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Archival description
Series
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Church records

Series reflects Shimizu’s involvement with the Japanese United Church and the Church of All Nations in Toronto. Material includes reports, mailing lists, membership lists, and news bulletins on Japanese church goers.

New Democratic Party of British Columbia Standing Committee on Women’s Rights (Women’s Rights Committee or WRC)

Series includes records related to the Women’s Rights Committee (WRC), a committee which was created to “develop and strengthen the NDP policy on Women’s Rights. Thomas was an active member of WRC for a number of years. The WRC also published the feminist socialist newsletter <em>Priorites</em>, which Thomas was Coordinating Editor of from 1979-1981, and records related to the production of <em>Priorites</em> are included here. The series also includes records related to a report Thomas wrote for the Task Force for Technological Change.

University of British Columbia

Series contains course and lecture notes from Thomas’s teaching career as a professor of English. There are subject files on individual authors and subjects, correspondence from students and other materials related Thomas’s activities at UBC. The series also contains records related to committees that Thomas served on, including the Faculty Association, Academic Women’s Association and Sexual Harassment Policy Committee, which Thomas served as a mediator for from 1989-1993. (Sensitive material related to third parties has been deaccessioned.)

Research on Malcolm Lowry

Series contains material related to Thomas’s 1965 thesis on Malcolm Lowry’s Under the Volcano, and related research in later years.

Human Rights

Series contains records related to Thomas’s human rights activism, including subject files on Iranian refugees, Iraq, and prisoner’s rights.

Minutes

Series documents various meetings held by NDP Little Mountain Constituency, including: executive meetings, sub-committee meetings, general membership meetings, and community meetings. It consists of meeting minutes, reports, memoranda, resoluts, and other material produced about or for these meetings.

Gitxsan Nation Trial Exhibits

51 Gitxsan appellants represented all but 12 of the Gitxsan Houses during the Delgamuukw Trial. The Gitxsan territories lay all within the land claim area, in the northern and central Skeena, Nass and Babine Rivers and their tributaries. The original claims were altered and replaced with claims for aboriginal title and self-government, and eventually the individual claims by each House were amalgamated into two collective claims, one on behalf of the Wet’suwet’en Nation and the other for the Gitksan Nation. The Gitxsan Exhibits consist of Plaintiffs' expert witness evidence relating to the Gitxsan people, their territories and traditions. Series includes genealogy information, photographs, oral histories, maps, letters, interviews, and commission evidence.

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Supporting Court Materials

Series consists primarily of evidence presented by expert witnesses and background research materials that the lawyers used in the Delgamuukw Trial case. There are mainly submissions by the Defendants, including affidavits, maps, Department and Ministry annual reports, extracts from various news sources, census documents, and historical materials relating to the land claim area in British Columbia. Transcripts of cross-examinations, data sheets, proclamations and ordinances, Land Title Office documents, and early settlers' correspondence are also included.

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Event files

Series consists of documents related to various events such as conference maps, registration and general information, workshop agendas, booklets, meeting announcements, and correspondence.

Research files

Series consists of documents related to different themes and avenues of research such as reports, research proposals, correspondence, grant proposals, surveys, and newsletters.

Ana Sokolović

Series consists of musical scores, handwritten notes and sketches, and a manuscript of the printed first version of Il divertimento barocco (“Baroque Fun” in Italian) 1999 with hand-written edits and other unique manuscript material related to the work’s revision in 2019/2020. The piece was commissioned by the Orchestre baroque de Montréal with funding from Canada Council for the Arts and completed by Sokolovic in 1999, when it was performed at the Salle Pierre-Mercure in Montréal on November 4th. It was originally written for violin, harpsichord, and string ensemble, but has also been performed by baroque flute, violin, viola da gamba, and harpsichord at the Galerie Montcalm in Gatineau, QC in 2012.

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Photographs

Series contains Lansdowne’s personal photographs including pictures of family and friends, as well as pictures of him at work, and publicity photographs taken of him. Series also includes some photographs of birds, both live and taxidermic, which Lansdowne may have used as studies for his artwork. Series includes negatives, prints, slides, contact sheets along with a small number of envelopes, letters and notes.

Administrative records

The series consists of minutes from the Women’s Auxiliary of the Icelandic Lutheran Church, event calendars of the Women’s Auxiliary, as well as annual reports. Series also documents the founding history of the Icelandic Lutheran Church and its subsequent development over time. Records include one scrapbook made by the church, and other published and unpublished church histories.

