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American Civil Liberties Union Records: Printed Materials Series, 1947-1995: Finding Aid
MC001.02.05

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Published in 2003
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Summary Information
- Creator:
- American Civil Liberties Union.
- Title and dates:
- American Civil Liberties Union Records: Printed Materials Series, 1947-1995
- Abstract:
- The American Civil Liberties Union Records document the activities of the Union in protecting individual rights from 1920 through 1995. The files contain materials on freedom of speech, expression, and association; due process of law; equality before the law; legal case files; and organizational records. Within these categories files reflect subject areas such as academic freedom, censorship, racial discrimination, aliens' rights, privacy concerns, labor concerns, amnesty, and government loyalty and security. The files reflect work on litigation, advocacy and public policy, and subject files on various areas of interest connected with civil liberties. Materials include correspondence, court documents, memoranda, printed matter, minutes, reports, briefs, and legal files. Also included are materials from ACLU affiliate organizations, and the Lawyers Constitutional Defense Committee.
- Size:
- 65 linear feet (156 boxes)
- Call number:
- MC001.02.05
- Location:
- Princeton University Library. Department of Rare Books and Special Collections.
Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library.
Public Policy Papers.
Princeton, New Jersey 08540 USA - Language(s) of material:
- English.
- Storage note:
- This collection is stored onsite at the Mudd Manuscript Library.
History of the American Civil Liberties Union
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) was established in 1920 to protect the specific constitutional freedoms in the Bill of Rights. In 1915 the American Union Against Militarism (AUAM) was formed to prevent United States involvement in World War I with Crystal Eastman serving as executive secretary. Roger Baldwin became executive director in 1917. Immediately upon United States entry in World War I, the AUAM was inundated with requests for aid to protect free speech, assembly and press which were threatened with political restriction imposed upon U.S. entry into the war and to defend the rights of conscientious objectors. A separate organization was needed to safeguard these rights, and thus the National Civil Liberties Bureau (NCLB) was established in the autumn of 1917 with Roger Baldwin as director.
For the history of the ACLU during the Baldwin years, see the history in the ACLU finding aid, 1912-1950.
The ACLU, 1950-1995: The Trials of Growth
The forty years between 1950 and 1990 were a time of significant growth for the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). Membership increased twenty-five times, and the Union's impact on the legal landscape was broad and deep. One historian decreed that the decade after 1954 witnessed “the greatest advances in civil liberties in American history,” with significant gains for African-Americans, women, students, the mentally-ill, prisoners, and others previously denied the full protection afforded by the U.S. Constitution. This period also saw the end to much censorship and the decoupling of church/state activity. The ACLU's boom was not without the threat of bust, however. The organization restructured itself several times as it wrestled to reflect internally the principles it espoused publicly. Its expansion into new areas of civil rights along with its firm stand on the First Amendment produced episodes that threatened the ACLU's viability.
Organizational Expansion
In the years immediately following World War II, younger, non-founding members of the ACLU Board pressed for and eventually achieved a structural reorganization that led to the Union's present configuration. In 1950, Roger Baldwin's role changed from administrator to ambassador, in which he toured, lectured, and wrote on civil liberties issues. While at the helm of the ACLU, Baldwin preferred that the ACLU remain a small, centrally-controlled unit with himself at the helm, something that changed under the administration of his successor, Patrick Murphy Malin. A Swarthmore economist, Malin lacked Baldwin's charm and speaking skills, but he was a successful administrator who oversaw the growth of the organization from 9,000 members in 1950 to over 60,000 by the time of his departure in 1962.
Much of this growth can be attributed to the expansion of local affiliates at the state and regional level that had their own boards and acted upon local civil liberties issues. Many served as watchdogs--ensuring that civil rights victories won by the national ACLU in the high courts were enforced at the local level--while other affiliates were active in initiating cases, often with more absolutist positions than the national office. Though the affiliates had a voice in deciding the national chapter's direction and policy since 1954, the organizational mechanism by which this was accomplished was cumbersome, changing several times. A workable method was found in 1967 with the creation of an 80-member board of directors comprised of representatives from all the affiliates and thirty at-large members. In addition, starting in 1959 and continuing to the present, the ACLU held biennial conferences to inform membership on pertinent topics, and to gather their views on civil liberties issues.
The Cold War and Civil Liberties
Historian Samuel Walker divides the ACLU's area of activity between 1950-1990 into four broad areas: Cold War issues, censorship, church/state, and civil rights. The beginning of the Cold War, the rise of Joseph McCarthy and the re-emergence of the House Committee on Un- American Activities (HUAC) created an atmosphere of intolerance and suspicion that not only posed a threat to individual civil liberties, but also destroyed the lives of many caught in the web spun by the Wisconsin Senator and his minions. The ACLU challenged the actions of McCarthy and HUAC on the tenet that only peoples' acts, not their beliefs, should be penalized; anything less infringed on First Amendment principle.
While the ACLU had not always lived up to these same principles (in 1940 it ousted board member Elizabeth Gurley Flynn for her membership in the Communist Party), by the early 1950s the ACLU did not hesitate to aid in the publication of Merle Miller's The Judges and the Judged. The book detailed HUAC's and McCarthy's red-baiting tactics, such as the prevalent use of unnamed (and hence unreliable or unanswerable) sources, guilt by association or exercise of one's Fifth Amendment rights, and other questionable means that resulted in blacklistings and firings of many in unions, the film industry, and the teaching profession. The ACLU called for the abolition of HUAC, attacked any measure that punished Communist Party members or denied them rights based solely on party membership ( Kent v. Dulles, for example), and sought fair and open investigations for the accused. In testament to its strict adherence to principle, the ACLU reminded the United States Senate of its obligation to provide McCarthy a fair hearing when it began censure proceedings against him in 1954.
The ACLU may have stood up for the rights of the accused more readily in 1950 than it did in 1940 because Roger Baldwin had developed a quid pro quo with J. Edgar Hoover in which the ACLU did not publicize FBI civil rights violations, and high-level Union officers cooperated with the Bureau. Baldwin and others thought that this cooperation, in conjunction with the Flynn resolution, inoculated the Union against attack as a Communist-front organization, freeing it to spend its energies defending constitutional principle, not itself. This arrangement, shocking when revealed in later years, did not prevent the FBI from continuing its massive surveillance of the ACLU and its members.
Red hunters cited national security as the basis for their actions, a justification that the government would continue to invoke and one that the ACLU contested in such cases as the Pentagon Papers ( U.S. v. New York Times), Watergate ( U.S. v. Nixon), and Iran-Contra. In 1969, 13 years after Joseph McCarthy's death, the ACLU's vigilance bore the ultimate fruit in Brandenburg v. Ohio in which the Supreme Court ruled that the government only could punish direct incitement to lawless action, thereby invalidating the Smith Act and all state sedition laws that restricted radical political thought.
Censorship and Freedom of Speech
The cousin to McCarthyism's national security cause was the drive to protect people from printed materials and movies that promoted Communism or were perceived to erode community morals. Censorship attempts were, from the ACLU's point of view, a fundamental attack on free speech, and over the course of three decades, the Union came to adopt an absolutist position, suffering no infringement in any form. Beginning with a 1952 Supreme Court victory in Burstyn v. Wilson/McCaffrey in which the high court declared that states cannot prohibit the screening of films based on state-based standards, the ACLU rang up a string of court victories. These, combined with changing market pressures, brought a complete end to many common censorship practices by the 1960s ( Jacobellis v. Ohio), including the sharp curtailment of post office censorship ( Hannegan v. Esquire).
In a related decision, the Supreme Court gave a boost to freedom of the press in New York Times v. Sullivan which declared that public officials could not sue for defamation unless they proved “actual malice,” thereby providing the media with heretofore unknown freedom to report critically. Freedom of speech was extended, with the ACLU's assistance, by placing it above property rights in Pruneyard Shopping Center v. Robins, with the high court deciding that a shopping center could not forbid the distribution of political pamphlets on its premises.
Perhaps the most famous free speech issue of the ACLU's history, and certainly one that had the greatest impact on the organization, was the pitched battle over American Nazis' right to parade through Skokie, Illinois in 1977. Half the town's 70,000 citizens were Jewish, and about 1,000 were Holocaust survivors, but this did not dissuade the ACLU (then headed by Aryeh Neier who was Jewish) from taking on the Nazis' cause in what the ACLU considered a “classic First Amendment case.”
What the Union did not count on was a vigorous counter-argument by the Jewish Defense League, nor the loss of the support of its long-time ally, the American Jewish Congress. The ACLU won the court case, though the Nazis never marched in Skokie (ultimately parading at a site in downtown Chicago), but the highly-publicized case caused a backlash resulting in a large drop in membership. Neier, who had assumed the executive director's post after the departure of John de J. Pemberton in 1970 and was accustomed to growing membership rolls and increasing budgets, found himself unable to reconcile the organization's activities with available funds and resigned. His successor, Ira Glasser, initiated an emergency appeal to supporters and raised over $500,000, allowing him to re-structure organizationally and financially, placing the ACLU back in the black and ready for the looming trials of the Reagan Revolution.
Church/State
The ACLU earned the enmity of many for its efforts in enforcing the separation of church and state. Working to end state-sanctioned forms of religion, predominantly mainstream Protestantism, the ACLU sought to abolish school prayer, various government subsidies for religious education, and other connections between government and religious activity. Starting in 1947 with Everson v. Board of Education, the court delineated the Establishment Clause and the ACLU began to challenge long-entrenched government support for religious activity. Assailing school prayer, the ACLU won high court decisions to end it ( Engel v. Vitale and Abingdon School District v. Schempp). It also re-fought the Scopes trial ( Epperson v. Arkansas) in Arkansas which had required the teaching of creationism as well as evolution.
Frequently working in conjunction with Protestants United for the Separation of Church and State (later Americans United…) and the American Jewish Congress, the ACLU repeatedly clashed with the desires of the Roman Catholic Church on issues such as censorship, birth control, or school aid, often with the ACLU the victor. By the late 1960s, changes in public attitude toward church/state issues cemented the organization's gains, as many mainstream churches accepted the delineation. However, fundamentalist religions continued challenging laws on public prayer issues into the 1990s, with little effect ( Wallace v. Jaffree). Often, the affiliates bore the brunt of enforcement on church/state separation, acting to check sometimes frequent local infringements, thus proving Roger Baldwin's assertion that “no victory ever stays won.”
Civil Rights
The First Amendment clearly delineates free speech protection and church/state separation, and it was easy for the ACLU to pick up the banner for these causes. However, most of the ACLU's work from the 1950s onward involved the more ambiguous and complex realm of civil rights, helping secure the rights or expanding the concept of those same rights for those who had been denied them in the past such as African-Americans, women, homosexuals, children, the mentally-ill, prisoners, and the accused. In this multifaceted arena, the ACLU found itself embroiled both internally and externally, as the national organization sought to define its mission even as state affiliates and regional offices acted on their own accord, usually pushing further and harder than the national organization planned to go.
For example, during the Vietnam War ACLU moderates clashed with anti-war activists over the issue of representing Dr. Benjamin Spock, the famous pediatrician and prominent anti-war activist accused of interfering with the functions of government when he organized a “Stop the Draft” Week in 1968. Legal director Melvin Wulf first announced that the ACLU would represent Spock, only to be overruled by the national board, prompting the Massachusetts affiliate to take up Spock's cause. Though ultimately the government would drop its case, pro- Spock members saw the case as an opportunity to raise questions about the Vietnam War's legitimacy (as well as freedom of speech), while moderates viewed that issue as outside the ACLU's scope. It also brought to the fore a long-simmering debate over whether the ACLU should participate directly in lawsuits or contribute amicus curiae (“friend of the court”) briefs to other cases. After reviewing its most recent past activity, the Union decided that they had de facto become directly involved in cases and would continue as such.
Despite the organizational turmoil, a discussion of the ACLU's legal success under the civil rights rubric threatens to become a numbing list of historic Supreme Court decisions. Brown v. Board of Education, which overturned Plessy v. Ferguson and tolled the end of government-endorsed segregation was one of many cases in which the ACLU worked together with the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) to win rights for African-Americans. The ACLU participated in all the major civil rights cases, arguing for freedom of speech and association rights that allowed the sit-ins, freedom rides, and other methods employed by the movement.
Other famous high court cases in which the ACLU partook include: Griswold v. Connecticut, which recognized a right to privacy, thereby laying the foundation for future abortion rights decisions; Tinker v. Des Moines and In re Gault, two cases recognizing that minors enjoyed some Constitutional protection, especially in regard to freedom of speech and due process; and Miranda v. Arizona, Mapp v. Ohio, Escobedo v. Illinois, and Gideon v. Wainwright, all of which expanded the rights of the accused, mandating an explanation of their rights and access to counsel, and placing limits on police action. (While these last cases caused many police groups to view the ACLU with hostility, the Union also defended a police officer's right to belong to conservative political organizations such as the John Birch Society.)
As the concept of civil rights expanded, the ACLU started several special projects designed to focus solely on specific topics, including the Mental Health Law Project, the Project on Amnesty, the Privacy Project, the Women's Rights Project, the Lesbian and Gay Rights Project, and Prisoners' Rights Project. Each project worked not only to change the law, but to educate the public and raise their own funds.
Expansion Issues
The Children's Rights Project is an example of how the ACLU changed itself from a small, centrally-controlled organization to an expansive confederacy of groups working to advance the goal of civil liberties. With its roots in the 1970s and located at the national organization's office in New York City, it was one of the focused projects financially seeded by the national organization. In 1995, it had become successful enough to incorporate itself and separate from the ACLU organizationally, physically, and financially. Another sign of growth was the start of the regional offices. In addition to the Washington, D.C. office (established 1938) the Southern Regional Office in Atlanta was organized in 1964 and the Mountain States Regional Office in Denver a few years later. Each handled cases particular to their geographic areas, as well as the usual range of cases that interested the ACLU. This led to varying interpretations of ACLU policy which resulted in the creation of the ACLU's official policy guides, issued first in 1966 and revised periodically. These represented the ACLU's attempt to coordinate and control the types of cases the Union would take on and to shepherd resources along coordinated lines.
Unfortunately, the national organization had trouble determining what path to take, as many individuals within the organization pulled in different directions. Exacerbating this problem was the ACLU's re-structuring which attempted to reconcile the many voices in the civil liberties debate. After the first re-organization which opened up policy making to affiliates in 1954, the ACLU re-organized again in 1964, establishing a two-tiered system of governance in which affiliate representatives met twice a year and the board of directors in between. The dichotomy did not provide any stability and three years later, the Union re-organized once again, establishing its one-body 80-member board. Throughout this time, the ACLU continued its board committees--some standing, others ad hoc--which focused on particular issues such as academic freedom or due process. In later years, the rise of the special projects would overtake some of the committees' work and the role of the committees would be reduced, though not eliminated.
The establishment of the Roger N. Baldwin/ACLU Foundation in 1967 was another major organizational change for the ACLU. The Union created the charitable fund-raising arm to pay attorneys to work on the ACLU's behalf, signalling the end of the national organization's long- standing reliance on volunteer lawyers. Though volunteer attorneys continued to play a significant role in many of the affiliates, even there some groups, such as the New York and Southern California affiliates, had a history of paying for legal representation. The Foundation's purpose was to solicit funds from, among other places, other foundations, and during its early years much of its resources supported civil rights work in the South. In later years, it would provide initial funds for many of the special projects, gather any legal fees won by the project lawyers, applying the funds against the project's overhead costs.
These changes reflected not only the organization's growth, but also its expanding interpretation of what constituted civil liberties work. Starting with the civil rights movement and continuing on through the Vietnam War and Watergate, the ACLU fought internally, often bitterly, over the scope and nature of its work. In this battle, the broad interpreters of the Union's mission won out, as the organization took on cases involving abortion rights, women's rights, affirmative action, and other areas, far from the basic principle of protecting First Amendment rights on which the Union was founded.
The 1980s and early 1990s
The ACLU emerged from the 1970s a victor of many legal battles and organizationally strong. However, despite its track record and strength, the ACLU would not ring up a string of Supreme Court victories in the 1980s and 1990s as it had in the previous two decades. Public sentiment, long an ally in many areas, had shifted against the organization, to the point that ACLU membership was identified as out-of-the-mainstream. In the 1988 presidential election, GOP candidate George Bush, willfully unaware of nearly fifty years of Supreme Court decisions, echoed the phrase of Joseph McCarthy in calling his opponent, Michael Dukakis, a “card- carrying member of the ACLU” for his opposition to a flag-salute requirement. The Bush accusation reflected the state of public awareness of civil liberties in the 1980s as the ACLU re- fought a number of battles over such issues as censorship, school prayer, creationism, and abortion rights. In the area of censorship, the Union withstood challenges from both right and left, the latter trying to censor publications under the rubric of protecting women. However, the ACLU stood firm in its belief in the absolute freedom of speech.
The U.S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights were written to guarantee that the rights of the minority would not be infringed upon by the majority; the ACLU's accomplishments during the twentieth century helped to ensure that unpopular views would be tolerated, and indirectly, to remind people that it is an uncommon nation that commonly tolerates challenges to the majority view.
Description
These Records document the activities of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) in protecting individual rights between 1947 and 1995. The collection contains correspondence, clippings, court documents, memoranda, printed matter, minutes, reports, briefs, legal files, exhibit materials, and audio-visual materials. Also included are materials from ACLU affiliate organizations, the Lawyers Constitutional Defense Committee and national office legal department records (1945-1960).
Due to the exceptionally large volume within the ACLU Records, succinct series and subseries descriptions have been written, providing a basic outline of the records available. The researcher should always consult the folder list to ascertain if the records contain a topic of interest since not all subjects are mentioned in these brief descriptions.
The researcher should also be aware that many topics may be covered in more than one series or subseries. For instance, materials concerning freedom of the press are located in both the Mass Communications and Censorship subseries. Often the series descriptions note similar materials found in other parts of this collection. Due to limitations in processing time, not every file is in exact chronological or alphabetical order.
Arrangement
- Series 5: Printed Materials, 1917-1995
- Subseries 5A: ACLU Printed Material, 1917-1994
- Subseries 5B: Subject Files, 1946-1990
- Subseries 5C.1: Outside Organizations: Publications, 1917-1986 [bulk 1950-1969]
- Subseries 5C.2: Outside Organizations: Correspondence, 1946-1968
- Subseries 5D: Ephemera, 1958-1995
Access and Use
Access
This agreement describes the limits on access to portions of the American Civil Liberties Union Records as provided by paragraph six of the agreement between the American Civil Liberties Union and the Princeton University Library dated on March 1993. These restrictions may be revised from time to time at the initiation of either party.
Consistent with its support of freedom of information and informed public discourse on matters of public interest, the American Civil Liberties Union Records will be completely open to researchers. However, sections of the Records shall be closed for stated periods of time to protect privacy, confidentiality, and attorney-client privilege. The following categories of records shall be restricted as indicated below:
Personnel Records - Records which deal with personnel issues, whether in personnel files or in other files maintained by the ACLU shall be closed during the lifetime of the person to whom they apply. When scattered personnel records are present in open files, they shall be governed by this paragraph. This restriction shall not apply if the person or persons to whom the record applies have given their permission in writing to disclose said information.
Administrative Records - Records maintained by ACLU administrators (Board and Executive committee members, officers, executives, department heads, project directors, etc.) shall be closed for twenty years after the creation of the record or ten years after its deposit in the Princeton University Library, whichever is latter, but in no case for more than 30 years after the creation of the record. Personnel records will continue to be closed as provided above.
Development Records - Records relating to financial support from foundations or other legal entities but not individuals or their family foundations shall be closed for the same period as administrative records. Records relating to financial support by individual donors or their family foundations shall be returned to the ACLU if other more substantive issues relating to policy are not raised by the correspondence. When other issues are relevant, these records shall be closed for the same period as administrative records. Where opened the portions relating to individuals or their family foundations shall be treated like personnel records as provided below.
