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Size | 248.5 feet of linear shelf space (approximately 92,000 items) |
Abstract | Bob Hall (1944-) is a white activist in progressive politics in North Carolina since the early 1970s. The collection documents his investigative research and grassroots organizing work for the Institute for Southern Studies, a nonprofit research and media center dedicated to economic and social justice issues in the South. Topics include North Carolina politics; environmental and economic justice; social change; voting rights; campaign finance and election reform; landfills and hazardous waste dumps in Warren County, N.C.; pollution; brown lung disease; farmworker safety, hog farming, poultry farming, and the Hamlet poultry plant fire in 1991; the 1988 labor strike at the Schlage Lock plant in Rocky Mount; the 1974 coalminers strike in Harlan County, Ky.; utility rates; military bases in the South; labor unions, labor strikes, and union-busting; workplace health and safety; government accountability; and several major projects and organizations initiated by the Institute, including the North Carolina Alliance for Democracy (NCAD), Democracy South, the Foundation for Community Encouragement (FCE), North Carolina Brown Lung Association, and Southerners for Economic Justice. There are also ephemeral print materials related to student organizing and social change in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Materials include subject files, administrative records, editorial and research files for Southern Exposure, a publication of the Institute, and audio and moving images compiled by Bob Hall. The collection formerly was titled Institute for Southern Studies Records. |
Creator | Hall, Bob, 1944- |
Curatorial Unit | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Library. Southern Historical Collection. |
Language | English |
Processed by: Amy Morgan and Jodi Berkowitz, September 2017
Encoded by: Jodi Berkowitz, September 2017
Updated by: Wilson Library staff (Nancy Kaiser, Biff Hollingsworth, Anne Wells, Emma Evans, Laura Smith, Clare Carlson, Gillian McCuistion, Jodi Berkowitz, Luke Cimarusti), 2018-2023
The collection formerly was titled Institute for Southern Studies Records.
Since August 2017, we have added ethnic identities for individuals and families represented in collections. To determine ethnic identity, we rely on self-identification; other information supplied to the repository by collection creators or sources; public records, press accounts, and secondary sources; and contextual information in the collection materials. Omissions of ethnic identities in finding aids created or updated after August 2017 are an indication of insufficient information to make an educated guess or an individual's preference for ethnicity to be excluded from description. When we have misidentified, please let us know at wilsonlibrary@email.unc.edu.
Back to TopThe following terms from Library of Congress Subject Headings suggest topics, persons, geography, etc. interspersed through the entire collection; the terms do not usually represent discrete and easily identifiable portions of the collection--such as folders or items.
Clicking on a subject heading below will take you into the University Library's online catalog.
Bob Hall (1944-), a central figure in progressive politics and activism in North Carolina since the early 1970s, is best known for his investigative research work with the Institute for Southern Studies (ISS), for founding Democracy North Carolina, and for his role in several landmark legal cases on voting rights in North Carolina.
Hall became active in the civil rights movement in 1964-1965, participating in the "kneel in" campaign to integrate churches in Memphis, Tennessee. He attended Southern Student Organizing Committee (SSOC) events in 1965-1966, participated in anti-Vietnam War demonstrations in Washington, D.C. and New York City (1966-1972), participated in the Columbia University "rebellion" in 1968, and attended protests at the Republican and Democratic Party conventions in 1968. Hall also worked on a South Africa disinvestment campaign (1969-1970) through the National Council of Churches.
In 1970, Hall moved to Atlanta, Georgia, and joined the newly formed Institute for Southern Studies (ISS), a progressive nonprofit research and media center dedicated to economic and social justice issues in the South. Early work in Atlanta included a research study of the city's power structure, research and writing on Coca-Cola and other corporations, and several projects relating to electric utilities. In 1973, Hall co-founded and served as managing editor for ISS's magazine, Southern Exposure.
In 1973,Hall moved to Chapel Hill, N.C., where he organized and co-led the Duke Power Project in North Carolina to challenge the utility company's rate hike and to support striking miners at Duke's Eastover Mine in Harlan County, Ky. Hall was involved in the corporate campaign against J.P. Stevens & Co. (1974-1980), which culminated in a boycott led by the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union. In 1975, ISS launched two new projects that would later become independent organizations: the North Carolina Brown Lung Association and Southerners for Economic Justice.
Through the late 1970s and early 1980s, Hall led or played a major role in initiatives addressing the death penalty, education in the South, the Greensboro Massacre, the Voting Rights Act, workplace safety, grassroots organizing, and campaign finance. From 1983 to 1988, Hall conducted a statewide research study of land ownership in North Carolina, which produced the book Who Owns North Carolina?. In the late 1980s, Hall researched and published on the bailout of the savings and loans industry, military bases in the South, voter registration and turnout for the 1988 presidential election, discriminatory banking practices ("redlining"), worker health and safety in the poultry industry in North Carolina, and environmental issues. He co-authored The 1991-92 Green Index: A State-by-State Guide to the Nation's Environmental Health(Island Press).
In 1991, Hall began the North Carolina Money & Politics Project to analyze $10 million spent by lobbyists during an effort to reform the state legislature in North Carolina. This project spun off and launched the NC Alliance for Democracy and, in 1995, Democracy South (which would eventually become Democracy North Carolina). In the early 1990s, Hall was involved in several efforts to shed light on "patronage appointments" to the North Carolina Board of Transportation. The effort also involved a grassroots campaign to fight the construction of a highway through Craven County, N.C.
Throughout the 1990s, Hall continued to lead projects around North Carolina politics and elections, including research and analysis on top campaign donors in the state, lobbying expenses of North Carolina banks, the role of political action committees (PACs), campaign contributions from donors in the North Carolina hog industry, political contributions to influence legislation affecting the nursing home industry, reforms to the state's campaign disclosure laws, and publicly-financed elections.
Bob Hall received a MacArthur Foundation "Genius Grant" in 1992. He continued to work with the Institute for Southern Studies until 1995.
Back to TopThe Bob Hall Papers consist of a large collection of files documenting investigative research and grassroots organizing work of Hall, a white activist in progressive politics in North Carolina. Topics include North Carolina politics; environmental and economic justice; labor organizing; social change; voting rights; campaign finance and election reform; landfills and hazardous waste dumps in Warren County, N.C.; pollution; brown lung disease; farmworker safety, hog farming, poultry farming, and the Hamlet poultry plant fire in 1991; 1988 labor strike at Schlage Lock plant in Rocky Mount; 1974 coalminers strike in Harlan County, Ky; utility rates; military bases in the South; labor unions, labor strikes, and union-busting; workplace health and safety; and government accountability. There are also ephemeral print materials related to student organizing and social change in the late 1960s and early 1970s.
The boxes are grouped as Hall's early work, especially in Atlanta in early 1970s; subject files on organizations and individuals; Southern Exposure editorial files; Institute for Southern Studies administrative records; and project-specific files. The organizations/individuals and project files comprise the bulk of the collection. These were Hall's "working files" and they include incoming and outgoing correspondence from Hall and others, memos, notes, writings, collected reports and background information, and other materials. The Southern Exposure materials consist primarily of research files created by journalists at Southern Exposure, the magazine published by the Institute for Southern Studies. The Institute for Southern Studies (ISS) records document the general organizational operations and several major projects initiated by the ISS, including the North Carolina Alliance for Democracy (NCAD), Democracy South, and the Foundation for Community Encouragement (FCE).
Audio recordings compiled by Bob Hall consist of audiocassette recordings on brown lung disease, labor union organizing, workplace safety, and other topics. The majority of the recordings pertain to brown lung disease and the North Carolina Brown Lung Association, including recordings of meetings, conferences, and interviews with textile workers. Other recordings include music, such as cotton mill songs and music by Alice Gerrard, Hazel Dickens, Hank Williams, and others; recordings of workshops and meetings hosted by Highlander Research and Education Center Collection, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), and J.P. Stevens & Co.; and interviews conducted by Bob Hall and others. Video recordings consist of television appearances by Bob Hall, a Food Lion advertisement, and copies of the documentary films, Zoned for Slavery: The Child Behind the Label and The Tobacco Trap: American Farmers Look Beyond Tobacco.
Moving images compiled by Bob Hall consist mostly of videotapes on tobacco farming, child labor, workplace safety, and other topics. Materials include television appearances by Bob Hall, a Food Lion advertisement, and copies of the documentary films, The Tobacco Trap: American Farmers Look Beyond Tobacco and Zoned for Slavery: The Child Behind the Label (1995). The collection also includes a motion picture film on the death penalty.
The collection formerly was titled Institute for Southern Studies Records.
Back to TopAcquisitions Information: Accession 103478
Arrangement: as received from donor.
Box 19-20
Box 19Box 20 |
Atlanta |
Box 20-22
Box 20Box 21Box 22 |
Coca-Cola |
Box 23-24
Box 23Box 24 |
Corporation files, A-F, G-Z |
Acquisitions Information: Accession 20230417.1
Arrangement: as received from donor.
Acquisitions Information: Accession 103478
Arrangement: as received from donor; roughly alphabetical; original folder titles have been maintained.
Box 25 |
Dorothy Abbot, 1985 |
Rob Abbot, 1985 |
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Access, 1988 |
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Acorn, 1984, 1991-1994The Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now is an international collection of community-based organizations advocating for low- and moderate-income families by working on neighborhood safety, voter registration, health care, affordable housing, and other social issues. |
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Acre, 1980s |
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Accuracy in Media, 1984 |
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Frank Adams, 1980s-1990sIncludes a few copies of Facing South, a syndicated column for voices of tradition in a changing region. |
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Jerry Adams, 1993 |
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Bill Adler, 1986 |
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The American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations, 1991-1992 |
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Africa Peace Tour , 1987 |
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African American Institute, 1980sIncludes two publications of the Africa Report, America's leading magazine on Africa. |
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African News, 1987, 1991-1993 |
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Agricultural Resources Center, 1977-1992 |
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Alabamians for a Clean Environment, 1987 |
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Mike Alexander, 1986Papers related to Alexander's research about Mississippi's catfish industry. |
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Alliance Against Women's Oppression, 1980s |
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Alliance for Justice, 1988 |
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Alternate Roots, 1987 |
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Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union (ACTWU), 1990sHall supported their boycott as part of the corporate campaign against J.P. Stevens (1974-1980). He also assisted with stockholder resolution actions and public hearings. |
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Rob Amberg, 1980s-1990sA photographer for Southern Exposure. Subject focus included the poultry industry and its effects on farmers, consumers, and the environment. |
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American Civil Liberties Union, 1980s |
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Americans for the Environment, 1990 |
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American Farmland Trust |
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American Forum, 1992 |
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American Labor, 1979-1991Includes a series of American Labor publications by the American Labor Education Center. |
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American Legislative Exchange Council, 1985-1987Includes a series of The State Factor and First Reading publications by the American Legislative Exchange Council. |
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American Minor Breeds Conservancy, 1988 |
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Amistad Research Center, 1975, 1984, 1988 |
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Highlander Reports, 1988-1994Includes a series of Highlander Reports by the Highlander Research and Education Center. |
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Susan Angell, 1985 |
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Chip Hughes/Len Stanley, Before 1984Includes a series of research materials, drafts, and publications by Joseph Hughes, a research associate for the Institute of Southern Studies, about brown lung disability and mental health among cotton textile workers. |
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Anheuser-Busch Companies, 1983 |
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Anti-Defamation League, 1989 |
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Antioch Intern Program, 1989 |
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Sophie Ann Aoki, 1982-1984 |
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Appalachian Community Fund, 1991 |
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Appalachian Oral History Project, 1984 |
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The Appalachian Reader, 1988 |
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Appalshop, 1980s-1990sIncludes a few catalogs of documentary films and other creative storytelling productions (musical recordings) by those involved with the organization. |
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Arkansas Land and Farm Development Corporation, 1990 |
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Arkansas Public Policy Project, 1985-1987Includes five issues of The Public Policy Forum. |
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Arkansas Women's Project, 1989 |
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Cindy Arnold, 1980sIncludes copies of her research on the garment industry in Texas as part of her work with "La Mujer Obrera" in El Paso, an organization founded to address job loss and worker abuse of the mostly female and Mexican-origin sweatshop workforce. |
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Leah Fortson Arroyo, 1993 |
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Arts Advocates of North Carolina, 1984 |
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Advocates Senior Alert Process (A.S.A.P), 1985-1987 |
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Asher and Association, 1990Financial documentation of legal services rendered by the firm for the Institute of Southern Studies. |
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Asheville Citizen Times, 1989 |
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The Assemblies, 1982 |
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Atomic Industrial Forum Incorporated |
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Judy Austermiller, 1984 |
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Azalea Typography |
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B and C Association, 1994"Ball and Chain for African-American Workers?" was a publication/report conducted by the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union (ACTWU). |
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Babcock Foundation, 1982-1988The Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation provided grants to tax-exempt programs in education, social services, the environment, the arts, and citizen participation in the development of public policy, with the majority of their grants going to those in North Carolina and the Southeast, including the Institute of Southern Studies. |
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Kenneth Bain, 1985 |
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Balance and Accuracy in Journalism, 1993 |
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Gratton Baldwin, 1985 |
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Bannerman Fellowship, 1991-1994Since 1988, the Bannerman Fellowship has sought to honor outstanding activists of color and enable them to take sabbaticals. |
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Barbara Beecher, 1989 |
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Bell and Howell, 1984 |
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Benton Card Company, 1985 |
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Jason Berry, 1970s-1980sA valued writer for Southern Exposure, with publications on a variety of issues. |
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Best Products Foundation, 1981 |
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Bettman Newsphotos |
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Big Mountain Support Chapter, 1986Materials pertaining to the Navajo-Hopi Land Dispute and a call to action of support in their resistance to mandated relocation by the U.S. government. |
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John Birch Society, 1981-1984 |
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Mary Bishop, 1982 |
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Box 26 |
American Civil Liberties Union of Alabama, 1975-1976 |
American Civil Liberties Union of Mississippi, 1974 |
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Acorn, 1970s-1981The Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now is an international collection of community-based organizations advocating for low- and moderate-income families by working on neighborhood safety, voter registration, health care, affordable housing, and other social issues. |
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Acre, 1981-1982 |
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The Action Center, 1978 |
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Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union (ACTWU), 1982-1985 |
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Frank Adams, 1970s-1980sA writer for Southern Exposure and Facing South. Folder includes correspondence about his submissions and story pitches over the years. |
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The American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations, 1975-1980 |
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The American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations George Meany Center for Labor Studies, 1980 |
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AfrikaNews, 1976-1981Includes nine issues of AfrikaNews, covering themes such as the black oppressed, racism in the prison system, the black woman, black power, and Pan-Afrikan nationalism. |
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American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees, 1975, 1983 |
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AgBiz Tiller, 1976-1978Includes ten issues of The AgBiz Tiller, a publication of the Agribusiness Accountability Project. |
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Agribusiness Accountability Project, 1971-1973An organization engaged in research, national advocacy, and public education to involve constituents in agricultural and food policy decision-making. |
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Agricultural Data Center, 1976 |
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Agricultural Marketing Project, 1978-1980Includes a collection of articles prepared by students in the rural development program at the University of Alabama, titled "Who Owns the Future of the South." Also included is the F.A.R.M. Handbook (1980), a manual written for use by farmers and gardeners who run their own tailgate farmers' markets, particularly for those in Tennessee who sell at Food Fairs. |
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Alabama Prison Project, 1981 |
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American Legislative Exchange Council, 1982 |
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Alice Lloyd College, 1977An outgrowth of the Caney Creek Community Center founded in 1916 by Alice Geddes Lloyd, the college is a two-year program which provides educational opportunities and social services to the people of the Appalachian community and is fully accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. |
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AlternativesA campaign in Greensboro, North Carolina with firm convictions against commercialized celebrations and in support of resource diversion from consumption to human welfare causes. |
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Alternatives: A Journal of World Policy |
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Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America, 1975, 1981 |
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Harry AmanaAmana's research and writings about Bill Sutherland, a traveling black activist in southern Africa involved in pacifist movements (including denuclearization), the decolonization of Africa, and the building of a Pan-Africanist movement. |
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Robert Ambrose, 1983 |
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American Association for Stateland Local History, 1974, 1981 |
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Americans Exiled in Canada (AMEX), 1973 |
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American Federation of Teachers, 1979-1980An annual report with predictions of continued challenges in politics and organizing in the 1980s. |
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American Friends Service Committee, 1977-1983Most prominent materials are those related to stopping the B-1 bomber (pamphlets, resolutions, newsletters), which President Carter ultimately did in June of 1977. This step in denuclearization efforts was met with critics accusing the president of 'unilateral disarmament'. |
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Americans for Indian Opportunity, 1975-1976 |
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American Institute for Marxist Studies, 1975-1979 |
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American Library Association, 1979-1981Materials detailing the Institute of Southern Studies' exhibit space at the American Library Association's 98th and 99th annual conferences in Dallas and New York, respectively. |
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American National Cattlemen's Association, 1975 |
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American Working Class History Project, 1981-1983 |
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Amnesty International, 1974-1981Amnesty International was a worldwide human rights movement working for the release of men and women imprisoned anywhere for their beliefs, color, ethnic origin, or religion (so long as they had not used/advocated violence). Includes an Annual Report for 1974-1975 and two issues of Labor News. |
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Fran Ansley, 1980 |
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Anthropology Resource Center, 1978Includes a report by Dr. Jerry Brown on Rural Revitalization: A Challenge for Public-Interest Anthropology. |
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Antioch College, 1976-1977Recruitment and application materials among students at Antioch College interested in working with the Institute of Southern Studies. |
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The Anvil, 1978 |
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Appalachia, 1972-1974Includes one issue of Appalachia, a journal of the Appalachian Regional Commission devoted to regional development, and two additional publications by the Appalachian Oral History Project at Alice Lloyd College. |
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Appalachian Alliance, 1977-1978, 1983An organization in opposition to strip mine legislation and coal industry operations in the Appalachian region, with services addressing health and land ownership concerns and facilitating community organizing. |
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Appalachian Center for Spiritual Growth |
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Appalachian News Service in Charleston, West Virginia, 1974 |
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Appalachian Peace Education Center, 1983 |
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Appalachian Regional Commission, 1976-1978Includes a catalog of research on energy, environment, and natural resources funded by the Appalachian Regional Commission. |
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Appalachian Research and Defense Fund, 1974, 1983 |
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Appalachian State University , 1974Materials related to the Center of Continuing Education on the Appalachian State campus, chosen as the site for the Appalachian Consortium's Conference on "Energy, Land Use, and the Human Spirit." |
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Appalachian Studies Conference, 1978, 1981 |
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Appalshop, 1970sIncludes six issues of Mountain Review. |
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Clyde Appleton, 1982Copy of newspaper article about music professor Clyde Appleton picketing for tenure at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. |
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Arkansas Consumer Research, 1975-1976 |
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Art Papers, 1981 |
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Bob Arnold, 1980 |
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Carolyn Ashbaugh, 1976 |
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Tom Asher, 1982-1983A lawyer who submitted a piece on "Electoral Activities by Nonprofits" to Southern Exposure for their special issue on electoral politics. |
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The Assemblies, 1970sIncludes "An Analysis of an Authoritarian Approach to Democracy" by Steven L. Dawson. |
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The Assemblies: Claire Jupiter |
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Association of Migrant Organizations, 1983Includes two reports on the Rural Education Resource Network Project in Tallahassee, Florida. |
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Atomic Trades and Labor Council, 1981 |
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Atlanta Gazette, 1977 |
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Auntie Bellum, 1977A Southern Journal for Women. |
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Box 27 |
Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation, 1977-1981Includes Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation annual reports for 1979 and 1977. |
Deborah Baker, 1977 |
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Howard Baker, 1979Includes "Political Profile: Howard Henry Baker, Jr.," published by Public Interest Research. |
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Toni Cade Bambara, 1983Folder contains only one short telegram from Bambara. |
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Jack Bass, 1980Includes "The American South Comes of Age: An Introduction and Sample Lesson." |
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Bay Area Institute: Marty Gellen, 1970-1971 |
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Beacon Press, 1977 |
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John Beecher and Barbara Beecher, 1973-1980Personal correspondence exchanged between activist poet John Beecher and Bob Hall. Includes a photographic portrait of Beecher taken by James G. Redd in 1974, an "In Memoriam" card sent out by Beecher's family after his death in 1980, a few clippings and other papers. |
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Beemark Plastics |
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Bill Belville, 1980-1981Correspondence with writer Bill Belville about a proposed article for Southern Exposure on "the Loudd/Clark saga," about the case of African American former NFL football player Rommie Loudd and white sportswriter Bill Clark, who were involved in a bid to start a professional football team in Orlando, FL. |
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Benjamin and Maston |
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Donna Benson |
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Roman Berger |
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Wendell BerryClippings related to Wendell Berry. Does not include any personal letters, notes, etc. from Berry. |
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Big Business Day, 1980Big Business Day was an initiative founded to critique corporate power abuses by major companies. Includes lists of corporations and their alleged misdeeds. Also includes "The Case For a Corporate Democracy Act of 1980," published by Public Citizens Congress Watch, Council on Economic Priorities, and Building and Construction Trades Department, AFL-CIO. |
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The Bird: Atlanta, GeorgiaVol. 9, Issue No. 1 of "The Great Speckled Bird." |
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Wolfgang BischoffIncludes a manuscript copy of, "We Are People," a compilation of stories and interviews about the experiences of people incarcerated at Hillsborough Prison in Durham, N.C., including a lengthy piece called "Let My People Go," by civil rights activist Ben Chavis about the Wilmington 10. The manuscript was later published by The Sun magazine. |
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Tom Bethell, 1981Includes an August 1981 issue of "Sixteen Tons: An Occasional Letter to Miners About Matters of Life and Death," a newsletter about mine safety. |
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Leslie Black, 1981Includes an anti-war and anti-draft pamphlet prepared by the Inter-Campus Survival Network (New York/New Jersey), circa 1981. |
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Black American Literature Forum, 1978 |
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Black Economic Research Center, 1975Includes a report published by the Center, "Only Six Million Acres: The Decline of Black Owned Land in the Rural South." |
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Black Graphics International, 1969-1976Includes several issues of "Black Graphics International: A Journal of Revolutionary Literature and Art," published by Julian Richardson Association, Publishers. |
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Black Scholar, 1975, 1977 |
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Blue Diamond Coal, 1978Includes a letter, 13 December 1978, from John Gaventa of the Coal Company Monitoring Project. |
