[Preservation conference - audio presentations by guest panelists] transcript

[Preservation conference - audio presentations by guest panelists]

Sound recording of an unidentified lecturer during a preservation conference hosted by Texas Historical Commission and Preservation Texas Alliance. Side B: Oral history of Elizabeth Jones Tanner recording reminiscences, Margaret Hayes recording. Tanner talks about her childhood and community.
Date: January 2, 1995
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
[Funding on Preservation of Documents] transcript

[Funding on Preservation of Documents]

Sound recording of a meeting held in Abilene, TX, discussing the Local Government Records Act (LGRA) passed September 1, 1989. First speaker: Christopher Laplante, Director of the Texas State Library and Archives Commission; Second speaker: Associate Director of Southwest Collection/Special Collections Library at Texas Tech; Third speaker: Kent Keeth, Director of the Texas Collection at Baylor University. Topics of the meeting include the history of the National Historical Publications and Records Commission (NHPRC), changes made by the LGRA, and guidelines and procedures for grant application processes.
Date: April 1990
Creator: Hays, Margaret Parx
System: The UNT Digital Library

Arkheion, les voix de Pierre Schaeffer

Access: Use of this item is restricted to the UNT Community
Recording of Christian Zanési's Arkheion, les voix de Pierre Schaeffer. The composer has these remarks on the creation of this piece: In 1996, on the initiative of the Experimental Music Group of Bourges (GMEB), around a hundred composers paid tribute to Pierre Schaeffer. It was on this occasion that I composed a short, outdated waltz, the theme of which is childhood (it is said of Pierre Schaeffer that, when he was a few years old, he would have written a 'treatise on the hoop'). Later, I continued: the railway, the sound object, the single man, relativity in all things to evoke this multiple man who played with all registers and all voices. So many faces which, superimposed, draw a single form. As for Arkheion, the words of Stockhausen (1995) I composed this work from archives (from the Greek, arkheion). Karlheinz Stockhausen was a kind of distant and inaccessible angel, the ideal situation. I had only used one spoken document then. For Pierre Schaeffer, who is closer to me (I took his classes at the conservatory and produced several radio programs with him) I took, here and there, fragments discovered at random in the considerable mass of archives concerning him. With …
Date: 1996/1997
Creator: Zanési, Christian
System: The UNT Digital Library

Description of making brewer's yeast

This is a description of how to make brewer's yeast. Millet is dried, ground, and mixed with water to form a paste. The paste is molded into chunks for storage. It has to be turned at certain intervals in order to keep well. The yeast is used to make wine.
Date: 1990/2000
Creator: LaPolla, Randy
System: The UNT Digital Library

Description of making wine

This is a description of how wine is made from corn, millet, or buckwheat. First, the utensils are cleaned, and the grain is added to the container. Then it is covered with grass and, after a few days, transferred to a wine container. They describe how the process changes depending on the seasons.
Date: 1990/2000
Creator: LaPolla, Randy
System: The UNT Digital Library

Traditional narrative about why monkeys steal human food

This is a traditional narrative about monkeys caring for human babies. The monkeys were angry that the parents did not pay them well enough for taking take of the children, so they stole food from them to get payment.
Date: 1990/2000
Creator: LaPolla, Randy
System: The UNT Digital Library

The ghost of Eriboll

Access: Use of this item is restricted to the UNT Community
Recording of Peter Manning's The ghost of Eriboll. This programmatic work is a commentary on our natural environment and the urgent need to preserve the increasingly fragile ecology of so many hitherto unspoilt regions for the benefit of future generations. Loch Eriboll is to be found on the north coast of Scotland, creating an inlet which cuts deep into the countryside of Sutherland, an area of outstanding natural beauty, characterised by rich fishing grounds, rising mountains and tracts of wild moor land, from which and upon which small groups of fishermen and crofters have sought to maintain an existence in circumstances which have often been harsh and inhospitable. As the years have gone by so this way of life has come under threat with increasing industrialisation around the coast from the east, for example the nuclear power station built at Dounreay and numerous installations to support the North Sea oil industry. This piece is a soundscape, which reflects upon the survival of these communities down the ages and the uncertainty, which faces those who remain. All the source material is drawn from the archives of the World Soundscape Project at Simon Fraser University, British Columbia. The transformations of these aural …
Date: 1994
Creator: Manning, Peter, 1948-
System: The UNT Digital Library
Oral History Interview with Iliff D. Richardson, February 22, 1997 transcript

Oral History Interview with Iliff D. Richardson, February 22, 1997

The National Museum of the Pacific War presents an oral interview with Iliff Richardson. Richardson was commissioned in the Navy in 1940 and assigned to Motor Torpedo Boat Squadron 3 as the executive officer of PT-34. After the loss of his boat in April 1942, he joined a band of Filipino guerrillas. Richardson tells of setting up radio transmitters and of the unusual features of the operations and equipment used. At the request of General Douglas MacArthur he plotted the Japanese mine fields in Leyte Gulf and he gives the details on how this was accomplished. Upon returning to the Philippines, General MacArthur met with Richardson on the USS Nashville (CL-43) and he describes the discussion. After returning to the United States, he had a seven hour meeting with Admiral Ernest J. King concerning pending court martial charges against him and tells of the outcome of the meeting. Richardson joined the Industrial Incentive Division of the Navy and he comments on his travels and speeches given to industry workers. [A copy of the manuscript written by Richardson during the war describing PT boat operations in the Philippines is in the archives of The National Museum of the Pacific War and …
Date: February 22, 1997
Creator: Richardson, Iliff D.
System: The Portal to Texas History

