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Fall, 1994,
Deerfield Public Library, Volume 10, Number 1
Van flrsdale
Assumes
Board Post
Attractions:
Secrets Behind the Binding
Charms of Music....and
Romance! Hear them first at
your library!
The Songs That Sell!
October 4—Jim
Brickman, suc
cessful composer,
performer, commer
cial music producer
J tells how to make it
in the dynamic business of music.
A Windham Hill recording artist
in the George Winston tradition,
he will also entertain with his lyri
cal piano melodies.
The Novels ThgF Sizzle!
fp®
r-'-
1984 has arrived ten years late and it is
being hailed as the dawn of a new day. What I
am concerned about is the advent of political
correctness. How this has happened, and how
it has been passively accepted defy my imagi
nation. Maybe the past thirty years have inured
us to accept the unacceptable. It has been a
rough thirty years—Viet Nam, Watergate,
Irangate, the Persian War, stagflation, reces
-ll
well as the disintegration of the Soviet Union.
November 8—Authors Cathie
Linz & Linda Wiatr
Ethiopia and now Rwanda seem not to touch us
;>1
sion and the loss of our global market share, as
Global catastrophe in Bangladesh, Somalia,
(Laurel Collins) present an indepth look at the ever popular and
often misunderstood romance
novel. Although all romances focus
on the love relationship, there the
similarities end. Find out how the
authors play the game of love!
directly because of their distance and our lack of
Librarian in
books—trash and treasure—that a lot of authors
Lobby
Meet Library Administrator Jack
Hicks and one member from
the Library Board of Trustees in
the library lobby, 9-12 Saturdays
October 1 and November 5. This
is an opportunity to offer sugges
tions and discuss concerns infor
mally with library leaders.
Donald P. Van Arsdale has been
selected to fill the unexpired one
year Library Board term vacated by
retiring Rosemary Sazonoff. Van
Arsdale is Executive Director of
The Winnetka Community House.
A graduate of Western Illinois
University, he was formerly em
ployed by area park districts and
has served on several non profit
boards. He said, “I’m happy to
serve the people of Deerfield in
this wonderful library and hope to
contribute my many years of pub
lic service experience.” He, his wife
Mary and daughter Karen have
lived in Deerfield since 1990.
knowledge dr sympathy for those cultures.
When I was a teenager I was an insatiable
reader. Living at the end of an eighteen-mile dirt
road either makes you turn inward or look out
longingly to the distant world. I read so many
and books stand out: Graham Greene, Neville
Shute, Herman Wouk, Norman Mailer, Ernest
Hemingway, The Silver Chalice, Raintree
County, The Caine Mutiny, The Cruel Sea. I
came to love Greene, Shute and Wouk for their
Continued on page 2
We appreciate
your gifts!
Thanks to The Townley Club of
Deerfield, The Junior Women’s
Club of Deerfield, the Amy Simon Fund donors and
others, the library has
been able to purchase
many books to develop ,
the collection for you. We ~encourage you to remember the
library when you wish to make gift
donations.
§
Librorq Videos
D
eerfield cardholders may
now check out up to six
videos! Videos are loaned
for three days at $ leach
(except travel videos which are two
for $1). Overdue video fines are $2
per day. Videos cannot be renewed,
reserved, or checked out by anyone
under age 18. No exceptions!
�Librarian's Desh continued from page 1
abilty to move me in time and place and
put me directly into the story being told.
What stands out about all the reading was
my free choice and access to read any
thing I wanted. Free choice is what makes
us Americans.
Can kids make those same free
choices today when they want to read or
even watch TV? I hope so, but I don’t
know for how long. Political correctness is
a fundamental challenge to the
Constitution and the Bill of Rights that
could block access to information, stymie
free inquiry, hamper the right to receive
information, stop freedom of the press. It
has already deeply damaged freedom of
speech. College campuses across the
U.S. have become deeply attached to pc;
in fact, many of them employ the equiva
lent of thought police to insure doctrinal
purity. My problem is whose doctrine,
whose purity? In the condescending clam
our to do good and be nice, are we throw
ing away our crucial civil rights?