Legal Case Records - Legal Case Files shall be segregated into four categories:
1) Open Records - publicly-available materials relating to the case (public court records such as briefs, transcripts, exhibits, and judgments as well as other records such as press releases and media coverage) shall be open immediately upon transfer to Princeton.
2) Work Product Privileged Records - correspondence, memoranda, drafts of briefs prepared in anticipation of litigation, written statements of witnesses, and notes of mental impressions or personal recollections prepared or formed by an attorney shall be open twenty years after the closure of the case.
3) Attorney-Client Privileged Records - any document reflecting an exchange with a client or a potential client (including but not limited to written correspondence, memoranda to the file, notes, or any other report of communication to or from a client or potential client) made for the purpose of furnishing or obtaining professional legal advice and assistance shall be closed for seventy-five years for all clients, except for children where the period of closure shall be one hundred years.
4) The access rules set forth above do not apply to the following materials: classified documents; documents that have been placed under seal by a court or are subject to a protective order; documents that identify by name or otherwise clients that have been represented anonymously or pseudonymously; the terms of any confidential settlement or agreement. All such documents shall remain permanently closed unless the records are declassified, unsealed, the protective order is modified, or the client or the client's legal representative waives the privilege in writing.
Restrictions on Use and Copyright Information
Single photocopies may be made for research purposes. Permission to publish materials from the collection must be requested from the Curator of the Public Policy Papers. Researchers are responsible for determining any copyright questions.
Other Finding Aid(s)
The American Civil Liberties Union Records: Printed Materials Series forms part of the American Civil Liberties Union Records (Call Number 001). Due to the large volume of the ACLU records multiple online finding aids have been created.
A single finding aid exists for the American Civil Liberties Union Records dating from 1917-1947 and is available online: American Civil Liberties Union Records, The Roger Baldwin Years, 1917-1947.
American Civil Liberties Union Records dating from 1947 have been divided in to six series; each series is described in a separate finding aid. These finding aids are listed below:
Series 1: American Civil Liberties Union Records: Organizational Matters Series, 1947-1995.
Series 2: American Civil Liberties Union Records: Project Files Series, 1964-1979.
Series 3: American Civil Liberties Union Records: Subject Files Series, 1921-1990.
Series 4: American Civil Liberties Union Records: Legal Case Files Series, 1933-1990.
Series 5: American Civil Liberties Union Records: Printed Materials Series, 1917-1995.
Series 6: American Civil Liberties Union Records: Audiovisual Materials Series, circa 1920-1995.
Acquisition and Appraisal
Appraisal
During the processing of this collection, many items were discarded, including newspaper clippings from the New York Times and other major newspapers, government publications, well- known serial publications, and publications and large distribution memoranda from well-known and well-documented organizations such as the American Jewish Committee or Americans United for the Separation of Church and State.
Related Materials
Location of Copies or Alternate Formats
Public records of the ACLU from 1917 to 1989, have been microfilmed by the Microfilming Corporation of America (MCA) and University Microfilms International (UMI). These records include minutes of the board of directors, mailings to the board of directors, biennial conference papers, policy guides, the national legal docket, organization manuals, constitution and bylaws, legal briefs, and publications. The American Civil Liberties Union Records and Publications 1917-1975: A Guide to the Microfilm Edition and succeeding guides to these materials are available in the reference room, and the microfilm itself is located in the microforms reading room.
The bound volumes of ACLU records covering 1917 through 1946 (volumes 1-2762) have been microfilmed and researchers must use the microfilm in order to prevent further deterioration of the these fragile volumes. Researchers should consult the finding aid to the earlier ACLU records (1917-1946) for their description and arrangement.
Related Archival Material
- American Civil Liberties Union, Washington, D.C. Office Records
- American United for the Separation of Church and State Records
- Roger N. Baldwin Papers
- Osmond K. Fraenkel Diaries
- Fund for the Republic Records
- Arthur Garfield Hays Papers
- Peggy Lamson Collection on Roger N. Baldwin
- Law Students Civil Rights Research Council Records
- PEN American Center Records (at Firestone Library)
Processing and Other Information
Works Cited
Historical sketch based on In Defense of American Liberties: A History of the ACLU by Samuel Walker. See also Samuel Walker's The American Civil Liberties Union: An Annotated Bibliography.
Processing Information
This collection was processed by Paula Jabloner in 1994-1996 with the assistance of Assistant Archivist for Technical Services Daniel Linke, Special Collections Assistants Amy Escott, Claire Johnston, Alison McCuaig, and Tom Rosko, and students Laurie Alexander, Christina Aragon, Laura Burt, Jue Chen, Clement Doyle, Joe Faber, Said Farah, Boyd Goodson, Naomi Harlin, Janet Hine, Matthew Honahan, Katherine Johnson, Damian Long, Theresa Marchitto, Laura Myones, Olivia Kew, Grace Koo, Dan Sack, Bijan Salehizadeh, Tina Wang, Kyle Weston, and Elizabeth Williamson.
Descriptive Rules Used
Finding aid content adheres to that prescribed by Describing Archives: A Content Standard.
Encoding
Machine-readable finding aid encoded in EAD 2002 by Techbooks and Cristela García-Spitz on November 16, 2006.
Finding aid written in English.
Preferred Citation
Identification of specific item; Date (if known); American Civil Liberties Union Records, Box and Folder Number; Public Policy Papers, Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, Princeton University Library.
Subject Headings
These materials have been indexed in the Princeton University Library online catalog using the following terms. Those seeking related materials should search under these terms.
- Baldwin, Roger N. (Roger Nash), 1884-1981 -- Contributions to civil rights.
- Dorsen, Norman -- Contributions to civil rights.
- Dulles, John Foster, 1888-1959 -- Adversaries.
- Ennis, Bruce J., 1941 -- Contributions to civil rights.
- Epperson, Susan -- Trials, litigation, etc.
- Escobedo, Danny -- Trials, litigation, etc.
- Everson, Arch R. -- Trials, litigation, etc.
- Gault, Gerald Francis, 1949 or 50- -- Trials, litigation, etc.
- Gideon, Clarence Earl -- Trials, litigation, etc.
- Griswold, Estelle -- Trials, litigation, etc.
- Hays, Arthur Garfield, 1881-1954 - Contributions to civil rights.
- Holtzman, Elizabeth -- Trials, litigation, etc.
- Jacobellis, Nico -- Trials, litigation, etc.
- Levy, Herbert Monte, 1923 -- Contributions to civil rights.
- Malin, Patrick Murphy, 1903-1964 -- Contributions to civil rights.
- Miranda, Ernesto -- Trials, litigation, etc.
- Neier, Aryeh, 1937 -- Contributions to civil rights.
- Neuborne, Burt -- Contributions to civil rights.
- Nixon, Richard M. (Richard Milhous), 1913-1994 -- Adversaries.
- Pemberton, John de J. -- Contributions to civil rights.
- Perry, Richard L. -- Trials, litigation, etc.
- Pound, Ezra, 1885-1972 -- Imprisonment.
- Powell, John A. (John Anthony) -- Contributions to civil rights.
- Reitman, Alan -- Contributions to civil rights.
- Schempp, Edward L. -- Trials, litigation, etc.
- Schwarzschild, Henry -- Contributions to civil rights.
- Scopes, John Thomas, 1900-1970 --Trials, litigation, etc.
- Seeger, Daniel A. -- Trials, litigation, etc.
- Tinker, John Frederick -- Trials, litigation, etc.
- Wulf, Melvin A. -- Contributions to civil rights.
- American Union Against Militarism.
- Marshall Civil Liberties Trust Fund.
- National Civil Liberties Bureau (U.S.).
- New York Times Company -- Trials, litigation, etc.
- United States. Constitution. 1st-10th Amendments.
- Abortion -- Law and legislation -- United States -- 20th century.
- African Americans -- Civil rights -- History 20th century.
- African Americans -- Legal status, laws, etc. -- 20th century.
- Aliens -- United States -- Civil rights -- 20th century.
- Amnesty -- United States -- 20th century.
- Anti-communist movements -- United States -- History -- 20th century.
- Apportionment (Election law) -- United States -- 20th century.
- Assembly, Right of -- United States -- 20th century.
- Censorship -- United States -- 20th century.
- Church and state --United States -- 20th century.
- Citizen suits (Civil procedure) -- United States -- 20th century.
- Civil rights -- United States -- 20th century.
- Civil rights movements -- United States -- 20th century.
- Civil rights workers -- United States -- 20th century -- Correspondence.
- Communism -- United States -- 20th century.
- Conscientious objectors -- United States -- 20th century.
- Constitutional law -- United States -- 20th century.
- Discrimination -- United States -- 20th century.
- Discrimination in employment - Law and legislation - United States - 20th century.
- Draft resisters -- United States -- 20th century.
- Due process of law -- United States -- 20th century.
- Equality before the law -- United States -- 20th century.
- Freedom of association -- United States -- 20th century.
- Freedom of information -- United States -- 20th century.
- Freedom of movement -- United States --20th century.
- Freedom of religion -- United States -- 20th century.
- Gay rights -- United States -- 20th century.
- Homosexuality -- Government policy -- History -- United States -- 20th century.
- Indians of North America -- Civil rights -- 20th century.
- Insanity -- Jurisprudence -- United States -- 20th century.
- Internal security -- United States -- History -- 20th century.
- Jews -- Legal status, laws, etc. -- United States -- 20th century.
- Labor laws and legislation -- United States -- 20th century.
- Law -- United States -- Cases -- 20th century.
- Legal aid -- United States -- 20th century.
- Legal services -- United States -- 20th century.
- Loyalty oaths -- United States -- 20th century.
- Mental health laws -- United States -- 20th century.
- Minorities -- Legal status, laws, etc. -- United States -- 20th century.
- Police power -- United States -- 20th century.
- Political questions and judicial power -- United States -- 20th century.
- Political refugees -- Legal status, laws, etc. -- United States -- 20th century.
- Political rights -- United States -- 20th century.
- Political rights, Loss of -- United States -- 20th century.
- Privacy, Right of - United States - 20th century.
- Race discrimination -- Law and legislation -- United States -- 20th century.
- Records -- Access control -- United States -- 20th century.
- Sacco-Vanzetti Trial, Dedham, Mass., 1921.
- Sex discrimination -- United States -- 20th century.
- Strikes and lockouts -- United States -- Cases - 20th century.
- Subversive activities -- United States -- 20th century.
- Teaching, Freedom of -- United States -- 20th century.
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- Vietnam War, 1961-1975 -- United States.
- Women's rights -- United States -- 20th century.
- United States -- Armed forces -- Gays.
- Audiovisual materials.
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- Correspondence.
- Legal files.
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- Minutes.
- Reports.
Browse other finding aids related to the following terms:
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Contents List
Series 5: Printed Materials
Series Arrangement
Series 5 is arranged by form and alphabetically or chronologically therein.
Subseries 5A: ACLU Printed Material, 1917-1994
Subseries Description
This subseries consists of publications produced by the ACLU and is broken down into the following sections:
Annual Reports are inclusive for 1921-1994. Arranged chronologically, the annual reports are most comprehensive for the 1920s through the 1960s, with some reports over one hundred pages in length. From the 1970s to the present, the reports are brief recapitulations of the previous year's work.
Organizational manuals are internal guides established to assist new employees at the national and affiliate offices in their orientation to the ACLU. The manuals are arranged chronologically and were written in 1968, 1975, and 1976.
Pamphlets, 1917-1993, including publications from the National Civil Liberties Bureau. The pamphlets cover a wide variety of civil liberties issues pertinent to the time period in which they were written, including conscientious objection, labor disputes, alien rights, free speech, censorship, loyalty and security, church/state matters, and academic freedom. They are arranged by decade and then alphabetically.
Policy Guides are arranged chronologically. Guides dated from 1938 to 1966 deal with specific civil liberties issues. With the expansion of the ACLU and its growing number of state affiliates, in 1966 the ACLU wrote a comprehensive guide to all their policies to ensure that policy decisions throughout the organization remained uniform. Policy Guides were either reissued or updated every few years and this subseries includes guides and updates through 1992.
Press Releases, 1926-1990, are arranged chronologically and contain official news releases produced by the ACLU.
Rights of… books are a series of publications begun in 1968 dealing with the rights of specific groups in society. The books are basic legal guides for the lay person. Included are books on the rights of authors, crime victims, prisoners, teachers, students, hospital patients, young people, parents, and older persons. They are arranged alphabetically by title.
Serials are arranged alphabetically and then chronologically. The serials are broken down into two parts: one for the earlier publications (1920s to 1950s) and one for later publications (1950s- 1990s). The earlier serials include Weekly Press Bulletins and the Law and Freedom Bulletins. The later serials include publications by ACLU Foundation projects such as the National Prison Project Journal produced by the National Prison Project, Reproductive Rights Update produced by the Reproductive Freedom Project, and First Principles produced by the Center for National Security Studies. Also included is The Civil Liberties Review, a scholarly civil liberties journal produced in the mid-1970s.
The Textbooks section consists of a few texts produced in the mid-1970s and contains books from the “To Protect These Rights” series.
See also the Oversized Materials listings.
Printed Material, except for the Rights of… books, can also be found in the UMI and MCA microfilm collections. These records also include Civil Liberties, 1931-1992, the ACLU's monthly/quarterly publication for its membership. The records are complete for 1966-1992. Affiliate publications are also found.
Annual Reports, 1921-1943
Box 1879, Folder 1-17 Annual Reports, 1945-1969
Box 1880, Folder 1-19 Annual Reports, 1969-1976
Box 1881, Folder 1-15 Organizational Manuals, 1968-1976
Box 1881, Folder 16-18 Pamphlets, 1917-1919
General, 1917-1919
Box 1882, Folder 1 Amish Mennonite, 1917-1919
Box 1882, Folder 2 Amnesty, 1917-1919
Box 1882, Folder 3 Baldwin, Roger, 1917-1919
Box 1882, Folder 4 Christian Pacifists, 1918
Box 1882, Folder 5 Civil Liberties in Wartime, 1917-1919
Box 1882, Folder 6 Conscientious Objectors, 1917-1919
Box 1882, Folder 7 Debs, Eugene, 1917-1919
Box 1882, Folder 8 Deportation and Exclusion Laws, 1917-1919
Box 1882, Folder 9 Espionage Act Cases, 1918
Box 1882, Folder 10 Freedom of Speech, 1918
Box 1882, Folder 11 IWW, 1917-1919
Box 1882, Folder 12 Mob Violence, 1917-1919
Box 1882, Folder 13 O'Hare, Kate Richard, 1918
Box 1882, Folder 14 Prisons, 1918-1919
Box 1882, Folder 15 Pamphlets, 1920s
General, 1920s
Box 1882, Folder 16 Baldwin, Roger, 1920s
Box 1882, Folder 17 Censorship, 1920s
Box 1882, Folder 18 Centralia Murder Trial, 1920
Box 1882, Folder 19 Civil Liberties in Wartime, 1920s
Box 1883, Folder 1 Coal Fields - Denial of, 1920s
Box 1883, Folder 2 Colorado Miners, 1920s
Box 1883, Folder 3 Communist Trials, 1920s
Box 1883, Folder 4 Congress, 1920s
Box 1883, Folder 5 Contempt by Publication, 1928
Box 1883, Folder 6 Deportation, 1920s
Box 1883, Folder 7 Free Speech, 1920s
Box 1883, Folder 8 Government Secret Police, 1920s
Box 1883, Folder 9 Injunctions to Protect, 1928
Box 1883, Folder 10 Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), 1920s
Box 1883, Folder 11 Ku Klux Klan, 1920s
Box 1883, Folder 12 Mayor Hague, Jersey City, 1920s
Box 1883, Folder 13 Mob Violence, 1920s
Box 1883, Folder 14 Mooney and Billings, 1920s
Box 1883, Folder 15 Palmer Raids, 1920s
Box 1883, Folder 16 Paterson, NJ Silkworker, 1920s
Box 1883, Folder 17 Pennsylvania - Prosection, 1920s
Box 1883, Folder 18 Police, 1921-1929
Box 1883, Folder 19 Political Prisoners, 1920s
Box 1883, Folder 20 Radio, 1920s
Box 1883, Folder 21 Sacco-Vanzetti Case, 1924
Box 1883, Folder 22 Schwimmer, Rosika (Alien), 1920s
Box 1883, Folder 23 Scopes (Anti-Evolution), 1920s
Box 1883, Folder 24 Search and Seizure, 1920s
Box 1883, Folder 25 The Sex Side of Life, 1928
Box 1883, Folder 26 State Department, 1920s
Box 1883, Folder 27 Sedition Laws, 1920s
Box 1883, Folder 28 Tresca and Karolyi Cases, 1920s
Box 1883, Folder 29 West Virginia - coal mine, 1920s
Box 1883, Folder 30 Pamphlets, 1930s
General, 1930s
Box 1884, Folder 1 Academic Freedom, 1930s
Box 1884, Folder 2 Academic Freedom - Flag Salute, 1930s
Box 1884, Folder 3 “Alice in Justiceland”, 1930s
Box 1884, Folder 4 Aliens and Citizenship, 1930s
Box 1884, Folder 5 Alien Pacifists, 1930s
Box 1884, Folder 6 American Cities, Civil Liberties in, 1939
Box 1884, Folder 7 American Possessions, 1930s
Box 1884, Folder 8 Assembly, Right of, 1930s
Box 1884, Folder 9 Atheists, 1932
Box 1884, Folder 10 Bibliography - Civil Liberties, 1930s
Box 1884, Folder 11 California Red Flag Case, 1930s
Box 1884, Folder 12 Censorship, 1930s
Box 1884, Folder 13 Civil Liberties Cases, 1939
Box 1884, Folder 14 Civil Liberties in the Present Emergency, 1939
Box 1885, Folder 1 Civil Rights, 1930s
Box 1885, Folder 2 Conservation, 1930s
Box 1885, Folder 3 Constitution and Liberty, the, 1930s
Box 1885, Folder 4 Criminal Syndicalism and Sedition, 1930s
Box 1885, Folder 5 Communists, 1930s
Box 1885, Folder 6 Conscientious Objectors, 1930s
Box 1885, Folder 7 Deportation, 1930s
Box 1885, Folder 8 Divorce, 1930s
Box 1885, Folder 9 Eugenics, 1930s
Box 1885, Folder 10 Farmers and Civil Liberties, 1930s
Box 1885, Folder 11 Fascism, 1930s
Box 1885, Folder 12 Free Press, 1930s
Box 1885, Folder 13 Free Speech, 1930s
Box 1885, Folder 14 Georgia: Death for Inciting Insurrection, 1930s
Box 1885, Folder 15 Hague, Mayor - Jersey City, 1930s
Box 1885, Folder 16 Illinois Miners, 1930
Box 1885, Folder 17 Jennings, Emerson Case, 1930s
Box 1885, Folder 18 Kentucky Miners, 1930s
Box 1885, Folder 19 Labor, 1930s
Box 1885, Folder 20 Labor Injunctions, 1930s
Box 1886, Folder 1 Leaflet Distribution, 1930s
Box 1886, Folder 2 Liberty, Censorship, 1931
Box 1886, Folder 3 Local Civil Liberties, 1930s
Box 1886, Folder 4 Martial Law, 1930s
