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Special Collections and ArchivesW.E.B. Du Bois Library
University of Massachusetts Amherst
Robert Winston Collection, 1964-1993Finding Aid
Manuscript Number452
Collection Overview
Creator: Winston, Robert, 1942- Title: Robert Winston Collection, 1965-1993
Quantity: 27 boxes (30 linear ft.) including 22 loose posters
Collection Number: MS 452 Language of Material: English
Location: Special Collections and Archives W.E.B. Du Bois Library University of Massachusetts Amherst Amherst, Massachusetts
Abstract: Educator, social and political activist, civil rights worker, peace advocate and environmentalist. Contains personal correspondence, audio/visual materials (posters, LP records, audiotape), books, subject files with clippings, booklets, articles and
reprints, and an extensive collection of periodicals covering the years, 1965 –1993.
Terms of Access and Use: The collection is open for research.
Historical Note
In the decades between 1960 and 1980 an era of activism was spawned in the U.S. following its involvement in the Vietnam Conflict. The return to peace and the eradication of racism and social inequality became the goals of many people who chose to commit their lives to social justice.
Biographical NoteEducator, social activist, civil rights worker, peace advocate and environmentalist, Dr. Robert Winston, was born during a Manhattan blackout on April 20, 1942. His father, Dr. Philip Weinstein, came from a conservative, orthodox Jewish family, while his mother, Sylvia Wolrich, was raised in the more liberal, reformed denomination of the faith. Philip was a practicing dentist but had changed his surname to Winston before applying to dental school. This was in response to the bigotry of anti-Semitism that had blocked many Jewish students from admission to graduate programs in the U.S.
Robert Winston, nicknamed Bob, and his family lived a middle class lifestyle in the Flatbush neighborhood of Brooklyn before the onset of World War II. In 1943 they moved to La Quinta Airbase in California where his father began active service in the Navy. Eventually his mother moved the family to Florida, and then to New York where Dr. Winston joined them in 1945. They settled in Great Neck where Bob Winston would spend his elementary and high school years.
Dr. Winston came home an embittered veteran. He joined the Young People’s Socialist League, but registered to vote as a Republican like many other liberal New Yorkers. Neither of Robert’s parents was politically active, but their views were staunchly left of center. The 1950s brought the Cold War, the Communist scare, and the “redbaiting” of Sen. Joseph McCarthy’s House Committee on Un-American Activities. During this time Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were executed for conspiring to commit espionage which left their two sons orphans. Bob Winston would later play a role in this family’s life by serving on the board of the Rosenberg Fund for Children.
Winston credits summer camp for his education in political activism. Like other progressive camps of its time, Deer Lake Camp in Madison, Connecticut was international in scope and run with a socialist philosophy. From ten to seventeen years of age Winston spent his summers under the tutelage of teacher/counselors who exposed him to liberal, activist politics. He began his college education at Michigan State University, then transferred to the University of Michigan where he received a B.A. in Political Science in 1964, the same year he married Janet Walerstein. Eventually they would raise a family of three children, Micah, Resha and Jared. After graduation Winston entered the doctoral program in the Government Department of the University of Indiana.
His introduction to personal political activism came in 1965 when the University of Indiana denied the W.E.B. Dubois Boys Clubs, a Communist group, to become a student organization. While picketing in support of the club, Winston was physically assaulted by the FBI. During 1965-66 he participated in the Students for Democratic Society, but never became a member.
As a community organizer in Lyndon Johnson’s War on Poverty, Winston was personally trained by Saul Alinsky, who has been called “the father of community organizing” and wrote the book, Rules for Radicals. (link to Carl Oglesby collection.)They worked in the Miller Drive area on the southern edges of Bloomington, Indiana where even the minimum of municipal services was denied to residents. This was the first time Winston had ever witnessed scenes of such deplorable poverty.
In May of 1967 Martin Luther King was protesting open-housing restrictions in Louisville, Kentucky. For this he was stoned by onlookers while walking the streets. Winston and his wife gathered forty students from the university and traveled to Louisville. They joined the protestors at the A.D. King Zion Baptist Church and listened to Dr. King. He held one of the rocks that had struck him and gave a stirring speech alluding to its power to build or destroy. (The collection includes the only known audiotape of this speech.) After this prayer meeting more than two hundred people marched to the gates of Churchill Downs and blocked access to the Kentucky Derby, the annual horse racing event.
Influenced by this incident Winston applied for a Danforth grant. He interviewed many leaders of the community and wrote the paper, “Black Leadership in Louisville, a Case Study of Open Housing in Louisville, Kentucky.” However he had misgivings about completing his doctoral work. After giving it serious consideration he contended that his work, like similar social science research, exploited the conditions of the poor rather than serving them. He gave up the research and in disagreement with his dissertation committee did not complete this doctoral program.
In 1972 Winston was awarded a Ph.D. in Higher Education Administration from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. His dissertation, “Political Economy of Higher Education” can be found in the university’s holdings. The subject explored “the Marxist analysis of class difference between community colleges and higher education system.” He completed additional studies at the New York Institute of Radical Criminology and the Summer Institute for Race Relations at Fisk University.
In the 1960s with the Vietnam Conflict well underway and a lottery draft in force, Winston became a vocal peace activist. He was recruited by the University of New Hampshire as a visiting scholar and lecturer in the Life Studies Interim Program of the Parallel Institute. He was a very popular teacher, but the administration feared his political leanings and kept his class size to a minimum. Students were angered and responded with a sit-in demonstration. More importantly, seventeen department heads resigned their positions in support of their students. The administration agreed to reinstate an additional class if Winston resigned following that term. Consequently he was forced to give up his first teaching job.
In 1970 Winston became the Coordinator of the Valley Peace Center in Amherst, MA. Its objectives were to oppose the war, to counsel men of draft age and support programs directed at related social and political problems. (link to Valley Peace Center Records, 1967-1973.) Winston led peace demonstrations at Westover Air Base in Chicopee, MA. And also became the West Massachusetts coordinator of the IndoChina Peace Campaign begun by Tom Hayden and Jane Fonda.
In 1972 while teaching for Greenfield Community College Winston was arrested while protesting the war along with his students. Again he lost his job. During times of unemployment Winston supported his family including three children with any manual labor jobs he could find.
