December 3 2013: John Commerford Labor Education Awards Reception

ericfoner

Our thanks to everyone who made the John Commerford Labor Education Awards reception, held on December 3, 2013, so successful.  This includes the more than 150 people who attended; the awardees; Barbara Bowen,  President of the Professional Staff Congress/CUNY, and Eric Foner, prize winning historian, for their excellent remarks; Gail Malmgreen for coordinating the event; Rachel Bernstein for her help in securing the site and other important support; Regina Olff for arranging for the food; Loraine Baratti, Art Fleischner, Philoine Fried, Jane Latour and Kimberly Schiller for their work at the event; President George Gresham, President of 1199 SEIU, United Healthcare Workers East, for providing the site; and our patrons whose financial support made the evening possible:

  • AFSCME, DC 37
  • Center for Worker Education, CCNY
  • Larry Cary, Esq.
  • Local 372, DC 37
  • Local 1930, DC 37
  • New York State United Teachers
  • Organization of Staff Analysts
  • Professional Staff Congress/CUNY
  • United Federation of Teachers

More details on the wonderful event will follow in our next newsletter, Work History News, which will be mailed out to members and available on this website soon!

2013 Barbara Wertheimer Prize Awarded

grapesThe New York Labor History Association is proud to announce that the 2013 Barbara Wertheimer Prize is being awarded to Sarah Stern for her senior honor’s thesis, “We Cast Our Lot with the Farm Workers’: Organization, Mobilization, and Meaning in the United Farm Workers’ Grape Boycott in New York City, 1967-70.” Stern’s paper is a NYU Honors thesis written for Linda Gordon. Rather than look at either the UFW or the farm workers themselves, she focuses on the New Yorkers who made the boycott a cause of their own. Relying on letters in the UFW archives at the Reuther Library at Wayne State, the paper is very well written. Her discussion of the boycott as a broad-based social justice movement in NY in the late-60s is particularly relevant to the efforts to revitalize labor today. An abstract of her paper will be posted on the NYLHA website.

Bernard Bellush Prize & Barbara Wertheimer Prize in Labor History

BARBARA WERTHEIMER PRIZE IN LABOR HISTORY

To recognize serious study in labor and work history among undergraduate students, the New York Labor History Association annually awards the Barbara Wertheimer Prize for the best research paper written during the previous academic year. Wertheimer was a leading labor educator and scholar.

BERNARD BELLUSH PRIZE

The Bernard Bellush Prize recognizes outstanding scholarship by graduate students in labor and work history. The Bellush Prize honors the contribution to labor history made by Bernie Bellush, as a scholar and as an activist.

Both the Bellush and Wertheimer Prize provide an award of $250 for the best research paper written during the 2013-2014 academic year. An abstract of each paper will be posted on the NYLHA website. Please encourage your graduate and undergraduate students to submit their work. Entries will be evaluated on the basis of scholarship and literary merit.

Entrants should send (email acceptable) one copy of their paper to:

Brian Greenberg,
Department of History and Anthropology,
Monmouth University,
West Long Branch, NJ 07764.

The deadline is June 15, 2014

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