Box 1886, Folder 5 Minority Parties and the Ballot, 1930s
Box 1886, Folder 6 Minority Rights, 1930s
Box 1886, Folder 7 Mooney and Billings, 1930s
Box 1886, Folder 8 National Conference, 1939
Box 1886, Folder 9 Native Americans, 1930s
Box 1886, Folder 10 New Deal, 1930s
Box 1886, Folder 11 New Jersey, Consumers, 1930s
Box 1886, Folder 12 New York Constitution, 1938
Box 1886, Folder 13 North Carolina - Unions, 1930s
Box 1886, Folder 14 Police Practices, 1930s
Box 1886, Folder 15 Political Prisoners - Pennsylvania, 1930s
Box 1886, Folder 16 Political Refugees, 1930s
Box 1886, Folder 17 Radio, 1930
Box 1886, Folder 18 Religious Freedom, 1939
Box 1886, Folder 19 School Buildings as Public Forums, 1934
Box 1886, Folder 20 Scottsboro, Alabama Case, 1930s
Box 1887, Folder 1 Sedition and Subversion, 1930s
Box 1887, Folder 2 Speeches, Miscellaneous, 1930s
Box 1887, Folder 3 Strachey, John, Deportation Case, 1935
Box 1887, Folder 4 Supreme Court and Civil Liberties, 1930s
Box 1887, Folder 5 Unemployed, rights of, 1930
Box 1887, Folder 6 U.S. Military, 1930s
Box 1887, Folder 7 Pamphlets, 1940s
General, 1940s
Box 1887, Folder 8 Academic Freedom, 1940s
Box 1887, Folder 9 Alice in Justice Land, 1943
Box 1887, Folder 10 Aliens and Sedition, 1940s
Box 1887, Folder 11 Bill of Rights - Miscellaneous, 1940
Box 1887, Folder 12 Censorship, 1940s
Box 1887, Folder 13 Chuch-State, 1940s
Box 1887, Folder 14 Civil Liberties - Miscellaneous, 1940s
Box 1887, Folder 15 Civil Rights, 1940s
Box 1887, Folder 16 Conscientious Objectors, 1940s
Box 1887, Folder 17 Criminal Law Enforcement, 1940
Box 1887, Folder 18 Critical Issues of Democratic Liberties, 1947
Box 1887, Folder 19 Descriptive Summaries, 1946-1949
Box 1887, Folder 20 Dies Committee, 1940s
Box 1888, Folder 1 Erroneous Conviction, 1941
Box 1888, Folder 2 Flynn, Elizabeth Gurley Controversy, 1940
Box 1888, Folder 3 Free Speech, 1940s
Box 1888, Folder 4 Japanese-Americans, 1940s
Box 1888, Folder 5 Labor, 1940s
Box 1888, Folder 6 Leaflet Distribution, 1940s
Box 1888, Folder 7 Local Civil Liberties Committee, 1940s
Box 1888, Folder 8 Mass Communications, 1940s
Box 1888, Folder 9 Mental Health, 1949
Box 1888, Folder 10 Minority Parties, 1940s
Box 1888, Folder 11 150 Years of the Bill of Rights, 1939-1944
Box 1888, Folder 12 “Our Uncertain Liberties” 29th Conference, 1949
Box 1888, Folder 13 Peekskill, NY Riots Civil Robeson Concerts, 1949-1950
Box 1888, Folder 14 Police Practices, 1940s
Box 1888, Folder 15 Political Prosecutions, 1940s
Box 1888, Folder 16 Post-War Civil Liberties, 1940s
Box 1888, Folder 17 Sedition and Subversion, 1940s
Box 1888, Folder 18 Students, 1940s
Box 1888, Folder 19 Supreme Court and Civil Liberties, 1940s
Box 1888, Folder 20 25th Anniversary Conference, 1945
Box 1889, Folder 1 Unions, 1940s
Box 1889, Folder 2 War Time - Civil Liberties, 1940s
Box 1889, Folder 3 Pamphlets, 1950s
General, 1950s
Box 1889, Folder 4 Academic Freedom, 1950s
Box 1889, Folder 5 Aliens, 1950s
Box 1889, Folder 6 American Legion Magazine Article, Analysis, 1954
Box 1889, Folder 7 Baldwin, Roger, 1951
Box 1889, Folder 8 Bill of Rights - Miscellaneous, 1950s
Box 1889, Folder 9 Censorship, 1950s
Box 1889, Folder 10 Church/State, 1950s
Box 1889, Folder 11 Civil Rights, 1950s
Box 1889, Folder 12 Communism, 1950s
Box 1889, Folder 13 Congress and Civil Liberties, 1950s
Box 1889, Folder 14 “Descriptive Summaries of ACLU Defense of Civil Liberties”, 1950-1953
Box 1890, Folder 1 “Dilemmas of Liberalism” Biddle, Francis, 1953
Box 1890, Folder 2 Free Speech, 1950s
Box 1890, Folder 3 Government Employment, 1954
Box 1890, Folder 4 Government News Suppression, 1950s
Box 1890, Folder 5 Hays, Arthur Garfield Tribute, 1954
Box 1890, Folder 6 House Committee on UnAmerican Activities (HUAC), 1950s
Box 1890, Folder 7 “The Judges and the Judged” Miller, Merle, 1952
Box 1890, Folder 8 Kenyon, Dorothy Statement, 1950
Box 1890, Folder 9 Labor, 1950s
Box 1890, Folder 10 Local Affiliate, 1950s
Box 1890, Folder 11 Loyalty-Security Miscellaneous, 1950
Box 1890, Folder 12 Marine Corps, 1951
Box 1890, Folder 13 McCarran Act, 1950
Box 1890, Folder 14 National Affiliate Relations, 1956
Box 1890, Folder 15 Nazis, 1950s
Box 1890, Folder 16 Passports, 1950s
Box 1891, Folder 1 Police Practices, 1950s
Box 1891, Folder 2 Reporters Privilege, 1959
Box 1891, Folder 3 Smith Act, 1950s
Box 1891, Folder 4 Supreme Court and Civil Liberties, 1950s
Box 1891, Folder 5 30th Anniversary Conference, 1950s
Box 1891, Folder 6 Universal Civil Rights, 1950
Box 1891, Folder 7 Pamphlets, 1960s
General, 1960s
Box 1891, Folder 8 ACLU History, 1960s
Box 1891, Folder 9 Academic Freedom, 1960s
Box 1891, Folder 10 Arrest Records, 1960s
Box 1891, Folder 11 Censorship, 1960s
Box 1891, Folder 12 Church/State, 1960s
Box 1891, Folder 13 Civil Rights, 1960s
Box 1891, Folder 14 Corporate Political Spending, 1960
Box 1891, Folder 15 Death Penalty, 1960s
Box 1892, Folder 1-2 Demonstrations, 1960s
Box 1892, Folder 3 Dissent, 1960
Box 1892, Folder 4 Draft, 1960s
Box 1892, Folder 5 Educational Work, A Review of ACLU's, 1968
Box 1892, Folder 6 8th Circuit Court of Appeals Decisions, 1965-1977
Box 1892, Folder 7 40th Anniversary, 1960
Box 1892, Folder 8 Free Speech Rights, 1960s
Box 1892, Folder 9 House Committee on UnAmerican Activities (HUAC), 1960s
Box 1892, Folder 10 Labor, 1960s
Box 1892, Folder 11 Mental Health, 1960s
Box 1892, Folder 12 Organizational Manual, 1960s
Box 1892, Folder 13 Police, 1960s
Box 1893, Folder 1-2 Poverty, 1960s
Box 1893, Folder 3 School Integration, 1960s
Box 1893, Folder 4 Search and Seizure, 1960s
Box 1893, Folder 5 Speakers Manual, 1966
Box 1893, Folder 6 Students, 1960s
Box 1893, Folder 7 “The Supreme Court and Civil Liberties” Fraenkel, 1960s
Box 1893, Folder 8 “The Supreme Court and Civil Liberties”, 1960s
Box 1893, Folder 9 Surveillance, 1960s
Box 1893, Folder 10 Voting Rights, 1960s
Box 1893, Folder 11 Women's Rights, 1960s
Box 1893, Folder 12 Pamphlets, 1970s
General, 1970s
Box 1893, Folder 13 ACLU General, 1970s
Box 1894, Folder 1 Academic Freedom, 1970s
Box 1894, Folder 2 Amnesty, 1970s
Box 1894, Folder 3 Bell, Griffin - report on, 1977
Box 1894, Folder 4 Campaign Financing, 1977
Box 1894, Folder 5 Carter Administration and Civil Liberties, 1970s
Box 1894, Folder 6 Censorship, 1970s
Box 1894, Folder 7 Center for National Security Studies, 1970s
Box 1894, Folder 8 Children, 1970s
Box 1894, Folder 9 Church/State, 1970s
Box 1895, Folder 1 Civil Liberties Bibliography, 1970s
Box 1895, Folder 2 Civil Rights, 1970s
Box 1895, Folder 3 Constitutional Convention, 1979
Box 1895, Folder 4 Courts, Memphis, TN, 1970s
Box 1895, Folder 5 Death Penalty, 1970s
Box 1895, Folder 6 Demonstrations, 1970s
Box 1895, Folder 7 Deprogramming, 1970s
Box 1895, Folder 8-9 Draft, 1970s
Box 1895, Folder 10 Drugs, 1970s
Box 1895, Folder 11 Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), 1978
Box 1895, Folder 12 Federal Criminal Laws, Reform of - ACLU Testimony, 1970
Box 1896, Folder 1 Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), 1970s
Box 1896, Folder 2-4 Government Employment, 1970s
Box 1896, Folder 5 Grand Juries, 1970s
Box 1896, Folder 6 Immigration, 1970s
Box 1896, Folder 7 Mass Communications, 1970s
Box 1896, Folder 8 Membership Operations, 1979
Box 1896, Folder 9 Mental Health, 1970s
Box 1896, Folder 10 Military Discharge Upgrading, ACLU Practice Manual, 1975
Box 1897, Folder 1 “The National Guard and the Constitution” pamphlets, 1971
Box 1897, Folder 2 Native Americans, 1979
Box 1897, Folder 3 Nixon Impeachment, 1970s
Box 1897, Folder 4 “Paroled”, 1975
Box 1897, Folder 5 Police Practices, 1970s
Box 1897, Folder 6 Press, 1970s
Box 1897, Folder 7 Privacy, 1970s
Box 1897, Folder 8 Prisons, 1970s
Box 1898, Folder 1 “Prisoners” Self-Help Litigation Manual”, 1976
Box 1898, Folder 2 Privacy, 1970s
Box 1898, Folder 3 Prostitution, 1970s
Box 1898, Folder 4 Reproductive Freedom, 1970s
Box 1898, Folder 5 Students - Corporal Punishment, 1970s
Box 1898, Folder 6 Students - Civil Liberties, 1970s
Box 1898, Folder 7 Surveillance, 1970s
Box 1899, Folder 1 Vietnam War, 1970s
Box 1899, Folder 2 Welfare, 1970s
Box 1899, Folder 3 Women and the Law Handbooks, 1970s
Box 1899, Folder 4 Women's Rights, 1970s
Box 1899, Folder 5-6 Pamphlets, 1980s
General, 1980s
Box 1900, Folder 1 Abscam, 1982
Box 1900, Folder 2 Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS), 1980s
Box 1900, Folder 3 AIDS and Prisons, 1980s
Box 1900, Folder 4 Bork, Robert H. - Civil Liberties Record, 1980s
Box 1900, Folder 5 Censorship, 1980s
Box 1900, Folder 6 Censorship - Meese Commission, 1980s
Box 1900, Folder 7 Center for National Security Studies, 1980s
Box 1900, Folder 8-9 Center for National Security Studies, 1980s
Box 1901, Folder 1 Children, 1980s
Box 1901, Folder 2 Church and State, 1980s
Box 1901, Folder 3 Civil Rights, 1980s
Box 1901, Folder 4 Congress and Civil Liberties, 1980s
Box 1901, Folder 5 Death Penalty, 1980s
Box 1901, Folder 6 Demonstrations, 1980s
Box 1901, Folder 7 El Salvadorans in the U.S.A., 1980s
Box 1901, Folder 8 Employees, 1980s
Box 1901, Folder 9 Free Speech, 1984
Box 1901, Folder 10 Freedom of Informaton Act (FOIA), 1980-1981
Box 1901, Folder 11-12 Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), 1980s
Box 1902, Folder 1-2 Free Trade in Ideas, 1984
Box 1902, Folder 3 Gay Rights, 1980s
Box 1902, Folder 4 Human Rights - El Salvador, 1982
Box 1902, Folder 5 Immigration, 1980s
Box 1902, Folder 6-7 Kennedy, Anthony - Civil Liberties Record, 1988
Box 1903, Folder 1 Mass Communications, 1980s
Box 1903, Folder 2 Meese, Attorney General Edwin - Civil Liberties, 1987
Box 1903, Folder 3 National Security, 1980s
Box 1903, Folder 4 The New Anti-Civil Liberties Movement Report, 1980s
Box 1903, Folder 5 Organizational Miscellaneous, 1980s
Box 1903, Folder 6 Our Endangered Rights, 1980s
Box 1903, Folder 7 Poverty, 1980s
Box 1903, Folder 8 Pretrial Detention - New Hampshire, 1981
Box 1903, Folder 9 Prisoners, 1980s
Box 1903, Folder 10 Reagan Civil Rights Record, 1980s
Box 1903, Folder 11 Rehnquist, Justice William Civil Liberties Record, 1986
Box 1904, Folder 1 Reproductive Freedom, 1980s
Box 1904, Folder 2 Reproductive Rights, 1980s
Box 1904, Folder 3 Sex Discrimination, 1980s
Box 1904, Folder 4 Students, 1980s
Box 1904, Folder 5 Thornburgh, Richard - Civil Liberties Record, 1980s
Box 1904, Folder 6 Virgin Islands, 1980s
Box 1904, Folder 7 Voting, 1980s
Box 1904, Folder 8 Washington Office, 1986
Box 1904, Folder 9 Women's Rights, 1980s
Box 1904, Folder 10 Pamphlets, 1990s
General, 1990s
Box 1904, Folder 11 Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS), 1990s
Box 1904, Folder 12 AIDS Agenda, 1992
Box 1904, Folder 13 AIDS and Prisoners, 1990s
Box 1905, Folder 1 Campus Organizing Manual, 1993
Box 1905, Folder 2 Censorship, 1990s
Box 1905, Folder 3 Center for National Security Studies, 1990s
Box 1905, Folder 4 Clinton Administration, 1992
Box 1905, Folder 5 Congress and Civil Liberties, 1990s
Box 1905, Folder 6 Death Penalty, 1990s
Box 1905, Folder 7 Drugs, 1990
Box 1905, Folder 8 Immigration, 1990s
Box 1905, Folder 9 North Carolina Schools, 1991
Box 1905, Folder 10 Police, 1990s
Box 1905, Folder 11 Prisons, 1990s
Box 1905, Folder 12 Reproductive Rights, 1990s
Box 1905, Folder 13 Souter, David, 1990
Box 1905, Folder 14 Students, 1990s
Box 1905, Folder 15 Thomas, Clarence, 1991
Box 1906, Folder 1 Women's Rights, 1990s
Box 1906, Folder 2 Workers, 1990s
Box 1906, Folder 3 Policy Guides: Organizational matters, academic freedom, education, 1938-1962
Box 1906, Folder 4 Policy Guides: Aliens, Censorship, 1938-1962
Box 1906, Folder 5 Policy Guides: Communism and Totalitarianism, 1938-1962
Box 1906, Folder 6 Policy Guides: House Committee on UnAmerican Activities (HUAC), Federal Loyalty and Government Employment, 1938-1962
Box 1906, Folder 7 Policy Guides: Federal Loyalty, etc., International Civil Liberties, 1938-1962
Box 1907, Folder 1 Policy Guides: Congressional Investigating Committees, 1938-1962
Box 1907, Folder 2 Policy Guides: Treaty Making Power, Civil Rights Act of 1957, etc., 1938-1962
Box 1907, Folder 3 Policy Guides: Labor Relations, 1938-1962
Box 1907, Folder 4 Policy Guides: Libel, 1st and 5th amendments, Church and State, etc., 1938-1962
Box 1907, Folder 5 Policy Guides: Policy Digest, Race Relations, Group Libel, etc., 1938-1962
Box 1907, Folder 6 Policy Guides: Entertainment Industry, 5th amendment, etc., 1938-1962
Box 1908, Folder 1 Policy Guides: Sedition and Treason, Military Training, etc., 1938-1962
Box 1908, Folder 2 Policy Guides, 1966
Box 1908, Folder 3-4 Policy Guides: Supplement, 1977
Box 1908, Folder 5 Policy Guides, 1981
Box 1908, Folder 6 Policy Guides, 1981
Box 1909, Folder 1 Policy Guides: Update, 1982
Box 1909, Folder 2 Policy Guides, 1986
Box 1909, Folder 3-5 Policy Guides: Update, 1987
Box 1909, Folder 6-7 Policy Guides, 1989
Box 1909, Folder 8-10 Policy Guides: Update, 1990
Box 1910, Folder 1 Policy Guides, 1991
Box 1910, Folder 2-8 Policy Guides: Update, 1992
Box 1910, Folder 9 Press Releases: News Releases, 1926-1931
Box 1911, Folder 1-6 Press Releases: News Releases, 1932-1933
Box 1912, Folder 1-5 Press Releases: News Releases, 1934
Box 1913, Folder 1-5 Press Releases: News Releases, 1935
Box 1914, Folder 1-5 Press Releases: News Releases, 1939-1942
Box 1915, Folder 1-6 Press Releases: News Releases, 1943-1950
Box 1916, Folder 1-8 Press Releases: News Releases, 1951-1955
Box 1917, Folder 1-5 Press Releases: News Releases, 1955-1960
Box 1918, Folder 1-6 Press Releases: News Releases, 1961-1964
Box 1919, Folder 1-5 Press Releases: News Releases, 1965-1967
Box 1920, Folder 1-5 Press Releases: News Releases, 1967-1969
Box 1921, Folder 1-5 Press Releases: News Releases, 1970-1971
Box 1922, Folder 1-5 Press Releases: News Releases, 1971-1972
Box 1923, Folder 1-5 Press Releases: News Releases, 1973-1975
Box 1924, Folder 1-6 Press Releases: News Releases, 1976-1979
Box 1925, Folder 1-6 Press Releases: News Releases, 1980-1987
Box 1926, Folder 1-8 Press Releases: News Releases, 1988-1990
Box 1927, Folder 1-3 Rights of: Aliens and Refugees, 1990
Box 1927, Folder 4 Rights of: Authors, Artists and other Creative People, 1992
Box 1927, Folder 5 Rights of: Candidates and Voters, 1976,1980
Box 1927, Folder 6 Rights of: Crime Victims, 1985
Box 1927, Folder 7 Rights of: Critically Ill, 1983
Box 1928, Folder 1 Rights of: Doctors, Nurses and Allied Health Professionals, 1981
Box 1928, Folder 2 Rights of: Employees, 1983
Box 1928, Folder 3 Rights of: The Equal Rights Handbook, 1978
Box 1928, Folder 4 Rights of: Ex-Offenders, 1979
Box 1928, Folder 5 Rights of: Gay People, Lesbians and Gay Men, 1975-1992
Box 1928, Folder 6 Rights of: Your Right to Government Information, 1985
Box 1929, Folder 1 Rights of: Hospital Patients, 1975,1989
Box 1929, Folder 2 Rights of: Indians and Tribes, 1983,1992
Box 1929, Folder 3 Rights of: Lawyers and Clients, 1979
Box 1929, Folder 4 Rights of: Mental Patients, 1978
Box 1929, Folder 5 Rights of: Mentally Retarded Persons, 1976
Box 1929, Folder 6 Rights of: Military Personnel, 1977
Box 1930, Folder 1 Rights of: Older Persons, 1979,1989
Box 1930, Folder 2 Rights of: Parents, 1980
Box 1930, Folder 3 Rights of: Physically Handicapped People, 1979
Box 1930, Folder 4 Rights of: The Poor, 1974
Box 1930, Folder 5 Rights of: Prisoners, 1973,1977
Box 1930, Folder 6 Rights of: Prisoners, 1983,1988
Box 1930, Folder 7 Rights of: Privacy, 1980,1990
Box 1931, Folder 1 Rights of: The Right to Protest, 1991
Box 1931, Folder 2 Rights of: Racial Minorities, 1980
Box 1931, Folder 3 Rights of: Reporters, 1974
Box 1931, Folder 4 Rights of: Servicemen, 1972-1977
Box 1931, Folder 5 Rights of: Single People, 1985
Box 1931, Folder 6 Rights of: Suspects, 1974
Box 1931, Folder 7 Rights of: Students, 1973-1988
Box 1931, Folder 8 Rights of: Teachers, 1968-1983
Box 1932, Folder 1 Rights of: Tenants, 1978
Box 1932, Folder 2 Rights of: Union Members, 1979
Box 1932, Folder 3 Rights of: Veterans, 1978
Box 1932, Folder 4 Rights of: Women, 1973,1983
Box 1932, Folder 5 Rights of: Young People, 1977,1985
Box 1932, Folder 6 Serials: The Arbitrator; a monthly digest of news of social, 1930-1939
Box 1933, Folder 1-5 Serials: Civil Liberties in the News, 1939-1940
Box 1933, Folder 6 Serials: The Law and Freedom Bulletin, 1921-1931
Box 1934, Folder 1-5 Serials: Monthly Bulletin for Action, 1930-1934
Box 1934, Folder 6-7 Serials: Monthly Financial Statement, 1926-1928,1930-1931
Box 1934, Folder 8-10 Serials: Monthly News Bulletin, 1942-1949
Box 1935, Folder 1-4 Serials: Monthly Report on Civil Liberty Situation, 1926-1931
Box 1935, Folder 5-7 Serials: Weekly Press Bulletin, 1926-1931
Box 1936, Folder 1-6 Serials: Weekly Press Bulletin, 1932-1937
Box 1937, Folder 1-6 Serials: Weekly Press Bulletin, 1938-1944
Box 1938, Folder 1-7 Serials: Weekly Press Bulletin, 1945-1951
Box 1939, Folder 1-7 Serials: Weekly Press Bulletin, 1952-1957
Box 1940, Folder 1-6 Serials: Weekly Press Bulletin, 1958-1960
Box 1941, Folder 1-3 Serials: Yearly Financial Audit, 1933
Box 1941, Folder 4 Serials: ACLU Briefing Papers, undated
Box 1941, Folder 5 Serials: ACLU Lawyer, 1977-1983
Box 1941, Folder 6-7 Serials: Arts Censorship Project Newsletter, 1992-1993
Box 1941, Folder 8 Serials: Bill of Rights Lobby, 1984
Box 1942, Folder 1 Serials: Censorship News, undated
Box 1942, Folder 2 Serials: Children's Rights Report, 1976-1979
Box 1942, Folder 3 Serials: Civil Liberties Alert, 1977-1985
Box 1942, Folder 4-5 Serials: Civil Liberties Gift Planner, 1988-1991
Box 1942, Folder 6 Serials: Civil Liberties Review, 1973-1974
Box 1942, Folder 7-9 Serials: The Civil Liberties Review, 1975-1977
Box 1943, Folder 1-6 Serials: The Civil Liberties Review, 1978-1979
Box 1944, Folder 1-3 Serials: Death Watch, 1976-1978
Box 1944, Folder 4 Serials: Feature Press Service, 1961-1963
Box 1944, Folder 5-7 Serials: Feature Press Service, 1964,1966-1968
Box 1945, Folder 1-4 Serials: First Privilege Index, 1975-1990
Box 1945, Folder 5 Serials: First Principles, 1975-1980
Box 1945, Folder 6-9 Serials: First Principles, 1981-1993
Box 1946, Folder 1-4 Serials: Inside ACLU, 1958-1961,1968-1970
Box 1946, Folder 5-8 Serials: Legislative Action Bulletin, 1967-1968
Box 1946, Folder 9 Serials: Legislative Action Bulletin, 1971
Box 1947, Folder 1 Serials: Legislative Briefing Series, undated
Box 1947, Folder 2 Serials: Mental Health Law Project, 1975-1977
Box 1947, Folder 3 Serials: National Military Review Project, 1979
Box 1947, Folder 4 Serials: National Prison Project Journal, 1984-1993
Box 1947, Folder 5-8 Serials: Prisoner's Rights Newsletter, undated
Box 1947, Folder 9 Serials: The Privacy Report, 1974-1976
Box 1947, Folder 10-12 Serials: Privacy Report, 1977-78
Box 1948, Folder 1 Serials: Reproductive Rights Update, 1989-1992
Box 1948, Folder 2-5 Serials: Women's Rights Report, 1979-81
Box 1948, Folder 6 Serials: Women's Rights Project, Notes from the, 1977-78
Box 1948, Folder 7 Serials: The Working Parts, 1973-80
Box 1948, Folder 8 Textbooks: National Textbook Co. Series Freedom of Speech, 1976
Box 1949, Folder 1 Textbooks: Racial Equality, 1977
Box 1949, Folder 2 Textbooks: Rights of Privacy, 1977
Box 1949, Folder 3 Textbooks: Woman and the Law, 1977
Box 1949, Folder 4 Textbooks: Teacher's Guide “To Protect These Rights” Series, 1976
Box 1949, Folder 5 Subseries 5B: Subject Files, 1946-1990
Subseries Description
This subseries consists of printed material culled from the Subject Files (Series 3) and includes monographs, journals, newsletters, magazines, reports, newspapers, press releases and some press clippings. Much of the material deals with various topics related to the main subjects.
