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Collection: 0038 Haymarket People’s Fund records, 1974-1989 Quantity: 15 record cartons, 3 document cases Processed by Elizabeth Mock Finding aid reviewed by Jessica Holden, April 2013 Accession number: 90-3; 94-4; 99-7 PROVENANCE The Haymarket People’s Fund donated the records of the Boston Regional Funding Board, the Boston portion of HPF’s grant files, and HPF’s annual reports and publications to University Archives & Special Collections at UMass Boston in June 1990. A second accession was donated in October 1994 and a third accession was donated in December 1999. Restrictions: Permission to identify board members’ opinions by name, as expressed in non-published materials, must be obtained from Haymarket People’s Fund before publication. HISTORY Haymarket People’s Fund, a New England alternative granting foundation for social change, was founded in July 1974 by George Pillsbury and other young people with inherited wealth. In 1976, the Haymarket staff established Rank and File (R&F), a corporation used to fund projects that would not pass guidelines for tax-exemption. When organizations without tax-exempt status submit proposals that fall within tax-exempt guidelines, HPF encourages them to find a tax-exempt “conduit” or “sponsor.” Between 1976 and 1977 the structure of HPF evolved from one community decision-making board in Boston to eight autonomous boards, one for each New England state, and two each for Massachusetts and Connecticut. Each regional board is comprised of five to ten members who are often political activists and from organizations that HPF has previously funded; each board makes funding decisions for that region. The boundaries of the Boston Regional Funding Board include the area from Worchester to the Atlantic, Fall River to the northern border of Massachusetts. From 1977 until 1983 one member of each regional board sat on the New England Board which made grants for proposals crossing funding areas and served as a board of directors. In 1983 HPF established the Coordinating Council, responsible for general administration of the Fund, financial and personnel policies, and fund-raising plans. Although apparently most of HPF’s grants are directed from the regional boards, HPF also channels donor-directed (DD) or donor-advised (DA) grants to organizations. HPF relies on donations from people with inherited wealth and earned income as well as interest from its investments in corporations that meet its moral and political standards. In 1979 HPF helped found the Funding Exchange (FEX), an umbrella organization for alternative funds with a shared philosophy. In 1980 FEX moved beyond sharing technical support among the funds by creating National Community Funds to administer grants to national and international organizations within its guidelines. Believing that in order “to transform our society the unequal distribution of wealth and power must be righted” (1983-84 Annual Report) the philosophy and goals of the Haymarket People’s Fund have apparently remained consistent throughout its existence. Since the “potential for change in the United States lies in people’s realization that the roots of our oppression and insecurities are related to the political/economic system in which we live” (1981-82 Annual Report), HPF’s goals are: “to help people understand the sources of social and economic injustice in our country and how to change them; to support people trying to take control of their lives through challenging established power, learning how to use leadership, and developing self-respect; and to work towards the shared vision of a non-oppressive, life-supporting society” (1983-84 Annual Report). In its attempt to support people organizing among their own constituencies, HPF has tried to be responsive to what people, particularly those in “oppressed” groups, identify as pressing issues. These goals have resulted in grants to a variety of grassroots organizations including those interested in the rights of people of color, tenants, workers, women, students, people with disabilities, gay men and lesbians, the elderly, veterans, welfare recipients, and environmentalists, as well as groups working on issues of peace, poverty, discrimination, economic justice, accessibility, and public education on international issues. HPF explicitly states that they do not fund activities not clearly linked to organizing, groups with budgets over a particular amount, groups receiving significant government or corporate grants or those with no fund-raising plans beyond HPF, groups that solely provide services, or alternative businesses or institutions. (1988-89 Annual Report) In addition to making grants, Haymarket People’s Fund makes small emergency grants, administers loans, and provides technical assistance. HPF helps socially responsible people with wealth make investment and donor decisions. Technical assistance to groups sharing its philosophy (whether or not they meet its granting guidelines) includes helping organizations make long-range plans, develop fund-raising strategies and network with other groups. For additional information see HPF’s annual reports in Series III of this collection. SCOPE AND CONTENT The Haymarket People’s Fund Collection primarily consists of HPF’s Boston grant files from 1974 through 1984. The papers of HPF’s Western Massachusetts Regional Funding Board are located at the University of Massachusetts Amherst Archives. This collection is divided into three series and several subseries. Series I: Boston Regional Funding Board Subseries IA: Minutes, #1-10 Subseries IB: Other, #11-1 Series II: Boston Grants, files, #17-485 Series III: Haymarket People’s Fund, publications Subseries IIIA: Annual reports, #486-497 Subseries IIIB: Other, #498-499 The folder descriptions used in the inventory below are extensions of the folder titles used by HPF. HPF marked the files in Series III by organization name, and occasionally included date of funding, “emergency,” or project sponsor. SERIES I: Boston Board Series I is divided into two subseries and documents the Haymarket People’s Fund’s Boston Regional Funding Board’s deliberations and activities, and occasionally its policy debates, between 1974 and 1984. Subseries IA: Minutes #1-10, includes correspondence, agendas, and notes. Some are in chronological order, some are in reverse chronological order. Subseries IB: Other #11-16, consists of 1984 board records including emergency grant applications, and correspondence, minutes, and completed registration forms relating to HPF’s Tenth Anniversary Festival. Before 1984, some emergency grant applications were interfiled with regular grant applications files such as those in Series II. HPF may, however, have maintained a separate emergency grant applications file prior to 1984 in which case there is a gap in the University of Massachusetts Boston’s HPF Collection. SERIES II: Boston Grants, files #17-485, the bulk of this collection, contains successful and unsuccessful grant applications and a few loan applications made to the Haymarket People’s Fund between 1974 and 1984. Each folder consists of one or more grant application files. When the collection was transferred to UMass Boston these files were divided into pre-1983 and 1983-84. As this was an arbitrary distinction, the files were integrated into one alphabetical series, but applications from the same organization remain in separate folders. Each grant application file includes a completed “Haymarket Grant Application” form or answers to questions on that form, and often includes proof of the applicant or conduit’s tax-exempt status, samples of the group’s work, letters in support of the application, a grant proposal not following Haymarket’s requested format, correspondence with HPF staff or board, or copies of applications made to other funding sources. The “Haymarket Grant Application” form requests a brief history of the group, organization’s goals, how the group plans to reach those goals, the group’s structure and decision-making process, targeted constituency and membership make-up, how the group deals with the oppression of racial and oppressed nationalities, women and gay/lesbian people, working class and poor people, the group’s current and planned projects, a description and budget for the project the grant would fund, how the organization or project’s effectiveness could be evaluated, and other items the organization wished to include. The grant proposals include samples of leaflets, clippings, etc. used to support grant proposals or as part of subsequent reports. Many application files include a form filled out by the HPF board member who interviewed the organization or other notes taken by board members about the applicant. Most include notes indicating the board’s decision. Folders that include successful grant application files also usually contain a copy of a memorandum from HPF, a completed grant agreement form, a grant history, and a six month progress report. The grant history includes the date of the grant, conduit through which the grant was channeled to the organization, the funding period, the amount of the grant, the grant’s source (HPF, R&F, donor directed (dd), donor advised (da), etc.), and often notes if the grant was an emergency. In the middle of the decade this series covers, HPF Boston Board used an orange form for the grant history. It appears that in the early eighties someone (“RT”) went through each file and, following the format of the orange sheet, wrote the same information on the inside of each folder. The processor transferred these notes to the first sheet of each folder. When it appeared that the organization acting as a conduit had a relationship with the grant recipient beyond transferring funds, the conduit, or project sponsor, was noted in the folder description. The dates in the folder headings are not inclusive; they represent years when an organization either received a grant from HPF or made an unsuccessful grant application. In keeping with HPF’s notations, each year represents at least one grant application. If an organization submitted an application in October 1976 and received the grant in February 1977, 1977 is the only year noted for that application. If the organization did not receive the grant, 1976 is the only year noted for that application. Therefore, folder headings spanning two or more years contain two or more applications or grants. Most folders are in rough reverse-chronological order. At times HPF used colored paper dividers to separate different grant applications within a file. For preservation purposes, some such dividers were replaced with white sheets marked “divider.” Most folders contain supporting material dating from the period before and after the year in which the grant was applied for or funded. Many applications include samples of the organization’s then current work. Most grantees filed a required six month progress report, and some sent HPF information for years to come. Researchers interested in a particular subject should examine the entire folder list for Series II which is in alphabetical order by organization name. SERIES III: Haymarket People’s Fund #486-499, publications is divided into two subseries and provides thorough if general information about HPF’s philosophy, goals, and activities. Subseries IIIA: Annual reports #486-497, consists of HPF’s annual reports from 1979 through fiscal year 1988. They include HPF’s goals, financial information, grant recipients, and other information. Subseries IIIB: Other #498-499, contains a set of articles published by HPF in 1981, and a book including a chapter about HPF’s work. INVENTORY Series I: Boston Regional Funding Board Subseries IA: Minutes Carton 1: 1-61 1-2: 1974-75 3: 1976 4: 1977 5: 1978 6: 1979 7: 1980 8: 1981-82 9: 1983 10: 1984 Subseries IB: Other 11-13: Emergencies 1984 14-16: Boston’s Tenth HPF Anniversary Festival 1984 14: Correspondence, public relations 15: Minutes/Org. of Festival Committee, includes notes 16: Answers (completed registration forms) Series II: Boston Grants, files 17: Abortion Action Coalition, 1978-79. Conduit: Women’s Educational Center 18: Abortion Rights Action Week, 1979. Conduit: Women’s Educational Center 19: Access Resource Center 1975 20: Accion International 1980-1981 21: Ad Hoc Coalition for a Safe Boston Harbor. Emergency. 1983 A project of Survival Education Fund. 22: Ad Hoc Lebanon Emergency Committee. A project of 1982 Middle East Research and Information Project (MERIP). 23: Ad Hoc South End Committee. Re: housing. 1974 24: Advocacy for Resources for Modern Survival. Re: Welfare 1984 Mothers; Up in Arms. Conduit: Massachusetts Human Services Coalition. 25: Affirmative Consequence thru Social Change. Re: criminal 1977 justice, former inmates. 26: African Forum. Conduit: Boys Harbor. Apr 1983 27: Afrika Baraza. Human rights watch group. Sponsor: All 1983 Saints Lutheran Church of Boston. 28: Afrikan Heritage Institute 1977 29: Afro-American Liberation House 1974 30-31: All-City Organization - Housing Task Force 1978-1979 32: All Women’s Program of Fields Corner. Conduit: 1980 Cleveland-Marshall Community Council. 33: Alliance against Sexual Coercion 1978, 1980 34: Alliance for the Mentally Ill/Cambridge-Middlesex 1983-1984 35: Allston-Brighton Community News 1976, 1978 36: Allston-Brighton Greenlight. Safehouse program. 1980 37: Allston-Brighton Tenants Organization 1975-1976 38: Alpha and Omega Evangelistic Outreach Church 1982 39: Alternative House. Emergency shelter for battered 1978 women and children in Lowell area. 40: Amandla People’s Security. Conduit: The Group School 1979, 1981-1982 41: Anthropology Resource Center (ARC) 1977-1978 42: Anti-Nuclear Legal Project. Conduit: Central Massachusetts 1980-1982 Safe Energy Project. Anti-Racism Project (National Lawyers Guild, Massachusetts Chapter, Anti-Racism Committee), see #324 43: Anti-War Organizing League (AWOL). Emergency. Conduit: 1981 Survival Education Fund 44-45: Asian-American Resource Workshop 1977, 1979-1983 46: Back of the Hill Community Development Association 1978 47: Back of the Hill Community Development Association 1982-1983 48: Back Bay/Beacon Hill Tenants Union 1981-1982 49: Bar None. Prison paper. 1975 50: Bay State Conversion Project. Conduit: Survival Education Fund 1979 51: Beacon Hill Update 1981 52: Being: A Magazine on Prison Issues 1983-1984 53: Black Family Women’s Association. Emergency. 1982 54: Black Ghetto Theater (Paige Academy). Roxbury High School 1982, 1984 students. 55: Black Mothers Against Drugs 1984 56: Black Mothers’ Organization 1977 57: Black Panther School of Freedom Fighting 1976 58: Black Spectrum, WYBC 1977 59: Blackfolk, Boston University Newsletter 1980 60: Boston Alliance Against and Political Repression. Conduit: 1980 Families and Friends of Prisoners. 61: Boston Area Day Care Workers Union (or “United”) (BADWU) 1981 Carton 2: 62-123 62-63: Boston Area Educators for Social Responsibility 1983-1984 64: Boston Area Rape Crisis Center. Conduit: Women’s 1984 Educational Fund. 65: Boston Attica Project. Conduit: National Lawyers Guild. 1974 66-67: Boston Bail Project 1974-1979, 1981 68: Boston Bail Project 1982 69: Boston Black United Front 1980 70: Boston Campaign for Political Rights 71: Boston Centre for Older Americans 1975 72: Boston City-Wide Organizing Program. Proposed by 1975 Massachusetts Community Center. 73: Boston Clamshell. Re: Seabrook nuclear power plant. 1978-1979 See also #369. 74: Boston Committee against the Bakke Decision 1977 75-76: Boston Committee against Executions. Conduit: Unitarian 1978-1979, 1981 Universalist Service Committee. See also #270. 77: Boston Committee for the Liberation of Southern Africa. 1976, 1980 Special project of Boston-Cambridge Ministries in Higher Education. 78: Boston Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador 1981-1982 (CISPES). Project of Survival Education Fund. See also #330. 