In 1975 the University of Massachusetts began the program, “Career Opportunities for Minority Paraprofessionals” in the Center for Urban Education. Winston was hired as the Director of the Juvenile Justice Program and played a role in deinstitutionalizing the state’s juvenile justice and mental health systems. He founded a community-based program, the Team Learning Center, to serve those populations. The UMass project ended in 1980, but Winston continued the care for delinquent youth by grant funds to create the Tri-County Youth Program, Inc. This advocate program was designed to place delinquents in foster care, and the Winston family personally took adolescents into their home for eight years.
In 1984 UMass opened its first prisoner education program for college inmates in the Protective Custody Maximum Prison System and Winston was hired as the Criminology and Justice Counselor. This began a twelve year commitment to teach Political Science to adult prisoners in MA and Connecticut. During this time he also served as the Director of Drug Addiction Services for both Springfield and Westfield, MA. In 1987 he left the Tri-County Youth Program to combine the addiction services of both towns and consequently became the Director of Counseling Centers of Western MA. This agency eventually merged with the Provident Hospital system which generated a clinic in Northampton MA through the Multi-Services Center. In 1991 Winston became the Dean of Academic Affairs at Asnuntuck Community College in Enfield, Connecticut where he stayed until 2003. From 2003-06 he served in a similar position at Manchester Community College. In 2006 he accepted the position of Executive Director at the Bonnyvale Environmental Center in Brattleboro, Vermont.
Robert Winston: “A few key lessons that life has taught me: Taking principled positions has come at a very high price but it has developed my character immeasurably, taught me humility, and given me a modicum of wisdom, resiliency, compassion and empathy.”
Throughout the years Winston has served on numerous boards and participated in a variety of organizations. The following groups represent his interests:
Rosenberg Fund for Children: Board President. A non-profit fund founded in 1990 by Robert Meeropol and named in honor of his parents Ethel and Julius Rosenberg, the only two United States civilians to be executed for conspiracy to commit espionage during the Cold War. The fund provides “for the educational and emotional needs of children whose parents have suffered because of their progressive activities and who, therefore, are no longer able to provide fully for their children." The mission has since been expanded to provide grants for "the educational and emotional needs of targeted activists.
Pioneer Valley Folklore Society: Board President
Greensboro Justice Fund: Board member. Established to memorialize the deaths of five activists by Klan violence in 1979.
Faculty for Israeli-Palestinian Peace: Founding member and delegate to the Mideast in 2002-2003.
Karuna Center for Peace Building: A U.S.-based nonprofit organization that offers international training programs in conflict transformation, intercommunal dialogue, and reconciliation.
The Performance Project: A theater group that creates plays with inmates to be acted within the prison for fellow prisoners and general public.
Saving the Salamanders: Winston established this grassroots organization in his hometown of Amherst, MA to save an endangered salamander population. For his work he was awarded the President’s National Merit Award in 1991.
Scope and Contents of the CollectionUpdate quantities.The Robert Winston Collection includes one box of personal records, seven boxes of subject files, a collection of posters, an audiotape of Martin Luther King, and twenty boxes of publications, books, and periodicals which span over twenty years beginning in Winston’s graduate school years at the University of Indiana, 1965-68, and culminating in the late 1980s. During those years he worked as an educator and administrator in educational and counseling programs and earned his doctoral degree. Correspondence includes letters to those he referred to as “elected officialdom,” i.e., U.S. Congressmen, including Al Gore, Eugene McCarthy and Vance Hartke. There are also records concerning the University of New Hamphshire controversy that cost him his first teaching position. One administrative form letter stipulates an oath against communism that faculty members were expected to sign. Winston never signed it.
Over one hundred folders of subject files include clippings, articles, and newsletters relating to current topics and organizations in which Winston took an interest. Among many are: the labor movement, leftist politics and organizations, social and political revolution, peace advocacy, the anti-Vietnam war movement, China and Mao Tse Tung’s writings, Chile’s socialist movement, the assassinations of Martin Luther King and John F. Kennedy, defense funds for activists, poverty/hunger, civil liberties and alternative education.
There are twenty-two posters, most from woodblocks and in color. The audiotape of Martin Luther King was made on June 5 and 10, in 1967 when Winston protested discriminatory housing practices in Louisville, Kentucky. It is believed to be the only record of those speeches.
Organization of the Collection
This collection is organized into six series:
SERIES 1: PersonalSERIES 2: Subject FilesSERIES 3: PublicationsSERIES 4: PamphletsSERIES 5: BooksSERIES 6: Audio/Visual
Contents List
SERIES 1: PERSONAL
This series contains correspondence with members of U.S. Congress while Winston was enrolled at the University of Indiana. Also, correspondence with faculty and administration at University of New Hampshire while he held a faculty position. Included are periodicals, newspaper clippings (1968-70) depicting the demonstration by students and faculty on his behalf.
Box
1 Personal correspondence
SERIES 2: SUBJECT FILES
This series contains over 100 folders in QUAN boxes of printed materials, clippings, articles, newsletters, bulletins and periodicals covering a wide range of topics and organizations. They are arranged in A-Z order.
Box
2 African Liberation Movement Newsclippings, printed material and publications, including LSM News, Mozambique
Revolution, and Southern Africa 4 folders
1960-1978
American Friends Service Committee Printed material and publications including Quaker Service Bulletin, Thai Review,
Indochina Program. Other publications from this organization are listed by title in Series 3.
