
Guide to the Arnie Goldwag Brooklyn Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) collection ARC.002
128 Pierrepont Street
Brooklyn, NY, 11201
718-222-4111
library@brooklynhistory.org
Brooklyn Historical Society
Collection processed by Larry Weimer
This finding aid was produced using the Archivists' Toolkit
on May 19, 2011
English using Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Descriptive Summary
Creator: | Committee for Peace Organization. |
---|---|
Creator: | Congress of Racial Equality. Brooklyn Chapter. |
Creator: | Congress of Racial Equality. |
Creator: | End the Draft Committee. |
Creator: | Goldwag, Arnold |
Title: | Arnie Goldwag Brooklyn Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) collection |
Dates [inclusive]: | 1943-2007 |
Dates [bulk]: | Bulk, 1961-1971 |
Abstract: | The Arnie Goldwag Brooklyn Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) collection consists principally of the subject files concerning 1960s civil rights activism maintained by Arnie Goldwag, an officer of Brooklyn CORE during the first half of the 1960s. These files include correspondence, newsletters, event announcements (e.g., fliers), directions for demonstrators, photographs, press releases, clippings, and other documents related to many of the actions conducted by Brooklyn CORE, particularly for the period 1961-1965. Actions represented in the collection include those protesting discrimination in employment, housing, schools, and the like, including the controversial initiative to block traffic in connection with the opening of the 1964 World's Fair. The collection also includes reminiscences by Goldwag and other CORE members looking back from the 1990s and 2000s. In addition to Brooklyn CORE-related material, the collection includes material related to other 1960s activist groups, including those involved with civil rights, Vietnam War opposition, and draft resistance, among others. |
Quantity: | 13.75 Linear feet in 13 manuscript boxes, 5 record cartons, and 2 artifact boxes |
Call Phrase: | ARC.002 |
Biographical/Historical note
Arnold (Arnie) Stanley Goldwag was born on January 18, 1938. A resident of Brooklyn, Goldwag attended Brooklyn College beginning in 1955 where he held leadership positions in a range of organizations, including social fraternities, student government, and student rights groups. He left Brooklyn College about 1961 without graduating, though he was readmitted in 1966 and graduated in 1968.
While still at Brooklyn College in the late 1950s, Goldwag became involved in the activities of the Brooklyn chapter of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), starting with distributing fliers urging a boycott of Woolworth's. His role in the chapter expanded quickly, and in the years of Goldwag's active participation in CORE (1960-1965), he held leadership positions, principally as the Community Relations Director. In this position, Goldwag was responsible for press relations, publicity, and coordination with communities and demonstrators on the organization's direct actions. Over the course of his tenure in Brooklyn CORE, Goldwag participated in a number of actions, both locally, such as the 1963 Board of Education sit-in, and nationally, such as in Cambridge, Maryland, where Goldwag was involved in CORE's effort to desegregate public facilities. Goldwag's activism led to several arrests and a 13 month prison sentence in 1964; he served one month of the sentence in Rikers Island penitentiary.
Founded in Chicago in 1942, CORE was centered on the principles of interracial, nonviolent direct action. Local chapters that affiliated with national CORE had a great deal of autonomy of action. Within this structure, Brooklyn CORE emerged in the early 1960s as one of the most radical CORE chapters, focusing on the living conditions of poor African-Americans in Bedford-Stuyvesant and employing increasingly aggressive confrontational tactics. It was during this surging radical activism in Brooklyn CORE that Goldwag was a central figure in the chapter and in its many civil rights actions. Indeed, Goldwag was a principal creator of one of Brooklyn CORE's most controversial actions, the Stall-In at the opening of the 1964 World's Fair. This action, which called for the deliberate blockage of automobile traffic headed to the Fair in order to call attention to discrimination against African-Americans, led to the suspension of the chapter by CORE.
Subsequent to his days with CORE, which ended in 1965, and his 1968 graduation from Brooklyn College, Goldwag went to work for the New York City Human Resources Administration as a contract manager for home care programs. In the 1990s he went on leave to work for his union (Social Service Employees Union Local 371) as Health and Safety Coordinator. In the 1990s and 2000s, Goldwag was actively engaged in ensuring that the civil rights movement was remembered, and its continued struggle recognized. He participated in a number of conferences and oral histories, and opened his files to researchers. Arnie Goldwag died on August 9, 2008.
Scope and Contents
The Arnie Goldwag Brooklyn Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) collection consists principally of the subject files concerning 1960s civil rights activism maintained by Arnie Goldwag, an officer of Brooklyn CORE during the first half of the 1960s. These files include correspondence, newsletters, event announcements (e.g., fliers), directions for demonstrators, photographs, press releases, clippings, and other documents related to many of the actions conducted by Brooklyn CORE, particularly for the period 1961-1965. Actions represented in the collection include those protesting discrimination in employment, housing, local government services, schools, and the like. The collection includes actions, such as the Stall-In at the 1964 World's Fair, aimed at calling attention to discrimination practiced in Brooklyn and in the metropolitan New York City area, as well as participation in nationally-oriented initiatives, such as the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom.
While the collection documents Brooklyn CORE's actions as an organization, it also documents the intersection of activism with the life of an important activist, Arnie Goldwag. The collection includes documentation of Goldwag's student years at Brooklyn College, his military draft status, arrest records, correspondence written to him while in Rikers Island prison, his reflections on his CORE activism, and other material. In addition, personal correspondence to Goldwag from other former CORE activists often include reflections on their activism.
The collection holds little or no material on CORE from the years after 1965, and little material generally from the 1970s and 1980s. Nevertheless, the collection holds material from the 1980s-2000s that concern reunions, memorials, reminiscences, research papers, and other reflections on CORE, the civil rights struggle, and its continuing legacy.
In addition to Brooklyn CORE, there is material in the collection from other national and New York organizations concerned with civil rights actions, including the Student NonViolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and Harlem Parents Committee, among others. There is also material from the mid to late 1960s concerning anti-Vietnam War and anti-draft matters, including newsletters from the Brooklyn-based organizations End the Draft and Committee for Peace Organization. The collection also includes photocopies of New York City Police Department reports concerning the activities of CORE and other organizations from the 1960s and early 1970s.
Finally, the collection includes a selection of books and pamphlets from Arnie Goldwag's library and lapel pins and buttons from election campaigns, anti-war demonstrations, union activities, etc. collected by Goldwag.
Arrangement note
The collection is organized in two series: Subject Files and Books.
Access Points
Subject Names
- Goldwag, Arnold
- Lynn, Conrad J.