79-80: Boston Community School/Boston Community Center. Conduit: 1976-79, 1981 Mass. Community Center 81: Boston Feminist Coalition. Emergency. 1982 82: Boston Indian Council. Re: The Circle, a Paper for Native People. 1977 83: Boston INFACT. Re: infant formula 1978 84: Boston Jobs Coalition. Conduit: Low Income Planning Aid 1980 85: Boston Organizing Committee of the National Writers Union 1982-1983 86: Boston People against Racism and the Klan. Emergency. 1982 Boston Puerto Rico Solidarity Committee (PRSC), see #370-371 87: Boston Urban Gardeners (BUG) 1979?, 1982 88: Boston Urban Gardeners (BUG). Some re: Nesenkeag 1979, 1982-1983 Cooperative produce program. 89: Boston Wages for Housework 1977 90: Boston-Washington Walk for Disarmament and Social Justice 1976 91: Boston Wind. Alternative energy, education center undated 92: Brockton Tenants Union 1974 BUG (Boston Urban Gardeners), see #87-88 93: Cambridge Committee of Elders 1984 94: Cambridge Social History Resource Center, Cambridge Arts 1981-1982 Council. Re: women’s oral history project 95-96: Cambridge Tenants Organization 1975-1979 Cape Verdean Group (Massachusetts Correctional Institution, Norfolk), see #274-275. 97: Cara de Piedra 1983 98: Casa Boricua 1974 99: Casa Myrna Vasquez. Multiracial temporary shelter 1975, 1977-1978? 100: Casa Myrna Vasquez 1978, 1980-1981, 1983 101: Cauldron Experimental Theater. Conduit: Women’s 1982 Center Cambridge 102: C.D. Film Workshop. Re: Mission Hill Film project. 1975 103: Center for the Study of Public Policy 1978 104: Central America Education Fund 1984 105: Central Massachusetts Safe Energy Project 1986 106: Centra Communautaire Haitient du Massachusetts, 1975 Cecohama. Marked “Miscellaneous Third World” 107: Le Centre des Haitiens a Somerville 1977 108: Centre-Wainwright Block Association. Emergency. 1982 109: Channel 3 Producer’s Group, Somerville. Re: Somerville 1975 Public Access Video Festival. 110: Charlesgate Tenant Union. Conduit: Symphony Tenants 1981 Organizing Project. 111: Child Care Resource Center 1974, 1979 112: Childcare Organizing Project. Conduit: Women for 1984 Economic Justice 113: Children are Many Colors. Re: Third World Children’s Book 1980 and Film Festival. 114: China Institute 1981 115: Chinatown People’s Progressive Association 1978 116: CINE. Emergency. Re: Southern Africa Film Project 1981 CISPES (Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador), see Boston Committee (#78) and New England Committee (#330) 117: Citizens Action Program on Energy. Conduit: Mass. 1974 Community Center 118: City Life/Vida Urbana. Formerly Tenants Action 1974-1975, 1977, 1979-1981 119: Group (TAG). Jamaica Plain. See also #235, 419, 446. 120: Citywide Parents’ Advisory Council 1977 121: Citywide Parents’ Advisory Council. Emergency. 1981 122: City Women for Action. Organization of municipal women 1975 employees. Conduit: Mass. Community Center 123: Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts (CLUM), Women’s 1975? Rights Project Clamshell Alliance (Boston Clamshell), see #73 Carton 3: 124-208 124: Clergy and Laity Concerned (CALC), 1975 125: Club Gregorio Luperon 1976 126: Coalition for a Better Acre. Lowell newsletter for low 1983 income and Hispanic communities. Coalition for a Fair Budget, see #271 127-8: Coalition for Basic Human Needs 1979, 1982-1984 129: Coalition for Reproductive Freedom/Boston Women’s Health 1982 Book Collective 130: Coalition for Women’s Safety 1979-1980 131: Coalition of Labor Union Women (CLUW) 1975 132: Coalition to Stop Institutional Violence. Re: “violent 1977 women” and prisons. Conduit: Women’s Educational Center. 133: Coalition to Take Back the Night. Conduit: Cambridge 1978 Women’s Center 134: Code Inc. Belmont hotline. 1976 135: Coming Down. Re: Vietnam War veterans 1981 136: Comite Centroamericano Boston. A project of Centro Presente. 1983 137: El Comite Latino (Emergency) 1982 138: Committee for Community Access. Re: WGBH-FM. 1975 139: Committee for Justice for Domingo and Viernes. Emergency. 1982 140: Committee to Free Black Defendants of East Boston, 1976 Committee to Free the East Boston Black Defendants 141: Committee to Free Professor Wamba. Emergency. 1982 Wamba was in Zaire. 142: Committee to Stop the Rate Hike. Emergency. Re: electricity. 1982 Project of Clamshell Alliance. 143: CommonHealth 1981 144: Commonwealth Tenants Association. Brighton. Includes 1983 some re: Boston Fair Housing omission and Home Rule bill. 145: Community Access Graphic 1979 146: Community Alliance for Safe Energy. Conduit: Students 1980 Union League 147: Community Change. Re: racism, race relations 1983 148: Community for Human Rights. Conduit: Freedom House 1978 149: Community Legal Empowerment Project 1981 150: Community Organization toward a New Survival (CONS). 1984 Holistic alternative program for prisoners, ex-offenders, and their families, Conduit: Humanity. 151: Community Press Features (folded). Conduit: Urban Planning Aid 1983 152: Community Safety Survival Center/Family and 1982 Friends of Prisoners 153: Concerned Tenants of Newcastle-Saranac/Columbus Ave. 1981 Tenants Association. Emergency. 154: Concilio Human Services (Puerto Rican Festival Committee) 1979 CONS (Community Organizations toward a New Survival), see #150 155: Crisis Information/Action Center. Conduit: Urban Planning Aid 1981 156: Deadpan. Organization of workers at Mount Auburn Hospital 1974 157: Dignity/Boston. Organization of “gay and concerned Catholics” 1978 158: Disabled Peoples Liberation Front 1979 159-60: Dorchester Children’s Center 1974-1976 161: Dorchester Community Action Council. Formerly Dorchester 1974-1976 Tenants Action Committee. 162-3: Dorchester Community News 1975, 1978, 1980-1981 164: Dorchester Gardenlands Preserve 1978 165: Dorchester Greenlight or “Greenlite.” Re: safe houses. 1979 166: Dorchester Neighbors Organizing Neighbors 1981 167: Dorchester Residents for Racial Harmony. (Emergency) 1982 Project of Boston College High School 168: Dorchester Welfare Committee 1976 169: Dorchester Women’s Committee. For International Women’s 1984 Day Celebration. Conduit: Families and Friends of Prisoners. See also #187, 422. 170: Dorchester Youth Alliance. Conduit: Friends and Families of 1980 Prisoners. 171: East Boston People’s Rights Group 1975-1976 172: Eastern Massachusetts Coalition for Reproductive Rights. 1979 Project of Women’s Educational Center. 173: Ecumenical Social Action Council/Jamaica Plain (ESAC) 1977 El Comite Latino, see #137 El Frente Hispano, see #195 174-5: Elizabeth Stone House. Alternative feminist mental health 1976-1878, 1980-1983 facility. 176: Emergency Campaign Against U.S. Intervention in Central 1981 America and the Caribbean. Emergency. 177: Eritrean Support Committee, 1977 ESAC (Ecumenical Social Action Council), see #173 178: Espacio de Mujeres/Womens Space. Re: women in the undated South End. Conduit: Every Woman’s Resource. 179: Ethnic Arts Center of Somerville 1984 180: The Exodus Center. Re: Gay and Lesbian parenting 1981 181: Extended Family Institute. Assists people of color interested 1981 in adopting children. 182: Families and Friends of Prisoners 1980-1982 183-5: Families and Friends of Prisoners Survival Center 1975-1979 186: Farm Labor Organizing Committee. For “Hear the Children” 1983 campaign. Conduit: Farm Labor Research Project. 187: Feminists in Radio. Re: International Women’s Day. 1982 Conduit: WMBR. See also #169, 422. 188: Fenway Area Tenant Union 1977 189: Fenway Arts Council. Re: film, “Tenants Fight Arson and 1982 Displacement”. 190: Fenway News. Conduit: Symphony Tenants Organizing Project. 1983-1984 191: Fight Back, Cambridge, 1974. Against imperialist crisis. 192: Focus Counseling and Consultation for Women and Their Families 1976 193: Food Not Bombs, Food for Free Committee. Project of Survival 1982 Education Fund. 194: The Free Press 1980-1982 195: El Frente Hispano 1975 196: Friends of Hopi 1978 197: Friends of Indochina 1976 198: Friends of the Earth Foundation (Donor-Directed) 1976 199: Friends of the Filipino People 1976 200: Friendshipment/Bach Mai Hospital Fund 1975-1976 201: Fordham Courts Tenants Union. Jamaica Plain. Conduit: City Life. 1981-1982 202: Full Circle School. Emergency. 1975 203: The Funding Exchange (DA) 1983-1984 204: Gay Community News. Conduit: Survival Education Fund. 1982 205: Greater Boston Physicians for Social Responsibility 1983 206: Greater Lawrence Citizens for rent Control 1975 207: Guardian-Boston Bureau. Radical newsweekly. 1976-1978 208: Guatemala Solidarity Committee. Conduit: Survival Education 1982-1983 Fund. Carton 4: 209-290 209: La Habana Media Tour. Trip to Cuba. Conduit: Media Works. 1980 210: Haiti Culturelle 1974, 1977 211: Hard Times. Cambridge working-class political organization 1976 212: Harper’s Ferry Theatre Co. Re: play It’s Not the Bus 1976 213: Harvard African Students Association. Re: Africa week. 1980 214: Harvard Black Law Students. Emergency. For First Annual 1979 Third World Conference. See also #423. 215: Harvard Employees Organizing Committee. No proposal. 1975 Harvard Medical Area Total Energy Plant (MATEP), see #340-341 216: Health Information Referral Service 1982 217: High Technology Professionals for Peace. For defense 1983 information package. 218: Hispanic Labor Education Booklet Project/Urban Planning Aid 1979 219: Houseworker’s Handbook. Conduit: Cambridge Women’s Center. 1974 220: Housing Code Checklist/Urban Planning Aid 1976 221: Independent Restaurant Workers Union undated 222-4: Indochina Curriculum Project 1974-76 225: Indochina Newsletter: Indochina Aid and Friendship Project. 1982 Conduit: Bach Mai Hospital Emergency Relief Fund. 226: Indochina Peace Campaign 1974 227: Institute for Community Economics. Formerly American 1978 Natural Resources Trust. 228: International Defense and Aid Fund for Southern Africa 1976 229: International Independence Institute. Donor-directed. 1977 International Women’s Day, see: Feminists in Radio (#187); Dorchester Women’s Committee (#169); Third World Committee (#422). 230: Irish Republican Club-Charlie McGleenon 1975 231: Irish Solidarity Committee 1981 232: Jamaica Plain Battered Women’s Task Force 1979 233: Jamaica Plain Community Council 1974 234: Jamaica Plain Community Defense Club 1981-1982 235: Jamaica Plain Community News. Produced by Tenants Action Group, later became City Life/Vida Urbana. See also #118-19, 419, 446. 236: Jamaica Plain People for Community Safety Greenlight. 1979 Conduit: Racial Unity Now. 237: Jamaica Plain-Roxbury Food Coop 1977 Jamaica Plain Tenants Action Group, see #419 238: January 15 Mobilizing Committee/M.L. King Day Memorial 1981 Rally Coalition. In Buffalo, New York. See also #263. 239: January 22 Coalition (Emergency). Re: 10 year anniversary of 1983 Supreme Court decision legalizing abortion 240: Joven Cuba Magazine 1975 JP (Jamaica Plain), see #232-37 241: July 4th, 1976. Re: meaning of American revolution. 1976 242: June 6th Coalition. Re: Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1982. 1984 Conduit: Survival Education Fund. 243: Juvenile Action Movement of Fields Corner, Dorchester. 1976 244: Kinfolk 1980-1981 245: Labor in the Eighties. Conduit: Center for the Study of 1982 Public Policy. 246: Labor Pains Newsletter. Day care center newsletter. 1974 La Habana Media Tour, see #209 La Unidad Latina, see #433 247: Latin American Theater Arts Festival 1980 248: Latin Women’s Video Project 1976 249: Latina Women’s Collective, Colectiva de Mujeres Latinas de 1980 Boston. For conference, “La Mujer Latina Se Enfrenta a los ‘80”. 250: Law Communes-Central Square. Includes Mass Dissent 1974-1975 Collective, Capp Street Foundation, Cambridge Center for Legal Education, National Lawyers Guild. Greater Lawrence Citizens for Rent Control, see #206 Le Centre des Haitiens a Somerville, see #107 251: Lebanese Palestine Crisis Coalition. Emergency. Conduit: 1982 Middle East Philanthropic Fund. 252: Legal In-Service Project (LISP) of the Arlington Street Church 1975 253: Legal Tactics: A Handbook for Tenants. Conduit: Cambridge 1978 Women’s Center. 254: Lesbian and Gay Parents Project. Conduit: Cambridge 1978 Women’s Center. LISP (Legal In-Service Project), see #252 255: Little Flags Theatre 1978 256: Low Income Network for Services and Tex Reform. 1981 Conduit: Policy Training Center. 257: Low Income Planning Aid (childbearing rights conference) 1978 258: Lowell Communicator 1975-1976 259: Lucy Parsons Women’s Coalition 1977 260: Lynn Rent Control Coalition ca. 1975 261: Margaret Fuller Neighborhood House 1983 262: Martin Luther King Athletic, Cultural and Scholarship 1981 Association. Emergency. 263: Martin Luther King Day Memorial Rally Coalition. 1981 Emergency. Re: Buffalo, New York anti-Nazi rally. See also #238 264: Mashpee Wampanoag Indian Trial Council 1977 Mass. Divest (Massachusetts Coalition for Divestment from South Africa) see #272 265: Mass. Energy. Emergency. Statewide organization working on 1982 comprehensive energy program to benefit low- and moderate-income people. Conduit: Mobilization for Survival. 266: Massachusetts Association for Older Americans 1975 267-8: Massachusetts Childbearing Rights Association or Alliance 1979-1982 (also donor directed). Conduit: Boston Campus Ministry in Higher Education. 269: Massachusetts Children’s Lobby 1980 270: Massachusetts Citizens Against the Death Penalty. 1984 See also #75-76 Massachusetts Civil Liberties Union (Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts), see #123 271: Massachusetts Coalition for a Fair Budget. Emergency. 1981 272: Massachusetts Coalition for Divestment from South Africa 1981-1982 (Mass Divest). Conduit: Survival Education Fund. 273: Massachusetts Community Center. Re: merger with Fair Share 1975, 1977 274: Massachusetts Correctional Institution (MCI), Norfolk, Cape 1978 Verdean Group. Re: Nu Pintcha. 275: Massachusetts Correctional Institution (MCI), Norfolk, Cape 1978-1980 Verdean Group. Conduit: Three Pyramids. 276: Massachusetts Correctional Institution (MCI), Norfolk, Norfolk 1978 Strike Coalition. Re: prison strike. Conduit: Families and Friends of Prisoners. 277: Massachusetts Correctional Institution (MCI), Norfolk, Prisoners 1977-1978 Legal Education Association. Conduit: Families and Friends of Prisoners. 278-9: Massachusetts Correctional Institution (MCI), Norfolk, Question 1978-1982 Mark. Prison journal. 280: Massachusetts Correctional Institution (MCI), Norfolk, Radio 1978 Free Rehabilitation Group. 281: Massachusetts Correctional Institution (MCI), Norfolk, 1978 Worcester Rehabilitation Group. 282: Massachusetts Correctional Institution (MCI), Walpole, 1979? Video-Drama Workshop. Re: “Rewinding the Clockwork Orange” 283: Massachusetts Correctional Institution (MCI), Walpole, Walpole 1977 Education Project. Conduit: Institute for Responsive Education. 284: Massachusetts Correctional Institution (MCI), Walpole, 1978? The Writing on the Wall. Re: art in prison. 285: Massachusetts Correctional Legal Services. For Libby v. Hogan 1980 case re: solitary confinement at Walpole state prison. 286-8: Massachusetts Council (or Coalition) for Occupational Safety 1977, 1979 and Health (MassCOSH) 289: Massachusetts Fair Share 1974-1975 290: Massachusetts Feminist Federal Credit Union 1975 MassCOSH (Massachusetts Coalition for Occupational Safety and Health), see #286-88 Carton 5: 291-362 291: Massachusetts History Workshop 1982, 1984 292: Massachusetts Organization of Disabled Workers 1982, 1984 293-4: Massachusetts Senior Action Council 1981, 1983-1984 295: Massachusetts Solidarity Coalition. Re: unemployment. 1983 Conduit: Survival Education Fund. 296: Massachusetts Tenants Organization. For minority outreach 1984 in membership and decision-making 297: Massachusetts Twentieth Anniversary Mobilization. 1983 For March for Jobs, Peace and Freedom in Washington, D.C. on anniversary of 1963 march. Conduit: Survival Education Fund. 298: Massachusetts Union of Public Housing Tenants 1979 299: Massachusetts Welfare Recipients for Welfare Reform. 