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ARCHIVAL COLLECTIONS

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[0001] ABC Radio Collection, 1943-1971, RG 200 ABC [sound recordings]

Location: Motion Picture, Sound, and Video Branch, National Archives at College Park, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD 20740-6001

Description: 27,000 radio broadcasts of news and public affairs programs from 1943 to 1971. This collection includes approximately 350 ABC audio sound recordings of 15-minute radio broadcasts by Drew Pearson numbering approximately 350 items spanning May 13, 1945, to December 28, 1952.

Websites with information:

http://www.archives.gov/research/guides/catalog-film-sound-video.html

http://www.library.american.edu/pearson/other_collections.html

[0002] ADAH Vertical File Pamphlet Collection [partially digital collection]

Location: Alabama Department of Archives and History, P.O. Box 300100, 624 Washington Ave., Montgomery, AL 36130

Description: Contains copies of Kloran, Knights of the Ku Klux Klan ([Atlanta] Ku Klux Press, c1916); Ideals of the Ku Klux Klan ([S.l.: s.n., 194-?]); The public school problem in America: outlining fully the policies and the program of the Knights of Ku Klux Klan toward the public school system, by H.W. Evans ([United States]: K.K.K., c1924); Ku Klux Klan [by Mrs. S.E.F. Rose ([West Point, Miss.] West Point Leader Print [1909]); and A Ku Klux uniform, by Elizabeth M. Howe ([Buffalo, N.Y., 1921]).

Catalogue search engine:

http://archives-alabama-primo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com/primo_library/libweb/action/­search.do?vid=01ALABAMA

Finding aid to digital collection:

Includes a copy of An open letter on suffrage restriction, and against certain proposals of the platform of the State Convention, by Edgar Gardner Murphy (1901) [opposing the platform of Alabama Democratic State Convention to limit black suffrage and opposing white supremacy]

http://digital.archives.alabama.gov/cdm/search/searchterm/"Vertical%20File%20Pamphlet%20Collection"/order/date

[0003] ALERT (Against Legalised Euthanasia Research and Teaching) Records

Location: ALERT, 27 Walpole Street, London, SW3 4QS, UK

Description: ALERT (Against Legalised Euthanasia Research and Teaching), created in 1991, is a UK campaigning organisation opposing euthanasia and related practices, such as living wills. It provides information, and co-ordinates concerned individuals and organisations. ALERT defines euthanasia as 'any action or omission which is intended to end the life of a patient.' The records include correspondence, promotional material, and other publications.

Websites with information:

http://www.alertuk.org/index.htm

http://www.dango.bham.ac.uk/record_details.asp?recordType=ngo&id=31

http://www.dango.bham.ac.uk/record_details.asp?id=60&recordType=coll

http://apps.nationalarchives.gov.uk/nra/searches/subjectView.asp?ID=O118506

http://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/rd/N13553312

[0003a] ARS Audiotape Collection, 1900-1991, Coll. ARS.0070

Location: Archive of Recorded Sound, Braun Music Center, 541 Lasuen Mall, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305-3076

Description: Miscellaneous tape recordings, mostly small donations, that span the history of the Archive of Recorded Sound. Recordings include Thomas Edison, "Let us not forget" speech (1919); speeches by Francisco Franco; Giovinezza, Inno Dei Fascisti (Fascist marching anthem); Adolf Hitler pre-war speeches (tape); Herbert Hoover recordings; Ku Klux Klan songs from Louisiana; the speech of Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh - delivered in the Arena in St. Louis 1941-05-10 (tape); Malcolm Muggeridge Interview 1962-12-24; Ezra Pound, Le Testament de Francois Villon, BBC performance 1962-07 (tape); and speech by G. Sokolsky to Lions Club.

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8f769x2/entire_text/

[0004] Abele vs. Markle records, 1947-1981 (bulk 1970-1975), RG 009 006

Location: Connecticut State Library, 231 Capitol Avenue, Hartford, CT 06106

Description: The Abele vs. Markle court case challenged whether Connecticut's anti-abortion law was constitutional. The civil case was argued before the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut, the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, and the United States Supreme Court from March 2, 1971 to April 26, 1973. Series 3. Correspondence, 1970-1980, include correspondence between the Attorney General's Office and Hiltz Publishing Company, "Life or Death", circa 1972 [by Dr. & Mrs. J. C. Willke (1972)]; The New York Legal Defense and Education Fund for the Unborn; Pro-Life Council of Connecticut; and The Value of Life Committee.

Finding aids:

http://www.cslib.org/archives/finding_aids/rg009_006.html

http://www.ctstatelibrary.org/RG009_006.html

[0005] William Aberhart fonds, ca. 1885-1977 (bulk ca. 1918-1943), UARC 2005.075, 2006.010

Location: University of Calgary Archives, 2500 University Dr NW, Calgary, AB, Canada

Description: William Aberhart (1878-1943) was a Canadian politician and the seventh Premier of Alberta between 1935 and 1943. Aberhart helped found the Social Credit Party of Alberta, which won the 1935 provincial election and remained in power in the province until the 1971 election. Fonds contains speeches and publications pertaining to Aberhart's political career and research notes, sermons and other material pertaining to his involvement with the Calgary Prophetic Bible Institute, the "Back to the Bible Hour" and other groups. Includes a copy of Social Credit Manual (1935), a manual written by William Aberhart applying Social Credit principles to the province of Alberta.

Websites with information:

http://www.albertaonrecord.ca/william-aberhart-fonds-2

http://archives.ucalgary.ca/private

http://www.asc.ucalgary.ca/collections/archival/political

https://asc.ucalgary.ca/collections/archival/political

Finding aid:

http://archives.ucalgary.ca/files/lcr_archives/aberhart-2005.075-2006.010.pdf

[0006] William Aberhart fonds, 1897-1965, PR1982

Location: Provincial Archives of Alberta, 8555 Roper Rd NW, Edmonton, AB T6E 5W1, Canada

Description: The fonds consists of records of William Aberhart (1878-1943) relating to his involvement in education, religion, and Social Credit, and includes pamphlets and published material, notes and speeches, audio tapes, correspondence, photographs of family and his public life.

Websites with information:

https://hermis.alberta.ca/paa/Details.aspx?ObjectID=PR1982&dv=True&deptID=1

http://www.archivescanada.ca/english/search/Outputs.asp?sessionKey=1143825756048_206_191_57_199&l=-1&coll=1&itm=143973&av=2&f=2&hdg=0&tihdg=0&i=&rt=1

[0007] William Aberhart fonds, 1928-1971 (bulk 1935-1966), GLEN glen-1 [partly digital collection]

Location: Glenbow Archives, 130 - 9 Avenue S.E., Calgary, Alberta, T2G 0P3, Canada

Description: William "Bible Bill" Aberhart (1878-1943), a radio broadcaster, became interested in the monetary ideas of Major C.H. Douglas in 1932. Douglas espoused state supervision of credit and dividend payments to citizens. Aberhart founded the Social Credit League, and in 1935 became the premier of Alberta when Social Credit swept the United Farmers of Alberta (UFA) government from power. The government was unable to implement Aberhart's proposed reforms because the legislation was disallowed by the federal government. Aberhart died in office. Series 1. Memorabilia related to Aberhart.—1928-1971, contains a lecture on Social Credit, given by Aberhart in Edmonton on May 23, 1935. Series 3. Radio broadcasts.—1936-1952, contains recorded radio broadcasts (1936-1940). Series 4. Scanned Document Other records related to Aberhart at Glenbow. --1935-1940, contains transcripts of William Aberhart's radio broadcasts, March-July 1935, made from the Calgary Prophetic Bible Institute under the auspices of the Alberta Social Credit League.

Websites with information:

http://www.albertaonrecord.ca/william-aberhart-fonds

http://glenbow.org/collections/search/findingAids/index.cfm

http://www.glenbow.org/collections/search/findingAids/index.cfm

Finding aid:

http://www.glenbow.org/collections/search/findingAids/archhtm/aberhart.cfm

[0008] Thomas G. Abernethy Collection, 1924-1975 (1943-1972 bulk), MUM00001 [partly digital collection]

Location: Modern Political Archives, The Department of Archives and Special Collections, J.D. Williams Library, The University of Mississippi, P.O. Box 1848, University, MS 38677-1848

Description: Thomas G. Abernethy (1903-1998) represented Mississippi in the U.S. House of Representatives between 1943 and 1973. The collection contains copies of ACA Index (Americans for Constitutional Action), Liberty Ledger (Liberty Lobby), and Dan Smoot Report, all of which contain voting records ratings. Also, letters from Rep. John M. Ashbrook, Theo G. Bilbo, J. P. Coleman, Rep. William M. Colmer, Rep. William Jennings Bryan Dorn, Sen. James O. Eastland, J. Edgar Hoover, Lieutenant Governor Lester Maddox, John E. Rankin, Senator John Stennis, Rep. Jamie L. Whitten, and Rep. John Bell Williams. Files on Anti-Lynch, 1946-1956; Association of Citizens' Councils of Mississippi; Ezra Taft Benson; John Birch Society; Brannan Farm Bill; Bricker Amendment—Judiciary Committee, 1954-1955; Catholic Freedoms Foundation; Citizens' Council, 1964-1967; The Committee of One Million; Communism, including "The Coming Red Dictatorship" broadside; Integration in Mississippi Schools, 1965; Integration—University of Mississippi; Ku Klux Klan (copy of Robert M. Shelton letter to President Nixon, 29 January 1969); Ku Klux Klan Investigation, Un-American Activities Committee; Fulton Lewis Questionnaire; Little Rock, Arkansas—Civil Rights; MacArthur Incident; Dr. Carl McIntire—Federal Communications Commission; James Meredith; Poll Tax, 1943-1952; Poll Tax—Anti-Lynch & Cloture; Segregation—Mr. Hodding Carter; States Rights; and Taft-Hartley Act. Copy of newspaper clipping, "The Motes and the Beams: In Defense of Mississippi," by James J. Kilpatrick, The Roanoke Times, January 8, 1965. Copies of Behind Communism, by Frank L. Britton; "Full Text of MacArthur Hearings," U.S. News and World Report (on the firing of Douglas MacArthur); and "How Red Is The Federal (National) Council of Churches?" (American Council of Christian Laymen, 1959).

Websites with information:

http://www.library.olemiss.edu/guides/archives-subject-guide/journalism-and-mass-media-manuscript-collections?page=show

Finding aid:

http://www.olemiss.edu/depts/general_library/archives/finding_aids/MUM00001.html

Finding aids to digital collection:

http://clio.lib.olemiss.edu/cdm/landingpage/collection/abernethy

http://clio.lib.olemiss.edu/cdm/search/collection/abernethy

[0008a] Abernethy manuscript miscellany collection, 1835-2000, ABER MS MISC

Location: Special Collections & Archives, Davis Family Library 101, 110 Storrs Avenue, Middlebury College, Middlebury, VT 05753

Description: This collection includes original manuscript and typescript letters and writings from American authors throughout the 19th and 20th centuries. Files on Louis Agassiz, Henry Louis Mencken, Richard Nixon, Ezra Loomis Pound, Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt, George Santayana, and Oswald Garrison Villard.

Finding aid:

http://archivesspace.middlebury.edu/repositories/2/resources/128

[0009] Abortion Action Coalition records, 1970-1982, M21 [partly digital collection]

Location: Archives and Special Collections, 92 Snell Library, Northeastern University, 360 Huntington Ave., Boston, MA 02115

Description: The Abortion Action Coalition (AAC), a project of the Women's Educational Center (Cambridge, MA), was founded in Boston, Massachusetts, in 1977 to oppose the Doyle-Flynn anti-abortion amendment, which proposed cutting state funding for abortions, following the national adoption of the Hyde Amendment, which allowed states to restrict Medicaid payments for abortions. The Abortion Action Coalition disbanded in 1980. Records include Abortion Action Coalition brochures, articles on abortion and women's health issues, clippings, contact and membership lists, correspondence, flyers, "how to" media packets, information on clinics, minutes, organizing materials, pamphlets, data about abortion and women's health legislation during the 1970s, and speeches. Series 3. Subject Files, 1970-1980, contains files on the Anti-Abortion Movement, including "Arguments in Opposition to the Public Funding of Abortion" (ca. 1970); Financing the Anti-Abortion Movement: Excerpts (ca. 1970); "Massachusetts Citizens for Life" (2 folders) (ca. 1977); "The Monstrosity of Planned Parenthood" (ca. 1970); "National Right to Life News" for April and September 1978; Notes on Articles and Conferences (ca. 1970); Pamphlets (1978-1981); Price List from Phyllis Schlafly Report (ca. 1970); "The Right-Wing Attack on Women" (1979); Rockford College Institute: Brochures (1978); "Testimony on Proposed Abortion Amendment Excerpted" (1974); "Voice for the Unconceived": Newsletter (1970); and "Who Are the Right-to-Lifers' and What Do They Want?": Draft (ca. 1970).

Websites with information:

http://www.library.neu.edu/archives/collections/manuscript_collections/

http://library.northeastern.edu/archives-special-collections/find-collections/by-subject-0

http://library.northeastern.edu/archives-special-collections/find-collections/boston-history/a-z-index-of-boston-history-collections

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/70940012

http://www.worldcat.org/title/records-1977-1980/oclc/70940012

Finding aids:

http://www.library.neu.edu/archives/collect/findaids/m21find.htm

http://www.library.neu.edu/archives/collect/findaids/m21findseries.htm

http://www.library.neu.edu/archives/collect/findaids/m21findprint.htm

Finding aid to microfilm edition of Grassroots Feminist Organizations. Part 1: Boston Area Second Wave Organizations, 1968-1998 (Woodbridge, CT, Primary Source Media, 2008):

http://microformguides.gale.com/Data/Download/3312000C.pdf

Finding aid to digital exhibit We Raise Our Voices...Reproductive Rights:

http://www.lib.neu.edu/archives/voices/w-reproductive-intro.htm

[0010] Abortion Collection, 1936-1995, MS 428

Location: Sophia Smith Collection, Smith College, Northampton, MA 01063

Description: Primarily printed materials, plus legislative records, memorabilia, and audiovisual materials documenting the efforts of both the pro-life and pro-choice movements. Series V. Opposition, contains a file on Black Americans for Life; books, including Lime 5, Exploited by Choice, by Mark Crutcher (Denton, Tex.: Life Dynamics, Inc., 1996); The War Against Population: The Economics and Ideology of World Population Control, by Jacqueline Kasun (San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 1988); Pro-Life Feminism: Different Voices, ed. Gail Grenier Sweet (Toronto: Life Cycle Books, 1985); and Behind Every Story is A Choice, by Gloria Feldt (Denton, TX: University of North Texas Press, 2002); and videotapes, including A Doctor Explains the Abortion Procedure; Meet the Abortion Providers; Project Truth; The Right Choice; Silent Scream; and Window to the Womb.

Websites with information:

https://asteria.fivecolleges.edu/findaids/sophiasmith/list/

http://asteria.fivecolleges.edu/findaids/sophiasmith/list/

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/49695963

http://www.worldcat.org/title/abortion-collection-1936-1995/oclc/49695963

Finding aids:

http://asteria.fivecolleges.edu/findaids/sophiasmith/mnsss79_main.html

http://asteria.fivecolleges.edu/findaids/sophiasmith/mnsss79.html

[0011] Fondo Giano Accame, 1946-2009

Location: Fondazione Ugo Spirito e Renzo de Felice, Via Genova, 24, 00184 Roma, Italy

Description: Giano Accame (1928-2009) was a journalist and writer on politics and economics. He was an editor of Il Secolo d'Italia from 1988 to 1990. In 1946 he joined the Fronte dell'italiano, which later merged with Movimento sociale italiano (MSI), but left MSI in 1968. Serie 1: Attività di pubblicista, contains correspondence with Pino Rauti and Stefano Delle Chiaie. Serie 3: Corrispondenza, 1948-2008, contains correspondence with Giorgio Almirante, Giacinto Auriti, William Frank Buckley, Jr., Renzo De Felice, Carlo Delcroix, John Dos Passos, Luca Gallesi, Ezio Maria Gray, Giuseppe Prezzolini, Pino Rauti, Tomislav Sunic, Duilio Susmel, and Giovanni Volpe.

Reference:

Massimo Bacigalupo, "Giano Accame [1928-2009] In Memoriam," Paideuma, 36 (2007-2009): 255-61, online at http://www.flashpointmag.com/accamememoriam.htm

Websites with information:

http://catalogo.archividelnovecento.it/Spirito.htm

http://www.fondazionespirito.it/sito2012/archiviostorico.asp

Finding aid:

http://catalogo.archividelnovecento.it/scripts/GeaCGI.exe?REQSRV=REQEXPLORE&ID=490434820

http://catalogo.archividelnovecento.it/scripts/GeaCGI.exe?REQSRV=REQEXPLORE&ID=490434820&LEV=2&SORT=

[0012] Accuracy in Academia records, 1986-2001, MSS 2302

Location: 20th &21st Century Western and Mormon Americana, L. Tom Perry Special Collections, Harold B. Lee Library, 1130 HBLL, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah 84602

Description: Accuracy in Academia (AIA) was founded in 1985 by columnist and former Federal Reserve economist Reed Irvine as an outgrowth of Accuracy in Media. It is a watchdog group for political correctness on university campuses. The AIA is run by executive director Daniel J. Flynn, the author of the book Why the Left Hates America. The AIA is opposed to multicultural education and abortion. Correspondence and research files, issues of Campus Report, brochures, and cassette tapes marked "AIA spy tapes."

Websites with information:

https://findingaid.lib.byu.edu/browse.php

Finding aids:

http://findingaid.lib.byu.edu/viewItem/MSS%202302

http://files.lib.byu.edu/ead/XML/MSS2302.xml

[0013] Accuracy in Media records, 1969-2011, MSS 2194

Location: L. Tom Perry Special Collections; Arts & Communications Archives; 1130 Harold B. Lee Library; Brigham Young University; Provo, Utah 84602

Description: Accuracy In Media (AIM) is an conservative American news media watchdog founded in 1969 by economist Reed Irvine. Collection includes correspondence, publications, research files, Media Monitor papers, and video and audio tapes covering Accuracy in Media activities. Files on AIM Reports, Allan Brownfeld, Ethics and Public Policy Center, Joseph C. Goulden, Senator Hatch, John Hemingway, Daniel C. Holdgreiwe, Reed Irvine, Cliff Kinkaid, Deborah Lambert, Mont Pèlerin, National Foundation of Decency, National Review, Ed Staples, James Tyson, Bernard Yoh, and Joan Yoh.

Reference:

William Gillis, "Say No to the Liberal Media: Conservatives and Criticism of the News Media in the 1970s" (Ph.D., Indiana University, 2013), https://scholarworks.iu.edu/dspace/bitstream/handle/2022/17960/Gillis_indiana_0093A_1237

3.pdf.

Websites with information:

https://findingaid.lib.byu.edu/browse.php

Finding aids:

http://findingaid.lib.byu.edu/viewItem/MSS%202194

http://files.lib.byu.edu/ead/XML/MSS2194.xml

[0014] Carl W. Ackerman Papers, 1833-1970 (bulk 1931-1956), MSS50039

Location: Manuscript Division, Library of Congress, 101 Independence Ave. SE, Room LM 101, James Madison Memorial Bldg, Washington, D.C. 20540-4680

Description: Carl W. Ackerman (1890-1970) was a journalist, educator, and public relations consultant. In 1919, in stories printed in the Public Ledger of Philadelphia and carried by other newspapers, Ackerman published the first excerpts of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion in English translation, removing references to Jews so that the plot described in the Protocols seemed to be a Bolshevist affair. The papers consist of correspondence, diaries, speeches and writings, family papers, scrapbooks, clippings, and other papers relating chiefly to Ackerman's career as a journalist and dean of Columbia University School of Journalism. The series General Correspondence, 1907-1970, contains files on William Edgar Borah, Spruille Braden, Nicholas Murray Butler, Josephus Daniels, Kenneth de Courcy, Thomas E. Dewey, Bonner F. Fellers, Frank Gannett, Joseph C. Grew, Herbert Hoover, Roy Wilson Howard, Alfred M. Landon, David Lawrence, Isaac Don Levine, Charles A. Lindbergh, Robert A. Millikan, Felix Morley, Westbrook Pegler, Kenneth L. Roberts, and Morris Ryskind. The series Subject File, 1908-1970, contains files on William Benton; Bolshevism, 1919; William Edgar Borah speech, 22 Sept. 1935; Spruille Braden; Nicholas Murray Butler; Virginius Dabney; John A. Danaher; Thomas E. Dewey; Dwight D. Eisenhower; Fair Labor Standards Act, 1938-1941; Foreign Press Association, 1943-1946; James Forrestal; Joseph C. Grew; William Randolph Hearst; Herbert Hoover, The Problems of Lasting Peace, correspondence 1942; Roy Wilson Howard; Institute of Pacific Relations; David Lawrence; Lend-Lease Bill (H.R. 1776), 1941; Henry R. Luce; John J. McCloy; Robert R. McCormick; Robert A. Millikan; Raymond Moley; A. Cressy Morrison; New York Tribune, Garet Garrett, 1917; Pearl Harbor, May 1945; Westbrook Pegler; Kermit Roosevelt; John Spargo; Voice of America; Burton K. Wheeler; William Allen White; Alexander Wiley; and Wendell Willkie. The series Speech, Article, and Book File, 1909-1964, contains a copy of Amos A. Fries, "The Future of Poison Gas," Current History, Dec. 1921, and files on Bohemian Club, San Francisco, Calif.; James F. Byrnes; Josephus Daniels; Joseph C. Grew; Herbert Hoover; and Alfred M. Landon.

Reference:

Norman Cohn, Warrant for Genocide: The Myth of the Jewish World Conspiracy and the Protocols of the Elders of Zion (1967), p. 156.

Websites with information:

http://findingaids.loc.gov/browse/collections/c

http://www.loc.gov/rr/mss/f-aids/mssfa.html

Finding aids:

http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms011056

http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms011056.3

http://rs5.loc.gov/service/mss/eadxmlmss/eadpdfmss/2011/ms011056.pdf

[0015] John and Jane Adams Ephemera Collection, 1856-1996 (bulk 1880-1982), MS-0384

Location: Special Collections and University Archives, Library and Information Access, San Diego State University, 5500 Campanile Dr. MC 8050, San Diego, CA 92182-8050

Description: John and Jane Adams collected ephemera among other areas of collecting. The series Political 1903-1996, subseries Campaign Mailers 1903-1992, contains files on Alert America Association, American Conservative Union, American Committee on Immigration Policies, John Ashbrook, Christian Anti-Communism Crusade, Citizen's Foreign Aid Committee, Conservative Book Club, Council for Statehood, Federation for Constitutional Government, First National Directory, Freedom Bulletin, Barry Goldwater, Jesse Helms, The Herald of Freedom, Human Events, The Independent American, International Youth Federation For Freedom, John Birch Society, William F. Knowland, Alfred Landon, The Manion Forum, Minutemen, National Coalition of American Patriots, National Economic Council, The National Program Letter, The National Right to Work Committee, National Tax Limitation Committee, The New Right, Omni Publications, John Rousselot, The Spotlight, Think!, United States Anti-Communist Congress, George C. Wallace, and Albert Wedemeyer.

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8416zrt/entire_text/

[0016] June N. Adamson Papers, 1870-2003 (bulk 1943-2003), MS.2739

Location: University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Special Collections Library, 121 John C. Hodges Library, 1015 Volunteer Boulevard, Knoxville, TN 37996-1000

Description: June N. Adamson (1922-2009) was a newspaper reporter, student, and University of Tennessee Professor of Journalism. This collection contains correspondence, research and teaching files, student work, articles, newspaper clippings, notes, and manuscripts. Included is research related to Adamson's unpublished book The Lit Stick of Dynamite, which documents the desegregation of Clinton (Tennessee) High School in 1956 and its bombing in 1958. Adamson's extensive research for this work includes newspaper clippings, photographs, redacted FBI files on the bombing and on John Frederick Kasper (who organized a White Citizens' Council in Clinton), and taped interviews with various participants. There are files on Admiral John Crommelin, Citizens' Councils, Ezra Pound, John Kasper, Ku Klux Klan, Judge Robert L. Taylor, and the Edward R. Murrow program "Clinton and the Law," aired on CBS on January 6, 1957.

Reference:

Jane S. Row, "Breaking the Gender Barrier: June Adamson," The Library Development Review (University of Tennessee Libraries, Knoxville, Tennessee) (2009-2010), pp. 2-4, http://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_lib­devel/103 and https://ww

w.academia.edu/500202/On_the_White_Right_Christian_Side_of_Every_Issue_­The_Life_and_Death_of_Byron_de_la_Be

ckwith.

Websites with information:

http://libguides.utk.edu/c.php?g=188664&p=1245273

http://www.loc.gov/folklife/civilrights/survey/view_collection.php?coll_id=2077

Finding aids:

http://web.archive.org/web/20100628002316/

http://dlc.lib.utk.edu/f/fa/fulltext/2739.html

http://dlc.lib.utk.edu/spc/view?docId=ead/0012_001145_000000_0000/0012_001145_000000_0000.xml

[0017] Lee J. Adamson Papers, 1954-1969, Coll. 086

Location: Special Collections and University Archives, Knight Library, 2nd floor North, Mail: UO Libraries--SPC, 1299 University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403-1299

Description: Adamson was a Washington certified accountant, conservative activist, speaker, and writer. He was a member of Americans for Constitutional Action and the John Birch Society. His writings include a periodic commentary about national and international affairs titled "Liberty Line," which was published in Rank and File (Portland, OR), and editorials for newspapers and journals. Much of the correspondence is also about conservative and anti-Communist individuals and activities. Some of the persons and organizations represented are Bryton Barron, the Church League of America, Pedro A. del Valle, William E. Fort, Jr., Housewives Organized for Better Living, the John Birch Society, Mothers' Crusade for Victory Over Communism, Phyllis Schlafly, and Robert Welch. The papers also contain about 1,000 articles and essays by Adamson, including the "Liberty Line" commentaries, and numerous writings by others. Speeches and Writings by Morris A. Bealle, A. G. Blazey, Eric D. Butler, Christian Crusade, John De Courcy, Martin Dies, Barry Goldwater, Ashley E. Holden, J. Edgar Hoover, Craig Hosmer, T. Robert Ingram, Hatley Norton Mason, J. B. Matthews, Manuel and Lucille Miller, Jozef Mlot-Mroz, Leonard E. Read, Phyllis Schlafly, SPX Research Associates, W. P. Strube, Jr., The John Birch Society, The Fair Play Committee, R. B. Thieme, Jr., Strom Thurmond, Lawrence Timbers, Edwin A. Walker, and Henry J. Walters. Subject files on A Texan Looks at Lyndon (J. Evetts Haley), American Opinion Speakers Bureau, Anti-Communist Action, Anti-Semitism, Atlantic Union, Berachah Church, Bookmailer News, Eric D. Butler, China (Communist), China (Nationalist), Christian Challenge, Church League of America, Committee of One Million, Communism, Conservatism, Conspiracy, Extremism, Fluoridation, Barry Goldwater, A. G. Heinsohn, Jr., J. Edgar Hoover, House Committee on Un-American Activities, Immigration, Income Tax, T. Robert Ingram, Integration, Intelligence Digest, John Birch Society, Liberty Amendment, Mental health, Metropolitan government, Moral rearmament, National Committee of Christian Laymen, Operation Abolition, Operation Water Moccasin, Race, Archibald E. Roberts, George Lincoln Rockwell, Philippa Schuyler, Segregation, St. Thomas' Episcopal Church (Houston, Texas), The Phoenix Report, The Cardinal Mindszenty Foundation, United Nations, United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), Vietnam, World Government, and Richard Wurmbrand.

Websites with information:

http://researchguides.uoregon.edu/scua-politics/conservative

http://library.uoregon.edu/speccoll/nwdalinks.html

http://library.uoregon.edu/tools/blogs/scua/check-out-lee-j-adamson-papers/

http://library.uoregon.edu/speccoll/guides/conservative.html

http://janus.uoregon.edu/record=b1970574

Finding aids:

http://nwda-db.wsulibs.wsu.edu/print/ark:/80444/xv71491

http://nwda.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv71491

http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv71491

[0017a] Affirmation Vietnam records, 1965-1966, Series No. 81

Location: Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library, Emory University Archives, Emory University, Atlanta, GA 30322

Description: Affirmation Vietnam, a student organization in favor of the Vietnam War, was established in December 1965 by a group of Emory University students. In February 1966, the organization staged a rally in support of the war, featuring well-known local and national politicians, at Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium, Atlanta, Ga. The rally included speeches by Secretary of State Dean Rusk (1909-1994), conservative activist Anita Bryant, Georgia Governor Carl Edward Sanders (b. 1925), Georgia's United States Senators Richard Brevard Russell (1897-1971) and Herman Eugene Talmadge (1913-2002), Georgia Congressmen Charles Longstreet Weltner and James Armstrong Mackay (1919-2001), and Atlanta Mayor Ivan Allen. The collection consists of the records of Affirmation Vietnam, including a scrapbook, newspaper clippings, progress reports, press releases, and an event program, chiefly related to the rally.

Finding aids:

http://findingaids.library.emory.edu/documents/eua0081affirmationvietnam/

http://findingaids.library.emory.edu/documents/eua0081affirmationvietnam/printable/

[0017b] The Africa Fund records, 1952-2001 (bulk 1979-1997)

Location: Amistad Research Center, Inc., Tilton Hall, Tulane University, 6823 St. Charles Avenue, New Orleans, LA 70118

Description: The Africa Fund, a non-profit 501(c)3 organization, was founded in 1966 by the American Committee on Africa (ACOA). The records cover the era independence movements on the African continent against the British, Dutch, French, German, and Portuguese colonial governments. Series 3: Research, 1952-2001. Sub-Series 2: South Africa, 1956-1998, contains files on Right Wing, 1989-1982, and Right Wing, 1988. Sub-Series 3: South Africa-United States, 1964-1998, contains files on Church Action: Right Wing, 1989-1987 (a copy of The Tragedy of the Children in the South African Liberation Struggle (Costa Mesa, CA: Restore A More Benevolent Order Coalition), undated); Press: Right Wing, 1987-1977 (includes a copy of It's Happening Now 9:8 (San Diego, CA: Morris Cerullo World Evangelism), 1977 August); and Right Wing, 1988-1985 (includes a copy of The Aida Parker Newsletter (Costa Mesa, CA: Restore A More Benevolent Order Coalition), 1988 Spring). Sub-Series 4: Countries, 1958-1999, contains files on Mozambique: U.S. Rightwing; Namibia: AWB (Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging); and Namibia: Right Wing, 1991-1981. Sub-Series 7: United States, 1956-2000, contains files on Churches - Right Wing, 1998-1990; Right Wing, 1988; Right Wing, 1984-1967; Right Wing - About My Father's Business, 1986-1980; Right Wing - Church, 1998-1989; Right Wing - Heritage Foundation, 1990-1982; Right Wing - Ministry for Religion & Democracy, 1987-1983; Right Wing - RAMBOC [Restore A More Benevolent Order Coalition], 1988-1987; Newsletter: The Aida Parker Newsletter. Aida Parker Newsletter (Pty) Ltd. Johannesburg 1988; and Right Wing - World Media Association, undated.

Finding aid:

http://amistadresearchcenter.tulane.edu/archon/?p=collections/findingaid&id=251

[0018] Africa News Service (Durham, N.C.) Leroy T. Walker Africa News Service Archive, 1952-1998 and undated (bulk 1952-1994), RL.00017

Location: David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Duke University, Box 90185, 103 Perkins Library, Durham, North Carolina 27708

Description: Africa News Service (ANS) is a non-profit U. S. news agency founded in 1973. It is a leading information source on Africa in the United States and works in partnership with African news agencies and periodicals to make available current and background materials on all aspects of African life, politics, and culture. The LeRoy T. Walker Africa News Service Archive is an extensive resource file assembled by ANS over the course of two decades in support of its news gathering efforts about Africa-related issues and U.S. foreign policy towards Africa. Newspaper clippings, magazine articles, press releases, newsletters, brochures, and reports comprise the collection. Files on American Security Council, apartheid, John Birch Society, Spruille Braden, Patrick Buchanan, William F. Buckley, Christian Anti Communism Crusade, Roy Cohn, Communism, Jerry Falwell, Foundation for Economic Education, Jesse Helms, Heritage Foundation, Alger Hiss, Jack Kemp, James J. Kilpatrick, Irving Kristol, Ku Klux Klan (KKK), William Langer, Liberty Lobby (Liberty Letter, Rockefeller Record, America First), Lyndon LaRouche, Larry McDonald, North Carolina Ultra Right Wing, Norman Podhoretz, Richard Mellon Scaife, Rev. Robert Schuller, South Africa Police/Right-Wing White Involvement, South Africa Religious Right, South Africa Ultra-Right, Southern Africa Right Wing Groups, J. Strom Thurmond, John Tower, U.S. Right Wing (Klan, Moral Majority, NCPAC), Richard A. Viguerie, George Will, World Right Wing, and Young Americans for Freedom (YAF).

Finding aids:

http://library.duke.edu/rubenstein/findingaids/africa/

http://library.duke.edu/rubenstein/findingaids/africa.pdf

http://library.duke.edu/rubenstein/findingaids/africa/pdf

[0018a] African-American and African Pamphlet Collection, 1905-1979 (bulk 1960s–1970s)

Location: Special Collections, University of Maryland Libraries, Hornbake Library, College Park, MD 20742

Description: The African-American and African Pamphlet Collection consists of 20th century materials on African, African-American, and Caribbean culture and literature. Series 3: African-American Culture and History, 1916-1971 and undated, contains copies of Committee on Un-American Activities. Hearings Regarding Communist Infiltration of Minority Groups: Hearings before the HUAC House of Representatives, eighty-first Congress. Pt.1. (1949); and Committee on Un-American Activities. Hearings Regarding Communist Infiltration of Minority Groups (Testimony of Manning Johnson): Hearings before the HUAC, House of Representatives, Pt. 2. (1949). Series 10: Desegregation, 1973-1974 and undated, contains a copy of House Un-American Activities Committee: bulwark of segregation, by Anne Braden (undated) [online at http://www.crmvet.org/info/64_braden_huac-r.pdf]. Series 12: Race Relations and Racism, 1971-1974 and undated, contains a copy of The Biology of the Race Problem, by Wesley Critz George (1962) [online at http://www.pdfarchive.info/pdf/G/Ge/George_Wesley_Critz_-_The_biology_of_the_race_problem.pdf]. Series 13: Revolutionary and Radical Literature, 1934-1972 and undated, contains copies of Are All White Men Israelites?, by Theodore Fitch (undated) [a book about white supremacy]; Reds Promote Racial War, by Kenneth Goff (1958); Ku Klux Klan, Knights Of The Klan Versus The Knights Of Columbus (undated) [anti-Catholic, with a chapter on the fraudulent Knights of Columbus oath]; and George C. Wallace, Speech At The 11th Annual Christian Crusade Convention, Tulsa, Oklahoma, August 1, 1969 (1969).

Finding aid:

http://digital.lib.umd.edu/archivesum/actions.DisplayEADDoc.do?source=MdU.ead.rare.0001.xml&style=ead

[0018b] African American Vertical Files

Location: Published Materials Division, South Caroliniana Library, University of South Carolina, 910 Sumter St., Columbia, S.C. 29208

Description: Topical / Subject Files on Black History (Civil Rights/Minority Issues, Civil Rights Movement, Discrimination, Education/Desegregation, Education/Race Relations, Education/Segregation, Integration, Interracial Marriage, Lynching, Race Relations, Racial Violence/Conflict, Racism in South Carolina, Segregation).

Websites with information:

http://library.sc.edu/socar/vrtcls/

Finding aid:

http://library.sc.edu/socar/vrtcls/AfAmVertical.pdf

[0019] African American Videos [videos]

Location: Media Resources Center, University of California, Berkeley, 245 Moffit Library, Berkeley, California 94720-6000

Description: Films include Clinton and the Law (Civil Rights Movement: Primary Sources, 1957; originally aired on CBS on January 6, 1957) (footage of the Rev. Paul Turner preaching brotherhood and John Kasper expounding his rhetoric of intolerance in Clinton, Tennessee); From Washington: Report on Integration (CBS Reports, 1957); The Other Face of Dixie (CBS Reports, 1962; online at http://www.cbsnews.com/­videos/the-other-face-of-dixie/) (a report on progress in school integration in Clinton, Tennessee; Norfolk, Virginia; Atlanta, Georgia; and Little Rock, Arkansas; an interview with Arkansas governor Orval Faubus); Crisis: Behind a Presidential Commitment (1963) (on the crisis over integration of the all-white University of Alabama in June 1963); Kennedy v. Wallace: A Crisis Up Close (1963; re-edited) (President John F. Kennedy and Governor George Wallace during the confrontation over desegregation of Alabama schools); Ku Klux Klan: The Invisible Empire (CBS Reports, 1965) (includes an interview with KKK Imperial Wizard Robert Shelton); Forgotten Fires (1998) (a documentary about the burning of two Afro-American churches near Manning, South Carolina, in June 1995 by Ku Klux Klan members); 4 Little Girls (1998; producer/director, Spike Lee) (on the dynamiting of the 16th St. Baptist Church, Birmingham, Sept. 15, 1963, by the Ku Klux Klan); George Wallace: Settin' the Woods on Fire (2000); Inside the Ku Klux Klan: Faces of Hate (2000) (the leaders of the American Knights of the KKK and the Invisible Empire of the KKK air their views and discuss their efforts to recruit members through rallies, the Internet, and pamphlets); and Briars in the Cottonpatch (2012) (on Koinonia Farm, a small Christian community founded by Clarence Jordan in Southwest Georgia in 1942 where whites and blacks chose to live and work together as equals despite the attacks by segregationalist Georgians).

Finding aid:

http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/MRC/africanamvid2.html

[0020] African Americans and Civil Rights: Subject Clippings Files

Location: Alabama Department of Archives and History, P.O. Box 300100, 624 Washington Ave., Montgomery, AL 36130

Description: Clippings files on Civil Rights, Commission to Preserve the Peace, Desegregation, Integration and Segregation, Poll Tax, Segregation, Southern Poverty Law Center, Sovereignty Commission, and White Citizens' Council.

Websites with information:

http://www.archives.state.al.us/afro/clips.html

[0021] African Film Collection [films]

Location: Special Collections, African Studies Collection, UCT Library, University of Cape Town, Private Bag x 3, Rondebosch 7701, Western Cape, South Africa

Description: Contains a copy of the documentary film Hartseer land: een film over extreme rechts in Zuid-Afrika (My Beloved Country: The Extreme Right in South Africa), directed by Saskia Vredeveld (Amsterdam, Ciné Té Filmproduktie Amsterdam, 1991). By focusing on three specific groups – the Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging, the Boerestaat Party, and the proponents of the independent white enclave of Orania in the Northern Cape – the film presents a cross-section of their views. These Afrikaners believe that God chose them as the superior race of Africa. Throughout, the followers of these groups present themselves as the preservers of white civilization, fighting to maintain their culture, language and religion, if necessary with force. They would like to re-establish a separate white state – the old "Boer State", now to be called "Orandee", which was destroyed by England in 1902 during the Boer War. Also contains a copy of the BBC programme No Way Back, directed by David Harrison (BBC News & Current Affairs, 1990). Reporter David Dimbleby looks at white right wing reaction to Nelson Mandela's release and subsequent violence. In this programme, representatives of the Conservative Party, the White Transport Union, the AWB and the Oranjewerkers all express their anger at the government's actions.

Websites with information:

http://sabinet.worldcat.org/title/hartseer-land-extreem-rechts-in-zuid-afrika-my-beloved-country-the-extreme-right-in-south-africa/oclc/869779403&referer=brief_results

http://www.saha.org.za/resources/docs/PDF/Publications/AV_Audit_2010.pdf

Finding aid:

http://www.lib.uct.ac.za/wp-content/uploads/asl/films2013.pdf

[0022] Papers of the Afrikaner Party, 1940-1951, PV 51

Location: Archive for Contemporary Affairs, Stef Coetzee Building, Room 109, Academic Avenue South, University of the Free State, 205 Nelson Mandela Drive, Park West, Bloemfontein 9300 South Africa

Description: After the declaration of war in September 1939, Gen. Hertzog and his followers broke away from the United Party and founded the Volks Party. The Volks Party then split up and one section joined the National Party to form the Herenigde [Re-united] National Party while the other section became the Afrikaner Party under the leadership of N.C. Havenga. During the 1948 election the HNP and AP joined forces. In 1951 the two parties amalgamated and became the National Party.

