Summary Information
Arthur Ocean Waskow Papers 1943-1977 (bulk 1961-1977)
- Waskow, Arthur Ocean, 1933-
Mss 5; PH 6607
21.8 c.f. (21 record center cartons, 2 archives boxes, and 1 oversize folder), 15 photographs, 2 pieces of ephemera in 1 folder, and 1 negative
Wisconsin Historical Society (Map)
Papers, 1943-1977 (mainly 1961-1977), of Arthur Waskow, a historian, writer, activist, and rabbi, primarily documenting his activities as a research fellow for the Peace Research Institute (PRI), 1961-1963, and the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS), 1963-1977; as a leader in left-wing Jewish organizations; and as a writer on subjects relating to peace, the war in Vietnam, and Judaism. In addition, there are detailed notes from the records of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) about the race riots of 1919, the subject of Waskow's doctoral research. English
http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/wiarchives.uw-whs-mss00005
Biography/History
Arthur Ocean Waskow was born Arthur I. Waskow in Baltimore, Maryland, in 1933. He took his bachelor's degree at Johns Hopkins University in 1954 and his doctorate in American history in 1963 at the University of Wisconsin, where he studied with Merle Curti. From 1959 to 1961 Waskow worked as a legislative assistant to Representative Robert Kastenmeier, a Democrat from Wisconsin. Waskow edited the controversial Liberal Papers for Kastenmeier and other like-minded members of the House of Representatives.
In 1961 Waskow became a research fellow at the Peace Research Institute (PRI), a grant-funded institute devoted to the study of world peace. In 1963 PRI merged with the newly-organized Institute for Policy Studies (IPS), and Waskow joined Richard Barnet and Marcus Raskin, the senior fellows at IPS, as a peace research fellow, later becoming a senior fellow. Because of his leadership experience at PRI, Waskow was influential in shaping the programs and structure of IPS. Waskow remained with IPS until 1977 when he and other IPS staff left to establish the Public Resource Center (PRC). During the next five years Waskow led a PRC research project funded by the U.S. Department of Energy on renewable energy and conservation.
During the 1960s and early 1970s Waskow was a national leader in the movement against the war in Vietnam. He participated in the first anti-war teach-in at the University of Michigan and was a member of the national steering committee of the New Mobilization Committee Against the War in Vietnam. As a result of their association at IPS, Waskow and Raskin, one of the defendants in the Boston 5 Conspiracy case, co-authored “A Call to Resist Illegitimate Authority,” which urged support for draft resisters. During this period Waskow was widely criticized for allegedly radical political views, although his activities within the Democratic Party and the National Conference for a New Politics demonstrated his commitment to working for change within the political system. As a result of his organizing for the New Mobilization Committee in 1969, seven years later Waskow was a successful plaintiff in Hobson v. Wilson, an important Supreme Court decision concerning infringement of free speech rights by the FBI.
During this phase of his career Waskow wrote extensively on subjects related to peace and the war in Vietnam. Among his books are The Limits of Defense (1962); America in Hiding (1962), The Worried Man's Guide to World Peace (1963); and From Race Riot to Sit-in, 1919 and the 1960s (1966), an expansion of his dissertation. He was also a prolific writer of letters to the editor and articles for such magazines as Commentary, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, Survival, Scientific American, Liberation, New York Review of Books, and Dissent. Waskow was a contributing editor to Ramparts, which published his Freedom Seder article in 1969. This article was the first widely-published Passover Haggadah that connected the liberation of the ancient Israelites with modern liberation struggles.
Although raised in a non-observant Jewish family, beginning in 1969 Waskow began a search to find meaning in his religious heritage. He organized or participated in left-wing Jewish organizations such as Breira, Jews for Urban Justice, and the National Jewish Organizing Project, and through organizations such as Fabrangen, Tzedek Tzedek, and the kibbutz Micah, Waskow worked to create a better community life for Jews in the District of Columbia. Eventually Waskow became a leader in the Jewish Renewal Movement, and in 1995 he was ordained as a rabbi.
Because the Waskow Papers at the Wisconsin Historical Society Archives contain no material on which to base a biographical sketch, the following information for Waskow's post-1977 career, the following is taken from website of the Shalom Center, which he established in 1983:
Since 1969, Waskow has taken a leadership role in the Jewish Renewal movement. He founded The Shalom Center in 1983 and serves as its director. In its inception the Shalom Center primarily confronted the threat of nuclear war from a Jewish perspective, emphasizing the story of Noah and the imperative to save the world from “a flood of fire”. As the Cold War abated, the Shalom Center turned its focus toward ecology and human rights issues. The chief concerns of The Shalom Center are:
The Iraq War and related issues, including the growing use of torture by the United States and unchecked presidential power; American addiction to over-use of oil and the danger it poses to the planet through global warming; the creation of deeper connections among Jews, Christians, and Muslims; an interfaith effort to identify and encourage the use and marketing of “Sacred Foods”; Peace in the Middle East; lesbian and gay rights, especially in marriage and other sacred contexts; and the rights of immigrants.
From 1982 to 1989, Waskow was a member of the faculty of the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College, where he taught courses on contemporary theology and practical rabbinics. He has also taught in the religion departments of Swarthmore College, Temple University, Drew University, and Vassar College.
In 1993, Waskow co-founded ALEPH: Alliance for Jewish Renewal. Between 1993 and 2005, he performed research, wrote, and spoke on behalf of ALEPH. Waskow was ordained a rabbi in 1995 by a beth din (rabbinical court) made up of a rabbi with Hasidic lineage, a Conservative rabbi, a Reform rabbi, and a feminist theologian. Waskow's best-known books [written during this phase of his career] include Godwrestling (1978), Seasons of Our Joy (1982), Down-to-Earth Judaism: Food, Money, Sex, and the Rest of Life (1995), and Godwrestling — Round 2: Ancient Wisdom, Future Paths (1996).
Some of Waskow's positions on religious and political issues, and his interpretations of Jewish traditions, have drawn criticism from more conservative quarters of the Jewish community and from some parts of the American Left. Pointing to the implications of the Jubilee year for the peaceful and meditative redistribution of land, Waskow has argued that prophetic Judaism contains elements of social vision that have reappeared in some aspects of Marxism and some aspects of Buddhism. Waskow has been a strong critic of Israeli policies in the West Bank and Gaza. He is opposed to the Second Iraq War, citing what he describes as Jewish religious grounds. He has supported the positions of Cindy Sheehan. Waskow has said he has found no evidence of Sheehan making anti-Israel statements attributed to her. Waskow has supported full rights and full presence of gay and lesbian persons in the Jewish community and in American life, including supporting the right to same-sex Jewish and civil marriage.
Since his first visit to Israel, the West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem in 1969, he has supported a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and has strongly condemned such actions by some Palestinians as terrorist attacks on Israel and acts of the Israeli government such as the invasions of Lebanon in 1982 and 2006. He became one of the founding members of Rabbis for Human Rights/North America and served on its board and steering committee. When some parts of the U.S. anti-war movement demonized Israel, he publicly criticized their behavior and the Shalom Center sponsored alternative actions that strongly criticized the Iraq war while affirming the legitimacy of Israel and the importance of its achieving peace with a Palestinian state.
Though a critic of the environmental policies of Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez, Waskow has disagreed with claims that Chávez is anti-Semitic, pointing out that his critical comments on “...some minorities, descendants of those who crucified Christ, descendants of those who threw Bolívar out of here...took the world's riches for themselves...” were referring not to the Jews but to the heirs of the Roman Empire that crucified Jesus and of the Spanish empire that attacked Bolivar -- that is, to the U.S. empire of today.
In 1996, Waskow was named by the United Nations a “Wisdom Keeper” among forty religious and intellectual leaders who met in connection with the Habitat II conference in Istanbul. He was presented the Abraham Joshua Heschel Award by the Jewish Peace Fellowship and in 2005 was named by the Forward newspaper one of the “Forward Fifty” leaders of American Jewry. In 2007, Newsweek named him one of the fifty most influential American rabbis. In that year also, the Neighborhood Interfaith Movement of Philadelphia presented him its Reverend Richard Fernandez Religious Leadership Award, and the Muslim American Society Freedom Foundation presented him its Peace and Justice Award.
Waskow has taught as a Visiting Professor in the religion departments of Swarthmore College (1982-1983, on the thought of Martin Buber and on the Book of Genesis and its rabbinic and modern interpretations); Temple University (1975-1976 on contemporary Jewish theology and 1985-1986, on liberation theologies in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam); Drew University (1997-1998, on the ecological outlooks of ancient, rabbinic, and contemporary Judaism and on the synthesis of mysticism, feminism, and social action in the theology and practice of Jewish renewal); Vassar College (1999 on Jewish Renewal and Feminist Judaism); and from 1982 to 1989 on the faculty of the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College (contemporary theology and practical rabbinics) .
Scope and Content Note
The Waskow Papers are arranged in five series: CORRESPONDENCE, SPEECHES AND WRITINGS, SUBJECT FILES, REFERENCE MATERIAL, and VISUAL MATERIALS. The papers cover Waskow's career beginning with his years as a graduate student in American History at the University of Wisconsin. About his tenure as a member of Robert Kastenmeier's congressional staff there are memoranda, correspondence, and press clippings about the publication of the Liberal Papers, for which Kastenmeier was one of the authors. Files on Waskow's career during the 1960s when he worked as a fellow first for the Peace Research Institute and then for the Institute for Policy Studies are particularly strong, and they illustrate the transition that took place from the mainstream peace organizations to the increasingly radical activities of the anti-Vietnam War mobilizations. Coverage terminates in 1977 with the end of Waskow's association with IPS, the same point at which his Jewish heritage emerged as an increasingly central focus of his life. As a result of this end date, there is nothing here about the Public Resource Center that was organized by Waskow and other dissident IPS staff or the Shalom Center that Waskow established in Philadelphia in 1983. There is also little about his leadership within the Jewish Renewal Movement. However, many files suggest his growing religious interests. More papers concerning Waskow's Jewish activities and associations are held by the American Jewish Historical Society.
