34 results

  • Tags: Pacifism
  • Item Type: Text
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Detzer updates Addams on efforts to meet with government officials about the situation in Haiti, the American Legion, and other affairs of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom's Washington office.
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Winsor tells Addams that she cannot support the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom because they will not come out cleanly for non-resistance.
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Balch tells Park that she thinks that requiring a peace a pledge of Women's International League for Peace and Freedom members might not be a good strategy.
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Balch tells the Kaskia Chapter that Women's International League for Peace and Freedom's position ion disarmament has been misrepresented and hopes that even if they disagree, they are both working for the nation's best interests.
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Balch sends Addams the text of Lili Jannasch's letter that describes the German women's struggle against Pan-Germanism and seeks help from Women's International League for Peace and Freedom.
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Balch asks Addams for advice on peace strike regarding the wording of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom's creeds and objective statements.
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Balch tells Mead about her meeting with the American Defense Society and discusses the divide between left and right positions within the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom.
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Balch answers Puck's letter to Addams suggesting caution against working for mobilization against war.
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Balch provides Harwood with a sense of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom's mission and immediate goals.
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Watson-Schütze sends Addams information about the Association for Peace Education.
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Rochester reviews Marcelle Capy's L'Amour Roi.
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Johnson tells Elliott about her experience with peace celebrations.
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Farwell thanks Addams for sending Peace and Bread in Time of War and remarks that in one hundred years society will accept pacifism as the logical way.
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Addams tells Spencer her ideas about next steps for the Woman's Peace Party given the situation in the United States.
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A pamphlet describing the activities of the Women's International League of Peace and Freedom from 1915-1919.
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Vernet writes to the No More War organizers in the hopes of joining the movement and securing support for an anti-war league.
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Widegren tells Addams that the Swedes are having difficulty accepting the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom's pacifist platform passed at the International Congress of Women.
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Butts writes Addams about her fears of communism, fascism, and violent ideology and recommends the creation of an International Peace Bureau.
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Elliott tells Johnson that she believes it is acceptable for peace workers to take part in an Armistice Day event with veterans and preparedness supporters.
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Collson sends Addams her thoughts about peace and asks for help finding work she can do for peace.
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Shiverick criticizes Addams and the peace movement for operating in theory to end war rather that focusing on the deterrent of preparedness.
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Also known as Next Steps Towards World Peace, July 12, 1926

Addams addresses the Fifth Congress of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom in Dublin detailing different approaches to a peaceful society that she has met around the world.
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Misař tells Addams about the violence in Hungary.
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Heymann reports on a questionnaire about passive resistance and seeks information from other Women's International League for Peace and Freedom branches.
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Also known as Peace and Bread: Personal Reactions During the War, January 28, 1922

Addams discusses United States foreign policy and pacifism during World War One.

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