Series 1, Biographical and Personal, 1930-1995
The Biographical and Personal series consists of approximately 0.5 linear feet of material and includes biographical information, as well as material related to Kirkpatrick's time at Princeton University and other non-professional activities. Of special note is a 185-page biography compiled by Kirkpatrick's wife Rita, which makes use of documents found elsewhere in the collection. The majority of correspondence found in the series is a group of photocopies of letters compiled by Kirkpatrick's wife Rita into a "significant signatures file." The file includes correspondence from U.S. presidents and vice presidents, senators and representatives, and military officers including Omar Bradley. The vast majority of the correspondence in the Significant Signatures File is brief and insubstantial; many of the letters are holiday greetings, invitations, or congratulations on Kirkpatrick's retirement from the CIA or Brown University. There is some correspondence related to Kirkpatrick's intelligence career, including a brief letter in which newly appointed Director of Central Intelligence George H.W. Bush comments on the struggles ahead of him. The series also includes a small folder of photographs, primarily of Kirkpatrick during his military service and years with the CIA.
Series 2, World War II, 1941-2000
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The World War II series documents Kirkpatrick's service in the Office of Strategic Services and U.S. Army during World War II. Approximately half of the series consists of reports and studies on the activities of the German army and General Omar Bradley's 12th Army Group. Kirkpatrick wrote at least one of the studies ("Destruction of the German Armies in Western Europe, June 6, 1944 - May 9, 1945"). Other highlights in the series include a group of progress reports and daily summaries which appear to have been written by Kirkpatrick during his time in the OSS, the text of a Kirkpatrick speech which appears to have been broadcast to the United States on V-E Day, and photocopies of Kirkpatrick's personnel records.
Declassified Reports, 1944-2000
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Series 6, Audio-Visual materials, 1930-1995
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The Audio Visual Series contains VHS video cassette tapes, Beta video cassette tapes, 1" and 2" video tape, 16 mm film, 2-inch videotape, microfilm, audio cassettes, 33 1/3 rpm and 45 rpm records, photographs, and reel-to-reel audio tapes. All of the audio-visual material is arranged by format, then chronologically, except for the photographs which are arranged alphabetically by subject or individual.
American Civil Liberties Union Records: Subgroup 2, Audiovisual Materials Series, 1947-1995
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The American Civil Liberties Union Records document the activities of the Union in protecting individual rights from 1920 through 1995. The files contain materials on freedom of speech, expression, and association; due process of law; equality before the law; legal case files; and organizational records. Within these categories files reflect subject areas such as academic freedom, censorship, racial discrimination, aliens' rights, privacy concerns, labor concerns, amnesty, and government loyalty and security. The files reflect work on litigation, advocacy and public policy, and subject files on various areas of interest connected with civil liberties. Materials include correspondence, court documents, memoranda, printed matter, minutes, reports, briefs, and legal files. Also included are materials from ACLU affiliate organizations, and the Lawyers Constitutional Defense Committee.
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Series 3: Correspondence, 1951-1997
This series consists of business and personal correspondence received by Cobo Borda from Latin American writers, publishers, university professors, political and cultural officials, and others. There are two sub-series, arranged alphabetically: Sub-series A. 1969-1997 [general correspondence], and Sub-series B., comprised of a small amount of correspondence of others from literary figures such as Baldomero Sanín Cano and Germán Arciniegas. Correspondence in sub-series A. spans 1969 to January 1997 and documents Cobo Borda's activities as a poet and essayist, editor of Eco, and cultural attaché of Colombia in Buenos Aires and Madrid. Sub-series B. spans 1951 to 1981, though there are also several undated letters.
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Series 4: Printed Material, 1930-2004 October
This series includes Frank's collection of reprints, offprints, and other copies of published writings by fellow academics, poets, and friends. Many are inscribed to Frank by the author. While most materials are scholarly and literary journal articles on French and Russian literature, sociology, and anthropology, also present are several chapbooks and poetry collections inscribed to Frank from poets Francis Ponge, John Berryman, and Theodore Weiss, as well as Yves Bonnefoy's translations of Y. B. Yeats. Printed material that was clearly an enclosure with letters sent to Frank was maintained alongside those letters in Series 1: Correspondence.
