Subseries 3H: Office Files, 1903-1999
The Office Files subseries contains records kept by the Office of General Counsel in regards to general University legal matters in discrimination, injury, salary, benefits, scholarships and fellowships (includes the Robertson Foundation), and various other matters involving faculty members, academic departments, and student based organizations. Files include correspondence, negotiations, bound contracts, and litigation material.
Subseries 3E: Gift Files, 1941-1996
The Gift Files subseries contains correspondence and legal contracts, procedural documentation, agreements, stock certificates, checks, and ledgers regarding restricted and non-restricted gifts, gifts of stock, and restricted and non-restricted securities made to the University by living donors, including individuals, organizations, and corporations.
Series 3: General Files, 1903-1999
The General Files series contains information on a wide range of subjects involving academic and administrative departments, as well as legal proceedings which include the Stony Brook Regional Sewer Authority's "Sewer Odor Case." This series also includes disciplinary records, scholarship and memorial fund information, contracts, documentation regarding possible patents, and tax and copyright infringement information.
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Subseries 3F: Photographs, circa 1860-1949
Consist of numerous loose and framed photographs, including approximately 400 cartes-de-visite (some of which are from the studios of Matthew Brady and M.P. Simons) and a couple of daguerreotypes, and several photograph albums belonging to Arnold Guyot, Constance Cameron (A. Guyot Cameron's sister), Henry Clay Cameron, and A. Guyot Cameron. A majority of the photographs depict family members; friends, such as Jane Link and Lucy Russell, as well as those likely unaffiliated with the Cameron and Guyot families, such as prominent American politicians and members of European royal families, are also represented.
Card Photographs (4), 1860s-1940s
41 photographs, ranging in size from 1 3/4" x 3 1/4" to 5 3/4" x 8 3/4". Most appear to be family.
Card Photographs (3), 1860s-1940s
10 portraits, many of which are signed. Mostly from photographer Orren Jack Turner, Princeton, NJ, ranging in size from 4" x 6.5" to 4.25" x 6.25"
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Subseries 3D: Guillermo Blanco y Nangle to and from, 1751 June 14-1957 June 19
Consists of the correspondence of Guillermo Blanco y Nangle with individuals such as José L. Anguiano and Francisco de Solera, as well as others.
Series 3: Correspondence, 1715 February 28-1957 June 19
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Consists of the correspondence of the Blanco White Family.
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Subseries 3B: Photographs by Topic, circa 1890s-1988
This subseries consists of photographs arranged by topic, such as baseball or portraits of Berg, without geographic distinctions. This subseries also consists of images of others and images by others, such as documentary prints of Moe Berg by the collector Charles Owen. These are identified at the folder-level when known. Additional information on specific origin and identified individuals is provided at the folder-level when known.
Subseries 3A: Photographs by Location, 1932-1950s
This subseries consists of photographs arranged by an identifiable location or locations. Additional information on specific places and identified individuals is provided at the folder-level when known.
Subseries 2B: Notebooks and Notepads, 1940-1963
This subseries consists of notebooks, notepads, and associated sheaves of paper arranged by date. Materials in this subseries have been gathered because of physical relationships, such as notes bound in spiral notebooks, or multiple pages of notes that still are or once were on the same pad of paper. These materials are intellectually similar to the materials in Subseries 2A: Loose Notes, but are physically distinct. Both subseries should be considered in tandem for the most complete look at Berg's notes at any given time.
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Subseries 3B: Photographs, 1945-1975
Consists of photographs of Madrid, Spain during 1945 (which do not appear to contain Hemingway) as well as photographs of General Lanham in his later life (Washington, D.C., 1975). Also includes photographs of Hemingway memorabilia, books, and photographs. Contains a photograph of a birthday party for Ernest Hemingway in 1959, a photograph of Ernest and Mary Hemingway in Cuba (1945), several other photographs of Hemingway that appear to be taken in Cuba, several photographs of Hemingway and Lanham together in WWII, and one inscribed photograph of Hemingway, Lanham, and Buck (inscribed with "To Buck from his best friend, always, and whenever. Ernest Hemingway").
Series 1: Charles T. Lanham Correspondence, 1945-1977
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Consists of the correspondence of Charles T. Lanham, including William Faulkner and Ernest Hemingway (many of which are photocopies), as well as others.
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Subseries 3B: Others, 1783-1958
This subseries consists of material created by family and colleagues of Ashbel Green. The bulk of the material relates to Ashbel's children, wives, and in-laws. Much of the correspondence between family is personal in nature. Since the material covers numerous members of the Green and McCulloh families, the dates range from before the birth of Ashbel to well after his death.
Series 3: Papers of Other Persons, 1744-1958
The series contains documents created by Ashbel's father Jacob and various other family and associates. This series contains two subseries: Jacob Green and Others. The Jacob Green subseries contains the writings of Ashbel's father while the Others subseries consists mostly of personal correspondence between family members.
