Sound recording of Partners for Liveable Places Workshop: Archives (Partners for Livable Communities) lecture with keynote speaker, Robert H. McNulty, founder, and president. Lecture about what archives are and what their responsibilities to the community are; lecture does not start at the beginning. Side A: cuts off mid-lecture. Side B: lecture continued from side A. .
Physical Description
1 sound cassette (1 hr., 00 min., 35 sec.) : analog ; 2 1/2 x 4 in.
The Special Collections Department collects and preserves rare and unique materials including rare books, oral histories, university archives, historical manuscripts, maps, microfilm, photographs, art and artifacts. The department is located in UNT's Willis Library in the fourth floor Reading Room.
Sound recording of Partners for Liveable Places Workshop: Archives (Partners for Livable Communities) lecture with keynote speaker, Robert H. McNulty, founder, and president. Lecture about what archives are and what their responsibilities to the community are; lecture does not start at the beginning. Side A: cuts off mid-lecture. Side B: lecture continued from side A. .
Physical Description
1 sound cassette (1 hr., 00 min., 35 sec.) : analog ; 2 1/2 x 4 in.
Preferred Citation:
Margaret Parx Hays Papers (AR0906), University of North Texas Special Collections
Collections
This recording is part of the following collection of related materials.
Margaret Parx Hays Papers
Materials related to Hays' life and multifaceted career. She served 22 years in the Department of State's Foreign Service Office with postings in Latin America, the Philippines, and Hong Kong. Later she returned to Texas, establishing the Cooke County Historical Society, heading the Cooke County Mental Health Hospital, and serving as mayor of Gainesville.
[Partners for Livable Places Workshop, Archives - audio presentation by Robert McNulty],
audio recording,
October 18, 1989;
(https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc1831711/:
accessed May 26, 2024),
University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu;
crediting UNT Libraries Special Collections.