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Barry Boggs |
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Bolivar Project, 1976Writings by Margaret Molinari Duckles on the Work Improvement Project at Harman International Industries in Bolivar, TN., and other related clippings and articles. |
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James Bond, 1979Copy of a letter, 10 May 1979, from Atlanta City Councilman James Bond. |
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Julian Bond: News ClipsMostly newspaper clippings relating to Julian Bond, but also includes copies of three speeches delivered by Bond in 1971, and a few notes exchanged between Bob Hall and Julian Bond. |
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Julian Bond: SpeechesIncludes manuscript copies of about ten speeches written by politician and civil rights leader Julian Bond, 1970s-1980s (sometimes with what appear to be his editing marks). Also includes a copy of "A Conversation with Julian Bond," edited by Trevor L. Chandler, and a transcription of an interview with Julian Bond, conducted by Bob Hall. Also includes a few letters exchanged between Bond and Hall relating to speeches Bond was to give on behalf of the Institute for Southern Studies (he was a co-founder of the organization). |
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Bookpeople |
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Paul Booth, 1968-1971Includes a copy of "Corporate Use of the Democratic Party," a paper delivered by Paul Booth at the Institute for Policy Studies in 1968. |
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Reber Boult |
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David Bowman, 1979Includes issues of the newsletter, "Citywatching," published by Eleanor and David Bowman of Memphis, TN; and a few related letters. |
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Box 28 |
Appalachian Development Projects Committee, 1983 |
Karen Barrows, 1979 |
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Pete Brandon, 1977-1980He conducted a research project on Cone Mills Corporation, which sought to determine the company's most important product lines so that reorganization could take place and bargaining points could serve as leverage on Cone to settle with the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Worker's Union. |
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Breaking the Ice: Akron, Ohio, 1974 |
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Breath of Life Organizations, 1980sA coalition fight for the right to breathe which addressed all occupational diseases causing lung problems in workers. |
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Krista Brewer, 1978 |
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Bob BrinkmeyerPersonal essay on the fear of nuclear holocaust, calling to action worldwide disarmament of warheads. |
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Betsy Brinson, 1978-1979An active member of the Women's Rights Project, a faction of the American Civil Liberties Union. Note that Ruth Bader Ginsburg served on the board of this organization, as general counsel. |
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Broadside Video, 1977An organization which worked to make portable videotape and cable TV a community-based and community-sensitive medium of television in the Central Appalachian Region. |
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Broken Barriers, 1976Includes three issues of Broken Barriers newspaper, an underground press publication providing alternative news and arts for New Orleans. |
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Alex Brooks, 1981 |
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Brookings Institute, 1972Includes two issues of The Brookings Bulletin, a publication of the Brookings Institute, an independent organization devoted to nonpartisan research, education, and publication in Economics, government, foreign policy, and the social sciences. |
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Cynthia Brown, 1980-1981Wrote an article for Southern Exposure on the relationships of E.D. Nixon, Myles Horton, Rosa Parks, Virginia Durr, and Septima Clark in planting the roots from which the Civil Rights Movement could grow. "The Roots of the Matter" studies how movements begin. |
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Brown Lung Association, 1978-1981An organization of disabled textile workers across the Southeast fighting back against the region's most powerful industry to win justice for textile workers whose lives were threatened by brown lung disease. Includes eight issues of the organization's newsletter, Brown Lung Blues. |
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Paul Buhle, 1976 |
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Bureau of Labor Statistics |
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Bureau of National Affairs, 1977 |
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Ed Burnett Consultants, 1977 |
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Burning Spear, 1978-179Includes two issues of The Burning Spear, a newspaper publication of the African People's Socialist Party. |
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Burroughs-Wellcome, 1978-1979 |
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Edyth Bush Foundation, 1975A charitable foundation to which Bob Hall applied for grants to fund the Institute of Southern Studies and Southern Exposure research projects. |
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Business and Society Review, 1981-1982Includes one issue of their publication from the winter of 1981-1982, which features Bob Hall's article "The Truth About Brown Lung." |
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Jake Butcher, 1977An American banker and politician who had built a financial empire in East Tennessee and was the Democratic Party nominee for governor of Tennessee in 1978. He lost his business and his personal fortune after he was found to have engaged in bank fraud. Included in this folder are clippings and research of this scandal. |
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Byrd Press, 1978-1980 |
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Campaign for Human Development, 1980-1983The national anti-poverty and social justice program of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. It originated in 1969 as the "National Catholic Crusade Against Poverty," in part as a response to Pope Paul VI's encyclical Populorum progressio. Includes three booklets of annual funded projects and other print material about the Christian response to poverty. |
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Carlsona Enterprises, 1975-1976 |
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Carolina Action, 1974-1978A Durham-based community organization fighting utility rate and other fare hikes, particularly in opposition to the Duke Power Company. Bob Hall supported Carolina Action's mission with research into the Duke Power Company campaign. |
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Carolina Action, 1974-1978Includes twenty nine issues of the organization's newsletter, Action Power. |
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Coalition of Labor Union Women, 1980 |
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Coalition for a New Foreign and Military Policy, 1977-1980 |
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Coalition on National Priorities, 1974-1976Includes House and Senate voting records on bill calling for the reduction of the Department of Defense budget. |
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Coastal Area Management, 1978 |
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Coastal Society, 1982 |
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CoEvolutionary Quarterly, 1981 |
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Tom and Stephanie Coffin, 1979-1983 |
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Tom Coker, 1975 |
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Bill Collins, 1970s-1980sIncludes materials related to the Committee for an Open Newspaper and the North Carolina Institute for Open Journalism. |
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Combined Book Exhibit, 1981 |
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Commission for Racial Justice, 1976 |
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Committee for Self Education, 1975Includes a proposal to computerize basic data on the structure of agribusiness. |
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Common Sense San Francisco |
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Common Sense Philadelphia, 1974Includes four issues of their newspaper. |
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Box 29 |
Black Star Photos, 1991 |
Tom Blanton, 1983Writer for Southern Exposure. |
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Blue Mountain Center, 1980sA gathering of people seeking to discuss a "Common Practice" in their political work, representing a microcosm of activity on the left. Participants included organizers working for social and Economic justice, peace and international solidarity, public health, and environmental safety. |
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Shelley Blum, 1974 |
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Lisa Blumenthal, 1983-1984Includes invitation to a Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation event (an organization of which Tom Lambeth was executive director) focused on environmental communications, cooperation, and coordination in North Carolina. |
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Julian Bond, 1975-1993Board president for the Institute of Southern Studies; includes correspondence with Governor Wallace regarding Bond's proposal of a story on him (as a Southerner and about the changing political climate in Alabama) for Southern Exposure. |
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Peter Bourne, 1984Researched Caribbean affairs at the Washington-based Council on Hemispheric Affairs; formerly an Assistant Secretary General at the United Nations under Kurt Waldheim and Special Assistant to President Carter. His professional relationship to Bob Hall was rooted in the organization for which he served as president, Global Water. |
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Harry Boyte, 1970s-1980sA researcher of and academic writer on themes such as democracy, revolution, and public philosophy. Publications included are a copy of "Revolution and Democracy" by Harry Boyte and Frank Ackerman reprinted by the New American Movement in Minneapolis and "Building a New Democracy" in The Progressive. |
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Anna Braden, 1968, 1987Includes a reprint of the pamphlet authored by Anne Braden in 1964, "House Un-American Activities Committee: Bulwark of Segregation". It is in opposition to such committees, which studies have shown exhibit a long record of destruction in the South and throughout the country. |
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Kip Branch, 1990-1993A writer for Southern Exposure and correspondent with the Institute of Southern Studies regarding the development of an anthology, which would facilitate the Institute's visibility and service to a much larger public. |
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Pete Brandon, 1979Includes a detailed outline of his response to the Stevens Campaign, an effort of the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union to organize J.P. Stevens Company textile workers in a strike for fair wages and safe working conditions. |
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Bread for the WorldA Christian citizens' movement which worked with elected officials to pass bi-partisan legislation and policies addressing hunger. |
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Brookings Institute, 1995 |
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Building a New South, 1990-1995A comprehensive guide to more than 500 progressive social justice organizations operating throughout the southern and southeastern United States to create a new and more just South. |
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Building a New South: Page Proofs, 1992 |
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Burrell's Press Clippings, 1984-1993 |
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Business Risk International, 1987-1988 |
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Business Telecom Incorporated, 1987, 1991 |
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Business/Wire, 1990 |
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Jake Butcher, 1984 |
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Cabin Creek Center for Work and Environmental Studies, 1989-1990The organization with which Bob Hall proposed funding for research and development toward a major documentary film project on the recent history of Robeson County, North Carolina. |
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Pat Callair, 1980sThe Community Development Director for The Satir Institute of the Southeast, a nonprofit providing education, training, and consultation services to individuals, groups, families, organizations, and communities in the Virginia Satir human systems model; mission was approached through the implementation of a summer camp with therapeutic interventions designed to build self-esteem among youth at risk and to cultivate a context of growth and healing where change can take place. |
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Campaign for Human Development, 1984-1986 |
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Campaign for Political Rights, 1982Includes three issues of their publication Organizing Notes, which sought to end U.S. intelligence agency abuse, defend the right to dissent, and promote government accountability. |
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Bonnie Campbell, 1986Worked in editorial services for the Institute of Southern Studies. |
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Will Campbell, 1988Includes article from newspaper Scene on preacher Will Davis Campbell, a civil rights activist. |
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Ingrid Canright, 1984-1985A former writer for Southern Exposure who proceeded to work with The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Learning, focusing her research on the undergraduate student body at Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio. |
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Daniel Cantor, 1990Includes a memo he co-authored with Joel Rogers about political strategies for progressives in the 1990s. |
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Capital Consortium, 1989 |
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Carolina Association for Passenger Trains, 1992 |
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Carolina Clipping Service, 1992 |
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Carolina Community Project, 1984 |
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Carolina Community Project, 1982-1987Includes board mission statement. |
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Carolina Farm Stewardship Association, 1993An organization comprised of farmers, gardeners, food businesses, and consumers working to encourage the development of a fairer, more healthful, and more sustainable agricultural system. |
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Carolina Justice Policy Center, 1986-1990Includes materials related to the North Carolina Prison and Jail Project, an advocacy agency in support of alternative sentencing and working for positive reform of the prison system. |
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Carolina Sports Association, 1987, 1990Includes two issues of their newspaper Sporting Journal. |
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Carteret County Crossroads, 1988 |
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Catalyst Communications, 1989 |
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Catholic Committee of the South, 1986-1995A revitalization of the church's effort to approach regional problems on a regional basis, providing a forum for the voiceless who have stories to share beyond their immediate community. |
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Central Committee for Conscientious Objectors (CCCO), 1988An Agency for Military and Draft Counseling. |
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David Cecelski, 1986-1995A researcher and writer with several submission and publications in Southern Exposure, covering topics such as "The U.S. South and Central America," "Poverty and Rural Upheaval in the Pamlico Sound Vicinity," "African American Architecture on the North Carolina Coast," and "Three Lost Slave Autobiographies from Coastal North Carolina." |
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Center for Appalachian Studies |
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Center for Community Action, 1989-1990Includes two issues of their publication Center Point and one 1982 issue of Southern Exposure, "Prevailing Voices: Stories of Triumph and Survival". |
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Center for Community Change, 1989-1992Includes five issues of Community Change, two annual reports, and one special edition 25-year anniversary comprehensive report on the Center's involvement in various community-based organizations. |
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Center for Community Change, 1970s-1990sIncludes two annual reports for 1984 and 1985. |
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Center for Community Self-Help, 1992-1993 |
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Center for Constitutional Rights, 1983-1987An organization in protest of the government (under President Reagan) acting against its own legislation in matters such as the CIA-supported Nicaraguan Contras and wrongful dismissal of the Refugee Act, established to support civilians fleeing the threat of death in Central America. Also included are materials for their campaign against the nomination of Judge Robert Bork to the United States Supreme Court, two issues of their publication Movement Support Network, and a docket report for the year 1983-1984. |
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Center for Defense Information, 1970s-1980sIncludes four issues of Defense Monitor. |
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Center for Democratic Renewal, 1983-1992An Atlanta-based organization. Includes fifteen issues of The Monitor and four Anti-Klan Network newsletters/publications. |
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Center for Disarmament Education, 1984 |
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Center for Documentary Studies, 1990 |
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Center for Health Services: Vanderbilt University, 1989-1990 |
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Center for Informational Democracy, 1989 |
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Center for Investigative Reporting, 1991 |
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Center for Justice, 1980s |
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Center for Law and Education, 1979-1981, 1992Includes six issues of their newsletter, Newsnotes; based in Cambridge, Massachusetts. |
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Center for Metropolitan Affairs, 1980 |
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Center for a New Democracy, 1992 |
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Center for Popular Economics |
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Center for Southern Folklore, 1983-1990A nonprofit, multi-media organization which produces films, records, and books documenting folk traditions rapidly disappearing in the southern United States; includes several photographs of people throughout the South. |
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Center for the Study of the American South, 1997 |
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Box 30 |
Cabletronics, 1981Includes five copies of documented statements of workers collected by the Triangle Committee for Economic Justice. |
Callaloo, 1979A tri-annual black south journal of arts and letters, published by the Department of English at the University of Kentucky. |
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Cambridge Institute, 1973-1975Includes materials about the Goddard/Cambridge Graduate Program in Social Change, a socialist approach to graduate studies at Goddard College in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Also included are chapter drafts and a prospectus for a book titled "New Towns and Old Cities: Creating an Urban Land Reform Movement" by Carl Sussman. |
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Campaign for Political Rights, 1976-1982Includes seventeen issues of Organizing Notes. |
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Carolina Committee on Central America, 1983 |
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Carolina Community Project, 1982-1983 |
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Carolina Environmental Study Group, 1974 |
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Carolina Farm Stewardship Association, 1981-1985Includes nine issues of Stewardship News. |
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Carolina Financial Times, 1976Includes seven issues of their newspaper, the South's leading business publication. |
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Susan Carpenter, 1983 |
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Carpetbag Theater, 1983-1985A community-based nonprofit professional theater company dedicated to the production of new works and one of the few established tenured Black professional theater companies in the South, at the time; includes a copy of the screenplay for "Dark Cowgirls and Prairie Queens" by Linda Parris-Bailey. |
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Eddie Carthan, 1982Includes materials for and news coverage of the campaign to free Mayor Eddie James Carthan and the Tchula Seven and to preserve Black political rights. |
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Catholic Committee of the South, 1982-1983Includes a couple reports on the history and activities of the organization, with a letter from Bob Hall expressing his and the Institute's support of and excitement for the development of a faith-based social justice movement. |
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Central Committee for Conscientious Objectors (CCCO), 1973-1976Includes seven issues of their News Notes publication. |
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Census Department |
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Center for Community Economic Development, 1973-1978Includes five issues of their newsletter. |
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Center for Community Self-Help, 1982-1984Includes two issues of their newsletter Changing Shifts, a publication in support of workplace democracy and worker-ownership. |
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Center for Constitutional Rights, 1981-1982An organization born out of the southern civil rights struggle of the early 1960s, working on behalf of people's movements and representing anti-war activists, Native Americans, Blacks, Puerto Ricans, women, and others seeking to change American policies and structures. |
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Center for Defense Information, 1978-1979 |
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Center for Documentary Media |
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Center for Labor Education and Research, 1974-1975An organization at the University of Alabama under director Dr. Higdon Roberts, with similar objectives and research interests as Southern Exposure. One of their primary goals involved making relevant and accurate information accessible to their trade-union clientele and workers throughout Alabama. |
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Center for Law and Social Policy, 1975-1976 |
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Center for National Security Studies, 1976-1979Includes one issue of their publication Intelligence Report, covering current issues related to Ford's presidency (including his accountability proposals) and covert action abroad on the part of the Central Intelligence Agency. Also includes one issue of First Principles on national security and civil liberties. |
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Center for New Corporate Priorities, 1975 |
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Center for Rural Studies, 1974A nonprofit liaison for alternative agricultural and land reform groups across the country, assisting in organizational efforts on behalf of minority populations seeking access to land and moving toward community control of utilities. Includes a bibliography on "Land Reform in Rural America" by Charles L. Smith and one issue of their quarterly publication People and Land. |
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Center for Science in the Public Interest, 1974-1977Includes fives issues of their newsletter, a report from their energy series on "The Enforcement of Strip Mining Laws in Three Appalachian States: Kentucky, West Virginia, and Pennsylvania" and one issue of Nutrition Action. |
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Center for Southern Folklore, 1975-1982Includes an unidentified photograph from 1941 of a father with his daughter in Memphis, Tennessee. Photographer Rev. L.O. Taylor left behind him a rare portrait of the black community in Memphis from the 1920s to the 1950s, this example serving to highlight documentary photography as a focal tenant of the Center for Southern Folklore. |
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Center for Study of Human Resources, 1974-1976 |
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Center for United Labor Action, 1979Includes one issue of their newspaper. |
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Center to Protect Workers' Rights, 1980 |
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Church Groups, 1971-1973 |
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Chapel Hill Peace Center: North Carolina, 1973-1976Includes five issues of their newsletter and marketing materials for a special workshop on stopping the B-1 bomber. |
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Charleston Communications CenterIncludes two pamphlets on the art of South Carolina lowcountry coil baskets, one of America's oldest African arts. |
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ChemofactsA public health coalition promoting public awareness through data collection and communication and promoting public debate of the issue at hand: chronic, human exposure to toxic substances and the associated basic human right to know of and consent to health risks. |
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Barry Childers and Beth Ferris: Pembroke, 1977 |
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Children's Defense FundA national organization paying particular attention to the needs of poor, minority, and handicapped children, with the goal of educating the nation about preventive investment to reduce their getting sick, dropping out of school, or getting into trouble. Includes a report on "Children in Adult Jails". |
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The Children's Foundation, 1975-1980A nonprofit with informational resources and programs designed for women and children. Most materials in this folder pertain to their WIC program, which provides extra food and nutrition education to high-risk pregnant and nursing women and children who cannot otherwise afford it. |
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Christic Institute, 1980-1987An interfaith center for law and public policy; includes a special report on the Iran-Contra drug scandal. |
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Chrysler Corporation Fund, 1982 |
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Church Fundraising, 1972-1977Includes correspondence between Bob Hall and the United Methodist Church Board of Missions and Department of Voluntary Services, the Division of Voluntary Service at the United Presbyterian Church, the United Church of Christ. |
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Marvin Ciporen/Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union, 1980sIncludes a series of the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union newsletter Threads. |
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Citizen Heritage Center, 1981 |
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Citizens Association for Sound Energy: Texas, 1976 |
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Citizens Clearing House/Hazardous Waste, 1980s |
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Citizens Committee: Washington D.C., 1979-1980 |
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Citizens Energy Conference, 1974 |
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Citizens Energy ProjectA nonprofit public interest research and advocacy organization founded in 1973, working in areas of solar energy developments, opposition to nuclear power, and promotion of appropriate community-level technologies. |
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Citizens Leadership Foundation, 1982-1983A national nonprofit training institution founded to provide citizen and issue organizations with assistance in developing a variety of voter involvement programs. Its two main programs were the Electoral Training Program and the Voter Registration and Education Project. CLF supported the Institute of Southern Studies with their training needs. |
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Citizens Research Foundation |
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Citizens United for Fair Electric RatesAn alliance of people working together as individuals and through organizations to stop the rapid rise of electric rates in North Carolina. |
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Kenneth Clark, 1979Excerpts from two of his speeches (one from his address at Dillard in 1976 and the other from "American Minorities in Education") were published in Southern Exposure's special report on desegregation 25 years after Brown. The first excerpt was a broad discussion of the issue of the role of the traditional black college in America; the Second offered a vision for democratic education. |
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Clearing House for Community-Based Free Standing Educational Institute, 1976-1980A national membership organization of community-based and controlled institutions independent of state support, serving a central coordinating agency for resource development, information dissemination, technical assistance, advocacy, evaluation, and research. |
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Clergy and Laymen Concerned, 1973-1977 |
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Coal Company Monitoring Project, 1979-1980Includes clippings and press releases describing the efforts of shareholders (and the project) in their lawsuit against the Blue Diamond Coal Company. |
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Coal Patrol, 1977-1978A publication committed to news, reports, and commentary on coal-related developments in labor, industry, and government; includes one issue. |
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Box 31 |
Coalition Against Strip-Mining |
Coalition for a New Military and Foreign Policy, 1980-1982Includes two issues of their newsletter Close-Up and three Disarmament Action Guides. |
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Coalition for a People's Alternative, 1980 |
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Coalition for Choice, 1983An organization committed to supporting women's right to choose abortion; included is correspondence and other materials from Planned Parenthood of Greater Charlotte encouraging voter registration. |
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Coalition for the 80s, 1981The Institute of Southern Studies served as a fiscal agent and nonprofit sponsoring organization for the Coalition's "Save Our Democracy Conference." |
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Coalition for Human Needs and Budget Priorities (Common Cause), 1973 |
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Commission on Religion in Appalachia (CORA), 1977-1984Organized by seventeen church bodies to address the religious, moral, and spiritual implications inherent in the Economic, social, and cultural conditions of the Appalachian region; includes three of their publications CORAspondent. |
