R-MC 106

Guide to the Sol Stetin Papers, 1935-1992, bulk 1972-1989

By David Ranzan

January 2007

Special Collections and Unversity Archives, Rutgers University Libraries

Finding aid encoded in EAD version 2002 by Chris Ellwood, September 2008
This project was assisted by a grant from the New Jersey Historical Commission, a division of the Department of State.

Descriptive Summary

Creator: Stetin, Sol
Title: Guide to the Sol Stetin Papers
Dates: 1935-1992,
Dates: bulk 1972-1989
Quantity: 6 cubic ft. (15 manuscript boxes)
Abstract: The Sol Stetin Papers consist of primarily textual records that chronicle Stetin's career as an educator and proponent for organized labor over a period of more than fifty years. They document Stetin's personal and professional association with various divisions and programs at Rutgers University, among them the Rutgers Oral History Project, the Livingston Labor Studies Association, and the Labor Education Center at the Institute of Management and Labor Relations, where Stetin served as the first labor leader in residence. Also represented in the Papers are Stetin's work as an independent labor consultant and researcher, his tenures as a trustee and teacher at William Paterson College, and his role as a founder of the American Labor Museum at the Botto House in Haledon, New Jersey. In addition, the Papers commemorate a campaign that Stetin led on behalf of the Textile Workers Union and, later, the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America, to organize employees of J.P. Stevens & Co. at the firm's manufacturing plants in the American South.
Collection No.: R-MC 106
Location: Stored offsite. Advance notice of two working days required to consult materials in this collection.
Language: This collection is predominantly written in English.
Repository: Rutgers University Libraries. Special Collections and University Archives

Biographical Sketch of Sol Stetin

Sol Stetin, trade unionist, educator and leader of a landmark campaign to organize textile workers employed by J.P. Stevens & Company at factories in the American South, was born in Pabianice, Poland on April 2, 1910. He immigrated to the United States as a youth of ten and settled with his parents in Paterson, New Jersey. (1)

"We came steerage, third class, and I was always hungry," Stetin explained, in a 1977 profile recounting his passage from Europe. "I learned a few English words quickly, and I was always going to the [ship's] chef to get extra food for my family." (2)

Shortly after he arrived in America, Stetin began selling newspapers on the street after school. (3) Emboldened by the "kick" that he experienced "hanging around carnivals," he quit the classroom in ninth grade and briefly tried his hand competing in boxing and basketball, even though he was only five-feet, four-inches tall. (4)

At age nineteen, while employed as a caddy on a golf course near his home, he persuaded a client who owned a textile mill to hire him in the firm's dye shop for thirty-two cents an hour. (5) Later, when an impromptu walkout threatened to paralyze the plant, Stetin, who harbored hopes of winning a profitable promotion, initially complied with his supervisor's directive to distance himself from his disgruntled peers. (6) But a fateful encounter with a unionist friend soon convinced him to reverse his decision and openly profess support for the strike. (7)

In time Stetin would assert that he owed his education—moral and intellectual—to his commitments on behalf of labor rights. (8)

In 1933 he affirmed his formal affiliation with the labor movement as a charter member of Dyers Local 1733 in Paterson. (9) The following year saw his marriage to Frieda Goldstein and his participation in a nationwide job action involving 500,000 employees of textile firms. (10) Thereafter he rose through the union ranks to positions of increasing prominence, advancing from shop steward, organizer and regional director to secretary-treasurer, then president, of the Textile Workers Union of America (TWUA).

Stetin's election to the TWUA presidency in 1972 coincided with the culmination of a seventeen-year organizing drive at J.P. Stevens, an event that New York Times reporter Steven Greenhouse described as "one of labor's most ambitious campaigns in the anti-union South and one of the most publicized unionization efforts since World War Two." (11) In 1976, at a crucial juncture in the Stevens struggle, Stetin surprised some observers by aligning his "very viable" 174,000-member union with the larger Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America to create the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union (ACTWU). (12) Analysts suggested that Stetin orchestrated the move at considerable cost to his own career—this, in deference to his belief that the merger was essential if labor hoped to obtain the resources it needed to negotiate successfully with a manufacturer of Stevens' size. (13) The Stevens drive, which ended in 1980 and eventually enrolled some 3,500 workers, was dramatized in the movie Norma Rae (1979, directed by Martin Ritt).

