Brünn-Harris-Watts Papers

Brünn 's archives mostly contains documents concerning his publishing work and predominantly spans the 1980s and 1990s. Harris ' archives contains materials from his time as a GI counselor and editor for GI newspaper Forward , materials concerning individual deserters, unionizing soldiers and collective GI action, but also documents his non-GI activities. The Military Counseling Network archives mostly revolve around the Gulf War and conscientious objection. It contains information about the counseling of individual objectors, but also about its internal organization. The papers of the Archive Soldatenrechte mostly concern the establishment and the management of the collection. The archives of Max Watts form the largest part of the collection. Among his papers we find correspondence, personal documents, documentation, article drafts, personal writings, photos and typescripts. His archives also contain a small sub-segment of papers belonging to his partner June van Ingen and/or her daughter Cora Leibowitz . Van Ingen also used the names Mary-Jo Leibowitz , Mary-Jo van Ingen , June Leibowitz and June Regnier . Watts ' materials predominantly concern subjects like resistance inside the army (RITA), antimilitarism, war and peace. He maintained an extensive network of contacts. His network consisted of RITA's (GI resisters), FRITA'S (friends of RITA's), journalists, activists, academics and lawyers. A few names of individual contacts: Thomas Barton , John Catalinotto , Noam Chomsky , David Cortright , Jean-Jacques de Felice , Howard De Nike , Todd Ensign , Jane Fonda , Rosemary Gillespie , Jim Goodman , Adam Keller , Terry Klug , Robert Malecki , Francis Ona , Robert Young Pelton , Dick Perrin , John Pilger , Vivienne Porzsolt , Bob Rivkin , William Schaap , Clancy Sigal , Andy Stapp . He also corresponded with numerous organizations like RITA groups, (underground) newspapers, publishers, activist committees, unions and universities. A few notable names are the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), the American Deserters Committee , the Lawyers Military Defense Committee (LMDC), the American Servicemen's Union (ASU), War Resisters' International and Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VVAW). Watts' papers also extensively document his private life: his travels, his women, his family and friends. Furthermore there are materials from his time as a student and a geophysicist and materials from his later years as a journalist and activist concerning himself with Pacific politics and the fate of the indigenous peoples of Australia, Papua New Guinea and Bougainville. As an activist he was a member of the Sydney Peace Squadron and the Bougainville Freedom Movement . As a journalist he wrote for various news media, among others TAZ. Die Tageszeitung , Die Wochenzeitung , Informationsdienst , Neues Deutschland , Junge Welt , Reporters Sans Frontières , Ossietzky , Green Left Weekly , Australian Socialist and Overland .

Brünn-Harris-Watts Papers

Brünn 's archives mostly contains documents concerning his publishing work and predominantly spans the 1980s and 1990s. Harris ' archives contains materials from his time as a GI counselor and editor for GI newspaper Forward , materials concerning individual deserters, unionizing soldiers and collective GI action, but also documents his non-GI activities. The Military Counseling Network archives mostly revolve around the Gulf War and conscientious objection. It contains information about the counseling of individual objectors, but also about its internal organization. The papers of the Archive Soldatenrechte mostly concern the establishment and the management of the collection. The archives of Max Watts form the largest part of the collection. Among his papers we find correspondence, personal documents, documentation, article drafts, personal writings, photos and typescripts. His archives also contain a small sub-segment of papers belonging to his partner June van Ingen and/or her daughter Cora Leibowitz . Van Ingen also used the names Mary-Jo Leibowitz , Mary-Jo van Ingen , June Leibowitz and June Regnier . Watts ' materials predominantly concern subjects like resistance inside the army (RITA), antimilitarism, war and peace. He maintained an extensive network of contacts. His network consisted of RITA's (GI resisters), FRITA'S (friends of RITA's), journalists, activists, academics and lawyers. A few names of individual contacts: Thomas Barton , John Catalinotto , Noam Chomsky , David Cortright , Jean-Jacques de Felice , Howard De Nike , Todd Ensign , Jane Fonda , Rosemary Gillespie , Jim Goodman , Adam Keller , Terry Klug , Robert Malecki , Francis Ona , Robert Young Pelton , Dick Perrin , John Pilger , Vivienne Porzsolt , Bob Rivkin , William Schaap , Clancy Sigal , Andy Stapp . He also corresponded with numerous organizations like RITA groups, (underground) newspapers, publishers, activist committees, unions and universities. A few notable names are the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), the American Deserters Committee , the Lawyers Military Defense Committee (LMDC), the American Servicemen's Union (ASU), War Resisters' International and Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VVAW). Watts' papers also extensively document his private life: his travels, his women, his family and friends. Furthermore there are materials from his time as a student and a geophysicist and materials from his later years as a journalist and activist concerning himself with Pacific politics and the fate of the indigenous peoples of Australia, Papua New Guinea and Bougainville. As an activist he was a member of the Sydney Peace Squadron and the Bougainville Freedom Movement . As a journalist he wrote for various news media, among others TAZ. Die Tageszeitung , Die Wochenzeitung , Informationsdienst , Neues Deutschland , Junge Welt , Reporters Sans Frontières , Ossietzky , Green Left Weekly , Australian Socialist and Overland .