1977, 1979-1980 Program of Voluntary Defenders Committee. See also #352. MCI (Massachusetts Correctional Institution), see #274-84 300: Media Access Training and Assistance Unit 1981 301: Men Sharing 1975 302-3: Mental Patients Liberation Front 1974-1978, 1980, 1983 304: Meredith and Associates. Emergency. For homelessness study. 1983 305: Middle East Research and Information Project (MERIP) 1974, 1977 306: Middlesex New American Movement (NAM) 1975 307: Mishawum Park Tenants’ Association 1975 308: Mission Hill Community Land Trust. Project of Mission Hill 1979 Planning Commission. 309: Mission Hill Good News 1974-1975, 1980 310: Mission Hill Planning Commission 1981 311-2: Mission Park Youth Theatre 1980 313: MORAL/Constitutional Defense Project. Re: abortion rights? 1979-1980 Conduit: Boston Cambridge Ministry in Higher Education 314: Moslem Iranian Students Society. Conduit: Survival 1983 Education Fund. 315-6: Multicultural Project for Communication and Education 1981-1982 317: Municipal Power Advocacy Coalition. Project of Energy 1984 Education Corporation. NASC (Native American Solidarity Committee), see #327 318: National Anti-Racist Organizing Committee (NAROC), 1982-1983 Boston Chapter. Some re: Klan march on Boston 319: National Association of Atomic Veterans 1982-1983 320: National Coalition for Peace and Freedom 1981 321: National Conference of Black Lawyers 1977 322-3: National Lawyers Guild (NLG), Massachusetts Chapter. 1975-1976, 1979 Mostly re: referral service 324: National Lawyers Guild (NLG), Massachusetts Chapter, 1975-1976 Anti-Racism Committee, Anti-Racism Project. Re: Louisa Day Hicks et al. 325: National Lawyers Guild (NLG) Summer Projects Committee. 1977 Conduit: Capp Street Foundation. Re: Tenants First Coalition Summer Project. 326: National Student Coalition Against Racism (NSCAR) 1977 327: Native American Solidarity Committee (NASC). 1977 Conduit: Capp Street Foundation. 328: Neighborhood Coalition of Jamaica Plain 1975? 329: Network of Women in Trade and Technical Jobs 1981 330: New England Committee in Solidarity with the People of 1984 El Salvador (CISPES). Conduit: Survival Education Fund. See also #78. 331: New England Free Press 1976 332: New England Medical Center Employees 1975 333: New England North East Prisoners Association (NEPA). 1976 Re: NEPA News 334: New England Supporters of Silkwood. Re: Karen Silkwood, 1978? nuclear energy 335: Newburyport Study Group 1976 336-7: Nicaragua Solidarity Committee. Conduit: Survival Education 1979-1982 Fund and others. 338-9: 9 to 5 Organization for Women Office Workers 1974-1975 NLG (National Lawyers Guild), see #322-25 340-1: No-MATEP Coalition. Re: Harvard’s Medical Area Total 1981 Energy Plan. See also #378. Norfolk (MCI), see #274-81 342: North Dorchester Tenant’s Organizing Committee 1977 343: North End Neighborhood Task Force. For housing 1977 feasibility study 344: North Shore Welfare Rights Organization. Conduit: North Shore 1980 Community Action Programs. 345: Nuclear Education Project 1980 346: Organized Against Sexism and Stereotypes (Oasis), Boston 1980 347: Overview. Newsletter re: Panama Canal treaty 1976? 348: Oral History Center (c/o Cambridge Commission on Status of 1983 Women) 349: Packard Manse Media Project. Re: distribution of slideshow, 1982 “Hostage at Hell’s Bottom - The Economy and the Pentagon”. 350: Palfry Street School. Donor directed. 1977 351: Parent Support and Action Center. Conduit: Central School 1978-1979 352: Parents for Justice and Welfare Rights. Formerly Massachusetts 1976, 1981 Welfare Recipients for Welfare Reform. Conduit: Massachusetts Law Reform. See also #299. 353: Peace and Justice Summer project. Conduit: Jobs with Peace. 1984 354: Peaceful Movement Committee. Group for humanism 1978 and correctional reform. 355: People in Solidarity with Central American (PISCA). Formerly 1983 Worcester Area Coalition for El Salvador, see #475. 356: People’s Anti-War Mobilization 1981 357: People’s Committee for Boston. Group re: Boston’s fiscal crisis. 1977 358: The People’s Voice 1974-1975 359: Pequod (Cambridge). A collectively operated alternative 1976 mental health center. 360: Philippines Information Bulletin 1974-1975 361: Phillips Brooks House (Rob Gips). Harvard University. 1975 No proposal. PISCA (People in Solidarity with Central America), see #355 362: Planning for Peace/Architects for Social Responsibility. 1984 Conduit: Physicians for Peace. Carton 6: 363-438 363: Political Education Project. Project for Massachusetts 1974 Community Center 364: Preterm Strike. Brookline Health Clinic. 1977 Prisoners Legal Education Association, see #277 365: Project Aware/Massachusetts Committee for Children 1983 and Youth (MCCY). Re: gay/lesbian adolescents. 366: Project Lambda (Charles St. Universalist Church). 1975 Re: homosexual adolescents. 367: Project Place. Alternative counseling center. 1976, 1980 Interseminarians project. 368: Project Place Law Collective. For a variety of projects. 1975-1976 Includes a variety of other organizations. 369: Public Interest Development Company/Boston Clamshell. 1978 Re: nuclear power plants. See also #73. 370-1: Puerto Rico Solidarity Committee (PRSC), Boston. 1978, 1980 Conduit: Inter-Religious Foundation for Community Organization. 372: Racial Unity Now. Dorchester. 1976 373: Racism and Busing slide show. “In Back of the Bus”. 1976 Conduit: Urban Planning Aid. Radio Free Norfolk, see #280. 374: Rainbow Coalition. Conduit: Survival Education Fund. 1984 RAMA (Roxbury Alianza of Mothers Associated), see #382 375: Rape Action Project. Conduit: Women’s Educational Center. 1980 376: Reality Theater. Re: International New Theater Festival 1977 377: Registration and Enlistment Counseling Network. 1982 Conduit: American Friends Services Committee. 378: Residents United to Stop Harvard (RUSH). See also #340-341. 1977 379: Respond. Re: domestic violence 1975, 1977-1978, 1980 380: Robert W. White School 1975 381: Roxbury Action Program - Marcus Garvey Youth Center 1982 382: Roxbury Alianza of Mothers Associated (RAMA). 1977? Re: day care center 383: Roxbury Crossing Welfare Advisory Board. 1981 Re: welfare rights manual 384: Roxbury Fair Share 1977 385: Roxbury-North Dorchester/Neighborhood Revitalization 1982 386: “The Roxbury Response”/Film Fund Pyramid Production 1980 RUSH (Residents United to Stop Harvard), see #378 387: Self Advocacy Project. Conduit: Greater Boston Association 1983-1984 for Retarded Citizens. 388: Self Help Organization of Liberians 1983 389: Self Help Organization of Worcester. Disabled people. 1982 SEPAC (South End Project Area Committee), see #401-401 390: Service Employees for a Democratic Union. Emergency. 1980 391: Sister Courage. Newspaper. Project of Cambridge Women’s 1978 Educational Center. 392: Somerville Coalition for Fairer Property Taxes. 1977 Conduit: Massachusetts Community Center. 393: Somerville Tenants Union 1975-1976 394-5: Somerville United Neighborhoods 1975, 1981-1983 396: Somerville Women’s Center 1980 397: Somerville Women’s Health Project 1975 398: South East Asia Education Project. Conduit: Boston Cambridge 1982, 1984 Ministry in Higher Education. 399: South End Press 1980 400-1: South End Project Area Committee (SEPAC) 1979, 1981 402: Southern Africa Solidarity Conference Continuations 1982 Committee of Massachusetts 403: Southwest Corridor Community Farm. Also Southwest 1980, 1983 Corridor Coalition. Includes re: Wake Up the Earth Festival. See also #49. 404: Spanish-American Association of Lynn 1977 405: Star Film Library 1978-1979 406: State and Mind, a.k.a. Radical Therapist/Rough Times (RT) 1978-1979 407: Stoneham Women’s Center 1975 STOP (Symphony Tenants Organizing Project), see #411-14 408: Straight Talk. Somerville teen paper. 1974 409: Struggle!. Boston Afro-American community paper. 1974 410: Susan Saxe Defense Committee. Conduit: Women’s 1976 Educational Center 411: Symphony Tenants Organizing Project (STOP) 1978-1979 412-4: Symphony Tenants Organizing Project (STOP). Includes 1980, 1982, 1984 Fenway News. 415: Table Scraps. Food advocate’s newsletter. No proposal. 1975 416: The Tania Collective. Political theater. 1975 417: Taxpayers Against 2 ½. Proposition to cut property tax. 1980 Conduit: Urban Planning Aid. 418: Teatro Macondo. Latin American theater group. 1982 Conduit: Galaxy. 419: Tenants Action Group (TAG). Jamaica Plain. Became 1978 City Life/Vida Urbana, see also #118-19, 235, 446. 420: Tenants First Coalition 1976 421: Tenants First Defense Committee. Re: landlord Max Kargman. 1976 Conduit: Urban Planning Aid. 422: Third World Committee for International Woman’s day. 1979-1980 Also Dorchester Women’s Committee. See also #169, 187. Third World Conference, First Annual, see #214. 423: Third World Conference, Second Annual. Called: Second Annual 1980 Third World Conference 424: Third World Conference on Race and Class undated 425: Thirteenth Amendment Project 1985 426: Thresholds. To teach life planning and other skills to 1979 inmates at Worcester County Jail. 427: Together, Inc. Counseling agency aimed at young street 1975 people and welfare families. For Tocon Arms Tenant Union. 428: Transfusion. Hospital workers. 1975 429: Traprock Peace Center (six month progress report filed 1984). 1982 430: Trust for Native Americans 1982 431: Tupelo Support Committee. Anti-racist, anti-Klan. 1979 432: Unemployment Law Project. Conduit: Massachusetts Law 1981-1984 Reform Institute. 433: La Unidad Latina. Newspaper. Conduit: Hispanic Office of 1981 Planning and Evaluation. 434: Union Members for Jobs and Equality. Conduit: Jobs with Peace. 1982 435: UNITAS-Lowell. Project to organize services for the Spanish 1976 speaking community. 436: United Farm Workers (UFW)-New England Boycott 1974, 1977 437-8: United Labor Unions. Project of National Center for Jobs 1981-1983 and Justice. Includes Homemakers Organizing Project. Carton 7: 439-499 439: United Peoples. Low income 1976? 440: United Puerto Ricans/The Liberators 1980 441: Unity Through Creativity. Political theater for youth. 1983 442: University Christian Movement in New England 1978 443: Urban Planning Aid (UPA), CPF 1976 444: Urban Planning Aid (UPA), Media Project (or Group). Includes 1976, 1981 “In Back of the Bus”, and speaker system. 445: Urban Planning Aid-Occupational Safety and Health 1975-1976 Administration (UPA-OSHA) Project 446: Urban Revival. Include re: CommUnity News. 1978 See also #118-19, 235, 419. 447: Vietnam Veteran Artists. Conduit: families and Friends of 1983 Prisoners. 448: Vocations for Social Change. Conduit: American Friends 1977-1979 Service Committee. Wages for Housework, see #89 WAITT (We’re All in This Together), see #453 449: Wake Up the Earth Festival Coalition. Conduit: Southwest 1982-1983 Corridor Community Farm. See also #403. Walpole Education Project, see #283 450: Warehouse Cooperative School 1974-1975 451: WCUW-FM, Worcester 1979? 452: Wellmet Project. Halfway house for people with 1976 emotional illnesses. 453: We’re All In This Together (WAITT) House. For adult program 1982 in Roxbury neighborhood center. 454: Winter Hill Neighborhood Association. Somerville. post-1977 455: Who Rules Boston?. Project of Center for Study of Public Policy. 1983 Also Democratic Socialists of America. 456: Woburn Citizens Committee for a Cleaner Environment (FACE) 1982 457: Woburn Council of Social Concern. For Hispanic program. 1982 458: A Women’s Place - in Hingham. Women’s Center. 1978 459: Women Against Violence Against Women. 1978-1979 Conduit: Women’s Educational Center. 460: Women and Health Conference 1975 461: Women Like Me Collective. African-American women. 1978 For workshops. Conduit: Cooper Community center. 462: (The) Women’s Alliance; a Network for Economic Survival. 1985-1986 Conduits: Survival Education Fund, Mobilization for Survival. 463: Women’s Cable TV. Conduit: Margaret Fuller House. 1984 464: Women’s Commission in Exile. Former Governor’s Commission 1982-1983 on the Status of Women all fired by Governor King. Includes Women for Economic Justice. 465: Women’s Community Health Center 1974, 1976, 1978, 1981 466: Women’s Community Studies. Project of Feminist Studies 1979 at Goddard-Cambridge Graduate Program in Social Change. 467-8: Women’s Educational Center 1974, 1976, 1982, 1986 469: Women’s Educational Media. Lesbian educational outreach. 1978, 1980-1981 470: Women’s Institute of New England. Women’s camp, etc., 1978? near Worcester. 471: Women’s Mental Health Collective 1976 472: Women’s Resource Center of North Central Massachusetts. 1979, 1981 Began as Leominster Women’s Center. Conduit: Leominster Multi-Service Center. 473-4: Women’s School. Conduit: Women’s Educational Center 1974-1980 475: Worcester Area Coalition for El Salvador. Became People in 1982 Solidarity with Central America. Conduit: Center for Reflective Action. See also #355. 476: Worcester Community Television Council, Cable Channel 13. 1978 For Little Apple. 477: Worcester People’s Press 1975 478: Worcester Tenants’ Association. Became Housing 1975, 1978 Information Center. Includes re: Worcester Labor Co-op Worcester Rehabilitation Group, see #281 479: Worcester Women’s Center 1975 480: Worcester Women Working. Boston Cambridge Ministry 1978 in Higher Education. 481: Word of Mouth Productions. Working-class women 1982 political theater. 482: Workers’ Action Council 1976? 483: Working on Wife Abuse 1977 484: Working Woman Organizing Project 1978 485: World Fellowship. In cooperation with Boston People’s 1982 Organization. For youth organizing and training conference. Writing on the Wall (Massachusetts Correctional Institution, Walpole), see #284 Series III: Haymarket People’s Fund, publications Subseries IIIA: Annual reports 486: 1976 487: 1977 488: 1978 489: 1979 490: 1980-81 491: 1981-82 492: 1982-83 493: 1983-84 494: 1984-85 495: 1985-86 496: 1986-87 497: 1987-88 498: 1988-89 499: 1989-90 500: 1990-91 501: 1991-92 502: 1992-93 Subseries IIIB: Other 503: “Inherited Wealth: your money and your life,” for the Funding Exchange by Haymarket Peoples Fund (April 1981; reprint of articles originally in the Haymarket News) 504: Robin Hood Was Right: A Guide to Giving Your Money for Social Change by Vanguard Public Foundation (1977), Chapter 4: “Haymarket Peoples Fund” 1994 Accession Carton 1: 1-33: Boston Area Board [Boston Regional Funding Board?], 1985-89 1: BAB [Boston Area Board] - evaluations [by grant recipients] 2: BAB [funding] 3: NECAN 4: [BAB grant allotments] 5: BAB listing [of grant recipients] 6: BAB [proposals] 7-11: Boston minutes 7: Formal minutes, 1989 8: Formal minutes, 1988 9: Formal minutes, 1987 10: Formal minutes, 1986 11: 1985 12: TA [training applicants?], 1989 13-33: Boston emergency grant decisions 13: 1989 14: Report, 1988 15: 1987 16-18: 1989 19-21: 1988 22-24: 1987 25-26: 1986 27-28: 1986 #2 29-30: 1986 #3 31: 1985 #2 32-33: 1985 34-237: Boston Grants, files, ca. 1978-1991 (bulk, ca. 1984-88) 34: Access Philippines 35: Advocacy Center for Older Women Workers 36: A La Vida 37-38: All Peoples Congress 39: Alliance for Prison Justice 40: Alliance vs. Women’s Oppression 41: Artists Call Against U.S. Intervention In Central America 42: Architects and Planners in Support of Nicaragua-Boston chapter 43: Amigas Latinas en Accion Pro-Salud 44-46: Arts for a new Nicaragua 47: Association of Concerned African Scholars 48: Blackstone Valley Rape Crisis Team 49: Battered Women’s Video Project 50: Black Cat Collective 51: Black Community Info Center 52: Blacks for Empowerment 53-54: Boston Acorn 55: Boston Affordable Housing Coalition 56-57: Boston Alliance Against Registration and the Draft (BAARD) 58: Boston Area Coalition for the Mobilization for Justice and Peace in Central American and South Africa 59: Boston Area Committee for the AMANDLA US Tour 60: Boston Area FAT Liberation 61: Boston Area Network on Central American (BANCA) 