- Mitchell, David Henry
- Owens, Major R., (Major Robert Odell)
Document Type
- Books
- buttons (information artifacts)
- Clippings (information artifacts)
- Correspondence
- Fliers (printed matter)
- lapel pins
- leaflet (printed work)
- Pamphlets
- Photocopies
- Photographs
- Press releases
Subject Organizations
- Alliance for Jobs or Income Now (New York, N.Y.).
- Brooklyn Civil Rights Defense Committee (Brooklyn, New York, N.Y.).
- Congress of Racial Equality. Brooklyn Chapter.
- Congress of Racial Equality.
- Freedom & Peace Party of New York State.
- Harlem Parents Committee.
- Metropolitan Council on Housing (New York, N.Y.).
- New York World's Fair (1964-1965).
- Peace and Freedom Party (U.S.).
- Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (U.S.).
- Youth Against War & Fascism.
Subject Topics
- African Americans -x Civil rights -- New York (State) -- New York
- African Americans -x Education -- New York (State) -- New York
- African Americans -x Employment -- New York (State) -- New York
- African Americans -- New York (State) -- New York
- Civil disobedience -- New York (State) -- New York
- Civil rights demonstrations -- New York (State) -- New York
- Civil rights movements -- New York (State) -- New York
- Civil rights workers -- New York (State) -- New York
- De facto school segregation -- New York (State) -- New York
- Discrimination in employment -- New York (State) -- New York
- Discrimination in housing -- New York (State) -- New York
- Discrimination in public accommodations -- Maryland -- Cambridge
- Government, Resistance to -- New York (State) -- New York
- March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, Washington, D.C., 1963
- Minorities -x Civil rights -- New York (State) -- New York
- Police patrol -- Surveillance operations
- Race discrimination -- New York (State) -- New York
- Rent strikes -- New York (State) -- New York
- Reunions
- Tenants' associations -- New York (State) -- New York
Subject Places
- Bedford-Stuyvesant (New York, N.Y.)
- Brooklyn (New York, N.Y.)
- Brooklyn (New York, N.Y.) |x History |v Archival resources.
- Harlem (New York, N.Y.)
- New York (N.Y.)
- New York (N.Y.) |x History |v Archival resources
Subject Uniform Title(s)
- Children's rights report
- Downdraft
- Ergo (Brooklyn, New York, N.Y.)
Administrative Information
Conditions Governing Access
The collection is open to researchers without restriction.
Conditions Governing Use note
The collection includes a wide range of materials, most of which BHS does not hold reproduction rights to. Permission to publish or reproduce must be secured from the repository and the copyright holder.
Preferred Citation
Identification of item, date (if known); Arnie Goldwag Brooklyn Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) collection, ARC.002, Box and Folder number; Brooklyn Historical Society.
Immediate Source of Acquisition note
The bulk of the collection was donated to the Brooklyn Historical Society in 2009 by Gilda Goldwag, the wife of the late Arnie Goldwag. A second donation of some additional correspondence was made by Ms. Goldwag in 2010.
Processing Information note
The collection was processed by Larry Weimer in January 2011. The collection combines two accessions: 2009.007 and 2010.004.
Container List
Series 1: Subject Files, 1950-2007. 7.25 Linear feet
Arrangement noteOverall series arrangement Arnie Goldwag's files were in no overall order when accessioned by BHS. Accordingly, the arrangement of this series was imposed by the archivist. The arrangement is roughly thematic and chronological. The series opens with files that focus principally on CORE actions from 1961-1965, which was the period of Goldwag's main involvement with the organization. These files move from actions concerning local New York City area matters (e.g., local discrimination in housing, employment, education, etc.) to actions with a national orientation (e.g., support for civil rights in the South). Following the files that tend to have a focus on particular actions are those that hold newsletters, clippings, and other material concerned with various CORE and Brooklyn CORE matters. Following the CORE-oriented segment is a small number of folders that relate to other activist organizations and subjects dating from the 1960s and 1970s. Following these are photocopies of New York City police reports on demonstrations and other actions by various groups, including CORE, from throughout the 1960s. The series then turns to files that have an emphasis on Goldwag himself, including matters concerning his education at Brooklyn College, imprisonment at Rikers Island penitentiary, and other matters at the intersection of his activism and his personal life. The series closes with files dating from the 1980s-2000s that concern reunions, memorials, reminiscences, research papers, and other reflections on CORE, the civil rights struggle, and its continuing legacy. As sharp as these dividing lines might appear, the researcher should be aware that there is a fair amount of overlapping material throughout the series so the arrangement described here should not be taken as rigid. Folder content and descriptions Although Goldwag's files were in no overall order, the bulk of the material was found in folders as labeled by Goldwag. All folder descriptions used by Goldwag were transcribed by the archivist to new archival folders and, with minor exception, content was left in the folder as Goldwag had it. To the extent that the archivist added clarifications to Goldwag's descriptions, these clarifications were shown in [brackets]. Non-substantive changes to labels (e.g., the original "Imp Assoc" rendered by the archivist as "Improvement Association") were not bracketed. Also shown in [brackets] were folder descriptions assigned by the archivist to material found in unlabeled folders or as loose material. Material found loose or in unlabeled folders was not combined by the archivist with materials on the same or similar topic from a Goldwag-labeled folder. Some of Goldwag's folder descriptions included date ranges, and these were transcribed by the archivist to the new folders. However, these dates often were not entirely consistent with the folder's contents. Accordingly, the archivist also noted on all folders, below the description, the date range observed during processing; only the observed date range is included in the finding aid's container list. Generally, the archivist discarded Goldwag's original folders because of their poor condition. However, in some instances the original folders had notations other than the label written on them. For these, either the original folder was retained within the new archival folder or, more commonly because of the poor condition of the original, a photocopy of the notation was retained. Many of the folders contained newspaper clippings or other documents that had been taped or glued to paper backing that had contextual information (e.g., dates) written on it by Goldwag. Because the document had fallen away from the backing over time, the archivist photocopied the two documents together to show their original relationship. Generally in the case of text-only clippings, the originals were then discarded. Any photocopies made by the archivist and placed in the collection were noted as such in [brackets] on the copy; the notation [CPBA] found on many copies is an acronym for "clipping photocopied by archivist." Photocopies with no bracketed annotations were in the original Goldwag material.
