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The bulk of this collection consists of postcards of Miami Beach and Greater Miami-Dade county, with representation of other areas in Florida depicting architecture, landscape, and scenes of travel and leisure, such as the International Pan American Airport, Miami Florida, the Hialeah Race Course, The Naples Hotel, Naples-on-the-Gulf, Florida, the Casino at Las Olas Beach, Ft. Lauderdale, the Ringling Mansion in Sarasota, FL, and many more. Materials mostly consist of postcards, color illustrations, and souvenir picture books. This collection was indexed by the Architecture Research Center as a project to commemorate the contributions of Aristides J. Millas, a beloved professor of the University of Miami School of Architecture, and as a resource for students, faculty and external researchers seeking historic images of Florida.
Binder 1: Miami Beach, Florida
Binder 2: Miami Dade County / City of Miami, Florida
Binder 3: Miami Dade County (South)
Binder 4: Miami Dade County (North)
Binder 5: Florida general
Aristides J. Millas
Augustus C. Mayhew, Jr. Photograph Collection
The Augustus C. Mayhew, Jr. Photograph Collection consists of black and white photographs of the Mayhew and McAbee families during their time living in the American colony of La Gloria in the province of Camagüey, Cuba. The photographs include views of La Gloria from 1901 to 1952, the Mayhew family and neighbors, and the Mayhew apiary "Bee Ranch" and orange groves.
NOTE: Two postcards were transfered from this collection to CHC0359: Cuban Postcard Collection.
Mayhew Jr., Augustus C., 1879-1961
Augustus Seymour Houghton collection
The papers of A.S. Houghton (1866-1948) numbering approximately 4500 items consist of articles, printed matter, newspaper clippings, by-laws, legislative matter, and pamphlets. The material extends from 1905 to 1948 with the bulk of the papers falling within the period of 1929 to 1948.
The papers deal primarily with Augustus Houghton's work as a conservationist. The material is broken down into the different organizations with which he was involved. There is a large section of material dealing with the American Game Association, the Association for the Protection of the Adirondacks, and the
Camp Fire Club of America but they are not a major part of the collection because Houghton corresponded and kept files on a diverse number of conservation and wildlife organizations.
The correspondence to and from August S. Houghton is varied and he had several principal correspondents, all of whom shared with him their interest in conservation. His principal correspondents were: John B. Burnham, President of the American Game Protective Association, which later became the American Game Association; Carlos Avery, President of the American Game Association; Seth Gordon, President of the American Game Association; William Greely, leading member of the American Game Association; Erl Roman, Fishing Editor of the Miami Herald; Merlin Mitchell, Executive Secretary, Florida State Fish and Game Association and later secretary of the Florida Wildlife Federation; Jay N. (Ding) Darling, famous cartoonist and leading Florida conservationist; Dr. W.T. Hornaday, Zoological Gardens, N.Y.; Lithgow Osborne, Conservation Commissioner, State of New York; Raymond Torrey, Camp Fire Club of America; and Karl Frederick, President of the New York State Conservation Council. Houghton also corresponded with F.G. Walton Smith, Director of the University of Miami's Marine Laboratory (now the Rosentiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences) and with Spessard L. Holland, Governor of Florida in the early 1940's.
Houghton, A. S., 1866-1948
The Bailey Diffie Papers include manuscripts, notes, copies, correspondence, classroom materials, bibliographies and other materials related to Diffie's research, teaching and publications on Latin America and the Caribbean.
Diffie, Bailey W., 1902-1983
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
Kursunoglu, Behram, 1922-
The papers document professional and personal activities of Bernardo Benes, a Cuban exile in South Florida and high profile civic activist attempting to bridge the gap between the Anglo and Cuban communities. Materials include correspondence, writings, notes, newspapers, magazines, clippings, reports, articles, books, photographs, memos, resumes and catalogs.