My own professional organization,
the American Library Association,
embraces and advocates politically cor
rect speech and thought. Their new ortho
doxy is placing them far from many librari
ans who still believe in the Bill of Rights.
By no means do I want to return to an era
of racial, religious, sexist and gender slurs
and epithets. But I reject the prison of polit
ical correctness as an even more danger
ous social evil. It reminds me all too much
of my neighbor from the Soviet Union chill
ingly dismissing her father's tenure in the
Siberian Gulag as the result of "merely not
being correct with government." Let's hope
I turn out to be wrong when I sa$< 1984 has
come ten years late.Has anyone read
Orwell's 1984 lately?.
The books I am recommending this
month are all nonfiction and cover a wide
field of experience. The Roosevelts by Peter
Collier. Leading With My Heart by Virginia
Kelley. Life of the Party by Chris Ogden,
and finally Land Where the Blues Began by
Alan Lomax. Like Bill Clinton or not, you
can't help but like his mother and her can
dor. Alan Lomax has chronicled American
music for most of this century and knows
the themes and rhythm of blues music like
no one else. Pamela Digby Churchill
Hayward Harriman was indeed the "life of
the party" and knew all the rich and power
ful on both sides of the Atlantic for the past
fifty years. (And married most of them!) The
Roosevelts is a fine essay on money, poli
tics. power and arguably the most important
political family in U.S. history.
---- —
r
:
Jack Alan Hicks. Administrative Librarian
Powerful Now Dynix
Computer System Arrives
aiba Rosenkranz, Head
of Technical Services
fl and Director Jack Hicks
mS are surrounded by
equipment for the library’s
new computer catalog and cir
culation system.
The ten year old system is
old by computer standards,
and hardware for it cannot be
replaced. The faster, more
powerful system will again be
on a network with Skokie,
Morton Grove and Waukegan
Libraries.
It is expected to be
installed by the beginning of
October. Librarians will assist
you in learning the new cata
log.
New Books—Don't
Miss ‘Em
• The Train Home by
Susan Shreve. A chance
encounter on a train
between two unlikely
people unearths their
secrets and leads to love.
• The Favourite by
Meredith Daneman. With
great insight and feeling,
Daneman traces the story
of a girl growing up from
the 1950's to the 1970’s.
• The Soloist by Mark
Salzman. A former child
prodigy, now a cello
teacher and failed per
former, copes with rela
tionships and students.
• Back Talk by Joan
Weimer. While Weimer
struggles with a debilitat
ing spinal disease that
temporarily ends her
busy career, she finds
some truths of her own
as she explores the life
of a 19th century woman
novelist. (820.9 WEI)
Special library services for special needs:
• Large print books, books on cassette, service to the homebound.
• Reasonable accommodations for persons with disabilities including a
new elevator, lowered telephone, drinking fountains, etc.
• Visualtek closed circuit television magnifies print or handwritten
materials up to 60 times the original size.
• Chicagoland Radio Information Service (CRIS) offers two radio
receivers for visually handicapped to borrow from the library.
Receivers provide live, up to date, verbatim readings of local, regional
and national newspapers, and other programs.
• National Library Service unabridged popular books and magazines
in braille or recorded formats can be borrowed from Illinois’ Voices
of Vision. A variety of materials and special equipment can be mailed
free for visually handicapped. For service, call 1-800-227-0625.
Deerfield Library' also has some magazines on tape and listening
equipment.
-(XT'
• The library has a TDD telecommunrcatibns/levice so that the hear
ing or speech impaired can call the library. With your special unit at
home, call TDD at 945-3372.
• As a Libraries for Literacy member, we can contact Lake County
Literacy program for those who wish to volunteer, or those who wish
to be tutored. Adult easy reader books are in library’s collection.
For special library needs or resources, contact a Reference Librarian.
�Book
Programs arefree but reservations are requested
Attention Deficit Disorder
Tuesday, September 13, 7:30p.m.
ADD affects 16 million adults/children. Dr.
Richard Saul discusses the most topical issues in
this field. He’s a medical school professor, devel
opmental medicine specialist and an attending
physician at Childrens Memorial, Evanston and
Highland Park Hospitals.
