Series 1, Board of Directors, 1950-1961, contains four subseries: Minutes, Working Papers, Committees, and Individual Correspondence. Each subseries reveals the formulation of the Fund's programs and policies, and the enormous variety of issues the board considered over the years.
No arrangement action taken or arrangement information not recorded at the time of processing.
Working Papers, 1952-1953 August
Working Papers, 1955 March-1955 November
Working Papers, 1955 November-1956 May
Working Papers, 1956 June-1957 February
Working Papers, 1957 March-1957 October
Working Papers, 1957 November-1958 May
Working Papers, 1958 June-1960 April
Working Papers, 1960 May-1961 October
Working Papers, 1961 November-December
Clippings, 1953-1961
Awards Committee, 1955
Investment Committee, 1957-1960
Planning Committee, 1952-1953
Attendance, 1952-1955
Candidates For the Board, 1951-1956
General Board Material, 1952-1959
Ashmore, Harry S, 1954-1959
Bryan, Malcolm, 1952-1953
Brownlee, James F, 1952-1955
Bowles, Chester, 1954-1958
Cairns, Huntington, 1952-1953
Case, Clifford, 1953-1955
Catton, Bruce, 1956-1959
Cole, Charles, 1952-1961
Dean, Arthur, 1954-1955
Dearmont, Russell, 1952-1959
Elliott, John C, 1959-1961
Finnegan, Richard J, 1952-1958
Goldberg, Arthur J, 1957-1960
Griswold, Erwin N, 1952-1958
Hammerstein, Oscar, II, 1956-1961
Hoffman, Paul G, 1952-1961
Hoffman, Paul G: Speeches, 1952-1959
Hoffman, Paul G: Itineraries, 1953-1956
Joyce, William H., Jr, 1952-1960
Kestnbaum, Meyer, 1952-1960
Lally, Francis J, 1957-1961
Lapham, Roger, 1955-1958
Lehman, Herbert E, 1956-1961
Lehman, Herbert E.: Speeches, 1956-1959
Linton, M. Albert, 1952-1961
Marshall, J. Howard, 1956-1961
O'Brian, John Lord, 1953-1957
Parten, Jubal R, 1952-1961
Patterson, Alicia, 1956-1961
Roper, Elmo, 1952-1961
Roper, Elmo: Speeches, 1950-1960
Schweitzer, Louis, 1959-1961
Sherwood, Robert E, 1954-1956
Shuster, George N, 1952-1961
Stevenson, Eleanor B, 1952-1961
Van Dusen, Henry P, 1957-1961
Zellerbach, James D, 1952-1956
Series 2, Administration, 1928-1963
Series 2, Administration, 1928-1963 [bulk 1951-1961], is divided into three subseries: Correspondence, Congressional Investigations, and Financial and Annual Reports. This series details the inner-workings of the Fund and illuminates the strong characters of its staff. Often referred to as officers, the Fund's small staff was active in every aspect of its administration. Their respect for each other and their work is apparent through the documents contained within this series. Throughout the series, correspondence and memoranda from various Fund staff members, including Robert M. Hutchins, Clifford Case, W.H. Ferry, David F. Freeman, Frank K. Kelly, Edward Reed, Joseph P. Lyford, Hallock Hoffman, Frank S. Loescher, Adam Yarmolinsky, Paul Jacobs, John Cogley and Walter Millis, can be found.
No arrangement action taken or arrangement information not recorded at the time of processing.
Aa-American F, 1956-1961
American J-Ash, 1955-1961
Asso-Az, 1956-1961
Adler, Mortimer, 1959-1961
Allen, Steven, 1960-1961
American Legion, 1954-1959
Andy's Mailing Service, 1961
Annual Report: Memoranda, 1954-1961
Annual Report: Two Year Report, 1958
Annual Report: Two Year Report, 1957
Aron, Raymond, 1959-1960
Ashmore, Harry S, 1955-1961
Athens Conference: Speeches, 1961
Audiobooks, Co, 1955-1957
Auerbach, Carl A, 1959-1960
Bab-Baz, 1955-1961
Bea-Ben, 1956-1961
Ber-Bis, 1953-1961
Bla-Bok, 1957-1961
Bol-Boy, 1953-1961
Bra-Brom, 1958-1961
Bron-Bry, 1956-1961
Bu-Bye, 1957-1961
Barkin, Solomon, 1961
Benton, William, 1956 October-1961
Benton, William, 1951-1956 September
Berle, Adolf A., Jr, 1959-1961
Bernard, Herbert, 1955-1957
Brady, James T, 1959-1961
Brown, Harrison, 1959-1961
Buchanan, Scott, 1961
Burdick, Eugene, 1959-1961
Cag-Cap, 1956-1961
Car-Cek, 1959-1961
Cek-Cha, 1959-1961
Che-Cla, 1957-1961
Cle-Col, 1958-1961
Com-Commi, 1955-1961
Commu-Coo, 1957-1960
Cop-Cut, 1957-1961
Calendars, 1960-1961
Cameron, Angus, 1960-1961
Candidates for President, 1953
Carmichael, D.D., 1960-1961
Carter, Arimistead B, 1959-1961
Case, Clifford, 1953
Chernoff, Howard L, 1954-1959
Chronological Copies, 1954
Coblentz, William, 1953-1956
Cogley, John, 1958-1961
Cogley, John, 1955-1957
Complementary Letters, 1960-1961
Consultants, 1954-1955
Countryman, Vern, undated
Cushman, Robert E, 1954-1957
Da-Dea, 1957-1961
Deb-Don, 1957-1961
Dor-Dy, 1957-1961
Davis, Elmer, 1954-1958
Discussion Notes, 1961
Douglas, William O, 1960-1961
Drake Debacle, 1960
Ea-Eh, 1956-1961
En-Ev, 1955-1961
Eaton, Cyrus S, 1958-1959
Editors' Advisory Committee, 1956
Employee Benefits, 1959-1961
Encyclopedia Britannica, 1948-1959
Evan, William M, 1961
Exchange Visitor Program, 1961
Fa-Fau, 1956-1957
Fe-Fla, 1955-1961
Fle-Fo, 1953-1961
Fr-Fu, 1958-1961
Facci, Joseph, 1959-1961
Ferry, W.H., 1954-1961
Ferry, W.H.: Speeches, 1960-1962
Fitzgerald, Stephen E, 1959-1960
Forms, 1953-1954
Fowler, Albert, 1950-1955
Freeman, David F, 1954-1959
Fundraising, 1959-1960
Fundraising: Proposals, 1961
Gab-Gaz, 1955-1961
Gea-Git, 1956-1961
Gla-Goy, 1959-1961
Gra-Gre, 1959-1961
Gri-Gwy, 1959-1961
Galbraith, John K, 1959-1961
Goldman, Eric F, 1959-1961
Goldstein, Joseph, 1953
Gordis, Robert, 1959-1961
Gorman, William, 1959-1961
Governmental Affairs Institute, 1961
Grant to the Fund, 1953-1960
Greenfield, Albert M, 1959-1960
Hab-Han, 1957-1961
Har-Haz, 1957-1961
Hea-Herm, 1954-1961
Hern-Hir, 1954-1961
Hoa-Hop, 1958-1961
Hur- Hym, 1958-1961
Hanna, Sam C, 1960
Harbrecht, Paul P, 1959-1961
Haussaman, Crane, 1959-1961
Hennings Committee, 1957
Hodgins, Eric, 1953-1954
Hoffman, Hallock, 1954-1961
Hoffman, Hallock: Speeches, 1961
Holiday Magazine, 1961
Hunt, Herold, 1954
Hutchins, Robert M, 1955 November-1961
I, 1952-1961
Insurance Claims, 1960
Internal Revenue Service, 1959-1961
Inter-Office Memoranda, 1953-1958 March
Ja-Je, 1954-1961
Ji-Jy, 1957-1961
Jacobs, Paul, 1955-1961
Ka-Ke, 1956-1961
Kh-Kop, 1953-1961
Kor-Ky, 1956-1961
Kelly, Frank K, 1955-1961
Kelly, Frank K.: FCC Testimony, 1960
Kelly, Frank K.: Speeches, 1960-1961
Kerr, Clark, 1960-1961
Ketcham, Orm W, 1952-1954
Kronstein, Heinrich, 1961
La-Lem, 1956-1961
Len-Lin, 1957-1961
Lip-Los, 1954-1961
Lot-Ly, 1958-1961
Landman, Amos, 1955-1956
Legacy of American Liberty, 1953
Limitation of Diversity, undated
Living Constitution, 1960-1961
Loescher, Frank S, 1955-1961
Loescher, Frank S, 1951-1954
Luce, Henry R, 1959-1961
Lyford, Joseph P, 1957-1961
Mac-Mar, 1949-1961
Mas-Maz, 1953-1961
McA-McW, 1957-1961
Mea-Mic, 1953-1961
Mid-Mil, 1958-1961
Min-Moo, 1954-1961
Mor, 1957-1961
Mos-Myr, 1953-1961
McCarthy, Joseph R, 1953-1955
McGrady, Patrick, Jr, 1959-1960
McKeon, Richard, 1960-1961
Marshall, Charles B, 1954-1958
May, Dickinson, 1955-1956
Mayer, Milton, 1954-1956
Meskus, Winifred G, 1953-1955
Michael, Donald N, 1960
Miller, Arthur S, 1959-1961
Miller, William Lee, 1959-1961
Millis, Walter, 1959-1961
Modern Forum, 1961-1963
Modern Forum: Memoranda, 1960-1962
Modern Forum: Speeches, 1960-1961
Moskowitz, Irwin, 1960
Mumford, Lewis, 1961
Murray, John Courtney, 1959-1961
Nad-Nat, 1956-1961
Nav-Not, 1956-1961
Nug-Nuv, 1958-1961
Neal, Fred Warner, 1961
Nef, John, 1961
Niebuhr, Reinhold, 1959-1961
Norwood, W.F., 1960
Nut File, 1961
Office Administration, 1959-1961
Office Administration: Fire, 1960
Ogden, Archibald, 1955-1957
