WORDS WON'T WIN--ACTION WILL
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CIA-RDP88-01315R000300540022-9
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Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
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Document Creation Date:
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Document Release Date:
September 21, 2004
Sequence Number:
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Publication Date:
December 1, 1963
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MAGAZINE
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_---o R ~~6c /
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TARGET
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We guarantee that all law suits filed against this news letter will be settled out of court.
WORDS WON'T WIN- ACTION WILL
December1,..1.963
SECOND DISARMAMENT SYMPOSIUM SCHEDULED
The second International Arms Control and Disarmament Symposium jointly
sponsored by the University of Michigan and the Bendix Corporation has been set
for January 21 to 24, 1964 at Ann Arbor, Michigan.
In the last three issues of "On Target" we have devoted considerable
space to the first of these meetings which was held in December, 1962. In a
past issue we outlined the communist associations of several of the speakers
at the first symposium. We also brought out the step-by-step plan which has
been developed for gradual and total disarmament of this nation including
confiscation of all private firearms.
We pointed out how many of the people who attended this meeting con-
sider themselves to be part of an elite society that is exempt from the normal
moral and legal restrictions of civilization. We pointed out that these self-
styled elite include the wealthy and the powerful from nearly every nation
on both sides of the Iron Curtain. They plan to "inherit the earth" by means
of a one-world government to be achieved through international disarmament and
the transfer of all major weapons to the United Nations.
The first symposium was attended by nearly 400 "prominent" educators,
labor leaders, businessmen, clergymen and government officials. Some of these
people were identified communists; many others were "one-wonders". Still
there must have been many others who, judging from their positions, should
believe strongly in the American system of free enterprise.
It is astonishing that some of these people would sit for three days
listening to a series of speakers which included several known communists, a
large number of foreigners, and nearly all of whom had one or more associations
with questionable organizations such as communist fronts, or communist controlled
"peace" groups.
We proved by quotations from their own literature how vast sums of
public tax money are being used to support this disarmament scheme. We quoted
their own plans for using the over $4,000,000 that was allotted to them to
propagandize and pressure our elected representatives into passing anti-gun
legislation.
In this issue we will examine further the affiliations of some of the
other people who attended the first symposium last December. Nearly all of the
organizations listed after the names given below are either communist fronts,
-re dominated by known communists, or consistently repeat the communist peace
line. Addresses of the individuals named were given in the November issue.
Ruth Adame is a member of the Board of Directors of the Council For
a Livable World; Committee for a Test Ban Treaty (Turn Toward Peace);
speaker for Peace Education Program of American Friends Service Committee.
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Maurice lay Albertson is a Peace Corps pioneer; head of Colorado State
University Research Foundation; advisor? Peace Research and Education Project.
Robert fc,Angell is a Prof. of Sociology, University of Michigan;
director, Center for Research on Conflict: Resolution.
William Belcher Rallis is a member of the American Association for
Advancement of Slavic Studies; member Detroit Committee on Foreign Relations.
Richard J. Barnet is an advisor, to the Council For a Livable World;
author, "Who Wants Disarmament" (Fellowship Publications book list).
Bernhard Bechoefer is the author of "]History of Disarmament" in
"Readings and a Discussion Guide for a Seminar on Legal and Political Problems
of World Order, edited by Saul Mendlovitz (Fund for Education Concerning
World Peace Through World Law).
Joan Y, Bondurant is the author of "Conquest of Violence" (Fellow-
ship Publications book list).
Chester Y. Chambera is a member of the Toledo Council of Churches;
the Methodist Board of Christian Social Concerns.
Gordon AOL,. Christansen is the author of "Fatal Illusion" (Fellowship
Publications book list); member Steering Committee of Turn Toward Peace;
member American Friends Service Committee;; author, "Survival in Nuclear War:
A Vanishing Probability" (Fellowship Publications book list).
