78 results

  • Contributor is exactly "Piha, Sue"
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Jane Addams writes to Mary Rozet Smith while they are apart.
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Addams tells Haldeman Addams about her upcoming trip to Paris.
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Addams tells Kelley that she has been appointed to the jury for the 1900 World's Fair.
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Addams updates Kelley about planning for the 1900 World's Fair.
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Scudder critiques colleges that accept donations from unethical sources.
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Addams discusses the sinking of the Lusitania but remains firm that the United States should avoid joining the war.
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Addams thanks Ovington for sending her book, Portraits in Color, a collection of short biographies of notable Black Americans published in 1927.
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Addams claims that prohibition has improved life in the Hull-House neighborhood.
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Addams notes that politicians, rather than idealists, are responsible for most achievements in peace.
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Addams remarks on the improvement in the Hull-House neighborhoods since prohibition took effect.
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Addams praises the Kellogg Peace Pact in a short interview on her return from the Pan-Pacific Women's Conference.
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Addams compliments the American women of Chinese and Japanese descent in Hawaii.
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Addams discusses prohibition, her plan to vote in the presidential election, and the Pan-Pacific Women's Conference.
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Addams discusses women's desire for peace and the obstacles in its way.
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Broda asks Addams to join an American Advisory Board for his League for the Organization of Progress.
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Addams accepts Kuhn's invitation to speak in Cleveland.
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Roden tells Addams that the Chicago Public Library will extend the hours of the Hull-House branch to help serve unemployed men.
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Addams apologizes to Webb for erroneously saying that he was born to poor Jewish parents.
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A compilation of testimony offered by Jane Addams and Evangeline Booth about the impact of prohibition in poor communities.
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