Discontinued American peace movements and peace groups
Abandonnées mouvement de la paix américain et des groupes pacifistes.
Suspendió el movimiento pacifista estadounidense y grupos de paz.
Aufgegebene amerikanischen Friedensbewegung und Friedensgruppen.
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Litteratur |
Burns, Grant: "A dream unfolding": A guide to selected journals,
magazines, and newsletters on peace, disarmament, and arms control,
1992.
Edwin E. Moise: Vietnam War Bibliography:Congressional Committee
Documentation: The Anti-War Movement.
http://www.clemson.edu/caah/history/facultypages/EdMoise/canti.html
Terp, Holger: Peace in
Print
Wisconsin in the Vietnam War: A Bibliography, compiled by Abigail
Miller
- Madison, Wisconsin: Wisconsin Veterans Museum Research Center,
2005 - 12 pp.
Terp, Holger: Goliath vs
David, 2010.
American peace directory, US Institute for Defense and
Disarmament Studies. Ballinger, 1984
American Peace Directory. Institute for Peace and Disarmament
Studies, Cambridge, MA, 1984
Glenn of Providence: A peace Directory, 1970
Grassroots Peace Directory, 1988
Grassroots peace directory: SANE-FREEZE inventory, 1987
Personnel Security Clearance Designation of Organizations in
Connection With the Federal Employee Security Program. Departments
of the Army and the Air Force. - Washington, D.C., 14 December
1966.
Susan J. McGuire: Iowa Peace Directory 1984, United Nations
Association of Iowa, 1984
L.A. peace directory: a guide to peace groups in Los Angeles and
Orange Counties, 1984
North American Peace Directory
The Music and Protest of the Vietnam War.
-
http://www.archive.org/details/TheMusicAndProtestOfTheVietnamWar
Alternative Information Network: A conversation with Dr. Spock,
1982.
-
http://www.archive.org/details/AV_168-A_CONVERSATION_WITH_DR._SPOCK
Fox Butterfield: Professional groups flocking to antinuclear
drive. The New York Times, March 27, 1982.
Supplementary Detailed Staff Reports on Intelligence Activities and
the Rights of Americans Book III. Final Report of the Select
Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to
Intelligence Activities United States Senate April 23 (under
authority of the order of April 14), 1976.
Subcommittee on Constitutional Rights, Committee on the Judiciary,
United States Senate: Army Surveillance of Civilians: A Documentary
Analysis. 1972, 92d Congress, 2d session, 1972.
Nassau Prosecutor Says Peace Sign
Violates NY Law, Threatens Arrest. In: Civil Liberties,
no 267, 1970 p. 8.
Book of the fourth American peace congress : St. Louis, May 1, 2,
3, 1913.
- http://www.archive.org/details/bookoffourthamer00amerrich
Hickok, Laurens P., Rev.: An Address before the Connecticut Peace
Society; delivered at their second anniversary...
Sunday evening, May 5, 1833... - Hartford: Printed by Philemon
Canfield, 1833, 40pp.
Constitution of the Connecticut peace society. [n. p. 1831].
Great Speckled Bird - Underground Magazine
-
http://digitalcollections.library.gsu.edu/cdm/landingpage/collection/GSB
The Great Speckled Bird was one of several underground newspapers
that appeared in the United States in the 1960s. Published in
Atlanta from 1968 to 1976, The Bird, as it was commonly known,
stood out among the alternative press for the quality of its
writing, its cover art and its fearless opinions and reporting on a
range of topics—national and local politics, the
counterculture, women’s issues, gay liberation, reproductive
choice, music, art…The Bird was a new, radical voice from
the South.
Great Speckled Memories: Back when The Bird Really Was the Word
(UPDATE 1) . / : Jonathan springston. Atlanta Progressive News, May
9, 2006.
-
http://atlantaprogressivenews.com/2006/05/09/great-speckled-memories-back-when-the-bird-really-was-
the-word-update-1/
'The Bird had a habit of criticizing the local establishment, be it
the police who harassed local hippies and Bird vendors, real estate
developers, or City Hall, especially then-Mayor of Atlanta Sam
Massell.
The 1972 Office Firebombing
In May 1972, an unknown assailant(s) firebombed The Bird office at
240 Westminster Drive in the middle of the night. Most of the house
was destroyed along with back issues of the paper and other
artifacts. A police report was filed but no arrest was ever made in
connection with the crime. Most Atlanta residents denounced the
attack.'