Judy Richardson is a veteran of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee who worked in Mississippi during the Mississippi Freedom Summer Project in 1964. She later worked with Blackside, Inc., on the Eyes on the Prize civil rights documentary series, and co-edited Hands on the Freedom Plow, about women's experiences in SNCC. Her papers include materials from her years working on staff at SNCC in Atlanta and Mississippi; her involvement with the Drum and Spear Bookstore in Washington D.C.; extensive print and audiovisual materials from her work in documentary film, including projects like Malcolm X: Make It Plain, Eyes on the Prize, and Scarred Justice: The Orangeburg Massacre; her correspondence and drafts from the editing of Hands on the Freedom Plow; project and event files from numerous committees, speaking engagements, and panels; personal files, including her FOIA about her SNCC service in the 1960s; and subject files collected from various projects.
Judy Woodruff is a broadcast journalist covering U.S. politics whose career has spanned work at NBC, CNN, and PBS. This collection documents her professional life, consisting of extensive research and subject files, correspondence including viewer mail, speaking appearances and engagements, and service including the Duke University Board of Trustees and the Interntional Women's Media Foundation.
Jules Picot was a French chemist and inventor, active between the 1880s and around 1930. Collection primarily consists of documents registering and renewing trademarks for the Phénix brand of laundry detergent in a number of countries. It also includes some ephemeral items: an advertisement for the Jeanne d'Arc detergent; a poster; trade cards.
Julia Comfort (1889-1983) was an actress and model who appeared in a variety of print advertisements and publication illustrations during the 1920s. Collection includes black-and-white photographs and print advertisements that document Comfort's career in advertising photography. Products include apparel, automobiles, cleaning products, cosmetics, eyeglass lenses, Green Stamps, hygiene products, life insurance, mouthwash, paper, and thread. Companies represented in the collection include Bauer & Black; Clark's; J & P Coats; Johnson & Johnson; Lambert Pharmacal (later Warner-Lambert), Lever Brothers; Metropolitan Life; Norwich Pharmacal; and Sperry and Hutchinson. Photographers and studios represented include Aldene; Dana Merrill; Ira Martin; Joel Feder; Lejaren Hiller; and Underwood & Underwood. Acquired as part of the John W. Hartman Center for Sales, Advertising & Marketing History.
Children's book author and socialite Julia Ellsworth Ford writes to fellow children's book writer Helen Hoke offering an introduction to the Yeats family while Hoke is in Dublin. Ford particularly wishes Hoke to meet Elizabeth Yeats because of her printing work with the Cuala Press. She writes that she considers William Butler Yeats the greatest poetic genius to emerge from England and Ireland in the 20th century, but that it will be difficult to meet him because he "is more or less a recluse because of writing all the time."
Collection contains two letters written by Julia Carpenter, 1855 July 24 and 1855 October 5. One letter is written to an unidentified recipient in thanks for a loan of money. Carpenter also writes of her poor health and plans to go on vacation. The other letter is addressed to R. M. Adams. Topics include Carpenter's renting rooms for her work, her brother's illness and her own health, Adams' loan of money, the dedication of the Spiritual Temple, and a divorced couple known to them.