Showing 1923 results

Archival description
Simon Fraser University Archives and Records Management Department Sub-series English
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Eat Magazine articles

Sub-series consists of records relating to Rowling's published writings for Eat Magazine, a Victoria-based magazine covering food, wine and associated themes. Records are primarily in digital format; see Scope and content note in the parent series description for record types.

Administrative records

Sub-series consists of paper and born-digital records created by Adbusters Media Foundation while administering the Blackspot campaign. Paper records include income statements, correspondence (manufacturer, retailer, and customer), stock inventories, marketing plans, market analyses, newsletters, and an internal order processing manual. Born-digital records include John Fluevog design drawings, letterheads, and internal manuals on the pricing, order processing, shipment, and exchange of Blackspot shoes.

Radical Campus - chapter drafts

Sub-series contains drafts of all the chapters of Radical Campus. Johnston's publishers, Douglas and McIntyre, reviewed the manuscript draft of Radical Campus and asked Johnston to condense the book. This sub-series includes lengthier versions of the chapters.

Promotional materials

Sub-series consists of analogue and born-digital records created by Adbusters Media Foundation while promoting Blackspot sneakers and boots. Paper and analogue records include pamphlets, a "Blackspot manifesto," stickers, promotional photographs, and shareholder certificates. Born-digital records include advertisement graphics, promotional photographs, posters, coupons, stickers, gift cards, labels, shareholder certificates, T-shirt mockups, catalogues, promotional comics, and website mockups.

Field Programs publications

Series consists of publications relating to the services, events, conferences and workshops offered by the Field Programs division of the Faculty of Education. Records include pamphlets, brochures, and information sheets.

CAMRA branch files

Sub-series consists of records relating to various branches of CAMRA BC that have existed at different times, including chapters at Nanaimo, Peachland, Prince Rupert, Richmond, Vancouver and Victoria. Records include branch declarations, correspondence, balance sheets, member and director lists. Also includes 4 photographs (file 6) from the 2000 Caskival event held by the Vancouver branch at Dix Barbecue and Brewery. Records exist only in digital form. Original file formats include Microsoft Word (doc, docx), Excel (xls, xlsx) and jpg.

Web news releases

Sub-series consists of news releases created and disseminated online by Communications and Marketing and its predecessors. Media and Public Relations (as the department was then known) began posting university news releases on the SFU website in 2002, and by 2003 only the web version was retained as paper copies were discontinued. This sub-series consists of pdf copies of the web news releases. For the earlier paper records, see series 5-1; for the early years there is some duplication between paper and digital versions.

For the years up to and including part of 2011, only the text of the new releases survives, without formatting, photographs or links; from 2011 on, the pdf captures formatted text, images and links, though many of the links have become obsolete with the passage of time ("dead links"). For more information about the transfer process (and its effect on the form and content of the records), see the note below on Availability of other formats.

Centre for Dialogue

Sub-series consists of records relating to the development of SFU's Centre for Dialogue and its programs by Mark Winston in his capacity as the Centre's academic director and as a fellow. Unlike the USD program records, these materials are not considered official university records as they are not unique and are reflected in the records still held by the Centre itself. Records include correspondence, agendas, minutes, reports, proposals, and background literature.

TeleLearning web site

Sub-series consists of the TeleLearning web site as it was in September 2002, when it was burned onto a compact disk. Earlier versions of the web site were not preserved. The main sections include Home page, Profile, Activities and events, Research projects, Conference, Contact, K-12, Post-secondary, Teachers, Workplace, En français, Talk to us, and a Member / researcher section.

IWW - Vancouver Island branch materials

Sub-series consists of materials relating to the Vancouver Island branch of the IWW. Gambone participated in branch activities following his move to Nanaimo in 2006. Records includes pamphlets and leaflets both created and collected by the branch.

Advancement Advisory Committee

This sub-series consists of records created by the Advancement Advisory Committee while advising on a broad range of advancement activities, including fundraising, alumni relationships, and special activities. Includes meeting agendas and minutes, reports, memos, correspondence, and terms of reference.

Simon Fraser University. Board of Governors. Advancement Advisory Committee

Born-digital records

Sub-series consists of born-digital records related to the creation of Adbusters-branded merchandise. Records include photographs and digital graphic mockups of stickers, postcards, T-shirts, coffee mugs, baseball cards, flags, packaging, buttons, patches, and a spoof parking ticket.

While there is some overlap, physical merchandise from sub-series F-300-6-1 and born-digital records in this sub-series do not necessarily correlate.

Undergraduate Semester in Dialogue program

Sub-series consists of records documenting the establishment and development of SFU's Undergraduate Semester in Dialogue (USD) program by Mark Winston in his capacity as director of the program. Since the records are originals and were created and received by Winston in the course of his activities in founding, developing, and sustaining this academic program for the university, they are considered official university records. Records include correspondence, agendas, minutes, reports, proposals, budgets, and photographs.

