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David Walls (academic)

David Walls (born October 21, 1941) is an activist and academic who has made significant contributions to Appalachian studies and to the popular understanding of social movements. He is professor emeritus of sociology at Sonoma State University (SSU) in California, where he was dean of extended education from 1984 to 2000.

Early life and education edit

Born David Stuart Walls in Chicago, Illinois, he grew up on the Upper Peninsula of Michigan and in Duluth, Minnesota. He finished the last two years of high school in Coral Gables, Florida. He attended the University of California, Berkeley as an undergraduate from 1959 to 1964, earning a bachelor's degree in economics.[1] While at Berkeley, he was active in SLATE, the campus political party,[2] and served a term on the board of directors of the Associated Students of the University of California.

Work in Washington, DC edit

After graduating from UC Berkeley, he began work in 1964 as a management intern at the Department of Health, Education and Welfare in Washington, DC, serving as an assistant to Mary E. Switzer, commissioner of the Vocational Rehabilitation Administration, and her deputy. In 1965 he transferred to the newly established War on Poverty headquarters, the Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO), where he worked in the Community Action Program, assisting Jule Sugarman with the launch of Project Head Start and funding student volunteer programs.[1]

Work with Appalachian Volunteers edit

In fall 1966 Walls joined the staff of the Appalachian Volunteers (AV), a nonprofit agency conducting community organizing projects in the central Appalachian coalfields of eastern Kentucky, southern West Virginia, and southwestern Virginia. He moved to Harlan County, Kentucky to supervise VISTA volunteers. A year later he became field coordinator for the AV in the state, and moved to Berea, Kentucky. When founding executive director Milton Ogle resigned in August 1968, Walls became the director for the organization's final year.[3] Although his initial work in Harlan County involved organizing low-income people to demand representation on the Cumberland Valley's community action agency, he soon was drawn into the growing opposition to strip-mining for coal, after a landslide from a strip-mine bench threatened a house at the head of Jones Creek,[4] above Verda on the Clover Fork of the Cumberland River in Harlan County. The AV's support for people opposing strip-mining for coal led to sedition charges in Pike County, Kentucky in August 1967 against an AV staff member and two workers for the Southern Conference Education Fund. Although the sedition charges were quickly dismissed by federal judge and former Kentucky governor Bert T. Combs, the case undermined OEO support for the AV.[5]

After Republican governor Louie B. Nunn was elected in November 1967, the AV faced an investigation by the Kentucky Un-American Activities Committee (KUAC). Walls issued a statement challenging the constitutionality of KUAC and the legality of the hearings. He refused an invitation to appear before the committee, but was not issued a subpoena, which he had hoped to challenge in court.[6][7][8] In an interview with the Louisville Courier-Journal, Walls summarized the outlook of the AV staff on the coalfield region:

An impatience with the slowness of change and paternalistic government programs; a distrust of experts who think they can solve the problems of poor people; a disgust with the way corruption is taken for granted in the mountains; a trust in the ability of poor people to solve their own problems, given the proper tools and money; a desire to end the colonialistic exploitation of Appalachia by corporations in Pittsburgh and New York and by small cliques of men in county seats; and a belief that the wealth of the area's mineral resources ought to go toward constructing a better way of life for all the people who live here.[9][10]

Political pressures to terminate funding for the AV finally took their toll, and no further OEO support was forthcoming. After attempting an orderly spin-off or phase-out of AV staff and programs, Walls resigned as executive director in April 1970.[11][12]

Activism and Appalachian studies at the University of Kentucky edit

Walls began graduate work in sociology at the University of Kentucky (UK) in fall 1969, while still working part-time for the AV. In fall 1970 he began full-time studies at UK, moving to Lexington, Kentucky, to live with a group of fellow graduate students in Collective One, a politically progressive household of five men and five women. With an offset press in the basement, Collective One printed leaflets for the local anti-Vietnam War and women's movements. The women in the collective were among the initiators of the women's liberation movement in Lexington.[13] Collective members also helped organize participation in local and national demonstrations against the Vietnam War, and helped elect one of their group, Scott Wendelsdorf, to two terms as student body president. Walls married Lucia Gattone, whom he had met in Prestonsburg, Kentucky while working for the AV, at Collective One on Thanksgiving Day, 1971. He received an MA in sociology in 1972 with a thesis comparing dialectical sociology in Peter Berger and Western Marxism. After two years Collective One broke up as members went their separate ways to jobs and other graduate schools.