Beginner’s Guide to the Stock
Market
Tuesday, September 27, 7:30p.m.
Easy to understand presentation on investing
basics by Vern A. Magnesen of Dean Witter
Reynolds: where stocks fit in overall portfolio,
how to make buying decisions, reducing risk, etc.
Making It in the Music Business
Tuesday, October 4, 7:30p.m.
Composer of well known music, L.A.’s Jim
Brickman has created commercials for McDonalds,
7- UP, Sony, Sprint, Kraft, Kelloggs, etc., and musi
cal themes for Disney TV and Euro Disney. His
debut album of solo piano music on-Windham Hill
Records, reminiscent of George Winston,'is7climb
ing the charts. He’ll give tips on “making it in
•v
music” and will perform.
Writers’ Workshop—Improve your
WRITING: POETRY, FICTION, DRAMA,
ESSAYS, MEMOIRS, ETC.
Saturday, OctoberJ5, 9Jd.m. to 4p.m.
Break through readers block, generate new ideas,
become a self editor, and get your work published!
All will be'presented by Cynthia Gallaher, a “master
sto ryteller” and winner of an Illinois Women
Writers Poetry Prize. This event is’made possible in
part by Poets and Writers, Inc. through a major
grant from the Lila/Wallace Readers Digest Fund.
Prize Winning Pies
Thursday, October 27, 7pm. Note early starting time
In time for holiday baking, a return visit by popular
caterer Lou Buchenot, formerly Coordinator of
Hospitality Programs at Harper College. He’ll demon
strate pie making and offer some pies to taste test.
The Power of the Romance Novel
Tuesday, November 8, 7:30 p.m.
Novelists Cathie Linz and Linda Wyatr (writing as
Laurel Collins) present an in-depth look at the popu
lar and often misunderstood romance novel. They’ll
give an overview of the genre, discuss the research/
writing process and explore the misconceptions!
Discussions in
The Library
Thursdays, 10:30 a. m.
September 8 Floating In
My Mother's Palm by Ursula
Hegi, 1990. In Germany in the
early 1950 s, a girl tries to make
sense out of her own and her
country’s hidden past.
October 13 Regeneration
by Pat Barker, 1992. In the
summer ol 1917, Siegfried
Sassoon, a brilliant English poet
and officer, disavows the war and
is sent to a mental hospital for a
cure. An intriguing look at pub
lic insanity' and private despair.
November 10 The Chosen
by Chaim Potok, 1967. Danny,
an Hasidic Jew, and Reuven, an
Orthodox scholar, form a bond
of friendship which helps Danny
to reach his father after he has
been raised by a code ofsilence.
Adult Fall 1 994
Calendar
September
2 Staff Institute Day Library Closed
5 Labor Day Library Closed
8 Book Discussion, Floating in My
Mother's Palm, 10:30 a.m.
13 Attention Deficit Disorder, 7:30 p.m.
21 Library Board 8 p.m.
27 Stock Market Workshop, 7:30 p.m.
1
4
13
15
19
27
October
Librarian in the Lobby. 9-12
Making it in Music, 7:30 p.m.
Book Discussion, Regeneration, 10:30 a.m.
Writer's Workshop, 9-4.
Library Board 8 p.m.
Prize Winning Pies, 7:00 p.m.
5
8
10
16
23
24
November
Librarian in the Lobby, 9-12
Power of the Romance Novel, 7:30 p.m.
Book Discussion, The Chosen, 10:30 a.m.
Library Board 8 p.m.
Thanksgiving Eve Library Closes at 5 p.m.
Thanksgiving, Library Closed
Free Blood Pressure Screening: Mondays,
6-8 p.m. September 12, October 3, November
7 at the library, with Drs. Wendi Marcus and
William Seiden of Lutheran General Medical
Group, Deerfield office.
College of Lake County’s Great Books
meets in library alternate Thursdays, 7 p.m.
from September 8. Fee, $55. Call 433-7884 to
register.
