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The New Reconstruction: America in the '70s lecture recordings

 Collection
Identifier: NS-07-02-25

Abstract

This collection consists of audio recordings of the six-lecture series, "The New Reconstruction: America in the '70s," given by sitting United States senators at the New School for Social Research between November 1 and December 17, 1973. The series was produced by the New School in conjunction with the Fund for New Priorities in America, a New York-based non-profit organization started in 1968, which organized public discussion forums on important issues.

Dates

  • 1973 November 1 - December 17

Creator

Extent

6 1/4 inch Audio Tape

Language of Materials

English

Scope and Contents

This collection consists of six analog audio recordings of the six-lecture series, "The New Reconstruction: America in the Seventies," given by sitting United States senators at the New School for Social Research between November 1 and December 17, 1973.

The six senators who gave lectures in the series were: Dick Clark, State of Iowa 1973-1979; Floyd K. Haskell, State of Colorado 1973-1979; Thomas F. Eagleton, State of Missouri 1967-1987; James Abourezk, State of South Dakota 1973-1979; Charles McC. Mathias, Jr., State of Maryland 1973-1987; and Lloyd M. Bentsen, State of Texas 1971-1993. Except for Mathias, a Republican, the senators were all affiliated with the Democratic Party.

An advertisement in the October 16, 1973 issue of the New York Times lists seven sessions for the series, with a December 13 lecture by Senator Birch Bayh of Indiana advertised, but no recording of this session is present in The New School Archives and the New School course catalogs list only six sessions.

As a part of the Short Courses and Special Lectures offerings of the New School that year, the sessions were open to the public for an admission fee. Per the published course description in the Fall 1973 catalog, the topics to be discussed in the lectures were: the national purpose; the political process; the distribution of wealth; national growth and development policy; the distribution of justice; and America’s foreign relations.

The format of each lecture begins with an introduction by moderator William Meyers, followed by an approximately 20-30 minute lecture by the senator. A guest journalist or academic then responds to the speech and the floor is opened to questions from the audience. Guests include New York University Professor of Political Science Alfred de Grazia, attorney and activist Peter Weiss, journalist Martin Bronsky, and New York Times columnists Victor McElheny, Tony Austin, and Tom Wicker.

In addition to the audio reels, collection also includes audio engineer's notes.

Conditions Governing Access

Collection is open for research use. Researchers must use digital access copies.

Conditions Governing Use

To publish material from this collection, permission must be obtained in writing from the New School Archives and Special Collections. Please contact: archivist@newschool.edu.

Historical note

“The New Reconstruction: America in the Seventies” was a lecture series presented by The New School and the Fund for New Priorities in America in 1973. The series of lectures, each given by a United States Senator, were held in the Fall semester at The New School. Organized by the chairman of the Fund for New Priorities, William Meyers, the lecture series followed up on a 1970 series of panel discussions at The New School held by the Fund, featuring United States congressional representatives in conversation with academics.

“The New Reconstruction” was thematically organized around a comparison between American politics in the 1970s and those of the 1870s, the Reconstruction Era in the United States. A politically tumultuous period in American history after the end of the U.S. Civil War, the “old” Reconstruction was marked by intense debate over issues surrounding the abolition of slavery and the readmission of the former Confederate states into the Union. The lecture series most immediately drew this comparison by highlighting the impeachment of the President.

President Richard Nixon’s impeachment process occurred concurrently with the series, and at the time had only a single historical precedent, in the impeachment of President Andrew Johnson in 1868 over his attempts to obstruct Reconstruction efforts. More broadly, the comparison also refers to the low levels of trust in the federal government and high levels of perceived state corruption that typified both the Reconstruction era and the early 1970s in the wake of the Watergate scandal, an incident where Nixon was found to have sanctioned and subsequently attempted to cover up a series of crimes; most notably a break-in, wiretapping, and kidnapping; aimed at spying on and weakening his political rivals.

The Fund for New Priorities in America was a New York-based non-profit organization started in 1968 that organized public discussion forums on important issues. In a 1979 New York Times advertisement, the group labeled itself an organization “devoted to the cause of peace and human rights.” In 1970, The Fund for New Priorities had organized a special course at the New School entitled, "Four Congressional Hearings: The People and Congress," in which various members of the United States House of Representatives (Congress) questioned experts in public policy and illustrated legislative processes.

William Meyers was a New York attorney and political activist who was a New School faculty member from 1971 to 1977. He taught a course entitled, "Workshop for New Priorities," in the fall semesters of 1971 and 1972, in addition to moderating the "The New Reconstruction: America in the Seventies" series in 1973. In 1975, Meyers became director of the National Policy Studies Program at the New School, which included a course with lectures by United States senators called "National Planning in a Free Society: A View from the Senate," as well as a course with lectures by members of the House of Representatives, "America’s Agenda: the House Speaks." The National Policy Program Studies Program at The New School lasted into the fall semester of 1976.

Sources

“Bill Meyers – Guest Availability Memo.” New School Press Release Collection, September 2, 1975. The New School Archives Digital Collections, New York, New York.

Course Catalogs, 1971-1973, New School Course Catalog Collection, The New School Archives Digital Collections, New York, New York.

“Farm Forum Fails to Yield Harvest, Too Few City Slickers Show Up.” Chicago Tribune, April 27, 1985. 3. https://www.proquest.com/docview/290832397/2238449534E847BCPQ/1?accountid=12261.

Fund for New Priorities in America (1970). Poverty Amidst Surplus [audio tape]. New School Adult Division Event Recordings. The New School Archives and Special Collections. /digital.archives.newschool.edu/index.php/Detail/objects/NS070212_000011>

Fund for New Priorities in America (1973). National Growth and Development [audio tape]. The New Reconstruction: America in the Seventies Event Recordings. The New School Archives and Special Collections. /digital.archives.newschool.edu/index.php/Detail/objects/NS070212_000047>

Fund for New Priorities in America (1973). Justice in the Seventies [audio tape]. The New Reconstruction: America in the Seventies Event Recordings. The New School Archives and Special Collections. /digital.archives.newschool.edu/index.php/Detail/objects/NS070212_000050>

“Open Letter.” New York Times, February 22, 1979, B10. https://www.proquest.com/docview/120954784/29EBD671A5234A12PQ/22?accountid=12261.

Arrangement

Arranged chronologically by date of lecture.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

The staff of The New School Archives and Special Collections assembled this collection from a larger set of legacy recordings transferred from The New School's Raymond Fogelman Library following the establishment of The New School Archives, circa 2012.

Processing Information

The New School Archives dgitized the session recordings from analog audio tapes.

Title
Guide to The New Reconstruction: America in the '70s lecture recordings
Status
In Process
Author
Jack Wells, Jason Adamo, and Jenny Swadosh
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin