Carton 33
Contains 18 Results:
Correspondence, undated
Correspondence sent and received by Anderson. Correspondents include Joan London, Anne Loftis, Craig Jenkins, Frank Bardacke, Lynn A. Bonfield, Craig S. Piper, Cindy Hahamovitch, Don Watson, Rudy Torres, Catherine Powell, David McPhail, Douglass and Debbie Adiar, Laurie Coyle, Deborah Cohen, and David Bacon. Subjects include Ernesto Galarza, Pablo Camacho, Sugarman Report, Labor Archives and Research Center, Braceros, and farm workers.
General, undated
Anderson's typed speech for Vincent St. John's memorial and artwork drafts for Anderson's Pacem in Suburbis.
Chavez, Cesar, 1979, 1984, 1993
Contains eulogy for Rufino Contreras by Chavez, transcript of Chavez's speech to the Commonwealth Club, UFW statement on Chavez's death, and transcript of Senator Robert F. Kennedy's speech on Chavez's death. Includes Anderson's memories of Chavez and information on Chavez memorial.
Correspondence, 1956-1964, 1974, undated
Mostly correspondence between Galarza and Anderson. Also contains Galarza's letters to other individuals; many letters are from the period in which he was secretary of the National Agricultural Workers Union. Topics include El Centro Reception Center and DiGiorgio film, Strangers in our Fields, farm worker unemployment, Public Law 78, illegal use of braceros, Imperial Valley; U.S. Dept. of Labor, and Louis Tagaban's eviction from El Centro welcome center.
Mexican Contract Workers, 1944
Galarza's 16-page confidential memorandum on Mexican contract workers in the United States.
General, 1957, 1960, undated
Material collected by Galarza or pertaining to him. Includes news clippings on DiGiorgio Corp., Congressional record on Galarza and the film Poverty in the Valley of Plenty , government report on 1963 farm labor transportation accident, proceedings of the 1957 National Sharecroppers Fund Conference, testimony by peach pickers, and minutes of the NAWU executive board.
Writings, 1944, 1949, 1957-1959, 1962, 1967
Galarza's writings: Strangers in Our Fields, a study on the problems of Mexican Nationals in nine camps; problems with Mexican war workers employed in the U.S.; analysis of the agreement between the U.S. and Mexico regarding recruitment of farm labor; statement to U.S. Congress on farm labor wages; and numerous press releases written for the National Agricultural Workers Union.
Correspondence, 2004, 2007, 2011
Email correspondence between Prof. Gilbert G. Gonzalez and Anderson, mostly regarding exchange of documents on braceros, farm labor, and Anderson's experiences.
Economic Power, 2004, undated
Gonzalez's manuscript, "Economic Power vs. Academic Freedom: The case of Henry P. Anderson and the University of California, Berkeley," documented the events that transpired around Anderson's thesis and research on the Bracero Program.
News Clippings, 2009, 2013, 2014
News clippings on farm labor.