5 folders 1969-1978
American Indian Movement AIM Printed material, Wounded Knee Commemoration, National American Solidarity
Committee 1973-1977
American Professors for Peace in the Middle East
Newsletter, printed material 1967-1968
Amnesty International Printed material; Matchbox journal; Amnesty Action newsletter
4 folders 1967-1979
Another Mother for Peace (Mothers for Peace) Newsletter and printed material
2 folders 1967-80
Armstrong, Karl Defense FundPrinted material 1972
Association of Vietnamese Patriots in Canada Printed material and newsletters including Vietnam News & Reports; News from Vietnam
1973-75
Atmore-Holman Brothers Defense FundPrinted material 1975
Attica Brigade Fight Back, newsletter 1974-1975
Attica Defense Committee Printed material, Attica News newsletter
1972-1975
Black Panther PartyPrinted material 1968
Campaign for a Democratic Foreign Policy Newsletter 2 folders: Vol.1 nos.1-16
1975-77
Canadian Civil Liberties UnionPrinted material
Caucus for a New Political Science Newsletter, newsclippings
1969-70 CCCO
Organization of Conscientious ObjectorsNewsletter News Notes; printed material 1973-1979
Center for Constitutional RightsPrinted material
Center for National Security StudiesPublications, pamphlets 1975-80
Box
3 Chile Solidarity CommitteePrinted material; pamphlets, Chile Newsletter 3 folders: Vol. 1 nos. 6-10; Vol. 2 nos. 1, 3; Vol. 3. nos. 1-5; Vol. 4 nos. 1-5; Vol. 5. nos. 1-6; Vol. 6 nos. 1-3 1973-1981
ChinaPrinted material; pamphlets from Radical Education Project; issues of Peking Review 1942-1975
Civil Liberties Union, MassachusettsPrinted material 1971
Civil RightsPrinted material including subjects re: fair housing, film documentary, voters rights et al. 1966-1970
Clergy and Laity Concerned CALC Report newsletter; printed material 4 folders 1967-1981
Coalition to End Grand Jury Abuse Newsletter; publication; printed material, Grand Jury Report
Vol. 1 no.4; Vol. 2 nos. 1-4 1976-1981
Coalition to Stop Funding War/Coalition for New Foreign Military PolicyNewsletters, Action Guides, publications, printed material 4 folders 1974-1981
Columbia University Newsclippings, printed material re: protest demonstration 1968
Committee to Defend Carlos FelicianoPrinted material
Committee to Defend Panthers Newsletter, printed material 1970-1971
Committee to Free Martin Sobell Printed material, newsclippings 1967-69
Committee to Free Martin Sostre
Printed material 1975
Committee on New Alternatives in the Middle East Printed material
1971-1973
Committee for Prisoner Support in Birmingham Printed material, CPSB newsletter
Issues 3-7 1974-1975
Committee of Returned Volunteers Printed material 2 folders 1968-1970
Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador Printed material
1981
Cuba Newsclippings, printed material 1965-79
The Defense Committee
Newsclippings and printed material re: Harrisburg Eight et al. 1970-1972
Detroit Riots, 1967Newspaper clippings: Detroit News, NY Times, Louis Lomax 1967
Ella Ellison Support Committee Printed material 1974-1976
PULL The Elements, A Journal of World ResourcesNewspaper Nos. 29, 32-46 1977-1979
Fellowship of Reconciliation Printed material, Fellowship newsletter
2 folders 1967-1980
Female LiberationPrinted material 1 folder 1969-1971
Box
4 Fifth Estate Printed material and, CounterSpy, the newsletter of CARIC, The Committee for Action/
Research on the Intelligence Community
3 folders: Vo1. no.1-5; Vol. 2 issue 1-3; Vol. 3 no. 3-4; Vol. 4 nos. 1, 3, 4; Vol. 5. nos. 1-3
1973-1981
Friends of Indochina Printed material, Friendshipment newsletter 2 folders
1975-78
Harrisburg 8Printed materials 1970-1972
Haymarket Peoples Fund Newsletters, 1979 annual report
1978-81
IndochinaPrinted material 1970-1978
Indochina Peace CampaignPrinted material inc. Indochina Focal Point newspaper, organization newsletters, newsclippings 8 folders 1974-1975
PULL Indochina Bulletin, formerly the War BulletinNewspaper 1972-1973
Indochina Research Center Printed materials and publications including Indochina Chronicle/Southeast Asia
Chronicle, Thoi-Baq Ga, US and Indochina 5 folders
1971-1979 Indochina Solidarity Committee
Newsletter and printed material 2 folders 1969-1975
Inez Garcia Defense FundPrinted material 1977
Institute of the Black WorldMonthly Report newsletter and printed material 1971-1976
International Committee to Free South Vietnamese PrisonersPrinted material 1973-1977
Jewish Liberation ProjectPrinted material and periodical, Jewish Liberation Journal 2 folders 1968-1972
Jewish Peace FellowshipPrinted material 1968-1981
J.P. Stevens boycottPrinted material 1977
July 4th Coalition (J4C)Printed material 1976
Kennedy, Robert Fitzgerald, assassinationNewsclippings 1969
Kent State Legal Defense FundPrinted material 1971
Latin America (general)Printed material and pamphlets from The Radical Education Project 1975-1977
Leavenworth Brother Offense/Defense CommitteePrinted material and newsletter 1974
Box
5 Martin Luther King, Jr. assassination
Newsclippings re: assassination, originals and copies. 1969
Massachusetts Party Organizing Committee MPOC Bulletin, pamphlets and printed material
1975-1977
Medical Aid for IndochinaPrinted material, pamphlets 1973
Miami Convention CoalitionPrinted material protesting war 1972
Miscellaneous Printed material re: Labor movement, peace and social change; obitsNews clippings re: Watergate/JFK assassination 1973;Pamphlet and statement booklet from W.E.B. Du Bois Clubs Convention 1967 3 folders 1967-1976
National Alliance against Racist and Political Repression Printed material, The Organizer newsletter Vol. 1 nos. 6,7; Vol. 2 nos. 1-5; Vol. 3 nos. 1-4; Vol. 4 nos. 1-6; Vol. 5 nos. 1-4; Vol. 6 no. 1 1974-79
NARMIC (National Action/research on military industrial complex) Newsletter, publications including a collection of essays, “Police on the Homefront”
2 folders 1969-1971
National Campaign to Impeach Nixon Printed material, poster, newsletter
1973
National Coalition against the War, Racism and RepressionPrinted material 1970
National Commission to Re-Open the Rosenberg CaseNews clippings, printed material, newsletter 1973-1975
National Conference for New Politics Printed material, news clippings, New Politics News 1965-1968
National Committee for Universal and Unconditional Amnesty NCUUA newsletter, printed material
2 folders 1974-1978
National Emergency Civil Liberties Commission
Rights periodical, Bill of Rights Journal, printed material 2 folders 1974-1981
National Lawyers Guild Printed material
1973-1974
National Mobilization CommitteeNewsletters, publications, printed material re: protest against Vietnam War. Includes J. Edgar Hoover’s open letter to college students 3 folders 1967-1973
Nestle BoycottPrinted material 1979
New American Movement Printed material and publication of same name
5 folders
New England Committee for Non-Violent ActionNewsletter, Direct Action; printed material
Box
6 New University Conference Printed material and NUC Newsletter
6 folders: Vol.3 nos. 1, 3, 5, 7, 8, 10-17; Vol.4 nos. 1-6, 7, 9-17; Vol. 5 nos. 1-5-7
1968-1972
No Nukes Printed material, Western Mass newsletter, Ears Energy Catalog
1974-1980
OverthrowNewspaper 1979-1981
Pacific Rim Project Printed material, Pacific Imperialism Notebook 1973-1974
Palestine Solidarity Committee
Printed material and periodical, Palestine! Vol.1 nos.2-4; Vol. 2 nos. 1, 2, 4, 5
1976-1980
The PeacemakerPublication of the Peacemaker Movement 4 folders:
Vol. 22. nos. 3, 5, 6, 13-15; Vol. 23 nos. 1-16; Vol. 24 nos. 1-15; Vol.25 nos.1-15; Vol.26 nos.1-15; Vol. 27 nos. 1-15; Vol.28 nos.1-15; Vol.29
nos.1-7; Vol.30 nos.1-7; Vol.31 nos.1-5, 8, 10
1969-1978
People and the Pursuit of Truth Publication, printed material, news clippings re: JFK assassination et al.
