Search Results
[Maps of Archangel District, Russia], 1918
1 folder
The collection contains maps (Scale 1:420,000 and [1:1,050,000] not "1/105,000") of the district of Archangel, Russia created in 1918 by engineers of the Allied intervention in North Russia. Individual sheets are by the Elope Mapping Section or the N.R.E.F. Mapping Section.
Maps of Archangel District, Russia, 1919
1 maps (on 6 sheets; color; 118 x 137 cm.; 77 x 56 cm.)
The collection contains maps (Scale 1:420,000) of the district of Archangel, Russia created in 1918 by engineers of the Allied intervention in North Russia, the 1st Battalion, 310th U.S. Engineers. The maps were published by the Allied Mapping Section. This copy contains only five of the six sheets published. Another copy of this map is found in the Frederick C. O'Dell papers.
[Maps of Archangel District, Russia], 4th ser., circa 1918
9 maps (color; 27 x 35 cm.)
The collection contains maps (Scale 1:420,000) of the district of Archangel, Russia created by engineers of the Allied intervention in North Russia, the N.R.E.F. Mapping Section. The Bentley Historical Library has only a partial set of these maps.
Maps of the University of Michigan Campus, circa 1906-1913
12 maps
Twelve maps of the University of Michigan campus, 1906?-1913, collected by the Ann Arbor City Engineer’s Office maps showing university buildings, adjoining property ownership, proposed utility tunnels, and university railroad spur.
Marcia Barrabee Papers, 1961-1969
2 linear feet
The collection includes correspondence, newsletters, printed material, and newspaper clippings concerning the Women Strike for Peace, the House Un-American Activities Committee, the National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam, disarmament, the draft, civil defense and fallout shelters. The collection has been arranged into the following series: Ann Arbor Women for Peace; Women Strike for Peace; Peace Issues; and Surveillance Files.
Marcia Federbush papers, 1967-2005 (majority within 1970-1990)
4.4 linear feet
The collection contains mostly letters, articles, reports, and essays concerning equality among the sexes. Although most of the collection contains work by Federbush, there are many parts to the collection that were not written by her but may have served as inspiration for her own projects. Throughout the collection, if a folder is not specifically labeled "by Federbush" then there are mixtures of items written by different people contained in the folder. The collection is divided into three series: Equality in Education, Equality in Employment, and Equality in Athletics.