Guide To The Walter Lowenfels Papers

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Yale University LibraryBeinecke Rare Book and Manuscript LibraryGuide to the Walter Lowenfels PapersYCAL MSS 367by Andrea Benefiel and Molly WheelerMay 2010P. O. Box 208330New Haven, CT .library.yale.edu/Last exported at 1:23 a.m. on Wednesday, June 1st, 2022

Walter Lowenfels papersYCAL MSS 367Table of ContentsCollection Overview . 3Requesting Instructions . 3Administrative Information . 4Immediate Source of Acquisition . 4Conditions Governing Access . 4Conditions Governing Use . 4Preferred Citation . 4Processing Information . 4Associated Materials . 4Biographical Note . 4Scope and Contents . 6Arrangement . 6Collection Contents . 7Series I: Correspondence, 1920-1979 . 7General Correspondence, 1925-1976 . 7Correspondence by Subject, 1935-1975 . 34Third-Party Correspondence, 1920-1979 . 35Series II: Writings, 1926-1976 . 39Series III: Writings of Others, 1941-1976 . 54Writings by Author, 1941-1976 . 54Writings by Unknown Authors, 1966-1974 . 68Series IV: Photographs, 1897-1975 . 72Photographs of Lowenfels and Family, 1897-1975 . 72Photographs of Others and Places, 1930-1971 . 72Series V: Other Papers, 1931-1976 . 74Series VI: Printed Material, 1925-1976 . 75Printed Material about Walter Lowenfels, 1925-1976 . 75Other Printed Material, 1927-1976 . 75Oversize, 1946-1975 . 82Restricted Fragile Materials, 1920s-1970s . 85Restricted Fragile Materials Oversize, 1920s-1970s . 86Selected Search Terms . 87

Walter Lowenfels papersYCAL MSS 367Collection OverviewREPOSITORY: Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript LibraryP. O. Box 208330New Haven, CT .library.yale.edu/CALL NUMBER: YCAL MSS 367CREATOR: Lowenfels, Walter, 1897-1976TITLE: Walter Lowenfels papersDATES: 1897–1979BULK DATES: 1930–1976PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION: 85.51 linear feet (183 boxes)LANGUAGE: Chiefly in English, some writings in Russian, Spanish, and French.SUMMARY: The Walter Lowenfels Papers document the life and work of the writer,journalist, editor, activist, and member of the Communist Party USA, WalterLowenfels. The papers consist of correspondence, writings, writings ofothers, photographs, personal papers, printed material, and other papersspanning the years 1897-1979, with the bulk of the material dating from1930-1976. Correspondence, writings, and writings of others comprisethe bulk of the papers. The correspondence records his personal andprofessional relationships and chronicles his 1953 and 1954 trials for seditionand conspiracy and his publication process. Writings document Lowenfels'swork as a writer, editor and anthologist, including drafts of his prose,poetry, drama, essays, and articles. The writings also document his workfor the Pennsylvania edition of the Daily Worker. The writings of othersreveal Lowenfels's work editing anthologies and collections of works byother writers. Photographs include snapshots of Lowenfels, his family andfriends, his home and other subjects. Printed material contains clippings,tearsheets, ephemera, and other printed material concerning Lowenfels andother subjects of his interest. A small amount of personal papers includesbiographical information and files on his finances and estate.ONLINE FINDING AID: To cite or bookmark this finding aid, please use the following link: wRequesting InstructionsTo request items from this collection for use in the Beinecke Library reading room, please use therequest links in the HTML version of this finding aid, available at w.To order reproductions from this collection, please send an email with the call number, box number(s), andfolder number(s) to beinecke.images@yale.edu.Key to the container abbreviations used in the PDF finding aid:Page 3 of 87

