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     sl 454    National Nuclear Weapons Freeze Campaign
     Records, 1980-1986
     242 Folders


     Western Historical Manuscript collection
     University Of Missouri-St. Louis



     Randy Kehler, former director of the National Nuclear Weapons
     Freeze Campaign, donated the group's records to the Western
     Historical Manuscript Collection at the University of Missouri-St.
     Louis on May 15, 1985.

     The National Nuclear Weapons Freeze Campaign began in 1979 when
     Randall Forsberg, Director of the Institute for Defense and
     Disarmament Studies in Brookline, MA drafted "The Call to Halt the
     Nuclear Arms Race," a four page statement outlining a bilateral
     nuclear weapons freeze strategy. U.S. peace groups and arms
     control experts held a national conference to approve the strategy
     in March 1981. More than three hundred and fifty representatives
     from over 30 states met at Georgetown University to call for broad
     and visible public pressure on Congress to work toward a
     comprehensive freeze between the U.S. and Soviet Union.

     Major national religious, civic, and political organizations that
     became early endorsers of the Freeze included the YWCA, the
     National Conference of Black Mayors, the national board and social
     issues offices of the National Council of Churches, and the United
     Presbyterian Church, the Unitarian Universalists Association, and
     the Bishops and diocesan conventions within the Episcopal and
     Roman Catholic Churches. These and other organizations provided
     educational activities on the Freeze and actively promoted it.

     The national office of the Nuclear Weapons Freeze Campaign opened
     in St. Louis December 2, 1981. Randy Kehler became its first
     national coordinator. A longtime peace activist, Kehler had worked
     at the Trapcock Peace Center in western Massachusetts where he
     helped organize local Freeze referendums. The national freeze
     office in St. Louis acted as an information clearinghouse for
     thousands of similar Freeze groups around the country.

     The Nuclear Weapons Freeze Campaign designated "Disarmament Week"
     in late October 1981. It called on local organizations to create
     exhibits, show films, and hold lectures, press conferences,
     religious services, and teach-ins about the danger of nuclear war.
     The campaign also held a national "Call-In" on October 26, 1981,
     encouraging Americans to call the White House and urge President
     Reagan to propose a mutual freeze to Premier Brezhnev of the
     U.S.S.R.

     The Nuclear Freeze Political Action Committee, FREEZEPAC, formed
     in April 1982. This bi-partisan committee supported candidates for
     the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives who advocated a
     comprehensive, verifiable bilateral nuclear weapons freeze. During
     the 1982 elections, more than fifty percent of the candidates
     FREEZEPAC supported won office.

     During Fall 1982, in the closest equivalent to a national
     referendum in the history of American democracy, thirty percent of
     the American electorate voted on a bilateral freeze proposal put
     on local ballots through the efforts of the Freeze campaign. The
     proposal won by a 60 to 40 percent margin.

     At its fourth national convention held in St. Louis in December
     1983, the National Nuclear Weapons Freeze Campaign established
     "Freeze Voter '84," a political action committee, to campaign for
     candidates supporting the Freeze and work towards the defeat of
     candidates opposing it. Conference participants called on Congress
     to pass a "quick freeze" to halt funding for testing and
     development of nuclear weapons. They also expanded their platform
     to include: getting the U. S. and the Soviet Union to adopt
     non-intervention policies in Third World countries; adopting a "no
     first use" policy on nuclear weapons; and banning the use of
     satellite and space weapons.

     At their national conference in December 1984, the National
     Nuclear Weapons Freeze Campaign endorsed three non-violent civil
     disobedience actions: the Central America invasion contingency
     plan, an August witness at the Nevada Nuclear Test Site, and
     anti-apartheid demonstrations. Legislative priorities included
     ending the production of the MX missile and cutting off funds for
     weapons programs.

     SCOPE AND CONTENT

     The National Nuclear Weapons Freeze Campaign records document the
     grassroots movement to get the U.S. and the Soviet Union to adopt
     a mutual freeze on the testing, production, and deployment of
     nuclear weapons and missiles. The collection is arranged
     alphabetically according to the files of Randy Kehler.

     The decentralized structure of the campaign allowed for the
     self-determination of local groups, coordinated by the national
     office. Kehler kept files of peace groups around the country
     organized solely around the Freeze issue, and already existing
     peace groups that adopted the Nuclear Freeze issue as part of
     their agenda.