Some of the better represented subjects include: academic freedom which includes The Last Resort, a periodical about corporal punishment, with issues from the 1970s and 1980s; mass communications printed material which consists primarily of publications dealing with cable television; and the international civil liberties subdivision which includes publications from and about Germany, Great Britain, Guam, Japan, Korea, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands. Also included are United Nations publications and material from the American Association for the United Nations and the Conference Group of U.S. National Organizations on the United Nations.
Military rights which consists primarily of publications culled from the Amnesty Project subseries is another well represented subject. Topics cover amnesty for draft resisters and the social issues relating to the Vietnam War and the anti-war movement. It includes publications from the Central Committee for Conscientious Objectors (CCCO) and Vietnam Veterans Against the War/Winter Soldier Organization (VVAW/WSO). Press clippings are also included under this subject.
Other subjects are: censorship (which includes publications from the National Coalition Against Censorship); Labor and Business which consists primarily of union magazines and newsletters; lesbian and gay rights printed material which includes Mattachine publications from the 1950s; loyalty and security which includes a semi-complete run of Counterattack from 1947-1951; and Native Americans which contains Indian Truth from 1946-1978 (sporadic).
Other subjects found in this subseries include assembly and public protest, children's rights, church and state, civil rights, court proceedings, environment, police practices, poverty and civil liberties, privacy, and women's rights.
See also the Oversized Materials listing.
Academic Freedom, 1951-1955,1962-1971
Box 1950, Folder 1-2 Academic Freedom: Corporal Punishment Miscellaneous, 1975-1986
Box 1950, Folder 3 Academic Freedom: “The Last Resort” - Corporal Punishment Periodical, 1972-1980,1980-1983
Box 1950, Folder 4-5 Academic Freedom: “The Last Resort” - Corporal Punishment Periodical, 1984-1987
Box 1951, Folder 1 Assembly and Public Protest, 1964,1977
Box 1951, Folder 2 Assembly and Public Protest: “Free Speech”, 1971-1980
Box 1951, Folder 3 Assembly and Public Protest: “Student Protest and the Law II” Conference, 1970
Box 1951, Folder 4-5 Censorship, 1949-1989
Box 1951, Folder 6 Censorship: National Coalition Against Censorship - “Censorship News”, 1977-1990
Box 1951, Folder 7 Censorship: National Coalition Against Censorship - Miscellaneous, 1985-1987
Box 1951, Folder 8 Children's Rights, 1964-1966
Box 1951, Folder 9 Children's Rights, 1972
Box 1952, Folder 1 Church and State: “The Catholics and the Schools” CBS Program, 1964
Box 1952, Folder 2 Church and State: “Church State Consortium”, 1967
Box 1952, Folder 4 Church and State: “Federal Aid to Private and Sectarian Schools”, 1961
Box 1952, Folder 5 Church and State: “A Journal of Church State”, 1964
Box 1952, Folder 6 Church and State: Kelley, Dean; Articles on Lobbying and Tax Exemption, 1972
Box 1952, Folder 7 Church and State: Matching of Religious in Adoption of Children, New York State, 1966
Box 1952, Folder 8 Church and State: National Association of the Laity - Press Releases, 1973
Box 1952, Folder 9 Church and State: “Nativity Scene Case: An Error of Judgment” by Norman Dorsen and Chuck Sims, 1985
Box 1952, Folder 10 Church and State: PEARL (Public Education and Religious Liberty), 1967-1990
Box 1952, Folder 11 Church and State: Pfeffer, Leo, Memo on Constitution of Utilizing Church-Related Institutions, 1966
Box 1952, Folder 12 Church and State: Shrub Oak (New York) Board of Education Transportation Resolution, 1952
Box 1952, Folder 13 Church and State: Stenshoel, Myles “When You Haven't a Prayer” Paper on School Prayer, 1962
Box 1952, Folder 14 Church and State: “Teaching about Religion and…” by Elizabeth Flexner, 1967
Box 1952, Folder 15 Civil Rights: “Imani”, 1971
Box 1952, Folder 16 Civil Rights: Pamphlets, undated
Box 1952, Folder 17 Civil Rights: Pamphlets - Miscellaneous, 1956-1967,1970-1971
Box 1953, Folder 1-8 Civil Rights: Press Releases - Miscellaneous, 1959-1963
Box 1953, Folder 9 Civil Rights: “Racial Discrimination in Public Education” by Foster, G.W., 1963
Box 1953, Folder 10 Civil Rights: Southern Christian Leadership Conference Appeal to President Kennedy, 1962
Box 1954, Folder 1 Court Proceedings, 1968
Box 1954, Folder 2 Environment, 1970,1976
Box 1954, Folder 3 International Civil Liberties, 1961-1968,1975,1986
Box 1954, Folder 4-5 International Civil Liberties: Congo Crisis, 1960
Box 1954, Folder 6 International Civil Liberties: Germany - Die Burgerrechte - German Civil Rights Union, 1950
Box 1954, Folder 7 International Civil Liberties: Europe - Assembly of Captive European Nations, 1956-1958
Box 1954, Folder 8 International Civil Liberties: Great Britain, 1961
Box 1954, Folder 9 International Civil Liberties: Great Britain - Censorship, 1965
Box 1954, Folder 10 International Civil Liberties: Great Britain - National Council for Civil Liberties, 1971
Box 1954, Folder 11 International Civil Liberties: Great Britain - National Council for Civil Liberties, 1971-1972
Box 1955, Folder 1-3 International Civil Liberties: “Guam Echo”, 1947-1948
Box 1955, Folder 4-5 International Civil Liberties: Guam - Trusteeship, 1946-1947
Box 1955, Folder 6 International Civil Liberties: Hawaii - Statehood, 1946-1947
Box 1955, Folder 7 International Civil Liberties: International Commission of Jurists, 1958
Box 1955, Folder 8 International Civil Liberties: International League for the Rights of Man, 1954-1955,1962
Box 1955, Folder 9-11 International Civil Liberties: Japan - “Achievements of the Civil Liberties Bureau Since Its Establishment, 1950
Box 1955, Folder 12 International Civil Liberties: Japan - “Sohyo News”, “Japan Report”, “Facts about Japan”, 1966
Box 1955, Folder 13 International Civil Liberties: Japan - “Wage Problems in Japan”, 1963
Box 1955, Folder 14 International Civil Liberties: Korea - “The Voice of Korea”, 1948-1949
Box 1956, Folder 1-2 International Civil Liberties: Liberia - Miscellaneous, 1961
Box 1956, Folder 3 International Civil Liberties: Mexico - “Citizens Land” by Hefter, J., 1971
Box 1956, Folder 4 International Civil Liberties: Occupied Areas - “News Notes”, 1949
Box 1956, Folder 5 International Civil Liberties: Okinawa - Office of Public Information Press Summaries, 1960-1961
Box 1956, Folder 6-9 International Civil Liberties: Okinawa Press Highlights, 1961-1962
Box 1956, Folder 10-11 International Civil Liberties: Pacific Islands - United Nations Reports, 1964-1966
Box 1957, Folder 1 International Civil Liberties: Palestine Arab League, 1959-1960
Box 1957, Folder 2 International Civil Liberties: Puerto Rico - “Bulletin of the Office of Puerto Rico”, 1947-1948
Box 1957, Folder 3-4 International Civil Liberties: Puerto Rico - Comision de Derechos Civiles Annual Report, 1970
Box 1957, Folder 5 International Civil Liberties: Puerto Rico - Constitutional Status, 1956
Box 1957, Folder 6 International Civil Liberties: Puerto Rico - Revista de Derechos Humanos, 1972
Box 1957, Folder 7 International Civil Liberties: Puerto Rico - “77 Years of Wholesale Discrimination of American Subjects”, 1976
Box 1957, Folder 8 International Civil Liberties: Puerto Rico - Supreme Court, 1960
Box 1957, Folder 9 International Civil Liberties: Puerto Rico - U.S. Commission on the Status of Puerto Rico, 1966
Box 1957, Folder 10 International Civil Liberties: Spain - Miscellaneous, 1961
Box 1957, Folder 11 International Civil Liberties: Soviet Union - Miscellaneous, 1964
Box 1957, Folder 12 International Civil Liberties: United Nations - Miscellaneous, 1962,1965-1966,1971
Box 1958, Folder 1-4 International Civil Liberties: United Nations - American Association for the United Nations, 1953-1958
Box 1958, Folder 5-11 International Civil Liberties: United Nations - American Association for the United Nations, 14th Annual, 1964
Box 1958, Folder 12 International Civil Liberties: United Nations - Conference Group of U.S. National Organizations on the UN, 1953-1961,1964
Box 1959, Folder 1-7 International Civil Liberties: United Nations - Convention on the Privilege and Immunities of the UN, 1953
Box 1959, Folder 8 International Civil Liberties: United Nations - Human Rights Convention, 1953
Box 1959, Folder 9 International Civil Liberties: United Nations - Personnel - Report of Commission of Jurists on UN, 1953
Box 1959, Folder 10 International Civil Liberties: United Nations - Personnel Policy, 1954
Box 1960, Folder 1 International Civil Liberties: United Nations - United Nations Association of the United States of America, 1965-1966
Box 1960, Folder 2-3 International Civil Liberties: United Nations - U.S. Committee for Refugees, 1959
Box 1960, Folder 4 International Civil Liberties: United Nations - U.S. Committee for the UN, 1961-1962
Box 1960, Folder 5 International Civil Liberties: United Nations - U.S. Committee for UN Day, 1954
Box 1960, Folder 6 International Civil Liberties: United Nations - U.S. Mission to the United Nations, 1960,1962
Box 1960, Folder 7-8 International Civil Liberties: United Nations - U.S. National Commission for UNESCO, 1962
Box 1961, Folder 1 International Civil Liberties: United Nations - U.S. National Mission to UN - Non-Government Organizations, 1957
Box 1961, Folder 2 International Civil Liberties: Virgin Islands - “The Civic”, 1955-1957
Box 1961, Folder 3-5 International Civil Liberties: Virgin Islands - “The Democrat”, 1956
Box 1961, Folder 6 International Civil Liberties: Virgin Islands - “The Mortar and Pestle”, 1955
Box 1961, Folder 7 International Civil Liberties: Virgin Islands - “Virgin Islands Voice”, 1961
Box 1961, Folder 8 Labor - Business, 1967-1981
Box 1961, Folder 9 Labor - Business: American Arbitration Association, 1972
Box 1961, Folder 10 Labor - Business: National Maritime Union, 1968
Box 1961, Folder 11 Labor - Business: “The Pros and Cons of Compulsory Arbitration”, 1965
Box 1961, Folder 12 Labor - Business: United Auto Workers Public Review Board, 1964
Box 1961, Folder 13 Labor - Business: Union Democracy in Action, circa 1967
Box 1961, Folder 14 Labor - Business: Union Democracy Review, circa 1971
Box 1961, Folder 15 Lesbian and Gay Rights, 1949-1950
Box 1961, Folder 16 Lesbian and Gay Rights, 1965-1983
Box 1961, Folder 17 Lesbian and Gay Rights: Mattachine Newsletter - Los Angeles, CA, 1959
Box 1961, Folder 18 Lesbian and Gay Rights: Mattachine Society-Washington Newsletter, 1956-1958
Box 1961, Folder 19 Lesbian and Gay Rights: Mattachine Times - New York, 1972
Box 1961, Folder 20 Lesbian and Gay Rights: Sexual Law Reporter, 1977
Box 1961, Folder 21 Loyalty and Security: “Counterattack”, 1947-1951
Box 1962, Folder 1-3 Loyalty and Security: House Committee on UnAmerican Activities, 1954-1967
Box 1962, Folder 4 Mass Communication, 1966,undated
Box 1962, Folder 5-7 Mass Communication: “Blue Sky” - Boulder, CO, circa 1975
Box 1962, Folder 8 Mass Communication: “Broadcasting Cable”, 1974
Box 1962, Folder 9 Mass Communication: “Broadcast Media Guide for Candidates” Asher, Thomas R., 1974
Box 1962, Folder 10 Mass Communication: “Cabletelevision in the cities…” Tate, Charles, 1971
Box 1963, Folder 1 Mass Communication: “The Case Against Satellites” The Network Project, 1974
Box 1963, Folder 2 Mass Communication: “CATelevision”, Ohio, 1973-1975
Box 1963, Folder 3 Mass Communication: “Demystifying Broadcasting” National Citizen's Committee for Broadcasting, 1974
Box 1963, Folder 4 Mass Communication: “The Fairness Doctrine In Broadcasting…. ” Geller, Henry, 1973
Box 1963, Folder 5 Mass Communication: “The First Amendment and the News Media”, 1973
Box 1963, Folder 6 Mass Communication: “The Future of Commercial Television” by Stanley Donner, 1975
Box 1963, Folder 7 Mass Communication: “In the Public Interest” The National News Council Report, 1973-1975
Box 1963, Folder 8 Mass Communication: “Judicial Restraints on the Press” Donald M. Gillmor, 1974
Box 1963, Folder 9 Mass Communication: Media Access Project - Annual Reports, 1979-1981
Box 1963, Folder 10 Mass Communication: “Media Watch”, 1976-1980
Box 1963, Folder 11 Mass Communication: “Minorities and the Media” Astor, Gerald, 1974
Box 1963, Folder 12 Mass Communication: “Philadelphia Cable News”, 1973-1974
Box 1963, Folder 13 Mass Communication: “Public Broadcasting: A National Asset to be Preserved,…”, 1988
Box 1963, Folder 14 Mass Communication: “The Social Impact of Television…” Aspen Institute, 1981
Box 1963, Folder 15 Mass Communications: “The Speaker and the Listener:…” John Immerwahr, 1980
Box 1964, Folder 1 Mass Communications: “Trends in Attitudes toward Television and other Media” Roper Organization, 1983
Box 1964, Folder 2 Mental Health Issues, 1946-1950,1960-1980
Box 1964, Folder 3-4 Military Rights: “American Exile” Newsletter (Stockholm), 1973-1975
Box 1964, Folder 5 Military Rights: “The American Exile in Britain”, 1973-1974
Box 1964, Folder 6 Military Rights: Americans for Amnesty (AFA), 1973-1975,1964
Box 1964, Folder 7 Military Rights: American Friends Service Committee (AFSC), 1972-1977
Box 1964, Folder 8 Military Rights: “AMEX - Canada”, 1972-1977
Box 1964, Folder 9 Military Rights: “Amnesty” National Campus Alliance for Amnesty, 1974
Box 1965, Folder 1 Military Rights: “Amnesty Report” Safe Return Amnesty Committee and Families of Resisters for Amnesty, 1973-1975
Box 1965, Folder 2 Military Rights: Booth, John Nicolls: “The Middle East: No Escape from Armageddon?”, 1972
Box 1965, Folder 3 Military Rights: Catholic Church, circa 1973
Box 1965, Folder 4 Military Rights: Central Committee for Conscientious Objectors (CCCO): Handbooks, 1957-1970
Box 1965, Folder 5 Military Rights: Clergy and Laity Concerned About Vietnam, circa 1968
Box 1965, Folder 6 Military Rights: Committee Against Registration and the Draft (CARD), 1979
Box 1965, Folder 7 Military Rights: “Discharge Upgrading Newsletter”, 1979
Box 1965, Folder 8 Military Rights: “Draft Action”, 1981
Box 1965, Folder 9 Military Rights: “Draft Counselor's Newsletter”, 1975
Box 1965, Folder 10 Military Rights: “Firing Line” (Southern Educational Communication Association) transcript, 1973
Box 1965, Folder 11 Military Rights: Fund for New Priorities in America - “Amnesty…”, 1976
Box 1965, Folder 12 Military Rights: “God and Caesar”, 1982
Box 1965, Folder 13 Military Rights: Indochina Resource Center, 1973
Box 1965, Folder 14 Military Rights: “Inland” - Manitoba, Canada, 1973
Box 1965, Folder 15 Military Rights: “Keeping Posted”, 1973
Box 1965, Folder 16 Military Rights: Manpower Channeling and Education: “The Exploitation of Youth”, undated
Box 1965, Folder 17 Military Rights: “Militarism Memo”, 1977-1979
Box 1965, Folder 18 Military Rights: “Military Discharge Review Letter (MDRL)”, 1975
Box 1965, Folder 19 Military Rights: “Military Law Reporter”, 1976
Box 1965, Folder 20 Military Rights: National Association for the Advancement of Colored People -“The Search for Military Justice”, 1971
Box 1965, Folder 21 Military Rights: National Advisory Commission on Selective Service Report, 1967
Box 1965, Folder 22 Military Rights: National Council to Repeal the Draft - Newsletter, 1971-1972
Box 1965, Folder 23 Military Rights: National Council for Universal and Unconditional Amnesty (NCUUA), 1974-1975
Box 1965, Folder 24 Military Rights: National Interreligious Service Board for C.O. (NISBCO), undated
Box 1966, Folder 1 Military Rights: Newsletters - Miscellaneous, 1967-1976,1966
Box 1966, Folder 2 Military Rights: Pamphlets - Miscellaneous, 1950-1972
Box 1966, Folder 3 Military Rights: Pamphlets - Miscellaneous, undated
Box 1966, Folder 4 Military Rights: People for Amnesty (Louisville, KY), undated
Box 1966, Folder 5 Military Rights: Philadelphia Resistance - “Exiled”, undated
Box 1966, Folder 6 Military Rights: Press Clippings, 1971-1974
Box 1966, Folder 7-11 Military Rights: Press Clippings, 1975
Box 1967, Folder 1 Military Rights: Press Clippings - Magazines, 1971-1973
Box 1967, Folder 2 Military Rights: Public Law Education Institute: “Prospectus for Selective Service Law Reporter”, circa 1968
Box 1967, Folder 3 Military Rights: Reprints, undated
Box 1967, Folder 4 Military Rights: Ripon Society, 1972-1973
Box 1967, Folder 5 Military Rights: John M. Swomley: “Amnesty: The Record and the Need”, 1969
Box 1967, Folder 6 Military Rights: Toronto Anti-Draft Programme, 1970-1971
Box 1967, Folder 7 Military Rights: Vietnam Veterans Against the War/Winter Soldier Organization (VVAW/WSO), circa 1973
Box 1967, Folder 8 Military Rights: Vietnamese Studies, 1971-1973
Box 1967, Folder 9 Military Rights: War Resisters International, 1969-1971
Box 1967, Folder 10 Military Rights: War Resisters League, 1973-1981
Box 1967, Folder 11 Miscellaneous: American Eugenics Party, 1967
Box 1967, Folder 12 Native Americans: Miscellaneous, undated
Box 1967, Folder 13 Native Americans: American Indian Community House, Inc. - New York, 1977
Box 1967, Folder 14 Native Americans: “The Cherokee Report”, 1970
Box 1967, Folder 15 Native Americans: Americans for Indian Opportunity, 1958,1980
Box 1967, Folder 16 Native Americans: “Indian Truth”, 1946-1971
Box 1968, Folder 1 Native Americans: “Indian Truth”, 1975-1978
Box 1968, Folder 2 Native Americans: “Indian Voices”, 1965
Box 1968, Folder 3 Native Americans: National Congress of American Indians - “Washington Bulletin”, 1949-1955
Box 1968, Folder 4 Native Americans: “New Breed News” - Idaho, 1970
Box 1968, Folder 5 Police Practices, 1967
Box 1968, Folder 6 Poverty and Civil Liberties: Miscellaneous, 1969-1972
Box 1968, Folder 7 Prisoners Rights, 1973,undated
Box 1968, Folder 8-10 Prisoners Rights: Newsletters, 1972-1975
Box 1968, Folder 11 Privacy: Miscellaneous, 1975-1978
Box 1968, Folder 12 Privacy: “Access Reports”, 1975-1978,1969
Box 1969, Folder 1 Privacy: Campaign to Stop Government Spying, 1977-1978
Box 1969, Folder 2 Privacy: Computer and Business Equipment Manufacturers Association - “Privacy Update”, 1977-1978
Box 1969, Folder 3 Privacy: Freedom of Information Center, 1978
Box 1969, Folder 4 Privacy: “Justice Department Watch”, 1977-1979
Box 1969, Folder 5 Privacy: “Privacy Journal”, 1974-1976
Box 1969, Folder 6 Privacy: “Rx [confidentially]”, 1978
Box 1969, Folder 7 Women's Rights: Miscellaneous, undated
Box 1969, Folder 8 Subseries 5C.1: Outside Organizations: Publications, 1917-1986 [bulk 1950-1969]
Subseries Description
This subseries (21.42 linear feet) contains periodicals as well as pamphlets, monographs, and public relations materials produced by individuals and organizations outside the ACLU. The organizations include well-known groups such as the YWCA and SNCC, but is composed primarily of regional councils and committees or highly-specialized activist groups--ranging from the extreme left to the extreme right.