On the Beach, 1959-1960
Reports, 1955-1956
Overton, George, 1954-1955
Pac-Per, 1956-1961
Pet-Pol, 1957-1961
Pom-Put, 1955-1961
Permission File, 1959-1961
Personnel, 1953-1956
Piel, Gerard, 1959-1961
Programs and Policies, 1951-1954
Projects: Progress Report, 1956
Q, 1959-1961
Raa-Rep, 1956-1961
Rep-Rob, 1957-1961
Roc-Rot, 1955-1961
Rov-Ryp, 1958-1961
Real, James, 1959-1961
Reed, Edward, 1954-1961
Reichley, James, 1959-1961
Research Director: Candidates, 1953
Rollman, Heinz, 1952-1961
Rossiter, Clinton, 1959-1961
Ruff, Carl, 1953-1961
Russian Scientists, 1961
Sad- Sco, 1957-1961
Scu-Sey, 1956-1961
Sha-Slo, 1955-1961
Sma-Sou, 1953-1961
Spa-Sta, 1952-1961
Ste-Sto, 1952-1961
Str-Stu, 1951-1961
Sul-Szi, 1951-1961
Santa Barbara News Press, 1959-1961
Shane, Joseph D, 1959-1961
Skinner, B.F., 1960
Stork, Thomas M, 1961
Stover, Carl F, 1960-1961
Speeches (Miscellaneous), 1953-1959
Tab-Taw, 1959-1961
Tea-Tho, 1956-1961
Tid-Tyn, 1953-1961
Tugwell, Rexford G, 1961
U, 1957-1961
V, 1953-1961
Veblen, Paul, 1959-1961
Visitors, 1959-1960
Wac-Wak, 1958-1961
Wal-War, 1953-1961
Was-Wei, 1951-1961
Wel-Why, 1954-1961
Wie-Wil, 1948-1961
Wim-Work, 1951-1961
World-Wy, 1957-1961
Wack, John deBlois, 1960-1961
Wain, Philip, 1959-1961
Wang, Arthur, 1958-1961
Warne, Clore, 1959-1961
Webster, Bethuel, 1953-1961
Weekly Reports, 1953 July
Wheeler, J. Harvey, 1959-1961 July
Wofford, Harris, 1959-1961
Woodyatt, Philip, 1954-1958
X-Y, 1951-1961
Yarmolinsky, Adam, 1955-1961
Z, 1951-1961
Financial Correspondence, 1956-1957
Financial Statements, 1952-1958
Report of the President, 1958-1962
Two Year Report, 1958
Three Year Review, 1956
Series 3, Grants, 1940-1965
Series 3, Grants, 1940-1961 [bulk 1952-1959], is divided into three subseries: Grants Approved, Grant Awards, and Grants Rejected. Each subseries is arranged alphabetically by organization. From the outset the Fund realized that in order to advance its civil rights and civil liberties agenda, it needed to financially aid existing organizations already working within those areas. The Fund sought to assist organizations who were educating people about their civil rights and the precarious state of those rights at that time. The Fund believed these organizations were the most qualified to obtain the facts and their interpretation of the facts would merit the attention of the public.
No arrangement action taken or arrangement information not recorded at the time of processing.
American Bar Association, 1951-1958
American Friends Service Committee: Central Committee for Conscientious Objectors, 1956-1959
American Friends Service Committee: Central Committee for Conscientious Objectors, 1954-1955
American Heritage Council, 1954-1957
AMVETS: Proposal, 1957
Bar Association of St. Louis, 1956
Chicago Urban League, 1959
Chicago Urban League, 1959
Cornell University, 1953-1957
Disciples of Christ, 1956
Editorial Competition, 1953-1955
Fellowship of Reconciliation, 1954-1958
Freedom House, 1957-1958
Institute of Social Order, 1955-1957
NAIRO, 1949-1956
National Book Committee, 1954-1961
Schools: Grant Proposal, 1954
National Urban League, 1947-1958
New York Public Library, 1953-1959
Protestant Episcopal Church, 1956
Public Education Association, 1955
Religious Drawings: Hamm, Jack, 1956
Sarah Lawrence College, 1955-1959
Stanford Law Review, 1955-1956
Toledo Bar Association, 1955
United Church Women, 1956-1959
Vanderbilt University, 1954-1959
Series 4, Fellowships and Grants-in-Aid Program, 1953-1962, contains proposals, copies of the Fund's approval letter, and almost always a copy of the final report. What falls in between are progress reports, correspondences, and more often than not requests for more money.
No arrangement action taken or arrangement information not recorded at the time of processing.
General, 1954-1957
Aaron, Ben, 1955-1959
Becker, William, 1955-1960
Bontecou, Eleanor, 1954-1957
Bradbury, William, 1955-1959
Caughey, John, 1955-1956
Dabbs, James, 1956
Fellman, David, 1954-1958
Fickett, Lewis, Jr, 1955-1956
Fleischman, Harry, 1956-1959
Fox, James, 1956-1957
Galarza, Ernesto, 1955-1959
Galarza, Ernesto: Report, 1956
Gellhorn, Walter, 1955-1956
Gorman, William, 1956-1958
Grant, J.A.C., 1955-1958
Greenberg, Jack, 1956-1959
Grodzins, Morton, 1954-1955
Guzman, Ralph, 1955-1957
Helfeld, David, 1954-1956
Herling, John, 1955-1956
Horvitz, Ellis J, 1955-1957
Hyman, Harold, 1953-1957
Jahoda, Marie, 1956
Kellogg, Charles, 1955-1957
Kirschenbaum, Rabbi A, 1956-1957
Konvitz, Milton, 1955-1956
Lee, J. Oscar, 1956
Levy, Herbert, 1955-1962 October
Levy, Herbert: Typescript, 1962
Leflar, Robert A, 1955-1957
Longaker, Richard, 1958 May-1959
Longaker, Richard, 1957-1958 January
Loth, David, 1954-1957
Loth, Fleming, 1956
McClellan, Graydon, 1956-1957
McMillan, George, 1955-1957
Miller, Arthur S, 1955-1956
Muller, Herbert, 1956-1959
Muravchik, Emanuel, 1956-1957
Nimmer, Melville, 1956-1958
Norton, Clark, 1955
Parks, Wallace, 1956-1957
Peck, James, 1955-1956
Rogow, Arnold, 1955-1958
Rosenblum, Victor, 1954-1957
Rosenthal, Albert, 1956-1958
Rostow, Eugene, 1955-1957
Rourke, Francis, 1955-1956
Sanders, Edwin, 1955
Selznick, Philip, 1955-1957
Shils, Edward, 1954-1956
Siepmann, Charles, 1955-1959
Smith, James, 1955-1957
Spitz, David, 1955-1958
Watts, Roland: Final Draft, 1955
Watts, Roland, 1954-1956
Winslow, Walker, 1956-1957
Series 5, Public Relations, 1952-1961, has been arranged into four subseries: Correspondence, Press Releases, Radio Reports, and Clippings. This series chronicles the Fund's public relations difficulties and the steps it took to procure a better public image. The Fund was put on the defensive from the outset. Hutchins and Ferry, who were responsible for the Fund's early public relations program, lacked finesse in explaining the Fund's purpose. Their brusque manner alienated critics, further widening the chasm of misunderstanding.
No arrangement action taken or arrangement information not recorded at the time of processing.
General Correspondence, 1956 June-1958
General Correspondence, 1953-1956 May
American Legion Attack, 1955
Engel Program Proposal, 1955-1956
Fact Sheets, 1956-1958
Hoffman, Paul G, 1956
Letters of Criticism, 1955-1958
Letters of Support, 1955-1957
Meet the Press with Hutchins, 1955
Miscellaneous, 1953
Progress Reports, 1955
Public Relations Program, 1955
Real, James F, 1955-1956
Stephen Fitzgerald & Company, 1955-1959
Thompson, Dorothy, 1953
Series 6, Projects, 1939-1964
Series 6, Projects, 1939-1964 [bulk 1953-1959], is arranged by topic and alphabetically thereunder. The topics were devised by the Fund's officers and include: Academic Freedom, American Traditions, Blacklisting, Censorship, Civil Liberties, Distribution Project, Due Process, Educational Activities, Extremist Groups, Immigration, Inter-Group Relations, Internal Communist Menace, Loyalty-Security, Mass Media, and Trade Unions. The results of each project were produced in various forms including reports, handbooks, articles, print and television media, and books. The end product is usually included within the folders, as well as correspondence, memoranda, articles, clippings, proposals, project outlines, progress reports, scripts, press releases, invitations, and statistics.
No arrangement action taken or arrangement information not recorded at the time of processing.