Benes, Bernardo
Birds-eye views; computer generated graphics of site
Part of:
Rossi, Aldo, 1931-1997
The histories of Miami and Biscayne Bay are intimately related. In addition to food, industry, transportation and recreation, the Bay provides a constant source of aesthetic satisfaction to those who live and work along its shores.
Biscayne Bay is a tropical lagoon, approximately 35 miles long and a maximum of 8 miles wide. It is geographically divided into three parts: North, Central and South Bay. The North Bay is the most urbanized, bordered on the east by barrier islands, including Miami Beach, and including the Miami business district. Central Bay, extending from Government Cut to the southern limits of Coral Gables, has been affected by bulkheading and canal discharges. South Bay, aside from the Cutler and Turkey Point power plants, has been less affected by human activity and includes the northwestern portion of the Biscayne National Park.
Over 100 years ago, Hugh M. Smith of the U.S. Commission of Fish and Fisheries was dispatched to Biscayne Bay to determine whether the region was suitable for a marine hatching and experiment station. He found that "the water of Biscayne Bay is exceedingly clear. In no part can one fail to clearly distinguish objects on the bottom when the surface is not especially rough." Since that time, however, a century of natural phenomena, development and urbanization have profoundly affected the health and character of the Bay. Dredging and filling, sewage disposal, channel and canal building, flood control practices, hurricanes, and intense development of the shoreline have profoundly altered the waters.
Information on the marine environment of Biscayne Bay is frequently requested by students, researchers, engineers, planners and the public. All the documents listed are available in the Library of the Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science (RSMAS) at the University of Miami. Included are books, scientific articles, theses and dissertations, book chapters, conference proceedings, reports, videos, and government publications. The bibliography does not include newspaper articles, accounts of public hearings, personal correspondence or articles from popular boating and sports magazines. Besides nautical charts issued by the U.S. Defense Mapping Agency, only a few maps are cited.
Hale, Kay
Biscayne Boulevard, Miami, Florida, Concept Development Plan, Roberto Burle Marx, January 13th, 1988
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Oversized diazotype print 42"x54"
Burle Marx, Roberto, 1909-1994
The Bob Simms collection documents the life and activities of Robert H. Simms in the black communities in Coconut Grove and Miami and reflects his work with the Community Relations Board and the Defense Race Relations Institute. The collection also contains campaign materials from Leah Simms, the first African American female judge in the state of Florida, and the "Glory in the Grove" photographs of people and events at the George Washington Carver elementary and high schools in Coconut Grove before desegregation. A final component of the collection includes photographs, correspondence and clippings of General "Chappie" James and his family. General James was the first four star African American General and married Dorothy Watkins.
Simms, Bob, 1927-
Box 5: Projects, Photographs, and Slides
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Project Plans, Slides, and Photographs in numbered folders
Browne, Robert Bradford
Boy Scouts of America Merit Badge Series Books; Architecture, Art, Mechanical Drawing
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3 booklets in the Boy Scouts of America Merit Badge Series: "Architecture" published in 1943, "Art" published in 1944, and "Mechanical Drawing" published in 1945
Boy Scouts of America
British and American social history pamphlet collection
The pamphlets, published in the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries, consist of political essays, economic commentaries, treatises on the poor, religious sermons, speeches on current events of the time, reports to government, notes on history, almanacs, plays, music and literature.
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Warson, Albert. "The Newest New Urbanism". May/June 2001
Caribbean Documents collection
This collection includes various types of documents pertaining to the historical and cultural production taking place in the Caribbean. Materials include correspondence, diaries, ledgers, property transactions including slave registers, reports, typescripts, from the various islands of the Caribbean such as Antigua, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, Jamaica, Puerto Rico, St. Kitts, St. Christopher, Trinidad and Tobago from the 16th to the present. The collection is further enhanced by the acquisition of antique maps from cartographers such as Linschoten and Sanson.