Walter Lowenfels papersYCAL MSS 367b.f.boxfolderAdministrative InformationImmediate Source of AcquisitionGift of Manna Lowenfels Perpelitt, 1984.Conditions Governing AccessThe materials are open for research.Boxes 181-183: Restricted fragile material. Reference surrogates have been substituted in the main files.Consult Access Services for further information.Conditions Governing UseThe Walter Lowenfels Papers is the physical property of the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library,Yale University. Literary rights, including copyright, belong to the authors or their legal heirs and assigns.For further information, consult the appropriate curator.Preferred CitationWalter Lowenfels Papers. Yale Collection of American Literature, Beinecke Rare Book and ManuscriptLibrary.Processing InformationThis collection includes materials previously identified by the following call numbers: Uncat ZA MSSLowenfels, Uncat ZA MSS 317, Uncat ZA MSS 317A.Associated MaterialsPrinted material received with the collection was removed for separate cataloging and can be accessedby searching the library's online catalog.Biographical NoteWalter Lowenfels was born on May 10, 1897 in New York City. His family owned the successful buttermanufacturing business Hotel Bar Butter, which provided a comfortable upbringing for Lowenfels. Aftergraduating from preparatory school in 1914, he served in the military during World War I. Following hisservice, Lowenfels worked for his family's company and wrote poetry, an interest he developed while inthe military. Some early poems appeared in local newspapers and in 1925 he published his first collectionof poems,Episodes & Epistles. In 1924 Lowenfels met Lillian Apotheker, who co-funded Episodes & Epistles,and moved to Europe with her after he decided to focus on writing and quit the family business. Theymarried in 1926 in Europe. The couple spent time in Florence and settled in Paris, meeting many influentialwriters, including Henry Miller, T.S. Eliot and Ford Madox Ford, and for a brief time lived with composerGeorge Antheil. Lowenfels's writing was well received and he appeared in journals and little magazines,such as transition and This Quarter. Nancy Cunard admired his poetry and in 1930 published his collectionPage 4 of 87

Walter Lowenfels papersYCAL MSS 367Appolinaire: An Elegy, through her Hours Press. In 1931, he shared This Quarter's Richard Aldington PoetryPrize with e.e. cummings.While in Paris, Lowenfels met writer Michael Fraenkel. Fraenkel and Lowenfels became close friends and in1930 co-founded the Carrefour Press. That same year, they published the pamphlet Anonymous: The Needfor Anonymity, a manifesto that demanded total anonymity in art and in turn started the "anonymousmovement." Lowenfels anonymously published through Carrefour a musical play, U SA with Music:An Operatic Tragedy. The play's anonymity was short-lived since he and Fraenkel were forced to revealauthorship in a 1932 plagiarism suit against composer George Gershwin for his musical Of Thee I Sing.Carrefour lost the case and began to identify published authors, thereby ending the anonymous movement.Lowenfels continued to write poetry and began to edit poetry of others. His interest in politics increasedand his poetry began to feature his leftist political ideas, focusing on the rise of fascism in Germany andItaly. The Lowenfels' first three daughters were born in France, Michal and twins Manna and Judy.Lowenfels and his family returned to the United States in 1934, moving to Mays Landing, New Jersey.Lowenfels returned to his father's butter business and worked alongside his brother, Albert. During thattime, Lowenfels introduced new ideas to the business; he invented a new waxed paper packaging forbutter and he applied date stamping to improve the butter's freshness. At night and on the weekends,he continued to write poetry. In 1937, he published Steel 1937, a collection of poetry commemorating thesteelworkers killed by US Steel during the 1937 Little Steel strike. Following the publication, Lowenfels quitwriting poetry. In 1938, he left the family business again and moved to Philadelphia where he began writingfor the Pennsylvania edition of the Daily Workerand became increasingly involved in the Civil Rights andCommunist movements. He soon became editor and held that job through 1954. His social activism andwriting focused on civil and worker's rights. Through the 1940s, he sometimes worked only part-time forthe paper, while also selling intercommunication devices and relying on his wife's teaching salary. Thecouple's family grew to four daughters. In 1951, Lowenfels suffered a heart attack and recovered fully. Thesame year, his family moved to a cabin in Weymouth, New Jersey.In July of 1953, Lowenfels was arrested with eight others (they were known as "The Philadelphia Nine")and accused of sedition and conspiracy to overthrow the United States government under the Smith Act.While planning how they could best strategize their defense, the group agreed that Lowenfels shouldreturn to writing poetry to raise money. After seventeen years, Lowenfels began to write poetry againand started to translate others' poetry from French and Italian into English. The group was convicted butthe government's case was overturned in August of 1953. He was arrested again in 1954 for distributing"subversive" materials and was imprisoned at the Holmsburg County Prison in Philadelphia for treason. Hisconviction was overturned for lack of evidence in 1954. That same year, he published A Prisoner's Poemsfor Amnesty. In the midst of Lowenfels's arrests and trial, Lillian was asked to sign a loyalty oath. She pledthe Fifth Amendment and was fired from her teaching job. After his release from prison, Lowenfels quit theDaily Worker and devoted himself to writing and editing the writing of others.Through the 1950s and 1960s, he worked prolifically as an anthologist, focusing on writings that reflectedMarxism and opposition to political repression. He published an anthology of Walt Whitman's poetrycalled Walt Whitman's Civil War(1961); Where Is Vietnam? (1967), a collection of protest poetry for whichhe is perhaps best known; and In the Time of Revolution (1969), a collection of civil rights poems by AfricanAmericans. He was active in the anti-Vietnam War peace movement and edited the anti-war publicationDialog. To protest the war, Lowenfels joined with other writers and editors and refused to pay taxes.An anthology of Lowenfels's own poems edited by Robert Gover, The Portable Walter, was publishedin 1968, and included the second half of his autobiography My Many Lives. In 1970, Lowenfels co-wroteThe Life of Fraenkel's Deathwith Howard McCord and continued to edit poetry anthologies, publishingseveral collections, including From the Belly of the Shark: a new anthology of Native Americans; poems byChicanos, Eskimos, Hawaiians, Indians, Puerto Ricans in the U.S.A., with related poems by others (1973); andFor Neruda, For Chile: an international anthology (1975).Lowenfels died on July 8, 1976 in Tarrytown, New York.Page 5 of 87