Inis L. Claude is the author of "The UN and the Use of Force" (US
Committee for the UN book list); author, "Power and International Relations"
(recommended by Peace Research and Education Project); author, "The Management
of Power in the Changing United Nations" in "Readings and a Discussion Guide
for a Seminar on Legal and Political Problems of World Order", edited by Saul
Mendlovitz (Fund for Education Concerning World Peace Through World Law).
Edward A. Conway, S. J. is a member of the Board of Sponsors of
'War/Peace Report".
Karl Deutsch was a staff member at the UN Conference on International
Organization, San Francisco, 1945; speaker at Second Annual Conference of
Scientists on Survival (June 14-16, 1963 Biltmore Hotel, NY).
Mrs. Alexander Duffiel Is a member of Women's International League
for Peace and Freedom.
Albert Encols attends Greenwich Village Peace Center, New York, NY.
Lawrence Finkelstein is a member of Advisory Council of Peace Research
Institute; author of "Arms Inspection" (US Committee for UN book list).
Richard Flacks is a student staff member of Peace Research and Education
Project at University of Michigan.
Derma Frank Fleming is the author of "Can We Escape?" an article from
"Beyond Deterrence Series" by Peace Literature Service of American Friends Ser-
vice Committee; author, "The Cold War and Its Origins, 1917-1960"; speaker
for Peace Education Program of American Friends Service Committee.
William Q, Foster is the head of the US Disarmament Agency; is quoted
in Women Strike For Peace literature.
Morton I. Halperin is the author of "On Resuming Nuclear Tests" in
New Republic, April 30, 1962.
Captain Paul Hind. is on the Advisory Council, US Committee for the
United Nations.
GoLae G xill is the Minister of World Affairs (financed by Richard
Rodgers, M.D. of Tampa, Florida).
Richard Hudson is editor of "War/Peace Report"; interviewed on a tape
distributed by the World Peace Broadcasting Foundation.
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Hubert Humphrey is the United States Senator from Minnesota; author,
"Questions and Answers on the Test Ban" (recommended by SANE).
David R. Inglis is the contributing editor to Council for Correspon-
dence "Newsletter"; has been quoted in Women Strike For Peace literature.
Homer Jack is a member of the Steering Committee of Turn Toward Peace;
National Advisory Council, Student Peace Union, author, "Belgrade: The Con-
ference of Non-aligned States" (Student Peace Union book list); Executive
Director, National SANE Committee; gave talk on the Moscow Peace Conference on
a tape distributed by the World Peace Broadcasting Foundation; author, "Toward
Nuclear Disarmament"; member of national committee of Committee for Nonviolent
Action; signer of appeal for recognition of Red China for the Chicago Area
Liberal Ministers Association; participated in Institute on Non-Violent Social
Change (sponsored by Montgomery Improvement Association); committee member of
Lawsuits Seek Nuclear Weapons Ban; member of advisory committee of Witness for
Peace.
Lloyd Jensen teaches Political Science portion of an unofficial course
in peace and war for students at the University of Illinois.
Mrs. Walter Josephy represented Canadian Campaign for Nuclear Disarma-
ment (Ottawa Branch) at International Arms Control and Disarmament Symposium
(Univ. of Michigan, December 1962).
Amrom H. Katz is a member of Board of Sponsors of "War/Peace Report".
Ralph 0. Kerman is a member of American Friends Service Committee.
Harold Lasswell is a member of the Advisory Council of Peace Research
Institute; Fellow, Center for Advanced Study in Behavioral Sciences; lecturer
at the Chicago Communist school; sponsor Chicago Workers Theatre (cited by HCUA).
Theodore F. Lentz is the Director of Peace Research Laboratory.
Bohdan Lewandowski is the permanent representative to the UN from
Poland; is on the faculty of the Rensalaerville (N.Y.) Institute (sponsored by
the Oliver Wendell Holmes Association).
Carolyn Dana Lewis is a member of the League of Women Voters.
