Papers, (inclusive), (bulk) 1893-1983 1943-1983
Related Entities
There are 75 Entities related to this resource.
United farm workers
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6zm68jg (corporateBody)
Collected by Fr. Victor Salandini. From the description of Clippings from first convention, 1973. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 462019377 The National Farm Workers Association (NFWA) was founded in 1962 by César E. Chávez and other Mexican-American community activists in Delano, California. In 1966, the NFWA merged with the Agricultural Workers Organizing Committee (AWOC) to form the United Farm Workers of America, the first successful and largest effort ever to organize ag...
MacDowell (Peterborough, N.H.)
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MacDowell is an artist's residency program in Peterborough, New Hampshire, United States, founded in 1907 by composer Edward MacDowell and his wife, pianist and philanthropist Marian MacDowell. Prior to July 2020, it was known as the MacDowell Colony (or simply "the Colony") but the Board of Directors voted to remove "Colony" from the name in an effort to remove "terminology with oppressive overtones". After Edward MacDowell died in 1908, Marian MacDowell established the artists' residency pr...
Chavez, Cesar, 1927-1993
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w65v4b6b (person)
Cesar Chavez (b. March 31, 1927, Yuma, AZ – d. April 23, 1993, San Luis, AZ) was an American labor leader and civil rights activist who, with Dolores Huerta, co-founded the National Farm Workers Association (later the United Farm Workers union, UFW) in 1962. Originally a Mexican American farm worker, Chavez became the best known Latino American civil rights activist, and was strongly promoted by the American labor movement, which was eager to enroll Hispanic members. His public-relations approac...
Columbia University
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The Columbia University community and administration mobilized to the fullest extent in answer to the entry of the United States into World War I. Summed up by President Nicholas Murray Butler in the 1918 Annual Report, the effects of the war on the University were far-reaching: "Students by the hundred and prospective students by the thousand entered the military, naval, or civil service of the United States; teachers and administrative officers to the number of nearly four hundred...
Paine Webber Inc.
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Madeira School
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Bernard, Allen
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Diamond, Stanley
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Delores Huerta
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Marchetti, Peter
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Carol Ann Douglas
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Council of the Southern Mountains
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The Council of the Southern Mountains was established as the result of fact-finding efforts by John C. and Olive Dame Campbell during the early 1900s. The organization's first annual meeting was held in 1912. Its original purpose was to provide a means of information sharing and cooperation among Appalachian social services, church, and school workers. Olive Campbell followed her husband as Council Executive Secretary, serving from 1919 to 1928. Others in that position include Helen Dingman, 192...
Martínez, Antonio José 1793-1867
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Antonio José Martínez was born in Abiquiu, N.M. in 1793. His family moved to Taos in 1804. Upon completion of his studies at the seminary in Durango, Mexico he returned to N.M., first to Tomé, then Abiquiu and finally Taos. Martínez, with others was responsible for bringing the first printing press to Santa Fe in 1834. The first printing press was primarily used to advance political, ecclesiastical, and educational agendas. Martínez is recognized as a champion of the common folk, a pastoral...
Bernard, Joel
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Charles de Gaulle
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Thenault, Sarah
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Redstockings, Inc.
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Gerald R. Hart.
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Graham, Katherine Meyer
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Sr. Mary Hartman
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Jacqueline, Bernard, 1918-
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Jacqueline de Sieyes Bernard, daughter of Jacques Edouard, a diplomat, and Louise (Paine) de Sieyes, was born May 5, 1921, in Le Bourget du Lac, Savoie, France. After moving to the United States with her family in 1927, she attended the Madeira School in Greenway, Virgina (1935-1939), Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, New York (1939-1941), and the University of Chicago (1941-1942). She moved to Mexico in 1942 and worked as a researcher for Revista Tiempo, a weekly news magazine, where...
Kotex
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The City College of New York
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Egleson, Jim
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James, Betty Payne
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Rodell, Marie F. (Marie Freid), 1912-
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Jewish Child Care Association
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De Sieyes, Louise
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Tiller, J. E. (John Eric), 1938-
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Don Curtiss
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Brontë, Charlotte, 1816-1855
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Charlotte Brontë (b. April 21, 1816, Thornton, Yorkshire, England–d. March 31, 1855, Haworth, Yorkshire, England), English novelist and poet, the eldest of the three Brontë sisters. She first published her works, including Jane Eyre, under the pen name Currer Bell....
Steinem, Gloria, 1934-
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6kb62d1 (person)
Gloria Steinem, late 1960's Gloria Steinem was born on March 25, 1934 in Toledo, Ohio to Leo Steinem and Ruth Nuneviller Steinem, the second of their two children (Suzanne Steinem was born in 1925). She grew up in Toledo and Clark Lake, Michigan, where the family ran a summer resort. Leo and Ruth divorced in 1945, and, with Suzanne away at Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts, eleven-year-old Gloria assumed responsibility for the care of her mother, who was incre...