Websites with information:

http://supportservices.ufs.ac.za/content.aspx?id=196

http://supportservices.ufs.ac.za/content.aspx?id=527

http://www.archivalplatform.org/registry/entry/south_african_political_party_archives

Finding aid:

http://supportservices.ufs.ac.za/dl/Userfiles/Documents/00001/1163_eng.pdf

[0022a] The Afro Newspaper Morgue Collections, 1920s-present (bulk 1930s-1970s)

Location: Afro-American Newspapers Archives and Research Center, 2519 N. Charles Street, Baltimore, MD 21218

Description: Founded in 1892 by John H. Murphy, Sr., the Afro-American Newspaper, most commonly called the Afro, began publication with the specific mission of documenting the news in the black community of Baltimore City, Maryland. The Afro-American Newspapers Archives and Research Center holds the newspaper's "morgue" files. The photographs, newspaper clippings, correspondence, brochures, and pamphlets in the AFRO Morgue were collected by reporters and editors at the Afro for use as reference materials. The morgue is made up of more than 155,000 individual folders about people, places, issues, and events. The collection contains as many as million images and provides a rich visual record of African American life in the twentieth century. Files or materials on Ross Barnett, Bryant Bowles, busing, Ace Carter, John Birch Society, John Kasper, Ku Klux Klan, lynchings, school integration, school segregation, and school desegregation.

Websites with information:

https://marylandhcc.wordpress.com/2011/01/11/afro-american-newspapers-archives-and-research-center/

http://morgue.afro.com/AfroArchon/

http://www.loc.gov/rr/news/oltitles.html

[0022b] Louis Agassiz letters and other material, 1847-1896

Location: Rare Book & Manuscript Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 346 Main Library (MC-522), 1408 West Gregory Drive, Urbana, Illinois 61801

Description: Louis Agassiz (1807-1873) was a professor of natural history, first at the University of Neuchatel, Switzerland, and later at Harvard University, and the founder of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard. Includes 30 letters written by Agassiz.

Websites with information:

http://www.library.illinois.edu/administration/collections/about/special.html

http://www.library.illinois.edu/rbx/archon/index.php?p=collections/controlcard&id=426

[0023] Philip Agee Papers, 1948-2007 (bulk 1965-2000), TAM.517

Location: Tamiment Library/Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives, Elmer Holmes Bobst Library, New York University Libraries, 70 Washington Square South, New York, NY 10012

Description: Philip Burnett Franklin Agee (1935-2008) was a Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) case officer and writer, best known as the author of Inside the Company: CIA Diary (1975), which identified about 250 CIA officers, front companies and foreign agents then or previously working for the United States. Agee joined the CIA in 1957, and over the following decade had postings in Washington, D.C., Ecuador, Uruguay, and Mexico. After resigning from the Agency in 1968, he became a leading opponent of CIA practices. Exiled from the U.S., and expelled from Great Britain, he died in Cuba in January 2008. The collection contains: biographical materials, correspondence, datebooks, documents obtained under the FOIA Act, notably CIA documents, as well as FBI and State Department documents; legal materials from various cases in which Agee was the plaintiff; lectures and university teaching files; subject files, many relating to Latin American and other countries and to CIA activity in them, and some relating to his expulsion from Great Britain; published and unpublished writings by Agee; reviews of his work; and other writings about Agee. Series VI, Subject Files. Subseries VI-A, Countries: Latin America and the Caribbean, contains files on Nicaragua: Contras: US Backed Anti Government Guerrilla Group (Clippings) and Nicaragua (The CIA Manual Distributed for Anti-Government Forces in Nicaragua): Distributed by the Center for Constitutional Rights Before the House Committee on Intelligence. Series VI, Subject Files. Subseries VI-D, Individuals, Organizations, Topics, contains files on Council Against Communist Aggression, Washington, DC; Council For Inter-American Security, Washington DC; "Counterspy" Clippings; Covert Action Bulletin; "Gladio-Timewatch" Script by James Jesus Angleton, Head of CIA Counter-Intelligence 1954-1974; Gladio (Operation): Italian Secret Network Anticipating the Soviet Overrunning of the West: Clippings (English, Spanish, Italian); The Heritage Foundation: "To Restore Balance, Freedom of Information and National Security; and Mind Control: Clippings. Series VII, University Lectures, Teaching and Research Files (1948-1999), contains files on "The Extreme Right in Europe in the 1990s:" Lecture (English, German); "The Extreme Right in Europe in the 1990s," Research Materials; "The Extreme Right in the US and Canada in the 1990s:" Lecture (English, German); Italy-Role of P-2, 1994 Elections Neonazism: Reading Assignments; Italy-US Intervention in 1947-1948, 1960s and 1970s, and Gladio Reading Assignments; "Neo-Nazism and Racism in America" Research Materials; "Neo-Nazism in Germany" Research Materials (English); "Neo-Nazism in Germany" Research Materials (German); "Racism, Anti-Semitism, Homophobia:" Reading Assignments; "Racism, Anti-Semitism, Homophobia" Research Materials; "Reinhard Gehlen and Continuation of the German War against the USSR:" Lecture (English, German); "Reinhard Gehlen and Continuation of the German War against the USSR" Reading Assignments; and "Reinhard Gehlen and Continuation of the German War against the USSR:" Research Materials.

Websites with information:

http://www.nyu.edu/library/bobst/research/tam/fa_index.html

Finding aid:

http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/tamwag/tam_517/tam_517.html

[0024] Agenzia Giornalistica Fotografica (AGF)

Location: Via Salaria 332 - 00199 Roma, Italy

Description: Founded in 1976, the archive consists of more than 2,000,000 images, including photographs relating to Mussolini and fascism.

Reference:

Guida alle fonti per la storia dei movimenti in Italia (1966-1978), a cura di Marco Grispigni and Leonardo Musci (Roma: Ministero per i beni e le attività culturali, 2003), http://www.archivi.beniculturali.it/­dga/uploads/documents/Str

umenti/Strumenti_CLXII.pdf

Websites with information:

http://editorial.agf-foto.it/controller/archiviostorico

[0024a] Spiro T. Agnew papers, 1953-1977, Coll. 74-10

Location: Special Collections, University of Maryland Libraries, Hornbake Library, College Park, MD 20742

Description: Spiro T. Agnew (1918-1996) was a Baltimore County (Md.) executive, governor of Maryland, and vice president of the United States. Correspondence; subject files; campaign materials; speeches; press releases; publications; calendars and schedules; news summaries; newspaper clippings; and briefing books. Correspondents include Patrick J. Buchanan, William F. Buckley, Milton S. Eisenhower, Charles McC. Mathias, Richard M. Nixon, and Ronald Reagan.

Websites with information:

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/105768476

http://www.worldcat.org/title/spiro-t-agnew-papers-1953-1977/oclc/105768476

Finding aid:

http://hdl.handle.net/1903.1/1744

[0025] Agrarian Periodicals in the United States, 1920-1960 (Westport, CT, Greenwood Press, 1976) [microfilm]

Description: This collection consists primarily of newsletters, pamphlets, and official journals of numerous agrarian organizations, published between 1926 and 1975, the vast majority from the 1930s, '40s, and '50s. Politically, the writings range from pro- and anti-Communist, to pro-Fascist, to pro- and anti-New Deal, from favoring unions and collectivism to opposing them, to anarchist, to mildly liberal or conservative. Includes Farmers Guild News, the organ of the National Farmers Guild, Apr. 1942-Apr. 1949, and Coughlin, Lemke and the Union Party, by Dale Kramer (Minneapolis, Farmers Book Store, 1936).

References:

Eugene A. Engeldinger, "Microform Reviews," Microform & Imaging Review, Volume 13, Issue 3 (Jan. 1984), p. 189, http://www.deepdyve.com/lp/de-gruyter/microform-reviews-5GurrQPM6M

Websites with information:

http://images.crl.edu/089.pdf

[0026] Olivia Rossetti Agresti Papers, 1947-1963, YCAL MSS 173

Location: Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University, P. O. Box 208240, New Haven, CT 06520-8240

Description: Olivia Rossetti Agresti (1875-1960) was the secretary and biographer of David Lubin and an interpreter. The collection contains correspondence between Agresti and Ezra Pound documenting their political and economic views; their opinions of Mussolini and Fascism; and their disagreements on anti-Semitism and the Catholic Church. There are also letters from Dorothy Pound and several other friends of Pound, including T. S. Eliot; a few short pieces by Agresti, including one in defense of Pound; and a transcript of Pound's "Four Steps."

Finding aids:

http://hdl.handle.net/10079/fa/beinecke.agresti

http://drs.library.yale.edu/fedora/get/beinecke:agresti/PDF

[0026a] Agrupación Abdala Poster Collection, 1967-1982 [digital collection]

Location: Cuban Heritage Collection, University of Miami Libraries, 1300 Memorial Drive, P.O. Box 248214, Coral Gables, Florida 33124-0320

Description: Agrupación Abdala (or Agrupación Estudiantil Abdala) was an anti-Communist organization of primarily Cuban-born students founded in the United States in 1968 with chapters at several colleges and universities around the country. Abdala hosted congresses, marches, and other events to promote their anti-Castro agenda. The posters in this collection advertise these events and Abdala's causes.

Finding aid:

http://merrick.library.miami.edu/cubanHeritage/chc5143/

[0027] James Aho Collection on Right-Wing Extremism, MC 131

Location: Special Collections, The Eli M. Oboler Library, Idaho State University, 850 S 9th Ave, Pocatello, ID 83209

Description: This collection, created by Dr. James Aho, contains clippings, pamphlets, books, newsletters from various right-wing extremist groups, newspaper articles, oral interviews, posters, periodicals, taped sermons, videos pertaining to right wing extremist propaganda, ideology, case studies, and correspondence with convicts, including those on death row, who are serving time for hate crimes.. Sample titles are Know Your Enemies, by Gordon "Jack" Mohr, and Essays of a Klansman, by Louis Beam. The collection also contains Aho's personal correspondence and interviews with members of the right-wing movement in north Idaho during the 1980s and '90s such as Aryan Nation members.

References:

Kelsi Linsenmann, "Aho Collection on Right-Wing Extremism Donated to Special Collections," Between the Lines: The Eli M. Oboler Library Newsletter, Idaho State University, Volume 20, Number 2, Spring 2013, pp. 1, 3, http://libpublic2.eol.isu.edu/documents/btl202spring.pdf; "Introduction to the James Aho Collections," CIMA Newsletter, Volume 40, Issue 4 (Fall/Winter 2013), p. 16, http://cimarchivists.­files.wordpress.com/2014/03/cima_newsletter_nov2013.pdf.

Websites with information:

http://www.isu.edu/library/special/scmc.htm

http://libpublic2.eol.isu.edu/documents/btl202spring.pdf

http://libpublic2.eol.isu.edu/blogs/ln/wordpress/?p=3330

http://libpublic2.eol.isu.edu/blogs/ln/wordpress/?m=201310

[0028] Aid Refugee Chinese Intellectuals Records, 1952-1970, Coll. 70023

Location: Hoover Institution Archives, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305-6010

Description: Aid Refugee Chinese Intellectuals, Inc. (ARCI, 1952-1970) was a State Department-funded, non-profit organization which aimed to resettle 25,000 Chinese intellectual refugees from Hong Kong in the United States. The records consist of correspondence, reports, minutes of meetings, financial records, and photographs relating to relief work for Chinese refugees. Files on Claire Chennault, Charles Edison, Christopher Emmet, Freedom Fund, J. Peter Grace, Joseph C. Grew, Stanley K. Hornbeck, Walter H. Judd, Arthur B. Lane, Marvin Liebman, Henry Luce, and A. C. Wedemeyer.

Reference:

Madeline Hsu, "Aid Refugee Chinese Intellectuals, Inc. (1952-1970): The Economic and Symbolic Uses of Refugee Admission" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Studies Association Annual Meeting, Grand Hyatt, San Antonio, TX, <Not Available>. 2014-11-26 <http://citation.allacademic.com/meta/p412636_index.html>

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf0x0n97kd/entire_text/

[0029] Alabama associations collection, 1850-1984, LPR136

Location: Alabama Department of Archives and History, P.O. Box 300100, 624 Washington Ave., Montgomery, AL 36130

Description: This collection contains a wide variety of materials, such as minutes, programs, and histories from various associations throughout the state of Alabama. A folder on the Ku Klux Klan contains a copy of Alabama KKK Newsletter, June 1926, which prints an anti-Catholic poem by Elsie Thornton, "The Pope's Last Call."

Websites with information:

http://www.alabamamoments.alabama.gov/sec46ps.html

Catalogue search engine:

http://archives-alabama-primo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com/primo_library/libweb/action/­search.do?vid=01ALABAMA

[0029a] Alabama Citizen's Council Oral History, 1979, MSS.0025 [oral history]

Location: W. S. Hoole Special Collections Library, University of Alabama, Box 870266, Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35487-0266

Description: A collection of audiotapes and typed transcripts of interviews conducted with former members of the Alabama Citizen's Council from Tuscaloosa, Centerville, Birmingham, and other chapters across Alabama, by students in Dr. Culpepper Clark's SCT 536 class, spring 1979. Interviewees included both men and women and they were asked about the membership and motivations of the organization, reactions to Autherine Lucy's enrollment at the University of Alabama, the role of their chapters during the Civil Rights movement in Alabama, and related topics.

Websites with information:

http://acumen.lib.ua.edu/search/all/localbroad:%22Civil%20Rights%20and%20Human%20Rights%22

http://www.loc.gov/folklife/civilrights/survey/view_collection.php?coll_id=721

Finding aid:

http://acumen.lib.ua.edu/u0003_0000025

[0029b] Alabama Governor administrative assistants' files, 1961-1972 and n.d.

Location: Alabama Department of Archives and History, 624 Washington Ave., Montgomery, AL 36130

Description: Files on Brown vs Board of Education of Topeka; Committee on Constitutional Government- Governor's Advisory Committee; Court decisions and elections - re: racial matters; Defenders of the American Constitution; Discrimination against whites; Federal Reserve System law suit against Federal Reserve System; 14th Amendment - History and background; Gun control; Martin Luther King; Ku Klux Klan; Legislative Commission to Preserve the Peace; Liberty Amendment; Liberty Lobby; Manion Forum; Minutemen; Miscegenation case (Florida, 1964) [McLaughlin v. Florida, 379 U.S. 184 (1964)]; Miscegenation case (VA, 1966) [Loving v. Commonwealth, 206 Va. 924, 147 S.E.2d 78 (1966)]; N.A.A.C.P.; National Conservative Council; National Council of Churches; poll tax; Pornography; Prayer Amendment; Karl Prussion; Race Relations Law Reporter; Racial incidents and violence; Rhodesia; Right to work laws - Taft-Hartley Act 14B; Arch E. Roberts, Major USAF; Segregation; Socialism; Southern Conference Educational Fund; Senator John Sparkman; Governor George C. Wallace - Speeches & opinions; State Sovereignty Commission - Committee for Fundamental Freedoms; States' rights; States' Rights Party of 1948; Test Ban Treaty; Strom Thurmond; United Nations; and Gen. Edwin A. Walker.

Catalogue search engine:

http://archives-alabama-primo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com/primo_library/libweb/action/­search.do?vid=01ALABAMA

Finding aid:

http://www.archives.state.al.us/findaids/v9010f.htm

[0029c] Alabama Governor administrative files-miscellaneous, 1963-1979

Location: Alabama Department of Archives and History, 624 Washington Ave., Montgomery, AL 36130

Description: Files on 'Abortion and the U.S. Supreme Court'; Bible Reading in Public Schools; Bussing-Regarding Supreme Court Decision (1971) [Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education]; Desegregation --'Fulfilling the Letter and Spirit of the Law: Desegregation of the Nation's Public Schools' [Fulfilling the Letter and the Spirit of the Law: Desegregation of the Nation's Public Schools - a Report of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. Washington, D.C., August, 1976, online at https://www.law.umaryland.edu/marshall/usccr/documents/cr

12l412.pdf]; Gun Control and Crime; Liberty Lobby-The Story of George C. Wallace; National Review: What Makes Wallace Run? ["What Makes Wallace Run?" by James Jackson Kilpatrick, National Review, April 18, 1967, pp. 400-409]; North Atlantic Treaty Organization, Wallace Speaks Out On The; and States Rights and Peoples Rights, George C. Wallace Speaks Out On.

Catalogue search engine:

http://archives-alabama-primo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com/primo_library/libweb/action/­search.do?vid=01ALABAMA

Finding aid:

http://www.archives.state.al.us/findaids/v16084f.htm

[0030] Alabama Labor Archives & History, Vertical File

Location: The Alabama Labor Archives and History, 435 S. McDonough Street, Montgomery, Alabama 36104

Description: Vertical files on Right to Work Bill – 1951-1956; Right to Work Bill Newspaper Clippings; Christian American, Attack on Labor Legislation – 1944-1945; H.R. 3020 – Taft-Hartley Act – 1947-1948; Integration/Desegregation – 1942-1956; Right-to-Work Law, Repeal – 1955; Taft-Hartley Anti-Labor Bill; Anti-Labor Legislation; Poll Tax; Child Labor Law; Equal Rights Amendment; and Civil Rights – 1949.

Finding aids:

http://www.alabama-lah.org/downloads/Vertical_File,_Filing_Cabinet_1,_Finding_Aid.doc

http://www.alabama-lah.org/downloads/Vertical_File,_Filing_Cabinet_1,_Finding_Aid.pdf

http://www.alabama-lah.org/downloads/Vertical_File,_Filing_Cabinet_2,_Finding_Aid.doc

http://www.alabama-lah.org/downloads/Vertical_File,_Filing_Cabinet_2,_Finding_Aid.pdf

[0031] Alabama Legislature, Commission to Preserve the Peace, Records, 1962-1975, SG24838 Reels 1-16, and 24 [microfilm]

Location: Alabama Department of Archives and History, P.O. Box 300100, 624 Washington Ave., Montgomery, AL 36130

Description: The administrative, reference, and financial records of the Commission to Preserve the Peace, an anti-integration investigative agency. Some of the individuals who are the subject of correspondence and reference file material are J. Edgar Hoover and Karl Prussion. Correspondents include Dan Smoot, Paul Harvey, John R. Rarick, Billy James Hargis, John Stennis, Richard B. Cotten, J. C. Phillips, Opal Tanner White, J. Walter Yeagley, Strom Thurmond, Edith Kermit Roosevelt, Edgar C. Bundy, Christian Crusade, Women for Constitutional Government, New Yorkers for the Constitution, Inc., John Birch Society, Indiana Patriotic Publications, American Opinion Library, International Conference of Police Associations, Bob Jones University, U.S. Congress Committee on Un-American Activities, Student Voice, Illinois Seditious Activities Investigation Commission, Conservatives, Inc., Fraternal Order of Police, American Legion, American Security Council, Citizens' Councils of America, Conservative Viewpoint, and the Church League of America. There are also numerous memoranda and informal reports to Governor George C. Wallace.

Websites with information:

http://adahcat.alabama.gov/vwebv/holdingsInfo?bibId=9282

http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/guidedisplay.pl?index=R000065

http://adahcat.alabama.gov/vwebv/holdingsInfo?searchId=596&recCount=10&recPointer=0&bibId=9282

http://archives.state.al.us/whatsnew/open.html

http://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/data/122498744

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/122498744

http://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/122498744

http://www.loc.gov/coll/nucmc/oclcsearch.html

http://www.worldcat.org/title/records-1962-1975/oclc/122498744

[0031a] Alabama Pamphlets Collection, 1821-1961, LPR131 [partly digital collection]

Location: Alabama Department of Archives and History, 624 Washington Ave., Montgomery, AL 36130

Description: The collection includes copies of Alfred E. Buck, Condition of the South, The Ku Klux Klan and Organization in Alabama: Speech in the House of Representatives, Feb. 8, 1871 (1871); Houston Cole, Fascism and Mussolini (n.d.); John Witherspoon DuBose, "The Story of Rescue of a Literature," Watson's Jeffersonian Magazine 12 (March 1911): 123-128; 30 pamphlets by J. Thomas Heflin; George Huddleston, The "Share-the-Wealth" Fallacy: Speech before the Kiwanis Club of Birmingham, Ala., Nov. 5, 1935 (1936); Josiah C. Nott, The Prospective Influence of the Anglo-Saxon Race on the World: An Address, Delivered before the Eutaw Junto, May 17, 1844 (1844); Josiah C. Nott, Two Lectures, on the Natural History of the Caucasian and Negro Races (1844); Samuel F. Rice, Americanism and Southern Rights: An Address Delivered before a Mass Meeting of the American Party of Talladega County, Sept. 6, 1855 (1855); William R. Smith, The American Party, and Its Mission: Speech Delivered in the House of Representatives, Jan. 15, 1855 (1855); John Sparkman, Speech Prepared for Delivery before Annual Luncheon of Phi Alpha Delta Legal Fraternity at the Alabama Bar Convention, Tuscaloosa, Ala., July 19, 1957; John Sparkman, "Notes on the Japanese Peace Treaty," Journal of Public Law, 1 (Spring 1952): 109-116; George C. Wallace, Address of Right worshipful Brother, George C. Wallace, Grand Orator of the Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of the State of Alabama, in Its 141st Annual Communication in Montgomery, Ala., Nov. 21, 1961; John H. Wallace, Let Alabamians Write Their Representatives at Once: The Proposed Amendments to the Federal Constitution, Providing for National Woman's Suffrage and National Prohibition, Obliterate the Democratic Principle of Local Self-Government and Constitute a Dangerous Encroachment upon the Sovereignty of the States. From the Montgomery Advertiser, Dec. 20, 1916; and West Virginia University Documents Relating to Reconstruction. Nos. 4 and 5. Edited by Walter L. Fleming. Morgantown, WV: 1904 [III. Local Ku Klux Constitution] [online at http://www.latinamericanstudies.org/book/D

ocuments_­Relating_to_Reconstruction.pdf].

Finding aid:

http://www.archives.state.al.us/findaids/v10146.pdf

Finding aid to digital collection:

http://digital.archives.alabama.gov/cdm/search/searchterm/"Alabama%20Pamphlets%20Collection"/field/all

/mode/all/conn/and/display/100/order/sort/ad/asc

[0032] Alabama Photographs and Pictures Collection [digital collection]

Location: Alabama Department of Archives and History, P.O. Box 300100, 624 Washington Ave., Montgomery, AL 36130

Description: This digital collection contains over 15,000 images from the Alabama Department of Archives and History holdings. Includes a cartoon of a lynching of a carpet bagger and scalawag, "those great pests of Southern society," from the Independent Monitor, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, September 1, 1868; photographs and "Warning Sent by the Klan" (1871) from Ku Klux Klan: Its Origin, Growth and Disbandment, by J. C. Lester and D. L. Wilson (1884; reprinted in 1905, with an introduction by Walter L. Fleming); and photographs of a Ku Klux Klan induction ceremony at East Lake Park in Birmingham, Alabama, 1923; a Ku Klux Klan gathering in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, 1924; and Ku Klux Klan Rally Day at the Opelika District Fair, 1925.

Finding aids:

http://digital.archives.alabama.gov/cdm/landingpage/collection/photo

http://digital.archives.alabama.gov/cdm/search/collection/photo

[0032a] Alabama Republican Party Records, 1928-1984, RG 545

Location: Special Collections & Archives, Draughon Library, Auburn University, 231 Mell Street, Auburn, Alabama 36849

Description: The Alabama Republican Party was established in 1867. Records include administrative office files; attorney's papers; convention files; subject files (1960-1984); contribution and pledge files (1971-1977); publications and general campaign materials (1970-1984); Young Republican Federation of Alabama files (1965-1971); resumes and files on elected officials, both Republican and Democrat; photographs; and clippings. Series: Campaigns & Elections, contains files on Campaign Material - 1960 Nixon for President; George C. Wallace; Barry Goldwater; Richard M. Nixon; Ronald Reagan; Busing; SALT II; Vietnam; and Voting Rights Act. Series: Elected Officials, contains files on Sen. John Sparkman, Gov. George Wallace, and Pres. Richard M. Nixon. Series: National Republican Party, contains files on Busing; Desegregation - Busing; SALT Talks; Pres. Richard M. Nixon; Republican National Committee (George Bush (Chairman), Bob Dole (Chairman)); Young Republicans and J. Edgar Hoover; Young Republican Federation of Alabama; and Young Republicans for Nixon. Series: Newspapers & Clippings, contains files on Sen. Barry Goldwater, Rep. William E. Miller, Pres. Richard M. Nixon, Ronald Reagan, Sen. John Sparkman, George Wallace, Alabama Conservative Party, Desegregation, and Nixon Administration. Series: Miscellaneous Files, contains files on Newspaper Clippings - Richard Nixon - 1964-66, and Republican National Convention - 1972. Series: Photographs and Biographical Data, contains files on George Bush, Robert Dole, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Jack Kemp, William F. Knowland, and Strom Thurmond. Series: Campaign Materials, 1970-81, contains files on Young Republicans; Ripon Forum; Issue of American Conservative Union Battleline - March 1980; and Issues of Challenge - Natl Federation of Republican Women, 1980-81. Series: Subject Files & 1971 Southern Conference, contains files on Alabama Young Republicans, Americans for Constitutional Action, and Senator Bob Dole. Series: Miscellaneous Files, contains files on Congressman Larry McDonald, Phil Gramm, George Bush, Congressman Philip Crane, Robert Dole, Honorable Barry Goldwater, S.I. Hayakawa, Jesse Helms, Newt Gingrich, Jack Kemp, Gerald R. Ford, Moral Majority, American Conservative Union, Fund for a Conservative Majority, Lyn Nofziger, Ronald Reagan, Citizens for the Republic (Ronald Reagan), Young Republicans, and George Wallace.

Websites with information:

http://www.lib.auburn.edu/archive/find-aid/

http://www.lib.auburn.edu/specialcollections/manuscripts.php

Finding aid:

http://www.lib.auburn.edu/archive/find-aid/545.htm

[0032b] Alabama. Tenth Judicial Circuit Court. State of Alabama vs. Robert E. Chambliss Trial Transcript, 1977, AR85 [digital collection]

Location: Department of Archives and Manuscripts, Central Library, Birmingham Public Library, 2100 Park Place, Birmingham, AL 35203-2794

Description: On the morning of Sunday, September 15, 1963, a bomb planted by members of the Ku Klux Klan exploded outside the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church, an African American church in Birmingham, Alabama. The blast did extensive damage to the church building and killed four girls inside. Several other members of the congregation also suffered injuries. In 1977 Robert E. Chambliss was tried and convicted for his role in the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church bombing. This collection contains the transcript for Robert E. Chambliss's 1977 trial, 15 photographs showing bomb damage to the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church and surrounding area, and trial notes and dispatches produced by Associated Press reporter Garry Mitchell.

Finding aid:

http://www.bplonline.org/resources/archives/aids/AR85.pdf

Finding aid to online collection:

http://cdm16044.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p4017coll8/id/13854

[0033] Alabama Textual Materials Collection [digital collection]

Location: Alabama Department of Archives and History Digital Collections, P.O. Box 300100 / 624 Washington Ave., Montgomery, AL 36130

Description: This collection contains a selection of textual materials such as letters, diaries, minutes, fliers, clippings, and excerpts from books. Contains Prescript of the * * [order of the Ku Klux Klan], 1867; Revised and Amended Prescript of the Order of the * * * [Ku Klux Klan], 1868; a flyer for a rally sponsored by the United Americans for Conservative Government; anti-Communist flier issued by the Ku Klux Klan in Birmingham, Alabama; Official Document (Grand Dragon of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan in Alabama), IV.10 (June 1926), including a letter from H. W. Evans, Imperial Wizard, Knights of the Ku Klux Klan; a flier issued by the Cullen A. Battle Klan in Tuskegee, Alabama, listing the issues the Ku Klux Klan stands for and against; copies of The States Rights Advocate (the official publication of the Montgomery County Citizens' Council), 1956, 1961; Inaugural address of Governor George Wallace, delivered at the Capitol in Montgomery, Alabama, 1963, in which Wallace makes his famous statement against integration; a copy of The White American, "official organ of the American States' Rights Party," 1964; a letter from Charles A. Lindbergh to Governor George Wallace, 1973; George Wallace campaign materials; "The Shoppers Guide to Communist Imports" (Miami, Fla., Committee to Warn of the Arrival of Communist Merchandise on the Local Business Scene); "Communism Is Our Mutual Enemy / Help Us to Fight It," a flier describing the mission and activities of Alpha 66, a paramilitary group formed by Cuban exiles in Puerto Rico; a draft of a letter from Craig T. Sheldon of the International Anti-Communist Brigade to "former friends of Anti-Castro Freedom Fighters."

Finding aids:

http://digital.archives.alabama.gov/cdm/landingpage/collection/voices

http://digital.archives.alabama.gov/cdm/search/collection/voices

[0034] Alabama Vertical Files, circa 1859-2011, MSS.3437

Location: W. S. Hoole Special Collections Library, Manuscript Collections, The University of Alabama, Mary Harmon Bryant Hall, 500 Hackberry Lane, Box 870266, Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35487-0266

Description: This collection contains materials, both published and unpublished, that document the history of the state of Alabama. Materials include items such as reprints, pamphlets, typescripts, and photocopies of documents relating to individuals, organizations, cities, and a large number of other topics. Folders on African American Segregation, Civil Rights, Ku Klux Klan--Serials, Ku Klux Klan--Alabama, Douglas MacArthur, Henry Louis Mencken, Race Problems--Alabama, and John J. Sparkman.

Reference:

kgmatheny, "What the Heck Is a Vertical File?" What's Cool at Hoole, March 25, 2016, http://apps.lib.­ua.edu/blogs/coolathoole/2016/03/25/what-the-heck-is-a-vertical-file/.

Websites with information:

http://www.lib.ua.edu/content/findingaids/indexsql.php?alpha=a

Finding aids:

http://www.lib.ua.edu/content/findingaids/pdf/mss_3437.pdf

https://www.lib.ua.edu/content/findingaids/pdf/mss_3437.pdf

http://acumen.lib.ua.edu/u0003_0003437

http://purl.lib.ua.edu/38494

http://acumen.lib.ua.edu/legacy/u0003_0003437.ead.xml

[0034a] Tony Alamo Materials, 1976-present, MC 1673

Location: Special Collections, University of Arkansas Libraries, 365 N. McIlroy Ave., Fayetteville, AR 72701-4002

Description: Tony Alamo (born Bernie Lazar Hoffman) (1934- ) is an evangelist. In California in the 1960s, Alamo and his wife Susan (d. 1982) established the Music Square Church, and Alamo preached a pentecostal theology with strong anti-Catholic and conspiratorial undertones. In 1975 the Alamos relocated to Dyer, Crawford County, Arkansas, near Alma. Following his release from prison in 1998 Alamo established the headquarters of his Tony Alamo Christian Ministries in Miller County outside of Texarkana. The collection includes circulars and flyers put forth by the ministry and typically placed on car windshields by Alamo followers. Also included are copies of the Alamo Christian Ministries World Newsletter, as well as a 2006 reprint of Tony Alamo's The Messiah According to Bible Prophecy, originally published in 1980. Other materials include online source materials, newspaper clippings, and six audio CD recordings of Alamo's "How to Have God's Life Living in You," Parts 114-119, dating from July 2006.

Websites with information:

http://libraries.uark.edu/specialcollections/manuscripts/atoz.asp

http://libinfo.uark.edu/specialcollections/manuscripts/atoz.asp

Finding aid:

http://libinfo.uark.edu/specialcollections/findingaids/mc1673.asp

[0035] Alberta Report fonds, 1973-2003, PR0440 [partly digital collection]

Location: University of Calgary Archives, 2500 University Dr NW, Calgary, AB, Canada

Description: The Alberta Report began as a weekly general news magazine called the St. John's Edmonton Report. The main focus was on political figures and events from a socially conservative Christian viewpoint. The magazine opposed gay rights, feminism, and abortion.. It followed the early years of the political birth of the Reform Party of Canada, and later the Alliance Party, as well as the beginning of Preston Manning's and Ralph Klein's political careers. By the mid-1990s, the editorial focus of the magazine shifted to social issues. Plunging into the "Culture Wars", the Report's perspective on feminism, abortion, gay rights, affirmative action, human rights law, subsidized art and political correctness earned the reputation of the magazine as being intolerant, bigoted, and at times racist. The fonds consists of records of the Alberta Report, including magazines, photographs, and negatives. Both the Provincial Archives of Alberta (8555 Roper Road, Edmonton, AB T6E 5W1) and the University of Calgary own the fonds.

Websites with information:

http://www.asc.ucalgary.ca/collections/archival/political

https://asc.ucalgary.ca/collections/archival/political

Finding aid:

http://www.asc.ucalgary.ca/files/lcr_asc/alberta-report_1.pdf

Emerging Alberta Image Database:

The Emerging Alberta Image Database includes 3200 photographs and political cartoons taken from the Alberta Report fonds held at the Provincial Archives of Alberta.

http://emergingalberta.ucalgary.ca

http://emergingalberta.ucalgary.ca/searchcollection

[0036] Alberta Social Credit, 1934-1938, COLL MISC 0090

Location: Archive and Special collections, British Library of Political and Economic Science, 10 Portugal Street, London WC2A 2HD, England

Description: William Aberhart (1878-1943), founder of the Social Credit Party, began his career as a high school teacher and religious-radio-show host in Calgary, Alberta. During the Great Depression of the 1930s, Aberhardt formed a political party that proposed that the government set fair prices for all goods and that a dividend of $25 be paid by the government to all consumers. Aberhart added his own brand of religious fundamentalism to these radical economic theories, which became popular in Alberta. The Social Credit party controlled the province's legislature until the early 1970s. Collection of pamphlets, reports, cartoons, etc of William Aberhardt's social credit proposals for the province of Alberta, Canada.

Websites with information:

http://library-2.lse.ac.uk/archives/handlists/

Finding aid:

http://library-2.lse.ac.uk/archives/handlists/CollMisc0090/CollMisc0090.html

[0037] Alberta Social Credit League. Offerdale Social Credit Group fonds, 1935-1986, wet-108

Location: City of Wetaskiwin Archives, 4904 - 51 Street, Wetaskiwin, Alberta, T9A 1L2, Canada

Description: The fonds consists of materials created the Offerdale Group of the Alberta Social Credit Party from 1935- 1986. The fonds consists of these series: 1. Minutes (1935-1985) Series consists of the minute books of the Offerdale Group of the Alberta Social Credit Party. 2. Financial (1942- 1986) consists of bank statements, receipts, receipt books and other materials related to the group's financial operations. 3. Miscellaneous (ca.1940-ca. 1980) consists of third party publications, ephemera, and other materials created or collected by the Offerdale Group of the Alberta Social Credit League.

Finding aid:

http://www.albertaonrecord.ca/alberta-social-credit-league-offerdale-social-credit-group-fonds

[0038] C. Earl Albrecht papers, 1905-1996, HMC-0375

Location: Archives and Special Collections, Consortium Library, University of Alaska Anchorage, 3211 Providence Drive, Anchorage, AK 99508

Description: Conrad Earl Albrecht (1905-1997) was a Matanuska Colony doctor, health commissioner, and circumpolar health advocate. The collection consists of papers and publications documenting C. Earl Albrecht's career in medicine and public health administration, primarily in Alaska. Part VII. Health-related subject files, 1934-1989, contains legislative and legal papers on the Alaska Mental Health Act (H.R. 6376), including reports and correspondence on the need for a mental health hospital in Alaska.

Websites with information:

http://consortiumlibrary.org/archives/CollectionsList/alphalists/A.html

Finding aid:

http://consortiumlibrary.org/archives/FindingAids/hmc-0375.html

[0039] Hugh Meade Alcorn, Jr., Papers, 1957-1963, ML-85

Location: Rauner Special Collections Library, Dartmouth College, 6065 Webster Hall, Hanover, NH 03755

Description: The materials that make up the collection are exclusively concerned with the years that Meade Alcorn (1907-1992) served as Chairman of the Republican National Committee during the second Eisenhower Administration (1957-1959). The materials themselves consist of correspondence, clippings, newsletters, pamphlets, reports, proposals, financial records, news releases, and many other items. Includes "What Is 'The Law of the Land?'" by Samuel B. Pettengill, in Human Events, October 5, 1957; "Who Profits From Free Enterprise?" by Benjamin F. Fairless, in Spotlight for the Nation, published by Committee For Constitutional Government, Inc., New York, 1954; excerpt from Businessmen's Complex, by Raymond Moley; The State of the Unions, excerpts, by Ralph W. Gwinn, M.C., at Allegheny County League of Women Voters, Pittsburgh, February 27, 1958; "Why the Republicans Lost the Congress and How They Can Win It Back," by Ralph W. Gwinn, in Human Events, January 26, 1957; What Has Happened to the Republican Party in Michigan?, by Barry Goldwater; at United Republican Dinner, Detroit, January 20, 1958; Proposal: 1958 Budget Proposals, Young Republican National Federation, John M. Ashbrook, Chairman; December 1957; and Exclusive, by Fulton Lewis, Jr., September 18, 1957.

Websites with information:

http://ead.dartmouth.edu/html/index_ab.html

Finding aid:

http://ead.dartmouth.edu/html/ml85.html

[0039a] Alert America Association flyers, 1962-1969

Location: David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Duke University, Box 90185, 103 Perkins Library, Durham, North Carolina 27708

Description: The Alert Americans Association (also known as Alert America Association) was an extreme right organization based in Los Angeles, Calif. Collection comprises flyers distributed by the Alert America Association during the 1960s. Topics include the Nixon administration, promotion of segregation, the Vietnam War, and opposition to the United Nations and to fluoridated water.

Websites with information:

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/881278132

http://www.worldcat.org/title/alert-america-association-flyers-1962-1969/oclc/881278132

[0040] Fred D. Alexander Papers, 1908, 1931-1998 (bulk 1946-1980), MS0091

Location: J. Murrey Atkins Library Special Collections, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, 9201 University City Blvd, Charlotte, NC 28223-0001

Description: Public papers of Frederick Douglas Alexander (1910-1980), a Charlotte politician and civil rights leader. Includes a copy of "Here is what the 'Civil Rights' proposals would do in Georgia: F. E. P. C. explained," a pamphlet (ca. 1948) supporting Herman Talmadge for governor of Georgia against Ellis Arnall, who is condemned for his support of the Fair Employment Practices Commission (FEPC); a flier (1950) from Know the Truth Committee accusing U. S. Senator Frank Porter Graham of favoring "mingling of the races" and urging support for his opponent Willis Smith; a letter (ca. 1956) from Patriots of North Carolina, Inc. opposing school integration; a report (ca. 1957-58) from North Carolina Virginia office of Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith concerning Ku Klux Klan activities in North Carolina; the platform (n.d.) of the North Carolina Defenders of States Rights, Inc.; and a letter (9-25-72) from Democrats for Helms supporting Jesse Helms for the United States Senate.

Websites with information:

https://libaws.uncc.edu/specialcollections/manuscripts

https://web.archive.org/web/20150929061913/http://specialcollections.uncc.edu/specialcollections/manuscripts

Finding aids:

https://findingaids.uncc.edu/repositories/4/resources/427

http://library.uncc.edu/manuscript/ms0091

https://library.uncc.edu/manuscript/ms0091

[0041] Robert Jackson Alexander Papers, 1890(1945)-1999, MC 974

Location: Special Collections and University Archives, Rutgers University Libraries, 169 College Ave, New Brunswick, NJ 08901

Description: A professor of economics at Rutgers University, Robert J. Alexander (1918-2010) conducted interdisciplinary research focused on Latin America, where he frequently traveled to conduct interviews, Spain (particularly the opposition to Franco) and international radical movements. Subject files include files on fascist, radical, and national revolutionary parties in Latin America. Folders on Communists and International Right Opposition, 1930-1940; Fascists--Argentina, 1925-1956; Fascists--Bolivia, 1942-1976; Fascists--Bolivia--Falange, 1967-1982; Fascists--Brazil, 1934-1965; Fascists--Chile--Nazis, 1933-1966; Fascists--Chile--Partido Nacional (Conservative), 1969-1972; Fascists--Colombia, 1940-1942; Fascists--Latin America--History and Miscellany, 1933-1944; Fascists--Mexico, 1935-1958; and U.S.--Politics--Conservatives, 1990; U.S.--Politics--New Right, 1983-1986.

Reference:

John D. French, "The Robert J. Alexander Interview Collection," Hispanic American Historical Review, 84:2 (2004), pp. 315-326, https://fds.duke.edu/db/attachment/41

Websites with information:

http://www.libraries.rutgers.edu/scua/manuscripts

http://www2.scc.rutgers.edu/ead/

http://www.libraries.rutgers.edu/rul/libs/scua/manuscripts/manuscripts.shtml

Finding aids:

http://www2.scc.rutgers.edu/ead/manuscripts/alexanderb.html

http://www2.scc.rutgers.edu/ead/manuscripts/alexanderf.html

[0041a] Ruth Alexander Papers, 1920-1973, Coll. 05136

Location: American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming, 1000 E. University Ave., Laramie, WY 82071

Description: Ruth Alexander (1899- ) was a conservative writer and lecturer. She was associate editor of "Finance" from 1942-1944, participated in several of the American Economic Foundation's "Wake Up, America!" radio broadcasts from 1940-1946, and was an editorial columnist for the New York "Mirror" from 1944-1963. She wrote a weekly column entitled "Our America" from the 1950s to the early 1970s. Alexander also had a short career as a concert pianist from 1929-1930. Collection includes manuscripts of "Our America" columns (1957-1973); transcripts of her "Wake Up, America!" broadcasts (1940-1946); speeches; manuscripts of articles by Alexander; photographs; a scrapbook of her career; and miscellaneous other materials.