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Committee on Political Education (COPE), 1980Includes three issues of their newsletter Memo from COPE, published weekly when Congress is in session and every two weeks during recess. |
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Committee of Small Magazine Editors and Publishers (COSMEP), 1976-1981An San Francisco-based international Association of small magazines and presses committed to preserving vigor, experimentation, diversity, and excellence through free expression in print. Includes nineteen issues of their newsletter. |
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Communications Workers of America, 1976 |
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Communities Magazine, 1974A journal of cooperative living communities. Includes one issue and covers the theme of "Work in Community," attitudes toward work and how work gets done in communal situations. |
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Communist Labor Party, 1974-1975Includes five issues of the People's Tribune. |
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Communist Workers Party, 1979-1981Includes one issue of their newspaper Workers Viewpoint. |
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Community Ownership Organizing Project, 1975-1977Includes three issues of their publication The Public Works. |
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Community Renewal Society, 1982Includes two issues of The Chicago Reporter, a monthly information service on racial issues in metropolitan Chicago. |
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Concerned Asian Scholars, 1973 |
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Concerned Citizens for Fair Taxes, 1974 |
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Cone Workers' Union Voice, 1980 |
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Consumer Coalition for Health, 1981Includes reports about the nurse-midwifery issue, offered to Bob Hall for his related research interests and writing endeavors for Southern Exposure. |
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Consumer Federation of America, 1974-1976An independent and non-regulatory organization speaking for consumers before federal regulatory agencies, departments, and the courts, presenting arguments to federal decision-makers as to how their various decisions would affect consumers. Additionally, the organization disseminated relevant customer information and forwarded consumer complaints to the appropriate agencies. Included in this folder are seven issues of their publication You've Got To Move. |
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Contemporary Art/Southeast, 1978 |
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Coordinating Council of Literary Magazines, 1980-1983A national nonprofit established in 1967 to provide grants and services to the growing field of noncommercial literary magazines. |
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The Cornucopia Project, 1981-1983Includes one issue of their newsletter and a summary report/study of the U.S. Food System titled "The Coming Challenge to America's Food Supply and What We Can Do About It." |
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Corporate Action Project, 1975 |
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Corporate Data Exchange, 1979Includes two comprehensive studies on pension fund investments. The handbook "Pension Investments: A Social Audit" confirms charges by union leaders and elected officials that billions of dollars of pension assets are being invested against the interests of working Americans. |
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Corporate Information Center, 1971-1975An organization engaged in research designed to provide a growing number of national, regional, and local churches with accurate and up-to-date information concerning the social policy of corporations, thereby assisting them with the application of social criteria in their investment decisions. |
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Corporate Information Center, 1972-1980Includes thirty issues of The Corporate Examiner, a publication examining actions and policies of major U.S. corporations in the areas of consumerism, environment, foreign investment, government, labor and minorities, military production, and corporate responsibility. |
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Cotton Promotion Association, 1973 |
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Council of Southern Mountains, 1977-1983Includes one issue of Mountain Life and Work: The Magazine of the Appalachian South and one published 1973-1974 Bibliography on the Appalachian South. |
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Council on Economic Priorities, 1972-1979Includes six issues of their publication Economic Priorities Report, four issues of their newsletter, and a special report titled "The Invisible Hand: Questionable Corporate Payments Overseas" by Gordon Adams and Sherri Zann Rosenthal. |
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Council on Interracial Books for Children, 1981-1983Includes four issues of their bulletin and one special report/compilation of fact sheets on institutional racism. |
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Tom Cousins/Cousins Properties, 1968-1973 |
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Dick Couto, 1981-1982 |
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Created Equal, 1979A publication of the Southeastern Public Education Program designed to promote equality of the sexes in public schools; includes two issues. |
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CSA Printing, 1976-1981 |
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Bill Cutler, 1983-1984 |
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Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, 1985-1990Includes reports and analyses of various propositions, from tax reforms, food stamps, and budget proposals, all with regard to their impact on low income demographics. Also included are two publications by Isaac Shapiro, titled "The President's Veto of the Minimum Wage Bill: Impact on Poor and Minority Workers" and " No Escape: The Minimum Wage and Poverty," as well as a series of Holes in the Safety Nets, which report on poverty programs and policies across 13 different states. |
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Box 32 |
National Center for Policy Alternatives, 1989-1995A nonprofit promoting progressive policy for state and local governments , operating programs in Economic development, environment and Economics, family and work, and voter participation. Includes one issue of their publication Ways and Means and seven issues of their newsletter Alternatives. |
Center for Reflection on the Second Law, 1982-1995An organization committed to sustainable land ownership and habitation practices, rooted in a sacred view of the earth and environmental theology. |
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Center for Renewable Resources, 1985Includes one issue of their publication The Hidden Costs of Energy. |
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Center for Research on Women: Memphis, 1987-1989Includes two issues of their newsletter. |
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Center for Responsive Politics, 1990-1994Includes a proposal titled "Where Do We Go From Here? Rethinking Strategies for Reform of Money in Politics" and some reports from FEC Watch, a project of the Center for Responsive Politics committed to exposing the Federal Election Commission's poor record. Among additional print materials included in this folder are two issues of their publication Capital Eye: A Close-Up Look at Money in Politics. |
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Center for Rural Affairs, 1986-1987Includes two issues of their newsletter in survey of events affecting rural Nebraska. |
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Center for Southern Folklore, 1987-1989 |
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Center for the Study of Southern Culture, 1980-1985An educational program at the University of Mississippi offering interdisciplinary teaching, research, and outreach focused on the American South. |
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Center for the Study of Southern Culture and Religion, 1977-1982Includes five issues of their bulletin and two issues of their newsletter The Southern Register. |
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Center for Third World Organizations, 1983-1985Includes one issue their newsletter Third Force. |
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Center for Voting and Democracy, 1992-1994Includes three issues of their newsletter Voting and Democracy Review and one issue of Blueprint for Social Justice, a publication of the Twomey Center for Peace through Justice at Loyola University in New Orleans, Louisiana. |
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Center for Women's Economic Alternatives, 1984-1993A nonprofit located in Ahoskie, North Carolina focused on women's issues in rural counties with few resources for women's Economic development. Includes one issue of Women United and a photocopy of an issue of Southern Exposure about the poultry industry and poultry organizer Donna Bazemore. |
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Change Magazine |
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John Chapman Foundation, 1989-1990 |
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Chappell: Whites in the Movement, 1989Includes his dissertation prospectus for the University of Rochester, "Inside Agitators: White Southerners in the Civil Rights Movement, 1950-1970." |
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Alex Charns, 1988-1989Includes his research, writings, and newspaper clippings about FBI surveillance of Supreme Court Justices. |
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Chesapeake Bay Foundation, 1981-1982Includes one issue of their journal. |
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Judy Chicago, 1984Includes research materials about "granny midwives" in the South and, specifically, granny midwife Gussie Jackson from Plains, Georgia. Chicago's book "The Birth Project" tells the story with support from previously published photographs and contextual information in an issue of Southern Exposure, found in Chris Walters-Bugbee's article "And None of Them Left-Handed." |
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Chicago Neighborhood Information System, 1989Includes a report by James L. Greer on "Public and Private Investments in Urban Neighborhoods." |
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Chicago Reporter, 1986-1992Includes four issues of the publication, a monthly information service on racial issues in metropolitan Chicago. |
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Christian Appalachian Project, 1985 |
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Christic Institute, 1987-1992Includes four issues of their publication The People's Advocate. |
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Church Partners, 1992 |
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Citizens Clearing House for Hazardous Waste, 1984-1994Includes three issues of their Action Bulletin and eight issues of their publication Everyone's Backyard. |
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Citizens for Clean Industry, 1990-1991 |
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Citizens: Labor Energy Coalition |
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Citizens' Leadership Foundation, 1984-1985 |
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Citizens for Tax Justice, 1984-1987Includes two studies/reports published by the organization: "Corporate Income Taxes in the Reagan Years: A Study of Three Years of Legalized Tax Avoidance" and "The Sorry State of State Taxes: The Golden Opportunity of Federal Tax Reform." |
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Civil Rights Research and Documentation Project |
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Tony and Ellen Clarke-Sayer |
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Clean Water Fund of North Carolina |
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Clean Water Action Project, 1982-1985Includes organizational and promotional materials for a benefit concert featuring Si Kahn and Cathy Fink. |
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Clearinghouse for Environmental Advocacy and Research |
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Coal Employment Project |
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Coalition of Southern Black Youth (COSBY) |
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Stephanie Coffin |
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Jerry Cohen, 1979-1987 |
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Robert Coles, 1977-1978A psychiatrist and professor at Harvard University. Materials included in this folder highlight his praise of Southern Exposure as a valuable educational resource. |
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Columbia Journalism Review, 1978-1982Includes a photocopy of Bob Hall's article published in the Columbia Journalism Review, "The Brown Lung Controversy: How the Press, North and South, Handled a Story Involving the South's Largest Industry." |
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Commercial Equipment |
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Commission on Religion in Appalachia (CORA) |
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Common Cause |
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Common Sense Foundation, 1994Includes an excerpt from an issue of The Prism about the Common Sense Foundation, written by Chris Fitzsimon. |
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Communications Consortium, 1990A public interest media organization founded in 1987 which works with groups at both the national and local levels to design and implement media strategies on the issues of environment, reproductive health, and the jobs and family agenda. |
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Communities |
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Community Board Center for Policy and Training, 1985 |
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Community Education and Action Group |
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Community Information Exchange |
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North Carolina CED Network |
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Community JobsA journal of The Youth Project, a public foundation created in 1970 to assist grassroots organizing efforts, Community Jobs operated as a "trade journal" of and for those involved in community work to promote community change. |
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Box 33 |
Community Service Work Program |
Concerned Citizens of Tillery, North Carolina |
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Conservation Council of North Carolina |
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The Conservation Fund |
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Consumers United with Employees |
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Cece Conway |
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Danforth Foundation, 1977-1978Bob Hall was invited as a key resource and plenary session speaker to the Danforth Graduate Fellowship regional conference in March of 1978, organized to provide instruction and encouragement to graduate students working toward their Ph.D. and committed to careers in college teaching; includes a paper commissioned by the Danforth Foundation titled "The Community of Scholars and Self-interest Rightly Understood" by John MacAloon at the University of Chicago. |
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John David, 1982Includes proposal materials and personal research/notes for Southern Exposure's coverage of J. Peter Grace and the W.R. Grace Company. |
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Stuart Davidson, 1979 |
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The Day Foundation, 1978-1979Funded Bob Hall and Ken Dean's research on the prison complex at Shelby County Penal Farm in Memphis, Tennessee. The product, however, did not make deadline for Southern Exposure's special on prisons, and the grant was returned. |
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Ken Dean, 1978-1981A minister and prison chaplain with extensive experience investigating and writing about social conditions in the Mid-South region. In addition to supporting Bob Hall's research on the prison system in Memphis, he conducted studies on and wrote speeches about matters such as ministry, community needs, organization, and development of the greater Memphis area (including school desegregation and busing and school revenue), and Memphis television stations. |
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Peter and Deedee Decker, 1978Hosts of the Institute's cocktail party with Julian Bond, which served as an outreach event for supporters of the Institute and Southern Exposure, and as a fundraiser for their continued research and community development initiatives. |
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John Delgado, 1972-1977 |
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Democracy Project, 1981Includes a series of articles by and about the Democracy Project from September to December of 1981. |
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Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee, 1977-1983Founded in 1973 with the coming together of veterans from other social justice and community-focused organizing campaigns, intellectuals who fought Joe McCarthy, and younger activists engaged in the civil rights, anti-war, and feminist movements. The committee's vision was to create a socialist presence in the United States through public forums, discussions, and conferences, as well as their monthly Newsletter of the Democratic Left (seven copies included). |
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Delta Ministry, 1974Established by the National Council of Churches in 1964, the Delta Ministry played a crucial role in the Mississippi Civil Rights Movement. It supported the southern black freedom struggle with numerous programs and services focused on relief, education and training, self-help initiatives, Economic and community development, and the fostering of indigenous leadership and leadership skills. Included here is a publication titled "The Sabotage of Freedom Village: How the Farmers Home Administration Blocked Housing for the Rural Poor in Mississippi--A Sorry Tale of Bureaucratic Chicanery, Double Talk, and Double Dealing." |
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Discount Foundation, 1983Includes the Institute's grant proposal for a project on "Electoral Politics: Citizen Action in the Eighties." |
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Chuck Dizard, 1981Includes his comprehensive paper/report on "Strategic Organizing for the Eighties." |
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Jim Dombrowski, 1980-1981Hosted the annual Art Distribution at his residence in New Orleans, Louisiana. |
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Dollars and Sense, 1975-1980A monthly bulletin of Economic affairs; includes seven issues. |
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Bob Dorland, 1977, 1983 |
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Greg Downey, 1971 |
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Eric Draper, 1983 |
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Leonard and Rhoda Dreyfus, 1980 |
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Durham County Health Care, 1974 |
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Durham Life Broadcasting, 1981 |
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Durham-Orange Employment Training Office, 1979-1980 |
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Durham Tenants Steering Committee, 1982Includes one issue of the North Carolina Anvil and various clippings about rent increase in Durham and displacement of the poor. |
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Durham Women's CenterEstablished in 1983 by a group of women at the YWCA, the center offered peer counseling and support groups, educational activities, "hot-line" information and referral, and library and resource material addressing the needs of women in the community. |
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Virginia and Cliff Durr, 1970sCivil rights activists in Montgomery, Alabama, well-acquainted with Rosa Parks, Aubrey Williams, E.D. Nixon, and Myles Horton. Includes a transcript of interview with Virginia for coverage in Southern Exposure. |
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Daffney Dwyer, 1977-1981 |
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Earthwork Books, 1979Part of the education and organizing activities of the Center for Rural Studies, which played an active role in many land and food concerns throughout the United States and Canada. |
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East Tennessee Energy Group, 1975-1976Includes a dozen issues of their newsletter Ratekeeper News. |
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East Tennessee Research Corporation, 1976 |
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Eastern North Carolina Human Development Organization, 1983 |
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Ebsco Subscription Service, 1974-1978 |
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Economic Notes, 1973-1981A monthly publication of the Labor Research Association. Includes twenty two issues. |
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Ecos Incorporated, 1973-1976Includes two issues of their Environmental Bulletin, three newsletters, and special report by Egan O'Connor on solar energy. |
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Edelstein and Payne Legal Services, 1983 |
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Wells Eddleman, 1982-1983A frequent donor to the Institute of Southern Studies , with financial support largely invested in their research about and work on energy issues. |
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Educational Resources Information Center (ERIC), 1984 |
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Educational Resources Information Center: New Mexico State University, 1974Includes a publication by James M. Palmer of East Texas Baptist College on "The Impact of Private Education on the Rural South." |
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Brooks Egerton, 1981-1982Includes research and clippings about immigrant Southerners, particularly concerning migrants to Sun Belt and their return. |
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Abram Eisenman, 1977-1978A retired Savannah newspaper publisher and radio broadcaster, he ran for president of the United States as an official Democratic candidate in 1968, 1972, and 1976. Active politically and with a special interest in economic issues, he sent a manuscript of his fictional work "Survival" to Bob Hall in 1977 for publication in Southern Exposure. |
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Electricity and Gas for People: San Francisco, California |
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The Elements |
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Ron Eller, 1973 |
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Scott Ellsworth, 1977Includes his comprehensive paper/report on "The Textile Strike in Henderson, North Carolina, 1958-1961". |
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Encore Magazine, 1975-1977A black biweekly newsmagazine. Includes two issues. |
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Energy Policy Task Force, 1975 |
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John English, 1978-1979A free lance writer and documentary filmmaker who submitted a piece on James Gray to Bob Hall for publication in Southern Exposure; the edited and ultimately rejected manuscript is included in this folder. He also taught journalism at the University of Georgia in Athens. |
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Environmental Action: Washington D.C., 1973-1978Includes materials for various initiatives, such as their Solid Waste Project, Project Independence hearings (organized in the effort to minimize the nation's dependence on foreign energy sources), atomic energy safety, and electric utility rates. Includes two of their publications: one issue of The Power Line and one issue of Garbage Guide. |
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Environmental Policy Center, 1974-1979, 1986Formed in 1972 by Washington environmental lobbyists, the center's primary objectives included influencing Congressional and federal agency decisions about national environmental issues and working with local and regional citizens' groups to collaborate on behalf of new energy policies. |
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Environmentalist for Full Employment |
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Equal Employment Opportunity, 1970-1972Includes informational publications on the Equal Employment Opportunity Act of 1972, laws on sex discrimination in employment, and women's rights. |
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Equal Rights Congress, 1979Includes two reports from Executive Director Wylie Rogers about the November 3rd attack on an anti-Klan demonstration by the KKK and American Nazi party in Greensboro, North Carolina, resulting in the murder of five people. |
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Eskenosen, 1984-1985A rural conference and learning center in Roberta, Georgia. |
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Exploratory Project for Economic Alternatives, 1977-1980Includes materials about the COIN Campaign, Consumers Opposed to Inflation in the Necessities. |
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Exploratory Project for Economic Alternatives, 1976-1977Includes four comprehensive publications covering the following topics: Public Trusts for Environmental Protection, Cooperatives at the Crossroads, Understanding the New Inflation, and The Costs of Continued Unemployment. |
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Exposure, 1981Includes one issue of the newspaper, a publication of the Environmental Action Foundation. |
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FSA Photography, 1976-1979 |
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Fall-Out Coalition, 1981 |
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The Farm, 1981A community of some 1300 people in Summertown, Tennessee, living together as pacifists and promoting an alternative lifestyle rooted in the principles of self-sufficiency and independence from the profit system. |
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Pamela Farmer, 1979-1980Includes a comprehensive study on the relationship between the utility companies and Economic growth, a report published for the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill with the support of the Institute for Southern Studies and supervised by Bob Hall and Jim Overton. |
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Box 34 |
Mimi Conway, 1975-1981A former Time staffer and Newsweek reporter, her investigative work has also appeared in Newsday, The Village Voice, the New York Times, the Progressive, and Esquire. A grant from the Fund of Investigative Journalism facilitated her research on the textile industry in the South, which led to the publication of her book Rise Gonna Rise: A Portrait of Southern Textile Workers. Photographs for the book were taken by Earl Dotter. |
Coordinating Council of Literary Magazines, 1987Includes a directory of over 350 literary publications nationwide. |
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Corporate Campaign Incorporated, 1970sA team of experienced professionals with varied skills in all aspects of mounting and sustaining a corporate campaign, organized by director Ray Rogers as an innovative and dynamic strategy and key to union victory over J.P. Stevens and Company. |
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Corporate Data Exchange, 1977-1985Includes annual and progress reports, two handbooks on pension investments and banking and finance, and one report to the United Steelworkers of America titled "Confronting the Crisis: The Challenge for Labor." |
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Claire Cosner, 1979Includes transcripts of her interviews with Bob Hall and thesis for Hampshire College, "Geographically Oriented, Regional Magazine Journalism: A Critique of Southern Exposure, a Journal of Politics and Culture." |
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Cottage Cheese Productions, 1990-1993A company which released video and television productions specific to environmental issues. |
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Council on Economic Priorities, 1986-1993Includes five issues of their Research Report and one newsletter, as well as an analysis of various corporations across America with regard to their environmental policies and transgressions. Data for this report was collected by Council researchers as part of their Campaign for Cleaner Corporations. |
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Council of State Governments, 1985 |
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Council on Interracial Books for Children, 1984-1986Includes four issues of their bulletin and two annual catalogues of resources to counter racism, sexism, and other forms of bias in school and society. |
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Covert Action Information Bulletin, 1986Includes one issue which features an article by Noam Chomsky on the Libya attack and several articles on U.S. sponsorship of terrorism. |
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Matthew Countryman, 1990sIncludes the manuscripts for a resource packet developed for use by African-American youth and community organizations working to involve young people in school reform efforts. |
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Louie Crew, 1979-1980s |
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Cultural Survival, 1992 |
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Connie Curry, 2000Includes the manuscript for her paper "The Army of Wronged: The Poor, Friendless, and Black" given at the DuBois Conference in March of 2000. |
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Data Search, 1979-1980A private company specializing in research and information retrieval for individuals or organizations, located in the Research Triangle of North Carolina. |
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Data Center, 1985-1991A user-supported, public interest library and information center in Oakland, California focused on the United States and its role in the world political Economy, organized to serve labor, community, and political activists, investigative reporters, freelance writers, academic researchers, and students or individuals working in related areas of interest. |
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Tom Davenport Films, 1983-1985Includes several grant applications to the North Carolina Arts Council for his project with the Institute of Southern Studies, "A Singing Stream." |
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Death Penalty Information Packet, 1982 |
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Death Penalty Resistance Project of Tennessee, 1991 |
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Eugene Debs Foundation, 1986 |
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Deep Dish T.V. Network, 1990The first national public access satellite network and educational organization devoted to democratizing the media by providing a national forum via television programs made by community groups and independent producers. |
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Tom Dent, 1974-1981Proposed a three-part article/thought piece to Bob Hall for publication in Southern Exposure on New Orleans, Atlanta, and Andy Young, covering specifically the differences in black culture and politics between the two cities. |
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Discount Foundation, 1984 |
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L.C. Dorsey, 1981-1983The associate Director of the Delta Ministry, a Mississippi statewide human rights movement of the National Council of Churches, and of the Southern Coalition on Jails and Prisons, a nine-state prison reform program and anti-death penalty moratorium. Widely published, her work includes articles, editorials, and poetry about prison life and other matters of social work. Included in this folder is a poem of hers, titled "Struggling Against the Grain." |
