Wells, Jack, Alfred Bryan and Willie Weston. "Joan of Arc They Are Calling You." New York: Waterson-Berlin & Snyder Co., 1917. Whiting, Richard A. and Dave Radford. "Where the Black-Eyed Susans Grow." New York: Jerome H. Remick & Co., 1917. Whiting, Richard A., Gus Kahn and Raymond Egan. "Where the Morning Glories Grow." (2 copies.) New York: Jerome H. Remick & Co., 1917.
Letters received and sent. Most are personal, some pertain to official functions. Some are merely congratulatory.
Playbills and performing arts programs collected by Valerie and Kenneth S. Lynn. Primarily from New York and Washington, D.C., especially Kennedy Center.
The playbill collection, donated by Valerie Lynn, is comprised of playbills and other theatre ephemera, pamphlets from various art exhibitions, and programs from musical performances and ballets collected over her lifetime. The collection spans seven decades, from 1946 to 2009, and includes playbills from at least five different countries.
Undated, unidentified correspondence. Includes poison-pen letters to Paul Hume re articles he wrote.
Contents (with supporting materials) of presentations that Warnke makes before live audiences or cameras, as opposed to texts for a reading audience.
Talks given at the Institute on the Spiritual Excercises held at Weston.
This series contains back issues of the Catholic magazine founded by Edward Rice Jubilee.
Consists of 58 folders containing incoming correspondence received by Lawrence Gilman between 1901 and 1937. The bulk of the letters date between 1933 and 1936. Correspondents include Gilman's fans across the United States and some of his contacts in the music profession. Topics of discussion include Gilman's radio broadcasts and orchestral program notes. Arranged chronologically.
Consists of 38 folders containing incoming chronological correspondence received by Rev. Horace B. McKenna, S.J. between 1923 and 1953. Includes correspondence from friends, parishioners, and some of his fellow Jesuits. Arranged chronologically.
This series contains back issues of the Catholic magazine founded by Edward Rice Jubilee.