Scope and ContentsSubject Files principally includes correspondence, newsletters, event announcements (e.g., fliers), directions to demonstrators, photographs, press releases, clippings, and other documents related to Brooklyn CORE's civil rights activism, particularly for the period 1961-1965. The documents in the series reflect actions on a number of fronts. Protests over garbage (Operation Clean Sweep), apartment/housing conditions, traffic, police brutality, and other problems facing the local community are well-represented, especially for the Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn. Actions confronting employment discrimination are included, such as those involving Sealtest, Schaefer, White Castle, construction jobs at Downstate Medical Center, and Ebinger Baking; a copy of the signed agreement with Ebinger Baking concerning hiring of African-Americans and Puerto Ricans is in the series. The series includes much on protests against de facto school segregation, including actions such as Operation Shutdown and Elaine and Jerome Bibuld's efforts to move their children from an underperforming minority-majority school to a more effective school. The series includes material on the Stall-In, Brooklyn CORE's well-publicized plan to back up traffic at the opening of the 1964 World's Fair as a protest against employment and other forms of discrimination. Brooklyn CORE's response to national events is also documented. Responses included participation in the 1962 Freedom Highways program (CORE's challenge to segregated facilities), Operation Federal Intervention in Georgia (FIG), and the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. Local actions, including a call for a Christmas shopping boycott, in response to the church bombing and murder of children in Birmingham are represented. Letters written to editors and others protesting cultural imagery/representations of African-Americans in the press, comic strips, etc. are in the series. In addition to Brooklyn CORE, other New York-area CORE chapters and organizations, such as the Harlem Parents Committee and the Metropolitan Council on Housing, were involved in the actions of the early 1960s, and the series includes documents related to them as well. Documents from national CORE, such as committee minutes, and national groups, especially the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), are included to a limited extent in the series. The series also includes files that illuminate the human dimensions of civil rights activism, in the person of Arnie Goldwag. The series includes Goldwag's files of his activism at Brooklyn College in the late 1950s, his mid-1960s readmission and graduation, his selective service (draft) card, draft induction notice, and record of arrests principally during various civil rights actions. The series includes correspondence sent to Goldwag while he was in Rikers Island penitentiary and his reflections on CORE while in prison, as well as other correspondence to Goldwag from friends and family. The focus of Subject Files on CORE actions centers on the first half of the 1960s; there is little material on CORE actions from later periods. Nevertheless, other local organizations continue to be represented through the 1960s, especially Vietnam War opposition/peace organizations such as End the Draft (ETD) and Committee for Peace Organization (CPO). Several of ETD's newsletter, downdraft, and CPO's newsletter, ergo, are in the series. Many documents relate to the military draft refusal trial of David Henry Mitchell, including End the Draft's downdraft commentary. Mitchell's lawyer was Conrad J. Lynn, the African-American civil rights attorney; Lynn also represented Goldwag in at least some of his legal matters, so documents prepared by Lynn on Goldwag's behalf are in the series. Nonetheless, with some exceptions, such as material related to Major Owens's 1986 congressional campaign, the series holds very little material from the 1970s and 1980s. Picking up in the 1990s and 2000s, the series includes memorials, tributes, obituaries, reminiscences, historical research papers, interviews, reunions, and other such material as Goldwag and other former CORE activists reflected back on their 1960s activism. The series also holds many photocopies of police reports, notably from the New York City Bureau of Special Services, concerning protests, demonstrations, meetings, and other events held by CORE and other organizations in New York throughout the 1960s and into the early 1970s. These were presumably obtained by Goldwag in the 1990s or later in response to disclosure requests; a copy of at least one such request from Goldwag is in the series. Finally, the series holds a variety of lapel pins and buttons from election campaigns, anti-war demonstrations, union activities, and other matters. |
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Container 1 | Container 2 | Title | Date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Box: 1 | Folder : 1 | Housing Sit-Ins (Misc), Etc. |
1961-1964 | |
Box: 1 | Folder : 2 | Whitings - Housing |
1962-1963 | |
Box: 1 | Folder : 3 | Brooklyn, Etc. Rent Strikes; Rent Control |
1963-1964 | |
Box: 1 | Folder : 4 | Rent Strike |
1963-1964 | |
Box: 1 | Folder : 5 | Garbage [Bed-Stuy] |
1950, 1962-1963 | |
Box: 1 | Folder : 6 | Traffic - Bed-Stuy |
1963 | |
Box: 1 | Folder : 7 | Community Problems - Misc |
1962-1964 | |
Box: 1 | Folder : 8 | Employment Misc |
1963-1965 | |
Box: 1 | Folder : 9 | Ebingers [Employment] |
1962-1963 | |
Box: 1 | Folder : 10 | White Castle - Bronx, Brooklyn, N.J. |
1963-1965 | |
Box: 1 | Folder : 11 | [Mayor's Action Panel - Union Hiring Recommendations] |
1963 | |
Box: 1 | Folder : 12 | Flower and Fifth, Beth-El, Bronxville [Hospitals] |
1962-1965 | |
Box: 1 | Folder : 13 | Harlem Hospital |
1963 | |
Box: 1 | Folder : 14-16 | Downstate Medical Center [and other actions] - Lists, Etc. (3 folders) |
1963-2003 | |
Box: 1 | Folder : 17 | Civil Liberties, Religious Freedom, Academic Freedom |
1963-1965 | |
Box: 2 | Folder : 1 | Jones Beach (L.I. CORE) |
1963 | |