The CORRESPONDENCE series covers a shorter time span than the collection as a whole. Carbons of chronologically-arranged outgoing correspondence date only from the years 1967 to 1972. Incoming and additional outgoing correspondence for this period is filed in the appropriate folder in the SUBJECT FILES series which is described below. Additional files in the CORRESPONDENCE include general and personal letters, both categories that Waskow himself established. Generally, this correspondence is of a miscellaneous character.
The SPEECHES AND WRITINGS series includes draft and published copies of articles, letters to the editor, policy statements and proposals, and other short pieces, but no manuscripts for books. The articles are arranged alphabetically by title. Speeches and other oral presentations are included, but only a few, as Waskow often spoke only from outlines. This series is complemented by correspondence with the publishers of his articles, reviews, and reactions from the general public in the SUBJECT FILES series. In addition, research and correspondence related to several longer works, most notably his doctoral dissertation on the race riots of 1919 and the Working Man's Guide, are also included there, as well as folders labeled “T&T,” presumably meaning talks and travel, which document arrangements for his public speaking.
The heart of the collection is the alphabetically-arranged SUBJECT FILES series, which contains important information on the many organizations in which Waskow was active and on individuals of prominence with whom he was associated. An activist and organizer in the literal sense of the word, Waskow formed and took leadership roles in many organizations concerned with peace, history, social action, and Judaism. Perhaps because of his historical training, Waskow saved significant files of organizational minutes and mass mailings from these organizations as well as historical documentation about his personal involvement. Similar motivation may be the reason that he paid attention to the filing. Most of the files are arranged alphabetically according to the categories that Waskow himself established, although some inconsistencies and refinements were made in the Archives. Among the well documented organizations are the American Committee on Africa; the Consortium on Peace Research, Education and Development (COPRED), the National Coalition for a New Party (NCNP), the New Party, and Resist.
Most important among the organizational records, however, are the files on the Peace Research Institute and the Institute for Policy Studies. Waskow's files on PRI are thought to be the most extensive in archival custody, and, although his files about IPS are much smaller than the organization's own collection, which is also held by the Wisconsin Historical Society, Waskow's papers includes important information on early planning and organizational work that is missing from the IPS records. Waskow's file of internal IPS memoranda is a concise chronological overview of IPS history that is not so readily available in the organizational records.
Files on PRI and IPS include administrative correspondence and memoranda, research reports, educational and seminar files, and conference planning materials. For other organizations for which Waskow was a leader there is correspondence, minutes, and mass mailings; these organizations include the American Committee on Africa, Breira, the Committee for Emergency Support, Conference for Peace Research in History, Consortium on Peace Research in Education and Development, Jews for Urban Justice, Mankind 2000, National Conference for New Politics, New Mobilization Committee Against the War in Vietnam, the Radical Caucus of the American Historical Association, and Washington Mobilization Committee. There are also files on Democratic National Conventions in 1964 and 1968. Prominent individuals with which Waskow corresponded include Gar Alperovitz, Bernice Carroll, Dave Dellinger, Paul Jacobs, Brad Lyttle, Seymour Melman, Jessica Mitford, Dave McReynolds, A.J. Muste, Sidney Peck, Marcus Raskin, and David Riesman. Waskow also exchanged personal correspondence with Paul Booth, Robb Burlage, Rennie Davis, Todd Gitlin, Al Haber, Tom Hayden, and other leaders of Students for a Democratic Society.
About the Peace Research Institute there is correspondence, project proposals, research reports for the Arms Control Agency, memoranda, press information, and information on conferences. There are also files on books Waskow wrote for the institute such as A Worried Man's Guide to World Peace and America in Hiding, a critique of U.S. fallout shelters. Also included is a file on PRI's response to the Cuban missile crisis. Waskow directed PRI toward the study of world order, particularly through his participation in the Mankind 2000 program and his interests in development of an international police force. Creation of an international peacekeeping academy was another effort in which Waskow was active on an international level. An offshoot of the peace agenda at PRI was involvement in future studies and the use of games and simulation as a tool to advance the cause of peace.
In addition to the previously mentioned documentation, the subject-based documentation about IPS in the collection grew out of Waskow's responsibility for its educational program, his contacts with prospective students and alumni, and the IPS seminar program. The theme of educational reform seen in the IPS files is also evident in other areas of the series. Gar Alperovitz, Paul Jacobs, Seymour Melman, and David Riesman are among the individuals associated with IPS with whom Waskow had contact. Waskow and his staff gathered a substantial quantity of information on prisons and prisoners as part of an IPS project. However, little documentation places this information within the programmatic framework at IPS so it has been filed separately. The prison material includes a brief correspondence with Jessica Mitford.
During the 1960s several members of Students for a Democratic Society were interns at IPS, and through them Waskow formed close relationships with national SDS leaders such as Paul Booth, Robb Burlage, Rennie Davis, Al Haber, Tom Hayden, and, in particular, Todd Gitlin and Carol McElerney. This personal correspondence adds an important dimension to the SDS records held by the Wisconsin Historical Society. Waskow's files on SDS itself, however, were heavily weeded, as they duplicated the SDS records at the Historical Society, the chief exception being a file on the Radical Education Project which has been retained here. It is likely that the files in the collection about the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party were also created as a result of his association with SDS people working in the South.
Like other fellows at IPS, Waskow opposed the war in Vietnam. Here his activities focused on supporting Marcus Raskin, who was indicted as one of the Boston 5, and serving on the national steering committee of the New Mobilization Against the War in Vietnam. Because many mobilizations organized marches and demonstrations in Washington D.C., Waskow, as a resident of the capitol, assumed an important role. Among his contacts in the anti-war movement in addition to the previously mentioned SDS leaders were Dave Dellinger, Brad Lyttle, Dave McReynolds, A.J. Muste, and Sidney Peck.
The most important documentation relating to Waskow's career as a historian are the detailed notes created while working on the race riots of 1919 for his doctoral dissertation. Records of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People that he used at the Library of Congress are now missing at that institution, and Waskow's notes are the only known source of information on this subject. The dissertation itself, “The 1919 Race Riots: a Study in the Connections between Conflict and Violence,” is available in the University of Wisconsin Library. Waskow's 1956 master's thesis, “Negroes and the American Labor Movement, 1880-1990,” is also available there. Despite his doctorate, Waskow never taught professionally, but he maintained close relations with many individual historians such as Gar Alperovitz, Merle Curti, Todd Gitlin, Gabriel Kolko, Staughton Lynd, and with historical organizations such as the Radical Caucus of the American Historical Association and the Conference on Peace Research in History.
The District of Columbia community provided the focus for much of Waskow's activism. His work ranged from efforts in behalf of the Adams Morgan neighborhood and the Committee for Emergency Support, which he founded after a riot in the capitol. In 1968 Waskow was one of the district delegates to the National Democratic Convention in Chicago, and, as a result, he collected information on the local party during that important year. Waskow's growing awareness of his religious heritage is also evident in the local community. For this there are files on Fabrangen, the district's Jewish Community Council, and the kibbutz Micah. Waskow was also active in national left-wing Jewish organizations, by taking a leadership role in Breira, an organization critical of Israeli policies in the Middle East, and helping to establish Jews for Urban Justice and the National Jewish Organizing Project.
The REFERENCE files consist of near-print secondary material collected by Waskow on organizations and topics with which Waskow had varying levels of involvement. In the main, these files contain no information about Waskow's own activities. Among the most extensive are civil defense, community control of police, futurism, games and simulations, Middle Eastern foreign affairs, and prisoners.
The VISUAL MATERIALS include images and ephemera related to demonstrations by the Campaign for Global Justice and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee; a protest at Gwynn Oaks in Baltimore; and images of Arthur Waskow and Bob Moses.
Administrative/Restriction Information
Presented by Arthur Ocean Waskow (then Arthur I. Waskow), Washington, D.C., 1966-1967. Accession Number: M66-326, M67-110, M75-047, M75-098, M76-358, M78-206
Contents List
Mss 5
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Series: Correspondence
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Box
1
Folder
1-26
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Outgoing, 1967 May-1972 August
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General
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Box
1
Folder
28-43
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1952, 1961-1970, 1972-1977
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Box
1
Folder
27
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undated
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Box
1
Folder
44
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undated, circa 1974-1977
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Box
2
Folder
1-7
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Personal, 1961-1965, 1967-1977, undated
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Series: Speeches and Writings
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Articles and short pieces
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Box
2
Folder
8
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“If Things Went Reasonably Well,” 1984
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Box
2
Folder
8
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“21 Theses on the 1970s”
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A
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Box
2
Folder
9
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“The Absurd, the Establishment and the Assassination”
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Box
2
Folder
9
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“Advancing the American National Interest Without War”
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Box
2
Folder
9
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“After the Text Ban: Detente or Disarmament?”
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Box
2
Folder
9
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“American Capitalism and American Catholicism: on a Collision Course?”
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Box
2
Folder
9
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“American Crisis of the 1970s, Electoral Politics and other Action,” 1970
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Box
2
Folder
9
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“American Foreign Policy and Vietnam”
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Box
2
Folder
9
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“American Military Doctrine,” 1961
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Box
2
Folder
9
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“American Public and International Tensions,” 1961
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Box
2
Folder
9
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“And After Chicago?”