Walter Lowenfels papersYCAL MSS 367Scope and ContentsThe Walter Lowenfels Papers document the life and work of the writer, journalist, editor, activist, andmember of the Communist Party USA, Walter Lowenfels. The papers consist of correspondence, writings,writings of others, photographs, personal papers, printed material, and other papers spanning the years1897-1979, with the bulk of the material dating from 1930-1976.Correspondence, writings, and writings of others comprise the bulk of the papers. The correspondencerecords his personal and professional relationships and chronicles his 1953 and 1954 trials for seditionand conspiracy and his publication process. Writings document Lowenfels's work as a writer, editor andanthologist, and include drafts of his prose, poetry, drama, essays, and articles. The writings also documenthis work for the Pennsylvania edition of the Daily Worker. The writings of others reveal Lowenfel's workediting anthologies and collections of works by other writers.Photographs include snapshots of Lowenfels, his family and friends, his home and other subjects. Printedmaterial contains clippings, tearsheets, ephemera, and other printed material on Lowenfels and othersubjects of his interest. A small amount of personal papers includes biographical information and files onhis finances and estate.ArrangementOrganized into six series: I. Correspondence, 1920-1979. II. Writings, 1926-1976. III. Writings of Others,1941-1976. IV. Photographs, 1897-1975. V. Other Papers, 1931-1976. VI. Printed Material, 1925-1976.Page 6 of 87

Series I: CorrespondenceWalter Lowenfels papersYCAL MSS 367Collection ContentsSeries I: Correspondence, 1920-197921 linear feet (50 boxes)General Correspondence contains incoming letters to Lowenfels and carbon copies of his outgoing letters.The series documents his career as a poet, editor, and anthologist as well as his personal relationshipswith family, friends, and colleagues. Some letters include enclosures of poems and writings of others sentto Lowenfels and are noted when they occur. A significant portion of the correspondence is identified byfirst name only and a smaller amount of correspondence remains unidentified. Included within generalcorrespondence are letters from literary figures such as Henry Miller, Langston Hughes, Gwendolyn Brooks,Nancy Cunard, and Lawrence Ferlinghetti, and musicians and composers such as George Antheil, PeteSeeger, Lee Hays, and Woody Guthrie.Correspondence by Subject contains correspondence regarding specific topics or incidents groupedtogether by Lowenfels. Included in the subseries are files of correspondence relating to Lowenfels's 1953and 1954 trials for sedition and plotting to overthrow the government. This correspondence includesincoming and outgoing correspondence with Lowenfels, letters from Lillian Lowenfels, and copies of letterswritten by third parties to Judge Cullen Ganey, President Dwight Eisenhower, and others in support ofamnesty for Lowenfels.Third-Party Correspondence contains correspondence between other parties, including members ofWalter Lowenfels's family and correspondence regarding his estate and posthumous publications, as wellas the incoming and outgoing correspondence of his wife Lillian Lowenfels.Additional correspondence is located in Series II. Writings and Series III. Writings of Others.Series I. is organized into three subseries: General Correspondence, Correspondence by Subject, and ThirdParty Correspondence.ContainerDescriptionDateGeneral Correspondence1925-1976This series is arranged alphabetically by correspondent. Correspondenceidentified by first name only and unidentified correspondence is filed at the end ofthe subseries.b. 1, f. 1"A" General1954-1976,undatedb. 1, f. 2Abbe, George1965-1971b. 1, f. 3Abelord-Schuman Limited1963b. 1, f. 4Abt, John J.1962-1968b. 1, f. 5Ackerson, John1965b. 1, f. 6Ackley, Randall1972b. 1, f. 7Addison, Lloyd1963-1967b. 1, f. 8Adnan, Etel1967-1976,undatedb. 1, f. 9Advance Printing Co.1957-1962Includes letters from Joel Rothman.Page 7 of 87