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Earl Dotter, 1981-82, 1993-94A photographer for Southern Exposure and with various other published work, including here a 1979 calendar of miners and millworkers released by the Highlander Research and Education Center in New Market, Tennessee. |
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Earl Dotter: Poultry, 1989-1993Includes several sets of proofs documenting poultry farmers (and others) connected to the poultry issue, a matter of special interest to Bob Hall and the Institute of Southern Studies. |
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David Duke, 1989-1991A Klansman and former Grand Wizard of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan elected to the Louisiana State Legislature in 1989. Includes one issue of Klanwatch Intelligence Report and other publications covering his political career. |
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Duke Futures Program, 1989 |
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Duke University/University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Center for Research on Women, 1986-1989Includes three issues of their newsletter Branches. |
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Leslie Dunbar, 1987Includes two of her reports on the American welfare system. |
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Tony Dunbar, 1979-1982He wrote an expose for publication in Southern Exposure titled "Accident and Illness Rates are Uncommonly High in the Furniture Industry" and contributed to the Institute's work on a number of additional occasions. |
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Virginia and Cliff Durr, 1985Includes promotional materials for the Southern Oral History Program and Bull's Head Book Shop sponsored "Conversation with Virginia Durr," an event celebrating the publication of her oral autobiography Outside the Magic Circle. |
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Leigh Eason |
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Eastcoast Farmworkers Supply Network, 1983-1988 |
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Eastern North Carolina Human Development Organization, 1983-1984 |
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Economic Policy Institute, 1992Includes one issue of their journal. |
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Steve Edelstein, 1993Includes his proposal for a Labor Law Education and Participation Project. |
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John Egerton, 1977-1990Includes his booklet Education and Desegregation in Eight Schools, made possible by the Ford Foundation. |
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EMI Electronics, 1991 |
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Emergency Land Fund, 1973-1982Includes a report sponsored by Clark College of Atlanta, Georgia and funded by the Rockefeller Brothers Fund titled "Only Six Million Acres: The Decline of Black Owned Land in the Rural South." |
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Empowerment Project, 1995 |
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Energy Research Foundation, 1985-1991Includes one issue of their publication Research Exchange. |
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Environmental Action, 1988-1989 |
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Environmental Defense Fund |
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Environmental Policy Institute, 1987-1989Includes one issue of their publication Environmental Update. |
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Environmental Protection Agency: Air Quality, etc., 1990Includes one issue of their publication Earth Citizen. |
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Environmental Exchange, 1991-1993 |
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Environmental Resources Project, 1989-1995Includes five issues of their publication connecting the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill to the community, The Link and two issues of their Sustainable State News. |
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Environmental Summit, 1989 |
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Environmental Task Force |
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Episcopal Diocese: Hunger Commission, 1988A commission which delved broadly into the complexities of hunger and poverty in North Carolina and pursued ties with the Institute of Southern Studies in the interest of a collaborative field to table study of the food Economy. |
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Richard Epps, 1983-1987A graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, he served as the school's first black student body president and at the time of his correspondence with Bob Hall was as a trial attorney with the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice. He proposed a project for publication in Southern Exposure detailing the history of the black student at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, with the intent of capturing an era of desegregation. |
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Robin Epstein: Peat Mining, 1985-1986Includes her proposal for and draft of the article which later was published in an issue of Southern Exposure (included in the folder). "The Peat Wars" is a success story about the coalition of local fishers and environmentalists who together fought off the threat to their way of life on the coast by slowing entrepreneur Malcolm McLean's proposed mining of peat bogs, which would cause irreparable damage to the ecology and Economy of North Carolina's Outer Banks. |
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ERIC Clearinghouse on Rural Education and Small Schools, 1990Includes one bulletin. |
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Ergonomics Resource CenterA joint program of North Carolina's Department of Labor and North Carolina State University, established to address the rising rate of Cumulative Trauma Disorders (such as strained backs and carpal tunnel syndrome) in the workplace. |
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Eskenosen, 1986 |
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Watt Espy Correspondence, 1980Includes a historical log of executions of prison inmates across North Carolina, ranging from 1812 to 1949. Data sets include name, race, age (occasionally), occupation, county, crime, race of victim, motive, date of execution, and (sometime) form of execution. The records are listed in a table format on the first couple pages, followed by a more narrative documentation. |
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William Randolph Hearst Foundation |
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Jim Hightower, 1984-1987A Texas democrat and elected Commissioner of Agriculture, he became famous across the country as the orator who thrilled a national television audience with his humorous lambasting of the Bush administration at the Democratic Convention. What became known as his "hot bites" were 300-word hard-hitting and hilarious commentaries exposing corporate exploiters and bureaucratic rip-off artists. |
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Box 35 |
Federal Reserve Bank, 1974-1976Includes two issues of Economic Review from the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond and two issues of Business Review from the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. |
Federation for Economic Democracy, 1977A project of the Funding and Educational Development Organization. Includes one issue of their newsletter, which covers stories of the development of self-management in the United States. |
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Federation of Southern Cooperatives, 1972-1982An organization comprised of thirty agricultural co-ops uniting thousands of small farmers and sharecroppers in rural areas, members spanning fourteen states across the South and including mostly low income Black people, low income white people from the Appalachian region, Mexican-Americans from Texas, and Indigenous Peoples from Oklahoma and Mississippi. As a central service organization, it provided management accounting, training, legal, and educational services. Includes one annual report from 1972. |
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Feminary, 1982A journal granted funding from the Fund for Southern Communities to pursue and publish a special issue titled, "Staying or Leaving: The South as Home." |
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Feminist Press, 1976-1977A publishing house and network of people across the country concerned with educational change, focused on the promotion of books by neglected female authors, nonsexist children's stories, materials for the classroom, and information on women's studies. Includes one issue of their newsletter Newsnotes and one issue of their journal publication from the fall of 1977 |
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Field Foundation, 1970s-1980sIncludes one biennial report and a print of "Freedom Came to Mississippi" by L.C. Dorsey. |
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Film Fund, 1979-1983A funding service for films with highest priority given to projects on issues around which there are local or national organizing efforts. Includes five issues of their newsletter and some published guidelines of eligibility for grant applicants. |
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Bill Finger, 1978-1980A published writer with various newspapers and literary magazines. Includes an essay of his titled "On Structural Change" and a book proposal titled "Courtside at Freedom Hall". Also included are clippings and issues of publications in which his work is featured. |
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First World Magazine, 1977Includes one issue. |
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Ernest Fitzgerald Seminar, 1972-1973Author of book The High Priests of Waste, which tells of his adventures in Pentagon big spending, and special consultant to the Joint Economic Committee of Congress. The seminar featured him as a speaker on federal Economic policies and what they mean to the taxpayer. |
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Paul Fitzgerald , 1977Includes a column of his on flea markets which Bob Hall later reprinted in a special issue of Southern Exposure on folklife. |
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Florida Clearinghouse on Criminal Justice, 1979-1983Includes the draft of a paper by Michael Kroll on the death penalty in Florida, which the organization planned to print and distribute to civic groups, legislators, educators, and others concerned about the issue. Also included is one issue of their newsletter. |
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Florida Community Development Corporations |
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Florida Consumer Federation, 1982-1983Includes four issues of their newspaper Federation Focus and a collection of clippings from publications such as The Tampa Tribune and News of Delray Beach. |
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Federation of Childcare Centers of Alabama (FOCAL), 1982Includes one issue of their newsletter. |
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Food and Drug Administration, 1972Includes a series of reports/news releases. |
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Bernard Forer, 1985 |
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James Forman, 1981Includes one issue of The Washington Times. |
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Forum, 1977-1979Includes four issues of the publication, which seeks to bring people together in a context of in-depth coverage about developments in equal opportunity and affirmative action. |
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Kenny Foscue, 1981 |
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Foxfire, 1976-1983A nonprofit/multi-faceted project born from the culture of and located in the Appalachian Mountains of northeast Georgia. Its public high school curriculum is grounded in experiential learning and offers courses in environmental studies, photography and bookkeeping, furniture craftsmanship, music, publishing, and more. Includes four issues of the Foxfire Fund's newsletter for cultural journalism, Hands On, and a series of photographs from the school. |
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Free Southern Theatre, 1974-1978A national leader in the Black Arts Movement pioneering new aesthetic forms which influenced rising poets and performing artists. Includes ten issues of their newsletter, FST Voice. |
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Freedom of Information Act, 1978-1983 |
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Freedomways, 1982A quarterly review of the Freedom Movement; includes one issue. |
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Roland Freeman, 1977Includes a draft of his article submission to Southern Exposure on The Mississippi Folklife Project, including photo documentation to accompany the text. |
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Freemen and Southern Society Project, 1981 |
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Friends of Filipino People Project, 1984 |
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Friends of the Earth, 1983An organization which proposed legislation aimed at the prevention of birth defects. |
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Eric Frumin, 1980-1981Includes an agreement between the Institute of Southern Studies and the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union for a public education project through mass media on the cotton dust standard and one issue of The Columbus Times. |
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Full Employment Action Council, 1980sIncludes one issue of Blueprint for a Working America, which conveys a comprehensive message about the American Economy concerning its ills of inflation and unemployment and offering sensible, people-oriented solutions. The publication was distributed as a pamphlet by dozens of labor, civil rights, and religious groups, all comprising the Full Employment Action Council. |
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Katherine Fulton, 1980Includes a synopsis of her research and written work about the black female household worker in the twentieth century south and the role of the black domestic in Southern life and literature. |
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Fund for Open Information and Accountability, 1981Includes one issue of their publication Our Right to Know. |
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Fund for Southern Communities, 1980-1984A member organization of the Funding Exchange; includes one issue of their newsletter. |
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Fund for Southern Communities 1982 Funding Cycle |
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Sally GaabIncludes a draft of her piece for Southern Exposure on the women's movement. |
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Debbie Galant, 1978Includes clippings and photocopies from various publications in which her articles were published, as well as her resume and application materials for a position with the Institute of Southern Studies. |
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Tom Gardner, 1980 |
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Samuel Garner, 1983 |
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G.G. Gatling |
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John Gaventa, 1976-1978Includes three reports: one on the AMAX Coal Company in Tennessee, one on "Appalachia and the Third Face of Power" by John Gaventa, and one on the impact of unionism. |
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Pamela George, 1979 |
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Georgia American Civil Liberties Union, 1982Includes a pamphlet on "Reaganism and the New Right: A Clear and Present Danger to Civil Liberties and Civil Rights." |
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Georgia Action, 1979-1981Includes the organization's official campaign for youth summer jobs and one issue of their newsletter Action Power. |
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John Glen, 1984 |
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Glenmary Justice Ministry, 1983 |
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Goddard-Cambridge Graduate Program in Social Change, 1977-1978A unique educational venture producing research reports, theatrical presentations, and literary social commentaries among graduates who become community leaders and social activists. |
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Grand Gulf Nuclear Plant |
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Grantsmanship Center, 1980 |
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Graphic Arts International Union, 1981 |
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Grass Roots Events, 1980A nonprofit organized to present cultural events and educational programs through story and song, often as an expression of outrage against injustice and designed to inspire hope and creativity. |
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Grass Roots Peoples Parties, 1974Includes one issue of Grass Roots, a national publication for the People's Parties. |
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Bingham Graves, 1976-1978 |
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Box 36 |
Fairfield United |
Faith and Politics Institute, 1994-1995A non-partisan nonprofit created to facilitate spiritual growth and moral and ethical reflection in public life, particularly as it relates to effective leadership in racial Reconciliation, Economic justice, and non-violent conflict resolution. |
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Leslie Falk, 1986Includes a speech and clippings about Joy Hume Falk, who received a humanitarian service award from the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). |
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Families USA, 1984-1993Formerly the Villers Foundation, it seeks to help reform ageist stereotypes through its support for and assistance in a wide variety of organizing and social change work by elders. |
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Farm Labor Organizing Committee, 1994 |
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Farmworkers Self-Help Incorporated, 1994Includes one issue of their newsletter. |
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Federal Elections Commission, 1991 |
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Federal Express |
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Federation for Industrial Retention and Renewal, 1989-1994A coalition of community, labor, and religious organizations from all regions of the country which together examine the social costs of Economic dislocation and insist on a voice for workers in Economic decisions affecting them. Includes two issues of their publication Notes and six issues of their newsletter. |
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Federation of Southern Cooperatives, 1988Includes two issues of their newsletter. |
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Deborah and Ken Ferruccio, 1993Two activists who fought the PCB landfill in Afton, North Carolina for fourteen years. |
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Field Foundation, 1980sAn organization committed to policy alternatives, operating from a concern about the presidential administration's threat to the lives of millions of low-income families, particularly children, by way of excessive budget cuts. |
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Films, 1983-1990Includes brochures and catalogs for various film productions on social issues, most notably the environment and peace and conflict. |
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Film Fund, 1984Includes three issues of their newsletter. |
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Bill Finger, 1984-1987 |
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First Union Forecast of North Carolina Economy, 1983-1989Includes seventeen issues of the publication. |
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Food Day, 1974-1980Includes three issues of Food Monitor, which provides information, analysis, and action on food, land, and hunger. |
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Food First, 1980s-1990A publication of the Institute for Food and Development Policy; includes one issue. |
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Food Research Task Force, 1976Includes a pilot study and corporate profile on Consolidated Foods, an agribusiness firm. |
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Ford Foundation, 1974-1982Includes six issues of their newsletter and two publications: "Left-Handed Fastballers: Scouting and Training America's Grass-Roots Leaders 1966-1977" and "That 51 Per Cent: Ford Foundation Activities Related to Opportunities for Women." |
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Leah Fortson, 1990 |
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Forward Motion, 1987-1988 |
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Fourth and Gill Neighborhood Committee, 1978Includes one issue of The Gazette, a newspaper from Knoxville, Tennessee serving as a voice for poor and working class people. |
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John Hope Franklin, 1989-1990Includes a paper of his titled "In Their Footsteps: The Forerunners of Martin Luther King, Jr." |
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Friends of the State Parks: North Carolina, 1987An organization with the mission to protect North Carolina's extensive Natural Parks and Recreation Areas from development detrimental to their ecosystem and to promote public awareness of the contribution of the Parks system to quality of life. Includes one newsletter. |
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Katherine Fulton, 1989 |
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Fundi Productions, 1982-1983Includes publicity materials for films Bob Hall agreed to list as resources in Southern Exposure. Featured films include "The Story of Ella Baker," "Beauty in the Bricks," and "The Flashettes." |
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Carter Garber and Marty Collier, 1988-1989Development professionals working in Managua, Nicaragua. Includes one issue of The Cepad Report from the Evangelical Committee for Aid to Development. |
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Paul Gaston, 1984 |
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General Service Foundation, 1979-1981An organization contributing to research in the fields of population, education, and environment. |
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Georgia Poverty, 1986-1990Includes two publications with special coverage of Burke County, Georgia, its industrial growth and changing job market, politics, and race relations. |
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Gwen Gerber: Animal and Human Abuse, 1990-1991Includes an overview of The National Assessment and Conference featuring The Animal Abuse and Human Violence Project's work in promoting animal welfare, one newsletter from The Animal Protection Society of Orange County, one issue of The Latham Letter, and one issue of APEC News about domestic violence. |
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Alice Gerard, 1990 |
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Gifts in Kind, 1985-1986An organization with the mission of expanding the capacity to provide voluntary services by promoting in-kind donations as a supplement to financial support. |
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Jess and Kathy Gilbert, 1975-1981Includes applications for a Youthgrant from the National Endowment of the Humanities to fund their proposed project on "Southern Agrarianism in the 1930s: Challenges to Contemporary America." |
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Rose Gladney, 1977 |
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Brent Glass, 1978 |
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Blue Ridge Environmental Defense League, 1986-1988Includes three issues of their publication The League Line, which provides updates on nuclear waste. |
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Good Works Directory, 1989A publication and much needed resource of alternative careers, listing over 600 social change organizations with paid positions, internships, and volunteer opportunities. |
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Goldenseal, 1977-1978A quarterly forum documenting West Virginia's Traditional Life. Includes two issues. |
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Jerome and Donna Gorman, 1984-1985Directors of Penny Resistance, an anti-death penalty organization fighting for its abolition. |
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Governor's Waste Management Board, 1988 |
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Government Accountability Project, 1988-1994Includes one issue of The Washington Monthly. |
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Grassroots Development, 1991A journal of the Inter-American Foundation. Includes the special 20th anniversary issue. |
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Grassroots Leadership Project, 1984-1993Includes five issues of their newsletter. |
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Grassroots Peace Directory, 1987A computer-based directory of information on religious and secular groups working in the areas of peace, disarmament, and international security. Includes one issue covering organizations in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee. |
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Grassroots Press, 1991 |
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Jim Green and Vann Woodward, 1983-1984 |
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Green WaveA movement for environmental justice and a sustainable Economy. |
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Greensboro Justice Fund, 1984-1994Includes one issue of their newsletter. |
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Greenpeace, 1989 |
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William GreiderIncludes a photocopy of his book The Trouble with Money. |
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Richard Grossman, 1988-1995Publisher of The Wrenching Debate Gazette. Includes five issues and several clippings of his articles featured in various publications. |
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Guild Bindery Press, 1989 |
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Guilford Alliance for Gay and Lesbian EqualityA grass-roots organization of gay men, lesbians, and allies committed to the complete political, legal, Economic, and social equality of all people. |
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Gulf Coast Tenant Leadership Development Project, 1979-1988 |
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Box 37 |
Rayna Green, 1981The director of Project on Native Americans in Science. |
Green Mountain Quarterly, 1975Includes "The Urban Ethnic Working Class" by Richard Rothstein. |
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Wayne Greenhaw, 1978Includes his letter to Bob Hall regarding a pitch for "Long Journey Home: Folklife in the South," about a friend who was killed in an airplane crash. |
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Greensboro Justice Fund , 1981-1982Includes an issue of the newsletter with article, "Who were the Greensboro five?" |
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The Greenville, North Carolina Paper, 1975A nonprofit community publication written and supported by people in the Greenville Community. |
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Greensboro Sun, 1980Includes an issue of the newspaper with focus on "Music in the Summer City: Notes on Sounds, Groups and Places to Go." |
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Barry Greever, 1983 |
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Lindsey Gruson , 1979Includes a letter to Bob Hall about an alternative viewpoint on the nuclear issue. |
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Guardian, 1980The Independent Radical Newsweekly. |
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Gulfcoast Pulpwood Association, 1971Includes appeals from the United States District Court on behalf of the Southern District of Alabama. |
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Steve Haft, 1978 |
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Barry Hager, 1982-1983The North Carolina director of People for the American Way. |
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Phillip Hanes, Jr., 1978 |
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Harpers, 1980 |
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George Harris, 1981Includes a letter to George Harris from Bob Hall expressing interest in doing a special issue of Southern Exposure on food and farming. |
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Human/Economic Appalachian Development Corporation (HEAD), 1980 |
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Health Policy Advisory Center (HEALTH-PAC), 1982Includes one issue of the bulletin with coverage of "The Case of the Disappearing Nurse." |
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Diana Hembree, 1981 |
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Bob Herbert, 1978Includes a letter from Bob Herbert to Peter H. Wood. |
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John Herling's Labor Letter, 1977Includes forty five issues. |
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Neill Herring, 1976Includes an issue of the newspaper Ripsaw. |
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Hill and Wang, 1976Includes a letter from Arthur Wang to Bob Hall informing him of the publication of "Our Appalachia," an oral history edited by Laurel Shackelford and Bill Weinberg. |
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George Holt, 1977Includes papers for the North Carolina Bicentennial Folklife Festival. |
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Mike Honey, 1983 |
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Myles Horton |
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Hospital Workers, 1981Includes a letter from the Southern Hospital Workers Organizing Committee. |
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Bob Houston, 1981 |
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Human Endeavor, 1976 |
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Human Services in the Rural Environment, 1980A bi-monthly newsletter which provides an exchange for practitioners and educators in the rural non-metropolitan areas. |
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Human Serve Fund, 1983 |
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Edward Humberger, 1981Includes his research and policy proposal for the Community Development Collaborative. |
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Pamela George, 1979Includes issues of Hunger Notes, a newsletter of the World Hunger Education Service. |
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Floyd Hunter, 1971 |
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Bruce Hutson, 1977 |
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Box 38 |
Earl Hall, 1985 |
Jacquelyn Hall, 1980-1993A graduate of Columbia University with a doctorate in history, professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and as an American Historian the author of several books and journal publications. She is married to Bob Hall. Includes one newsletter from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, featuring her piece "An Oral History of Industrialization: Learning by Listening." |
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Jason Hall, 1988Includes a short piece of his titled "Serving a Minority: The Georgia State Flag." |
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Robert Hamburger, 1981-982Includes a photocopy of his article published in a 1977 issue of Southern Exposure, "A Stranger in the House". His research and writings predominantly covered the history of women and domestic workers in the South. |
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Oskars Hanbergs, 1994Includes his research proposal for a study of successful nonviolent movements and peaceful change, looking specifically at the Civil Rights Movement in the American South and the Independence Movement in Latvia. |
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Handsnet, 1990A communications tool offering timely access to relevant news, resources, and information on a broad range of human service issues. Includes one issue of their newsletter Connections. |
