Search Results
Communist Party of the United States of America Records, 1900-2007, circa 1900-2007-1940 - 1991
1 Linear Feet 525.0 linear feet (approx. 525 records cartons; some flat boxes, possibly)Jedediah Horcrux Congreave fly fishing correspondence and photographs, 1925-1992
1 Electronic file 1 Box 1 Linear Feet 1 record cartons- Abstract Or Scope
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Content Description
Correspondence and photographs spanning 1925-1992 and documenting Jedediah Horcrux Congreave's interest in fly fishing. Included in the collection are letters to Congreave's father between 1925-1935; correspondence from and to diverse friends, colleagues, and associates sharing Congreave's interest in fly fishing; and photographs of many of Congreave's fishing expeditiions. More detailed descriptions of the materials are provided below.
1925-1935 Carton 1, Folder 1-2
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Content
Thirty-two letters from Congreave to his father Wilberforce, written during Congreave's school and college years and describing summer fishing trips around New England with his maternal uncle Socrates Whipple. These letters describe materials used in fly fishing during these years, especially materials for tying artificial flies. The letters also contain exquisite, detailed, hand-drawn illustrations of various artificial flies, which Congreave either drew himself or acquired from other sources and then sent to this father.
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1952-1992 Carton 1, Folder 3-17
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Correspondence from and to numerous friends, colleagues, and associates during the years 1952-1992. Correspondents include the French philosopher Michel Foucault, a companon of Congreave's on several fly fishing trips to the French Alps; Julia Child, with whom Congreave discussed recipes for serving trout and salmon; and B. F. Skinner, the Harvard behaviorial psychologist, who Congreave met during his final year at Harvard and whith whom Congreave maintained a correspondence, until Skinner's death in 1990, about their mutual passion for fly fishing. One letter from 1960 recounts Congreave's failed attempt to keep a journal during his fishing trips, which was thwarted when the journal fell into the Housatonic River and washed downstream. At that point Congfreave decided that making copies of his outgoing letters was the best way to document his passion for fly fishing; hence the collection typically includes both incoming and copies of outgoing correspondence.
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Very Important Records from Very Important Office, 1888-2025
25 Linear feet 30 boxes + oversize materials, several TB of data, etc.Born digital photographs
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Joe Brainard Archive, 1960-1992
32.20 Electronic file (8 archives boxes, 59 art bin items and 88 oversize folders) 32.20 linear feet (8 archives boxes, 59 art bin items and 88 oversize folders)- Abstract Or Scope
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Materials collected by Robert Butts consisting primarily of diverse works by and regarding the popular New York artist and writer Joe Brainard (1942-1994). Brainard was the author of fifteen books of writing, the illustrator of numerous other books produced by members of the New York School, and a celebrated graphic artist whose work covered a broad range of sizes, styles and media. The Joe Brainard Archive consists of numerous examples of Brainard's graphic work dating from 1962 to 1979, most of the books illustrated by Brainard, all of Brainard's manuscripts and published writings, notebooks for Brainard's I REMEMBER series and several other books, Brainard's correspondence with members of the Butts family and correspondence to Brainard from Ned Rorem and Virgil Thompson, checklists of Brainard's artistic production constructed by Robert Butts, and a selection of articles devoted to Brainard's career. In addition to the Brainard materials, the Joe Brainard Archive also includes several lithographs by Alex Katz (b. 1927), an oil painting by Tom Clark, and a few ink sketches by poets Ron Padgett and Allen Ginsberg. There are also manuscripts of Ted Berrigan, Tom Clark and Rudy Kikel, in addition to broadsides and books written by New York School writers such as John Ashbery, Edwin Denby, and Kenneth Koch. The accessions processed in 1991 contain primarily original artworks by Joe Brainard in collaborations with Bill Berkson and Kenward Elmslie, including THE BABY BOOK (1965). Also included are correspondence, manuscript materials and photographs. The accession processed in 1993 comprises 16 letters and postcards from Joe Brainard to Robert Butts and one print by Andy Warhol.