American Traditions, 1956-1959
American Traditions: Cases, 1957
American Traditions: Pamphlets, 1957
Distribution Project: American Book Publishers Council Inc., Censorship Bulletin, 1955-1957
Distribution Project: Commager, Henry Steele, "Tom Paine Talks Back to Providence", 1955-1957
Distribution Project: Department of Defense, Industrial Personnel Security Review Program, 1956-1957
Distribution Project: Frost, Robert, Address to Graduating Class of Sarah Lawrence College, 1956
Distribution Project: Hill, Herbert and Jack Greenberg, Citizen's Guide to Desegregation, 1956
Distribution Project: Hofstadter & Metzger, The Development of Academic Freedom in the U.S., 1956
Distribution Project: Kenealy, William J., "The Legal Profession and Segregation", 1956-1957
Distribution Project: Medina, Harold R., Speech before the Sons of the American Revolution, 1957
Distribution Project: President's Committee on Government Contracts, "Commencement", 1955-1956
Distribution Project: Rejects, 1956
Distribution Project: Rejects, 1955
Distribution Project: Rejects— Fordham, Jefferson B., "A Larger Concept of Community", 1955-1956
Distribution Project: Rejects— Lee, Alfred McClung, "Fraternities Without Brotherhood", 1951
Distribution Project: Wilner, Walkley and Cook, Human Relations in International Housing, 1956
Extremist Groups: Study of Extremist Groups, Extremist Organizations in Contemporary America, 1954
Extremist Groups: Study of Extremist Groups, Extremist Organizations in Contemporary America, 1954
Extremist Groups: UNESCO, 1955-1956
Inter-Group Relations Education: Commission on Race and Housing, Committee Members, circa 1956
Inter-Group Relations Education: Commission on Race and Housing, Conclusions of Study, 1958
Inter-Group Relations Education: Commission on Race and Housing, Mortgage Financing, undated
Inter-Group Relations Education: Commission on Race and Housing, Final Report, Chapters 9-10, 1957
Inter-Group Relations Education: Commission on Race and Housing, Interim Research Report No. 3, 1956
Internal Communist Menace: Study of Communist Influence in the U.S., Frantz, Laurent B, 1954-1957
Loyalty-Security: General, 1947-1957
Loyalty-Security: Special Committee on the Federal Loyalty-Security Program, Clippings, 1956
Mass Media: TV Projects—Robert E. Sherwood Awards, Reports on Nominations by Screeners, 1956
Mass Media: TV Projects—Television Script Competition, Announcements and Notifications, 1955
Series 7, Ideas, 1946-1959
Series 7, Ideas, 1947-1959 [bulk 1953-1957], closely parallels the project series and is arranged by similar topics. The series contains such items as: proposals, correspondence, memoranda, clippings, press releases, and reports. This material documents ideas for potential projects submitted to and originated by the Fund's officers or consultants. Albeit some of these ideas were presented to the Board, they were either dismissed by the Board, absorbed by other projects or reformulated.
No arrangement action taken or arrangement information not recorded at the time of processing.
Summaries of Ideas, 1953
Academic Freedom: General, 1951-1956
Academic Freedom: Beilan Case, 1955
Academic Freedom: Constitutional Liberties and Responsibilities Related to Teacher Education, 1954
Academic Freedom: Hill, Leslie, 1955
Awards: General, 1955-1956
Awards: Mount Dora, Florida, 1955
Awards: New Rochelle, 1953-1954
Awards: Reed College, 1955
Awards: School Integration, 1955
Censorship: Art, 1955-1958
Censorship: Blacklisting, 1956-1957
Censorship: Blacklisting, 1953-1955
Censorship: Chase, Stuart, 1953
Censorship: Dissent Program, 1954
Censorship: Kerr, Clark, 1953
Censorship: Libraries, 1955
Censorship: McKnight, Eugene, 1953
Censorship: O'Connor, Ray, 1954-1955
Censorship: Paterson, Donald, 1953
Censorship: Poynter, Nelson, 1953
Censorship: Smith, Malcolm, 1954
Censorship: Wilson, Mrs. E. L, 1953
Civil Liberties: General, 1954
Civil Liberties: Klein, Paul, 1953
Civil Liberties: Summer Planning Committee on the Legacy of American Liberty, Brooks, George, 1953
Civil Liberties: Summer Planning Committee on the Legacy of American Liberty, Chrisney, Judson, 1953
Civil Liberties: Summer Planning Committee on the Legacy of American Liberty, Forer, Lois, 1953-1954
Civil Liberties: Summer Planning Committee on the Legacy of American Liberty, Fund Papers, 1953
Civil Liberties: Summer Planning Committee on the Legacy of American Liberty, Harrison, Joseph, 1954
Civil Liberties: Summer Planning Committee on the Legacy of American Liberty, Mayer, Albert, 1954
Civil Liberties: Summer Planning Committee on the Legacy of American Liberty, Vincent, William, 1954
Due Process: General, 1953-1958
Due Process: Braden Case, 1954-1956
Due Process: Cary, Allan, 1955
Due Process: Case, Leonard L, 1953
Due Process: Colliers, 1955-1956
Due Process: Dennis, Eugene, 1955
Due Process: Loyola Law School, 1955
Due Process: Overton, George, 1954-1955
Due Process: Roberts, Abe, 1953-1956
Educational Activities: Hutchins, Robert M., American Society of Newspaper Editors` Speech, 1955
Educational Activities: Hutchins, Robert M., Commencement Address at Hunter College, 1957-1958
Immigration: General, 1954-1957
Immigration: Corsi, Edward, 1955
Inter-Group Relations Education: American University, Bureau of Social Science Research, 1952-1953
Inter-Group Relations Education: Institute for Urban Land Use and Housing Studies, 1954-1955
Mass Media: Coe, Fred, 1954
Mass Media: Edwards, Herbert T, 1954
Mass Media: Films, 1953-1957
Mass Media: Hume, Cyril, 1954-1955
Mass Media: Radio, 1953-1956
Mass Media: Roberts, Clete, 1954
Mass Media: Stagg, Jerry, 1954
Mass Media: State of Terror, 1956
Mass Media: TV Fund Program, 1956
Mass Media: TV, 1954-1959
Series 8, Basic Issues, 1924-1965
Series 8, Basic Issues, 1950-1964 [bulk 1956-1961], has been divided into eight subseries: Administration, Consultants's Meetings, Study of the Corporation, Study of the Trade Union, Study of Religious Institutions in a Democratic Society, Study of War and Democratic Institutions, Study of the Political Process, and Study of the Mass Media. The material is arranged alphabetically, with the exception of the Consultants's Meetings. However, the general administrative files for each of the studies precedes the alphabetical run.
No arrangement action taken or arrangement information not recorded at the time of processing.
General Correspondence, 1956-1961
Acton, Len, 1960
Adler Mortimer, 1957-1960
Africa, Thomas W, 1959-1960
Allen, Steve, 1960
American Freedom Seminars, 1958
Andrews, Donald Hatch, 1960
Ashmore, Harry S, 1960
Bay, Christian, 1959
Bazelon, David L, 1960
Beck, John F, 1960
Bell, Charles R, 1960
Benjamin, Robert, 1960
Benton, William, 1960
Berle, Adolf A., Jr, 1959-1960
Bledsoe, Thomas A, 1960
Boudin, Leonard B, 1960
Brown, Harrison, 1960-1961
Buchanan, Scott, 1957-1961
Calderone, Mary S, 1960
Cameron, Angus, 1960
Chase, Stuart, 1959-1960
Cleveland, Harlan, 1960
Cogley, John, 1959
Cosand, Joseph P, 1961
Cowen, Zelman, 1960
Coyle, David Cushman, 1960
Crane, John Alexie, 1960
Dahlberg, Edward, 1958
deJouvenel, Bertrand, 1958-1961
Diamond, Martin, 1958-1959
Douglas, William O, 1960-1961
Dozer, Donald, 1960
Eaton, Cyrus S, 1960
Eban, C, 1958
Eddy, Jane Lee, 1960
Ferry, W. H, 1959-1961
Fletcher, Allan L, 1958-1960
Foreman, Clark, 1960
Fuller, Lon L, 1959-1960
Gaudino, Robert L, 1957
Geiger, Henry, 1960
Goldman, Eric F, 1959
General Material, 1956-1959
Gorman, William, 1957-1959
Greenleaf, Charles H, 1958-1960
Hacke, James E., Jr, 1960
Harbrecht, Paul P, 1961
Haussamen, Crane, 1959-1960
Herman, Stanley M, 1959-1960
Himel, Irving, 1957-1958
Hoffman, Hallock, 1959-1961
Humphrey, Hubert H, 1960
