Contains correspondence, memoranda, reports, minutes and other items concerning Cornell University Religious Work (CURW) and its predecessor, the Cornell University Christian Association (CUCA), including radio scripts.
Contains mostly radio scripts for The Right to Happiness. Also includes radio and television scripts for Doctor Eve, Days of Our Lives, Attorney at Law, Road of Life, From These Roots, Date with Life, The Verdict is Yours, Golden Windows, The Second Mrs. Burton, Woman in White, Zenith, There Was a Woman, The Wheels of Time, The Rising Tides, Return of Constance Curtis, Four Corners, U.S.A. and the Doris Blake Show. Also includes correspondence, plot synopses, notes, research for some of the scripts and some fan mail.
Contains personal and professional correspondence, course schedules, rosters, student letters and other material related to Swearingen's career as a professor of history. Also includes unidentified radio broadcasts.
Contains personal and professional files of the Chair of the Department of Veterinary Medicine and Obstetrics at the New York State College of Veterinary Medicine, including papers relating to radio programs.
Contains personal and business correspondence and other papers, clippings, manuscripts of articles and radio broadcasts, photographs, scrapbooks, pamphlets and other printed matter reflecting Berry's varied talents and interests.
A recording of an interview with Muller in which he discusses his career as a child actor in Hollywood and as a contestant in radio quiz shows, including The Hollywood Smarty Party and also his appearances on other radio shows such as I Was There and the Mercury Theater of the Air.
A phonograph record and transcript of the May 28, 1952 student raid on WVBR and the broadcasting of music and a false news report concerning Russian bombings of London and Marseilles.
Contains two pamphlets entitled "Farm Radio Programs: WEAI, 1930," published by the New York State College of Agriculture at Cornell University, and "Twenty Years of Broadcasting, 1925-1945, 1947," by Charles L. Taylor, a transcript of "Radio Station Development, Cornell University" by Elmer S. Phillips and bound volumes of Farm Radio Program quarterly issues, 1930-1944.