Remaining at UK, Walls worked toward a doctorate in sociology and edited Appalachia in the Sixties[14] with his faculty mentor John B. Stephenson. In fall 1974, Walls accepted a faculty position of assistant professor in the social work program at UK. He also worked with a group of colleagues to organize the interdisciplinary Appalachian Center at UK, with a mission of promoting Appalachian studies courses, research on the region, and community service. The Appalachian Center was formally established in 1976, with Stephenson named director, and Walls designated associate director. A meeting between Walls and American studies professor Alessandro Portelli during a visit to Rome, Italy, in 1973 led to a long-term exchange program, involving graduate students and faculty, between the UK Appalachian Center and Sapienza University of Rome.[15]

Walls's doctoral research produced several articles and chapters that contributed to the emerging field of Appalachian studies. At the 1975 Appalachian Symposium held at Appalachian State University to honor Cratis D. Williams, Walls presented his paper "On the Naming of Appalachia",[16] which identified the first appearances of "Appalachia" on the maps of early explorers and mapmakers. This conference served as a catalyst for the Appalachian Studies Association. At UK, Walls elaborated on the application of the internal colonialism model to the Appalachian region, first developed by Helen M. Lewis,[17] and collaborated with sociologist Dwight Billings on the sociology of the southern Appalachians, the structure of the coal industry for the Ohio River Basin Energy Study, and the foundations of the university's Appalachian studies curriculum. His Ph.D. in sociology was awarded in 1978.

Career at Sonoma State University edit

In 1982 Walls returned to California to take a job at Sonoma State University (SSU) as director of sponsored programs and general manager of the SSU Academic Foundation. In 1984 he became the dean of the school of extended education. During his tenure as dean, SSU introduced a BA degree completion program with a distance learning component, MA degrees in liberal studies and computer and engineering science, and an expanded group of MA degrees in psychology, including organizational development and depth psychology. He received an academic appointment in sociology, and taught classes on the civil rights movement, the environmental movement, and gender and social movements.[1]

Walls authored The Activist's Almanac: The Concerned Citizen's Guide to the Leading Advocacy Organizations in America, interviewing over a hundred leaders of national social movement organizations.[18] After a favorable review of The Activist's Almanac in The Workbook[19] (a quarterly aimed at activists in the Southwest), editor Kathy Cone invited several articles by Walls. These appeared in The Workbook between 1994 and 2000, when the magazine was discontinued by its sponsor. Walls's survey article on community organizing has since been updated online.[20]

In the early 2000s Walls engaged in a dispute with Project Censored over what he saw as a denial of war crimes committed by Serbs in Bosnia and Kosovo, specifically concerning atrocities at Trnopolje camp and Omarska camp near Prijedor in Bosnia, and the Račak massacre in Kosovo. Walls's article in New Politics[21] drew a supportive letter from sociologist Bogdan Denitch and rejoinders from Peter Phillips, Diana Johnstone, and Edward S. Herman and David Peterson, with replies to each by Walls.[22] He was also critical of Project Censored's occasional inability to distinguish between sound and unsound science, as in the case of NASA's Cassini-Huygens mission to Saturn[23] and its promotion of 9/11 conspiracy theories.[24]

Walls stepped down as dean in 2000, and taught part-time at SSU for four years, retiring as emeritus professor in 2005. He has since taught short courses on the sources of social movement success for the Osher Lifelong Learning Institutes (OLLI programs) at SSU and other northern California campuses.[1]