62: Boston Big Mountain Support Group 63: Boston Black and Green 64: Boston Collective 65: Boston Educators for Survival 66-67: Boston Mobilization for Survival 68: Boston Labor/Student Delegation to El Salvador 69: Boston Self Help Center 70: Boston Senior Action Council 71: Boston Student Action Network 72: Boston Winning Democracy Coalition 73: Boston Women’s Committee for International Women’s Day 74: BU Exposure 75: Byte Back 76: Boston Center for Lesbians and Gay Men 77: Broomfield St. Educational Foundation/GCN 78: Cambridge El Salvador Sister City Project 79: Cambridge Haitian American Association 80: Cambridge Tenants Union 81: Campaign for Change 82: Campaign for Peace with Justice in the Middle East 83: CAPA-Educators in Support of ANDES 84: Casa Chile 85: Center for Atomic Radiation Studies 86: Center for Women’s Safety Education 87: Central American Education Exchange 88: Central American Labor Leaders Tour New England Planning Committee 89: Central America Solidarity Association 90: Centro Presente 91: Children Are the Future 92-93: Chinatown Community Mural 94-95: Chinatown Housing and Land Development Task Force 96: Clean Water Action Project 97: Coalition for a Nuclear Test Ban 98: Coalition for Palestinian rights 99: Colectivo Puertoriqueno 100: Committee to Free Sharon Kawolski 101: Comite El Salvador (Formerly Casa El Salvador Farabundo Marti) 102: Community Services for Women 103: Contragate Action Team of Boston 104: Cultural Resistance 105: Dawn Project 106: Deadly Connection Working Group 107: Disabled Peoples Liberation Group 108: Disability Integration Organizing Project 109-10: East Boston Community News 111: East Boston Ecumenical Community Council 112: Ethnic Arts Center of Somerville 113-4: Emerge 115: Eastern Mass Regional Organizing Network 116: Faneuil Hall Tenants Organization 117: Fenway Community Development Corporation 118: Fenway Community Health Center 119: Forum on Disability Issues 120: Florence After School Program 121: Franklin Hill Tenants United (or Task Force) 122: Framingham Tenants Organization 123: Free South Africa Movement, Boston 124: Gay and Lesbian Advocates and Defenders 125: Geese Theatre Company 126: Go no time for Affinity 127: Grassroots International 128: Greater Boston Chapter of the Coalition for Labor Union Women 129: Greater Boston Minority Health Coalition 130: Greater Boston June 11 Campaign 131: Greater Boston Anti-Arson and Anti-Displacement Organization 132: Greater Boston Union of the Homeless 133: Grenada Solidarity 134: Grenada Investigation 135: Haiti Yes 136: Hands of Time Incorporated 137: Harbor Me 138: Hawthorne Youth and Community Center 139: High Tech Workers Network 140: Hispanic Office of Planning Evaluation Jamaica Plain Youth 141: Homefront 142: Honduras Information Center 143: HUD Tenants Committee Boston Affordable Housing Coalition 144: Incest Survivors Network 145-6: Infact 147-8: Inner City Outreach Philips Brooks House 149: Jamaica Plain Community Planning Coalition 150: Justice at Work Project 151: League of Haitian Families 152: Let Nicaragua Live Great Boston Outreach Task Force 153: Les Caynes Children’s Fund 154: Lesbians and Children’s Conference 155: Low Income Students for Survival 156: Lowell Tenants Alliance 157: Margaret Fuller House 158: Massachusetts Affordable Housing Alliance 159: Massachusetts Campaign for Safe Energy 160: Massachusetts Coalition of Battered Women Service Groups 161: Massachusetts Coalition for the Homeless 162: Massachusetts College of Art Visiting Artists Program 163: Massachusetts Coalition for Occupational safety and Health 164: Massachusetts Coalition of Citizens with Disabilities 165: Massachusetts Coalition on New Office Technology 166: Massachusetts Housing Now Coalition 167: Massachusetts Friends of Midwives 168: Massachusetts Association of Disabled Artists 169: Massachusetts Labor Support Project 170-1: Massachusetts Labor Committee in Support of Democracy, Human Rights, and Non- Intervention in Central America 172: Mrs. Bee’s Gardens 173: Mission Main Tenants Task Force 174: Media Education Project on the Women’s Convoy to Central America 175: Men of All Colors Together Boston 176: Media Access Training and Assistance Unit 177: Massachusetts Rock Against Racism 178: Massachusetts Propaganda Alert 179: National Conference of Black Lawyers Massachusetts Chapter 180: National Lawyers Guild Anti-Repression Committee 181: New England Equity Institute 182: Newcomers Job Bank 183: Organizing and Leadership Training Center 184: Olaleye Communications 185: Office Technology Education Project 186-7: Parents United for the Education and Development of Others (PUEDO) 188: Parents United for Childcare/Research and Education Project 189: PACRAT 190: Peace Brigades International Boston Area Support Group 191: Physicians for a National Health Program 192: Playwrights Platform 193: Poor Peoples United Fund 194: Proyecto Cultural Morivivir 195: Project Change 196-9: The Question Mark Journal 200-1: Rainbow Multiversity, Inc. 202: Quincy-Geneva Housing Corporation 203: Refugee/Immigration Ministry 204: Roxbury Community News 205: Say It Sister 206: Somerville Community News 207: Smedley D. Butler Bridge 208-9: Simplex Steering Committee 210: South Shore Conversion Committee 211: South End Self-Advocates 212: South African Relief 213: Street Artists Guild 214: Street Magazine 215: Survival News 216: Third World Awareness Club (of Brookline High School) 217: Toxic Alert 218-9: Veterans Benefit Clearinghouse 220: Veterans Peace Convoy 221: We Are the City Television (WAC-TV) 222: Watermelon Studio Inc. 223: Washington Street Corridor Coalition 224: What’s Left in Boston 225: We’re Educators A Touch of Class (WEATOC) 226: Whitter Street Tenant Association 227: WCUW, Inc. 228: Women’s Community Broadcast Group 229: Women’s Convoy to Central America 230: Women for Women in Lebanon 231: Women’s Peace Encampment 232: Women’s Resource Center 233-5: Women’s Statewide Legislature Network of Massachusetts 236: Word of Mouth Productions 237: Youth Educational and Recreational Project 1999 Accession Carton 1: 1: Boston Technical Assistance Invoices 2: Action and Community Training, Inc. 3: AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (ACT UP)/Boston, Inc. 4: Agissiz Community School Council/Jamaica Plain Community School 5: All Kinds of Family Alliance 6: Alternatives for Community and Environment 7: American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, Boston Chapter 8: Amigas Latinas en Accion pro Salud (ALAS) 9: April 25 Youth Rally Committee 10: ARK Theatre 11: Arnean Siochana Eireann/Peace Watch Ireland 12: Asian Sisters in Action (ASIA) 13: Asian Task Force Against Domestic Violence 14: Asian Women’s Project 15: Association of Haitian Women in Boston 16: Battered Women Fighting Back (BWFB) 17: Bikes Not Bombs 18: Boston Alliance of Gay and Lesbian Youth, Inc. (BAGLY) 19: Boston/Cambridge Area Clothesline Project 20: Boston Center for the Arts/Homeless Women Speak 21: Boston Chapter of the National Committee to Free Puerto Rican Prisoners of War 22: Boston Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador (CISPES) 23: Boston Committee for Puerto Rican Rights 24: Boston Do Something 25: Boston Human Rights Institute 26: Boston Kennebunkport ’91 Coalition 27: Boston Jobs with Peace Campaign 28: Boston Jobs with Peace Campaign 29: Boston Media Action 30: Boston Tradeswomen’s Network 31: Boston Women’s Health Book Collective (Boston R2N2) 32: Boston Women’s AIDS Information Project 33: Bread & Jams 34: Brookside Theater 35: Cambridge-Ramallah/El-Bireh Sister City Campaign 36: Cape Cod Women’s Agenda 37: Caribbean Focus at Roxbury Community College (RCC): Puerto Rico & Jamaica Work Groups 38: Cathedral Tenants United, Inc. 39: Chelsea Community Economic Development (CED) Alliance 40-42: Chelsea’s Commission on Hispanic Affairs, Inc. 43-45: Chinese Progressive Association 46: CIBAO Club, Inc. 47: Citizens for Safety 48: Citizens Opposed to Polluting the Environment 49: Citizens to End Animal Suffering and Exploitation (CEASE) Carton 2: 50-51: City Life/Vida Urbana 52: Clean Coalition 53: Clothesline Project 54-55: Coalition for Basic Human Needs 56-57: Coalition for Community Control of Development 58: Coalition on New Office Technology 59: Coalition for Social Justice 60: Codman Square Neighborhood Council 61: Colombia Vive 62: Comite De Mujeres Puertorriquences Miriam Lopez Perez 63: Comite Hondureno Francisco Morazan 64: Committee 500 Years Resistance 65: Commonground US - Cuba Information Exchange 66: Commonwealth Education Project 67: Part of the Solution 68: Commonwealth Tenants Association 69: Community Bytes 70: Community Change 71: Cooperative Economics for Women 72: CPPAX Education Fund, Inc. 73: Culture Sharing 74: Deaf-Blind Contact Center 75: Disability Pride Day Coalition 76: Dorchester Community News 77-78: Dorchester Women’s Committee 79: East Coast Bisexual Network (ECBN) 80: Egleston Square Neighborhood Association 81: Emergency Coalition for Peace, Justice & Non-Intervention in the Middle East 82-84: Eviction Free Zone Coalition of Cambridge 85-86: Essex County Community Organization, Inc. 87: Evaluation Family Counseling, Haitians & Minorities Inc. (EFCHAM) 88: Feminist Jews for Justice 89: Filmmakers Collaborative Carton 3: 90: Fisherman’s Wives Association, Inc. 91: Fishnet 92: 500 Years is Enough! Coalition 93: 500 Years of Indigenous Resistance Council 94: Four Corners Public Safety Action Project 95: Framingham Regional Alliance of Gay/Lesbian Youth (FRAGLY) 96-97: Free My People 98: Freedom Now Coalition - Coalition 99: Gay Prisoner Project of Bromfield Street Educational Foundation 100: Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual Speakers Bureau 101: Grass-Roots Peace and Justice Network 102: Gray Panthers of Greater Boston 103-4: Greater Boston Regional Youth Council Teens Training Teens 105: Greater Roxbury Neighborhood Authority 106: Guatemala Committee of CASA 107: Haiti Communications Project Fund, Inc. 108: Health Action Research Group 109: Health Care for All 110: Health Security Coalition 111: Heritage Common (CDC) 112: Homeless Organization for Women 113: Homeless Organizers’ Support Team (HOST) 114: HonduNet (Honduras National Network) 115: Immigrant Rights Advocacy, Training and Education Project (IRATE) 116-7: Immigrant Workers Resource Center 118-9: Ina Mae Best Solidarity Committee 120: International Women’s Day Video Festival 121: Irish Immigration Center 122: Jefferson Park Writing Center 123: July 26th Coalition 124: June 27th Project 125: Kenmore/Audobon Circle/Fenway Neighborhood Initiative 126: Labor Committee on the Middle East 127-8: Lawrence Youth Commission Family Development Center 129: MADRE, Inc. 130: Massachusetts Anti-Hunger Coalition 131: Massachusetts Association of Women Fire Fighters 132: Massachusetts CFIDS Association 133: Massachusetts Citizens Against the Death Penalty Fund 134-5: Massachusetts Community Coalition for Public Education 136: Massachusetts English Plus Coalition 137: Massachusetts Human Services Coalition 138: Massachusetts Jobs with Justice Coalition 139: Massachusetts Lifers Organization 140: Massachusetts Peace Action 141: Medford Citizens Diversity in Education 142: Massachusetts tenants Resource Center 143: Mattapan-Dorchester Churches in Action 144: Middle East Philanthropic Fund 145: Miss J’s Youth Club 146: Mission Hill Neighborhood Housing Services, Inc. 147: Mouvman Peyizan Papay Education and Development Fund (MPP-EDF) 148: National Congress for Puerto Rican Rights - Mass Chapter 149: National Lawyers Guild - Mass Chapter 150: National Writers Union - Boston Local 151: Neighbor to Neighbor 152: Network for Battered Lesbians 153: NICA - Nuevo Instituto De Centra America 154: New Neighborhood Priority 155: Nicaragua Solidarity Committee 156: Nurses for National Health Care 157-8: Odyssey Journal 159: Center for Labor Education and Research (CLEAR) 160: Orchard Park United Tenants Association, Inc. 161: Ourstories Herstories Project 162: Palestine Solidarity Committee - Boston Chapter 163: Parents Organized for Development, Education & Reform 164: Peace and Justice Hotline 165: Peace for Cuba International Appeal 166: People’s Music Network/SFS 167: People to People 168: P.E.W.T.E.R. Program 169: Police Practices Coalition 170: Poor People’s United Fund 171-2: Prison Book Program 173-4: Prison Theatre Arts Program 175: Project Free (Franklin Residents Efforts for Equality) 176: Puerto Rican Organizing Resource Center 177: People with AIDS Coalition (PWA) 178: Pynk Patrol of Greater Boston 179: Rainforest Defense Fund 180: Reproductive Rights Network 181: Somerville-Perguin Sister City Project 182: Sponsoring Committee for Greater Movement Unity 183: Spontaneous Celebrations 184: Survivors, Inc. 185: Technology Education Council of Somerville 186: Teens as Community Resources 187: Theater Offensive 188: United Youth of Boston 189: Unity Boston 190: University Conversion Project 191: U.S. - Cuba Labor Delegation Tour 192: Waltham Alliance to Create Housing (W.A.T.C.H.) 193: Welcome Project Haymarket People’s Fund, Western Massachusetts records, 1975-83 (at UMass Amherst Library and Archives) 1: Minutes, reports - 1975-82 2: Alternative Energy Coalition of Hampden County 3: Amherst Community Resource Center/Western Mass. Welfare Coalition 4: Association Latina Progresso y Accion 5: Battered People’s Project 6: Berkshire Community Education Group 7: Berkshire Model Education Program 8: Berkshire Union of Community Organizers 9: Berkshire Voices Collective 10: Butterfly Education Arts/Women’s Media Coalition 11: Casa Latina/Hampshire Community Action Commission (Noticiero Latina) 12: center for Community Access TV (CCATV) 13: Che Lumumba Multicultural Community Education Project 14: CISPES/Center for Reflective Action 15: Committee for Childcare in Crisis (CCC) 16: Community Union Rural Development Corporation 17: correctional Change Group 18: Council of Churches of Grater Springfield/Committee to End Apartheid 19: Cultural Workers Collective 20: Evergreen Defense Fund 21: Franklin Training Corp. 22: Gray House, Inc./Motherhouse of Sisters of St. Joseph 23: Gray Panthers/Faith Church of Springfield 24: Hampshire County Employed/Unemployed Council 25: Holyoke YWCA/Greater Holyoke Women’s Center 26: July 4th Coalition, Western Mass Chapter 27: Labor Relations and Research Center, University of Mass 28: Last Resort, The 29: Little Apple, The 30: Mass Coalition for Occupational Safety and Health (MassCOSH) 31: Mass Organization of Disabled Workers 32: Mass People’s History Project 33: Mobilization for Survival, Northampton 34: Native American Solidarity Committee 35: Necessities/Necesidades/ISIS 36: New England Small Farm Inst./W. Mass. Energy, Environment and Agri. Resource Network 37: New Unity 38: Northampton Veterans’ Coalition 39: Open Door/Association for Retarded Citizens 40: Panache 41: Parents for Peace 42: Patria Libre 43: People for Economic Survival 44: People for Peace of Southern Berkshire 45: Puerto Rican Congress 46: Puerto Rican Solidarity Committee 47: Puerto Rican Solidarity Committee, Springfield 48: Southern Africa Solidarity Committee/ANC 49: Spanish American Union/Springfield Citizens Coalition for Justice 50: Springfield Health Coalition/Family Planning Council of Western Mass 51: Springfield Rape Crisis Center 52: Springfield Women’s Union 53: Students United for Public Education 54: Sunday News Collective 55: 12 to 1 56: Union of Student Employees 57: University of Mass Labor Community Support Network 58: Urban Ministry/United Citizens Action League 59: Valley Women’s Martial Arts 60: Valley Women’s Union 61: Western Mass Latin American Solidarity Committee 62: Western Mass Native American 63: Women against Violence in Pornography and Media 64: Women’s Caucus of the Northampton Committee on El Salvador 65: Women’s Center of North Berkshire Community Action 66: Work, Inc.