Hurwitz, Stefan, 1960
Hutchins, Robert M, 1956-1960
Hutchins, Robert M.: Proposal, 1956
Huxley, Aldous, 1958
Invasions of the Mind, 1957-1958
Jacobs, Paul, 1961
Kemble, E. D, 1959-1960
Kennan, George, 1958
Klein, Jacob, circa 1960
Levy, Leonard, 1957-1958
Luce, Henry R, 1960
Malik, Charles, 1960
McClellan, David, 1960
Meyer, Heinrich, 1960
Michael, Donald N, 1961
Miller, Arthur S, 1960
Millis, Walter, 1958-1959
Miscellaneous, 1959-1960
Mishan, E. J, 1960
Monthly Reports, 1958-1960
Mordecai, Johnson, 1950
Moreland, Marc, 1960
Morse, Arthur D, 1960
Mumford, Lewis, 1960
Murray, John Courtney, 1959-1961
Neibuhr, Reinhold, 1960-1961
Nielsen, Waldemar A, 1960
Palyi, Melchior, 1960
Patterson, Charles J, 1960
Public Information Committee, 1957
Public Relations, 1957-1959
Quigley, Martin, 1959-1960
Rabi, I.I., 1957
Radio Station WBAI, 1958-1959
Real, James F, 1960-1961
Redfield, Robert, 1956-1959
Reorganization, 1956-1957
Reports, 1957-1959
Roche, John P, 1957-1958
Rogat, Yosal, 1960
Ruddock, A. B, 1959-1960
Rum, Beardsley, 1950-1951
Sheinbaum, Stanley, 1961
Shuster, George N, 1959-1960
Siepmann, Charles A, 1960
Smith, Henry Nash, 1958-1959
Snow, Sir Charles P, 1960
Stewart, Walter W, 1960
Stover, Carl, 1960-1961
Straus, Leo, 1960
Study of the Corporation, 1958
Sturz, Herbert, 1960
Swander, Homer D, 1960
Thompson, Kenneth W, 1960
Toulmin, Stephen, 1960
Wack, John deBlois, 1959-1960
Warburg, James P, 1959-1960
Way, Max, 1958
Wheeler, J. Harvey, 1959-1961
Williams, Franklin H, 1960
Wolcott, Helen, 1959-1960
Zimmerman, Carle C, 1959-1960
Meeting: January 30, 1957, 1957
Transcript, 1957 April 22-23
Meeting: June 10-12, 1957, 1957
Transcript, 1957 June 10-12
Meeting: September 8-13, 1957, 1957
Transcript, 1957 September 8-9
Transcript, 1957 September 10-13
Meeting: November 3-4, 1957, 1957
Transcript, 1957 November 3-4
Meeting: December 1-2, 1957, 1957
Transcript, 1957 December 1-2
Meeting: Adler, Mortimer, 1957
Transcript, 1958 January 26
Transcript, 1958 March 23
Transcript, 1958 April 27-28
Transcript, 1958 July 30-31
Transcript, 1958 August 1-3
Meeting: October 25-27, 1958, 1958
Transcript, 1958 October 25
Transcript, 1958 October 26-27
Meeting: January 18, 1959, 1958-1959
Transcript, 1959 January 18
Meeting: February 23, 1959, 1959
Meeting: March 15, 1959, 1959
Transcript, 1959 March 15
Transcript, 1959 April 26-27
Meeting: June 27-29, 1959, 1959
Transcript, 1959 June 27-29
Meeting: November 21-23, 1959, 1959
Transcript, 1959 November 21-23
Governor's Staff Meeting, 1959-1960
Meeting: August 1, 1960, 1960
Meeting: August 14-25, 1961, 1961
Series 8, Subseries 3, Study of the Corporation (The Individual and the Corporation), 1955-1962
A, 1957-1961
Abney, Fred S, 1959-1960
The Acton Society Trust, 1960
Advisors, 1959-1960
American Motors Corporation, 1958
Angell, Sir Norman, 1959-1960
Auerbach, Carl A, 1959-1960
B, 1957-1961
Babian, Haig, 1959-1960
Bailey, Stephen K, 1957-1958
Barnard, Chester I, 1959-1960
Bazelon, David T, 1959-1960
Bell, Daniel, 1959-1960
Bendiner, Robert, 1957
Benoit, Emile, 1961
Benswanger, William E, 1959-1960
Berle, Adolph A., Jr, 1957-1960
Berwick, Keith B, 1959-1960
Biedenkopf, Kurt H, 1961
Blair, John, 1959-1960
Bok, Bart I, 1961
Boulding, Kenneth E, 1958-1960
Boyden, Roland W, 1959-1960
Brookshire, Joseph, 1959-1960
Brown, Courtney C, 1957-1958
Brown, Harrison, 1959-1960
Brubeck, William, 1959-1960
Buchanan, Scott, 1957-1960
Buchanan, Scott: Seminar, 1958
Burns, Arthur F, 1957-1960
C, 1957-1961
Campbell, Sir Jock, 1957-1960
Canary, George A, 1959-1960
Chase, Stuart, 1958-1959
Chayes, Abraham, 1957-1961
Clark, John Bates, 1958
Committee of Advisors, 1958-1959
Coolidge, Charles A, 1960
Corning Conference, 1961
Cohen, Zelman, 1961
Cushman, Edward L, 1958
D, 1957-1961
Dale, Ernest, 1958
deCormis, Anna, 1957-1959
deCormis, Anna: Working Papers, 1959
deJouvenel, M. Bertrand, 1961
Dion, Gerard, 1959-1960
Dixon, Robert G., Jr, 1959-1960
Drucker, Peter F, 1959-1960
E, 1957-1961
E.I. Dupont de Nemours & Co, undated
Eban, Carmel Anne, 1958
Economic Club of New York, 1958
The Economist, 1960
Eells, Richard, 1958
Engler, Robert, 1959-1960
Evan, William M, 1959-1960
Evans, Luther D, 1961
F, 1961
Ferry, W.H., 1957-1961
Ferry, W.H.: Working Papers, 1959-1960
Finn, David, 1960
Foote, Nelson, 1957
Friedman, Julian R, 1960
G, 1961
Gabor, Dennis, 1959-1960
Galbraith, John K, 1957-1960
Garbutt, Gordon, 1959-1960
Gelber, Lionel, 1959-1960
Gellhorn, Walter, 1959-1961
Gervasi, Sean, 1961
Goldman, Eric F, 1957-1959
Gordon, Robert Aaron, 1960
Gosett, William T, 1959-1961
Goyder, George, 1961
Granick, David, 1960-1961
Grant, George P, 1960-1961
H, 1957-1961
Hacker, Andrew, 1957-1960
Hale, Robert, 1959
Handmacher, Alvin, 1959-1960
Hanslowe, Kurt, 1959-1960
Harbrecht, Paul P, 1958-1961
Harbrecht & McCallin: "The Corporation and the State in Anglo-American Law and Politics", 1959
Harrington, Alan, 1957-1960
Haussamen, Crane, 1959-1961
Hazard, Leland, 1958-1960
Heckscher, 1960 August
Heilbroner, Robert L, 1959-1960
Hertzler, John R, 1958
Homans, George C, 1957
Hosmer, Robert C, 1957-1960
J, 1957-1961
Jacobs, Paul, 1957-1961
Jones, Edgar A., Jr, 1956-1959
K, 1957-1961
Karr, David, 1959
Kagan, Sioma, 1960
Kastner, Harold, 1957
Kaufmann, Carl, 1957
Kayson, Carl, 1957-1960
Kefauver Committee, 1959-1961
Kelly, Frank, 1960
Kelson, Louis D, 1958-1962
Klaw, Spencer, 1957 -1960
Knopf, Inc, 1960-1961
Koerner, James D, circa 1959
Kornhauser, Arthur, 1959-1960
Kronstein, Heinrich, 1960-1961
Kronstein, Heinrich, 1959
Kuhre, Leland B, 1959-1960
L, 1957-1961
Latham, Earl, 1959-1960
Lawton, William C, 1958
Lebowitz, Leon, 1960
LeKachman, Robert, 1957-1960
Lenczowski, George, 1959-1960
Lerner, Daniel, 1959-1960
Lerner, William E, 1959-1960
Leslie, S.C., 1960-1961
Levitt, Theodore, 1958-1960
Lewis, Ben, 1959
Linton, M. Albert, 1957-1960
Littlejohn, Edward, 1958
Livermore, Charles, 1959
Livingston, J.A., 1958-1960
Loevinger, Lee, 1961
Lyford, Joseph P, 1961
M, 1957-1961
MacMahon, Arthur W, 1958
Manning, Bayless, 1958-1960
Marshall, Burke, 1958-1959
Marshall, J. Howard, 1958-1959
Mason, Edward S, 1958-1960
Maxwell, John F, 1959-1960
Mayer, Milton, 1959-1960
McGee, Patricia, 1958
McMillan, George, 1957
McNally, William J, 1961
McNamara, Robert S, 1959-1960
McWilliams, Carey, 1958-1961
Means, Gardiner C, 1957-1959
Meeting, 1961 March 16-17
Meeting, 1959 November 19
Meeting, 1958 January 17
Meeting, 1957 December 19
Meeting, 1957 October 29
Meeting, 1957 July 28-29
Meiklejohn, Alexander, 1959-1961
Melman, Seymour, 1961
Miller, Arthur S, 1959-1961
Miller, Arthur S, 1958
Miller, Eugene, 1959-1960
Miscellaneous Papers, 1957-1958
Mitchell, Maurice B, 1961
Monagan, John S, 1961
Morgenthau, Hans, 1958
Morrell, S.W., 1959-1960
N, 1957-1961
Neal, Fred Warner, 1961
Nemiah, Royal, 1960
Newmeyer Associates, 1959-1960
Northwestern University, 1958-1959
Norwood, Gus, 1960
Novick, David, 1959-1960
O, 1957-1961
Oelman, R.G., 1960-1961
Orr, Dudley W, 1957-1959
P, 1957-1961
Panofsky, Erwin, 1961
Parker, Peter, 1961
Piel, Gerard, 1957-1961
Pitzele, Merlin, 1958
Proposed Centers in Europe, 1961
Public Relations Journal, 1957-1958
R, 1957-1961
Randall, Clarence B, 1959
Reagan, Michael D, 1957-1961
Real, James, 1958-1959
Reports, 1957-1960
Romney, George S, 1960
Rondot, Jean M, 1959-1960
Roper, Elmo, 1957-1961
S, 1958-1961
Sancton, Thomas, 1959
Schackne, Stewart, 1959
Schwartz, Louis B, 1959
Schwartz, Murray L, 1959
Schwep, Charles, 1959
Science and Technology, 1960
Selznick, Phillip, 1960
Shepard, David, 1957-1958
Simon, H.A., 1960
Solow, Herbert, 1957
Steiner, George, 1961
Sternberg, Fritz, 1957-1958
Stover, Carl, 1959-1960
Structure of the Problem, 1957
T, 1957-1961
Taconic Foundation, 1959
Thatcher, Harold W, 1959