Series I: CorrespondenceWalter Lowenfels papersYCAL MSS 367General Correspondence (continued)ContainerDescriptionDateb. 1, f. 10Aldan, Daisy1967-1970b. 1, f. 11Aldington, Richard1928-1931b. 1, f. 12Alexan, George1964, 1973,undatedb. 1, f. 13Angoff, Charles1963-1964Alfred A. Knopf, Inc.b. 1, f. 14-16Cameron, Angus1956-1974,undatedb. 1, f. 17Miscellaneous1960-1969,undatedb. 1, f. 18b. 1, f. 19Includes letters from John Stanford.1963-1976,undatedAllen, Samuel1965-1967All Points of ViewAmerican Dialogb. 2, f. 20-21Frieder, Jacquie1965-1976,undatedb. 2, f. 22To "Friends" from WL1969b. 2, f. 23Moroze, Lewis M.1971-1972b. 2, f. 24-25North, Joe1964-1969,undatedb. 2, f. 26Vroboská, Anća1970-1971b. 2, f. 27General1964-1967,undatedb. 2, f. 28Includes letters from Jack Lewis.1963-1968,undatedb. 2, f. 29American Society of African Culture1962-1963b. 2, f. 30American Weave1958-1961,undatedb. 2, f. 31Ammons, A. R. (Archie)1964-1967,undatedb. 2, f. 32Anderson, Chester1967-1969American Literary ExchangeIncludes poems by Anderson.b. 2, f. 33André, Michael1973-1974,undatedb. 2, f. 34-36Antheil, George1928-1932,undatedPage 8 of 87

Series I: CorrespondenceWalter Lowenfels papersYCAL MSS 367General Correspondence (continued)Containerb. 2, f. 37DescriptionDatéAppercelle, Andree1967-1972Letters in French.b. 2, f. 38-391962-1976Aptheker, HerbertAmerican Institute for Marxist Studies, Political Affairs.b. 3, f. 40Arkin, Frieda1970b. 3, f. 41Arnold, Bob1974-1975b. 3, f. 42Arobateau, Red1969, 1972b. 3, f. 43Arts and the People1975-1976Includes letters by Henri Percikow.b. 3, f. 441970-1971Arts In SocietyIncludes letters by Monika Jensen.b. 3, f. 45Asselineau, Roger1961-1976,undatedb. 3, f. 46Atheneum (New York, N.Y.)1963-1972b. 3, f. 47The Authors Guild1955-1971b. 3, f. 48Ayling, Ronald1966-1967b. 3, f. 49-51"B" Generalcirca 1954-1976,undatedb. 3, f. 52Babeuf, Howard1967, undatedb. 3, f. 53Bair, Deirdre1974-1975Baraka, Imamu AmiriSee: Jones, Leroi, Box 17, Folder 343b. 3, f. 54Barlenmir House1972-1975b. 3, f. 55Barry, Jan1976b. 3, f. 56Bart, Connie1955-1968b. 3, f. 57Bart, Philip1967-1970,undatedb. 3, f. 58Bartlett, ElizabethIncludes first edition volume of It Takes Practice Not To Die, by Bartlett.1964-1970,undatedb. 3, f. 59Bartlett, Paul1964-1969b. 3, f. 60Bates, Scott1956-1969,undatedb. 3, f. 61Baxandall, Lee1962-1964b. 3, f. 62Baxandall, Rosalyn1972Page 9 of 87

