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clippings (information artifacts)

 Subject
Subject Source: Art & Architecture Thesaurus

Found in 149 Collections and/or Records:

Bernard B. Kliks papers relating to Minoru Yasui and University of Oregon Law School reunions

 Collection
Identifier: Coll 920
Abstract

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.

Dates: circa 1938-1993

Labor Temple records

 Collection
Identifier: Mss1401
Abstract

Collection includes correspondence and financial records, 1918-1957; ephemera and newspaper clippings, 1923-1965, regarding social welfare and organizations related to labor.

Dates: 1918-1965

Samuel Christopher Lancaster collection

 Collection
Identifier: Mss2843
Abstract

Samuel Christopher Lancaster (1864-1941) was a highway engineer and builder of the famed Columbia River Highway. Collection includes a typescript biography, "Samuel Christopher Lancaster: Master of Arts in Public Places," by SuAnn M. Reddick, circa 1980-1990; National Register of Historic Places inventory of Zion National Park, for which Lancaster was a consulting engineer, circa 1930-1968; newspaper clippings, circa 1940-1990; and miscellaneous research on Lancaster.

Dates: circa 1903-1990

Harry Lane papers

 Collection
Identifier: Mss 536
Abstract

Papers relating to Harry Lane (1855-1917), who was mayor of Portland, Oregon, from 1905-1909 and a U.S. senator for Oregon from 1913 until his death. Papers include a small amount of original correspondence from and to Lane; drafts and research materials for a biography by the Federal Writers' Project, circa 1940; news clippings about Lane; and writings and notes by Lane's daughter Nina Lane McBride (later Nina Lane Faubion).

Dates: 1891-circa 1940

Dorothea Lensch papers

 Collection
Identifier: Coll 990
Abstract

Papers of Dorothea Lensch (1907-2000), including correspondence, clippings, and awards. Lensch was the first director of recreation in the Bureau of Parks and Public Recreation of Portland, Oregon, serving in that position from 1936 to 1972.

Dates: 1925-2000

Lesbians in Coalition Against Racism and Anti-Semitism records

 Collection
Identifier: Coll792
Abstract

Records of Lesbians in Coalition Against Racism and Anti-Semitism, including research materials, handouts, and workshop documents.

Dates: 1967-1999; Majority of material found within 1982-1999

Lone Pine Farm photograph album

 Collection
Identifier: Album 199
Abstract

Album containing primarily engravings and photographs clipped from newspapers and other publications, and a small number of photographic prints. The clippings are of notable people, most of them women, particularly wives of United States politicians and presidents, and royalty and nobility of various nations. The photographs, most on pages labeled "Lone Pine Farm," depict a house and grounds, as well as unidentified people.

Dates: circa 1900

Ray Lung papers

 Collection
Identifier: Coll 354
Abstract

Papers of Ray Lung, who managed the Klamath Indian Management Trust for United States National Bank of Portland from 1959 to 1975.

Dates: 1943-2007

Hall Stoner Lusk papers

 Collection
Identifier: Mss 2640
Abstract

Collection includes correspondence; opinions; minutes; reports; newspaper clippings; speeches on legal cases, political and professional activities, and educational and religious interests. Hall Stoner Lusk (1883-1983) was a lawyer and judge who served on the Multnomah County Circuit Court, on the Oregon Supreme Court, and briefly in the United States Senate.

Dates: 1899-1972

Lutheran Schools Committee records

 Collection
Identifier: Mss 646
Abstract

Records compiled by the Lutheran Schools Committee of Portland, Oregon, largely as part of a 1922 political campaign to defeat the Compulsory Education Bill, which sought to make public school attendance mandatory in Oregon for children ages eight to sixteen. Materials include clippings, campaign literature, posters, correspondence, ephemera, and voter registration lists.

Dates: 1921-1925