In addition to his numerous union activities, Stetin taught labor studies at William Paterson College in Wayne, New Jersey, (14) where he served on the board of trustees. (15) He was also employed, from 1947 to 1990, by the Institute of Management and Labor Relations (IMLR) at Rutgers University. In 1983 Stetin was named the first labor leader in residence at the Institute's Labor Education Center. (16) There he participated in seminars and taught and advised students for the remainder of his academic career.

Recognized by both the Puffin Foundation and the Sidney Hillman Foundation for his efforts to foster a more equitable society, (17) Stetin additionally received an honorary doctor of humane letters degree from Rutgers in 1961. (18) Following his 1982 retirement as senior executive vice president of the ACTWU, he helped establish the American Labor Museum (ALM) at Botto House, a state and national historic site in Haledon, New Jersey. (19) Stetin continued his labor advocacy as president emeritus of the ALM, speaking out, for the duration of his life, through his active involvement with organizations like Jobs With Justice and the National Worker Rights Board. (20)

Sol Stetin died on May 20, 2005 at a nursing home in St. Louis, Missouri. (21) His immediate survivors at the time of his death included his wife, a sister, and two daughters.

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Notes

(1) Steven Greenhouse, "Sol Stetin, 95, Labor Leader Who Unionized J.P. Stevens, Dies," New York Times, 24 May 2005, B9.

(2) Edward M. McConville, "Why Sol Stetin Stepped Down," Nation, 10 December 1977, 622.

(3) Ibid.

(4) Ibid.

(5) Ibid.

(6) "Nothing to Do With You," Folklife Center News, Volume 17, Number 2 (Spring 1995); available from http://www.libraryofcongress.gov/folklife/news/Spring95.txt; Internet; accessed 26 September 2009.

(7) McConville, "Why Sol Stetin Stepped Down," 622.

(8) Greenhouse, "Sol Stetin," New York Times.

(9) U.S. House. Representative Roe speaking on congressional salute to Hon. Sol Stetin of Paterson, N.J. Congressional Record, 97th cong., 2nd sess., 1982, 128, no. 118, daily edition (9 September 1982).

(10) Greenhouse, "Sol Stetin," New York Times.

(11) Ibid.

(12) Ibid. The Amalgamated Clothing & Textile Workers Union merged with the International Ladies Garment Workers Union to form UNITE in 1995. In 2004, UNITE and the Hotel Employees & Restaurant Employees International Union combined under the new name UNITE HERE.

(13) McConville, "Why Sol Stetin Stepped Down," 621-23.

(14) Sandra Gardner, "New Jerseyeans," New York Times, 22 May 1983, NJ34.

(15) Congressional Record, 97th cong., 2nd sess., 1982, 128, no. 118, daily edition (9 September 1982).

(16) Gardner, "New Jerseyeans," New York Times.

(17) Unite Here Press Center, "Sol Stetin, Labor Leader And Humanitarian, Dies At 95"; available from http://unitehere.org/frontpagedetail.php?ID=62; Internet; accessed 19 September 2009.

(18) Office of the Secretary of the University, "Honorary Degree Recipients By Year Awarded"; available from http://ruweb.rutgers.edu/governance/secretary/degrees-year.shtml; Internet; accessed 29 August 2009.

(19) Damon Stetson, "Ex-Union Chief Works on a Labor Museum," New York Times, 5 September 1982, 39.

(20) Unite Here Press Center, "Sol Stetin, Labor Leader And Humanitarian, Dies At 95."

(21) Greenhouse, "Sol Stetin," New York Times.