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Title | Haymarket People's Fund records, 1974-1989 |
CollectionID | SC-0038 |
FA_Identifier | UASC-SC-0038-FA |
Decades - Collection |
1970-1979 1980-1989 |
Publisher | University of Massachusetts Boston, Joseph P. Healey Library |
Creator | University Archives & Special Collections, University of Massachusetts Boston |
Collection Category |
Activism Community Organizations Dorchester Labor |
OCR Text | Collection: 0038 Haymarket People’s Fund records, 1974-1989 Quantity: 15 record cartons, 3 document cases Processed by Elizabeth Mock Finding aid reviewed by Jessica Holden, April 2013 Accession number: 90-3; 94-4; 99-7 PROVENANCE The Haymarket People’s Fund donated the records of the Boston Regional Funding Board, the Boston portion of HPF’s grant files, and HPF’s annual reports and publications to University Archives & Special Collections at UMass Boston in June 1990. A second accession was donated in October 1994 and a third accession was donated in December 1999. Restrictions: Permission to identify board members’ opinions by name, as expressed in non-published materials, must be obtained from Haymarket People’s Fund before publication. HISTORY Haymarket People’s Fund, a New England alternative granting foundation for social change, was founded in July 1974 by George Pillsbury and other young people with inherited wealth. In 1976, the Haymarket staff established Rank and File (R&F), a corporation used to fund projects that would not pass guidelines for tax-exemption. When organizations without tax-exempt status submit proposals that fall within tax-exempt guidelines, HPF encourages them to find a tax-exempt “conduit” or “sponsor.” Between 1976 and 1977 the structure of HPF evolved from one community decision-making board in Boston to eight autonomous boards, one for each New England state, and two each for Massachusetts and Connecticut. Each regional board is comprised of five to ten members who are often political activists and from organizations that HPF has previously funded; each board makes funding decisions for that region. The boundaries of the Boston Regional Funding Board include the area from Worchester to the Atlantic, Fall River to the northern border of Massachusetts. From 1977 until 1983 one member of each regional board sat on the New England Board which made grants for proposals crossing funding areas and served as a board of directors. In 1983 HPF established the Coordinating Council, responsible for general administration of the Fund, financial and personnel policies, and fund-raising plans. Although apparently most of HPF’s grants are directed from the regional boards, HPF also channels donor-directed (DD) or donor-advised (DA) grants to organizations. HPF relies on donations from people with inherited wealth and earned income as well as interest from its investments in corporations that meet its moral and political standards. In 1979 HPF helped found the Funding Exchange (FEX), an umbrella organization for alternative funds with a shared philosophy. In 1980 FEX moved beyond sharing technical support among the funds by creating National Community Funds to administer grants to national and international organizations within its guidelines. Believing that in order “to transform our society the unequal distribution of wealth and power must be righted” (1983-84 Annual Report) the philosophy and goals of the Haymarket People’s Fund have apparently remained consistent throughout its existence. Since the “potential for change in the United States lies in people’s realization that the roots of our oppression and insecurities are related to the political/economic system in which we live” (1981-82 Annual Report), HPF’s goals are: “to help people understand the sources of social and economic injustice in our country and how to change them; to support people trying to take control of their lives through challenging established power, learning how to use leadership, and developing self-respect; and to work towards the shared vision of a non-oppressive, life-supporting society” (1983-84 Annual Report). In its attempt to support people organizing among their own constituencies, HPF has tried to be responsive to what people, particularly those in “oppressed” groups, identify as pressing issues. These goals have resulted in grants to a variety of grassroots organizations including those interested in the rights of people of color, tenants, workers, women, students, people with disabilities, gay men and lesbians, the elderly, veterans, welfare recipients, and environmentalists, as well as groups working on issues of peace, poverty, discrimination, economic justice, accessibility, and public education on international issues. HPF explicitly states that they do not fund activities not clearly linked to organizing, groups with budgets over a particular amount, groups receiving significant government or corporate grants or those with no fund-raising plans beyond HPF, groups that solely provide services, or alternative businesses or institutions. (1988-89 Annual Report) In addition to making grants, Haymarket People’s Fund makes small emergency grants, administers loans, and provides technical assistance. HPF helps socially responsible people with wealth make investment and donor decisions. Technical assistance to groups sharing its philosophy (whether or not they meet its granting guidelines) includes helping organizations make long-range plans, develop fund-raising strategies and network with other groups. For additional information see HPF’s annual reports in Series III of this collection. SCOPE AND CONTENT The Haymarket People’s Fund Collection primarily consists of HPF’s Boston grant files from 1974 through 1984. The papers of HPF’s Western Massachusetts Regional Funding Board are located at the University of Massachusetts Amherst Archives. This collection is divided into three series and several subseries. Series I: Boston Regional Funding Board Subseries IA: Minutes, #1-10 Subseries IB: Other, #11-1 Series II: Boston Grants, files, #17-485 Series III: Haymarket People’s Fund, publications Subseries IIIA: Annual reports, #486-497 Subseries IIIB: Other, #498-499 The folder descriptions used in the inventory below are extensions of the folder titles used by HPF. HPF marked the files in Series III by organization name, and occasionally included date of funding, “emergency,” or project sponsor. SERIES I: Boston Board Series I is divided into two subseries and documents the Haymarket People’s Fund’s Boston Regional Funding Board’s deliberations and activities, and occasionally its policy debates, between 1974 and 1984. Subseries IA: Minutes #1-10, includes correspondence, agendas, and notes. Some are in chronological order, some are in reverse chronological order. Subseries IB: Other #11-16, consists of 1984 board records including emergency grant applications, and correspondence, minutes, and completed registration forms relating to HPF’s Tenth Anniversary Festival. Before 1984, some emergency grant applications were interfiled with regular grant applications files such as those in Series II. HPF may, however, have maintained a separate emergency grant applications file prior to 1984 in which case there is a gap in the University of Massachusetts Boston’s HPF Collection. SERIES II: Boston Grants, files #17-485, the bulk of this collection, contains successful and unsuccessful grant applications and a few loan applications made to the Haymarket People’s Fund between 1974 and 1984. Each folder consists of one or more grant application files. When the collection was transferred to UMass Boston these files were divided into pre-1983 and 1983-84. As this was an arbitrary distinction, the files were integrated into one alphabetical series, but applications from the same organization remain in separate folders. Each grant application file includes a completed “Haymarket Grant Application” form or answers to questions on that form, and often includes proof of the applicant or conduit’s tax-exempt status, samples of the group’s work, letters in support of the application, a grant proposal not following Haymarket’s requested format, correspondence with HPF staff or board, or copies of applications made to other funding sources. The “Haymarket Grant Application” form requests a brief history of the group, organization’s goals, how the group plans to reach those goals, the group’s structure and decision-making process, targeted constituency and membership make-up, how the group deals with the oppression of racial and oppressed nationalities, women and gay/lesbian people, working class and poor people, the group’s current and planned projects, a description and budget for the project the grant would fund, how the organization or project’s effectiveness could be evaluated, and other items the organization wished to include. The grant proposals include samples of leaflets, clippings, etc. used to support grant proposals or as part of subsequent reports. Many application files include a form filled out by the HPF board member who interviewed the organization or other notes taken by board members about the applicant. Most include notes indicating the board’s decision. Folders that include successful grant application files also usually contain a copy of a memorandum from HPF, a completed grant agreement form, a grant history, and a six month progress report. The grant history includes the date of the grant, conduit through which the grant was channeled to the organization, the funding period, the amount of the grant, the grant’s source (HPF, R&F, donor directed (dd), donor advised (da), etc.), and often notes if the grant was an emergency. In the middle of the decade this series covers, HPF Boston Board used an orange form for the grant history. It appears that in the early eighties someone (“RT”) went through each file and, following the format of the orange sheet, wrote the same information on the inside of each folder. The processor transferred these notes to the first sheet of each folder. When it appeared that the organization acting as a conduit had a relationship with the grant recipient beyond transferring funds, the conduit, or project sponsor, was noted in the folder description. The dates in the folder headings are not inclusive; they represent years when an organization either received a grant from HPF or made an unsuccessful grant application. In keeping with HPF’s notations, each year represents at least one grant application. If an organization submitted an application in October 1976 and received the grant in February 1977, 1977 is the only year noted for that application. If the organization did not receive the grant, 1976 is the only year noted for that application. Therefore, folder headings spanning two or more years contain two or more applications or grants. Most folders are in rough reverse-chronological order. At times HPF used colored paper dividers to separate different grant applications within a file. For preservation purposes, some such dividers were replaced with white sheets marked “divider.” Most folders contain supporting material dating from the period before and after the year in which the grant was applied for or funded. Many applications include samples of the organization’s then current work. Most grantees filed a required six month progress report, and some sent HPF information for years to come. Researchers interested in a particular subject should examine the entire folder list for Series II which is in alphabetical order by organization name. SERIES III: Haymarket People’s Fund #486-499, publications is divided into two subseries and provides thorough if general information about HPF’s philosophy, goals, and activities. Subseries IIIA: Annual reports #486-497, consists of HPF’s annual reports from 1979 through fiscal year 1988. They include HPF’s goals, financial information, grant recipients, and other information. Subseries IIIB: Other #498-499, contains a set of articles published by HPF in 1981, and a book including a chapter about HPF’s work. INVENTORY Series I: Boston Regional Funding Board Subseries IA: Minutes Carton 1: 1-61 1-2: 1974-75 3: 1976 4: 1977 5: 1978 6: 1979 7: 1980 8: 1981-82 9: 1983 10: 1984 Subseries IB: Other 11-13: Emergencies 1984 14-16: Boston’s Tenth HPF Anniversary Festival 1984 14: Correspondence, public relations 15: Minutes/Org. of Festival Committee, includes notes 16: Answers (completed registration forms) Series II: Boston Grants, files 17: Abortion Action Coalition, 1978-79. Conduit: Women’s Educational Center 18: Abortion Rights Action Week, 1979. Conduit: Women’s Educational Center 19: Access Resource Center 1975 20: Accion International 1980-1981 21: Ad Hoc Coalition for a Safe Boston Harbor. Emergency. 1983 A project of Survival Education Fund. 22: Ad Hoc Lebanon Emergency Committee. A project of 1982 Middle East Research and Information Project (MERIP). 23: Ad Hoc South End Committee. Re: housing. 1974 24: Advocacy for Resources for Modern Survival. Re: Welfare 1984 Mothers; Up in Arms. Conduit: Massachusetts Human Services Coalition. 25: Affirmative Consequence thru Social Change. Re: criminal 1977 justice, former inmates. 26: African Forum. Conduit: Boys Harbor. Apr 1983 27: Afrika Baraza. Human rights watch group. Sponsor: All 1983 Saints Lutheran Church of Boston. 28: Afrikan Heritage Institute 1977 29: Afro-American Liberation House 1974 30-31: All-City Organization - Housing Task Force 1978-1979 32: All Women’s Program of Fields Corner. Conduit: 1980 Cleveland-Marshall Community Council. 33: Alliance against Sexual Coercion 1978, 1980 34: Alliance for the Mentally Ill/Cambridge-Middlesex 1983-1984 35: Allston-Brighton Community News 1976, 1978 36: Allston-Brighton Greenlight. Safehouse program. 1980 37: Allston-Brighton Tenants Organization 1975-1976 38: Alpha and Omega Evangelistic Outreach Church 1982 39: Alternative House. Emergency shelter for battered 1978 women and children in Lowell area. 40: Amandla People’s Security. Conduit: The Group School 1979, 1981-1982 41: Anthropology Resource Center (ARC) 1977-1978 42: Anti-Nuclear Legal Project. Conduit: Central Massachusetts 1980-1982 Safe Energy Project. Anti-Racism Project (National Lawyers Guild, Massachusetts Chapter, Anti-Racism Committee), see #324 43: Anti-War Organizing League (AWOL). Emergency. Conduit: 1981 Survival Education Fund 44-45: Asian-American Resource Workshop 1977, 1979-1983 46: Back of the Hill Community Development Association 1978 47: Back of the Hill Community Development Association 1982-1983 48: Back Bay/Beacon Hill Tenants Union 1981-1982 49: Bar None. Prison paper. 1975 50: Bay State Conversion Project. Conduit: Survival Education Fund 1979 51: Beacon Hill Update 1981 52: Being: A Magazine on Prison Issues 1983-1984 53: Black Family Women’s Association. Emergency. 1982 54: Black Ghetto Theater (Paige Academy). Roxbury High School 1982, 1984 students. 55: Black Mothers Against Drugs 1984 56: Black Mothers’ Organization 1977 57: Black Panther School of Freedom Fighting 1976 58: Black Spectrum, WYBC 1977 59: Blackfolk, Boston University Newsletter 1980 60: Boston Alliance Against and Political Repression. Conduit: 1980 Families and Friends of Prisoners. 61: Boston Area Day Care Workers Union (or “United”) (BADWU) 1981 Carton 2: 62-123 62-63: Boston Area Educators for Social Responsibility 1983-1984 64: Boston Area Rape Crisis Center. Conduit: Women’s 1984 Educational Fund. 65: Boston Attica Project. Conduit: National Lawyers Guild. 1974 66-67: Boston Bail Project 1974-1979, 1981 68: Boston Bail Project 1982 69: Boston Black United Front 1980 70: Boston Campaign for Political Rights 71: Boston Centre for Older Americans 1975 72: Boston City-Wide Organizing Program. Proposed by 1975 Massachusetts Community Center. 73: Boston Clamshell. Re: Seabrook nuclear power plant. 1978-1979 See also #369. 74: Boston Committee against the Bakke Decision 1977 75-76: Boston Committee against Executions. Conduit: Unitarian 1978-1979, 1981 Universalist Service Committee. See also #270. 