Transcripts
Found in 34 Collections and/or Records:
Don Erjavec collection of Dizzy Gillespie solo transcriptions
Collection consists of transcribed Dizzy Gillespie solos which were transcribed by musician and jazz instructor, Don Erjavec.
First Century Families records
The collection contains records of the activities of the First Century Families, especially centered on the planning and implementation of the group's annual luncheon. Considerable genealogical and biographical material is also contained herein. The collection also includes 22.4 gigabytes of audio and video files.
Margaret Russell Bates Hane papers
House Un-American Activities Committee records
This collection consists of transcripts of the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC). HUAC was an investigative committee of the United States House of Representatives used to investigate alleged disloyalty and subversive activities on the part of private citizens, public employees, and those organizations suspected of having either fascist or communist ties.
Collection on Diamond Kimm
This small collection chiefly contains photocopies of documents related to the deportation case of Diamond Kimm, a Korean resident of Los Angeles, whose legal case denying a suspension of deportation after refusing to say whether he was a Communist in the 1950s went to the Supreme Court (Kimm v. Rosenberg, 363 U.S. 405).
Herbert G. Klein papers
Korean American Leftists in the 1950s collection
Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department's Records on the Investigation of the Homicide of Ruben Salazar
Maclay College of Theology records
This collection consists of the records of the Maclay College of Theology at the University of Southern California.
Hilton H. McCabe papers
The Hilton H. McCabe papers consist of correspondence, reports, photographs, clippings, legal documents and maps documenting McCabe's judicial work with allotments, guardianships and conservatorships of the Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians in and around Palm Springs, California. McCabe, a graduate of USC's Law School, was appointed as a judge in the Superior Court in Indio, California in 1953, and then as an appeals court judge in San Bernardino.