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Scope and Content Note

The Sol Stetin Papers consist of 6 cubic feet of material, comprising fifteen manuscript boxes, spanning the period 1935-1992, bulk 1972-1989. The papers comprise the professional records of Sol Stetin, documenting his history in the mid- to late- twentieth century. They also include records pertaining the Rutgers Oral History Project, Livingston Labor Association, the Institute of Management and Labor Relations, William Paterson College and numerous unions.

The Sol Stetin Papers are composed primarily of textual records such as correspondence, articles, course materials, newspaper clippings, organizational records, research papers, publications, speeches and reports. Among the most extensively documented topics in this collection are Stetin's role in labor education—both at the Rutgers University Institute of Management and Labor Relations (IMLR) and at William Paterson College—and his activities with regard to numerous labor unions, notably the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union (ACTWU); the American Federation of Teachers (AFT); the Bottled Beer Drivers, Warehousemen, Bottlers and Helpers; the Communications Workers of America (CWA); and the International Union of Electronic, Electrical, Salaried, Machine & Furniture Workers (IUE).

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Arrangement Note

The Sol Stetin Papers were, for the most part, arranged by Sol Stetin and his secretaries. Stetin annotated many of the documents in this collection to facilitate filing by his staff.

The Sol Stetin Papers are arranged in the following series:

I. Correspondence, 1970-1990
II. Union, 1946-1992
III. Rutgers University Institute of Management and Labor Relations (IMLR), 1955-1992
IV. Livingston Labor Studies Association (LLA), 1975-1989
V. Oral History Project, 1983-1989
VI. Rutgers University, 1983-1989
VII. William Paterson College, 1978-1983
VIII. Labor History, 1935-1992
IX. Research, 1989
X. Articles, 1971-1991
XI. Miscellaneous, 1972-1988

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Related Collections

See also the Sol Stetin Collection at the American Labor Museum. Additionally, interviews by Stetin are available in audio recordings at the Archive of Folk Culture, American Folklife Center, Library of Congress.

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Name and Subject Tracings

Researchers can facilitate access to related materials in other collections by searching the Rutgers University Libraries' online public catalog (IRIS) and other union catalogs under the following index terms used for people, organizations, and subjects represented in these records.

Personal Names:

Begin, James P.
Glazer, Joe
Holderman, Carl, 1894-1959
Karcher, Alan J.
Keddie, Wells H. (Wells Hamilton), 1925-
Levine, Herbert A.
McKee, Donald Kennedy, 1915-
Paz, Suni
Seeger, Pete, 1919-
Upshaw, Gene
Weisberg, Ted

Corporate Names:

AFL-CIO
AFL-CIO. Executive Council
AFSCME
Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union
American Association of University Professors.
American Federation of Teachers
American Labor Museum/Botto House National Landmark
Association for Union Democracy.
AT & T Foundation
Charles A. Lindbergh Fund
Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador (U.S.)
Communications Workers of America
Eagleton Institute of Politics
Earhart Foundation.
Eastern Air Lines, inc.
International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers
International Business Machines Corporation
International Textile, Garment and Leather Workers' Federation
International Union of Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers
ITT Corporation
J.P. Stevens & Co.
Jewish Labor Committee (U.S.)
Labor Research Association (U.S.)
Livingston College
National Post Office Mail Handlers
New Jersey Historical Commission.
New Jersey Housing Finance Agency.
New Jersey State AFL-CIO.
New Jersey State Industrial Union Council
Oil, Chemical, and Atomic Workers International Union
Philadelphia Area Project on Occupational Safety and Health.
Puerto Rican Congress of New Jersey
Rutgers University. Institute of Management and Labor Relations.
Rutgers University. Labor Education Center.
Texaco, inc.
Textile Workers Union of America
U.S./Guatemala Labor Education Project
Union of Needletrades, Industrial and Textile Employees
United Federation of Teachers
William Paterson College of New Jersey.
William Paterson University of New Jersey
Youth Project (U.S.)

