33 results

  • Subject is exactly "Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, lobbying"

Sheepshanks asks the signers of the Kellogg Pact to invite the Soviet Union to join the negotiations.

Detzer asks Hoover to reduce the United States naval fleet in adherence with the Kellogg Treaty.

Detzerupdates Balch and Hull about lobbying for peace and the London Naval Conference.

Detzer asks Richey to arrange an interview for Jane Addams and Herbert Hoover while she is in Washington.

Blake tells Addams about the plans of United States Section of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom reagarding Mexico.

Detzer tells McDonald about her meeting with Herbert Hoover and what she thinks they can take from it.

Detzer sends Hull a letter detailing her meeting with President Hoover on the London Naval Conference.

Detzer updates member leagues on the upcoming International Congress of Women, poison gas, and other news.

Addams asks Detzer to help get the Democratic Party's national plank to support the World Court.

Also known as Mary Ryott Sheepshanks to Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, August 27, 1928

Sheepshanks asks League sections to report on activities and tells about work done to include the Soviet Union in discussions of the Kellogg Pact.

Bennett and Flynn asks the Irish Free State to cooperate with American plans for an anti-war treaty at the League of Nations.

Sheepshanks asks delegates of the League of Nations to support disarmament.

Sheepshanks sends Addams draft letters that the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom want to send to the signers of the Kellogg Pact and League of Nations delegates.

Addams tells Detzer that they sent telegrams to Fred Britton asking him to consult the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom directly with regard to information.

Detzer gives Borah details on the differences between the Sayre Treaty and other arbitration treaties.

Detzer sends Addams clippings about the Sayre plan and the American government response.

Addams asks the Democratic National Convention to adopt ap peace plank that includes participation in the League of Nations, global disarmament, the cancelling of war debts, and recognition of the Government of the Soviet Union.

Detzer updates Addams on her protesting a bill in Congress.

Macnaghten asks Addams for help in securing entry to the United States for an extended tour.

Woods updates Baber on efforts to have Senators read the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom's resolutions into the Congressional Record.

Glücklich drafts a letter to the Peruvian president asking him to show show amnesty to citizens exiled and persecuted for their beliefs during Peru's Army Day celebration of December 9.

Woods asks the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom's United States Section to approve Addams's statement regarding American-Japanese foreign policy and the pending immigration law.

Glücklich tells Addams about efforts in Europe to prepare for the International Congress of Women.

Balch discusses the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom's stand on the need for women on the League of Nations' Mandates Commission in order to protect the interests of women.

A Women's International League for Peace and Freedom member reports to Addams on lobbying Senator Robert Owen.

Addams sends Hobbs to the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom's United States Section's views on the National Defense Act of 1920, but notes that she personally is not in favor of peace pledges.

Balch asks the New York Times to support efforts to have the United States postpone Austrian war debts until the country is back on its feet.

Addams asks Mead to help with the Washington work of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom's United States Section.

Brown testifies on behalf of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom's United States Section for a dramatic reduction in American military spending and and for universal disarmament.

Addams and Kittredge formally request the United States to pressure France to remove black troops for occupied Germany.
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