UMarmot(SCUA)

Special Collections & University Archives
Collections

Váli, Ferenc A. (Ferenc Albert), 1905-

Ferenc A. Vali Papers, 1964-1969. 1 box (0.5 linear feet).
Ference Vali

A scholar of international politics, Ferenc Vali left his native Hungary during the revolution of 1956 after five years of imprisonment for his political activities. Born on May 25, 1905, Vali was educated at the University of Budapest and London School of Economics (PhD, 1932), and worked as a Professor of International Law at the University of Budapest until his arrest. Following his escape and a brief period as Fellow at Harvard, he joined the faculty in political science at UMass Amherst in 1961. A popular lecturer, he became the first member of the Political Science Department to receive emeritus status in 1975. He died at his home in Amherst in 1984.

The Vali collection includes both published and unpublished essays by Ferenc Vali on Hungary during the post-revolutionary years and idealism and realism in American foreign policy.

Subjects

  • Hungary–History–1945-1989.
  • University of Massachusetts Amherst. Department of Political Science.
  • University of Massachusetts Amherst–Faculty.
  • United States–Foreign relations.
  • Váli, Ferenc A. (Ferenc Albert), 1905- .
Call no.: FS 137

Valley Light Opera

Valley Light Opera Records, 1977-2005. 12 boxes (18.5 linear feet).

Founded in 1975 by a group of Gilbert and Sullivan devotees, the Valley Light Opera is based in Amherst, Massachusetts. VLO presents one fully staged opera and one less formal production every year, and over the years the company has presented all fourteen of the Gilbert and Sullivan operas at least once.

This collection contains a wonderful visual record of VLO productions with literally hunderds of photographs capturing dozens of performances. The collection contains, too, records that document the company’s activities from the moment an opera is selected to be performed to last curtain call.

Subjects

  • Theatrical companies–Massachusetts.
  • Valley Light Opera.
Call no.: MS 476

Valley Peace Center (Amherst, Mass.)

Valley Peace Center Records, 1965-1973. 28 boxes (13.5 linear feet).

In the summer of 1967, members of University of Massachusetts Amherst campus groups, such as the Faculty Group on War and Peace and the Students for Political Action, joined with individuals from other area colleges and from the community at large to form the Valley Peace Center of Amherst for the purposes of opposing the Vietnam War, providing draft counseling, eliciting pledges from the government to avoid first use of nuclear and biological weapons, and reduction of the power of the “military-industrial complex”. The Center was active for more than five and a half years, drawing its financial support largely from the community and its human resources from student and community volunteers.

Correspondence, minutes, volunteer and membership lists, financial records, newsletters, questionnaires, notes, petitions, clippings, posters, circulars, pamphlets, periodicals, other printed matter, and memorabilia. Includes material relating to alternative service, boycotts, war tax resistance, prison reform, environmental quality, and political candidates.

Subjects

Call no.: MS 301

Valley Women’s Union

Valley Women’s Union Records, 1974-1976. 1 box (0.25 linear feet).

Organization based in Northampton, Massachusetts, whose purpose was to unify groups that were working for political change beneficial to women. Records include newsletters, agendas for meetings, reports, position papers, and mailings.

Subjects

  • Feminism–Massachusetts–Pioneer Valley–History
  • Feminists–Massachusetts–Pioneer Valley–Political activity–History
  • Social change–Political activity–Massachusetts–Pioneer Valley–History
  • Valley Women’s Union (Northampton, Mass.)
  • Women–Massachusetts–Pioneer Valley–Political activity –History
Call no.: MS 201

Valley Women’s History Collaborative

Valley Women’s History Collaborative Records, 1966-2004.
5 boxes (3.5 linear ft.).

During the early phases of second wave feminism (1968-1978), the Pioneer Valley served as a center for lesbian and feminist activity in western Massachusetts, and was home to over 400 hundred, often ad hoc, groups, such as the Abortion and Birth Control (ABC) Committee, ISIS Women’s Center, the Mudpie Childcare Cooperative, and the Springfield Women’s Center.

The records of the Valley Women’s History Collaborative document the activities of these groups as well as the efforts of the founders of the Women Studies program and department at UMass Amherst to preserve this history. Of particular value are the many oral histories conducted by the collaborative that record the history of women’s activism in the Pioneer Valley, especially as it relates to reproductive rights.

Subjects

  • Abortion–Massachusetts–Pioneer Valley–History–20th century.
  • Birth control–Massachusetts–Pioneer Valley–History–20th century.
  • Feminism–Massachusetts–Pioneer Valley–History.
  • Feminists–Massachusetts–Pioneer Valley–Political activity–History.
  • Oral histories.
  • Valley Women’s History Collaborative.
  • Women–Massachusetts–Pioneer Valley–Political activity–History.
Call no.: MS 531

Van Dusen, J. M.

J.M. Van Dusen Ledgers, 1865-1910. 5 v. (0 linear feet).

Tinsmith and plumber from Stockbridge, Massachusetts. Mentions items he repaired and cleaned (stoves, furnaces, pots, pans, tinware, glassware, and crockery), goods sold (lamps, wash basins, kitchen utensils, shovels, fuel, and furnaces), occasional mention of payment with goods, lists of suppliers, and lists of customers, many of whom were prominent people in the community.

Subjects

  • Business enterprises–Massachusetts–Stockbridge–History–19th century
  • Heating–Equipment and supplies–History
  • House furnishings–Massachusetts–Stockbridge–History
  • J.M. Van Dusen Plumbing and Heating Co.
  • Plumbers–Massachusetts–Stockbridge–Economic conditions–19th century
  • Plumbing–Equipment and supplies–History
  • Stockbridge (Mass.)–Economic conditions–19th century
  • Tinsmiths–Massachusetts–Stockbridge–Economic conditions–19th c
  • Van Dusen, J. M.