2 folders 1964-1979
People’s Anti-War Mobilization, P.A.MPrinted material, periodical 1981
People’s Bicentennial CommissionPeriodical 1975
Box
7 People’s Coalition for Peace and Justice Printed material: 1971 May Day Peace March, Wash. D.C.; newsletter
2 folders 1971-1974
People’s Party
Printed material, Grass Roots periodical 1974-1976
People’s Peace Treaty Newsletter, printed material; newsclippings
1971-1974
Political Activity- University of IndianaPrinted material; local SDS newsletter; reference to W.E.B. Du Bois Clubs of America 2 folders 1965-1971
Political EconomyPrinted material; pamphlets; news clippings 1968-1971
Political Prisoners Printed material; newsletters; publications
2 folders1968-1976
Political Rights Defense FundPrinted material; publications; news clippings 1973-1974
Poverty in the USPrinted materials; periodicals; news clippings 1967-1982
Promoting Enduring Peace, Inc.
Newsletter, printed material; reproductions of editorials 3 folders 1973-1981
Puerto Rican Solidarity Committee
Printed material; bulletin Puerto Rico Libre 2 folders
1974-1978
Quaker Action Group Printed material; newsletter 1967-1970
Box
Racism8 Printed material
1968-1969
Radical Education ProjectPrinted material; newsletter 1969-1970
RECON Newsletter; printed material
Vol. 3 nos. 4-6, 8-12; Vol. 4 nos. 1-4 1975-1976
The ReporterNewsletter of National Interreligious
Service Board for Conscientious Objectors (NISBCO) Vol. 31 nos. 1-12; Vol. 32. nos. 1-12 1974-1975
Resist Newsletter; printed material 4 folders: 1968-1980
Revolutionary Union Newsletter, Revolution; Languages: English, Spanish
4 folders 1974-1976
Safe Return Amnesty Printed material, publication Amnesty Report 1973-1977
San Quentin Six Printed material 1973
Saxe (Susan) Defense FundPrinted material 1976
Shoshana (Pat Swinton) Defense CommitteePrinted material 1975
Socialist Party USA 1970 Printed material; newsletter, New America; 1970 convention minutes
1964-1970
Soledad Brothers DefensePrinted material 1972
Southern Christian Leadership Conference Printed material; Martin Luther King
1966-1979
Southern Conference Educational Fund Printed material, news clippings re: community organizing, voter registration 3 folders 1967-1978
Southern Poverty Law CenterNewsletter, Klanwatch Intelligence Report; printed materials 1974-1981
---------------------------------------------Box
9 Southern Student Organization Committee Reproduced essays
1968-1969
Student Mobilization CommitteePrinted material; news clippings 1971-1972
PULLPeriodicals Students for a Democratic Society
The Port Huron Statement; CAW; New Left Notes Vol. 4 no.21, Vol. 5 no.13; and printed material 1966-1970
Supporters of Karen SilkwoodPrinted material 1975-1979
Union of Vietnamese in the U.S.Newsletter 1973-1974
United Farm Workers Printed material: Grape and Lettuce Boycott
1973-1975
Universities and Schools Printed materials 4 folders 1969-1971
University Radical UnionJournal, Upstart 1971-1972
US-China People’s Friendship AssociationPublication, China and Us; printed material 1974-1979
US Committee for Democracy in GreeceNewsclippings, printed material; newsletter News of Greece 1967-1970
US National Student AssociationNewsletter 1971-1972
Valley Peace CoalitionPhoto of demonstrators and banner; printed material inc. newsclipping w/ Bob Winston photo and interviews 1972-1973
Venceremos Brigade Newsletter, Venceremos
1975-1978
VietnamPrinted material inc. edited drafts of Bob Winston’s writings 4 folders 1960-1971
War Resisters LeagueNewsletter, WRL News; printed material 4 folders 1967-1977
War Tax Resistance
Printed material includes periodical Tax Talk, 1970-1971 1970-1973
Weather Underground Newsletters, Groundswell and Osawatomi; Prairie Fire
1975
Workers Defense League Newsletter, WDL News; printed material
1969-1978
SERIES: 3 PUBLICATIONS
This series is the most extensive in the collection. It consists of running series of periodicals, for the most part incomplete. Single copies of some publications may also be found in the Subject files.