Joseph Frank Correspondence, 1930-2013 (mostly 1950-1987)
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Joseph Frank (1918-2013) was an American literary scholar best known for his five-volume biography of Russian novelist Fyodor Dostoyevsky, which he began in the early 1970s and completed in 2002. The collection consists of his personal and professional correspondence, including with Elizabeth Bishop, Yves Bonnefoy, Pierre Bourdieu, Ralph Ellison, Carlos Fuentes, Irving Howe, James Laughlin, Richard W. B. Lewis, Mary McCarthy, Allen Tate, and other writers, artists, and academics, as well as some family correspondence, writings, personal documents, and printed materials.
Honors and Awards, 1935-2008
Includes certificates from the Academy of Literary Studies and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, as well as photocopies of other awards and certificates.
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Peter Kenen papers, 1930-2009
Peter B. Kenen is a well-known economist, prolific writer, and Walker Professor of Economics and International Finance, Emeritus, at Princeton University. These records document Kenen's research and teaching work.
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Series 1: Public Policy Seminars, 1930-2018
Series 1: Public Policy Seminars contains the final papers, and sometimes additional course materials, from the eponymous junior and senior level courses that have been a capstone of the undergraduate experience in the Woodrow Wilson School of Public Policy since its founding. The "Creator" names listed below indicate the Professor who taught the seminar.
Woodrow Wilson School Policy Seminar Papers, 1930-2018
The undergraduate Policy Seminar is one of the defining elements of the academic curriculum of Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. The records consist of the final reports, as well as some syllabi and course materials from the policy seminars and a short-lived graduate-level program from the 1960s.
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Nancy Crawshaw Papers, 1930s-1996
The Nancy Crawshaw Papers contains the correspondence, photographs, and writings of Nancy Crawshaw, as well as copies of her published work. Her writings include work on her book The Cyprus Revolt (1978), lectures, broadcasts and articles from her career as a journalist, and her notes and other writings.
Subseries 2B: Photographic Negatives and Thumbnails, 1939-1995
Consists of photographic negatives and thumbnails.
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Victor Gollancz Author Files, 1931-1997
Consists of the British publisher Victor Gollancz's author files on Miguel Ángel Asturias, Edith Sitwell, and Richard Wright.
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Subseries 9B. Subject Files, 1931-2002
The subject files subseries consists of material related to a variety of subjects in Baker's life after government. The subseries includes brief correspondence from George H.W. Bush, Gerald Ford, John Major, and Nancy Reagan, as well as a folder devoted to Rice University which contains information about Baker's grandfather's role in the development of the University.
Series 9: Post-Secretary of State, 1931-2007
The Post-Secretary of State series documents Baker's activities following the end of the Bush administration and is divided into two subseries: The Baker Institute for Public Policy and Subject Files.
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Story Magazine and Story Press Records, 1931-1999
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Consists of the fairly complete working business files of the original Story and other related publishing ventures of owner-editors Martha Foley and Whit and Hallie Burnett, and the new Story author files of Richard and Lois Rosenthal. Included are editorial and personal correspondence, business and financial records, and artwork.
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Politics in Peru, I, 1931-2000
This microfilm covers primarily the 1990, 1995, 2000 and 2001 elections in Peru. It contains election propaganda and literature from participating political parties, political analysis, and official government publications.
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Catholic Church in Cuba, III, 1995-2001
This collection contains materials published and distributed by various Catholic Church organizations in Cuba.
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Selected Papers of J. Howard Woolmer, 1931-2009
Consists of files of American antiquarian book dealer J. Howard Woolmer's correspondence with various poets and writers and author photographs.
Author Photographs, 1953-2005
Consists of portraits of authors, many of which are inscribed to J. Howard Woolmer.
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Pierre and Dollie Chareau Collection, 1932-1998
Louise Dorothee (Dollie) Dyte Chareau (1880-1967) was the wife of the architect Pierre Chareau (1883-1950), who is best known for the Maison de Verre, which was built from 1927 to 1932 in Paris. This collection consists mainly of correspondence between Harold Rubinstein (1891-1975) and Dollie Chareau, and between Michael Rubenstein (1920-2001) and Pierre Chareau scholars, including Marc Vellay, Margaret Antalopoulos, and Margaret Tallet.
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Archivo de Elena Garro, 1932-1998
El archivo de Elena Garro contiene manuscritos, correspondencia, cuadernos, diarios, fotografías, material impreso y un diario de la escritora mexicana Elena Garro (1916-1998). También se incluye correspondencia y documentos personales de la hija de Garro, la poeta Helena Paz Garro (1939-2014).
Subserie 2: Octavio Paz, 1935-1995
Contiene mayormente cartas manuscritas de Octavio Paz a Elena Paz Garro.