Theobald, Robert, 1961
Thorp, Willard L, 1959
Tilove, Robert, 1959
Tingsten, Herbert, 1961
Tyler, Gus, 1959-1960
U-V, 1957-1961
W-X-Y-Z, 1960-1961
Ward, John W, 1960-1961
Warne, Clore, 1961
Wasserman, Louis, 1961
Weber, Palmer, 1958-1959
Weil, Robert P, 1957-1959
Westin, Alan F, 1958-1961
Westin, Alan F.: Typescript, 1960
Wheeler, J. Harvey, 1957-1960
Whyte, William H, 1957-1959
Widener, Alice, 1961
Wight, Martin, 1955-1959
Wofford, Harris, 1958-1961
Wolcott, Helen, undated
WMCA, New York, 1957
Ziffren, Paul, 1961
Series 8, Subseries 4, Study of the Trade Union (The Individual and the Trade Union), 1924-1964
General Administration, 1957-1964
Aaron, Benjamin, 1959
Arden House Conference, 1957-1958
Barkin, Sol, 1958
Bell, Daniel, 1957-1960
Blauner, Robert, 1959
Blumenthal, Albert, 1958
Bromwich, Leo, 1959
Carliner, Lew, 1958-1959
Collective Bargaining Seminar, 1960
deJouvenal, Bertrand, 1959
Duke, Marie, 1958
Dungan, Malcolm T, 1960
Dunlop, John T, 1958
Fleming, Robben Wright, undated
Goldsmith, William, 1957-1958
Harrington, Michael, 1957-1960
Hoffer, Eric, circa 1958
Horvat, Branko, undated
Jacobs, Paul: Working Papers, 1957-1962
Kopald, Sylvia, 1924
Mandelbaum, Leonard D, 1960
Marshall, Ray, 1959-1960
Miller, Arthur S, 1959
Meyers, Frederic, undated
Monthly and Interim Reports, 1957-1960
Myers, Robin, 1959
Novack, George, 1957
Pitzele, Merlyn, 1958
Reference Material, 1957-1961
Ross, William Warfield, undated
Segal, Ben, 1957
Selznick, Philip, 1957-1960
Spaay, Gene, 1959
Tyler, Gus, 1959
Zielinski, Janusz G, 1958
General Administration, 1959-1961
General Administration, 1957-1958
Amper, Richard, undated
Babigian, John, 1957-1958
Clancy, William, 1957-1961
Cohen, Arthur, 1957-1961
deJouvenal, Bertrand, 1959
Diamond, Malcolm L, 1960
Donohue, Thomas C, 1960
Ferry, W.H., 1959
Gilbert, Arthur, 1957-1961
Gordis, Robert, 1957-1961
Gorman, William, 1957-1961
Hourani, Albert, undated
Howe, Mark de Wolfe, 1957-1959
Hoyt, Robert G, 1957-1960
Johnson, F. Ernest, 1957-1961
Kaplan, Mordecai M, undated
Kempner, Maximillian W, undated
Lally, Francis J, 1961
Lekachman, Robert, 1957-1961
Levy, Leonard, 1954-1958
Little, M.V., 1959
McKeon, Richard, 1957
Maritain, Jacques, 1957-1959
Meetings, 1957-1960
Meeting: Transcript, 1959 May 5
Meeting: Transcript, 1959 April 14
Meeting: Transcript, 1959 March 10
Meeting: Transcript, 1959 January 20
Meeting: Transcript, 1958 June 26
Miller, William Lee, 1957-1961
Murchland, Bernard G, 1958
Murray, John Courtney, 1959-1961
Niebuhr, Reinhold, 1957-1961
Pfeffer, Leo, 1958
Polish, David, undated
Pomarlen, Judith, 1957
Project Inquiries, 1957
Reference Material, 1956-1961
Rielly, John E, 1958-1961
Rischin, Moses, 1959
Sanders, Thomas G, 1959-1961
St. John-Stevas, Norman, 1957-1961
Seminar in Santa Barbara, 1958-1959
Sheerin, John B, undated
Shields, Currin V, 1960
Sudak, Eunice, 1960
Tucker, Joseph A., Jr, undated
Van Dusen, Henry D, 1957-1961
Westin, Alan, 1957-1959
General Administration, 1957-1962
Andrews, Paul Shipman, 1960
Ashmore, Harry S, 1960
Baldwin, Hanson W, 1959
Brown, Harrison, 1959-1960
Condon, E.U., 1959
deJouvenal, Bertrand, 1959-1960
Ferry, W.H., 1959-1960
Fowler, Harold S, 1957-1958
Frank, Jerome D, 1960
Henkin, Louis, 1959
Holton, Gerald, 1960-1961
Johnson, Byron L, 1960
Kahn, Herman, 1960-1961
Laucks, Irving F, 1960-1961
Little, Donald R, 1960
Meeting, 1958 December 22
Melman, Seymour, 1959
Millis, Walter: "The Model", 1960
Millis, Walter: Speeches, 1960
Modern Forum Meeting, 1961
Monthly Reports, 1959-1960
Murray, John Courtney, 1958
Murray, Thomas E, 1959-1960
National Manpower Council, 1957
Noel-Baker, Philip, 1960
Porter, Charles, 1960
Publications, 1957-1960
Real, James, 1959-1962
Sampson, Sidney O, 1961
Szilard, Leo, 1960
Taylor, Harold, 1960
Wack, John T. deBlois, 1961-1962
General Administration, 1956-1961
A, 1958-1961
Acheson, Dean, 1959
Adler, Mortimer, 1958-1959
Agger, Robert E, undated
Alisjahbana, S. Takdir, 1959-1960
B, 1958-1961
Bailey, Stephen, 1958-1960
Baird, Leslie, 1960
Bazelon, David T, 1960
Bell, David, 1960
Beloff, Max, 1958-1961
Best, Wallace H, 1960
Buchanan, Scott, 1957-1958
Burdick, Eugene, 1957 November-1961
Burdick and Hoffman, 1957-1958
Byrne, Brendan, 1958-1961
C, 1957-1961
California State Politics, 1958-1959
Carter, Richard, 1958
Chernoff, Howard, 1954-1955
Clark, Joseph S, 1959-1960
Cobban, Alfred, 1960
Cory, Catherine, 1958-1960
Criddle, Russell, 1957-1958
D, 1958-1961
Dash, Samuel, 1957-1961
David, Paul, 1958-1960
deGrazia, Alfred, 1958-1959
deJouvenal, Bertrand, 1959-1961
Dilworth, Richardson, 1955-1961
E-F, 1957-1961
Eban, Carmel Anne, 1958-1959
Ellsworth, Ralph P, 1955-1959
Freedman, Leonard, 1960
Fromm, Erich, 1957-1958
G-H, 1958-1961
Glick, Edward M, 1960
Goldberg, Arthur J, 1958-1959
Goldman, Ralph, 1958-1961
Griswold, Erwin N, 1957
Hal Dunleavy and Associates, 1959
Haviland, John, 1961
Hays, Brooks, 1959
Heard, Alexander, 1957-1958
Hile, Frederic W, 1961
Hoffman, Donald G, 1958-1959
Hofstadter, Richard, 1955-1959
Hutchins, Robert M, 1958-1959
J, 1958-1959
Jack, Homer A, 1960
Jacobson, Norman, 1958-1959
Jones, Lewis, 1957-1959
Joyce, William H, 1957-1959
Junker, Buford H, 1958
K-L, 1959-1961
Kelley, Robert L, 1959-1960
Kimball, Penn, 1958
Lederer, William, 1958-1960
Lehman, Herbert H, 1957-1960
Leonard, George, 1958
Lindsey, John, 1960
Lipset, Seymour Martin, 1959-1960
Lyford, Joseph P, 1957-1961
M, 1960-1961
Mainzer, Lewis C, 1960
Matson, Floyd, 1958-1959
Mayer, Milton, 1957-1961
McClelland, David C, 1958
McGee, Pat, 1958
Meetings, 1958-1960
Meeting: Transcript, 1959 May 25
Meeting: Transcript, 1959 April 28
Meeting: Transcript, 1959 March 16
Meeting: Transcript, 1959 January 16
Meeting: Transcript, 1958 December 5
Meeting: Transcript, 1958 October 22
Meeting: Transcript, 1958 April 23
Meeting: Transcript, 1958 January 23
Metropolitan Studies, 1958
Milan, Mike, 1961
Milbrath, Lester W, 1958
Miller, Arthur S, undated
Miller, William Lee, undated
Millis, Walter, 1958-1960
Mills, C. Wright, 1958-1960
Miscellaneous, 1959
Moos, Malcolm, 1959-1961
Morgenthau, Hans J, 1958
Muggeridge, Malcolm, 1958
N, 1959-1961
Nathanson, Nathaniel L, 1956-1961
Neal, Fred Warner, 1961
O-P, 1958-1961
Ostrom, Vincent, undated
Park, Oliver W, 1960
Politics and the Citizen, 1957-1959
Q-R, 1957-1961
Real, James, 1957-1959
Reference Material, 1958-1961
Reference Material, 1958
Reichley, James, 1958-1960
Reports, 1957-1961
Rivkin, Donald, 1957-1961
Rogow, Arnold, 1958-1959
Roper, Elmo, 1957-1961
Ruml, Beardsley, 1958
S-T, 1958-1961
Sandrich, Vannessa Brown, 1961
Sayre, Wallace S, 1960
Schaar, John, 1958-1959
Selznick, Philip, 1960
Skinner, B.F., 1956-1961
Stark, Wallace R, 1960
Teague, Charles M, 1960
Thomson, David, 1959
U-V, 1958-1961
Udall, Stewart, 1958-1959
Vickers, Geoffrey, undated
W-X-Y-Z, 1957-1961
Warne, Clore, 1960
Warren, Tully E, 1958
Wheeler, J. Harvey, 1957-1961
White, Theodore H, 1959-1960
Williams, Franklin H, 1960
Wolin, Sheldon, 1960
Yarmolinksy, Adam, 1957-1958
General Administration, 1957-1963
A-B, 1958-1961
Alldredge, Charles, 1957
Allen, Steve, 1959-1960
Ashmore, Harry S, 1955-1962
Broadcasting, 1957-1959
Brown, James A, 1961
Brucker, Herbert, 1959-1960
C-D, 1958-1961
Cassyd, Syd, 1960
Catton, Bruce, 1957-1960
Chicago 1960 Election, circa 1961
Christman, Henry, 1959-1960
Collingwood, Charles, 1961
Cooper, Edward, 1957-1959
Crosby, John, 1958-1960
Day, John F, 1956-1961
Dinner: July 9, 1957, 1957
Douglas, William O, 1960
Durr, Clifford, 1957-1958
E-F, 1961
Feature Press Service, 1961
Ferry, W. H, 1954-1961
Fitzgerald, Stephen E, 1958-1959
G-H, 1959-1961
Goldman, Eric F, 1957-1959
Griswold, Erwin N, 1957-1958
Hausman, Louis, 1961
Hector, Louis J, 1959
Higbie, Charles, 1958-1959