Selected publications edit

Appalachian studies edit

  • David S. Walls and John B. Stephenson, eds., Appalachia in the Sixties: Decade of Reawakening (Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1972). ISBN 0-8131-0135-2
  • "On the Naming of Appalachia", in An Appalachian Symposium, ed. J.W. Williamson (Boone, NC: Appalachian State University. Press, 1977), pp. 56–76.
  • David S. Walls and Dwight B. Billings, "The Sociology of Southern Appalachia", Appalachian Journal, 5 (Autumn 1977), 131–144.
  • "Internal Colony or Internal Periphery? A Critique of Current Models and an Alternative Formulation", in Colonialism in Modern America; The Appalachian Case, ed. Helen M. Lewis, Linda Johnson, and Don Askins (Boone, NC: Appalachian Consortium Press, 1978), pp. 319–349.
  • David S. Walls, Dwight B. Billings, Mary P. Payne, and Joe F. Childers, Jr., "A Baseline Assessment of Coal Industry Structure in the Ohio River Basin Energy Study Region", 2 vol. (Urbana, IL: ORBES, June 1979). NTIS No. PB 82 103615.
  • Dwight Billings and David Walls, "Appalachians," in Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups, ed. Stephan Thernstrom (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1980), pp. 125–128. ISBN 0-674-37512-2
  • "Appalachia," in Encyclopedia of Appalachia, ed. Rudy Abramson and Jean Haskell (Knoxville: The University of Tennessee Press, 2006), pp. 1006–7. ISBN 1-57233-456-8
  • "The Appalachian Volunteers in Perspective," review essay of Thomas Kiffmeyer, Reformers to Radicals:The Appalachian Volunteers and the War on Poverty, in Appalachian Journal, vol. 37, nos. 1–2 (Fall 2009/Winter 2010), pp. 100–105.

Social theory edit

  • "Models of Poverty and Planned Change: A Framework for Synthesis", Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare, 5 (May 1978), 316–326.
  • "Dialectical Social Science", in Theoretical Perspectives in Sociology, ed. Scott G. McNall (New York: St. Martins, 1979), pp. 214–231.

Social movements edit

  • The Activist's Almanac: The Concerned Citizen's Guide to the Leading Advocacy Organizations in America (New York: Simon & Schuster/Fireside Books, 1993). ISBN 0-671-74634-0. Updated overviews of thirteen social movements, with annotated bibliographies are located at: David Walls - Sonoma State University - Biographical Sketch
  • "Power to the People: Twenty Years of Community Organizing," in The Workbook, Vol. 19, No. 2 (Summer 1994), pp. 52–55. "Thirty-five Years" update: David Walls - Sonoma State University - Power to the People: Thirty-five Years of Community Organizing
  • "Community Organizations," in Encyclopedia of the Consumer Movement, ed. Stephen Brobeck (Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, 1997), pp. 120–122. ISBN 0-87436-987-8
  • "Marching Song of the First Arkansas Colored Regiment: A Contested Attribution", Arkansas Historical Quarterly, Winter 2007, pp. 401–421.
  • Community Organizing: Fanning the Flame of Democracy (Polity Press, 2015), ISBN 978-0-7456-6320-3

Human rights edit

  • "Dubious Sources: How Project Censored Joined the Whitewash of Serb Atrocities," New Politics, Vol. IX, No. 1 (New Series), Summer 2002, pp. 165–171.
  • "Debate: Did Project Censored Whitewash Serbian Atrocities?" New Politics, Vol. IX, No. 2 (New Series), Winter 2003, pp. 88–100 (commentary and responses by Bogdan Denitch, Edward S. Herman and David Peterson, Diana Johnstone, and Peter Phillips, with replies by David Walls).

