 |


|
Amsterdam News 13 September 1958, 1.
Antler, Joyce. The Journey Home: Jewish Women
and the American Century. New York: The Free Press, 1997.
Antler, Joyce. "Justine Wise Polier."
Jewish Women In America. Vol. 2. Paula E. Hyman and
Deborah Dash Moore, eds. New York: Routledge, 1997:
1089-1091.
Antler, Joyce. "Justine Wise and the
Prophetic Tradition." Unpublished essay, 1998.
Campbell, Barbara . "A
Battling Judge Retires To Aid Minority Children." New York
Times 3 February 1973.
De Lima, Agnes. Night-Working Mothers in
Textile Mills. New York: The National Consumers League
and the Consumers League of New Jersey, 1920.
Harrity, Richard and Ralph
G. Martin. Eleanor Roosevelt: Her Life in Pictures.
New York: Duell, Sloan and Pearce, 1958.
Jolles, Naomi. "Close-Up." New York
Post 19 April 1945.
Juvenile Delinquency Evaluation Project.
Three Residential Treatment Centers: Children's Village,
Wiltwyck, Hawthorne. [New York]: 1958.
Kilgallen, Dorothy. "No
Hero." NY Evening Journal 9 July 1935.
Knitzer, Jane. "Do
Children Have a Future?" Readings June 1990.
Mills, James. "The War Against Children."
Life 19 May 1972: 58-61.
"Mrs. Tulin, Kin of Rabbi Wise." Clipping with
unspecified source, July 1935.
Nash, Rachel. "Justine Wise Polier: The
Conscience of the Juvenile Court." Thesis. Harvard
University, 1998.
New York Daily News 2 March
1926.
New York Journal 2 March 1926.
"Outspoken Foe of Discrimination." Jewish
Exponent 15 April 1960.
Polier, Justine Wise,
Luis Alvares, Vincent L. Broderick, Phyllis Harrison Ross,
M.D., Robert C. Weaver. Corporal Punishment and School
Suspensions: A Case Study. Metropolitan Applied Research
Center, 1974.
Polier, Justine Wise and Edmund Murrow. "This
I Believe," Radio. 1953. Transcript. Box 45, folder
564.
Justine Wise Polier: Selected Articles
- "A Day in Children's Court- As One
Judge Sees It." Federal Probation 12
(Dec. 1948): 3-7.
- "The Invisible Legal Rights of the Poor."
Children 12 (Nov.-Dec. 1965):
215-220.
- "The Jewish Commitment." The Jewish Echo,
12 Sept. 1958.
- "Religion and Child Care Services." Social
Service Review 30 (June 1956): 132-135.
- "Social Work, Social Problems, and Community Values."
Social Service Review 29 (Sept. 1955): 260-266.
- "Wartime Needs of Children and Federal Responsibility."
Federal Probation 8 (April-June 1944): 9-12.
Justine Wise Polier: Selected Books
- Back to What Woodshed? Public
Affairs Pamphlet, No. 232, 1956.
- Everybody's Children, Nobody's Child.
New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1941.
- Juvenile Justice in Double Jeopardy: The
Distanced Community and Vengeful Retribution.
New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Publishers,
1989.
- The Rule of Law and the Role of
Psychiatry. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press,
1968.
- A View from the Bench. New York:
National Council on Crime and Delinquency, 1964.
Justine Wise Polier: Selected Manuscripts,
Letters, Speeches and Oral Histories from the Polier
Papers
- Address. American Jewish Congress
Convention, Plenary Session. November 9, 1949, Box
45, folder 560.
- Address. Temporary State Commission on Youth and
Delinquency, DeWitt Clinton Hotel, Albany, New York.
5 October 1955. Box 45, folder 566.
- "Basic Elements of Friendly Frontiers." Christ
Church. October 14, 1952. Polier papers, box 45,
folder 563.
- "Deposition of Justine Wise, City of New Haven."
24 April 1926. Box 1, folder 15.
- "Child Advocacy: What Is It? Why Is It Important?
How Can It Be Implemented?" Eastern Regional
Conference, C.W.L.A. Atlantic City, New Jersey. 25
April 1974. Polier papers box 47, folder 589.
- "The Future of World Jewry." Stephen Wise Free
Synagogue, New York City. March 16, 1957. Box 45,
folder 568.
- Letter to Hon. Jule Sugarman, Administrator. 6
July 1971. Box 21, folder 251.
- "In Defense of Human Rights." Commencement
address, Bryn Mawr. May 14, 1973. Polier papers box
47, folder 587.
- Interview with Thomas F. Soapes. 14 September
1977. Franklin D. Roosevelt Library, Hyde Park, New
York. Box 1, folder 2.
