File contains catalogue cards that are filled with handwritten contact information related to James Morrison's thesis on the Jos Plateau. The cards contain contact information of individuals from countries outside of Nigeria.
File contains correspondence. Correspondents include Dr. T. Eitel, Member of Parliament Charles Caccia (includes a press release from his office), Richard C. Caruana (on ratification of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea), The Right Honourable Joe Clark (Secretary of State for External Affairs), Harlan Cleveland (on the boat paper, and the reasons it must be resisted), law professor Thomas A. Clingan, Professor Umberto Columbo, Guido De Marco (Maltese Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs), Indonesian Ambassador Hasjim Djalal (on the non-paper, and the need to establish a sea-bed mining authority immediately), and Akiko Domoto. Also includes a draft paper by the Group of 77 ("Agreement on the Establishment of an Interim Regime from the Coming into Force of the Convention to the Time when Commerical Seabed Mining Becomes Economically and Ecologically Feasible").
File contains correspondence. Correspondents include Valerie Facey; Carl-August Fleischhauer, Legal Counsel to the United Nations Secretariat (and address Part XI of the Convention,); Patrik Garnier (attached is an editorial Elisabeth Mann Borgese wrote for the "New York Times" on the Convention); Mate Granić (Croatian Minister of Foreign Affairs), which deal with the reasons for Croatia to ratify the Convention; Tom Harris; Bohdan Hawrylyshyn; Louis Henkin; and Charles Higginson of the Council on Ocean Law. See MS-2-744, Box 274, Folder 3 and MS-2-744, Box 279, Folder 8 for additional correspondence with the Council on Ocean Law.
File contains correspondence from Brian Flemming, Association International Futuribles (regarding an introduction Mann Borgese was to write for a collection), "Frankfurter Allgemeinen Zeitung" (FAZ), and the Ford Foundation. File also includes lists of names.
File contains correspondence with A. Papadopoulos, Renate Platzoder, and Ambassador Arpad Prandler of Hungary. Correspondence concerns the International Ocean Institute (IOI)'s training programme, Pacem in Maribus, and other topics.
Item is a photographic slide depicting buildings, several people, and a black fountain in Cochem, Germany. One of the men is in uniform. Some of the buildings have scaffolding on them.
Item is a photographic slide of a mountain by the Mosel Valley from Lasserg, Germany. There is water visible at the bottom of the Valley. The Mosel Valley (also spelled Moselle) borders on three countries including Germany, and is famous for its wine.
Item is a photographic slide of "life on the market" in Trier, Germany. There is a large statue with flowers in the middle of the city, and two people with a motorized scooter depicted.
Item is a photographic slide of the Rhine river upstream from the Drachenfels ("Dragon's Rock") - the large land mass in the middle of the water. Houses, boats, and sun coming from between clouds are also depicted.
Item is a photographic slide of Katz Castle (Burg Katz) above St. Goarshausen, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. It is depicted from across the Rhine river, with several unidentified people walking by.
Item is a photographic slide of the Cologne Cathedral (Kölner Dom or Hohe Domkirche Sankt Petrus) in Cologne, Germany. There is a main station and various buildings depicted, as well as the Rhine river and a boat.
Item is a photographic slide of the Cologne Cathedral (Kölner Dom or Hohe Domkirche Sankt Petrus) in Cologne, Germany. It features two of the cathedral's prominent spires.
Item is a photographic slide of the Rheintor Gate in Andernach, Germany. The building beside it has a sign saying "Restaurant zum Anker" (anchor). There are two unidentified people looking at the gate.
Item is a photographic slide of three unidentified men taking photographs near old farms (alte hofe) in Germany. They are standing off of a road, looking over a hillside. One man holds the camera to his face, looking at the photographer; the second has his around his neck, and the third does not have a visible camera. They are dressed in jackets and hats.
Item is a photographic slide of Mönkeberg street in Hamburg, Germany with St. Peter's Church in the background. The building in the foreground says "Dyckhoff". There are people crossing the street, and a trolley driving past.
File includes a postcard with a black and white photograph of Pietro Mascagni (1863-1945), an Italian opera composer. The postcard has various signatures on the front, including Francesco Marconi (1855-1916, operatic tenor from Rome) and four other illegible signatures. The postcard is addressed to Frau Dr. Lehnsern(?) of Berlin. File also includes the incipits of three pieces by Ignaz Moscheles (1794-1870), signed at dated October 3, 1844. There are also five letters written by the following composers: Jacques Offenbach (1879), Gustav Mahler (1899), Edvard Grieg (1902), Maurice Ravel (1921), and Ignacy Paderewski (n.d., 1860-1941).
File consists of two catalogues for the exhibition 'Fritz Brandtner 1896-1969: A Retrospective Exhibition', sponsored by Sir George Williams University, Montreal. The exhibition was presented at Dalhousie Art Gallery in February 1972, through circulation in the Atlantic Provinces Art Circuit (APAC).
File is an audio reel containing an episode of Women's Time. This episode is part of a series on women in Germany. This episode is on Helma Sanders-Brahms, a German filmmaker. The episode aired March 21, 1989.
File is an audio reel that contains an episode of Radio Free World. This episode, hosted by Mike Hymers, features news stories on South African sanctions; military aid to the Contras; Australia, New Zealand, United States (ANZUS) defense pact; and the Berlin Wall. It was recorded August 14, 1986 and aired August 15, 1986.
File contains correspondence regarding Mr. and Mrs. Richard Sigerson, from [Marie?], to [Unkie?], from [Peter?], [T.? -indecipherable], [Jacques Piccard], Cathy Enright, [Humberto and Alara Gristancho], [Johan], Bruce Kubert, and an invitation from one of Elisabeth Mann Borgese's dogs.
File contains two copies of the report (one in English, the other in Spanish), on the second session of the United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea (UNCLoS). The papers were written for the Club of Rome (CoR).
File includes correspondence and agreements with publishers and magazines. Correspondents include Basic Books; Duke University Press; Future; GEO magazine; Interdisciplinary Science Reviews (regarding Borgese's "Mediterranean Project").
Item is a photographic slide depicting the Bonn Minster Roman Catholic church in Bonn, Germany. There are seven people walking by the church, and two cars driving past.
Item is a photographic slide depicting the Beethoven House in Bonn, Germany, a memorial site and museum studying the life and works of composer Ludwig van Beethoven. There are three people standing outside, and one sitting in a top window.
Item is a photographic slide depicting the Hammerschmidt Villa, which was the primary official seat and primary official residence of the President of the Federal Republic of Germany from 1950 to 1994. It is pictured from a distance with a path and trees.
Item is a photographic slide of a mountain by the Mosel River below Lasserg, Germany. There are a few houses and vines growing on sticks on the mountain, and a road can be seen in the bottom right corner.