See also the Oversized Materials listing.
Abelard-Schuman, Inc.
Box 1970, Folder 1 Abzug, Bella Reports, 1973
Box 1970, Folder 2 The Activist by Oberlin College Student Council, 1964
Box 1970, Folder 3 Ad Hoc Committee on Human Rights and Genocide Treaties, 1973
Box 1970, Folder 4 Adult Education Association of the U.S.A., 1968
Box 1970, Folder 5 Advance, 1963
Box 1970, Folder 6 Advance Youth Organization, 1963
Box 1970, Folder 7 Ahead of Times, 1973
Box 1970, Folder 8 Alabama Council Newsletter, 1962
Box 1970, Folder 9 Albatross, 1960
Box 1970, Folder 10 Algic Defense Committee, undated
Box 1970, Folder 11 Alliance for a Safer New York, 1971-1972
Box 1970, Folder 12 American Assembly Columbia University, 1964
Box 1970, Folder 13 American Association for Adult Education, 1941
Box 1970, Folder 14 American Association of Fund-Raising Counsel Bulletin, 1964-1966
Box 1970, Folder 15 American Association of University Professors, 1954-1970
Box 1970, Folder 16 American Association on Indian Affairs, 1938
Box 1970, Folder 17 The American Bar Association, 1954-1977
Box 1970, Folder 18 American Book Publishers Council, Inc., 1962
Box 1970, Folder 19 American Committee for Cultural Freedom, 1954
Box 1970, Folder 20 American Committee for Democracy and Intellectual Freedom, 1941
Box 1970, Folder 21 American Community for Protection of Foreign Born, 1964
Box 1970, Folder 22 American Council for Judaism, 1964-1966
Box 1970, Folder 23 American Council for Nationalities Service, 1963-1964
Box 1970, Folder 24 American Council for Spanish Speaking People, 1948-1951
Box 1970, Folder 25 American Council of Spanish-Speaking Peoples, 1952
Box 1971, Folder 1 American Council on Public Affairs, undated
Box 1971, Folder 2 American Council on Race Relations, 1947
Box 1971, Folder 3 American Economic Foundation, 1941
Box 1971, Folder 4 American Education Center, undated
Box 1971, Folder 5 American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO), 1959-1968
Box 1971, Folder 6 AFL-CIO Civil Rights Bulletin, 1958
Box 1971, Folder 7 American Federation of Teachers, 1937
Box 1971, Folder 8 American Federation of World Citizens, 1964
Box 1971, Folder 9 American Foundation for Continuing Education, 1959-1962
Box 1971, Folder 10 American Freedoms Council, 1961
Box 1971, Folder 11 American Friends of Religious Freedom in Israel, Inc., 1966
Box 1971, Folder 12 American Friends Service Committee, 1953-1971
Box 1971, Folder 13 American Humanist Association, 1959,1967
Box 1971, Folder 14 American Immigration and Citizenship Conference, 1961-1963
Box 1971, Folder 15 American Immigration and Citizenship Conference, 1964-1972
Box 1972, Folder 1 Americanism, What is it?, 1936
Box 1972, Folder 2 American Judicature Society, 1968-1970
Box 1972, Folder 3 The American Legion Firing Line, 1964-1967
Box 1972, Folder 4 American Library Association, 1966
Box 1972, Folder 5 American Mercury Article, 1959
Box 1972, Folder 6 American Orthopsychiatric Association, 1972
Box 1972, Folder 7 American Party, 1951
Box 1972, Folder 8 American-Southern Africa Council, 1968
Box 1972, Folder 9 American Jewish Congress, 1951-1959,1965-1968
Box 1972, Folder 10-12 The American Trial Lawyers Association, 1966-1967
Box 1973, Folder 1 American Union Against Militarism, 1917-1918
Box 1973, Folder 2 American Veterans Committee, 1967
Box 1973, Folder 3 Americans for Democratic Action, 1947-1972
Box 1973, Folder 4 Americans for the Defense of Independent Education, 1962-1963
Box 1973, Folder 5 Americans United for Separation of Church and State, 1966
Box 1973, Folder 6 The Amistad Research Center, 1971
Box 1973, Folder 7 Amnesty International, 1964-1970
Box 1973, Folder 8 Amorphia, The Cannabis Cooperative, 1971
Box 1973, Folder 9 Animal Rights Law Reporter, 1980-1983
Box 1973, Folder 10 Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, 1960-1972
Box 1973, Folder 11-12 The Archibald Newsletter, 1971
Box 1973, Folder 13 Assembly of Captive European Nations, 1966
Box 1973, Folder 14 Association for Union Democracy, 1975
Box 1973, Folder 15 Association for Voluntary Sterilization, Inc., 1965-1972
Box 1973, Folder 16 Association of American Publishers, 1973
Box 1974, Folder 1 Association of the Bar of the City of New York, 1965
Box 1974, Folder 2 Audience Unlimited, undated
Box 1974, Folder 3 Aware, Inc., 1953
Box 1974, Folder 4 Roger N. Baldwin Civil Liberties Foundation, 1952
Box 1974, Folder 5 Baltimore Bulletin, 1965-1966
Box 1974, Folder 6 Baltimore Community Relations Commission Newsletter, 1964
Box 1974, Folder 7 Baptist Joint Committee on Public Affairs, 1960,1964
Box 1974, Folder 8 Bar of the City of New York, 1965-1966
Box 1974, Folder 9 Behavior Today, 1976
Box 1974, Folder 10 Behavioral Technology, Inc., undated
Box 1974, Folder 11 Belden, May F., 1954
Box 1974, Folder 12 Bill of Rights Day, 1949-1957
Box 1974, Folder 13 Bill of Rights in Action, 1976-1978
Box 1974, Folder 14 Bill of Rights Journal, 1975-1983
Box 1974, Folder 15 Bill of Rights Newsletter, 1967-1972
Box 1974, Folder 16 Birch Society (John), 1965,1969
Box 1974, Folder 17 Birch Society (John), 1970-1973
Box 1975, Folder 1-2 Black Justice, undated
Box 1975, Folder 3 B'nai B'rith, 1964-1968
Box 1975, Folder 4 Board of Indian Commissioners, 1931
Box 1975, Folder 5 Bonfire, 1964
Box 1975, Folder 6 Brandon Films, Inc., 1964
Box 1975, Folder 7 Britannica Book of the Year, 1960
Box 1975, Folder 8 Brookings Institution, 1964
Box 1975, Folder 9 Brooklyn Center Conference (Bill of Rights Day Celebration), 1966
Box 1975, Folder 10 Building America, undated
Box 1975, Folder 11 Bureau of Indian Affairs, 1964-1965
Box 1975, Folder 12 Bureau of National Affairs, 1964-1965
Box 1975, Folder 13 Bureau of Prisons, Annual Report, 1965
Box 1975, Folder 14 The Cameo Newsletter, 1970
Box 1975, Folder 15 Campaign for a World Constitution, Inc., undated
Box 1975, Folder 16 Campaign for Political Rights, 1978-1983
Box 1975, Folder 17 Carnegie Corporation; Annual Report, 1964
Box 1975, Folder 18 Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 1942
Box 1975, Folder 19 Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, 1968
Box 1975, Folder 20 Carta Editorial, 1963-1964
Box 1975, Folder 21 Catalan Newsletter, 1965
Box 1975, Folder 22 Catholics and Civil Liberties, 1964
Box 1976, Folder 1 CBS News Election Unit, 1970
Box 1976, Folder 2 Center for Community Economic Development, 1972-1976
Box 1976, Folder 3 Center for Constitutional Rights, 1973-1976
Box 1976, Folder 4 Center for Research and Education in American Liberties, 1965-1967
Box 1976, Folder 5 Center for Responsive Psychology Brooklyn College, 1973
Box 1976, Folder 6 Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions, 1964-1973
Box 1976, Folder 7-10 Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions, 1964-1973
Box 1977, Folder 1-2 Center for the Study of Human Rights, 1983
Box 1977, Folder 3 Center for the Study of Liberal Education for Adults, 1964-1967
Box 1977, Folder 4 Central Committee for Conscientious Objectors, 1967-1968
Box 1977, Folder 5 Channing L. Bete Co., Inc., 1972
Box 1977, Folder 6 Carrie Chapman Catt Education Fund, 1951-1954,1958
Box 1977, Folder 7-8 Chattanooga Council for Cooperative Action, 1962
Box 1977, Folder 9 Chicago Civil Liberties Union, 1941
Box 1977, Folder 10 Chicago Committee to Defend Democratic Rights, 1959
Box 1977, Folder 11 Chicago Council Against Racial and Religious Discrimination, 1951
Box 1977, Folder 12 Chicago Journalism Review, 1968-1970
Box 1977, Folder 13 Chicago Police Department Training Bulletin, 1962
Box 1977, Folder 14 Christianity and Crisis, 1975
Box 1977, Folder 15 Church of Scientology News Release, undated
Box 1977, Folder 16 Church/State News Service, 1972
Box 1977, Folder 17 Churchman, The, 1962-1965
Box 1977, Folder 18 Cinema Educational Guild - “Truth about the United Nations”, 1962
Box 1977, Folder 19 Citizen Friends of the American Indian, 1921
Box 1977, Folder 20 Citizens Advisory Council on the Status of Women, 1970-1971
Box 1977, Folder 21 Citizens Against Legalized Murder, 1968-1971
Box 1978, Folder 1 Citizens Anti-Communist Committee of Connecticut, 1963,1978
Box 1978, Folder 2 Citizens Committee for an Effective Constitution, 1966
Box 1978, Folder 3 Citizens Committee for Cancer Survivors on Krebiozen, Inc., 1964
Box 1978, Folder 4 Citizens Committee for Constitutional Liberties, 1961-1965
Box 1978, Folder 5 Citizens Committee for Constitutional Rights, 1964
Box 1978, Folder 6 Citizens' Committee of Inquiry, 1964
Box 1978, Folder 7 Citizens Committee to Preserve American Freedom, 1957-1959
Box 1978, Folder 8 Citizens' Council on Democratic Rights, 1950-1951
Box 1978, Folder 9 Citizens Crusade Against Poverty, 1966-1967
Box 1978, Folder 10 Citizens for Decent Literature, undated
Box 1978, Folder 11 Citizens Freedom Foundation, 1982
Box 1978, Folder 12 Citizens Housing and Planning Council of New York, Inc., 1951
Box 1978, Folder 13 Citizens Joint Committee of Inquiry; South Chicago Incident, 1937
Box 1978, Folder 14 Citizens Journal, 1979
Box 1978, Folder 15 Citizens League Against the Sonic Boom, 1967
Box 1978, Folder 16 Citizens Research Foundation, 1960-1972
Box 1978, Folder 17 Citizens Union, 1968
Box 1978, Folder 18 Citizens United for Rehabilitation of Errants, 1983
Box 1978, Folder 19 City Club of NY, 1937
Box 1978, Folder 20 Civil Disorder Research Institute, 1969
Box 1978, Folder 21 Civil Liberties Center, 1962
Box 1978, Folder 22 Civil Liberties Docket, 1965
Box 1978, Folder 23 Civil Liberties Educational Foundation, 1964-1965
Box 1978, Folder 24 Civil Liberties Educational Foundation, 1964-1965
Box 1978, Folder 25 Civil Liberties Features, 1972
Box 1979, Folder 1 Civil Liberties Legal Defense Fund, Inc., 1969
Box 1979, Folder 2 “Civil Liberties” Organizations, 1964
Box 1979, Folder 3 Civil Liberties Research Service, 1964
Box 1979, Folder 4 Civil Liberties Union of the Philippines, 1940
Box 1979, Folder 5 Civil Liberty and Civil Rights, 1964
Box 1979, Folder 6 Civil Rights Act of, 1964
Box 1979, Folder 7 “Civil Rights and Legal Wrongs”, 1963
Box 1979, Folder 8 Civil Rights and Liberties Task Force, 1963
Box 1979, Folder 9 “The Civil Rights Bulletin” (Connecticut), 1965
Box 1979, Folder 10 Civil Rights Congress, 1947-1953
Box 1979, Folder 11 Civil Rights Defense Committee, undated
Box 1979, Folder 12 Civil Rights Federation, 1938
Box 1979, Folder 13 Civil Service Journal, 1970
Box 1979, Folder 14 Civil Rights League (Capetown), 1965
Box 1979, Folder 15 Clearinghouse for Civil Rights Research, 1972
Box 1979, Folder 16 Clergy and Laymen Concerned about Vietnam, 1970
Box 1979, Folder 17 Cleveland State Law Review, 1973
Box 1979, Folder 18 Coalition for Human Needs and Budget Priorities, 1973
Box 1979, Folder 19 Coalition to End Grand Jury Abuse, 1976-1977
Box 1979, Folder 20-22 College Press Service, 1970
Box 1979, Folder 23 Collegiate Press Service, 1964-1965
Box 1980, Folder 1-3 Columbia Journalism Review, 1973
Box 1980, Folder 4 Columbia University Forum, 1970
Box 1980, Folder 5 Columbia University Press, 1966
Box 1980, Folder 6 Columbia University Law School, 1961
Box 1980, Folder 7 “Commentary”, 1964
Box 1980, Folder 8 Commerce Clearing House, 1949
Box 1980, Folder 9 Comics Magazine Association of America, Inc., 1960-1964
Box 1981, Folder 1 Commission of Inquiry on Civil Rights in Puerto Rico, 1937
Box 1981, Folder 2 Commission on Community Relations, 1970
Box 1981, Folder 3 Commission on Human Rights (Missouri), 1965
Box 1981, Folder 4 Committee for Democratic Rights, 1964
Box 1981, Folder 5 Committee for Economic Development, 1962,1972
Box 1981, Folder 6 Committee for Equality in Naturalization, 1947
Box 1981, Folder 7 Committee for Nonviolent Action, 1964-1967
Box 1981, Folder 8 Committee for Peace and Freedom, 1964
Box 1981, Folder 9 Committee for Social Justice, 1962
Box 1981, Folder 10 Committee for Student Rights, 1965
Box 1981, Folder 11 Committee for the Defense of Public Education, 1941
Box 1981, Folder 12 Committee of 100, 1963
Box 1981, Folder 13 Committee of First Amendment Defendants, 1960
Box 1981, Folder 14 Committee on Freedom of Speech, 1969
Box 1981, Folder 15 Committee on Integration of the New York Society for Ethical Culture, 1964
Box 1981, Folder 16 Committee on Militarism in Education, 1926
Box 1981, Folder 17 Committee on Military Training in Schools and Colleges, 1936
Box 1981, Folder 18 Committee on Public Justice, 1971-1982
Box 1981, Folder 19 Committee on Refugee Integration, 1962
Box 1981, Folder 20 Committee on State Sovereignty, Inc., 1962
Box 1981, Folder 21 Committee on Youth and the Draft. Council for Christian Social Action. United Church of Christ, 1968
Box 1981, Folder 22 Committee to Defend Resistance to Ghetto Life, 1964
Box 1981, Folder 23 Committee to Defend the Panthers, 1970
Box 1981, Folder 24 Committee to End Radiological Hazards, 1971
Box 1981, Folder 25 Committee to End Violence Against the Next Generation, 1975
Box 1981, Folder 26 Common Cause News, 1986
Box 1981, Folder 27 Common Council for American Unity, 1940-1941
Box 1981, Folder 28 Common Sense, 1962-1963
Box 1981, Folder 29-30 Commons, 1969
Box 1982, Folder 1 Communist Party, U.S.A., 1962-1967
Box 1982, Folder 2 Communist Viewpoint, 1963
Box 1982, Folder 3 Community Church of New York, 1964-1965
Box 1982, Folder 4 Community Legal Action Workshop, 1971
Box 1982, Folder 5 Community Relations and the Administration of Justice, 1971
Box 1982, Folder 6 “Community Relations Service”, 1964
Box 1982, Folder 7 Community Research and Development Corp., 1966
Box 1982, Folder 8 Concern, Inc., 1964
Box 1982, Folder 9 Confederate States of America, 1966
Box 1982, Folder 10 Conference Group of U.S. National Organizations on the United Nations, 1960-1964
Box 1982, Folder 11 Conference for Quality Integrated Education, 1964
Box 1982, Folder 12 Conference for the Protection of Civil Rights, 1937
Box 1982, Folder 13 Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, 1965
Box 1982, Folder 14 Conference on Democratic Processes in New York
Box 1982, Folder 15 Conference on Preserving the Democratic Process, 1964
Box 1982, Folder 16 Conference on the Status of Soviet Jews, 1967
Box 1982, Folder 17 Conformity, 1962
Box 1982, Folder 18 Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), 1945-1963
Box 1982, Folder 19-21 Congress for Racial Equality (CORE), 1964-1965
Box 1983, Folder 1-3 Congressional Action. Chamber of Commerce of the U.S., 1962
Box 1983, Folder 4 Congressional Action Fund, 1970
Box 1983, Folder 5 Congressional Quarterly, 1970
Box 1983, Folder 6 Connecticut Commission on Civil Rights, 1964-1965
Box 1983, Folder 7 Connecticut Conference on Soviet Labor Legislation, 1940
Box 1983, Folder 8 Conscription News, 1947-1959
Box 1983, Folder 9 Conservation Foundation, 1968
Box 1983, Folder 10 Constitutional Liberty League of Los Angeles, 1967
Box 1983, Folder 11 Constitutional Rights Foundation Rights and Riots, 1965-1976
Box 1983, Folder 12 Consultative Conference on Desegregation, 1961-1963
Box 1983, Folder 13 Consumers Union, 1970
Box 1983, Folder 14 Contact, 1970
Box 1983, Folder 15 Continuing Education for Adults, 1966
Box 1984, Folder 1 Controversy Magazine, 1959
Box 1984, Folder 2 Encore, 1964
Box 1984, Folder 3 Cornell Law Quarterly, undated
Box 1984, Folder 4 Council Against Intolerance America, undated
Box 1984, Folder 5 Council for Civic Unity, 1959-1967
Box 1984, Folder 6 Council for Democracy, 1941-1947
Box 1984, Folder 7 Council of Federated Organizations, 1964-1965
Box 1984, Folder 8 Council of Jewish Women, 1964
Box 1984, Folder 9 Council of Jewish Women, 1964
Box 1984, Folder 10 Council of National Organizations for Adult Education, 1957-1960
Box 1984, Folder 11-14 Council of National Organizations for Adult Education, 1961-1964
Box 1985, Folder 1-3 Council of New York Law Associates, 1971-1977
Box 1985, Folder 4 Council on Human Relations, 1965
Box 1985, Folder 5 Council on Indian Affairs, 1966
Box 1985, Folder 6 Council on Interracial Books for Children, 1971
Box 1985, Folder 7 Council on Radio Television Journalism, 1963-1965
Box 1985, Folder 8 Counter-Spy, 1975
Box 1985, Folder 9 Counter Attack, 1952-1955
Box 1985, Folder 10 Counter Attack, 1958-1961
Box 1986, Folder 1-3 Court of Man Foundation, 1973
Box 1986, Folder 4 Criminal Justice Reference Library, 1971
Box 1986, Folder 5 Creative Playthings, 1965
Box 1986, Folder 6 Crisis Appeal for Vietnamese Children of the International Rescue Committee, 1966
