Browse Items (9 total)
Unlike the prior issue, where Bruno Zevi is listed as editor ("redattore"), for editing ("redazione") the reader is directed to a P.O. Box at the…
Note that this copy of Vol. 3 of the Quaderni italiani has a different cover from the other copy in the Collection, red instead of green.
Quaderni Italiani was an antifascist political review founded and edited by Bruno Zevi (1918-2000) and his wife Tullia Calabi (1919-2011) in…
Quaderni Italiani was an antifascist political review founded and edited by Bruno Zevi (1918-2000) and his wife Tullia Calabi (1919-2011) in…
Other editors include Renato Poggioli and Enzo Taglicozzo (Silvio Carli); the collection has Vol. 3 in two formats, one like other numbers, and an odd…
For classes for Italians who were imprisoned at the internment camp at Ft. Missoula, Montana during World War II; typescript. See discussion of…
This arithmetic textbook was written in Italian for classes for Italians - mostly civilians who were in the wrong place at the wrong time - who were…
Notice to aliens in a rather large handbill, perhaps more accurately a broadside, to advise them to file applications to register for a certificate of…

Quaderni italiani [Italian Notebooks], Vol. 3. New York, Aprile [April] 1943.
Quaderni italiani [Italian Notebooks], Vol. 4. New York, 1944.
Quaderni italiani [Italian Notebooks], Vol. 3. New York, Aprile [April] 1943.
Quaderni italiani [Italian Notebooks], Vol. 2. Boston, Agosto [August] 1942.
Quaderni italiani [Italian Notebooks], Vol. 1. Boston, Gennaio [January] 1942.
Quaderni italiani [Italian Notebooks]. New York, 1942-1944.
Elementi di Algebra [Elements of Algebra]. Missoula: Scuole Fort-Missoula, 1943 [Anno XXI].
Aritmetica [Arithmetic]. Missoula: Scuole Fort-Missoula, 1943 [Anno XXI].
Notice to Aliens of Enemy Nationalities: The United States Government requires all aliens of German, Italian, or Japanese nationality to apply at post offices nearest to their place of residence for a Certificate of Identification...Go to your postmaster today for printed directions. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Justice, 1942.