Horton, Robert, 1958-1960
Hutchins, Robert M, 1954-1961
Huth, Arno, 1956-1958
I-J-K, 1958-1961
Jacobs, Paul, 1960
Kelly, Frank: Speeches, 1960-1961
Kimball, Penn, 1959
Krolik, Richard, 1957-1958
L, 1954-1961
Larson, Arthur, undated
Levin, Harvey J, 1958
Lewis, Fulton, Jr, 1960-1961
The Living Constitution, 1960-1961
Livingston, Stanley, 1959
Lofton, John, 1960-1961
Lyford, Joseph P, 1959-1961
Lyons, Louis, 1957-1961
M-N, 1954-1961
McCarthy, Eugene J, 1961
McCulloch, Frank, 1961
McGannon, Donald, 1961
McGrady, Patrick, Jr, 1959-1960
Maritain, Jaccques, 1959
Masters, Dexter W, 1960
Maxwell, Richard C, 1960
Mayo, Louis, 1958-1959
Meetings, 1958-1961
Meeting: Transcript, 1959 May 28
Meeting: Transcript, 1958 October 31
Meeting: Transcript, 1958 October 10
Michelson, Sig, 1959-1960
Miller, Harold C, 1961
Miller, L. Rex, 1960
Minow, Newton N, 1957-1961
Miscellaneous, 1958
Model, Frank, 1959
Moskowitz, Irwin M, 1960-1961
Murray, J. Edward, 1960
Neal, Fred Warner, 1961
O-P, 1958-1961
Open End: Transcript, 1959
Parten, Jubal R, 1958-1961
Patterson, Alicia, 1957-1961
Patterson, J. E, 1957-1959
Peace Corps, 1961
Press and the People: A-K, 1958-1959
Press and the People: L-W, 1958-1959
Q-R, 1961
Reed, Vergil D, 1953
Reference Material, 1959-1962
Reference Material, 1950-1958
Roper, Elmo, 1957-1958
S-T, 1957-1961
Saul, Richard M, 1958-1959
Seldes, Gilbert, 1957-1958
Sevareid, Eric, undated
Siepmann, Charles A, 1956-1957
Sigma Delta Chi, 1955
Skornia, H. J, 1957-1958
Stone, Martin, 1951-1954
Tuck, Jay Nelson, 1957
U-V, 1961
W-X-Y-Z, 1958-1961
Wake, Selmer O, 1961
Webster, Bethuel M, 1959-1960
Whiteside, Thomas, 1959-1960
Winnick, Charles, 1958-1959
Worm, William, undated
Yorick: One Viewer, 1959
Series 9, Reference Files, 1951-1961, contains documents from a wide variety of public minded organizations whose administrators exchanged information, ideas, and political views with officers of the Fund. In the general alphabetical files researchers will often find a single letter from an organization simply requesting information about the Fund and its grant making procedures. However, several notable organizations had on-going "conversations" with Fund personnel, including the American Civil Liberties Union, the American Jewish Committee, the American Legacy Project of the Audio Book Company, the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith and the Ford Foundation.
No arrangement action taken or arrangement information not recorded at the time of processing.
A, 1953-1955
American Jewish Committee, 1953-1958
American Jewish Congress, 1953-1957
AWARE, Inc, 1955-1956
B, 1954-1957
C, 1952-1958
Counterattack, 1956
E, 1953-1955
F, 1953-1958
Facts Forum, 1954-1956
Ford Foundation, 1953-1959
Fund for Adult Education, 1953-1959
H, 1955-1959
I, 1952-1953
J-L-M, 1953-1955
N, 1954-1956
Nietzche, undated
Nimitz Commission, 1951-1953
O-P, 1951-1957
R-S, 1953-1956
U, 1952-1953
Series 10, Photographs, Audiovisual and Oversized, 1941-1961, includes photographs of Board members, Consultants, award and grant recipients, Commission on Race and Housing members, and some events where Hutchins was in attendance. The audiovisual material includes audio tapes of a forum held on the Common Defense at Beverly Hills high school, six phonograph records of The Minority Report, and the film of Edward R. Murrow's interview with Robert Oppenheimer for the television program, See it Now. The film was selected for dissemination by the Fund as part of its distribution project. The series also includes a 16mm film print and digital copies of the documentary film Segregation and the South. The oversized material consists of promotional material for the Fund's various contests, and floor plans for the Fund's New York office.
No arrangement action taken or arrangement information not recorded at the time of processing.
- Scope and Contents
The Fund for the Republic, Inc. Records contain the administrative records of this educational corporation from its inception through its evolution into a think tank. The collection consists of various forms of textual material with a sparse selection of graphic and audiovisual materials.
- Arrangement
The Archives of the Fund for the Republic are arranged in accordance with the organizational structure of the Fund, which also reflects the original order of the collection. As is typical with most businesses, within each folder the date order of the material runs from most recent date to the earliest, unless otherwise noted. The collection is divided into ten series and is arranged as follows:
- Collection Creator Biography:
Fund for the Republic
The Fund for the Republic was officially incorporated in the state of New York on December 9, 1952 as a nonprofit membership corporation. However, its raison d'etre can be traced back to 1950 when the Ford Foundation recognized that pressures from the political and cultural right threatened to restrict basic freedoms. In an effort to "support activities directed toward the elimination of restrictions on freedom of thought, inquiry and expression in the United States, and the development of policies and procedures best adapted to protect these rights," the Ford Foundation created the Fund for the Republic. The Foundation concluded that the importance of defending and advancing the principles of the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution and the Bill of Rights required the undivided attention of a wholly separate organization. Although the Fund's stated objectives were to "help promote within the United States security based on freedom and justice," the Foundation trustees were made aware that the Fund's agenda would include controversial issues such as religious and racial discrimination. Despite the controversial agenda, the Foundation trustees agreed that the Fund would not be subjected to annual reviews by the Foundation nor would it manage any of the Fund's affairs.
The Ford Foundation trustees authorized the officers of the Foundation to establish the Fund for the Republic on October 4, 1951 and made an initial allocation of $1,000,000, enabling its staff to secure a board of directors, and hire attorneys to establish a legal corporation and acquire tax exemption. The search for suitable board candidates was begun by Foundation president Paul Hoffman and associate director Robert Hutchins. Their challenge was to find candidates beyond reproach but more importantly, individuals who were willing to become embattled in the Fund's controversial agenda. Each member also needed to be unanimously approved of by the Ford Foundation trustees.
The Fund's Board of Directors met for the first time on December 10-11, 1952, in New York City, with nine of the fifteen directors and staff members of the Ford Foundation in attendance. The board discussed the Fund's purpose, limitations and relationship to the Ford Foundation. A Planning Committee was formed to comprise a tentative program that would be submitted to the Ford Foundation in an effort to receive a large sustaining grant. Other orders of business included the election of David Freeman, on loan from the Ford Foundation, as temporary president and secretary of the Fund, and the approval of $50,000 granted to the American Bar Association's Special Committee on Individual Rights as Affected by National Security. This Special Committee had originally submitted its grant request to the Ford Foundation but it was deemed more appropriate for the Fund. This Committee was also well equipped to study the legal and procedural aspects of the government's loyalty program and the legal aspects of visa and passport issuance under the McCarran-Walter Act.