Princeton University Library Collection of Ashbel Green Materials, 1744-1958 (mostly 1783-1844)
Ashbel Green (1762-1848) was a prominent Presbyterian minister, eighth president of the College of New Jersey, and co-founder of the Princeton Theological Seminary. The bulk of the papers consist of Green's personal writings, including diaries and sermons. The papers of Green's father, the Reverend Jacob Green (1722-1790) are also included.
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Subseries 3B: Office of the Business Manager, 1919-1992
The Office of the Business Manager Series consists of documents pertaining to the department's finances. The business of hiring contractors and construction firms for new buildings and renovations and the finances of grounds and buildings maintenance is represented here through correspondence, reports, meeting minutes, and printed material. A bulk of the material pertains to project estimates and budget planning.
Subseries 3A: John P. Moran Files, 1901-1979
The John P. Moran Files consist of documents maintained by Moran during his tenure with what is now known as the Department of Facilities. The documents cover a range of administrative business within the department, including budgetary information, estimates and specifications for building projections, the maintenance of University housing, and the administration of services such as grounds maintenance, food service, and garbage removal. Items of note include correspondence and reports discussing the University's assessment and response to the energy crisis of the mid-1970s.
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Subseries 3B: J. D. Salinger, 1934-1973
Consists of the correspondence of J. D. Salinger, including originals as well as photocopies.
Series 4: Printed Matter, 1936-1986
Consists of J. D. Salinger: A Writing Life as well as printed matter related to Ursinus College and Valley Forge Military Academy.
Series 3: Correspondence, 1934-1985
Consists of the correspondence of Ian Hamilton and J. D. Salinger.
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Subseries 3A: From Tarkington, 1881-1952
Consists of letters written by Booth Tarkington to individuals such as Carl Brandt, John T. Jameson, Fred Kelly, and Warrack Wallace.
Subseries 1E: Plays, 1893-1986
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Consists of plays written by Booth Tarkington, including "Aromatic Aaron Burr," "The Gentleman from Indiana," and "The Ohio Lady," as well as others.
Subseries 1C: Short Stories, 1896-1949
Consists of manuscripts for short stories written by Booth Tarkington, including "Beasley and the Hunchbergers," "The Fair Coronet," and "The Song of the Bead," as well as others.
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Subseries 3A: Chapter Files, 1898-1995
The Chapter Files subseries includes drafts, notes and a substantial amount of source material relating to Martindell's unpublished autobiography. The subseries is arranged by chapter number, and chapter titles indicate the subject of each section of the book. Researchers should note that these files contain a small amount of photographs in addition to those found in the Photographs series.
Series 5: Photographs, 1929-2002
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The Photograph series contains photographs, arranged alphabetically by subject, from Martindell's personal and professional lives. Included are photographs of Martindell with Jimmy Carter and George McGovern and from Martindell's state senate campaign, as well as publicity shots and photographs of her various travels. Researchers should note that a small number of photographs are available in the Memoirs series.
Series 4: Subject Files, 1923-2008
The Subject Files series is primarily composed of documents relating to Martindell's personal activities and is arranged alphabetically. Included are materials detailing Martindell's education, from high school to a course taken at Princeton University in 1999, as well as correspondence and Freedom of Information Act requests regarding Federal Bureau of Investigation documents pertaining to Martindell, and a draft of a New Jersey legislature resolution regarding impeachment of Richard Nixon. There is also a scrapbook from a trip taken by Martindell in 1923. Materials include school records, correspondence, clippings, and notebooks.
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Subseries 3A: Ananda K. Coomaraswamy, 1919-1977
This subseries consists of both pen-and-ink and pencil drawings, as well as three prints and one tracing. The primary subject is female figures, but there are also two portraits and a small selection of miscellaneous drawings. Three drawings, "Relaxation," "Memory," and "Extension" [circa1919-1920], were published in Twenty-eight Drawings [see also Box 7, Folder 1]. Furthermore, this subseries contains three prints of drawings of Bloch. This subseries is organized by subject and then by medium, with miscellaneous material located at the end.
Stella Bloch Papers Relating to Ananda K. Coomaraswamy, 1890-1985 (mostly 1917-1930)
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The Stella Bloch Papers Relating to Ananda K. Coomaraswamy consists of manuscripts, correspondence, drawings, photographs, printed material, and postcards of the American dance critic, art historian, and artist Stella Bloch (1898-1999). This collection documents the relationship between Bloch and the Anglo-Indian art historian, philosopher, and author Ananda K. Coomaraswamy (1877-1947) who embodied the roles of mentor, husband, and friend. The papers primarily contain correspondence by Coomaraswamy to Bloch, as well as a small amount of other letters. Writing was a vital form of communication for Coomaraswamy and Bloch, especially during their marriage, since they always resided in different cities; he lived in Boston while she lived in New York. There are also drawings by Coomaraswamy and by Bloch, as well as photographs-some taken by Coomaraswamy-that include portraits and assorted images from their travels to India and Southeast Asia. The articles in both manuscript and printed form provide a sampling of Coomaraswamy and Bloch's writings on art, religion, and philosophy. Furthermore, there is a small selection of printed material about Coomaraswamy and Bloch, and a series of memento postcards.