Series I: CorrespondenceWalter Lowenfels papersYCAL MSS 367General Correspondence (continued)ContainerDescriptionDateb. 4, f. 63Beacon Press1974-1975b. 4, f. 64Bean, Adelaide1962-1970,undatedb. 4, f. 65Beaudoin, Kenneth Lawrence1966b. 4, f. 66Beckett, Samuel1932, 1966b. 4, f. 67Beecher, John1958-1970b. 4, f. 68Beissel, Henry1965, 1970b. 4, f. 69Benkovitz, Miriam1954-1973b. 4, f. 70Bentley, Eric1964-1970,undatedb. 4, f. 71Bergé, Carol1965-1975,undatedb. 4, f. 72Berger, Art1963-1972,undatedb. 4, f. 73Berger, Dorothy1962-1975b. 4, f. 74Bernard, Sidney1967-1975b. 4, f. 75Bessie, Alvah Cecil1960-1966b. 4, f. 76Bilicke, Tom1971-1973,undatedb. 4, f. 77Blackburn, Paul1962-1967b. 4, f. 78Blau, Eric1963b. 4, f. 79Blazek, Douglas1964-1974,undatedb. 4, f. 80Blodgett, Harold William1962-1970,undatedb. 4, f. 81Blue Cloud Abbey (Marvin, S.D.)Includes letters by Brother Benét.1971-1974,undatedb. 4, f. 82Blumenthal, Daniel1932-1933b. 4, f. 83Bly, Robert1960-1971b. 4, f. 84The Book Review1971Includes letters by Jay Bail.b. 4, f. 85Bovingdon, John and Bess1958-1969b. 4, f. 86Boyle, Kay1932-1975,undatedPage 10 of 87

Series I: CorrespondenceWalter Lowenfels papersYCAL MSS 367General Correspondence (continued)ContainerDescriptionDateb. 5, f. 87-93Brand, Millen1955-1975,undatedb. 5, f. 94Bratt, George1961-1975b. 5, f. 95Braun, Henry1966-1967b. 5, f. 96-102Braymer, Nan1932-1975,undatedb. 6, f. 103Breman, Paul1963-1975b. 6, f. 104Britt, Alan1974-1976b. 6, f. 105Brittain, Roger1968-1969b. 6, f. 106Broadside Magazine1963-1971Includes letters by Sis Cunningham.b. 6, f. 107-108Brooks, Edwin1967-1977,undatedb. 6, f. 109Brooks, Gwendolyn1969, undatedb. 6, f. 110Brown, Bob1958, undatedb. 6, f. 111Brown, Fred1962b. 6, f. 112Brown University1964-1969b. 6, f. 113Buchman, Marion1962-1966,undatedb. 6, f. 114Buechel, Paul1963-1973,undatedb. 6, f. 115-116Burgum, Edwin Berry1937, undatedb. 6, f. 117Burke, Kenneth1937, undatedb. 6, f. 118Burrows, Vinie1966-1975b. 7, f. 119-122"C" General1950-1976,undatedb. 7, f. 123-126Cabral, Olga1952-1970,undatedb. 7, f. 127Caffee, Valorie1968b. 7, f. 128Callahan, James D.1963-1969b. 7, f. 129Camus, Albert1958 April 29b. 7, f. 130Cantu, Martin1971b. 7, f. 131Capek, Abe1956, 1962Page 11 of 87

Series I: CorrespondenceWalter Lowenfels papersYCAL MSS 367General Correspondence (continued)ContainerDescriptionDateb. 8, f. 132Cardona-Hine, Alvaro1965 September1b. 8, f. 133Cardoza y Aragón, Luis1954-1966,undatedb. 8, f. 134Carrington, Glenn1961-1967,undatedb. 8, f. 135Carrington, Harold1960-1964b. 8, f. 136Carruth, Hayden1967-1973b. 8, f. 137Case, Clifford P. (Clifford Philip)1964-1966b. 8, f. 138Caspe, Marie1971-1972b. 8, f. 139Cavell, Marcia1964 -1965,undatedb. 8, f. 140Center for Marxist Education1969-1970b. 8, f. 141Chakovskii, Aleksandr1956 - 1972b. 8, f. 142Charters, Ann1966-1967b. 8, f. 143Childress, William1966-1974b. 8, f. 144Chinese Writers' UnionIncludes letters from Chen Ping-Yi.1954-1962,undatedb. 8, f. 145Chomsky, Noam1970b. 8, f. 146Chute, Robert1964, 1967,undatedb. 8, f. 147Citadel Press1963-1966b. 8, f. 148Clodd, Alan1959-1960b. 8, f. 149Colombo, John1968-1972,undatedb. 8, f. 150Communist Party of the United States of America1958-1975b. 8, f. 151-152Congdon, Kirby1964-1974,undatedb. 8, f. 153Connellan, Leo1960-1973,undatedb. 8, f. 154Continuum Books1973-1975b. 8, f. 155Corinth Books1964, 1972-1973Includes letters from Elias and Theodore Wilentz.b. 8, f. 1561962-1966,undatedCorrington, John WilliamPage 12 of 87