The Planning Committee met after the Board meeting on December 10, and opened the meeting with a discussion of what the Fund should be expected to do in its field that other active organizations, such as the American Civil Liberties Union, were not already doing. It was the general feeling that whereas many of the objectives of the Fund were similar to those of the ACLU, the approach should be much broader and the Fund should endeavor to avoid being tagged as a defender of Communists. Throughout the course of several meetings, the Planning Committee concluded that the Fund's primary method of operation would be projects directly sponsored by the Fund and carried out under contractual arrangements and that grants would be made to other organizations, groups and individuals for particular purposes. After completion of the various projects, the Fund would then decide whether or not to implement its educational role through the distribution, via various forms of mass media, of the project results. The Planning Committee also believed that in order to be truly beneficial to the public, a non- academic approach to the projects was required. The Committee outlined three tentative areas as being of special interest to the Fund. These included:
By the time the Fund submitted its tentative program to the Ford Foundation trustees in February 1953, the Fund's board had met three times and elected Paul Hoffman as its chairman. Hoffman had resigned the Ford Foundation's presidency in January. In its statement, the Fund proposed two immediate projects: the American Legacy of Liberty Project, which would provide a clear contemporary statement on the legacy of American liberty; and research into the extent and nature of the internal Communist menace and its effect on our community and institutions. The Planning Committee hoped that the American Legacy of Liberty project would highlight areas where basic freedoms were endangered and in turn lead the Fund to lend its support to the following five areas of immediate interest:
The Foundation trustees, on a motion by Henry Ford II, authorized on February 23, 1953, an additional sum of $14,000,000 to supplement the $1,000,000 granted from the appropriation of 1951. There were two conditions on which payments would be suspended if not met: loss of its tax exempt status or failure to conform to the purpose of the Fund. The Fund had no need to fear the first, for on March 27, 1953 the Fund received a temporary certificate of tax-exemption entitling it to receive a $2,800,000 installment on its total allocation. An unqualified ruling of tax exemption was handed down by the Treasury Department on January 22, 1954.
Clifford Case, a Republican Congressman from New Jersey, was approached by David Freeman on April 22, 1953 to ascertain his interest in becoming president of the Fund. Case agreed but stated he would not be able to assume his duties as President until September. The Board officially appointed Case President of the Fund on May 18, 1953 and a week later he formally accepted. The last piece of the administrative puzzle was in place. The Fund could finally get down to the everyday business of advancing the understanding of civil rights and civil liberties.
The Fund had not even completed its first year of existence when it came under the scrutiny of Congress. Representative B. Carroll Reece cited the newly established Fund as one reason the House needed to reinvestigate the tax-exempt status of foundations. The new House Committee would determine which foundations were using their resources to fund "un-American and subversive activities, for political purposes, or influencing legislation." With its $15,000,000 endowment and its vague description of promoting civil liberties, the Ford Foundation laid the Fund open to misconceptions. Some thought the Foundation was using its financial resources to question the investigative powers of Congress, and the Reece Committee dogged the Fund for over two years. The Fund was constantly being inundated with requests from René Wormser, counsel to the Committee, who asked for the "obstetrical and gynecological facts about the birth of the Fund," its method of operation, and any information that would counter the accusations being made against it. The Fund complied with the requests and though the Reece Committee ultimately could prove no wrongdoing, it accused all large foundations of being involved in a diabolical conspiracy to allow Marxists and internationalists to dominate U.S. policy. This would not be the only time the Fund would be investigated due to its ideology. The Fund's agenda, already deemed somewhat controversial, was about to become even more contentious.
A review of the Fund's first year revealed a long arduous process of determining the minute, but essential administrative details. However, the first year had not been without accomplishments. The Fund had reviewed and turned down forty-six grant applications while approving four grants totaling $174,500 to the American Bar Association, American Friends Service Committee, Columbia University and the Boston chapter of the Voluntary Defenders Committee, Inc. The Fund had also sanctioned several projects under its Study of the Internal Communist Menace project, which were now underway. The new President was settling in and had hired four consultants to advise him on possible projects. Regrettably, Case had only been active as President for six months when he resigned under enormous pressure from President Eisenhower to seek the Republican candidacy for the open Senate seat in New Jersey. The Executive Committee of the board formally accepted Case's resignation on March 16, 1954 but retained him as a consultant, at his regular salary through April 1, until the full board met. Board members George Shuster, Elmo Roper, Erwin Griswold and John Lord O'Brian were charged with finding a new president.
As the main target of a Congressional investigation, it would seem prudent for the board search committee to pick a highly respectable, noncontroversial candidate to fill the vacancy. Instead, they approached one of most controversial figures at that time, Robert M. Hutchins. Hutchins had remained at the Ford Foundation after his friend Hoffman resigned as President and continued to administer his pet projects, such as the Fund for the Advancement of Education, where he had been a target of the political right. Undeterred by the threat of attacks, the board offered Hutchins the position of president of the Fund. He accepted and succeeded Case on June 1, 1954.
Hutchins's effect on the policies and procedures of the Fund was immediate although he remained headquartered in Pasadena. He added additional administrative staff to the New York office, including W. H. Ferry who had conceived the idea of the Fund with Hutchins, hired eleven new consultants, encouraged the board to elect seven new members, and proposed studies on blacklisting, fears of educators, minority housing problems and the mass media, which stretched well beyond the board's internal communist menace agenda. Hutchins streamlined the often cumbersome administrative tasks of the board as well. At the June 30, 1954 meeting, he informed the board he planned to decrease the monthly meetings to quarterly ones and each board member would receive extensive documentation of all proposals and grant recommendations prior to each meeting. Hutchins also received background briefings from his consultants prior to all board meetings, enabling him to answer any and all questions raised on various projects. Hutchins strongly believed preparation would positively affect the board's attitude towards the officers of the Fund and they in turn would look more favorably upon their recommendations. By the end of Hutchins's first year, the Fund's grants and appropriations totaled over $1,600,000. However, Hutchins's daring ideas worried some board members that he was crossing the educational line into propaganda, which could legally jeopardize the Fund's existence.
Hutchins was a brilliant, fearless man with a formidable ego, who was often quite shortsighted when expressing his views. It was Hutchins's opinion that the American people had not received the liberal education needed to ensure the survival of democracy. In fact, this lack of education allowed demagogues like McCarthy to exploit the public. Also, his brusque manner alienated and incited the fury of many. Many of Hutchins's attackers had a difficult time discerning between the approval of Communism and his belief that every American, including Communists and nonconformists, was entitled to equal protection under the Constitution. In 1955, Hutchins and Ferry provoked further criticisms and caused dissension among the Fund's board members when they stated they would not hesitate to hire former Communists or people who had invoked the Fifth Amendment. Days later, the Internal Revenue Service, the Committee on House Un- American Activities, and Senate Internal Security Subcommittee began to investigate the Fund. Although Hutchins was re-elected president at the annual board meeting, his presidency was in jeopardy.
Henry Ford II was barraged with mail and confided to Paul Hoffman that he had been affected by the great many letters expressing disapproval of the Fund. Publicly, Ford questioned the manner in which the Fund had attempted to achieve its stated objections and accused Hutchins and Ferry of poor judgment. Ford also met with Fund board member Erwin Griswold and encouraged him to lead a movement within the board to remove Hutchins and Ferry. Griswold
was deeply troubled by Hutchins and Ferry's statements and believed they irreversibly damaged the Fund's reputation. On December 19, 1955, Griswold wrote to the board and declared it was necessary to remove Hutchins, citing two main reasons: Hutchins's inflexibility in his approach toward civil liberties and his ineffectiveness as a Fund spokesman.
The board met on January 7, 1956 with two major items on the agenda: the fate of Robert M. Hutchins's presidency and a Hutchins memorandum detailing plans for an administrative reorganization of the Fund. Hutchins would move his office from Pasadena to New York, David Freeman would take over Ferry's position of running the New York office, while Ferry would handle specific responsibilities for programs and planning. Hutchins also proposed that a public relations officer be hired and all the officers would report to him. The board approved his memorandum on a trial basis. After thirteen hours of debate, Robert Hutchins was reaffirmed as president but not without ramifications. The board took action to ensure that it, not Robert Hutchins, determined the Fund's policies. All staff recommendations would now have to receive prior approval by legal counsel before being presented to the board, no awards could be allocated without unanimous consent of the board, and a resolution was passed saying no former or active Communist or person who had invoked the Fifth Amendment would ever be employed by the Fund.
The restrictions may have bothered Hutchins in principle but in practice he was already formulating a shift in the Fund's policy. By the spring of 1956, Hutchins had become disenchanted with administering a grant-making institution, and spending large amounts of time and money defending the Fund. He thought the Fund's studies lacked cohesiveness and were simply reactionary measures to an already existing problem. The studies also were based on the false assumption that people understood the underlying ideas of the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. Thus, a clarification of these "basic issues," the moral and political principles underlying civil liberties and civil rights, was needed as Hutchins stated, "to aid in developing a basis of common conviction in the West and throughout the world, to help to show a pluralistic society how it can reach unanimous devotion to freedom and justice."
Hutchins sent a memorandum to the board on May 4, 1956 recommending that the Board authorize an advisory committee to examine the feasibility and desirability of establishing an institute or council for the study of the theory and practice of freedom. The institute or council would be comprised of men and women, who through group discourse would arrive at common convictions in spite of profound philosophical differences. The institute or council would allow the men and women to gather in a common place, free from all administrative burdens and hold conferences, seminars, debates and discussions. Studies and reports would be made as they were needed in order to promote an understanding of some important problem. Most importantly, the object of the institute would be to promote coherence and intelligibility in the program of the Fund. While Hutchins's recommendations required a transfer of the planning functions of the Fund from the board to a group of thinkers, he presented the proposal in words designed to reassure the directors that their ideas would always be considered and their decision making powers would remain intact.
The board considered Hutchins's proposal at its May 15 meeting. While there was some reluctance, it was hard for the board to refuse Hutchins's request for an advisory committee to explore the idea. Thus an advisory committee of three board members, George Shuster, Meyer Kestnbaum and J. Howard Marshall, and five scholars, Eric Goldman, Robert Redfield, Richard McKeon, Clinton Rossiter, and John Courtney Murray was established. The advisory committee, chaired by Hutchins, met three times during the summer of 1956 and presented a report, signed by the five scholars, to the board on September 6, 1956. The report not only validated Hutchins's earlier memorandum, but argued that the Fund focus on examining the state of the free man within society. Hutchins asked the board at its September 12 meeting for the authority to prepare a plan for implementing the proposal so that at its November meeting the board could determine its practicability and effect on the Fund's activities. His request was granted.