Serie 3: Correspondencia de Elena Garro, 1935-1998
Esta serie contiene la correspondencia de Elena Garro con otros escritores, editores y miembros de su familia. La correspondencia entre Elena Garro y otros escritores y editores incluyen a Carmen Balcells, Adolfo Bioy Casares, Max Aub, Victoria Ocampo, Luis Buñuel, René Avilés Fabila, Guillermo Schmidhuber de la Mora, Leonor Fini, Emilio Carballido, Ulyses Petit de Murat y Emmanuel Carballo. Existe una extensa correspondencia entre Octavio Paz y Elena Garro, que comienza con su noviazgo, dos años antes de casarse y cesa en torno a su divorcio. Existe correspondencia con varios miembros de su familia, como sus hermanas Deva, Estrella y Alba, y su antigua suegra, Josefina Lozano de Paz. La Subserie 4 contiene la correspondencia de otras personas además de Elena Garro, incluyendo la correspondencia de Octavio Paz con su madre, Josefina "Pepa" Lozano de Paz.
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Women and Gender Issues in Latin America, 1932-1998
This microfilm consists primarily of pamphlets published by non-governmental organizations and government agencies from various Latin American countries in relation to women and gender issues. The bulk of the material was published during the 1980s and 1990s.
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Identification, 1932-1999
Population registry card, passport, border crossing card, voter registration card (1981), voter registration card (1991), fiscal identification card, Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes identification, Cultural Congress of Havana identification, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de México identification, ISSSTE identification, birth certificate (1999 copy), record of birth, physical description from Registro de Personal Federal.
Series 3: Documents, 1932-2003
Contains various forms of identification, medical records, contracts with various publishers, and miscellaneous documents.
Juan García Ponce Papers, 1932-2004 (mostly 1965-2001)
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Contains the personal and working papers of Juan García Ponce, a Mexican novelist, dramatist, short story writer, and critic.
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Series 1: Administrative, 1932-2001
The Administrative series contains records which relate to the Department of Music's activities outside of the classroom environment. The records document curriculum decisions, fundraising activities, purchases of equipment and materials, concerts, and other related topics.
Programs and Events, 1932-2002
Department of Music Records, 1932-2015
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Since 1935 Princeton University's Department of Music has offered courses in composition, music history, and related areas to students at the graduate and undergraduate level. The records of the Department of Music document the department's wide range of activities including teaching, research, curriculum development, and the planning of music-related programs on campus.
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Françoise Kestsman Durrell Collection of Lawrence Durrell Materials, 1932-2005
Consists primarily of Françoise Kestsman Durrell's collection of manuscripts, many of them unpublished, by British author Lawrence Durrell (1912-1990).
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Series 4: Writings, 1932-2008
Series 4: Writings includes the Birds' articles, poetry, speeches, and other writings on the Middle East and various topics. Most of the series is composed of Eugene Bird's writings; the majority of Jerine Bird's writings may be found in Series 2: Saudi Arabian Women Projects. Of note are Eugene Bird's notes and other writings related to an unpublished biography of the diplomat George Antonius.
Eugene and Jerine Bird Papers, 1932-2012 (mostly 1962-1984)
Eugene Bird (1925-) is a retired Foreign Service Officer who served primarily in the Middle East. During Eugene Bird's tenure with the State Department, he and his family lived in Jerusalem, Beirut, Cairo, Bombay, New Delhi, and the Saudi Arabian cities of Jeddah and Dhahran. His wife, Jerine "Jerri" Bird (1926-2012), was an activist who started the nonprofit organization Partners for Peace, which sponsored speaking tours by Israeli and Palestinian women throughout the United States. The collection contains Eugene and Jerine Bird's personal and professional correspondence, subject files on the Middle East, and writings, especially pertaining to Jerine Bird's unpublished manuscript on Saudi Arabian women.
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From Others, 1933-1996
Most of the correspondence is to Naiman unless otherwise noted. A good deal is addressed to both Anatoly and Galina Naiman; some correspondence is neither to nor from Naiman- these are noted if known
Correspondence, 1933-1996 (mostly 1960-1991)
Mostly correspondence to Naiman from family, friends, and colleagues along with some correspondence from Naiman. A good deal of correspondence is addressed to both Naiman and Galina Narinskaya and some to just Galina; some correspondence also involves other senders and recipients. Some of the correspondence includes manuscripts, typescripts, and photographs.