     The collection includes these groups' advertisements,
     correspondence, posters, petitions, and resolutions using the
     issues most relevant to their locale while preserving the
     integrity of the overall Freeze movement. Some groups stressed the
     effects of nuclear war, others emphasized the danger of a
     "limited" nuclear war, and others concentrated on the economic
     effects of the arms race. The groups include: Citizens Against
     Nuclear War, Common Cause, Council for a Livable World, Federation
     of American Scientists, Ground Zero, Physicians for Social
     Responsibility, SANE, Sojourners, Southern Christian Leadership
     Conference, and the Women's Initiative Project. Kehler also kept
     the files of international peace groups such as the Dutch
     Inter-church Peace Council, and European Nuclear Disarmament
     groups.

     The collection also documents materials generated by the national
     office, including: budgets, correspondence, fundraising reports,
     executive and strategy committee meeting minutes, media
     strategies, newsletters, press statements, outreach program
     reports, national conference packets, political training kits, and
     political action committee questionnaires and correspondence
     concerning the presidential and congressional elections of 1984.

     The collection dates primarily from 1981-1985. The movement
     generated most of the national material in late 1983 when it
     became active in political campaigning. Correspondents include
     John Anderson, Daniel Ellsberg, Helen Caldicott, Senator Mark
     Hatfield, and Senator Edward Kennedy.

     FOLDER LIST

     BOX 1, FOLDERS 1-21
     1. American Committee on East West Records, 1983
     2. Anderson, John, 1982-1983
     3. Anti-Satellite Weapons, 1983-1984
     4. Arms and Education Control Project, 1984
     5. Arms Control Association, 1983-1984
     6. Arms Control Strategies and Resolutions, 1982-1984
     7. Arms Control Strategies and Resolutions, 1985-
     8. Arts for a Nuclear Weapons Freeze, 1983-1984
     9. Battleship Iowa, 1983
     10. British Disarmament Movement, 1982-1984
     11. Build-Down, 1983
     12, Business Executives for Natural Security, 1983-1984
     13. California Trip, 1983
     14. Campus Task Force/Student Movements, 1983-1985
     15. Central America, 1984
     16. Citizens Against Nuclear War, 1982-1983
     17. Committee for National Security, 1982
     18. Common Cause, 1982-1983
     19. Comprehensive Test Ban, 1982-1984
     20. Congressional Quick Freeze, Jan. - Apr. 1984
     21. Congressional Quick Freeze, May 1984 - Jan. 1985

     BOX 2, FOLDERS 22-32
     22. Congressional Voting Records, Feb. 1982 - Mar. 1983
     23. Congressional Voting Records, Mar. 1983 - Feb. 1984
     24. Connecticut Freeze, 1984-1985
     25. Correspondence, Jan. 1981 - Mar. 1982
     26. Correspondence, Apr. 1982 - Jun. 1982
     27. Correspondence, Jul. 1982 - Dec. 1982
     28. Correspondence, Jan. 1983 - Feb. 1983
     29. Correspondence, March 1983
     30. Correspondence, Apr. 1983 - May 1983
     31. Correspondence, Jun. 1983 - Dec. 1985
     32. Correspondence, Jan. 1984 - Feb. 1985

     BOX 3, FOLDERS 33-46
     33. Council for a Livable World, 1982-1985
     34. Council for Nuclear Weapons Freeze, 1982-1984
     35. The Day After, Aug. - Oct. 1983
     36. The Day After, Nov. 1983 - Feb. 1984
     37. The Day After, Organizers Kit
     38. Democratic Platform, Jun. 1983 - Oct. 1983
     39. Democratic Platform, Mar. 1984
     40. Democratic Platform, Mar. 1984
     41. Democratic Platform, Mar. - Apr. 1984
     42. Democratic Platform, Apr. - May 1984
     43. Democratic Platform, May - Sep. 1984
     44. Direct Action, Jan. - May, 1984
     45. Direct Action, Jun. - Aug. 1984
     46. Direct Action, Sep. 1984 - Jan. 1985

     BOX 4, FOLDERS 47-57
     47. Disarmament Campaigns, 1983-1984
     48. Ellsberg, Daniel, 1981-1983
     49. Euromissiles, 1981-1983
     50. Euromissiles, Jun. - Jul. 1983
     51. Euromissiles, Aug. 1983
     52. Euromissiles, Sep. - Oct. 1983
     53. Euromissiles, Nov. 1983 - Jun. 1984
     54. Executive Committee Meetings, Jun. - Dec. 1982
     55. Executive Committee Meetings, Jan. 1983 - May 1982
     56. Executive Committee Meetings, Jun. - Dec. 1983
     57. Executive Committee Meetings, Jan. 1984 - Jan. 1985