Websites with information:

https://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/_files/collection_guides/journalism_guide_2005_ed2016.pdf

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/30790521

http://www.worldcat.org/title/papers-1920-1973/oclc/30790521

Finding aids:

https://rmoa.unm.edu/docviewer.php?docId=wyu-ah05136.xml

http://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/_files/pdffa/05136.pdf

[0042] Bruce Alger Collection, 1954-1979, MA 83-11

Location: Texas/Dallas History & Archives, Dallas Public Library, 1515 Young St, Dallas, TX 75201

Description: Alger (1918– ) was a U.S. representative from Texas (1954-1964). The Bruce Alger Collection begins with campaign and election in 1954, continues through his tenure in office and follows his political interests and activities up to 1979. Correspondence, speeches, legislative files, photographs, tape recordings, campaign material, unpublished manuscripts, and books. Files on American Challenge, American Coalition of Patriotic Societies, Americans for Constitutional Action (ACA), Anti-Semitic pamphlets, Cong. John Ashbrook, Communism, Conservative organizations, Conservative Society of America, Constitution Party, Dan Smoot Report, Don Bell Reports, Charles Edison, Facts Forum, Barry Goldwater, H. R. 9905 (1962) (to rescind and revoke membership of the United States in the United Nations and the specialized agencies thereof, and for other purposes), H. R. 263 (1963) (to rescind and revoke membership of the United States in the United Nations and the specialized agencies thereof, and for other purposes), Billy James Hargis, House Un-American Activities Committee, Human Events, Jews, John Birch Society, Liberty Amendment, Liberty Lobby Letter, Manion Forum, Congressman Noah M. Mason, Monroe Doctrine, Adm. Ben Moreell, National Indignation Convention, National Right to Work Newsletter, Panama Canal, Archibald Roberts (Lt. Col. Aus. Ret.), Phyllis Schlafly, Texas Committee for the Constitution, Inc., James B. Utt, General Edwin Walker, and George Wallace. Tape Recordings of Arch E. Roberts, Dan Smoot, and William F. Buckley.

Websites with information:

http://dallaslibrary2.org/texas/archives/findguides.htm

http://dallaslibrary2.org/texas/archives/a.htm

Finding aids:

http://dallaslibrary.org/CTX/archives/MA83-11.html

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/dalpub/08311/dpub-08311.html

http://dallaslibrary2.org/texas/archives/MA83-11.html

[0043] All-American Conference to Combat Communism records, 1950-1962, RH WL MS 18

Location: Kenneth Spencer Research Library, Wilcox Collection, Kansas Collection, University of Kansas, 1450 Poplar Lane, Lawrence, KS 66045-7616

Description: The All-American Conference to Combat Communism was formed in 1950 to defend American liberties and to expose and curtail Communism within the United States. These records of the organization were collected by Frederick S. Harris, one of the Conference leaders who was also National Commander of the Jewish War Veterans of the United States. The records consist primarily of Harris's correspondence with other leaders of the Conference, and include meeting programs and published statements of the organization's purpose.

Websites with information:

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/191201290

Finding aid:

http://etext.ku.edu/view?docId=ksrlead/ksrl.kc.allamericanconferencetocombatcommunism.xml

[0044] All-Russian National Union collection, fond 1/19

Location: Gosudarstvennyi arkhiv Rossiiskoi Federatsii (State Archive of the Russian Federation, or GARF), 119435, Moscow, ul. Much pirogovskaya 17, and 121059, Moscow, Berezhkovskaya nab., 26, Russia

Description: All-Russian National Union was a right-wing, nationalist organization.

Reference:

Collections of the State Archive of the Russian Federation on the History of Russia in the 19th and Early 20th Centuries. A Research Guide. Volume 1. 1994, http://guides.rusarchives.ru/browse/guidebook.html?­sid=680338&bid=201&

enc=eng

State Archive web page:

http://statearchive.ru

[0045] All Volunteer Clinic Escort for the Summit Women's Center Records, 1995-2002, MS 546

Location: Sophia Smith Collection, Smith College, Northampton, MA 01063

Description: The All Volunteer Escort Service for the Summit Women's Center in Bridgeport, Connecticut, was founded by Patricia Hendrickson in 1993. The Summit Women's Center is an abortion facility. The All Volunteer Escort Service was formed to escort patients and staff from the parking lot of the Summit Women's Center to the building, shielding them from harassment by anti-abortion protestors. The All Volunteer Clinic Escort Service Records include legal documents relating to court cases and legal actions involving the service, memorabilia including photographs and volunteer vests, and videotapes created by Donald Hendrickson documenting the anti-abortion protestors who formed around the Summit Medical Center.

Websites with information:

https://www.smith.edu/library/libs/ssc/orgsaf.html

https://asteria.fivecolleges.edu/findaids/sophiasmith/list/

Finding aids:

http://asteria.fivecolleges.edu/findaids/sophiasmith/mnsss366.html

http://asteria.fivecolleges.edu/findaids/sophiasmith/mnsss366_main.html

[0046] Norman Allderdice Collection, 1895-1984, Coll. 2000C53

Location: Hoover Institution Archives, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305-6010 [formerly the Social and Political Action Documents Collection at Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ]

Description: Norman Allderdice (1894-1961) was vice president and director of Pennsylvania Central Airlines from 1927 to 1935. Allderdice assembled this collection as an outgrowth of his conservative beliefs and interest in individual freedom. Contains pamphlets, leaflets, and other printed ephemera issued by right-wing, left-wing and other political organizations, and by governmental, business, labor, religious, educational and other organizations, relating to political, social and economic conditions in the United States and abroad, and especially to right-wing and left-wing movements in the United States. Information on Einar Åberg; Alabama Legislative Commission to Preserve the Peace; Alert Americans Association; Alerted Americans; Gary Allen; Allen-Bradley Company (Milwaukee, Wisconsin); Alliance, Inc. ("Race, Heredity, and Civilization," by Wesley Critz George (1963)); Alliance, Inc. ("Brainwashing and Senator McCarthy," by Joseph Zack Kornfeder (1954)); America First Committee (Chicago, Illinois); American Afro-Asian Educational Exchange, Inc.; American Bar Association; American Birthright Committee (Los Angeles, California); American Coalition of Patriotic Societies (Washington, D.C.); American Committee on Immigration Policies; American Committee to Free Cuba (Arcadia, California); American Conservative Union (Washington, D.C.); American Council for Judaism; American Council of Christian Laymen (Madison, Wisconsin); American Council of Christian Churches (New York); American Economic Foundation (New York); American Education Association; American Educational League; American Enterprise Association (Washington, D.C.); American Eugenics Party (Los Angeles, California); American Flag Committee (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania); American Friends of the Captive Nations; American Heritage Protective Committee (San Antonio, Texas); American Heritage Protective Committee ("Unfolding Social Security" (1952)); American Institute for Economic Research, Great Barrington, Massachusetts; American League for the Defense of Jewish Rights (later the Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League to Champion Human Rights); American Legion; American Legion National Americanism Commission; American Legion--Anti-Subversive Committee, Seattle, Washington; American Medical Association--Physicians opposed to fluoridation, Detroit, Michigan; American Mercury; American Nationalist, Inglewood, California; American Nazi Party, Arlington, Virginia; American Opinion; American Party; American Patriots in Defense of Christian Observances; American Progress Foundation; American Public Relations Forum ("Brainwashing: A Synthesis of the Russian Textbook on Psychopolitics" (undated)); American Public Relations Forum, Inc.; American Renaissance Book Club, Chicago, Illinois; American Renaissance Book Club ("The Chickens of the Interventionist Liberals Have Come Home to Roost," by Harry Elmer Barnes (1953)); American Security Council (ASC), Washington, D.C.; American States' Rights Party; American Survival Party; American Taxpayers Union of California, Inc.; American Way Program; American-Asian Educational Exchange, New York; American-Southern Africa Council; Americanism Educational League; Americans for America; Americans for Conservative Education; Americans for Constitutional Action ACA Index; Americans for Constitutional Action, Washington, D.C.; Americans for Freedom, Santa Barbara, California (Karen McKay); Americans for Mental Freedom, Merced, California; Americans for National Security; Americans United Council; Americans United for Separation of Church and State; America's Future; Thomas J. Anderson, Editorial articles; Tom Anderson "Farm Ranch"; Anglo-Saxon Committee; Anti-Communist Liaison (Committee of Correspondence), Arlington, Virginia; Appeal to Reason; Arizona Captive Nations Committee; Arizona Committee for Economic Freedom; Arizona Committee of Taxpayers, Inc.; Arizonans for America; Arizonans for General Walker, Phoenix, Arizona; Arizonans for Mental Freedom; Herbert W. and Ted Garner Armstrong; George W. Armstrong; John M. Ashbrook; "A Jewish View on Segregation" (Association of Citizen's Councils of Mississippi, undated) [online at http://digilib.usm.edu/cdm/compound­object/collection/manu/id/1948]; Assembly of Captive European Nations; Associates for Americanism; Association of Citizen's Councils, Greenwood, Mississippi; Australian League of Rights; Karl Baarslag; Harry Elmer Barnes; Barry Goldwater for President Committee; Fanchon Battelle; Bay Area Conservatives; Hilaire Belloc; Ezra Taft Benson; Bible News Flashes ("The Seven Judgments," by W. D. Herrstrom (1934)); E. M. Biggers; Bilderberg conferences; Bill Knowland for Governor Committee; Aldrich Blake; Bookmailer, Inc.; Anthony T. Bouscaren; Spruille Braden; John W. Bricker; Bricker Amendment; British Israel Association; The Buckman Press; "How the Communists Use Religion," by Edgar C. Bundy (undated); Eric D. Butler; California Free Enterprise Association; California Freedom Forum II; California League of Christian Parents; Californians' Committee to Combat Communism; Campaign for the 48 States; Canadian Intelligence Publications; Canadian League of Rights; Candour Publishing Company ("B.B.C.: A National Menace," by A. K. Chesterton (1972)); Cardinal Mindszenty Foundation, St. Louis, Missouri; The Catholic Challenger (W. L. King); Catholic Race Preservation Committee; Caxton Printers Limited; Caxton Printers ("Ex America," by Garet Garrett (undated)); "Persecution--Jewish and Christian," by Charles E. Coughlin; Chedney Press ("Wake Up America!" by Emanuel Josephson (1958)); A. K. Chesterton; Christian Alliance Against Illuminism; Christian Anti-Communism Crusade; Christian Anti-Communism Crusade--Fred Schwarz; Christian Beacon Press; Christian Crusade Publications; Christian Crusade, Tulsa, Oklahoma; Christian Crusader; Christian Educational Association, Union, New Jersey; Christian Freedom Foundation--Howard E. Kershner; Christian Nationalist Crusade, Los Angeles, California; Christian Nationalist Party, Los Angeles, California; Christian Patriotic Rally; Christian Patriots, Chester, Pennsylvania; Christian resistance; Christian Scientists to Combat Communism in the Christian Science Movement; Christian Youth against Communism, Los Angeles, California; Church League of America, Wheaton, Illinois; Church infiltration by communists; Cinema Educational Guild, Hollywood, California; Circuit Riders, Inc., Cincinnati, Ohio; Circuit Riders, Inc. ("Recognize Red China?" (1958)); Citizens Committee for a Free Cuba; Citizens Committee for Constitutional Liberties; Citizens Committee on Fluoridation; Citizens Committee to Restore U.S. Constitutional Sovereignty, Dallas, Texas; Citizens Council, Jackson, Mississippi; Citizens for Educational Freedom; Citizens Foreign Aid Committee, Washington, D.C.; Citizens Foreign Aid Committee ("Foreign Aid and You" (1959)); Citizens Protective Association, St. Louis, Missouri; Citizens' Council of Greater New Orleans; Citizens' Councils of America; Upton Close; Closer Ups ("The Anti-Defamation League and its Use in the World Communist Offensive," by Robert H. Williams (1947)); Committee for Survival of a Free Congress, Washington, D.C.; Committee on Anti-Communist Action, Centerville, Ohio; Committee of the States ("Save the Republic," by Robert C. Olney (1967)); Committee for 48 States, Washington D.C.; Committee of One Million ("Red China and the United Nations," by Peter H. Dominick (undated)); Committee on State Sovereignty ("The Citizen in Politics" (1958)); Committee of Russian Slaves of Jewish Communism, Union, New Jersey; Committee against Summit Entanglements, Belmont, Massachusetts; Committee on New Alternatives in the Middle East; Committee on Un-American Activities; Committee for the Hollywood Ten, Hollywood, California; Committee for McCarthyism ("The Red-addled 'brain' behind the Scripps-Howard smear of Senator Joe McCarthy," by Joseph P. Kamp (1954)); Committee on Pan-American Policy ("The Panama Canal: it must remain American," by Dr. Charles Callan Tansill (1963); Committee of Christian Laymen; Committee for Constitutional Government, Inc., New York; Committee for Pillion Resolution; Committee of Endorsers; Committee of One Million against the Admission of Communist China; Committee to Defend the Rights of the Arab Students and Workers, San Francisco, California; Committee to Save the McCarran Act; Committee for the Preservation of the Constitution ("What Is Metropolitan Government?" (1958); Common Sense, Union, New Jersey; Communism; "Israel's Fingerprints: Biblical Identification of the True Israel," by Bertrand L. Comparet (1949); Congress of Freedom ("The Secret Government of the United States," by Mary M. Davison (undated)); Congress of Freedom, Inc., Omaha, Nebraska; Connally Amendment; Conservative Book Club, New Rochelle, New York; Constitution Party U.S.A. ("To Restore and Preserve ..."); Constitution Party; Constitutional Educational League; "Communist Psychological Warfare (Brainwashing)," consultation with Edward Hunter (1958); Council for Statehood--Mary M. Davison (The Robbers' Roost (1964), The Second Rebellion (1971), and The Tale of the Guinea Pigs "greeting girls" (1960s)); Counterattack, New York; Kent Courtney; Kent and Phoebe Courtney; John G. Crommelin; Cathrine Curtis; Dan Smoot Report; Daughters of the American Revolution; Mary Davison; Defenders of the Christian Faith--Gerald B. Winrod ("The Great Christian Pledge" (1954) and "The United Nations, a tower of Babel" (1953)); Defenders of American Education; Defenders of State Sovereignty and Individual Liberties, Arlington Chapter, Virginia; Defenders of State Sovereignty and Individual Liberties; Defenders of the American Constitution, Washington, D.C.; Defenders of the Christian Faith; Defenders, Inc.; "Blueprint for Victory," by Robert DePugh (1966) [online at http://www.resist.com/Instauration/OtherPubs-20120723/BlueprintForVictory-DePugh.pdf]; Devin-Adair Company ("The Constitution Be Damned," by Orson Kilborn (1952)); Martin Dies; Elizabeth Dilling; Hilaire du Berrier; Eagle Forum ("The Real World of Working ..." (undated)); James Oliver Eastland (The Supreme Court's Modern Scientific Authorities in the Segregation Cases. Speech of Hon. James O. Eastland of Mississippi in the Senate of the United States Thursday, May 26, 1955) [online at http://digital.lib.uh.edu/­collection/integ/item/234]; Edmondson Economic Service; Education Information, Inc.; Educational Fund of the Citizen's Councils--"The Ugly Truth about the NAACP," by Eugene Cook (circa 1955)); Educational News Service; "The American Eagle Weapons for Freedom," by Edwin A. Walker (1961); Elmore County White Citizens Council, Wetumpka, Alabama; Harry T. Everingham; Facts Forum ("The Communist Party of the United States of America: What it Is, How it Works: A Handbook for Americans" (1955); Myron C. Fagan; Fascism; Federation for Constitutional Government; Bonner Fellers; Fellowship of Reconciliation; Florida Minuteman; Florida Coalition of Patriotic Societies, Tampa, Florida; Fluoridation; John T. Flynn; For All Comprehensive Truth Committee; For America; For America of Arizona; For America of California; For America, Washington, D.C.; Foreign Policy Association; Foundation for Economic Education, Irvington-on-Hudson, New York; Foundation for Re-education (Samuel Evans Hayes); Foundations; Free Enterprise Institute; Free Gold Market; Free Men Speak; The Free Society; Free Trade Union Committee of the American Federation of Labor [publisher of "Gulag"-Slavery, Inc. The Documented Map of Forced Labor Camps in Soviet Russia (1951)]; Flick-Reedy Corporation; Benjamin H. Freedman; Freedom Builders of America; Freedom Center (Portland, OR); Freedom Club of Downtown Chicago (Harry T. Everingham); Freedom Fighters; The Freedom School (The Pine Tree Press, Colorado Springs, Colorado); Freedoms Foundation at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania; Freeman, New York; Friends of General Walker, Dallas, Texas; Friends of Louis F. Budenz; Friends of Rhodesian Independence; Fundamental American Freedoms, Washington, D.C.; Garet Garrett; Goldwater for 1964; Greater Phoenix School of Anti-Communism; Greater Nebraskan; Elmore D. Greaves; Guardians of our American Heritage; Billy James Hargis; Headlines; Heads-Up; W. D. Herrstrom; Highlander Folk School, Knoxville, Tennessee; Alger Hiss; Adolf Hitler; Frank E. Holman; J. Edgar Hoover; Housewives Organized for Better Living; Bela Hubbard, Tucson, Arizona; Human Events; Humanitarian Society--R. Swinburne Clymer; Independent American, New Orleans, Louisiana; Industrial Defense Association, Inc.; Institute for American Democracy, Inc.; Institute for Special Research; Intercollegiate Society of Individualists, Inc.; Interim Committee for a New Party; International Alliance Against Communism; International Youth Federation for Freedom, Inc.; "Let's Try Freedom Again," by Jack B. Tenney (1954); "Mind-washing in America; a conspiracy against liberty," by Jack B. Tenney (undated); "Zion's Trojan Horse," by Jack B. Tenney (1954); Joint Council for Repatriation (Willis Carto); John Birch Society, Belmont, Massachusetts; George Racey Jordan; Justice for Pelley Committee; Joseph P. Kamp; Verne P. Kaub; Keep America Committee, Los Angeles, California; Kingdom Tract Society; Granville F. Knight; William F. Knowland; Fred C. Koch; Ku Klux Klan; Bracken Lee; Fulton Lewis, Jr.; League for Peace with Justice in Palestine (Benjamin H. Freedman); Liberation, New York; Liberation News Service; Liberty Amendment Committee of the U.S.A.; Liberty and property; Liberty Bell Press, Florissant, Missouri; Liberty Line, Bellingham, Washington; Liberty Lobby, Washington, D.C.; Life Line, Dallas, Texas; Charles Lindbergh; Lutheran Research Society, Detroit, Michigan; Douglas MacArthur; Joseph R. McCarthy; W. Henry MacFarland; Carl McIntire; MacArthur Freedom Association; George Malone; Clarence Manion; Manion Forum, South Bend, Indiana; MARAH, Inc., Florida; Vito Marcantonio; Maricopa County Co-ordinating Council of Federated Women's Republican Clubs; Victor E. Marsden; Maryland Constitutionalists, Baltimore, Maryland; J. B. Matthews; Mental health; Mesa Citizens Information Center; Methodist Laymen of North Hollywood; Metropolitan government; Minute Women; Minute Women U.S.A., Inc., Virginia Branch; Minutemen; Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission; Modern Age; Ben Moreell; George Van Horn Moseley; Mothers' Crusade for Victory over Communism; Karl E. Mundt--Historical and Educational Foundation, Washington, D.C.; Lyle H. Munson; National Association for the Preservation of White People, Columbia, South Carolina; National Blue Star Mothers of America, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; National Christian Association, Chicago, Illinois; National Citizens Protective Association; National Citizens Union; National Committee against Fluoridation, Washington, D.C.; National Committee for Economic Freedom, Los Angeles, California; National Committee of Christian Laymen, Phoenix, Arizona; National Committee to Uphold Constitutional Government, New York; National Council for American Education; National Defense Committee of the Daughters of the American Revolution; National Economic Council, New York; National Education Program; National Indignation Convention, Dallas, Texas; National Policy Committee; National Putnam Letters Committee; National Renaissance Party, New York; National Republic; National Research Bureau, Inc.; National Review; National Right to Work Committee, Washington, D.C.; National States Rights Party, Louisiana branch, New Orleans; National States Rights Party, Birmingham, Alabama; National Strategy Committee (American Security Council); National White Americans Party; National White People's Party, Asheville, North Carolina; National Youth Alliance, Washington, D.C.; Network of Patriotic Letter Writers; 1976 Committee (William J. Grede); New Republic: "The Financial Affairs of McCarthy ...," 1953; Nuremberg trials; Revilo P. Oliver; OMNI Publications, Hawthorne, California; Operation America, Washington, D.C.; Organization to Repeal Federal Income Taxes, Los Angeles, California; Patrick Henry Group, Richmond, Virginia; Patrick Chenoweth Defense Committee, Oakland, California; Patrick Henry League, Yonkers, New York; Patriotic Research Bureau--Chicago; Patriotic Order--Sons of America, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Paul Revere Associated Yeomen, Inc.; Paul Revere Patriots, Phoenix, Arizona; Westbrook Pegler; Plain-Speaker Publishing Company; Potsdam Agreement; Ezra Pound; Karl Prussion; Rampart College; Ronald Reagan; "Treaties to Destroy America," by Bryson Reinhardt (1954); Review of the News; Eddie V. Rickenbacker; Right, San Francisco, California; Rockwell reports; Archibald B. Roosevelt; Murray Rothbard; John H. Rousselot; Russian Slaves of Jewish Communism, Union, New Jersey; S. O. Sanderson, Rochester, Minnesota; Schlafly for Congress Committee, Alton, Illinois; John G. Schmitz, Santa Ana, California; J. Creagh Scott; Segregation; W. Cleon Skousen; Gerald L. K. Smith; Dan Smoot; George Sokolsky; Spiritual Mobilization; Standard Publications, Hollywood, California ("The Jews Won't Take Jack Tenney," by Jack B. Tenney (undated)) Alan Stang; States sovereignty; States' Rights Council of Atlanta, Georgia; Jeremiah Stokes; Subversive organizations; George Edward Sullivan (Wolves in sheep's clothing (Washington, D.C.: Sodality Union, 1937)) [online at https://ia800406.us.archive.org/1/items/wolvesinsheepscl00sull/wolvesinsheepscl00sull.pdf]; Supreme Court Amendment League (SCALE), Washington, D.C.; Charles Callan Tansill; Strom Thurmond; Ralph de Toledano; Torchbearers of America, Inc.; Truth about Civil Turmoil; Truth about Cuba Committee, Miami, Florida; Twentieth Century Evangelism; Twentieth Century Reformation Hour, Collingswood, New Jersey; United Klans of America, Inc.; United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO); United Republicans of America; United Societies of Methodist Laymen, Inc.; United States Day Committee, Inc., Tulsa, Oklahoma; United States Flag Committee; United World Federalists, Inc.; University of Arizona Young Republicans; Wickliffe B. Vennard; Vigilant Women for the Bricker Amendment, Hinsdale, Illinois; Virginia Commission on Constitutional Government; Voice of Americanism; Volunteers for Goldwater; Edwin A. Walker; Walker Defense Fund, Dallas, Texas; George C. Wallace, Montgomery, Alabama; Agnes Waters; We the People; Robert Welch; White American; Alice Widener; Robert H. Williams; Charles A. Willoughby; Gerald B. Winrod; Women Investors Research Institute, Washington, D.C.; Women's Voice, Chicago, Illinois; World Youth Crusade for Freedom; Yalta Agreement; Glenn O. Young; Young Americans for Freedom - National; Young Americans for Freedom - Phoenix Chapter; and Youth for the Voluntary Prayer Amendment.

Reference:

James Howard Fraser, A Guide to the Political and Social Action Documents in the Special Collections Division, Northern Arizona University Library (1967).

Websites with information:

http://www.hoover.org/news/new-finding-aids-posted-online-14

http://www.hoover.org/news/29085

Finding aids:

http://pdf.oac.cdlib.org/pdf/hoover/allderdi.pdf

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt6000265m/

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt6000265m/entire_text/

http://content.cdlib.org/view?docId=kt6000265m&doc.view=entire_text

[0047] Norman Allderdice Collection, 1902-circa 1990, D-404

Location: Department of Special Collections, General Library, University of California, Davis, 100 NW Quad, Davis, California 95616-5292

Description: Norman Allderdice (1894-1961) was a Pennsylvania industrialist. Collection of serial publications in the fields of conservative political and economic philosophy, Communism, socialism, Russian history, anti-Communism, and Soviet-American relations.

Websites with information:

https://www.library.ucdavis.edu/special-collections/manuscript/allderdice-norman-collection/

https://www.library.ucdavis.edu/special-collections/manuscripts/political-science/

http://www.lib.ucdavis.edu/dept/specol/collections/manuscripts/?subject=8

http://www.lib.ucdavis.edu/dept/specol/collections/manuscripts/index.php?collection=585

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt6000265m/entire_text/

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/search?style=oac4;Institution=UC%20Davis::Special%20Collections;descriptions=sh

ow;idT=UCD-002307119

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8j38vtn/entire_text/

[0048] Marilyn R. Allen papers, 1943-1967, Accn1718

Location: Special Collections, J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah, 295 South 1500 East, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112-0830

Description: Marilyn Ross Allen lived in Atlanta, Georgia, sometime before 1947, then moved to Ohio before settling in Salt Lake City, Utah. She was a far right-wing, anti-Communist, and anti-ethnic minority author of such books as Alien Minorities and Mongrelization, and the pamphlet series, I Love America. Collection contains correspondence, published and unpublished manuscripts, circulars, articles, news clippings, and letters to the Salt Lake Tribune (1952-1963).

Websites with information:

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/449252726

http://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/data/449252726

http://www.worldcat.org/title/marilyn-r-allen-papers-1943-1967/oclc/449252726

Finding aids:

http://content.lib.utah.edu/cdm4/item_viewer.php?CISOROOT=/UU_EAD&CISOPTR=3210

http://nwda.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv27139

[0049] Rowland Allen Papers, 1830-1972, M 508

Location: Manuscripts & Archives, Indiana Historical Society, 450 West Ohio Street, Indianapolis, Indiana 46202

Description: William Rowland Allen (1897-1973) was a personnel director in Indianapolis, one of the founders of the Indianapolis Civil Liberties Union in 1953, and a crusader against a number of radical organizations and movements including the Ku Klux Klan, National Socialism and Fascism, McCarthyism, and the John Birch Society. The papers include Rowland Allen's personal, professional, and civic correspondence, reports, meeting minutes, publications, and related materials. Box 23: Political Extremism, 1951-1967, contains folders on Joseph McCarthy v. State Dept., 1951-1953; McCarthy; John Birch Society; Papers on Communism; Communism and "Operation Abolition," 1960-1961; and anti-Communist newsletters.

Finding aid:

http://www.indianahistory.org/our-collections/collection-guides/rowland-allen-papers-1830-1972.pdf

[0049a] Alliance for Life Fonds, R3172

Location: Social and Cultural Archives, Manuscript Division, Library and Archives Canada, 395 Wellington Street, Ottawa, ON K1A 0N4, Canada

Description: Alliance for Life Canada, founded in 1968 in Ottawa, was an umbrella group for more than 200 local and provincial right-to-life organizations and Canada's first national anti-abortion organization. Alliance for Life Canada ceased operations in the late 1990s. The series Briefs - Reports - Submissions contains documents on abortion, euthanasia, in vitro fertilization, population, Roe vs. Wade, and assisted suicide. The series Publications includes copies of Actualité Vie, Alliance for Life - Bulletin, Alliance for Life - National Newsletter, Alliance for Life - Press Release, Alliance for Life - Report, Alliance for Life Resource Manual for the 90's, Pro-Life News, and The Uncertified Human. The series Subject Files contains files on Abortion, Canadian Physicians for Life, Pro-Life Brochures, and Abortion scrapbook.

Finding aid:

http://data2.archives.ca/pdf/pdf001/p000000712.pdf

[0049b] Records of the "Alliance Raciste Universelle," Berlin Branch (fond 1299), 1933-1935, RG-11.001M.14 [microfilm]

Location: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, 100 Raoul Wallenberg Place, SW, Washington, DC 20024-2126

Description: This collection contains organizational information about this pro-Nazi alliance, also known as European Union of Racists, whose purpose was to repulse purported Jewish influence on national life in various countries. Included are organizational bylaws, samples of the alliance periodical Judenkenner, materials on Jews and Freemasons, correspondence with local branches of the alliance and with Munich NSDAP headquarters, announcements of lectures, reports from sympathetic visitors to Germany who repudiated "Jewish hate propaganda," membership lists, and proofs of racial purity. Files on World Union of the Alliance of Racists; European Union of Racists; and Federation of European Nationals, whose purpose was to assist Aryans throughout Europe to avert foreign nationalist and particularly Jewish influences on their cultural life.

Websites with information:

https://www.ushmm.org/online/archival-guide/list.php

https://www.ushmm.org/online/archival-guide/detail.php?id=636

Finding aid:

https://www.ushmm.org/online/archival-guide/finding_aids/RG11001M14.html

[0049c] Alliance to End Repression records, 1969-1986, M1973.0056, M1975.0005, M1975.0

055?, M1976.0026, M1981.0019

Location: Research Center, Chicago History Museum, 1601 North Clark Street, Chicago, IL 60614-6038

Description: The Alliance to End Repression, created in 1970, was a fifty-member consortium of politically liberal or leftist organizations, including churches, labor unions, and human relations and community groups, which chose to work together to change government practices that threatened civil liberties. The Alliance addressed issues such as opposition to the death penalty, protection of prisoners' rights, gay rights, constitutional rights, and opposition to police surveillance for political purposes. The records consist of correspondence, memos, announcements, meeting minutes, topical files, and constituent organization files. Series 1. Operating files, 1969-1986. Subseries 1. General administrative and topical file, 1969-1986, contains files on "America's secret police network" by George O'Toole 1976 [George O'Toole, "America's Secret Police Network," Penthouse (December 1976) [on the Law Enforcement Intelligence Unit], online at https://fightgangstalking.files.wordpress.com/2013/05/americas-secret-police-network1.pdf]; Hate groups; Hate groups Nazism; impeachment of Richard M. Nixon; and school desegregation. Series 5. Legislative Efforts, 1971-1979, contains a file on Prayer in Schools.

Finding aid:

http://chsmedia.org/media/fa/fa/M-A/AER-inv.htm

[0049d] Dorothy Allison Papers, 1965-2010

Location: David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Duke University, Box 90185, 103 Perkins Library, Durham, North Carolina 27708

Description: Dorothy Allison (1949- ) is an author and feminist. The Dorothy Allison Papers include drafts and manuscripts of her writings, personal and professional correspondence, research materials and subject files, her personal journals, photographs, electronic files, and oversize materials. Subject Files Series, 1974-1998 and undated, contains files on Paul de Man pro-Nazi writings; Jesse Helms; Homophobia; Firing Line transcript: William Buckley, Andrea Dworkin and Harriet Pilpel; and Meese Report [Attorney General's Commission on Pornography].

Finding aid:

http://library.duke.edu/rubenstein/findingaids/allisondorothy.pdf

[0049e] Edward M. Almond Papers

Location: U. S. Army War College Library and Archives, U.S. Army Heritage and Education Center, U.S. Army Military History Institute (MHI), 950 Soldiers Drive, Carlisle, PA 17013-5021

Description: Edward Mallory "Ned" Almond (1892-1979) was a United States Army general during World War II and the Korean War. He was a member of conservative organizations such as the American Security Council, the American Conservative Union, Americans for Constitutional Action, and the John Birch Society.

Reference:

Michael E. Lynch, "'Sic 'em Ned': Edward M. Almond and His Army, 1916-1953" (Ph.D., Temple University, 2014), http://digital.library.temple.edu/cdm/ref/collection/p245801coll10/id/289819.

Websites with information:

http://usahec.polarislibrary.com/polaris/search/title.aspx?ctx=1.1033.0.0.1&pos=1

http://cdm16635.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/p16635coll18/id/38/rec/14

[0050] Selected Papers of Lieutenant General Edward M. Almond, USA, 1946-1951, RG-38

Location: Archives and Library, MacArthur Memorial, 198 Bank St, Norfolk, VA 23510

Description: Almond (1892-1979) served as MacArthur's Chief of Staff, SCAP, and Commander of X Corps in the Korean War. In the 1950s Almond was a member of the national policy committee of For America. He was among the high-ranking officers who endorsed John Beaty's anti-Semitic Iron Curtain over America (1951). These papers include facsimiles of correspondence and reports covering Almond's service under Douglas MacArthur, from the collections of the U.S. Army Institute of Military History.

Reference:

Michael E. Lynch, "'Sic 'em Ned': Edward M. Almond and His Army, 1916-1953" (Ph.D., Temple University, 2014), http://digital.library.temple.edu/cdm/ref/collection/p245801coll10/id/289819.

Websites with information:

http://www.macarthurmemorial.org/la_rg_lb_arch.asp

http://www.macarthurmemorial.org/337/MacArthur-Memorial-Archives-and-Library

[0051] J. Lindsay Almond, Jr., Papers 1850-1987, Mss1 AL685 a FA2

Location: Virginia Historical Society, 428 North Boulevard, Richmond, Virginia 23220

Description: James Lindsay Almond, Jr. (1898-1986) was governor of Virginia from 1958 until 1962.and a United States federal judge. Correspondence, 1925-1983; speeches, 1927-1979; financial and legal papers, 1948-1978; scrapbooks, 1934-1963; newspaper clippings, 1931-1987; miscellaneous volumes; certificates and awards. Series 1 contains correspondence with Harry Flood Byrd and James O. Eastland. Series 2 contains speeches concerning school desegregation, 1958-1960. Series 4 includes scrapbooks, 1934-1963, containing chiefly newspaper clippings from Richmond and Roanoke, Va., newspapers documenting Almond's fight against court-ordered desegregation of public schools. Series 5 contains newspaper clippings, 1931-1987, arranged chronologically, chiefly from Roanoke and Richmond, Va., papers, on the "massive resistance" movement.

References:

A Guide to State Records in the Archives Branch of the Virginia Branch of the Virginia State Library and Archives, comp. John S. Salmon (Richmond: Virginia State Library, 1985); Directory of Manuscript Collections Related to Federal Judges, 1789-1997. Compiled by Peter A. Wonders (Federal Judicial History Office, Federal Judicial Center, 1998), p. 7, http://www.fjc.gov/public/pdf.nsf/lookup/judmsdir.pdf/$file/­judmsdir.pdf and http://www.fjc.gov/public/pdf.ns

f/f385048e0431aa3c8525679e0055d35c/­2aca63df6e927c7485256a870045907f/$FILE/JudMsDir.pdf and https://b

ulk.resource.org/courts.gov/fjc/­judmsdir.pdf; Biographical Directory of Federal Judges, http://www.fjc.gov/history/home.nsf/page/­judges.html; Sonia Yaco, "Balancing Privacy and Access in School Desegregation Collections: A Case Study," The American Archivist, Vol. 73 (Fall/Winter 2010), pp. 637-668, http://anlex.com/balancing_aa.pdf.

Websites with information:

http://www.vahistorical.org/collections-and-resources/how-we-can-help-your-research/researcher-resource

s/finding-aids

Finding aids:

http://www.vahistorical.org/collections-and-resources/how-we-can-help-your-research/researcher-resource

s/finding-aids/almond-jr

http://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaxtf/view?docId=vhs/vih00019.xml

[0052] Alpha 66 Records, n.d., 1958-2003 (bulk 1963-1985), CHC5157

Location: Cuban Heritage Collection, University of Miami Libraries, 1300 Memorial Drive, P.O. Box 248214, Coral Gables, Florida 33124-0320

Description: The Cuban exile paramilitary organization known as Alpha 66 was first organized and founded in Puerto Rico in 1961 with 66 men. The group was created with the intention of maintaining the fighting spirit of the Cuban people after the Bay of Pigs Invasion. The Alpha 66 Records document the political, propaganda, paramilitary, and administrative activities of the organization as collected by Andrés Nazario Sargén, one of it's founders and longtime leaders. The Records include correspondence, circular letters, financial records, clippings, maps, photographs, press releases, proclamations, programs, propaganda, and reports. Series 1: Correspondence, undated, 1958-1995, contains files on Confederación Anticomunista Latinoamericana, World Anti Communist League (WACL), and World Youth Anti Communist League (WYACL).

Finding aid:

http://proust.library.miami.edu/findingaids/?p=collections/findingaid&id=487

[0053] Alphabetical Pamphlet Collection, 1878-1977, ALP [partly digital collection; pamphlet collection]

Location: University of Notre Dame Archives, 607 Hesburgh Library, Notre Dame, IN 46556

Description: Pamphlets, leaflets, novenas, liturgical booklets, catechisms, pastoral letters, papal encyclicals, reprints, and miscellaneous issues of periodicals concerning such topics as Fascism, Communism, socialism, racism, integration, and war. Includes pamphlets by Hilaire Belloc (How we got the Bible - 1934 [online at https://repository.library.nd.edu/view/630/000750800.pdf], and The Church & Socialism - 1931 [online at https://repository.library.nd.edu/view/629/000750798.pdf]), Rev. Chas. E. Coughlin (Lifting the Embargo - A Victory for the Vulture - 1939 [online at https://repository.library.nd.edu/view/1005/000746047.pdf], The Story of the Resurrection - 1940, Why Leave Our Own? - 1939, and Communism a World Menace - 1947), John F. Cronin SS (Prices in the United States - 1937, and Rugged Individualism - 1937 [online at https://repository.library.nd.edu/view/945/000051209.pdf]), and Edward Lodge Curran (The Hand of Pilate - Reply to Earl Browder's Message to Catholics Lent is Old Fashioned? - 1933, Madness of Magdalen - 1934).

Websites with information:

http://archives.nd.edu/findaids/ead/

Finding aid:

http://archives.nd.edu/findaids/ead/xml/alp.xml

[0054] Alternative and Radical Publications, 1962-1981 (bulk 1970s), Manuscript Group 57

Location: Special Collections and University Archives, Indiana University of Pennsylvania, Stapleton Library, Room 302, 431 South Eleventh Street, Indiana, PA 15705-1096

Description: These publications include political, religious, sociological, and other non-mainstream periodicals. Publications by or entitled Cardinal Mindszenty Foundation, Christian Crusade Weekly, Christian Economics, Christian Educational Association, Christian Nationalist Crusade, Common Sense, Don Bell Reports ("Damn the Constitution"), Foreign Policy Association, Foundation for Economic Education, Freedom Club Bulletin, Liberty Letter, National Education Program Letter, Rampart College, Richard Cotton's Conservative Viewpoint, Fred Schwarz, Task Force, The Cross and the Flag, The Church League of America, The Appeal to Reason, The Dan Smoot Report, The Alternative: An American Spectator, Truth - About Communism, and Washington Observer.

Websites with information:

http://www.iup.edu/page.aspx?id=75041

Finding aid:

http://www.lib.iup.edu/depts/speccol/All%20Finding%20Aids/Finding%20aids/MG%20or%20Col/MG57AlternativeRadicalPublications.pdf

[0055] Alternative Press Collection, ca. 1966-1977, Mss 169

Location: Department of Special Collections, Davidson Library, University of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA 93106

Description: The collection mainly contains latter 1960s and early 1970s U.S. newspapers, with an emphasis on California, but also some foreign titles. In most cases there are only single or scattered issues, not long runs. Included are newspapers devoted to African American, anti-war, Chicano/Latino, environmental, feminist, gay/lesbian, literary/poetry, radical/conservative, and religious themes and issues. Titles include Christian Beacon (Collingswood, NJ), Christian Crusade Weekly (Tulsa, OK), and National Christian News (Ocala, FL).

Websites with information:

http://libraries.ucsb.development-preview.com/special-collections/collections/aguides

http://www.library.ucsb.edu/special-collections/collections/aguides

Finding aid:

http://findaid.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/ft400003nx/entire_text/

[0056] The Alternative Press Collection, 1800s -present

Location: Archives & Special Collections, Thomas J. Dodd Research Center, University of Connecticut Libraries, 405 Babbidge Road Unit 1205, Storrs, CT 06269-1205

Description: The Alternative Press Collection (APC) was founded in the late 1960s as a repository for publications emanating from activist movements for social, cultural and political change. The collection contains more than 7,000 newspaper and magazine titles with 90 still on subscription, 5,000 books and pamphlets, 1,800 files of ephemera from activist organizations throughout the country, plus miscellaneous posters, broadsides, buttons, calendars and manuscripts. In addition to historic materials, the collection includes contemporary alternative publications as well, with 90 non-mainstream serials currently on subscription. Titles of conservative materials include American Spectator, Review of the News, The Phyllis Schlafly Report, The Turner Diaries, and White Patriot. Publications from far right wing groups such as the Ku Klux Klan, National Emancipation of the White Seed and the John Birch Society are also included in the collection. Researchers can search for publication titles and subjects in HOMER, the library's online catalog.

