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  1. Featuring Casey Hayden, Jean Wheeler Smith, Joyce Ladner ; moderator, Barbara Sicherman. Part of a 10 part series of videorecordings of a conference held at Trinity College, Hartford, CT, April 14-16, 1988, titled, "We Shall Not Be moved: The Life and Times of the Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee, 1960-1966."

  2. Document 101: Casey Hayden and Mary King, "A Kind of Memo," 18 November 1965, Box 25, folder, "A kind of memo" from Casey Hayden, Mary King, 1965," Judy Richardson Papers, David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Duke University, Durham, N.C. 4 pp. Documents selected and interpreted by Kathryn Kish Sklar and Elaine DeLott Baker.

  3. Document 86B: Photo, Casey Hayden (aka Sandra Cason), [1965], Elaine DeLott Baker Papers, Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University. Included in How and Why Did Women in SNCC (the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee) Author a Pathbreaking Feminist Manifesto, 1964-1965? , Documents selected and interpreted by Kathryn Kish Sklar and Elaine DeLott Baker.

  4. 1 de abr. de 2009 · Quote from “SNCC Position Paper: Women in the Movement,” November 1964, reprinted in Evans, Personal Politics, 234. 31 Casey Hayden and Mary King, “Sex and Caste: A Kind of Memo,” November 18, 1965, reprinted in Evans, Personal Politics , 235–238, quotes from 236, 237.

  5. women within SNCC or within larger society? Within SNCC there were a num-ber of very crucial African American women who were part and parcel of the internal dialogue, the internal conversation that Casey Hayden and I had been having for nearly two years, who were always in discussion with us about these matters.

  6. Memo to Jessie Harrison from Casey Hayden, ‘Results of Hayden Masterful Investigation of the SNCC Car Confusion,” Septempber 18, 1964, Sojourner Motor Fleet Records, January 1, 1964- January 31, 1964, SNCC Papers, ProQuest History Vault.

  7. In the Attics of My MindCasey Hayden Written for Hands on the Freedom Plow: Personal Accounts by Women in SNCC Tucson, 2010. While it's necessary to situate my story in my SNCC history in order to write about the topics I've chosen for this book, it proved difficult to condense the years I spent in the South.