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Series 1: Peter Grose Papers, 1933-1999
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The Peter Grose Papers document Grose's research on Allen Dulles, the origins and early years of the Central Intelligence Agency, and the Soviet Union. The papers include writings, subject files consisting of research notes and photocopied sources, and a small number of photographs. Of note is the Central Intelligence Agency's declassified history of Allen Dulles's tenure at the CIA. The collection also includes readings and other materials from a Yale seminar on Cold War intelligence taught by Grose.
Peter Grose Papers, 1933-1999
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Peter Grose is an editor and specialist on the history of intelligence. The Peter Grose Papers document Grose's research on Allen Dulles, the origins and early years of the Central Intelligence Agency, and the Soviet Union.
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Helenē Vakalo Papers, 1933-2000 (mostly 1954-1990)
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The Helenē Vakalo Papers consists of papers by and relating to the Greek art critic and poet Helenē Vakalo (1921-2001). Included are autograph and typed manuscripts of Vakalo's poetry, lectures, articles, and essays, as well as her correspondence, notebooks, loose notes, and memorabilia. There are also official documents, photographs, awards, printed material, and several works by prominent Greek writers and artists. Of particular importance are the unpublished works and early manuscripts, as well as Vakalo's correspondence with her husband, painter, stage designer, art critic, and writer Giōrgos Vakalo, and with numerous distinguished artists and literary figures.
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.
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Series 10: May 2000 Accession, 1933-2001
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The May 2000 Accession series includes materials received from Freedom House in May 2000. The records include topical files of correspondence, articles and meeting materials about issues and individuals, copies of articles, reports and speeches and related correspondence, files on the planning and tenants of the Willkie Memorial Building, and Board of Trustees meeting minutes.
Freedom House Records, 1933-2017
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The Freedom House Records document the organization's activities in advocating freedom and democracy throughout the world. The records provide an invaluable insight into an organization that evolved from an answer to Hitler's Braunhaus to a diligent monitor of freedom worldwide.
Series 2, Subseries 1: Executive Directors, 1940-1995
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Series 2, Subseries 1: Executive Directors, 1940-1995 files contain correspondence, memoranda, clippings, reports, and articles reflecting each man's interests. George Field served as the first executive director of the organization, from its inception until 1967.
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Series 2: Council Records, 1933-2014 June 17
Series 2: Council Records contains administrative records of the committees and programs of the Council of the Humanities, as well as the Council itself.
Humanities Council Records, 1935-2021
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The Council of the Humanities was founded in 1953 at Princeton University to foster teaching, research and intellectual exchange. Consists of materials collected and generated by the Council of the Humanities, including materials pertaining to the Ford Foundation Project.
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Department of Near Eastern Studies Records, 1933-2017
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The Department of Oriental Studies was formed at Princeton University in the spring of 1927 as the Department of Oriental Languages and Literature. It offered an interdisciplinary curriculum centered on the study of the Arabic, Turkish, and Persian languages and the regions in which they were spoken until 1969, when it was reorganized into the separate Departments of Near Eastern Studies and East Asian Studies. The records consist of correspondence, memoranda, printed materials, course syllabi, and other materials which document the activities of the department and it's faculty inside and outside of the classroom.
Series 3: August 2008 Accession, 1968-2004
Contains a variety of materials that document the Department of Near Eastern Studies from the late 1960s to the early 2000s. Document types include graduate student records, administration and professors' correspondence files, event handouts, registration cards and other miscellaneous materials.
Yilmaz, Suhnaz, 1993-1999
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Articles about Colby, 1935, 1968-1995
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Series 3, Writings, 1935-1995
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Series 3, Writings, 1935-1995, is arranged into three groups: articles written by Colby, articles about Colby, and interviews with Colby, each arranged chronologically. The second group includes a folder with articles written in French, Italian, Japanese, and Norwegian, among other languages. In the collection of articles written by Colby, the published form of the article is often accompanied by one or more rough drafts.
William E. Colby Papers, 1935-1996 (mostly 1975-1995)
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William E. Colby, Princeton University Class of 1940, was a career agent in the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and Director of Central Intelligence from 1973-1976. However, the bulk of the collection documents his post-CIA career and contains correspondence, speeches, writings, newspaper clippings, and subject files that reflect Colby's professional and private interests.
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Luiz Forjaz Trigueiros Correspondence, 1935-1995
Consists of approximately 100 letters and postcards addressed to Trigueiros from seven correspondents: Jorge Amado (1967-1995), António S. Celestino (1973), Manuel Ferriera (1959-1966), Jesué Pinharanda Gomes (1960-1995), António Guedes de Amorim (1947-1971), Afonso Lopes Vieira (1935-1944), and José Rodrigues Júnior (1958-1987).