References:

Joanne V. Akeroyd, Alternatives: A Guide to the Newspapers, Magazines, and Newsletters in the Alternative Press Collection in the Special Collections Department of the University of Connecticut Library. 2d ed. Storrs, CT: The Library, 1976; Ellen E. Embardo, "The Alternative Press Collection, University of Connecticut," The Library Quarterly, Vol. 59, No. 1 (Jan. 1989), pp. 55-63; Graham Stinnett, "The Ku Klux Klan, Rebel Pride and Anti-Klan Resistance," July 8, 2015, http://blogs.lib.uconn.edu/archives/­2015/07/08/5767/.

Websites with information:

http://www.library.ucsb.edu/special-collections/research/general-manuscripts-collections

http://doddcenter.uconn.edu/asc/collections/apc/brochure.htm

http://www.celebratingresearch.org/libraries/uconn/altpress.shtml

http://www.clir.org/hiddencollections/registry/hc.0258

[0057] Alternative/Underground Press Collection, 1950-1989

Location: Browne Popular Culture Library, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, OH 43403-0001

Description: The BPCL's Alternative and Underground Press Collection currently contains more than 250 radical, anti-establishment, and counter-culture serial titles (nearly 2,000 issues), ranging in dates from 1950 to 1989. Under the category Anti-Communist/White Supremacist, the collection contains issues of The CDL Report (Baton Rouge, La.: Christian Defense League), Common Sense (Union, N.J.: Christian Educational Association, 1947-1972), Councilor (Shreveport, La.: Citizens' Council of Louisiana, 1962-), Fiery Cross (Tuscaloosa, Ala., R. M. Shelton), Independent American (Littleton, Colo.: [s.n., 195-]), The Patriotic Press (Cincinnati, Ohio: Patriotic Gifts, Inc., 1971-), Statecraft ([Alexandria, Va.: Statecraft, Inc.], 1968-), The Thunderbolt ([Birmingham, Ala.: National States Rights Party, 196-?]), and White Power ([Arlington, Va., George Lincoln Rockwell Party, etc.]).

Websites with information:

http://www2.bgsu.edu/colleges/library/pcl/page38347.html

http://www2.bgsu.edu/colleges/library/pcl/page38839.html

http://www.bgsu.edu/colleges/library/pcl/page38839.html

http://www2.bgsu.edu/colleges/library/pcl/page38704.html

http://www.bgsu.edu/colleges/library/pcl/altund4.html

[0058] Bernd Ewald Althans Collection on the Extreme Right in Germany, 1980-2000, ARCH02326

Location: International Institute of Social History (IISH), Cruquiusweg 31, 1019 AT Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Description: Born in Bremen, Germany, Bela Ewald Althans (1966- ) participated in paramilitary training of the Wehrsport but broke away with some friends to found the Nationale Jugend Deutschlands. Expelled from school, he joined the Deutsche Freiheitsbewegung der Bismarck-Deutsche of the former SS-major Otto Remer; in 1983 he became member of the neo-Nazist organization Aktion National Sozialisten (ANS) headed by Michael Kühnen; after his break with Kühnen at the end of the 1980s, he became friends with Ernst Zündel, a 'revisionist' publisher who denied the Holocaust. In 1990 he organized in Munich the conference "Wahrheit macht frei," which was a landmark in the history of revisionism, the movement to deny or dismiss the Holocaust. He broke with neo-Nazism in 1992, partly because of his aversion to the attacks/assaults on refugees and other foreigners in Germany, partly because of his bisexuality. He became known to a broader audience as the main figure in Winfried Bohnengel's documentary film Beruf: Neo-Nazi (1996). In 1995 he was sentenced to a term of three-and-a-half years imprisonment as a Holocaust denier and for agitation in earlier years; he left Germany after his release. The collection contains prison diaries; correspondence with neo-Nazist organizations in Europe, the USA and South Africa; address lists; documents on trials; pamphlets; illegal facsimile editions of publications of Joseph Goebbels and other documents.

References:

"Accessions," in Annual Report 2000 (Amsterdam, International Institute of Social History, 2001), pp. 32-33, http://socialhistory.org/sites/default/files/docs/annualreport2000.pdf; "Guide to the International Archives and Collections at the IISH: Supplement over 2000," International Review of Social History 45 (2001), pp. 321-334 (p. 322), https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/­S0020859001000189.

Websites with information:

http://socialhistory.org/en/collections/extreme-right-germany

http://socialhistory.org/en/node/2190

http://www.iisg.nl/collections/althans/

http://search.socialhistory.org/Record/ARCH02326/Description

http://hdl.handle.net/10622/ARCH02326

Finding aids:

http://hdl.handle.net/10622/ARCH02326

http://www.iisg.nl/archives/pdf/ARCH02326.pdf

http://www.iisg.nl/archives/en/files/a/ARCH02326.php

https://search.socialhistory.org/Record/ARCH02326

https://search.socialhistory.org/Record/ARCH02326/Export?style=PDF

[0059] Leaflet-collection from Bela Althans

Location: International Institute of Social History (IISH), Cruquiusweg 31, 1019 AT Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Description: Bela Althans, born in Bremen (Germany) in 1966, became a member of the Neo-Nazist organization Aktion National Sozialisten (ANS) in 1983; organized the conference "Wahrheit macht Frei" in 1990; broke with neo-Nazism in 1992; was sentenced to a three-and-a-half years term in 1995 for incitement and his denial of the Holocaust; left Germany after his release. Includes leaflets on Right extremism, Holocaust-denying, Nationalism, Jews and anti-Semitism, and South Africa (Apartheid).

Websites with information:

http://www.worldcat.org/title/brochure-collectie-bela-althans-leaflet-collection-bela-althans/oclc/85178084

http://184.168.105.185/archivegrid/collection/data/85178084

[0060] The Papers of Frank Altschul, 1884-1986 (bulk 1925-1980), MS#0022

Location: Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Columbia University, 6th Floor East Butler Library, 535 West 114th St., New York, NY 10027

Description: Personal papers of Frank Altschul (1887-1981), philanthropist, bibliophile, and authority in international affairs. The papers consistent correspondence, manuscripts, documents, memoranda, reports, printed material and photographs, and contain no business or financial records. The major series of the collection are: cataloged correspondence, general correspondence, Charles and Camilla Altschul files (his parents), writings of Frank Altschul and others, subject files, political correspondence, organizations and printed materials. Series I: Correspondence, 1884-1986, contains files on Warren Austin, Styles Bridges, William F. Buckley, James Buckley, Harry F. Byrd, René and Josée Chambrun, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Hamilton Fish, Ralph Flanders, Joseph Grew, Alger Hiss, Hamilton Holt, Herbert Hoover, J. Edgar Hoover, E.F. Hutton, Vivien Kellems, Alf Landon, David Lawrence, Henry C. Lodge, Jay Lovestone, Clare Boothe Luce, Henry R. Luce, Raymond C. Moley, Richard Nixon, Ogden Rogers Reid, Leverett Saltonstall, Robert Taft, Dorothy Thompson, James Warburg, and Wendell Willkie. Series IV: Subject and Political Files, 1919-1986. Subseries IV.1: Subject Files, 1919-1986, contains files on General John Frederick Charles Fuller, Jews and Judaism. Anti-Semitic Literature (c.1933-1942), and Jews and Judaism. Anti-Semitic Literature Sidney Hillman Campaign, 1944. Subseries IV.2: Political, 1932-1978, contains correspondence with John W. Bricker, H. Styles Bridges, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Herbert Hoover, Alf M. Landon, Joseph McCarthy, Sterling Morton, Robert A. Taft, and Wendell L. Willkie. Series V: Printed Materials, 1909-1984, contains files on Einar Åberg, America First, Inc., American Friends of Anti-Bolshevik Bloc of Nations (A.B.N.), American Mercury, American Nazi Party, Bricker Amendment, Frank L. Britton, Christian Anti-Communism Crusade, Christian Educational Association, Christian Nationalist Crusade, Cinema Educational Guild, Constitutional Educational League, Elizabeth Dilling, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Foreign Policy Association, Freedom House, Freedom School, Herald of Freedom, Herbert C. Holdridge, Human Events, Jewish Defense League, John Birch Society, Ku Klux Klan—Texas, McCarran Immigration Act, National Committee for a Free Europe, National Economic Council, National Renaissance Party, National States Rights Party, Neo-Nazis—Great Britain, Neo-Nazis—Iceland, Neo-Nazis—Mexico, Richard Nixon, Non Sectarian Anti-Nazi League, William Dudley Pelley, Pioneer News Service, Social Justice, U.S. Nationalist Party, James P. Warburg, White Sentinel, Robert H. Williams, Wendell Willkie, Gerald B. Winrod, and Women's Voice. Press Clipping Collection includes clippings on Barry Goldwater--William Miller, Robert A. Taft, and Un-American Activities (4 vols.). Series VIII: Organizations, 1908-1980, contains files on William F. Buckley, Jr., "God and Man at Yale," Correspondence and Book, 1951; Dwight D. Eisenhower; Fight For Freedom; Foreign Policy Association; Freedom House; National Committee for a Free Europe: Crusade for Freedom; National Committee for a Free Europe--Radio Free Europe: Crusade for Freedom, National Council for Civic Responsibility, Merwin K. Hart, Paul Körbel, Voice of America; National Committee to Uphold Constitutional Government; National Jeffersonian Democrats Declaration, 1960; and Rand Corporation.

Websites with information:

http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/archival/collections/ldpd_4078512/

Finding aids:

http://findingaids.cul.columbia.edu/ead//nnc-rb/ldpd_4078512

http://library.columbia.edu/locations/rbml/units/lehman/guides/altschul.html

[0060a] Frank Altschul papers, 1924-1941, MS 909

Location: Manuscripts and Archives, Sterling Memorial Library, Yale University, 128 Wall Street, P.O. Box 208240, New Haven, CT 06520

Description: Frank Altschul (1887-1981) was an authority on public finance and chairman of the General American Investors Co. Inc. The papers consist of a memorandum on the French foreign exchange situation (1924), letters from Altschul to Bernhard Knollenberg and Donald G. Wing, and the typescript of Altschul's book Let No Wave Engulf Us (1941).

Finding aids:

http://hdl.handle.net/10079/fa/mssa.ms.0909

http://drs.library.yale.edu/fedora/get/mssa:ms.0909/PDF

[0060b] Peter H. Amann Papers, 1929-1980 (bulk 1930-1940), UP001229

Location: Archives of Labor and Urban Affairs, Walter P. Reuther Library, Wayne State University, 5401 Cass Ave., Detroit, MI 48202

Description: Peter H. Amann (1927-2012) was a professor of history at the University of Michigan-Dearborn. The papers reflect Amann's research on the Black Legion, a vigilante organization which operated principally in Michigan and Ohio from 1925 through 1936. Series I, Investigatory Reports, 1923-1980, contains correspondence, and reports of federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies which conducted inquiries into the activities of the Black Legion in the mid-western United States. Series II, Black Legion Source Material, 1936-1980, contains clippings, correspondence, local histories, undergraduate papers, and reports generated by Amann's research on the Black Legion. Series III, Oral History Interviews, 1976-1979, contains transcripts of interviews conducted by Amann and his students. Correspondents include Samuel Dickstein, J. Edgar Hoover, and John Lesinski. Topics include American Legion; American League against War and Fascism; Black Legion; Constitutional Protective League; Charles E. Coughlin; Crusaders; Virgil [Bert] Effinger; Knights of the Ku Klux Klan; Ku Klux Klan; Mantle Club; National Federation for Constitutional Liberties; Night Riders; Our Sunday Visitor; Sentinels of the Republic; William Jacob "Doc" Shepard, M. D.; Silver Shirts; Maurice Sugar; and Vigilantes.

Reference:

Peter H. Amann, "Vigilante Fascism: The Black Legion as an American Hybrid," Comparative Studies in Society and History 25.3 (July 1983): 490-524.

Websites with information:

http://reuther.wayne.edu/abstracts?page=1

http://reuther.wayne.edu/node/2243

Finding aid:

https://reuther.wayne.edu/files/UP001229.pdf

[0060c] Amendment Two Collection, 1992-1993, MSS #1550

Location: Stephen H. Hart Research Center, History Colorado, 1200 Broadway, Denver, Colorado 80203

Description: Collection consists of approximately 800 letters written to the Denver newspaper the Rocky Mountain News reflecting the debate in Colorado over the so-called "Amendment Two," a controversial amendment to the Constitution of the State of Colorado that would have prevented all cities, counties, or towns from taking any legislation, executive, or judicial action to recognize gay or lesbian citizens as a protected class. In Romer v. Evans, argued before the U.S. Supreme Court in 1995, the Court ruled that the proposed amendment was unconstitutional.

Websites with information:

http://c70003.eos-intl.net/C70003/OPAC/Details/Record.aspx?BibCode=2863783

http://www.historycolorado.org/sites/default/files/files/Researchers/GLBTResourceGuide.pdf

[0060d] America First Committee Collection

Location: Swarthmore College Peace Collection, 500 College Avenue, Swarthmore, PA 19081-1399

Description: America First Committee, founded in September 1940, was a powerful isolationist group in America before America's entry into World War II.

Websites with information:

https://www.swarthmore.edu/library/peace/manuscriptcollections/mss_collections.html

[0061] America First Committee records, 1940-1942, Coll. 42001

Location: Hoover Institution Archives, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305-6010

Description: Correspondence, minutes, reports, studies, financial records, press releases, speeches, newsletters, campaign literature, clippings, photographs, and other audiovisual material, relating to the issue of American neutrality in World War II. Organization Department Files contain files on Charles A. Lindbergh, America First Club, Neutrality vote, Pettengill's file to Congressmen, Chapter reactions to C. A. Lindbergh's Des Moines speech (Sept. 11, 1941), and Special campaign - Neutrality Act fight. Publicity and Research Files contain files on Stephen A. Day, Fight for Freedom Committee, Hamilton Fish, John T. Flynn, Lord Halifax, Herbert Hoover, Keep America Out of War Congress, Alfred M. Landon, Lend-Lease Bill, Charles A. Lindbergh, Alice Longworth, Henry R. Luce, Hanford MacNider, Mothers' Groups, Karl E. Mundt, Neutrality, No Foreign War Committee, Senator Nye, George N. Peek, General Robert Wood, Porter Sargent, Robert A. Taft, American Economic Foundation, Citizens No Foreign War Coalition, Dorothy Thompson, Honorable George Holden Tinkham, Senator Burton K. Wheeler, Wendell L. Willkie, and Uncensored. Speakers Bureau Files contain files on Harry Elmer Barnes, Congressman Usher L. Burdick, Senator Capper, Gertrude Coogan, Congressman Stephen A. Day, Hamilton Fish, Congressman Clare E. Hoffman, Honorable Rush D. Holt, Honorable Ben F. Jensen, Senator William Langer, Charles A. Lindbergh, Senator Pat McCarran, Colonel MacNider, Dean Clarence Manion (Notre Dame University), Congressman Karl Mundt, William H. ("Alfalfa Bill") Murray, Senator Gerald P. Nye, Senator Lee O'Daniel, George N. Peek, Samuel B. Pettengill, Senator Robert R. Reynolds, Senator Robert A. Taft, and Senator Burton K. Wheeler. Miscellaneous Office Files contain files on A.F.C. Bulletins, Neutrality Law, Lend-Lease Bill, Tribute to General Wood, Colonel Lindbergh's Des Moines speech, R.E. Wood-correspondence, Alfred M. Landon-correspondence, Charles Lindbergh-clippings, and A.F.C. Newsletters (Impeachment of Roosevelt, Against Lend-Lease, Political backing for isolationists, Neutrality debate in Senate, Connection with Nazis). Sound Recordings contain recordings of a Charles Lindbergh speech 1941 April 23 (This speech was delivered at Manhattan Center and broadcast by WMCA in New York); an interview with Brigadier General Robert E. Wood 1941 July 25; a Senator Burton K. Wheeler speech undated; and a Robert E. Wood speech: Our Foreign Policy, 1940 October 26. Correspondents include William Benton, L. M. Birkhead, Lawrence Dennis, J. T. Flynn, Frederick Kister, Sterling Morton, G. N. Peek, S. B. Pettengill, Edward Rickenbacker, E. J. Smythe, Jacob Thorkelson, Mrs. E. S. Welch, B. K. Wheeler, and General Robert E. Wood. Mimeographed texts of addresses by Hamilton Fish, J. T. Flynn, C. A. Lindbergh, G. P. Nye, B. K. Wheeler, and R. E. Wood.

References:

Wayne S. Cole, "The America First Committee," Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society, Volume 44, No. 4 (Winter 1951), pp. 305-322, http://dig.lib.niu.edu/ISHS/ishs-1951winter/ishs-1951winter-305.pdf; Wayne S. Cole, America First: The Battle Against Intervention 1940-1941 (Madison, The University of Wisconsin Press, 1953), http://archive.org/stream/americafirsttheb000771mbp/americafirsttheb­000771mbp_djvu.txt.

Finding aids:

http://pdf.oac.cdlib.org/pdf/hoover/reg_345.pdf

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf9s20075g/entire_text/

Finding aids to photographs (42001 - 8.01/03):

Contains 18 photographs of General Robert E. Wood, John T. Flynn, Alice Roosevelt Longworth, Charles A. Lindbergh, Sen. D. Worth Clark, Kathleen Norris, Lillian Gish, and Cong. Karl E. Mundt.

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt7c603790/entire_text/

http://cdn.calisphere.org/data/13030/90/kt7c603790/files/kt7c603790.pdf

[0062] America First Committee research collection, 1940-1942, Manuscript Collection No. 411

Location: Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library, Robert W. Woodruff Library, Emory University, Atlanta, GA 30322-2870

Description: The America First Committee was founded in the summer of 1940 as an "anti-interventionist" organization opposed to President Franklin Roosevelt's foreign policy decisions leading up to U.S. entry into World War II. The committee espoused isolationism, argued for increased spending for U.S. domestic defense, and opposed U.S. entry into World War II. The collection consists of papers collected by Morris Burns Stanley from 1940 until 1942. The papers include the America First Committee's correspondence, printed material relating to the movement, and a box of research notes. The bulk of the collection consists of correspondence between Stanley and leading Committee members and other active members of the non-interventionist movement, including Harry Byrd, D. Worth Clark, James Fallon, Gerald P. Nye, Robert R. Reynolds, and Charles W. Tobey. The collection also contains copies of the Congressional Record; printed material regarding the organization; America First Committee reports; a box of research notes probably compiled by Stanley; and printed material by the Friends of Democracy, an organization opposed to the efforts of the America First Committee.

Finding aids:

http://findingaids.library.emory.edu/documents/stanley411/

http://findingaids.library.emory.edu/documents/stanley411/printable/

[0063] America First Movement, MS10

Location: Manuscripts and Archives, McCormick Library, Northwestern University Library, 1970 Campus Drive, Evanston, IL 60208-2300

Description: This collection provides materials from three sources: the America First Committee, other American groups with similar goals, and German propaganda in the 1930s. Materials include pamphlets, small monographs, serials, correspondence, flyers, posters, political ephemera, and photographs. The first section is composed of materials from the actual America First Committee, a group opposed to American entry into World War II, active in 1940-1941. Many of these pieces are concerned in particular with the Los Angeles area branch of the movement. The second section is made up of materials from other American groups, who, while having the same goal as the America First Committee, were not officially affiliated with it. These groups are also from the Los Angeles area. Most are extremely conservative and materials reflect the anti-Semitism, racism, and anti-Communism masquerading behind the respectable front of association with the America First Committee itself and Charles Lindbergh. Also included in the movement were pro-German Bund societies, and some pieces reflect that association. The third category of materials in the collection include pamphlets, serials, and photographs from Germany.

Websites with information:

http://www.library.northwestern.edu/libraries-collections/evanston-campus/special-collections/manuscripts-and-archives

Finding aids:

http://files.library.northwestern.edu/spec/americafirst.pdf

http://web.archive.org/web/20100607155133/http://www.library.northwestern.edu/spec/pdf/americafirst.p

df

https://web.archive.org/web/20100607155133/http://www.library.northwestern.edu/spec/pdf/americafirst

.pdf

[0064] America Magazine Archives, c.1909-1989 (bulk 1909-1989), GTM.GAMMS60

Location: Booth Family Center for Special Collections, Georgetown University Library, 37th & O Streets NW, Washington, DC 20057-1174

Description: With headquarters in New York City, America Magazine was founded in 1909. Contains correspondence from Ezra Pound to Francis Talbot, Mar. 26 [1940?], to S[tephen] J. Meany, Sept. 7, 1940, to America Press and S.J. Meany, Apr. 26, 1959, and to Thurston Davis, May 29, 1959; the National Gentile League [Donald Shea], which alleges a connection between U.S. Jews and Communism, 1938; Edward A. Rumely of the League for Constitutional Government (National Committee to Uphold Constitutional Government), 1939; Dorothy Thompson, 1939; T.S. Eliot to John LaFarge, S.J., Sept. 17, 1946; George S. Viereck [sometimes under the nom de plume Donald Furthman Wickets], 1939-1940; George Lincoln Rockwell, the head of the American Nazi Party, May 26, 1964; J. Edgar Hoover to Thurston Davis, Apr. 10, 1958, to F.X. Talbot, S.J., Aug. 24, 1937, and Dec. 20, 1937, to F.D. Sullivan, S.J., Dec. 9, 1937, and to Benjamin L. Masse, Mar. 16, 1944; U.S. Senator Gerald P. Nye, 1934; Leonard Feeney, S.J. 1928-1934; John Birch Society, 1961; Merwin K. Hart, Chairman of the Committee to Send Anesthetics and Medicines to Spain, 1939-1943; a letter (Jul. 11, 1940) from the Bishop of Savannah, Georgia [Bishop Gerald P. O'Hara], which addresses the subject of an invitation extended by him to the Ku Klux Klan Imperial Wizard [Hiram Wesley Evans] to attend the dedication of the Co-Cathedral of Christ the King in Atlanta in 1939; Westbrook Pegler, 1956-1964; Rev. Charles Coughlin, 1939-1941; and correspondence (1939) pertaining to the anti-Semitic news releases of the Nationalist Press Association [New York]. Also includes manuscripts by Ezra Pound and copies of the following manuscripts and publications: Elizabeth Dilling, Director of the Patriotic Research Bureau [Chicago], "Has America Two Major Parties?" (1940), concerning Wendell Willkie's nomination bid for the Republican Presidential ticket (1940); a newsletter of the Patriotic Research Bureau [for the Defense of Christianity and Americanism] [Elizabeth Dilling], containing the reprint of a Chicago "Daily News" article (1938) on Bishop Bernard J. Sheil; a copy of "The Hour" (100 E. 42nd St., New York) (Sept. 27, 1941), dedicated to exposing Nazi and Fascist activities in the United States, which features the activities of Charles A. Lindbergh, Charles Coughlin, and America First; a printed copy of "A Letter to Americans" (1941) by Charles A. Lindbergh; Character Study of Bertrand Russell, by Harry A. Jung; a news bulletin (1933) pertaining to the recently appointed Assistant Secretary of State, Raymond Moley; Spain material news releases and varia (1936-1937) pertaining to Rightist Propaganda; a newsclipping (1939) concerning John V. Henkel, a pro-Franco/fascist news reporter; an article by Leonard Feeney, S.J., "The Brown Derby" (1928); Hilaire Belloc's pamphlet "The Catholic and the War"; a newsclipping (1941) of an article by Henry R. Luce; newsclippings and periodicals (1961-1962) pertaining to the John Birch Society; newsclippings (1940) which pertain to U.S. isolationism in the early years of World War II; newsclippings (1940) pertaining to J. Edgar Hoover and the Federal Bureau of Investigation; correspondence and newsclippings (1939-1940) pertaining to the Ku Klux Klan; an anti-B'nai B'rith Society pamphlet entitled "B'nai B'rith-An International Anti-Christian, Pro-Communist Jewish Power," by John Merrick Church [i.e., Robert Edward Edmondson] (ca. 1938) [online at https://repository.library.nd.edu/view/1085/­000768945.pdf]; an article by Westbrook Pegler, "Why the Catholics Shouldn't Be Indignant Against Gov't in Spain" (1938); an anti-Semitic pamphlet entitled Judaism and Bolshevism: A Challenge and a Reply, by Annie Homer (1936), which alleges, among other things, that Judaism is the source of Bolshevism; newsclippings (1940) pertaining to Joseph E. McWilliams, anti-Semitic leader of the American Destiny Party; newsclippings (1940-1941) pertaining to Herbert Hoover's food plan; Herbert Hoover's radio address entitled "Can Europe's Children Be Saved?"; newsclippings (1954-1958) pertaining to U.S. Senator Joseph McCarthy of Wisconsin; newsclippings pertaining to Rev. Charles Coughlin, covering the period 1935-1940; a typescript entitled "Round Table on Father Coughlin," in which some of Coughlin's 16 points [i.e., the 16-point program of the National Union For Social Justice] are analyzed and discussed; The Real Father Coughlin (1939), by A.B. Magil [online at http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/­31735061658427.pdf]; and Father Coughlin on the Air (1938), by Msgr. John A. Ryan.

Websites with information:

http://www.library.georgetown.edu/dept/speccoll/sj.htm

http://www.library.georgetown.edu/dept/speccoll/clt1.htm

http://guides.library.georgetown.edu/c.php?g=424692

Finding aids:

https://repository.library.georgetown.edu/bitstream/handle/10822/559221/GTM.GAMMS60.html

http://www.library.georgetown.edu/dept/speccoll/cl60.htm

Self-extracting finding aid:

http://www.library.georgetown.edu/dept/speccoll/gufa160.exe

[0064a] American authors collection, 1832-1956, M0122

Location: Department of Special Collections and University Archives, Green Library, Stanford University, 557 Escondido Mall, Stanford, CA 94305-6064

Description: Literary manuscripts and letters of American writers, as well as autographs, portraits, newspaper clippings, and pamphlets. The collection includes a manuscript by George Creel and letters from Thomas A. Edison, Ernst Hanfstangl, Hiram Johnson, David Starr Jordan, Goodwin J. Knight, William F. Knowland, Dorothy Thompson Lewis, Benito Mussolini, Ezra Pound, George Santayana, and William Butler Yeats.

Websites with information:

https://searchworks.stanford.edu/view/4082812

Finding aids:

http://pdf.oac.cdlib.org/pdf/stanford/mss/m0122.pdf

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf5s2004n1/entire_text/

[0065] American Birth Control League records, 1917-1934 (bulk 1921-1928), MS Am 2063

Location: Houghton Library, Harvard Yard, Harvard College Library, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138

Description: The American Birth Control League (ABCL) was an organization founded in New York City in 1921 by birth control pioneer Margaret Sanger (1879-1966). The bulk of the collection is correspondence and office files of the workers, both paid and volunteer, who staffed the New York Office. Files on American birth control conference (1st: 1921: New York, N. Y.), William Edgar Borah, Arthur Capper, Corrado Gini, Madison Grant, International Birth Control Conference, International Federation of Neo-Malthusian and Birth Control Leagues, International Neo-Malthusian and Birth Control Conference, Hiram Johnson, Ku Klux Klan, Marie Carmichael Stopes, and Women's Christian Temperance Union. Correspondents include American Social Hygiene Association, Harry Elmer Barnes, Birth Control Review, Luther Burbank, Carnegie Institution of Washington, Charles Benedict Davenport, Denver (Colo.) Juvenile Court, Henry Herbert Goddard, Vivien Kellems, Harry Hamilton Laughlin, Ben B. Lindsey, Clarence C. Little, Amos Pinchot, Walter Ashby Plecker, Margaret Sanger, and Lothrop Stoddard.

Websites with information:

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/allFindingAids?_collection=oasis

Finding aid:

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~hou00030

[0065a] American Bureau for Medical Aid to China Records, 1937-2005, Ms Coll\ABMAC

Location: Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Butler Library, 6th Floor, Columbia University, 535 West 114th Street, New York, NY 10027

Description: The American Bureau for Medical Aid to China (ABMAC) was founded in 1937 to give aid to Chinese medical and public health services by working through existing Chinese medical agencies. Between 1937 and 1945 more than ten million dollars in aid was given to China. In 1949 when the Peoples Republic of China was established, ABMAC shifted its aid to Taiwan. The papers consist of correspondence, memoranda, reports, minutes, committee files, membership records, financial records, fund raising records, motion pictures, audio tapes, phonograph records, photographs, posters, publications of ABMAC and other printed materials. Also included are the files of related Chinese relief organizations, including Aid Refugee Chinese Intellectuals, 1954-1969, and 45 phonograph records including speeches by such ABMAC supporters as Mme. Chiang Kai-Shek, Pearl S. Buck, Wendell Willkie, Fiorello LaGuardia, and a number of movie stars. Series I: Cataloged Correspondence, contains files on Pearl Sydenstricker Buck, Claire Lee Chennault, Mayling Soong Chiang (Mme. Chiang Kai-Shek), and Hu Shih. Series II: Permanent File, contains files on Pearl Buck, Claire L. Chennault, Chennault Fund for Front Line Freedom Fighters, Mme. Chiang Kai-shek, James W. Clise, Charles Edison, Hu Shih, Walter H. Judd, Alfred Kohlberg, and Albert C. Wedemeyer. Series III: Program Files, contains a file on Walter H. Judd. Series IV: Alfred Kohlberg File, contains a file on Alfred Kohlberg. Series VIII: Aid Refugee Chinese Intellectuals, contains files on the organization. Series XIV: Printed Materials, contains files on Committee of One Million: Chiang Kai-Shek Speeches and Messages (Mr. and Mrs.), Joseph C. Grew, Stanley K. Hornbeck, Hu Shih, and Walter H. Judd.

Finding aids:

http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/archival/collections/ldpd_4079642/

http://findingaids.cul.columbia.edu/ead/nnc-rb/ldpd_4079642/dsc

[0065b] American Catholic Pamphlets and Parish Histories Database [pamphlet collection]

Location: Rare Books and Special Collections, Mullen Library, Room 214, The Catholic University of America, Washington, DC 20064

Description: The subject Communism includes such titles as American Bar Association, Brief on communism (Notre Dame: Ave Maria Press, 1952); Communism and the masses, by Joseph C. Davoli (New York: America Press, 1937); Communists still war on God! by Maurice S. Sheehy (Huntington, Ind.: Our Sunday Visitor, 1956); Light your lamps, by Bishop Fulton J. Sheen (Washington, D.C.: National Council of Catholic Men, 1947); Two Chinas, by Daniel Lyons, S.J. (New York, NY Twin Circle Publishing Company, 1968); Catholic front, by Edward Lodge Curran (Brooklyn: International Catholic Truth Society, 1936); Complete exposure of Russian communism, by M.D. Forrest, M.S.C. (St Paul: Radio Replies Press, 1949); Menace of Rutherfordism, by Charles P. Windle (Chicago, IL, Iconoclast Publishing Company [1920]); Red war on religion, by Clare Gerald Fenerty (Brooklyn: Tablet, 1946); Conferences on communism, by Cardinal Richard J. Cushing (Boston: Daughters of St. Paul, 1962); Relation of religion to communism, fascism and democracy, by John A. Ryan (N.p.: American Sociological Society, 1937); Why Pope Pius XI asked prayers for Russia on March 19, 1930, by Edmund A. Walsh, S.J. (New York: Catholic Near East Welfare Association, 1930); Crisis in history, by Bishop Fulton J. Sheen (St. Paul: Catechetical Guild Educational Society, 1952); Rulers of Russia. American edition, third edition, revised and enlarged, by Denis Fahey, C.S.Sp. (Royal Oak: Social Justice Publishing Co., distributors, 1940); Wolves in sheep's clothing, by George Edward Sullivan (Washington, D.C.: Sodality Union, 1937) [online at https://ia800406.us.archive.org/­1/items/wolvesinsheepscl00sull/wolvesinsheepscl00sull.pdf]; Christian civilization versus Bolshevist barbarism, by M.D. Forrest, M.S.C. (Huntington, Ind.: Our Sunday Visitor, 1937); NCWC Department of Social Action, Communism in the United States (Washington, D.C.: NCWC. Department of Social Action, 1937); Spain in arms (with notes on communism), by Edward Lodge Curran (Brooklyn: International Catholic Truth Society, 1936); Church and communism, by Cardinal Richard J. Cushing (Boston: Daughters of St. Paul, 1962); Neutrality Bill - the first step towards Communism, by Charles E. Coughlin (Royal Oak, 1939); World war on God, by Victoria Booth Demarest (Huntington, Ind.: Our Sunday Visitor); Communism is un-American, by Cardinal Francis J. Spellman (New York: Constitutional Educational League, Inc., ca. 1946); American democracy vs. racism, communism, by John A. Ryan (New York: Paulist Press, 1939); Comments on communism, by Cardinal Richard J. Cushing (Boston: Daughters of St. Paul, 1959); Communism the child of socialism (Huntington, Ind.: Our Sunday Visitor, 1930?); Not Anti-Semitism but Anti-Communism, by Charles E. Coughlin (Royal Oak: Radio League of the Little Flower, 1938); Statements on the war and Hitler, by John A. Ryan (Washington, D.C., 1942); Americanism vs. Communism: liberty or tyranny, by David Goldstein (St. Louis: Central Bureau Press, 1936); Communism: A world menace, by John F. Cronin, S.S. (Washington, D.C.: National Catholic Welfare Conference, 1947); Communism, by Cardinal Richard J. Cushing (Boston: Daughters of St. Paul); Communism: the opium of the people, by Bishop Fulton J. Sheen (Paterson: St. Anthony's Guild, 1937); Communism's challenge to youth, by Bishop Duane G. Hunt (Huntington, Ind.: Our Sunday Visitor); Appeal to all Americans to join the battle against communism, by Cardinal Richard J. Cushing (Boston: Daughters of St. Paul); 'Persecution - Jewish and Christian' and 'Let us consider the record,' by Charles E. Coughlin (Royal Oak: Radio League of the Little Flower, 1938); Popular Front, by Charles E. Coughlin (Royal Oak, 1939); Beware of the 'Patriots' Who are they? What are they up to? And why? by Lon Francis (Huntington, Ind.: Our Sunday Visitor, 1947); Communistic crisis, by Joseph A. Vaughan, S.J. (Huntington, Ind.: Our Sunday Visitor); It is happening here, by John Francis (Huntington (Ind.): Our Sunday Visitor, 1937); Questions and answers on communism, by Cardinal Richard J. Cushing (Boston: Daughters of St. Paul); and Lecture ... Social Justice and Communism, by Charles E. Coughlin (Royal Oak: Radio League of the Little Flower, 1935).

Finding aid:

http://www.lib.cua.edu/rarebook/taxonomy/term/7059

[0066] American Citizens Concerned for Life, Inc., Records, 1968-1986 (bulk 1974-1982)

Location: Gerald R. Ford Library, 1000 Beal Avenue, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2114

Description: American Citizens Concerned for Life, Inc. (ACCL) was a national pro-life organization formed after the 1973 United States Supreme Court cases of Roe v. Wade and Doe v. Bolton, both of which upheld a woman's right to an abortion. In addition, papers regarding the National Right to Life Committee and the Minnesota Citizens Concerned for Life are housed within the collection. The series American Citizens Concerned for Life Administrative File, 1973-1986, contains Marjory Mecklenburg correspondence and files on Gerald R. Ford, Nellie Gray, Timothy LaHaye, Clare Boothe Luce, Dr. Fred Mecklenburg, Marjory Mecklenburg, Bernard N. Nathanson, and Mary Senander.

Websites with information:

http://www.fordlibrarymuseum.gov/library/guides/guidecollectionsa-m.asp

http://www.ford.utexas.edu/library/fordguide.pdf

Finding aids:

http://www.fordlibrarymuseum.gov/library/guides/findingaid/americancitizens.asp

https://www.fordlibrarymuseum.gov/library/guides/findingaid/americancitizens.asp

http://archive.today/RBjXh

[0067] Records of American Civil Liberties Union, 1917-date, CDG-A

Location: Swarthmore College Peace Collection, 500 College Avenue, Swarthmore, PA 19081-1399

Description: The ACLU grew out of the American Union Against Militarism, which was founded in 1916 and dissolved in 1922. A subsection of the AUAM was called the National Civil Liberties Bureau; in 1920 it changed its name to the American Civil Liberties Union. Roger Baldwin was its director for 30 years (1920-1950), followed by Patrick Murphy Malin. Contains correspondence re: "Professional Patriots," 1927-1928.

Finding aid:

http://www.swarthmore.edu/library/peace/CDGA.A-L/aclu.htm

[0068] American Civil Liberties Union. Cincinnati Chapter. Records, 1961-1971, 1976-1983, 1968-1986, Accession Nos.: US-74-1, US-75-16, US-86-20, US-89-3

Location: Archives and Rare Books Library of the University of Cincinnati Libraries, 8th Floor Blegen Library, P.O. Box 210113, 2602 McMicken Circle, Cincinnati, Ohio 45221-0113

Description: Records, including minutes, financial information, articles, newsletters, office files, organizational material and publications. Files on Abortion; Church / State; Desegregation; Hand Gun Control; KKK; Nazi Party; Pornography; School Desegregation; Skokie Case; Right to Life Mailing; New Far Right News Clips; Nazis; Terrorism; Scientific Creationism Decision-Arkansas US District Court; HUAC-Operation Abolition 1960-1961; Censorship-Citizens for Decent Literature; Civil Rights-Becker Amendment (Church and State); Labor - Miscellaneous (re: Right to Work Laws), 1965; Church-State Separation, 1967 - Abortion, 1966-1968; and Church-State Separation - School Busing, 1967.

References:

Whitney Strub, "Perversion for Profit: Citizens for Decent Literature and the Arousal of an Antiporn Public in the 1960s," Journal of the History of Sexuality, Volume 15, Number 2 (May 2006), pp. 258-291, https://stru

blog.files.wordpress.com/2014/08/15-2strub.pdf; Whitney Strub, Perversion for Profit: The Politics of Pornography and the Rise of the New Right (New York, Columbia University Press, 2013).

Websites with information:

https://web.archive.org/web/20131511053800/http://www.libraries.uc.edu/libraries/arb/archives/collections/urban_coll.html

http://www.libraries.uc.edu/arb/collections/urban-studies/us-collections.html

Finding aids:

https://web.archive.org/web/20100615044357/http://www.libraries.uc.edu/libraries/arb/archives/inventories/aclu.pdf

http://rave.ohiolink.edu/archives/ead/OhCiUAR0171

http://rave.ohiolink.edu/archives/ead/OhCiUAR0172

http://rave.ohiolink.edu/archives/ead/OhCiUAR0173

http://ead.ohiolink.edu/xtf-ead/view?docId=ead/OhCiUAR0171.xml&query=&brand=default

http://ead.ohiolink.edu/xtf-ead/view?docId=ead/OhCiUAR0172.xml&query=&brand=default

http://ead.ohiolink.edu/xtf-ead/view?docId=ead/OhCiUAR0173.xml&query=&brand=default

[0069] American Civil Liberties Union. Illinois Division. Records, 1920-1982

Location: Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library, 1100 E. 57th Street, Chicago, IL 60637-1504

Description: Documents the activities of the Illinois Division of the American Civil Liberties Union from its founding through the early 1980s. Includes case files, finances and fundraising information, individual and institutional correspondence, minutes, newsletters and publications, film, audio cassettes, and photographs. Contains files on Academic Freedom: Revilo Oliver, American Legion, American Security Council, Anti-Semitism, Attorney General's list, Joseph Beauharnais, Broyles Commission, Broadcasting blacklists (including Red Channels), Censorship, Frank Collin, Communism in the Public Schools, Communist Party and front groups, Iva Toguri D'Aquino (Tokyo Rose), Deportation, fluoridation, Ford Foundation, Fund for the Republic, Gwinn Amendment, Alger Hiss, Letters to J. Edgar Hoover, House Un-American Activities Committee, Immigration, Internal Security Act of 1950, Jenner-Butler bill, John Birch Society, Ku Klux Klan, Loyalty, Loyalty Oath, Senator Joseph McCarthy, National Socialist White People's Party, Nazi Party, Obscenity, Operation Abolition, People of the State of Illinois v Frank Collin, Red Squad, right wing organizations, George Lincoln Rockwell, SACB, Skokie v. Nazi Party of America, Smith Act, and Gen. Edwin Walker.