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Peter Hans, 1991-1992Conducted an extensive public financing research project as a consultant to the Institute of Southern Studies. Additionally, as the Special Assistant for Policy and Research to Lieutenant Governor James C. Gardner, also included is a co-authored report about improving North Carolina's public school system. |
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Vincent Harding, 1978 |
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Chris HarlanIncludes his proposal to the Institute of Southern Studies for the publication of a photo essay on the life of Yolanda Vasquez de Ybarra, a former migrant farmworker in Sampson County, North Carolina. |
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Harvard Legislative Research Bureau, 1987 |
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Haw River Assembly, 1985-1986Includes a report on and study of synthetic organic chemicals in Pittsboro drinking water and influent Haw River water. |
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Haymarket Peoples Fund, 1977 |
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Human/Economic Appalachian Development Corporation (HEAD), 1985Includes three issues of their newsletter Impact. |
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Helping Hands, 1991-1992 |
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Russel Herman, 1990Includes his drafter proposal and plan for Here, a news publication of and for progressive organizing in North Carolina. |
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Neil Herring, 1991An author, poet, and photographer. Includes four published booklets featuring his work. |
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Annie Hess, 1986-1990 |
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Highlander, 1970s-1990sThe Highlander Research and Education Center in East Tennessee is a 105-acre farm which brings people together to learn from social activists, educators, grassroots leaders, and each other. Includes twelve issues of their newsletter, Highlander Reports. |
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Highlander, 1980s-1990sIncludes ten issues of their newsletter and a collection of stories and resources from a water workshop at the Center titled "Water: You Have to Drink it with a Fork." |
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Tom Hill, 1984 |
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Wilbur Hobby, 1982-1984A prominent leader in North Carolina's labor movement and president of North Carolina's chapter of the American Federation of Labor - Congress of Industrial Organizations. Includes summary of social activist work with senior citizens, women, civil rights, the environment, and other public interest campaigns and a copy of a petition for a writ in the case of Wilbur Hobby (petitioner) v. United States of America (respondent). |
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Steve Hoffius, 1976-1981 |
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Bill Holman, 1989Includes a copy of Senate Bill 27 introduced to the North Carolina General Assembly: "NC May Exceed US Environmental Regs". |
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Cliff Honicker, 1991-1992 |
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Mary Howell, 1992 |
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Human Environment Center, 1989Serves as a clearinghouse for information on existing and new conservation and service corps programs. |
|
Human Rights Watch, 1998-2000Includes an annual report, a publications catalog, a report on "Clinton's Landmine Legacy," and a similar report in French about consolidation in Burundi. |
|
Human Service Institute, 1985-1986An organization in Greensboro, North Carolina which seeks to create an atmosphere of dialogue and collaboration among participating agency executives and academic faculty involved in human services. Includes one newsletter from the Human SERVE Campaign. |
|
The Humanity Fund, 1980Formed in response to the increasing probability of war and growing sentiments of militarism, the severity of poverty and other forms of social injustice, and the developing ecological catastrophe. Empowers people through their support of projects directed toward the growth of a more cooperative and just world. |
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Maclyn Humphrey, 1986 |
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ICA Group, 1991-1992 |
|
Impact, 1987 |
|
In These Times, 1986-1987A publication of the Institute for Public Affairs, reporting on the Reagan administration's "illegal, immoral, and arrogant activities". Includes one issue of the newspaper. |
|
Independent Opinion Research and CommunicationsOffers a wide variety of services to business, industry, political and governmental agencies, and governmental leaders, such as conducting surveys, providing campaign consultation, media production, advertising, and focus groups. |
|
Industrial Areas Foundation, 1990-1993Includes a special edition 50th anniversary publication about the organization and its legacy organizing for change. |
|
Industrial Union Department, 1986-1996Includes six issues of their newsletter Action and a salute to Harold McIver, the former national organizing director. |
|
Infact, 1981-1992 |
|
Inform, 1984-1993Includes eight issues of Inform Reports. |
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Robert Ingolls, 1984-1985 |
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Injured Workers Network: North Carolina, 1993 |
|
Injured Workers Union: Louisiana |
|
Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy, 1990Includes a publication by Mark Ritchie on "Trading Away Our Environment." |
|
Institute for Alternative Agriculture, 1983-1991Includes eight issues of their newsletter Alternative Agriculture News and a comprehensive agenda for "Research on the Impacts of Sustainable Agriculture: Assessment and Recommendations of a Panel of Social Scientists." |
|
Institute for Alternative Journalism |
|
Institute for Community Economics, 1990-1991Includes one issue of their newsletter. |
|
Institute for Conservation Leadership, 1989-1995Includes two issues of their newsletter The Network. |
|
Institute on Desegregation, 1989 |
|
Institute for Labor Education and Research, 1979-1981Includes a publication titled "The Economy: Who's Holding Up Who?" |
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Institute for Women's Policy Research, 1992 |
|
Interdenominational Theological Center, 1992 |
|
Interfaith Center for Corporate Responsibility, 1971-1977Includes three issues of The Corporate Information Center's publication The Corporate Examiner, a report on "Church Investments, Technological Warfare, and the Military-Industrial Complex," and collected informational documents about "Corporate Responsibility and Religious Institutions." |
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Interlinks, 1985 |
|
International Economic Conversion Conference, 1984Includes proceedings and other materials from the conference held at Boston College in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. |
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Interreligious Foundation for Community Organization, 1977-1988 |
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Investigative Reporting Fund: Asheville, North CarolinaA research and reporting organization which funds investigative reports on social and Economic justice, the environment, sustainable Economics, transportation, minority rights, sexual equality, and education. |
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Island Press 1990-1993 |
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Island Press 1994-, 1994-1995 |
|
Malcolm Jones, 1983Includes his resume and other application materials for a position with the Institute of Southern Studies and Southern Exposure, including a collection of his articles with other publications. |
|
Box 39 |
Institutional Development and Economic Affairs Service (IDEAS), 1972-1974Includes a letter to Murry Durst from Bob Hall about Southern Exposure. |
Iconoclast, 1975Includes a newspaper clipping with article titled "Dallas Civil Service Employees Get the Shove." |
|
Independent Community Consult, 1983 |
|
Independent Publishing Fund, 1977 |
|
Industrial Union Department, 1981 |
|
Inform, 1982Includes Inform reports and a book by James Cannon serving as a guide to industrial pollution: "A Clear View." |
|
Initiative News Report, 1982A bi-weekly report on nationwide ballot initiatives. |
|
Inquiry, 1977 |
|
Institute for Community Economics, 1987 |
|
Institute for Policy Studies, 1970Includes documents from conference on the United States Strategy in Asia. |
|
The Institute for Social Justice (Acorn), 1977 |
|
Institute of Cultural Affairs, 1983Includes a letter from Rose H. Worden to Bob Hall upon referral for his and Southern Exposure's inclusion in Success Southern. |
|
Institute of the Black World |
|
Institute of Policy Sciences and Public Affairs (Duke University), 1974Includes pamphlet with goals and objectives for the internship program at Duke University. |
|
The Institute for Social JusticeEstablished in 1974 to provide technical assistance to urban dwellers working toward community-based and community-controlled development. |
|
Institute in the Church in Urban Industrial Society: Chicago, Illinois, 1976 |
|
Institute for Policy Studies, 1983Includes a resource catalog. |
|
Institute of Race Relations, 1975 |
|
Interfaith Action for Economic Justice, 1980-1983Includes a booklet titled, "Journal: Inter-American Foundation" and several annual reports. |
|
Interfaith Action for Economic Justice, 1983Includes an annual report for the Interreligious Taskforce in United States Food Policy. |
|
Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility, 1981 |
|
International Association of Machinists (IAM), 1979Includes information about J.C. Turner's withdrawal from the race for presidency of the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations. |
|
International Bulletin, 1977Includes thirty five issues. |
|
International Chemical Workers Union, 1980Includes issues of the Southern Fight-Back newsletter and a newspaper clipping from The Clarion-Ledger. |
|
International Peoples Appeal, 1977Includes two newsletters. |
|
International Workshops, 1977Includes case studies on "Flags of Convenience," "Guinea Bissau," and "Military Regimes in Latin America". |
|
In These Times, 1976 |
|
Investor responsibility Research Center, 1978 |
|
Maynard Jackson, 1977Includes correspondence regarding controversy between the City of Atlanta and the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees. |
|
Job with Peace, 1986Includes one copy of the "Jobs with Peace Campaign Report." |
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Barbara Jordan, 1977 |
|
Journal of Products Liability, 1977 |
|
Box 40 |
July Fourth Coalition, 1977Includes a letter from John Carver to Bob Hall about building a People's Alliance. |
Justice and Peace Center: Wisconsin, 1975Includes a letter from Ken Rolling requesting a copy of the first issue of Southern Exposure on "The Military and the South." |
|
Henry Kahn and Mickey Gillmor, 1983Includes a letter from Bob Hall to Henry and Mickey about a fundraiser in Atlanta. |
|
Si Kahn, 1974A singer-songwriter, activist, and founder and former executive director of Grassroots Leadership. |
|
Katallagete, 1978 |
|
Harris and Eliza Kempner Fund, 1982Includes record of the organization's $1,000 donation to the Institute for Southern Studies. |
|
Robert F. Kennedy Memorial, 1979Includes a booklet about "Robert Kennedy and The Qualities of Leadership." |
|
Martin Luther King Center for Social Science, 1977Includes booklets titled, "Nonviolence and Human Rights" and "Charting the Course for Nonviolent Social Change." |
|
K.Y. Highlands Investment Company, 1981Includes newspaper clipping with article titled, "Development Group in Appalachia Finds it Needs More Capital to Foster Capitalism." |
|
Kingsport, 1978 |
|
Ted Knight, 1976 |
|
Koinonia Partners, 1973 |
|
Barbara Kopple, 1978Includes a letter from Bob Hall in response to Kopple's request for Southern Exposure issues on textile organizing. |
|
Shelly Korman, 1981 |
|
Kudzu Alliance, 1979 |
|
Labor Notes, 1982Includes two issues of the newsletter. |
|
The Labor Theater, 1975Includes issues of their newsletter and a mini poster. |
|
Ladyslipper, 1980 |
|
Lamar Society, 1974Includes an issue of the Southern Journal. |
|
Joy Lamm, 1979Includes a letter from Lamm to Bob Hall about a poem she had sent him, "A Miner's Death." |
|
David Larson, 1978Includes correspondence addressing his proposed article on migrant conditions in North Carolina. |
|
Washington Office on Latin America, 1981 |
|
Angaza Laughing House, 1983 |
|
The Law Project: Atlanta, Georgia, 1978 |
|
Ken Lawrence, 1977Includes a copy of "Marx on American Slavery." |
|
Box 41 |
Reader Response/Land Stewardship Council, 1980 |
Land Stewardship Council of North Carolina, 1985 |
|
Land Loss Prevention Project/Southern Advertisers, 1985-1987 |
|
La Mujer Obrera, 1991 |
|
Labor Research Association, 1993Includes one issue of Economic Notes. |
|
Labor Party Advocates |
|
Labor Notes, 1991 |
|
Jenny Labalme, 1989 |
|
Cliff Kuhn, 1981Includes a letter from Bob Hall to Kuhn regarding an internship opportunity with the Institute for Southern Studies. |
|
Ku Klux Klan, 1985Includes information about Glen Miller's leadership of the Carolina Knights. |
|
Robert Korstad, 1988Includes "Opportunities Found and Lost: Labor, Radicals, and the Early Civil Rights Movement." |
|
North Carolina Association of Electric Coops, 1985Includes eighteen copies of the Klanwatch Intelligence Report. |
|
Larry Krone, 1988Includes papers related to the nonprofit North Carolina Against Racist and Religious Violence. |
|
Michael Kroll, 1984 |
|
Kentucky Fair Tax, 1984 |
|
Kentuckians for the Commonwealth, 1988Includes thirteen issues of their newsletter Balancing the Scales. |
|
Kentucky Local Government Project, 1992Includes three copies of their Local Voices newspaper. |
|
Mary Lee Kerr, 1991 |
|
Stetson Kennedy, 1974 |
|
Kettering Foundation |
|
Liz Kettelle, 1984 |
|
James J. Kilpatrick, 1983Includes a newspaper clipping from Raleigh News and Observer on James J. Kilpatrick. |
|
Mary King, 1983Includes a pamphlet titled "Freedom Song: A personal Story of the 1960s Civil Rights Movement." |
|
Kitchen Table and Women of Color Press, 1987 |
|
Al Krebs, 1992 |
|
John Locke Foundation, 1990Includes a letter from John M. Hood to Bob Hall. |
|
Elise Witt, 1986Includes "The Climate for Workers in the United States: A Study and Report" by the Southern Labor Institute. |
|
Lynn Goldberg Communications Incorporated, 1991Includes documents from the Arlington Daily News. |
|
The Kamper Group, 1986The Rural Advancement Fund of National Sharecroppers Fund. |
|
Katuah Magazine, 1985A bioregional journal of the southern Appalachias; includes five issues. |
|
Wally Kaufman, 1987 |
|
Tom Kennedy, 1984 |
|
Kentucky Housing, 1984-1985Includes a report on "Better Housing for Low-Income Families." |
|
Jonah, 1986 |
|
Delores Janiewski, 1988 |
|
Cornelia Janke: Tillery, North Carolina, 1986Includes a report on "Tillery, North Carolina: One Hundred Years of Struggle in a Black Community." |
|
Japan Pacific Resource Network, 1987Includes a pamphlet titled, "Everybody's Business: A Peoples Guide to Economic Development." |
|
Marie Jemison, 1984 |
|
Neh Grant, 1995Includes twenty six issues of the Joint Center for Political Studies monthly newsletter Focus and two booklets titled, "Black Elected Officials and their Constituencies" and "Race and Political Strategy." |
|
Box 42 |
John Lewis, 1973Includes the transcripts of an interview with Lewis conducted by Jack Bass and Walter De Vries. |
League of Conservation Voters, 1970Includes a report about "How Congress voted on Energy and the Environment." |
|
League of Women Voters, 1983 |
|
League of Women Voters, 1972Includes issues of their newspaper FACTS. |
|
Legislative Electoral Action Program (LEAP), 1983 |
|
Legal Defense Fund (LDF), 1986Includes materials about the awaited Supreme Court ruling on major civil rights issues. |
|
Sue Levine, 1977Includes a newspaper clipping from the New York Times titled, "A Pictorial Tribute to Working Women." |
|
Boyd Lewis, 1980 |
|
Liberation Magazine, 1975 |
|
Liberation News Service, 1979 |
|
Limits to Growth, 1975 |
|
Joel and Sherri Davidson/Living in the Ozark's Newsletter (LION), 1973 |
|
Jim Loewen, 1979 |
|
Pare Lorentz, 1979Includes letter from Lorentz to Bob Hall about Southern Exposure's receipt of the George Polk Regional Reporting Award. |
|
Louisiana Committee for the Humanities, 1978 |
|
Bob Lynn, 1977 |
|
Mississippi Action for Community Education (MACE): Charles Bannerman, 1979Includes issues of the newspaper The voices of Shimph. |
|
Metropolitan Cooperative Educational Service Agency (MCESA): Atlanta, 1975 |
|
Microwave Communications Incorporated (MCI) Long Distance Service, 1982 |
|
Wakesa Madzimoyo, 1980Includes their application for a staff editorial position with Southern Exposure. |
|
Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority (MARTA): Miscellaneous, 1972Includes a United States Department of Labor booklet on "Commuting" and a pamphlet titled, "What Bus and Rail transit Means to You." |
|
Bob Maguire, 1978 |
|
Maine Issues, 1977Includes one issue of newspaper The Maine Issue. |
|
Emil Malizia, 1977Includes presentation notes of their report titled, "A Study of the Determinants of Geographical Earning Differentials." |
|
Adrienne Manns, 1983 |
|
Steve March, 1982 |
|
Markle Foundation, 1980 |
|
Marxist Perspectives, 1979 |
|
Massachusetts Fair Share, 1976Includes five issues of the newsmonthly. |
|
David Massey, 1976 |
|
Master Printers of America, 1983 |
|
Match IncorporatedIncludes an Appalachian Hand Craft Catalog. |
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Bob Maurer, 1977Includes a copy of "North Carolina's Buried Treasure: The Ben Chavis Case." |
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Mike McCarthy, 1976 |
|
Ed McConville, 1978 |
|
Marde McCreary, 1982 |
|
Dan McCurry, 1975A student at Chicago City College who wrote "The Great Railroad Robbery." |
|
Laughlin McDonald, 1981 |
|
Sharon McKern-Whitaker, 1977 |
|
George McMillan, 1979Includes a photocopy of The Beaudor Cazette. |
|
Measuring Cup, 1979A publication of Public Information and Research Services; includes one issue. |
|
Suzanne Mendelssohn, 1977Includes a "Special Issue: Empire State Report" and "Fundraising in the Public Interest" by Suzanne Mendelssohn. |
|
Mercer University Press, 1981 |
|
Microfilming Corporation of America, 1974 |
|
MicroforumIncludes two issues. |
|
Midwest AcademyIncludes publication "What is an Organizer?" by Richard Rothstein. |
|
Midwest Institute Academy, 1977 |
|
Milea Foundation, 1974 |
|
Military Resource ProjectIncludes a pamphlet titled, "Before You Join the Military." |
|
Calvin Miller, 1983 |
|
George Mitchell, 1978 |
|
H. L. Mitchell, 1983 |
|
Hayes Mizell, 1978 |
|
Mobilization for Survival, 1977Includes issues of newsletter The Mobilizer. |
|
Modern Media Institute, 1977Includes issues of Summary magazine. |
|
Bob Moody, 1970Includes publication titled, "The Lord and Ellen Burnett: Angst in Arkansas." |
|
Carolina Brown Lung Association, 1978Includes a letter to Bob Hall from Gael Mooney. |
|
Box 43 |
Ken Lawrence, 1987 |
Lead Belly, 1992Includes issues of the Lead Belly Letter, a publication of the Lead Belly Society. |
|
The League of Women Voters, 1992Includes letter from Alyson Reed, Project Manager of The League of Women Voters, to Bob Hall, thanking him for his endorsement and support of the National Voter Registration Drive. |
|
Jim Lee, 1984Includes a letter Bob Hall wrote to the Marian Davis Scholarship Fund on behalf of Jim Lee. |
|
Left Green Notes, 1989Organizing Bulletin of the Left Green Network. |
|
Legislative Electoral Action Program (LEAP): New England, 1990Includes a photocopy of the Hartford Courant. |
|
Legal Services of North Carolina, 1985Includes three fliers with information about what items you need to apply for food stamps. |
|
Lesbian and Gay Health ProjectIncludes two pamphlets with guidelines for AIDS risk reduction. |
|
John Lewis, 1990Includes a letter from John Lewis (a member of Congress) to Bob Hall. |
|
Libby Lewis, 1978Includes "A Study of First-Time Wage Earners in North Carolina" by Dorothy Elizabeth Lewis. |
|
Liberation GraphicsIncludes "Oppositional Poster Publishing: The Basics." |
|
Light Factory, 1990Includes two issues of The Light Factory's Community Voice. |
|
Light WorksIncludes photographs of Nicaragua and a Lightworks pamphlet. |
|
Tobi LippinIncludes a document about workers' compensation benefits. |
|
Lobbying Handbooks and GuidesIncludes a booklet titled, "How to Change the World: A Woman's Guide to Grassroots Lobbying." |
|
W.H. Long Marketing, 1988Includes a letter sent to Bob Hall regarding 'Who Owns North Carolina?' |
|
Larry Long |
|
Slice of Life, 1984Includes a newspaper clipping from Slice of Life, "The Fair's Forum of Homegrown Music." |
|
Pare Lorentz, 1984Includes three issues of The Washington Film Council magazine. |
|
Doug Lowe, 1983 |
|
Luce Press Clippings |
|
Isabelle Lyle, 1985 |
|
Serving Co-op |
|
Mid-Atlantic Radical Historians' Organization (MARHO)Includes one issue of their newsletter. |
|
Pete MacDowell, 1992Includes photocopies of the News and Observer, one article titled "The Power of Money." |
|
Wekesa O. Madzimoyo, 1992 |
|
Richard Magat, 1994Includes a letter from Richard Magat, a visiting fellow at Yale University, to Bob Hall. |
|
Making a DifferenceIncludes three issues. |
|
Management Assistance Group (MAG), 1983Includes a client evaluation. |
|
Manning Marable, 1978 |
|
Steve March, 1992Includes "Catfish Jones And One-Eyed Johnny Down by the River at Twilight," a book by Stephen March. |
|
Karl Mathiasen, 1984 |
|
Imedla Maurer, 1983 |
|
Chris Mayfield |
|
George McDaniel |
|
Jim McElduff, 1992 |
|
Vincent McGee, 1981 |
|
Manpower Development Corporation (MDC), 1992Includes booklets titled, "Coming out of the Shadows" and "Shadows in the Sunbelt". |
|
Media Guides and Working with Press, 1993Include a photocopy of newspaper clipping titled, "Specific Tips to Follow When Dealing with the News Media." |
|
Media: Starting a New Magazine, 1973-1978The first semi-automated subscription management system. |
|
Media Network, 1981 |
|
Memphis Magazine, 1984 |
|
Mercer University Press, 1988 |
|
Metro Mary Polling |
|
Mickey Michaux |
|
Midwest Center for Labor ResearchIncludes resources for unions. |
|
Migrant Research and Information Project, 1982 |
|
Miller Brewing Company, 1983 |
|
Birthalene Miller, 1989 |
|
Jennifer Miller, 1979Includes issues of newspaper The Coaster Dispatch. |
|
Marc Miller |
|
Minority People Council: Tennessee Tombigee Waterway Project, 1986 |
|
Minority Trendsletter, 1992A publication of the Center for Third World Organizing. |
|
Mississippi Cultural Arts Alliance, 1984Includes two issues of their newsletter Monitor. |
|
H.L. Mitchell, 1990 |
|
Hayes Mizell, 1984Includes "A New Education Agenda for the South." |
|
Mobilization for Survival, 1986Includes issues of the Weapons Facilities Network Bulletin. |
|
Morgan Association, 1988 |
|
Mother Jones, 1984 |
|
Mountain Life and Work, 1984The magazine of the Appalachian South; includes four issues. |
|
Mountain Women's Exchange: Jellico, Tennessee |
|
Mountaineer Policy Institute |
|
Mary Mountcastle, 1993 |
|
Multinational Monitor, 1994 |
|
Laura MurphyIncludes "Results of Consultancy Survey of Community Economic Development." |
|
Ronald Myers: Tchula ClinicIncludes issues of newsletter Activities of Daily Living. |
|
The Daily News, 1990 |
|
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), 1985 |
|
American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO) |
|
National Anti-Klan Network, 1985Includes two issues of their newsletter. |
|
National Association for Preservation and Perpetuation of Storytelling (NAPPS), 1985Includes one issue of their National Storytelling journal. |
|
National Association of ManufacturersIncludes papers from Coastal Lumber Company. |
|
National Black Child Development Institute, 1987Includes the 21st Annual Conference booklet. |
|
National Civil Rights Museum |
|
National Coalition Against the Death Penalty, 1984Includes eight issues of their newsletter Life Lines. |
|
National Coalition Against the Misuse of Pesticides, 1984 |
|
National Coalition Building Institute |
|
National Commission for Economic Conversion and Disarmament, 1995 |
|
National Committee for an Effective Congress |
|
National Committee for Full Employment, 1986Includes "A First Friday Report" and "Youth Employment Today: Invest Now or Pay Later." |
|
National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy, 1990Includes a special report on "Workplace Giving Alternatives." |
|
National Committee for Independent Political Action, 1984 |
|
National Council on Crime And Delinquency, 1987-1988 |
|
National Economic Development and Law Center, 1986Includes two reports. |
|
National Education Association, 1981Includes a booklet titled, "Violence, The Ku Klux Klan, and the Struggle For Equality." |
|
National Emergency Mobilization of the Right to Vote |
|
National Endowment for the Arts, 1989 |
|
National Farm Alliance |
|
National Family Farm Coalition |
|
National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, 1988 |
|
National Issues Forum |
|
National Network of Grantmakers, 1981 |
|
National Network of Grantmakers , 1985 |
|
National Neighborhood Coalition (NNC), 1992Includes issues of their Information Report. |
|
National Newspaper Publishers Association, 1992 |
|
National Office of the Episcopal Church, 1989 |
|
National Organizers AllianceIncludes a book of biographical information about the participants in the National Organizers Alliance Gathering titled, "Who's Who in the N-O-A?" |
|
National Priorities Project, 1989 |
|
Box 44 |
Moral Majority, 1983Includes photocopy of an article from the Daily News titled, "Moral Majority Takes on Local Gays." |
More Magazine, 1977 |
|
More Magazine, 1980 |
|
Charles Morgan, 1976Includes a newspaper clipping titled, "No Final Days for Charles Morgan." |
|
Mother Jones, 1977A publication with tagline "A magazine for the rest of us." |
|
Mountain Call, 1975Includes seven issues. |
|
Mountain Eagle, 1977Includes a newspaper clipping about Sherry Lynn Bently. |
|
Movement for Economic Justice, 1976Includes a booklet titled, "Just Economics." |
|
MS Magazine, 1975 |
|
Multinational Monitor, 1983Includes three issues. |
|
Bill Murrah |
|
Alan Murray, 1975 |
|
Pauli Murray, 1979Includes an American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) publication titled, "Women's Rights Report: The Liberation of Black Women." |
|
Muse Foundation |
|
Mutual of Omaha, 1983 |
|
Gunner Mydral, 1974Includes "The Case Against Romantic Ethnicity" by Gunner Myrdal. |
|
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), 1983 |
|
National Action/Research on the Military-Industrial Complex (NARMIC): Philadelphia, 1971Includes issues of newsletter Air War. |
|
Mark NaisonIncludes "Harlem Communists and The Politics of Black Protest." |
|
Nashville Panel, 1980Includes a pamphlet titled, "How is it Possible: An Explanation of the KKK." |
|
Nation, 1977 |
|
National Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression, 1978 |
|
National Anti-Klan Network, 1980 |
|
National Association of Human Rights Workers, 1978Includes a booklet titled, "The Dilemma of Black Politics: A Report on Harassment of Black Elected Officials." |
|
National Black Independent Political Party (NBIPP) |
|
National Black United Fund, 1982 |
|
National Campaign to Save Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), 1983 |
|
National Citizens Committee for Broadcasting, 1976 |
|
National Council on Household Employment, 1981 |
|
National Committee for Full Employment |
|
National Committee in Support of Based Organizations, 1980 |
|
National Conference of Black Mayors, 1983 |
|
National Conference on Religion and Labor, 1982Includes program for the Third National Conference on Religion and Labor. |
|
National Consumer Congress, 1975 |
|
National Consumer Information Center, 1977 |
|
National Council of La Raza, 1983Includes a journal of Hispanic Issues and Bilingualism in the United States. |
|
National Endowment for the Arts, 1981Includes a guide to programs. |
|
National Endowment for the Humanities, 1981 |
|
National Family Farm CoalitionIncludes report of Title I Meeting. |
|
National Food Coalition Materials, 1979Includes issues of newsletter The National Farmworker and newspaper Matchbook. |
|
National Humanities Center, 1980 |
|
National Institute for Work and Learning, 1980 |
|
National Intervenors, 1974 |
|
National Labor Relations, 1979 |
|
National Lawyers Guild, 1975 |
|
National Opinion Poll Magazine, 1978Includes two issues. |
|
National Organization of Women, 1973 |
|
National Peace Conversion Campaign, 1975Includes two issues of the Southern Strategy. |
|
National Peoples Action, 1977Includes "The Next Move: Gale Concotta" and issues of newspaper Disclosure. |
|
National Public Radio, 1978 |
|
National Rural Center, 1978 |
|
National Sharecroppers Fund, 1976Includes a working paper on "The Next Five Years." |
|
National Training and Information Center, 1977Includes two issues of newspaper Disclosure. |
|
National Women's Education Fund, 1983 |
|
Natural Resources Defense Council, 1982 |
|
Nexus Gallery |
|
New York Foundation, 1979 |
|
New York Chinatown History Project, 1983 |
|
New York Review of Books, 1977 |
|
New York Times, 1981Includes clipping of article by Bob Hall titled, "The Politician as Magician." |
|
Box 45 |
National Rainbow Coalition, 1987 |
National Right to Work Committee, 1984 |
|
National Safe Workplace Institute, 1992 |
|
National Society of Internships, 1984 |
|
National Student Movement, 1988Includes photocopied newspaper clippings from The Chapel Hill Newspaper, one article titled, "Campus Activism on Rise: Student." |
|
National Taxpayers Union, 1974Includes issues of Dollars and Sense. |
|
National Toxics Campaign, 1993Includes "Sewage of Foreigners" by Scott Morrison and Leanne Howe. |
|
National Trust for Historical Preservation, 1989Includes a pamphlet titled, "Preservation Forum: A Valuable Partner." |
|
National Unemployed Network, 1988Includes newspaper clippings from St. Louis Post-Dispatch and The Philadelphia Inquirer, with one article titled, "The Hard Times Aren't Over: Basic Information on the Status of Working People." |
|
National Voting Rights Institute, 1994Includes papers pertaining to voters requesting that the federal court declare campaign finance system unconstitutional. |
|
Old Lod Schoolhouse: North Carolina, 1986Includes photocopies of newspaper clippings from The Wall Street Journal. |
|
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), 1985Reports on total number of death row inmates known to Legal Defense Fund. |
|
The Nation, 1990 |
|
Barbara Neely, 1985 |
|
Neighbor to Neighbor, 1987 |
|
New Party, 1993Includes five issues of their newsletter. |
|
National Patriot Alliance, 1976 |
|
New Republic, 1976 |
|
New River Free Press, 1985 |
|
New York State Defenders Association, 1984Includes two issues of their publication The Defender and a booklet titled, "Capital Losses: The Price of the Death Penalty for New York State." |
|
New World, 1984Includes "Fulfilling the Promise of Disclosure" by Edward Zuckerman. |
|
North Carolinians Against Racist and Religious Violence (NCARRV), 1990Includes various reports about bigotry and hate in North Carolina. |
|
North American Farm Alliance, 1990Includes issues of their newspaper. |
|
North American Worker Network, 1993Includes a booklet on free trade mailing. |
|
New World Foundation, 1972-1982 |
|
New World Communication: Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1974Includes issues of their newsletter. |
|
Newsletter of the Democratic Left, 1977 |
|
New Line Presentations, 1976 |
|
New Directions |
|
New Day Films, 1981-1982 |
|
New American Movement, 1976 |
|
Network of North Carolina Women, 1980Includes six issues of their newspaper. |
|
Doyle Niemann, 1983 |
|
E.D. Nixon, 1984 |
|
Phil Noble Association: South Carolina |
|
Nuclear Information and Research Service, 1984 |
|
Nuclear Times, 1983 |
|
Nuclear Watch, 1982 |
|
The Nucleus Club: Alabama, 1975Includes three issues. |
|
Nuke Information and Environment, 1999Includes "Working Notes on Community Rights-to-Know" and a photocopy of The Washington Spectator. |
|
North Carolina Agricultural Marketing Project |
|
North Carolina American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO), 1985 |
|
North Carolina Alternative Energy Corporation, 1990 |
|
North Carolina Association of Educators (NCAE), 1986-1987 |
|
North Carolina Association of Black Lawyers, 1983 |
|
North Carolina Board of Science and Technology, 1984 |
|
North Carolina Catch Model Ordinance |
|
North Carolina Center for Black History, 1988 |
|
North Carolina Center for Nonprofits, 1992-1993 |
|
Box 46 |
North Carolina Center for Public Policy: Raleigh, 1982-1990 |
North Carolina Civil Liberties, 1985John R. Kernodle was president of organization at time. |