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George Adams Graham Papers, 1935-1995 (mostly 1935-1964)
George Adams Graham, faculty member in the Department of Politics at Princeton University from 1935 to 1958, specialized in the field of public administration. He was also active in public life, serving on the Citizens Federal Committee on Education; the Committee on Indian Affairs (a subcommittee of the Hoover Commission on Organization of the Executive Branch of Government); the Committee on Public Administration of the Social Science Research Council; and the second Hoover Commission's Task Force on Personnel and Civil Service. His papers consist of reports, notes, correspondence, and subject files from his service in these capacities.
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Series 3: Bennington College Papers, 1935-1995 (mostly 1945-1950)
This series primarily contains Rudikoff's notebooks, papers, diaries, planners, assessments, clippings, and coursework from her time at Bennington College from 1945 until her graduation in 1948. Composition notebooks contain extensive notes on her Bennington classes in literature, creative writing, art, logic, Greek, and psychology, the margins of which are usually lushly decorated with small sketches and doodles. Intimate diaries describe Rudikoff's experience as a young female college student in the late 1940s. Rudikoff's academic writings demonstrate an early interest in modernist women writers and include several drafts of her senior project, titled "Gertrude Stein's Blue Guitar: Studies in Language, Form, Motif."
Sonya Rudikoff Papers, 1935-2000
Sonya Rudikoff (1927-1997) was a writer, literary critic, and independent scholar, active from the 1950s through the 1990s, who wrote primarily on Victorian literature, feminism, and Virginia Woolf. The papers include Rudikoff's professional and personal correspondence, including five decades of extensive correspondence from second-generation Abstract Expressionist painter Helen Frankenthaler; typescripts of Rudikoff's unpublished fiction and lectures; notebooks, papers, and diaries from her time at Bennington College in the late 1940s; along with a curriculum vitae and bibliography of her work and some related materials.
Robert Gutman Correspondence, 1949-1999
This file group contains correspondence between Sonya Rudikoff and her husband, Robert Gutman, throughout their courtship and marriage, as well as Robert Gutman's correspondence regarding his wife after her death in 1997, including condolence letters from friends and family and correspondence related to the posthumous publication of Rudikoff's book.
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Series 1: Antioch Excavation Financial Records, 1935-1998
Series 1: Antioch Excavation Financial Records, 1935-1938 consists of detailed expense vouchers from the second half of the excavation of Antioch. Each voucher lists a single expense, its cost, and its purpose. Also included as expenses are purchases of antiquities found during the excavation.
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Ansley J. Coale Papers, 1935-1998 (mostly 1954-1994)
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Professor Ansley J. Coale (1917-2002) was a demographer whose work focused on nuptiality, fertility, and mortality in several countries. Coale joined the Princeton University faculty in 1947 and spent his entire career as a member of the university's Office of Population Research (OPR). The papers contain correspondence, Coale's research papers and projects, and samples of data collected. The material spans the several decades (1950s to 1990s) Coale spent as a member of the Princeton faculty, as well as the work he did during his retirement.
Series 4: Papers and Projects, 1947-1996
The Papers and Projects series is a compilation of Coale's writings, including texts of lectures, reprints of published manuscripts, data, correspondence, and other articles collected by Coale during his research. Notable projects include demographic studies conducted about India (1950s), Mexico (1950s and 1970s), China (1970s and 1990s), and the countries of the former Soviet Union (1990s).
Series 2: Correspondence, 1954, 1976-1998
The Correspondence series contains items sent and received by Coale over the course of his career at Princeton. The series has two divisions: Chronological (1954-1998) and Topical (1954-1998). Chronological is often outgoing correspondence, though both contain a variety of letters to and from other demographers in Princeton, the United States, and abroad. Many provide details regarding the scope and progress of Coale's research projects. Others relate to travel and his participation in professional organizations, particularly the International Union for the Scientific Study of Population (IUSSP). A large amount of correspondence is between Coale and Edgar M. Hoover, with whom he authored the Coale-Hoover report.
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Brooke Stoddard Collection on the University Press Club, 1935-2005
Brooke R. Stoddard, Class of 2005 is a member of the University Press Club (UPC), who wrote a senior thesis about the history of the UPC in 2005. The collection contains correspondence and interviews with Princeton UPC alumni that Stoddard used for his research, as well as copies of clippings and printed materials.