Series 3: Drawings, 1919-1977
Consists of both pen-and-ink and pencil drawings, as well as three prints and one tracing. The primary subject is female figures, but there are also two portraits and a small selection of miscellaneous drawings. Three drawings, "Relaxation," "Memory," and "Extension" [circa1919-1920], were published in Twenty-eight Drawings [see also Box 7, Folder 1]. Also consists of unbound pencil drawings and two sketchbooks from Bloch's travels, one each from Bali (1919) and Java (1919-1920). The primary subject of the unbound drawings is Coomaraswamy and Bloch, while that of the sketchbooks is indigenous people and dancers of Bali and Java. Also included in the Bali sketchbook are two drawings of Coomaraswamy, one of him wearing a typical Balinese hat, and two prints of a Balinese dancer, one hand-colored [see also Box 8, Folder 1].
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Subseries 2M: Frederick Henry Osborn, 1889-1981
[son of William Church Osborn and Alice Clinton Hoadley Dodge Osborn, and Princeton Class of 1910]
Subseries 2I: Earl Dodge Osborn, 1893-1989
[son of William Church Osborn and Alice Clinton Hoadley Dodge, and Princeton Class of 1910]
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Subseries 2L: Women's Rights Project, 1940-2000
The majority of the Women's Rights Project subseries is composed of case files. Well documented cases challenge sexual discrimination and include Christman v. American Cyanamid Company (employment), Faulkner v. Jones (Citadel) (education), and Peters v. Wayne State University (retirement benefits). The subseries also contains files on state legislation and cases related to prosecuting women for drug or alcohol use during pregnancy for child abuse, and files on the administration of the project such as correspondence, finances, and the clinic they taught with the Columbia Law School.
Subseries 2K: Voters' Rights Project, 1898-1994
The Voters' Rights Project subseries contains case files, correspondence, and the files of director Charles Morgan. The primary cases are Hadnott v. Amos , a class action suit brought by the National Democratic Party of Alabama (NDPA) against Alabama state officials for refusing to include NDPA candidates on ballots in the 1968 general election, and Johnson v. Miller regarding Georgia's congressional districts. The correspondence includes letters from prisoners with general appeals for ACLU help on due process violations and project correspondence with the Southern Regional Office and with affiliates. Also included are files on organizations involved in related advocacy work, publications, speeches, and newspaper clippings.
Subseries 2J: Sexual Privacy Project, 1878-1978
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The Sexual Privacy Project subseries is largely composed of case files and subject files about the project's work on behalf of the LBGT community, prostitutes, and the general right to sexual privacy. Major issues addressed in the cases include anti-sodomy laws, child custody, discrimination, employment discrimination, military rights, police harassment, and security clearance. The subject files consist of materials on cases and legislation that the ACLU was monitoring and research materials on a wide variety of sexual privacy issues. The subseries also includes materials for a book on gay rights, correspondence from homosexuals in prison about their treatment, files on legalizing prostitution, and files on sexual privacy legislation and challenges in each state.
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Subseries 2D: Official Documents, Clippings, and Ephemera, 1870-1954
This subseries includes government-issued documents, including marriage and birth certificates and passports as well as awards and certificates; newspaper clippings and a few periodicals; notes and writings; various types of ephemera, such as programs and souvenirs; and unidentified letters and empty envelopes. Most of the materials relate to Harry Maule Crookshank and Harry F.C. Crookshank with some relating to Emma Comfort Crookshank and Helen Elizabeth "Bessie" Crookshank, in particular, Bessie's involvement with the British Red Cross during World War II.
Subseries 2C: Harry F.C. Crookshank, 1902-1960
Includes some letters and a diary. Of special note is a letter to his family written during the Battle of the Somme (September 14, 1916); as well as correspondence between Harry and Winston Churchill (December 7, 1954).
Subseries 2B: Emma Comfort Crookshank, 1877-1953
This subseries includes the correspondence, diaries, and scrapbooks of Emma Comfort Crookshank. Some items predate her marriage to Harry M. Crookshank. There are 9 diaries with large gaps in the years covered.
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Subseries 2D: Miscellaneous Materials, 1929-1963
Consists of La Casa del Libro, "Memorial service in memory of Dr. Elmer Adler," and miscellaneous printed matter.
Subseries 1D: Miscellaneous Materials, 1944-1985
Consists of "Van Wyck Brooks and the Creation of a Historical Fable" as well as miscellaneous printed matter.
