3801 Cullen Blvd
Houston, TX 77004
(832) 842-5989
The School of Theatre and Dance is a department under the College of Liberal Arts & Social Sciences (CLASS) at the University of Houston. The School offers both Bachelor of Fine Arts and Master of Fine Arts programs, including a Bachelor of Fine Arts in acting, stage management, technical theatre, theatre education and a joint degree in both playwrighting and dramaturgy; all at the undergraduate level. Graduate programs are offered in: acting, theatre studies, theatrical design, technical direction, and theatre education. The current Director of the School of Theatre and Dance is Jim Johnson, a position he has held since 2013.
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Founded February 26, 1897 University of Houston November 22, 2003 Bayou Oaks 5019 Calhoun Street Houston, Texas 77004 Townhouse #1
Focused on delivering high quality local, regional and national content in the areas of news and information, arts and culture, and education, Houston Public Media utilizes its broadcast and online outlets to provide audiences with unprecedented access to the content that is meaningful to them – on air, online, at home and everywhere they go. Houston Public Media is built on 60 years of success in public radio and television, including TV 8’s distinction as the nation’s first educational public television station. Houston Public Media’s ongoing operation is made possible through the generous support of members, sponsors and underwriters through Houston Public Media Foundation a non-profit 501(c)(3). Throughout its history, Houston Public Media has remained committed to service which educates children, informs citizens and lifts the spirits of the community. Houston Public Media’s goal, through quality content, is to serve as the catalyst that takes audiences beyond the ordinary, beyond Houston and beyond the world they know. The organization is a community service of the University of Houston.
Workshop Houston offers innovative youth development programs through four creative shops: the Beat Shop (music & production), the Dance Shop (dance & performing arts), the Scholar Shop (academic enrichment & mentorship) and the Style Shop (fashion & graphic design.)
The Mitchell Center was formed in late 2003 with a gift from George Mitchell in honor of his wife, Cynthia Woods Mitchell, whose long-standing love of the arts was so evident throughout her life. The Mitchell family’s desire was to make a donation that would impact each of the University of Houston’s strong arts programs. Working closely with UH leadership, the family proposed a programmatic alliance among the schools of Art, Music, and Theatre & Dance, as well as the Creative Writing Program and Blaffer Art Museum. $16 million was designated to form an endowment for the Centers programs, and $4 million covered the renovation of the School of Theatre & Dance facility, making room for new studios, a lobby for the Wortham Theatre, and offices for the Mitchell Center staff. The building was renamed the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Center for the Arts.
Arte Público Press, the oldest and most accomplished publisher of contemporary and recovered literature by U.S. Hispanic authors, and its imprint, Piñata Books, has become the country’s leading showcase for Hispanic literary creativity, arts and culture. In the early 1970's, it became obvious to Nicolás Kanellos, Ph.D., founder and director of Arte Público Press and the Brown Foundation Chair of Spanish at the University of Houston, that Hispanic writers were not being published by the mainstream presses. To provide an outlet for the creative efforts of Latino writers, Kanellos founded the Revista Chicana-Riqueña, in Gary, Indiana in 1972. This quarterly magazine for Latino literature, art and thought eventually evolved into The Americas Review. The magazine won praise and recognition nationwide, including the 1986 and 1987 Citations of Achievement from the Coordinating Council of Literary Magazines. Building on the literary magazine's success, Kanellos founded Arte Público Press in 1979 to further the endeavor of providing a national forum for Hispanic literature. The following year, Kanellos was offered a position at the University of Houston, and he was invited to bring the press with him. As part of the ever-expanding efforts to bring Hispanic literature to mainstream audiences, Arte Público Press launched the Recovering the U.S. Hispanic Literary Heritage project in 1992. The Recovery project represents the first nationally coordinated attempt to recover, index and publish lost Latino writings that date from the American colonial period through 1960. The notion of an imprint dedicated to the publication of literature for children and young adults was planted by an urgent public demand for books that accurately portray U.S. Hispanic culture. In 1994, a grant from the Mellon Foundation allowed Arte Público Press to transform the dream into a reality. With its bilingual books for children and its entertaining novels for young adults, Piñata Books has made giant strides toward filling the void in the literary market created by an increased awareness of diverse cultures. Arte Público Press has expanded into producing much-needed documentation of the Hispanic Civil Rights Movement through the creation of the Hispanic Civil Rights Series. The series seeks to address the continuing, appalling lack of information accessible to students and the general public. Highlighted in the series are the topics of women’s activism, immigration reform, educational equity, the participation of citizens in a democratic society, civic culture and racial/cultural relations. With thirty titles published each year, Arte Público Press is David to New York publishing industry Goliaths. However, because of its cultural sensitivity to its writers and the experiences they write about, along with a vision for the role of Hispanic literature in the United States, Arte Público Press has demonstrated that size (or lack of it) is not proportionately related to success in the commercial book market.
