Showing Collections: 1 - 4 of 4
Abstract
Paul Barton was a European Representative for the AFL-CIO, who served in the Paris Office during the Cold War. He worked for the AFL-CIO International Affairs Department from 1968-1994. His records represent the AFL-CIO’s international relationship with European countries from the 1960s to the 1990s. Materials include his personal writings, published manuscripts, and transcripts of radio broadcasts. Notable topics are the Prague Spring, and labor and Communism in Eastern Europe.
Abstract
The Early Printed and Manuscript Leaf collection consists of printed and illuminated manuscript leaves from Europe dated from the 12th -16th centuries. The collection includes 70 whole and partial leaves, representing a variety of styles and techniques that serve as a sampling of early print and manuscript book history.
Abstract
Barbara Haggh-Huglo (b. 1955) and her late husband, Michel Huglo, (1921–2012) specialize in the music of the medieval and Renaissance periods. Barbara Haggh-Huglo and Michel Huglo were both prominent figures in the International Musicological Society (IMS) as well as the American Musicological Society (AMS) and their study group focusing on liturgical plainchant, “Cantus Planus.” Combined, both scholars’ international travel, research, and teaching formed a vast network of colleagues,...
Abstract
The Raymond Haggh (September 4, 1920 - March 13, 2011) and Hilde Wentzlaff-Eggebert (February 8, 1927 - March 16, 2007) correspondence documents the lives and long-distance relationship of these two music scholars. The collection primarily consists of pieces of correspondence exchanged between Haggh and Wentzlaff-Eggebert and sent to them by their respective relatives. Letters are occasionally accompanied by newspaper clippings or other loose papers, including a musical score composed by...