Box
10About Face
Newsletter, U.S. Servicemen’s Fund 1972
African AgendaPeriodical published by the African Solidarity Committee Single issue 1972
Alert! Focus on Central America Monthly newsletter, CISPES (Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador) 2 folders 1988-1990
Alternative to AlienationPeriodical by a “Communal group in Toronto, Canada.” Single issue 1974
Amex, the American Expatriate in Canada
Periodical 3 folders
1970-1977
Anti-BrassPeriodical, Information Center for Military Legal Problems
ArmageddonUniversity of New Hampshire student periodical 1969-1970
Asian ReportsPeriodical from Dispatch News Service 1972
Black Bart, the Outlaw MagazinePeriodical 1973
The BondNewsletter, the Servicemen’s Newspaper 1970
Bulletin of Concerned Asian ScholarsPeriodical 9 folders 1970-1978
The Call Box Newspaper
1973-197411
Camp NewsNewsletter, Chicago Area Military Project 4 folders 1970-1973
Canadian Tribune Newspaper 1972
CAW! Periodical, Students for a Democratic Society 1960s
A Center Occasional Paper
Journal, Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions 1967-1968
Civil LibertiesPublication, American Civil Liberties Union 2 folders 1970-1975
ChangePeriodical Single issue 1970
Civil Rights DigestQuarterly, U.S. Commission on Civil Rights 1969
Common SenseNewsletter, Concerned Officers Movement 1971
Daily WordNewspaper 1972
OS Dispatch
Periodical from News Service International 2 folders 1970-1972
Docket, ThePublication, Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts 2 folders 1971-1974
ExitPeriodical Single issue features photo essay on Vietnam 1974
Economic NotesMonthly periodical of Labor Research Association 1971
Fact:
Bimonthly periodical published by Fact magazine 1965
Farmstead Magazine, Home Gardening and Small FarmingQuarterly periodical 3 folders 1977-1980
FellowshipMagazine, Fellowship of Reconciliation 1967
The First CasualtyPeriodical from the group “Vietnam Veterans Against the War” Single issue 1971
GI Press ServicePublication, Student Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam 1970-1971
Greenpeace Periodical, formerly Greenpeace Examiner 1987-1990
Greenpeace Examiner (also see Greenpeace)Periodical 1982-1986
Hard Times (also see MayDay) Periodical 3 folders 1968-1970
Honduras UpdatePeriodical, Honduras Information Center 1987
Box 12 I.F. Stone’s Weekly2 folders 1965-1971
ImperialismPrinted materials inc. pamphlets
1967-1968
Indochina Resource CenterHandbooks, Publications 2 folders 1972-1975
Indochina TodayPeriodical, Indochina Resource Center 1974
Insurgent SociologistQuarterly, University of Oregon 7 folders 1971-1981
International Socialist ReviewPeriodical 1967-1971
Journal of Female Liberation, APublication 1969-1970
OS Liberation News Service
Periodical 1971-1973
Box 13 Liberation Periodical 10 folders 1968-1977
LiberatorPeriodical 1970
MadrePeriodical, English and Spanish Single issue 1989
MayDay (also see Hard Times) Periodical 1968-1969
MemoQuarterly publication, Women Strike for Peace, and pamphlets 1970-1972
MobilizerPeriodical Single issue 1987
Mother JonesPeriodical 1980-1988
Box NACLA Report on the AmericasBimonthly periodical, North American Congress of Latin America 1983
14Nation, The
Magazine, One Hundredth Anniversary Issue 1965
New ChinaQuarterly periodical published by the US-China Peoples Friendship Association 1977-1978
Negotiation Now! BulletinNewsletter 1967
New Left NotesNewsletter, Students for a Democratic Society 5 folders 1966-1970
New Left ReviewPeriodical 1971
New Politics, a journal of socialist thought Quarterly publication 4 folders 1968-1976, incomplete
FIND27? New Roots
Periodical 1979-1981
New TimesPeriodical 2 folders 1973
News & Letters, ‘The Root of Mankind is Man’Newspaper 1967-1968
99th BummerNewsletter, Westover AFB, Chicopee, Massachusetts 1971-1972
No More Teachers Dirty LooksPeriodical 1973
Find Nuclear Times27? Periodical
1983-1987
Off Our BacksBi-weekly newsletter, A Women’s Liberation 1970
Pacific ResearchQuarterly, Pacific Studies Center 4 folders 1969-1980
PAKNewsletter1972-1973
PAX, Peace Act Exchange Newsletter 1973-1974
The Pentagon PaperNewsletter 1972
PerceptionsStudent literary quarterly, Southwest Minnesota State College 1971
Political AffairsSpecial issue, “The Battle for Black Liberation” 1968
Probe, People’s Revolt to Overthrow the Banking EstablishmentPeriodical, Issue no. 1
The ProgressivePeriodical 1983
The RadioactivistPeriodical, Clamshell Alliance News Single issue 1989
Rage Newsletter, Marines Unite! 1971-1972
Box 15 RampartsPeriodical 18 folders 1965-1974, Index: 1963-1964
FIND Raw TruthNewsletter, Reservists against the War 1971
FIND The RealistPeriodical 2 folders 1965-1971, incomplete
Box16 Root and Branch, a Libertarian Socialist Journal
Periodical, pamphlets 2 folders 1970-1978
Science for the PeopleBi-monthly 1972, 1975
Seven Days
Periodical 4 folders 1975-1980 incomplete
OSSouth Vietnam in Struggle Newspaper of the Central Organization of South Vietnam, National Front for
Liberation 4 folders 1970-1974
Southern ExposureQuarterly, Institute for Southern Studies 6 folders 1973-1978
1973 vol. no. 1, 3, 41974 vol. 2 nos. 1-41975 vol. 3 nos. 1, 41976 vol. 4 nos. 1-41977 vol. 5 no. 11978 vol. 6 nos. 1-4
Southern Patriot (also see: Southern Struggle) Periodical 5 folders 1965-1976
Southern Struggle (also see: Southern Patriot) Periodical 2 folders
1976-1980
Box
17 Studies on the Left Bi-monthly publication 5 folders 1961-1967
Tricontinental News ServicePeriodical, the “direct news link” to Asia, Africa and Latin America Single issue 1974
TumbrilUniversity of New Hampshire student publication 1969-1970
Underhanded History of the USABooklet, black/white version Radical America magazine, Vol.7, no.3 1973
United States Apartheid NewsletterPeriodical on Africa from American Friends Service Committee 1987
Valley AdvocateNews and arts weekly from Western Massachusetts Single issue 1988
Vietnam Quarterly Periodical
1976
Viet ReportPeriodical 1965-1968
Vietnam Summer NewsNewspaper 1967
Village VoiceNewspaper Single issue 1968
Voice of HaitiNewsletter published by the Friends of Haiti
Single issue 1973
The Washington SpectatorNewsletter 1975-1976
What’s LeftNewsletter, Western Mass. Labor/Community Support Network 1981-1982
Win, Peace and Freedom through Nonviolent ActionPeriodical 8 folders 1967-1979
With AbolafiaQuarterly 1968
Women, A Journal of LiberationQuarterly 3 folders 1970-1974
Women’s IssuesNewsletters and periodicals 3 folders 1971-1990
Find Work Force
Box Working ClassAmerican labor movement Printed material; pamphlets 3 folders
18 1950s, 1960s
Working Papers, for a New SocietyPeriodical 6 folders 1974-1983
Workplace Democracy
Periodical 1985-1987
World Student NewsPeriodical 1968
YahooPeriodical, University of Massachusetts 1970
Yester TimesNewspaper 3 folders 1977-1978
Zeta MagazinePeriodical, The Institute for Social and Cultural Change 2 folders 1987-1990
Box Find
20? Politics and Society Nov. 1970-Summer 1974
Dissent 1954, winter; 1964-67 incomplete, 1968; Jan/Feb, 1973, winter
Vietnamese Studies 1966-74
Vols. 12, 18, 26, 28, 29, 33-35, 37-39
Box
26 Chilean Resistance Courier MIR1978 July, Oct 8-91977 Mar, July, nos.6-71976 nos.3 -51975 May, Nov nos. 1-2
The Communist International
1037 nos. 1-9, 12
SERIES 4: PAMPHLETS 1 BoxFormat ranges from two-page flyers to published booklets. Subject matter includes: political revolution; social activism, industrial-military complex, Chinese communism, Vietnam Conflict, capitalism, Civil Rights, et al. Substantial collection from 1961-1993.