|
North Carolina Arts Council, 1978-1981Includes a guide to programs. |
|
North Carolina Association of Educators, 1981Includes four issues of their newspaper. |
|
North Carolina Catch (Citizens Action on Toxic and Chemical Hazards), 1982 |
|
North Carolina Catch (Citizens Action on Toxic and Chemical Hazards), 1983 |
|
North Carolina Catch (Citizens Action on Toxic and Chemical Hazards), 1984 |
|
North Carolina Central University (NCCU) Harbambi Student Union |
|
North Carolina Citizens Association, 1977 |
|
North Carolina Citizens Network, 1981 |
|
North Carolina Coastal Federation, 1992Includes "A Citizen's Guide to Coastal Water Resource Management." |
|
North Carolina Coastal Federation, 1988Includes a newspaper clipping from Coastal Review and the organization's strategic plan. |
|
North Carolina Coastal Federation, 1983 |
|
North Carolina Farmworkers Network |
|
North Carolina Federation of Teachers, 1980 |
|
North Carolina Health Access Coalition, 1993Includes two pamphlets titled, "The Consumer Checklist for Evaluating President Clinton's Health Program" and "Our Health Care System is Sick." |
|
North Carolina Humanities Committee, 1984 |
|
North Carolina Hunger Coalition, 1981 |
|
North Carolina Independent Film and Video Association, 1980Includes issues of Rough Cut News. |
|
North Carolina Industrial CommissionIncludes "North Carolina Worker's Compensation Act in a Nutshell." |
|
North Carolina Institute of Minority Economic Development, 1989 |
|
North Carolina Labor Law Center, 1979 |
|
North Carolina Land Use Congress, 1982Includes two issues of their newsletter. |
|
North Carolina League of Conservation Voters, 1983 |
|
North Carolina Forum |
|
North Carolina Low Income Housing Coalition, 1990Includes issues of their newsletter Housing Hotline. |
|
North Carolina Nature Conservancy, 1981Includes newspaper clipping of article titled, "Saving the Carolinas." |
|
Box 47 |
North Carolina New Priorities Project, 1993Includes "Reinvest in North Carolina: Put our Federal Tax Dollars to Work." |
North Carolina Occupational Safety and Health Project (NCOSH), 1983Includes issues of Safety and Health News and a pamphlet titled, "A New Coalition to Combat Workplace Illness." |
|
North Carolina Legal Services Corporation, 1980Includes booklet titled, "Legal Services of North Carolina Perspectives." |
|
North Carolina Peace Network, 1982-1984Includes two issues of newsletter. |
|
North Carolina Poverty Project, 1988Includes booklet titled, "Finding out About Poverty in North Carolina." |
|
North Carolina Political Prisoners Committee, 1973Includes special edition issues of Criminal Justice. |
|
North Carolina Prison and Jail Report, 1981 |
|
North State Public Video, 1975-1979 |
|
North Carolina Rail Trails, 1990 |
|
North Carolina Real Enterprises, 1990Includes four issues of The Real Story. |
|
North Carolina Recycling Association, 1989 |
|
North Carolina Rural Development Center Poultry Project, 1990 |
|
North Carolina Rural Development Center, 1992Includes booklet detailing "Program Highlights." |
|
North Carolina Sane/Freeze, 1990Includes issues of newsletter. |
|
North Carolina Solar CenterIncludes list of project videotapes. |
|
North Carolina Senior Citizen's Federation Incorporated, 1979 |
|
North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics, 1983 |
|
North Carolina Student Rural Health Coalition, 1992Includes report titled, "African-American Workers: Leading the Struggle for Occupational Safety and Health." |
|
North Carolina Student Christian Movement, 1984 |
|
North Carolina Waste Awareness and Reduction (WARN), 1991Includes photocopies of The Sanford Herald and The Atlanta Constitution. |
|
North Carolina Wildlife Federation, 1988 |
|
North Carolina Women's History Project |
|
North Carolina Women's Legislative Agenda, 1988 |
|
North Carolina Writers Network, 1986Includes issues of the bi-monthly newsletter. |
|
North Carolina for Effective Citizenship, 1983 |
|
North Carolinians for Effective Citizenship, 1983 |
|
North Carolinians for Effective Citizenship, 1986Includes board meeting agendas. |
|
North Carolinians for Effective Citizenship Pre-1983 |
|
North Carolinians for Full Voting and Rights, 1982Includes fliers with "A Message to Senators Not from North Carolina." |
|
North Mississippi Rural Legal Services, 1979Includes nine issues of their newsletter. |
|
Northern Lights |
|
Northern Rockies Action Group, 1981Includes "Be it Enacted By the People: A Citizen's Guide to Initiatives." |
|
John Norton, 1978 |
|
North Carolina Center for Public Policy: Raleigh, 1994Includes a Watchdog report on the first ten years. |
|
North Carolina Coalition on Farm and Rural Families |
|
North Carolina Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality, 1993Includes booklet titled, "Homophobia and Human Rights in North Carolina." |
|
North Carolina Coastal Federation, 1984Includes three issues of newspaper Coastal Review. |
|
North Carolina Committee on Bicentennial, 1989 |
|
North Carolina Community Land Trustees, 1989Coalition strives to meet critical need for housing document |
|
North Carolina Council for Churches, 1986 |
|
North Carolina Department of Commerce |
|
North Carolina Department of Crime Control |
|
North Carolina Equality Incorporated, 1991Includes "Equality Reports". |
|
North Carolina Fair Share, 1993Includes handbook titled, "Breakthrough to Progressive Front Membership." |
|
Carolina Community Project, 1989Includes meeting agendas. |
|
Box 48 |
Oak Ridge Peace Conversion Group Project, 1984Includes report of Radiation Research Project. |
Oak Ridge Peace Conversion Group , 1982 |
|
Loli Oates, 1993 |
|
Oil, Chemical, and Atomic Workers International Union (OCAW), 1987 |
|
Sondra O'Neale, 1983 |
|
Occupational Safety and Health Law Center, 1989 |
|
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Watch, 1987Includes "The Struggle for Public Accountability." |
|
Open Door Community, 1985Includes an issue of The Georgia Bulletin. |
|
Todd Oppenheimer, 1991 |
|
Oral HistoryIncludes "The Southern Oral History Project: Special Projects on Contemporary Southern Politics." |
|
Oral History of the American Left, 1981Includes issues of their newsletter. |
|
Orange/Durham Coalition for Peace in the Middle East, 1991Includes "Middle East Peace Guide for North Carolina." |
|
Jim O'reilly, 1984 |
|
Organizing Media Project, 1986 |
|
Organization of American Historians, 1981 |
|
Oxfam America, 1988 |
|
James OrangeIncludes Bob Hall's notes about interview with James Orange. |
|
Orange County for Alternative Power (OCCAP), 1975Includes presentation to Public Hearing with Attorney General Edmisten and an issue of The Chapel Hill Newspaper. |
|
Our South, 1980Includes a proposal from The Institute for Southern Studies. |
|
Organizer Magazine, 1981-1982Includes two issues of their journal The Organizer. |
|
Osawatomie, 1975 |
|
Overton-Hazardous Waste, 1980-1981Includes a pamphlet about "Nuclear Power" and an issue of newspaper Greensboro Daily News. |
|
PJ Promotions (PJP), 1982 |
|
Pacific News Service, 1977 |
|
Pacific Research, 1975-1977Includes sixteen issues. |
|
Pacific Northwest Research Center, 1975Includes two copies of "Institutional Racism in American Society: A Primer," "The Rightness of Whiteness," "The Indian in Michigan," and a catalog publications. |
|
People Acting for Change Together (PACT) |
|
Box 49 |
Pacific Studies Center, 1986-1987Includes eleven issues of their newsletter Global Electronics. |
Pantheon Books, 1976 |
|
Pantheon Books, 1983 |
|
Panthers for Livable Places, 1992 |
|
Partnership for Democracy, 1991 |
|
Pastoral Letter, 1987-1988 |
|
Alicia Patterson Foundation, 1990Includes issues of their publication APF Reporter. |
|
Daniel Patterson, 1980Includes grant application for a National Endowment for the Arts project. |
|
Gwen Patton, 1986 |
|
Pay Discrimination Institute, 1984 |
|
Peace Development Fund, 1984 |
|
Penn Center, 1992 |
|
People for Community Recovery, 1992 |
|
People for the American Way, 1984Includes their report titled, "The Attack on Public Education: North Carolina Experience." |
|
People of Color, 1991Includes "United Church of Christ: Commission for Racial Justice." |
|
People of Color Environmental Groups, 1991Includes papers related to The First National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit. |
|
People's Alliance Fund, 1985 |
|
People's Voice, 1984The newspaper for all the people of Halifax and Northampton counties. |
|
Joe Pfister, 1983Includes a thank you letter to Pfister from Bob Hall for his contribution of $4,200 to the Institute for Southern Studies. |
|
Phoenix Resources, 1993 |
|
Philanthropy Journal, 1993Includes an issue of their newspaper. |
|
Feather Phillips, 1994 |
|
Piedmont Environmental Council, 1989Includes issues of their newsletter Newsreporter. |
|
Piedmont Peace Project, 1999Includes issues of their newsletter Connections. |
|
Monte Piliawsky, 1983Includes a pamphlet titled, "Primary Election." |
|
Mark Pinsky, 1995Includes clippings from the Los Angeles Times. |
|
Planned Parenthood, 1989 |
|
Johnathan PolanskyIncludes "Selling the South: How to reach More People, More Persuasively." |
|
Polling Rep, 1990 |
|
Dan Pollitt, 1987Includes "The National Labor Relations Act: Proposals for Legislative Change." |
|
Grace Paine, 1976 |
|
Neil Painter, 1981 |
|
Palmetto Alliance, 1978Includes "The UnEconomics of Nuclear Energy." |
|
Pantheon Books |
|
Parker Coltrane Pac, 1982Includes New York Times clipping titled, "Blacks and Their Allies Learn to be Candidates." |
|
Parker/Dodd Association, 1980 |
|
Anita Parlow, 1977 |
|
Alicia Patterson Foundation, 1978 |
|
Jerry Paul |
|
Peace Newsletter, 1976Includes one issue. |
|
Dick Pearce, 1975 |
|
Box 50 |
Janice Pearlman, 1975-1976A professor of City and Regional Planning at the University of California at Berkeley engaged in exploratory research on the issue of local community organizations, grassroots challenges, and rural and urban social movements. Includes an article adapted from her paper presented at the International Sociological Association Conference in Messina, Italy in 1976. |
Penn Community Services, 1975-1982A community development institution in Frogmore, South Carolina offering on-site agricultural, land retention, and education and youth development programs, as well as other seminars; a symbol of Black achievement since 1862. |
|
People for the American Way, 1982-1984An organization established to meet the challenges of discord and fragmentation with an affirmation of the "American way," meaning pluralism, individuality, freedom of thought, expression, and religion, a sense of community, and tolerance and compassion for others. Includes one issue of their quarterly report and one issue of their newsletter Forum, as well as two reports: "Religion in North Carolina's Schools: The Hidden Reality" and "Defending the Freedom to Learn: Combatting Censorship in North Carolina's Schools." |
|
People United to Save Humanity (PUSH), 1982An operation serving as the vehicle for Jesse Jackson's campaign of trade agreements with various large corporations, organized in the effort to employ more blacks at all levels of industry. Includes an article from Fortune magazine about the conflict between Jackson and Anheuser-Busch. |
|
People's Alliance for a Cooperative Commonwealth, 1975-1983A socioeconomic justice organization dedicated to the rights of workers and consumers violated by corporate interests and a government which has grown unresponsive to the nation's needs. Includes ten issues of their newsletter The People's Word. |
|
People's Appalachia, 1972-1973A critical research report from the People's Appalachian Research Collective. Includes four issues. |
|
People's Art Action, 1981-1982An organization with the vision of providing arts experience and training for incarcerated people, handicapped people, minorities, juveniles, the elderly, and other special groups and to facilitate the exploration of issues like justice, racism, gay rights, nuclear power, worker rights, and freedom. |
|
People's Bicentennial Commission, 1974-1976A nonprofit, public foundation established with the belief that the Bicentennial Era can serve as a time for stimulating renewed understanding and commitment to the democratic ideals which shaped the birth of America, thereby uniting individuals and groups into a force for change. Includes eight issues of their publication Commons Sense and other special edition print material. |
|
People's Bookseller, 1974Includes one issue of the publication, a newsletter for Progressive Booksellers. |
|
People's Energy Movement for People's Power, 1974-1976Includes three issues of their news publication on citizen action in energy, People and Energy, and a comprehensive "Citizens Energy Platform" prepared by various organization involved in energy and environmental action and policy. |
|
People's Press, 1974-1975A group of anti-war activists in San Francisco, California established in response to the struggle of Vietnamese people against U.S. imperialism and which focused their publications on imperialist oppression around the world as resistance movements continued to grow. |
|
People's Voice, 1982-1983A newspaper for all the people of Halifax and North Hampton Counties in North Carolina, committed to the exchange of ideas as a means to broaden the range of social, cultural, political, and Economic discussion. Includes three issues. |
|
Theda Perdue, 1984 |
|
Periodical Exposition Displays, 1974-1978 |
|
H. Ross Perot, 1977 |
|
Joseph Persky, 1977Includes an article co-authored with John F. Kain on "Migration, Employment, and Race in the Deep South." |
|
Ron Phillips, 1977-1983The executive director of Coastal Enterprises Incorporated, a private nonprofit community development organization tackling local issues of employment and business opportunities in the natural resource industries of Midcoast Maine. Includes a proposal for an aquaculture development workshop, a publication on "Growing Oysters and Mussels in Maine," and one issue of the organization's quarterly newsletter Ventures. |
|
Pilgrim Press, 1980 |
|
Mark Pinsky, 1978-1982Staff writer for Southern Exposure. |
|
The Piton Foundation, 1980-1981 |
|
Planning Magazine, 1975Includes two issues. |
|
Phaye Poliakoff, 1977-1981 |
|
Politicks, 1977A citizen action publication with which Bob Hall, as editor of Southern Exposure, proposed an advertisement exchange. |
|
Politics and Education, 1977-1978A national magazine of higher education designed to overturn clichés about political apathy by supporting, reporting on, and working with the many people engaged in constructive change in education. |
|
Politics and Society, 1978 |
|
George Polk Award, 1979-1985A recognition of special achievement in journalism. Southern Exposure was named winner of the award for Regional Reporting in 1979, and Bob Hall later served on the national panel of advisers to assist in the selection of candidates. |
|
Paul Pooley, 1988 |
|
Population Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1976 |
|
Popular Economics Press, 1976Includes one issue addressing the question: "What's Happening to Our Jobs?" |
|
Potomac Institute, 1981Includes a report on grant-making and operating organizations for which information has been submitted to the information exchange of an educational project about voting rights and black political participation in the South. |
|
Poverty and Race Research Action Council (PRRAC), 1994An organization committed to progressive solutions to problems of race and poverty. Includes a network directory and one issue of their newsletter. |
|
Fred Powledge |
|
Poynter Fund, 1982 |
|
Prairie Fire, 1988Includes a report/semiquarterly update from the Heartland on rural faith and justice issues published by the Interfaith/Ecumenical Mid-continent Consultation on the rural crisis. |
|
Presbyterian Church, 1982 |
|
Presbyterian Hunger Program, 1982-1983 |
|
Julian Price, 1991 |
|
Mary Priniski, 1992 |
|
Prisoner Visitation and SupportA nationwide program for prisoners in federal and military prisons, sponsored by thirty five national religious bodies and socially-concerned agencies. |
|
The Progressive, 1973-1977Includes two issues of the publication. |
|
The Progressive, 1984-1986 |
|
Progressive Alliance, 1980 |
|
The Progressive Political Action Committee, 1983Includes a press release announcing the organization's launch of a $100,000 advertising campaign for a 1983 educational effort against Senator Jesse Helms in North Carolina. |
|
Progressive Support Service, 1981 |
|
Pro-Media Public Relations, 1989-1995Includes reports on the State Homeless Persons' Assistance Act of 1989. |
|
Project Censored, 1989-1991Includes two comprehensive reports on the "Top 25 Censored News Stories" by Carl Jensen. |
|
Project on Corporate Responsibility: Washington, D.C., 1972Includes one issue of News and Thoughts. |
|
Project Vote!, 1982-1983An effort to ensure equal access to the ballot and empower the poor. Includes articles and memorandums written and prepared by Sanford A. Newman, the project's executive director. |
|
Paul Pruitt, 1985 |
|
Public Citizen, 1975-1982Includes two reports on the Congressional voting index/money index, intended to aid citizens in holding their elected officials accountable and published by the Public Citizen's Congress Watch advocacy group founded by Ralph Nader. |
|
Public Concern Foundation, 1984 |
|
Public Education Project (PEPIC), 1976 |
|
Public Interest Economics Foundation, 1982 |
|
Public Interest Public Relations, 1979-1981 |
|
Public Interest Video Network, 1986 |
|
Public Media Center, 1987-1989Includes one issue of their newsletter and two annual reports. |
|
Public Power, 1983 |
|
The Public Voice, 1974 |
|
Public Works, 1976-1977A publication of the Community Ownership Organizing Project. Includes two issues. |
|
Publishers Clearing House |
|
Rachel's Hazardous Waste News, 1989 |
|
Religion, 1978 |
|
Box 51 |
United States General Accounting Office (GAO), 1991Includes booklet titled, "Pollution from Pipelines" and a clipping from newspaper The Atlanta Constitution. |
Population, 1990 |
|
Poverty: Insurance/AFDC/Benefits, 1989Includes a report titled "Taxing the Poor: The Tax System in Alabama." |
|
Print-Outs of Charts |
|
Public Citizen: Energy Statement, 1992Includes news release. |
|
Public Citizen: Nuclear Lemons, 1991Includes news release. |
|
Public Citizen: Sun Day, 1993Includes news release. |
|
Public Health, 1992Includes newspaper clippings from the News and Observer. |
|
Public Water Systems, 1990 |
|
Ralph Nader |
|
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA), 1993Includes six issues of their newspaper. |
|
Recreation (Boars, Hunting, Fishing), 1992 |
|
Recycling, 1981Includes an issue of PET Projects. |
|
Recycling/Solid Waste, 1993Includes a newspaper clipping from the Atlanta Journal, a 1990 issue of Waste Age magazine, and "Forty Ways to Make Governments Purchase Green." |
|
Renew America: Other Publications, 1980Includes booklets titled, "Reducing the Rate of Global Warming: The States' Role," "Sustainable Energy," and "Searching for Success." |
|
Success Index Book, 1992Includes application for National Environmental Achievement Awards. |
|
Renew America State of the States 1987, 1987Includes "The State of the States: Air Pollution Reduction and "The State of the States: Fund for Renewable Energy and the Environment." |
|
Renew America State of the States 1988, 1988Includes a paper on "Reducing Pesticide Contamination." |
|
Renew American State of the States 1989, 1989Includes "The State of the States: Food Safety" and "Growth and the Environment." |
|
Renewable Energy, 1994Includes a Public Citizen news release. |
|
Right-to-Know, 1994Includes five issues of their newsletter Working Notes on Community Right-to-Know and The Butterfly Effect. |
|
State Parks, 1990-1993The Texas Observer newspaper, National Parks and Conservation Association, Conservation Foundation bi-monthly report, newspaper clippings, Annual Information Exchange April 1990 |
|
Radiation Experiments, 1994-1995Includes newspaper clipping from the Washington Post titled, "Radiation Hot Line Swamped with Calls". |
|
Box 52 |
Rainbow Coalition, 1989 |
David Ramm, 1989-1990Includes his application to study at the Newberry Library's Fall Seminar in Chicago, which examined the changing ethnographic imagery in European and American travel writings from the Middle Ages to the twentieth century. |
|
Random House, 1985-1987 |
|
Rebecca Ranson, 1986-1987 |
|
Bernard Rapaport, 1975-1984 |
|
Reconstruction Magazine, 1990 |
|
Red Bass, 1988A progressive arts publication dealing with a variety of themes, from women's international arts to Palestine; as much a political journal as a literary magazine. |
|
John Shelton Reed, 1989-1994A social scientist and professor of American Studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Included are copies of some articles he published as well as an approved panel on research in the South for the Southern Sociological Society, over which he presided. |
|
Barbara Reich, 1989Includes a copy of her published collection of poetry/narrative history of a family by a daughter of the South, Quilters. |
|
Dee Reid / Reid Association |
|
Renew America, 1989-1990An educational and networking forum dedicated to the development of a safe and sustainable environment by way of information provision to policymakers, media, and environmental organizations. |
|
Report on Union Busters, 1979-1984Includes fifteen issues of the Rub Sheet and twelve issues of its supplementary publication STIR (Statistical and Tactical Information Reports). |
|
Resource Center for Women and Ministry in the South, 1992 |
|
Resist, 1973-1987A fundraising and grantmaking political organization born from the "call to resist illegitimate authority" in opposition to the draft and war in Vietnam. Includes three issues of their newsletter. |
|
Retired Senior Volunteer Program, 1986 |
|
Nancy Susan Reynolds Awards, 1986Nancy Susan Reynolds was the founder of the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation. Included in the folder are materials related to a dinner in recognition of three award recipients: Lena S. Ritter for Advocacy, Henrietta H. Williams for Personal Service, and Reverend Ronald E. Rice for Community Change. |
|
Rural Coalition, 1985-1992Includes five issues of their Update newsletter, three issues of their Groundwater Bulletin, and three special reports about the recession and unemployment. |
|
Rurak Crisis Committee: North Carolina Council of Churches, 1991 |
|
Rural Cumberland Resources, 1985Includes a series of small booklets covering various topics in opposition to big business/corporate production and distribution of food, and in support of small, local farmers. |
|
Rural Southern Voice for Peace (RSVP), 1988-1994Founded in 1981 in the mountains of western North Carolina, it provides organizing assistance, networking, and training in the rural communities and small cities of the southern United States in affirmation of common humanity and promotion of positive alternatives. Includes seventeen issues of their newsletter Voices. |
|
Rural Virginia, 1984-1989Includes a comprehensive study of the Virginia Food System titled "Harvesting Our Choices" and one issue of their newsletter The Rural Virginia Voice. |
|
Daniel Rothenberg |
|
John Runkle, 1988 |
|
Rural Advancement Fund, 1984-1989Founded in 1937 to improve the living and working conditions of tenant farmers and sharecroppers in the South through preservation of the family farm and a balanced agriculture, conservation of natural resources, and promotion of equal rights. Includes three issues of their publication Rural Advance and a series of reports. |
|
Rural Advancement Fund International (RAFI), 1990-1993A small nonprofit headquartered in Pittsboro, North Carolina which works to find and implement safe, just, and environmentally sound ways of growing, processing, and marketing foods. |
|
Rural Daycare Association of Northeastern North Carolina, 1985 |
|
Unknown, 1985-1986 |
|
Roadside Theater, 1986 |
|
Debbie Robertson, 1989 |
|
Linda Rocawich, 1987 |
|
Howard Romaine, 1985-1991 |
|
Vera Rony: Research Consortium for the Southwide Textile Strike of 1934, 1985-1991Includes research proposal and grant applications, as well as clippings about the strike. |
|
Roosevelt Center for American Policy Studies, 1986 |
|
The Roosevelt Centennial Youth Project, 1986 |
|
Roots, 1983-1985Includes one issue of their newsletter Alternate Roots. |
|
Jack Roper, 1991 |
|
Jacob Roquet, 1989-1990 |
|
John Rosenblum, 1988 |
|
Stuart Rosenfeld, 1987-1993Includes two issues of Firm Connections and a publication co-authored with Brian Bosworth titled "Significant Others: Exploring the Potential of Manufacturing Networks." |
|
Ted and Dale Rosengarten, 1977-1985 |
|
R.J. Reynold Industries, 1980 |
|
RPM Distributions, 1975-1977 |
|
Race Relations Reporter, 1974Includes two issues. |
|
Racially Motivated Violence, 1981 |
|
Radical America, 1975-1977An independent socialist and feminist journal featuring in-depth articles on working-class militancy and left activity and analyses of sexism and racism. |
|
Amanda Ray, 1974-1980 |
|
Bruce Raynor and Nick Builder: ACTWU Education, 1977-1978 |
|
Bernice Reagon, 1980Includes a Smithsonian Institution publication of "Voices of the Civil Rights Movement: Black American Freedom Songs 1960-1966." |
|
Real Dirt: Nashville, Tennessee, 1973 |
|
The Red Hornets: Charlotte, North CarolinaResidents of the Dilworth community opposed to the Neighborhood Assistance Program (NAP) initiated by the city of Charlotte, on the basis of it being unrepresentative of Dilworth and that it would likely drive out the poor community members. |
|
Research Atlanta, 1972 |
|
Religion and LaborIncludes one issue. |
|
Recon, 1974-1987A quarterly newsletter read by activists in the movements for peace, women's rights, and racial justice. Includes twenty issues. |
|
Resources: Somerville, Massachusetts, 1975-1977Includes one issue. |
|
James Reston Jr. , 1975-1977 |
|
Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation, 1978-1983 |
|
Box 53 |
Riverside Church Disarmament Program, 1983Includes issues of the Riverside Church Letter. |
J.R. Riley, 1984 |
|
Margaret Rigg, 1981 |
|
Jim Ridgeway, 1978-1980Includes newspaper clipping from The New York Times. |
|
Gary Richman Communications, 1980Includes "Growing up Jewish in Charleston." |
|
Adrienne Rich, 1977 |
|
Linda Rocawich, 1980Includes newspaper clippings titled, "The Great Oil Reserve Snafu" and "Building Cells for 10,000 More Prisoners." |
|
Rockefeller and Foundation, 1977Includes newspaper clippings from The New York Times titled, "Gardner Quits Rockefeller Fund," "Citing 'Special Status' of Brothers," and "Rockefellers Shake Rockefeller Fund." |
|
Howard Romaine, 1998Includes proposal for a book written by Julian Bond and Howard Romaine titled, "The Black Southern Strategy and National Reform." |
|
Ann RomaineA singer and songwriter of country music. |
|
Rolling Stone, 1977Includes Lucie A. Gilburg's letter to Bob Hall from the Rolling Stone. |
|
Regional Organization of Theatres - South (ROOTS), 1984Includes informational pamphlet for Alternate ROOTS festival. |
|
Regional Organization of Theatres - South (ROOTS), 1978 |
|
Jack Roper, 1981 |
|
June Rostan, 1980 |
|
Rural Advancement Fund, 1978 |
|
Rural America: Conference in April of 1975, Washington D.C., 1975Includes a report on "Rural Housing: Needs, Credit Availability, and Federal Programs." |
|
Rural Housing Alliance, 1976-1977Includes booklet titled, "What is the Rural Housing Alliance" and a publications list. |
|
Rural Practice Project, 1978 |
|
Rural Southern Voice for PEACE, 1982Includes issues of their newsletter. |
|
Steelworkers Fight Back, 1976Includes newspaper clipping from Chicago Daily News titled, "Sadlowski Gets Boost from 2 State Victories." |
|
St. Anthony's Education Foundation, 1981 |
|
Kirkpatrick Sale, 1977Includes issues of their newsletter RHA Reporter and a newspaper clipping from The New York Times titled, "Mark Rudd a 'Flawed Example of the Radical Movement'." |
|
John Salter, 1960-1980 |
|
Riki Saltzman, 1983 |
|
Syl Sampson, 1979 |
|
Sane World, 1972Includes booklet titled, "The Arm Pushers: Booming World Arms Trade" and a newspaper clipping from Northern Virginia Convert. |
|
Southern Conference Educational Fund (SCEF), 1976Includes two issues of newspaper Southern Struggle and a clipping from The Southern Patriot titled, "Government Harasses Houston Bookstore: Klan Attacks Mao Memorial." |
|
Steve Schewel, 1981 |
|
Tom Shlesinger, 1980-1982Includes "The Unprotected Flank: Regional and Strategic Imbalances in Defense Spending Patterns." |
|
Science for the People, 1980Includes booklet titled, "The Anti-Nuclear Movement: An Analysis." |
|
Kim Scipes, 1982 |
|
Charles Scribners Son Publishing: New York City, New York, 1974-1975 |
|
Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art (SECCA) |
|
Service Employees International Union (SEIU): Local 925, 1982 |
|
Second Harvest, 1983 |
|
Seers Catalogue: Albuquerque, New Mexico, 1973 |
|
Self Reliance, 1976Includes issues of their newsletter. |
|
Corey Seltzer, 1980 |
|
Seven Days, 1975Includes three issues of their booklet Seven Days World Power. |
|
Dinesh Sharma, 1982 |
|
Shelter Force, 1976A National Housing Newspaper. |
|
Bob Sherrill, 1974 |
|
Mitchell Shields, 1979 |
|
The Voices of Shimph, 1976Includes issues of the newspaper. |
|
Elizabeth Shores, 1983Organizer of the Arkansas Peace Center. |
|
Chuck Shuford, 1976 |
|
Modjeska SimkinsIncludes "Activist, Banker, Warrior: Modjeska Simkins." |
|
Social Issues Resources Series (SIRS), 1978-1981 |
|
Cluade Sitton, 1978 |
|
Skylight Pictures |
|
Cliff Sloan, 1979 |
|
Michael Smith, 1978 |
|
Smith Patterson Follin and Curtis James: Greensboro and Raleigh, 1977Includes photocopies of Textile World, with article titled, "Can the Union Win the 1-million Worker Tug-O-War?" |
|
Society of North American Cultural Survey, 1976Includes issues of their newsletter. |
|
Sojourners Magazine, 1981 |
|
Sojourners Truth Organization, 1977Includes booklet titled, "Urgent Tasks" and "No Condescending Saviors" by Noel Ignatin. |
|
Southeast Project on Human Needs and Peace, 1982Includes proposal for "Building A Base for New Peace-and-Human-Needs Movement." |
|
Southern Black Press Institute, 1978Includes issues of their quarterly Reporter. |
|
Southeastern Council of Foundations, 1981 |
|
Southeastern Public Education Program, 1982Includes issues of their newsletter. |
|
Southern Advocate, 1979-1981Includes three issues of their newspaper. |
|
Southern Appalachian Labor School, 1980Includes list of special courses for Fall Semester of 1980. |
|
Southern Appalachian Ministry in Higher Education, 1975-1977Includes twenty issues of the Southern Appalachian Ministry (SAM) booklet and "Appalachian Issues and Resources" booklet. |
|
Box 54 |
Student Environmental Action Coalition (SEAC), 1989 |
Sea Grant Program: University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1988-1989Includes three issues of newsletter Coast Watch Netmaking. |
|
Service Employees International Union (SEIU), 1985Includes issues of newspaper Service Employee. |
|
Securities and Exchange Commission |
|
Mab Segrest, 1982Includes self evaluation of Dr. Mab Segrest. |
|
Lorisa Seibel, 1987Includes letter of recommendation and resume of Lorisa Seibel. |
|
Ann Seidman Report/Southern OverviewIncludes a paper draft titled, "Africa Peace Tour Background" by Ann Seidman. |
|
Local Governance Project, 1992-1996Includes two issues of Self-Help News. |
|
Self Help, 1984Includes clipping from the News and Observer titled, "Rare Worker-Owned Knitting Mill Opens in Burlington." |
|
Mary D.B.T. Semans, 1978 |
|
Caroline Senter, 1986 |
|
The Shalan Foundation, 1993An organization which sought to address the environmental and human consequences of economic decisions made on the basis of short term profitability. |
|
Jonathan Sher, 1981Includes "So, you're thinking of having a business" and three issues of North Carolina Today, a publication prepared by Rural Education and Development. |
|
Bob Sherrill, 1984 |
|
The Sherwood Fund, 1982-1983 |
|
Solutions to Issues of Concern to Knoxvillians (SICK), 1985Includes issues of their publication S.I.C.K. News. |
|
Sierra Club, 1983-1993Includes a "Sierra Election Analysis." |
|
Rob Sikorski, 1989-1990 |
|
Silicon Valley Toxic Campaign, 1991-1992Includes issues of their newsletter. |
|
Barbara Silverstein, 1989 |
|
Joe Sinsheimer: Mississippi InterviewIncludes Joe Sinshemier's interview of Sam Block. |
|
Patsy Sims, 1992 |
|
John Slaughter, 1992Includes pamphlet titled, "New Battles Over Dixie: The Campaign for a New South." |
|
Society for Participatory Research, 1982-1988Includes booklet titled, "Search of Relevance." |
|
Society of Environmental Journalists, 1994Includes materials related to Fourth National Conference. |
|
Carol Jolow, 1985 |
|
Sosna Morton, 1976 |
|
Sophia Fund, 1985 |
|
Dom Soto, 1979 |
|
Soul City, 1975Includes booklet titled, "History of a Free Standing New Community." |
|
Resources for Organ, 1977 |
|
South Carolina Black Voting Rights Campaign, 1981 |
|
South Carolina Committee Against Hunger, 1983 |
|
South Carolina Coastal Conservation League, 1992Includes issues of their bulletin. |
|
South Carolina Council on Human Rights, 1974 |
