Showing Collections: 4511 - 4520 of 5315
Student/Teacher Organization to Prevent Nuclear War Collected Records
The collection includes correspondence, minutes of meetings, financial records, flyers, brochures, pamphlets.
Helen Rutgers Sturgis scrapbook
"Poems of Su-Shieh"
This collection is comprised of the single volume manuscript of the "Poems of Su-Shieh," and the labels that accompanied it during an earlier exhibit. This modern copy of the poems of Su Shi was produced as a copy book for practice in handwriting.
Peace Collection Subject Files
Summer Spotlight
The collection contains printouts of the Summer Spotlight newsletter.
Sunnycrest Farm for Negro Boys (Cheyney, Pa.) Records
Sunnycrest Farm for Negro Boys was founded in 1855 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, as the Home for Destitute Colored Children, a Hicksite Quaker women's charity which provided shelter and education for black children (generally boys) and then placed them with private families. The Home built a new facility in Cheyney, Pa, in 1922, and the name was changed to Sunnycrest Farm for Negro Boys in 1945. The collection contains minutes, financial and legal records, and reports.
Survivors of Assault and Rape (SOAR) records
This collection contains documentation of Haverford's Survivors of Assault and Rape (SOAR) group from 2011. It printouts of the club website "Consent is Sexy" and printouts from Haverford Go Boards about the "Consent is Sexy" project.
Bertha von Suttner Collected Papers
Bertha von Suttner was an Austrian peace activist and intellectual, and the author of one of the first international bestselling novels focused on peace ("Lay Down Your Arms") published in 1891. In her life-long correspondence on peace matters with Alfred Nobel she urged him to establish a prize for peace. Von Suttner was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1905, the first woman to be thus recognized.
Joseph Swain Papers
This collection contains the official and personal correspondences and related papers of Joseph Swain, sixth president of Swarthmore College (1891-1921). He was notable for presiding over the development of the college into a top-ranked academic institution.