About the Constitution. From the National Emergency Civil Liberties Committee. Channing L. Bete Co.: Greenfield, Mass., 1972
Allen, Charles Jr. Concentration Camps USA. From the The Citizens Committee for Constitutional Liberties. Marzani & Munsell: New York, 1966 (2 copies)
An Alternative media brochure. Times Change Press: Washington, NJ, 1973An advertisements for periodicals.
Aptheker, Herbert. The Negro Today. Marzani & Munsell, New York: 1962
Basta! La Historia de Nuestra Lucha. Enough! The Tale of Our Struggle. Farm Workers Press: Delano, Calif. 1966.
Beal, Frances. Double Jeopardy: to be Black & Female. Reprint from Black Women’s Manifesto, Radical Education Project: Detroit
Behind the Corporate Image. What General Electric did not say in its Annual Report.Report prepared by the GE Project, American Friends Service Committee1972
Benello, C. George. Wasteland Culture. Reprinted from Sept. 1967 issue of Our Generation. The Black Mountain Press: Corinth, Vermont, 1967
Bennett, Lerone Jr. The Challenge of Blackness. Black Paper No. 1, Institute of the Black World: 1970
Beyond the Color Line, 125th Anniversary Tribute to W.E.B. Dubois. W.E.B. Du Bois Foundation: Amherst, 1993
Black & White. New England Free Press: Boston, [no date]
Birmingham, People in Motion. Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights: Birmingham, c. 1963
Braden, Anne. House Un-American Activities Committee: Bulwark of Segregation. National Committee to Abolish the House Un-American Activities Committee: New York, c.1963
Breitman, George. How a Minority Can Change a Society. Printed originally in the International Socialist Review, 1964. Merit Publishers: New York, 1966
Breitman, George. Malcolm X, the Man and His Ideas. Pioneer Publishers: New York, 1965
Brown, Holmes and Don Luce. Hostages of War, Saigon’s Political Prisoners. Indochina Mobile Education Project: 1973.
Burchett, Wilfred. Ho Chi Minh an appreciation. The Guardian: New York, 1972
Burke, J.R. The Coming Democratic Revolution. 1967
Callison, Bill. The Coming Revolution. 1973
Cannon, James P. E.V. Debs, the Socialist Movement of His Time – It’s Meaning for Today. Merit Publishers: New York, 1967
Cannon, Terry. Vietnam, A Thousand Years of Struggle. Peoples Press: San Francisco, 1969
China. 24-page Pictorial, 1972
Clayton, Ed. The SCLC story in words and pictures. Southern Christian Leadership Conference: Atlanta, 1964
Consider, These are the Days… Prepared by Five College Research Committee, Amherst MA, 1970
Crowell, Suzanne. Appalachian People’s History Book. Southern Conference Educational Fund: Louisville, 1971
Cuba’s Workers, Workers’ Cuba, 1969- Article is introduction to Revolutionary Politics and the Cuban Working Class by Maurice Zeitlin. Princeton University Press: Princeton, 1970
The Curse That Lingers, (a look at hunger in New Hampshire). A study prepared by the Bureau of Educational Research and Testing Services, 1969
Davidson, Carl. The New Radicals in the Multiversity. SDS Print Shop: Chicago, 1968
Douglas, William O. A Living Bill of Rights. From The One Nation Library pamphlet series. Anti-Defamation League of B’nai B’rith: New York, 1961
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. [et al] speak on the war in Vietnam. Clergy and Laymen Concerned about Vietnam, 1967
Evrard, Jim. 5 O’Clock World. The Bum Press
Falk, Richard A. The American POWs: Pawns in Power Politics. Reprinted from the March, 1971 issue of The Progressive. The Black Mountain Press: Corinth, Vermont, c. 1971
The Fat Capitalist’s Song on the Death of Che Guevara. Times Change Press: New York, 1970
Fight Racism! New England Free Press: Boston, c.1968.
Fighting Back! Attica Memorial Book 1974. Attica Now: Buffalo, NY, 1974.
Forster, Arnold. Violence on the Fanatical Left and Right. Reprinted from The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1966. Anti-Defamation League of B’nai B’rith: New York, c.1966
Frank, Andre Gunder. Exploitation or Aid? U.S. – Brazil Economic RelationsRadical Education Project: Ann Arbor, c.1963
A “Freedom Budget” for All Americans. A. Philip Randolph Institute: New York, 1967
Freedom Now. Published for the Socialists Workers Party.Pioneer Publishers. New York: 1963
Freeman, Harrop. One Nation, Indivisible. The Legal and Historical Case for Amnesty. A Fellowship Reprint c.1972
Garson, Barbara. Macbird! “The Play’s the Thing wherein I’ll Catch the Conscience of the King.” Grassy Knoll Press: New York, 1966
Gliedman, John. Terror from the Sky. Vietnam Resource Center: Cambridge, Mass., 1972.
“The Great Socialist Cultural Revolution in China.” Pamphlet series, nos. 1,2,3,6,7. Foreign Languages Press. Peking: 1966-1967
Guide to Subversive Organizations and Publications. House Document No. 398. Committee on Un-American Activities: Washington, 1962.