Directorship files

This series consists of papers and correspondence relating to the various companies in which Frank H. Brown held a position on the board of directors.

Personal and Professional Slides

This series consists of a photograph and many slides which were not in interfiled with Brown's other papers. The images consist predominantly of scenes from various parts of BC and the Yukon, as well as Brown's trips to Europe in the 1950s. A vast majority of the slides are stereoscopic, designed to produce a three-dimensional image when viewed through a special holder. Of these slides, the majority were processed by the View-Master company and are housed in the circular reels designed for View-Master viewers.

Chronological papers

This series consist of papers which were condensed into a new chronological system before their donation to UBC. The materials are roughly chronological, and cover a wide range of topics, including papers with topics relevant to all the other series in Brown's fonds.

Personal papers and correspondence

Series consists of private papers of Knight, including correspondence with his publishers and various universities, a curriculum vitae, and research grant and job applications.

Photographs

Series consists of photographs used as illustrations in Knight's book <em>Along the No. 20 Line</em>.

Biographical material series

Series consists of records reflecting Dahlstrom's music activities in Canada and the United States in her capacity as a pianist, accompanist, music teacher, choir conductor, examiner, and adjudicator. The records consist of a scrapbook, newspaper clippings, passenger receipts, travel claim vouchers, thank you notes, correspondence, speeches, concert programs, histories of Canadian music, A Capella Singers promotional material, examination lists, material relating to music teaching, jury schedules, competition policies, letters of confirmation of exam schedules, and photographs. The records are arranged according to documentary form and content. The series is arranged according to the original titles of the folders created by Helen Dahlstrom.

Records relating to Canada Music Week committee series

Series consists of Dahlstrom's records relating to the Canada Music Week committee. Canada Music Week (CMW) is an annual nationwide festival sponsored by the Canadian Federation of Music Teachers Association (CFMTA) to introduce and stimulate a keener appreciation of Canadian music to students, teachers, and audiences; to encourage and promote Canadian music, musicians, and music teaching; and to emphasize the significance of music in society. Introduced in 1959 during the silver anniversary of CFMTA, it has become a regular event on the last week of November since 1969. The Canada Music Week Committee has nine provincial and other branch chairpersons and a national chairperson. Dahlstrom became the third national chairperson in 1969. The Canada Music Week committee publishes a newsletter (since 1959 but regularly since 1969) with suggestions for activities and promotional material and administers the national music writing competition to stimulate interest in music composing among young Canadian musicians. Dahlstrom has edited special issues of the newsletter. During Canada Music Week, special events and programs take place in each community under the responsibility of individual centers throughout Canada. In addition, the CBC broadcasts student recitals, provides capsule biographies of Canadian composers and panel discussions and features Canadian music during the week. In 1985, the CFMTA and Waterloo Music Co-published The Canada Music week Silver Anniversary Collection a piano solo book by Canadian composers. This edition was compiled and edited by Dahlstrom and resulted from a juried competition. This series includes correspondence, drafts of the newsletter, writing competition material, biographical material relating to Canadian music, curriculum vitae, speeches, Canadian music sheets, grant proposals, promotional material, news releases, radio announcements, annual reports, financial records, minutes of annual and biennial meetings of chief officers of the Canada Music Week committee, and photographs. The records are arranged according to documentary form and chronological order.

Miscellaneous photographs series

Series consists of photographs by unknown photographer(s). These photographs were created for private and for promotional use. Many of the photographs were used to promote the 1975 CFMTA convention. The series includes photographs of Dahlstrom and unidentified persons and one of a comic strip. In addition to the graphic material, the series consists of one page. The textual record is a typewritten dialogue describing one of the photographs. The material is arranged according to the content of the photographs. No original arrangement was apparent. The photographs were scattered loosely amongst the fonds with no immediate relationship with other records from other series of the fonds. They were subsequently brought together in this series to facilitate their access.

Hart House String Quartet series

Series consists of newspaper clippings, concert programmes, and correspondence documenting the history of the Hart House String Quartet, both during Harry Adaskin's tenure and afterwards. Some items are pasted onto cardboard.

Audio Disc (vinyl) series

Series consists of eight audio discs. Most of the discs are 33 1/3 r.p.m. although one is 78 r.p.m. The discs include performances by the Hart House String Quartet, as well as Harry Adaskin presenting his radio show Musically Speaking.