     BOX 5, FOLDERS 58-70
     58. Fast for Life, Aug. - Nov. 1983
     59. Federation of American Scientists, 1982-1983
     60. Field Organizers' Project, Sep. 1982 - May 1983
     61. Field Organizers' Project, Jun. - Jul. 1983
     62. Field Organizers' Project, Sep. - Dec. 1983
     63. Field Organizers' Project, Jan. - Apr. 1984
     64. Field Organizers' Project, May - Jul. 1984
     65. Field Organizers' Project, Aug. 1984 - Jan. 1985
     66. Films, 1983
     67. Forsberg, Randall (Institute for Defense and Disarmament),
     1982-1985
     68. Foundations and Funders' Fundraising, Oct. 1982 -Aug. 1983
     69. Foundations and Funders' Fundraising, Sep. - Dec. 1983
     70. Foundations and Funders' Fundraising, Jan. - Nov. 1984

     BOX 6, FOLDERS 71-81
     71. Foundations and Funders' Fundraising, Jan. - Mar. 1982
     72. Freeze Activities for Presidential Campaign of 1984, Oct. 1983
     - Oct. 1984
     73. Freeze Fridays/Weekend 1984, Feb. - Mar. 1984
     74. Freeze Fridays/Weekend 1984, Apr. 1984
     75. Freeze Forum, Mar. 22, 1982
     76. Freeze Foundation, May - Jun. 1982
     77. Freeze Lobby, Aug. 1982 - Apr. 1983
     78. Freeze Voter 1984, 1983
     79. Freeze Voter 1984, Jan. - Mar. 1984
     80. Freeze Voter 1984, Apr. - May 1984
     81. Freeze Voter 1984, Jun. 1984 - Jan. 1985

     BOX 7, FOLDERS 82-93
     82. Gender Gap Action Campaign, 1984
     83. Ground Zero, 1982-1983
     84. Hatfield, Senator Mark O., 1983
     85. House Vote, Jan. - Apr. 1983
     86. Humanitas, 1982-1984
     87. IKV (Dutch Inter-Church Peace Council), 1981-1984
     88. International Freeze and Peace Activities, Mar. 1983 - May
     1984
     89. International Freeze and Peace Activities, Jul. 1984 - May
     1985
     90. Itineraries, 1983
     91. Itineraries, 1984
     92. Kennedy, Senator Edward M., 1982-1984
     93. King, Martin Luther, March on Washington, Dec. 1982 - Aug.
     1983

     BOX 8, FOLDERS 94-105
     94. Labor and the Economy, Aug. 1982 - Feb. 1983
     95. Labor and the Economy, Mar. - May 1983
     96. Labor and the Economy, Jun. - Dec. 1983
     97. Labor and the Economy, Jan. 1984 - Feb. 1985
     98. League of Women Voters, 1983-1984
     99. Legislative Information and Alerts, 1983-1984
     100. Legislative Information and Alerts, April 1984
     101. Local Elected Officials of America, 1983-1984
     102. Local Organizer Mailings, 1982-1983
     103. Local Organizer Mailings, Jan. - Jul. 1984
     104. Local Organizer Mailings, Aug. 1984 - Apr. 1985
     105. Massachusetts Nuclear Freeze, Apr. 1983 - Dec. 1984

     BOX 9, FOLDERS 106-121
     106. Media Strategy, 1983
     107. Media Strategy, 1984
     108. Membership, 1983-1985
     109. Mideast, Dec. 1983 - Jun. 1984
     110. Minorities Outreach Program, Oct. 1982 -
     111. Minorities Outreach Program, 1984
     112. Miscellaneous Articles, 1983-1984
     113. Mobilization for Survival, 1983-1984
     114. Musicians Against Nuclear Arms, Oct. 1983
     115. MX Missile, 1983-1984
     116. National Conference (3rd Annual, Feb. 4-6, 1983), Dec. 1982 -
     Jan. 1983
     117. National Conference (3rd Annual), Feb. - Mar. 1983
     118. National Conference (3rd Annual), Correspondence, Jan. - Mar.
     1983
     119. National Conference (4th Annual, Dec. 2-4, 1983), Sep. - Nov.
     1983
     120. National Conference (4th Annual), Dec. 1983
     121. National Conference (4th Annual), Proposals, November 1983

     BOX 10, FOLDERS 122-132
     122. National Conference (5th Annual, Dec. 7-9, 1984),
     Pre-Conference Information and Strategy Proposals, Nov. - Dec.
     1984

     123. National Conference (5th Annual), Dec. 7-9, 1984
     124. National Committee, Mar. - Jan. 1982
     125. National Committee, Sep. - Dec. 1982
     126. National Committee, 1983
     127. National Committee, 1984
     128. New Century Policies, 1984
     129. Newsclippings and Articles, Mar. 1974 - Dec. 1983
     130. Newsclippings and Articles, Jan. - Dec. 1984
     131. Newsletters and Copy, Mar. 1981 - Sep. 1983
     132. Newsletters and Copy, Oct. 1983 - Jul. 1985