Die Unsichtbare front

Access: Use of this item is restricted to the UNT Community
Recording of Ipke Starke's Die Unsichtbare front. The composer notes the following: The spatial installation of this work was designed and realized for the highest space in the building of the Technical Collections of the city of Dresden. This place just below the dome of the tower with its exceptional view of the city and the nearby radio tower is part of the work. The composition itself consists of 16 minutes of music on magnetic tape, constantly looped, spatialized and broadcast through the 7 loudspeakers configured in the space. The piece is based on modulations of extremely high frequencies, up to the limits of the audible, whose dynamic degree barely reaches the threshold of perception. What is significant vis-à-vis the content of the play is their interruption by documentary material: news in different languages, interviews, recordings of demonstrations, reports and documents from the archives, and synthetically generated or processed sounds of associative character. This confrontation of situational elements with documentary elements generates contradictory tensions in space. The architectural form of this one is also substantial: first of all, the space is presented in a neutral way, not done on purpose for pleasure. The exposed location of the dome provides openness, …
Date: 1996
Creator: Starke, Ipke, 1965-
System: The UNT Digital Library
[Marking Texas History] transcript

[Marking Texas History]

Sound recording of a Jefferson County Historical Commission seminar in Beaumont, TX in April 1991, outlining the history of markers in Texas and the historic marker application process.
Date: April 1991
Creator: Hays, Margaret Parx
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tracing Your Religious Roots - Resources and Procedures transcript

Tracing Your Religious Roots - Resources and Procedures

Lecture given Wednesday, February 25, 1998, 8:30 AM at Abilene Christian University
Date: February 25, 1998
Creator: Holley, Peggy
System: The Portal to Texas History
Writing Congregational Histories - Why, How and What transcript

Writing Congregational Histories - Why, How and What

Lecture given Wednesday, February 24, 1999, 8:30 AM at Abilene Christian University
Date: February 24, 1999
Creator: Loveland, Emera
System: The Portal to Texas History
["It's A Matter of Pride", a salute to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.] transcript

["It's A Matter of Pride", a salute to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.]

Audio cassette from The Black Academy of Arts and Letters recorded during It's A Matter of Pride, a salute to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Black History Month in 1993. The tape has two tracks of audio including side A: Introduction by Billy Taylor. It's A Matter of Pride. His Name Was Martin. Only Human. Who Are you? and Peace of the World. Side B includes "Rhythm Saved the World", "Let Me Dream", and "A Love Supreme."
Date: February 1993
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Oral History Interview with Robert Donihi, October 13, 1996 transcript

Oral History Interview with Robert Donihi, October 13, 1996

The National Museum of the Pacific War presents an oral interview with Robert Donihi. Donihi was born in Erie, Pennsylvania. He graduated from high school in 1934. During the Depression, he worked low wage jobs and lost his leg in an automobile accident while hitchhiking to Florida. His experiences influenced him to attend law school. He passed the Bar in 1941 and went to work in Tennessee. He was exempt from the draft, but was motivated to learn to fly under the Civil Air Patrol. He joined the Coast Guard Reserve during World War II and became a Seaman First Class, ferrying submarine chasers down the Mississippi River to the Gulf of Mexico for shakedown cruises. After the war, he met Tom Clark, President Truman’s Attorney General (and later Associate Supreme Court Justice). Clark offered Donihi a job in Tokyo and introduced him to Joseph B. Keenan, who had worked in President Roosevelt’s White House. Keenan was setting up an organization named Project K, which operated out of the Justice Department. Its purpose was to prosecute Emperor Hirohito and other suspected Japanese war criminals. In Tokyo he lived with Keenan and 15 other lawyers and judges. He attended several meetings …
Date: October 13, 1996
Creator: Donihi, Robert
System: The Portal to Texas History
Joint Sumposium with Religion, Politics, and Science - Religion, the Hidden Story: The Church's Attitude transcript

Joint Sumposium with Religion, Politics, and Science - Religion, the Hidden Story: The Church's Attitude

Lecture given Tuesday, February 24, 1998, 11:00 AM at Abilene Christian University
Date: February 24, 1998
Creator: Martin, Bill
System: The Portal to Texas History
[Jim Marrs - KTAR 620AM] transcript

[Jim Marrs - KTAR 620AM]

Audio cassette from the Jim Marrs collection. A radio program with Frank Baranowski on the Kennedy assassination and the aftermath. KTAR 620AM (Phoenix, Arizona). Baranowski also mentions a book published by Jim Marrs, "Crossfire." The program also includes an interview with Marrs.
Date: May 2, 1993
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Writing Congregational Histories - Why, How and What transcript

