Showing 92 results
Archival DescriptionSanford Archibald's scrapbooks documenting the Protestant Digest
- MS-2-292
- Collection
- 1938 - 1946
Archibald, Sanford
- MS-2-232, Box 2, Folder 3
- File
- 1972
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 2, Folder 2
- File
- 1973
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 2, Folder 1
- File
- 1972-1973
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
File contains seven letters (three typed and four hand-written), written between 1972 and 1973, by David B. Lord (from Jacksonville, FL). Five of the letters are addressed to Kenneth Leslie, while one is addressed to his wife, Nora, and another addressed to Kurt Anderson (New York, NY), with Kenneth Leslie and George Bilankian carbon-copied.
The first letter, dated March 25, 1972, addresses Lord's appreciation of Leslie's poetry, discusses the passing of Lord's acquaintance Harold Cohn and a misdeed the Cohn had done to Lord, as well as a request for more copies of the previous issue of New Man.
The following two letters are dated June 12, 1972. The first, addressed to Nora, expresses his closeness to her despite Lord's not having met her, having heard good things from a mutual friend in California. The other letter, addressed to Kenneth but undated (same stationery and ink), expresses Lord's regret at taking so long to answer the previous message. Lord expresses his disgust with "the shame of Vietnam" and of "Tricky Dick [...] claiming to be a Quaker, with Billy Graham as his co-pilot" as being a "good example of religion at its lowest", but expressing admiration of the "young, protesting with their bodies, but [that] the sadistic pigs are having their field day."
The fourth letter, dated December 10, 1972 and addressed to Kurt Anderson, responds to Anderson's article "From life to money to body counts" which appeared in the October 1972 issue of The Churchman. It includes excerpts from Kenneth Leslie's and George Bilankian's responses to the same article.
The fifth is a postcard sent from France, dated January 12, 1973, expressing the view that "America has failed the world."
The sixth is a handwritten four-page letter of the same date, from Foix, Languedoc, draws comparisons between the present destruction of Vietnam with the past "attempted destruction" of the "Albigensian civilization", addressing how one should address to the "hopeless disaster" while living in a country that now seems "resigned to its fate". Lord also is reminded of an article he wrote for The Protestant "more than thirty years ago" entitled 'The spirit of crucified Spain'.
In the final letter, dated March 10, 1973, Lord expresses his pleasure at having returned from France to an awaiting copy of 'O'Malley to the Reds', recounts his visit with George Bilankian in London, and remarks on the "history of dissent" found while following his family trail through genealogical work. He mentions being "indebted to Rev. James B. Leslie, M.A. Rector of Kilsaran" for directing Lord's research efforts in the right direction.
Letter to Kenneth and Nora Leslie from Dermot and Anita McHugh
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 9
- Item
- 1972
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 8
- Item
- 1942
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
Letters to Kenneth Leslie from Jacquelin Leslie
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 7
- File
- 1971
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
Letter to Kenneth Leslie from Bertha Starratt Leslie
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 6
- Item
- [193-?]
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 52
- File
- 1973
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 51
- File
- 1944
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
attacking Fascism here and abroad, irrespective of whether its sponsorship be Protestant, Catholic or Jewish". He finishes by defending accusations of anti-Semitism levied against Pierre van Paassen, Johannes Steel, and Joseph Brainin (fellow editor of The Protestant), stating that "the accuser must be pitied for having exposed his ignorance--or malice--so flagrantly" by accusing "a man of the stature of Pierre van Paassen, whom the Jews in this country, in Europe and in Palestine have come to regard as their greatest champion, [of anti-Semitism]".
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 50
- File
- 1945
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
Card to Kenneth Leslie from Kathleen Latham
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 5
- Item
- [1973?]
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
Chicago Ministerial Action Committee
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 49
- File
- 1946
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
Andover-Harvard Theological Library
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 48
- File
- 1973
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 47
- File
- 1965-[197-]
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 46
- File
- 1972
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 45
- File
- 1973
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 44
- File
- 1973
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 43
- File
- 1973
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 42
- File
- [197-]
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 41
- File
- [1972?]
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 40
- File
- [1971?]-1973
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
Card to Kenneth Leslie from Pricilla Jamison
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 4
- Item
- [197-]
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 39
- File
- [1972 or 1973]
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 38
- File
- 1972
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 37
- File
- 1972
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 36
- File
- [1943]
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 35
- File
- 1972
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 34
- File
- 1973
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 33
- File
- 1972
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 32
- File
- [197-?]
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 31
- File
- [197-?]
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 30
- File
- 1972
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
Letter and card to Kenneth Leslie from Rosaleen Dickson
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 3
- File
- [1958?], [1972?]
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 29
- File
- [1972?]
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 28
- File
- [195-?]
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 27
- File
- 1972
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
File contains five pieces of typed correspondence written by Morris Kominsky, of Elsinore, CA, between March and July of 1972, and sent to Kenneth Leslie. File contains Kominsky's discussions about the inclusion of his essay "The anatomy of Fascism" in a forthcoming issue of Leslie's publication "New Man" as well as Kominsky's request for dozens of copies; his desire to extend the readership of Kominsky's recent book "The Hoaxers"; and his efforts to expose an extremist plot against targets in Haiphong harbor, Vietnam.
File also contains facsimiles of correspondence sent to Kominsky, including two from sitting members of Congress: Jerome R. Waldie (14th, California) and Victor V. Veysey (38th, California) regarding threats to blow up a dredge in Haiphong harbor "that keeps [it] navigable [during the War]", as instigated in the October 1971 issue of Off-the-Cuff, written and distributed by "avowed member of the John Birch Society", ideologue Nord Davis, Jr. (fragments of which are included).
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 26
- File
- 1973
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 25
- File
- 1972-1973
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
File contains fourteen draft typed manuscripts columns and handwritten letters, written by Brigadier-General Hugh B. Hester, a noted critic of American foreign policy, written in 1972 and 1973, submitted to numerous newspapers with copies (as well as a couple of personal handwritten letters) sent to Kenneth Leslie. The topics of the letters include the ongoing "disastrous mistake" of the Vietnam War, the "most ballyhooed" nuclear agreements between Nixon and Brezhnev, the 1972 Presidential Election (declaring that Americans "could not psychologically bring themselves to vote for McGovern because his election would have proven true all those crimes committed by Washington [against the Vietnamese people]" and the developing Watergate scandal.
File contains correspondence sent to the Charlotte Observer, the New York Times, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Senator Michael Mansfield (D-MT), The Nation Magazine, the Asheville Citizen, the Chicago Sun-Times, the Greenville News, and Meyer Robert Field.
The letter written to Leslie, dated July 4, 1973, expresses regret at not yet discussing Hester's recent trip to China, as well as demanding that Nixon should "be dismissed and tried" for his actions regarding the escalating Watergate scandal. The file also includes a draft manuscript of a letter "to the Editor" of Leslie's "New Man Magazine", dated November 27, 1972, responding to newspaper magnate John S. Knight proclamation that the "two-party system will continue to be strong and stable" being incorrect following McGovern's defeat, suggesting that "there were no 1972 presidential elections in any meaningful sense".
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 24
- File
- 1973
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 23
- File
- 1946
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 22
- File
- 1972
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 21
- File
- 1931
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 20
- File
- 1973
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
Card to Kenneth Leslie from Charles Dickson
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 2
- Item
- [197-]
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 19
- File
- 1972
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds
- MS-2-232, Box 1, Folder 18
- File
- 1973
Part of Kenneth Leslie fonds