Subjects:

Tariff preferences
Working class--Songs and music

Titles:

Norma Rae

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Administrative Information

Preferred Citation

Sol Stetin Papers (R-MC 106). Special Collections and University Archives, Rutgers University Libraries.

Acquisition Note

Special Collections and University Archives, Rutgers University Libraries was given the Sol Stetin Papers on permanent loan by the Carey Library of the School of Management and Labor Relations.

Processing Note

This project was assisted by a grant from the New Jersey Historical Commission, a division of the Department of State.

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Detailed Description of the Collection/Container List

This section provides descriptions of the materials found within each series. Each series description is followed by a container list, which gives the titles of the folders and their locations in the numbered boxes that comprise this collection.

I. Correspondence, 1970-1990
Arrangement: The Correspondence series is arranged alphabetically.
Summary: This series contains Stetin's professional and personal correspondence with numerous individuals. Among the correspondents are Amy Abrams, Joe Glazer, Norman Eiger, James Begin, Dr. Don McKee of Upsala College, Larry Evans, Prof. Irwin Nack, Sid Reitman, Jack Rubenstein, and Henry Winkler. Topics throughout this series pertain to the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union, IMLR, American Labor Museum, Livingston Labor History Video Project, Rutgers Forum and other Rutgers issues. Among the documents in this series is a copy of "Textile Voices: Songs From the Mills" by Joe Glazer, an article in Democratic Left highlighting Paul Baicich, a reminiscence of Joel Jacobson and correspondence relating to a case with Texaco Inc. regarding seniority rights.
Box Folder
1 1 Abrams, Amy, 1983-1984
2 Bahruth, Amy, 1988
3 Baicich, Paul, 1986
4 Begin, James P., 1989
5 Blake, Pam, 1989
6 Correspondence, 1986
7 Edelson, Edith, 1988
8 Eiger, Norman, 1983-1989
9 Evans, Larry, 1983-1989
10 Fricano, Thomas M. and Carl J. Thul, 1989
11 Garcia, Victor, 1989
12 Glazer, Joe, 1988
13 Graves, Carole A., 1989
14 Horn, Hillary, 1989
15 Jacobson, Joel, 1990
16 Karcher, Alan, circa 1982
17 McKee, Donald - Upsala College, 1981-1985
18 McShea, Kathleen P. - Eagleton Institute of Politics, 1988
19 Merrill, Michael D., 1988
20 Nack, Irwin - American Federation of Teachers (AFT) Local 1796, 1989
21 Plescia, Dominick, 1986
22 Reitman, Sidney, 1983-1988
23 Reitman, Sidney and Zurofsky, Bennet D. - Texaco, 1981-1983
24 Rogers, Ray, 1983-1984
25 Rosenthal, Steve - Communications Workers of America (CWA), 1986
26 Rubenstein, Jack, 1989
27 Winkler, Henry, 1970-1971
II. Union, 1946-1992
Arrangement: The Union series is arranged alphabetically.
Summary: This series contains correspondence, newspaper clippings, notes, publications, contracts, and reports pertaining to unions with which Stetin was involved either as a consultant, an executive or in research. Included are documents relating to the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union (ACTWU); the American Federation of Teachers (AFT); the Bottled Beer Drivers, Warehousemen, Bottlers and Helpers; the Communications Workers of America (CWA); the International Union of Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers (IUE); the New Jersey State AFL-CIO; and the Trade Union Consulting Committee. Also included are numerous union pamphlets and other documentation concerning the Amalgamated Bank of New York as well as some of the resources and notes that Stetin compiled in preparation for select speeches on labor issues he gave to audiences throughout his career. Among the specific topics encompassed by materials in this series are children in the labor movement, the foreign labor crisis, the Columbian Quincentenary, immigrants' rights, and labor management and organization. In addition, the series includes commemorative files that Stetin kept to honor retired New Jersey labor leaders and the 1981 occasion during which his portrait was installed in the Textile Workers Union of America Presidents Room.
