Audiotapes
Subject
Subject Source: Art & Architecture Thesaurus
Found in 5 Collections and/or Records:
University of Connecticut, Black Experience in the Arts Collection
Collection
Identifier: 2015-0002
Scope and Contents
Lecture notes, transcriptions of lectures and interviews, and over three hundred audio recordings associated with a University of Connecticut School of Fine Arts course, "Black Experience in the Arts." The course's instructors included professors James Eversole, Hale Smith, Edward O'Connor, Leon Bailey, and Carlton Molette. The records, particularly the audio recordings, document the contributions of black artists of the time period and the power of art as a mechanism for social change and...
Dates:
1970 - 1994
Bookstore Press Records
Collection
Identifier: 1997-0027
Abstract
Small press publisher (1971-1976) of poetry, children's books, and cookbooks located in Lenox, MA. The press was owned by Gerald Hausman. Authors and illustrators published by the press include Ruth Krauss, Paul Metcalf, David Kheridan, Sam Cornish and Maurice Sendak.
Dates:
undated, 1967-1976
Connecticut Citizens Action Group Records
Collection
Identifier: 1987-0024
Abstract
The Connecticut Citizen Action Group was the first state-based consumer interest group. Created in 1971 by Ralph Nader and directed by Toby Moffett, CCAG was designed to represent, inform, unite, and empower the citizens of Connecticut in their roles as consumers, workers, tax payers, and voters. Taking on such issues as illegal business practices, utility rate increases, environmental pollution, and consumer fraud, the newly formed group was inundated with citizen requests for information...
Dates:
undated, 1964-2002
Vincent Ferrini Papers
Collection
Identifier: 1997-0107
Abstract
Vincent Ferrini was born 24 June 1913 in Saugus, Massachusetts, the son of Italian immigrants. Ferrini's first book of poems, No Smoke (1941), was written while he was employed by General Electric at the Lynn (MA) plant. In the early 1950s he edited a small magazine entitled Four Winds
Dates:
undated, 1949-1977