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B
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Box
2
Folder
10
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“Balanced Deterrent Implies Co-Existence,” 1962
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Box
2
Folder
10
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“Basic Question: Unintended Evil,” 1962
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Box
2
Folder
10
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“Black Manifestoes and Jewish Response”
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Box
2
Folder
10
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“Before and Beyond Watergate,” 1973
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Box
2
Folder
10
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“Beginning the Second Decade” (IPS)
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Box
2
Folder
10
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“The Belly of Leviathan: A Response to 'Response' ”
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Box
2
Folder
10
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“Beyond Sinai”
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Box
2
Folder
10
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Board of Christian Education, Occasional papers, 1967
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Box
2
Folder
10
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“Bomb Surplus, the Victory Mood, and Counterforce,” 1963
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Box
2
Folder
10
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“Breaking the Arms Deadlock,” 1963
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Box
2
Folder
10
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“Breakthrough of the Absurd,” 1964
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Box
2
Folder
10
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“Building from the Grassroots,” 1967
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Box
2
Folder
10
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“Die Bunkergesellschaft,” 1962
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Box
2
Folder
10
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“The Bush Is Burning”
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Box
2
Folder
10
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“Business, Religion and the Left,” 1969
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C
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Box
2
Folder
12
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“The Cabinet Session That Wasn't, or How Rabin Solved the Crisis”
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Box
2
Folder
12
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“The Campus If You Were 20”
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Box
2
Folder
12
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“Can Enemies Make Peace?”
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Box
2
Folder
12
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“Can the UN Move Beyond the Israel-Palestine Deadlock?”, 1975
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Box
2
Folder
12
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“The Center for Emergency Support”
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Box
2
Folder
12
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“Civil Defense, Democracy, and the Self-Destroying Prophecy,” 1962
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Box
2
Folder
11
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“Commemorating the End of the War,” 1976
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Box
2
Folder
13
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“Community Control of the Police”
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Box
2
Folder
12
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“Conflicting National Interests in Alternative Disarmed Worlds”
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Box
2
Folder
12
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“Convention of Business Public Relations and Public Affairs Counterforce,” 1962
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Box
2
Folder
12
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“Counter-Insurgency at Home,” 1965
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Box
2
Folder
11
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“Creative Disorder: 1999,” 1966
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Box
2
Folder
11
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“'Creative Disorder' in Racial Struggle,” 1964?
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D-E
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Box
2
Folder
14
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“Dangers of Counterforce Strategy,” 1962?
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Box
2
Folder
14
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“Day of Revolutionary Tranquility,” 1972
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Box
2
Folder
14
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Demilitarized World / by Walter Millis, postscript by Arthur Ocean Waskow (AOW)
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Box
2
Folder
14
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“Democratizing the Democratic Party”
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Box
2
Folder
14
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“Disarmament 2000: the Spirit and the Strategy” (written after , 1983)
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Box
2
Folder
14
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“Disarmament, Nuclear Testing, and Peace,” 1963?
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Box
2
Folder
14
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“Disarmament, Peace, and Liberty,” 1964
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Box
2
Folder
15
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“The Diaspora, Israel, and Their Relationship,” 1975
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Box
2
Folder
14
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“Does American Jewry Face a Contradiction?”, 1971
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Box
2
Folder
14
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“Domestic Counterinsurgency,” 1970
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Box
2
Folder
14
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“Education of Peacemakers,” 1967
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F
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Box
2
Folder
16
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“Fallout Shelters,” 1962
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Box
2
Folder
16
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“Food Crisis”
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Box
2
Folder
16
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“For Interlocking Movements,” 1980
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Box
2
Folder
16
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“The Freedom Politics,” 1984
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Box
2
Folder
17
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“The Freedom Seder: A New Haggadah for Passover,” 1969
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Box
2
Folder
16
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“From Obsolescence to Civil Defense”
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Box
2
Folder
16
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“From Race Riot to Sit-In,” 1965
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Box
2
Folder
16
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“The Fusion of Gandhi and Guerrilla”
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Box
2
Folder
16
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“The Future of the Radial Movement,” 1965
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Box
2
Folder
16
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“The Future-Who Can Imagine It?”, 1968
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G
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Box
2
Folder
19
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“Godwrestling”
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Box
2
Folder
18
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“Great Powers and Small Nations”
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Box
2
Folder
18
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“Growing Peace at the Grass Roots,” 1963?
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Box
2
Folder
18
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“Guerre et Paix: Soixante ans d'Histoire des Etats Unis”
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Box
2
Folder
18
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“Guerrilla Politics,” 1968
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H
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Box
2
Folder
20
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“Have I Sold Out?”
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Box
2
Folder
20
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“Historiography and the Disarmed World: A Problem in the Study of an Unprecedented Future,” 1964
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Box
2
Folder
20
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“How to Avoid a Race Riot,” 1963
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Box
2
Folder
20
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“How to Bring Mashiach: Ten Points to Consider,” 1973
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Box
2
Folder
20
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“How to Prevent a Pogrom,” 1967
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I
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Box
2
Folder
21
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“I Am Not Free,” 1972
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Box
2
Folder
21
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“Impeachment and Beyond,” 1973
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Box
2
Folder
21
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“Impeachment is Only a Crossroads,” 1974
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Box
2
Folder
21
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“Impotence and Energy in Israel”
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Box
2
Folder
21
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“In Serious thought about the Future through Simulation and Role-Playing”
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Box
2
Folder
21
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“In the Beginning,” 1974
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Box
2
Folder
21
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“The International Rat Race,” 1963
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Box
2
Folder
21
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“Is the United States a Revolutionary Country?”
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Box
2
Folder
21
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“Israel, the Arabs, and the Torah,” undated
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J
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Box
2
Folder
22
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“The Jewish Contradiction”
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Box
2
Folder
22
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“Jewish Experience and the Vietnamese Refugees”
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Box
2
Folder
22
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“Jewish Radical/Radical Jew”
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Box
2
Folder
22
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“The Jewish Situation,” 1976
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Box
2
Folder
22
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“Johnson, the Test Ban, and Disarmament,” 1964
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Box
2
Folder
22
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“Jubilee 1976?”
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K
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Box
2
Folder
23
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“Keeping the Peace,” 1966
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Box
2
Folder
23
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Keeping the World Disarmed, 1965
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L
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Box
2
Folder
24
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“Letter to an Israeli,” 1976
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Box
2
Folder
24
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“The Liberals, the Congress, and the Rules Committee,” 1961
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Box
2
Folder
25
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“The Liberation of Middle America”
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Box
2
Folder
25
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“The Lightning Flash,” 1970
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Box
2
Folder
25
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“Limited Strategic War,” 1963
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Box
2
Folder
25
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“L'malshinim Al-t'hi Tikvah,” 1971
|
|
Box
2
Folder
25
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“The Limits of Defense,” 1962
|
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Box
2
Folder
26
|
“Looking Forward: 1999,” 1967
|
|
|
M
|
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Box
2
Folder
27
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“Making Democracy Work,” 1962
|
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Box
2
Folder
28
|
“Manifest Destiny and Disarmament,” 1962
|
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Box
2
Folder
27
|
“Mankind 2000,” 1966
|
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Box
2
Folder
27
|
“Marxism, Judaism, and Messiah-Time”
|
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Box
2
Folder
27
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“The Mask Jews Wear,” 1974
|
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Box
2
Folder
27
|
“The Meaning of the Mandate, 1964: The Middle East Way to Peace,” 1976
|
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Box
2
Folder
27
|
“Messiah: When?”
|
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Box
2
Folder
27
|
“Military Superiority and the New Realities,” 1963
|
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Box
2
Folder
27
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“The Minority Mandate,” 1965
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Box
2
Folder
27
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“The Moral Limits of Intervention,” 1966
|
|
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N
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Box
2
Folder
29
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“National Coalition for a New Congress”
|
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Box
2
Folder
30
|
“Neo-isolationism and Neo-interventionism,” 1963?
|
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Box
2
Folder
30
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“New American Arrogance,” 1965?
|
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Box
2
Folder
30
|
“The New Class in Washington: A Working Paper”
|
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Box
2
Folder
30
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“New Diaspora: New Israel”
|
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Box
2
Folder
30
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New Party position paper, 1968
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Box
2
Folder
30
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“New Roads to a World without War,” 1964
|
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Box
2
Folder
30
|
“The New Vocation: Activator,” 1965?
|
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Box
2
Folder
31
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“The Next 30 Years of American History,” 1969
|
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Box
2
Folder
32
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“Nonlethal Equivalents of War,” 1964
|
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Box
2
Folder
33
|
“Nonviolence and Creative Disorder,” 1965
|
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Box
2
Folder
33
|
Notes from , 1969
|
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Box
2
Folder
34
|
Notes from , 1999
|
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Box
2
Folder
33
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Notes from Innerground, 1966
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Box
2
Folder
33
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Notes on a Trial Near Wall Street, 1966
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Box
2
Folder
33
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Notes on American Politics, 1964
|
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Box
2
Folder
33
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Notes on Chicago, 1967
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Box
2
Folder
33
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Notes on Next Steps (teach-in review), 1965?