Box Folder
2 1 AAUP (American Association of University Professors) Prejudice Reduction Workshop, 1988
2 ACTWU (Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union), 1976-1986
3 ACTWU (Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union) Newsletter, 1983
4 AFL-CIO Executive Council, 1961-1983
5 AFL-CIO Regional Conference, 1984
6 AFL-CIO Structure Chart, 1979
7 Amalgamated Bank of New York, 1981-1987
8 American Association of University Professors (AAUP), 1985
9 American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME), AFL-CIO, 1989
10 American Federation of Teachers (AFT), 1989
11 Arbitration Seminar, 1989
12 Artists' Festival Against Apartheid, 1988
13 Asner, Edward - Shoot, 1989
14 Association for Union Democracy, Inc., 1988
15 ASTTEL [Salvadoran Telecommunications Workers Association] Support Committee for El Salvador, 1989
16 Awards, 1972-1992
17 Boycott Shell Bulletin, 1988
18 Brewery Workers Local 843, 1988
19 Budget Crisis - Brazil, 1972-1988
Box Folder
3 1 California Joint Board ACTWU (Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union), 1983
2 Children in the Labor Movement: From Child Labor to Child Care, circa 1981
3 Citizen Action, 1989
4 Coalition for an Alternative Budget, 1989
5 Columbian Quincentenary, 1989
6 Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador, 1988
7 Conference Papers, 1987-1989
8 Coponi, Joseph P. Dinner, 1983
9 CUNY (City University of New York) - Center for Labor-Management Policy Studies, 1989
10 CWA (Communications Workers of America) Contract Negotiation, 1989
11 CWA (Communications Workers of America) Local 1082 - Crabiel Funeral, 1988
12 CWA (Communications Workers of America) Welfare Unit, circa 1986
13 Eastern Air Lines, 1988-1989
14 Education Leadership Commission, 1983-1991
15 Equality and Quality in Education: Labor's Role, 1975, 1983
16 Garbage Incineration, 1989
17 Generalized System of Preferences (GSP), 1989
18 Global Labor, 1989
19 Grass Roots Environmental Organization, Inc., undated
20 Hispanic Labor Task Force (The Statewide Hispanic Task Force on Labor Relations of the Puerto Rican Congress of New Jersey), 1989
21 Hometowns Against Shutdowns, 1989
22 Housing Finance Agency (New Jersey Housing Finance Agency), 1983
23 Humphrey, Hubert H. Quote, 1977
24 Immigrants' Rights, 1988
25 International Labour Review, 1989
26 International Textile Garment and Leather Workers' Federation, 1980
27 International Union of Food, 1989
28 Iron Workers Local 11, 1988
29 IUC (New Jersey State Industrial Union Council), 1988
30 IUE (International Union of Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers), 1983
Box Folder
4 1 Jewish Labor Committee, 1982-1983
2 Labor Research Association, 1981
3 Magazines and Miscellaneous, 1988-1991
4 Mail Handlers, 1988
5 Mill Hunk Herald [Magazine], 1988
6 National Unemployed Network, 1988
7 New Jersey AFT (New Jersey State Federation of Teachers) Newspaper, 1989-1990
8 New Jersey Building and Construction Trades Council, 1984
9 New Jersey Citizen Action, 1983
10 New Jersey Historical Commission, 1988-1989
11 New Jersey Historical Commission Newsletter, 1989
12 New Jersey State AFL-CIO, 1983
13 New Jersey State Coalition of Labor Union Women, 1989
14 NJCOSH (New Jersey Committee for Occupational Safety and Health) Conference on Workers' Compensation, 1979
15 NJLCLAA (New Jersey Labor Council for Latin American Advancement AFL-CIO), 1988
16 OCAW (Oil, Chemical, and Atomic Workers International Union), 1989
17 Organizing in 90's, 1989
18 Personal, 1961-1983
19 Personal Follow-Up, 1982-1983