Websites with information:

https://www.lib.uchicago.edu/scrc/finding-aids/

http://www.lib.uchicago.edu/e/scrc/findingaids/browse.php?alpha=A

http://bmrcsurvey.uchicago.edu/collections/1487-1

http://explore.chicagocollections.org/ead/uchicago/68/pk07v9p/

https://www.lib.uchicago.edu/scrc/finding-aids/?topic=Politics%2C%20Public%20Policy%20and%20Political

%20Reform&view=topics

Finding aids:

http://www.lib.uchicago.edu/e/scrc/findingaids/view.php?eadid=ICU.SPCL.ACLUIL

http://www.lib.uchicago.edu/ead/rlg/ICU.SPCL.ACLUIL.pdf

https://www.lib.uchicago.edu/ead/rlg/ICU.SPCL.ACLUIL.pdf

[0070] American Civil Liberties Union of Eastern Missouri Records, 1953-2008, WUA/

06/wua00355

Location: University Archives, Washington University in St. Louis, West Campus, 7425 Forsyth Blvd, St Louis, MO 63105

Description: This collection contains the records of the American Civil Liberties Union of Eastern Missouri. Items in the collection include office files, promotional materials, memos, reports, financial documents, articles, conference materials, and other materials. Series 1: St. Louis Civil Liberties Committee, 1935-1967. Sub-Series 1: Office Files, 1953-1959, contains the statement of the ACLU on "Civil Aspects of the Lee Harvey Oswald Case.... December 1963." Sub-Series 2: Office Files and Cases, 1947-1957, contains a copy of "The Informer," by Frank Donner, The Nation, April 10, 1954; material on the Gwinn Amendment to the Independent Offices Appropriation Act, a law passed in 1952 requiring of persons living in federally-assisted housing a loyalty oath to the effect that they were not members of any organization on the Attorney General's "subversive list"; copies of bills on: lynching and poll tax; and Lattimore the Scholar, edited by Gerry Boas and Harvey Wheeler (1953), containing articles by other scholars attesting to Professor Lattimore's reputation; a copy of "People vs Property: Race Restrictive Covenants in Housing," by Herman H. Long and Charles S. Johnson, 1947 [online at https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015020076074]. Sub-Series 3: General Files of the Chairman, 1960-1961 (circa), and 1963-1965, contains "Communism on the Map" - complete text of the tape-film strip; and "The Greater St. Louis School of Anti-Communism, April 1961, Selected Quotations" prepared by the St. Louis Civil Liberties Committee (STLCLC), St. Louis, 1962. Series 2: ACLU of Eastern Missouri Files, 1953-1981. Sub-Series 1: Office Files, 1953-1980, contains a file on Ultra Right Organizations 1962-1967; a filmstrip guide to "Communism on the Map"; "The Christian Anti-Communism Crusade," prepared by STLCLC (April 1962); and a file on interracial marriage and miscegenation. Sub-Series 4: News clippings, 1967-1985, contains files on desegregation; Equal Rights Amendment; Church/State Aid to Parochial Schools - The School Bus Question; and School Desegregation U.S. Cities. Series 3: ACLU of Eastern Missouri Files, 1940-1991, contains files on Robert Bork-ACLU Opposition to Supreme Court Nomination; School Desegregation/ Busing; National Socialist White Peoples Party - Dennis Nix; National Socialist White Peoples Party v. Breckenridge Hills; Nix v. Breckenridge Hills - National Socialist White Peoples Party; and Nazis. Series 4: ACLU of Eastern Missouri Files, 1959-1995. Sub-Series 1: Administrative & Subject Files, has files on abortion, civil rights, and Ronald Reagan. Series 5: ACLU of Eastern Missouri Files, 1960-2003, has files on the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan. Series 8: American Civil Liberties Union of Eastern Missouri Files, 1994-2012, contains files on Traditionalist American Knights of the Ku Klux Klan v. City of Cape Girardeau.

Websites with information:

http://libguides.wustl.edu/stl-urban-history

http://archon.wulib.wustl.edu/index.php?p=collections/collections&char=A

Finding aids:

http://archon.wulib.wustl.edu/index.php?p=collections/controlcard&id=207

http://archon.wulib.wustl.edu/index.php?p=collections/findingaid&id=207

http://archon.wulib.wustl.edu/?p=collections/findingaid&id=207&q=#

https://web.archive.org/web/20130501232001/http://library.wustl.edu/units/spec/archives/guides/pdf/aclu.pdf

[0071] American Civil Liberties Union of Florida Records, 1955-1981, Ms 2

Location: Special & Area Studies Collections, PO Box 117005, George A. Smathers Libraries, University of Florida, 205 Smathers Library, 1508 Union Rd, Gainesville, FL 32611-7005

Description: The American Civil Liberties Union of Greater Miami was formally recognized by the American Civil Liberties Union as an affiliate on June 6, 1955. The group was formed largely as a response to the anti-Communist scare of the nineteen fifties. Following the formation of chapters in Gainesville and Tampa, the group's named was changed in 1959 to the Florida Civil Liberties Union. In 1965, the name was changed again to the American Civil Liberties Union of Florida, and the Miami affiliate was recognized as a chapter within the state wide organization. The records contain the official records and correspondence of the organization, topical files on subjects of interest, and complaints from citizens about alleged civil rights violations. The series Desegregation has files on Desegregation: Dade County School Board. The series Women has files on abortion and Equal Rights Amendment. The series Cases (Intake forms, briefs, etc.) by Subject, has files on Abortion, Ku Klux Klan, and Socialist Workers Party. The series ACLU of Florida Positions, 1971-1989, contains a file on Children's Rights (including Prayer in School).

Websites with information:

http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/spec/browset.htm

http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/spec/browseu_flm.htm

Finding aid:

http://www.library.ufl.edu/spec/pkyonge/ACLUFL.htm

[0071a] American Civil Liberties Union of Georgia Records, 1938-2014 (bulk 1975-2000), RBRL/025/ACLU

Location: Richard B. Russell Library for Political Research and Studies, University of Georgia Libraries, 300 S Hull St, Athens, GA 30605

Description: The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Georgia, founded in 1963, is a nonprofit corporation dedicated to protecting civil liberties in the state of Georgia. The records document their litigation and lobbying work, the subjects that they are concerned with, and their daily operations and include correspondence, case files, research files, and publications. Series I. Administrative, 1963-2009, contains files on ACLU: Skokie, 1978-1981, and ["Partial-Birth Abortion" Bans: The Threat to Reproductive Freedom]. Series II. Issues, 1952-2009 (Bulk, 1985-2000), contains files on Abortion (Access, Clinic Protests and Violence, Partial Birth, Planned Parenthood v. Casey, Right-to-Life Groups, Rust v. Sullivan (Gag Rule), Webster v. Reproductive Health Services); American Center for Law and Justice (ACLJ); Anti-Semitism; Birth Control; George Bush; Censorship; Christic Institute; Church/State; Church and State; Coral Ridge Ministries; Creationism; Discrimination; Discrimination, race; Equal Rights Amendment; Euthanasia; Family Planning; Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI); Flag Burning; Confederate Flag; Fundamentalists; Gay and Lesbian Rights; Genetics; Newt Gingrich; Gun Control; Hate Crimes; Highlander Center; Immigration - McCarran-Walter Act; Interracial Relationships; Judiciary (Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas); KKK; Jack Kemp; Koinonia; Ku Klux Klan; Libertarian Party; Loyalty Oaths; Ed Meese; Militia; Multiculturalism; Planned Parenthood; Pornography; Republican Party; Schools (Creationism, Prayer, Religion, Segregation, Racial, Sex Education); Sodomy; Sterilization; Terrorism; and Voting Rights. Series III. Legal, 1938-2014 (Bulk, 1974-2007), contains files on City of Atlanta v. Operation Rescue and Voting Rights. Series IV. Legislation, 1984-2014 (Bulk, 2000-2010), contains files on AAP [Abortion Access Project], "Impeding the Right to Choose: Crisis Pregnancy Centers" [Emergency Contraception], 2004 [online at https://web.archive.org/web/20050

519113052/http://www.abortionaccess.org/AAP/publica_resources/fact_sheets/crisispregnancy.pdf]; Abortion Ban; Anti-Immigrant Legislation; Church/State- Evolution; Gay Rights and Gay Marriage; Obscenity; Prayer in Schools; USA Patriot Act; and voting rights (particularly requiring a photo-ID to vote).

Finding aid:

http://russelldoc.galib.uga.edu/russell/view?docId=ead/RBRL025ACLU-ead.xml

[0072] ACLU of Louisiana records, 1954-1986, Manuscripts Collection 661

Location: Louisiana Research Collection, Howard-Tilton Memorial Library, Tulane University, 6801 Freret St, New Orleans, LA 70118

Description: The American Civil Liberties Union of Louisiana (ACLULA) started in 1956 as a state affiliate of the national ACLU, adopting the initial name of the Louisiana Civil Liberties Union (LCLU). The first president of the group was George Dreyfous. In the chapter's early years, the organization dealt with many issues related to segregation, including school integration, voting rights, and censorship of media. The group also struggled against public perceptions that the group had Communist sympathies. The records include financial records, court case files, personal correspondence, pamphlets, clippings, case research, and newsletters. Files on Abortion, Civil rights in the South, Communist material, Communist Party elections, Constitution, Equal Rights Amendment (ERA), Jim Garrison, F. Edward Hébert, Ku Klux Klan, Knights vs. East Baton Rouge Parish School Board, Socialist Workers Party, Sterilization, Unification Church, and Young Men's Business Club attack on ACLU.

Websites with information:

http://newcomb.tulane.edu/blogs/reprohealth/archival-collections/primary-sources-archival-collection/

Finding aids:

http://specialcollections.tulane.edu/archon/?p=collections/controlcard&id=225

http://specialcollections.tulane.edu/archon/?p=collections/findingaid&id=225&q=

[0072a] American Civil Liberties Union of Louisiana records, 1970-1985

Location: Amistad Research Center, Inc., Tilton Hall, Tulane University, 6823 St. Charles Avenue, New Orleans, LA 70118

Description: These records document a range of activities including legal cases and ongoing functions of the Louisiana branch of the American Civil Liberties Union. Cases include a variety of issues, such as Creationism, abortion, AIDS discrimination, censorship, and others.

Websites with information:

http://newcomb.tulane.edu/blogs/reprohealth/archival-collections/primary-sources-archival-collection/

Finding aid:

http://amistadresearchcenter.tulane.edu/archon/index.php?p=accessions/accession&id=923

[0073] American Civil Liberties Union of Maryland (ACLU) Collection, 1919-2005

Location: Langsdale Library Special Collections, University of Baltimore, 1420 Maryland Avenue, Baltimore, Maryland 21201

Description: The Maryland ACLU was founded March 8, 1931, and currently has over 14,000 members in Maryland. It is a nonprofit foundation involved in litigation and public education. The collection consists of case files, correspondence, reports, publications, clippings, and programs. Series IX. Subject Files, contains files on Abortion, Abortion, Sterilization, Church/State: Prayer in Schools, Expression: Flag Desecration, Expression: Loyalty Oaths, Operation Abolition, and George L. Rockwell.

Websites with information:

http://langsdale.ubalt.edu/special-collections/a-z-holdings-list/

Finding aids:

http://langsdale.ubalt.edu/special-collections/a-z-holdings-list/american-civil-liberties-union-of-maryland.cfm

http://cdm16352.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16352coll2/id/26

[0074] American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts records, 1920-2005

Location: Massachusetts Historical Society, 1154 Boylston Street, Boston, MA 02215

Description: The records of the American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts (ACLUM), formerly the Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts (CLUM), consist of 96 record cartons, 3 document boxes and 11 oversize boxes, spanning the years 1920-2005. The records include legal, legislative, and subject files, ACLUM administrative records, correspondence, printed material, and other records related to the organization's attempts to protect civil rights in Massachusetts and the United States. Series I. Archival records, 1920-1970, contains files on Anti-Poll Tax Bill; Dies Committee; Poll-Tax; McCarran Act; Smith Act of 1940; "Operation Correction," anti-HUAC film, 1962; "Operation Abolition," HUAC Film, 1961; American Nazi Party, George L. Rockwell case, 1960; Becker Amendment, school prayer, 1964; Group Research Report, newsletter in right-wing groups, index, 1964; Group Research Report, newsletter, 1962-63; House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC); John Birch Society; and Massachusetts Commission to Investigate Subversion, Sherman Commission, "Reports of The Social Commission to Investigate the Activities within this Commonwealth of Communistic, Fascist, Nazi and other Subversive Organizations...," Commonwealth of Massachusetts, 1938. Series VII. Subject files, 1972-1999, contains files on Abortion, 1978-1989; ACLU defense of right-wingers, 1987; David Duke; The Nationalist Movement, 1995; Ollie North on Freedom Alliance, 1990; Religious Right, 1993-1994; Skokie and CLUM, 1977-1978; and White supremacist parade. 1994 (Richard Barrett of the Mississippi-based Nationalist Movement, in Boston, May 7, 1994).

Finding aids:

http://www.masshist.org/collection-guides/view/fa0309

http://www.masshist.org/findingaids/doc.cfm?fa=fa0309

[0075] American Civil Liberties Union of Michigan/Metropolitan Detroit Branch Collection Papers, 1952-1966, Accession #231

Location: Archives of Labor and Urban Affairs, Wayne State University, 5401 Cass Ave., Detroit, MI 48202

Description: The Metropolitan Detroit Branch of the American Civil Liberties Union was chartered in 1952 as an affiliate of the national ACLU, founded in 1920 to protect the civil liberties of citizens expressing unpopular views during World War I. In 1961, the Lansing, Ann Arbor, and Detroit area chapters joined together to form the ACLU of Michigan, which coordinates civil liberties activities for these and several other chapters that formed over the next decades. The papers of the ACLU of Michigan/Metropolitan Detroit Branch consist of minutes, correspondence, reports, clippings, case files, press releases, newsletters and other material relating primarily to the activities of the Detroit branch and to a lesser extent the activities of the state organization and regional branches. Series II - General File, contains files on Anti-Communist, Anti-Labor legislation, Bricker Amendment, Barry Goldwater, Gwinn Amendment (1952; forbidding the occupation of public housing by a member of an organization on the Attorney General's list of subversive groups, and required loyalty oaths as a means to insure this), Imprisonment for Debt, Jenner-Butler Bill (to limit the appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court in certain cases), Miscegenation, Moral Rearmament, Operation Abolition and Operation Correction, Lee Harvey Oswald, Karl Prussion, Right to Work, Right Wing Organizations, Jack Ruby, and Smith Act (internal security).

Websites with information:

http://reuther.wayne.edu/abstracts

Finding aid:

http://reuther.wayne.edu/files/UR000231.pdf

[0076] American Civil Liberties Union of Minnesota records, 1940-2012 (bulk 1951-1996), File no. 00497, Accession numbers: 14,123, etc.

Location: Minnesota Historical Society, 345 W. Kellogg Blvd., St. Paul, MN 55102-1906

Description: Organizational files, subject files, news media files, files relating to relationships with other organizations, investigation files, fund raising events, lobbying files, and case files documenting the 1952 formation and subsequent activities of the Minnesota state affiliate of the American Civil Liberties Union. Organizational Files, 1940-1997 (bulk 1951-1996), contains a file on the film Communism on the Map (National Education Program, Searcy, Ark.; produced by Glenn A. Green), 1961-1962. Subject Files, 1951-2012. Topic I: Freedom of Belief, Expression, and Association, contains files on Free Speech (National Committee to Abolish the HUAC, 1958-1966; House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) - "Operation Abolition" (film), 1960-1962; Hate crimes rulings; Racism hate speech); Cases (Nazi march in Skokie, 1978-1988); Flag burning; Mississippi KKK case, 1978; Freedom of Assembly (Anti-abortion protests); and Religion and the Public Schools (Creationism, Prayer in the public schools). Topic II: Equality Before the Law, contains files on Discrimination in education: desegregation; Grove City decision and aftermath; and Racial discrimination. Topic V: Abortion and Reproductive Freedom, contains files on Pro-life movement clippings and Right to Life publications. Topic VIII: Miscellaneous Subject Files, contains files on American Legion, American Nazi Party, anti-Communism, Civil rights, Euthanasia, Anti-gay legislation: an attempt to sanction inequality, Gun control, Holocaust studies, Iran Contra, Loyalty oaths, Moral majority/new right, and Segregation. Organizations, 1969-1995, contains files on American Nazi Party, Ku Klux Klan, Minnesota Family Council, Minnesota Citizens Concerned for Life, Moral Majority, Morality in Media, National Socialist White People's Party, and Religious Right.

Websites with information:

http://libguides.mnhs.org/civilrights/primary

http://www.mnhs.org/library/findaids/index_A.htm

Finding aids:

http://www.mnhs.org/library/findaids/00497.xml

http://www2.mnhs.org/library/findaids/00497.xml

[0077] American Civil Liberties Union of North Carolina records, 1960-2005 and undated, RL.00012

Location: Human Rights Archive, David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Box 90185, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27708-0185

Description: North Carolina affiliate of the American Civil Liberties Union, founded in 1969 and based in Raleigh. The records of the American Civil Liberties Union of North Carolina (ACLU of N.C.) date from the 1960s to the mid-2000s. There are many files on the Ku Klux Klan, Confederate displays, and right-wing organizations in North Carolina. Files on Creationism; Picketers at Crist Clinic being charged with interference, 1982; telegram from ACLU-NC to Jesse Helms; Ku Klux Klan/Nazi rally, 1984; Greensboro: press credentials, coverage of Ku Klux Klan rally; Sons of Confederate Veterans, denied access to city festival, 1992; and Skokie.

Finding aids:

http://library.duke.edu/rubenstein/findingaids/acluofnc/

http://library.duke.edu/rubenstein/findingaids/acluofnc.pdf

http://library.duke.edu/rubenstein/findingaids/acluofnc/pdf

[0078] American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California records, 1900-2000 (bulk 1934-2000), MS 3580

Location: California Historical Society, 678 Mission Street, San Francisco, CA 94105-4014

Description: Comprising correspondence, minutes, policy statements, annual reports, legal documents, attorneys' working notes, scrapbooks, newspaper clippings, pamphlets, and other printed material created or collected by the ACLU-NC, these records document the establishment and activities of the northern California branch, including and especially its efforts to protect and extend individual liberties in California. Files on Nazi Party, Far right, Ku Klux Klan, Nazis, Nazi groups, Skokie case (1977), Mankind United, Operation Abolition, American Liberty League, California Crusaders, John Birch Society, and Nazism and fascism.

Websites with information:

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/122642406

Finding aids:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt009nf073/admin/

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt009nf073/entire_text/

[0079] The American Civil Liberties Union of Ohio, Cleveland Chapter records. 1958-1978, MS 5047

Location: Western Reserve Historical Society, 10825 East Boulevard, Cleveland, Ohio 44106

Description: The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), an organization formed to "defend and preserve the individual rights and liberties" guaranteed to every person in this country by the Constitution and laws of the United States was first established in the in 1920 by Roger Baldwin and a group of associates formerly of the National Civil Liberties Bureau. In the years after World War I, a fear of Communism known as "The Red Scare" was overtaking America. In 1919 and 1920 Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer began having those considered left wing radicals arrested and deported without regard to their constitutionally protected rights against unlawful search and seizure (the Palmer raids). The formation of the ACLU became the outgrowth of opposition to what became known as "The Palmer Raids" and other such violations of civil liberties. The Cleveland chapter of the union was founded in 1922 and remained active throughout the 1920s and 1930s focusing on cases concerning unionization, Communism, and religious freedom. The chapter closed during World War II, but was revived in 1950 with the advent of McCarthyism. Series III: National American Civil Liberties Union, 1963-1977; undated. Sub-series G: General Subject Files, 1966-1972, contains a file on school desegregation.

Finding aids:

http://ead.ohiolink.edu/xtf-ead/view?docId=ead/OCLWHi0171.xml&query=&brand=default

http://ead.ohiolink.edu/xtf-ead/view?docId=ead/OCLWHi0171.xml&doc.view=printead;chunk.id=0

[0080] American Civil Liberties Union of Ohio records, MSS 253, 1951-1982

Location: The Ohio History Connection, 800 E. 17th Ave., Columbus, OH 43211

Description: The American Civil Liberties Union (A.C.L.U.) was created by Roger N. Baldwin in 1920 as an outgrowth of the National Civil Liberties Bureau. The Bureau handled civil liberties cases involving freedom of speech, press, association, and conscience during World War I. An Ohio chapter of the A.C.L.U. known as the Youngstown Workers' Defense League, was formed in 1920, and chapters in other cities followed. In ca. 1954 the statewide affiliate was sanctioned by the national A.C.L.U., and in 1971 the A.C.L.U. of Ohio was incorporated. Records consist of correspondence, minutes, and newsletters documenting the ideology and administration of the Ohio ACLU, its chapters, and the national ACLU. Includes administration files of the Ohio office, copies of minutes and memoranda from the national organization, court cases of interest to the Ohio affiliate, and reference files on numerous topics. Series II, National ACLU Files, contains files on the Women's Rights Project, 1972-1975, concerning A.C.L.U.'s campaigns for the Equal Rights Amendment and abortion rights. Series IV. Reference Files, dates from 1951 to 1982 and is arranged alphabetically by subject. The files contain material relating to topics of interest to the Ohio A.C.L.U. and include clippings, printed material, memoranda, and correspondence. Files on abortion; civil rights legislation; closed shop, union shop, right-to-work laws; federal loyalty-security programs, n.d.; Fund for the Republic; House Un-American Activities Committee; housing integration material; integration; internal security; Jenner-Butler Bill; John Birch Society; The Ku Klux Klan of Ohio; loyalty and security; McCarran Act; Operation Abolition (film controversy concerning U.S. House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) allegations of Communist influence in the May 1969 student riots at a San Francisco HUAC hearing), 1957-1962, n.d.; race; Rockwell case (defense of George Lincoln Rockwell of the American Nazi Party in his attempt to distribute anti-Semitic literature in Washington, D.C.), 1960-1961; Fred Schwarz and the anti-Communist school, 1962; sterilization; and ultra right.

Note:

The Ohio History Connection was formerly known as the Ohio Historical Society. On the name change, see "Ohio Historical Society Changes Its Name To Ohio History Connection," http://www.ohiohistory.org/about-us/newsroom/press-releases/ohio-history-connection-announcement.

Finding aids:

http://www.ohiomemory.org/cdm/ref/collection/aids/id/1007

http://www.ohiomemory.org/cdm/ref/collection/aids/id/979

[0081] American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California records, ca. 1935-, Collection Number 900

Location: Special Collections, Manuscripts Division, Room A1713, Charles E. Young Research Library, University of California, Los Angeles, Box 951575, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1575

Description: The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), established in 1920, originally began as the American Union Against Militarism in 1915, later becoming the National Civil Liberties Bureau in 1917. The ACLU of Southern California was established in Los Angeles in 1924. Collection consists of legal, educational, and organizational files of the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California. Includes minutes, correspondence, memoranda, clippings, case files, and briefs. Files on Anti-Mexican-Americans, Anti-Negro, Anti-Semitism, Attacks, Critics, Anti-ACLU, Pro-ACLU 1960-1963, Attacks on Supreme Court, Bible reading in schools, Civil Rights Act (1957), Communism, Communist Control Act of 1954, De facto school segregation, Joel Dvorman - Orange County, Group Research Report, Alger Hiss, J.E. Hoover, House Committee on Un-American Activities Cases - "Operation Abolition" and "Operation Correction," Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 (Walter-McCarran Act), Internal Security Act (1950), Interracial marriage, Ku Klux Klan, Loyalty oaths, McCarthy, Matusow, Organized labor - Attack on, Lee Harvey Oswald, Public housing - Gwinn Amendment, Racism, Max Rafferty, Right to work, School Integration, School Prayer Decision [Engel v. Vitale, 370 U.S. 421 (1962), prohibiting the use of a Regent's prescribed prayer in New York public schools], Sumner, Mississippi - Till killing, Taft-Hartley Act, Taft-Hartley non-communist oaths, Subversive Activities Control Board, Tokyo Rose, Ultra Right organizations, and Women's rights. Files on Right groups include "Americans, On Guard," American Legion, Daughters of American Colonists, Gerald L.K. Smith, The Cross and the Flag, Keep America, Fifield, Merchants and Manufacturers, Minute Men (Gen. Holdridge), Neo-fascist groups (30's), Women of the Pacific, Christian Anti-Communism Crusade, and Rockwell. Newspaper clippings on Attacks, critiques, anti-ACLU and HUAC-operation abolition.

Finding aids:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt9c60151m/dsc/

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt9c60151m/entire_text/

[0082] American Civil Liberties Union of Washington Records, circa 1942-1996, Coll. 1177

Location: Special Collections, University of Washington Libraries, BOX 352900, Seattle, WA 98195-2900

Description: The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) is an organization dedicated to the protection of constitutional rights and liberties in the United States. It was founded in 1920 by a group of civil libertarians. Established in 1935 as Seattle ACLU, becoming Washington state chapter in Seattle, Washington, in the 1960s. Accession No. 1177-001, American Civil Liberties Union of Washington Records, circa 1955-1975, contains general subject files on abortion, American Legion, Bricker Amendment, de facto segregation, equal rights, extremism, flag desecration, Fund for the Republic, Guaranteed Annual Income, gun control, Gwinn Amendment, homosexuality - gay rights, Ku Klux Klan, loyalty oaths, Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy, right to work laws, right wing activities, and Lawrence Timbers. Accession No. 1177-024, American Civil Liberties Union of Washington Records, circa 1960-1987, contains correspondence, mailings, planning files, committee files, conferences and conventions, other record series; three 16mm films, early 1960s. The 16mm movie film "Operation Abolition" is about the spread of Communism; ACLU fought its distribution to the public schools in the early 1960s. "Operation Correction" is a film produced by the ACLU to counter distortions in "Operation Abolition". The third film is untitled.

Finding aids:

http://www.lib.washington.edu/static/public/specialcollections/findingaids/1177-001.pdf

http://digital.lib.washington.edu/findingaids/view?docId=AmericanCivilLibertiesUnionofWashington1177.xml

http://nwda.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv75164

[0083] American Civil Liberties Union Records: Subgroup 2, Organizational Matters Series, 1947-1995, MC001.02.01

Location: Public Policy Papers, Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, Princeton University Library, 2001 Princeton University Library, One Washington Road, Princeton, New Jersey 08544

Description: The American Civil Liberties Union Records document the activities of the Union in protecting individual rights from 1920 through 1995. Subseries 1E.1: Departments: Executive Directors, 1950-1978, includes material from Roger Baldwin, Patrick Murphy Malin, John de J. Pemberton, Jr. and Ayreh Neier, including a file on Malin: Free Speech - Rockwell Case - American Nazi Party. Subseries 1E.2: Departments: Executive Director Aryeh Neier, 1970-1978, documents Neier's service as National Executive Director of the ACLU from 1970 to 1978. The administrative files contain numerous internal memoranda and correspondence concerning the ACLU's involvement in various legal and social issues, including Abortion, Philip Agee, Anti-ACLU, Robert Bork, James L. Buckley, William F. Buckley, Busing, Cointelpro, Desegregation, Frank Donner, Equal Rights Amendment (ERA), gun control, Flag Desecration, John Heinz, III, Hyde Amendment, Jewish Defense League, Libertarian Party, Morality in Media, School Desegregation, Shockley Free Speech Case, Skokie Case (the ACLU's support of the right of Nazis to parade through the predominantly Jewish Chicago suburb of Skokie, Illinois), and Sterilization. Subseries 1E.3: Departments: Associate Director Alan Reitman, 1948-1986, contain correspondence, memoranda, reports, and statements which document Reitman's role in ACLU operations. Sub-subseries Subject Files, 1963-1989, contains files on Conservatives, Frank Donner, Ku Klux Klan, Moral Majority, and Nazi Party- Skokie, Illinois. Subseries 1E.4: Departments: Assistant Director Dorothy Dunbar Bromley, 1959-1962, documents her tenure as assistant director of the American Civil Liberties Union. The Church and State materials contain files on Bible Reading in Public Schools, Fairness Doctrine: Anti-Communist Programs, Regents' Prayer Case (Long Island, NY) [Engel v. Vitale, 370 U.S. 421 (1962), prohibiting the use of a Regent's prescribed prayer in New York public schools], and Right-Wing Attacks. Subseries 1E.8: Departments: Legal, 1937-1980. Sub-subseries Subject File, 1937-1954, contains files on Group Libel, Gwinn Amendment Data, Ku Klux Klan, and Poll Tax Research Material. Sub-subseries Subject File, 1946-1960, bulk 1954-1960, contains a file on School Integration: John Kasper, 1957. Subseries 1E.9: Departments: Membership, 1951-1971, contains a file on Ezra Pound Fake Application, 1954. Subseries 1E.10: Departments: Public Information and Education Office, 1966-1988, bulk 1975-1987, primarily contains the records of Trudi Schutz, who served as Press Director (1974-1975) and Director of the Public Information and Education Office (1975-1987). Files on Abortion, Philip Agee, Walter and Frances Bergman: FBI providing information to Ku Klux Klan, Robert H. Bork: Confirmation Hearings, Creationism Bills, Desegregation of Schools, and Nazis-in-Skokie. Subseries 1I: Meetings and Celebrations, 1947-1995, bulk 1949-1989, contains files on Conference on Effect of Ultra-Right Organizations on Democratic Process (1962), Greenwich Conference (1962), and Right Wing Analysis; Research; Conference on a Preserving Democratic Press (1962) [i.e., the Conference on Preserving the Democratic Process, sponsored by the American Jewish Committee and held in Greenwich, Connecticut, January 25-27, 1962]. Subseries 1M: Attacks and Commendations, 1936-1982, bulk 1948-1970. Sub-subseries Attacks, 1936-1982, documents attacks leveled against the ACLU by the press, various institutions, and individuals. The majority of the attacks on the ACLU came from the American Legion. The attacks on the ACLU occurred primarily during the McCarthy years, and were concerned with a suspected relationship between the ACLU and Communism. Files on American Council of Christian Laymen, American Mercury: J.B. Matthews, American Legion, American Mercury article, 1936, 1938, Anti-Communist League of America, Christian Broadcasting Network, Christian Economics Article, Firing Line Statement, 1958, John T. Flynn, Individualist, McCarthy Attack, 1954, Mullins' Attack on ACLU (re: "Hood-Smith Act Case"), 1954, National Economic Council Letter: Merwin K. Hart, 1948, Senator McCarthy Attack on ACLU during "Voice of America", 1953, Senator McCarthy Attack on ADA and Roger Baldwin, 1952, Tenney Committee - California, The Wanderer Attacks on Roger Baldwin, 1952, and The Freeman.

Finding aids:

http://findingaids.princeton.edu/collections/MC001.02.01

http://findingaids.princeton.edu/collections/MC001.02.01.pdf

http://findingaids.princeton.edu/collections/MC001.02.01?view=onepage

http://findingaids.princeton.edu/collections/MC001.02.01/c04020

[0084] American Civil Liberties Union Records: Subgroup 1, The Roger Baldwin Years, 1917-1950, MC001.01

Location: Public Policy Papers, Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, Princeton University Library, 2001 Princeton University Library, One Washington Road, Princeton, New Jersey 08544

Description: The American Civil Liberties Union Records, The Roger Baldwin years, document the activities of the ACLU from 1917 through 1950. Subseries 5 - General--Clippings, 1912, 1917-1946, 1949-1950, contains files on Open Shop Campaign, Ku Klux Klan, Lynchings/Mob Violence, Japanese-Americans, Patrioteering Organizations, Patrioteering Organizations: American Legion, and Patrioteering Organizations: Better America Federation. Subseries 6 - Legislation--Clippings, 1917-1923, 1926-1946, 1949-1950, contains files on Anti-Labor Legislation, Anti-Lynching Bill, and Geyer Anti-Poll-Tax Bill. Subseries 12 - Federal Legislation--Correspondence, 1919-1921, 1926-1950, contains files on Anti-Lynching Legislation, Anti-Japanese Bill, Anti-Poll Tax Legislation, Anti-Semitism, Dickstein Racial Hatred Bill, Dies Committee to Investigate Subversive Activities, Chinese Exclusion Act, Connally Resolution, Group Libel Legislation, Lynching Legislation, Race Hatred Bill, Race Hatred Legislation, Sterilization Laws, Taft-Hartley Act, and Women's Equal Rights Amendment. Subseries 13 - General--Correspondence, 1917-1924, 1926-1929, 1931-1950, contains files on American Legion, Communism, Fascism and Nazism, Lynchings, Poll Tax, and U.S. vs. Schwimmer. Subseries 15 - Labor and Liberal Organizations--Correspondence, 1921, 1931-1950, contains files on American Jewish League Against Communism and Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League. Subseries 17 - New York City Committee--Correspondence, 1936-1950, contains files on Anti-Semitic Speaker Arrests, Father Coughlin Activities, Christian Front Meetings, Fritz Kuhn Case, and Social Justice Parade. Subseries 18 - Organizational Matters--Correspondence, 1917-1950, contains a file on Ku Klux Klan. The Index Headings for the ACLU Card Index (1917-1946) (Names) include Harry Elmer Barnes, Charles A. Beard, William E. Borah, Frank Buchman, Louis F. Budenz, Nicholas Murray Butler, John Roy Carlson, John Chamberlain, George W. Christians, Grenville Clark, Upton Close, Charles E. Coughlin, Bronson Cutting, Virginius Dabney, George Deatherage, Cecil DeMille, Prescott Dennett, Lawrence Dennis, Arthur Derounian, Samuel Dickstein, Martin Dies, Elizabeth Dilling, John Dos Passos, Ralph Easley, Max Eastman, Robert Edmondson, Milton S. Eisenhower, Hamilton Fish, Irving Fisher, Henry Ford, Amos Fries, Frank E. Gannett, Benjamin Gitlow, Merwin K. Hart, William Randolph Hearst, Granville Hicks, Adolf Hitler, Hamilton Holt, Sidney Hook, J. Edgar Hoover, Herbert Hoover, Hiram Johnson, Harry A. Jung, Joseph P. Kamp, Vivien Kellems, Tyler Kent, Rudyard Kipling, Fritz Kuhn, David Lawrence, Charles A. Lindbergh, Huey Long, Jay Lovestone, Clare Boothe Luce, Douglas MacArthur, Fred R. Marvin, Joseph McWilliams, H.L. Mencken, Robert A. Millikan, Raymond Moley, George Van Horn Moseley, Oswald Mosley, Benito Mussolini, Gerald P. Nye, William Dudley Pelley, S.B. Pettengill, Amos Pinchot, Paul Popenoe, Ezra Pound, Carlos P. Romulo, John Stewart Service, Gerald K. Smith, John B. Snow, Vilhjálmur Stefánsson, Eugene Talmadge, Dorothy Thompson, George H. Tinkham, John B. Trevor, Harold Lord Varney, George S. Viereck, Anastase Vonsiatsky, Burton K. Wheeler, William Allen White, Wendell L. Willkie, and Gerald B. Winrod. The Index Headings for Card Index (Subjects) include Abortion; All Russian Fascist Party; Allied Patriotic Societies, Inc.; Amerasia; America First Committee; America, Incorporated; America First Party; American Coalition of Patriotic Societies; American Social Credit Movement; American Protective League; American Mercury (ACLU Libel Case); American National Action Party; American Alliance; American Patriots, Inc.; American Friends of German Freedom; American Coalition; American Freedoms Foundation; American Forward Movement (Reverend Ralph E. Nollner of Houston, Texas, organizer; publisher of the Christian American); American Coalition Society; American Constitutional Association; American Liberty League; American Legion; American Flag Movement; American Birth Control League; American Vigilant Intelligence Federation; American Council of Christian Churches; American Constitutionalists; Anti-Evolution; Anti-Semitism; Anti-Evolution (Mississippi); Anti-Vaccination; Anti-Ism League of America; Better America Federation; Black Legion; Blacklist of Liberals; Caucasian Crusade; Chinese Exclusion Act; Christian Front; Christian American Crusade; Christian Mobilizers; Church League for Industrial Democracy; Citizens National League; Citizens Patriotic League; Citizens National Committee; Civil Rights; Committee of One Million; Committee for the Nation; Communists; Concentration Camps (Aliens); Conservatives; Constitution of American Coalition; Constitutional Educational League; Constitutional Protective League Of America; Coughlinites; Council of National Defense; Cox Committee; Crusader White Shirts; Crusaders; Daughters of the American Revolution; Defenders of Democracy; Defenders of America; Denaturalization; Dies Committee; Dirksen Bill; Discrimination/Segregation; Dumbarton Oaks Proposals; Equal Rights Amendment; Fascism/Fascists; German-American Bund; Guards of Washington; Hearst, William R; Highlander Folk School (Tennessee); Hobbs Bill (Concentration Camps); Hobbs Bill (Anti-racketeering); Hobbs Bill (Subversive Activities); House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC); Immigration Restriction League; Industrial Defense League; Industrial Espionage; Industrial Defense Association; James True Associates; Knights of Liberty; Ku Klux Klan; Labor/Anti-Labor; League for Democratic Control; League for Industrial Democracy; League for Constitutional Government; Lend-Lease Bill; Liberty League; Liberty Defense Union; Louisiana League for the Preservation of Constitutional Rights; Loyal Americans; Loyalty Oaths; Lusk Committee; Lynching; Militant Christian Association; Military Intelligence Association; Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States; Military Order of the World War; National Security League; National Sentinels; National Constitution Committee; National Civic Federation; National Republic; National Clay Products Industries Association; National Labor Relations Act; National Labor Relations Board; National Anti-Vaccination League (England); Nazis; New Vigilantes; New York State Economic Council; Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League; Open Shop; Order of '76; Order of Black Shirts; Order Of Independent Americans; Oregon Commonwealth Federation; Oriental Exclusion Act; Patriot Guard of America; Patrioteering Organizations (General); Patriotic League; Patriotic Laymen's Education Association; Patriotic Order of Sons of America; Patriotic Citizenship Association; Paul Reveres; Pennsylvania Security League; People v. Benjamin Gitlow [Briefs]; Poll Tax; Private Armies; Protocols of Zion; Race Relations; Race Hatred Legislation; Racism; Rapp-Coudert Committee Investigation; Royalist League (Texas); Security League; Sedition; Segregation; Sentinels of the Republic; Silver Shirts; Single Tax (California); Smith Committee Investigation (NLRA); Social Justice; Spider Web Chart; Sterilization; Storm Troop Bill (Sheppard); Subversive Activities; U. S. Patriotic Society; U. S. Flag Association; Un-American Activities (California); Vigilantes; White Supremacy Resolution; White Man's Union Association (Texas); White Shirts; and Woman Patriot.

Reference:

Ross Lambertson, "Activists in the Age of Rights: The Struggle for Human Rights in Canada - 1945-1960" (Ph.D., University of Victoria, 1998), http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk2/ftp02/NQ37352.pdf.

