For Further Information: Works Cited

“Post-Vietnam: Non-Violence at Bangor Part 1,” Antiwar and Radical History Project-Pacific Northwest, 2008, http://depts.washington.edu/antiwar/nukes_dundas1.shtml#_ftn49.

Danielson, Leilah. “’It Is a Day of Judgement’: The Peacemakers, Religion, and Radicalism in Cold War America,” Religion and American Culture: A Journal of Interpretation 19, no 2. (2008).

Douglass, Jim. “Stopping the Train Together,” Ground Zero 4, no. 2 (1985).

Foley, Michael. “No Nukes and Front Porch Politics,” in Nuclear Threats, Nuclear Fear, and the Cold War of the 1980s, ed. Eckart Conze, Martin Klimke, and Jeremy Varon, (New York, Cambridge University Press, 2017).

 Fournier, Suzanne. “Jail terms ‘certain’ for anti-Trident demonstrators,” The Georgia Straight (Vancouver, BC), August 12-19, 1976.

Gale Warner, Gale and Shuman, Michael. “Introduction,” in Citizen Diplomats, by Gale Warner and Michael Shuman (New York, The Continuum Publishing Company, 1987).

Ground Zero, “for Love & for Life,” Ground Zero 5, no. 4 (1987).

Hunter, Bob. “The Moral Imperative to Resist Trident,” Vancouver Sun (Vancouver, BC), March 14, 1975.

Olson, John. “Bangor: Is base a good neighbor for N. Kitsap?” Kitsap Daily Herald (Kitsap, WA), May 17, 1989.

Pacific Life Community, “A Strategy for Bangor Summer” (Document, Seattle, WA, 1977).

Pacific Life Community, “Ideas for the July 4 Action” (Document, Seattle, WA, 1977).

Pacific Life Community. “Statement from the 4-5 January weekend, Vancouver” (Public Statement, Vancouver B.C., n.d.).

Rokotuivuna, Amelia. Chairperson of the Conference for a Nuclear Free Pacific to the Pacific Life Community, April 6, 1975.

Seattle Chamber of Commerce. “Resolution Adopted by the Board of Trustees of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce May 21, 74,” (Resolution, Seattle, WA, 1974).

For Further Information: Works Cited