Robert E. Light is the author of "Hoax of Civil Defense" in the "National
Guardian" (November 13, 20, 27, and December 11, 1961).
Franklin A. Lon was a speaker at the Second Annual Conference of
Scientists on survival (June 14-16, 1963, Biltmore Hotel, NY).
Elton McNeil is the editor of "Social Science and Human Conflict"
(mentioned by Character Research Associates).
Wesley H. Maurer is the association organizer of the Michigan Federa-
tion of Teachers.
Seymour Melman is the author of "The Peace Race" (Fellowship Publications
book list); urged House Appropriations Subcommittee to make major cuts in defense
spending (reported in Friends Committee on National Legislation "Washington
Newsletter", June 1963); author, "How Much Military Power is Enough?" (dis.-
tr'.buted by Physicians for Social Responsibility); National Advisory Council
Student Peace Union; speaker at Second Annual Conference of Scientists on
Survival (June 14-16, 1963-Biltmore Hotel, NY); sponsor, National Committee for
a Sane Nuclear Policy; author, "Inspection for Disarmament"; gave three talks on
peace on a tape distributed by World Peace Broadcasting Foundation; author,
"Peace Without Depression" (Saturday Review, Dec. 2, 1961).
Donald N. Michael is the author of "Cybernation: the Silent Conquest"
(Center for tie Study of Democratic Institutions book list); author of twenty-
four books and articles listed by Peace Research Institute; contributing editor
to Council for Correspondence "Newsletter".
a+ Miller is a member of American Friends Service Committee; spon-
sor, Committee for a Test Ban Treaty (Turn Toward Peace); Peace Education
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Secretary, Illinois-Wisconsin region, American Friends Service Committee;
speaker for Peace Education Program of American Friends Service Committee.
Hans Morgenthau is a director, Center for Study of American Foreign
Policy; co-author, "Morality and Foreign Policy: A Discussion" (in "Worldview");
advisor to Council for a Livable World.
Leslie Paffrath is a member of the Council On Foreign Relations; member
of American Friends Service Committee.
Paul Peachey is a researcher for Institute of Mennonite Studies;
Executive Secretary of Mennonite Central Committee's Church Peace Mission;
author, "Our Witness to Christendom" in "Report"', Fall 1960.
Mrs. Ralph Pomerance is on the Board of Directors and UN observer for
the American Association for the United Nations, Inc.; sponsor of National
Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy; on Board of Directors of World Affairs
Center.
Morton W. Ryweck is Executive Director of the Chicago area Committee
For a Sane Nuclear Policy; former assistant director, Upper Midwest Regional
Office of Anti-Defamation League of.B'Nai B'rith; participated in European
journey in 1958 protesting atomic testing; speaker for Peace Education Program
of American Friends Service Committee.
Cameron B. Satterthwaite teaches the physics portion of an unofficial
course in peace and war for students of the University of Illinois.
Oscar Schachter is a member of Advisory Council of Peace Research
Institute.
William Edward Stirton is a director of the Michigan Society for
Mental Health.
Harold Taylor is a member of Board of Directors of Peace Research
Institute; member Board of Directors of Institute for International Order;
vice-president, Council for Correspondence; head of National Council for
Research on Strategy for Peace; participated in Second Annual Conference of
Scientists on Survival (June 14-16, 1963--Biltmore Hotel, NY);sponsor Committee
for a Sane Nuclear Policy; National. Advisory Council, Student Peace Union.
Quincy Wright is the editor of "Preventing World War III" (Fellowship
Publications book list); on the Board of Directors of American Association for
the United Nations, Inc.; author, "'Domestic Jurisdiction as a Limit on National
and Supra-National Action" in "Readings and A Discussion Guide for a Seminar on
Legal and Political Problems of World Order," edited by Saul Mendlovitz (Fund
for Education Concerning World Peace Through World Law).