Hours of Operation: Mon-Thurs...........Noon-6pm Fri-Sat...............RESERVATION ONLY Pricing for Vocal Recording: $20/h per vocalist *$5 per additional person accompanying Mixtape/Project Pricing: $50 for 12 songs **$10 per additional vocalist ***All sessions are saved to the customers own flash drive in pdf. or WAV. format, and must leave with the customer.
The Rebecca and John J. Moores School of Music is the music school of the University of Houston. The Moores School offers the Bachelor of Music, Bachelor of Arts in Music, Master of Music, and Doctor of Musical Arts degrees in music performance, conducting, theory and composition, music history and literature, pedagogy, and music education and also offers a Certificate of Music Performance. It is a component of the University of Houston College of the Arts (CotA). The Moores School is a fully accredited member of the National Association of Schools of Music (NASM). Its namesakes are UH alumni John Moores (a businessman and philanthropist) and his former wife Rebecca. As of June 2014, the Director of the Moores School is Andrew Davis.HistoryThe University of Houston was founded in 1927, and the music department was formed in 1940. In 1969 the department was officially designated as the University of Houston School of Music. In 1972 the School of Music moved into the Fine Arts Building, a facility it shared with the Department of Art. A multimillion-dollar gift in 1991 by UH alumni John and Rebecca Moores led to renaming of the school in their honor (media references to the "Moores School of Music" appear as early as fall 1995) and to the construction of the present facility, which began operation in 1997.
Coordinator of the Music Library: Stephanie Lewin-Lane [email protected] 713-743-3196 Music Library Supervisor: [email protected] Paula Truitt (713) 743-3770
CougarCS is the official Computer Science Club here at UH. Our members consist of CS students who are interested in various topics in the CS field (web development, software development, software design, ubiquitous computing, and other technologies). CougarCS is a social and academic organization geared towards Computer Science students. By hosting open technology discussions, workshops, gaming parties, and much more. Last year we have hosted a variety of events: LAN parties, Programming Competitions, Frontier Fiesta, Developer Workshops, and a Computer Science Career Fair. All of which were organized for students by students.
Tasty, fresh-baked bagels and breads made with the finest ingredients, then stuffed, wrapped, topped and shmeared in ways never-before imagined. Today clever creations have expanded beyond the bagel to bring more new taste discoveries to breakfast, lunch and then some.
The University of Houston System is a state university system in Texas, comprising four separate and distinct universities. It also owns and holds broadcasting licenses to a public television station and a public radio station.The fourth-largest university system in Texas, the UH System has more than 70,000 students from the four distinct universities. Its flagship institution is the University of Houston, a comprehensive doctoral degree-granting research university of about 43,000 students. The economic impact of the UH System contributes over $3 billion annually to the Texas economy, while generating about 24,000 jobs.The administration is housed in the Ezekiel W. Cullen Building, located on the campus of the University of Houston. The chancellor of the UH System is Renu Khator, who serves concurrently as president of the University of Houston. The System is governed by nine voting-member board of regents, appointed by the Governor of Texas.Component institutionsThe University of Houston System has four separate and distinct institutions; each institution is a stand-alone university and confers its own degrees. Its flagship institution is the University of Houston. The three other institutions in the System are universities; they are not branch campuses of the University of Houston.Admission into each institution is separate, and each institution has distinct admission criteria and requirements.HistoryThe University of Houston, founded in 1927, entered the state system of higher education in 1963. The evolvement of a University of Houston System came from a recommendation in May 1968 which called for the creation of a university near NASA's Manned Spacecraft Center to offer upper-division and graduate-level programs. By 1971, the 62nd Texas Legislature passed House Bill 199 authorizing the establishment of the University of Houston at Clear Lake City as a separate and distinct institution with the organization and control vested in the Board of Regents of the University of Houston.