Subseries 1C: Writings of Van Wyck Brooks, 1910-1961
Consists of From the Shadow of the Mountain: My Post-Meridian Years, "The Soul: An Essay Towards a Point of View," and "Writers and the Future".
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Subseries 2D: Interviews, 1948-1962
Consists of transcripts for "Early Poetry", BBC, produced by James McFarlan, "Portrait of Dylan Thomas", interview by Wynford Vaughan Thomas, and "This is Your Life", Television Theatre.
Series 5: Papers of Others, 1932-1972
Consists of papers such as Cecil, Henry: Portrait of a Judge, and Other Stories; Driberg, Tom: "Cottage Squalor"; and Lindsay, Jack: "The Poetry of Edith Sitwell," as well as others.
Series 2: Writings, 1948-1964
Consists of the writings of Edith Sitwell, including biographical materials, book reviews, essays, interviews, introductions, lectures, and poetry, as well as miscellaneous notes.
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Subseries 2C: Nellie Harris/Esar Levine, 1925-1955
Consists of miscellaneous correspondence of Nellie Harris and Esar Levine.
Series 3: Printed Matter, 1908-1976
Consists of Esar Levine's scrapbook pages and contemporary newspaper clippings and magazine tearsheets about Harris and his writings, as well as reports of police arrests and seizures of copies of My Life and Loves in both France and America. Also present are original, printed paperback copies of Harris's Joan La Romée (play) and Stories of Jesus The Christ... including Jesus by George Bernard Shaw, an assortment of magazines edited by Harris or containing articles by or about him, a few photographs of Harris, and other printed ephemera and memorabilia relating to him.
Series 2: Correspondence, 1920-1955
Consists of over one hundred autograph and typed letters (chronologically arranged in 8 folders by date), mostly signed by Harris, to his friend and agent, Esar Levine, dating from 1920 to 1930 and discussing various publication and marketing strategies for My Life and Loves in both Mexico and America, as well as personal and financial matters. There are also letters to Harris and Levine from their mutual business associates, and from such notable persons as Otto Kahn, H.L. Mencken, Upton Sinclair, and G.S. Viereck, arranged by correspondent. Also present is a typed copy of a letter from G. Bernard Shaw to Harris's widow, Nellie O'Hara Harris, as well as one folder of her sporadic correspondence with Levine, ending with the news of her death in 1955
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Subseries 2C: Correspondence of Others, 1937 April 9-1993 July 30
This subseries contains letters by individuals to people other than María Rosa Oliver, including two by Tota Atucha [de Llavallol], one to Rafael Alberti and María Teresa León, and the other to Victoria Ocampo. Other correspondence filed here is a letter by Gisèle Freund to Victoria Ocampo from Nazi-occupied France, dated December 7, 1940, and two letters by Oliver's friend (and co-author) Norberto A. Frontini to others. There are two letters written to María Teresa Bortagaray de Testa, one dated 1992(?) by Hebe Clementi who has published a biography of Oliver, and the other, dated 1993, by Editorial Sudamericana. The subseries is arranged alphabetically by the surname of the sender.
Subseries 2A: General, 1920-1975
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This subseries, arranged alphabetically, consists of Oliver's correspondence with friends and colleagues, including well-known Latin American, European, and American novelists, poets, artists, and cultural figures. The largest number of letters are by Luis Saslavsky (126), followed by Victoria Ocampo (80+), Waldo Frank (40), and Eduardo Mallea (23). There is also a large amount of correspondence with individuals active in the organization World Council of Peace, in particular, the Colombian sociologist Diego Montaña Cuéllar, Colombian Jorge Zalamea, and Argentinian Alfredo Varela. Also of interest are the letters by Chilean peace activist Olga Poblete, British peace advocate Monica Felton, and director of the U.S. Section of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom Mildred Scott Olmstead. Significant Latin American writers in the correspondence include Gabriela Mistral, Miguel Angel Asturias, Alfonso Reyes, J. C. Onetti, Gabriel García Márquez, and Mexicans Daniel Cosío Villegas and Jesús Silva Herzog. There is correspondence from numerous individuals of the Casa de las Américas in Havana, Cuba, and Roberto Fernández Retamar, in particular. Correspondence from other political and cultural figures in Argentina include Alfredo L. Palacios and Gregorio Bermann. There are numerous letters from the '20s and '30s of cultural interest-Conde Galeazzo Ciano (son-in-law of Benito Mussolini), German playwright Georg Kaiser, French theater directors Louis Jouvet and Lugné-Poe, architect Le Corbusier and philosopher Jacques Maritain. From the '40s and '50s, there are 11 letters by American dance executive Lincoln Kirstein and letters by American writers Howard Fast and Joseph Starobin. Undated, but probably from the '60s, are four letters by French author Simone de Beauvoir. The correspondence is also strong on Brazilian writers-there are 11 letters each (in Portuguese) by Jorge Amado and Vinícius de Moraes, spanning the years 1941-1975.