JAPANESE RED GIVEN BIG WELCOME. Professor Kaoru Jasui, Dean of the
Law School, Hosei University in To.oyo and Director of the Japan Council
Against A and H Bombs is making an extensive speaking tour throughout the United
States sponsored by the (communist) National Guardian and various peace groups.
As a member of the communist Japanese-Soviet Friendship Society,
Prcfessor Jasui could not legally be admitted to the United States under terms
of the Walter-McCarran Act which prohibits the State Department from granting
visas to known communists for entering the United States except on diplomatic
affairs.
After a short delay our State Department provided the red professor
with his visa with the excuse that "the visit would be in the national interest"..
When the professor stopped off at Honolulu, Harry Bridges' Longshore-
men's Union held a "Stop-Work Meeting" which means a halt in all labor on the
waterfront. The communist led union then held a grand reception which was
attended by many prominent people among whom were Hawaiian State Governor Burns,
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the speakers of both Hawaiian Houses, the State Attorney General, and the
President of the American Bar Association. Following this the red professor
spoke to the students at the University of Hawaii.
On November 17th and 18th Pro-
fessor Yasui spoke at public meetings
held in the Scottish Right Auditorium in
San Francisco. Professor J. T. Morray was
chairman.
On November 18th, Professor
Yasui attended a breakfast meeting of the
San Francisco Women for Peace.
Later in the day Dr. Linua au -
ing introduced the professor at a public
meeting held at the Los Angeles, St.
Nicholas Church Auditorium. The Reverend
Stuart Innerst (Quaker) was chairman.
Dr. Ju Stuart Innerat has been
identified many times as a member of com-
munist organizations such as: 1) American
Forum for Socialist Education (Member
National Committee); 2) Appeal to President
on Behalf of Morton Sobell (signer of
leaflet, 1959); 3) Appeal to Stop the Spread
of Nuclear Weapons (initial signer of peti-
tion circulated by Linus Pauling and Ava
Helen Pauling); 4) Citizens Committee to
Preserve American Freedoms; 5) Committee to Secure Justice for Morton Sobell;
6) Petition for Smith Act Amnesty; 7) Sponsor Southern California Conference
to Repeal Walter McCarren Law; and 8) Member of administrative staff of World
Committee of Peaceful Cooperation.
On the same day he was "honored" at a luncheon held by the National
Lawyer's Guild and spoke to students at the University of California at Los
Angeles.
By November 20th Professor Yasui was speaking at the Midland Hotel.
Chairman of the meeting was Frank Anglin, Jr. legal counsel for the Congress of
Racial Equality.
In Cleveland on November 21st, Professor Yasui was entertained by Mr. &
Mrs. Cyrus Eaton. (This well known communist millionaire is the largest single
stockholder in the Kansas City Power & Light Company and a member of its Board
of Directors). In the evening the professor spoke at a meeting held in Cleveland's
Old Stone Church near the public square which had been arranged by various peace
groups of that city.
In Detroit, November 22nd, Dr. Henry Hitt Crane sponsored a meeting for
the Japanese Red Professor at the First Unitarian Universalist Church with at-
torney John Conyers, Jr. acting as chairman. Conyers is Detroit Workman's Com-
pensation referee and was Democratic candidate for Congress in 1964.
On November 23, a reception for Yasui was held with Dr. Barrows
Dunham as chairman followed by informal meetings with the leaders of the Ameri-
can Friends Service Committee.
On November 24, he spoke to a public meeting and private reception
sponsored by Women's Strike for Peace.
On November 25, Yasui spoke to the student-faculty forum at Yale Law
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to make this special exception for Professor Yasui was presented in person by
Dagmar Wilson, leader of the left-wing Women's Strike for Peace.
As a result of the State Department's illegally granting Yasui this
visa, various communist front groups were able to gain many thousands of dollars
in fund raising campaigns which featured h:tm as a speaker and hundreds, per-
haps thousands of college students were given one more trip through the
brain-washing machine.
