Donors 



107 



Barbara H. Kemp: polirical card 

 sraring "Always Buy Your 

 Communisr Producrs at Drug Fair," 

 protesting the selling of products 

 manufactured in eastern Europe 

 during rhe Cold War (1998.0293); 

 No Parking sign used during the 

 inauguration of President Lyndon 

 B. Johnson, January 19—20, 1965 

 (1998.0300). 



Harold J. Kepler: hand-held 

 therapeutic lamp with a dark 

 bulb producing radiant light and 

 heat in a reflector, ca. 1918 

 (1999.0170). 



KFC Corporation (through Michael R. 

 Tierney): 4 "Team KFC" name 

 badges and a work cap, 1990s, and 

 a clip-on black string necktie worn 

 by Col. Harland Sanders in the 

 1960s (1999.0049). 



Priscilla C. Kidder: 9 wedding gowns 

 and a petticoat designed for 

 Priscilla of Boston by Mrs. Kidder, 

 John Burbidge, and Jim Hjelm, 

 1968-90 (1997.0329). 



Claudia Brush Kidwell: pair of man's 

 bowling shoes, 1970—85, and a 

 woman's floral print cotton baseball 

 cap, 1990—95 (1999.0046). 



Vincent King: Wood electric volt 

 meter made by the Fort Wayne 

 Electric Works of Fort Wayne, 

 Indiana, ca. 1890 (1998.01 12). 



Marvin E. Kirkland in memory of 

 Marie and William C. Zuegel: 

 2-tune musical Christmas tree stand 

 patented in the U.S. in 1886 and 

 made by Eckardt of Germany in the 

 1890s (1999. 0151). 



Edward C. Klauck: 2 linear calcu- 

 lating rules related ro horse racing 

 (1998.3050). 



Evelyn Weirh Klees: 7 thermometers, 

 a hydromerer, and a pipette, 

 1909—13 (1998. 0215). 



Jeffrey Kliman: 51 photographs of the 

 D.C. Curators summer jazz 

 programs, 1994-98, and 15 

 photographic contact sheets 

 documenting 2 of the programs in 

 1998(1998.3105). 



Stacey Kluck: The First Book of 



Rhythms by Langston Hughes, 1954 

 (1999.3043). 



Kevin A. Klug: 5 MRI scans and a 

 face mask used for a PET scan used 

 to diagnose Mr. Klug's brain tumor 



prior to successful gene rherapy 

 treatment (1998. 0291). 



Lt. Comdr. John W. Koster, USCG: 

 56 pieces of campaign memorabilia 

 from rhe polirical career of Paul N. 

 "Pete" McCloskey, 1970-75 

 (1997.0341). 



Sharon L. and Terry L. Krischer: 

 pamphlet explaining 10 ways to 

 survive a nuclear attack, i960 

 (1999.0073). 



Gerald E. Kron, Ph.D.: 3 

 photomultiplier tubes and a 

 photoelectric photometer with 

 amplifier made in 1936 but 

 modified by Dr. Kron and used by 

 him at Lick Observatory into the 

 1950s (1997.0340). 



Julia Kushenbach: woman's gold- 

 colored enameled metallic mesh 

 purse with a swastika design, 

 1915-30 (1999. 0190). 



Aveline and Michio Kushi: 64 

 macrobiotic food products and a 

 "Rice is Nice" apron (1997.0240); 

 rice huller made in Japan by Otake 

 Agriculrural Machinery Company, 

 ca. 1985 (1997.0271). 



Vincent LaCapra: 2 U.S. patents 

 issued to Pasquale DAngelo for 

 improvements to padlocks and 

 locks, 1907 and 1915 (1999. 0140). 



Amy Lamb: 18 proofs, photographs, 

 prinrs, and note cards made by Ms. 

 Lamb via a process of printing 

 using an Iris computer-controlled 

 digital system (1998.0358). 



Jennifer Langeberg: 2 design drawings 

 by Ms. Langeberg for the 

 "Napoleon" ice skating costume 

 worn by Brian Boitano for his gold 

 medal competition at the 1988 

 Olympic Winter Games 

 (1998.0290). 



Anne M. Larsen: scarf and a shirt with 

 printed illustrations by James 

 Thurber (1999. 0126). 



Wendy Leeds-Hurwitz: woman's silk 

 dress of pink, ecru, green, and floral 

 vertical stripes, 1840s (1998.0259). 



Judith Leiber (through Catherine 

 Carmichael): 4 pairs of Judith 

 Leiber designer earrings and a gift 

 box, 1998 (1998.0282). 



Salvatore Leonardi: Dixie cup 



dispenser, 1940—59 (1998.0333); 

 18 cubic feet of archival records of 

 the Brannock Device Company and 



the Park-Brannock shoe store 

 (1999.3007); 2.5 cubic feet of trade 

 literature documenting the U.S. 

 shoe industry (1999.3008); 1.5 

 cubic feet of miscellaneous trade 

 literature (1999.3009). 



Levi Strauss and Company (through 

 Lynne Downey): 10 copies of "Levi 

 Strauss & Co. Business Partner 

 Terms of Engagement and 

 Guidelines for Country Selection" 

 written in English, Spanish, 

 Portugese, French, German, Italian, 

 Flemish, Greek, Chinese, and 

 Korean (1998.3024). 



Philip H. Lichty: bottle of synthetic 

 PML79 watch oil from the first 

 batch made at the Hamilton Watch 

 Company, 1950s (1998.0307). 



Amelia M. and Peter Liebhold: 2 



electronic games, 1997 (1998.0228). 



Steve Lubar: T-shirt, baseball cap, 

 insignia, and a bearing rate 

 computer, all related to the SSN 

 Trepang deployment and 

 decommissioning (1998.0253). 



William M. Lubar: 8 lapel pins, a 

 garnet ring, and a gold-plated 

 watch, all awarded to Mr. Lubar 

 during his career as an insurance 

 salesman, 1949—85 (1998.0335). 



Vince Lupo: paperback book, Slick 

 'Willie, Why America Cannot Trust 

 Bill Clinton, by Floyd G. Brown, 

 1993 (1999.0069). 



Joshua L. Mack: serigraph and 



photomechanical lithograph poster 

 print titled Art, by Jim Dine, 1968 

 (1998.0207). 



Princess Masha Magaloff: set of seed 

 pearl jewelry of 1820—40 in its 

 original box consisting of 2 

 brooches, a necklace, and a pair of 

 earrings, originally used in Jones 

 County, Georgia (1 999.0021). 



Maidenform, Inc. (through Steven N. 

 Masket): 33 brassieres, 9 girdles, 8 

 corsers, 3 display forms, 2 boxes, 2 

 garter belts, a pigeon vest, waist 

 cincher, set of fabric samples, and a 

 7-piece advertising costume wirh 

 boxing gloves, 1932-97 

 (1997. 0177); 3.5 cubic feet of 

 archival materials documenring the 

 history of Maidenform, Inc., 

 1922-97 (1997.3056). 



La Veda Mair: 3 wooden bottle shapes 

 and a glass jar, all designed by 