Subseries 1B: Nonfiction, 1640-1979
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The Nonfiction subseries contains Oliver's typescript and autograph manuscripts and notes of nonfiction articles, book and film reviews, speeches, conference papers, and sections of her published memoirs. This subseries is divided in two sections, General (1), and Articles, Speeches, and Notes (2). Each section is arranged alphabetically by subject, and, if there are multiple items on the same subject, the items are arranged chronologically within each subject. The manuscripts in the first section consist of her autobiographical writings, some of which can be identified as drafts of her memoirs, and the material in the second section consists of Oliver's nonfiction writings, arranged by subject. The nonfiction articles are in Spanish and English, and were written for a variety of publications in Latin America, Italy, and the United States. The subjects of Oliver's articles include North American novelists, Cuba in the 1960s, Pablo Neruda, the peace organization World Council of Peace, and reports on her visits to China, India, Ceylon, and the Soviet Union in the 1950s and 1960s.
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Subseries 2B: Scrapbooks, 1945-1962
Consists of scrapbooks on "Friends of Albert Schweitzer, Boston," "A Picture Story," "His Eightieth Year," and general clippings.
Series 2: Albert Schweitzer Papers, 1945-1994 August
Consists of the papers of Albert Schweitzer, including documents, scrapbooks, and audio visual materials.
Miriam Rogers collection of Albert Schweitzer, 1945-1973 (mostly 1950-1963)
Consists primarily of papers collected by Miriam Rogers concerning Albert Schweitzer (1875-1965) as medical missionary and physician at his hospital (founded in 1913) in Lambarene, French Equatorial Africa, after World War II. Rogers shared Albert Schweitzer's interest in music (as a pianist) and medicine, leading her to become chairman (1950-1971) of the""Friends of Albert Schweitzer" in Boston. She made several trips to Africa, France, and Germany to visit Schweitzer.
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Subseries 2B: Personal Correspondence, 1948-1954
The personal correspondence is minimal but includes nine items from E. M. Forster, the British novelist, one of which deals at length with Merrick's earliest work, The Strumpet Wind. A Christmas card, undated, includes a picture of Forster in his study. There is also a note from composer Leonard Cohen who knew Merrick from having spent much time in the Greek islands.
Series 2: Correspondence, 1948-1990
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The business and financial correspondence (1967-1990) includes contracts, royalty statements, and check stubs for royalty payments, as well as incoming letters from agents and editors. Although Merrick came from a wealthy family, he seems to have lived to a large extent on royalties, as his correspondence demonstrates. There is an interesting turn in the correspondence when one of his agents Bernard Geis goes bankrupt and Merrick has to sue for back payment of royalties. There are some letters by Merrick, attached to the replies they received, because they are mostly undated. The last dated folder in the series (1989-1990) contains correspondence relating to Merrick's estate.
Gordon Merrick Papers, 1936-1991 (mostly 1954-1988)
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The Gordon Merrick Papers consist primarily of drafts of the manuscripts of Merrick's novels, written over a thirty-nine year period, from the late 1940s ( The Strumpet Wind, 1947) to the mid-1980s ( Measure of Madness, 1986). Also present is his business and financial correspondence with agents, publishers, and banks over a twenty-one year period, from 1967 until his death in 1988. In addition there is a clipping file which dates back to Merrick's first experiences as an actor in the 1930s, as well as photographs taken for publicity as well as for Merrick's personal collection.
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Subseries 2B: Other Family Members, 1901-1971
This sub-series consists of correspondence between various family members other than Mujica Láinez. There are also several original envelopes, a few assorted clippings, a few letters to family members by non-family members, seven mass cards, two manuscripts, and a chronology of family homes. This sub-series is arranged chronologically by year and then by correspondent. A large portion of this correspondence is between the following individuals: Lucía and Manuel Mujica Farías [father], Lucía, Justa, Ana María Láinez ["Anamama," "Viuda"] [aunt], Josefina Láinez ["Pepa," "Pepita," "Mamachica"] [aunt], Justita Láinez ["Tita," "Tina," "Vinagera"] [aunt], and Martha Láinez ["Nenatony"] [aunt].
Subseries 2A: Manuel Mujica Láinez, 1923-1984
This sub-series consists of correspondence between Mujica Láinez and various family members. Also included are several original envelopes, 10 clippings about his marriage to Ana de Alvear de Mujica Láinez ["Anita"], two invitations to their wedding, a telegram sent by Mujica Láinez, two manuscripts by Mujica Láinez (one written in Justa's hand), three manuscripts by others, an echocardiogram of Anita, and one miscellaneous letter. This sub-series is arranged alphabetically by correspondent and then chronologically by year. The primary correspondents are his wife Anita, Lucía Láinez de Mujica Farías ["Chía"] [mother], Ana Mujica [daughter], and Justa Varela de Láinez ["Lala"] [grandmother].