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d "David Walls - Sonoma State University - Biographical Sketch". web.sonoma.edu.
  2. ^ Jo Freeman, At Berkeley in the '60s: The Education of an Activist, 1961–1965 (Indiana Univ. Press, 2004), p. 21.
  3. ^ Charles Spradlin, "Director of Appalachian Volunteers Resigns Post," The Herald-Dispatch (Huntington, WV), July 19, 1968.
  4. ^ See photo in Caudill, My Land Is Dying, p. 56, and in Carawan, Voices from the Mountains, p. 21.
  5. ^ Paul Good, "Kentucky's Coal Beds of Sedition," The Nation, September 4, 1967, pp. 166–169.
  6. ^ Bill Peterson, "Internal Fight Splits Pikeville as KUAC Probe Nears: Entrenched Establishment vs. the Dissidents," The Courier-Journal, October 14, 1968, pp. B1-back page,
  7. ^ Gene L. Mason, "The 'Subversive' Poor," The Nation, December 30, 1968, pp. 721–724.
  8. ^ Thomas Kiffmeyer, Reformers to Radicals: The Appalachian Volunteers and the War on Poverty (The University Press of Kentucky, 2008), pp. 192–196.
  9. ^ Bill Peterson, "The Appalachian Volunteers: A Look at Them First Hand—Embattled Poverty Fighters," The Courier-Journal, December 12, 1968, p. A9.
  10. ^ For more quotes from interviews with Walls, see Alessandro Portelli, "It Was Supposed to Be Happening in Berkeley: The 1960s Meet Eastern Kentucky," Ch. 13 in The Battle of Valle Giulia: Oral History and the Art of Dialogue (University of Wisconsin Press, 1997), pp. 199–231.
  11. ^ William Greider, "Politics Ends Appalachia Experiment," Washington Post, September 29, 1969, p. A5.
  12. ^ Kiffmeyer, Reformers to Radicals, pp. 204–205.
  13. ^ Sally Bly, "Young adults in Lexington form a large family," The Courier-Journal & Times, September 20, 1970, pp. G1, G20.
  14. ^ University Press of Kentucky, 1972.
  15. ^ Ira Simmons, "Italia Meets Appalachia," The Courier-Journal Magazine, February 8, 1987, p. 5.
  16. ^ "David Walls - Sonoma State University - Sociology of Southern Appalachia". web.sonoma.edu.
  17. ^ "David Walls - Sonoma State University - Central Appalachia: Internal Colony or Internal Periphery?". web.sonoma.edu.
  18. ^ Liesel Hofmann, "Getting their activism together," The Paper, "Book Supplement," Summer 1993, pp. B8–9.
  19. ^ Kathy Cone, The Workbook, Summer 1993, pp. 77–78.
  20. ^ "David Walls - Sonoma State University - Power to the People: Thirty-five Years of Community Organizing". web.sonoma.edu.
  21. ^ . October 16, 2006. Archived from the original on 2006-10-16.
  22. ^ "David Walls - Sonoma State University - Project Censored Whitewash Debate". web.sonoma.edu.
  23. ^ "David Walls - Sonoma State University - Cassini-Huygens". web.sonoma.edu.
  24. ^ Paul Payne (2006-11-04). . The Press Democrat. Archived from the original on 2008-03-29. Retrieved 2008-03-20.

