94 results

  • Tags: Women
REEL0017_0247.jpg

Hymans asks his colleagues whether they should include women's organizations in their Advisory Committee on Traffic in Women and to the Protection of Children.
REEL0017_0457.jpg

Moore tells Courtney her views on the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom's acceptance of many kinds of pacifists.
REEL0017_0443.jpg

Glücklich tells Addams that she hopes the reduction of funds from the United States Section is not due to a problem.
REEL0017_1073.jpg

Garlin tells Addams her thoughts on the meeting of the National Council of Women in Detroit.
Lincoln_Journal_Star_1925_12_24_Page_2.jpg

Addams argues that modern girls are unconventional, not immoral.
REEL0017_1776.jpg

Addams and seventy other prominent club women write President Coolidge asking for better enforcement of prohibition laws.
REEL0018_0188.jpg

The Council lists facts and questions for discussion at their annual meeting.
REEL0048_0761.jpg

Addams describes the history of the Chicago Woman's Club and the future of social reform.
REEL0048_0767.jpg

Addams discusses the motto of the Chicago Woman's Club and its history of social reform for its Golden Jubilee at the Congress Hotel.
41035.jpg

Addams encourages women to seek patriotism through internationalism and stresses the role of the United States in the movement.
35893-page-002.jpg

The League of Nations describes the work of Geneva in the committees of Traffic in Women and Child Welfare.
REEL0017_1689.jpg

Detzer updates Addams on efforts to meet with government officials about the situation in Haiti, the American Legion, and other affairs of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom's Washington office.
REEL0048_0811.jpg

Also known as What Next in Chicago?, October 1926

Addams discusses early efforts for civic reform and housing in a speech to the Woman's City Club.
39765.jpg

Addams speaks on women's roles in peace and internationalism at a public meeting "Next Steps Toward World Peace," held in Geneva on the eve of the opening of the League of Nations General Assembly. It was opened by William Rappard and featured remarks by Addams, Hilda Clark, and Lucie Desjardins.
reel0018_1038.jpg

Addams tells Schweizer that she cannot pick out one influence of women's voting but is certain they will show.
JAPA-1874-01.jpg
Needs Review

Easy

Addams speaks before the Gulf Coast Chapter of the American Association of University Women on the role that women take in other parts of the world.
JAPA-1867 (2).jpg

Addams discusses the murder of unwed mother Rosa Stoble, and argues for love and sympathy rather than punishment and stigma. This article was syndicated and published in many newspapers in March and April.