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Box
2
Folder
33
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Notes on Nonviolence and Creative Disorder, 1965
|
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Box
2
Folder
33
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Notes on Peace and a Worried America, 1963
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Box
2
Folder
33
|
Notes on some Possible Institutional and Political Difficulties Involved in Planning for Disarmament
|
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Box
2
Folder
33
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Notes on the Student Movement, 1965
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Box
2
Folder
33
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Notes on the Teach-in Movement, 1965
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Box
2
Folder
33
|
Notes on an ADA Foreign Policy Resolution
|
|
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O
|
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Box
2
Folder
35
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“Observation on a Trip to the Mideast,” 1975
|
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Box
2
Folder
35
|
“On Holy Days,” 1970
|
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Box
2
Folder
35
|
“On Overthrowing Foreign Tyrannies,” 1969
|
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Box
2
Folder
35
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“On the U.N. and the Palestinians,” 1975
|
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Box
2
Folder
35
|
“Operation Zulu”
|
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Box
2
Folder
35
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Order, Disorder, and Disarmament preliminaries
|
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Box
2
Folder
35
|
“The Origins of Peace,” 1968
|
|
|
P
|
|
Box
2
Folder
36
|
“Partners”
|
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Box
2
Folder
36
|
“Patterns of American Protest,” 1971
|
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Box
2
Folder
36
|
“Peace and War: the History of the United States, 1939-1999,” 1967
|
|
Box
2
Folder
36
|
“Peace: Foreign Policy or Domestic Issue?”
|
|
Box
2
Folder
36
|
“Peace in the '66 Elections,” 1966
|
|
Box
2
Folder
36
|
“Peace Politics and 1968,” 1967
|
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Box
2
Folder
36
|
“Perspective on '68 and Beyond: Toward a Radical Tammany,” 1967
|
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Box
2
Folder
36
|
“Pipedream or Possibility,” 1976
|
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Box
2
Folder
36
|
“Place of Hostility and Conflict in a Disarmed World,” 1962
|
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Box
2
Folder
36
|
“Politics of the Precipice”
|
|
Box
2
Folder
36
|
“Populism and Peacekeeping at the Untied Nations,” 1965
|
|
Box
2
Folder
36
|
“Politics of the Pentagon Papers”
|
|
Box
2
Folder
36
|
“President Johnson and Disarmament,” 1964
|
|
Box
2
Folder
36
|
“Project on an American Equivalent of the Biblical Jubilee,” 1975?
|
|
Box
2
Folder
36
|
“Project on an Alternative U.S. Policy in the Middle East and Its Impact on Creation of a New Direction in U.S. Foreign Policy”
|
|
Box
2
Folder
36
|
“Project on U.S. Policy in the Middle East” (IPS)
|
|
Box
2
Folder
36
|
“Proposals for a War Constitution,” 1965
|
|
|
R
|
|
Box
2
Folder
37
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“Radical Nightmare, Radical Workday”
|
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Box
2
Folder
37
|
“Radicals, Conservatives, and History,” 1969
|
|
Box
2
Folder
37
|
“The Recovery of Judaism,” 1969
|
|
Box
2
Folder
37
|
“Rejection of the Administration Fallout-Shelter Program of 1961,” 1963
|
|
Box
2
Folder
37
|
“Reflections on the Mobe,” 1970
|
|
Box
2
Folder
37
|
“Religious Upwelling on the Left”
|
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Box
2
Folder
37
|
“Response to Van Buren”
|
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Box
2
Folder
37
|
“Riots and Pogroms,” 1968
|
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Box
2
Folder
37
|
“Rubicon on the Potomac,” 1973
|
|
Box
2
Folder
37
|
“Running Riot at the Washington Post”
|
|
|
S
|
|
Box
3
Folder
1
|
“Scholarship, Protest, and the Mob,” 1963
|
|
Box
3
Folder
1
|
“Seeking Total Victory through Disarmament,” 1963
|
|
Box
3
Folder
1
|
“The Shalom Seder: Toward a Passover of Peace”
|
|
Box
3
Folder
1
|
“Shock Waves of Selma,” 1965
|
|
Box
3
Folder
1
|
“Should 1976 Be an American Jubilee Year?”
|
|
Box
3
Folder
1
|
“So Long as There's a Soul in Prison”
|
|
Box
3
Folder
1
|
“'The Song of Songs' as a Model for Women and Men”
|
|
Box
3
Folder
1
|
“South African Crisis of 1999,” 1966
|
|
Box
3
Folder
1
|
“Strategy of Demilitarization,” 1965
|
|
Box
3
Folder
1
|
“Strategy, Politics, and the Nineteenth Century”
|
|
Box
3
Folder
1
|
“The Student Movement: 1970”
|
|
|
T
|
|
Box
3
Folder
2
|
“Talking with the PLO,” 1976
|
|
Box
3
Folder
2
|
“Teach-ins on Southern Africa,” 1966
|
|
Box
3
Folder
2
|
“The Theory and Practice of Deterrence,” 1962
|
|
Box
3
Folder
2
|
“This Game of Strategy,” 1962
|
|
Box
3
Folder
2
|
“Toward a Decent Manifest Destiny,” 1965
|
|
Box
3
Folder
2
|
“Toward a Democratic Futurism”
|
|
Box
3
Folder
2
|
“Toward a Palestinian State,” 1976
|
|
Box
3
Folder
2
|
“Toward Parent-coop Schools?”
|
|
Box
3
Folder
2
|
“Toward the Unarmed Forces of the United States,” 1965
|
|
Box
3
Folder
2
|
“The Twin Crises,” 1964
|
|
Box
3
Folder
2
|
“Two Proposals for a Year of Jubilee: in Israel and America”
|
|
Box
3
Folder
3
|
“Toward a Peacekeeper's Academy”
|
|
|
U
|
|
Box
3
Folder
4
|
“U.N.E.F. and the Middle East”
|
|
Box
3
Folder
4
|
“Unintended War,” 1962
|
|
|
V
|
|
Box
3
Folder
5
|
“Victories for Liberty through World Disarmament,” 1965
|
|
Box
3
Folder
5
|
“A Vision of the Possible Society,” 1966
|
|
Box
3
Folder
5
|
“Voluntary National Service,” 1966
|
|
|
W
|
|
Box
3
Folder
6
|
“Washington Wages an Aggressive War”
|
|
Box
3
Folder
6
|
“Watering the Seed of Abraham and Sarah,” 1974
|
|
Box
3
Folder
6
|
“The Weaponry Revolution: Victories for Liberty through World Disarmament,” 1964
|
|
Box
3
Folder
6
|
“What I Did Last Summer”
|
|
Box
3
Folder
6
|
“Where the Peace Action Is”
|
|
Box
3
Folder
6
|
“White Draftees in the Long War against Blacks”
|
|
Box
3
Folder
6
|
“Why I Went to Jail,” 1963
|
|
Box
3
Folder
6
|
“Why Not a Peacekeepers Academy?”
|
|
Box
3
Folder
6
|
“Why We Got into Counterforce - and a Way Out,” 1962
|
|
Box
3
Folder
6
|
“Winning the Cold War in a Disarmed World”
|
|
Box
3
Folder
6
|
“World Disarmament without World Transformation,” 1963
|
|
Box
3
Folder
6
|
“World Peace: Foreign Policy or Domestic Issue,” 1964
|
|
|
Y
|
|
Box
3
Folder
7
|
“A Year Later, the Mideast Ledger,” 1974
|
|
Box
3
Folder
7
|
“Yom Kippur - Peace or War,” 1975
|
|
Box
3
Folder
7
|
“Young America's Newest Vocation,” 1965
|
|
Box
3
Folder
7
|
“Youth and the Reawakening of Judaism,” 1969
|
|
Box
3
Folder
8
|
American Academy paper
|
|
Box
3
Folder
9
|
Book reviews
|
|
Box
3
Folder
10
|
Book review correspondence
|
|
Box
3
Folder
11
|
Letters to editors
|
|
Box
3
Folder
12-13
|
Notes/Outlines
|
|
Box
3
Folder
14
|
University of Wisconsin student papers
|
|
Box
3
Folder
15
|
Untitled and miscellaneous writings
|
|
Box
3
Folder
16
|
Reviews of Waskow's writings
|
|
|
Series: Subject Files
|
|
Box
3
Folder
17
|
ACLU prison conference, 1971-1972
|
|
Box
3
Folder
18
|
Activator's Information, 1966
|
|
|
Adams Morgan Neighborhood
|
|
Box
3
Folder
19
|
Community Council correspondence, 1967-1970
|
|
Box
3
Folder
20
|
Funding
|
|
Box
3
Folder