External links edit

  • David Walls's Web site

david, walls, academic, this, biography, living, person, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, adding, reliable, sources, contentious, material, about, living, persons, that, unsourced, poorly, sourced, must, removed, immediately, from, art. This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page especially if potentially libelous Find sources David Walls academic news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message David Walls born October 21 1941 is an activist and academic who has made significant contributions to Appalachian studies and to the popular understanding of social movements He is professor emeritus of sociology at Sonoma State University SSU in California where he was dean of extended education from 1984 to 2000 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Work in Washington DC 3 Work with Appalachian Volunteers 4 Activism and Appalachian studies at the University of Kentucky 5 Career at Sonoma State University 6 Selected publications 6 1 Appalachian studies 6 2 Social theory 6 3 Social movements 6 4 Human rights 7 Notes 8 External linksEarly life and education editBorn David Stuart Walls in Chicago Illinois he grew up on the Upper Peninsula of Michigan and in Duluth Minnesota He finished the last two years of high school in Coral Gables Florida He attended the University of California Berkeley as an undergraduate from 1959 to 1964 earning a bachelor s degree in economics 1 While at Berkeley he was active in SLATE the campus political party 2 and served a term on the board of directors of the Associated Students of the University of California Work in Washington DC editAfter graduating from UC Berkeley he began work in 1964 as a management intern at the Department of Health Education and Welfare in Washington DC serving as an assistant to Mary E Switzer commissioner of the Vocational Rehabilitation Administration and her deputy In 1965 he transferred to the newly established War on Poverty headquarters the Office of Economic Opportunity OEO where he worked in the Community Action Program assisting Jule Sugarman with the launch of Project Head Start and funding student volunteer programs 1 Work with Appalachian Volunteers editIn fall 1966 Walls joined the staff of the Appalachian Volunteers AV a nonprofit agency conducting community organizing projects in the central Appalachian coalfields of eastern Kentucky southern West Virginia and southwestern Virginia He moved to Harlan County Kentucky to supervise VISTA volunteers A year later he became field coordinator for the AV in the state and moved to Berea Kentucky When founding executive director Milton Ogle resigned in August 1968 Walls became the director for the organization s final year 3 Although his initial work in Harlan County involved organizing low income people to demand representation on the Cumberland Valley s community action agency he soon was drawn into the growing opposition to strip mining for coal after a landslide from a strip mine bench threatened a house at the head of Jones Creek 4 above Verda on the Clover Fork of the Cumberland River in Harlan County The AV s support for people opposing strip mining for coal led to sedition charges in Pike County Kentucky in August 1967 against an AV staff member and two workers for the Southern Conference Education Fund Although the sedition charges were quickly dismissed by federal judge and former Kentucky governor Bert T Combs the case undermined OEO support for the AV 5 After Republican governor Louie B Nunn was elected in November 1967 the AV faced an investigation by the Kentucky Un American Activities Committee KUAC Walls issued a statement challenging the constitutionality of KUAC and the legality of the hearings He refused an invitation to appear before the committee but was not issued a subpoena which he had hoped to challenge in court 6 7 8 In an interview with the Louisville Courier Journal Walls summarized the outlook of the AV staff on the coalfield region An impatience with the slowness of change and paternalistic government programs a distrust of experts who think they can solve the problems of poor people a disgust with the way corruption is taken for granted in the mountains a trust in the ability of poor people to solve their own problems given the proper tools and money a desire to end the colonialistic exploitation of Appalachia by corporations in Pittsburgh and New York and by small cliques of men in county seats and a belief that the wealth of the area s mineral resources ought to go toward constructing a better way of life for all the people who live here 9 10 Political pressures to terminate funding for the AV finally took their toll and no further OEO support was forthcoming After attempting an orderly spin off or phase out of AV staff and programs Walls resigned as executive director in April 1970 11 12 Activism and Appalachian studies at the University of Kentucky editWalls began graduate work in sociology at the University of Kentucky UK in fall 1969 while still working part time for the AV In fall 1970 he began full time studies at UK moving to Lexington Kentucky to live with a group of fellow graduate students in Collective One a politically progressive household of five men and five