Box 1986, Folder 7 CUNA Mutual Insurance Society, 1964
Box 1986, Folder 8 Curb the National Guard, 1938
Box 1986, Folder 9 Current, 1961-1964
Box 1986, Folder 10 Decalogue Society of Lawyers, 1966
Box 1986, Folder 11 Defender, 1965
Box 1986, Folder 12 Defenders of American Liberties, 1963
Box 1986, Folder 13 Defense News Service, 1918
Box 1986, Folder 14 Democratic Party, 1964
Box 1986, Folder 15 Democratic Policy Council, 1970
Box 1986, Folder 16 Department of Justice, 1942
Box 1986, Folder 17 Department of State, 1947
Box 1986, Folder 18 Department of the Interior, 1943
Box 1986, Folder 19 Division of Education, undated
Box 1986, Folder 20 DuBois (W.E.B.) Clubs of New York, 1967
Box 1986, Folder 21 Editor and Publisher, 1973-1975
Box 1986, Folder 22 Education Commission of the States, 1973
Box 1986, Folder 23 Educational Committee to Halt Atomic Weapons Spread, 1968
Box 1986, Folder 24 Education U.S.A., 1964
Box 1986, Folder 25 Emergency Civil Liberties Committee, 1952-1960
Box 1986, Folder 26 Emergency Civil Liberties Committee, 1953-1966
Box 1987, Folder 1-3 Emergency Convocation: The Urban Coalition, 1968
Box 1987, Folder 4 Encampment for Citizenship;, 1962-1964
Box 1987, Folder 5 Esalen Institute, 1966
Box 1987, Folder 6 Eugene V. Debs Foundation, 1970
Box 1987, Folder 7 Expectations, 1971
Box 1987, Folder 8 Expose, 1952
Box 1987, Folder 9 FACT, 1964
Box 1987, Folder 10 Facts Forum, 1954
Box 1987, Folder 11 Fair Campaign Practices Committee, Inc., 1960-1966
Box 1987, Folder 12 Fair Employment Practice Commission, 1941-1965
Box 1987, Folder 13 Fair Housing Handbook, 1964
Box 1987, Folder 14 Family Planning Digest, 1972
Box 1987, Folder 15 Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America, 1919-1947
Box 1987, Folder 16 Federation of American Scientists, 1962
Box 1987, Folder 17 Federation to Fight Fascism, 1947
Box 1987, Folder 18 Fellowship of Reconciliation, 1960-1966
Box 1987, Folder 19 Films, 1965
Box 1987, Folder 20 Film Daily, 1964
Box 1988, Folder 1 Firing Line, 1958-1962
Box 1988, Folder 2 First Unitarian Church - Jackson Welfare Fund, undated
Box 1988, Folder 3 Florida Atlantic University, 1964
Box 1988, Folder 4 Ford Foundation, 1964-1973
Box 1988, Folder 5 Foreign Policy Association, 1964-1965
Box 1988, Folder 6 Foundation Center, 1969
Box 1988, Folder 7 Foundation for Freedom and Democracy in Community Life, 1969
Box 1988, Folder 8 Foundation of the Federal Bar Association, 1965
Box 1988, Folder 9 Free Southern Theater, Inc., 1965
Box 1988, Folder 10 Freedom Agenda, 1956-1957
Box 1988, Folder 11 Freedom House, 1964-1986
Box 1988, Folder 12 Freedom of Information Center, 1958-1966
Box 1988, Folder 13-14 Freedom of Information Center, 1966-1973
Box 1989, Folder 1-2 Freedom's Review, 1962
Box 1989, Folder 3 Freethinkers of America, 1964
Box 1989, Folder 4 Friends Committee on National Legislation, 1951-1978
Box 1989, Folder 5-6 Friends of Democracy, Inc., 1946-1947
Box 1989, Folder 7 Friends of Freedom for India, 1919
Box 1989, Folder 8 Friends Journal, 1964
Box 1989, Folder 9 From the State Capitals, 1954
Box 1989, Folder 10 Fulton (Richard) Inc. Lecture, 1973
Box 1989, Folder 11 Fun, Travel, Adventure, 1969-1970
Box 1989, Folder 12 Fund for Adult Education, 1959
Box 1989, Folder 13 Funk and Wagnalls Year Book Series, 1961
Box 1989, Folder 14 Gadson Law and Order Committee, 1937
Box 1989, Folder 15 Gallup Political Index, 1966
Box 1989, Folder 16 Gandhi Society for Human Rights, 1962-1963
Box 1989, Folder 17 General Board of Christian Social Concerns of the Methodist Church, undated
Box 1989, Folder 18 General Defense Committee, 1923-1927
Box 1989, Folder 19 GI Civil Liberties Defense Committee, 1969
Box 1989, Folder 20 GI Counseling Services, 1970
Box 1989, Folder 21 Girardin, Inc., undated
Box 1990, Folder 1 Governmental Research Bureau, 1970
Box 1990, Folder 2 Groundswell Quarterly, 1970
Box 1990, Folder 3 Group Research Report, 1962-1983
Box 1990, Folder 4-7 Grove Press, Inc., 1964
Box 1990, Folder 8 Hall (Gus) - Davis (Benjamin J.) Defense Committee, 1964
Box 1990, Folder 9 Hammarskjold College, 1970
Box 1990, Folder 10 Harlem Parents Committee, 1966
Box 1990, Folder 11 Harvard Liberal Union, 1942
Box 1990, Folder 12 Hastings Center Bibliography of Society, Ethics and The Life Sciences, 1973
Box 1990, Folder 13 Hayes (Arthur Garfield) Civil Rights Program, 1967-1968
Box 1990, Folder 14 Health Insurance Association of America, 1969-1971
Box 1990, Folder 15 Help and Action Newsletter, 1980
Box 1991, Folder 1 Henry Group, The Patrick, undated
Box 1991, Folder 2 Highlander Center, 1964-1969
Box 1991, Folder 3 Highlander Folk School, 1953-1959
Box 1991, Folder 4 House Committee on Military Affairs, 1919
Box 1991, Folder 5 Huelga Committee, Washington, D.C., 1966
Box 1991, Folder 6 Human Betterment Association for Voluntary Sterilization, 1964
Box 1991, Folder 7 Human Relations Council, 1965
Box 1991, Folder 8 Human Relations News (Chicago), 1964
Box 1991, Folder 9 Human Rights News, Frankfurt, KY, 1974
Box 1991, Folder 10 Human Rights News (Newark), 1964
Box 1991, Folder 11 Human Relations Newsletter, 1975
Box 1991, Folder 12 Human Resources Administration, 1967-1968
Box 1991, Folder 13 Human Rights, 1963
Box 1991, Folder 14 Humanist Society of Metropolitan New York, 1983
Box 1991, Folder 15 Humanity a Call for Survival, 1964
Box 1991, Folder 16 I.F. Stories Weekly, 1954-1965
Box 1991, Folder 17 Independent American, 1967
Box 1991, Folder 18 Indian Affairs, 1960
Box 1991, Folder 19 Indians @ Work, 1940
Box 1991, Folder 20 Indian Bureau, 1921
Box 1991, Folder 21 Indian Defense Association of California, 1930-1931
Box 1991, Folder 22 The Indian Progress, 1963
Box 1991, Folder 23 Indian Reorganization Act of 1934, 1934
Box 1991, Folder 24 Indian Rights Association, 1940
Box 1991, Folder 25 In Friendship, 1958
Box 1991, Folder 26 Industrial Workers of the World, 1918
Box 1991, Folder 27 Information Service, 1936-1958
Box 1991, Folder 28 Insider's Newsletter, 1962-1964
Box 1991, Folder 29 Institute for American Democracy, 1967-1971
Box 1991, Folder 30-31 Institute for Cybercultural Research, 1965
Box 1992, Folder 1 Institute for Humane Studies, 1973
Box 1992, Folder 2 The Institute of Continuing Legal Education, 1969
Box 1992, Folder 3 Institute of Human Relations Press, 1963-1966
Box 1992, Folder 4 Institute of Judicial Administration, Inc., 1959
Box 1992, Folder 5 Institute of Labor and Industrial Relations, 1965
Box 1992, Folder 6 Institute of Modern Legal Thought, 1964
Box 1992, Folder 7 The Institute of Politics in Mississippi, 1973-1974
Box 1992, Folder 8-9 Institute of Public Affairs, undated
Box 1992, Folder 10 Institute of the Black World, 1970
Box 1992, Folder 11 Intellectual Freedom Committee of the American Library Association, 1952-1962
Box 1992, Folder 12 Intelligence Digest Service, undated
Box 1992, Folder 13 Inter-Citizens Committee, 1963-1965
Box 1992, Folder 14 Internal Union Democracy in Action, 1964
Box 1992, Folder 15 International Association for the Advancement of Ethnology and Eugenics, 1969
Box 1992, Folder 16 International Association of Chiefs of Police, 1964
Box 1992, Folder 17 International Association of Police Clubs, 1964
Box 1992, Folder 18 International City Managers Association, 1944
Box 1992, Folder 19 International Conference of Social Work (11th), 1962
Box 1992, Folder 20 International Juridical Association, 1938
Box 1992, Folder 21 International Labor Defense Committee for Nuclear Information, 1931-1940
Box 1992, Folder 22 International League for the Rights of Man, 1962-1966
Box 1992, Folder 23 International Student Service, 1936
Box 1992, Folder 24 International Union of Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers, 1961-1964
Box 1992, Folder 25 International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers, 1965
Box 1992, Folder 26 International Union of Socialist Youth (IUSY), 1969
Box 1992, Folder 27 International Visitors Bureau, 1965
Box 1992, Folder 28 Interracial Council for Business Opportunity, 1964
Box 1992, Folder 29 Interracial News Service, 1959
Box 1992, Folder 30 Interreligious Foundation for Community Organization, 1970
Box 1992, Folder 31 Japanese-American Citizens League, undated
Box 1992, Folder 32 Jews in Eastern Europe, 1965
Box 1992, Folder 33 Jewish Labor Committee, 1958-1966
Box 1993, Folder 1 Joint Committee on the Conscientious Objector, 1939-1940
Box 1993, Folder 2 Johnson-Humphrey-Kennedy Campaign Committee, 1969
Box 1993, Folder 3 Johnson, Lyndon B., The White House, 1964
Box 1993, Folder 4 Joint Washington Office for Social Concern, 1970
Box 1993, Folder 5 Jones. Bethune, 1960
Box 1993, Folder 6 Journal of Criminal Law, Criminology and Political Science, 1964
Box 1993, Folder 7 Judiciary Committee: Senate, 1963-1966
Box 1993, Folder 8 Justice, 1970
Box 1993, Folder 9 Justice in Urban America, 1974
Box 1993, Folder 10 Kansas Free Press, 1965
Box 1993, Folder 11 Kentucky Committee on Moral and Spiritual Values, 1963
Box 1993, Folder 12 Kiwanis International: “You and the Law”, 1963
Box 1993, Folder 13 Kutcher Civil Rights Committee, 1958
Box 1993, Folder 14 Labor Magazine, 1964
Box 1993, Folder 15 Labor-Management Relations Service, 1970-1971
Box 1993, Folder 16 Labor Reports, 1960-1963
Box 1993, Folder 17 Law and Poverty Report, 1978
Box 1993, Folder 18 Law and Contemporary Problems, 1962
Box 1993, Folder 19 Law and Society Association, 1964
Box 1993, Folder 20 Law in American Society, 1976-1977
Box 1993, Folder 21 Law Students Civil Rights Research Council, Inc., 1966-1972
Box 1994, Folder 1 Lawyers Committee on American Policy Towards Vietnam, 1966
Box 1994, Folder 2 Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, 1958-1968
Box 1994, Folder 3-6 Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, 1969-1978
Box 1995, Folder 1-2 League Against Obnoxious TV Commercials, 1963
Box 1995, Folder 3 League for Industrial Democracy, 1922-1970
Box 1995, Folder 4 League for Mutual Aid, 1965
Box 1995, Folder 5 League for Political Education, Inc., 1936
Box 1995, Folder 6 League of Women Voters, 1959-1971
Box 1995, Folder 7 Legal Aid Society, 1964
Box 1995, Folder 8 Lemberg Center for the Study of Violence, 1969
Box 1995, Folder 9 Liberal Party of New York State, undated
Box 1995, Folder 10 Liberal Survey, 1939
Box 1995, Folder 11 Liberation, 1975
Box 1995, Folder 12 Libertarian League, 1957-1958
Box 1995, Folder 13 Liberty, 1972
Box 1995, Folder 14 Liberty Amendment Committee, 1966
Box 1995, Folder 15 Liberty Bulletin, 1964
Box 1995, Folder 16 Liberty Lobby, circa 1956
Box 1995, Folder 17 Life Line Foundation, Inc., 1962
Box 1995, Folder 18 Life Lines, 1964
Box 1996, Folder 1 Lorien Productions, Inc. “Film Comment”, 1964
Box 1996, Folder 2 Luce - Romeike, 1964
Box 1996, Folder 3 Lucy Stone League, Inc., 1964
Box 1996, Folder 4 Mass Media Committee (Consultative Conference on Desegregation), 1961-1962
Box 1996, Folder 5 Massachusetts Council for Constitutional Rights, 1966
Box 1996, Folder 6 Mattachine Society, Inc., 1964-1966
Box 1996, Folder 7 Meiklejohn Civil Liberties Library, 1970
Box 1996, Folder 8 Men's Rights Association, 1975
Box 1996, Folder 9 Merton-Buber House, 1970
Box 1996, Folder 10 Metropolitan Christian Council of Philadelphia, 1971
Box 1996, Folder 11 Metropolitan Dade County Community Relations Board, 1971
Box 1996, Folder 12 Metropolitan Human Relations Commission, 1970
Box 1996, Folder 13 Michigan Civil Rights Committee, 1966
Box 1996, Folder 14 Michigan Free Speech Defense Committee, 1966
Box 1996, Folder 15 Minneapolis Department of Civil Rights, 1973
Box 1996, Folder 16 Minority of One, 1959-1965
Box 1996, Folder 17-18 Minority Resources, Inc. Contact, 1972-1965
Box 1996, Folder 19 The Missionary Society of St. Paul the Apostle in New York, 1959
Box 1996, Folder 20 Mississippi Free Press, 1963
Box 1996, Folder 21 Missouri Commission on Human Rights, 1970
Box 1996, Folder 22 Mobilization for Youth, Inc., 1963
Box 1996, Folder 23 Mobilization for Youth, Inc., 1962
Box 1997, Folder 1 Modern Community Developers, Inc., 1966
Box 1997, Folder 2 Tom Mooney Case, 1966
Box 1997, Folder 3-4 Moral Democracy, 1982
Box 1997, Folder 5 Motion Picture Association of American, 1966
Box 1997, Folder 6 Moving On, 1977-1978
Box 1997, Folder 7 Nation, 1952-1977
Box 1997, Folder 8 National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, 1964
Box 1998, Folder 1 National Advisory Committee on Farm Labor, 1959-1964
Box 1998, Folder 2 National Advisory Council on Educational Freedom, undated
Box 1998, Folder 3 National Alliance for Safer Cities, 1970-1979,1998
Box 1998, Folder 4 National Assembly for Democratic Rights, 1961
Box 1998, Folder 5 National Assembly on Teaching the Principles of Bill of Rights, 1963-1965
Box 1998, Folder 6 National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, 1938-1940
Box 1998, Folder 7 National Association for Better Radio and Television, 1964
Box 1998, Folder 8 National Association for Mental Health, Inc., 1964-1965
Box 1998, Folder 9 National Association for Puerto Rican Civil Rights, 1964
Box 1998, Folder 10 National Association of Broadcasters, 1964-1966
Box 1998, Folder 11 National Association of Educational Broadcasters, 1964
Box 1998, Folder 12 National Association of Human Rights Workers, 1972-1975
Box 1998, Folder 13 National Association of Intergroup Relations, 1955-1958
Box 1998, Folder 14 National Association of Intergroup Relations Officials, 1958
Box 1998, Folder 15 National Association of Intergroup Relations Officials, 1959-1970
Box 1999, Folder 1-5 National Association of Social Workers, 1956-1978
Box 2000, Folder 1 National Audience Board “Newsletter”, 1958
Box 2000, Folder 2 National Book Committee, 1964
Box 2000, Folder 3 National Broadcasting Company, Inc., 1964
Box 2000, Folder 4 National Businessmens Council, 1969
Box 2000, Folder 5 National Catholic Conference for Interracial Justice, 1961-1965
Box 2000, Folder 6 National Center for Law-Focused Education, 1973-1977
Box 2000, Folder 7 National Center for Research and Information on Equal Educational Opportunity, 1971
Box 2000, Folder 8 National Citizens Communication on International Cooperation, 1965
Box 2000, Folder 9 National Citizenship Test, 1965
Box 2000, Folder 10 National Civil Liberties Clearinghouse, 1949-1953
Box 2000, Folder 11-13 National Civil Liberties Clearinghouse, 1954-1963
Box 2001, Folder 1-5 National Civil Liberties Clearing House, 1964-1972
Box 2002, Folder 1-3 National Committee Against Discrimination in Housing, 1951-1960
Box 2002, Folder 4-5 National Committee Against Discrimination in Housing, 1961-1967
Box 2003, Folder 1-4 National Committee Against Nazi Criminals and Nazism in America, 1965
Box 2003, Folder 5 National Committee Against Repressive Legislation, 1971-1973
Box 2004, Folder 1 National Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy, 1967
Box 2004, Folder 2 National Committee for an Effective Congress, 1958
Box 2004, Folder 3 National Committee for Children and Youth, 1961,1970
Box 2004, Folder 4 National Committee for Revision of the Comstock Law, 1938
Box 2004, Folder 5 National Committee for Support of the Public Schools, 1964
Box 2004, Folder 6 National Committee for the Albany Defendants, 1964
Box 2004, Folder 7 National Committee on Employment of Youth, 1964
Box 2004, Folder 8 National Committee on Tithing in Investment, 1968
Box 2004, Folder 9 National Committee to Abolish the House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC), 1964-1969
Box 2004, Folder 10-11 National Committee to Repeal the McCarran Act, 1964-1966
Box 2004, Folder 12 National Community Relations Advisory Council, 1954-1966
Box 2004, Folder 13 National Conference of Christians and Jews, 1962-1969
Box 2005, Folder 1-3 National Conference of Friends on Race Relations Continuation Committee, 1967
Box 2005, Folder 4 National Conference on Citizens Rights in Broadcasting, 1970
Box 2005, Folder 5 National Conference on Citizenship, 1962-1964
Box 2005, Folder 6 National Conference on Social Welfare, 1965-1966
Box 2005, Folder 7 National Consultation on Shaping Safer Cities, 1969-1970
Box 2005, Folder 8 National Convocation of Lawyers to End the War, 1971
Box 2005, Folder 9 National Council Against Conscription, 1954-1956
Box 2005, Folder 10 National Council for Civic Responsibility, 1965
Box 2005, Folder 11 National Council for Civil Liberties, 1964-1965
Box 2005, Folder 12 National Council for the Social Studies, 1962,1973