21
|
Independents, 1967-1968
|
|
Box
3
Folder
22
|
Library report
|
|
Box
3
Folder
23
|
Mailings
|
|
Box
3
Folder
24
|
Proposal
|
|
Box
3
Folder
25
|
Ram's Horn
|
|
Box
3
Folder
26
|
Schools and Teachers
|
|
Box
3
Folder
27
|
Zoning, 1968
|
|
Box
3
Folder
28
|
Adlai Stevenson Institute, 1969, 1971
|
|
Box
3
Folder
29
|
Agency for International Development, 1969
|
|
Box
3
Folder
30
|
Akwesasne notes
|
|
Box
3
Folder
31
|
Alperovitz, Gar, 1961-1977
|
|
|
America in Hiding
|
|
Box
3
Folder
32
|
Editorial correspondence and “Shelter Madness” cover design, 1961-1962
|
|
Box
3
Folder
33
|
Outline
|
|
Box
3
Folder
34
|
Reaction
|
|
|
American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Summer Institute
|
|
Box
3
Folder
35-36
|
Papers, 1962-1963
|
|
Box
3
Folder
37-38
|
Working papers, 1962
|
|
Box
3
Folder
39
|
American Association of University Professors, 1964-1966
|
|
|
American Committee on Africa
|
|
|
Executive Board
|
|
Box
3
Folder
40-41
|
1965-1967
|
|
Box
4
Folder
1
|
1968-1969
|
|
Box
4
Folder
2
|
Mailings, 1968-1969
|
|
Box
4
Folder
3-4
|
Correspondence, 1965-1970
|
|
|
American Historical Association
|
|
Box
4
Folder
5
|
General
|
|
Box
4
Folder
6
|
Constitution
|
|
Box
4
Folder
7-10
|
Radical History Caucus, 1969-1971
|
|
Box
4
Folder
11
|
Americans for Democratic Action, 1963
|
|
Box
4
Folder
12
|
Antioch College, 1963-1966
|
|
Box
4
Folder
13
|
Anti-war
|
|
Box
4
Folder
14-19
|
Article-related correspondence, 1962-1967
|
|
Box
4
Folder
20
|
Bay Area Institute
|
|
Box
4
Folder
21a
|
Biographical miscellany
|
|
Box
4
Folder
21b
|
Bloom, Abe, 1974
|
|
Box
4
Folder
22
|
Book review correspondence, 1966-1969
|
|
Box
4
Folder
23
|
Booth, Paul, 1962-1967
|
|
Box
4
Folder
24
|
Bowman, Joan
|
|
|
Breira
|
|
Box
19
Folder
1
|
General
|
|
Box
19
Folder
2
|
Arthur Ocean Waskow activities and membership conference, 1977
|
|
Box
4
Folder
25
|
Broadcasts, 1963-1968
|
|
Box
4
Folder
26
|
Brown, Rita Mae
|
|
Box
4
Folder
27
|
Buber conference, 1975-1976
|
|
Box
4
Folder
28
|
Bulletin of Atomic Scientists, 1962-1964
|
|
Box
4
Folder
29
|
Burlage, Robb, 1962-1966
|
|
Box
4
Folder
30
|
Cambridge Institute
|
|
|
Carroll, Bernice
|
|
Box
4
Folder
31
|
Papers
|
|
Box
4
Folder
32
|
Sex discrimination case, 1972
|
|
|
Center for Emergency Support
|
|
Box
4
Folder
33
|
Organization
|
|
Box
4
Folder
34
|
Binder of mimeographed material
|
|
Box
19
Folder
3
|
Clippings
|
|
Box
4
Folder
35
|
Medical Committee
|
|
Box
4
Folder
36
|
Mass mailings
|
|
Box
4
Folder
37
|
Waskow's personal file
|
|
Box
5
Folder
1
|
Police miscellany
|
|
Box
5
Folder
2
|
Miscellaneous reference material
|
|
Box
5
Folder
3
|
Testimony
|
|
|
Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions
|
|
Box
5
Folder
4-5
|
General, 1962-1969
|
|
Box
5
Folder
6
|
Zucker-Trapnell proposals
|
|
Box
5
Folder
7
|
Civil defense correspondence, 1961-1963
|
|
Box
5
Folder
8
|
Coburn, Judy
|
|
Box
5
Folder
9-15
|
Comments and criticisms (“C&C”) about writings, 1966-1972, undated
|
|
Box
5
Folder
16
|
Committee of Correspondence
|
|
Box
5
Folder
17
|
Community for Creative Non-violence
|
|
Box
5
Folder
18
|
Committee of Returned Volunteers, 1969
|
|
|
Conference on Peace Research in History
|
|
Box
5
Folder
19-24
|
General, 1966-1971, 1973
|
|
Box
5
Folder
25
|
Aptheker, Herbert, 1968
|
|
Box
5
Folder
26
|
Bibliography
|
|
Box
5
Folder
27
|
Levin, Gordon, Conference paper
|
|
Box
5
Folder
28
|
Mimeographed mailings, 1967-1969
|
|
Box
5
Folder
29-32
|
Papers, 1967-1969, undated
|
|
Box
5
Folder
33a
|
Conference on a Unified Jewish Left, 1972-1973
|
|
|
Consortium on Peace Research, Education and Development
|
|
Box
5
Folder
33b
|
Correspondence, 1971-1975
|
|
Box
5
Folder
34
|
Mimeographed mailings
|
|
Box
5
Folder
35
|
Minutes
|
|
Box
5
Folder
36
|
Miscellany
|
|
Box
5
Folder
37
|
Coordinating Center for Education in Repression and the Law, 1971
|
|
Box
5
Folder
38
|
D.C. 9
|
|
Box
6
Folder
1
|
D.C. Lawyers Committee, 1968-1969
|
|
Box
6
Folder
2
|
D.C. statehood
|
|
Box
6
Folder
3
|
Daedalus, 1962-1963
|
|
Box
6
Folder
4
|
Davis, Rennie, 1965-1967
|
|
Box
6
Folder
5
|
Debate over thermonuclear strategy, 1964
|
|
Box
6
Folder
6
|
Dellinger, Dave, 1964-1968
|
|
|
Democratic Party national conventions
|
|
Box
6
Folder
7
|
Notes, 1964
|
|
|
1968
|
|
Box
6
Folder
8
|
Correspondence
|
|
Box
6
Folder
9
|
District of Columbia delegation
|
|
Box
6
Folder
10
|
March 22-24 meeting and mailings
|
|
Box
6
Folder
11
|
Notebook of Phil Ryan, Ramparts reporter notes
|
|
Box
6
Folder
12
|
Trial of Chicago conspirators
|
|
Box
6
Folder
13
|
Democrats for Peace and Progress, 1968
|
|
Box
6
Folder
14
|
Deterrence
|
|
Box
6
Folder
15
|
Disarmament correspondence, 1961-1963
|
|
Box
6
Folder
16
|
Draft resistance, 1967-1970
|
|
Box
6
Folder
17
|
Ecology
|
|
Box
6
Folder
18
|
Education
|
|
Box
6
Folder
19
|
Ellsberg, Daniel, 1971
|
|
Box
6
Folder
20
|
Employment, 1961-1967
|
|
Box
6
Folder
21
|
Fabrangan
|
|
Box
6
Folder
22
|
Federal employees, 1968-1971
|
|
Box
6
Folder
23
|
Food
|
|
Box
6
Folder
24
|
Foreign contacts, 1962-1968
|
|
Box
6
Folder
25
|
Free University of Florida, 1965
|
|
Box
6
Folder
26
|
Freedom Seder, 1970-1973
|
|
Box
6
Folder
27
|
Fryer, Lee, 1967
|
|
Box
6
Folder
28
|
Fulcrum Press, 1962
|
|
Box
6
Folder
29
|
Future, 1962-1974
|
|
Box
6
Folder
30
|
Games and simulation correspondence, 1968-1969
|
|
Box
6
Folder
31
|
Gingrich, Newt, 1970
|
|
|
Gitlin, Todd
|
|
Box
6
Folder
32
|
Correspondence, 1962-1967, 1973
|
|
Box
6
Folder
33
|
Writings
|
|
Box
6
Folder
34
|
Gitlin-McEldowney matter, 1965
|
|
|
Gwynn Oak Park racial protest, 1963
|
|
Box
6
Folder
35
|
Papers and clippings
|
|
Box
6
Folder
36
|
Haber, Al
|
|
Box
19
Folder
4
|
Halacha, 1975
|
|
Box
6
Folder
37
|
Harrisburg Defense Committee, 1971
|
|
Box
6
Folder
38
|
Hayden, Tom, 1962-1965
|
|
Box
6
Folder
39-46
|
History, General correspondence, 1969-1973, undated
|
|
Box
6
Folder
47
|
Hoopes, Townsend
|
|
Box
6
Folder
48
|
Hunnius, Gerry, 1966-1968
|
|
|
Institute for Policy Studies
|
|
|
General
|
|
Box
6
Folder
49-52
|
1962-1965
|
|
Box
7
Folder
1-5
|
1965-1967 March
|
|
Box
7
Folder
6-7
|
Alumni, 1967-1972, undated
|
|
Box
7
Folder
8
|
Annual report drafts
|
|
Box
7
Folder
9
|
Board, 1966-1972
|
|
Box
7
Folder
10
|
Employment inquiries
|
|
Box
7
Folder
11
|
Employment, Arthur Springer, 1964
|
|
Box
7
Folder
12
|
Encyclopedia, 1971-1973
|
|
Box
7
Folder
13
|
Expense accounts
|
|
Box
7
Folder
14
|
Freedom pamphlet series, 1967-1968
|
|
Box
7
Folder
15
|
Impeachment conference, 1973
|
|
Box
7
Folder
16-21
|
External correspondence, 1965-1970, undated
|
|
Box
7
Folder
22-37
|
Internal correspondence, 1965-1977, undated
|
|
Box
7
Folder
38
|
Labor issues, 1966-1967
|
|
Box
7
Folder
39
|
Long view proposal, 1963
|
|
Box
7
Folder
40
|
Mayday project, 1971
|
|
Box
7
Folder
41
|
Miscellany
|
|
Box
7
Folder
42
|
New Politics, Conference on, 1965
|
|
Box
7
Folder
43
|
Ph.D. program
|
|
Box
7
Folder
44
|
Police conference, 1968
|
|
|
Possible projects
|
|
Box
7
Folder
45
|
1962-1965
|
|
Box
8
Folder
1
|
1966-1967, undated
|
|
Box
8
Folder
2
|
Prison conference, 1971
|
|
Box
8
Folder
3
|
Prison project, 1971-1972
|
|
Box
8
Folder
4
|
Prison seminar, 1972
|
|
Box
8
Folder
5
|
Project reports
|
|
Box
8
Folder
6-9
|
Public information correspondence, 1964-1968
|
|
Box
8
Folder
10
|
Race
|
|
Box
8
Folder
20
|
Religious liberation, 1976
|
|
|
Seminars
|
|
|
1964
|
|
Box
8
Folder
11
|
Civil rights
|
|
Box
8
Folder
12
|
Congressional staff
|
|
|
1965
|
|
Box
8
Folder
13
|
New directions in peace policy
|
|
Box
8
Folder
14
|
Youth and politics
|
|
Box
8
Folder
15
|
1966, Revolution in the third world
|
|
Box
8
Folder
16-19
|
1966-1971, undated, General
|
|
|
