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6 results for vault

  1. History Vault (ProQuest)

    Researchers can access digitized letters, papers, photographs, scrapbooks, financial records, diaries, and many more primary source materials taken from the University Publications of America (UPA) Collections.

  2. World War II History Vault

    World War II: U.S. Documents on Planning, Operations, Intelligence, Axis War Crimes, and Refugees (from ProQuest)

  3. Firsthand (formerly Vault Online Career Library)

    Requires free registration which must be completed on-campus. Vault.com provides in-depth intelligence on what its really like to work within an industry, company, or professionand how to position yourself to launch and build the career you want. Vault is best known for its influential rankings, ratings, and reviews on thousands of top employers and hundreds of internship programs. Vault Guidebooks cover a broad range of disciplines and include industry guides, employer rankings, and job seeking skills.

  4. Slavery and the Law

    Collection of primary source documents from ProQuest’s History Vault. Includes judicial cases, petitions to the southern legislatures and county courts (1777-1867), and state slavery statutes.

  5. Vietnam War and American Foreign Policy, 1960-1975

    This database, from ProQuest History Vault and LexisNexis, includes news reports from the Associated Press Saigon Bureau on South Vietnamese and U.S. military and political activity in Vietnam from 1953 to 1972.

  6. Black Freedom Struggle in the 20th Century

    The first two modules of ProQuest History Vault offer all levels of researchers the opportunity to study the most well-known and also unheralded events of The Black Freedom Struggle in the 20th Century from the perspective of the men, women, and sometimes even children, who waged one of the most inspiring social movements in American history. From the founding of the National Association of Colored Womens Clubs in the last decade of the 19th Century to the riots that followed the verdict in the Rodney King police brutality case in the last decade of the 20th century, along the way researchers will encounter documentation on subjects like the Great Migration, the East St. Louis Riot of 1917, the activities of members of the Federal Council on Negro Affairs during the New Deal, the March on Washington Movement during World War II, the landmark Brown v. Board of Education decision, the Montgomery Bus Boycott, the 1963 March on Washington, and the protests in Selma, Alabama, that inspired the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965.