Archival materials
Found in 604 Collections and/or Records:
L. Arthur D'Asaro Papers
Research files, personal files, printed materials, audio-visual materials, electronic storage materials, and photographic materials of American physicist and electronics engineer L. Arthur D’Asaro.
Laboratory notes taken by Clara Esther Hartley
Laird Gordon Lindsay Ward miscellaneous materials
Collection includes: Reprint of Lord Rutherford's Recorded Lecture at Gottingen, Ronald K. Smeltzer, 1997, 2 typed pages titled Two Earlier Lives, Photocopy of The Transmutation of the Atom by Lord Rutherford of Nelson 1933, 5 photopcoy pages of letters exchanged between Archibald MacDiarmid and Lord and Lady Rutherford, 1992 Program and Abstracts from Inorganic Anoranies 92, Booklet titled The Chemical Society Invites You, n.d., By-Laws of the Chemical Society booklet, 1954.
Lectures on physiological and experimental chemistry broadside 1798 or 1804: by John Stancliffe of Caius College, Cambridge, F.L.S
Leebert Lloyd Lamborn notebooks
Leeds & Northrup Company Potentiometer Recorder schematic
This schematic would have been one of a series of such schematics covering all aspects of the instrument's manufacture and operation.
Leon B. Gortler – Knox Family Collection
A collection of materials created, collected, and maintained by Leon B. Gortler pertaining to the Knox Family, particularly brothers and African-American chemists William Jacob Knox, Jr. and Lawrence Howland Knox.
Letter from Francis Crick to Stanley C. Glauser
Letter from Francis Crick to Stanley C. Glauser.
Letter from Robert Oppenheimer
Letter from Robert Oppenheimer dated May 20, 1955. The letter is a thank you message from Oppenheimer, on behalf of the Institute for Advanced Study for the condolences received regarding the death of Albert Einstein.
Liebig's Extract of Meat Company advertisement card: Fleisch-Extract u-Pepton card
The Liebig's Extract of Meat Company's advertising cards were initially issued in sets of six, one per product, and were designed by leading artists. The cards were finely printed and today are popular with collectors.
