The Caique-Mersey Group: The Library, Information, Radio, Music & - TopicsExpress



          

The Caique-Mersey Group: The Library, Information, Radio, Music & Business Service Firm Fostering Proud Associations caiquemerseygroup Richard Thau: President linkedin/pub/richard-thau/14/3b3/469 Joyce Wemer: Vice President linkedin/pub/joyce-wemer/1b/9b0/69a The Caique-Mersey Group: Service to a Diverse Group of Clients Key points for the Entity In Transition/The Discussion: Developing Alternative/New Revenue Streams / Supporting Education and Critical Thinking Initiatives / Support for Economic and Social Development ~ Partnerships ~ Public Service / The Library / The Radio Station / The Small Business / The Non-Profit Organization - - Acting as a Major Service/Destination Point – The Town Commons – The Center of the Community – A Cornerstone for a Region / Outreach to the entire population and its various political/economic/social demographic groupings / Public Service/Community/Regional Civic ~ Commercial Affairs /Advocacy and Governmental Relations / Public Relations ~ Branding ~ Marketing / Organizational Employee Team Training and Development / Agency Relationships / Priority Customer Service / Evolving Technology Implementation Our Kaleidoscopic Evaluation Process {K.E.P.} Supporting “The Best of The Old and The Best of The New” as we “Integrate Solid Old School and Creative New School” elements into contemporary and progressive 21st Century agency and organizational paradigms for our clients. THE LIBRARY BEATLES FAN CLUB / THE LIBRARY SCRUFFS A Public Service Advocate as “Caiques Care” Pro-bono service opportunities available to libraries, information centers, small business and non-profit/community–centric organizations. These agencies have helped open new possibilities for education, workforce development, and civic participation. They are strong community anchors that, together with community organizations create a network of learning and community development within a region. Civic/Community Engagement fosters Community Revitalization as it contributes directly to community well-being. The Library Beatles Fan Club/The Library Scruffs The public service/non-profit vehicle that brings together people that profess their love for “The World of Libraries” and “The World of Radio” and “The World of Popular Culture” together with that of “The Beatles Universe.” Through a developing and evolving array of social media platforms, communications, library programs, exhibits, meetings, events, collectibles, music conferences, tours, and the like, The Library Beatles Fan Club: aspires to progressively promote, develop and grow to meet the rising expectations of its nascent membership base. AN UPCOMING NATIONAL LISTING OF “BEATLE UNIVERSE” EVENTS AND PROGRAMS from: The Library Beatles Fan Club / The Library Scruffs E-MAIL US IN THE FUTURE TO BE INCLUDED IN OUR CALENDARS! [email protected] They’re Here! Beatles Exhibition Marking the 50th Anniversary of the Band’s Arrival In The U.S. Coming To The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts………Ladies and Gentlemen...The Beatles! – a collaboration between the Library and the GRAMMY Museum – will run from Feb. 6, 2014 to May 10, 2014 November 6, 2013 -- It will be 50 years ago next year that The Beatles touched down at John F. Kennedy Airport in New York City, forever changing American music, history and culture. To mark the 50th anniversary of the iconic band’s arrival in the United States – and the launch of “Beatlemania” – The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts and the GRAMMY Museum in Los Angeles, California are presenting Ladies and Gentlemen...The Beatles!, a free multimedia exhibition. The exhibition – a traveling show that will debut at the Library for the Performing Arts at Lincoln Center – will focus on the early years of The Beatles in the U.S., and the tremendous impact that the Fab Four had on American society. On display will be original Beatles materials including memorabilia, records, photographs, tour artifacts, videos, and more. Ladies and Gentlemen…The Beatles! will open February 6, 2014 (the day before the anniversary of the band’s arrival) and will run through May 10, 2014. It will be on display in the Donald and Mary Oenslager Gallery of The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, located at 40 Lincoln Center Plaza. -------- The Beatles: Band of the Sixties Wednesday, January 8, 2014, 7:00-8:00 p.m., Torrington Library, 12 Daycoeton Pl, Torrington, CT The program is free and open to the public. Registration is required and begins December 15. To register, please contact the Torrington Library at 860.489.6684. The Beatles: Band of the Sixties Wednesday, January 15, 2014, 7:00-8:30 p.m., Guilford Free Library, 67 Park Street, Guilford, CT Free and open to the public Early interviews with John F. Kennedy, Hubert Humphrey and Ronald Reagan are part of a collection of public broadcast recordings dating to the 1950s that will now be preserved at the Library of Congress. Under a project funded by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, 40,000 hours of radio and television content is being digitized for long-term preservation at the library. It will become the American Archive of Public Broadcasting and will be housed at the librarys National Audio-Visual Conservation Center in underground vaults in Culpeper, Va. Recordings of Kennedy and Humphrey come from Twin Cities Public Televisions coverage in 1960 presidential primaries. There is also a commentary by George Lucas on his first Star Wars movies from KUSC in Los Angeles and 1967 interviews with then-California Gov. Ronald Reagan from Bostons WGBH. The archive, made up of contributions from about 120 stations nationwide, also is rich with regional programming, curators said. There is a series on the history of Southwest Florida, films of performances of an acclaimed organist at the Mormon Tabernacle in Salt Lake City and shows on the space program. Its an incredible collection for local and regional history that has not been shown to the rest of the country, said curator Alan Gevinson of the librarys audio-visual conservation center. A lot of what stations picked as what they really wanted to preserve were shows about their own areas. Public, education-related radio dates to the 1920s, and public TV goes back to the 1950s — before the creation of NPR and PBS. But as far as archiving, nothing really had been done, and certainly not at this scale, until now, Gevinson said. Public broadcasting officials began creating an inventory of significant recordings held by stations in 2007, resulting in 2.5 million records. That list was narrowed down for the archive. The project will make the recordings available to researchers and the public at both the library and WGBH in Boston over the next two years. The station helped coordinate the archival project. Digitized recordings will eventually be made available online with the permission of copyright holders, Gevinson said. The library also hopes to create exhibits based on the collection. Congress urged the creation of a public broadcast archive at the time when stations were converting to digital transmission and encouraged the Corporation for Public Broadcasting to spend some federal funds on the project. –B. Zongker, AP Which of the 11 American nations do you live in? washingtonpost/blogs/govbeat/wp/2013/11/08/which-of-the-11-american-nations-do-you-live-in/
Posted on: Sat, 16 Nov 2013 19:34:27 +0000

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