77: Boston Committee for the Liberation of Southern Africa. 1976, 1980 Special project of Boston-Cambridge Ministries in Higher Education. 78: Boston Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador 1981-1982 (CISPES). Project of Survival Education Fund. See also #330. 79-80: Boston Community School/Boston Community Center. Conduit: 1976-79, 1981 Mass. Community Center 81: Boston Feminist Coalition. Emergency. 1982 82: Boston Indian Council. Re: The Circle, a Paper for Native People. 1977 83: Boston INFACT. Re: infant formula 1978 84: Boston Jobs Coalition. Conduit: Low Income Planning Aid 1980 85: Boston Organizing Committee of the National Writers Union 1982-1983 86: Boston People against Racism and the Klan. Emergency. 1982 Boston Puerto Rico Solidarity Committee (PRSC), see #370-371 87: Boston Urban Gardeners (BUG) 1979?, 1982 88: Boston Urban Gardeners (BUG). Some re: Nesenkeag 1979, 1982-1983 Cooperative produce program. 89: Boston Wages for Housework 1977 90: Boston-Washington Walk for Disarmament and Social Justice 1976 91: Boston Wind. Alternative energy, education center undated 92: Brockton Tenants Union 1974 BUG (Boston Urban Gardeners), see #87-88 93: Cambridge Committee of Elders 1984 94: Cambridge Social History Resource Center, Cambridge Arts 1981-1982 Council. Re: women’s oral history project 95-96: Cambridge Tenants Organization 1975-1979 Cape Verdean Group (Massachusetts Correctional Institution, Norfolk), see #274-275. 97: Cara de Piedra 1983 98: Casa Boricua 1974 99: Casa Myrna Vasquez. Multiracial temporary shelter 1975, 1977-1978? 100: Casa Myrna Vasquez 1978, 1980-1981, 1983 101: Cauldron Experimental Theater. Conduit: Women’s 1982 Center Cambridge 102: C.D. Film Workshop. Re: Mission Hill Film project. 1975 103: Center for the Study of Public Policy 1978 104: Central America Education Fund 1984 105: Central Massachusetts Safe Energy Project 1986 106: Centra Communautaire Haitient du Massachusetts, 1975 Cecohama. Marked “Miscellaneous Third World” 107: Le Centre des Haitiens a Somerville 1977 108: Centre-Wainwright Block Association. Emergency. 1982 109: Channel 3 Producer’s Group, Somerville. Re: Somerville 1975 Public Access Video Festival. 110: Charlesgate Tenant Union. Conduit: Symphony Tenants 1981 Organizing Project. 111: Child Care Resource Center 1974, 1979 112: Childcare Organizing Project. Conduit: Women for 1984 Economic Justice 113: Children are Many Colors. Re: Third World Children’s Book 1980 and Film Festival. 114: China Institute 1981 115: Chinatown People’s Progressive Association 1978 116: CINE. Emergency. Re: Southern Africa Film Project 1981 CISPES (Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador), see Boston Committee (#78) and New England Committee (#330) 117: Citizens Action Program on Energy. Conduit: Mass. 1974 Community Center 118: City Life/Vida Urbana. Formerly Tenants Action 1974-1975, 1977, 1979-1981 119: Group (TAG). Jamaica Plain. See also #235, 419, 446. 120: Citywide Parents’ Advisory Council 1977 121: Citywide Parents’ Advisory Council. Emergency. 1981 122: City Women for Action. Organization of municipal women 1975 employees. Conduit: Mass. Community Center 123: Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts (CLUM), Women’s 1975? Rights Project Clamshell Alliance (Boston Clamshell), see #73 Carton 3: 124-208 124: Clergy and Laity Concerned (CALC), 1975 125: Club Gregorio Luperon 1976 126: Coalition for a Better Acre. Lowell newsletter for low 1983 income and Hispanic communities. Coalition for a Fair Budget, see #271 127-8: Coalition for Basic Human Needs 1979, 1982-1984 129: Coalition for Reproductive Freedom/Boston Women’s Health 1982 Book Collective 130: Coalition for Women’s Safety 1979-1980 131: Coalition of Labor Union Women (CLUW) 1975 132: Coalition to Stop Institutional Violence. Re: “violent 1977 women” and prisons. Conduit: Women’s Educational Center. 133: Coalition to Take Back the Night. Conduit: Cambridge 1978 Women’s Center 134: Code Inc. Belmont hotline. 1976 135: Coming Down. Re: Vietnam War veterans 1981 136: Comite Centroamericano Boston. A project of Centro Presente. 1983 137: El Comite Latino (Emergency) 1982 138: Committee for Community Access. Re: WGBH-FM. 1975 139: Committee for Justice for Domingo and Viernes. Emergency. 1982 140: Committee to Free Black Defendants of East Boston, 1976 Committee to Free the East Boston Black Defendants 141: Committee to Free Professor Wamba. Emergency. 1982 Wamba was in Zaire. 142: Committee to Stop the Rate Hike. Emergency. Re: electricity. 1982 Project of Clamshell Alliance. 143: CommonHealth 1981 144: Commonwealth Tenants Association. Brighton. Includes 1983 some re: Boston Fair Housing omission and Home Rule bill. 145: Community Access Graphic 1979 146: Community Alliance for Safe Energy. Conduit: Students 1980 Union League 147: Community Change. Re: racism, race relations 1983 148: Community for Human Rights. Conduit: Freedom House 1978 149: Community Legal Empowerment Project 1981 150: Community Organization toward a New Survival (CONS). 1984 Holistic alternative program for prisoners, ex-offenders, and their families, Conduit: Humanity. 151: Community Press Features (folded). Conduit: Urban Planning Aid 1983 152: Community Safety Survival Center/Family and 1982 Friends of Prisoners 153: Concerned Tenants of Newcastle-Saranac/Columbus Ave. 1981 Tenants Association. Emergency. 154: Concilio Human Services (Puerto Rican Festival Committee) 1979 CONS (Community Organizations toward a New Survival), see #150 155: Crisis Information/Action Center. Conduit: Urban Planning Aid 1981 156: Deadpan. Organization of workers at Mount Auburn Hospital 1974 157: Dignity/Boston. Organization of “gay and concerned Catholics” 1978 158: Disabled Peoples Liberation Front 1979 159-60: Dorchester Children’s Center 1974-1976 161: Dorchester Community Action Council. Formerly Dorchester 1974-1976 Tenants Action Committee. 162-3: Dorchester Community News 1975, 1978, 1980-1981 164: Dorchester Gardenlands Preserve 1978 165: Dorchester Greenlight or “Greenlite.” Re: safe houses. 1979 166: Dorchester Neighbors Organizing Neighbors 1981 167: Dorchester Residents for Racial Harmony. (Emergency) 1982 Project of Boston College High School 168: Dorchester Welfare Committee 1976 169: Dorchester Women’s Committee. For International Women’s 1984 Day Celebration. Conduit: Families and Friends of Prisoners. See also #187, 422. 170: Dorchester Youth Alliance. Conduit: Friends and Families of 1980 Prisoners. 171: East Boston People’s Rights Group 1975-1976 172: Eastern Massachusetts Coalition for Reproductive Rights. 1979 Project of Women’s Educational Center. 173: Ecumenical Social Action Council/Jamaica Plain (ESAC) 1977 El Comite Latino, see #137 El Frente Hispano, see #195 174-5: Elizabeth Stone House. Alternative feminist mental health 1976-1878, 1980-1983 facility. 176: Emergency Campaign Against U.S. Intervention in Central 1981 America and the Caribbean. Emergency. 177: Eritrean Support Committee, 1977 ESAC (Ecumenical Social Action Council), see #173 178: Espacio de Mujeres/Womens Space. Re: women in the undated South End. Conduit: Every Woman’s Resource. 179: Ethnic Arts Center of Somerville 1984 180: The Exodus Center. Re: Gay and Lesbian parenting 1981 181: Extended Family Institute. Assists people of color interested 1981 in adopting children. 182: Families and Friends of Prisoners 1980-1982 183-5: Families and Friends of Prisoners Survival Center 1975-1979 186: Farm Labor Organizing Committee. For “Hear the Children” 1983 campaign. Conduit: Farm Labor Research Project. 187: Feminists in Radio. Re: International Women’s Day. 1982 Conduit: WMBR. See also #169, 422. 188: Fenway Area Tenant Union 1977 189: Fenway Arts Council. Re: film, “Tenants Fight Arson and 1982 Displacement”. 190: Fenway News. Conduit: Symphony Tenants Organizing Project. 1983-1984 191: Fight Back, Cambridge, 1974. Against imperialist crisis. 192: Focus Counseling and Consultation for Women and Their Families 1976 193: Food Not Bombs, Food for Free Committee. Project of Survival 1982 Education Fund. 194: The Free Press 1980-1982 195: El Frente Hispano 1975 196: Friends of Hopi 1978 197: Friends of Indochina 1976 198: Friends of the Earth Foundation (Donor-Directed) 1976 199: Friends of the Filipino People 1976 200: Friendshipment/Bach Mai Hospital Fund 1975-1976 201: Fordham Courts Tenants Union. Jamaica Plain. Conduit: City Life. 1981-1982 202: Full Circle School. Emergency. 1975 203: The Funding Exchange (DA) 1983-1984 204: Gay Community News. Conduit: Survival Education Fund. 1982 205: Greater Boston Physicians for Social Responsibility 1983 206: Greater Lawrence Citizens for rent Control 1975 207: Guardian-Boston Bureau. Radical newsweekly. 1976-1978 208: Guatemala Solidarity Committee. Conduit: Survival Education 1982-1983 Fund. Carton 4: 209-290 209: La Habana Media Tour. Trip to Cuba. Conduit: Media Works. 1980 210: Haiti Culturelle 1974, 1977 211: Hard Times. Cambridge working-class political organization 1976 212: Harper’s Ferry Theatre Co. Re: play It’s Not the Bus 1976 213: Harvard African Students Association. Re: Africa week. 1980 214: Harvard Black Law Students. Emergency. For First Annual 1979 Third World Conference. See also #423. 215: Harvard Employees Organizing Committee. No proposal. 1975 Harvard Medical Area Total Energy Plant (MATEP), see #340-341 216: Health Information Referral Service 1982 217: High Technology Professionals for Peace. For defense 1983 information package. 218: Hispanic Labor Education Booklet Project/Urban Planning Aid 1979 219: Houseworker’s Handbook. Conduit: Cambridge Women’s Center. 1974 220: Housing Code Checklist/Urban Planning Aid 1976 221: Independent Restaurant Workers Union undated 222-4: Indochina Curriculum Project 1974-76 225: Indochina Newsletter: Indochina Aid and Friendship Project. 1982 Conduit: Bach Mai Hospital Emergency Relief Fund. 226: Indochina Peace Campaign 1974 227: Institute for Community Economics. Formerly American 1978 Natural Resources Trust. 228: International Defense and Aid Fund for Southern Africa 1976 229: International Independence Institute. Donor-directed. 1977 International Women’s Day, see: Feminists in Radio (#187); Dorchester Women’s Committee (#169); Third World Committee (#422). 230: Irish Republican Club-Charlie McGleenon 1975 231: Irish Solidarity Committee 1981 232: Jamaica Plain Battered Women’s Task Force 1979 233: Jamaica Plain Community Council 1974 234: Jamaica Plain Community Defense Club 1981-1982 235: Jamaica Plain Community News. Produced by Tenants Action Group, later became City Life/Vida Urbana. See also #118-19, 419, 446. 236: Jamaica Plain People for Community Safety Greenlight. 1979 Conduit: Racial Unity Now. 237: Jamaica Plain-Roxbury Food Coop 1977 Jamaica Plain Tenants Action Group, see #419 238: January 15 Mobilizing Committee/M.L. King Day Memorial 1981 Rally Coalition. In Buffalo, New York. See also #263. 239: January 22 Coalition (Emergency). Re: 10 year anniversary of 1983 Supreme Court decision legalizing abortion 240: Joven Cuba Magazine 1975 JP (Jamaica Plain), see #232-37 241: July 4th, 1976. Re: meaning of American revolution. 1976 242: June 6th Coalition. Re: Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1982. 1984 Conduit: Survival Education Fund. 243: Juvenile Action Movement of Fields Corner, Dorchester. 1976 244: Kinfolk 1980-1981 245: Labor in the Eighties. Conduit: Center for the Study of 1982 Public Policy. 246: Labor Pains Newsletter. Day care center newsletter. 1974 La Habana Media Tour, see #209 La Unidad Latina, see #433 247: Latin American Theater Arts Festival 1980 248: Latin Women’s Video Project 1976 249: Latina Women’s Collective, Colectiva de Mujeres Latinas de 1980 Boston. For conference, “La Mujer Latina Se Enfrenta a los ‘80”. 250: Law Communes-Central Square. Includes Mass Dissent 1974-1975 Collective, Capp Street Foundation, Cambridge Center for Legal Education, National Lawyers Guild. Greater Lawrence Citizens for Rent Control, see #206 Le Centre des Haitiens a Somerville, see #107 251: Lebanese Palestine Crisis Coalition. Emergency. Conduit: 1982 Middle East Philanthropic Fund. 252: Legal In-Service Project (LISP) of the Arlington Street Church 1975 253: Legal Tactics: A Handbook for Tenants. Conduit: Cambridge 1978 Women’s Center. 254: Lesbian and Gay Parents Project. Conduit: Cambridge 1978 Women’s Center. LISP (Legal In-Service Project), see #252 255: Little Flags Theatre 1978 256: Low Income Network for Services and Tex Reform. 1981 Conduit: Policy Training Center. 257: Low Income Planning Aid (childbearing rights conference) 1978 258: Lowell Communicator 1975-1976 259: Lucy Parsons Women’s Coalition 1977 260: Lynn Rent Control Coalition ca. 1975 261: Margaret Fuller Neighborhood House 1983 262: Martin Luther King Athletic, Cultural and Scholarship 1981 Association. Emergency. 263: Martin Luther King Day Memorial Rally Coalition. 1981 Emergency. Re: Buffalo, New York anti-Nazi rally. See also #238 264: Mashpee Wampanoag Indian Trial Council 1977 Mass. Divest (Massachusetts Coalition for Divestment from South Africa) see #272 265: Mass. Energy. Emergency. Statewide organization working on 1982 comprehensive energy program to benefit low- and moderate-income people. Conduit: Mobilization for Survival. 266: Massachusetts Association for Older Americans 1975 267-8: Massachusetts Childbearing Rights Association or Alliance 1979-1982 (also donor directed). Conduit: Boston Campus Ministry in Higher Education. 269: Massachusetts Children’s Lobby 1980 270: Massachusetts Citizens Against the Death Penalty. 1984 See also #75-76 Massachusetts Civil Liberties Union (Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts), see #123 271: Massachusetts Coalition for a Fair Budget. Emergency. 1981 272: Massachusetts Coalition for Divestment from South Africa 1981-1982 (Mass Divest). Conduit: Survival Education Fund. 273: Massachusetts Community Center. Re: merger with Fair Share 1975, 1977 274: Massachusetts Correctional Institution (MCI), Norfolk, Cape 1978 Verdean Group. Re: Nu Pintcha. 275: Massachusetts Correctional Institution (MCI), Norfolk, Cape 1978-1980 Verdean Group. Conduit: Three Pyramids. 276: Massachusetts Correctional Institution (MCI), Norfolk, Norfolk 1978 Strike Coalition. Re: prison strike. Conduit: Families and Friends of Prisoners. 277: Massachusetts Correctional Institution (MCI), Norfolk, Prisoners 1977-1978 Legal Education Association. Conduit: Families and Friends of Prisoners. 278-9: Massachusetts Correctional Institution (MCI), Norfolk, Question 1978-1982 Mark. Prison journal. 280: Massachusetts Correctional Institution (MCI), Norfolk, Radio 1978 Free Rehabilitation Group. 281: Massachusetts Correctional Institution (MCI), Norfolk, 1978 Worcester Rehabilitation Group. 282: Massachusetts Correctional Institution (MCI), Walpole, 1979? Video-Drama Workshop. Re: “Rewinding the Clockwork Orange” 283: Massachusetts Correctional Institution (MCI), Walpole, Walpole 1977 Education Project. Conduit: Institute for Responsive Education. 284: Massachusetts Correctional Institution (MCI), Walpole, 1978? The Writing on the Wall. Re: art in prison. 285: Massachusetts Correctional Legal Services. For Libby v. Hogan 1980 case re: solitary confinement at Walpole state prison. 286-8: Massachusetts Council (or Coalition) for Occupational Safety 1977, 1979 and Health (MassCOSH) 289: Massachusetts Fair Share 1974-1975 290: Massachusetts Feminist Federal Credit Union 1975 MassCOSH (Massachusetts Coalition for Occupational Safety and Health), see #286-88 Carton 5: 291-362 291: Massachusetts History Workshop 1982, 1984 292: Massachusetts Organization of Disabled Workers 1982, 1984 293-4: Massachusetts Senior Action Council 1981, 1983-1984 295: Massachusetts Solidarity Coalition. Re: unemployment. 1983 Conduit: Survival Education Fund. 296: Massachusetts Tenants Organization. For minority outreach 1984 in membership and decision-making 297: Massachusetts Twentieth Anniversary Mobilization. 