women With an offset press in the basement Collective One printed leaflets for the local anti Vietnam War and women s movements The women in the collective were among the initiators of the women s liberation movement in Lexington 13 Collective members also helped organize participation in local and national demonstrations against the Vietnam War and helped elect one of their group Scott Wendelsdorf to two terms as student body president Walls married Lucia Gattone whom he had met in Prestonsburg Kentucky while working for the AV at Collective One on Thanksgiving Day 1971 He received an MA in sociology in 1972 with a thesis comparing dialectical sociology in Peter Berger and Western Marxism After two years Collective One broke up as members went their separate ways to jobs and other graduate schools Remaining at UK Walls worked toward a doctorate in sociology and edited Appalachia in the Sixties 14 with his faculty mentor John B Stephenson In fall 1974 Walls accepted a faculty position of assistant professor in the social work program at UK He also worked with a group of colleagues to organize the interdisciplinary Appalachian Center at UK with a mission of promoting Appalachian studies courses research on the region and community service The Appalachian Center was formally established in 1976 with Stephenson named director and Walls designated associate director A meeting between Walls and American studies professor Alessandro Portelli during a visit to Rome Italy in 1973 led to a long term exchange program involving graduate students and faculty between the UK Appalachian Center and Sapienza University of Rome 15 Walls s doctoral research produced several articles and chapters that contributed to the emerging field of Appalachian studies At the 1975 Appalachian Symposium held at Appalachian State University to honor Cratis D Williams Walls presented his paper On the Naming of Appalachia 16 which identified the first appearances of Appalachia on the maps of early explorers and mapmakers This conference served as a catalyst for the Appalachian Studies Association At UK Walls elaborated on the application of the internal colonialism model to the Appalachian region first developed by Helen M Lewis 17 and collaborated with sociologist Dwight Billings on the sociology of the southern Appalachians the structure of the coal industry for the Ohio River Basin Energy Study and the foundations of the university s Appalachian studies curriculum His Ph D in sociology was awarded in 1978 Career at Sonoma State University editIn 1982 Walls returned to California to take a job at Sonoma State University SSU as director of sponsored programs and general manager of the SSU Academic Foundation In 1984 he became the dean of the school of extended education During his tenure as dean SSU introduced a BA degree completion program with a distance learning component MA degrees in liberal studies and computer and engineering science and an expanded group of MA degrees in psychology including organizational development and depth psychology He received an academic appointment in sociology and taught classes on the civil rights movement the environmental movement and gender and social movements 1 Walls authored The Activist s Almanac The Concerned Citizen s Guide to the Leading Advocacy Organizations in America interviewing over a hundred leaders of national social movement organizations 18 After a favorable review of The Activist s Almanac in The Workbook 19 a quarterly aimed at activists in the Southwest editor Kathy Cone invited several articles by Walls These appeared in The Workbook between 1994 and 2000 when the magazine was discontinued by its sponsor Walls s survey article on community organizing has since been updated online 20 In the early 2000s Walls engaged in a dispute with Project Censored over what he saw as a denial of war crimes committed by Serbs in Bosnia and Kosovo specifically concerning atrocities at Trnopolje camp and Omarska camp near Prijedor in Bosnia and the Racak massacre in Kosovo Walls s article in New Politics 21 drew a supportive letter from sociologist Bogdan Denitch and rejoinders from Peter Phillips Diana Johnstone and Edward S Herman and David Peterson with replies to each by Walls 22 He was also critical of Project Censored s occasional inability to distinguish between sound and unsound science as in the case of NASA s Cassini Huygens mission to Saturn 23 and its promotion of 9 11 conspiracy theories 24 Walls stepped down as dean in 2000 and taught part time at SSU for four years retiring as emeritus professor in 2005 He has since taught short courses on the sources of social movement success for the Osher Lifelong Learning Institutes OLLI programs at SSU and other northern California campuses 1 Selected publications editAppalachian studies edit David S Walls and John B Stephenson eds Appalachia in the Sixties Decade of Reawakening Lexington University Press of Kentucky 1972 ISBN 0 8131 0135 2 On the Naming of Appalachia in An Appalachian Symposium ed J W Williamson Boone NC Appalachian State University Press 1977 pp 56 76 David S Walls and Dwight B Billings The Sociology of Southern Appalachia Appalachian Journal 5 Autumn 1977 131 144 Internal Colony or Internal Periphery A Critique of Current Models and an Alternative