Showing Collections: 2801 - 2810 of 5316
"We Are All Involved"
Frank S. Loescher's manuscript includes discussion of America's "race problem," and his experiences with race relations while teaching in the American South and while he served as a consultant to the Institute of Race Relations in South Africa.
Angeline H. Lograsso papers
Angeline H. Lograsso taught Italian at Bryn Mawr for 35 years, also chairing the department from 1952-1965. This collection houses her papers. The majority of the materials in the collection come from the late 1930s and 1940s, but some are undated. The collection is useful for its insights into relief organizations in Italy during World War II and into the career of Don Luigi Sturzo, an anti-Fascist statesman, for whom Lograsso served as a secretary for some time.
John J. Logue Collected Papers
Collection includes correspondence, Logue's resume (1990), flyers, newsletters, commentary by Logue, including "A Plan of Action for the Philadelphia Chapter of United World Federalists" and "A History of the Main Line Petition Campaign" which would have granted police power to the United Nations.
Lombard Mennonite Peace Center Collected Records
Collection includes pamphlets, newsletters, flyers.
London Grove Friends Meeting photographs
Photographs of London Grove Friends Meeting in Chester County, Pennsylvania.
London Grove Monthly Meeting Records
London Grove Preparative Meeting Records
Records include: men’s minutes, 1777-1787; Hicksite men’s minutes, 1875 and 1877-1912; Orthodox men’s minutes, 1847-1897; Hicksite women's minutes, 1877-1912; Orthodox women’s meeting, 1862-1907; Orthodox financial records, 1889-1922.
London Yearly Meeting minutes
This collection consists of one volume of transcribed minutes. The minutes were transcribed by Sarah Dillwyn, and were originally from London Yearly Meeting in 1794, signed by Mary Copper.
Long Island Quarterly Meeting Records
Records of Long Island Quarterly Meeting, 1975-. Includes minutes 1975-1991.
Marion H. Longshore letter
The collection contains a letter written by Marion H. Longshore and addressed to Sara T. Marshall about a stay at camp.