Election Time Sources
The library’s newspapers and news magazines can help you
keep up with politics during this fall’s election season! If you
have questions about candidates or issues, please see a
Reference Librarian for biographical dictionaries, election clip
ping file, and other specialized sources such as:
Congressional Digest— pros and cons of issues before
Congress.
Congressional Quarterly Weekly Report— background on elections,
issues, candidates.
Congressional Record—proceedings of each daily Congressional session
Editorials on File— Editorial opinions from 150 newspapers.
Ilinois Issues—Illinois politics and government.
InfoTrac-General Periodicals Index—computerized article index, useful
to search specific candidates and issues.
Vital Speeches—for texts of recent speeches on current affairs, many by
major political figures.
Washington Monthly—Washington political news and opinion.
The library and the League of Women Voters co-sponsor Voter Registration
at the library from 10-2 Saturdays, September 24 and October 8.
�7
^77
Services
& ->
Youth
//
t's
/ ;
/ /
/ //
Childrens Rumors fo VisiT
Tor Time
Two authors visit/this fall! At 4:30,'p.m.
Wednesday, Ocjbber 3 Feenie Ziner.will
discuss her many juvenile nonfiction books,
The following Monday noon, October 10
(Columbus Day), Michael Rosen will be
here. Rosen, whose holiday-picture book
Elijah’s Angelas been a favorite, will discuss
his latest project, a special book to benefit
the homeless, The Greatest Table. As Rosen
has a special project planned, registration is
required beginning September 26. An
“admission price” of non-perishable food is
also requested. Children attending should
be over six years old.
Our very casual bimonthly program for
babies and toddlers (with an adult) will
resume and continue through Spring. In
Fall, please drop in on Fridays any time
from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. September 9 & 23,
October 14 & 28 and November 11 & 18.
Rhoq Holey!
Summer's Success!
Grab your spyglasses and set sail. X marks the
spot where the Punch and Judy
players will present the Treasure
Island puppet show Saturday
November 5 at 10:30 a.m. & 2
J&g |\
p-m. and Sunday, November 6 at 2
p.m. Tickets are available beginning
October 24, limit 3 per family, preference
to Deerfield cardholders. Under age 6 are too
young, but if here, they must sit with an
adult.
m&m
9
10
11
12
23
26
SEPTEMBER
Tot Time, 10:30-11:30 a.m.
Movies, 10 a.m. (young)
Movies, 2 p.m. (repeat)
Registration begins for PreSchool Storytime
Tot Time, 10:30-11:30 a.m.
Pre-School Storytimes begin *
OCTOBER
Author Feenie Ziner, 4:30 p.m.
Author Michael Rosen, Noon *
Tot Time, 10:30-11:30 a.m.
Movies, 10 a.m. (young)
Movies, 2 p.m. (repeat)
Tickets for. TreasureJsjand_. .
Puppet Show
26 Halloween Ghost Stories,
4:30 p.m.
28 Tot Time, 10:30-11:30 a.m
30-31 Come in Costume! "Trick or
Treat” the Library
5
10
14
15
16
24
Snakes alive!
Summer’s Reading Railroad Club was full!
964 participated! Special thanks to
Robert McClarren, Deerfield resi
dent & former librarian who loaned his
extensive collection of railroad memorabilia,
and hats off to Norm White, proprietor
of The Toy Station in Lake Forest who set
up a large scale model train.
31 great S^Y*^*^* volunteers
helped busy librarians and worked with
young readers in the IP^l-S program.
They were indispensable!
Deerfield Public Library
920 Waukegan Road
Deerfield, Illinois 60015
NOVEMBER
Treasure Island Puppet Show,
10:30 a.m. or 2 p.m.*
6 Treasure Island Puppet Show,
2 p.m.*
11 Tot Time, 10:30-11:30 a.m.
14-17 Last Week of Pre-School
Storytime*
18 Tot Time 10:30-11:30 a.m.
19 Movies (young), 10 a.m.
20 Movies (repeat), 2 p.m.
.5
An * indicates registration
necessary. All other programs
are drop in.
Non Profit Org.