Box: 2 | Folder : 2 | Long Beach (L.I. CORE) |
1963 | |
Box: 2 | Folder : 3 | Board of Ed - [Elizabeth] Weeks, [Leonard] Morris |
1963 | |
Box: 2 | Folder : 4 | Board of Ed - Bibuld - Leaflets, Etc. |
1962-1963 | |
Box: 2 | Folder : 5 | Board of Ed - Bibuld |
1962-1963 | |
Box: 2 | Folder : 6 | Board of Ed - Sit-Ins (Dec 16 and 30) |
1963-1964 | |
Box: 2 | Folder : 7 | [School] Boycott (Sept 9, 1963 and Feb 3, 1964), and 275 [Junior High School Integration] |
1963-1964 | |
Box: 2 | Folder : 8 | [School] Boycott #2 (March 16) |
1964 | |
Box: 2 | Folder : 9 | Schools - Misc Including PAT, Picketing, Etc. |
1963-1964 | |
Box: 2 | Folder : 10 | Operation Shutdown |
1964-1966 | |
Box: 3 | Folder : 1 | Imagery |
1963-1966 | |
Box: 3 | Folder : 2 | Misc Brutality Cases - NYC Police Dept |
1963-1964 | |
Box: 3 | Folder : 3 | Morris Lewis [Shot by Police, Brooklyn] |
1963 | |
Box: 3 | Folder : 4 | CORE Picketing Etc. of Police Dept |
1963-1964 | |
Box: 3 | Folder : 5 | Riots - Harlem, Philadelphia, Bedford-Stuyvesant |
1964-1966 | |
Box: 3 | Folder : 6 | Independent Community Improvement Assoc - 125th St Boycott |
1964 | |
Box: 3 | Folder : 7 | [Correspondence re: CORE Actions] |
1963-1964 | |
Box: 3 | Folder : 8 | Freedom Ride - Rallies, Film, Etc. and Freedom Highways |
1961-1962, 1965, 2001 | |
Box: 3 | Folder : 9 | Cambridge, Maryland [Segregated Facilities] |
1962-1963 | |
Box: 3 | Folder : 10 | KKK - WCC - PAT, Etc. |
1961-1965 | |
Box: 3 | Folder : 11 | House UnAmerican Activities Committee - Activities, Etc. (HUAC) |
circa 1961-1966 | |
Box: 3 | Folder : 12 | Demonstrations - Philadelphia [Chester]; N.J. |
1962-1965 | |
Box: 3 | Folder : 13 | Birmingham |
1963 | |
Box: 3 | Folder : 14 | Christmas Buying Boycott |
1963-1964 | |
Box: 3 | Folder : 15 | Bill Moore [Murder], Freedom March |
1963 | |
Box: 3 | Folder : 16 | [March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom] |
1963, 2003 | |
Box: 4 | Folder : 1 | March on Washington (Aug 20, 1963), Also Walk Brooklyn - DC |
1963-1964, 2003 | |
Box: 4 | Folder : 2 | [March on Washington, photocopies of 1963 documents] |
circa 2003 | |
Box: 4 | Folder : 3 | Southern Phenomena [Anti-discrimination Actions] |
1960-1965 | |
Box: 4 | Folder : 4 | Mississippi (Including Medgar Evers) |
1963-1966 | |
Box: 4 | Folder : 5 | Black Power, White Power, Jewish Power,Italian, etc. |
circa 1963-1966, 1989 | |
Box: 4 | Folder : 6 | Selma, Alabama |
1965 | |
Box: 4 | Folder : 7 | Misc Politics |
1962-1977 | |
Box: 4 | Folder : 8 | [Brooklyn CORE Actions] |
1961-1964 | |
Box: 4 | Folder : 9-10 | [Event Announcements, Newsletters, Correspondence, Programs, Clippings, etc.] (2 folders) |
1962-1964 | |
Box: 5 | Folder : 1 | Clippings |
1962-1965 | |
Box: 5 | Folder : 2-6 | [Clippings] (5 folders) |
1963-1964 | |
Box: 5 | Folder : 7 | [Clippings] |
1963-1964, 1966 | |
Box: 5 | Folder : 8 | [Clippings and Other Documents] |
1962-1964, 1989 | |
Box: 5 | Folder : 9 | Brooklyn CORE Newsletters (1 of 3) |
1961-1965, 1967 | |
Box: 5 | Folder : 10 | Brooklyn CORE Newsletters (2 of 3) |
1964 | |
Box: 6 | Folder : 1 | Brooklyn CORE Newsletters (3 of 3) |
1963, 1983-2000 | |
Box: 6 | Folder : 2 | CORE - Letterhead, Business Cards, Etc. |
circa 1963 | |
Box: 6 | Folder : 3 | Constitutions, By-Laws - Brooklyn CORE, Brooklyn College CORE, National CORE |
circa 1962-1964 | |
Box: 6 | Folder : 4 | [CORE Sit-In Songs] |
1962 | |
Box: 6 | Folder : 5 | Freedom Songs |
circa 1964 | |
Box: 6 | Folder : 6 | [CORE Chapter Chairmen and Offices] |
1964 | |
Box: 6 | Folder : 7 | CORE Conventions - Minutes, Reports, Etc. and National Action Council Minutes |
1962-1964 | |
Box: 6 | Folder : 8 | CORE Literature and Reports |
circa 1956-1966 | |
Box: 6 | Folder : 9 | In Freedom's Defense; Brooklyn Civil Rights Defense Committee Correspondence |
1964 | |
Box: 6 | Folder : 10 | [The Zealots - Pan-Semitic Brotherhood] |
circa 1964 | |
Box: 6 | Folder : 11 | RAM - Revolutionary Activity (Domestic) |
1964-1967, 1973 | |
Box: 6 | Folder : 12 | Alliance for Jobs or Income Now |
circa 1965 | |
Box: 6 | Folder : 13 | [Letters to Editor re: Malcolm X] |
1965 | |
Box: 6 | Folder : 14 | Plots - Statue of Liberty, Wilkins-Young [Assassination] |
1965-1967 | |
Box: 6 | Folder : 15 | SNCC Literature Etc. |
circa 1963-circa 1966 | |
Box: 6 | Folder : 16 | Nuclear Weapons, Fallout |
1963 | |
Box: 6 | Folder : 17 | fACTs,
ergo [Committee for Peace Organization] |
1961-1965 | |
Box: 7 | Folder : 1 | Peace, Disarmament |
circa 1963-1965 | |
Box: 7 | Folder : 2 | Dave Mitchell vs United States [Draft Resistance] |
1965-1967 | |
Box: 7 | Folder : 3 | Vietnam - Publications (From and About) |
1965-1966 | |
Box: 7 | Folder : 4 | Vietnam - Protests, Criticism |
1965-1969 | |
Box: 7 | Folder : 5 | Vietnam - The War, Internal Opposition, US Statements |
1967-1968, 1974 | |
Box: 7 | Folder : 6 | Rosenberg - Sobell Case |
1963-1967, 1975-1978, 1983-1984 | |
Box: 7 | Folder : 7 | [Dick Gregory for President Handbills] |
1968 | |
Box: 7 | Folder : 8 | [Brooklyn Committee in Defense of the Black Panthers - Statement] |
1970 | |
Box: 7 | Folder : 9 | KCLR [Community Action Group] |
1971 | |
Box: 7 | Folder : 10 | Migrant Labor, Grape Pickers, Etc., Coal Miners |
1960-1965 | |
Box: 7 | Folder : 11 | [
Unconstitutional Conditions, The Property Rights of Indigents, and Equal Protection
Analysis, paper by Alan R. Wolfson] |
1974 | |
Box: 7 | Folder : 12 | Africa, So. America, Etc., Apartheid, Colonialism, Revolution |
1977 | |
Box: 7 | Folder : 13-14 | [
Children's Rights Report, ACLU publication] (2 folders) |
1976-1979 | |
Box: 7 | Folder : 15 | [Request for Disclosure of Police Department Files] |
1986, 1991 | |
Box: 7 | Folder : 16 | [Police Reports] Metropolitan Council on Housing |
1961-1971 | |
Box: 7 | Folder : 17 | [Police Reports] Goldwag, Arnold |
1962-1971 | |
Box: 8 | Folder : 1 | [Police Reports] Harlem Hospital |
1963 | |
Box: 8 | Folder : 2 | [Police Reports] Rockaway Council of Civic Associations |
1963 | |
Box: 8 | Folder : 3 | [Police Reports] East Harlem Triangle Civic Association (including CORE, Harlem Parents,
Kinloch) |
1963-1964 | |
