Activity Listings
- Letter from Eugene C. Winslow, President, Windham College, to LP, RE: Glad that LP accepts the invitation to be their Commencement Speaker and an honorary alumnus. Will write to him again with more details about his visit. [Letter from LP to Eugene C. Winslow, 8, 1968] [Filed under LP Speeches: (Speeches by Linus Pauling, 1968), Box# 1968s, Folder# 1968s.15]
- Letter from F. Grün to LP, RE: Grün writes that he is glad to hear that LP is willing to consider an invitation to deliver a lecture at the IV International Congress for Pharmacology. [Filed under LP Correspondence: Box# 143, Folder# 143.3]
- Letter from LP to Miss Dorothy M. Swatzel, RE: Writes that his work is in the fields of molecular biology and nuclear physics as well as in structural chemistry, and that he has not conducted seminars or given classes in the courses she asked about. [Handwritten letter from Miss Dorothy M. Swatzel to LP 5, 1968] [Filed under LP Correspondence: Box 385, Folder 385.1]
- Letter from LP to Prof. George S. Hammond, Division of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, California Institute of Technology, RE: LP and his wife do not plan to attend the dinner on the evening of 7 May because of the press of work on LP. [Letter from George S. Hammond to LP, 6, 1968] [Filed under LP Speeches: (Speeches by Linus Pauling, 1968), Box# 1968s, Folder# 1968s.11]
- Letter from LP to Tecolote Bookshop, RE: Writes that he has enclosed two cancelled checks and asks if they would return the checks and reimburse him. [Filed under LP Correspondence: Box 412, Folder 412.5]
- Letter from R. P. Hurst, Associate Professor of Physics at the State University of New York at Buffalo, to LP, RE: Hurst answers LP's questions regarding the poliarizability of Be++ ion and the hyperpoliarizability of the hydrogen atom. He writes about how LP has impressed him with his approach to the hyperpolarizability of one electron ions. [Filed under LP Correspondence: Box# 170, Folder# 170.2]
- Letter from Thomas M. Riddick to LP, RE: Asks to be remembered if LP gives consideration to the basic concepts of colloid stability. Expresses his belief that all really basic science arises form a single fountainhead. Asks for LP to visit him and his colleagues during his next visit to New York. [Filed under LP Correspondence: Box# 343, Folder# 343.5]
- Manuscript Notes: Scientific Experiment: its Impact on Man, Distinguished Visitors Program - Human Aspects of Scientific Discoveries, First Lecture, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts. [Filed under LP Speeches: (Speeches by Linus Pauling, 1968), Box# 1968s, Folder# 1968s.8]
- Manuscript: Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Amherst, Massachusetts. [Filed under LP Speeches: (Speeches by LP, 1968), Box# 1968s, Folder# 1968s.7]
- Newspaper Clipping: “150,000 Mourners Escort Dr. King’s Body to Atlanta Resting Place, Springfield Union. [Filed under LP Biographical: Scrapbooks: Box #6.009 Folder #9.62]
- Newspaper Clipping: “‘Free at Last,’ Martyr’s Voice Says at U. of M.”, Springfield Union. [Filed under LP Biographical: Scrapbooks: Box #6.009 Folder #9.60]
- Receipt from First Western Bank to LP RE: “Advice of Charge.” $234.12. [Filed under LP Biographical: Business and Financial: Box #4.030, Folder #30.1]
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