Writing Congregational Histories - Why, How and What

Lecture given Wednesday, February 24, 1999, 11:00 AM at Abilene Christian University
Date: February 24, 1999
Creator: Loveland, Erma
System: The Portal to Texas History
Oral History Interview with Arthur E. Owen, September 11, 1996 transcript

Oral History Interview with Arthur E. Owen, September 11, 1996

The National Museum of the Pacific War presents an oral interview with Arthur Owen. Owen enlisted in the Marine Corps in May 1941. After boot camp in San Diego, he was assigned to the Marine Detachment at San Clemente Island, California. After he was there for a year, they transferred him to Camp Elliott in San Diego where he became part of the 2nd Marine Division. In Oct 1942, they sailed for New Zealand and additional training. They made several practice landings and then invaded Tarawa on November 20, 1943. Owen was a corporal in what was called Shore Party Command Group - Headquarters, 2nd Battalion, 18th Marines. The job of this Group was to establish dumps on the beaches and unload the ships. Owen states that he was probably one of the few that made the landing in Tarawa twice and never did get ashore, because he spent 13 days on the pier. At the end of this time, they went aboard the President Monroe and sailed to Hawaii. Upon arriving in Hilo, they set up a camp on the volcano which was at the Parker Ranch in Kamuela (Camp Tarawa) and at an old Japanese POW camp. While …
Date: September 11, 1996
Creator: Owen, Arthur E.
System: The Portal to Texas History
Oral History Interview with George McColm, March 18, 1995 transcript

Oral History Interview with George McColm, March 18, 1995

The National Museum of the Pacific War presents an oral interview with George McColm. McColm was born on a farm in Kansas in 1911. In 1928, he was selected to go to Washington, DC where he met President Herbert Hoover and his wife. Graduating from Kansas State College in Manhattan in 1935 he began studying terrain, weather and demand in crop growing. He tells of recognition and honors he received in the agricultural field. Soon after the war with Japan began, he was offered a commission in the US Navy to participate in a special classified project. At the time, he was in charge of crops at the Topaz War Relocation Center in Utah. McColm shares many of his experiences with the Japanese internees and expresses his opinion of the people he worked with. Upon being inducted, he went to Tucson, Arizona for boot training and then to Princeton University Naval School of Military Government. Upon completion of the training he was sent to the Civil Affairs staging area at the Presidio of Monterey, California. Upon his arrival he was assigned to a Top Secret staff working on the plans for the invasion and occupation of Japan. He concludes the …
Date: March 18, 1995
Creator: McColm, George L.
System: The Portal to Texas History
Oral History Interview with Levi and Evelyn Taylor, September 19, 1998 transcript

Oral History Interview with Levi and Evelyn Taylor, September 19, 1998

Interview with Levi and Evelyn Taylor, owners of a drive-in restaurant, The Grove, in Kerrville, Texas.
Date: September 19, 1998
Creator: Rector, Bill; Taylor, Levi; Taylor, Evelyn; Grayson, Dorothy & Bethel, Ann
System: The Portal to Texas History
Oral History Interview with Marie Castro, September 30, 1998 transcript

Oral History Interview with Marie Castro, September 30, 1998

The National Museum of the Pacific War presents an oral interview with Marie Castro. As a child, Castro lived in Saipan under Japanese occupation, living with rationing and blackout conditions. As a Chamorro, she received corporal punishment from her teachers, and one of her cousins was beaten to death. When Japanese Marines came to Garapan seeking comfort women, Castro hid in an attic to avoid being taken. She then moved with her family to Marpi Point, but her father was sent to a labor camp. After the United States invaded, Castro and her family hid in a cave, lacking food and water. They were discovered and sent to Camp Susupe, crowded with orphans of those who committed suicide. Initially wary of Americans, the interned were happy to find themselves treated very well. Grateful to Americans for giving their lives to save hers, Castro devoted herself to a teaching career in Kansas City.
Date: September 30, 1998
Creator: Castro, Marie
System: The Portal to Texas History
[Preservation Week 1995] transcript

[Preservation Week 1995]

Sound recording of a keynote presentation and awards ceremony held as part of Gainesville, Texas' Historic Preservation Week in 1995.
Date: 1995
Creator: Hays, Margaret Parx
System: The UNT Digital Library
[Preserving Knowledge: Cathy Hartman's Journey into Library Digitization] transcript

[Preserving Knowledge: Cathy Hartman's Journey into Library Digitization]

Audio recording of an interview with Cathy Hartman about her extensive experience as a librarian. Cathy shares insights into the early days of digitization and content preservation for government documents and journals in the library. Delve into the fascinating aspects that drew Cathy to this field and learn about her integral role in advancing digital preservation initiatives at UNT. This interview provides a glimpse into Cathy's passion for preserving knowledge and contributing to the evolution of library services.
Date: 1995
Creator: Hartman, Cathy Nelson & Gieringer, Morgan Davis
System: The UNT Digital Library
Restoration History: Irene Young Maddox transcript

Restoration History: Irene Young Maddox

Lecture given Monday, February 21, 1994, 8:30 AM at Abilene Christian University
Date: February 21, 1994
Creator: Young, M. Norvel
System: The Portal to Texas History