Series I: CorrespondenceWalter Lowenfels papersYCAL MSS 367General Correspondence (continued)ContainerDescriptionDateb. 8, f. 157Costley, William1967-1972b. 8, f. 158Council on Interracial Books for Children1971-1972b. 8, f. 159Cousins, Norman1963-1970,undatedb. 9, f. 160Cressman, William1957-1961b. 9, f. 161Crews, Judson1966-1969b. 9, f. 162Crown Publishers1961-1976b. 9, f. 163-164Cunard, Nancy1954-1964,undatedb. 9, f. 165Curtis, Norman1957-1968,undatedb. 9, f. 166-167"D" General1954-1976,undatedb. 9, f. 168Daily World (New York, N.Y.)1968-1975,undatedb. 9, f. 169Dane, Barbara1967-1972,undatedb. 9, f. 170Dangulov, Savva1959-1964,undatedb. 9, f. 171Darcy, Emma and Sam1965-1966b. 9, f. 172Davidson, Richard1957-1970b. 9, f. 173Davis, Benjamin1953-1964,undatedb. 9, f. 174Davis, Georgecirca 1931b. 9, f. 175Davis, Ossie and Ruby Dee1964-1975b. 9, f. 176Dawson, Chester S.1966-1967b. 10, f. 177Decker, Clarence RaymondLiterary Review1959-1966,undatedb. 10, f. 178Degnan, June Oppen1962-1965b. 10, f. 179Delacorte BooksGross, Nancy1969-1973,undatedb. 10, f. 180Dell Publishing Company1963-1974b. 10, f. 181De Loach, Allen1965-1975,undatedb. 10, f. 182Dennis, R. M.1970, undatedPage 13 of 87

Series I: CorrespondenceWalter Lowenfels papersYCAL MSS 367General Correspondence (continued)ContainerDescriptionDateb. 10, f. 183Deutscher Schriftsteller-Verband1960-1962b. 10, f. 184Dial Press1963b. 10, f. 185Dialog Houseundatedb. 10, f. 186Dick, Kenneth C.1965-1966b. 10, f. 187DiPalma, Ray1969-1970b. 10, f. 188Di Prima, Diane1962-1968b. 10, f. 189Diskin, Bernice1957-1974,undatedb. 10, f. 190Divĭs, Ivan1969b. 10, f. 191Dobzynski, Charles1955-1975,undatedb. 10, f. 192Dolsen, James H.1953-1965Doubleday and Company, inc.b. 10, f. 193Deming, Lynn1966-1972b. 10, f. 194Drymalski, Paul1970-1971b. 10, f. 195Kaufman, Sybil1966-1967b. 10, f. 196McHargue, Georgess1968-1970b. 10, f. 197Polushkin, Maria1970-1971,undatedb. 10, f. 198Strachan, William1971-1974b. 10, f. 199Thompson, Janice1967-1968b. 10, f. 200General1964-1974,undatedb. 10, f. 201Dowden, George1966-1973b. 10, f. 202Draper, Muriel1922-1934Typescript copies and photocopies of correspondence.b. 10, f. 203Dukess, Murray1965, 1975,undatedb. 10, f. 204Durem, Ray and Dorothy1963-1964b. 11, f. 205"E" General1948-1973b. 11, f. 206Editions Seghers1955, 1965b. 11, f. 207Eichorn, Douglas1968, undatedPage 14 of 87