1983 For March for Jobs, Peace and Freedom in Washington, D.C. on anniversary of 1963 march. Conduit: Survival Education Fund. 298: Massachusetts Union of Public Housing Tenants 1979 299: Massachusetts Welfare Recipients for Welfare Reform. 1977, 1979-1980 Program of Voluntary Defenders Committee. See also #352. MCI (Massachusetts Correctional Institution), see #274-84 300: Media Access Training and Assistance Unit 1981 301: Men Sharing 1975 302-3: Mental Patients Liberation Front 1974-1978, 1980, 1983 304: Meredith and Associates. Emergency. For homelessness study. 1983 305: Middle East Research and Information Project (MERIP) 1974, 1977 306: Middlesex New American Movement (NAM) 1975 307: Mishawum Park Tenants’ Association 1975 308: Mission Hill Community Land Trust. Project of Mission Hill 1979 Planning Commission. 309: Mission Hill Good News 1974-1975, 1980 310: Mission Hill Planning Commission 1981 311-2: Mission Park Youth Theatre 1980 313: MORAL/Constitutional Defense Project. Re: abortion rights? 1979-1980 Conduit: Boston Cambridge Ministry in Higher Education 314: Moslem Iranian Students Society. Conduit: Survival 1983 Education Fund. 315-6: Multicultural Project for Communication and Education 1981-1982 317: Municipal Power Advocacy Coalition. Project of Energy 1984 Education Corporation. NASC (Native American Solidarity Committee), see #327 318: National Anti-Racist Organizing Committee (NAROC), 1982-1983 Boston Chapter. Some re: Klan march on Boston 319: National Association of Atomic Veterans 1982-1983 320: National Coalition for Peace and Freedom 1981 321: National Conference of Black Lawyers 1977 322-3: National Lawyers Guild (NLG), Massachusetts Chapter. 1975-1976, 1979 Mostly re: referral service 324: National Lawyers Guild (NLG), Massachusetts Chapter, 1975-1976 Anti-Racism Committee, Anti-Racism Project. Re: Louisa Day Hicks et al. 325: National Lawyers Guild (NLG) Summer Projects Committee. 1977 Conduit: Capp Street Foundation. Re: Tenants First Coalition Summer Project. 326: National Student Coalition Against Racism (NSCAR) 1977 327: Native American Solidarity Committee (NASC). 1977 Conduit: Capp Street Foundation. 328: Neighborhood Coalition of Jamaica Plain 1975? 329: Network of Women in Trade and Technical Jobs 1981 330: New England Committee in Solidarity with the People of 1984 El Salvador (CISPES). Conduit: Survival Education Fund. See also #78. 331: New England Free Press 1976 332: New England Medical Center Employees 1975 333: New England North East Prisoners Association (NEPA). 1976 Re: NEPA News 334: New England Supporters of Silkwood. Re: Karen Silkwood, 1978? nuclear energy 335: Newburyport Study Group 1976 336-7: Nicaragua Solidarity Committee. Conduit: Survival Education 1979-1982 Fund and others. 338-9: 9 to 5 Organization for Women Office Workers 1974-1975 NLG (National Lawyers Guild), see #322-25 340-1: No-MATEP Coalition. Re: Harvard’s Medical Area Total 1981 Energy Plan. See also #378. Norfolk (MCI), see #274-81 342: North Dorchester Tenant’s Organizing Committee 1977 343: North End Neighborhood Task Force. For housing 1977 feasibility study 344: North Shore Welfare Rights Organization. Conduit: North Shore 1980 Community Action Programs. 345: Nuclear Education Project 1980 346: Organized Against Sexism and Stereotypes (Oasis), Boston 1980 347: Overview. Newsletter re: Panama Canal treaty 1976? 348: Oral History Center (c/o Cambridge Commission on Status of 1983 Women) 349: Packard Manse Media Project. Re: distribution of slideshow, 1982 “Hostage at Hell’s Bottom - The Economy and the Pentagon”. 350: Palfry Street School. Donor directed. 1977 351: Parent Support and Action Center. Conduit: Central School 1978-1979 352: Parents for Justice and Welfare Rights. Formerly Massachusetts 1976, 1981 Welfare Recipients for Welfare Reform. Conduit: Massachusetts Law Reform. See also #299. 353: Peace and Justice Summer project. Conduit: Jobs with Peace. 1984 354: Peaceful Movement Committee. Group for humanism 1978 and correctional reform. 355: People in Solidarity with Central American (PISCA). Formerly 1983 Worcester Area Coalition for El Salvador, see #475. 356: People’s Anti-War Mobilization 1981 357: People’s Committee for Boston. Group re: Boston’s fiscal crisis. 1977 358: The People’s Voice 1974-1975 359: Pequod (Cambridge). A collectively operated alternative 1976 mental health center. 360: Philippines Information Bulletin 1974-1975 361: Phillips Brooks House (Rob Gips). Harvard University. 1975 No proposal. PISCA (People in Solidarity with Central America), see #355 362: Planning for Peace/Architects for Social Responsibility. 1984 Conduit: Physicians for Peace. Carton 6: 363-438 363: Political Education Project. Project for Massachusetts 1974 Community Center 364: Preterm Strike. Brookline Health Clinic. 1977 Prisoners Legal Education Association, see #277 365: Project Aware/Massachusetts Committee for Children 1983 and Youth (MCCY). Re: gay/lesbian adolescents. 366: Project Lambda (Charles St. Universalist Church). 1975 Re: homosexual adolescents. 367: Project Place. Alternative counseling center. 1976, 1980 Interseminarians project. 368: Project Place Law Collective. For a variety of projects. 1975-1976 Includes a variety of other organizations. 369: Public Interest Development Company/Boston Clamshell. 1978 Re: nuclear power plants. See also #73. 370-1: Puerto Rico Solidarity Committee (PRSC), Boston. 1978, 1980 Conduit: Inter-Religious Foundation for Community Organization. 372: Racial Unity Now. Dorchester. 1976 373: Racism and Busing slide show. “In Back of the Bus”. 1976 Conduit: Urban Planning Aid. Radio Free Norfolk, see #280. 374: Rainbow Coalition. Conduit: Survival Education Fund. 1984 RAMA (Roxbury Alianza of Mothers Associated), see #382 375: Rape Action Project. Conduit: Women’s Educational Center. 1980 376: Reality Theater. Re: International New Theater Festival 1977 377: Registration and Enlistment Counseling Network. 1982 Conduit: American Friends Services Committee. 378: Residents United to Stop Harvard (RUSH). See also #340-341. 1977 379: Respond. Re: domestic violence 1975, 1977-1978, 1980 380: Robert W. White School 1975 381: Roxbury Action Program - Marcus Garvey Youth Center 1982 382: Roxbury Alianza of Mothers Associated (RAMA). 1977? Re: day care center 383: Roxbury Crossing Welfare Advisory Board. 1981 Re: welfare rights manual 384: Roxbury Fair Share 1977 385: Roxbury-North Dorchester/Neighborhood Revitalization 1982 386: “The Roxbury Response”/Film Fund Pyramid Production 1980 RUSH (Residents United to Stop Harvard), see #378 387: Self Advocacy Project. Conduit: Greater Boston Association 1983-1984 for Retarded Citizens. 388: Self Help Organization of Liberians 1983 389: Self Help Organization of Worcester. Disabled people. 1982 SEPAC (South End Project Area Committee), see #401-401 390: Service Employees for a Democratic Union. Emergency. 1980 391: Sister Courage. Newspaper. Project of Cambridge Women’s 1978 Educational Center. 392: Somerville Coalition for Fairer Property Taxes. 1977 Conduit: Massachusetts Community Center. 393: Somerville Tenants Union 1975-1976 394-5: Somerville United Neighborhoods 1975, 1981-1983 396: Somerville Women’s Center 1980 397: Somerville Women’s Health Project 1975 398: South East Asia Education Project. Conduit: Boston Cambridge 1982, 1984 Ministry in Higher Education. 399: South End Press 1980 400-1: South End Project Area Committee (SEPAC) 1979, 1981 402: Southern Africa Solidarity Conference Continuations 1982 Committee of Massachusetts 403: Southwest Corridor Community Farm. Also Southwest 1980, 1983 Corridor Coalition. Includes re: Wake Up the Earth Festival. See also #49. 404: Spanish-American Association of Lynn 1977 405: Star Film Library 1978-1979 406: State and Mind, a.k.a. Radical Therapist/Rough Times (RT) 1978-1979 407: Stoneham Women’s Center 1975 STOP (Symphony Tenants Organizing Project), see #411-14 408: Straight Talk. Somerville teen paper. 1974 409: Struggle!. Boston Afro-American community paper. 1974 410: Susan Saxe Defense Committee. Conduit: Women’s 1976 Educational Center 411: Symphony Tenants Organizing Project (STOP) 1978-1979 412-4: Symphony Tenants Organizing Project (STOP). Includes 1980, 1982, 1984 Fenway News. 415: Table Scraps. Food advocate’s newsletter. No proposal. 1975 416: The Tania Collective. Political theater. 1975 417: Taxpayers Against 2 ½. Proposition to cut property tax. 1980 Conduit: Urban Planning Aid. 418: Teatro Macondo. Latin American theater group. 1982 Conduit: Galaxy. 419: Tenants Action Group (TAG). Jamaica Plain. Became 1978 City Life/Vida Urbana, see also #118-19, 235, 446. 420: Tenants First Coalition 1976 421: Tenants First Defense Committee. Re: landlord Max Kargman. 1976 Conduit: Urban Planning Aid. 422: Third World Committee for International Woman’s day. 1979-1980 Also Dorchester Women’s Committee. See also #169, 187. Third World Conference, First Annual, see #214. 423: Third World Conference, Second Annual. Called: Second Annual 1980 Third World Conference 424: Third World Conference on Race and Class undated 425: Thirteenth Amendment Project 1985 426: Thresholds. To teach life planning and other skills to 1979 inmates at Worcester County Jail. 427: Together, Inc. Counseling agency aimed at young street 1975 people and welfare families. For Tocon Arms Tenant Union. 428: Transfusion. Hospital workers. 1975 429: Traprock Peace Center (six month progress report filed 1984). 1982 430: Trust for Native Americans 1982 431: Tupelo Support Committee. Anti-racist, anti-Klan. 1979 432: Unemployment Law Project. Conduit: Massachusetts Law 1981-1984 Reform Institute. 433: La Unidad Latina. Newspaper. Conduit: Hispanic Office of 1981 Planning and Evaluation. 434: Union Members for Jobs and Equality. Conduit: Jobs with Peace. 1982 435: UNITAS-Lowell. Project to organize services for the Spanish 1976 speaking community. 436: United Farm Workers (UFW)-New England Boycott 1974, 1977 437-8: United Labor Unions. Project of National Center for Jobs 1981-1983 and Justice. Includes Homemakers Organizing Project. Carton 7: 439-499 439: United Peoples. Low income 1976? 440: United Puerto Ricans/The Liberators 1980 441: Unity Through Creativity. Political theater for youth. 1983 442: University Christian Movement in New England 1978 443: Urban Planning Aid (UPA), CPF 1976 444: Urban Planning Aid (UPA), Media Project (or Group). Includes 1976, 1981 “In Back of the Bus”, and speaker system. 445: Urban Planning Aid-Occupational Safety and Health 1975-1976 Administration (UPA-OSHA) Project 446: Urban Revival. Include re: CommUnity News. 1978 See also #118-19, 235, 419. 447: Vietnam Veteran Artists. Conduit: families and Friends of 1983 Prisoners. 448: Vocations for Social Change. Conduit: American Friends 1977-1979 Service Committee. Wages for Housework, see #89 WAITT (We’re All in This Together), see #453 449: Wake Up the Earth Festival Coalition. Conduit: Southwest 1982-1983 Corridor Community Farm. See also #403. Walpole Education Project, see #283 450: Warehouse Cooperative School 1974-1975 451: WCUW-FM, Worcester 1979? 452: Wellmet Project. Halfway house for people with 1976 emotional illnesses. 453: We’re All In This Together (WAITT) House. For adult program 1982 in Roxbury neighborhood center. 454: Winter Hill Neighborhood Association. Somerville. post-1977 455: Who Rules Boston?. Project of Center for Study of Public Policy. 1983 Also Democratic Socialists of America. 456: Woburn Citizens Committee for a Cleaner Environment (FACE) 1982 457: Woburn Council of Social Concern. For Hispanic program. 1982 458: A Women’s Place - in Hingham. Women’s Center. 1978 459: Women Against Violence Against Women. 1978-1979 Conduit: Women’s Educational Center. 460: Women and Health Conference 1975 461: Women Like Me Collective. African-American women. 1978 For workshops. Conduit: Cooper Community center. 462: (The) Women’s Alliance; a Network for Economic Survival. 1985-1986 Conduits: Survival Education Fund, Mobilization for Survival. 463: Women’s Cable TV. Conduit: Margaret Fuller House. 1984 464: Women’s Commission in Exile. Former Governor’s Commission 1982-1983 on the Status of Women all fired by Governor King. Includes Women for Economic Justice. 465: Women’s Community Health Center 1974, 1976, 1978, 1981 466: Women’s Community Studies. Project of Feminist Studies 1979 at Goddard-Cambridge Graduate Program in Social Change. 467-8: Women’s Educational Center 1974, 1976, 1982, 1986 469: Women’s Educational Media. Lesbian educational outreach. 1978, 1980-1981 470: Women’s Institute of New England. Women’s camp, etc., 1978? near Worcester. 471: Women’s Mental Health Collective 1976 472: Women’s Resource Center of North Central Massachusetts. 1979, 1981 Began as Leominster Women’s Center. Conduit: Leominster Multi-Service Center. 473-4: Women’s School. Conduit: Women’s Educational Center 1974-1980 475: Worcester Area Coalition for El Salvador. Became People in 1982 Solidarity with Central America. Conduit: Center for Reflective Action. See also #355. 476: Worcester Community Television Council, Cable Channel 13. 1978 For Little Apple. 477: Worcester People’s Press 1975 478: Worcester Tenants’ Association. Became Housing 1975, 1978 Information Center. Includes re: Worcester Labor Co-op Worcester Rehabilitation Group, see #281 479: Worcester Women’s Center 1975 480: Worcester Women Working. Boston Cambridge Ministry 1978 in Higher Education. 481: Word of Mouth Productions. Working-class women 1982 political theater. 482: Workers’ Action Council 1976? 483: Working on Wife Abuse 1977 484: Working Woman Organizing Project 1978 485: World Fellowship. In cooperation with Boston People’s 1982 Organization. For youth organizing and training conference. Writing on the Wall (Massachusetts Correctional Institution, Walpole), see #284 Series III: Haymarket People’s Fund, publications Subseries IIIA: Annual reports 486: 1976 487: 1977 488: 1978 489: 1979 490: 1980-81 491: 1981-82 492: 1982-83 493: 1983-84 494: 1984-85 495: 1985-86 496: 1986-87 497: 1987-88 498: 1988-89 499: 1989-90 500: 1990-91 501: 1991-92 502: 1992-93 Subseries IIIB: Other 503: “Inherited Wealth: your money and your life,” for the Funding Exchange by Haymarket Peoples Fund (April 1981; reprint of articles originally in the Haymarket News) 504: Robin Hood Was Right: A Guide to Giving Your Money for Social Change by Vanguard Public Foundation (1977), Chapter 4: “Haymarket Peoples Fund” 1994 Accession Carton 1: 1-33: Boston Area Board [Boston Regional Funding Board?], 1985-89 1: BAB [Boston Area Board] - evaluations [by grant recipients] 2: BAB [funding] 3: NECAN 4: [BAB grant allotments] 5: BAB listing [of grant recipients] 6: BAB [proposals] 7-11: Boston minutes 7: Formal minutes, 1989 8: Formal minutes, 1988 9: Formal minutes, 1987 10: Formal minutes, 1986 11: 1985 12: TA [training applicants?], 1989 13-33: Boston emergency grant decisions 13: 1989 14: Report, 1988 15: 1987 16-18: 1989 19-21: 1988 22-24: 1987 25-26: 1986 27-28: 1986 #2 29-30: 1986 #3 31: 1985 #2 32-33: 1985 34-237: Boston Grants, files, ca. 1978-1991 (bulk, ca. 1984-88) 34: Access Philippines 35: Advocacy Center for Older Women Workers 36: A La Vida 37-38: All Peoples Congress 39: Alliance for Prison Justice 40: Alliance vs. Women’s Oppression 41: Artists Call Against U.S. Intervention In Central America 42: Architects and Planners in Support of Nicaragua-Boston chapter 43: Amigas Latinas en Accion Pro-Salud 44-46: Arts for a new Nicaragua 47: Association of Concerned African Scholars 48: Blackstone Valley Rape Crisis Team 49: Battered Women’s Video Project 50: Black Cat Collective 51: Black Community Info Center 52: Blacks for Empowerment 53-54: Boston Acorn 55: Boston Affordable Housing Coalition 56-57: Boston Alliance Against Registration and the Draft (BAARD) 58: Boston Area Coalition for the Mobilization for Justice and Peace in Central American and South Africa 59: Boston Area Committee for the AMANDLA US Tour 60: Boston Area FAT