Formulation in Colonialism in Modern America The Appalachian Case ed Helen M Lewis Linda Johnson and Don Askins Boone NC Appalachian Consortium Press 1978 pp 319 349 David S Walls Dwight B Billings Mary P Payne and Joe F Childers Jr A Baseline Assessment of Coal Industry Structure in the Ohio River Basin Energy Study Region 2 vol Urbana IL ORBES June 1979 NTIS No PB 82 103615 Dwight Billings and David Walls Appalachians in Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups ed Stephan Thernstrom Cambridge Harvard University Press 1980 pp 125 128 ISBN 0 674 37512 2 Appalachia in Encyclopedia of Appalachia ed Rudy Abramson and Jean Haskell Knoxville The University of Tennessee Press 2006 pp 1006 7 ISBN 1 57233 456 8 The Appalachian Volunteers in Perspective review essay of Thomas Kiffmeyer Reformers to Radicals The Appalachian Volunteers and the War on Poverty in Appalachian Journal vol 37 nos 1 2 Fall 2009 Winter 2010 pp 100 105 Social theory edit Models of Poverty and Planned Change A Framework for Synthesis Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare 5 May 1978 316 326 Dialectical Social Science in Theoretical Perspectives in Sociology ed Scott G McNall New York St Martins 1979 pp 214 231 Social movements edit The Activist s Almanac The Concerned Citizen s Guide to the Leading Advocacy Organizations in America New York Simon amp Schuster Fireside Books 1993 ISBN 0 671 74634 0 Updated overviews of thirteen social movements with annotated bibliographies are located at David Walls Sonoma State University Biographical Sketch Power to the People Twenty Years of Community Organizing in The Workbook Vol 19 No 2 Summer 1994 pp 52 55 Thirty five Years update David Walls Sonoma State University Power to the People Thirty five Years of Community Organizing Community Organizations in Encyclopedia of the Consumer Movement ed Stephen Brobeck Santa Barbara ABC CLIO 1997 pp 120 122 ISBN 0 87436 987 8 Marching Song of the First Arkansas Colored Regiment A Contested Attribution Arkansas Historical Quarterly Winter 2007 pp 401 421 Community Organizing Fanning the Flame of Democracy Polity Press 2015 ISBN 978 0 7456 6320 3 Human rights edit Dubious Sources How Project Censored Joined the Whitewash of Serb Atrocities New Politics Vol IX No 1 New Series Summer 2002 pp 165 171 Debate Did Project Censored Whitewash Serbian Atrocities New Politics Vol IX No 2 New Series Winter 2003 pp 88 100 commentary and responses by Bogdan Denitch Edward S Herman and David Peterson Diana Johnstone and Peter Phillips with replies by David Walls Notes edit a b c d David Walls Sonoma State University Biographical Sketch web sonoma edu Jo Freeman At Berkeley in the 60s The Education of an Activist 1961 1965 Indiana Univ Press 2004 p 21 Charles Spradlin Director of Appalachian Volunteers Resigns Post The Herald Dispatch Huntington WV July 19 1968 See photo in Caudill My Land Is Dying p 56 and in Carawan Voices from the Mountains p 21 Paul Good Kentucky s Coal Beds of Sedition The Nation September 4 1967 pp 166 169 Bill Peterson Internal Fight Splits Pikeville as KUAC Probe Nears Entrenched Establishment vs the Dissidents The Courier Journal October 14 1968 pp B1 back page Gene L Mason The Subversive Poor The Nation December 30 1968 pp 721 724 Thomas Kiffmeyer Reformers to Radicals The Appalachian Volunteers and the War on Poverty The University Press of Kentucky 2008 pp 192 196 Bill Peterson The Appalachian Volunteers A Look at Them First Hand Embattled Poverty Fighters The Courier Journal December 12 1968 p A9 For more quotes from interviews with Walls see Alessandro Portelli It Was Supposed to Be Happening in Berkeley The 1960s Meet Eastern Kentucky Ch 13 in The Battle of Valle Giulia Oral History and the Art of Dialogue University of Wisconsin Press 1997 pp 199 231 William Greider Politics Ends Appalachia Experiment Washington Post September 29 1969 p A5 Kiffmeyer Reformers to Radicals pp 204 205 Sally Bly Young adults in Lexington form a large family The Courier Journal amp Times September 20 1970 pp G1 G20 University Press of Kentucky 1972 Ira Simmons Italia Meets Appalachia The Courier Journal Magazine February 8 1987 p 5 David Walls Sonoma State University Sociology of Southern Appalachia web sonoma edu David Walls Sonoma State University Central Appalachia Internal Colony or Internal Periphery web sonoma edu Liesel Hofmann Getting their activism together The Paper Book Supplement Summer 1993 pp B8 9 Kathy Cone The Workbook Summer 1993 pp 77 78 David Walls Sonoma State University Power to the People Thirty five Years of Community Organizing web sonoma edu The Whitewash of Serb Atrocities October 16 2006 Archived from the original on 2006 10 16 David Walls Sonoma State University Project Censored Whitewash Debate web sonoma edu David Walls Sonoma State University Cassini Huygens web sonoma edu Paul Payne 2006 11 04 There s that other theory on 9 11 SSU hosts discredited academic who says U S could have planned attack The Press Democrat Archived from the original on 2008 03 29 Retrieved 2008 03 20 External links editDavid Walls s Web site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title David Walls academic amp oldid 1029471714, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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