Prior to the November 15 annual meeting of the board, Hutchins mailed each director a forty- four page memorandum endorsing the recommendations of the scholars. His ideas for implementation were laid out in generalities, but it was clear that he was proposing a permanent, self-sustaining center run by a core group of individuals. Hutchins's recommendations were met with dissension from two Fund staff members. David Freeman and Adam Yarmolinsky submitted their own memorandum to the board encouraging it to continue with the Fund's original mandate. Although they agreed with Hutchins in principle, they disagreed with the methods proposed. The memorandum argued that the best way to find a common sense solution was from various approaches employed by different groups not from an individual or a single group of individuals. The Freeman/Yarmolinsky memorandum was not formally considered by the board and both men eventually resigned due to basic policy disagreements. Hutchins was permitted, with the advice of the Advisory Committee and temporary consultants, to reexamine the area of the Fund's concern. The board expected a proposal for studies of one or more of the basic issues at its next meeting.
The board was inching cautiously towards Hutchins idea of a permanent, self-sustaining center but they were unwilling to devote all of the Fund's remaining resources to it. Hutchins was unhappy with the slow progress of the board but realized that such a drastic shift in policy would take time. He presented his proposal in February 1957 to retain full-time consultants to study The Corporation and the Freedom of the Individual, The Common Defense and Individual Freedom, and The Church in a Democratic Society. Also added on the advice of the board was The Labor Union and the Freedom of the Individual. Each of the projects would have advisors and two or more board members as liaison directors. The board allotted $100,000 for Hutchins's proposal, which enabled him to hire ten Consultants. He continued to push the board for approval of his proposal in its entirety but still met with resistance. At its May 1957 meeting, the board passed a resolution stating that the Fund would concentrate on the basic issues for one year. If the studies on the basic issues did not produce significant results, the board was prepared to explore these problems through other methods.
Hutchins was again disappointed and feared the Consultants would be unable to produce the desired results within a year. He pushed forward, meeting with the Consultants seven times throughout the year. Their meetings resulted in the gradual clarification of some basic issues and the publication of four pamphlets. The most surprising result was the overwhelming public interest in the studies. The Fund received numerous demands for information on and about participation in the Basic Issues program. The largest obstacle preventing the establishment of a permanent Center was now removed. The board could no longer claim the studies of the Consultants might be too esoteric. Thus on May 22, 1958, the board appropriated $4 million for a three-year extension of its Basic Issues program. On June 4, 1959, Hutchins announced that the board had voted its remaining resources to establishing the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions in Santa Barbara, California.
Hutchins's dream had finally been realized. He and other great minds of the period were now free to devote their time to interdisciplinary discourse on the important issues affecting man and the free society. Although the Center might not be able to solve the problems confronting Western civilization, it hoped to identify the problems and offer possible approaches to their solution. The clarification of such complicated issues would be a long and arduous task that would continue, as Hutchins hoped, indefinitely. However, the Center depended too much upon the guidance of Robert M. Hutchins. The Center had never been financially secure but remained solvent because of Hutchins and his reputation. When Hutchins died in 1977, the Center was unable to function independently and was absorbed by the University of California, Santa Barbara in 1979.
- Acquisition:
The Fund for the Republic Records were donated to the Princeton University Library on December 26, 1963 by the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions of the Fund for the Republic, Inc. Supplementing the Fund for the Republic Records are the papers of Fund board member Eleanor B. Stevenson, donated to the Princeton University Library on August 1, 1966 , which were integrated into the Board of Directors series. Princeton reached an agreement with the University of California, Santa Barbara to exchange records. Princeton now holds all the pre-1961 records pertaining to the Fund for the Republic, and UCSB holds the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions records. Also, Princeton transferred material relating to Fund president Robert M. Hutchins's tenure at the Ford Foundation to the Ford Foundation Archives.
A 16mm print of the film Segregation and the South was donated in 2013 by Sarah, William, and George Martin III, children of the film's producer, George Martin, Jr. The accession number associated with this donation is ML.2013.013.
- Appraisal
No information about appraisal is available for this collection.
- Sponsorship:
These papers were processed with the generous support of The National Historical Publications and Records Commission and The John Foster and Janet Avery Dulles Fund.
- Processing Information
This collection was processed by Kristine Marconi in 1998-1999, with the assistance of Chris Kitto, Atu Darko, Michael Gibney, Meghan Glass, Nate Holland, Sandra Kumahor, Adelia Reliford, Stan Ruda, Brian Schulz, Susan Stawicki, Jeremy Sturchio, Michael Sullivan, and Terun Weed. Finding aid written by Kristine Marconi in 1998-1999.
- Conditions Governing Access
Collection is open for research use.
- Conditions Governing Use
Single copies may be made for research purposes. To cite or publish quotations that fall within Fair Use, as defined under U. S. Copyright Law, no permission is required. For instances beyond Fair Use, it is the responsibility of the researcher to determine whether any permissions related to copyright, privacy, publicity, or any other rights are necessary for their intended use of the Library's materials, and to obtain all required permissions from any existing rights holders, if they have not already done so. Princeton University Library's Special Collections does not charge any permission or use fees for the publication of images of materials from our collections, nor does it require researchers to obtain its permission for said use. The department does request that its collections be properly cited and images credited. More detailed information can be found on the Copyright, Credit and Citations Guidelines page on our website. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact us through the Ask Us! form.
- Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
For preservation reasons, original analog and digital media may not be read or played back in the reading room. Users may visually inspect physical media but may not remove it from its enclosure. All analog audiovisual media must be digitized to preservation-quality standards prior to use. Audiovisual digitization requests are processed by an approved third-party vendor. Please note, the transfer time required can be as little as several weeks to as long as several months and there may be financial costs associated with the process. Requests should be directed through the Ask Us Form.
- Credit this material:
Fund for the Republic Records; Public Policy Papers, Department of Special Collections, Princeton University Library
- Permanent URL:
- http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dn39x1531
- Location:
-
Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library65 Olden StreetPrinceton, NJ 08540, USA
- Storage Note:
- Mudd Manuscript Library (scamudd): Box 1-210
- Subject Terms:
- Adult education -- United States -- 20th century.
Allegiance -- United States -- 20th century.
Anti-Communist movements -- United States -- History -- 20th century -- Sources
Blacklisting of entertainers -- United States -- 20th century.
Blacklisting, Labor -- United States -- 20th century.
Censorship -- United States -- 20th century.
Civil rights -- United States -- 20th century.
Due process of law -- United States -- 20th century.
Educational consultants -- United States -- 20th century.
Endowment of research -- United States -- 20th century.
Freedom of association -- United States --20th century.
Governmental investigations --United States -- 20th century.
Internal security -- United States -- 20th century.
Labor unions -- United States -- 20th century
Loyalty oaths -- United States -- 20th century.
Mass media -- Censorship -- United States -- 20th century.
Mass media -- Influence -- United States -- 20th century.
Minorities -- Housing -- United States -- 20th century.
Minorities -- United States -- Political activity -- 20th century.
Nonprofit corporations -- United States -- 20th century -- Archives.
Philanthropists -- United States -- 20th century -- Correspondence.
Research grants -- United States.
Scholarships -- United States -- 20th century.
Social sciences -- Research --United States -- 20th century.
Television broadcasting -- Awards -- United States.
Television broadcasting -- United States.
Television in adult education -- United States -- 20th century. - Genre Terms:
- Correspondence
Interviews.
Minutes.
Press releases.
Reports.
Speeches. - Names:
- Center for the study of democratic institutions
Ford foundation
American friends service committee
American legion
United States. Congress. House. Committee on Un-American Activities
Southern Regional Conference
Ashmore, Harry S.
Benton, William, 1900-1973.
Buchanan, Scott M. (Scott Milross), 1895-1968
Burdick, Eugene
Case, Clifford P. (Clifford Philip) (1904-1982)
Catton, Bruce, 1899-1978.
Cogley, John.
Douglas, William O. (William Orville), 1898-1980.
Ferry, W. H. (Wilbur Hugh)
Freeman, David F.
Goldman, Eric Frederick, 1915-1989
Griswold, Erwin N. (Erwin Nathaniel), 1904-1994
Hoffman, Hallock B.
Hoffman, Paul G. (Paul Gray), 1891-1974
Hutchins, Robert Maynard, 1899-1977.
Jacobs, Paul, 1918-
Joyce, William H.
Kelly, Frank K., 1914-2010
Kerr, Clark, 1911-2003
Lewis, Fulton, 1903-1966
Loescher, Frank S.
Luce, Henry Robinson, 1898-1967.
Lyford, Joseph P.
Millis, Walter, 1899-1968
Murray, John Courtney
Murrow, Edward R.
Niebuhr, Reinhold, 1892-1971
Parten, J. R. (Jubal Richard), 1896-1992
Rabi, I.I. (Isidor Isaac), 1898-1988
Reed, Edward
Roper, Elmo, 1900-1971.
Shuster, George N.
Stevenson, Eleanor Bumstead, 1902-1987
Walter, Francis E. (Francis Eugene), 1894-1963
Wheeler, Harvey, 1918-2004
Yarmolinsky, Adam - Places:
- United States -- Politics and government -- 1953-1961.
United States -- Social conditions -- 20th century.