U.S. Postage
PAID
Deerfield, IL
Permit No. 196
Deerfield Public Library
Phone: 708/945-3311
Jack Hicks, Executive Librarian
Library Board
Sue Benn, President
David Wolff, Secretary
TonySabato, Treasurer
Jack Anderson
Diane Kraus
Yvonne Sharpe
Donald Van Arsdalc
Library Hours
Mon.-Thurs:
9:00am - 9:00PM
9:00am - 5:00pm
Fri.-Sat:
1:00PM - 5:00PM
Sundays:
EDITOR: Sally Seifert
Young People’s
Calendar
Deerfield Postal Patron
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Deerfield Public Library Browsing Newsletters
Description
An account of the resource
The historical archive of the Browsing newsletter, which is the quarterly newsletter put out by the Deerfield Public Library and lists all of the programming as well as news for the library.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Deerfield Public Library
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0010
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1986-present
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Browsing | Deerfield Public Library | Fall 1994
Description
An account of the resource
Vol. 10, No. 1
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Seifert, Sally Brickman
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
09/1994
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Searchable PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0010.034
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
September - November 1994
1984
7-UP
Alan Lomax
American Library Association (ALA)
Amy Simon Fund
Anthony G. Sabato
Atlantic Ocean
Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD)
Back Talk
Baiba Rosenkranz
Bangladesh
Bill Clinton
Blood Pressure Screenings
Cathie Linz
Chaim Potok
Chicago Illinois
Chicagoland Radio Information Service
Children's Memorial Hospital
Chris Ogden
College of Lake County
College of Lake County Great Books Discussion Group
Congressional Digest
Congressional Quarterly Weekly Report
Congressional Record
Cynthia Gallaher
David B. Wolff
Dean Witter Reynolds
Deerfield Illinois
Deerfield Public Library
Deerfield Public Library Audio Visual Circulation
Deerfield Public Library Board of Trustees
Deerfield Public Library Board of Trustees Trustee in the Lobby
Deerfield Public Library Books to Go Home Delivery Service
Deerfield Public Library Browsing Newsletter
Deerfield Public Library Circulation Policies
Deerfield Public Library PALS Program
Deerfield Public Library Programming
Deerfield Public Library S*T*A*R Volunteers
Deerfield Public Library Summer Reading Programs
Deerfield Public Library Tot Time
Diane Kraus
Disney TV
Donald Van Arsdale
Dynix Corporation
Editorials on File
Elijah's Angel
Ernest Hemingway
Ethopia
Euro Disney
Evanston Hospital
Feenie Ziner
Floating in My Mother's Palm
George Orwell
George Winston
Graham Greene
Gulf War
Harper College
Harper College Hospitality Programs
Harper College Hospitality Programs Coordinator
Hasidic Judaism
Herman Wouk
Highland Park Hospital
Illinois Issues
Illinois Voices of Vision
Illinois Women Writers Poetry Prize
InfoTrac General Periodicals Index
Iran-Contra Affair
Jack A. Hicks
Jim Brickman
Joan Weimer
John A. Anderson
Junior Womens Club
Karen Van Arsdale
Kelloggs
Kraft
Lake County Illinois
Lake County Libraries for Literacy Program
Lake County Literacy
Lake County Literacy Program
Lake Forest Illinois
Land Where the Blues Began
Laurel Collins
Leading With My Heart
League of Women Voters Deerfield
Life of the Party
Lila/Wallace Reader's Digest Fund
Linda Wiatr
Los Angeles California
Lou Buchenot
Lutheran General Medical Group
Mark Salzman
Mary Van Arsdale
McDonalds
Meredith Daneman
Michael Rosen
Morton Grove Public Library
National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped (BPH)
Nevelle Shute
Norm White
Norman Mailer
Orthodox Judaism
Pamela Digby Churchill Hayward Hamiman
Pat Barker
Peter Collier
Poets and Writers Incorporated
Political Correctness
Punch and Judy Players
Raintree County
Regeneration
Richard Saul
Robert R. McClarren
Rosemary Sazonoff
Rwanda
Sally Brickman Seifert
Searchable PDF
Sigfried Sassoon
Skokie Public Library
Somalia
Sony
Soviet Union
Sprint
Susan L. Benn
Susan Shreve
TDD Telephone System
The Caine Mutiny
The Chosen
The Cruel Sea
The Favourite
