Handwritten letter in which the professor of history advises the Women's Center's acting director on how to go about initiating negotiations to acquire Jane Grant's collection of books by and about wo...
Letter in which Women's Center co-founder Stimpson solicits opinions from her co-workers about the prospect of acquiring Jane Grant's collection of books on women. Includes a handwritten response from...
Letter in which the acting director of the Women's Center, Catharine Stimpson, expresses and interest in acquiring Grant's collection of books by and about women for the Center's library.
Letter in which Meadows-Hills implores the Women's Center's librarians to use non-chauvinist subject headings in the organization of their collection, rather than Library of Congress headings.
Handwritten notes in regards to the acquisition of Jane Grant's collection of books by and about women, subsequant to the note informing the Center that she is currently too sick to discuss its dispos...
Letter in regards to the Holdens' collection of books by and about women, and the College's progress on the establishment of a Women's Center. Possibly misdated.
Note from Elliott, the chairperson of the Trustee Committee on Development, to the rest of the Women's Committee, communicating certain details about the establishment of Barnard's "women's program," ...
Memo to accompany a list of the items included in the Helen Rogers Reid bequest to Barnard College, and remarking on its potential value to the Women's Center's library project.
Letter from the acting director of the Women's Center, suggesting that she and the Barnard librarian meet to establish an acquisitions policy for the Center's library.
Summary of the Library Committee meeting, during which acquisition opportunities for the Women's Center's library were discussed, as well as the projected scope of the collection itself.
Letter to accompany some material about the Women's Center, and to introduce two Barnard associates requesting permission to visit Holden's collection.
Letter from Grace Becker, offering the papers of her sister, Elsa G. Becker, a pioneer in the youth guidance movement, to the Women's Center's research archive.