Series I: CorrespondenceWalter Lowenfels papersYCAL MSS 367General Correspondence (continued)Containerb. 11, f. 208DescriptionDateEinstein, Albert1955, undatedPhotocopies of correspondence.b. 11, f. 209Eliade, Mircea1964-1965b. 11, f. 210Europa1965-1969b. 11, f. 211Evans, Mari1962-1970,undatedb. 11, f. 212-213"F" General1954-1975b. 11, f. 214Fabre, Michel1970-1971b. 11, f. 215Fahey, Harriet1974b. 11, f. 216Fahnestock, Karol1958-1960b. 11, f. 217Falk, Richard1966-1970b. 11, f. 218Fast, Howard1952-1957,undatedb. 11, f. 219-220Feinberg, Charles E.1960-1970b. 11, f. 221Ferlinghetti, Lawrence1957-1968,undatedb. 11, f. 222Fine, Albert1960b. 11, f. 223Finklestein, Sid1965-1969,undatedb. 11, f. 224Fishman, George1961, 1969b. 11, f. 225Fitzgerald, F. Scott (Francis Scott)1932Photocopy of correspondence.b. 11, f. 226Flanner, Janetundatedb. 11, f. 227Fles, Barthold1961-1963b. 11, f. 228Flores, Angel1958-1974,undatedb. 11, f. 229Flynn, Elizabeth Gurley1958-1959b. 12, f. 230Folkways1957-1967b. 12, f. 231Folsom, Franklin1955-1971b. 12, f. 232Folsom, Michael1967-1972b. 12, f. 233-234Ford, Hugh1962-1975b. 12, f. 235Foreign Language Press1954-1967b. 12, f. 236Foreign Literature1955-1964,undatedPage 15 of 87

Series I: CorrespondenceWalter Lowenfels papersYCAL MSS 367General Correspondence (continued)ContainerDescriptionDateb. 12, f. 237Fort Hood Defense Committee1966b. 12, f. 238Fortner, Ethel1967-1972b. 12, f. 239-245Fraenkel, Michael1930-1951,undatedb. 12, f. 246Frank, Waldo David1955-1965b. 12, f. 247Frederick A. Praeger, Inc.1963b. 12, f. 248Free Lance Poets and Prose Workshop1970-1971Includes letters from Russell Atkins.b. 12, f. 249Freedomways1961-1963b. 12, f. 250Friesen, Gordon1969-1971,undated1b. 12, f. 251Fulton, Len1967-1974b. 13, f. 252-253"G" General1953-1975,undatedb. 13, f. 254Gaess, Roger1970-1975,undatedb. 13, f. 255Gardner, Carl1964b. 13, f. 256Gardos, Grace1965-1967b. 13, f. 257Geddes, Jeff1974-1976b. 13, f. 258Geismar, Maxwell1954-1976,undatedb. 13, f. 259Georgakas, Dan1970-1975,undatedb. 13, f. 260George Braziller, Inc.1963-1975b. 13, f. 261George, Wilton A.1969-1970,undatedb. 13, f. 262Gershgoren, Estelle1962-1968,undatedb. 13, f. 263Gibson, Morgan1965-1969,undatedb. 13, f. 264Gill, John1966b. 13, f. 265Ginsberg, Allen1959-1968,undatedb. 13, f. 266Gitlin, Todd1966-67,undatedPage 16 of 87

Series I: CorrespondenceWalter Lowenfels papersYCAL MSS 367General Correspondence (continued)ContainerDescriptionDateb. 13, f. 267Gold, Mike1951-1967,undatedb. 13, f. 268Goldsmith, Walter1953, 1958b. 13, f. 269Goldwater, Walter1963-1975,undatedb. 13, f. 270Goodman, Ronald1956-1968,undatedb. 13, f. 271Gordon, Midi1953-1975,undatedb. 13, f

member of the Communist Party USA, Walter Lowenfels. The papers consist of correspondence, wrtings, writings of others, photographs, personal papers, printed material, and other papers spanning the years 1897-1979, with the bulk of the material dating from 1930-1976. Correspondence, writings, and writings of others comprise the bulk of the papers.

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Chính Văn.- Còn đức Thế tôn thì tuệ giác cực kỳ trong sạch 8: hiện hành bất nhị 9, đạt đến vô tướng 10, đứng vào chỗ đứng của các đức Thế tôn 11, thể hiện tính bình đẳng của các Ngài, đến chỗ không còn chướng ngại 12, giáo pháp không thể khuynh đảo, tâm thức không bị cản trở, cái được

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rotational motion and astrophysics can have impacts on our lives, as well on the environment/society. This application and development of skills can be achieved using a variety of approaches, including investigation and problem solving. The Unit will cover the key areas of kinematic relationships, angular motion, rotational dynamics, gravitation, general relativity, and stellar physics .