The Greatest Table
The Roosevelts
The Silver Chalice
The Soloist
The Toy Station
The Train Home
Townley Club of Deerfield
Treasure Island
United States Constitution
United States Constitution Bill of Rights
United States Elections
United States Stock Market
Ursula Hegi
Vern A. Magnesen
Vietnam War
Virginia Kelley
Visualtech Voyager XL Video Magnifier Machine
Vital Speeches
Voter Registration
Washington Monthly
Watergate
Waukegan Public Library
Wendi Marcus
Western Illinois University
William Seiden
Windham Hall
Winnetka Community House
Yvonne Sharpe
-
https://archives.deerfieldlibrary.org/files/original/2b05dbcf578ff513691653045fdeed91.pdf
55d5312a73db75b3fb55879879438ba9
PDF Text
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Deerfield Integration Case Records
Subject
The topic of the resource
American Civil Rights Movement
Deerfield, Illinois
Integration in the North
Racial Integration
Racial Segregation
Description
An account of the resource
The records related to the Deerfield Integration Case of 1959 include books, DVDs, a VHS tape, newspaper clippings, correspondence, and meeting minutes.
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Bulk Dates 1959-1968
Date Range 1955-2018
Relation
A related resource
Bob Gand Papers
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0001
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
The White Sentinel
Description
An account of the resource
Newsletter
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Ku Klux Klan
National Citizens Protective Association
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Ku Klux Klan
National Citizens Protective Association
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
01/1960
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0001.016.006
4th Assembly District Bronx New York
A. Philip Randolph
A.J. Muste
ABCs of Scapegoating
Action for World Federation
Adlai E. Stevenson
AFL-CIO Committee on Civil Rights
Albert S. Coolidge
Alfred B. Lewis
American Association of Scientific Workers
American Baptist Church
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)
American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born
American Committee for Yugoslav Relief
American Committee on Africa
American Communist Party
American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO)
American Friends of Spanish Democracy
American Friends Service Committee
American League Against War and Fascism
American League for Peace and Democracy
American Peace Crusade
American Society of Friends
American Student Union
American Youth Congress
Arthur E. Morgan
Averell Harriman Equal Housing Opportunity Award
B'nai Brith
Baltimore Maryland
Benjamin J. Anderson
Boston Massachusetts
Brotherhood of Sleeping-Car Porters
Brotherhood Week
California
Carl Marzani
Catherine B. Wurster
Central YMCA College
Charles Abrams
Charles Aimmerman
Charles S. Zimmerman
Chicago Daily News
Chicago Illinois
Chock Full O'Nuts
Christianity
Church Peace Mission
Citizens Committee to Free Earl Browder
Civil Rights
Clarence E. Pickett
Clark Smith
Class Struggle
Clemency Appeal for Green and Winston
Communism
Community Church
Concord Park Subdivision
Congress of Racial Equality (CORE)
Congressional Investigations
Congressional Record
Connecticut
CORE-Lator Newsletter
Council for Pan American Democracy
Daily Worker
Dave Meade
David H. Scull
Dean Chamberlin
Delaware
Donald Harrington
Dorothy L. Height
Durham North Carolina
Earl Browder
Edward D. Hollander
Edward P. Eichler
Edward P. Morgan
Edwin T. Dahlberg
Eleanor Roosevelt
Equal Opportunity in Housing
Equal Rights
Equality of Opportunity
Estrella Matos
Evanston Illinois
Expose Newspaper
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
Federation of Architects Engineers Chemists and Technicians
Fellowship of Reconciliation
Forest W. Wolf
Fort Lauderdale Florida
Frances Levenson
Frank C. Montero
Frank S. Loescher
Franklin H. Williams
Frederick D. Patterson
Gene Weltfish
George J. Ritter
George M. Johnson
Gordon H. Scherer
Gordon W. Allport
Greater Boston Peace Strike Committee
Greater New York Urban League
Gus Hall
Harold J. Gibbons
Harvard University
Haverford Pennsylvania
Helen M. Wolf
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