Matches in Harvard for { <http://id.lib.harvard.edu/aleph/007812661/catalog> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 37 of
37
with 100 items per page.
- catalog abstract "Collection includes biographical information; journals, 1985-1996; family and other correspondence, 1967-1996; an essay concerning her years as a Marxist-Leninist, 1995; a typescript of her father's memoir, 1984; a typescript of notes from her interviews with her aunt and brother, 1987-1990; and published and unpublished articles.".
- catalog contributor b10811867.
- catalog date "1967".
- catalog description "Collection includes biographical information; journals, 1985-1996; family and other correspondence, 1967-1996; an essay concerning her years as a Marxist-Leninist, 1995; a typescript of her father's memoir, 1984; a typescript of notes from her interviews with her aunt and brother, 1987-1990; and published and unpublished articles.".
- catalog description "Electronic finding aid available http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:RAD.SCHL:sch00078".
- catalog description "Unpublished finding aid; most Schlesinger Library finding aids are also available in the National Inventory of Documentary Sources in the United States (Chadwyck-Healey, 1984- ).".
- catalog description "Vanda Sendzimir Papers. Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University.".
- catalog description "Writer and social activist Vanda Sendzimir (1952-1996) was born and raised in Waterbury, Conn., the daughter of Berthe Bernoda and Tadeusz Sendzimir. She attended Reed College (1971-1973) and graduated from McGill University (1976), where she was one of the founders of the first college women's newspaper in Canada, and active in the anti-war and feminist movements. Sendzimir came from a wealthy family and struggled for all of her life with issues surrounding money and privilege. She lived in San Francisco (1977-1986), working as a graphic designer and for social change as a member of a small Marxist-Leninist group. Eventually disillusioned, Sendzimir moved to Boston in 1986, worked as a freelance journalist, and published Steel Will: The Life of Tad Sendzimir (1993), a biography of her father, an inventor and entrepreneur. She was active in the Boston chapter of the National Writers Union and in organizations working for social justice and civil rights. An avid photographer, traveler, and mountaineer, Sendzimir fell to her death while climbing in Siberia with her husband David Ludlow in 1996.".
- catalog extent "1 linear ft.".
- catalog issued "1967".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog spatial "California.".
- catalog spatial "Massachusetts Cambridge.".
- catalog spatial "United States.".
- catalog subject "Authors, American.".
- catalog subject "Communal living California.".
- catalog subject "Communist parties United States.".
- catalog subject "Dixon, Marlene, 1936-".
- catalog subject "Feminists United States.".
- catalog subject "Hiking.".
- catalog subject "Inventors.".
- catalog subject "Journalists United States.".
- catalog subject "Ludlow, David.".
- catalog subject "Marriage customs and rites Massachusetts Cambridge.".
- catalog subject "Mothers and daughters United States.".
- catalog subject "Polish American families.".
- catalog subject "Sendzimir, Tadeusz.".
- catalog subject "Sendzimir, Vanda.".
- catalog subject "Social justice.".
- catalog subject "Travel writing.".
- catalog subject "Wealth Moral and ethical aspects United States.".
- catalog subject "Women philanthropists United States.".
- catalog title "Papers, 1967-1997 (inclusive).".
- catalog type "Audiotapes.".
- catalog type "Diaries. aat".
- catalog type "Memoirs. aat".
- catalog type "collection".