Series 2: Family Correspondence, 1901-1984
Consists of family correspondence, divided into those of general family members and those of Manuel Mujica Láinez.
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Subseries 2B: Lawyers Constitutional Defense Committee, 1946-1978
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Founded in the summer of 1964 to assist the civil rights movement, the Lawyers Constitutional Defense Committee (LCDC) solicited lawyers to provide volunteer legal representation for worthy or significant cases. Typically, a volunteer lawyer would travel to a small town in the South and spend one month working on cases in coordination with one of the LCDC's regional offices. While these regional offices handled case work locally, the headquarters in New York handled lawyer solicitation, fundraising, publicity, and other general activities. In December 1967, the LCDC was merged into the Roger Baldwin Foundation (the tax-exempt arm of the ACLU) becoming the LCDC project of the Foundation. As the civil rights movement grew in popularity, the LCDC's practical and ideological goals were met by other organizations, most notably the United States Justice Department.
Series 2: Project Files, 1946-1980
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Subseries 2B: Correspondence, 1828-1953
Contains family correspondence with Gwinn's mother, Matilda Bowie Gwinn, her husband's parents, Mahalia Riley and Alfred James Hodder, and other relatives, as well as correspondence with friends and acquaintances, especially M. Cary Thomas, with whom she corresponded writing under many different pet names, Katharine Fullerton and Gordon Hall Gerould, and including correspondence with Gwinn's special Baltimore friends, Bessie King, Mary E. Garrett, Julia Rogers, and Nancy Howard. The correspondence is full of references to Jessie Donaldson Hodder's presence in the lives of the Hodders, as well as references to M. Carey Thomas' reaction to the Gwinn and Hodder relationship.
Series 2: Mary Mackall Gwinn Hodder, 1861-1940s
Consists of the papers of Mary Mackall Gwinn Hodder, including writings, correspondence, photographs, documents, financial materials, memorabilia, and printed matter.
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Subseries 2B: By Project, 1940-2009
This subseries consists of negatives, contact sheets, color transparencies (slides), manuscripts, research, interviews, correspondence and a few prints for Douglas Kent Hall's unpublished photography projects. The material spans Hall's entire career and most of the projects are thematically related to other concurrent projects or publications located through the rest of the collection. When known, those relationships are listed at the project level.
Series 2: Photography, 1940-2009
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This series consists of photographic and manuscript material spanning Hall's entire career, from when he started experimenting with photography in 1965 until his death. Manuscripts, research, interviews, correspondence, working drafts, audio and visual materials in magnetic and optical formats, and reviews are also included with the project to which they correspond.
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Subseries 2B: Board of Governors, 1934-1992
The Board of Governors subseries is composed of the minutes of the Board of Governors meetings as well as reports submitted to the Board of Governors by the Tower Club undergraduate officers. Also included are correspondence and related material on the Club which deals with the role of the Princeton Prospect Foundation, tax exemption, and general Club obligations, as well as address and telephone lists of the Board of Governors.
Subseries 1A: General, 1947-1990
The General subseries consists of correspondence between the Princeton Prospect Foundation and the Princeton Prospect Foundation Board of Trustees, members and interested people, and Princeton University faculty and administration in regards to the role of the Foundation and its acceptance by the University. Also included are general memoranda and mailings by the Foundation inquiring about assistance for their cause. There are also reports completed by the Foundation in an effort to show the positive impact it has had on the Eating Clubs and the University. Also incorporated in this subseries are the minutes of the meetings of the Foundation Board of Trustees (including address and telephone lists of the trustees), and the bylaws and certificate of incorporation for the Foundation.
Series 4: Graduate Inter-Club Council, 1940-1988
Series 4: Graduate Inter-Club Council, 1940-1988, consists of correspondence and related material concerning James Newman, who was chairman of the Graduate Inter-Club Council, and the role of the Eating Clubs in general. Also included are the minutes of the Graduate Inter-Club Council meetings, along with address and telephone lists of the members of the Graduate Inter-Club Council.
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Subseries 2A: Personal, 1943-2000
This subseries comprises correspondence Tsitselē mostly received from friends and acquaintances.
Subseries 1E: Translations, 1939-1996
This subseries consists of typescripts and autograph manuscript drafts of published translations in English by Kaiē Tsitselē of works by other writers.
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Subseries 2A: Novels, 1932-1950
Consists of manuscripts for novels such as The Scottish Queen, The Brave General, and The Breast of the Dove, as well as others.
Series 2: Manuscripts, 1909-1950
Consists of the manuscripts for works of Herbert S. Gorman, including novels, plays, poetry, and miscellaneous prose.