Box: 8 | Folder : 4 | [Police Reports] Procept |
1963-1964 | |
Box: 8 | Folder : 5 | [Police Reports] Harlem Parents Committee |
1963-1965, 1968-1969 | |
Box: 8 | Folder : 6 | [Police Reports] CORE Brooklyn - Rent Strikes and Police HQ; CORE - General |
1963-1964, 1977 | |
Box: 8 | Folder : 7 | [Police Reports] School Boycott |
1963-1965 | |
Box: 8 | Folder : 8 | [Police Reports] Mississippi Relief Committee, Mississippi-Alabama Southern Relief
Committee |
1963, 1965 | |
Box: 8 | Folder : 9 | [Police Reports] Independent Community Improvement Association |
1963, 1966 | |
Box: 8 | Folder : 10 | [Police Reports] Hotel Industry - Discrimination |
1964 | |
Box: 8 | Folder : 11 | [Police Reports] Alliance for Jobs and Income Now |
1964-1968 | |
Box: 8 | Folder : 12 | [Police Reports] Police Brutality; Core and Brooklyn Freedom Democratic Movement |
1965 | |
Box: 8 | Folder : 13 | [Police Reports] Saul Alinsky, Clergy Concerned, Citywide [Committee for Emergency
Services] |
1965-1966 | |
Box: 8 | Folder : 14 | [Police Reports] SNCC |
1965, 1974 | |
Box: 8 | Folder : 15 | [Police Reports] Rent Control |
1967 | |
Box: 8 | Folder : 16 | [Police Reports] Peace and Freedom Party, United Farm Workers |
1967-1969 | |
Box: 8 | Folder : 17 | [Police Reports] NYU - Washington Square |
1968 | |
Box: 8 | Folder : 18 | [Police Reports] Poor Peoples Campaign (ML King) |
1968 | |
Box: 8 | Folder : 19 | [Police Reports] SDS [Columbia University Community Action Committee] |
1968 | |
Box: 8 | Folder : 20 | [Police Reports] Wallace for President [Rally at Park Sheraton] |
1968 | |
Box: 8 | Folder : 21 | [Police Reports] Vietnam / Hiroshima [Protest Demonstrations] |
1968-1969 | |
Box: 8 | Folder : 22 | [Police Reports] Freedom and Peace Party |
1968-1969 | |
Box: 8 | Folder : 23 | [Police Reports] Hiroshima Week |
1969 | |
Box: 8 | Folder : 24 | [Police Reports] Youth Against War and Facism, Anti Imperialism Rally |
1968, 1970 | |
Box: 8 | Folder : 25 | [Police Reports] Cambridge, MD - [Caravan for] Justice 4 Rap Brown (Freedom and Peace
Party) |
1968-1969 | |
Box: 8 | Folder : 26 | [Police Reports] Attica Prison Riot Protest - YAWF [Youth Against War and Fascism]
and Others |
1971 | |
Box: 8 | Folder : 27-28 | [Police Reports] (2 folders) |
1962-1969, undated | |
Box: 9 | Folder : 1 | Arnie - Brooklyn College |
1956-1968 | |
Box: 9 | Folder : 2-4 | [
History and Analysis of Resistance to Military Conscription, 1863-1968, paper by Arnold Goldwag] (3 copies) |
1968 | |
Box: 9 | Folder : 5-7 | Notes and Source Material - Paper on History of the Draft - All Cases, Etc., Mitchell
[includes photocopies of material dated circa 1917-1964] (3 folders) |
circa 1968 | |
Box: 9 | Folder : 8 | The Metamorphosis of West African Religion and Culture in the Caribbean and the United
States, paper by Arnold Goldwag |
1968 | |
Box: 9 | Folder : 9 | Otis Gamm [Clippings from
Kingsman, Brooklyn College] |
1958-1961 | |
Box: 10 | Folder : 1 | People vs Goldwag - Subway |
1961 | |
Box: 10 | Folder : 2 | Select Service and Army |
1961-1963, 1967-1968 | |
Box: 10 | Folder : 3 | U.S. Post Office - Application, Papers, Transcripts, Etc. |
1963-1964 | |
Box: 10 | Folder : 4 | Violation of Probation |
1963-1964, 1966 | |
Box: 10 | Folder : 5 | Appointment Books |
1963-1964 | |
Box: 10 | Folder : 6 | [Goldwag Prison Term] |
1964 | |
Box: 10 | Folder : 7 | Rikers Island Penitentiary |
1964-1965 | |
Box: 10 | Folder : 8-11 | Personal - Correspondence (4 folders) |
1962-1980s | |
Box: 11 | Folder : 1 | [Correspondence] |
1989, 1998-2005 | |
Box: 11 | Folder : 2 | [Miscellaneous Notes] |
circa 1964-circa 2000 | |
Box: 11 | Folder : 3 | [Keypunched Cards] |
undated | |
Box: 11 | Folder : 4 | 15 Crown [Realty], Crown St. Air Pollution, Crown Auto Laundry |
1966-1968 | |
Box: 11 | Folder : 5 | Bushwick Correspondence |
1980-1983 | |
Box: 11 | Folder : 6 | Cobble Hill [-Carroll Gardens Social Service Center] |
1978-1981 | |
Box: 11 | Folder : 7 | [Major Owens] |
1986-2002 | |
Box: 11 | Folder : 8 | Marches, Demonstrations - Georgia, Wash DC, NY, Etc. |
1963, 1983-2002 | |
Box: 11 | Folder : 9 | Health, Vitamins, Etc. |
1972-2005 | |
Box: 11 | Folder : 10 | House, Outdoors, Indoors |
1983-2003 | |
Box: 11 | Folder : 11-12 | First Annual Leadership Training Institute and Civil Rights Reunion (2 folders) |
1990 | |
Box: 11 | Folder : 13 | [First Annual Leadership Training Institute and Civil Rights Reunion] |
1990-1991 | |
Box: 11 | Folder : 14 | [Isaiah House Brochure] |
circa 1990 | |
Box: 12 | Folder : 1 | [
Bloodlines, Publication of Rural Organizing and Cultural Center] |
1988, 1990 | |
Box: 12 | Folder : 2 | [
Free at Last, Publication of Southern Poverty Law Center] |
1989 | |
Box: 12 | Folder : 3 | [Freedom Riders Commemorative Conference] |
1991 | |
Box: 12 | Folder : 4 | [
Appeal to this Age: Photography of the Civil Rights Movement, Exhibition Catalog] |
1994 | |
Box: 12 | Folder : 5-7 | [CORE Reunions] (3 folders) |
1989, 1999-2000 | |
Box: 12 | Folder : 8 | [CORE Reunion and James Farmer Tribute - Member Contact Effort] |
1962, 1966, 1999 | |
Box: 12 | Folder : 9 | [Miscellaneous Civil Rights Material] |
1998, 2000 | |
Box: 12 | Folder : 10-11 | People I Know (2 folders) |
circa 1986-2003 | |
Box: 13 | Folder : 1 | Death, Obits - CORE, Union, Etc. |
circa 1985-2004 | |
Box: 13 | Folder : 2 | [James Farmer Memorials] |
1997, 1999, 2001 | |
Box: 13 | Folder : 3 | [Memorials and Tributes] |
1988-1989, 2002, 2006 | |
Box: 13 | Folder : 4 | [
Long Walk to Freedom, Exhibition Pamphlet] |
2001 | |
Box: 13 | Folder : 5-7 | [Historical Research Papers, Requests, and Proposals] (3 folders)
General noteIncludes research papers written by Brian J. Purnell concerning CORE actions. |
1985-2006 | |
Box: 13 | Folder : 8 | [Clippings] |
1983-2007 | |
Box: 14-15 | [Lapel Pins and Buttons - Elections, Anti-War, etc.] (2 boxes) |
circa 1960-circa 2000 | ||
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Series 2: Books, 1943-1993. 6.5 Linear feet
Arrangement noteThe container list is arranged in alphabetical order by author. The actual books are boxed in no particular order.