Box 2005, Folder 13 National Council of American-Soviet Friendship, 1965
Box 2005, Folder 14 National Council of Churches of Christ in the U.S.A., 1958-1970
Box 2005, Folder 15 National Council of Jewish Women, 1960-1967
Box 2006, Folder 1 National Council of Juvenile Court Judges, 1966
Box 2006, Folder 2 National Council on Crime and Delinquency, 1965-1970
Box 2006, Folder 3-4 National Council of Methodist Youth, 1938
Box 2006, Folder 5 National Council of Teachers of English, 1962
Box 2006, Folder 6 National Council on Freedom from Censorship, 1949
Box 2006, Folder 7 National Council Service League, 1971
Box 2006, Folder 8 National Council to Repeal the Draft, 1969-1971
Box 2006, Folder 9 National Education Association, 1964-1967
Box 2006, Folder 10 National Educational Television, 1959-1964
Box 2006, Folder 11 National Emergency Civil Liberties Committee, 1966-1982
Box 2006, Folder 12 National Farm Labor Union, 1950-1951
Box 2007, Folder 1 National Farmers Union, 1965
Box 2007, Folder 2 National Federation for Constitutional Liberties, 1941
Box 2007, Folder 3 National Federation of Catholic College Students, 1961
Box 2007, Folder 4 National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers, 1962
Box 2007, Folder 5 National Federation of Social Service Employees, 1967
Box 2007, Folder 6 National Insider, 1965
Box 2007, Folder 7 National Institute on Religion and Race, Inc., 1966
Box 2007, Folder 8 National Interreligious Service Board for Conscientious Objectors, 1970
Box 2007, Folder 9 National Jewish Youth Conference, 1951
Box 2007, Folder 10 National Labor Service, 1960-1966
Box 2007, Folder 11-12 National Lawyers Guild, 1954-1975
Box 2007, Folder 13-14 National Legal Aid and Defense Association, 1970-1978
Box 2007, Folder 15 National Medical Fellowships, Inc., 1962
Box 2007, Folder 16 National Municipal League, 1948-1967
Box 2008, Folder 1-2 National Negro Congress, 1941
Box 2008, Folder 3 National Office for Decent Literature, 1962-1967
Box 2008, Folder 4 National PTA (Parents Teachers Association), 1976-1980
Box 2008, Folder 5 National Peace Action Coalition, 1970
Box 2008, Folder 6 National Police Seminar, 1965-1967
Box 2008, Folder 7 National Prisoner Statistics Bulletin, 1964-1966
Box 2008, Folder 8 National Putnam Letters Committee, circa 1965
Box 2008, Folder 9 National Right to Work Committee, 1969
Box 2008, Folder 10 National Service Newsletter, 1967-1968
Box 2008, Folder 11 National Service Board for Religious Objectors, 1965
Box 2008, Folder 12 National Social Welfare Assembly, 1951-1966
Box 2008, Folder 13 National Student Association, 1952,1960-1974
Box 2009, Folder 1-2 National Training Laboratories, 1965
Box 2009, Folder 3 National University Extension Association, 1967
Box 2009, Folder 4 National Urban Coalition, 1970
Box 2009, Folder 5 National Urban League, Inc, 1965
Box 2009, Folder 6 New American Library, 1970
Box 2009, Folder 7 New Currents Publishing, 1964
Box 2009, Folder 8 New England Committee for Non-Violent Action, 1966
Box 2009, Folder 9 New Jersey Committee for the Right to Read, 1966
Box 2009, Folder 10 The New Leader, 1946-1962
Box 2009, Folder 11 New Providence Baptist Church, 1964
Box 2009, Folder 12 New South, 1953-1965
Box 2009, Folder 13 New South Student, 1965
Box 2009, Folder 14 New York Board of Education, 1965
Box 2009, Folder 15 NY Bureau of Legal Advice, 1919
Box 2009, Folder 16 New York Citizens Council, 1964
Box 2009, Folder 17 New York Commission on Human Rights, 1962-1968
Box 2009, Folder 18-19 New York Committee for Puerto Rican Civil Rights, 1964
Box 2009, Folder 20 New York Committee to Abolish Capital Punishment, 1965-1966
Box 2010, Folder 1 New York Conference on Soviet Jewry, 1965
Box 2010, Folder 2 New York Council to Abolish the House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC), 1963-1965
Box 2010, Folder 3 New York Ethical Culture Society, 1964-1966
Box 2010, Folder 4 New York - Mayors Committee on Job Placement, 1965
Box 2010, Folder 5 New York Membership Committee for Civil Liberties, 1971
Box 2010, Folder 6 New York Council for a Sane Nuclear Policy, 1965
Box 2010, Folder 7 New York Metropolitan Council on Fair Employment Practice, undated
Box 2010, Folder 8 New York Office for the Aging, 1964
Box 2010, Folder 9 New York Post Series on Federal Bureau of Investigation, 1959
Box 2010, Folder 10 New York Post - Post Office Censorship, 1959
Box 2010, Folder 11 New York State Bar Association Civil Rights Committee, 1964
Box 2010, Folder 12 New York State Bar Journal, 1964
Box 2010, Folder 13 New York State Education Department, 1940
Box 2010, Folder 14 New York Urban Coalition, Inc., 1969-1973
Box 2010, Folder 15 North Dakota Farmers Union - North Dakota Farmers Union, 1962
Box 2010, Folder 16 Northern Student Movement, 1965
Box 2010, Folder 17 Northwest District Defense Committee, 1922
Box 2010, Folder 18 Notre Dame Lawyer, 1959
Box 2010, Folder 19 Nursing Outlook, 1956
Box 2010, Folder 20 Oceana Publications, 1964
Box 2010, Folder 21 Office of Church and Society, 1965
Box 2010, Folder 22 O'Meara (Joseph), 1955-1956
Box 2010, Folder 23 Operation Freedom, 1967
Box 2010, Folder 24 Oregon Council to Abolish the Death Penalty, 1964
Box 2010, Folder 25 Passaic Strike, 1926-1927
Box 2010, Folder 26 Pacifist Research Bureau, 1945
Box 2010, Folder 27 Pageant Press, 1965
Box 2010, Folder 28 Painters Free Press, 1964
Box 2010, Folder 29 Parents Against the Draft, 1971
Box 2010, Folder 30 Parents Mississippi Association, 1965
Box 2010, Folder 31 PASSD (Protection and Advocacy System for Developmental Disabilities) News, 1980
Box 2010, Folder 32 “Pax Romana Journal”, 1962
Box 2010, Folder 33 Peace Corps, 1966
Box 2010, Folder 34 Peace Council of the German Democratic Republic, 1964
Box 2010, Folder 35 Peacemaker, 1959
Box 2010, Folder 36 Pennsylvania Community Services, Inc., 1964
Box 2010, Folder 37 Pennsylvania Prison Society, 1965-1968
Box 2010, Folder 38 People for the American Way, 1982-1983
Box 2011, Folder 1 People's Bicentennial Commission, 1972-1976
Box 2011, Folder 2 Peoples of America Society, undated
Box 2011, Folder 3 The Petal Paper, 1959
Box 2011, Folder 4 Planned Parenthood, 1963-1975
Box 2011, Folder 5-6 “Police”, 1962
Box 2011, Folder 7 Police and Community Relations Newsletter, 1966
Box 2011, Folder 8 Poor Peoples Corporation, 1965
Box 2011, Folder 9 Population Reference Bureau, 1962-1971
Box 2011, Folder 10 Post War World Council, 1946-1964
Box 2011, Folder 11 Potomac Institute, 1968
Box 2011, Folder 12 Practicing Law Institute, 1964-1966
Box 2011, Folder 13 Progressive, The, 1959-1971
Box 2011, Folder 14 Progressive Action Society, 1970
Box 2012, Folder 1 Progressive Labor Party, 1962-1966
Box 2012, Folder 2 Promoting Enduring Peace, Inc., 1967
Box 2012, Folder 3 Protestants and Other Americans United, 1959-1965
Box 2012, Folder 4 PTA (Parents Teachers Association) Magazine, 1964
Box 2012, Folder 5 Public Affairs Committee, 1954-1964
Box 2012, Folder 6-7 Public Affairs Lecture Bureau, 1966
Box 2012, Folder 8 Public Education Association, 1965
Box 2012, Folder 9 Public Eye, 1982
Box 2012, Folder 10 Public Information Center, 1970-1971
Box 2012, Folder 11 Public Opinion Quarterly, 1970
Box 2012, Folder 12 Public Press, 1973
Box 2012, Folder 13 Purdue University, 1960-1962
Box 2012, Folder 14 Puerto Rican American Women's League, circa 1940
Box 2012, Folder 15 Pure Water Association of America, 1973
Box 2013, Folder 1 Race Relations Reporter, 1971-1972
Box 2013, Folder 2 Radio WMCA, 1964
Box 2013, Folder 3 Randolph (A. Philip) Institute, 1967
Box 2013, Folder 4 Regional Plan Association, 1973
Box 2013, Folder 5 Registration of Aliens, 1926
Box 2013, Folder 6 Relatives and Friends of Conscientious Objectors, 1918
Box 2013, Folder 7 Religion and Labor, Council of America, 1961
Box 2013, Folder 8 Religious Freedom Committee, Inc., 1958-1962
Box 2013, Folder 9 Religious Liberal, 1960
Box 2013, Folder 10 Reporter, The, 1954-1965
Box 2013, Folder 11-12 Reporter for Conscience' Sake, The, 1965-1970
Box 2013, Folder 13 Republican National Committee, 1972
Box 2013, Folder 14 Resist, 1973
Box 2013, Folder 15 Rockefeller Foundation, 1964-1965
Box 2013, Folder 16 Roper Reporter, 1971
Box 2013, Folder 17 Rosenwald (Julius) Fund, 1945
Box 2013, Folder 18 Rutgers Law Review, 1969
Box 2013, Folder 19 Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Fund, 1920-1965
Box 2013, Folder 20 Sage (Russell) Foundation, 1963-1975
Box 2013, Folder 21 St. Louis Civil Liberties Committee, 1964
Box 2013, Folder 22 St. Paul Council on Human Relations, 1951
Box 2014, Folder 1 St. Paul (Minn.) Fair Employment Practice Commission, 1960
Box 2014, Folder 2 Saints' Herald, 1963
Box 2014, Folder 3 Sane World, 1965-1968
Box 2014, Folder 4 San Francisco Human Rights Committee, 1965
Box 2014, Folder 5 Scholarship, Education and Defense Fund for Racial Equality, 1966-1967
Box 2014, Folder 6 School Management, 1962
Box 2014, Folder 7 Scopes Trial, 1925
Box 2014, Folder 8 Scottsboro Defense Committee, 1937
Box 2014, Folder 9 Sex Information and Education Council of the USA (SIECUS), 1969-1971
Box 2014, Folder 10 Seymour Press, undated
Box 2014, Folder 11 Show and Tell, 1973
Box 2014, Folder 12 Sigma Delta Chi, 1962 Report, 1962
Box 2014, Folder 13 Social Legislation Information in Service, 1969-1970
Box 2014, Folder 14 Social Policy, 1975
Box 2014, Folder 15 Socialist Party, 1937-1970
Box 2014, Folder 16 Society for Ethical Culture, 1965
Box 2014, Folder 17 Society for Humane Abortion, 1967
Box 2014, Folder 18 Society for Propagating the Gospel Among the Indians and Others in North America, 1932
Box 2014, Folder 19 Society for Social Responsibility in Science, 1966
Box 2014, Folder 20 Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues, 1973
Box 2014, Folder 21 Society for the Right to Die, 1978
Box 2014, Folder 22 South African Scope, 1965
Box 2014, Folder 23 Southern Christian Leadership Conference, 1962-1965
Box 2014, Folder 24 Southern Conference Educational Fund, Inc., 1963-1972
Box 2014, Folder 25 Southern Conference for Human Welfare, 1940
Box 2014, Folder 26 Southern Education Report, 1966
Box 2014, Folder 27 Southern Electoral Reform League, 1941
Box 2014, Folder 28 Southern Legal Action Movement, 1969
Box 2014, Folder 29 Southern Newsletter, 1958-1959
Box 2014, Folder 30 Southern Regional Council, 1949-1958
Box 2014, Folder 31 Southern Regional Council, 1958-1979
Box 2015, Folder 1-5 Southern Reporter, 1964
Box 2016, Folder 1 Southern Student Organizing Committee, 1964-1965
Box 2016, Folder 2 Stanford Research Institute, 1970
Box 2016, Folder 3 State of Michigan Civil Rights Commission, 1967
Box 2016, Folder 4 Stern Fund Grants, 1971
Box 2016, Folder 5 I.F. Stone Weekly, 1959-1965
Box 2016, Folder 6-7 Student Civil Liberties Coordinating Committee, 1963-1965
Box 2016, Folder 8 Student Mobilization Committee, 1970
Box 2016, Folder 9 Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), 1962-1967
Box 2016, Folder 10 Student Peace Union, 1962-1964
Box 2016, Folder 11 Student Religious Liberals, 1965
Box 2016, Folder 12 Student Union for Peace, 1966
Box 2016, Folder 13 “The Student Voice”, 1964
Box 2016, Folder 14 Students for a Democratic Society, 1965
Box 2016, Folder 15 Suggested Program of Action for Preservation of the Democratic Process, 1962
Box 2017, Folder 1 Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias, 1961
Box 2017, Folder 2 Teachers College Record, 1964
Box 2017, Folder 3 Teachers' Committee for Peace in Vietnam, 1970
Box 2017, Folder 4 Teacher's Union, 1951
Box 2017, Folder 5 Teacher's Union of New York, 1954
Box 2017, Folder 6 Television Information Office, 1960-1962
Box 2017, Folder 7 Tennessee Committee for Human Development, 1970
Box 2017, Folder 8 Texas Observer, 1975
Box 2017, Folder 9 Trans Ethnic Education/Communication Foundation, 1971
Box 2017, Folder 10 Triple Revolution, The, 1964
Box 2017, Folder 11 TRUE Magazine, 1960-1961
Box 2017, Folder 12 Twentieth Century Fund, 1961-1966
Box 2017, Folder 13 Union Democracy in Action, 1961-1965
Box 2017, Folder 14 “Union News Article”, 1961
Box 2017, Folder 15 Union of American Hebrew Congregations, 1961
Box 2017, Folder 16 Union Seminary Quarterly Review: Black Muslims, 1962
Box 2017, Folder 17 United Auto Workers Union;, 1964
Box 2017, Folder 18 United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, 1964
Box 2017, Folder 19 United Church of Christ, 1968-1971
Box 2018, Folder 1 United Nations Association of the United States of America, 1965-1968
Box 2018, Folder 2 United Presbyterian Church, 1964-1965
Box 2018, Folder 3 United Proportional Representation League, undated
Box 2018, Folder 4 United Shoe Workers of America, circa 1938
Box 2018, Folder 5 U.S. Capitol Historical Society, 1964-1965
Box 2018, Folder 6 U.S. Catholic, 1963
Box 2018, Folder 7 United States Commission on Civil Rights, 1965-1966
Box 2018, Folder 8 United States Committee for Refugees, 1960
Box 2018, Folder 9 U.S. Committee for the United Nations, 1964
Box 2018, Folder 10 U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, 1964-1965
Box 2018, Folder 11 U.S. Department of Labor, 1964
Box 2018, Folder 12 United States Divorce Reform, Inc., 1968
Box 2018, Folder 13 United States National Student Association, 1963-1965
Box 2018, Folder 14 U.S. Student Press Association, 1964-1968
Box 2018, Folder 15 United Synagogue of America, 1962-1964
Box 2018, Folder 16 United World Federalists, 1965
Box 2018, Folder 17 University of California-Berkeley, 1965
Box 2018, Folder 18 University of Chicago, 1939-1941
Box 2018, Folder 19 University of Chicago Conference on the Draft; Conscription, 1966
Box 2018, Folder 20 Upland Institute, 1965
Box 2018, Folder 21 Urban Coalition, 1969
Box 2018, Folder 22 Urban League, 1965-1969
Box 2018, Folder 23 Vanguard Group, 1936
Box 2018, Folder 24 Veterans of Foreign Wars, 1938
Box 2019, Folder 1 Vietnam Moratorium Committee, 1970
Box 2019, Folder 2 Vista, 1969
Box 2019, Folder 3 Vocations for Social Change, 1970-1973
Box 2019, Folder 4 Voice of Freedom Committee, 1950
Box 2019, Folder 5 Voluntary Health and Welfare Agencies in the U.S., 1962
Box 2019, Folder 6 Volunteer's Digest, 1965
Box 2019, Folder 7 War Resisters League, 1940-1971
Box 2019, Folder 8 War's Heretics, 1917
Box 2019, Folder 9 War Tax Resistance, 1970-1972
Box 2019, Folder 10 Washington Center for Metropolitan Studies, 1972
Box 2019, Folder 11 Washington County Closed Circuit Television Report, undated
Box 2019, Folder 12 Washington Human Rights Project, 1963-1966
Box 2019, Folder 13 Washington Newsletter for Women, 1970
Box 2019, Folder 14 West Virginia University Cooperative Extension Service, 1971
Box 2019, Folder 15 White House Conference on Children and Youth, 1970
Box 2019, Folder 16 Window on the World, 1965
Box 2019, Folder 17 Win-Peace and Freedom thru Nonviolent Action, 1975
Box 2019, Folder 18 Winnipeg Committee to Assist War Objectors, 1971
Box 2019, Folder 19 Woman's Division of Christian Service Board of Missions of the Methodist Church, 1958
Box 2019, Folder 20 Women Law Reporter, 1975
Box 2019, Folder 21 Women's International Democratic Federation, 1972
Box 2019, Folder 22 Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, 1959
Box 2020, Folder 1 Women of the Whole World, 1970
Box 2020, Folder 2 Workers Defense League, 1940-1959
Box 2020, Folder 3 Workers Defense Union, 1920
Box 2020, Folder 4 Workers Education Bureau of America, 1938
Box 2020, Folder 5 Works Progress Administration, 1938
Box 2020, Folder 6 World Affairs Center, 1959
Box 2020, Folder 7 World Affairs Council of Philadelphia, 1966
Box 2020, Folder 8 World Book Encyclopedia, 1959
Box 2020, Folder 9 World Without War Council, 1970-1972
Box 2020, Folder 10 Young Democratic Clubs of Mississippi, 1965
Box 2020, Folder 11 YWCA, 1965-1938
Box 2020, Folder 12 Miscellaneous, 1926-1948
Box 2020, Folder 13-14 Subseries 5C.2: Outside Organizations: Correspondence, 1946-1968
Subseries Description
This subseries (5.88 linear feet) contains correspondence between the ACLU and other organizations culled from the Outside Organizations Publications subseries (above). Generally, these records discuss projects, publications, or items of common interest between the ACLU and groups such the American Bar Association or the NAACP. However, much of the correspondence is from regional and highly specialized groups, with one box devoted to the American Immigration Conferences (1955-1960).