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Subseries 2A: Nikos Kazantzakis Letters, 1902-1957
This subseries consists of photocopies of all the Kazantzakis letters that Peter Bien collected, dated, and arranged chronologically.
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Subseries 2A: Chairmen's Correspondence, 1920-1990
Subseries 2A, Chairmen's Correspondence, 1922-1988, is arranged alphabetically by each chairman's last name and alphabetically by subject within. It contains the correspondence of R. S. Dugan, Lyman Spitzer, Jr., and John Q. Stewart. The correspondence deals with a wide range of subjects including appointments, committees, funding, personnel, and cooperation with national science foundations. Spitzer's folders are additionally divided into two sections, one by specific issues and one by general topics, each arranged alphabetically.
Subseries 1B: Phenomenal Observations, 1874-1966
Subseries 1B: Phenomenal Observations, 1874-1966, is arranged alphabetically by the name of the phenomenon observed and chronologically therein. It contains observational records of particular phenomena, such as the Eros asteroid, the Transit of Venus, the Total Lunar Eclipse of 1891, and various comets and satellites. Some astrophysical events, such as the Transit of Venus, have many record books for the same year.
Series 4: Photographs Additions, 1945-1981
Series 4: Photographs Additions, circa 1945-1955 and 1973-1981 includes 4"x5" glass plate and film negatives primarily of illustrations likely produced for publications, as well as a smaller number of images depicting laboratory equipment and an experiment or demonstration. The series also includes a binder of contact prints of illustrations likely produced for publications, a set of photographs of researchers in a laboratory, and a folder of photographs of the Aerobee 170 A Rocket project at White Sands Missile Range.
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Subseries 1, Subject Files, 1947-1998
The Subject Files subseries documents Kirkpatrick's active years at the CIA between 1947 and 1965 and is the largest of the three subseries. It includes approximately 0.5 linear feet of material related to the Bay of Pigs Invasion and Kirkpatrick's role in the compilation of the Inspector General's report on the incident. The report was released in 1998, after being classified for thirty-six years, following a Freedom of Information Act request by the National Security Archive at George Washington University. Copies of the two volumes of records released by the CIA, titled "Inspector General's Survey of the Cuban Operation and Associated Documents," are included in the subseries. Other material related to the Bay of Pigs includes two 1958 State Department reports on Cuba, a folder of correspondence between Kirkpatrick and Cuban lawyer Mario Lazo, and transcripts of a lecture and an interview, both given by Kirkpatrick after he left the CIA.
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Subseries 1S: Reviews of Bishop, 1941 September-1955 June
Consists of reviews of works such as Act of Darkness and American Harvest, as well as others.
Series 2: Correspondence, 1912-2008
Consists of correspondence with individuals such as Sherwood Anderson, e. e. Cummings, William Faulkner, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, Marianne Moore, Katherine Anne Porter, and Edmund Wilson, as well as others.
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Subseries 1D: Scientific Papers, 1941-1989
A bibliography (1941-1980) of Dr. Thomas's scientific publications is provided at the beginning of this section. Reprints of the papers, if present, follow the chronological order of the bibliography; where they are lacking, a full citation is given. Later (post-1980) papers continue the chronological order. At the end have been foldered miscellaneous material, including electron microscope photographs and requests for reprints of Dr. Thomas's papers.
Series 1: Publication and Media Files, 1941-1992
The series has been subdivided by grouping together original and related material for each of the genres in which Dr. Thomas published: books; columns in the New England Journal of Medicine ("Notes of a Biology Watcher") and Discover magazine; general works—articles, reviews, forewords, etc.; and scientific papers. Files covering Dr. Thomas's relationship with the media (TV, radio, and film) conclude the series.
Lewis Thomas Papers, 1941-1992 (mostly 1973-1983)
The Lewis Thomas papers consist primarily of files from the years (1973-1983) that Thomas (Princeton Class of 1933) spent as president and, later, chancellor, of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York City. These contain general correspondence with doctors, drafts and reprints of his essays and books, files of lectures, presentations, and awards, and files of scientific organizations with which he was involved. There are also drafts and reprints of early scientific papers (which pre-date his years at MSKCC).
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Subseries 1D: Articles, 1915-1954
Consists of manuscripts for articles such as "The General Subject of Conversation," "How to Waste Material: A Note on My Generation," and "Sleeping and Waking," as well as others.
Subseries 1C: Tear Sheets, 1920-1960s
Consists of tear sheets for works such as "An Alcoholic Case," "The Count of Darkness," and "How to Live on Practically Nothing a Year," as well as others.
Subseries 1A: Novels, 1917-1957
SOME ONLINE CONTENT
Consists of manuscripts for novels such as Afternoon of an Author, The Great Gatsby, and This Side of Paradise, as well as others.
