Box 67
Contains 5 Results:
National Science Foundation and Health Research Council, 1961 - 1964
Osborn championed the Society’s marine research and its need for a dedicated laboratory space sited at the New York Aquarium. When this building opened in 1967, it was named the Osborn Laboratories of Marine Sciences (OLMS) in his honor. This subseries largely concerns the building and construction of OLMS as well as its funding by government agencies and independent foundations. See this collection’s Correspondence series for additional records related to OLMS.
Correspondence, 1959-08 - 1962-03
A supporter of the Society’s Fund for Conservation Education in Tanganyika (later Tanzania), William Eddy also served as an NYZS Associate in Education from 1962 to 1964 and later as a staff member of the Conservation Foundation. This subseries’ contents reflect programs carried out by Eddy in the early 1960s that were designed to educate Africans about native wildlife and the value of national parks.
Correspondence, 1962-04 - 1962-12
A supporter of the Society’s Fund for Conservation Education in Tanganyika (later Tanzania), William Eddy also served as an NYZS Associate in Education from 1962 to 1964 and later as a staff member of the Conservation Foundation. This subseries’ contents reflect programs carried out by Eddy in the early 1960s that were designed to educate Africans about native wildlife and the value of national parks.
Correspondence, 1963-01 - 1963-06
A supporter of the Society’s Fund for Conservation Education in Tanganyika (later Tanzania), William Eddy also served as an NYZS Associate in Education from 1962 to 1964 and later as a staff member of the Conservation Foundation. This subseries’ contents reflect programs carried out by Eddy in the early 1960s that were designed to educate Africans about native wildlife and the value of national parks.
Correspondence, 1963-07 - 1965-01
A supporter of the Society’s Fund for Conservation Education in Tanganyika (later Tanzania), William Eddy also served as an NYZS Associate in Education from 1962 to 1964 and later as a staff member of the Conservation Foundation. This subseries’ contents reflect programs carried out by Eddy in the early 1960s that were designed to educate Africans about native wildlife and the value of national parks.