Carlos Sanz was the author of several articles and books dealing with cartography and the discovery of the New World. The Sanz map collection includes 19 reproductions of maps and charts originally published between 1482 and 1598 by well known cartographers such as Mercator, Juan de la Cosa, Contarini, and Ptolemy. These maps form part of 50 items reproduced and published with a commentary by Sanz in his two volume work entitled Mapas antiguos del mundo: (siglos XV-XVI) (Madrid, 1962).
The Carmen V. Suárez collection consists of correspondence to Gabriel Montaner from Generalísimo Máximo Gómez and Rafael Rodríguez during the Cuban War of Independence and a copy of a Cuban newspaper, "Avance."
Suarez, Carmen V.
The Ruth Bryan Owen letters are intimate personal letters to a lifelong woman friend. Within the group there are different signatures and/or letterheads 1) Mrs. Ruth Bryan Leavitt 2) R with B imposed upon the R within a circle 3) Ruth within a circle 4) Daniel 5) Ruth (Daniel) 6) Dan. The letters signed "Daniel"contain much information on the life and career of Ruth Bryan Owen.
There is much on the lectures, the film she wrote, financed and produced in Miami, and its promotion and distribution, her family, etc., but with William jennings Bryan mentioned only indirectly most of the time.
Among these letters are examples of the postmark for Cocoanut Grove with the "a" Oct. 27, 1919 and without the "a" Jan. 12, 1925. The last part of the collection are the personal papers of Carrie Dunlap. Most deal with her academic background, others with her retirement years.
Dunlap, Carrie, 1907-1929
The César A. Mena Collection contains the documentation and research notes used by Dr. César A. Mena Serra to write his work Historia de la medicina en Cuba (History of Medicine in Cuba), which was published in two volumes by Ediciones Universal in Miami, Florida. The first volume, Hospitales y centros benéficos en Cuba colonial (Hospitals and charity centers in colonial Cuba), was published in 1992, and the second volume, Ejercicios y enseñanzas de las ciencias médicas en la época colonial (Exercises and teachings of the medical sciences in colonial Cuba), was published in 1993. Dr. Armando F. Cobelo was co-author of these works.
This collection also contains the galley proofs and illustrations of volumes one and two; the original manuscript of volume two; and an invitation to the presentation of the volume one in March 1992.
Mena Serra, César A.
Dr. Charles A. Bicking was an award-winning mechanical engineer active in the fields of Industrial Engineering, Industrial Statistics, Engineering Statistics, Operations Research, and Quality Control. A graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Techology, Bicking has held numerous posts as an engineer, consultant, and lecturer in a number of countries. Bicking also published and presented dozens papers in the above fields. Bicking was an official U.S.A. delegate for the 1953 session of the International Statistical Institute in Rome. He won the ASTM Award of Merit in 1962. Some of the organizations, corporations, and associations that Bicking worked with include the American Society for Quality Control, the American Statistical Assocation, A.S.Q.C., Technical Association of the Pulp and Paper Industry, White Sands Missile Range, Carborundum Company, Hercules Powder Company, NASA, Nashua Corporation, Tracor Jitco, the American Society for Testing and Materials, and the Control Data Corporation.
The Charles Bicking Papers contains documents spanning across the entirety of Dr. Bicking's career, as described above.
Charles Deering was a collector of art and a friend to many notable artists including John Sargeant and Augustus St. Gaudens. Painting, scrulpture, prints, rugs and many other items combined to decorate and furnish the Deering Estate in Florida. He collected a wide range of artwork, and the Print Department of the Art Institute of Chicago received his fine collection.
Deering, Charles, 1852-1927
The Charles Lewis Morgan papers consist of one box of materials and total one-half cubic foot of files. The papers contain copies of several poems, as well as "In Memorium," and correspondence dated 1969 to 1970. "In Memorium" includes addresses given by faculty during a memorial service for Morgan in addition to a selection of Morgan's poems. Correspondence discusses the possible publication of Morgan's works and contributions to the memorial service.
Morgan, Charles Louis