Hamber, Jill Where It’s At, A Research Guide for Community Organizing. New England Free Press: Boston, 1967
Harding, Vincent. Beyond Chaos: Black History and the Search for the New Land. Black Paper No. 2. Institute of the Black World: Atlanta, 1970
Harrington, Michael. American Power in the Twentieth Century. League for Industrial Democracy: New York, 1967
Harry Golden on Anti-Semitism, Jews, Christians, Race Relations, Negroes, Whites, Civil Rights, the South, the North, Social Action and some other matters […]. Anti-Defamation League of B’nai B’rith: New York, 1966
Hayden, Tom. Vietnam, the Struggle for Peace. Indochina Peace Campaign: Santa Monica, 1973
The House of Apartheid. From the Polaroid Revolutionary Workers. Polaroid Newsletter, 1970
Huberman, Leo. Notes on Left Propaganda. How to Spread the Word. Articles reprinted from Monthly Review, 1950, 1967. New England Free Press: Boston, [no date]
Indochina 1971. A White Paper on Requirements for Peace in Southeast Asia. American Friends Service Committee: Philadelphia, 1970
In Their Own Words, A student appraisal of what happened after school desegregation. Southern Regional Council: Atlanta, 1967.
Introducing Harvard. From the Cambridge Movement and the New American Movement et al.c. 1974
Johnson, Giff. Collision Course at Kwajalein.Marshall Islands in the Shadow of the Bomb. Pacific Concerns Resource Center: Honolulu, 1984.
Jones, LeRoi. Preface to a Twenty Volume Suicide Note… Totem Press in association with Corinth Books: New York, 1961.
Justice for Huey P. Newton and the Black Panther Party. Committee for Justice for Huey P. Newton: Oakland, 1974
Kim Il Sung. New World Liberation Front: U.S.A, 1970.
Kolko, Gabriel. Three Documents of the National Liberation Front. Beacon Press: Boston, 1970
Krushnic, Richard. Raytheon Company, Heart of the Massachusetts Military-Industrial Complex.University Christian Movement of New England. Cambridge: 1971
Lens, Sidney. Revolution and Cold War. From the series “Beyond Deterrence.” Peace Literature Service: 1962
Leo Huberman. A Memorial Service and Meeting of Friends. Monthly Review Press: New York, 1968
Leon Trotsky on Black Nationalism and Self-Determination. Merit Publishers: New York, 1967
Lin Piao. Long Live the Victory of People’s War! Foreign Languages Press: Peking, 1965 (2 copies)
Malcolm X on Afro-American History. Betty Shabazz and Merit Publishers: New York, 1967
Malcolm X, Talks to Young People. Young Socialist: New York, 1966
Mandel, Ernest. The Revolutionary Student Movement, Theory and Practice. Young Socialist Alliance: New York, 1969
Martin Luther King, Jr. The Journey of a Martyr. Award Books: New York, 1968.
McCarthy, Eugene. First Things First, New Priorities for America. The New American Library: New York, 1968
Mao Tse-Tung. Lectures and essays, 8 pamphlets. Foreign Languages Press: Peking, 1965-1967
Milgram, Stanley. The Compulsion To Do Evil. The Black Mountain Press: Corinth, Vermont, 1967
Montague, Peter. Racial Discrimination at Indiana University, A Report on Fraternities and Sororities.Students for a Democratic Society: Bloomington, 1967
Muse, Benjamin. Louisville. A Special Report. Southern Regional Council: Atlanta, 1964.
Neighborhoods. Where Human Relations Begin. Southern Regional Council: Atlanta, 1967 New Chile. North American Congress on Latin America: Berkeley, 1973.Oglesby, Carl. Trapped in a System. Students for a Democratic Society: Chicago, 1965
Norwin, W.P. The Notorious Case of Sacco and Venzetti. Little Blue Book No. 1378. Haldeman-Julius Publications: 1929
The Opium Trail, Heroin and Imperialism. Written with support from the Committee of Concerned Asian Scholars. New England Free Press: Boston, 1972
Outlaws of Amerika, communiques from the weather underground. Liberated Guardian: New York, 1971
Paul Baran on Marxism. Reprinted from the Nov. 1958 issue of Monthly Review. New England Free Press: Boston, [no date]
A Peace Directory. Glenn of Providence. c. 1960s.
A Pentagon Papers Digest. Produced by the Indochina Information Project, c.1970
Pettigrew, Thomas F. Racially Separate or Together? Reprinted from Journal of Social Issues Vol. 25, no.1, 1969. Anti-Defamation League of B’nai B’rith: New York, c.1969
PLP, A Critique. [Progressive Labor Party] Reprinted from The Old Mole. The Radical Education Project: Detroit, c. 1969
Political Participation. A Report of the United States Commission of Civil Rights. U.S. Government Printing Office: Washington, 1968.
President Ho Chi Minh Answers President L.B. Johnson. Foreign Languages Press: Hanoi, 1967
Primary Issues. Published by Tom Hayden for U.S. Senate campaign, 1975
Prisoners of Conscience in the USSR: Their Treatment and Conditions. Amnesty International Press: London, 1975.
Programme of Action of the Neo Lao Haksat. Reprint. c.1964
Prokosch, Eric. The Simple Art of Murder. NARMIC: Philadelphia, 1972
The Red Lantern, A Peking Opera with a Revolutionary Theme. Foreign Languages Press: Peking, 1966.
Report of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders. Summary of Report. Reprinted from Bantam Books: c.1967
Russell, Philip. Cuba in Transition. Armadillo Press: Austin, 1972.
Rustin, Bayard. The Anatomy of Frustration. Anti-Defamation league of B’nai B’rith: New York, c.1968
Rustin, Bayard. Fear Frustration Backlash. The New Crisis in Civil Rights. Jewish Labor Committee: New York, c.1966. (3 copies)
Rustin, Bayard. A Way Out of the Exploding Ghetto. League for Industrial Democracy: New York, 1967
Scrapping the War Machine or How to Turn the AntiWar Movement into a Socialist Movement. National Caucus of SDS Labor Committees: c. 1968
Schesch, Adam. An Outline History of Vietnam. 1968
Shipler, David K. Torture in South Vietnam – an American Responsibility? New York Times, 1974
The Silent Slaughter, the role of the United States in the Indonesian massacre. Youth Against War and Fascism: New York, c.1966
Slater, Giuseppi R., Doug Kitt, et al. The Earth Belongs to the People. Peoples Press: San Francisco, 1970.