20 Philadelphia Area Project on Occupational Safety and Health (PHILAPOSH), 1988-1989
21 Pictures, 1946
22 Poland - Singer, 1989
23 Ragged Traversed Philanthropist, 1979
Box Folder
5 1 Retired Labor Leaders, 1985
2 Retired Labor Leaders Addresses, 1983-1984
3 Retired Labor Leaders Advisory Council, 1982-1987
4 Rieve-Pollock Foundation, 1981-1982
5 Senate Bill No. 1635, 1982-1983
6 Speech Data, 1973-1981
7 Speech Notes, 1982-1983
8 Speech Resources, 1984-1985
9 Speech Resources - Union Leadership Academy, 1968-1985
10 Talkin' Union [newsletter], 1982-1985
Box Folder
6 1 Trade Union Consulting Committee, 1962-1987
2 Trade Union Consulting Committee, 1983-1991
3 Trade Union Consulting Council, 1991
4 Trade Union Consulting Council, 1986-1988
5 200 R.P.M. Fall '77, 1976-1977
6 Textile Workers Union of America (TWUA) Presidents Room, 1981
7 UFT (United Federation of Teachers), 1986
8 Union Leadership Academy, 1969-1989
9 Union Pamphlets, 1978-1981
10 Union Retirees Conference, 1984-1990
11 Unionized Retirees Resources, 1983
12 US/Guatemala Labor Education Project, 1988
13 Why Unions?, 1980
III. Rutgers University Institute of Management and Labor Relations (IMLR), 1955-1992
Arrangement: The Rutgers University Institute of Management and Labor Relations (IMLR) series is arranged alphabetically.
Summary: The documents in this series focus on the Institute of Management and Labor Relations, the Labor Education Center and the origins and development of the Labor Studies program at Rutgers. This series contains correspondence and reports concerning the school's financial, administrative and departmental issues and activities as well as its students and faculty. Subjects include the Herbert A. Levine Memorial, the labor leader in residence position, Stetin Wing fund-raising activities, the School of Labor and Human Resources, and the School of Employment and Labor Policy.
Box Folder
7 1 Accountability Report 1982-1983, 1983
2 Advisory Committee Agenda, 1989
3 Advisory Committee, 1988
4 Graduate School, 1968-1970
5 Holderman, Bea and Carl - Book Project, 1983
6 IMLR, 1988-1989
7 IMLR History, 1988
8 Institute Building Plans - Early History, 1949-1981
9 Labor Education Articles, 1981-1985
10 Labor Education Center, 1980-1985
11 Labor Education Center, 1987
12 Labor Education Center Faculty Memos, 1983
13 Labor History Class, 1979-1981
14 Labor Leader in Residence - Rutgers, 1984-1985
Box Folder
8 1 Labor Studies Applications, 1983
2 Labor Studies at Rutgers - Origins, 1970-1971
3 Levine, Herbert A. Memorial, 1986
4 MA in Labor Studies, 1973
5 Rutgers, 1978-1991
6 Rutgers, 1984-1987
7 Rutgers, 1986
8 Rutgers, 1989-1990
9 Rutgers, 1992
10 Rutgers College, 1969-1971
11 Rutgers Faculty, 1985
Box Folder
9 1 Rutgers Labor Education Center - IMLR, 1968-1990
2 Rutgers Labor Education Center - IMLR, 1981-1986
3 Rutgers Labor Education Center - IMLR, 1991
4 Rutgers Labor Study Program, 1955-1973
5 School of Employment and Labor Policy, 1988
6 School of Labor and Human Resources, 1988
7 Seniors - Rutgers, 1986-1988
8 Sol Stetin Wing Fund Raising Activities, 1978-1986
9 State Advisory Council, 1985-1991
10 Students in Labor, 1970
IV. Livingston Labor Studies Association (LLA), 1975-1989
Arrangement: The Livingston Labor Studies Association (LLA) series is arranged alphabetically.
Summary: This series contains documents pertaining to activities, meetings, and events sponsored by the Livingston Labor Studies Association of Rutgers University during the late 1970s and early 1980s. The Livingston Labor Studies Association was a student organization, independent of the Labor Studies program, that sought to raise campus awareness about the plight of working people. Documents concerning the association's financial matters, such as student dues and fees, are included in the series. Correspondents include Wells Keddie, associate professor of Labor Studies, and Acting Dean Robert Jenkins. In the late 1970s the LLA held an annual labor music festival and hosted the musical production 200 R.P.M. Among the performers were Pete Seeger and Suni Paz.