CHERRY, 1973 .25 Linear Feet Cherry contains .25 linear feet of files, papers and digitized photographs of Joe Brainard's art. Box 1, Folder 7, Oversize AB010B
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UNTITLED, 1972 Box 1, Folder 3, Oversize AB010C
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Santa Fe Light Cone Simulation research project files, Bulk, 2005-2007, 2005-2012, Bulk 2005-2007
683.0 Gigabytes 39 Electronic file 683.0 Gigabyte(s) 39 digital objects collectively containing 1,797 digital files of various types.- Abstract Or Scope
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Scope and Contents note
The project files consists of data in three broad categories: the simulation data ("Data at Redshift" components); analysis tools and example scripts (Data Processing Tools) for processing the data; and project administration and background documents (Historical Documents) related to the project. All these materials were created between 2005 and 2012, beginning with a proposal for the LUSciD Project, continuing on to the simulation data, and ending with the recent analysis tools. The historical documents are proposals and progress reports that were part of grants or requests for computational resources supporting the research. The component for analysis tools and example scripts contains the source code to yt (http://yt-project.org/), which was used to produce the example data analysis results. The results are a combination of structured text, binary files, and images. The historical documents and analysis tools are described in greater detail in their component descriptions.
The scientific motivations for the light cone simulation are described in the Project Background. Here we describe how the simulation data was generated. The simulation was the final in a group of simulations, with each one designed to meet certain requirements, such as resolution. Earlier simulations tied to the LUsciD Project were performed on Thunder, a Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory cluster. This calculation for the Santa Fe Light Cone Simulation was a demonstration of the software's ability to perform adaptive refinement throughout the volume, and as a result, was run on the San Diego Supercomputer Center's DataStar system and the National Center for Supercomputing Applications Altix, Cobalt.
The simulation was initialized at high redshift, assuming a standard cosmological model incorporating dark energy and cold dark matter. The physical volume represented was a periodic cube 512 comoving megaparsecs on a side. The simulation was evolved to the present day, using models for gravity and adiabatic gas dynamics. At specific points, snapshots of the simulation were saved, and a representative subset of those are contained in this collection.
These snapshots are organized by time (or, equivalently, redshift) at the top level, and named from RD0009 to RD0036; lower numbers (e.g., RD0009) represent earlier times in the universe's evolution, while higher numbers are later times and ones closer to the present day. Each snapshot has an archive (tar) file of the original data, a checksum of the archive, and text files of the parameters, grid hierarchy, and boundary conditions. The parameter, hierarchy, and boundary files are also in the archive file, but are available separately for convenience in a component named "Parameters."
The contents of each project component labeled RD00## are the same:
* RD00## (parameters, ASCII): All of the simulation parameters are listed in these files as key-value pairs, using a "key = value" format. The input parameter are identical across all parameter files, while variables such as the current time, or redshift, change.
* RD00##.hierarchy (grid metadata, ASCII): A list of the grid data structures, their spatial position, file names, and numerical size.
* RD00##.cpu0XXX (physical data, HDF5): These files hold the physical fields (density, velocity, etc.) for each grid.
* RD00##.boundary (boundary conditions, ASCII): Boundary metadata.
* RD00##.boundary.hdf (boundary conditions, HDF5): Boundary data for necessary fields
Data at Redship=2.0 (RD0016)
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Scope and Contents note
This data represent a snapshot, or instant in time, from the cosmology simulation. This snapshot was taken at a redshift of 2.0, which is 3.2 billion years after the Big Bang. At this point, the simulation had created 144,546 grids and 69 galaxy clusters with masses of at least 10^14 solar masses.
The primary contents are the parameter files, hierarchy file (description of grid sizes and spatial locations), and grid data. For a complete description of the contents, refer to the Scope and Contents note for the collection.
In the Derived Data subcomponent, there are text, binary, and images files representing halo properties and the projections of various physical fields.
Data Processing Tools
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Scope and Contents note
There are three example scripts which are used together for generating images from the datasets and projected fields. The scripts will produce the image files found in the Derived Data-Projections sub-component for each "Data at Redshift" component.
Dublin Core Papers, 2025
22 Files DCPapers, with over 20 years of publishing history, is a diamond open access portal for the Dublin Core Conference Proceedings.DCMI-2024 Toronto, Canada Proceedings
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Wayward Family papers, 1847-1963
2.0 Linear Feet 2 Box 2.0 Linear feet 2 record cartons- Abstract Or Scope
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Scope and Contents note
The Wayward family papers includes material from several Wayward descedents living in the 19th and 20th centuries, and was collected by variou family members. Document types in the collection include correspondence, diaries, clippings, posters and audio tapes about the Wayward family and their various activities.
See the scope and content note for each series for more details about the collection contents.
Letters, 1849 Box 1, Folder 22-24
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