Scope and ContentsThe Books series includes published material from Arnie Goldwag's library. These are primarily non-fiction books and pamphlets concerning African-Americans, civil rights, race relations, racial violence, black militancy, social conditions, and related topics. A small number of books are inscribed to Goldwag by activists Kwane Ture (Stokely Carmichael), Jamil Al-Amin (H. Rap Brown), Dick Gregory, Gloria Richardson, and Conrad Lynn. There are a small number of issues of Landscapes and Nocturne, literary publications from Brooklyn College. |
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Container 1 | Container 2 | Title | Date | |
Box: 16 | Item : 1 | Addlestone, David F., Susan H. Hewman, et al.,
The Rights of Veterans |
1978 | |
Box: 20 | Item : 1 | Adelman, Bob,
Down Home: Camden, Alabama |
1972 | |
Box: 20 | Item : 2 | AFSCME,
Passing the Bucks |
1984 | |
Box: 20 | Item : 3 | Al-Amin, Imam Jamil (H. Rap Brown),
Revolution by the Book
General noteInscribed by author |
1993 | |
Box: 13 | Item : 1 | American Oil Company,
American Travelers Guide to Negro Monuments |
1963 | |
Box: 13 | Item : 2 | Americans for Democratic Action,
A Citizen's Guide to the Right Wing |
circa 1978 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 2 | Aptheker, Herbert,
Nat Turner's Slave Rebellion |
1968 | |
Box: 13 | Item : 3 | Aptheker, Herbert,
Heavenly Days in Dixie, or The Time of Their Lives |
1974 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 1 | Bailey, F. Lee,
The Defense Never Rests |
1972 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 2 | Beck, Robert,
The Naked Soul of Iceberg Slim |
1971 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 3 | Belfrage, Sally,
Freedom Summer |
1966 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 4 | Bennett, Jr. Lerone,
The Negro Mood |
1965 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 5 | Bernard, Mitchell, Ellen Levine, et al.,
The Rights of Single People |
1985 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 3 | Bettelheim, Bruno,
Love is Not Enough |
1965 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 6 | Bill Adler Books,
The Wisdom of Martin Luther King |
1968 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 4 | Birmingham, Stephen,
The Right People |
1969 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 7 | Blair, Jr. Clay,
The Strange Case of James Earl Ray |
1969 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 8 | Blaustein, Albert P.and Robert L. Zangrando,
Civil Rights and the American Negro |
1968 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 9 | Boggan, E. Carrington, Marilyn G. Haft, et al.,
The Rights of Gay People |
1983 | |
Box: 13 | Item : 4 | Boggs, James,
The American Revolution: Pages From a Negro Worker's Notebook |
1963 | |
Box: 17 | Item : 1 | Branch, Taylor,
Parting the Waters |
1988 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 10 | Breitman, George (ed.),
Malcolm X Speaks |
1966 | |
Box: 13 | Item : 5 | Breitman, George (ed.),
Malcolm X on Afro-American History |
1967 | |
Box: 13 | Item : 6 | Brooklyn College,
Landscapes Fall 58 |
1958 | |
Box: 13 | Item : 7 | Brooklyn College,
Landscapes Spring 58 |
1958 | |
Box: 13 | Item : 8 | Brooklyn College,
Landscapes Spring 59 |
1959 | |
Box: 13 | Item : 9 | Brooklyn College,
Nocturne Spring 1963 |
1963 | |
Box: 13 | Item : 10 | Brooklyn College,
Nocturne Spring 1967 |
1967 | |
Box: 18 | Item : 1 | Brown, Claude,
The Children of Ham |
1976 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 11 | Brown, Jr, Turner,
Black Is |
1969 | |
Box: 17 | Item : 2 | Carlson, John Roy,
Under Cover |
1943 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 5 | Carmichael, Stokely and Charles V. Hamilton,
Black Power: The Politics of Liberation |
1967 | |
Box: 17 | Item : 3 | Carroll, Ted,
White Pills |
1964 | |
Box: 20 | Item : 4 | Chapman, Abraham (ed.),
Black Voices |
1968 | |
Box: 18 | Item : 2 | Chrisman, Robert and Nathan Hare (ed.),
Contemporary Black Thought |
1973 | |
Box: 17 | Item : 4 | Clarke, John Henrik (ed.),
Harlem: A Community in Transition |
1964 | |
Box: 20 | Item : 5 | Cleaver, Eldridge,
Soul on Ice |
1968 | |
Box: 20 | Item : 6 | Cleaver, Eldridge,
Post-Prison Writings and Speeches |
1969 | |
Box: 17 | Item : 5 | Cohen, Jerry and William S. Murphy,
Burn, Baby, Burn! |
1966 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 12 | Collier, John,
Indians of the Americas |
circa 1960 | |
Box: 17 | Item : 6 | Comer, James,
Beyond Black and White |
1972 | |
Box: 18 | Item : 3 | Corwin, Norman,
Overkill and Megalove |
1963 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 6 | Countdown Mag (ed.),
Countdown 1 |
1970 | |
Box: 18 | Item : 4 | Dailey, Louis E.,
The Sin or Evils of Integration |
1962 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 7 | deCoy, Robert H.,
The Nigger Bible |
1967 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 13 | Dorman, Michael,
We Shall Overcome |
1965 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 8 | Dorson, Richard M. (ed.),
American Negro Folktales |
1967 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 9 | Douglas, William O.,
America Challenged |
1960 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 10 | Douglas, William O.,
The Right of the People |
1962 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 11 | Du Bois, W.E.B.,
John Brown |
1962 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 12 | Du Bois, W.E.B.,
An A.B.C. of Color |
1963 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 14 | Fanon, Frantz,
Black Skin, White Masks |
1968 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 15 | Fanon, Frantz,
The Wretched of the Earth |
1968 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 13 | Feldmann, Susan (ed.),
African Myths and Tales |
1963 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 14 | Franklin, John Hope (intro),
3 Negro Classics: Up from Slavery [Washington]; The Souls of Black Folk [Du Bois];
The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man [Johnson] |
1965 | |
Box: 20 | Item : 7 | Free,
Revolution for the Hell of It |
1968 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 15 | Friedman, Paul R.,
The Rights of Mentally Retarded Persons |
1976 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 16 | Galbraith, John Kenneth,
The Liberal Hour |
1964 | |
Box: 18 | Item : 5 | Gardner, John W.,