- Oral History. Conducted by Columbia University ,
Butler Library, Oral History Research Office, 1982.
Box 1, folder 3.
- Oral History Interview with Dr. Ernest Goldstein,
[1982]. Box 1, folder 3.
- "Passaic." Ts undated. Box 1, folder 16.
- "Prophetic Judaism: Fossil or Living Legacy?"
Address at Brandeis University, 1959. Box 46, folder
570.
- "Stephen Wise as I Knew Him." Stephen Wise Free
Synagogue, New York City. 15 March 1974. Box 47,
folder 589.
- "Who are our Neighbors?" Congress Monthly
April 1976. Box 48, folder 596.
- "The World We Want to Live In--- How to Achieve
It." Howard University, 12 March 1947. Box 45,
folder 558.
- "Woman Lawyer in the Depression: An Oral History."
Interview with Ann Fagan Ginger. The National
Lawyers Guild Practitioner 39.4 (1982):
122-128. Box 1, folder 3.
Robbins, Jack. "Daily Close-up." New
York Post 22 May 1975.
"Say Mrs. Tulin is to Lose Post." NY World
Telegram 10 Sept. 1935.
U.S. News & World Report
9 Jan. 1959, 82-3.
Vorse, Mary Heaton.
The Passaic Textile Strike. Passaic, New Jersey:
General Relief Committee of Textile Strikers, 1927.
Voss, Carl Hermann. Rabbi and
Minister. Cleveland, Ohio: The World Publishing Company,
1964.
Walker, Betty. "Why She
Strives for Justice." Chicago Sun Times 11 Dec
1950.
Wilder v. Bernstein.
153 F.R.D. 524. United States Court of Appeals for The Second
Circuit. 23 February 1995.
"Wiltwyck Names Judge
Polier to Top Honorary Position." The Yorktowner, 17
July 1969.
Wise, Stephen. Stephen S. Wise: Servant
of the People. Ed. Carl Hermann Voss. Philadelphia: The
Jewish Publication Society of America, 1969.
Wohler, Milly . "Judge Polier speaks on
juvenile justice system..." Oregonian, 11 Sept
1975.
Woolf, Dorothy.
"Justine Wise Tulin." Barnard College Alumnae 1 Oct
1935.
Archival Sources
American Jewish
Historical Society. Waltham, MA and New York, NY.
Center for Law and
Education, Boston, MA.
Citizens' Committee for Children, New York, NY.
Collections of the Municipal Archives of the City of New York.
Roosevelt Library, Hyde Park, NY.
Schlesinger
Library, Radcliffe College. Cambridge, MA.
Images and Facsimiles:
-
Justine Wise Polier with Mrs. Andre Taylor, Alfred
Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. John James, Stephanie James, Andrew Taylor, Mrs. Jessie
Profelt at "Tea for Toys".
Justine Wise Polier Exhibit—
Introduction.
-
Chairing a Meeting at Louise Wise Services, May 1,
1958.
Justine Wise Polier Exhibit—
A Second Day.
-
Justine Wise Polier and Eleanor Roosevelt at a 1960
Banquet for the Wiltwyck School.
Justine Wise Polier Exhibit—
The Wiltwyck School.
-
Justine Wise Polier as a Young Judge.
Justine Wise Polier Exhibit—
But Can She Cook?.
-
Justine Wise Polier.
Justine Wise Polier Exhibit—
A Life's Work.
-
Justine Wise Polier, 1973.
Justine Wise Polier Exhibit—
Wilder v. Sugarman.
-
Justine Wise Polier.
Justine Wise Polier Exhibit—
Introduction.
-
Justine Wise Polier.
Justine Wise Polier Exhibit—
The Skipwith Case.
-
Justine Wise Polier at a Mental Health Association of
New York Convention, May 24, 1973.
Justine Wise Polier Exhibit—
A Life's Work.
-
"New City Relief Director Talks it Over With..."
.
Justine Wise Polier Exhibit—
Just Like Her Father.
-
"Mrs. Justine Wise Tulin Thanks Mayor".
Justine Wise Polier Exhibit—
Just Like Her Father.
-
"Say Mrs. Tulin to Lose Post".
Justine Wise Polier Exhibit—
Just Like Her Father.
-
"Mrs. Tulin Kin of Rabbi Wise Now Justice".
Justine Wise Polier Exhibit—
Just Like Her Father.
-
Justine Wise Polier.
Justine Wise Polier Exhibit—
But Can She Cook?.
-
"Outspoken Foe of Discrimination" .
Justine Wise Polier Exhibit—
A Life's Work.
Shad Polier Memorial Library,
American Jewish Congress.
New York, NY.
Trudy Festinger.
United Press International.
Washington, DC.
|
|
|