Academy News: Luiba, Margaret M., 1952
Box 2021, Folder 1 Altgeld Centenary Committee of Illinois, 1947-1948
Box 2021, Folder 2 America - National Catholic Weekly Review “To Our Jewish Friends”, 1962
Box 2021, Folder 3 American Association for a Democratic Germany, 1949
Box 2021, Folder 4 American Association of University Professors, 1964
Box 2021, Folder 5 American Bar Association, 1963
Box 2021, Folder 6 American Committee for Cultural Freedom: Censorship Subcommittee, 1956
Box 2021, Folder 7 American Committee for Protection of Foreign-Born, 1956
Box 2021, Folder 8 American Committee on United Europe, 1953
Box 2021, Folder 9 American Council on Education, 1950
Box 2021, Folder 10 American Council for Judaism, 1964
Box 2021, Folder 11 American Council for Nationalities Service, 1959
Box 2021, Folder 12 American Council on Race Relations, 1948
Box 2021, Folder 13 American Council of Spanish Speaking People, 1951
Box 2021, Folder 14 Americans for Democratic Action, 1947-1967
Box 2021, Folder 15 American Flag Committee, 1952
Box 2021, Folder 16 Americans for Republican Action, 1951
Box 2021, Folder 17 Americans for Traditional Liberties, 1955
Box 2021, Folder 18 American Friends Service Committee, 1951-1957
Box 2021, Folder 19 American Foundation for Continuing Education, 1959
Box 2021, Folder 20 American Freedoms Council, 1959
Box 2021, Folder 21 American Heritage Foundation, 1949-1950
Box 2021, Folder 22 American Immigration Conference, 1954-1960
Box 2022, Folder 1-7 American Jewish Committee, 1950
Box 2023, Folder 1 American Jewish Congress, 1950-1964
Box 2023, Folder 2 ACLU, Attacks on, 1950
Box 2023, Folder 3 American Labor Party, 1951
Box 2023, Folder 4 American Library Association Committee on Intellectual Freedom, 1953
Box 2023, Folder 5 American Political Science Association, 1952
Box 2023, Folder 6 American Religious Town Hall Meetings, Inc., 1956
Box 2023, Folder 7 American Traditions Project, 1956-1957
Box 2023, Folder 8 American Veterans Committee, 1954
Box 2023, Folder 9 Amnesty International; Outside Organizations, 1964
Box 2023, Folder 10 Anti-Defamation League for B'Nai Brith, 1950-1963
Box 2023, Folder 11 Association on American Indian Affairs; LaFarge, Oliver, 1962
Box 2023, Folder 12 Articles General, 1955
Box 2023, Folder 13 Association for Voluntary Sterilization, 1965-1966
Box 2023, Folder 14 Aware, Inc., 1954,1956
Box 2023, Folder 15-16 Beacon Foundation, Inc. - Potomac Institute, 1962
Box 2023, Folder 17 Bill of Rights Fund - Lamont, 1954-1956
Box 2023, Folder 18 Bonfire, 1964
Box 2023, Folder 19 “Brainwashed into Slavery”, 1962
Box 2023, Folder 20 Bureau of Current Affairs, 1951
Box 2023, Folder 21 Carrie Chapman Catt Memorial Fund, Inc., 1954
Box 2024, Folder 1 Catholic Council on Civil Liberties, 1962
Box 2024, Folder 2 Center for Information on America, Barth, Alan., 1962
Box 2024, Folder 3 Central Committee for Conscientious Objectors; Reed, 1964
Box 2024, Folder 4 Citizens Committee on Displaced Persons, 1948-1950
Box 2024, Folder 5 Citizens Committee for the Hoover Report, 1950
Box 2024, Folder 6 Citizens' Council on Democratic Rights, 1950
Box 2024, Folder 7 Civil Liberties Defense and Education Fund, 1968
Box 2024, Folder 8 Civil Liberties Educational Foundation, Inc., 1960
Box 2024, Folder 9 Civil Liberties Educational Proposals, 1960-1962
Box 2024, Folder 10 “Civil Rights and Civil Liberties”; (article for encyclopedia), 1963
Box 2024, Folder 11 Civil Rights Congress, 1950
Box 2024, Folder 12 Collier's Yearbook, 1954-1955
Box 2024, Folder 13 Committee Against Jim Crow in Military Service and Training, 1950
Box 2024, Folder 14 Committee of 10, 1954
Box 2024, Folder 15 Committee to Celebrate the 90th Birthday of Dr. Harry F. Ward, 1963
Box 2024, Folder 16 Committee of Citizens Against the Feinberg Law, 1949
Box 2024, Folder 17 Committee on Civil Rights in East Manhattan, 1951
Box 2025, Folder 1 Committee on Community Projects, 1953
Box 2025, Folder 2 Committee on Educational Aid, 1947
Box 2025, Folder 3 Committee for Equality in Naturalization, 1947
Box 2025, Folder 4 Committee to Improve U.S. Immigration Law, 1952
Box 2025, Folder 5 Committee for Protection of Foreign Born, 1948
Box 2025, Folder 6 Committee of Racial Equality, 1948
Box 2025, Folder 7 Committee to Repeal McCarran Act, 1951
Box 2025, Folder 8 Common Council for American Unity, 1949
Box 2025, Folder 9 Congress on Racial Equality (CORE), 1964
Box 2025, Folder 10 Constitutional Rights Foundation, 1964
Box 2025, Folder 11 Coordinating Committee on President's Civil Rights Program, 1948
Box 2025, Folder 12 Cooperating Council for Democracy, 1948
Box 2025, Folder 13 Council of Americans Resident Abroad, 1955
Box 2025, Folder 14 Council for Democracy, 1947
Box 2025, Folder 15 Council on Human Relations for Texas, 1950
Box 2025, Folder 16 Council on Human Rights (Zanesville, Ohio), 1950
Box 2025, Folder 17 Council of National Organizations, 1952-1964
Box 2025, Folder 18-19 Crusade for Freedom, 1950
Box 2025, Folder 20 Democratic Organizing Committee of Wisconsin, 1951
Box 2025, Folder 21 Emergency Civil Liberties Committee, 1951
Box 2026, Folder 1 Ernst (Morris L.); Speech: “Free Speech and Civil Disobedience”, 1964
Box 2026, Folder 2 Facts Forum Outside Organizations, 1954-1955
Box 2026, Folder 3-4 Fair Campaign Practices Committee, Inc., 1956
Box 2026, Folder 5 Fair TV Practices Committee, 1952
Box 2026, Folder 6 Federal Bar Association, 1968
Box 2026, Folder 7 Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America, 1946
Box 2026, Folder 8 Federation for Repeal of Levering Act, 1951
Box 2026, Folder 9 Fellowship of Reconciliation, 1947-1965
Box 2026, Folder 10 Film Reviews on Civil Liberty Issues, 1950
Box 2026, Folder 11 Flynn (Elizabeth Gurley) Defense Committee, 1952
Box 2026, Folder 12 Ford Foundation, 1956
Box 2027, Folder 1 Freedom Agenda Program, 1955
Box 2027, Folder 2 Freedom of Information Center. Paul L. Fisher; Harold Barnstein, 1963
Box 2027, Folder 3 Friends Committee on National Legislation, 1952-1957
Box 2027, Folder 4 Friends of Democracy, 1948
Box 2027, Folder 5 Fund for Adult Education, 1955
Box 2027, Folder 6 Fund for the Republic, 1953
Box 2027, Folder 7 Funk and Wagnall's Yearbook, 1963
Box 2027, Folder 8 Glenn, Elmer; “Nebraska Plan” for Racial Integration, 1964
Box 2027, Folder 9 “Greenwich Continuation Committee”; American Jewish Committee, 1964
Box 2027, Folder 10 Grolier, Inc. Encyclopedia Article, 1962
Box 2027, Folder 11 Group Research Inc. Fred Schwarz, 1962
Box 2027, Folder 12 Herndon (Booton) Book on ACLU (proposed), 1960-1961
Box 2027, Folder 13 Highlander Folk School, 1953
Box 2027, Folder 14 Hillman (Sidney) Foundation, 1956
Box 2027, Folder 15 HOPE (Help Organize Peace Everywhere), 1951
Box 2027, Folder 16 India League of America, 1951
Box 2027, Folder 17 International Committee of Jurists
Box 2027, Folder 18 International League for the Right of Man; R. Baldwin, 1964
Box 2027, Folder 19 International Rescue Committee, 1949
Box 2027, Folder 20 Japanese American Citizens League, 1948
Box 2027, Folder 21 Jewish Community Relations Council, 1950
Box 2027, Folder 22 Jewish Labor Committee, 1957
Box 2027, Folder 23 Joint Committee on Civil Rights, 1949
Box 2027, Folder 24 Joint Conference on Alien Legislation, 1951
Box 2027, Folder 25 Junior Americans, 1951
Box 2028, Folder 1 Kansas Clearing House on Civil Rights, 1951
Box 2028, Folder 2 Kutcher Civil Rights Committee, 1956
Box 2028, Folder 3 Law Students Civil Rights Research Council, 1964
Box 2028, Folder 4 Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, 1953
Box 2028, Folder 5 League for Industrial Democracy, 1951
Box 2028, Folder 6 League of Women Voters, 1949
Box 2028, Folder 7 Look, 1962
Box 2028, Folder 8 Maryland Committee for Democratic Rights, 1962
Box 2028, Folder 9 Mayor's Interracial Committee (Detroit), 1950
Box 2028, Folder 10 Meiklejohn Civil Liberties Library; Berkeley, CA, 1965
Box 2028, Folder 11 Metropolitan New York Coordinating Council for Educational TV, 1950
Box 2028, Folder 12 Minnesota Human and Civil Rights Association, 1950
Box 2028, Folder 13 Mobilization for Youth, 1964
Box 2028, Folder 14 Morse, Senator Wayne; Reprints of speech on wiretapping, 1954
Box 2028, Folder 15 Nation, 1963
Box 2028, Folder 16 National Assembly on Teaching the Principles of the Bill of Rights, 1963
Box 2028, Folder 17 National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), 1949
Box 2028, Folder 18 National Association for Calling a U.S. Constitutional Convention, 1951
Box 2028, Folder 19 National Association of Defense Lawyers in Criminal Cases, 1962
Box 2028, Folder 20 National Association of Intergroup Relations Officials, 1951
Box 2029, Folder 1 National Association of Mental Health, Inc., 1952
Box 2029, Folder 2 National Association of Mexican-Americans, 1949
Box 2029, Folder 3 National Audience Board, 1956
Box 2029, Folder 4 National Citizens' Commission on International Cooperation, 1965
Box 2029, Folder 5 National Citizens Conference on Civil Liberties, 1948
Box 2029, Folder 6 National Citizens Council on Civil Rights, 1948
Box 2029, Folder 7 National Civil Liberties Clearing House, 1952
Box 2029, Folder 8 National Civil Service League, 1954-1959
Box 2029, Folder 9 National Committee against Discrimination in Housing, 1954
Box 2030, Folder 1 National Committee for an Adequate Overseas U.S. Information Program, 1955
Box 2030, Folder 2 National Committee to Defeat the Mundt Bill, 1949
Box 2030, Folder 3 National Committee for an Effective Congress, 1952
Box 2030, Folder 4 National Committee to Repeal the McCarran Act, 1951
Box 2030, Folder 5 National Committee for Rural Schools, Inc., 1962
Box 2030, Folder 6 National Committee on Segregation in the Nation's Capitol. Inc., 1949
Box 2030, Folder 7 National Committee to Abolish the Poll Tax, 1947
Box 2030, Folder 8 National Committee to Win Amnesty for the Smith Act Victims, 1953
Box 2030, Folder 9 National Community Relations Advisory Council, 1954-1962
Box 2030, Folder 10-12 National Conference against Discrimination in Housing, 1955
Box 2030, Folder 13 National Council against Conscription, 1951
Box 2030, Folder 14 National Council for a Permanent FEPC, 1951
Box 2030, Folder 15 National Council of Jewish Women, 1953
Box 2030, Folder 16 National Council of Teachers of English “The Right to Read”, 1962
Box 2030, Folder 17 National Council on Crime and Delinquency, 1965
Box 2030, Folder 18 National Education Association, 1962
Box 2030, Folder 19 National Farm Labor Union, 1949
Box 2030, Folder 20 National Issues Committee, 1953
Box 2030, Folder 21 National Lawyers Guild, 1947
Box 2031, Folder 1 National Municipal League, 1965
Box 2031, Folder 2 National Rifle Association, 1949
Box 2031, Folder 3 National Sharecroppers Fund, 1957
Box 2031, Folder 4 National Social Welfare Assembly, 1965
Box 2031, Folder 5 National Student Association, 1963
Box 2031, Folder 6 New Leader Article by Upton Sinclair, 1954
Box 2031, Folder 7 New Masses, 1947
Box 2031, Folder 8 Newsweek Club Bureau, 1950
Box 2031, Folder 9 New York State Committee Against Discrimination in Housing, 1950
Box 2031, Folder 10 New York Teachers Guild, 1950
Box 2031, Folder 11 New York Times, 1963
Box 2031, Folder 12 One World Award Committee, 1949
Box 2031, Folder 13 Pacifica Foundation, 1963
Box 2031, Folder 14 Pageant Magazine - Article on Security Risks, 1953-1954
Box 2031, Folder 15 Pan American Anti-Communist Association, 1957
Box 2031, Folder 16 Pemberton, John de J., 1968
Box 2031, Folder 17 People's Lobby, 1947
Box 2031, Folder 18 Philadelphia Bulletin Forum, 1953
Box 2031, Folder 19 Philadelphia Fellowship Committee, 1949
Box 2031, Folder 20 Post War World Council, 1954
Box 2031, Folder 21 Progressive, 1962
Box 2031, Folder 22 Progressive Citizens of America, 1947
Box 2031, Folder 23 Promoting Enduring Peace, Inc., 1955
Box 2031, Folder 24 Protestants and other Americans United, 1964
Box 2031, Folder 25 PTA (Parents Teachers Association) Magazine, 1963
Box 2031, Folder 26 Public Affairs Committee, 1964
Box 2031, Folder 27 Right Wing Publications; “None May Call It Treason”, 1964
Box 2031, Folder 28 Ross Memorial Fund, 1962
Box 2031, Folder 29 Schreiber (Flora R.): Proposed Article on Internal Union Democracy, 1958
Box 2031, Folder 30 Social Action Committee - Community Church of New York, 1953
Box 2031, Folder 31 Socialist Labor Party, 1962
Box 2031, Folder 32 Southern Regional Council, 1958
Box 2031, Folder 33 Student League for Industrial Democracy, 1957
Box 2031, Folder 34 Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), 1962
Box 2032, Folder 1 Textile Workers Union of America, 1962
Box 2032, Folder 2 True Magazine, 1960-1961
Box 2032, Folder 3 Ultra-Right Organizations by Alan Reitman, 1962
Box 2032, Folder 4 Union Democracy in Action, 1962
Box 2032, Folder 5 Union for Democratic Action, 1947
Box 2032, Folder 6 United Service for New Americans, 1947
Box 2032, Folder 7 United States Commission on Civil Rights, 1965
Box 2032, Folder 8 U.S. National Student Association, 1949
Box 2032, Folder 9 Veterans Civil Liberties Committee, 1955
Box 2032, Folder 10 Washington Area Civil Liberties Research Center, 1959-1960
Box 2032, Folder 11 Washington Home Rule Committee, 1959
Box 2032, Folder 12 Washington Human Rights Project, 1964
Box 2032, Folder 13 Westchester Human Rights Committee, 1951
Box 2032, Folder 14 Westchester Peekskill Committee, 1950
Box 2032, Folder 15 Wirin's Proposed Article on “Smith Act Cases”, 1953
Box 2032, Folder 16 Wirt (Frederick M.) Proposed Magazine Article on Film Censorship, 1959
Box 2032, Folder 17 Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, 1955
Box 2032, Folder 18 Workers Defense League, 1948
Box 2032, Folder 19 Youth of All Nations, Inc., 1949
Box 2032, Folder 20 Y.W.C.A., 1951
Box 2032, Folder 21 Miscellaneous, 1947-1963
Box 2033, Folder 1-16 Miscellaneous, 1964-1968
Box 2034, Folder 1-5 Subseries 5D: Ephemera, 1958-1995
Subseries Description
This subseries consists of material suitable for display, such as bumper stickers, buttons, flyers, and other ephemeral materials related to Amnesty Project, the call for the impeachment of President Richard M. Nixon, the ACLU in general, and miscellaneous organizations and causes.
ACLU: General, 1988-1995
Box 2035, Folder 1 Amnesty, circa 1975
Box 2035, Folder 2 Nixon Impeachment Campaign, 1973-1974
Box 2035, Folder 3 Miscellaneous, 1958-1965
Box 2035, Folder 4
Permanent URL: http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/qb98mf46s