     BOX 11, FOLDERS 133-144
     133. Nuclear Times, Jan. - Dec. 1983
     134. Nuclear Times, Jan. - Apr. 1984
     135. Nuclear Weapons Education Fund, May 1983 - Sep. 1984
     136. Nuclear Weapons Freeze Staff Questionnaires, Sep. 1984
     137. Opposition/Criticism, May 1982 - Mar. 1982
     138. Opposition/Criticism, Apr. - Aug. 1982
     139. Opposition/Criticism, Sep. - Oct. 1982
     140. Opposition/Criticism, Nov. 1982 - Feb. 1983
     141. Opposition/Criticism, Mar. 1983 - Oct. 1984
     142. Pastoral Letter, Apr. 1983 - Apr. 1984
     143. Peace/Disarmament Groups (USA), 1982-1983
     144. Peace/Disarmament Groups (USA), 1984-1985

     BOX 12, FOLDERS 145-157
     145. Peace Education Program, Summer 1983
     146. Peace Education Program, Sep. 1983 - Jun. 1984
     147. Peace Media Poll and Focus Group, 1984
     148. Peace Roundtable, Sep. 1983 - Sep. 1984
     149. Physicians for Social Responsibility, 1982-1986
     150. Political Action Committee, 1982-1983
     151. Political Consultants Meeting, Jan. 20, 1983
     152. Political Training, 1982-1984
     153. Press Releases, 1982-1984
     154. Project `84, Jan. - Mar. 1983
     155. Project `84, Apr. - May 1983
     156. Project `84, May - Jun. 1983
     157. Project `84, Jul. 1983 - 1984

     BOX 13, FOLDERS 158-171
     158. Reagan, 1980-1984
     159. Referenda, Mar. 1982 - Jul. 1982
     160. Referenda, Aug. - Nov. 1982
     161. Religion, 1982-1984
     162. Republican Platform Hearings (Dallas, TX), Jul. - Aug. 1984
     163. Republican Platform Hearings/Testimony of Randy Kehler, Jul.
     - Aug. 1984

     164. Resolutions, May 1981 - Mar. 10, 1982
     165. Resolutions, Mar. 12, 1982 - May 1982
     166. Resolutions, Jun. 1982 - May 1983
     167. Resolutions, May - Sep. 1983
     168. Retreats, Workshops and Conferences, 1982-1983
     169. Retreats, Workshops and Conferences, 1984
     170. Reuben (McCormack)/Washington Lobbyist, 1982-1983
     171. Riverside Church Disarmament Program, May - Jun. 1983

     BOX 14, FOLDERS 172-189
     172. St. Louis Nuclear Weapons Freeze Petitions, May 1982
     173. SANE (Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy), 1982-1983
     174. SANE (Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy), 1984
     175. Sea-Launch Cruise Missiles (SLCM's), Apr. 1983
     176. Senate Foreign Relations Committee Hearings (5/13/82), Apr. -
     Aug. 1982
     177. Senate Foreign Relations Committee Hearings, 1983-1984
     178. Senate Freeze Vote, Fall 1983
     179. Sojourners, 1982-1984
     180. South Africa, Nov. - Dec. 1984
     181. Southern Christian Leadership Conference, Apr. - Nov. 1984
     182. Soviet Peace Groups, 1983-1984
     183. Speaking Engagements Requests, Jan. 1982 - Jul. 1983
     184. Speaking Engagements Requests, Sep. 1983
     185. Speaking Engagements Requests, 1983-1984
     186. Speeches, 1984
     187. Staff, Jan. - Jul. 1982
     188. Staff, Sep. - Dec. 1982
     189. Staff, Jan. - Apr. 1983

     BOX 15, FOLDERS 190-203
     190. Staff, May - Dec. 1983
     191. Staff, Jan. - Apr. 1984
     192. Staff. May 1984 - Jan. 1985
     193. State of the Campaign
     194. Strategy Committee, 1980
     195. Strategy Committee, Jan. - Mar. 1981
     196. Strategy Committee, Oct. - Dec. 1982
     197. Strategy Committee, Jan. - May 1982
     198. Strategy Committee, Jun. - Sep. 1982
     199. Strategy Committee, Nov. - Dec. 1982
     200. Strategy Committee, Dec. 1982
     201. Strategy Committee, Jan. 1983
     202. Strategy Committee, Feb. - Mar. 1983
     203. Strategy Committee, Apr. - May 1983