Types of material

Call no.: MS 188bd

Van Meter, Ralph Albert, 1893-

Ralph Van Meter Papers, 1919-1958. 2 boxes (1 linear feet).
Ralph Van Meter

Ralph Van Meter, the first president of the University of Massachusetts after it changed its name from Massachusetts State College in 1947, spent nearly 40 years learning, teaching, and leading on the Amherst campus. A graduate of Ohio State University (B.S., 1917), he came to the Massachusetts Agricultural College as a specialist in Food Conservation in 1917, serving in the Pomology Department first as a professor, and then as the head from 1936 to 1948. The Board of Trustees appointed Van Meter as Acting President in 1947 and President in 1948. He was responsible for a number of innovations, including the creation of the position of Provost (first held by John Paul Mather) and the establishment of new schools of business administration and engineering.

Correspondence, memos, reports, clippings, and other papers, relating to matters at issue during Van Meter’s presidency of University of Massachusetts including the building program, World War II veterans, accreditation, and the university seal; together with published writings, biographical material, military records, and material from Van Meter’s inauguration as university president.

Subjects

  • Van Meter, Ralph Albert, 1893- .
  • University of Massachusetts Amherst. President.
Call no.: RG 3/1 V36

Vietnamese Students Association (University of Massachusetts Amherst)

Vietnamese Students Association New Year’s Day Celebration Collection, 1985. 1 envelope (0.1 linear feet).

The Vietnamese Students Association hosted a Vietnamese New Year celebration at the Campus Center of the University of Massachusetts Amherst on February 20, 1985. Collection contains twelve photographs and a program listing sponsors, speakers, performers, the sequence of events, descriptions of ancestor worship, the legend of the earth and the sky cakes, the menu, and some song lyrics.

Subjects

  • Amherst (Mass.)–Social life and customs
  • Photographs
  • Songs
  • University of Massachusetts Amherst–Students–Social life and customs
  • Vietnamese New Year–Massachusetts–Photographs
  • Vietnamese Students Association (University of Massachusetts at Amherst)
  • Vietnamese students–Massachusetts–Folklore
  • Vietnamese students–Massachusetts–Social life and customs
Call no.: MS 106bd

Vinal, William Gould, 1881-

William Gould Vinal Papers, 1931-1963. 3 boxes (1.25 linear foot).
William Gould Vinal

William “Cap’n Bill” Vinal was the first instructor in nature education at Massachusetts State College and a pioneer in the field. A graduate of Bridgewater State (1904), Harvard (MA 1907) and Brown (PhD, 1922), Vinal worked for several years as a camp director on his native Cape Cod and held a variety of university appointments in nature education before joining the faculty at Massachusetts State College as Professor of Nature Education in the Nature Guide School in 1937. Spontaneous in the classroom and field, enthusiastic, and highly popular with his students, Vinal taught courses in conservation, outdoor leadership, outdoor recreation, and nature guiding, and was an important figure in the Massachusetts Audubon Society, the American Camping Association, the Camp Directors Association, and several conservation groups. After retiring from UMass in 1951, Vinal returned to his home in Norwell, Mass., remaining active as a nature writer and teacher until his death in 1973.

A valuable glimpse into the early growth of nature and conservation education, the Vinal collection includes dozens of scarce publications by the exceptionally prolific Cap’n Bill, along with a small quantity of correspondence, talks, and reports. As a collection, these document the origin and growth of the Nature Guide School and the program in nature recreation at MSC and UMass, and more generally the growth of nature, recreation, and conservation education in New England. Of local interest is an extensive report for the town of Amherst Recreation Survey Committee (1948) regarding recreational opportunities for youth. Nearly half of the collection consists of an extensive run of Vinal’s quirky, self-published Nature Guide Newsletter (1935-1951).

Subjects

  • Amherst (Mass.)–Social life and customs.
  • Conservation of natural resources–Study and teaching.
  • Nature Guide Newsletter.
  • Outdoor education–Massachusetts.
  • Recreation–Massachusetts–Amherst.
  • University of Massachusetts Amherst. Program in Nature Recreation.
  • University of Massachusetts Amherst. Nature Guide School.
  • University of Massachusetts Amherst–Faculty.
  • Vinal, William Gould, 1881-.
Call no.: FS 138

Vogl, Otto

Otto Vogl Papers, 1970-1998. 4 boxes (6 linear feet).

A native of Traiskirchen, Austria, Otto Vogl (b. 1927) earned an international reputation as a polymer scientist while working with the Polychemicals Department at Du Pont. In June 1970, he was recruited to join the relatively new Program in Polymer Science and Engineering at University of Massachusetts Amherst, where he has continued research on the structure and organic chemistry of polymers, focusing on macromolecular architecture and macromolecular asymmetry (chirality), among other topics. A prolific scholar, he has contributed over 630 articles, received nearly fifty U.S. and foreign patents, and among many other honors, has won election to the Austrian and Swedish Academies of Science.

The Otto Vogl Papers consist primarily of scholarly writings and professional correspondence, along with numerous master’s theses and doctoral dissertations completed under Vogl’s supervision and books written by Vogl’s wife, Jane C. Vogl.

Subjects

Call no.: FS
.
wordpress logo
UMass Amherst seal
Site by Special Collections & University Archives :: W.E.B. Du Bois Library :: UMass Amherst :: [ Spyder hole ] :: © 2009
Entries (RSS) and Comments (RSS)