Semester in Dialogue

First Things First project records

Sub-series consists of records created by Adbusters Media Foundation during the First Things First project advocacy campaign. Building on the 1964 manifesto of British designer Ken Garland, the First Things First project was re-launched by Adbusters in 1999 to advocate against the use of graphic design to promote unethical products and industries.

In 2008, Adbusters launched the One World, One Flag design competition as a sub-campaign within the First Things First movement. In this sub-campaign, Adbusters called on designers from around the world to submit a flag design that embodies the ideal of global citizenship. In 2018, Adbusters brought the First Things first campaign to Emily Carr University, through an event called the "Emily Carr Jam."

Paper records include posters, design concepts, sketches, collages, internal memos, and campaign strategies and plans. Born-digital records include digital graphics, press releases, emails, "One World, One Flag" design submissions, and digital photographs.

Printed works portfolio

Series consists of publications and other printed materials created by LIDC and its predecessors for SFU client departments. LIDC graphic designers worked with SFU departments and faculty members to create prints materials to support university communications, faculty teaching, research and publication, campus events and departmental programs. This series comprises sample copies retained by LIDC as a kind of portfolio of work. The dates range from 1999 to 2014, with the bulk concentrating on the years 2008-2012.

Publications and events represented include SFU Open Houses in 2008 and 2012; the President's annual Faculty Lecture (2006-2010) and the Distinguished Leadership Award ceremonies (2007-2012); reports to the SFU community by the President, the Alumni Association, University Advancement, and SFU Woodward's Vancity Office of Community Engagement; SFU News supplements for the Office of Aboriginal People (2011, 2012); books produced on special occasions to honor SFU community members, including President Michael Stevenson (2010), Chancellor Brandt C. Louie (2011), and donor Djavad Mowafaghian (2011); alumni and donor events; academic programs and workshops, including the Canadian Centre for Studies in Publishing annual Summer Workshops (1999, 2007-2010); and a book project for Continuing Studies entitled History of Sex Work Vancouver: Who We Were / Who We Are (ca. 2006).

Record types include posters, invitations, brochures, reports and books, program catalogues and university promotional materials.

Posters and associated records

Sub-series consists of physical and born-digital posters created and distributed by Adbusters Media Foundation. Born-digital records also include graphic design mockups and drafts associated with the creation of posters. While there is some overlap, print posters and born-digital records in this sub-series do not necessarily correlate.

Digital spoof ads and associated records

Sub-series consists of born-digital Adbusters' spoof advertisement graphic files and associated records. Records include digital spoof ads parodying Absolute Vodka, Altria, Benetton, Calvin Klein, Coca-Cola, Disney, Eli Lilly, Esso, Gap, George Bush, Joe Camel, Marlboro, McDonalds, Nike, Phillip Morris, the automotive industry, the beauty industry, the pharmaceutical industry, and the American flag. Associated records include spoof ad contest submissions, licensed image usage contracts, and licensed reprint request tracking tables.

Network of TeleLearning Communities project files

This sub-series consists of records relating to the management of the project. Activities documented include proposal development, Steering Committee deliberations, participant liaison, allocation of funds, and project reporting. Records include the project proposal, budgets, correspondence, meeting records, progress reports, final report, participant profiles, reports and summary financial statements. Records are retained in paper medium only.

Books and associated records

Sub-series consists of physical books authored by Kalle Lasn and their associated born-digital records. Physical books are available in English, as well as in the languages listed in the "Language of material" note. These books include Culture Jam: How to Reverse America's Suicidal Consumer Binge - and Why We Must (2000), Design Anarchy (2006), and Meme Wars: The Creative Destruction Of Neoclassical Economics (2012).

Born-digital records include release statements, advertisement graphics, book reviews, thank-you letters, contributor tracking tables, artist permissions tracking tables, licensed image usage contracts, royalty reports, spoof warning labels, and English-language digital copies of each of the three books.

Production and distribution records

Sub-series contains born-digital records associated with the production and distribution of Adbusters magazine and the Adbusters calendar. These records include lists of distributors and stockists, order tracking tables, invoices, sales forecasts, magazine exchange lists, production schedules, production cost quotes, and contacts between Adbusters and distribution services Disticor and Ebsco.

Buy Nothing Day campaign records

Sub-series consists of records created by Adbusters Media Foundation for the Buy Nothing Day advocacy campaign. Buy Nothing Day is an international day of protest against consumerism, coined by artist Ted Dave and promoted by Adbusters. Buy Nothing Day originally took place in September. It was later adjusted to and popularized as taking place on Black Friday, the fourth Friday of November. Buy Nothing Day has been since expanded to Buy Nothing Christmas in order to advocate for buying locally or crafting your own gifts during the holiday season.

Born-digital records include digital graphics, photographs, memes, press releases, moving image "subvertisements," and an audio file of Silent Night recorded in a mall. Paper records include "Buy Nothing Christmas" cards.

Results 31 to 60 of 1923