     BOX 16, FOLDERS 204-214
     204. Strategy Committee, Jun. - Jul. 1983
     205. Strategy Committee, Jul. - Aug. 1983
     206. Strategy Committee, Sep. - Oct. 1983
     207. Strategy Committee, Oct. 5-31, 1983
     208. Strategy Committee, Nov. - Dec. 1983
     209. Strategy Committee, Jan. - Mar. 1984
     210. Strategy Committee, Apr. 1984
     211. Strategy Committee, May 1984
     212. Strategy Committee, Jun. - Aug. 1984
     213. Strategy Committee, Sep. 1984
     214. Strategy Committee, Response Sheets, Oct. 1984

     BOX 17, FOLDERS 215-225
     215. Strategy Committee, Response Sheets, Oct. 1984
     216. Strategy Committee, Response Sheets w/comments, Oct. 1984
     217. Strategy Committee, Response Sheets w/comments, Oct. 1-20,
     1984
     218. Strategy Committee, Response Sheets w/comments, Oct. 21-29,
     1984
     219. Strategy Committee, Response Sheets w/comments, Oct. 30-31,
     1984
     220. Strategy Committee, Response Sheets w/comments, November 1984

     221. Strategy Committee, December 1984
     222. Strategy Committee, 1985
     223. Structure of Freeze Campaign, Dec. 1983 - Aug. 15, 1984
     224. Structure of Freeze Campaign, Aug. 17 - Sep. 1984
     225. Structure of Freeze Campaign, Oct. 1-15, 1984

     BOX 18, FOLDERS 226-241
     226. Structure of Freeze Campaign, Oct. 16-26, 1984
     227. Structure of Freeze Campaign, Oct. 29 - Nov. 4, 1984
     228. Structure of Freeze Campaign, Nov. 5, 1985
     229. Taylor, Camilla (Children Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament),
     1983-1984
     230. Tax Resistance
     231. Technical Advisory Committee, 1981-1982
     232. Ten Reasons to Organize for a Bilateral Freeze, Jan. 1982
     233. Texas Freeze, May 1982 - Jul. 1983
     234. Texas Freeze, Aug. 1983 - Mar. 1984
     235. U.S. Government Relations Task Force, May 1981 - Mar. 1982
     236. U.S. Government Relations Task Force, Apr. - Jul. 1982
     237. U.S. Government Relations Task Force, Aug. - Dec. 1982
     238. Vigil of Hope, n.d.
     239. Walks, Jan. - Sep. 1983
     240. Walks, Oct. - Dec. 1983
     241. Women's Action for Nuclear Disarmament, Inc. (WAND),
     1983-1984
     242. Women's Peace Initiative Project, 1984

     INDEX
     American Friends Service Committee, f. 1-242
     Anderson, John, f. 2
     Andropov, Yuri, f. 182, 206
     Arms Control, f. 1-242
     Bilateral Nuclear Weapons Freeze f. 1-242
     British Disarmament, f. 10, 88, 89
     Business Executives for National Security, f. 12
     Caldicott, Helen, f. 149, 240
     Central America, f. 15
     Civil Disobedience, f. 45-46, 230
     Comprehensive Test Ban, f. 19
     Disarmament, f. 1-242
     Ellsberg, Daniel, f. 48
     Euromissiles, f. 49-53
     Fellowship of Reconciliation, f. 143, 144
     Foreign Policy f. 1-242
     Freeze Voter `84, f. 78-81
     Ground Zero, f. 83
     Hardy, T. Walter Jr., f. 25-32
     Hatfield, Senator Mark O., f. 84
     Hunger Strike - Fast for Life, f. 58
     Jobs with Peace and Freedom, f. 94-97
     Kennedy, Senator Edward, f. 92
     King, Martin Luther, f. 93
     Labor, f. 94-97
     Minorities, f. 94-97, 110-111
     MX Missile, f. 115
     National Nuclear Weapons Freeze Campaign, f. 1-242
     National Peace Academy f. 145, 146
     Peace, f. 1-242
     Physicians for Social Responsibility, f. 149
     Protests, f. 1-242
     St. Louis Nuclear Weapons Freeze Petitions, f. 172
     South Africa, f. 180
     Southern Christian Leadership Conference, f. 181
     Soviet Union, f. 1-242
     Tax Resistance, f. 230
     Women in Politics, f. 1-242
     Women in Politics and Government Relations, f. 1-242

     WESTERN HISTORICAL MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION
     222 THOMAS JEFFERSON LIBRARY
     UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI-ST. LOUIS
     8001 NATURAL BRIDGE ROAD
     ST. LOUIS, MO 63121


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