Box Folder
10 1 Activities, 1978-1979
2 Financial File Fall '80, 1980
3 Labor Music Festival, 1976
4 Labor Music Festival, 1977
5 Labor Music Festival, 1978
6 Labor Music Festival, 1980
7 Livingston Labor Studies Association, 1975
8 Livingston Labor Studies Association, 1976 Fall
9 Livingston Labor Studies Association, 1976-1977
10 Livingston Labor Studies Association, 1977 Fall
11 Livingston Labor Studies Association, 1977-1979
12 Livingston Labor Studies Association, 1977-1980
13 Livingston Labor Studies Association, 1981 Spring
14 [Livingston Labor Studies Association], Meeting Agenda 1988 November 30
15 Livingston College Labor Studies, Program - Labor Studies Majors 1981-1982
16 Livingston Labor Association of Rutgers, University 1989
V. Oral History Project, 1983-1989
Arrangement: The Oral History Project series is arranged alphabetically.
Summary: This series deals with the Livingston Labor History Video Project. Coordinated by Larry Evans, graduate assistant at Rutgers Labor Education Center, this project, sponsored by the Livingston Labor Association, attempted to create an oral history archive by interviewing thirty-six retired labor leaders and rank-and-file members of the New Jersey labor movement. The series consists of documents relating to the project's creation, fundraising, reference tools and questionnaires. Included are letters of support from various unions and institutions based in New Jersey. Among the correspondents are Larry Evans and Scott Levinson.
Box Folder
11 1 Expenses Receipts, 1989
2 Feedback, 1989
3 Information about Oral History, 1989
4 Interested Students, 1989
5 Labor Videos, 1989
6 Letters of Support, 1989
7 Levinson, Scott, 1989
8 Livingston Labor History Video Project, (LLHVP) 1989
9 Oral History Referrals, 1983-1989
10 Oral History Subjects, 1989
11 NJLVP (New Jersey Labor Video Project), 1989
12 NJLVP (New Jersey Labor Video Project), - Questionnaire 1989
13 Rainbow Coalition Meets Video, 1988
14 Reimbursements, 1988-1989
15 Replies to Oral History List, 1989
16 Rutgers Oral History, 1988
17 Update, 1988
VI. Rutgers University, 1983-1989
Arrangement: The Rutgers University series is arranged alphabetically.
Summary: The series stems primarily from Stetin's involvement as a committee member with Public Responsibility for Educational Success (PRES), a statewide conference concerned with the contribution that non-school institutions make to the success of schools. The series contains a draft copy of "School Community Partnerships: A Handbook of Practical Programs" and additional documents pertaining to Youth Project, an organization promoting justice and peace. Other Rutgers-related material is included as well, such as the files Stetin kept on the Educational Opportunity Fund (EOF) and the "Rutgers University Forum," a televised series that featured Professor Roger Cohen as host.
Box Folder
12 1 Impact of Technology on Work (Symposium), 1988
2 Public Responsibility for Educational Success (PRES), 1986
3 Public Responsibility for Educational Success (PRES), 1984
4 Resources, 1983
5 Rutgers Educational Opportunity Fund, (EOF) Counselors 1989
6 "Rutgers University Forum," 1988
7 Youth Project 1984
VII. William Paterson College, 1978-1983
Arrangement: The William Paterson College series is arranged alphabetically.
Summary: This series contains records pertaining to Stetin's involvement with William Paterson College from 1978 to 1983. Stetin held a seat on the school's Board of Trustees and some documents in the series pertain to issues that were brought before the Board. Other items comprising this series include outlines and supplementary materials from the Sociology 323: Labor Organization and Organizing class that Stetin taught in the Spring of 1982. There are also records of discussions concerning the Labor Studies program at William Paterson College and a bargaining agreement between ITT Corporation and Local 400. In addition, the series includes brochures that were issued by the U.S. Department of Labor.
