78 items
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Peter Irons Interview II Segment 16 (ddr-densho-1000-127-16)
Initial meeting of the legal team: "One thing that impressed me was how well-organized everybody was"
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Peter Irons Interview II Segment 17 (ddr-densho-1000-127-17)
Dealing with various issues, e.g. redress movement, Japanese American Citizens League, publicity, information leaks
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Peter Irons Interview II Segment 18 (ddr-densho-1000-127-18)
Filing petition for writ of error coram nobis, assigned Judge Marilyn Hall Patel
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Peter Irons Interview II Segment 7 (ddr-densho-1000-127-7)
Getting a teaching job at Boston College Law School
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Peter Irons Interview I Segment 3 (ddr-densho-1000-126-3)
Attending segregated public school in Delaware during Brown v. Board of Education
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Peter Irons Interview I Segment 22 (ddr-densho-1000-126-22)
Serving time in federal prison, racial tensions regarding the Vietnam War
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Peter Irons Interview I Segment 11 (ddr-densho-1000-126-11)
Attending the first National Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) Conference in Atlanta, Georgia
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Peter Irons Interview I Segment 5 (ddr-densho-1000-126-5)
Raised with values of racial tolerance; awareness of the 1957 school desegregation incident in Little Rock, Arkansas
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Peter Irons Interview I Segment 14 (ddr-densho-1000-126-14)
Organizing political campaigns for Congressional candidates with peace platforms
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Peter Irons Interview I Segment 21 (ddr-densho-1000-126-21)
Transferred to Milan, Michigan, then to the federal penitentiary in Terre Haute, Indiana
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Peter Irons Interview I Segment 4 (ddr-densho-1000-126-4)
Influence of Unitarian Church and parents' values regarding race relations
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Peter Irons Interview I Segment 2 (ddr-densho-1000-126-2)
Frequently moved during childhood, did well in school
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Peter Irons Interview I Segment 20 (ddr-densho-1000-126-20)
Reporting to the federal marshal's office on New Year's Eve, singing gospel music with black inmates in the Hamilton County Jail, Cincinnati
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Peter Irons Interview I Segment 17 (ddr-densho-1000-126-17)
Being indicted for resisting Selective Service draft, and becoming active in the draft resistance movement
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Peter Irons Interview I Segment 1 (ddr-densho-1000-126-1)
Parents' background, raised the oldest of seven children
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Peter Irons Interview I Segment 16 (ddr-densho-1000-126-16)
Memories of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy; Freedom Democrats and the Democratic National Convention, Atlantic City, New Jersey
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Peter Irons Interview I Segment 13 (ddr-densho-1000-126-13)
Helping to organize the Student Peace Union, a student demonstration in Washington, D.C. against nuclear testing
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Peter Irons Interview I Segment 19 (ddr-densho-1000-126-19)
Being sentenced to three years in prison, deciding to serve the sentence rather than continue appeals process
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Peter Irons Interview I Segment 10 (ddr-densho-1000-126-10)
Participating in the civil rights movement: boycotts, sit-ins, and arrests
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Peter Irons Interview I Segment 7 (ddr-densho-1000-126-7)
Becoming involved in social activism with other Antioch students
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Peter Irons Interview I Segment 6 (ddr-densho-1000-126-6)
Father becoming ill; deciding to attend Antioch College in Ohio
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Peter Irons Interview I Segment 9 (ddr-densho-1000-126-9)
Reflecting on father's passing, mother's change of lifestyle
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Peter Irons Interview I Segment 18 (ddr-densho-1000-126-18)
Defending draft resistance on the basis of unconstitutionality of religious test
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Peter Irons Interview I Segment 12 (ddr-densho-1000-126-12)
Sending draft card back to Selective Service System and corresponding with the draft board for several years
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Peter Irons Interview I Segment 15 (ddr-densho-1000-126-15)
Editing the weekly newsletter for the Autoworkers Union in Washington, D.C. while protesting the Vietnam War