|
South Carolina Environmental Coalition, 1977 |
|
South Carolina Legal Services, 1984Includes two issues of The Support Report monthly update for South Carolina Legal Services staff. |
|
South Carolina Public Interest Research Group, 1977 |
|
South End Press, 1980 |
|
Southeast Project on Human Needs and Peace, 1985 |
|
Southeast Women's Employment Coalition, 1989Includes issues of their newspaper Generation. |
|
Southeastern Council of Foundations, 1985 |
|
Southern Arts Federation, 1983-1986Includes a "Guide to Programs" and "Regional Black Arts Directory of 1983." |
|
Southern Black Cultural Alliance, 1983 |
|
Southern Changes, 1986Includes two issues of their newsletter. |
|
Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), 1989 |
|
Southern Coalition for Educational Equity, 1986 |
|
Southern Coalition of Jails, 1989 |
|
Southern Education Foundation Reports, 1989-1994 |
|
Southern Education Foundation Correspondence, 1985 |
|
Southern Empowerment Project, 1993 |
|
Box 55 |
North Carolina Rural Development Center: Reports, 1980sIncludes one issue of Rural Routes and various other reports, such as "Aquaculture in North Carolina" and "North Carolina Rural Profile." |
Southern Governor's Association, 1984Includes a booklet of policy positions. |
|
Southern Growth Policies Board, 1980s-1994Includes a series of publications: five issues of Southern Growth, a quarterly newsletter focused on issues affecting the southern Economy; seven issues of Foresight, which features model programs linking Economic development with human resource development; three issues of SGPB Alert: Analysis of Emerging Issues; one issue of Southern International Perspectives; and The 1986 Commission on the Future of the South. |
|
Southern Growth Policies Board, 1983-1990Includes three issues of Southern Growth, two issues of Foresight, six issues of SGPB Alert: Analysis of Emerging Issues, two issues of Southern International Perspectives, and two issues of Strategic Indicators. |
|
Southern Growth Policies Board: Reports Before 1984, 1974Includes five reports: "Annexations in the Southern States," "Suburbs in the City: Municipal Boundary Changes in the Southern States," proceedings from the Southern Legislative Caucus on "Growth Management," "Human Resources and Public Services in the South," and "Transportation Policies for the South." |
|
Southern Growth Policies Board: 1988-, 1988-1994Includes six issues of Southern Growth, two issues of Foresight, and one issue of the Southern Technology Council's publication Regional Forum. |
|
Southern Labor Studies Conference, 1993-1994 |
|
Southern Legislative Conference, 1989 |
|
Southern Mutual Help Association, 1988-1991 |
|
Southern Neighborhoods, 1980s-2000Includes seven issues, as well as nine issues of Southern Communities, a combination publication of Southern Neighborhoods and Community Economic Reporter. |
|
Southern Organizing Committee, 1989-1995Includes seven issues of Southern Fight Back. |
|
Southern Political Reporter, 1980-1982Includes thirty five issues of the publication. |
|
Southwest Organizing Project, 1993Includes one issue of Voces Unidas. |
|
Southwest Research and Information Center, 1976-1988Includes five issues of their publication The Workbook. |
|
Southwest Voter Registration Institute, 1970s-1992 |
|
Box 56 |
Mike Ross, 1986-1987Includes clippings about the legacy Ross left at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, as both a progressive leader in the community and associate director of the Rural Practice Project at the university. |
Eddie Sandifer, 1989 |
|
SANE: Disarmament and Peace, Washington, D.C., 1986-1987A committee in support of "sane" nuclear policies. Includes one issue of their newsletter and one issue of their publication SANE World. |
|
Save Duke Forest, 1987 |
|
Save Our Cumberland Mountains (SOCM), 1979-1989Includes fifteen issues of their newsletter The SOCM Sentinel. |
|
Save Our Skies (SOS), 1986Includes a nine-part informational guide for citizens concerned about the militarization of the skies. |
|
Tom Schlesinger, 1984-1986 |
|
David Schwartz, 1985 |
|
Southern Center for Studies in Public Policy, 1979Includes a draft of Leslie Dunbar's paper, "The South of the Near Future." |
|
Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), 1974-1982 |
|
Southern Coalition of Jails and Prisons, 1977-1983Includes a paper prepared by Joseph B. Ingle, the organization's director, about "The Status of the Death Penalty in the South," eight issues of their report, and five issues of the Florida Clearinghouse on Criminal Justice newsletter. |
|
Southern Conference Educational Fund, 1983 |
|
Southern Cultural Exchange Center, 1977A community arts center with activities rooted in Appalachian culture. |
|
Southern Economic Development Intern Program, 1979-1981Includes various project proposals. |
|
Southern Folk Festival, 1975A southwide tour of local southern folk musicians with performances and accompanying discussions about the social experience and musical legacy of the South. Performers included Sparky Rucker, Bessie Jones, Alice and Hazel, Kilby Snow, and Babe Stoval. |
|
Southern Government Monitoring Project, 1975-1977Originally conceived as an effort to evaluate the impact of general revenue sharing (GRS) and federal cutbacks on social services, the SGMP broadened its focus to address other federal actions aimed at decentralizing decision-making to states and local governments. Includes a progress report. |
|
Southern Growth Policies Board, 1974-1982A public, interstate agency governed and supported by the state governments of the southern United States, which analyzes information and makes policy recommendations to promote Economic development. Includes thirteen issues of their publication Problems and Promise and three issues of their monthly report. |
|
Southern Labor Archive, 1978 |
|
Southern Land Congress, 1973-1974 |
|
Southern Media Messenger, 1977Includes one issue of the Regional Film Editing Studio's newsletter The Independent Spirit. |
|
Southern Neighborhoods, 1977-1983A bi-monthly publication of the Community Control Movement of the South. Includes seventeen issues, as well as three issues of The Common Bond and other educational materials related to community organizing. |
|
Southern Organizing Committee, 1977-1983Includes five issues of their Action Bulletin and ten issues of their publication Southern FIGHT-BACK. |
|
Southern Patriot, 1974-1978Includes seven issues of the newspaper and two issues of Southern Struggle, both published by the Southern Conference Educational Fund (SCEF). |
|
Southern Political Report, 1982-1984Includes nineteen issues. |
|
Southern P.O.W.E.R.Includes a funding application for the Project on Women's Economic Rights. |
|
Southern Prison Ministry, 1976 |
|
Southern Regional Council, 1975-1987 |
|
Southern Regional Council: "Clipped and Noted," 1973-1981A weekly round-up of news and issues affecting the region and Southern people. Includes twenty issues. |
|
Southern Regional Council for Educational Improvement, 1980 |
|
Southern Roundtable, 1982 |
|
Southern Rural Action, 1978-1979Includes two issues of the Southeastern Region's newsletter Energy Digest. |
|
Southern Rural Women's NetworkAn Association of rural women committed to improving the quality of life for rural people, with the aim to develop leadership potential of rural women and to empower them to control their own destinies. |
|
Southern Student Activist Network, 1980-1981Includes one issue of their newsletter and two issues of their publication Campus Unrest. |
|
Southern Territory Association, 1977 |
|
Southern Training Center, 1977-1981 |
|
Southern Voices, 1974-1976 |
|
Southwest Georgia Project, 1975Includes one issue of their newsletter Keepin' On. |
|
Southwest Journal, 1977-1978A publication of the Southwest Voter Registration Education Project. Include one issue. |
|
Southwest Voter Education Project, 1978-1983A nonprofit dedicated to registering minority voters and non-partisan voter education. Includes an informational report about the National Hispanic Voter Registration Campaign. |
|
Southwind |
|
Deborah Spielberg, 1983 |
|
John Spragens Jr. |
|
Howard StanbackIncludes one issue of the Southerners for Economic Justice newsletter Fair Measure. |
|
Len Stanley, 1987-1989 |
|
Stern Family Fund, 1970s-1993 |
|
St. Joseph's Historical Foundation, 1982-1987 |
|
Strongforce, 1978A six-part series on worker/community owned businesses. Includes the first three publications: "Non-profit Food Stores," "Democracy in the Workplace," and "The How-to-Start Folder for Self-managed Businesses." |
|
Jan Stucker |
|
Student Information Service, 1978Created and managed by students and to serve students by way of access to information about youth-oriented issues. Includes one issue. |
|
Survival Kit, 1975-1976A health and safety newsletter. Includes five issues. |
|
Sweet Honey in the Rock |
|
Box 57 |
Jay Stone |
Student Action for Farmworkers, 1992Includes "The Pickle Project." |
|
Students and Youth Against Racism, 1988 |
|
Student Environmental Action Coalition: University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1989 |
|
Patricia Sullivan, 1989 |
|
John Sutcliff, 1989-1990 |
|
Doug Tanner: Faith and Politics Institute, 1991A program to strengthen public leadership for racial justice and reconciliation in North Carolina. |
|
Taste of the South, 1985 |
|
Marieke Tax, 1987 |
|
Teamsters, 1992 |
|
Telecommunications Cooperative Network |
|
Tennessee Environmental Council, 1990 |
|
Tennessee Industrial Renewal Network, 1990-1993Includes a pamphlet titled, "Job Retention: Tools for a Broad-Based Strategy." |
|
Texas Center for Rural Studies, 1987 |
|
Texas Department of AgricultureIncludes a booklet titled, "Global Warming and The Future of Texas Agriculture." |
|
Texas Observer, 1990Includes papers related to benefit dinner for the Texas Observer. |
|
Texas Foundation for Women's Resources |
|
Team Commission on Occupational Safety and Health (TCOSH), 1987 |
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Third World Women's Writers Workshop, 1983 |
|
Mike Thompson, 1990 |
|
Sue Thrasher, 1978-1983 |
|
Elizabeth Tornquist, 1988 |
|
Sam Totten, 1984 |
|
Toxic Roundtable, 1984 |
|
Trainers: Resource Directory, 1989 |
|
The Trumpet, 1989A publication of Concerned Citizens United in Durham, North Carolina. Includes one issue. |
|
Allan Tullos, 1984 |
|
William Turner, 1985 |
|
Twin Streams, 1981Includes "Adult Residential Education for Democratic Social Change." |
|
Tynan and Association, 1985 |
|
Laurie Udesky, 1991 |
|
Union Carbide, 1990 |
|
Union of Concerned Scientist, 1988 |
|
Washington Report, 1985-1994Includes four issues of the Washington Post. |
|
United Church of Christ/Committee for Racial Injustice, 1987Includes newspaper clippings from The Frontline. |
|
United Food and Commercial Workers, 1991 |
|
United Electrical Workers (UEW), 1979-1980 |
|
United Furniture Workers, 1983Includes photograph of members. |
|
United Methodist Voluntary ServiceIncludes information about board of Global Ministries. |
|
United Mine Workers of America, 1974Includes three copies of booklet titled, "Betraying the Trust" and a report about "Coal Miners and The Economy." |
|
United States Bureau of Census, 1980 |
|
United States Industrial Council, 1983Includes booklet titled, "Religion And Marxism: The Social Responsibility Tactic." |
|
United Woodcutters Association, 1983 |
|
University Microfilm, 1982 |
|
Utne Reader, 1989 |
|
Tom Vass, 1990-1991 |
|
Larry Vellani, 1991 |
|
Victim's Voice, 1993Includes photocopy of newspaper Sun Herald titled, "Deputy Wages War Begins to See Results." |
|
Virginia Forum, 1984 |
|
Virginia Water Project, 1984-1985Includes two issues of The Rural Community Journal. |
|
Virginian Pilot, 1987 |
|
Pat Rich, 1984 |
|
Alice Walker, 1981 |
|
War Resisters League, 1977 |
|
Debbie Warren, 1986 |
|
Washington Journalism Review, 1988 |
|
Wendy Watriss, 1988 |
|
Palmer Weber, 1984 |
|
Copier, 1988 |
|
Don West, 1978Includes "People's Cultural Heritage in Appalachia" by Don West. |
|
West Virginia Citizens Action Group, 1984Includes testimony of Perry Bryant on behalf of the West Virginia Citizens Action Group. |
|
Western North Carolina Alliance, 1991Includes issues of their newspaper Accent. |
|
Western North Carolina Tomorrow, 1988Includes "Western North Carolina Solid Waste Task Force Report." |
|
Western States Center, 1993Includes five issues of Western States Center News. |
|
Liz Wheaton, 1984-1985 |
|
Bob Williams, 1994Includes "A Study in State Industrial Development: Importance, Programs, and Record." |
|
Wilmington College Peace Resource Center, 1985Includes an annotated resource list. |
|
Windcall Resident Program, 1992 |
|
Windom Fund, 1983 |
|
World Hunger Year, 1986-1987Includes three issues of Food Monitor. |
|
Women and Foundations, 1985 |
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Women's Research and Education Institute, 1985Includes a directory of selected Women's Research and Policy Centers. |
|
Lilian Woo, 1992Includes a clipping from the News and Observer titled, "An American Woman." |
|
Women of Empowerment, 1984 |
|
Peter Wood, 1984 |
|
Peter Wood to 1984, 1980-1984 |
|
Barbara Woods, 1990 |
|
C. Vann Woodward, 1977 |
|
Workers' Education, 1989 |
|
Workplace Mission, 1992 |
|
World Press Institute, 1984 |
|
Michael Yellin, 1987Includes two issues of their newsletter. |
|
Young Men's Institute (YMI) Cultural Center, 1982-1983 |
|
Youth Policy Institute, 1985 |
|
Youth Project: Correspondence/Grants, 1975 |
|
Zero Population Growth, 1993Includes a press release. |
|
Kathleen Zobel, 1983Includes newspaper clippings from The Virginian-Pilot and The Ledger-Star. |
|
Box 58 |
Taconic Foundation, 1981Includes a proposal to Jane Lee Eddy of the Taconic Foundation for a grassroots education project around black voting rights in the South. |
Talkin' Union, 1983 |
|
Frances Tamburro, 1977 |
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Tax Reform Group: J. Rowe, 1971-1978Includes eight issues of the Property Tax Newsletter published by Public Interest Research Group and two issues of Public Citizen's newspaper People and Taxes. |
|
Teamsters, 1979 |
|
Technocratic Trendevents, 1975Includes an issue of their Research Bulletin. |
|
Tennessee Council on Human Relations, 1973Includes two issues of their newsletter. |
|
Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA), 1974-1980Includes booklet titled, "Facts about Strip Mining" and one issue of TVA Today. |
|
Tennessee Valley Socialists, 1975Includes three issues of The Tennessee Valley Socialist. |
|
Texas Observer, 1977-1980Includes three issues of the Texas Observer: A Journal of Free Voices. |
|
J Walter Thompson, 1983 |
|
Those United to Fight Racism, 1980Includes an issue of their newsletter. |
|
Transaction, 1978 |
|
Tread Softly, 1982Includes issues of their Tread Softly Carolina Conservation Quarterly. |
|
Triangle Friends of the United Farmworkers, 1981-1982 |
|
Triangle Project on Military Spending and Human Needs, 1982 |
|
Allan Troxler, 1978Includes a photocopy of the Durham Herald with article titled, "The Anti-Gay Backlash." |
|
Allen Tullos, 1977 |
|
Tom Turnispeed, 1977Includes a clipping from The New York Times titled, "Populists in South Attacking Vested Interests and Racism'. |
|
Twentieth Century Fund, 1977 |
|
USA Today, 1983 |
|
Henry Hunger, 1981 |
|
Union of Radical Political Economists (URPE), 1975Includes eleven issues of their newsletter. |
|
United Action Workers, 1976 |
|
United Farmworkers Union, 1982Includes booklet titled, "Farmworkers Build their Union: and a magazine clipping titled, "Can Cesar Chavez Cope with Success?" |
|
United Front Press: San Francisco, California, 1974Includes two booklets titled, "Soldiers and Strikes" and "Our Lives are at Strike." |
|
United Mine Workers, 1974 |
|
University of South Florida Bookstore, 1982 |
|
Willard Uphaus, 1980Includes papers related to the Three World Fellowship Center's 90th birthday celebration of Willard Uphaus. |
|
Urban Appalachia, 1974 |
|
Urban Environment Conference, 1977 |
|
Urban Life Association: Georgia State University, 1972 |
|
Urban Planning Aid, 1974 |
|
Urban Training |
|
Vanguard Books, 1977Includes a press release about the March for Human Rights. |
|
United Labor Service Agency, 1981 |
|
United League of Mississippi, 1980 |
|
United Mine Workers, 1977 |
|
United States Farmers Association, 1982 |
|
University of North Carolina Press, 1978 |
|
Tom VassIncludes "The Economic Development and Labor Market Implications of Computer Integrated Manufacturing in North Carolina." |
|
Bebe Verdery, 1982Includes "Energy Research Foundation Research Notes." |
|
Vietnam Veterans, 1983 |
|
Virginia Action, 1982 |
|
Vista, 1977 |
|
John Vodicka, 1980 |
|
Vocations for Social Change |
|
Voices from the Mountains |
|
Voices of Calvary Mississippi, 1977 |
|
Volunteer Service Bureau |
|
Voter Education Project, 1982 |
|
Box 59 |
Radio Free Georgia Broadcasting Foundation (WREG) |
Voices Serving the People (WVSP) Radio, 1979Includes a proposal to the National Endowment for the Humanities. |
|
Friends of Voices Serving the People (WVSP) Radio, 1980 |
|
Tom Wahman: Rockefeller, 1972Includes the Rockefeller Brothers Fund Annual Report from 1970. |
|
George Wallace, 1976Includes a clipping from The Alabama Message titled "A View from Within: An Analysis of the Record of George Wallace." |
|
Wall Street Journal, 1977 |
|
Chris Walters-Bugbee |
|
Washington D.C., 1976Includes issues of Planning Magazine. |
|
Washington Monthly, 1978 |
|
Washington Post, 1981 |
|
Washington Spectator, 1981 |
|
Wassaja-National Newspaper of Indian America San Francisco , 1974 |
|
Pat Watters, 1978 |
|
Lee Webb Gooard College |
|
Vera Weisbord, 1977 |
|
Cora Weiss, 1982 |
|
West Virginia Education Project, 1982 |
|
John Hay Whitney Foundation, 1980-1981Includes annual report of 1980. |
|
Whitten-Stoval, 1982 |
|
David Whisnant, 1976Includes photocopy of newspaper clipping titled, "UT Press Refuses to Print Book with TVA Criticism." |
|
David Wilk: Truck Press Cosmep |
|
Franklin Williams, 1982 |
|
Randall Williams, 1979 |
|
Luke and Ruth Wilson, 1979 |
|
Wisconsin State Historical Society, 1977 |
|
Matt Witt |
|
Women of Color Golf (WOCG-FM), 1980 |
|
Women in the Workforce: North Carolina, 1980Includes issues of Women in the Workforce News. |
|
Women's Action Alliance, 1977Includes "Women's Agenda: Abortion Groups Gear Up for Counterattack." |
|
Women's Campaign Fund, 1982 |
|
The Women's' Project: Arkansas, 1981 |
|
Lillian Woo, 1982Includes clipping from News and Observer titled, "Consulting Role for Lillian Woo." |
|
Women's International League for Peace and Freedom |
|
Workers Defense League, 1981-1983 |
|
Worker-Owned Network: Ohio, 1985Includes photocopy of clipping from Community titled, "8 Women Who Want to Help Others." |
|
Working Papers, 1976 |
|
Working Rights Institute, 1977Includes issues of their publication Worker Rights. |
|
Xerox University Microfilm, 1983 |
|
Andrew Yale, 1982 |
|
Andrew Young, 1976Includes "Toward a Politics of Trust: The Making of Andrew Young." |
|
Billie Jean Young, 1982 |
|
Youth Magazine, 1982 |
|
Youth Project: Annual Reports, Publication, 1973-1981 |
|
Zodiac News Service, 1973 |
Acquisitions Information: Accession 20230417
Arrangement: as received from donor; roughly alphabetical; original folder titles have been maintained.
Box 152 |
ACORNIncludes a 1996 report on ACORN's Living Wage Campaign, copies of The Acorn Report, and other correspondence. |
ACREIncludes a1985 report published by ACRE, "Will the Basic Education Plan Equalize Educational Opportunity?: What Six Counties Can Tell Us…" and data used in compiling the report, reported by North Carolina county. |
|
Frank Adams / Worker Ownership
|
|
AFL-CIO Atlanta Conference 2001Materials from a 2001 "Southern Community and Labor Strategy Meeting" in Atlanta. |
|
Alliance for Better CampaignsBackground information on the "Our Democracy, Our Airwaves Act" (ca. 2000) published by the Alliance for Better Campaigns. |
|
Alliance for Good Govt.Brochures and a 1998-1999 "Year in Review" report for the Alliance for Good Government |
|
Alliance of NC Black Elected Off.
|
|
Annenberg Conference - June 1992Includes correspondence and conference materials from a 1992 meeting at the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania and a participant list from the Campaign Finance Reform Conference that was held at Harvard University in October 1994. |
|
M.R. Babcock FoundationInformation related to two requests for funding to the Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation by the Institute for Southern Studies: a 1986 request to support the North Carolina Land Ownership Project, and a draft proposal (ca. 2000) related to "Voters First: A Collaborative Project" with Democracy NC and the League of Women Voters of NC. |
|
Beldon FoundationIncludes proposal drafts and correspondence with the staff of the Beldon Foundation related to political research and training projects. |
|
Black Workers for JusticeIncludes correspondence between Institute for Southern Studies staff and organizers with Black Workers for Justice (BWFJ), two issues of BWFJ's "Justice Speaks" newsletter, and a poster titled, "Ten Tasks for the Conscious Black Worker," printed by the Black Workers Unity Movement of Raleigh, NC. |
|
Blue Ridge Environmental Defense LeagueIncludes two issues of the Blue Ridge Environmental Defense League's newsletter, "The League Line," correspondence with the League's staff, and a few other loose printed materials from related environmental organizations. |
|
Brennan Center for JusticeCollected printed materials from the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of Law |
|
Brown Lung Association
|
|
Margaret Brown Campaigns, 1996-2004
|
|
Bydale Foundation
|
|
Campaign for America's Future
|
|
Capital Associated Industries
|
|
Carnegie Corporation of New YorkReports and correspondence, 2002-2011, related to several grant-funded projects supported by the Carnegie Corporation of New York. |
|
Carolina Alliance for Fair EmploymentIncludes about ten issues of "Economic Justice Journal," the print newsletter of the Carolina Alliance for Fair Employment. |
|
Carolina Associated Minority ContractorsIncludes legal filings related to a lawsuit filed by the Carolina Associated Minority Contractors against the North Carolina Department of Transportation alleging the State discriminated against Black highway contractors in how it awarded state highway contracts. |
|
Carolina Power & LightIncludes information on a 1986 investigation into political contributions made by Carolina Power & Light. |
|
Shearon Harris - CASHIncludes clippings, flyers, information packets, resolutions, and other organizing materials from Coalition for Alternatives to Shearon Harris (CASH). Also includes several letters from North Carolina Governor Jim Martin, members of the State of North Carolina Utilities Commission, and Rep. Joe Hackney, responding to letters sent by CASH leader Jennifer Miller. |
|
Catholic Committee of the South
|
|
David Cecelski
|
|
Center for a New DemocracyIncludes printed reports and updates from the Center for a New Democracy's initiatives on campaign finance reform. |
|
Center for Comprehensive Corporate Research
|
|
Center for Policy AlternativesIncludes two 1991 reports, "Policy Alternatives on Voter Participation." |
|
Center for Public Integrity
|
|
Center for Women's Economic AlternativesIncludes information sheets and flyers, prepared by the Center for Women's Economic Alternatives, warning workers about several occupational health and safety issues. |
|
Center on Budget and Policy Priorities
|
|
Citizens Clearinghouse for Hazardous WasteFile consists of two printed items published by the Citizens Clearinghouse for Hazardous Waste: a "Publications Catalog" and an issue of "Everyone's Backyard" journal. |
|
Center for Responsive PoliticsIncludes correspondence between Bob Hall and staff of the Center for Responsive Politics and publications from the Center, such as issues of the newsletter "Capital Eye." |
|
Citizens for a Sound EconomyContains a packet of information from a 2000 "Day at the Capitol" event in Raleigh, sponsored by Citizens for a Sound Economy. |
|
Citizens for Tax JusticeIncludes Citizens for Tax Justice reports and legislative alerts, such as "Corporate Taxpayers & Corporate Freeloaders: Four Years of Continuing, Legalized Tax Avoidance by America's Largest Corporations, 1981-1984" and other titles. |
|
Civitas InstituteIncludes collected newsletters, reports, and other print materials from the Civitas Institute. |
|
Clean Water Fund
|
|
Committee for Economic Development - Campaign Finance Reform
|
|
Common Cause
|
|
Common Sense FoundationContains collected print materials from the Common Sense Foundation, including issues of "Common Sense Says…" newsletter. |
|
Community Reinvestment Association of North Carolina
|
|
Concerned Citizens of Tillery
|
|
Conservation Council of North Carolina
|
|
Box 153 |
Court Watch of North CarolinaIncludes reports on judicial elections in North Carolina, 1996-2004, newsletters and other information from Courth Watch North Carolina. |
Cuddy FarmsResearch, ca. 1980s, into the appointment of Bruce Cuddy, the owner of an industrial poultry operation, to the North Carolina Board of Agriculture. |
|
Data Exchange
|
|
Data-Net UNC
|
|
Jim DavisPapers related to an investigation of possible election law violations by Jim Davis, a candidate for Hoke County (N.C.) Sheriff. |
|
Deer Creek Foundation
|
|
Democracy SummerPapers related to "Democracy Summer," a nine-week summer organizing internship program run by Democracy North Carolina. |
|
Demos
|
|
Hickory - Patty DilleyConsists of a copy of the paper, "Hickory, North Carolina: Its Labor History and Power Structure," by Patty Dilley. |
|
Dr. Charles DrewIncludes correspondence about the accuracy of an article that the Institute for Southern Studies published in its column "Facing South" about the death of Dr. Charles Drew, a renowned Black hemotologist. |
|
Duke Endowment
|
|
Duke University & Power Structure
|
|
Leah Eason
|
|
Wells EddlemanIncludes a copy of a draft of an essay by Wells Eddleman related to Duke Energy and the use of nuclear power plants. |
|
Educational Foundation of AmericaIncludes project proposals and reports by Democracy North Carolina related to election reform. |
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Environmental CaucusPapers related to meetings of the North Carolina Environmental Caucus, a consortium of environmental organizations facilitated by John Runkle. |
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Environmental Resource Center
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Robin Epstein
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Everett, Gaskins, Hancock & Stevens, LLP
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FairJudges.net
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Fannie Lou Hamer Project
|
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Farmworker Legal ServicesIncludes a copy of a legal filing for a 1983 class action lawsuit related to mistreatment of farmworkers in North Carolina, and a copy of a report titled, "Crewleader Violence Against Farmworkers in North Carolina," from the North Carolina Chapter of the National Lawyers Guild |
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Figure 8 IslandIncludes information on contributors to the Island Preservation Society PAC (of Figure 8 Island) and subsequent political contributions made by the PAC. |
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Financial Markets Center
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Fletcher Foundation
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Fund for Investigative Reporting
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Fund for Southern Communities
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Funders of South - Mtg.Papers related to a meeting of "Funders Who Fund in the South," in February 1992 at Penn Center in South Carolina. |
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Lillian Goldman Charitable Trust
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Good Jobs First
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Greensboro Community Foundation
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Richard Grossman - Corporations
|
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Group Research
|
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HKonJ Coalition, 2009-2014Includes information packets, meeting agenda, flyers, leaflets, and other organizing materials from the "Historic Thousands on Jones Street" (HKonJ) and Moral Mondays movements. |
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Hamlet Response CoalitionPapers related to organizing work of the Hamlet Response Coalition for Workplace Reform (a group formed in 1991 following the fire that killed 25 workers at Imperial Food Products in Hamlet, N.C.), particularly on workplace safety for poultry workers in North Carolina. |
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Hanes Hosiery CampaignFile empty - a report, "Report to the Citizens Commission on Justice at Hanes," has been removed and cataloged individually. |
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Harvard's Institute for Politics
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Robert Healey
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Helping Hands - Poultry Project
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Judy Helfand - Uprising of 1934
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Herb Block Foundation
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Chip HughesIncludes papers related to Hughes' work on brown lung / byssinosis and other initiatives. |
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Industrial Union Department
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Institute for Alternative Journalism
|
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Institute for Southern StudiesMiscellaneous papers related to the activities of the Institute for Southern Studies. Includes two 2007 ISS reports: "A New Agenda for the Gulf Coast: What Congress Can Do Now to Confront the Ongoing Crisis of Hurrican Katrina," and "Southern Voices: New Media for a Progressive South." |
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JEHT Foundation
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Jubilee Project
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Justice at Stake
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Justice SpeaksIncludes several issues of "Justice Speaks," a newspaper of the organization Black Workers for Justice. |
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Katuah
|
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Martha Kropf
|
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Land Loss Prevention Task ForceIncludes materials related to the Land Loss Prevention Project, at the North Carolina Central University School of Law, an organization fighting the loss of land by Black farmers and families. |
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Land Use/Mineral/NCCollected reports related to ownership of rural land, land use, and mineral rights. |
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Box 154 |
League of Women Voters
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Joel Lieske
|
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John Locke Foundation
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Richard Magat - Foundation & Black Workers Unions
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Roger ManusIncludes research and legal filings related to a lawsuit involving Liberty Commons Long Term Care, a nursing home facility in Wilmington, N.C. |
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Rus McCarter
|
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Gene MessickIncludes materials related to the Friends of Southern Highland Handicraft organization. |
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Marc Miller
|
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Mississippi River Basin AllianceIncludes papers related to a conference held in Memphis, Tenn., in 1995, and issues of the Mississippi River Basin Alliance's newsletters from the mid-1990s. |
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National Interfaith Committee for Worker Justice
|
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National Voting Rights Institute
|
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Nonprofit Votes
|
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Nordhoff Gift
|
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North Carolina AFL-CIO
|
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North Carolina Agribusiness Council
|
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North Carolina Black Leadership Caucus
|
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North Carolina Black Legislative Caucus
|
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North Carolina Center for Public Policy ResearchIncludes news releases, reports, and other information from the NC Center for Public Policy Research, much of which relates to lobbying and lobbying reform in North Carolina. |
|
North Carolina Citizens for Business and Industry