Box Folder
12 8 Course Outline - Sociology 323: Labor Organization and Organizing, 1983
9 William Paterson College, 1980-1983
10 William Paterson College Collective Bargaining Class, 1981
11 William Paterson College - Follow-Up, 1979-1980
13 William Paterson College Trustees, 1978-1979
VIII. Labor History, 1935-1992
Arrangement: The Labor History series is arranged alphabetically.
Summary: This series contains records pertaining to the American Labor Museum, a private, non-profit organization devoted to exploring the history of the labor movement and the culture and ethnicity of working people in the United States. Founded in 1980 by Sol Stetin, who later became its president, the museum is located in the historic Botto House in Haledon, New Jersey, where the Paterson silk strikers rallied in 1913. The series includes documents concerning labor history in general, as well as memorabilia from dinners honoring distinguished guests like Gene Upshaw, former National Football League player and union representative, and Hazel Frank Gluck, former New Jersey State Commissioner of Transportation.
Box Folder
13 1 American Labor History, 1986-1992
2 American Labor Museum, 1983-1989
3 Articles, 1935-1984
4 Botto House, 1982-1983
5 Botto House, 1982-1987
6 Botto House, 1983
IX. Research, 1987-1989
Arrangement: The Research series is arranged alphabetically.
Summary: The documents in this series contain specifications for institutional researchers seeking sponsorship and grant funding. Most of the information is furnished by the State University of New York Sponsored Programs Information Network. Among the funding agencies cited in this series are the AT&T Foundation, Department of Labor, Earhart Foundation, IBM Corporation, Mobil Foundation and the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.
Box Folder
14 1 AT&T Foundation, 1989
2 Department of Labor - The Future Labor, Force 1989
3 Earhart Foundation, 1989
4 Funds Received, 1989
5 IBM Corporation, 1989
6 Joyce Mertz-Gilmore Foundation, 1987
7 Lindbergh (Charles A.) Fund, Inc., 1989
8 Mobil Foundation, 1989
9 Research Foundations, 1989
10 Sloan (Alfred P.) Foundation, 1989
X. Articles, 1971-1991
Arrangement: The Articles series is arranged alphabetically.
Summary: This series contains assorted writings on American politics and organized labor that were collected from magazines, newspapers and periodicals. The series also includes an agreement between J. P. Stevens and the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union and several chapters of a typescript by Edward M. McConville entitled "The Future is the Past: The Story of J. P. Stevens."
Box Folder
14 11 Articles
12 Articles, 1988-1991
13 Building Trades, 1983
14 Magazine Articles, 1971-1988
15 Newsclipping, 1987-1991
16 Organizing, 1982
17 "The Future is the Past: The Story of J. P. Stevens," 1978
XI. Miscellaneous, 1972-1988
Arrangement: The Miscellaneous series is arranged alphabetically.
Summary: This series contains duplicates of documents that appear elsewhere in the collection. Also included in this series are items related to the "On Camera!" television program, Edward M. Kennedy's 1980 presidential campaign, and select materials that address aspects of Sol Stetin's career and personal biography.
Box Folder
15 1 Cable Television Network, 1988
2 Kennedy, Edward M., Presidential Campaign, 1980
3 Miscellaneous, 1972-1983
4 Miscellaneous, 1977-1987
5 Miscellaneous, 1982-1986
6 "On Camera!" (TV Series), 1988
7 Stetin, Sol - Biographical Information, 1982-2005