Students
|
|
Box
8
Folder
21-31
|
General, 1962-1976, undated
|
|
Box
8
Folder
32
|
Miller, Ellen
|
|
Box
8
Folder
33
|
Parow, Anita
|
|
Box
8
Folder
34
|
Urban studies proposal, 1967
|
|
|
Waskow
|
|
Box
8
Folder
35
|
General
|
|
|
Memoranda
|
|
Box
8
Folder
36-40
|
1963-1969
|
|
Box
9
Folder
1-6
|
1970-1976, undated
|
|
Box
9
Folder
7
|
Women associate fellows committee
|
|
Box
9
Folder
8
|
Women's projects
|
|
Box
9
Folder
9
|
International documentation
|
|
Box
9
Folder
10
|
International Peace Force, 1962
|
|
Box
12
Folder
22
|
International Peace Research Institute-Oslo
|
|
Box
9
Folder
11-12
|
Inter-University Committee/Vietnam, 1965-1967
|
|
Box
9
Folder
13
|
Irons, Peter, 1967-1969
|
|
Box
9
Folder
14
|
“J.D.,” 1975-1976
|
|
|
Jacobs, Paul
|
|
Box
9
Folder
15
|
General, 1965-1969
|
|
Box
9
Folder
16
|
Writings
|
|
Box
9
Folder
17-18
|
Jewish Community Council, 1968-1969
|
|
Box
9
Folder
19
|
Jewish correspondence, 1975-1976
|
|
Box
9
Folder
20
|
Jewish miscellany
|
|
Box
9
Folder
21
|
Jewish Peace Fellowship, 1971-1974
|
|
|
Jews for Urban Justice
|
|
Box
9
Folder
22-25
|
Correspondence, 1968-1972, undated
|
|
Box
9
Folder
26
|
Minutes and newsletters, 1968-1969
|
|
Box
9
Folder
27
|
Report
|
|
Box
9
Folder
28
|
Jubilee year, 1976
|
|
Box
9
Folder
29
|
Juries, Political cases
|
|
|
Kastenmeier, Robert
|
|
Box
9
Folder
30-31
|
General, 1958-1971
|
|
Box
19
Folder
5
|
Memoranda, 1959-1960
|
|
Box
19
Folder
6
|
Kennedy-Citizens United for Peace (CUP), 1968
|
|
|
Kolko, Gabriel
|
|
Box
9
Folder
32
|
General
|
|
Box
9
Folder
33
|
Writings
|
|
Box
9
Folder
34
|
Kotler, Milton, 1976
|
|
Box
9
Folder
35
|
League for Industrial Democracy, 1965
|
|
Box
9
Folder
36
|
Learning community, 1970
|
|
|
Legal
|
|
Box
19
Folder
7
|
Associated Press libel suit
|
|
Box
19
Folder
8
|
Waskow v. Associated Press
|
|
Box
19
Folder
9
|
Laird suit, 1969
|
|
Box
19
Folder
10
|
Miscellany
|
|
Box
19
Folder
11
|
Pentagon arrest
|
|
Box
9
Folder
37-39
|
Letters to the editor, 1962-1973, undated
|
|
Box
19
Folder
12
|
Liberal Project group
|
|
Box
9
Folder
40
|
The Liberal Papers
|
|
|
Limits of Defense
|
|
Box
9
Folder
41-42
|
Editorial correspondence, 1961-1962
|
|
Box
10
Folder
1a
|
Public reaction, 1961-1963
|
|
Box
10
Folder
1b
|
Living Theatre, 1971
|
|
Box
10
Folder
2
|
Lynd, Staughton, 1963-1970
|
|
Box
10
Folder
3
|
Lyttle, Bradford, 1966-1970
|
|
|
Mankind 2000
|
|
Box
10
Folder
4-12
|
Correspondence, 1964-1973
|
|
Box
10
Folder
13
|
Mimeographed mailings, 1966-1967
|
|
Box
10
Folder
14
|
March on Washington, 1965
|
|
Box
10
Folder
15
|
McEldowney, Carol and Ken, 1963, 1967
|
|
Box
10
Folder
16
|
McGovern, George, 1972
|
|
Box
10
Folder
17
|
McSurely, Alan
|
|
Box
10
Folder
18
|
Meachem, Stewart, 1964-1971
|
|
Box
10
Folder
19
|
Melman, Seymour, 1962-1976
|
|
Box
10
Folder
20-21
|
Micah (kibbutz), 1969-1972
|
|
Box
10
Folder
22
|
Michael, Donald, 1956-1966
|
|
|
Middle East
|
|
Box
10
Folder
23
|
General
|
|
Box
10
Folder
24
|
Documentation about AOW activities and opinions
|
|
Box
10
Folder
25
|
Minnis, Jack, 1965
|
|
Box
10
Folder
26-28
|
Mobilization against the war in Vietnam, 1969-1970, undated
|
|
Box
10
Folder
29
|
Moratorium
|
|
|
Moses, Bob
|
|
Box
10
Folder
30
|
Correspondence, 1963-1964
|
|
Box
10
Folder
31
|
Muste, A.J., 1962-1967
|
|
Box
10
Folder
32
|
National Association of Social Workers
|
|
Box
10
Folder
33
|
National Coalition Against War, Racism, and Repression
|
|
Box
10
Folder
34-35
|
National Coalition for a New Congress, 1964
|
|
|
National Conference for New Politics
|
|
Box
10
Folder
36
|
Board minutes
|
|
|
Waskow correspondence
|
|
Box
10
Folder
37-39
|
1966-1967
|
|
Box
11
Folder
1
|
undated
|
|
Box
11
Folder
2-4
|
General, 1966-1968, undated
|
|
Box
11
Folder
5
|
Gottlieb, Sanford, paper, 1966
|
|
Box
11
Folder
6
|
Interchange, 1966
|
|
Box
11
Folder
7-8
|
National Political Alliance
|
|
Box
11
Folder
9
|
Votes
|
|
Box
24
Folder
1-2
|
Mass mailings
|
|
|
National Jewish Organizing Project
|
|
Box
11
Folder
10-12
|
Correspondence, 1969-1972
|
|
Box
11
Folder
13
|
Proposal
|
|
Box
11
Folder
14
|
National Mobilization Committee, 1967
|
|
Box
11
Folder
15
|
National Peace Action Coalition, 1971
|
|
Box
19
Folder
13
|
New American Movement
|
|
Box
11
Folder
16
|
New Classroom, 1970-1972
|
|
Box
11
Folder
17
|
New Dimensions, 1975
|
|
|
New Mobilization Committee Against the War in Vietnam
|
|
Box
19
Folder
14
|
Milwaukee Conference, 1970
|
|
Box
19
Folder
15
|
National Action Group, 1970
|
|
Box
19
Folder
16
|
Miscellany
|
|
Box
19
Folder
17
|
Washington Action Committee, 1969
|
|
Box
19
Folder
18
|
Washington mailings
|
|
Box
19
Folder
19a
|
Waskow activities, 1969-1970
|
|
|
New Party
|
|
Box
11
Folder
18
|
National Committee minutes
|
|
Box
11
Folder
19
|
Waskow activities
|
|
Box
11
Folder
20
|
Miscellany
|
|
Box
11
Folder
21
|
New University Coalition, 1968-1971
|
|
Box
11
Folder
22
|
New University Thought, 1966-1968
|
|
Box
11
Folder
23
|
New Weekly, 1968
|
|
Box
11
Folder
24
|
Newark community school, 1967
|
|
Box
11
Folder
25
|
Nonviolent resistance, 1961-1966
|
|
Box
11
Folder
26
|
Notes
|
|
|
Order and Disorder
|
|
Box
11
Folder
27
|
Editorial correspondence, 1964-1966
|
|
Box
11
Folder
28
|
Criticism and commentary, 1966
|
|
Box
11
Folder
29
|
Outlines and prospectus
|
|
Box
11
Folder
30
|
Reference material
|
|
Box
11
Folder
31
|
Osborn, Earl, 1961-1962
|
|
Box
19
Folder
19b
|
Parkmont School, 1977
|
|
Box
11
Folder
32-38
|
Peace and politics, 1961-1966, undated
|
|
|
Peace organizations
|
|
Box
11
Folder
39
|
Miscellaneous
|
|
Box
19
Folder
20
|
Noyd, Dale E., v. McNamara
|
|
|
Peace Research Institute
|
|
Box
19
Folder
21
|
Articles of incorporation, organizational material, 1962
|
|
Box
11
Folder
40
|
Administrative memoranda, 1961-1962
|
|
Box
19
Folder
22
|
Civil Defense Conference, 1962
|
|
Box
11
Folder
41
|
Arms control
|
|
|
Arms Control and Disarmament Agency project
|
|
Box
11
Folder
42
|
Report
|
|
Box
11
Folder
43
|
Conference notes
|
|
Box
11
Folder
44
|
Seminar, 1961-1962
|
|
Box
12
Folder
1-2
|
Research reports
|
|
|
Civil defense
|
|
Box
12
Folder
3
|
Conference
|
|
Box
12
Folder
4
|
Reports
|
|
Box
12
Folder
5
|
Correspondence, 1962-1963
|
|
|
Cuba missile crisis
|
|
Box
12
Folder
6
|
Statement
|
|
Box
12
Folder
7
|
Reactions to
|
|
Box
12
Folder
8
|
Cuba questionnaire
|
|
|
International police force
|
|
Box
12
Folder
9
|
General, 1962
|
|
Box
12
Folder
10
|
Report and reactions
|
|
Box
12
Folder
11
|
Lachs, Manfred, lecture, 1962
|
|
Box
12
Folder
12
|
Miscellany
|
|
Box
12
Folder
13
|
National Research Council on Peace Strategy, 1962
|
|
Box
12
Folder
14
|
Peace march study, 1962
|
|
Box
12
Folder
15
|
Peace policy seminar, 1964-1965
|
|
Box
12
Folder
16
|
Possible projects, Correspondence concerning, 1962-1963
|
|
Box
12
Folder
17-18
|
Public information, 1962-1964
|
|
Box
12
Folder
19
|
Seminars, General
|
|
Box
12
Folder
20
|
SPSSI grant funds
|
|
Box
12
Folder
21
|
Worried man conference, 1962
|
|
|
Peacemakers
|
|
Box
12
Folder
23-25
|
General, 1967-1968
|
|
Box
12
Folder
26
|
Experiment in International Living
|
|
|
Peacemakers Academy
|
|
Box
12
Folder
27
|
Meetings
|
|
Box
12
Folder
28
|
Proposals
|
|
Box
12
Folder
29
|
World Association of World Federalists
|
|
Box
12
Folder
30
|
Peck, Sidney, 1968-1970
|
|
Box
12
Folder
31
|
People Against Racism
|
|
Box
12
Folder
32
|
People for Human Rights
|
|
Box
12
Folder
33
|
People's Bicentennial
|
|
Box
12
Folder
34
|
People's Coalition for Peace and Justice
|
|
Box
12
Folder
35-36
|
Permissions to quote
|
|
Box
13
Folder
1
|
Platt, Anthony (race riots)
|
|
|
Police
|
|
Box
13
Folder
2
|
Correspondence, 1968-1970
|
|
Box
13
Folder
3
|
Ferry, W.H.