ORGANIZED PEACE GROUPS NUMBER. OVER 300
If you ask most Americans, "Have you ever seen any communist propa-
ganda?" they will most likely answer that they have not. Yet the fact is that
the average American is bombarded with such propaganda all the time--he just
doesn't recognize it for what it is. The average American thinks of propaganda
as some effort to make HIM believe in communism. The communists have neither
the need or desire to do so.
The number one objectives of today's communist propaganda is to make
American citizens believe that anything is preferable to an atomic war. To
achieve this end they have organized or encouraged a fantastic number of different
peace groups--over 300 that we know of. Listed below are some of the most
prominant.
As you look over this list remember the words of Dimitri Manuilski,
Soviet Official and once presiding officer of the UN Security Council, as
spoken before the Lenin School of ]Political Warfare in Moscow:
War to the hilt between communism and capitalism
is inevitable-To win we shall need the element of
surprise. The bourgeois will have to be put to
sleep. So we shall begin by launching the most spec-
tacular peace movement on record. There will be elec-
trifying overtures and unheard of concessions. The
capitalistic countries, stupid and decadent, will re-
joice to cooperate in their own destruction. They will
leap at another chance to be friends. As soon as their
guard is down, we shall. smash them with our clenched fist.?
We are now witnessing this greatest: peace: offensive. We have been
put to sleep. Our guard is down. Our enemy waits to smash us with his
clenched fist
Acts For Peace
L730 Grove St.
Berkeley 9, California
American Association
United Nations
345 E. 46th St.
American Committee
Responsibility
1418 Edgewood Drive
Ann Arbor, Michigan
American Federation for World
Citizens
Box 148, 150 Chistopher St.
New York, 14, New York
American Freedom From Hunger
Founds ion
919 18th St., N. W.
Washington, 6, D. C.
American Friends Service
Committee
160 North 15th St.
Philadelphia, 2, Penna.
American Humanist Association
Yellow Springs, Ohio
American Institute of Pacific
Relations
1 East 54th St.
New York 22, New York
American Peace Navy
6 Adams St.
.Brooklyn 1, New York
American Peace Society
1307 New Hampshire Ave., N. W.
Washington 6, D. C.
American Vegetarian Party
:153 West 48th St.
New York 36, New York
Arms of Friendship, Inc.
4150 Henry Ave.
Philadelphia 44, Penna.
Art for World Friendship
Friendly Acres
Media, Penna.
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Atoms & Us, Inc.
Box 148
Newark, Delaware
Baptist Pacifist Fellowship
Room 1749, 475 Riverside Dr.
New York 27, New York
Board of Peace and Social
Concerns of the Five Years
Meeting of Friends
101 Quaker Hill Dr.
Richmond, Ind.
Bretheren Service Commission
1451 Dundee Ave.
Elgin, Ill.
Commission to Study the Organi-
zation of Peace
345 East 46th St.
New York 17, New York
Committee for Non-Violent
Action
325 Lafayette St.
New York 12, New York
Committee for Non-Violent
Action --
New England
Box 589
New London, Conn.
Action
West
Campaign for World Government
331 Park Ave.
Glencoe, Ill.
Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace
United Nations Plaza at 46th St.
New York 17, New York
Catholic Association for Inter-
national Peace
1312 Massachusetts Ave., N. W.
Washington 5, D. C.
Catholic Worker
175 Christie St.
New York 12, New York
Center for International Affairs
Harvard University
Cambridge, Massachusetts
Center for International Studies
Mass.- Institute of Technology
Cambridge 39, Massachusetts
Center for Research on Conflict
Resolution
820 E. Washington St.
Ann Arbor, Michigan
Center of international Studies
104 Woodrow Wilson Hall
Princeton University
Princeton, New Jersey
Central Committee for Conscien-
tious Objectors
2006 Walnut St.
Philadelphia 3, Penna.
Children's Plea for Peace
World Affairs Center
University of Minnesota
Minneapolis 14, Minn.
