Showing Names: 1 - 2 of 2
Name records describe the people, families, and organizations that create archival materials. In Archives at Rutgers, users can view name records to see all of the collections created by a person, family, or organization. Name records are shared across all libraries and repositories at Rutgers, and staff choose them from controlled lists, including the Library of Congress.
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The Janet Indick Papers document Indick's career as a New Jersey painter and sculptor. They contain records relating to awards, fellowships, exhibitions, donation and sale of artworks, publicity and press materials, and artistic organizations. Types of materials include correspondence, exhibition catalogs, applications, donation agreements, fliers, pamphlets, postcards, newsletters, and magazines. The collection highlights Indick's identity as a Jewish artist and as a woman artist.
Miriam Dinerman served in the Rutgers University School of Social Work as a professor from 1960 to 1999, and continued to teach until 2008. This collection holds numerous drafts and published articles by Dinerman as well as legal documentation for the journal Affilia: Journal of Women and Social Work, notes, and correspondence throughout and after her career at Rutgers.