|
|
|
Gottfried, Annette
|
|
Box
13
Folder
4-6
|
General, 1968
|
|
Box
19
Folder
23
|
Oversize notes and draft fragments
|
|
Box
13
Folder
7
|
Gottshalk, Annette
|
|
Box
13
Folder
8
|
Miscellany
|
|
Box
13
Folder
9
|
Community control
|
|
Box
13
Folder
10
|
Webb, Lee, Police article
|
|
Box
13
Folder
11-15
|
Politics, 1965-1970, undated
|
|
Box
13
Folder
16
|
Politics of the Precipice, 1965-1966
|
|
Box
13
Folder
17
|
Poor People's Campaign
|
|
Box
13
Folder
18-19
|
Possible articles
|
|
Box
13
Folder
20
|
Priest, Roger
|
|
|
Prisons and prisoners
|
|
Box
13
Folder
21
|
American Friends Service Committee (AFSC)
|
|
Box
13
Folder
22
|
Alternatives to prisons
|
|
Box
13
Folder
23-24
|
Correspondence, 1971-1972, undated
|
|
Box
13
Folder
25
|
District of Columbia jails
|
|
Box
13
Folder
26
|
Malone, Joanne (research file)
|
|
Box
13
Folder
27
|
Mitford, Jessica, 1971
|
|
Box
13
Folder
28
|
Prisoners' statements and letters
|
|
Box
13
Folder
29
|
Prison law project
|
|
Box
13
Folder
30
|
Public Resource Center
|
|
Box
13
Folder
31
|
Race in the United States
|
|
|
Race riots of 1919, Dissertation research
|
|
Box
13
Folder
32
|
Correspondence, 1959-1963
|
|
|
Arkansas
|
|
Box
13
Folder
33
|
Arkansas Methodist clippings, 1919
|
|
Box
13
Folder
34
|
Photocopied correspondence, 1919-1921
|
|
|
Library of Congress notes
|
|
Box
13
Folder
35
|
Army
|
|
Box
13
Folder
36
|
Committee of 7
|
|
Box
13
Folder
37
|
Fair trial
|
|
Box
13
Folder
38
|
Fighting back
|
|
Box
13
Folder
39
|
Hill case
|
|
Box
13
Folder
40
|
Local response to National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) appeal
|
|
Box
13
Folder
41
|
Miscellany
|
|
Box
13
Folder
42
|
NAACP appeal
|
|
Box
13
Folder
43
|
NAACP pressure
|
|
Box
13
Folder
44
|
NAACP probe
|
|
Box
13
Folder
45
|
Negro equality
|
|
Box
13
Folder
46
|
“Negroes incited”
|
|
Box
13
Folder
47
|
“Non-violence, Strong cops”
|
|
Box
13
Folder
48
|
Progressive Farmers Union
|
|
Box
13
Folder
49
|
Riot
|
|
Box
13
Folder
50
|
Trial
|
|
Box
13
Folder
51
|
U.S. reaction
|
|
Box
13
Folder
52
|
Charleston, South Carolina
|
|
|
Chicago
|
|
Box
13
Folder
53
|
Militia
|
|
Box
13
Folder
54
|
Miscellany
|
|
Box
13
Folder
55
|
“NAACP and defense”
|
|
Box
13
Folder
56
|
Reaction
|
|
Box
13
Folder
57
|
Result
|
|
Box
13
Folder
58
|
Riot
|
|
Box
13
Folder
59
|
U.S. reaction
|
|
|
Chicago Commission on Race Relations
|
|
Box
13
Folder
60
|
Creation
|
|
Box
13
Folder
61
|
Finances
|
|
Box
13
Folder
62
|
Meetings
|
|
Box
14
Folder
1
|
Public report
|
|
Box
14
Folder
2
|
Research
|
|
Box
14
Folder
3
|
Reaction
|
|
Box
14
Folder
4
|
Army
|
|
Box
14
Folder
5
|
Result
|
|
Box
14
Folder
6
|
Riot
|
|
Box
14
Folder
7
|
U.S. reaction
|
|
Box
14
Folder
8
|
Empty subject categories folders
|
|
|
Knoxville
|
|
Box
14
Folder
9
|
Riot
|
|
Box
14
Folder
10
|
U.S. reaction
|
|
|
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP)
|
|
Box
14
Folder
11
|
Anti-lynch lobby
|
|
Box
14
Folder
12
|
Defenses
|
|
Box
14
Folder
13
|
Local contacts
|
|
Box
14
Folder
14
|
Opposition
|
|
Box
14
Folder
15
|
Probes
|
|
Box
14
Folder
16
|
Publicity
|
|
Box
14
Folder
17
|
Speeches
|
|
|
Omaha
|
|
Box
14
Folder
18
|
Army
|
|
Box
14
Folder
19
|
Riot
|
|
Box
14
Folder
20
|
Result
|
|
|
U.S. reaction to race riots
|
|
Box
14
Folder
21
|
General
|
|
Box
14
Folder
22
|
Accommodation
|
|
Box
14
Folder
23
|
Anti-lynch laws
|
|
Box
14
Folder
24
|
Black nation
|
|
Box
14
Folder
25
|
Bolshevik fears
|
|
Box
14
Folder
26
|
Equality (integration)
|
|
Box
14
Folder
27
|
Inequality
|
|
Box
14
Folder
28
|
Neutral police
|
|
Box
19
Folder
26
|
Notes
|
|
Box
14
Folder
29
|
Separation
|
|
Box
14
Folder
30
|
Suppression
|
|
Box
14
Folder
31
|
World view
|
|
|
From Race Riot to Sit-ins
|
|
Box
14
Folder
32
|
Book correspondence
|
|
Box
14
Folder
33
|
Editorial and review correspondence, 1965-1966
|
|
Box
14
Folder
34
|
Notes
|
|
Box
14
Folder
35
|
Outline proposal
|
|
Box
14
Folder
36-37
|
Research
|
|
Box
14
Folder
38
|
Reviews
|
|
Box
14
Folder
39
|
Radical science and technology
|
|
Box
14
Folder
40
|
Ramparts, 1965-1967
|
|
Box
14
Folder
41
|
Raskin, Marcus
|
|
Box
14
Folder
42
|
Recommendations
|
|
Box
14
Folder
43
|
Redgrave, Vanessa
|
|
Box
14
Folder
44-47
|
Rejection letters, 1961-1968
|
|
Box
14
Folder
48
|
Religious miscellany
|
|
Box
14
Folder
49-50
|
Resist, 1967-1969, undated
|
|
Box
14
Folder
51-52
|
Riesman, David, 1961-1966
|
|
Box
15
Folder
1
|
Royalties
|
|
Box
15
Folder
2
|
The Committee for a SANE Nuclear Policy (SANE)
|
|
Box
15
Folder
3
|
Selective Service and Waskow's draft status
|
|
|
Shelter Centered Society
|
|
Box
15
Folder
4
|
Correspondence, 1961
|
|
Box
15
Folder
5-6
|
Reaction
|
|
Box
15
Folder
7
|
Southern Regional Council
|
|
Box
19
Folder
24
|
Spring Mobilization Committee, 1967
|
|
Box
15
Folder
8
|
Stafford, Peter, 1966-1967
|
|
Box
15
Folder
9
|
State Historical Society of Wisconsin, 1966-1976
|
|
Box
15
Folder
10
|
Statements, Comments about, 1964-1965
|
|
|
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC)
|
|
Box
19
Folder
25
|
Photocopied correspondence, 1963-1964
|
|
Box
15
Folder
11
|
Original correspondence and mailings, 1963-1964
|
|
Box
15
Folder
12
|
Student Peace Union
|
|
|
Student strike, 1967
|
|
Box
15
Folder
13
|
Papers
|
|
Oversize Folder
|
Poster for Washington, D.C. student strike, 1968?