In Common Cause |
1973 | |
Box: 17 | Item : 7 | Gary, Romain,
White Dog |
1970 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 16 | Ginzburg, Ralph,
100 Years of Lynchings |
1969 | |
Box: 18 | Item : 6 | Gitlin, Todd,
The Sixties: Years of Hope, Days of Rage |
1987 | |
Box: 18 | Item : 7 | Glazer, Nathan and Daniel Patrick Moynihan,
Beyond the Melting Pot |
1967 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 17 | Goodman, Mary Ellen,
Race Awareness in Young Children |
1964 | |
Box: 17 | Item : 8 | Goodman, Paul (ed.),
Seeds of Liberation |
1964 | |
Box: 18 | Item : 8 | Gover, Robert,
Here Goes Kitten |
1964 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 17 | Grant, Joanne (ed.),
Black Protest |
1968 | |
Box: 20 | Item : 8 | Gregory, Dick,
Nigger: An Autobiography
General noteInscribed by author. |
1965 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 18 | Gregory, Dick,
The Shadow That Scares Me |
1968 | |
Box: 20 | Item : 9 | Gregory, Dick,
Write Me In!
General noteInscribed by author. |
1968 | |
Box: 20 | Item : 10 | Grier, William H. and Price M. Cobbs,
Black Rage |
1968 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 19 | Griffin, John Howard,
Black Like Me |
1962 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 20 | Guevara, Che,
Guerrilla Warfare |
1961 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 21 | Guggenheim, Martin and Alan Sussman,
The Rights of Young People |
1985 | |
Box: 17 | Item : 9 | Haley, Alex,
Roots |
1976 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 10 | Halsell, Grace,
Soul Sister |
1970 | |
Box: 18 | Item : 9 | Hentoff, Nat,
The New Equality |
1965 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 18 | Hernton, Calvin C.,
Sex and Racism in America |
1966 | |
Box: 18 | Item : 10 | Herrick, Arnold and Herbert Askwith (ed.),
This Way to Unity |
1945 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 11 | Hersey, John,
The Algiers Motel Incident |
1968 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 12 | Hirschfield, Robert S.,
The Constitution and The Court |
1965 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 13 | Holmes, Beth,
The Whipping Boy |
1979 | |
Box: 20 | Item : 11 | Hughes, Langston (ed.),
The Best Short Stories by Negro Writers |
1967 | |
Box: 18 | Item : 11 | Huie, William Bradford,
3 Lives for Mississippi |
1965 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 12 | Huie, William Bradford,
The Hiroshima Pilot |
1965 | |
Box: 18 | Item : 12 | Hunter, John Francis,
The Gay Insider/USA |
1972 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 13 | Hunter, Kristin,
The Landlord |
1969 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 14 | Jackson, George,
Soledad Brother: The Prison Letters of George Jackson |
1970 | |
Box: 17 | Item : 10 | James, Beauregard,
The Road to Birmingham |
1964 | |
Box: 20 | Item : 12 | John Birch Society,
The Blue Book of the John Birch Society |
1961 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 13 | Joseph, Stephen M. (ed.),
The Me Nobody Knows |
1969 | |
Box: 18 | Item : 13 | Kelly, Philip J.,
How to Grow Old Rebelliously |
1963 | |
Box: 20 | Item : 13 | Killens, John Oliver,
The Cotillion |
1971 | |
Box: 20 | Item : 14 | Killian, Lewis and Charles Grigg,
Racial Crisis in America |
1964 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 15 | Kohl, Herbert,
36 Children |
1968 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 16 | Kozol, Jonathan,
Death at an Early Age |
1968 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 17 | Lanternari, Vittorio,
The Religions of the Oppressed |
1965 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 18 | Lavan, George (ed.),
Che Guevara Speaks |
1968 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 19 | Lederer, William J.,
A Nation of Sheep |
1962 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 20 | Leinwand, Gerald,
Problems of American Society: The Negro in the City |
1968 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 21 | Leinwand, Gerald,
Problems of American Society: Poverty and the Poor |
1968 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 22 | Leinwand, Gerald,
Problems of American Society: Crime and Juvenile Delinquency |
1968 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 23 | Leinwand, Gerald,
Problems of American Society: The Slums |
1970 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 24 | Lester, Julius,
Look Out, Whitey! Black Power's Gon' Get Your Mama |
1969 | |
Box: 13 | Item : 11 | Levine, Roy,
The New Apology |
1960 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 12 | Lewis, Anthony,
Gideon's Trumpet |
1964 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 13 | Lewis, Oscar,
Five Families |
1959 | |
Box: 18 | Item : 14 | Lewis, Oscar,
La Vida |
1968 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 15 | Lipsyte, Robert,
The Contender |
1969 | |
Box: 20 | Item : 15 | Lomax, John A. and Alan Lomax,
Folk Song U.S.A. |
1966 | |
Box: 18 | Item : 15 | Lomax, Louis E.,
When the Word is Given . . . |
1963 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 16 | Ludwig, Bernard,
Problems of American Society: Civil Rights and Civil Liberties |
1968 | |
Box: 20 | Item : 16 | Lynn, Conrad J.,
How to Stay Out of the Army
General noteInscribed by author. |
1967 | |
Box: 20 | Item : 17 | Lyon, Danny,
Memories of the Southern Civil Rights Movement
General noteInscription on page 136 by Gloria Richardson. |
1992 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 18 | Maas, Peter,
The Valachi Papers |
1969 | |
Box: 18 | Item : 16 | Malcolm X,
The Autobiography of Malcolm X |
1965 | |
Box: 18 | Item : 17 | Marshall, Paule,
Soul Clap Hands and Sing |
1961 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 18 | Marshall, Paule,
Brown Girl, Brownstones |
1970 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 19 | Marwick, Christine M.,
Your Right to Government Information |
1985 | |
Box: 20 | Item : 18 | Meier, August and Elliot Rudwick,
CORE: A Study in the Civil Rights Movement, 1942-1968 |
1975 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 19 | Milbauer, Barbara and Gerald Leinwand,
Problems of American Society: Drugs |
1970 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 20 | Mills, C. Wright,
The Causes of World War Three |
1961 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 21 | Monte, Anita and Gerald Leinwand,
Problems of American Society: Riots |
