This subseries contains notes on the genealogy of the family of Miriam Young Holden, which may be helpful for researchers examining family correspondence. It also contains working notes made by Miriam Holden on the histories of individual women, women in various countries, and women in various occupations. Some of these notes appear to be her own and some appear to be annotations and citations from works Holden used.
Search Results
Miscellaneous, circa 1941-1981
1 folder
Box 126, Folder 1
Includes a notebook with autograph manuscripts of poems translated into English by Friar (including the poem "Louloudi tēs Monovasias" by Giannēs Ritsos accompanied by a sketch of a Byzantine church, in the last pages of the notebook); and Friar's class record booklet.
Series IV. Photographs (ca.1942-1945) - Consists of one box of black and white photographs of authors such as Robert Lawson, Agnes Turnbull, Wendell Willkie, and Donald Hough; photographs of damaged cartons of books; group photographs of Council presentations, meetings, and radio interviews; and photographs of book displays and posters.
Reynolds, George T., Ephemera from Los Alamos, World War II, circa 1942-1945
1 folder
HAS ONLINE CONTENT
Box 5, Folder 6
(Includes medal, notebook, ration books, driver's license, dog tag plate, negatives, postal censorship card, and weapon data manual.)
Box b-001856, Folder 19
Miyatake, Tōyō (1895-1979)
Consists of 11 photographs of the Manzanar War Relocation Center taken by Tōyō Miyatake while he was incarcerated there during World War II. Subjects include camp buildings, the camp entrance sign, and fellow incarcerees. Miyatake and Ansel Adams included several of these images in a collaborative exhibit and a book published in 1978. These images were printed after the war and stamped with the name of the studio Miyatake opened in 1947.
Box b-001856, Folder 20
Miyatake, Tōyō (1895-1979)
A black and white photograph of two children on tricycles pedaling down a dirt street at the Manzanar War Relocation Center. Tōyō Miyatake was among the more than 11,000 prisoners incarcerated at the camp during World War II. These images were printed after the war and stamped with the name of the studio Miyatake opened in Little Tokyo, Los Angeles, California in 1947.
Box 329, Folder 2
Box 12
Contiene tres fotos de Alma Concepción de niña, una con su madre Ada Suárez, una foto de Alma Concepción con algunas de sus bailarinas, cuatro afiches relacionados con varios eventos y un diploma concedido a Alma Concepción de la Universidad Autonoma de Madrid.
Folder 1
Manzanar Cooperative Enterprises, Inc.
Consists of a large panoramic photograph of the Manzanar War Relocation Center, a concentration camp in Manzanar, California, where the United States government incarcerated Japanese Americans during World War II. The image was taken from a tower along the fence line of the camp, likely by an outside photographer, as incarcerated people were not allowed to have cameras. The photograph is copyrighted by Manzanar Cooperative Enterprises, Inc., an organization owned, operated, and managed by the Japanese Americans incarcerated in the concentration camp, per an agreement with the War Relocation Authority dated March 1, 1943. It was likely commissioned by the cooperative and printed by a Japanese American photographic developer, probably Tōyō Miyatake.
Box s-000304
With notes by Fred B. Rogers '47.
Box b-000853, Folder 7-9
Box 35
Consists of a roll of oversized plans related to Frank Lloyd Wright's design for the Guggenheim Annex.
Box 122, Folder 4
Includes typescripts of miscellaneous poems in English, some of them signed and dated by the poets or dedicated to Friar; among them the autograph poem "Poem" dedicated to Friar by Theodoros Stamos; there are also typescripts of an election of poems from "Dark Love" by Matsē Chatzēlazarou dated 1979.
Livingston T. Merchant Papers, circa 1944-1972 (mostly 1954-1968)
MC095
29 boxes
SOME ONLINE CONTENT
Merchant, Livingston T.
Livingston T. Merchant was a diplomat and high-ranking government official. This collection consists of Merchant's papers, including correspondence, articles, notes, speeches, statements, interviews, clippings, printed matter, and personal papers.