;hurch Peace Union
1133 Broadway, Room 1601
New York, New York
Collegiate Council for the
United Nations
345 East 46th St.
New York 17, New York
P. 0. Box 5983
San Francisco, Calif.
Committee for Nuclear Information
6504 Delmar Blvd.,
St. Louis 30, Missouri
Committee for Protection of Child-
ren from Nuclear Fallout
Box 253, Cathedral Station
New York 25, New York
Committee for World Development and
World Disarmament
345 East 46th St.
New York 17, New York
Committee on International Relations
University of Notre Dame
Notre Dame, Indiana
Committee on National and International
Policy
c/o American Socialogical Assn.
N. Y. University, Washington Sq.
New York 3, New York
Committee on Research in Inter-
national Conflict and Peace
Washington University
St. Louis 30, Missouri
Conference Upon Research and Edu-
cation in World Government
4030 Irving Park Rd.
Chicago 41, Ill.
Consultative Peace Council
2006 Walnut St.
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Council for Christian Social Action
289 Fourth Avenue
New York 10, New York
Council for Correspondence
P. 0. Box 536, Cooper Station
New York 3, New York
Council on Foreign Relations, Inc.
58 E. 68th St.
New York, New York
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Council on Religion and Inter-
national Affairs
170 E. 64th St.
New York 21, New York
Fund for Education Concerning World
Peace through World Law
11 West 42nd St.
New York 36, New York
Council on World Tensions
304 E. 42nd St.
New York 17, New York
Current Affairs Press
25 Vanderbilt Avenue
New York 17, New York
Disciples Peace Fellowship
222 S. Downey Ave.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Educational Foundation for Nuclear
Science, Inc.
935 E. 60th St.
Chicago 37, Illinois
End the Draft in '63
P. 0. Box 2548
Washington 13, D. C.
Episcopal Pacifist Fellowship
9 Story St.
Cambridge, Mass.
Farmers and World Affairs, Inc.
1201 Chestnut St.
Philadelphia 7, Penna.
Federation of American Scientists
1700 "K" St., N. W.
Washington 6, D. C.
Fellowship of Ethical Pacifists
1906 Rittenhouse Square
Philadelphia 3, Penna.
Fellowship of Methodist Pacifists
616 Edgewood Dr.
Gaithersburg, Md.
Fellowship of Reconciliation
Box 271
Nyack, New York
Foreign Policy Association -
World Affairs Center
345 East 46th St.
New York 17, New York
Foreign Policy Studies Program
Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Avenue, N. W.
Washington, D. C.
Friends Committee on National
Legislation
245 2na St., N. E.
Washington 2, D. C.
Friendly World Broadcasting
United Nations Plaza at 46th St.
New York 17, New York
Friends Peace Committee
1520 Race St.
Philadelphia, Penna.
Fund for Peaceful Atomic Develop-
ment
2000 Second Ave.
Detroit, 26, Mich.
Fund for the Republic - Center
for the Study of Democratic
Institutions
Box 4068
Santa Barbara, Calif.
Greater New York Society for the
Prevention of Cruelty to the
Human Animal
150 Nassau St.
New York 38, New York
Hiroshima Peace Center Associates
25 West: 45th St.
New York 36, New York
Human Events Associates
608 South Dearborn St.
Chicago 5, Illinois
Institute for International Order
11 West: 42nd St.
liew York, New York
Institute of World Affairs
527 Madison Ave, Room 314
New York 22, New York
International Friendship League
40 Mount Vernon St.
Boston 8, Mass.
Jane Addams Peace Association, Inc.
;145 East 46th St.
New York 17, New York
Jewish Peace Fellowship
Box 223
New York 21, New York
League for Industrial Democracy
1.12 East 19th St.
New York 3, New York
Letters Abroad
45 East 65th St..
New York 21, New York
Liberal Religious
Waldon St.
Concord, Mass.
Lobby for Abolishing
c/o Lee Szilard
Hotel Dupont Plaza
Washington 6, D. C.