1970 | |
Box: 18 | Item : 18 | Moody, Anne,
Coming of Age in Mississippi |
1968 | |
Box: 18 | Item : 19 | Moon, Bucklin,
The Darker Brother |
1943 | |
Box: 13 | Item : 12 | N.Y. Committee to Free Angela Davis (ed.),
Lectures on Liberation by Angela Y. Davis |
circa 1970 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 13 | National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders,
Report of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders |
1968 | |
Box: 17 | Item : 11 | National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence,
To Establish Justice, To Insure Domestic Tranquility |
1971 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 12 | Nelson, Truman,
The Torture of Mothers |
1964 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 13 | Neuborne, Burt and Arthur Eisenberg,
The Rights of Candidates and Voters |
1980 | |
Box: 18 | Item : 14 | Norfleet, Marvin Brooks,
Forced School Integration in the U.S.A. |
1961 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 15 | Norwick, Kenneth P. and Jerry Simon Chasen,
The Rights of Authors and Artists |
1984 | |
Box: 20 | Item : 19 | O'Neill, William L. (ed.),
Echoes of Revolt: The Masses, 1911-1917 |
1966 | |
Box: 20 | Item : 20 | Orben, Bob (ed.),
Dick Gregory: From the Back of the Bus |
1966 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 21 | Outten, Wayne N. and Noah A. Kinigstein,
The Rights of Employees |
1984 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 22 | Pevar, Stephen L.,
The Rights of Indians and Tribes |
1983 | |
Box: 13 | Item : 13 | Pioneer Publishers (ed.),
Two Speeches by Malcolm X |
1965 | |
Box: 18 | Item : 14 | Rainwater, Lee,
Behind Ghetto Walls |
1970 | |
Box: 18 | Item : 15 | Randall, Dudley and Margaret G. Burroughs,
For Malcolm X |
1967 | |
Box: 18 | Item : 16 | Reeves, Ambrose,
Shooting at Sharpeville |
1961 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 17 | Ritter, Bruce,
Sometimes God Has a Kid's Face |
1988 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 18 | Robertson, John A.,
The Rights of the Critically Ill |
1983 | |
Box: 18 | Item : 19 | Rogers, J.A.,
From "Superman" to Man |
1953 | |
Box: 13 | Item : 14 | Rogers, J.A.,
100 Amazing Facts about the Negro |
1957 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 15 | Rosengarten, Theodore,
All God's Dangers: The Life of Nate Shaw |
1975 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 16 | Ross, Susan Deller and Ann Barcher,
The Rights of Women |
1983 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 17 | Roth, Philip,
Our Gang |
1973 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 18 | Rubin, David and Steven Greenhouse,
The Rights of Teachers |
1984 | |
Box: 20 | Item : 21 | Rubin, Jerry,
Do It! |
1970 | |
Box: 17 | Item : 12 | Ruchames, Louis (ed.),
A John Brown Reader |
undated | |
Box: 16 | Item : 13 | Scheer, Robert (ed.),
The Diary of Che Guevara |
1968 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 14 | Schneir, Miriam (ed.),
Feminism: The Essential Historical Writings |
1972 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 15 | Schulman, L. M. (ed.),
Come Out the Wilderness |
1965 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 16 | Seale, Bobby,
Seize the Time |
1970 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 17 | Sforza, Count Carlo (ed.),
The Living Thoughts of Machiavelli |
1958 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 18 | Slim, Iceberg,
Mama Black Widow |
1969 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 19 | Smith, Edgar,
Brief Against Death |
1969 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 20 | Smith, Edgar,
A Reasonable Doubt |
1971 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 21 | Smith, Huston,
The Religions of Man |
1963 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 22 | Smith, Lillian,
Strange Fruit |
1944 | |
Box: 17 | Item : 13 | Smith, Lillian,
Killers of the Dream |
1961 | |
Box: 13 | Item : 15 | Southern Labor Institute,
Now Is the Time |
1986 | |
Box: 20 | Item : 22 | Stahl, David, Frederick B. Sussman, et al.,
The Community and Racial Crises |
1966 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 23 | Stang, Alan,
It's Very Simple |
1965 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 24 | Stark, James and Howard W. Goldstein,
The Rights of Crime Victims |
1985 | |
Box: 18 | Item : 25 | Stearn, Jess,
Sisters of the Night |
1956 | |
Box: 17 | Item : 14 | Sterling, Philip (ed.),
Laughing on the Outside |
1965 | |
Box: 17 | Item : 15 | Stetson, Erlene (ed.),
Black Sister |
1981 | |
Box: 17 | Item : 16 | Stone, I.F.,
In A Time of Torment |
1967 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 17 | Stringfellow, William,
My People is the Enemy |
1966 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 18 | Summers, Clyde W. and Robert J. Rabin,
The Rights of Union Members |
1979 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 19 | Sussman, Alan and Martin Guggenheim,
The Rights of Parents |
1980 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 20 | Sutherland, Elizabeth (ed.),
Letters from Mississippi |
1966 | |
Box: 17 | Item : 17 | Suttles, Gerald D.,
The Social Order of the Slum |
1973 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 18 | Tanner, Leslie B. (ed.),
Voices from Women's Liberation |
1971 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 19 | Taylor, Telford,
Grand Inquest |
1961 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 20 | Thomas, Piri,
Down These Mean Streets |
1968 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 21 | Toffler, Alvin,
Future Shock |
1970 | |
Box: 20 | Item : 23 | Ture, Kwane (Stokely Carmichael) and Charles V. Hamilton,
Black Power: The Politics of Liberation
General noteInscribed by author. |
1992 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 24 | Walker, Daniel,
Rights in Conflict |
1968 | |
Box: 17 | Item : 18 | Weinberg, Meyer (ed.),
W.E.B. Du Bois: A Reader |
1970 | |
Box: 18 | Item : 19 | Whalen, Richard J.,
A City Destroying Itself: An Angry View of New York |
1965 | |
Box: 16 | Item : 20 | Wilcox, Preston (ed.),
White Is |
1970 | |
Box: 19 | Item : 21 | Wilson, Edmund,
The Cold War and the Income Tax: A Protest |
1964 | |
Box: 20 | Item : 24 | Youth of the Rural Organizing and Cultural Center,
Minds Stayed on Freedom |
1991 | |
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