Liberation 61: Boston Area Network on Central American (BANCA) 62: Boston Big Mountain Support Group 63: Boston Black and Green 64: Boston Collective 65: Boston Educators for Survival 66-67: Boston Mobilization for Survival 68: Boston Labor/Student Delegation to El Salvador 69: Boston Self Help Center 70: Boston Senior Action Council 71: Boston Student Action Network 72: Boston Winning Democracy Coalition 73: Boston Women’s Committee for International Women’s Day 74: BU Exposure 75: Byte Back 76: Boston Center for Lesbians and Gay Men 77: Broomfield St. Educational Foundation/GCN 78: Cambridge El Salvador Sister City Project 79: Cambridge Haitian American Association 80: Cambridge Tenants Union 81: Campaign for Change 82: Campaign for Peace with Justice in the Middle East 83: CAPA-Educators in Support of ANDES 84: Casa Chile 85: Center for Atomic Radiation Studies 86: Center for Women’s Safety Education 87: Central American Education Exchange 88: Central American Labor Leaders Tour New England Planning Committee 89: Central America Solidarity Association 90: Centro Presente 91: Children Are the Future 92-93: Chinatown Community Mural 94-95: Chinatown Housing and Land Development Task Force 96: Clean Water Action Project 97: Coalition for a Nuclear Test Ban 98: Coalition for Palestinian rights 99: Colectivo Puertoriqueno 100: Committee to Free Sharon Kawolski 101: Comite El Salvador (Formerly Casa El Salvador Farabundo Marti) 102: Community Services for Women 103: Contragate Action Team of Boston 104: Cultural Resistance 105: Dawn Project 106: Deadly Connection Working Group 107: Disabled Peoples Liberation Group 108: Disability Integration Organizing Project 109-10: East Boston Community News 111: East Boston Ecumenical Community Council 112: Ethnic Arts Center of Somerville 113-4: Emerge 115: Eastern Mass Regional Organizing Network 116: Faneuil Hall Tenants Organization 117: Fenway Community Development Corporation 118: Fenway Community Health Center 119: Forum on Disability Issues 120: Florence After School Program 121: Franklin Hill Tenants United (or Task Force) 122: Framingham Tenants Organization 123: Free South Africa Movement, Boston 124: Gay and Lesbian Advocates and Defenders 125: Geese Theatre Company 126: Go no time for Affinity 127: Grassroots International 128: Greater Boston Chapter of the Coalition for Labor Union Women 129: Greater Boston Minority Health Coalition 130: Greater Boston June 11 Campaign 131: Greater Boston Anti-Arson and Anti-Displacement Organization 132: Greater Boston Union of the Homeless 133: Grenada Solidarity 134: Grenada Investigation 135: Haiti Yes 136: Hands of Time Incorporated 137: Harbor Me 138: Hawthorne Youth and Community Center 139: High Tech Workers Network 140: Hispanic Office of Planning Evaluation Jamaica Plain Youth 141: Homefront 142: Honduras Information Center 143: HUD Tenants Committee Boston Affordable Housing Coalition 144: Incest Survivors Network 145-6: Infact 147-8: Inner City Outreach Philips Brooks House 149: Jamaica Plain Community Planning Coalition 150: Justice at Work Project 151: League of Haitian Families 152: Let Nicaragua Live Great Boston Outreach Task Force 153: Les Caynes Children’s Fund 154: Lesbians and Children’s Conference 155: Low Income Students for Survival 156: Lowell Tenants Alliance 157: Margaret Fuller House 158: Massachusetts Affordable Housing Alliance 159: Massachusetts Campaign for Safe Energy 160: Massachusetts Coalition of Battered Women Service Groups 161: Massachusetts Coalition for the Homeless 162: Massachusetts College of Art Visiting Artists Program 163: Massachusetts Coalition for Occupational safety and Health 164: Massachusetts Coalition of Citizens with Disabilities 165: Massachusetts Coalition on New Office Technology 166: Massachusetts Housing Now Coalition 167: Massachusetts Friends of Midwives 168: Massachusetts Association of Disabled Artists 169: Massachusetts Labor Support Project 170-1: Massachusetts Labor Committee in Support of Democracy, Human Rights, and Non- Intervention in Central America 172: Mrs. Bee’s Gardens 173: Mission Main Tenants Task Force 174: Media Education Project on the Women’s Convoy to Central America 175: Men of All Colors Together Boston 176: Media Access Training and Assistance Unit 177: Massachusetts Rock Against Racism 178: Massachusetts Propaganda Alert 179: National Conference of Black Lawyers Massachusetts Chapter 180: National Lawyers Guild Anti-Repression Committee 181: New England Equity Institute 182: Newcomers Job Bank 183: Organizing and Leadership Training Center 184: Olaleye Communications 185: Office Technology Education Project 186-7: Parents United for the Education and Development of Others (PUEDO) 188: Parents United for Childcare/Research and Education Project 189: PACRAT 190: Peace Brigades International Boston Area Support Group 191: Physicians for a National Health Program 192: Playwrights Platform 193: Poor Peoples United Fund 194: Proyecto Cultural Morivivir 195: Project Change 196-9: The Question Mark Journal 200-1: Rainbow Multiversity, Inc. 202: Quincy-Geneva Housing Corporation 203: Refugee/Immigration Ministry 204: Roxbury Community News 205: Say It Sister 206: Somerville Community News 207: Smedley D. Butler Bridge 208-9: Simplex Steering Committee 210: South Shore Conversion Committee 211: South End Self-Advocates 212: South African Relief 213: Street Artists Guild 214: Street Magazine 215: Survival News 216: Third World Awareness Club (of Brookline High School) 217: Toxic Alert 218-9: Veterans Benefit Clearinghouse 220: Veterans Peace Convoy 221: We Are the City Television (WAC-TV) 222: Watermelon Studio Inc. 223: Washington Street Corridor Coalition 224: What’s Left in Boston 225: We’re Educators A Touch of Class (WEATOC) 226: Whitter Street Tenant Association 227: WCUW, Inc. 228: Women’s Community Broadcast Group 229: Women’s Convoy to Central America 230: Women for Women in Lebanon 231: Women’s Peace Encampment 232: Women’s Resource Center 233-5: Women’s Statewide Legislature Network of Massachusetts 236: Word of Mouth Productions 237: Youth Educational and Recreational Project 1999 Accession Carton 1: 1: Boston Technical Assistance Invoices 2: Action and Community Training, Inc. 3: AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (ACT UP)/Boston, Inc. 4: Agissiz Community School Council/Jamaica Plain Community School 5: All Kinds of Family Alliance 6: Alternatives for Community and Environment 7: American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, Boston Chapter 8: Amigas Latinas en Accion pro Salud (ALAS) 9: April 25 Youth Rally Committee 10: ARK Theatre 11: Arnean Siochana Eireann/Peace Watch Ireland 12: Asian Sisters in Action (ASIA) 13: Asian Task Force Against Domestic Violence 14: Asian Women’s Project 15: Association of Haitian Women in Boston 16: Battered Women Fighting Back (BWFB) 17: Bikes Not Bombs 18: Boston Alliance of Gay and Lesbian Youth, Inc. (BAGLY) 19: Boston/Cambridge Area Clothesline Project 20: Boston Center for the Arts/Homeless Women Speak 21: Boston Chapter of the National Committee to Free Puerto Rican Prisoners of War 22: Boston Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador (CISPES) 23: Boston Committee for Puerto Rican Rights 24: Boston Do Something 25: Boston Human Rights Institute 26: Boston Kennebunkport ’91 Coalition 27: Boston Jobs with Peace Campaign 28: Boston Jobs with Peace Campaign 29: Boston Media Action 30: Boston Tradeswomen’s Network 31: Boston Women’s Health Book Collective (Boston R2N2) 32: Boston Women’s AIDS Information Project 33: Bread & Jams 34: Brookside Theater 35: Cambridge-Ramallah/El-Bireh Sister City Campaign 36: Cape Cod Women’s Agenda 37: Caribbean Focus at Roxbury Community College (RCC): Puerto Rico & Jamaica Work Groups 38: Cathedral Tenants United, Inc. 39: Chelsea Community Economic Development (CED) Alliance 40-42: Chelsea’s Commission on Hispanic Affairs, Inc. 43-45: Chinese Progressive Association 46: CIBAO Club, Inc. 47: Citizens for Safety 48: Citizens Opposed to Polluting the Environment 49: Citizens to End Animal Suffering and Exploitation (CEASE) Carton 2: 50-51: City Life/Vida Urbana 52: Clean Coalition 53: Clothesline Project 54-55: Coalition for Basic Human Needs 56-57: Coalition for Community Control of Development 58: Coalition on New Office Technology 59: Coalition for Social Justice 60: Codman Square Neighborhood Council 61: Colombia Vive 62: Comite De Mujeres Puertorriquences Miriam Lopez Perez 63: Comite Hondureno Francisco Morazan 64: Committee 500 Years Resistance 65: Commonground US - Cuba Information Exchange 66: Commonwealth Education Project 67: Part of the Solution 68: Commonwealth Tenants Association 69: Community Bytes 70: Community Change 71: Cooperative Economics for Women 72: CPPAX Education Fund, Inc. 73: Culture Sharing 74: Deaf-Blind Contact Center 75: Disability Pride Day Coalition 76: Dorchester Community News 77-78: Dorchester Women’s Committee 79: East Coast Bisexual Network (ECBN) 80: Egleston Square Neighborhood Association 81: Emergency Coalition for Peace, Justice & Non-Intervention in the Middle East 82-84: Eviction Free Zone Coalition of Cambridge 85-86: Essex County Community Organization, Inc. 87: Evaluation Family Counseling, Haitians & Minorities Inc. (EFCHAM) 88: Feminist Jews for Justice 89: Filmmakers Collaborative Carton 3: 90: Fisherman’s Wives Association, Inc. 91: Fishnet 92: 500 Years is Enough! Coalition 93: 500 Years of Indigenous Resistance Council 94: Four Corners Public Safety Action Project 95: Framingham Regional Alliance of Gay/Lesbian Youth (FRAGLY) 96-97: Free My People 98: Freedom Now Coalition - Coalition 99: Gay Prisoner Project of Bromfield Street Educational Foundation 100: Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual Speakers Bureau 101: Grass-Roots Peace and Justice Network 102: Gray Panthers of Greater Boston 103-4: Greater Boston Regional Youth Council Teens Training Teens 105: Greater Roxbury Neighborhood Authority 106: Guatemala Committee of CASA 107: Haiti Communications Project Fund, Inc. 108: Health Action Research Group 109: Health Care for All 110: Health Security Coalition 111: Heritage Common (CDC) 112: Homeless Organization for Women 113: Homeless Organizers’ Support Team (HOST) 114: HonduNet (Honduras National Network) 115: Immigrant Rights Advocacy, Training and Education Project (IRATE) 116-7: Immigrant Workers Resource Center 118-9: Ina Mae Best Solidarity Committee 120: International Women’s Day Video Festival 121: Irish Immigration Center 122: Jefferson Park Writing Center 123: July 26th Coalition 124: June 27th Project 125: Kenmore/Audobon Circle/Fenway Neighborhood Initiative 126: Labor Committee on the Middle East 127-8: Lawrence Youth Commission Family Development Center 129: MADRE, Inc. 130: Massachusetts Anti-Hunger Coalition 131: Massachusetts Association of Women Fire Fighters 132: Massachusetts CFIDS Association 133: Massachusetts Citizens Against the Death Penalty Fund 134-5: Massachusetts Community Coalition for Public Education 136: Massachusetts English Plus Coalition 137: Massachusetts Human Services Coalition 138: Massachusetts Jobs with Justice Coalition 139: Massachusetts Lifers Organization 140: Massachusetts Peace Action 141: Medford Citizens Diversity in Education 142: Massachusetts tenants Resource Center 143: Mattapan-Dorchester Churches in Action 144: Middle East Philanthropic Fund 145: Miss J’s Youth Club 146: Mission Hill Neighborhood Housing Services, Inc. 147: Mouvman Peyizan Papay Education and Development Fund (MPP-EDF) 148: National Congress for Puerto Rican Rights - Mass Chapter 149: National Lawyers Guild - Mass Chapter 150: National Writers Union - Boston Local 151: Neighbor to Neighbor 152: Network for Battered Lesbians 153: NICA - Nuevo Instituto De Centra America 154: New Neighborhood Priority 155: Nicaragua Solidarity Committee 156: Nurses for National Health Care 157-8: Odyssey Journal 159: Center for Labor Education and Research (CLEAR) 160: Orchard Park United Tenants Association, Inc. 161: Ourstories Herstories Project 162: Palestine Solidarity Committee - Boston Chapter 163: Parents Organized for Development, Education & Reform 164: Peace and Justice Hotline 165: Peace for Cuba International Appeal 166: People’s Music Network/SFS 167: People to People 168: P.E.W.T.E.R. Program 169: Police Practices Coalition 170: Poor People’s United Fund 171-2: Prison Book Program 173-4: Prison Theatre Arts Program 175: Project Free (Franklin Residents Efforts for Equality) 176: Puerto Rican Organizing Resource Center 177: People with AIDS Coalition (PWA) 178: Pynk Patrol of Greater Boston 179: Rainforest Defense Fund 180: Reproductive Rights Network 181: Somerville-Perguin Sister City Project 182: Sponsoring Committee for Greater Movement Unity 183: Spontaneous Celebrations 184: Survivors, Inc. 185: Technology Education Council of Somerville 186: Teens as Community Resources 187: Theater Offensive 188: United Youth of Boston 189: Unity Boston 190: University Conversion Project 191: U.S. - Cuba Labor Delegation Tour 192: Waltham Alliance to Create Housing (W.A.T.C.H.) 193: Welcome Project Haymarket People’s Fund, Western Massachusetts records, 1975-83 (at UMass Amherst Library and Archives) 1: Minutes, reports - 1975-82 2: Alternative Energy Coalition of Hampden County 3: Amherst Community Resource Center/Western Mass. Welfare Coalition 4: Association Latina Progresso y Accion 5: Battered People’s Project 6: Berkshire Community Education Group 7: Berkshire Model Education Program 8: Berkshire Union of Community Organizers 9: Berkshire Voices Collective 10: Butterfly Education Arts/Women’s Media Coalition 11: Casa Latina/Hampshire Community Action Commission (Noticiero Latina) 12: center for Community Access TV (CCATV) 13: Che Lumumba Multicultural Community Education Project 14: CISPES/Center for Reflective Action 15: Committee for Childcare in Crisis (CCC) 16: Community Union Rural Development Corporation 17: correctional Change Group 18: Council of Churches of Grater Springfield/Committee to End Apartheid 19: Cultural Workers Collective 20: Evergreen Defense Fund 21: Franklin Training Corp. 22: Gray House, Inc./Motherhouse of Sisters of St. Joseph 23: Gray Panthers/Faith Church of Springfield 24: Hampshire County Employed/Unemployed Council 25: Holyoke YWCA/Greater Holyoke Women’s Center 26: July 4th Coalition, Western Mass Chapter 27: Labor Relations and Research Center, University of Mass 28: Last Resort, The 29: Little Apple, The 30: Mass Coalition for Occupational Safety and Health (MassCOSH) 31: Mass Organization of Disabled Workers 32: Mass People’s History Project 33: Mobilization for Survival, Northampton 34: Native American Solidarity Committee 35: Necessities/Necesidades/ISIS 36: New England Small Farm Inst./W. Mass. Energy, Environment and Agri. Resource Network 37: New Unity 38: Northampton Veterans’ Coalition 39: Open Door/Association for Retarded Citizens 40: Panache 41: Parents for Peace 42: Patria Libre 43: People for Economic Survival 44: People for Peace of Southern Berkshire 45: Puerto Rican Congress 46: Puerto Rican Solidarity Committee 47: Puerto Rican Solidarity Committee, Springfield 48: Southern Africa Solidarity Committee/ANC 49: Spanish American Union/Springfield Citizens Coalition for Justice 50: Springfield Health Coalition/Family Planning Council of Western Mass 51: Springfield Rape Crisis Center 52: Springfield Women’s Union 53: Students United for Public Education 54: Sunday News Collective 55: 12 to 1 56: Union of Student Employees 57: University of Mass Labor Community Support Network 58: Urban Ministry/United Citizens Action League 59: Valley Women’s Martial Arts 60: Valley Women’s Union 61: Western Mass Latin American Solidarity Committee 62: Western Mass Native American 63: Women against Violence in Pornography and Media 64: Women’s Caucus of the Northampton Committee on El Salvador 65: Women’s Center of North Berkshire Community Action 66: Work, Inc. |
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