General information, circa 1940-2005
Includes photocopies of non-email correspondence as well as newspaper clippings, articles, brochures, and other printed resources, partly found among materials held at the Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library.
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Subseries 2A: By Antōnēs Dekavalles, 1935-2008
This subseries consists mainly of autograph manuscript and typescript drafts of Dekavallēs's works published in books, as well as miscellaneous verse, translations of English and American poetry, book reviews, articles, essays, talks, notes, an interview, and talk-radio shows.
Series 2: Writings, 1935-2008
This series consists of autograph manuscripts and typescripts, as well as drafts of assorted writings by Dekavalles. There are also works by other Greek poets or writers.
Antōnēs Dekavalles Papers, 1935-2008
This collection consists of papers of Antōnēs Dekavalles, a Greek poet, professor at Fairleigh Dickenson University, and editor of The Charioteer, A Review of Modern Greek Culture. Included are: correspondence, autograph manuscripts and typescripts, drafts, miscellaneous notes, and files related to his affiliated organizations.
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Subseries 4B: Writings of Others, 1935-2008
This series consists of writings by other authors not about Fierro and Vitale.
Series 4: Writings of Others, 1935-2008
This series consists of writings by other authors not about Fierro and Vitale. It also includes a few translations by other authors of works by Fierro and Vitale.
Enrique Fierro and Ida Vitale papers, 1935-2008 (mostly 1980-2008)
Consists of the personal and literary papers of Uruguayan writers Enrique Fierro and Ida Vitale.
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School of Architecture Records, 1935-2015
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The School of Architecture, previously known as the School of Architecture and Urban Planning, is Princeton University's academic unit dedicated to the teaching and study of architecture and related topics. The records include subject files, correspondence, course descriptions, and other administrative materials, as well as records from the Bureau of Urban Research and its successor, the Research Center for Urban and Environmental Planning.
Series 1: Robert L. Geddes, 1959-2017
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Series 1: Robert L. Geddes, 1966-1989 contains the files of Robert L. Geddes during most of his tenture as Dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Planning. The files do not contain any records from the last few years of Geddes' term, 1979-1982.
Professional Files, 1960-2017
Professional Files contains information on the projects, writings, and impact of Robert Geddes' professional career as an architect. Of particular note are the Philadelphia Police Headquarters and Liberty State Park projects.
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Eurydice 29: Source Materials, 1935-2016
Includes a significant amount of research on the Elliott sisters, Eilis Elliott O'Brien and Emily Elliott Ledwith.
Poetry Collections, 1935-2016
Consists of drafts, proofs, poem lists, notes, source materials, research, photographs, cover designs, publicity materials, reviews, correspondence, and press clippings related to Ennis's published books of poetry and unpublished book-length collections of poetry.
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Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies Records, 1935-2017
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The Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies (PIIRS) is Princeton University's international and regional studies center. The PIIRS Records document the institute's activities and include material from its precursor organizations, the Yale Institute of International Studies and the Center of International Studies at Princeton University.
Center of International Studies, and PIIRS Visiting Fellows, 1948-2007
Copyrights, 1987-1996
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Jerome Karabel Papers, 1936-1999
Jerome Karabel is an American sociologist known for his research on university admissions policies. Consists of materials compiled by Jerome Karabel while researching for his 2005 book The Chosen: The Hidden History of Admission and Exclusion at Harvard, Yale, and Princeton. The papers contain correspondence, memoranda, reports, and other documents.
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Historic, Descriptive and Subject Files Relating to or About the William Seymour Theatre Collection, Covering the Years of Operation as a Separate Library Unit, 1936-2000
Files include correspondence about the founding of Princeton University Libray's William Seymour Theatre Collection, the gala dinner opening night, efforts to enlarge the collection in the 1940 to 1960s, and descriptive writings about the collection by the various curators.
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Burgi Collection of Modern Greek Theater Playbills, Second Series, 1936-2001
This collection contains playbills from Greece.
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Léon-François Hoffmann Collection on Haitian Literature, 1936-2009
Consists of correspondence in French between Léon-François Hoffmann and Haitian poet René Depestre, including handwritten letters, faxes, and several other documents. Other additions include photocopies of correspondence between Haitian writer and politician Jacques Roumain and his wife Nicole Hibbert.
Series 1: René Depestre, 1984-2009
Contains handwritten, typewritten, print out, and photocopy correspondence between Hoffmann and Haitian poet René Depestre. Also includes a heavily annotated print out titled, "Chronologie Biographique" about Depestre and some correspondence.