Parents without Partners, inc.
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Peter Reilly
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Moore, Marat.
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In 1975 and 1976, Marat Moore worked as a reporter for the Johnson City Press-Chronicle. It was while working for the Press-Chronicle that she first went to the coal mines to cover the 1976 Scotia mine disaster in Letcher County, Kentucky. This experience sparked her interest in the people who work in the mines. Shortly thereafter, she worked for two years as a VISTA volunteer in Minga County, West Virginia. Moore then went to work as a miner in the United States Steel N...
Collins, Frances
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Epithet: widow of Mortimer Collins, author British Library Archives and Manuscripts Catalogue : Person : Description : ark:/81055/vdc_100000000246.0x00035c ...
Barbara Angle
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Nazzari, Muriel, 1924-
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New School for Social Research (New York, NY, 2005 -)
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Ann Seidman
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Rodolfo Corky Gonzales
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Parents without Partners, inc.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6dp04sd (corporateBody)
De Sieyes, Jacques
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w61m36s8 (person)
Luxemburg, Rosa, 1871-1919
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Born in Zamość, Russian Poland 1871, died in Berlin 1919; socialist theorist, journalist and agitator; joined the revolutionary socialist group ÌI. Proletarjat' as a schoolgirl in Warsaw in 1887 and had to emigrate in 1889; studied sciences and economics in Zurich; cofounder of the Socjaldemokracja Królestwa Polskiego (i Litwy) (SDKP) in 1894, which she represented in the International Socialist Bureau (ISB) 1904-1914; participated in the Russian Revolution 1905/06; active in the Sozialdemok...
Mary Pauline Callender.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6g87dz3 (person)
New York Radical Feminists
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New York Radical Feminists was a radical feminist group co-founded primarily by Shulamith Firestone and Anne Koedt with the October 3, 1969, Stanton-Anthony Brigade, after they and other brigade members left Redstockings. Central to NYRF's philosophy was the idea that men consciously maintained power and a climate of supremacy over women in order to strengthen their egos. New York Radical Feminists members organized small 10-12 women consciousness-raising groups throughout NYC that all came toge...
Lucy T. Paine
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John Dumoulin)
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6t29rqw (person)
Union of Concerned Scientists
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Pikeville Methodist Hospital
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6hv5z3x (corporateBody)
Roger Wade Productions
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6rp6fsh (corporateBody)
Jewish Child Care Association (Essex County, N.J.)
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w62k2bp5 (corporateBody)
Virgina Woolfe
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Isabel Larguia
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Tate, Indy
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Christian Gottlieb Priber
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Paine, Charles H. (Charles Henry), 1788-1859
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Charles H. Paine (1788-1859) was an early settler of the Connecticut Western Reserve, first in Painesville, which was named after his father Edward Paine, and later in Freedom Township, Portage County, Ohio. From the description of Charles H. Paine letter to Edward Paine, 1813 January 29. (Rhinelander District Library). WorldCat record id: 766004430 ...
Charlotte Stern
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Tiller, Katherine
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New School for Social Research.
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Helper, Hinton Rowan
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Emiliano Zapata
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Marjory Collins
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Council of Southern Mountains
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Reies Lopez Tijerena
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Mary Jane Putzel
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Appalachian University
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Bergquist, Laura
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American author and journalist; b. Laura Cecella Bergquist, 1918; d. 1982. From the description of Laura Bergquist collection, 1927-1982. (Boston University). WorldCat record id: 70971146 ...
Howard Chapnick
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Appalachian Women Grants for Writers
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Jacques de Sieyes
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Gaulle, Charles de, 1890-1970
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Charles Gaulle (b. November 22, 1890, Lille, France-d. November 9, 1970, Colombey-les-Deux-Églises, France) was a French general, statesman, and veteran of World War I and World War II. He led the Free French Forces during World War II and later served as France's President, 1944-1945; Prime Minister, 1958-1959; and Minister of Defense, 1958-1959, before founding the French Fifth Republic and serving as its first president, 1959-1969. ...
Wheaton, Tom
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Barnard College
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Barnard College was given its first provisional charter by the Regents of the State of New York on Aug. 8, 1889. From the description of Barnard College charters and statutes, 1934-1988. (Columbia University In the City of New York). WorldCat record id: 275960020 Junior Month was a summer project in sociological theory and practice founded in 1917 and supervised by the Charity Organization Society of New York City. In a one month period juniors from twelve eastern colleges a...
June Appal Records
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