Lobby for Peace
345 Franklin St.
San Francisco 2, Calif.
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Lutheran Peace Fellowship
2407 Eastchester Rd.
New York 69, New York
Mennonite Central Committee
Akron, Penna.
Methodist Board of World Peace
7405 Rush St.
Chicago, Ill.
Methodist Division of Peace
and World Order
100 Maryland Ave., N. E.
Washington 2, D. C.
Movement for Federation of the Americas
863 Watertown St.
West Newton, Massachusetts
National Committee for a Sane
Nuclear Policy
17 East 45th St.
New York 17, New York
Physicians for Social Responsi-
bility
Box 104
Brookline 46, Mass.
Political Action for Peace (PAX)
56 Boylston St.
Cambridge 38, Mass.
Post War World Council
112 East 19th St.
New York 3, New York
Presbyterian Service Committee for
Religious Objectors
Witherspoon Bldg.
Philadelphia, Penna.
Promoting Enduring Peace, Inc.
112 Beach Ave.
Woodmont, Conn.
Pugwash Movement
935 East 60th St.
Chicago, Illinois
National Council of Churches
475 Riverside Drive
New York, New York
National Service Board for
Religious Objectors
401 3rd St., N. W.
Washington 1, D. C.
New Church Pacifists Fellowship
471 Ocean Parkway
Brooklyn, 18, New York
New World Foundation
475 Riverside Dr.
New York 27, New York
Pacifist Research Bureau
1201 Chestnut St.
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Peace Action Center
2023 Kalorama Rd., N. W.
Washington 9, D. C.
Peace Library
913 W. 69th St.
Chicago 21, Ill.
Peacemakers
10208 Sylvan Ave.
Cincinnati 41, Ohio
Peace Research Institute
1329 18th St., N. W.
Washington 6, D. C.
Peace Research Laboratory
5937 Enright Ave.
St. Louis 12, Missouri
Pendle Hill
Wallingford, Pennsylvania
Scientists On Survival
51 East 90th St.
New York 28, New York
Scientists Committee for
Radiation Information
2 East 63rd St.
New York 21, New York
Social Science Foundation
University of Denver
Denver 10, Colorado
Social Scientists for Peace
104-40 Queens Blvd.
Forest Hills 75, New York
Socialist Party - Social Demo-
cratic Federation
1182 Broadway
New York 1, New York
Society for Individual Responsi-
bility
Box 49016
Los Angeles 49, Calif.
Society for the Prevention of
World War III
24 W. 57th St.
New York 19, New York
Society for Social Responsibility
in Science
Gambier, Ohio
Society for the Sociological Study
of Social Issues
c/o American Sociological Assn.
New York University, Washington Sq.
New York 3, New York
Society for the Study of War
People-To-People Program 1515 Massachusetts Avenue, N. E.
P. 0. Box 896 Washington 5, D. C.
Washington 4, D. C.
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Southern Presbyterian Peace Fellow-
ship
P. 0. Box 413
Snow Hill, North Carolina
U. S. Committee Against Militari-
zation
913 West 69th St.
Chicago 21, Ill.
Speakers Research Committee for
the United Nations
345 East 46th St.
New York 17, New York
Speakers Services for the United
Nations
345 East46th St.
New York 17, New York
Strategy for Peace Conference
510 Madison Ave. Room 701
New York 22, New York
Students for a Democratic Society
112 East 19th St.
New York 3, New York
Student Non-Violent Coordinating
Committee
1974 Auburn Avenue, N. E.
Atlanta 3, Georgia
Student Peace Union
6029 University
Chicago 37, Ill.
Studies in International Conflict and
Integration
Stanford University
Stanford, California
Turn Toward Peace
P. 0. Box 401
New York 3, New York
Turn Toward Peace - West Coast
1730 Grove St.
Berkeley 9, Calif.
The Twentieth Century Fund
41 East 70th St.
New York 21, New York
Unitarian Service Committee
9 Park St.
Boston 8, Mass.