|
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North Carolina Civic Education Consortium
|
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North Carolina Coalition for Lobbying Reform
|
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North Carolina Coalition for Verifiable Voting
|
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North Carolina Coastal FederationIncludes reports, information sheets, and other publications from the North Carolina Coastal Federation. Also includes records, late 1990s-2000s, related to Bob Hall's service on the Board of Directors for the Federation. |
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North Carolina Conservation NetworkIncludes papers that document the 1997-1998 meetings and discussions of over thirty North Carolina environmental advocacy groups, called the "North Carolina Conservation Futures Discussion," which led to the formation of the North Carolina Conservation Network. The discussions were catalyzed by the resignation of Bill Holman, a long-time lobbyist for conservation issues in the NC General Assembly. The "Futures" project was supported by the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation. |
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North Carolina Consumers Council
|
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North Carolina Council of Churches
|
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North Carolina Department of Revenue / Sales TaxIncludes papers related to Democracy North Carolina's eligibility to receive refunds on its sales tax payments. |
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North Carolina Fair Share
|
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North Carolina Forum
|
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North Caroina Free
|
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North Carolina Humanities Council
|
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North Carolina Justice Center
|
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North Carolina NAACP / HKonJ CoalitionIncludes organizing materials for the "Historical Thousands on Jones Street" / HKonJ movement of the North Carolina NAACP, related legislative advocacy days at the North Carolina General Assembly, and other activities of the NC NAACP, ca. 2000s-2010s. |
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North Carolina Occupational Health and Safety ProjectIncludes newsletters, fact sheets, and other reports and publications of NCOSH. Also includes a copy of the "Right to Know Handbook for N.C. Workers and Community Groups," and other materials relating to the creation of the handbook. |
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North Carolina Open Government CoalitionIncludes an information packet from the first meeting of the North Carolina Open Government Coalition, with a copy of the organization's bylaws, mission statement, profiles of members of the board of directors, and other materials. Also includes a copy of the report, "A New Strategy to Save Freedom of Information," by the American Society of Newspaper Editors and a copy of the report, "Sunshine Day: Strengthening Transparency in Government," from a 2009 meeting in Charlotte, NC. |
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North Carolina PIRGIncludes issues of NC PIRG's newsletter, "Citizen Advocate," a copy of the report, "Looking for Funds in All the Wrong Places: How Out-of-District District Fundraising Weakens Democracy in North Carolina," a copy of the June 2003 report, "North Carolina's Natural Heritage at Risk," a copy of "The State PIRGs: 30 Years of Action in the Public Interest," a copy of the report "Developer Dollars: How Campaign Contributions Overpower Growth Management Efforts in North Carolina," a copy of a NCPIRG proposal for support from the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation, and other papers. |
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North Carolina Progress BoardIncludes a copy of "North Carolina 20/20 Update Report," issued by the North Carolina Progress Board in 2005. |
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North Carolina Stream Watch
|
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North Carolina Utilities CommissionIncludes a copy of the report, "North Carolina Utilities Commission Report on the Long Range Needs for Expansion of Electric Generation Facilities for Service in North Carolina" (April 1985), and a copy of statement filed with the Commission in 2019 related to lobbying and public utilities. |
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North Carolina WARNIncludes newsletters, flyers, fact sheets, and other information from NC WARN (ca. 1980s-2010), a copy of "Tri-County Alliance Hazardous Waste and Low-Level Radioactive Waste Management Ordinance" adopted in 1982 by Moore County, N.C., a copy of "Siting and Permitting Hazardous Waste Management Facilities in North Carolina," from the Governor's Waste Management Board, and other materials. |
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North Carolinians for Effective CitizenshipIncludes a list of members of the board of directors, meeting minutes, correspondence, project proposals, and other records (ca. 1980s) of the organization North Carolinians for Effective Citizenship. |
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Open Society InstituteIncludes information about funding given to Democracy North Carolina to support campaign finance reform initiatives. |
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Box 155 |
Park FoundationGrant for Democracy North Carolina for Youth Training and Civic Education Project. |
Piedmont Peace Project / Moore County ResearchGrant to develop a report, "A Historical Assessment of Moore County's Economy and its Impact on Low Income Communities" |
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Piper FundGrant in support of Democracy North Carolina operations. |
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Preyer Fund
|
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Julian Price Foundation
|
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Progressive States Center
|
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Project South, 1995-2000
|
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Public Campaign
|
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Public Citizen
|
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Public Interest ProjectsIncludes information on grant support given to Democracy North Carolina from the Public Interest Projects Action Fund. |
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Public Interest Research Group (US/NC) / Public CitizenIncludes several U.S. PIRG Education Fund reports: "Raising the Limits: A Bad Bet for Campaign Finance Reform," "The Wealth Primary: The Role of Big Money in the 2006 Congressional Primaries," "Toward a Small Donor Democracy: The Past and Future of Incentives for Small Political Contributions," and "Campaign Contribution Limits: No Harm to Challengers." |
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Public Welfare Foundation
|
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Octavia Rainey
|
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Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation 1999Includes correspondence with the staff of the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation, reports, and proposals submitted to ZSR and other papers. |
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ZSR - MusgroveIncludes planning materials, participant lists, correspondence, and an information packet related to the 1999 Musgrove Retreat on Campaign Finance Reform in St. Simon's Island, GA (sponsored by the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation, in cooperation with Democracy South). |
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ZSR - 2000-2006Includes papers related to financial support received from the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation in the early 2000s for general operating support, for Democracy South's Money and Politics Project, and other projects. |
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ZSR - 2006-Includes information about financial support received from the Z. Smith Reynold Foundation from 2006-2012. |
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ZSR - Millenial ProjectIncludes records related to Democracy North Carolina's "North Carolina Millenial Voter Partnership Project," including information on support received from the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation and reports submitted about the project to the Foundation. |
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Rockefeller Family FoundationIncludes information on financial support received by Democracy North Carolina from the Rockefeller Family Fund, 2005-2017. |
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Rural Advancement Fund
|
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SANE
|
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Sapelo Island Foundation
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Save Our State (Hogs)Consists of a copy of the 1998 report, "Hog Waste and Environmental Quality in North Carolina: Defining the problems, finding the solutions," from Save Our State. |
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Tom SchlesingerIncludes a copy of a 1986 proposal and background information for the "Southern Finance Project," which was a research initiative studying the structure, uses, and impacts of financial power (particularly commercial banks) in the U.S. South. |
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Hope Shand
|
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Sierra ClubIncludes several Sierra Club NC Legislative Bulletins, 1980s, and a few other items from the organization. |
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Tom Smith
|
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Smithfield FoodsIncludes background information sheets and legal filings related to labor issues at Smithfield Foods. |
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South Carolina Progressive Network
|
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Southern Coalition for Social JusticeIncludes information about a 2009 grant received by Democracy NC from the Southern Coalition for Social Justice. |
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Southern Communities
|
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Southern Growth Policies Board
|
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Southern Organizing Committee
|
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Joyce Barrett - Tall TalesIncludes two issues of "Voting Rights Review," one 1992 legislative bulletin, and about 10 issues of "Southern Changes" newsletter, all published by the Southern Regional Council. |
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Southern Student Organizing Committee (SSOC)Includes a copy of the article "We'll Take Our Stand: Race, Class, and Gender in the Southern Student Organizing Committee, 1964-1969," by Christina Greene. |
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Stern Foundation
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J.P. Stevens and Co.Includes background information and shareholder information for J.P. Stevens Co., also includes information related to a collaboration between Southerners for Economic Justice and the Institute for Southern Studies related to J.P. Stevens in South Carolina. |
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Tennessee Industrial Renewal Network (TIRN)
|
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Tennessee Valley Energy Reform Coalition
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Texas Gulf Task Force
|
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Sharon Thompson
|
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Tides Foundation
|
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Tillery - Concerned Citizens/Gary GrantIncludes an essay, "Fighting for Justice to Conquer the Great Divide," by Gary Grant of the Concerned Citizens of Tillery, and other background information. |
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1000 Friends of North Carolina
|
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Triangle Community Foundation
|
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The Trumpet
|
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Union Buster Research/Correspondence/FundraisingIncludes research and correspondence related to an investigation conducted by the Institute for Southern Studies into corporate union busting activites in the U.S. South. |
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UNC Civil Rights Center
|
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UNC - Local Democracy ProjectIncludes copies of papers presented at a Local Democracy Workshop at UNC Chapel Hill in 2001. |
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Box 156 |
UNITE / ACTWU / ILGWUIncludes an 1980 outreach plan related to a new Cotton Dust Standard and information about the J.P. Stevens labor campaign. |
United for a Fair Economy
|
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Wallace Global Foundation
|
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Warner Foundation
|
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Don West
|
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Western Carolina Women's Action for Nuclear Disarmament
|
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Western Carolina AllianceIncludes organizing materials from the Western Carolina Alliance and other groups focused on environmental issues in Western North Carolina. |
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Western N.C. Tomorrow
|
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Wilmington 1898 ManuscriptsIncludes drafts of articles on the history of the 1898 Wilmington Massacre that were being considered for inclusion in Southern Exposure magazine and correspondence with the authors of the articles. |
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Winston Salem Foundation
|
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Winston Salem Urban League
|
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Winston Salem Voting Rights Task Force
|
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Women's Voices, Women's VotesIncludes papers related to a 2008 complaint filed by the North Carolina NAACP against Women's Voices Women Vote for improper use of "robo-calls" during an election campaign. |
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Working Group for Electoral DemocracyIncludes correspondence, meeting minutes, and other organizing records of the Working Group for Electoral Democracy, as well as collected print materials on various electoral issues. |
Acquisitions Information: Accession 102326 (boxes 1-8), 103478 (boxes 60-73)
Arrangement: as received from donor.
The materials consist primarily of research files created by journalists at Southern Exposure, the magazine published by the Institute for Southern Studies. Topics include nursing homes, Food Lion grocery stores, tobacco, ethnic diversity in the South, the textile industry, the alternative press, forestry, chip mills, Alabama Tinder, and the Jim Hunt versus Jesse Helms North Carolina senatorial election of 1984. Files contain reporters' notes and notebooks from interviews and events, correspondence, court records, clippings, published material, and drafts.
Box 1-2
Box 1Box 2 |
Stories, 1980s-1990s |
Box 3 |
Nursing homes |
Box 4 |
Tobacco |
Food Lion |
|
Box 5 |
Chip mill |
Alabama Tinder |
|
Box 6-7
Box 6Box 7 |
Jesse Helms and Jim Hunt |
Box 8 |
Jesse Helms and Jim Hunt |
Alternative press |
|
Forestry |
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Institute for Southern Studies administrative papers |
|
Box 60 |
Old files, volume 1-5 |
Box 61 |
Volume 4-5 |
Box 62 |
Volume 6-9 |
Box 63 |
Volume 6-9 |
Box 64 |
Volume 10-12 |
Box 65 |
Volumes 13-15 |
Box 66 |
Volumes 13-15 |
Box 67 |
1988-1989 |
Box 68 |
1989-1990 |
Box 69 |
1990-1991 |
Box 70 |
1989-1995 |
Box 71 |
1991-1992 |
Box 72 |
1992-1994 |
Box 73 |
1994-1996 |
Acquisitions Information: Accession 103137 (boxes 9-18), 103478 (boxes 74-86).
Arrangement: as received from donor.
The Addition of 2017 consists of records documenting the general organizational operations of the Institute for Southern Studies (ISS) and files about several major projects initiated by the Institute, including the North Carolina Alliance for Democracy (NCAD), Democracy South, and the Foundation for Community Encouragement (FCE). These materials were gathered by Bob Hall.
Organizational records include correspondence, board meeting materials, meeting notes, ISS bylaws and mission statement, grant applications, fund-raising materials, and files from working groups.
Project files document the work of NCAD, Democracy South, and other organizations in the 1990s on many policy issues in North Carolina, including: election reform, campaign finance reform, voter registration, voting access expansion, labor organizing, transportation reform, pollution, and the environment. These files consist of position statements and press releases, research files on various bills and legislation, correspondence, white papers, studies, publications received from other non-profit and advocacy groups, information gathered from regional conferences, pilling and voter turnout data, lists of financial contributions made to politicians and political candidates, presentations, candidate surveys, brochures, and other ephemera.
Note that there is a group of files relating to a 1997 scandal involving alleged patronage and political influence activities by then-Governor Jim Hunt and his appointees within the North Carolina Department of Transportation. There is also a group of files relating to a controversy surrounding the state of North Carolina's approval of a waiver to allow the Village of Bald Head to construct sand-filled tubes along its shoreline to combat coastal erosion.
The Addition of 2017 also includes a few files created and collected by Bob Hall in 1979-1980 during his involvement with a campaign to organize workers in Tupelo, Miss. (Box 18).
Acquisitions Information: Accession 20230417.1
Arrangement: as received from donor.
Files concern sustainer program plans, sponsored projects, board meeting materials, reorganization, project proposals, journalism awards, financial statements, Facing South newsletters, and loose copies of several ISS reports.
Acquisitions Information: Accessions 103478, 20220929.1
Arrangement: as received from donor.
Box 87 |
Friends of Forsyth County |
Box 87-88
Box 87Box 88 |
Green Index |
Box 89 |
Wealth Primary, Catfish project, Nursing homes/Pierce Invest. |
Box 90 |
Land study: County files, MacDowell to Yancey |
Box 91 |
Land study: Basic files, large landowners, subjects, nat (?) clips, etc. |
Box 92 |
Land study: Basic files, large landowners, subjects, nat (?) clips, etc., co land use/soil/econ reports, Liden notes, promo flyer for W.O.N.C. |
Box 93 |
Land study: disks, New Mexico WOWN (?) study, tax supervisor surveys |
Box 94 |
County files (Alamance-Lincoln) |
Box 95 |
Land study: regional C.O.G.s, CAMA land use reports, etc, 1985-1986 |
Box 96 |
Land study: Regional C.O.G.s, county land use reports, mostly under CAMA, other reports by agencies |
Box 97 |
North Carolina Legislative Res., North Carolinians for Effective Citizenship; South in Congress |
Box 98 |
North Carolina Alliance for Transportation Reform, Gold and Green, Alabama Project, CDC/sustainable development, Faircloth finance reports and cong. Votes, sponsor BIU (?) |
Box 99 |
Campaign finance in states not NC, money in state politics, southern states, not NC |
Box 100 |
1984/1986 Campaign finance project, Helms-Hunt, Edmin/Stewart, Jordan/Martin, state legislature reports/campaign finance for 1986 |
Contribution analysis: Martin, Jordan, Edmisten, Stewart |
|
Box 101 |
Southern Finance Project/Bank res. 1986-1992, 2002 |
Box 102 |
Helping Hands, poultry workers project |
Box 104 |
Highway Robbery; 1988 Super Tuesday; South in Congress; Hawks Roost, general election analysis |
Box 103 |
Hamlet fire response; worker safety and compensation, 1991-1994 |
Box 105 |
Contribution analysis, Martin, Jordan, Edmisten, Stewart, Brown lung and textiles |
Box 106-112
Box 106Box 107Box 108Box 109Box 110Box 111Box 112 |
Brown lung and textiles |
Box 113 |
Hanes and Mueller steam |
Box 114 |
Canon MillsAudiocassette (C-5633/22) found in box 114 resides in series 6. |
Box 115 |
Southerners for Economic Justice |
Box 116 |
Schlage project, 1988, tax break and politics of North Carolina banks, bank heist report, 1994 |
Box 117-118
Box 117Box 118 |
Hog industry |
Box 119-125
Box 119Box 120Box 121Box 122Box 123Box 124Box 125 |
Poultry industry, farms, growers |
Box 126-127
Box 126Box 127 |
Farmworker safety and health, Chip Hughes, 1980s |
Box 128 |
Farmworker safety and health, Chip Hughes, pesticide project |
Box 129-131
Box 129Box 130Box 131 |
Union busters research |
Box 131, 133 |
Environmental politics book |
Box 132-134
Box 132Box 133Box 134 |
Environmental justice |
Box 135-136
Box 135Box 136 |
Hazardous waste siting |
Box 137 |
1960s-1970s leftist publicationsCollected ephemeral print materials on student organizing in the late 1960s and early 1970s (especially the 1968 student uprising at Columbia University and the 1970 protests and shooting at Kent State University), public and higher education reform, de facto segregated schools, anti-Vietnam War organizing, how to prepare protesters for grand jury testimony, anti-imperialist struggle, classism, and other topics. Titles include "Why We Strike," a manifesto of striking students during the 1968 Columbia University uprisings; "Who Rules Kent?" a report by the Kent Students for a Democratic Society that was published several months prior to the shooting on Kent State's campus; and "The Cambridge Project: Social Science for Social Control" and "How Harvard Rules," both of which were published by student activists at Harvard University. |
Box 138 |
Feminist publicationsCollected ephemeral and serialized print materials on women’s liberation and feminist organizing from the late 1960s and early 1970s. Topics include women’s liberation in Austin, Texas, serialized publications, Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), housework, childrearing, and other topics. Titles include "Toward a Female Liberation Movement," a 1968 essay by Beverly Jones and Judith Brown that was a critique to the "Women’s Manifesto," which was created by the Women’s Caucus at the 1967 SDS convention; "Notes From the Second Year: Women's Liberation Major Writings of the Radical Feminists," the 1970 sequel to "Notes from the First Year," which was the first journal published by the Women’s Liberation Movement; and the first three issues of Women: A Journal of Liberation, a feminist journal from Baltimore, Maryland. |
Box 139 |
Hanes, Siler City Waste Water, Repetitive motion injury, Poultry Project |
Box 140 |
Poultry, 1990sSubject files related to a special report on the poultry industry, "Ruling the Roost" in Southern Exposure Vol. XVII No. 2. Included are files on labor practices; occupational safety and health, especially Carpel tunnel and repetitive motion injuries, in Purdue chicken plants in Lewiston, N.C. and Robersonville, N.C.; the Perdue legal settlement with UFCW (United Food and Commercial Workers) International Union; and organizing efforts with Center for Women's Economic Alternatives, Black Workers for Justice, the Fairness Coalition for Poultry Workers, the National Poultry Project, North Carolina Student Rural Health Coalition, the Hamlet Response Coalition for Workplace Reform, and others. Other materials concern the poultry industry in Arkansas. |
Box 141 |
Poultry, 1980s-1990sTopics include the Poultry Growers Project; poultry pollution, animal waste, and environmental regulation for CAFOs (Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations) in the U.S. South (Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, Virginia, Texas); State of North Carolina Department of Environment, Health, and Natural Resources correspondence about violations with House of Raeford Farms and Nash Johnson and Sons Farm; and vertical integration of the poultry industry. |
Hogs, 1990sTopics include Farmers for Fairness, a lobbyist organization; the hog lobby, fundraisers, and “hog money” research; hog industry regulation; and investigative and advocacy organizations including the North Carolina Alliance for Democracy, Democracy South, and Institute for Southern Studies. |
|
Box 142 |
Hogs, 1990sIncludes clippings related to the hog industry in North Carolina; subject files on animal waste regulations and the concentration of the meat industry in North Carolina and across the United States; and correspondence with activists and organizations. |
Box 143 |
Land developers, corporate labor projects, environment and Democracy Index, 1980s-1990sResearch files related to major land developers in central North Carolina, including Clay Hamner in Durham and Orange Counties, Eric Stephen Stroud in Wake County, and Ronnie Watson and Frank Rouse in coastal North Carolina. Topics include government appointees to Coastal Resources Commission and conflicts of interest. See also C-5633/75: Land Study with Bob Hall and Mac Ledgerton in Series 6. There are also subject files related to an Institute for Southern Studies report on environmental justice legislation, 1993-1994; media coverage for publication of the Green Index, 1990-1992, 1999; the Southern Finance Project, including the Financial Democracy Campaign, 1990-1993; organizing by workers at Brown and Williamson Tobacco Company in Reidsville, N.C., to prevent a buy out that would have left their Reidsville plant without a product to produce; the unsuccessful attempt by FLOC (Farm Labor Organizing Committee) to settle labor disputes with Mount Olive Pickle Co. over living and working conditions that ultimately led to a consumer boycott, 1997-1998; the Labor Press Workshop on effective use of the media regarding cotton dust, brown lung, and worker injuries, 1981-1994; and the Democracy Index, a project to rank states by measurement of access to the ballot, 1992-2000. |
Box 144 |
Georgia Power Project, 1970sThe Georgia Power Project campaigned against rate increases and other objectionable aspects of the utility industry, including racial and sexual discrimination, private ownership and control, environmental destruction, and wasteful advertising. Reports and other materials from activists and organizations relate to the Georgia Power Project, as well as other aspects of the utilities and energy industries, including new trends in utility financing; alternative power sources; the Gulf Oil boycott; Oil, Chemical, and Atomic Workers Union and a strike at Shell Oil; Citizens Against Rate Excesses (C.A.R.E.) in New Orleans, La.; environmental recycling in Durham, N.C.; and the environment and advertising. There are also files for James Ridgeway and Barry Weisberg relating to an energy crisis conference in 1973. Other reports concern women and work in North Carolina, civil rights and censorship, campaign financing, North Carolina power structures and institutional leadership. |
Box 145 |
North Carolina Land Ownership Study, 1980sFiles relating to an Institute for Southern Studies research project that generated the "Who Owns NC?" report. Included are files on administration of the project, collecting data on land ownership, background research materials on other similar land ownership studies, and land reform projects in other states. Other topics include soil conservation, farmland, property taxes, park lands and land ownership by the United States Federal Government, economic development, and poverty. |
Box 146 |
North Carolina Department of Transportation political influence scandals, 1991-2002Files related to Democracy South's research project and subsequent audit and legal process related to political patronage scandals of appointments of political donors to the North Carolina Board of Transportation under Governors Jim Martin and Mike Easley in the 1990s-early 2000s. Includes ethics statements of board members/Governor Hunt appointees, 1993-1998, and clippings about the scandal and follow-up, 1997-1998. |
Box 147 |
Brown Lung, 1976-1980Subject files related to Brown lung, the Brown Lung Association, occupational health and safety, and compensation law reform. Of note is a file on a compensation case of Burlington Industries textile worker Linnie Mae Bass, who was diagnosed with byssinosis. |
Farmworkers, 1970sSubject files related to farmworkers organizing and solidarity work, particularly in eastern North Carolina and Florida. |
|
Image Folder PF-5633/1 |
Farmworkers, 197235mm roll film, prints One roll of photo negatives and prints taken at a migrant labor camp in Florida. Several images depict families/residents of the camp. |
Box 147 |
Coalition for Alternatives to Shearon Harris (CASH), 1986Files include internal correspondence, minutes, flyers, and other materials on the activities of CASH, an organization mobilizing around the Harris nuclear plant in New Hill, N.C. |
Box 148 |
Dealmakers Project, Lauch Faircloth, 1990sResearch files on Democracy South's Dealmakers project to investigate campaign finance and political patronage claims against Governor Jim Hunt and Senator Lauch Faircloth in the 1990s. Includes data and reports on political "soft money" in North Carolina and at national level, Board of Elections guidance and rules, and legislation. Faircloth research file topics include the highway scandal of 1976, deeds, contracts, bills and legislation, ads, anesthesiologists, autodealers, banks, campaign finance reform, finance, hogs, agribusiness, manufactured housing, Microsoft, mortgage insurance, and utilities. |
Box 149 |
Southerners for Economic Justice, 1976-1998Files relating to the founding of Southerners for Economic Justice (SEJ), an advocacy and activist organization that initially mobilized around the J.P. Stevens strike as an outgrowth of the Institute for Southern Studies. Includes founding documents, correspondence, issues of Fair Measure, a newsletter published by SEJ. Other materials document the Workers Rights Project Inc., including Beattie Hotline and The Public Voice, which were newsletters of the project; articles of incorporation for the project; and a brochure for the Job Rights Workshop. |
Acquisitions Information: Accessions 20230417.1
Arrangement: as received from donor. Note that there are 2 rough alphabetical runs in this series: boxes 156-159 and boxes 160-166.
Files related to private and corporate financial donations to poltical campaigns in North Carolina and political patronage and corruption issues. Topics include 1984 U.S. Senate campaign of Jesse Helsm; the 1996 North Carolina gubernatorial campaign for James B. Hunt; Alcoholic Beverage Control (ABC) boards; coastal development; a libel sut filed by Walter Davis against Bob Hall and the Institute for Southern Studies; a 2009 investigation into possible North Carolina election law violations by Michael Easley and his connections to donors Lanny Wilson and Nick Garrett; payday lending; fuel oil dealers; political "soft money"; political campaign contributions from forestry, tobacco, prison, video poker, and other industries; North Carolina Board of Ethics; Poltical Action Committees; Art Pope, the Pope family, and the Pope Foundation; possible campaign finance violations by Meg Scott Phipps; Richard Shoff, a business person based in Kannapolis, N.C., and former member of the Indiana Ku Klux Klan who was a major financial donor to U.S. Senator Jesse Helms; economic development and planning issues, such as rural character and flexible planning in Orange County, N.C., especially at Stoney Creek, University Station, and Brumley Forest; election law cases, including N.C. Right to Life v Leake, which challenged a 1999 rewrite of campagin finance law, and a 2006 case involving Republical Legislative Majority of North Carolina Inc.; elections law review committee; campaign finance reform training and leadership; judicial reform in the early 2000s; legislative bills and programs in support of public campaign financing and "clean elections" and adminsitrative files for North Carolina Voters for Clean Elections; lobbying and lobbying reform; Governor Jim Martin's appointments; the "Bank Heist" project; Frank Perdue and poultry research; the "pollution lobby" report by Barry Yeoman in the Independent Weekly; and Democracy North Carolina research reports, including "The Color of Money," "The Cost of a Seat in the Legislature," and "Highway Robbery."
There are also files on individuals: Marc Basnight, Cherie Berry, Jim Black, Russell Carter, Linda Johnson, Stephen Laroque, Mary McAllister, Richard Morgan, Robert Morgan, Bev Perdue, Dennis Wicker, Thomas Wright; and on organizations: North Carolinians Against Racial and Religious Violence, Center for Democratic Renewal (CDR), North American Congress on Latin America (NACLA), North Carolina Alliance for Democracy, and other organizations.