Finding aids:

http://findingaids.princeton.edu/collections/MC001.01

http://findingaids.princeton.edu/collections/MC001.01.pdf

http://findingaids.princeton.edu/collections/MC001.01?view=onepage

http://microformguides.gale.com/Data/Introductions/32720FM.htm

http://microformguides.gale.com/BrowseGuide.asp?colldocid=3253000&Page=1

http://microformguides.gale.com/Data/Download/3253000A.pdf

https://web.archive.org/web/20070622072207/http://infoshare1.princeton.edu/libraries/firestone/rbsc/find

ing_aids/aclu1920/index.html

Name Index: http://microformguides.gale.com/Data/Download/3272000A.pdf

Name Index: http://www.gale.cengage.com/pdf/scguides/americancivil/ACLU.Index.name.pdf

Name Index: http://www.galegroup.com/pdf/scguides/americancivil/ACLU.Index.name.pdf

Name Index: https://web.archive.org/web/20070622072428/http://infoshare1.princeton.edu/libraries/­firest

one/rbsc/finding_aids/aclu1920/aclu1920_3.html

https://web.archive.org/web/20070622072301/http://infoshare1.princeton.edu/libraries/firestone/rbsc/find

ing_aids/aclu1920/aclu1920_4.html

Subject Index: http://microformguides.gale.com/Data/Download/3271000A.pdf

Subject Index: http://www.gale.cengage.com/pdf/scguides/americancivil/ACLU.Index.subjects.pdf

Subject Index: http://www.galegroup.com/pdf/scguides/americancivil/ACLU.Index.subjects.pdf

Subject Index: https://web.archive.org/web/20070622072452/http://infoshare1.princeton.edu/libraries/­firest

one/rbsc/finding_aids/aclu1920/aclu1920_2.html

http://microformguides.gale.com/download.asp?colldocid=3272000&Item=&Page=1

http://microformguides.gale.com/Download.asp?CollDocid=3271000&page=1

http://archive.is/wN9Cv

[0085] American Civil Liberties Union Records: Subgroup 2: Subject Files Series, 1947-1995, MC001.02.03

Location: Public Policy Papers, Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, Princeton University Library, 2001 Princeton University Library, One Washington Road, Princeton, New Jersey 08544

Description: The American Civil Liberties Union Records document the activities of the Union in protecting individual rights from 1920 through 1995. Series 3: Subject Files; 1921-1990, consists of records gathered by the ACLU on various topics of interest pertaining to its mission. Files on ACLU Criticism of 1954 Report on "Neo-Fascist" Hate Groups [Preliminary Report on Neo-Fascist and Hate Groups, December 17, 1954 [Committee on Un-American Activities]]; Alaska Mental Health Bill; American Nazi Party; America's Future, Inc.-Operation Textbook; America's Concentration Camps [by] Allan R. Bosworth. Introd. by Roger Baldwin (New York, W.W. Norton and Co., 1967); Americanism Committee; Anti-Communist Seminar: Charles E. Woolery; Anti-Lynching Legislation; Anti-Poll Tax Constitutional Amendment; Anti-Poll Tax Legislation; Anti-Right Wing Groups; Conferences, Materials, etc.; Anti-Semitism; Association for Voluntary Sterilization; America First Party; Joseph V. Beauharnais; Becker Amendment (H.J. Res 693): General Information, Prayer, Bible Reading, Statements Opposing; Daniel Bell; Walter Bergman; John Birch Society; Blacklisting: Anti-Communists in Radio/TV; Blacklisting: Red Channels, Vincent Hartnett; Bricker Amendment; William F. Buckley's Refusal to Join Television Union; Hardy Burt: Complaint of Pressure-Group Activity against Facts Forum; Busing Legislation; James F. Byrnes; California Right to Work Law; Chinese Exclusion Laws; Christian Nationalist Party [Gerald L. K. Smith]: California Election Ban; Christian Anti-Communism Crusade; Christian Anti-Communism Crusade: Dr. Fred C. Schwarz; Church League of America; Roy Cohn; "Communism on the Map"; Communist Party, Legislation to Outlaw; Communist Propaganda; Concerned American Citizens Association, U.S.A.; Connally Amendment; Conservatives of West Virginia (Ballot Case); "Containment or Liberation?" (James Burnham); Corporate Anti-Communist Programs: Notes on the Industrial-Military Complex; "Counter Attack" Counter Attack on Author Millard Lampell; Cox Committee Investigating Tax-Exempt Foundations; Dan Smoot Report Attack (Fairness Doctrine), Station Responses; Defense of Right Wing Groups; Right of Assembly: Ku Klux Klan Meeting Ban; Dirksen Prayer Amendment; Hilaire du Berrier; Education: Governor Talmadge - Georgia: Remarks; Englewood Anti-Communist League (NJ) (charged Mary McLeod Bethune with Communist affiliations in 1952); "Euthanasia Controversy," Dr. Hermann Sanders; Facts Forum Panel; Myron Fagan - Blacklisting in Hollywood Materials; Fascism Curbs; Father Feeney Religious Books: Ban on Sale; Flanders' Resolution to Strip Senator McCarthy of Committee Chairmanship; Fluoridation; Foundations - House (Reece) Investigation; Free Speech by Military Personnel - Sen. John Stennis: Speech; Free Speech: Dismissal from Army, Right Wing Speech: Maj. A.E. Roberts; Fund for the Republic (sponsor): Cancellation of Henry Cabot Lodge, ABC Interview with Mike Wallace (1958); Genocide Convention; William S. Girard case; Girl Scout Handbook - "Internationalist" References; Goldwater Anti-Communist Labor Bill (1953); Group Libel; Group Libel Legislation; Group Research Inc.: Wesley McCune; Gwinn Amendment - Banning Subversives from Public Housing; Rev. Billy Hargis: Broadcast Transcript, Warren Commission; Hate Legislation; Hate Literature Bill; Hate Propaganda through the Mails; Highlander Folk School: (TN) (Integrated Highlander School Raided by Ku Klux Klan; Tennessee Efforts to Close; Tennessee Legislative Hearing); Alger Hiss; House Un-American Activities Committee (ACLU Criticism of; ACLU Statement on Abolition HUAC; Dr. John Haynes Holmes - Testimony of Benjamin Gitlow; Ku Klux Klan Investigation; Letter to Congressman Walter; Operation Abolition; Report on "Hate" Groups (1954); Subpoenaing of Truman, et al. to Testify on Harry Dexter White Case); House of Representatives: Reece Subcommittee Report Attacking Foundations; William Huie (Contempt Case Rule); Immigration and Naturalization Act of 1953 (McCarran-Walter); Japan-MacArthur Dismissal Comments; John Birch Society; John Birch Society Members in Police Forces; Joseph Kamp - Lobbying Activities 1948; John Kasper - Contempt Case Related to School Integration; August Klapprott (De-naturalization); Ku Klux Klan; Owen Lattimore; David Lawrence Columns Attacking Supreme Court Rulings; David Lawrence and Osmond K. Fraenkel Correspondence Debates on Congressional Investigations; Legislation: Challenges to "Right to Work" Laws; Legislation: Study of Right to Work Laws; Let Freedom Ring: Automatic Telephone Service, Smear Messages; Letters from FBI to ACLU (J. Edgar Hoover); Fulton Lewis - Libel Indictment; Louisiana "Right to Work" Law; Kurt Ludecke; A.B. Magil; Harvey Matusow v. U.S. (Government Witness-Perjury); McCarran Act - Internal Security Act of 1950; McCarthy (Army Report on Cohn-Schine Affair; Cohn and Schine - McCarthy Anti-Semitism Charge; Democratic Digest Article; "McCarthyism" - J.B. Matthews - Resignation; Miscellaneous; The Progressive Magazine - Documentary on McCarthy ["McCarthy: A Documented Record." The Progressive, April 1954; online at http://content.wisconsinhistory.org/cdm/ref/collection/tp/id/63472]; Resolution to Oust from Senate Seat; Voice of America Hearings; World Telegram Series on McCarthy 1954 [Frederick Woltman, "The McCarthy Balance Sheet," New York World Telegram, July 1954]; Lucille Miller - Due process/commitment; Minute Women of America; NAACP: "Birth of a Nation"; Nazi Handbill Distribution Case: George Lincoln Rockwell and Kenneth Morgan; Reitman Neier and William F. Buckley Correspondence on Unionism and Free Speech; Operation Abolition, Film to Counteract Operation Abolition; L.H. Oswald; "Oswald and the Law" Documentary; O. Otepka - Saturday Evening Post Article 1964 [Ben H. Bagdikian, "Big Brother is Listening," Saturday Evening Post (June 6, 1964, http://www.bugsweeps.com/info/big_bro.html]; Panama Canal; Drew Pearson v. Senator Joseph McCarthy (Defamation Suit); Poll Tax Amendment; Poll Tax Bills; Poll Tax, Discrimination: Virginia; Poll Tax Issue (Texas); Post Office: Anti-Jewish Week Mail; Post Office: G. Sokolsky: Saturday Review of Literature [George Sokolsky, "Open Letter to the Post Office," Saturday Review of Literature, Vol. XXXVIII, No. 17, April 23, 1955]; Post Office: Ezra Pound Book Ban; Ezra Pound: Commitment at St. Elizabeth's Hospital; Press: Easton Express and Congressman Francis Walter: Refusal to Print, Pennsylvania; Protest Movement: SCLC Opposed Ku Klux Klan in South; Public Schools: Regent's Prayer [Engel v. Vitale, 370 U.S. 421 (1962), prohibiting the use of a Regent's prescribed prayer in New York public schools] - George Sokolsky's Column; Radical Right: Report on Attacks on UNICEF; Reapportionment: Dirksen Amendment; Red Channels; Regent's Prayer - George Sokolsky's Column; Alan Reitman Correspondence on Buckley Lawsuit against TV Union (AFTRA); Victor Riesel: Article Attacking ACLU Labor Policy; Right to Work Committee Workers Defense League; Right Wing Groups; Right-Wing Movement: Printed Documents; George Lincoln Rockwell; Rogge-Ebey Controversy, Board of Education, Houston, Texas; School Integration; Rosika Schwimmer; Senate: Senate Committee Investigating Charges Against Senator McCarthy; Shockley Incident (1973); Smith Act; Status of Forces Treaty; Sterilization Bill - North Carolina; Subversive Activities Control Bills (Mundt-Nixon); Swain (Martin) et al. v. Florida: Father Feeney Books; Taft Hartley Act; Governor [Herman] Talmadge -Georgia (1950); Tax Exemption Denial Case, U.S. v. Armstrong Foundation; Tenney Committee - California; Harold K. Thompson; Emmett Till Murder Case; "Tokyo Rose" - Mrs. Iva Toguri d'Aquino; Treaty Making Powers - Bricker Amendment; Moïse Tshombe - President of Katanga; (Ultra) Right Wing: Documents; Ultra-Right Organizations: Report, Alan Reitman; George S. Viereck; General Edwin A. Walker: Confinement without Due Process, Controversy re: indoctrination of troops; and Gov. Wallace: Disclosure by Senator Wayne Morse.

Finding aids:

http://findingaids.princeton.edu/collections/MC001.02.03

http://findingaids.princeton.edu/collections/MC001.02.03?view=onepage

http://findingaids.princeton.edu/collections/MC001.02.03.pdf

http://findingaids.princeton.edu/collections/MC001.02.03/c000001

http://microformguides.gale.com/BrowseGuide.asp?colldocid=3255000&Item=&Page=1

http://microformguides.gale.com/Data/Download/3255000C.rtf

http://microformguides.gale.com/Data/Download/3255000C.pdf

http://microformguides.gale.com/Download.asp?CollDocid=3255000&page=1

http://microformguides.gale.com/Data/Introductions/32550FM.htm

http://www.galegroup.com/pdf/scguides/americancivil3/ACLUSeries3RollContents.doc

http://www.gale.cengage.com/pdf/scguides/americancivil3/ACLUSeries3RollContents.doc

http://www.galegroup.com/pdf/scguides/americancivil4/ACLUSeries3RollContents.doc

http://www.gale.cengage.com/pdf/scguides/americancivil4/ACLUSeries3RollContents.doc

http://web.archive.org/web/20070930165259/http://microformguides.gale.com/Data/Download/9021000

C.pdf

http://archive.is/wN9Cv

[0086] American Civil Liberties Union Records: Subgroup 2, Audiovisual Materials Series, 1947-1995, MC001.02.06 [films]

Location: Dept. of Rare Books and Special Collections, Public Policy Papers, Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library, Princeton University, 65 Olden Street, Princeton, New Jersey 08544

Description: The American Civil Liberties Union Records document the activities of the Union in protecting individual rights from 1920 through 1995. Series 6, Audio-Visual materials, circa 1920-1995. Subseries Film, 1950 December 13-1983. Sub-subseries 16mm Film, 1952-1982, contains "Operation Abolition," a 1960 documentary produced by the House Committee on Un-American Activities (a.k.a. House Un-American Activities Committee or HUAC), [which] focused on an incident on May 13, 1960, when the Committee convened in San Francisco's City Hall. While the committee met, students protested in the hallways and outside the building, leading to clashes with the police and the arrest of 64 students. Operation Abolition shows footage of the incident taken from subpoenaed San Francisco TV station newsreels, using that footage to allege that the students were Communists and/or instigated by Communist agents. The film's narrators, Representative Francis E. Walter, Chairman of HUAC, and Fulton Lewis III, son of a prominent anti-Communist radio commentator, suggest that the protesters were members of and/or 'duped' by groups whose ultimate goal was to destroy the committee, weaken the FBI, and reduce the enforcement powers of the Federal government." This description, along with the film itself, is online at http://blogs.princeton.edu/reelmudd/2010/10/operation-abolition-and-operation-correction/. Also contains "Operation Correction," which shows the same footage as Operation Abolition, interspersed with added commentary by Ernest Besig, the Executive Director of the ACLU of Northern California. Also contains a Facts Forum program with William F. Buckley, Patrick Malin, Richard Combs, and Prof. Charles Hodges; and tapes about the Bork Nomination; Hate on Trial (1992 documentary about the trial of Tom and John Metzger, leaders of the White Aryan Resistance (WAR) for inciting the murder of Mulugeta Seraw); David Duke's Candidacy; What is Un-American? (1961; TV Debate with Fulton Lewis III, M. Stanton Evans, and Frank Donner, among others); Iran Contra Affair; The Ku Klux Klan's right to be on television; Race Relations; Flag Burning; and Anti-abortion Laws.

Finding aids:

http://findingaids.princeton.edu/collections/MC001.02.06

http://findingaids.princeton.edu/collections/MC001.02.06.pdf

[0087] American Civil Liberties Union Records: Subgroup 3, Series 3: Subject Files, 1969-1996, MC001.03.03

Location: Public Policy Papers, Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, Princeton University Library, 2001 Princeton University Library, One Washington Road, Princeton, New Jersey 08544

Description: The Subject Files series contains articles, reports, court documents, and other materials collected by the ACLU during the course of their work. Files on racial discrimination, the Supreme Court nomination of Robert Bork, and Clarence Thomas.

Reference:

Merrell Noden, "New trove of ACLU papers opens at Mudd Library," Princeton Alumni Weekly, July 11, 2012, http://paw.princeton.edu/issues/2012/07/11/pages/8542/index.xml

Websites with information:

https://blogs.princeton.edu/mudd/2012/10/american-civil-liberties-union-records-processing-completed/

Finding aid:

http://findingaids.princeton.edu/collections/MC001.03.03.pdf

[0088] American Civil Liberties Union Records: Subgroup 3, Series 5: Regional Offices, 1894-2005 (bulk 1970-1990), MC001.03.05

Location: Public Policy Papers, Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, Princeton University Library, 2001 Princeton University Library, One Washington Road, Princeton, New Jersey 08544

Description: The Regional Offices series documents the work and administration of the ACLU's three regional offices: Mountain States Regional Office, concerned with civil rights in the west and Native American rights, the Southern Regional Office, focusing on civil rights in the south, and the Washington, D.C. office, which concentrates on national legislation and the actions of the federal government. The files include correspondence, case files, office publications, research files, and the papers of individual staff members. Subseries 5A: Mountain States Regional Office, contains files on Busing; Creationism; Desegregation - Schools; Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act, 1994; Ku Klux Klan (KKK); and Skinheads. Subseries 5B: Southern Regional Office, contains files on ACLU Attacks and Replies, 1954-1965; Civil Rights; School Desegregation; Frank Donner; Ku Klux Klan (KKK); and Racial Crisis and Race Relations. Subseries 5C: Washington, D.C. Regional Office, contains files on Robert Bork; Civil Rights; Charles Colson; Communist Influence on the Civil Rights Movement; Robert Dole; Frank Donner; Fake Abortion Clinics; Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) / Counter Intelligence Program (COINTELPRO), 1966-1980; Flag Desecration Amendment; Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances act of 1993, S. 636, 1993, and H.R. 796, 1993; Hate Propaganda (Plans dealing with); House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC); Hyde Amendment; Internal Security Act of 1950; Internal Security - Institutionalization of McCarthyism, 1965-1966; Iran-Contra; Ku Klux Klan (KKK); Letter to House From Former Member of Congress Bob Barr on H.R. 3313, the Marriage Protection Act, 2004; McCarran Act; Edwin Meese; MKULTRA (Central Intelligence Agency, CIA); National Socialist Party of America v. Village of Skokie, 1976; Nicaraguan Contras; Richard Nixon; Oliver North; Lee Harvey Oswald; Religious Freedom Restoration Act; Ronald Reagan; Antonin Scalia; School Voucher Program; Clarence Thomas; Senator Strom Thurmond; and Thurmond Amendment on Religious Sub - Units to S. 557, the Grove City Bill, 1988.

Reference:

Merrell Noden, "New trove of ACLU papers opens at Mudd Library," Princeton Alumni Weekly, July 11, 2012, http://paw.princeton.edu/issues/2012/07/11/pages/8542/index.xml

Websites with information:

https://blogs.princeton.edu/mudd/2012/10/american-civil-liberties-union-records-processing-completed/

Finding aid:

http://findingaids.princeton.edu/collections/MC001.03.05.pdf

[0089] American Civil Liberties Union--Southern Women's Rights Project, 1976-1981, M 178

Location: Special Collections and Archives, James Branch Cabell Library, Virginia Commonwealth University, Box 842003, 901 Park Ave, Richmond, VA 23284-2003

Description: The Southern Women's Rights Project (SWRP), located in Richmond, is affiliated with the American Civil Liberties Union. The project deals with issues of special concern for women. Topics include abortion, employment discrimination, ERA, education discrimination, prisoner's rights, children's rights, sexual harassment, and spousal abuse. The series Legislation 1976-1981, contains files on Abortion, Con. Con. Project, Constitutional Convention, ERA, Ku Klux Klan, Nazis-Skokie1978, Nazis Right Wing 1978, Right to Life, Ronald Reagan, and Sterilization. The series Periodicals contains files on "The Impact of the Hyde Amendment on Medically Necessary Abortions" (ACLU) and "National Right to Life News."

Finding aids:

http://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaxtf/view?docId=vcu-cab/vircu00017.xml

http://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaxtf/view?query=right&docId=vcu-cab%2Fvircu00017.xml&chunk.id=

[0090] American Civil Liberties Union Washington, D.C. Office Records, 1948-1970, MC190

Location: American Civil Liberties Union Washington, D.C. Office Records; Public Policy Papers, Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, Princeton University Library, 2001 Princeton University Library, One Washington Road, Princeton, New Jersey 08544

Description: The ACLU is a leading defender of civil liberties in the United States. Founded in 1920, it has been the recipient of sharp criticism for its willingness to defend unpopular causes and has participated in a majority of the landmark cases to come before the Supreme Court in the twentieth century. This collection consists of the papers received and generated by the staff of the Washington, D.C. Office of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) during the 1950s and 1960s.Series 1, Irving Ferman Records, 1948-1959, documents Irving Ferman's tenure as director of the ACLU's Washington, D.C. Office. The Legislative Investigating Committees section contains records related to the House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC) and several folders on U.S. v. Lattimore, a case in which Owen Lattimore was charged with perjury for having falsely represented his Communist associations. The Civil Rights section, 1953-1959, documents the Washington Office's involvement with school desegregation in Little Rock, Arkansas, Equal Rights Amendment, and opposition to the Bricker Amendment. The Rights of Mentally Ill section, 1955-1958, contains a file on Ezra Pound. The Loyalty/Security section, 1948-1965, contains a file on a Gwinn Amendment test case. Series 2, Lawrence Speiser Records, 1951-1970, relates to his work in Washington, D.C., and in San Francisco in connection with the National ACLU and the Northern California affiliate. The Voting Rights section, 1960-1966, contains files on Literacy Tests and poll taxes and several folders on reapportionment and the Dirksen Amendment. The Court Proceedings section, 1959-1969, contains a file on Edwin A. Walker: Psychiatric Exam, 1963. The Military Justice section, 1955-1970, contains a file on Right Wing Speech: Edwin A. Walker. The Assembly & Public Protest section, 1964-1969, contains a file on Koel v. Resor regarding the defense of the American Nazi Party's right to wear their uniforms at the burial of George Lincoln Rockwell in a national cemetery. The Loyalty and Security section, 1952-1969, contains files on test cases about the requirement of an oath for tenants to live in public housing (part of the Gwinn Amendment) and on Otto Otepka.

Finding aids:

http://findingaids.princeton.edu/collections/MC190

http://findingaids.princeton.edu/collections/MC190.pdf

[0091] American Committee for Cultural Freedom Records, 1939-1957, TAM.023

Location: Tamiment Library/Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives, Elmer Holmes Bobst Library, New York University Libraries, 70 Washington Square South, New York, NY 10012

Description: The American Committee for Cultural Freedom was formed in the 1950s as an affiliate of the International Congress for Cultural Freedom and membership included prominent liberal and leftist artists and intellectuals across a broad political spectrum. The group's activity involved the organization and execution of numerous anti-Communist campaigns and programs. Series III: American Committee for Cultural Freedom. Subseries A: Correspondence, General, contains correspondence with Aware, Inc., Whittaker Chambers, Ford Foundation, Fund for the Republic, Sidney Hook, Irving Kristol/Encounter, George S. Schuyler, and Peter Viereck. Subseries F: Public Activities. Sub-subseries 1: Topics, includes a file on Facts Forum Radio Show Proposal (Protest) (1954). Sub-subseries 2: Individuals' Cases, contains files on William Buckley/Haverford News Case (Ethical Issue) (1955) [Buckley spoke before the Forum for Free Speech at Haverford, Mar. 14, 1955], Milovan Djilas Case (Arrest and Book Burning) (1956), Alfred Lilienthal Case (Radio Program Cancellation) (1954), and Ezra Pound Case (Institutionalization) (1955). Sub-subseries 3: Miscellaneous, has files on McCarthy and the Communists: Book Reviews and Notices (1954), Alfred Kohlberg Correspondence (1954), and Owen Lattimore Libel Charges (1955). Subseries H: Miscellaneous Activities, has a file on Owen Lattimore Case (Protest Against New Republic Article Supporting Lattimore) (1954-1956). Subseries J: Miscellaneous, has files on Fund for the Republic / ACCF Controversy (1956), Joseph P. Kamp Attacks on ACCF (1954), Submitted Ms.- Anthony Bouscaren (1954-1956), Submitted Ms.- Ernest van der Haag (1952-1956), Americans for Intellectual Freedom (1949), and Facts Forum (1954-1955). Restricted Material includes a file on McCarthy and the Communists: Beacon Press Contract & Correspondence (1954).

Websites with information:

http://www.nyu.edu/library/bobst/research/tam/fa_index.html

Finding aid:

http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/tamwag/tam_023/tam_023.html

[0092] American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born Records, 1926-1980s, ACPFB

Location: Special Collections Library, Labadie Collection, Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library (South), 913 S. University Avenue, Office/Gallery 7th Floor; Reading Room 8th Floor, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1190

Description: The American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born (ACPFB) was founded in 1933 on the initiative of Roger Baldwin of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). The purpose of the Committee was to defend the constitutional rights of foreign-born persons in the United States. In practice, the Committee assisted individuals facing deportation and those wishing to become naturalized citizens; it attempted to combat harassment and official persecution of the foreign-born; and it worked for the repeal or revision of legislation considered discriminatory. In the 1950s the Committee assisted individuals charged with having Communist affiliations under the Internal Security Act of 1950 (also known as the McCarran Act) or who faced denaturalization or deportation for such activities under the Walter-McCarran Immigration Act. Records include correspondence, administrative files, clippings and publicity files, subject files and case files. Series III: Publicity/Activities, 1934-1977, contains a file on Emergency Conference to Defeat the Hobbs Concentration Camp Bill, May 8, 1941. Series V: Legislation, 1930-1972, contains files on the Walter-McCarran Act. Series VII: Subject Files, 1933-ca. 1974, contains files on anti-alien writings, Fascist literature, Fascism: "This is Fascism" Pamphlet, 1942, William Randolph Hearst, House of Representatives Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC), Informers (Paul Crouch, Matthew Cvetic, Joseph Zack Kornfeder), Palmer Raids, and Tokyo Rose (Iva d'Aquino).

Websites with information:

http://www.lib.umich.edu/labadie-collection/archives-and-manuscripts-f

http://quod.lib.umich.edu/s/sclead/browse.html

Finding aid:

http://quod.lib.umich.edu/s/sclead/umich-scl-acpfb?rgn=main;view=text

[0092a] American Committee on Africa records addendum, 1949-2001 (bulk 1970-1997)

Location: Amistad Research Center, Inc., Tilton Hall, Tulane University, 6823 St. Charles Avenue, New Orleans, LA 70118

Description: The American Committee on Africa (ACOA) was founded in 1953 to support liberation and anti-colonial struggles in Africa. The records addendum covers the era of Africa's liberation (independence) movements against British, Dutch, French, German, and Portuguese colonialism and their imperialistic policy toward the continent, including aspects of both settler and exploitation colonialism, mainly in the African countries of Angola, Guinea Bissau, Namibia, Rhodesia (Zimbabwe), and South Africa. Series 3: Research, 1949-1997. Sub-Series 2: South Africa, 1953-1997, contains files on Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging; Apartheid; Apartheid and International Law; Politics: White Nationalists; and Right Wing. Sub-Series 3: South Africa-United States, 1954-1997, contains files on Right Wing and Right Wing: Conservative Caucus. Sub-Series 4: Countries, 1949, 1961-1989, contains files on Rhodesia: Apartheid; Rhodesia: Right-Wing Government Information; and Rhodesia: United States (Right Wing Propaganda).

Finding aid:

http://amistadresearchcenter.tulane.edu/archon/?p=collections/findingaid&id=232

[0093] American Conservative Union Records, 1964-1980, MSS 176

Location: 20th &21st Century Western and Mormon Americana, L. Tom Perry Special Collections, Harold B. Lee Library, 1130 HBLL, Brigham Young University, P.O. Box 26800, Provo, UT 84602-6800

Description: In December 1964, the American Conservative Union (ACU) was organized to meld the splintered conservative movement into a unified whole after Barry Goldwater's defeat in the November election. The first Chairman of the ACU was Donald C. Bruce, a conservative Republican Congressman from Indiana, followed by John Ashbrook, a Congressman from Ohio; M. Stanton Evans; Philip M. Crane, an Indiana Congressman; Congressman Robert Bauman; and Congressman Marvin Henry "Mickey" Edwards. The ACU has been active in raising funds, corresponding with conservative political leaders, supporting projects, helping candidates, providing advice, and addressing issues relating to conservative causes and political activities all over the United States. The records consist of correspondence, notes, newsletters, memoranda, meeting minutes, charters, bylaws, resolutions, and miscellaneous items. Series I: Founding, contains corporate records of the American Public Affairs Educational Fund, Inc.; a memorandum from Marvin Liebman regarding the initial steps for organizing the ACU; news articles from the National Review concerning ACU's beginning and early activities; and a transcript of an interview with M. Stanton Evans by Dan Manion on the radio program, "The Manion Forum," Feb. 27, 1977. Series III: ACU "Special Projects," contains transcripts of speeches by Robert E. Bauman, James L. Buckley, Philip M. Crane, William Dannemeyer, Mickey Edwards, Orrin Hatch, Jesse Helms, Jack Kemp, James McClure, Larry McDonald, Dan Quayle, Ronald Reagan, and Phyllis Schlafly; publications of the ACU Education and Research Institute by James L. Buckley and James A. McClure, Philip M. Crane, and Lawrence P. McDonald; and Speakers Bureau files on Rep. John M. Ashbrook, Dr. Anthony T. Bouscaren, L. Brent Bozell, Dr. Philip M. Crane, James Jackson Kilpatrick, Frank S. Meyer, William F. Rickenbacker, William A. Rusher, Ralph De Toledano, Senator John G. Tower, and Dr. Ernest van der Haag. Series IV: The Board of Directors, contains correspondence with Dr. Lev E. Dobriansky, Rep. Wm. Jennings Bryan Dorn, M. Stanton Evans, Ronald Reagan, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Hon. Margaret Thatcher, Sen. Strom Thurmond, and John Wayne; news releases regarding Major General John Singlaub; and letters, papers, and documents regarding William F. Buckley, Orrin Hatch, Senator Jesse Helms, James A. McClure, William A. Rusher, Phyllis Schlafly, and Ralph de Toledano. Series V: The Advisory Assembly, contains files on Spruille Braden, Sen. James L. Buckley, Sen. Barry Goldwater, Rep. Jack Kemp, Howard E. Kershner, Walter Knott, Maj. Gen. Thomas Lane (Ret.), Adm. Ben Moreell (Ret.), Adm. Arthur W. Radford, Hon. John Tower, and Will Herberg. Series VI: Executive Directors, contains correspondence with Patrick J. Buchanan, Sen. Harry F. Byrd, Sen. Peter H. Dominick, Sen. Strom Thurmond, and John Tower. Series VIII: Financial Records, contains correspondence with Richard A. Viguerie. Series XI: Field Operations, contains a file on Tax Reform Immediately (TRIM), a John Birch Society affiliate. Series XI: Field Operations. Arkansas Conservative Union, contains a file on Dr. George S. Benson, President, National Education Program. Series XI: Field Operations. Maine Conservative Union, contains files on Charlotte Iserbyt. Oregon Conservative Union, contains a file on Walter Huss. Series XIII: Issues Files, 1965-1980, contains information on the Panama Canal issue; studies by Dr. Stefan T. Possony; publications by M. Stanton Evans; and a copy of A Program for American Survival 1973-78, by William Schneider. Series XV: Media Materials. ACU Productions, contains copies of ACU Report; Battleline; The Conservative Answer to Pollution, by Frank S. Meyer and John C. Meyer, 1971; The Conservative Mandate, by Dr. Philip M. Crane, 1968; "Conservative Outlook" (ACU weekly newspaper column), with articles by Bob Bauman, Philip Crane, Jesse Helms, and James McClure; An Effective Labor Policy for the United States, by Sylvester Petro, 1968; The First 1,000 Days--One Legislator's Viewpoint, by John M. Ashbrook, 1971; The G.R.I. Report, "A look into the operations of 'Group Research, Inc.'--America's foremost source of anti-conservative smear material," 1968; Public Monitor Report; and Ratings of Congress. Series XV: Media Materials. Non-ACU publications, contains copies of American Spectator; Citizens for the Republic Newsletter; Cornerstone, by the Foundation of Law and Society; Conservative Party, by the Conservative Party; Enterprise, journal of the National Association of Manufacturers; Heritage Foundation publications, including "The Key to Peace," by Clarence Manion, 1975; Human Events reprints; Intercollegiate Review; New Guard (publication of the Young Americans for Freedom); Persuasion at Work, by the Rockford College Institute, Sept. 1978; Review of the News; The Right Report (Richard A. Viguerie Company, Inc.); The Rockford Papers; and Secret U.S. War Against South Africa, by Aida Parker. Series XVI: ACU Audio Tape Collection, contains recordings of John Ashbrook, Robert E. Bauman, Patrick Buchanan, James L. Buckley, William Buckley, Harry Byrd, Philip M. Crane, Lee Edwards, Mickey Edwards, M. Stanton Evans, Milton Friedman, Philip Gramm, Orrin Hatch, Jesse Helms, Jack Kemp, James McClure, Larry McDonald, Stefan Possony, Ronald Reagan, John Rousselot, William A. Rusher, Phyllis Schlafly, John Singlaub, Strom Thurmond, and Ernest van der Haag.

Reference:

Kim Phillips-Fein, Invisible Hands: The Making of the Conservative Movement from the New Deal to Reagan (New York and London: W.W. Norton, 2009).

Websites with information:

https://findingaid.lib.byu.edu/browse.php

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/122322655

http://www.worldcat.org/title/american-conservative-union-records/oclc/122322655

Finding aids:

http://files.lib.byu.edu/ead/XML/MSS176.xml

http://findingaid.lib.byu.edu/viewItem/MSS%20176

https://findingaid.lib.byu.edu/viewItem/MSS%20176

[0094] American Council of Christian Churches and International Council of Christian Churches Collection, 1941-1958, Record Group # 1

Location: PCA Historical Center, 12330 Conway Road, St. Louis, MO 63141

Description: Constitution and Bylaws; Correspondence and deposition re H. McAllister Griffiths; various pamphlets and brochures; materials from the Second Plenary Congress [1950]. Pamphlets include The American Council of Christian Churches: Its Purpose and Testimony, by Carl McIntire; Communism and the Bible, by Dr. Fred Schwarz; and Facing Problems Raised by the World Council of Churches, by Capt. Edgar C. Bundy. A promotional booklet for the ICCC, Second Plenary Congress, 1950, August 16-23, contains articles by Carl McIntire and W.O.H. Garman, among others.

Finding aid:

http://www.pcahistory.org/findingaids/accciccc.html

[0095] American Council of Christian Laymen Records, 1949-1963, Mss 700; Micro 1100; M2004-199

Location: Wisconsin Historical Society, Library-Archives Division, 816 State St., Madison, WI 53706-1417

Description: Records, mainly 1950-1962, of the American Council of Christian Laymen (ACCL), a national conservative organization (1949-1964) based in Madison, Wisconsin, that published and distributed literature concerning communist influence within American Protestant churches (especially within the National Council of Churches) and (after 1953) Communist propaganda in school textbooks. The bulk of the collection consists of the extensive correspondence of its founder and president Verne P. Kaub. Among the correspondents are William F. Buckley, Edgar Bundy, L. Ray Carroll, Willis A. Carto, John K. Crippen, Harry Everingham, C.O. Garshwiler, Barry Goldwater, William J. Grede, Chester Hanson, Billy James Hargis, Merwin K. Hart, R.C. Hoiles, J. Edgar Hoover, Joseph P. Kamp, James J. Kilpatrick, Fulton Lewis, Jr., Joseph R. McCarthy, Carl McIntire, Ben Moreell, James D. Murch, J. Howard Pew, Henry Regnery, George Robnett, Edward A. Rumley, Gerald L. K. Smith, Dan Smoot, Governor George Wallace, Robert Welch, Gerald B. Winrod, and Allen Zoll. Also included are an incomplete run of "Challenge," the ACCL newsletter, 1952-1963; a copy of Kaub's book, Communist-Socialist Propaganda in Our Schools; and other records. Subject files on American Mercury, Ray Carroll – Freedom Forum (Billings, Mont.), Christian Beacon, Kenneth Colegrove, Congress of Freedom, John Birch Society, J.B. Matthews affair, mental health, segregation, Un-American Activities Committee—"Operation Abolition," 1960, United Nations—Bricker amendment, and We, the People.

Websites with information:

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/17270724

http://www.worldcat.org/title/records-1949-1963/oclc/17270724

Finding aids:

http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/wiarchives.uw-whs-mss00700

http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi/f/findaid/findaid-idx?c=wiarchives;cc=wiarchives;view=text;rgn=main;­didno=uw-whs-mss00700

[0096] American Defense Society Records, 1915-1942 (bulk 1918-1920; 1935-1939), MS 14

Location: The New-York Historical Society, 170 Central Park West at Richard Gilder Way (77th Street), New York, NY 10024

Description: This collection documents the views, aims, and internal workings of the American Defense Society (ADS), based in New York City, an early twentieth-century nationalist organization that embraced conservative, anti-radical, nativist, and related sentiments. The material dates from 1915 to 1942, and concerns many of the political, ideological, religious, and social debates and events of the time period. Nearly half of the American Defense Society Records consists of correspondence, including incoming and copies of outgoing letters, as well as internal communications among board members, officers, and members. In addition, the collection contains much printed material, some of which were published by the society. Also included is material that documents the society's internal organization, and newspaper clippings collected by ADS. In 1920, ADS distributed pamphlets entitled "Protocols and World Revolution," that reference the anti-Semitic publication "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion." In 1930, Charles Stewart Davison and ADS trustee Madison Grant published The Alien in Our Midst, or "Selling Our Birthright for a Mess of Pottage": The Written Views of a Number of Americans (Present and Former) on Immigration and Its Results (not an ADS publication).

Websites with information:

http://www.nyhistory.org/library/findingaids/manuscripts

http://www.jgsnydb.org/dorot/summerfall2005.pdf

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/58776278

http://www.worldcat.org/title/records-1915-1942/oclc/58776278

Finding aids:

http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/nyhs/americandefsoc/

http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/nyhs/americandefsoc_content.html

[0097] American Economic and Tax Reform Pamphlets and Ephemera, 1919-1984, RL.01276

Location: David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Box 90185, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27708-0185

Description: This collection consists of pamphlets, newsletters, newspapers, brochures, and other publications and periodicals from a variety of pro-libertarian and right wing organizations, including the American Economic Foundation and the National Economic Council, Inc. Topics include free market capitalism, price stabilization, the elimination or reduction of taxes, anti-Communism, the Federal Reserve, inflation and the gold standard, the Marshall Plan, foreign aid, gold and silver, the value of money, conspiracy theories, the taxation of the American people, inflation, Henry George, land value taxation, and monetary reform.

Finding aids:

http://library.duke.edu/rubenstein/findingaids/taxreformpamphlets/

http://library.duke.edu/rubenstein/findingaids/taxreformpamphlets.pdf

http://library.duke.edu/rubenstein/findingaids/taxreformpamphlets/pdf

[0098] American Eugenics Society Records, 1916-1973, Mss.575.06.Am3

Location: Library, American Philosophical Society, 105 S 5th St, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19106-3386

Description: The American Eugenics Society Records is a small, selective collection offering information on various periods of the Society's development, including correspondence, membership records, and formal and informal material on its history. Among those associated with the American Eugenics Society were Carl C. Brigham, Edwin G. Conklin, Irving Fisher, Henry H. Goddard, C. M. Goethe, E. S. Gosney, Madison Grant, Harry H. Laughlin, and Lothrop Stoddard. The collection largely revolves around Frederick Osborn (1889-1981), the moving force in the Society for most of its later history, and it includes approximately 100 papers written or delivered by Osborn concerning eugenics, genetics, or population related topics. Files on American Eugenics Party, The American Mercury, Carl C. Brigham, Edwin G. Conklin, Irving Fisher, Madison Grant, Harry H. Laughlin, Charles Lindbergh, and Pioneer Fund.

Finding aid:

http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.575.06.Am3-ead.xml

[0099] American Family Association Collection, 1990-2005, MUM00008

Location: Archives and Special Collections, J.D. Williams Library, The University of Mississippi, P.O. Box 1848, University, MS 38677-1848

Description: Collection of publications and circular letters from the American Family Association, a conservative Christian lobbying organization based in Tupelo, Mississippi, and founded by Donald Wildmon. The organization is concerned with homosexuality, conservative family values, the media, liberal ideology, abortion, and other conservative religious interests. Publications include American Family Association Journal. Topics of the publications include Abortion, Anti-AARP, Anti-media Anti-Bill Clinton, Anti-homosexuality, anti-"LLE" (left-liberal-elite), Anti-liberal, child pornography, Congressman Dornan, Euthanasia, Feminism, Gay rights, Government intrusion, History Standards for U.S. History, Homosexuality, IRS attack on conservatives, Liberals, National Health Care, National Council of Churches, National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), People for the American Way, Political correctness, pornography, Prayer in schools, Pro-family legislation, Same sex marriage, and Secular humanism.

Websites with information:

http://southernstudies.olemiss.edu/media/Special-Collections-List.pdf

http://www.olemiss.edu/depts/general_library/archives/finding_intro/alpha.html

http://www.olemiss.edu/depts/general_library/archives/finding_intro/bynumber.html

http://www.library.olemiss.edu/guides/archives_subject_guide/religion/manuscript?page=show

http://www.library.olemiss.edu/guides/archives_subject_guide/politics/manuscript-20th?page=show

http://www.library.olemiss.edu/guides/archives_subject_guide/criminal-justice/manuscripts?page=show

http://www.library.olemiss.edu/guides/archives-subject-guide/journalism-and-mass-media-manuscript-collections?page=show

Finding aid:

http://www.olemiss.edu/depts/general_library/archives/finding_aids/MUM00008.html

[0099a] American Family Association Journal, 1991-present [digital collection]

Description: American Family Association (AFA) was founded in 1977 by Donald E. Wildmon, who was the pastor of First United Methodist Church in Southaven, Mississippi, at the time. AFA Journal describes as its purpose "to promote the biblical standard of decency in American culture with emphasis on any moral issues that have an impact on the family. The Journal covers education, patriotism, pro-life issues, pornography, marriage and family, politics, biblical insights, profiles of other successful ministries, profiles of outstanding activists, entertainment issues, the gay activist agenda and more." Issues from Volume 15, Number 1 (January 1991) [online at http://afajournal.org/1991/0191afaj.pdf] to (the latest as of this writing) November 2016 [online at http://www.afajournal.org/past-issues/2016/november/]. Contributors include L. Brent Bozell III, Patrick Buchanan, James C. Dobson, Samuel Francis, James J. Kilpatrick, Mitch McConnell, Thomas Sowell, Cal Thomas, and Donald E. Wildmon.

Websites with information:

https://www.afa.net/who-is-afa/about-us/

https://www.afa.net/divisions/afa-journal/

Website for digital collection:

http://afajournal.org/

[0100] American Federation of Labor Records, 1888-1955, U.S. Mss 117A; Micro 489; Micro 568; Disc 53A

Location: Wisconsin Historical Society, Library-Archives Division, 816 State St., Madison, WI 53706-1417

Description: The American Federation of Labor is composed of national and international unions, which are organized on craft lines, such as carpenters or machinists. Records include files of AFL Presidents Samuel Gompers and William Green; files of various AFL officials and departments; and general files on federal and state legislation, industry and labor developments, strikes and agreements, and other topics. Series 3: State Legislation Files, 1942-1951, contains correspondence of William Green, including telegrams, newspaper clippings, pamphlets, and other materials concerning pending bills and legislation in state legislatures, including those dealing with anti-labor laws and right to work legislation. Series 8: Files of the Director of Research, Subseries: File A: General File, contains correspondence, telegrams, memoranda, clippings, reports, pamphlets, and other materials relative to economic, social, and political problems of interest to Florence Thorne as Director of Research of the AFL. There are files on the Bretton Woods Agreement, Communism, Dumbarton Oaks, and Garet Garrett. Series 11: Files of the Office of the President, 1881-1952, Subseries: File B: William Green Papers, 1915-1945, contains correspondence on the subject of Mussolini.

Reference:

Menzi L. Behrnd-Klodt and Carolyn J. Mattern, Social Action Collections at the State Historical Society of Wisconsin: A Guide (Madison: The Society, 1983).

Finding aid:

http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/wiarchives.uw-whs-us00117a

[0100a] American Historical Manuscripts, 1765-1982

Location: Special Collections and Archives, University Libraries, Kent State University, 1125 Risman Dr., Kent, OH 44242

Description: This collection contains miscellaneous historical manuscripts by Americans. Files on Charles Austin Beard, William Edgar Borah, Calvin Coolidge, Hamilton Fish, Gerald R. Ford, Herbert Hoover, Joe McCarthy, Henry Louis Mencken, Ronald Reagan, and Eddie Rickenbacker.