Unitarian-Universalist World Service
25 Beacon St.
Boston 8, Massachusetts
United Church Peace Fellowship
1:4 Osborne St.
Glen Ridge, New Jersey
United Nations, We Believe
33 East 48th St.
New York 17, New York
United Presbyterian Peace
Fellowship
14 Harvey St.
Ironia, New York
U. S. Committee for Cooperation
with the Japan Council Against
A and H Bombs
41-44 48th St., Apt. "C"
Long Island City 4, New York
United States Committee for
the United Nations
375 Park Ave.
New York 22, New York
United States Committee of the Dag
Hammarskjold Foundation
155 East 44th St.
New York 17, New York
U. S., Committee for UNICEF
P. 0. Box 1618, Church St. Station
New York 8, New York
United World Federalists
820 13th St., N. W.
Washington 5, D. C.
United World Movement, Inc.
504 Hamilton Ave.
Trenton. New Jersey
Voters For Peace
343 South Dearborn
Chicago, Illinois
War Resisters League
5 Beekman St., Room 1025
New York 38, New York
Woman's Committee to support the
United Nations
345 East 46th St.
New York 17, Nev York
Woman's Direct Action
498 West End Ave., Apt. 12-A
New York, New York
Women For Peace
P. 0. Box 944
Berkeley 1, Calif.
Woman's International League for
Peace and Freedom
2005 Walnut St.
Philadelphia 2, f' na.
Women Strike for Peace
1822 Massachusetts Ave., N. W.
Washington 6, D. C.
Women United for the United
Nations
345 East 46th St., Room 807
New York 17, New York
World Affairs Center
20 East State St.
Westport, Conn.
10
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World Committee for a World Con-
stitutional Convention
8600 West Colfax Avenue
Denver 15, Colorado
World Peace Through World Law
Fund
11 West 42nd St.
New York 36, New York
World Constitution Coordinating
Committee
2310 North 15th Ave.
Phoenix, Ariz.
World Fellowship, Inc.
66 Edgewood Dr.
New Haven 11, Conn.
World Neighbors, Inc.
5116 North Portland Ave.
Oklahoma City 12, Okla.
World Peace Broadcasting Foundation
P. 0. Box 96
West Des Moines, Iowa
World Peace Foundation
40 Mount Vernon St.
Boston 8, Mass.
World Republic Press
35 East Wacher, Room 1588
Chicago, Illinois
World Rule of Law Center
Duke University, School of Law
Durham, South Carolina
Young People for Peace
22 Clover Dr.
Great Neck, New York
Young People's Socialist League
1182 Broadway
New York 10, New York
"Which is heavier, a soldier's pack
or a slave's chains?"
--Napoleon
If these dead could speak from their graves, they would
utter a warning:
'You who are yet free must behold the awful truth. There is
no compromise possible with communism; unless it is overcome
and vanquished it will destroy you, too.'
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President Lyndon B. Johnson
White House
Washington, D. C.
Dear Mr. President:
Now is the time,
--while your oath of office is yet fresh in your
mind,
-to kick the traitors out of our government, to get
rid of the pinks and fellow travelers and to stop aiding
our enemies,
--to halt the mad plunge of our Federal Government
toward a socialist police state, to get out of the United
Nations and regain our national sovereignty,
--to re-awaken the patriotism of the American people
and to put our nation back on the road to greatness.
Robert B. DePugh
Editor
Now that John F. Kennedy is dead we can expect to hear millions of
words about his greatness. Even his most bitter political enemies will praise
him.
We will not be hypocrites--we will not soon forget that he ignored
the best interests of his country from the day he took the oath of office to
the day he died. Still, very little is really changed. The "power behind the
throne" remains the same as before?
The patriotic movement cannot afford to stand still a single day.
We suggest as our next step that citizens everywhere send thousands of letters
and telegrams to the White House, either the same or similar to the one printed
above.
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