Slum Ghettos in Your Town. Southern Regional Council: Atlanta, 1967
Snapshots of Life of Captured U.S. Pilots in the Detention Camps of the D.R.V.N. Published by The Vietnam Committee for Solidarity with the American People
South Vietnam. British Vietnam Committee: London, c.1967
South Vietnam, U.S. defeat inevitable. Speech by Gen. Van Tien Dung, VPA Chief of General Staff. Foreign Languages Publishing House: Hanoi, 1967
Southworth, Gayle. An Introduction to Capitalism: Four Lectures on Marxian Economics. Radical America: Cambridge, MA, c.1971
Speech by Lawyer Nguyen Huu Tho, President of the Presidium of the C.C. of the South Viet Nam National Front for Liberation on the occasion of the 5th founding anniversary of the N.F.L. Liberation Editions: South Vietnam, 1965
Stanfield, J. Edwin. “In Memphis: Tragedy Unaverted.” Supplement to Special Report, Southern Regional Council, Inc., 1968
Sweezy, Paul. Marx and the Proletariat. New England Free Press: Boston, c.1967
The Third Force in South Vietnam. NARMIC: 1975
A Time to Heal, the Effects of War on Viet Nam, Laos, Cambodia and America. Indochina Peace Resource Center: Washington, DC, 1976
OS Support the Chilean Resistance. Printed by Movement of the Revolutionary Left, MIRWoodblock ( two-color) illustration, photographs incorporated in 13 page publicationHoused with OS box, South Vietnam in Struggle, needs correct size file folder
To Establish Justice, to Insure Domestic Tranquility. Reprint of the Introduction and Summary of Recommendations from the Final Report of the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence. Award Books: New York, 1970
Vernon, Robert. The Black Ghetto. Pioneer Publishers: New York, 1965
Vernon, Robert and George Novack. Watts and Harlem. The Rising Revolt in the Black Ghettos. Pioneer Publishers: New York, 1965
Vietnam. 14-page Pictorial. 1974.
Vietnam Conflict: protests
Vietnam Conflict: rallies
Voices from Inside, 7 Interviews with Attica Prisoners. Great Jones Printing Company: [no date]
Walker, Margaret. How I Wrote Jubilee. Third World Press: Chicago, 1972
War Incorporated. The Complete Picture of the Congressional Military Industrial University Complex. Student Research Facility: Berkeley, c. 1970
We are Attica, Interviews with Prisoners of Attica. Attica Defense Committee: New York, [no date]
Wei Min She Labor Committee. Chinese Working People in America. United Front Press: San Francisco, 1974
Whitney, Norman J. Experiments in Community. Pendle Hill Pamphlet 149. Pendle Hill Publications: Wallingford, PA, 1966
Why Do We Spend So Much Money? Popular Economics Press: Somerville, Ma., 1973.
Wilcox, Laird M. Guide to the American Right. U.S. Directory Service: Kansas City, 1970
Wiley, Brad. Historians and the New Deal. New England Free Press: Boston, [no date]
Will We Use the Plague as a Weapon? Massachusetts Political Action for Peace, American Friends Service Committee
Winston, Henry. Negro-White Unity. New Outlook Publishers: New York, 1967
Women Under Torture. Indochina Peace Campaign: Santa Monica, 1973
Yanque Dollar, the Contribution of U.S. Private Investment to Underdevelopment in Latin America.Published by North American Congress on Latin America, 1971
Yippie National Spring Convention. Flyer. 1979
Zimmerman, Bill and Len Radinsky et al. Towards a Science for the People. Reprinted from the article “Science for the People” printed in the March, 1972 issue of Liberation. People’s Press: Brookline, 1972
Series 5: Books
This series contains books and booklets which cannot be categorized as pamphlets.
Hansberry, Lorraine. The Movement. Simon and Schuster: New York, 1964.
Littauer, Raphael and Norman Uphoff, editors. The Air War in Indochina. Beacon Press: Boston, 1972.
SERIES 6: AUDIO/VISUAL
Posters, loose #1-9 17x23, color, on foamboard, Various artistsCondition: very good“Original art based on quotations of labor themes from an exhibition by 1199’s Bread and Roses Cultural Project”
#10 “Mayday – May 1-7 Washington DC”16x25, color, paperStudents and Youth for a Peoples Peace
#11 Ganienkeh 13 May 197417x29, multicolor woodcutCond: goodNative American Solidarity Committee and Amherst Cultural Workers Collective, 1976
#12 Student Onion Seeds18x27Multi-color, from woodcut, paperCond: goodStudent Organization Project
#13 Vietnam Summer 196716x26, color, matted, stapled to heavy boardCond: goodSubj: Woman in terror, running, holding baby
#14 Nixon and LBJ et al17x23 ink drawing, b/w, thin paper,Cond: poor, needs copying for preservationSubj: Parody of the Creation by Michelangelo, Sistene Chapel
#15 “Viva La Causa’Cond: :fair
#16 June 12 March & Rally, New York, N.Y.18x25, mounted on foamboardCond: goodArtist: Giancarlo Impiglia, 1982
#17 “the Liberty Tree”17x24, color, woodcutCond: fairAmherst Cultural Workers Collective, 1976Native American Resistance
#18 “1890 We Remember 1993”16x23, b/w, glossy paperArtist: Bruce Carter
#19 “Where will the children play”18x24, color, original woodcutCond: goodSigned by artist: Stella 1973 limited ed. 1/20Note* needs preservation
#20 Nat’l Hard Times Conference, Chicago, Jan 30-Feb 117x22, color, loose, foam back w/ripped plastic sheeting
#21 “A Luta Continua The Struggle Continues Angola”15x21, color, woodcut, poster glued at top to foamboard.
#22 “If government won’t stop the war…” MayDay May 1-7 DC15x22, color, woodcutCond: poorMay Day Collective
Box
28 33 1/3 LP RecordsSubj: Cuba, political; Chile, political Victor Jara,; Folk songs, political: Pete Seeger; Holly Near, Bright Morning Star, Freedom SingersLanguages: English, Spanish, French
AudiotapeMLK audio tape “Open Housing Demonstration, Louisville Kentucky” Speeches: 6-5-67, 6-10-67Related news articles Note* Preservation on digital disc?
Search TermsCheck subject authority source LCSH
Civil rights and socialismDraft—United States—History--SourcesPeace movements—Massachusetts—Amherst—History—sources.Vietnamese Conflict, 1961-1975—Protest movements—Massachusetts—Amherst—History—Sources.Westover Air Force Base (Mass.)—History—20th century—Sources.
Alinsky, Saul David, 1909-1972.Kennedy, John F. (John Fitzgerald), 1917-1963 King, Martin Luther, 1899-1984Rosenberg, Ethel, 1915-1953. Rosenberg, Julius, 1918-1953.