Finding aid:

http://www.library.kent.edu/american-historical-manuscripts

[0100b] American Immigration and Citizenship Conference records, 1932-1968, SW 128

Location: Social Welfare History Archives, 320 Elmer L. Andersen Library, University of Minnesota, 222 21st Avenue South, Minneapolis, MN 55455

Description: The American Immigration and Citizenship Conference (AICC) was formed in 1960 as a result of the merger of the National Council on Naturalization and Citizenship (NCNC) and the American Immigration Conference (AIC). AICC served as a clearinghouse of information and coordinated activities for organizations and agencies committed to reforming immigration policy. Its efforts were recognized as influential in shaping the Immigration and Naturalization Act of 1965. In 1982, AICC became a part of the National Immigration Forum. Series 1. National Council on Naturalization and Citizenship 1932-1960. Series 1.7. Subject Files, contains a file on McCarran-Walter Act and Refugee Relief Act 1953. Series 2. American Immigration Conference (AIC) 1954-1961. Series 2.2. Board and Committee Materials. [Subseries] Committee on Legislation 1952-1963, contains a file on McCarran-Walter Act 1952-1960. Series 3.2. Committee Structure 1957-1968. [Subseries] Committee on Legislation 1957-1968, contains files on Legislation 1960-1964; Legislation 1961-1962; HR 6300, Walter Bill 1961; Hart Bill 1962; Hart Bill S 747 1963; Rep. Michael A. Feighan; and Fact Sheet: "The Immigration Act of 1965. Public Law 89-236" June 17, 1966. Series 3.7. Non-Government Agencies, contains a file on Organizations not Sympathetic 1962. The series Publications and Print Materials 1946-1969, contains a copy of "Communist Political Subversion: The Campaign to Destroy the Security Programs of the United States Government," Committee on Un-American Activities 1957, and a file on Committee on Un-American Activities, U.S. House of Representatives 1950-1958.

Finding aid:

http://special.lib.umn.edu/findaid/xml/sw0128.xml

[0101] American Immigration Conference Board Records, 1929-1939, MS 614

Location: Manuscripts and Archives, Sterling Memorial Library, Yale University, 128 Wall Street, P.O. Box 208240, New Haven, CT 06520

Description: The American Immigration Conference Board Papers, taken from the files of the periodical Uncensored, consists of the correspondence, writings, and printed materials relating to the question of the immigration and deportation of aliens. Active in the late 1930s, the aims of the American Immigration Conference Board (AICB) were to severely limit immigration, both legal and illegal, limit relief benefits only to United States citizens, deport alien criminals and aliens who were continuously on relief, and to "give American Jobs to Americans First." The AICB accordingly gave support to the Reynolds-Starnes Bills, sponsored by Congressman Joe Starnes and Senator Robert R. Reynolds, and opposed passage of the Dies Alien Deportation Bill, which permitted a number of aliens, otherwise subject to deportation, to remain in the United States. The AICB was also strongly anti-Communist. Series I. Correspondence, contains correspondence between officials of the AICB (in particular John Cecil, the president, and Lester M. Gray, the executive secretary) and members of the public who sponsored their policies. Series III. Writings and Publications, contains addresses by Allied Patriotic Societies Inc., Hon. William E. Borah, John Cecil, Hon. Martin Dies, and Senator Robert R. Reynolds. Publications derive from "America in Danger!", The American Coalition, American Nationalist Press, American School of Christian Democracy, Defenders of the Constitution, Inc., Robert Edward Edmondson, German American Bund (Fritz Kuhn, Chairman), Hearings before the Special Committee on Un-American Activities House of Representatives (Statement of Walter S. Steele), League for Constitutional Government, League for Sound Americanism Inc., and John B. Snow.

Finding aids:

http://hdl.handle.net/10079/fa/mssa.ms.0614

http://drs.library.yale.edu:8083/fedora/get/mssa:ms.0614/PDF

[0102] Records of the American Jewish Committee, Alphabetical Files (GEN-12), 1924-1981 (bulk 1933-1962), RG 347.17.12

Location: YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, Center for Jewish History, 15 West 16th Street, New York, NY 10011

Description: This collection consists of general reference files from the New York City headquarters of the American Jewish Committee (AJC). Materials originated in various AJC departments and were maintained by a Central Records office until 1962, when records retention policy was decentralized. Document types include correspondence, memoranda, reports, clippings, and published materials concerning individuals, businesses, government agencies, and other organizations related to the work of the AJC. Files on Einar Åberg, All American Conference to Combat Communism, Frank Altschul, America Plus, Inc., American Action, Inc., American Nationalist Party, American Mercury, American Legion, George W. Armstrong Foundation, Harold Noel Arrowsmith, Jr., John O. Beaty (Iron Curtain Over America/Darlington), John Birch Society, John Birch Society— Robert Welch, Boris Brasol, Christian Front, Christian Anti-Communism Crusade, Upton Close, Committee for Constitutional Government, Congress of Freedom, Crusade for Freedom, George W. Ebey, Béla Fábián, Facts Forum, Henry Ford, Ford Foundation — Fund for the Republic, Ford Foundation, Foreign Policy Association, Benjamin H. Freedman, Freedom House, Merwin K. Hart, Prof. William E. Hocking, Henry Hoke, Joseph Kamp, Ku Klux Klan, Ku Klux Klan — Father Foley, Alfred M. Lilienthal, Charles Lindbergh, Henry Cabot Lodge, General Douglas MacArthur, Senator Joseph McCarthy — "McCarthyism Under the Magnolias", Senator Joseph McCarthy — Polls, Conde McGinley — Common Sense, Minute Women of America, Minutemen, Moral Re-Armament, Felix Morley (Human Events), Merwin K. Hart — National Economic Council, National Council for American Education, National States Rights Party, National Association for the Advancement of White People, Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League, John O'Donnell, Westbrook Pegler, Congressman John Rankin, Red Channels, George Lincoln Rockwell — American National Socialist White Peoples Party (Investigative), George Lincoln Rockwell, George Lincoln Rockwell — American Nazi Party (Investigative), Rabbi Benjamin Schultz, Fred C. Schwarz, Gerald L. K. Smith, George Sokolsky, Senator Jack Tenney, Father Arthur W. Terminiello, Dorothy Thompson, United States Government — States Rights (Interposition), United States Government — Loyalty and Security Program — McCarthyism, United States Government — Congress — Committee on Communist Aggression (House), United States Government — Tax Exemption — Reece Committee, United States Government — Loyalty and Security Program — McCarthyism — Roy Cohn, United States Government — Committees — House Un-American Activities Committee, Congressman Harold H. Velde, Edwin A. Walker, White Citizens Council, Gerald Winrod, Women's Patriotic Conference on National Defense, and Allen Zoll.

Websites with information:

http://www.cjh.org/p/93

http://www.yivoarchives.org/index.php?p=collections/controlcard&id=33740

Finding aids:

http://digifindingaids.cjh.org/?pID=1863760

http://findingaids.cjh.org?pID=1863760

[0103] American Jewish Committee Anti-Semitic and Extremist Collection

Location: Jacob and Hilda Blaustein Human Relations Library, American Jewish Committee, 165 E. 56th St, New York, NY 10022

Description: Contains files on John Crommelin, Rev. Carl McIntire, and J. B. Stoner.

References:

Clive Webb, "Freedom for all? Blacks, Jews, and the political censorship of white racists in the civil rights era," American Jewish History, 94.4 (Dec. 2008), pp. 267-97, https://www.muse.jhu.edu/login?­auth=0&type=summary&url=/journals/american_jewish_history/v094/94.4.webb.html; Clive Webb, Rabble Rousers: The American Far Right in the Civil Rights Era (Athens, University of Georgia Press, 2011); Markku Ruotsila, "Carl McIntire and the Fundamentalist Origins of the Christian Right," Church History, Vol. 81, No. 2 (June 2012), pp. 378-407.

[0104] AJC General Correspondence Files, 1906-46 (bulk 1933-41)

Location: Special Collections, American Jewish Committee Library, 165 E. 56th St, New York, NY 10022

Description: The General Correspondence collection contains correspondence, including letters, memoranda, articles, reports, minutes, and abstracts that document the activities of the American Jewish Committee from 1906 through 1946. Series II: Subject Files, 1906-32, contains files on the Berne Trial, Boris Brasol, The Britons 1921-1930, Communism and Jews, Henry Ford, Industrial Defense Association 1931-32, Ku Klux Klan, Patriotic American Patriot 1922-23, W. D. Pelley 1925, Protocols of the Wise Men of Zion, and Gen. Tcherep-Spiridovich 1923.

Reference:

For more on the archival sources for the Berne trial, see Michael Hagemeister, "Russian Émigrés in the Bern Trial of the 'Protocols of the Elders of Zion' (1933-1935)," Cahiers Parisiens / Parisian Notebooks, 5, 2009, pp. 375-391, http://dg.philhist.unibas.ch/fileadmin/histsem/user_upload/redaktion/PersonenDateien/Hage­meister/MH-Russian_Emigres.pdf.

Finding aid:

http://www.ajc.org/site/c.9hJJLVMDKdKWE/b.6694165/k.83F/Special_Collections.htm

[0105] Records of the American Jewish Committee Executive Offices (EXO-29), Morris Waldman Files, 1905-1963 (bulk 1930-1945), RG 347.1.29

Location: YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, Center for Jewish History, 15 West 16th Street, New York, NY 10011-6301

Description: Morris Waldman was the Secretary of the American Jewish Committee, 1928-1943, and its Executive Vice President, 1943-1944. The Morris Waldman Files relate to all of Waldman's activities as acting executive secretary and vice-president of the AJC. Among the documents are correspondence, memoranda, minutes of meetings, statements, reports, pamphlets, publications, press clippings. Contains files on America First Committee, Anti-Semitism, Boris Brasol, Communism, Communism and Jews, Constitutional Educational League (anti-union and anti-New Deal) and its president, Joseph P. Kamp, as connected to known anti-Semites, Father Charles E. Coughlin, Council Against Nazi Propaganda and its publication, The Hour, Martin Dies, Ralph Easley and his National Civic Federation, Robert Edward Edmondson, Henry Ford, foreign affairs, Foreign Policy Association, Benjamin Franklin forgery, Group libel, Hate and Hate Merchants, Hate Literature (including correspondence on possible legal action against Pelley and his Silver Shirts), Isolationism, Knights of the White Camellia and George Deatherage, Charles A. Lindbergh, Louis T. McFadden, Militant Christian Patriots and L. Fry, Nazism - "Mein Kampf," Nazi Propaganda (on pro-Nazi German press in the US, on propaganda activities of Pelley and Silver Shirts, on ABC Legion, on anti-Nazi German-American League for Culture), Nazi Propaganda- United States, Nazism, Senator Gerald Nye, Protocols of the Elders of Zion, Steuben Society, James True, United Nations - San Francisco Conference (Dumbarton Oaks), United States Flag Association, United States Government - Congressional Investigations - Dies, Senator Burton Wheeler, and Gerald B. Winrod. Also contains correspondence between Harry Schneiderman and Fortune's editor Archibald MacLeish on the preparation of "Jews in America," Fortune 13.2 (February 1936).

Reference:

Guide to the YIVO Archives, edited by Fruma Mohrer and Marek Web (Armonk, NY, M.E. Sharpe, 1998).

Websites with information:

http://www.cjh.org/p/93

http://www.yivoarchives.org/index.php?p=collections/controlcard&id=33740

Finding aids:

http://polishjews.yivoarchives.org/archive/?p=collections/findingaid&id=34307

http://findingaids.cjh.org/?pID=1655280

http://www.yivoarchives.org/index.php?p=collections/controlcard&id=33845

http://opac.cjh.org/F/RJAATIFUTKD8CS8GJUCARM73P82P9C5T25FNP6EA348HV8BJUC-27433?func=dire

ct&local_base=CJH01&doc_number=000133842&pds_handle=GUEST

[0106] American Jewish Committee: Information & Research Service (IRS), 1930s-1940s, RG 347.8

Location: YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, 15 West 16th Street, New York, NY 10011-6301

Description: The collection includes press clippings on Jewish affairs, relating mainly to anti-Semitism in North America, England, and Europe. There are materials on Father Charles E. Coughlin; Henry Ford; Amin Al Husayni [Haj Amin el Husseini, former mufti of Jerusalem]; Oswald Mosley; Julius Streicher; the anti-Nazi boycott; and the Protocols of the Elders of Zion.

Reference:

Guide to the YIVO Archives, edited by Fruma Mohrer and Marek Web (Armonk, NY, M.E. Sharpe, 1998).

Finding aid:

http://www.yivoarchives.org/?p=collections/controlcard&id=33737

[0107] American Jewish Committee Records, 1917-1987 (bulk 1933-1984), MS-780

Location: American Jewish Archives, 3101 Clifton Ave., Cincinnati, OH 45220

Description: Consists of American Jewish Committee (AJC) records from 1917-1987. Series E. Civil Rights and Social Action Department. 1941-1976. Subseries 1. Director's Office. 1941-1968. Section ii. Subject Files. 1941-1968, contains subject files on American Mercury, American Nazi Party, Anti-Semitism, Harold Noel Arrowsmith, Jr., John Beaty, Christian Youth Corps, Common Sense, Federation of American Citizens, Group Research, Inc. (Wesley McCune), House Un-American Activities Committee, Ku Klux Klan, Let Freedom Ring, James Madole, Jr., Minutemen, Sir Oswald Mosley, National Renaissance Party, National States Rights Party, Neo-Fascists and hate groups, Radical right and extremism, Radical right and extremism. Greenwich conference. 1962-1965 [the Conference on Preserving the Democratic Process, sponsored by the American Jewish Committee and held in Greenwich, Connecticut, January 25-27, 1962], Radical right and extremism. Greenwich conference. Continuation Committee. 1962-1965, George Lincoln Rockwell, Gerald L.K Smith, James Venable, White Citizens Council, and Major General Charles A. Willoughby. Series G. Information and Research Services. 1947-1987. Subseries 1. September 1978 Accrual. 1947-1975. Section i. Alphabetical Files. 1947-1975, contains subject files on Incident at Massena: The Blood Libel in America, by Saul S. Friedman (1978); Jewish Defense League; and George Lincoln Rockwell. Section iii. Subject Files. 1947-1975, contains subject files on Abortion; Antisemitism; Church-State. Bible reading; Church-State. Federal aid to parochial schools; Church-State. Prayer in public schools; Codewords; Communism; Communism and Jews; Extremism; Radicals or Conservatives? The Contemporary American Right, by James McEvoy, III (1970); Radical right; Fluoridation; Fundamentalism and antisemitism; Integration; Race relations; and Intermarriage.

Websites with information:

http://americanjewisharchives.org/collections/findingAids.php

Finding aids:

http://americanjewisharchives.org/collections/ms0780/

http://collections.americanjewisharchives.org/ms/ms0780/ms0780.html

[0108] American Jewish Committee Records, Domestic and Geographic Files, 1921, 1941-1962, 1995, RG 247.17.13

Location: YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, Center for Jewish History, 15 West 16th Street, New York, NY 10011

Description: The American Jewish Committee (AJC) was founded in New York in 1906 to defend Jewish civil and religious rights throughout the world. The records consist of briefs, conference proceedings, correspondence, legal documents, memoranda, minutes of meetings, printed materials, reports, resolutions, statements, studies, and surveys. Series I: American Jewish Committee Records, Domestic and Geographic Files, 1921, 1941-1962, 1995. [Subseries]. Alabama, contains files on Integration, John Crommelin, Hate groups, and Anti-Semitism. [Subseries]. Arkansas, contains files on Little Rock and Integration. [Subseries]. California, contains files on Hate Groups and America Plus Inc. [Subseries]. Florida, contains files on Communism, Hate groups, Hate violence, and Integration. [Subseries]. Georgia, contains files on Hate and violence, Hate groups, and Integration. [Subseries]. Illinois, contains files on Beauharnais vs. Illinois, Hate and violence, and Hate groups. [Subseries]. Mississippi, contains files on Hate groups, The Petal Paper, Race, and the White Citizens Council. [Subseries]. New York, contains files on Hate groups, The Gaelic American, and The Tablet. [Subseries]. Tennessee, contains files on Hate and violence, Highlander Folk School, and Integration. [Subseries]. Texas, contains files on Extremist groups and Integration.

Finding aid:

http://findingaids.cjh.org/?pID=2062158

[0109] American Jewish Committee Records, Subject Files, 1930-1973 (bulk 1941-1961), RG 347.17.10

Location: YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, Center for Jewish History, 15 West 16th Street, New York, NY 10011

Description: The American Jewish Committee (AJC) was founded in New York in 1906 to defend Jewish civil and religious rights throughout the world. The collection documents American Jewish Committee's efforts to combat all forms of discrimination against the Jews in the United States. Additionally, there are materials pertaining to AJC's work regarding other minority groups in the United States. The American Jewish Committee Records, Subject Files consists of materials created by executive offices, departments, local offices and chapters of the Committee concerning a variety of matters; foremost Jewish civil and religious rights, immigration, and the Holocaust. The records consist of briefs, cartoons, conference procedures, correspondence, discussion guides, interviews, legal documents, manuscripts, memoranda, minutes of meetings, opinion polls, printed materials, questionnaires, reports, resolutions, scrapbooks, speeches, statements, studies, surveys, and television and radio scripts. Subject files on Anti-Semitism, including Anti-Semites, Anti-Semitic groups, Hate literature, Protocols of the Elders of Zion, and Swastika Epidemic; Extremism, including Radical Right; Genocide Convention; Group Libel Legislation, including Hate mail literature sent though the postal service; Hate and Violence, including Bombings, Terminiello case, Ku Klux Klan, Mothers, White Citizens, Anti-Lynching Legislation, Merchants (Austin Hancock, American Heritage Protective Society; Merwin K. Hart; Joseph Kamp; Conde McGinley; Gerald L.K. Smith), and Quarantine; Immigration, including McCarran-Walter Act; and Integration, including Hate and violence, Hate groups.

Websites with information:

http://www.cjh.org/p/93

Finding aid:

http://findingaids.cjh.org/?pID=1863758

[0110] AJC Subject Files (Gen-10), 1930-1962, RG 347.17.10 [digital collection]

Location: American Jewish Committee Information Center and Digital Archives, 165 East 56th Street, New York, NY 10022

Description: This series consists of alphabetical subject files. Main subjects include: anti-Semitism, bigotry and prejudice, church-state, civil liberties and rights, immigration, intergroup relations, race relations, restitution, and Zionism. The physical files are housed at the YIVO Archives. The subject file Anti-Semitism includes folders on Anti-Semitic groups 1934-1960, Hate literature articles and editorials 1933-1962, [Protocols of the] Elders of Zion, The New Nazis in Western Europe and Latin America (pamphlet, 1960-1962), Swastika Epidemic, and Neo-Nazi Youth Groups. The subject file Extremism contains a folder on the Conference on Preserving the Democratic Process, sponsored by the American Jewish Committee and held in Greenwich, Connecticut, January 25-27, 1962. The subject file Hate and Violence includes folders on Bombings, Terminiello case, Ku Klux Klan, Mothers groups, White Citizens, Anti-Lynching, Austin F. Hancock (American Heritage Protective Society), Merwin K. Hart, Joseph Kamp, Conde McGinley, and Gerald L.K. Smith. The booklet Anti-Semitic Activity in the United States: A Report and Appraisal (New York, American Jewish Committee, 1954) mentions American Heritage Protective Committee (San Antonio, Texas), George W. Armstrong, John Owen Beaty, Joseph Beauharnais, Frank L. Britton, Catherine V. Brown, Max A. X. Clark, Constitution Party, Edward A. Fleckenstein, Millard J. Flenner, Stephen Goodyear, John Hamilton, Merwin K. Hart, Jessie Welch Jenkins, Dan Kurtz, Andrew B. McAllister, W. Henry MacFarland, Jr., Conde McGinley, Kurt Mertig, George Van Horn Moseley, Eustace Mullins, National Renaissance Party, Stephen Nenoff, Gerald L. K. Smith, Jack B. Tenney, H. Keith Thompson, James R. White, Robert H. Williams, Gerald Winrod, Peter L. Xavier, and Allen A. Zoll. A mimeographed report on "The Dissident Political Movement—1956" (March 1956) cites American Good Government Society, Inc., American Mercury, The American Reporter (Sacramento, California), Prof. John O. Beaty, Black Monday (Judge Tom P. Brady), Judge Tom P. Brady, Mary D. Cain, Coalition Now (J. Harvie Williams), Christian Anti-Jewish Party (J. B. Stoner), Christian Nationalist Party (Gerald L. K. Smith), Committee for the 48 States, Congress of Freedom, Constitution Coalition Council, Constitution Party (San Antonio), Kent Courtney, Defenders of the American Constitution, Lt. Gen. Pedro A. del Valle (USMC ret.), Facts Forum (H. L. Hunt), Federation for Constitutional Government (John U. Barr), General Bonner Fellers, John T. Flynn, For America, Free Men Speak, Interim Committee for a New Party (ICNP), Iron Curtain Over America (John O. Beaty), Know Your Enemy, Colonel Robert R. McCormick, W. Henry MacFarland, Jr., Dean Clarence Manion, National Renaissance Party, Nationalist Conservative Party of Chicago (William B. Wernecke), Nationalist Party (West Hooker), Right (C. W. Thomas, San Francisco), W. J. Simmons, Dan Smoot, Gen. Stratemeyer, The Summit Sun, We, The People, White Citizens' Council, and Zion's Trojan Horse (Jack B. Tenney).

References:

Inventory of records of the American Jewish Committee, 1906-80, by Seymour J. Pomrenze (New York, N.Y., American Jewish Committee, Institute of Human Relations, 1981); Index to the Inventory of records of the American Jewish Committee, 1906-80, by Jessica L. Milstead and Beverly A. Pajer (New York, N.Y., American Jewish Committee, 1994).

Websites with information:

http://www.yivoarchives.org/index.php?p=collections/controlcard&id=33740

Finding aids:

http://digifindingaids.cjh.org/?pID=1863758

http://www.yivoarchives.org/index.php?p=collections/controlcard&id=33847

http://www.ajcarchives.org/ajcarchive/DigitalArchive.aspx

[0111] Records of American Jewish Congress, undated, 1916-2006 (bulk 1949-2003), I-77

Location: American Jewish Historical Society, Center for Jewish History, 15 West 16th Street, New York, N.Y. 10011

Description: The records of the American Jewish Congress, a national Jewish agency, concerned primarily with Jewish and other minority civil rights, include the constitution, by-laws, and minutes of the Administrative and Executive Committees and Governing Council of the Congress. The American Jewish Congress Records collects archival material from the creation of the organization to its later years, from 1915 through 2005. Files on "Benjamin Franklin Vindicated" (November 1938), "Father Coughlin: His 'Facts' and Arguments" (1939) [online at https://ia800303.us.archive.org/7/items/FatherCoughlinHisFactsAnd­Arguments_201502/Father%20Coughlin%20his%20facts%20and

%20arguments.PDF], "The Claim of 'Nordic' Race Supremacy," by Johan J. Smertenko (1924), Academic freedom and Shockley [William Shockley], American Mercury, Anti-Semitic literature collection, Institute of Jewish Affairs, Anti-Semitism in the U.S., Richard Arens, Becker Amendment, Benjamin Franklin forgery, Bombings, 1958-1962, Bricker Amendment, Bricker Resolution, Patrick Buchanan, Camps for Subversives, Church and State - Religion in Public Schools (Becker Amendment), Church and State - Religion and Politics (Contract with the American Family, Moral Majority, New Christian Right, Religious Right, Pat Robertson, Thomas G. Tancredo, Paul Weyrich), Conde McGinley, Discrimination - Private Club Discrimination, 1952-2001, Discrimination - Ku Klux Klan and Extremist Groups (David Duke, Knight Riders of the Ku Klux Klan, Military and white supremacist activity, Neo-Nazi and Aryan Nation, Paramilitary training camps, Recruitment on internet, Skinheads), Discrimination - Anti-Semitism and Race Relations, Discrimination - Hate Crimes and Vandalism, Robert Dole, Equal rights amendment, Evangelical Right, Extremist speech, Jerry Falwell, Family Research Council, Farm crisis, Father Feeney, Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Paul Findley, Flag salute and burning, Leo Frank, Genocide and Human Rights Treaties, Newt Gingrich, Gun control, Hate speech, Helms Amendment, Heritage Foundation, Holocaust revisionism, House Un-American Activities Committee, International anti-Semitism, Jewish Defense League, Jewish religious right, John Birch Society, Meir Kahane, Jeane Kirkpatrick, Ku Klux Klan, Liberty Lobby, McCarthyism, Moral Majority, National Rifle Association, Nazis, Neo-conservatives, Neo-Nazism, Oberammergau, Pat Robertson, Prayer amendments (Helms/Byrd), Promise Keepers Movement, Queens Nazi movement, Racial Segregation, Ronald Reagan, Reese Investigation of tax exempt organizations, Religious Freedom Restoration Act, Resolution regarding censure of Senator McCarthy, Pat Robertson, George Rockwell, School Desegregation, School prayer, School vouchers, Segregation, Skokie, Illinois, Skokie v. National Socialist Party of America, Soviet anti-Semitism, Valerian Trifa, United States Citizen vs. Senator Theo. G. Bilbo, and James P. Warburg.

Websites with information:

http://www.cjh.org/p/93

Finding aids:

http://digifindingaids.cjh.org/?pID=365446

http://findingaids.cjh.org/?pID=365446

http://www.cjh.org/nhprc/AmericanJewishCongress.pdf

[0112] American Jewish Congress, Northern California Division records, 1957-1988, Coll. BANC MSS 2010/702

Location: Western Jewish Americana, The Magnes Collection of Jewish Art and Life, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, California, 94720-6000

Description: The American Jewish Congress (AJC) was founded in 1916, and reorganized in 1920 and 1938. The Northern California Division was officially founded in December 1943. The collection documents the activities of the American Jewish Congress' Northern California Division from 1960 through the mid-1980s. It contains minutes (1960-1982, incomplete), financial records, membership records, annual reports, articles, programs, newsletters, press releases, clippings, correspondence, briefs and published material, and some photographs. Series 4 Subject Files. 1957-1988, contains files on Holocaust, Institute of Historical Review ("Holocaust Debunkers"), Jewish Defense League (JDL), John Birch Society, Nazi Activity in San Francisco (Vincent Suit), and Programs—Nazis and the First Amendment/L. A. Greenfeld

Websites with information:

http://www.magnes.org/collections/archives/western-jewish-americana

http://www.magnes.org/collections/archives/western-jewish-americana/american-jewish-congress-northern-california-division-

Finding aids:

http://pdf.oac.cdlib.org/pdf/berkeley/bancroft/m2010_702_cubanc.pdf

http://cdn.calisphere.org/data/13030/n2/kt9j49q6n2/files/kt9j49q6n2.pdf

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt3m3nf1j3/entire_text/

[0113] American Labor Conference on International Affairs. Records, 1939-1950, TAM.038

Location: Tamiment Library/Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives, Elmer Holmes Bobst Library, New York University Libraries, 70 Washington Square South, New York, NY 10012

Description: The American Labor Conference on International Affairs (ALCIA), a non socialist group, was organized in February 1943 by several labor leaders. The primary purpose of ALCIA was to engage in research on international economic and political problems for the benefit of the American labor movement. ALCIA published reports on political, economic, labor, and educational questions, and a monthly magazine entitled Modern Review between March 1947 and 1949, whose contributors included Louis Fischer and Granville Hicks. The collection includes correspondence, resolutions, constitutions and by laws, reports, conference papers, financial papers, press releases, speeches, minutes, memoranda, newspaper clippings, pamphlets, rough drafts of articles, and form letters. Series 1. Correspondence, 1941-1947, n.d., contains subject files on Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America, Foreign Policy Association, Foundations, and Institute of Pacific Relations. Correspondents include Max Eastman and Wendell Willkie. Series 2. Office files, 1940-1947, n.d., contains Albert Halasi's essay on the Bretton Woods agreements and George Denicke's article on the Dumbarton Oaks proposals, as well as files on Christopher Emmet, Alfred Kohlberg, and Gaetano Salvemini. Series 3. Modern Review files, 1939-1950, n.d., contains a file on Daniel Bell and his work as editor of the Modern Review in 1949. Correspondents include Richard Hofstadter, Seymour Martin Lipset, and Granville Hicks.

Websites with information:

http://www.nyu.edu/library/bobst/research/tam/fa_index.html

Finding aid:

http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/tamwag/tam_038/

[0114] Records of the American League for an Undivided Ireland (ALFUI), 1940-1965 (bulk 1947-1957)

Location: University Archives and Special Collections, St. John's University, St. Augustine Hall - Room B20, 8000 Utopia Parkway, Jamaica, New York 11439

Description: The American League for an Undivided Ireland was organized in New York City in March 26, 1947. The aim of the organization was to make every possible effort to abolish the partition of Ireland. The vast majority of the documents are letters between members of the organization, their correspondence with individuals from the U.S. Congress and with members of the Irish government, especially from the Parliament of Northern Ireland. Correspondents include Edward Lodge Curran, Everett M. Dirksen, Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., John Davis Lodge, Joe McCarthy, and Burton K. Wheeler.

Websites with information:

http://www.stjohns.edu/libraries/archives/special-collections

http://stjohnsarchives.wordpress.com/2014/01/27/american-league-undivided-ireland/

Finding aid:

http://www.stjohns.edu/sites/default/files/mc_american_league_undivided_ireland.pdf

[0114a] American Left Ephemera Collection, 1894-2008, AIS.2007.11 [digital collection]

Location: Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh, 7500 Thomas Boulevard, Pittsburgh, PA 15208

Description: This is a collection of ephemera accumulated by Dr. Richard J. Oestreicher, Associate Professor of History at the University of Pittsburgh. The collection includes periodicals, photographs, letters, pamphlets, books, posters, flyers, labels, pins and other objects. The collection contains copies of The Fascist Revival...the Inside Story of the John Birch Society...Who is in it? Who is Behind it? Who Directs and Finances it?, by Mike Newberry, June, 1961 [online at http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/31735061658757.pdf]; Pattern for American Fascism, by John L. Spivak, September, 1947 [online at http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/­pdf/31735061537779.pdf and http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/31735061659094.pdf]; The Fascist Danger and How to Combat it, by Eugene Dennis, August, 1948 [online at http://digital.library.­pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/31735061537613.pdf and http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/­ulsmanuscripts/pdf/31735066246087.pdf]; The Truth About Father Coughlin, by A.B. Magil, 1935 [online at http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/31735061659508.pdf]; The Real Father Coughlin, by A.B. Magil, May, 1939 [online at http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/3173506

1658427.pdf]; How Can We Share the Wealth? The Communist Way Versus Huey Long, by Alex Bittelman, April, 1935 [online at http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/31735061659979.pdf]; The Real Huey P. Long, by Sender Garlin, May, 1935 [online at http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/­31735061658872.pdf]; Treason in Congress: A Record of the Un-American Activities Committee, by Albert E. Kahn (1948 April) [online at http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/31735061656488.pdf]; San Francisco and the Un-American Activities Committee (San Francisco, Americans for Democratic Action, Northern California Chapter, 1960) [online at http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/­31735061540922.pdf]; The Red Baiters Menace America, by Eugene Dennis (New York, New Century Publishers, 1946) [online at http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/317350

61537621.pdf]; In the Shadow of Liberty, The Inhumanity of the Walter-McCarran Law, by Abner Green (1954) [online at http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/31735061657205.pdf]; Behind the Lynching of Emmet [sic] Louis Till, by Louis Burnham (New York, Freedom Associates, Inc., 1955) [online at http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/31735061656116.pdf]; Hate Groups and the Un-American Activities Committee, by David Wesley (New York, NY., Emergency Civil Liberties Committee, 1962) [online at http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/31735061657270.pdf]; and Myra Tanner Weiss, Vigilante Terror in Fontana; The Tragic Story of O'Day H. Short and His Family (1946) [on vigilante and other fascist-type formations terrorizing minorities and labor organizations] [online at http://digital.­library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/­pdf/31735058194139.pdf]. The Rankin Witch Hunt, By William Z. Foster, December, 1945 [online at http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/317350

61658195.pdf].

Finding aid:

http://digital.library.pitt.edu/cgi-bin/f/findaid/findaid-idx?c=ascead;cc=ascead;view=text;rgn=main;­didno=US-PPiU-ais200711

[0115] American Legion anti-Communist material, 1946-1952, Collection 793

Location: Special Collections, Margaret Herrick Library, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, 333 S. La Cienega Boulevard, Beverly Hills, California 90211

Description: The American Legion is an American veterans service organization chartered in 1919 by Congress to benefit veterans of the United States armed forces. The American Legion's national headquarters is in Indianapolis, Indiana. The material relates to the Legion's National Americanism Commission and includes reports, articles, memos, and research material. The research material includes publications generated by Jacoby & Gibbons and Associates, anti-subversive public relations specialists in Los Angeles; the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC); and others. Vertical files 31-f.276. Miscellaneous 1947-1952, undated, includes: (1) "How You Can Fight Communism"; (2) "Inquiry Concerning Quasi-Military Forces Organized by the Communists"; (3) "Know Your Enemy"; (4) "Inquiry on Racial Incitations Practiced by Communists"; (5) "'Peace' Sign-Up Bait for Gullible"; (6) "Crippling Courts Taught by Book"; (7) "The Plot against the McCarran-Walter Act" by Herbert G. Moore, National Republic, December, 1952; (8) "World War III, Russian Style, Is Here," November 2, 1951; (9) "Darkness at Noon in American Colleges" by E. Merrill Root, July 30, 1952; (10) "Alert," no. 147, November 16, 1950; (11) "Alert," no. 153, December 28, 1950; (12) memos, 1947-1952; and (13) research material, "Daily People's World," January 1, 1949. Vertical files 31-f.276a. Miscellaneous 1946-1951, undated, includes: (1) "Communism in Action," 1946; (2) "Un-American Activities in California," March 24, 1947; (3) "Un-American Activities in California," June 23, 1949; (4) "What the Hiss Trial Actually Means" by Senator Karl E. Mundt, January 25, 1950; (5) "Testimony of Edward G. Robinson," October 27, 1950 and December 21, 1950; (6) "Guide to Subversive Organizations and Publications," March 3, 1951; (7) "Report on the Communist 'Peace' Offensive," April 1, 1951; (8) "100 Things You Should Know about Communism," May 14, 1951; (9) research material, "A Great Nation Like Ours Can Neither Stand Still nor Turn Back"; (10) research material, "Communist Manifesto" by Karl Marx (Chicago: Foundation Books).

Library Catalog description:

http://catalog.oscars.org/vwebv/holdingsInfo?bibId=70918

Finding aid:

http://collections.oscars.org/link/msinvent/793/

[0115a] American Library Association Archives, 1920s to the present

Location: Archives Research Center, 105 Horticulture Field Lab, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1707 South Orchard St, Urbana, IL 61801

Description: The American Library Association, the world's oldest and largest national library association. The ALA Archives consists of official records, correspondence, publications, photographs, sound recordings, films, and videotapes. Record Group 6. Series Number 6/1/6. Office for Intellectual Freedom Subject Files, 1965-2008, contains files on Abortion; Accelerated Christian Education; Accuracy in Academia; Accuracy in Media; Accuracy in Media, Inc. (AIM) Reports; Ad Hoc Committee in Defense of Life; Alamo [Tony and Susan Alamo] Christian Foundation of Alma, Arkansas; Alliance Defense Fund; America's Future; American Center for Law and Justice; American Christian Cause; American Coalition for Traditional Values; American Conservative Union; American Constitution Society; American Family Association (Donald Wildmon); American Legislative Exchange Council; American Life Education and Research Trust [later the American Life League]; American Life League; American Life Lobby; American Party; Americanism Educational League; Americans against Abortion; Americans for a Sound Foreign Policy; Americans for Constitutional Freedom; Americans for Quality Education; Americans United for Life; Answers in Genesis; Arthur S. DeMoss Foundation; Aryan Nations; Attacks on ALA; Berean League of Minnesota; Bethany Baptist Academy; Birthright, Inc.; Californians for Biblical Morality; Campus Conservative Packs; Cardinal Mindszenty Foundation; Edwin Castagna's Response to an Article in "Let Freedom Ring" about Communist Influence in ALA, 1965; Catholic Alliance; Center for Constitutional Rights; Center for Constructive Alternatives; Center for the Study of Popular Culture; Center on the Family in America; Centre for Independent Studies; Children's Legal Foundation, Inc. [prev. Citizens for Decency through Law]; Christian Action League; Christian Action Network; Christian Anti-Communism Crusade; Christian Broadcasting Network; Christian Century Foundation; Christian Coalition; Christian Defense League; Christian Family Renewal (Anti-Smut, Anti-Abortion); Christian Leaders for Responsible Television; Christian Librarian's Fellowship; Christian Ministry; Christian School Action; Christian Voice; Church and State, Separation of; Church League of America; Church of Scientology; Citizens against Pornography; Citizens Concerned for the Constitution [later Advance America]; Citizens for Community Values; Citizens for Decency through Law [formerly Citizens for Decent Literature]; Citizens for Excellence in Education; Citizens for the Protection of Children; Citizens for True Freedom; Clippings on Right Wing Groups; Coalition against Pornography in Kansas City; Coalition for Freedom; Concerned Charlotteans (NC); Concerned Women for America; Conservative Caucus; Conservative Majority; Conservatives for America; Constitutional Heritage Club; Constitutional Revival; Coors [Coors Beer Corporation's involvement in Politics]; Coral Ridge Ministries; Council for National Righteousness; Council for National Policy; Creationism III; Crusade for a Christian Civilization; James Dobson; Dove Foundation; Eagle Forum (Education Reporter, Phyllis Schlafly Report, Stop Textbook Censorship Committee); Educational Research Analysis; Fairness in Media; Faith and Values Coalition; Jerry Falwell; Family Focus; Family Research Council; Far Right Media Task Force; FCC (Federal Communications Commission); FCC Fairness Doctrine; Federal Government - McCarran Walter Act - Ideological Exclusion; Federalist Society; Fellowship of Christian Athletes; Flag Amendment; Flag Desecration; Flashpoint [Evangelical Christian Minister Texe Marrs]; Focus on the Family (Citizen Newsletter, Community Impact Handbook, Family in Focus, Newsletters); Foundation to Defend the First Amendment; Free Congress Foundation; Freedom Alliance; Freedom Facts; Freedom Institute; Freemen Institute; Friends of Newt Gingrich; Front Lines Research; Hate Speech; Hawkeye Review; Heritage Education and Review Organization; Heritage Foundation; Heritage Today; Holocaust; Home Schooling; Howard Center for the Family, Religion, and Society; Human Events; Human Life Center; Human Life International; Hyde Amendment; Illinois Citizens for Family Life; Illinois Family Institute; Indiana Family Institute; Indiana Home Circle; Individual Rights Foundation; Institute for American Democracy; Institute for Historical Review; Institute for the study of the Religious Right; Intelligent Design; Interfaith Committee against Blasphemy in the Media; Iowa Freedom Foundation; John Birch Society; Key Project for Decency; Kitsap Educational Information Council; Ku Klux Klan; Law and Justice; Leadership Foundation; Leadership Institute; Let's Improve Today's Education; Liberty Foundation; Liberty Lobby; Life Amendment Political Action Committee; Loyalty Oaths; Media Research Center; Morality in Media [see also: National Obscenity Law Center]; National Association of Christian Educators; National Congress for Educational Excellence; National Conservative Political Action Committee; National Empowerment Television; National Family Legal Foundation; National Federation for Decency; National Forum Foundation [formerly Coalition for Decency]; National Justice Foundation; National Obscenity Law Center; National Pro-Life Political Action Committee; National Right to Life Committee; National Schools Committee; New Christian Crusade Church; New Right Report; Oklahomans for Children and Families; Operation Rescue; Opus Dei; Oregon Anti-Gay Initiative 1996 Ballot; Oregon Ballot Measure 9; Parents Aiding Education, Inc.; Parents for Unalienable Rights in Education; Parents of Minnesota; Parents of New York - United; Paul Reveres of America; People Concerned with Education; People for the American Way; People of America Responding to the Educational Needs of Today's Society; People Using Legislation Legally; Planned Parenthood (Planned Parenthood of the Columbia/Willamette, Inc. v. American Coalition of Life Activists, et. al.), 1999; Political Research Associates; Posse Comitatus; Prince George's County Coalition for Children; Probe Ministries; Pro-Family Forum; Progress and Freedom Foundation; Pro-Life Action League; Promise Keepers; Prospect House [Richard Viguerie]; Ralph Reed; Religious Alliance against Pornography; Religious Freedom Amendment 1997; Revisionist Literature (regarding the Holocaust); Right Wing; Right Wing Watch [People for the American Way]; Right Wing Watch Online; Rockford College; Roundtable Issues and Answers; Rutherford Institute; Joseph M. Scheidler [Anti-Abortion]; Dr. Laura Schlessinger; Southern Baptist Convention; Summit Ministries; Tom Tancredo; Taxpayer's Education Lobby; Randall Terry; Texas Freedom Network; The "New Right"; The American Cause [Patrick Buchanan]; The American Sentinel; The Limbaugh Letter; The National Conservative Foundation; The New American; The Religious Roundtable; The Right Woman; The Rockford Institute; Cal Thomas; Traditional Values Coalition; Truth Missions; U.S. Justice Foundation; United Families of America; University Conversion Project; USA Patriot Act Sec. 215; Violence Against Women; Voice of America; Voice of Liberty; Washington Educational Information Council; Washington Inquirer; Washington Legal Foundation; Watch on the Right; Western Center for Law and Freedom; Western Goals Foundation; White Power Publications; Wilcox Report Newsletter; Women's Watchcare Network; World Creation Science Association; Young Americans for Freedom; Young America's Foundation; Young Parents Alert; and Young Republicans (New). Record Group 97. Series Number 97/1/44. Personal Members. Papers. James P. Danky Papers, 1965-2001, consists of the papers of James P. Danky (1947– ), newspapers and periodicals librarian at the State Historical Society of Wisconsin, including correspondence, publications, photographs, clippings, cassette recordings, bibliographies, coursework, and conference materials. Folders on Ku Klux Klan, 1981; Politics, Right-Wing, 1980; Right-Politics (3 folders), 1973-79, 1983-88; Siege (James N. Mason), 1983-86; "The Heart of Darkness" (Radical Right Publishing), 1985; and The Right in America: An Annotated Guide to the Literature, 1985 (2 folders).