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Subseries 1C: Lecture Notes, 1945-1980 September
This subseries consists of lecture notes from two courses that Cortázar taught, one on French literature at Universidad de Cuyo, Mendoza, Argentina (1945), and the other on contemporary Latin American narrative and Cortázar's work at University of California, Berkeley (1980).
Subseries 1A: Writings, 1937-1977
This subseries consists of both fiction and non-fiction prose manuscripts. The majority of the manuscripts are unpublished, but the collection includes the following published works (complete unless otherwise indicated): Adiós, Robinson y otras piezas breves (1995) [two short plays], Los autonautas de la cosmopista: O, un viaje atemporal París-Marsella (1983), Diario de Andrés Fava (1995), El examen (1986), Rayuela (1963) [notes and short manuscript excerpts] and Teoría del túnel (1947). Many of the items, some with titles or otherwise identifiable as individual manuscripts, have been separated from a large miscellaneous folder. For items filed together in one folder, see the reference to the alternate folder. Furthermore, there is a small selection of quotations that Cortázar collected from the works of others, as well as miscellanea that include writing notes.
Series 2: Poetry, 1927-1977
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This series consists of poetry manuscripts, including a notebook of poems written by Cortázar when he was 12 years old (1927). Almost all of the manuscripts are unpublished, but the collection includes several poems listed individually or included in a poetry collection that have been published in Pameos y meopas (1971). Many of the items, some with titles or otherwise identifiable as individual manuscripts, have been separated from a large miscellaneous folder. For items filed together in one folder, see the reference to the alternate folder. Furthermore, there is a small selection of miscellanea that includes poetry fragments and writing notes.
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Subseries 1B: Literary, 1936-1984
This subseries comprises mostly incoming correspondence from leading poets and writers of the 20th century mainly of Greece and Eastern Europe.
Series 4: Newspaper Clippings; Photograph, 1935-1983
This series consists of photocopies of clippings mainly of Greek newspapers concerning Nikos Pappas's and Rita Boumē Papa's published works.
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Subseries 1B: Correspondence, 1830-1962
Consists of correspondence with his wife, Louise Selina Bonynge Maxwell, as well as with the Brazilian Embassy, Edward VII, King of Great Britain, George V, King of Great Britain, several Earls and Barons, and others.
Series 3: Others, 1869-1963
Consists of bound volumes (versebook from 1824, gift of John Pascoe Grenfell to Algernon Grenfell; Arabic prayer book, 1894-1895), documents, and unidentified papers.
Series 2: Louise Selina Bonynge Maxwell, died 1929, 1838-2999
Consists of the writings, correspondence, photographs, and scrapbooks of Louise Selina Bonynge Maxwell.
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Subseries 1A: Poetry, 1933-1994
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Consists of the poetry of Helenē Vakalo, including "Anamnēseis apo mia Ephialtikē Politeia," "Genealogia," and "Topeio Louomenōn," as well as others.
Series 9: Photographs, 1940-1998
This series consists of photographs of Helenē Vakalo through the years including her photograph portrtaits, photographs with her friends, colleagues, artists, actors and actresses, academics, art critics, and politicians.
Series 1: Writings, 1933-1994
SOME ONLINE CONTENT
This series consists of poetry, essays, articles, lectures, miscellaneous prose, and notes. Some of the works exist in numerous drafts, while others only appear in their final versions. Most of the poems belong to collections of poetry published between 1945 and 1997, but there are also a number of individual, unpublished poems. The majority of the articles have been cut from the newspaper Ta Nea, where they appeared between 1949 and 1974, and have been chronologically or thematically arranged by the author on pieces of paper. While the essays cover a wide range of subjects, the lectures are mainly about painters and general issues in fine arts. The miscellaneous prose and notes focus on art, but also include other subjects, such as Vakalo's travels, and an account of her thoughts and experiences on the first day of the dictatorship in Greece, 21 April 1967.
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Subseries 1A: Nonfiction, 1924-1959
Consists of manuscripts and notes for works such as "American Adventures" and "Table Topics."
Series 2: Correspondence, 1906-1961
Consists of correspondence with individuals such as the Marquis de Angerville, Willa Cather, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Sinclair Lewis, Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt, and Theodore Roosevelt.
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Subseries 1A: Correspondence, 1937-1981
Consists of correspondence of the Orchestra of America, including city and state officials, supporters of the orchestra, and the New York College of Music, as well as others.
Series 1: Orchestra of America, 1937-1981
Consists of papers of the Orchestra of America, including correspondence, legal documents, photographs, and printed material.
Richard K. Korn Papers, 1937-1981 (mostly 1959-1968)
Richard K. Korn was a clarinetist, conductor, and founder of the Orchestra of America. He was also involved in the American Council for Judaism. His papers include correspondence with composers, photographs, and correspondence with other members of the American Council for Judaism.