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Albert Ellis papers, 1920-2007, bulk 1965-1997
218 linear feetThis collection encompasses the professional and personal life of psychologist and pioneer of Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy Albert Ellis.
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Leo H. Downes Papers, 1789-2014, bulk 1950s-2014
20 linear feetThe collection comprises 753 cassette tapes; 2 videotapes, and 13 boxes of papers.
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Howard Ink Blots 1-12 Journal of Clinical Psychology w/ Leo's notes Box 11, Folder 9.5
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- Howard Ink Blots 1-12 Journal of Clinical Psychology w/ Leo's notes
Philip and Ruth Newman papers, 1949-1964
5 boxesCorrespondence, notes, reports, and miscellaneous materials relating to the work of Philip C. Newman and of his wife, Ruth Newman.
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Saul Hofstein papers, 1939-1994
23 linear feetThe research files of Saul Hofstein and his files from the Otto Rank Association.
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Phoenix House Foundation oral history collection, 2014-2015
183 GigabytesPhoenix House was founded in 1967 as a therapeutic community to treat addiction in an 85th Street apartment in New York City. In the following decades, Phoenix House expanded to locations throughout New York City and ten states. At the time of the interviews, Phoenix House was serving over 5,000 individuals and remained committed to supporting individuals and families by providing a wide range of services including prevention, early intervention, treatment, continuing care, and recovery support. The Phoenix House Oral History Collection documents three periods of Phoenix House's work: origins, growth, and established leadership. In the first period, spanning from 1967 to the 1970s, narrators detail the founding of a therapeutic community, the dynamics of this community, and the influences of other self-help drug treatment organizations such as Synanon on the program. In the growth period, narrators speak of opening up new facilities, and designing and launching new programs. Topics covered include the political and funding challenges of expanding Phoenix House's reach, increases in medical and mental health staff, and partnering with state departments of corrections to provide the Phoenix House program as an alternative to incarceration. In the final period, narrators describe changes in the therapeutic community model, further expansion of programs across the United States, acquisitions of competitors, new funding challenges, and transitions in leadership.
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George De Leon, 2014 September 8 Box 1
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- De Leon discusses his work in clinical psychology at the Veterans Hospital as both his introduction
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De Leon discusses his work in clinical psychology at the Veterans Hospital as both his introduction to therapeutic communities and to Mitchell Rosenthal. He discusses the international and national growth of therapeutic communities as well as the policies and research that have made them what they are today. De Leon also examines different training and rehabilitation techniques popular in Phoenix House, and the future uses he sees for therapeutic communities.
Marjory Belisch Hall papers, 1920s-2021, bulk 1920s-1965
2.5 Linear FeetThe Marjory Belisch Hall papers are a small collection of material documenting the life and career of journalist, homesteader, and clinical psychologist Marjory Belisch Hall (1905-1967), who studied gender roles in children during the early 1960s. The bulk of the collection is composed of clippings of newspaper articles written by Hall between 1928 and 1931.
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Mark Lundeen papers, circa 1962 -- 1975
1.25 linear feetMark Gillette Lundeen (1941-2018) was a 1968 BD graduate of UTS who participated in anti-war activism regarding the Vietnam War, as well as civil rights and social justice initiatives including Freedom Summer. The collection contains UTS coursework; material related to anti-war organizing and resistance efforts; reports written by Lundeen documenting voter registration campaigns in Hattiesburg, Mississippi during Freedom Summer, as well as reports documenting social justice work Lundeen took part in under the auspices of the Delta Ministry largely in Natchez and Edwards, Mississippi; notes and supplemental materials from organizations including SNCC, the Delta Ministry, and the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party; and photographs and other materials that Lundeen compiled documenting neighborhoods and people in Natchez, Mississippi, towards producing a Natchez poverty report.
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