Film series

Series consists of three rolls of film. "The Passionate Canadians" – 2 rolls, colour, original (n.d.) and "Harry Adaskin: To Play Like an Angel" (n.d.).

Research series

Series consists of Weisgarber's research material arising from "The Honkyoku of the Kinko-Ryu: Some Principles of its Organization" published 1968, a manuscript entitled “Flute Music of Zen,” and his unpublished biography of Aurelio Giorni.

Biographical series

Series consists of biographical materials relating to Weisgarber, including copies of his curriculum vitae, biographical articles, reviews, various awards and achievements, scrapbooks consisting of press clippings, programs and other material. Also included are autobiography drafts by Weisgarber and some materials from a biography project on him in the late 1980s.

Miscellaneous Scores series

Consists of a handwritten copy of Alban Berg’s Violin Concerto, apparently sent by a friend living in Germany to Elliot. The context of this record is uncertain.

General Programming

This series consists of administrative and program files from 1973-1983. This includes music, performance, dance, video, and exhibition grants and projects. After 1983, New Music, Performance Arts, dance, Media and Video, and Exhibition Program and General Administrative records are filed with their respective program series (Administrative, Exhibitions, Front Magazine, Luminous Sites, Media Arts and Video Art Program, New Music, Performance Art, Publicity and Promotional Materials).

University Departments series

Series consists of correspondence and memoranda about various University faculties, divisions, deans, and programs with which the School of Music has a relationship. Series is arranged in alphabetical order.

Printed Materials, Works By Lowry

Series consists of published works by Lowry organized by publication date. Contents include: juvenilia, published primarily in the Leys Public School's journal, the Leys Fortnightly, poetry and short stories published in anthologies, and poetry and short stories published in magazines and journals, during Lowry's lifetime and posthumously. Posthumous publications were predominantly the result of submissions and requests made by Earle Birney and Margerie Lowry to various magazines and journals, though in many cases Lowry's work was sought out for publication in anthologies and collections of poetry and short stories, and for spotlight features about Lowry (see the Earle Birney Papers sous-fonds for correspondence about some posthumous publication of Lowry's writing).

Notebooks

Series consists of notebooks not associated with any particular work by Lowry and Margerie, organized chronologically and by location. Both Lowry and Margerie kept notebooks, mostly palm sized and bound with staples, which they filled with thoughts and ideas, some of which developed into poems and manuscripts. Contents include bound notebooks, loose pages, and typewritten fragments of notes.

Programs

Series consists of records relating to the programs that the Icelandic Archives of British Columbia (IABC) has implemented during its existence, notably its language learning program, and oral history and community biography collection program. Records related to IABC programming include: correspondence; language learning material; obituaries; personal and family histories; historical typesetting story notebooks; ephemera and newspaper clippings; and audio cassettes containing the biographies and stories of community members.

Musical materials

Series consists of both published sacred, secular, and popular music as well as hand-copied, transcribed music, collected by the members of the Icelandic community in Vancouver. Records include manuscript sheet music, part books, solo sheet music, and etude books; as well as vinyl recordings of various Icelandic music. Documents are arranged into files according to genre of music and language.

The music was collected from V. Baldwinson, the Icelandic Lutheran Church choir, H. Johnson, G. Thorleifson, Anna Camb, Gwen Dowding, E. Sigmar, R. Einarson, J. Goodmundson, R. Rasmussen, O. Stefanson, T. Thorsteinsson, O. Howardson, T. Friđliefosn, R. Ásgeirsson, j. Reykdal, A. Sveinsson, S. Sigurdson, and B. Gudmundson.

Photographs

Series primarily consists of photographs taken or collected by the Icelandic Archives of British Columbia (IABC). Photographs document events, exhibits, and research initiatives, and some photographs are previous collections acquired by the IABC during its existence.

Notable collections are photographs documenting Sunnybrook (File 46-11, including original collections by Edna Proctor, Dorothea Calverley, Thora Howell, Doug Palsson, Lucile Palsson, and Carol Greenhalgh); photographs taken by the curator of the IABC, Robert Ásgeirsson, organized by subject and community event (Files 15-03 to 15-43); and historical photographs of Hunter Island taken by E.J. Fríðleifson and research completed about the communities on Hunter Island (Files 46-12 to 46-18).

结果 4501 到 4550 的 4551