|
|
Box
15
Folder
14
|
Student Union for Peace Action (Canada)
|
|
|
Students for a Democratic Society (SDS)
|
|
Box
15
Folder
15
|
General
|
|
Box
15
Folder
16
|
Radical Education Project, 1967-1968
|
|
|
Talks and travel (“T&T”)
|
|
Box
15
Folder
17-30
|
1961-1968
|
|
Box
16
Folder
1-6
|
1969-1971
|
|
Box
16
Folder
7
|
Taylor, Harold, 1962-1965
|
|
Box
16
Folder
8
|
Trees for Vietnam, 1973
|
|
Box
16
Folder
9-10
|
Triple Revolution, 1964-1965
|
|
Box
16
Folder
11
|
Tzedek Tzedek
|
|
Box
16
Folder
12
|
Underdeveloped nations
|
|
Box
16
Folder
13-14
|
Unintended War, 1960-1963
|
|
Box
16
Folder
15
|
Union Graduate School
|
|
Box
16
Folder
16
|
Universities and war
|
|
Box
16
Folder
17
|
University Committee on Post-war, 1945
|
|
Box
16
Folder
18
|
University of Michigan teach-in, Questions submitted by the audience, 1965
|
|
Box
16
Folder
19-20
|
Vestermark, Seymour D., Papers on civil defense, circa 1965
|
|
|
Vietnam
|
|
Box
16
Folder
21
|
Anniversary event, 1976 April 30
|
|
Box
16
Folder
22
|
Fellowship of Reconciliation
|
|
Box
16
Folder
23
|
Miscellany
|
|
Box
16
Folder
24
|
Moratorium, 1969-1970
|
|
|
Vietnam Summer
|
|
Box
16
Folder
25
|
General
|
|
Box
16
Folder
26
|
Publications
|
|
Box
16
Folder
27
|
Vietnam Week (Canada)
|
|
Box
16
Folder
28
|
Vocations for Social Change
|
|
Box
16
Folder
29
|
Voluntary Organizations and World without War Conference, 1963-1964
|
|
Box
16
Folder
30
|
War Resisters International
|
|
Box
16
Folder
31
|
War Resisters League, 1967-1976
|
|
Box
16
Folder
32
|
War Tax Resistance
|
|
Box
16
Folder
33
|
Washington Draft Resistance Union
|
|
|
Washington Mobilization Committee
|
|
Box
16
Folder
34
|
General
|
|
Box
16
Folder
35
|
Mass mailings, 1967
|
|
Box
16
Folder
36
|
Waskow Family
|
|
Box
17
Folder
1
|
Watergate
|
|
Box
17
Folder
2
|
Weather Underground
|
|
Box
17
Folder
3
|
Webb, Lee, 1964-1966
|
|
Box
17
Folder
4
|
Weingarten, Joe
|
|
Box
17
Folder
5
|
Weisberg, Barry
|
|
|
Wickes, Marietta
|
|
Box
17
Folder
6
|
General
|
|
Box
17
Folder
7
|
Repression in Brazil, 1969
|
|
Box
17
Folder
8
|
U.S. Polices the World, 1969
|
|
Box
17
Folder
9
|
Windmiller, Marshall, 1962-1965
|
|
Box
17
Folder
10
|
Wisconsin politics, 1956-1959
|
|
Box
17
Folder
11
|
Women Strike for Peace
|
|
Box
17
Folder
12
|
Working papers, 1972, undated
|
|
Box
17
Folder
13-14
|
World Future Society, 1967-1975
|
|
Box
17
Folder
15
|
World Law Fund script contest, 1968
|
|
|
Worried Man's Guide
|
|
Box
17
Folder
16
|
Comments, 1963
|
|
Box
17
Folder
17
|
Correspondence, 1962
|
|
Box
17
Folder
18
|
Reaction
|
|
Box
18
Folder
1
|
Prospectus
|
|
Box
18
Folder
2
|
“Alperovitzing”
|
|
|
Reference files
|
|
Box
18
Folder
3
|
Direct action
|
|
Box
18
Folder
4
|
Elections
|
|
Box
18
Folder
5
|
Iowa City consensus on international affairs, 1962
|
|
Box
18
Folder
6
|
Lobbying
|
|
Box
18
Folder
7
|
Miscellany and notes
|
|
|
People to People
|
|
Box
18
Folder
8
|
General
|
|
Box
19
Folder
27
|
Oversize material
|
|
Box
18
Folder
9
|
Policy and the American mood
|
|
Box
18
Folder
10
|
Policy and U.S. government
|
|
Box
18
Folder
11
|
Propaganda
|
|
Box
18
Folder
12
|
Research
|
|
Box
18
Folder
13
|
Yippies
|
|
Box
18
Folder
14
|
Young, Allen
|
|
|
Younger, J. Arthur
|
|
Box
18
Folder
15
|
General
|
|
Box
18
Folder
16
|
Research about Younger for Keating, 1966
|
|
Box
18
Folder
17-18
|
Youth, 1965-1966
|
|
|
Series: Reference Files
|
|
Box
20
Folder
1
|
Adlai Stevenson Institute
|
|
Box
20
Folder
2
|
Africa
|
|
Box
20
Folder
3
|
American deserters in Sweden
|
|
Box
20
Folder
4
|
American Psychological Association
|
|
Box
20
Folder
5
|
American Orthopsychiatric Association
|
|
Box
20
Folder
6
|
Anti-war
|
|
Box
20
Folder
7
|
Appleseed
|
|
Box
20
Folder
8
|
Bacterial Warfare
|
|
Box
20
Folder
9
|
Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation
|
|
|
Civil Defense
|
|
Box
20
Folder
11-13
|
General, 1962
|
|
Box
20
Folder
14
|
Sweden, 1963
|
|
Box
20
Folder
15
|
Miscellaneous information
|
|
Box
20
Folder
16
|
COFO
|
|
Box
20
Folder
17
|
Cuba
|
|
Box
20
Folder
18
|
Cuban Missile Crisis
|
|
Box
20
Folder
19
|
Project DAIS
|
|
Box
20
Folder
20
|
Democratic convention, 1968
|
|
|
Deterrence
|
|
Box
20
Folder
21
|
General
|
|
Box
20
Folder
22
|
Melman, Seymour
|
|
|
Disarmament
|
|
Box
20
Folder
23
|
1958-1963
|
|
Box
20
Folder
24
|
undated
|
|
Box
20
Folder
25
|
Draft, 1967-1968
|
|
Box
20
Folder
26
|
Economic development, 1963
|
|
Box
20
Folder
27
|
Fallout shelters, 1961
|
|
Box
20
Folder
28
|
Food, 1963-1975
|
|
Box
20
Folder
29
|
Free universities
|
|
|
Future
|
|
Box
21
Folder
1
|
General
|
|
Box
21
Folder
2
|
Conferences
|
|
Box
21
Folder
3-4
|
Papers
|
|
Box
21
Folder
5
|
Syllabus/bibliography
|
|
|
Games and simulation
|
|
Box
21
Folder
6
|
Arms control game, 1962
|
|
Box
21
Folder
8-9
|
General, 1966, 1968-1970
|
|
Box
21
Folder
7
|
Northwestern, 1966-1969
|
|
Box
21
Folder
10
|
Western Behavior Institute
|
|
Box
21
Folder
11
|
History
|
|
Box
21
Folder
12
|
Impeachment
|
|
Box
21
Folder
13
|
Institute for the Future
|
|
Box
21
Folder
14
|
Institute of Race Relations
|
|
Box
21
Folder
15
|
International Peace Research Institute-Oslo, 1966-1967
|
|
Box
21
Folder
16
|
International Police Force
|
|
Box
21
Folder
17
|
Jewish studies
|
|
Box
21
Folder
18
|
Liberation News Service
|
|
Box
21
Folder
19
|
Menninger, Roy
|
|
Box
21
Folder
20
|
Michigan v. Sinclair marijuana conviction
|
|
|
Middle East
|
|
Box
22
Folder
1
|
1969-1971
|
|
Box
21
Folder
21-22
|
1975-1976
|
|
Box
22
Folder
2
|
1975-1976
|
|
Box
22
Folder
3
|
Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party, 1964
|
|
Box
22
Folder
4-5
|
Mobilization against the war, General
|
|
Box
22
Folder
6
|
Negro Colleges and civil disturbances
|
|
Box
22
Folder
7
|
New universities, 1965
|
|
Box
22
Folder
8
|
New University Conference
|
|
Box
22
Folder
9
|
Non-violent resistance, 1962
|
|
Box
22
Folder
10
|
Peace and politics
|
|
Box
22
Folder
11
|
Peace organizations
|
|
|
Peace research
|
|
Box
22
Folder
12
|
General information
|
|
Box
22
Folder
13
|
Elsewhere, 1962-1963
|
|
Box
22
Folder
14
|
Peacekeeping information, 1969
|
|
|
Police
|
|
Box
22
Folder
15
|
General
|
|
Box
22
Folder
16
|
Speeches/papers
|
|
Box
22
Folder
17
|
U.S. Polices the World
|
|
Box
22
Folder
18
|
Innovation
|
|
Box
22
Folder
19
|
Latin America
|
|
Box
22
Folder
20
|
Great Britain
|
|
Box
22
Folder
21
|
International Association of Chiefs of Police
|
|
Box
22
Folder
22
|
District of Columbia
|
|
Box
22
Folder
23
|
Brandeis Institute on Violence
|
|
Box
22
Folder
24
|
University of Chicago report
|
|
Box
22
Folder
25-28
|
Liberal police control research material on Detroit, 1943
|
|
Box
23
Folder
1
|
Poverty
|
|
Box
23
Folder
2
|
Prisons and prisoners
|
|
Box
23
Folder
3
|
Analysis
|
|
Box
23
Folder
4
|
Greenberg, David
|
|
Box
23
Folder
5
|
Support groups
|
|
Box
23
Folder
6
|
Prisoners
|
|
Box
23
Folder
7
|
Quakers and Non-violence
|
|
|
Race in the U.S.
|
|
Box
23
Folder
8-10
|
General, 1963-1967
|
|
Box
23
Folder
11
|
Los Angeles Race Riot study, 1967
|
|
Box
23
Folder
12
|
Revolutionary Youth Movement
|
|
Box
23
Folder
13
|
Statements
|
|
Box
23
Folder
14
|
Students for a Democratic Society
|
|
Box
23
Folder
15
|
Theology in the Americas
|
|
Box
23
Folder
16
|
Turn Toward Peace
|
|
Box
23
Folder
17-20
|
Underdeveloped World, 1965-1970
|
|
Box
23
Folder
30-31
|
Unidentifiable materials
|
|
Box
23
Folder
21
|
USSR
|
|
Box
23
Folder
22
|
Vietnam
|
|
Box
23
Folder
23
|
War Resisters' International
|
|
Box
23
Folder
24
|
Women Strike for Peace
|
|
Box
23
Folder
25
|
Women's movement
|
|
|
Youth
|
|
Box
23
Folder
26
|
Flacks, Richard, Paper
|
|
Box
23
Folder
27-29
|
General
|
|
PH 6607
|
Series: Visual Materials
|
|
|
Prints and ephemera
|
|
Folder
1
Item
1-3
|
Campaign for Global Justice torture protest, Philadelphia, 1976
|
|
Folder
1
Item
4
|
Gwynn Oaks demonstrators probably including Waskow, 1962 : AP Wire Service Photograph.
|
|
Folder
1
Item
5
|
Bob Moses, director of the Mississippi Voter Registration Project
|
|
Folder
1
Item
6
|
Waskow, early 1960s
|
|
Folder
1
Item
16-17
|
Waskow, 1969, undated
|
|
|
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee
|
|
Folder
1
Item
7-10
|
Jail conditions in Leesburg, Georgia for girls arrested for demonstrating in Americus, Georgia, 1963
|
|
Folder
1
Item
11
|
Alabama state patrolmen, Birmingham, Alabama
|
|
Folder
1
Item
12-15
|
Demonstrators and demonstration, Danville, Virginia, 1963
|
|
|
Negatives
|
|
Envelope
1
|
Gwynn Oaks demonstrators probably including Waskow, 1962 : AP Wire Service Photograph.
|
|
|