Showing Collections: 1611 - 1620 of 3486
Kingsley family papers
Darius Kinsey photographic collection on logging in the Pacific Northwest
Eight black and white photographs of the logging industry in the Pacific Northwest, including workers, trains and oxen.
Arthur R. Kirkham papers
Arthur R. Kirkham (1897-1981) was a longtime radio newscaster for KOIN in Portland, Oregon. Collection includes scrapbooks, correspondence and miscellaneous personal papers regarding Kirkham's experiences in World War I and his radio career.
Kisor family papers
Collection includes correspondence of George W. Kisor and Sarah A. Kisor of Philomath, Oregon; financial records; biographical material; Occidental and Pacific Self-Endowment funds records; and teaching certificates and school record books of James Chambers, George W. Kisor's son-in-law.
Klamath River Commission records
Collection includes correspondence, minutes and other records, 1951-1958, regarding land and water use in the Klamath River Basin. The Klamath River Compact Commission was created by the 1957 Klamath River Compact as a cooperative relationship between the states of Oregon and California and the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation.
Klassen family papers
World War II correspondence of Albert and Delma Jean Klassen, scrapbook about Klassen family history, and photographs of the Grace Peck House.
Kleist & Company account books
Account books, 9 volumes, for Kleist & Company, a printing firm that was previously known as Kleist & Schuele.
Oral history interview with Virginia M. Kletzer
Oral history interview with Virginia M. Kletzer conducted by Charles Digregorio on March 30, 1976. Kletzer discusses her education at the Portland Academy in Portland, Oregon, from 1901 to 1906, as well as her volunteer activities, the 1905 Lewis and Clark Exposition, and her family.
Virginia Merges Kletzer papers
Bernard B. Kliks papers relating to Minoru Yasui and University of Oregon Law School reunions
Correspondence between Bernard B. Kliks (1915-2001) and Minoru Yasui (1916-1986), clippings about Yasui compiled by Kliks, and Kliks' correspondence regarding reunions of the University of Oregon Law School class of 1939. Kliks was an attorney in Portland, Oregon; he and Yasui attended the University of Oregon Law School together. Yasui was a Japanese American lawyer who challenged the constitutionality of a curfew placed on Japanese Americans during World War II.