Reference:

Guide to the American Library Association Archives. By Maynard Brichford. Chicago: American Library Association, 1979. 2 microfiche and 8p. pamphlet

Websites with information:

http://archives.library.illinois.edu/ala/

http://archives.library.illinois.edu/alasfa/

http://archives.library.illinois.edu/alaarchon/?p=collections/classifications

Finding aids to Office for Intellectual Freedom Subject Files, 1965-2008:

http://archives.library.illinois.edu/alasfa/0601006a.pdf

http://archives.library.illinois.edu/alaarchon/?p=accessions/accession&id=132

http://archives.library.illinois.edu/alaarchon/?p=collections/controlcard&id=7402

Finding aids to James P. Danky Papers, 1965-2001:

http://archives.library.illinois.edu/alaarchon/?p=collections/controlcard&id=7997

http://archives.library.illinois.edu/alasfa/9701044a.pdf

[0115b] American Nazi Party Recruiting Materials, c.1966, Ms2015-060

Location: Special Collections, University Libraries (0434), 560 Drillfield Drive, Newman Library, Virginia Tech University, Blacksburg, Virginia 24061

Description: This collection includes materials from a membership recruiting packet for the American Nazi Party, including a letter signed by Matt Koehl, the National Secretary for the American Nazi Party, a biographical article about George Lincoln Rockwell, founder of the American Nazi Party, a copy of the Program of the World Union of National Socialists describing the party platform, an order form for the party magazine, The Rockwell Report, an order form for political flyers called "'Back to Africa' tickets," and a copy of a short comic book called Here Comes Whiteman.

Finding aid:

http://search.vaheritage.org/vivaxtf/view?docId=vt/viblbv01823.xml

[0116] American Party Broadsides, 1847-1855

Location: Special Collections, The Filson Historical Society, 1310 South 3rd Street, Louisville, KY 40208

Description: The American Party rose to popularity in the mid-1800s owing to their anti-immigrant and anti-Catholic political platform. Political paraphernalia from the Know-Nothing Party including its platform and beliefs, a manifesto, and a warning to the voters of the Fayette Congressional District to unite immediately against the immigrants and Catholics in their region.

Finding aids:

http://kdl.kyvl.org/catalog/xt75hq3rv88m/guide

https://nyx.uky.edu/fa/findingaid/?id=xt75hq3rv88m

[0116a] American Patriots Against Foreign Wars Collection

Location: Swarthmore College Peace Collection, 500 College Avenue, Swarthmore, PA 19081-1399

Description: American Patriots Against Foreign Wars was a patriotic organization founded about 1938 by Eliot Edson Overdorf of Lake Forest, Ill.

Websites with information:

https://www.swarthmore.edu/library/peace/manuscriptcollections/mss_collections.html

[0117] American political campaigns miscellany, 1868-2012 (bulk 1968-1980), Coll. 6477

Location: Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, 2B Carl A. Kroch Library, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853

Description: Print, broadside, ribbon, posters, buttons, bumper stickers, bubble gum, greeting card, headscarf, medal, postcards and inaugural programs from various political campaigns, both national and gubernatorial (New York State). Contains materials from campaigns of Hamilton Fish, Barry Goldwater, Herbert C. Hoover, Jack Kemp, Alfred M. Landon, Douglas MacArthur (Constitution Party 1952), Robert A. Taft, George C. Wallace, and Wendell Willkie. Articles, speeches, or remarks by Dwight D. Eisenhower, Barry Goldwater, Karl E. Mundt, Strom Thurmond, and James B. Utt. Copies of None Dare Call It Treason (By John A. Stormer), A Choice Not An Echo (By Phyllis Schlafly), and Where I Stand (By Senator Barry Goldwater).

Websites with information:

http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/EAD/

http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/EAD/browselists/allRMC.html

http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/EAD/browselists/socsc.html

http://ebooks.library.cornell.edu/r/rmc/socsc.html

Finding aids:

http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/EAD/htmldocs/RMM06477.html

http://ebooks.library.cornell.edu/cgi/f/findaid/findaid-idx?c=rmc;cc=rmc;rgn=main;view=text;­didno=RMM

06477.xml

http://ebooks.library.cornell.edu/cgi/f/findaid/findaid-idx?c=rmc;cc=rmc;type=simple;rgn=Entire%20­Finding%20Aid;q1=American%20political%20campaigns%20miscellany;view=reslist;subview=standard;sort=occur;start=1;size=25;didno=RMM06477.xml

[0118] American Political Items Collectors collection, 1895-1988, C0023

Location: Special Collections Research Center, Fenwick Library, George Mason University, 4400 University Drive MSN 2FL, Fairfax, VA 22030-4444

Description: The American Political Items Collectors (APIC) is a non-profit membership organization that seeks to encourage and support the collection, study, and preservation of original materials relating to political campaigns of the United States of America. The collection contains donations of scholarly material that relates to national political campaigns as well as American history dating from 1895 to 1988. This collection is comprised of presidential campaigning materials that stem from bumper stickers to voting ballots. Not only is it an extensive collection of presidential campaigns but it also houses historical magazines, newspapers, and many other manuscripts and books. Series 1: Subject Files 1895-1982, is composed of campaigning materials such as informational pamphlets, stickers and stamps.. Files on J.S. Coxey (1895-1896), Dwight D. Eisenhower, Barry Goldwater, and Richard Nixon. Series 3: Oversize Material, 1940-1988, is composed of posters, newspapers, photographs, and political buttons. Includes posters for Richard Nixon, John G. Schmitz and Thomas J. Anderson (1972), and George Wallace.

Websites with information:

http://sca.gmu.edu/collections-alpha.php

Finding aid:

http://sca.gmu.edu/finding_aids/apic.html

[0119] American Protective League, New York Division Papers, ca. 1917-1919, D.419

Location: Rare Books, Special Collections and Preservation, Rush Rhees Library, Second Floor, Room 225, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY 14627-0055

Description: The American Protective League, New York Division Papers document the activities of an organization made up of private citizens who identified suspected German sympathizers and any other anti-American groups to protect the United States against foreign enemies during World War I. Members reported to the Department of Justice and the Bureau of Investigation. There were two classes of members: active and inactive. Active members were responsible for investigating cases assigned to them by government officials or agencies. Inactive members reported information to benefit the government and any potential investigation. Each member upon joining received an identification card. The rules and regulations of the League specified that members keep their affiliation with the organization a secret and only disclose their connection during the process of an investigation, if appropriate.

Websites with information:

http://rbscp.lib.rochester.edu/mssalpha

Finding aid:

http://rbscp.lib.rochester.edu/4746

http://www.lib.rochester.edu/index.cfm?page=4746

[0120] American Protestant Association Records, 1842-1843, RG 323

Location: Presbyterian Historical Society, 425 Lombard St, Philadelphia, PA 19147

Description: The American Protestant Association was formed in Philadelphia in 1842. Its founders were alarmed at the spread of Roman Catholicism in the United States, feeling as they did that it was "subversive of civil and religious liberty." They formed an association to further their Protestant interests; to educate their congregations about the differences between Protestantism and "Popery," and to encourage a through study of the Bible. The records of the Association include its Constitution, minutes, and first annual report.

Finding aid:

http://www.history.pcusa.org/collections/research-tools/guides-archival-collections/rg-323

[0121] APA Division of Public Affairs Papers, 1948-1980 (bulk 1960-1975)

Location: Archives, American Psychiatric Association, 1000 Wilson Boulevard, Suite 1825, Arlington, VA 22209

Description: The American Psychiatric Association (APA) is the main professional organization of psychiatrists in the United States. Series: Government Relations, contains a file on Alaska Mental Health Legislation, 1953-1959. Series: Subject Files, contains a file on Anti-Psychiatry.

Finding aid:

http://www.psychiatry.org/File%20Library/Learn/Archives/mss_publicaffairs.pdf

[0122] The American Radicalism Collection [partly digital collection]

Location: Special Collections, Michigan State University Libraries, 100 Main Library, 366 W. Circle Drive, East Lansing, MI 48824

Description: The American Radicalism Collection holds over 17,000 books, pamphlets, periodicals, posters, and ephemera covering a wide range of viewpoints on political, social, economic, and cultural issues and movements in the United States and throughout the world. The emphasis in the collection is on materials produced by radical groups, both left and right. While the American Radicalism Collection is strongest in publications from the American Left in the twentieth century, as well as in resources for the study of American Labor History, there is considerable material from the right, including the Ku Klux Klan of the 1920's and 1930's, neo-Nazi organizations, and the Christian Right. Among the component collections in the American Radicalism Collection are the Alternative Press Collection, the Edith and Arthur Fox Collection, The American Radicalism Vertical File, the Ku Klux Klan Collection, and the Arsenal Collection. All of these collections are searchable in the Michigan State University Libraries catalogue (web addresses below). The Alternative Press Collection features subscriptions, back files, and sample issues of a wide range of alternative magazines and newspapers. Approximately 1,200 titles are represented. Publications of the political parties of the left and racist and neo-Nazi organizations of the right are included. The Edith and Arthur Fox Collection has pamphlets, election material, and shop papers collected by Edith and Arthur Fox, who were long-time political and labor activists in Detroit and Socialist Workers candidates for Presidential Elector for Michigan. Series 2 – Political and Labor Activities, contains files on CIO – McCarran Act, CPUSA (Opposition), McCarran Act, Smith Act, and Taft-Hartley Act. The Ku Klux Klan Collection consists of items from the 1920's and 1930's, a period of growth in the Klan's history. Constitutions, installation ceremonies, advertisements for Klan merchandise, and the role of women in the Klan are all included from this period. There are also copies of the Kourier, the official monthly magazine of the Knights of the KKK; secondary studies of the Klan, as well as the research materials used by Wyn Wade in his book, The Fiery Cross (1987); and a large collection of United Klans of America material. The American Radicalism Vertical File contains files of clippings and miscellanea on Alert America Association, America's Future, Inc., America's Promise Radio, American Coalition of Patriotic Societies, Inc., American Conservative Union, American Council of Christian Laymen, American Freedom Coalition, American Immigration Control Foundation, American Life Lobby, American Party, American Security Council, American Society for the Defense of Tradition, Family and Property, Americanism Educational League, Americans for Freedom, Americans for Constitutional Freedom, Anglo-Saxon Federation of America-Detroit, anti-Catholicism, Anti-communist movements, Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, Anti-Semitism, Apartheid, Aryan Nations, Bookmailer, Inc., Anita Bryant and her anti-gay activism, Pat Buchanan, Cardinal Mindszenty Foundation, Catholic Anti-communist movements, Christian Anti-Communism Crusade, Christian Book Club of America, Christian Coalition, Christian Crusade: file of miscellaneous publications some by Billy James Hargis, Christian Defense League, Christian Educational Association, Christian Identity, Christian Nationalist Crusade, Christic Institute, Church League of America, Cinema Educational Guild Inc., Circuit Riders, Inc., Citizen Soldier (Organization), Citizen's Councils of America, Citizen's Councils Inc., College Republican National Committee (U.S.), Committee for Constitutional Government, Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC), Committee of One Million Against the Admission of Communist China to the United Nations, Committee to Restore the Constitution, Communism, Conservative Caucus, Inc., Conservative Society of America, Conspiracy theories, Contra aid, Charles E. Coughlin, Detroit-Campaign Literature and Right Wing, David Ernest Duke, Eagle Forum: file of miscellaneous publications including several by Phyllis Schlafly, English First (Organization), Equal rights amendment, Family Research Council, Focus on the Family (Organization), Foundation for Economic Education, Inc., Freedom School, Barry M. Goldwater, Hate crimes, Jesse Helms, Heritage Foundation, Homophobia, Institute for Historical Review, Jewish Defense League, Jewish Holocaust (1939-1945), errors, inventions, etc.: file of clippings, etc., regarding revisionist history of the holocaust, John Birch Society (Gary Allen, Thomas Jefferson Anderson, William E. Dunham, W. Cleon Skousen, Alan Stang, Robert Welch), Klanwatch Project, Ku Klux Klan in Michigan, Ku Klux Klan, Lyndon H. LaRouche, Liberty Amendment of USA, Liberty Bell Publications, Liberty Lobby (U.S.), Rush H. Limbaugh, McCarran Act, Joseph McCarthy, Michigan militia, Michigan State Conservative Club, Midwest Research Inc., Militia movement in the United States, Minute Women of USA, Money, Moral Majority: file of clippings, publications and miscellanea, including publications by Jerry Falwell, National Rifle Association, National Association for the Advancement of White People, National Right-to-Life Committee, National Right to Work Committee (U.S.), National Rifle Association of America, National Right to Life Committee (U.S.), National Socialist White People's Party, Nazi parties' miscellaneous publications: leaflets and miscellanea from American white supremacy organizations, Nazi Periodicals, Network of Patriotic Letter Writers, Noontide press, Oliver North, Oklahoma City Federal Building Bombing Oklahoma City, Okla., 1995, Omni Publications, Operation Rescue (Organization), Patriotic Majority, Paul Revere-Associated Yeomen, Inc., Fred W. Phelps and his anti-gay campaign, Poor Richard's Book Shop, Promise Keepers (Organization), Racism in universities and colleges, Racism, Ayn Rand, Ronald Reagan, Right wing journalism, Right wing organizations - History, Right to Life of Michigan, Right wing- Bibliography, Right wing-Book Clubs, Right wing-Fiction, Right Wing Watch Online, Pat Robertson, Phyllis Schlafly, Segregation, Soldiers of fortune, Soldiers of the Cross, Sons of Liberty (Metairie La.), Tea party movement, Richard A. Viguerie, Voice of Americanism, George Wallace, We, the People, White supremacist movements, World Anti-Communist League, and Young Americans for Freedom. (Midwest Research, Inc. was an independent research institute which collected and disseminated information on right-wing political groups and trends. It moved from Chicago to Cambridge, MA in 1987, and changed its name to Political Research Associates.) The Arsenal Collection is a growing collection of over 5,000 leaflets, books, and periodicals issued by extremist or right-wing organizations and agitators. Imprints from Canada, United Kingdom, the Arab capitals of the Middle East, Australia, South Africa, and the United States are represented in the collection. Topics represented include British Israelism and Christian Identity, the Social Credit movement and monetary reform literature, the New World Order as a globalist conspiracy, anti-New World Order, Ku Klux Klan and segregationist writings, anti-communism, anti-Catholicism, editions of the Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion and other antisemitica alleging a Jewish world conspiracy, Holocaust revisionism, neo-Nazi and fascist literature, Aryanism and white supremacy, and anti-Zionist tracts, the Rothschilds and the Federal Reserve conspiracy, anti-Roosevelt, and anti-New Deal. Items include Eyes Front, America (Los Angeles: Senator Jack B. Tenney, America Plus, Inc., no date [1951]); an envelope and enrollment application to the program America Plus; Secret Societies and their Power in the 20th Century: A guide through the entanglements of lodges with high finance and politics, by Jan van Helsing (Gran Canaria: Ewertverlag, 1995), and A Business Man Looks at Communism, by Fred C. Koch (Wichita, Kan.: F.C. Koch, 1960).

Ku Klux Klan Collection [digital collection], consisting of 29 titles, most from the 1920s:

Includes an anti-immigration work by Hiram Wesley Evans, The Menace of Modern Immigration (n.p.: Ku Klux Klan, 1924).

http://www.lib.msu.edu/branches/dmc/collectionbrowse/?coll=22&par=1

http://archive.lib.msu.edu/AFS/dmc/radicalism/public/all/

http://archive.lib.msu.edu/DMC/AmRad/

Link to several items in the Ku Klux Klan Collection [digital collection]:

http://lib.msu.edu/6050exhibit/

The Rooseveltian Concentration Camps for Japanese-Americans, 1942-46, by Austin J. App (Philadelphia, Boniface Press, 1967) [digital]:

http://archive.lib.msu.edu/DMC/AmRad/rooseveltianconcentration.pdf

http://archive.lib.msu.edu/AFS/dmc/radicalism/public/all/rooseveltianconcentration/

http://archive.lib.msu.edu/DMC/AmRad/

Reference:

Maria R. Traska, "Extremism @ the Library: Propaganda from all sides coexists in select academic collections," American Libraries Magazine, July 14, 2014, http://americanlibrariesmagazine.org/­2014/07/14/extremism-the-library/ and https://web.archive.org/web/20140907050658/http://www.­americanlibrariesmagazine.org/article/extremism-library and http://www.ilovelibraries.org/article/extremism-library.

Websites with information:

http://lib.msu.edu/spc/collections/radicalism/

http://lib.msu.edu/spc/collections/radicalism2/

http://spcexhibits.lib.msu.edu/html/materials/collections/radicalism_coll2.jsp

http://web.archive.org/web/20100609211007/http://spc.lib.msu.edu/html/materials/collections/radicalism_

coll2.jsp

http://web.archive.org/web/20061209135254/http://www.lib.msu.edu/coll/main/spec_col/radicalism/delpol

96.htm

http://web.archive.org/web/20061117122054/http://www.lib.msu.edu/coll/main/spec_col/radicalism/index.

htm

https://www.msu.edu/user/jonesmi/AmerRadicalismCol.pdf

Websites with information (for Alternative Press Collection):

http://spcexhibits.lib.msu.edu/html/materials/collections/radicalism_coll_alt.jsp

http://web.archive.org/web/20130801115246/http://specialcollections.lib.msu.edu/html/materials/collectio

ns/radicalism_coll_alt.jsp

Websites with information (for Edith and Arthur Fox Collection):

http://spcexhibits.lib.msu.edu/html/materials/collections/radicalism_coll_fox.jsp

Finding aid (for Edith and Arthur Fox Collection):

http://findingaids.lib.msu.edu/spc/index.php?p=collections/controlcard&id=163

Websites with information (for Ku Klux Klan Collection):

http://www.lib.msu.edu/spc/collections/kkk/

http://spcexhibits.lib.msu.edu/html/materials/collections/radicalism_coll_kkk.jsp

http://web.archive.org/web/20130328195406/http://specialcollections.lib.msu.edu/html/materials/collectio

ns/radicalism_coll_kkk.jsp

Finding aid for Special Collections' Vertical Files (including American Radicalism Vertical File):

http://img.lib.msu.edu/special-collections/spc_vertical_file.pdf

Websites with information (for American Radicalism Vertical File):

http://spcexhibits.lib.msu.edu/html/materials/collections/radicalism_coll_vertical.jsp

http://web.archive.org/web/20100609201720/http://spc.lib.msu.edu/html/materials/collections/radicalis

m_coll_vertical.jsp

http://spcexhibits.lib.msu.edu/html/materials/collections/radicalism_coll_vertical.jsp

http://libguides.lib.msu.edu/content.php?pid=62444&sid=794251

http://web.archive.org/web/20100609201720/http://spc.lib.msu.edu/html/materials/collections/radicalis

m_coll_vertical.jsp

Websites with information (for Arsenal Collection):

https://www.lib.msu.edu/spc/discover/

http://spcexhibits.lib.msu.edu/html/materials/collections/radicalism_coll_arsenal.jsp

http://web.archive.org/web/20130801115250/http://specialcollections.lib.msu.edu/html/materials/collectio

ns/radicalism_coll_arsenal.jsp

Reference (for Arsenal Collection):

Peter I. Berg, "The Arsenal Collection: Supporting Scholarship On Radicalism," Insight (MSU Libraries), Fall 2010, p. 7, http://img.lib.msu.edu/giving/insight/Insight_Oct2010.pdf

Catalogue search for American Radicalism Collection:

http://catalog.lib.msu.edu/search/X?SEARCH=(radicalism)&searchscope=23&SORT=D

Catalogue search for Alternative Press Collection:

http://catalog.lib.msu.edu/search/Y?SEARCH=alternative+press&searchscope=23

Catalogue search for Ku Klux Klan Collection:

http://catalog.lib.msu.edu/search/Y?SEARCH=ku+klux+klan&searchscope=23

Catalogue search for Arsenal Collection:

http://magic.lib.msu.edu/search/X?SEARCH=%28arsenal%20collection%29&searchscope=39&SORT=D&b=sp

Catalogue search for American Radicalism Vertical File:

http://catalog.lib.msu.edu/search/a?Michigan+State+University.+Libraries.+Am

http://catalog.lib.msu.edu/search~S23/a?Michigan+State+University.+Libraries.+American+Radicalism+Collect

ion&search_code=a

http://magic.lib.msu.edu/search~S39?/XN:(American+Radicalism+Vertical+File)

http://catalog.lib.msu.edu/search~S23?/aMichigan+State+University.+Libraries.+American+Ra/amichigan+state+un

iversity+libraries+american+radicalism+collection/-3%2C-1%2C0%2CB/exact&FF=amichigan­+state+university+libraries+american+radicalism+collection&1%2C987%2C

http://catalog.lib.msu.edu/search/X?SEARCH=(radicalism)&searchscope=23&SORT=D

Catalogue search for Arsenal Collection:

http://catalog.lib.msu.edu/search~S39/?searchtype=X&searcharg=arsenal+collection&searchscope=39&sortdr

opdown=-&SORT=DZ&extended=0&SUBMIT=Search&searchlimits=&searchorigarg=­Xarsenal+and+shapiro%2

6SORT%3DD

Part 1: Leftist Politics and Anti-War Movements. Part 2: The Religious and Radical Right. Part 3: Race, Gender, and the Struggle for Justice and Equal Rights. Part 4: Twentieth-Century Social, Economic, and Environmental Movements. Primary Source Microfilm, an imprint to the Gale Group [2004]. Part 2, The Religious and Radical Right, http://ir.usc.edu:8180/dspace/bitstream/10011/305/13/­Reel+Index+And+Guide+to+Pt+III+-+Race%2C+Gend

er%2C+and+the+Struggle+for+Justice+and+­Equal+Rights.pdf

http://microformguides.gale.com/Data/Download/9027000C.rtf

http://microformguides.gale.com/Download.asp?CollDocid=9027000&page=1

http://www.lib.msu.edu/branches/dmc/digital/?coll=1

[0123] American Reactionary Political Ephemera. Collection, 1939-1950 (bulk 1944-1946)

Location: Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library, 1100 East 57th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637

Description: This collection contains ephemera pertaining to American reactionary politics from 1939 to 1950. Included are newspaper clippings, flyers, pamphlets, postcards, newsletters, notes, and other similar pieces of ephemera covering topics such as anti-Semitism, Catholicism, Communism, Evangelism, Fascism, Isolationism, Labor, nationalism, racism, world government, and other issues related to ultraconservative social, religious, and economic movements. Files on America First Committee, undated; America Preferred, Carl H. Mote, 1944; American Action, 1946; American Nationalist Party, 1945; American Nationalists Committee of Independent Voters, 1944; American United for World Organization, 1945; America First Party, 1944 and undated; American Women Against Communism, 1942-1943 and undated; Charles J. Anderson, Jr., 1944; "An Appeal to Negro Womanhood," Eddene G. Graham, undated; Rep. Fred E. Busbey, mailing, 1944; Business Men's Committee, 1944; Chicago Committee to Defend America, undated; Chicago Council Against Racial and Religious Discrimination - Postcard, undated; Chicago Tribune - Criticism, 1944-1945; Citizens USA Committee, 1944; Committee of Veterans, undated; Constitutional Educational League, Inc., 1940; Constitutional Americans - Postcard, 1944; Council for Democracy, 1945; James J. Cusack, Alderman - Handbill, 1939; Dumbarton Oaks Conference, 1944; Executives' Club of Chicago - Executives' Club News, 1939-1946; "The Fourth Book of Ike," undated; Friends of Democracy, Inc. 1944-1949; Gentile Co-operative Association, 1944-1945; Rep. Clare E. Hoffman speech, 1943; "Last Plea for Europe," Oswald Garrison Villard, undated; Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Company, Upton Close broadcasts, 1944; Captain Edward Miles, undated; "Money," 1946; National Committee Against Persecution of the Jews - Pamphlets, undated; Peace Now, 1944; "The Protestant," 1944; Gerald L. K. Smith, 1944-1945; Spiritual Mobilization, Inc., 1949 and undated; "The Struggle Against 'Christian' Hatred in Detroit," Merrill Otis Bates, undated; "We, the Mothers" - Clippings, undated; White Circle League, 1950; Women's League for Political Education, undated; and Woodlawn Property Owners' League, 1944.

Websites with information:

https://www.lib.uchicago.edu/scrc/finding-aids/

http://www.lib.uchicago.edu/e/scrc/findingaids/browse.php?alpha=A

https://www.lib.uchicago.edu/scrc/finding-aids/?topic=Politics%2C%20Public%20Policy%20and%20Political

%20Reform&view=topics

Finding aids:

http://www.lib.uchicago.edu/ead/rlg/ICU.SPCL.REACTIONARYEPHEMERA.pdf

https://www.lib.uchicago.edu/ead/rlg/ICU.SPCL.REACTIONARYEPHEMERA.pdf

http://www.lib.uchicago.edu/e/scrc/findingaids/view.php?eadid=ICU.SPCL.REACTIONARYEPHEMERA

https://www.lib.uchicago.edu/e/scrc/findingaids/view.php?eadid=ICU.SPCL.REACTIONARYEPHEMERA

[0124] American Religions Collection, circa 1840s-2010s (bulk 1970s-1990s), ARC Mss 1

Location: Department of Special Collections, Davidson Library, University of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA 93106

Description: The American Religions Collection (ARC), much of which was assembled by J. Gordon Melton, primarily documents non-mainstream religions in America. The collection contains monographs, manuscript collections and serials mainly relating to 20th century non-traditional religions and splinter groups of larger religious bodies in North America. Series I: Groups/Families, contains files on A-Albionic Research; Don Bell Reports Newsletter- Christian America; Ministry of Christ Church - William P. Gale; and New Christian Crusade Church. Series II: Secondary Religious Organizations, contains files on American Center for Law and Justice, American Family Association, Anita Bryant Ministries, Campus Crusade for Christ, Christianity Today, Christic Institute, Church League of America, Committee of Christian Laymen, Concerned Women for America, Focus on the Family, Foundation for Christian Reconstruction, Foundation for Economic Education, The Freedom Council, Freedoms Foundation at Valley Forge, George Gordon's School of Common Law, Hillsdale College, Institute for First Amendment Studies, League of Christian Laymen, Moral Majority, Moral Re-Armament, National Right to Life Committee Inc., Operation Rescue National, Pro Family Forum, Pro-Life Action League, PTL Television Network (Praise the Lord), Rockford Institute, Rutherford Institute, 700 Club, Traditional Values Coalition, and 20th Century Reformation Hour. Series III: Subject Files, contains files on American Family Foundation, American Research Institute for Cults, Anti-Cult Legislation, Anti-Cult Movement, Anti-Cult Network, Christian Research Institute, Cult Awareness Network, Focus on the Family, and La Rouchies.

Websites with information:

http://www.library.ucsb.edu/special-collections/research/arcmss

https://web.archive.org/web/20130102223937/http://www.library.ucsb.edu/node/1680

http://libraries.ucsb.development-preview.com/special-collections/collections/aguides

http://www.library.ucsb.edu/special-collections/collections/aguides

http://www.library.ucsb.edu/special-collections/collections/d_j_guides

http://www.wrs.vcu.edu/ARCHIVES/American%20Religions%20Collection.pdf

Finding aids:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf3779n92n/

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf3779n92n/entire_text/

http://pdf.oac.cdlib.org/pdf/ucsb/spcoll/arcmss99.pdf

Database of serials:

Contains 5260 serials.

http://misc.library.ucsb.edu/arc/recordlist.php?-max=5260&-skip=0&-link=all&-action=findall

[0124a] American Spectator Educational Foundation records, 1967-2001

Location: Hoover Institution Archives, 434 Galvez Mall, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305-6010

Description: Publishing company of the journal The American Spectator. Minutes, correspondence, reports, memoranda, financial records, research files, book drafts, clippings, and other printed matter, relating to political conditions and conservatism in the United States, and to publication of The American Spectator. The records are currently closed.

Websites with information:

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/122369647

http://www.worldcat.org/title/american-spectator-educational-foundation-records-1967-2001/oclc/1223696

47

http://www.hoover.org/history-collection-americas

[0125] American States' Rights Association Papers, 1954-1956 (1/3 linear foot), AR416, files 416.1.1 and 416.1.2

Location: Department of Archives and Manuscripts, Birmingham Public Library, 2100 Park Place, Birmingham, AL 35203-2794

Description: Memorandum and other material dealing with the groups' support for racial segregation. Includes two items relating to Asa Carter.

Websites with information:

http://web.archive.org/web/20090517041910/http://www.bplonline.org/archives/collections/civilrightsmoveme

ntandracerelations.asp

https://web.archive.org/web/20090517041910/http://www.bplonline.org/archives/collections/civilrightsmoveme

ntandracerelations.asp

http://www.bplonline.org/resources/archives/collections.aspx?q=6

[0126] American Subject Collection, 1899-2004, Coll. XX742

Location: Hoover Institution Archives, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305-6010

Description: Pamphlets, leaflets, serial issues, clippings, other printed matter, memoranda, reports, letters, writings, and miscellany, relating to political and social conditions in the United States, and especially to socialist, libertarian, and radical movements. Subject File, 1901-1994, contains materials on Anti-Semitism: Leaflets issued by the Edmondson Economic Service, 1934; Civil rights movement; Communism: Correspondence, speeches, statements, testimonies, reports, studies, newsletters, pamphlets, brochures, and clippings, 1946-1977, relating to international communism and to communism in the United States; Herbert C. Hoover; Lyndon LaRouche; Libertarianism: General. Correspondence, reports, essays, financial records, notes, leaflets, pamphlets, bulletins, newsletters, newspaper and serial issues, and other printed matter, relating to libertarianism in the United States, the organization and activities of the Libertarian Party in California and other libertarian organizations and conservative youth groups, and the First National Convention of the Libertarian Party; and First issue of the newsletter North Texas Libertarian, 1986 March, relating to the beginning of the 1986 Libertarian Party campaign in Texas. Audio-Visual Material, n.d. and ca. 1929-1947, contains 7 phonotape cassettes of speeches on American politics and political parties by Frank Chodorov, John Hospers, Murray Rothbard, and Ludwig von Mises.

Note: The material on Libertarianism was originally a separate collection, the American Individualism Collection, 1966-1974. See Guide to the Hoover Institution Archives, by Charles G. Palm and Dale Reed (Stanford, Calif., Hoover Institution Press, 1980), pp. 15-16, and Guide to the Hanna Collection and Related Archival Materials at the Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace on the Role of Education in 20th-Century Society, by Fakhreddin Moussav (Stanford, Calif., Hoover Institution Press, 1982), p. 7.

Finding aids:

http://pdf.oac.cdlib.org/pdf/hoover/reg_035.pdf

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf1j49n4rx/entire_text/

[0127] American Woman's Council of Justice (Saint Louis, Missouri). Publications, 1924-1927, A1615

Location: Missouri History Museum Archives, Library and Research Center, 225 South Skinker Blvd., St. Louis, MO 63105-2317

Description: Political organization of Missouri women concerned with legislative matters, generally opposed to increasing the role of the federal government in traditionally state matters. Headquarters were located in St. Louis. Emilie M. Sweeney was president in the mid-1920s. Collection consists of printed matter relating largely to the organization's position on legislative matters. Collection includes booklet titled "Do Bolshevists 'Use' our Women's Clubs?" (Dearborn Independent, March 15, 1924) [charging that women's peace societies were acting as fronts for the Communists]; constitutional ballot guide, booklet regarding the federalizing of education, 1926; fliers opposing nuisance tax, the anti-evolution bill, and federal child labor amendment, 1927; card advocating the repeal of prohibition, voter registration flier, membership promotion, no date.

Websites with information:

http://www.mohistory.org/files/archives_guides/Guide.pdf

http://mohistory.org/files/archives_guides/Guide_to_the_Archival_Collections_A-Z.pdf

http://www.mohistory.org/files/archives_guides/Guide_to_the_Archival_Collections_A-C.doc.pdf

http://www.krausehouse.ca/krause/archives%20guide%20a-z%20(wp).htm

[0127a] American Women Making History and Culture: 1963-1982 Collection, 1944-1994 (bulk 1963-1982), PRA.RS.001 [audio recordings], Pacifica Radio Archives, 3729 Cahuenga Blvd., West, North Hollywood, CA 91604

The American Women Making History and Culture: 1963-1982 collection includes 2,024 reel-to-reel tapes and 2,024 WAV files preserved as part of the Pacifica Radio Archives' 2013-2016 "American Women Making History and Culture: 1963-1982" ("American Women") preservation project. Series 1: KPFA American Women's Recordings, bulk 1963-1982, contains copies of recordings of Pro-life council / produced by Portia Shapiro and Fran Watkins. 5238_P01 KPFA, December 11, 1971 (excerpts of the press conference held by the Pro-Life Council, an umbrella organization of anti-abortion groups in California, on October 12th, 1971, in San Francisco, and an interview about the Pro-Life movement with two members of the Council, Dr. Frank Filice and Marie de Pizzol, conducted a week later at KPFA by Fran Watkins and Portia Shapiro); Abortion on demand: a debate 16434_P01_02 KPFA, January 7, 1972 (recordings of Dr. Frank Filice, a biologist at the University of San Francisco and Marge Szudy, a psychology student at USF, who argued against abortion); The war against choice / Deirdre English interviewed by Adam Hochschild 1561_P01 KPFA, February 23, 1981 (Deirdre English on the 1980 Convention of the National Right to Life Committee in Anaheim, California, which she attended. Interview conducted by Adam Hochschild. Both Deirdre English and Adam Hochschild were editors at Mother Jones magazine, and this interview was conducted after the publication of English's article in the magazine entitled "The War Against Choice: Inside The Anti-Abortion Movement" (Mother Jones 6.11 (Feb./Mar. 1981): 16-32). Produced by Buster Gonzales); A Feminist critique of anti-feminism / produced by Peggy Irene Bray and Julia Randall. 1759_P01 KPFA, March 7, 1982 (Phyllis Schlafly, anti-abortion activist Nellie Gray, U.S. Senator Richard Schweiker (R-PA), U.S. Senator Jesse Helms (R-NC), and Evangelical theologian Francis Schaeffer); and Majority report, November 18, 1982: Schlafly v. English, Olivia's 10th Birthday, Update on Silkwood, Planetary conjunction 28977_P01 KPFA, November 18, 1982 (highlights from anti-ERA activist Phyllis Schlafly and Mother Jones editor Deirdre English's debate on the role of women in San Francisco on November 17, 1982). Series 2: KPFK American Women's Recordings, bulk 1963-1982, contains copies of recordings of A mersey killing 4476_P01 KPFK, October 15, 1965 (excerpts of the Reverend David Noebel's speech on "Communism, Hypnotism and the Beatles: The Communist Use of Music" given in Walnut Creek, California) and Minority reaction to the Briggs initiative / produced by Helene Rosenbluth 7583_P01 KPFK, August 1, 1978 (interviews with black and Jewish representatives of groups who were fighting the anti-gay Briggs Initiative, which would have prohibited hiring and required the dismissal of any teacher who engaged in homosexual activity or advocated for gay civil rights). Series 4: WBAI American Women's Recordings, bulk 1963-1982, contains copies of recordings of Debate on the Equal Rights Amendment (E.R.A.) 29224_P01_02 WBAI, 1975-04-06 (a debate on the Equal Rights Amendment between Karen DeCrow, President of N.O.W. and Phyllis Schlafly, leader of "Stop E.R.A.," held before a meeting of the American Women in Radio and T.V. on March 27, 1975) and Stop E.R.A.: Meg Katz interviewed by Bonnie Bellow 29116_P01 WBAI, 1975-11-02 (Bonnie Bellow interviews Meg Katz of "Stop E.R.A.," one of the groups opposed to the passage of New York's Equal Rights Amendment).

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c83f4v6g/entire_text/

[0127b] Americana Pamphlet Collection Part A, 1791-1992 (bulk 1800-1900), SpCo003 [pamphlet collection]

Location: Mahn Center for Archives and Special Collections, Ohio University, 30 Park Place, Athens, OH 45701

Description: The collection contains 484 pamphlets, including copies of Speech of Mr. Benton, of Missouri, on Calhoun's Amendment, by Thomas Hart Benton (1837); Address of the Hon. John C. Calhoun . . . on the Subject of Slavery (1850); Address of the Hon. John C. Calhoun, in the Senate (1850); and Speech of Hon. Ignatius Donnelly, of Minnesota.

Finding aid:

http://ead.ohiolink.edu/xtf-ead/view?docId=ead/OUN0371.xml

[0127c] Americana Pamphlet Collection Part B, 1791-1992 (bulk 1800-1900), SpCo004 [pamphlet collection]

Location: Mahn Center for Archives and Special Collections, Ohio University, 30 Park Place, Athens, OH 45701

Description: The collection contains 485 pamphlets, including copies of The Iniquity of Compulsory Vaccination, by Alfred E. Giles (1881); The Beneficent Effects of Silver Money, by Alex Del Mar (1897); Plain Issues of the War, by Elihu Root (1917); The German-Bolshevik Conspiracy, by Edgar Grant Sisson (1918); Address to Visiting Delegation of Labor Men at the White House, Labor Day, 1924, by Calvin Coolidge (1924); Our Ship of State, by Nicholas Murray Butler (1933); and Speech of Hon. Samuel Dickstein of New York in the House of Representatives.

Finding aid:

http://ead.ohiolink.edu/xtf-ead/view?docId=ead/OUN0378.xml

[0127d] Americans for Constitutional Action Records, 1955-1971, Mss 309

Location: Wisconsin Historical Society, Library-Archives Division, 816 State St., Madison, WI 53706-1417

Description: Americans for Constitutional Action was a non-partisan political action committee founded in 1958 for support of constitutional conservatives in congressional elections. Documents include trustee minutes and correspondence, fundraising and financial records, campaign and chapter files, speeches, pamphlets, and annual reports. The series Board of Trustees Records, 1958-1969. [Subseries]. Chairman Ben Moreell's Correspondence, 1958-1969, contains correspondence with Bruce Alger, E. Robert Anderson, Cooper Benedict, J. H. Bottum, Jr., Anthony T. Bouscaren, Walter T. Brennan, Howard Buffett, Clarence B. Carson, Mrs. Louis B. Cole, James C. Davis, Charles A. Edison, Edgar Eisenhower, Bonner Fellers, Edward Foremen, Patrick Frawley, Ralph Gwinn, A. Sydney Herlong, Charles B. Hoeven, T. Robert Ingram, August E. Johansen, Robert W. Johnson, Allen B. Kline, William Loeb, Philip McKenna, Walter B. Martin, D. L. Mechem, Felix Morley, Thomas Parker, John R. Pillion, H. W. Prentice, James E. Price, Max Rafferty, Katherine St. George, Gordon Scherer, Henry C. Schadeberg, Ralph de Toledano, William Tuck, John Wayne, Charles E. Whittaker, Steven B. Wilson, and Loyd Wright. Other subseries contain Secretary Owen Brewster's correspondence and Trustee Ralph Gwinn's correspondence. The series Executive Director's Records contains correspondence with Cooper Benedict, J. H. Bottum, Owen Brewster, Mrs. Louis B. Cole, Ralph Gwinn, Herbert Hoover, August E. Johansen, Robert W. Johnson, Allan B. Kline, Frank B. Kovac, Walter Martin, M.D., Ben Moreell, Felix Morley, Henry C. Schadeberg, Mrs. R. Templeton Smith, John J. Synon, and Ralph de Toledano. The series Publications contains copies of Digest and Tally of Roll Call Votes, Right Action, and Ratings of Congressmen. The series Speeches contains files on Ralph Gwinn, Thomas A. Lane, Ben Moreell, and Chester Ward. The series Subject Files contains files on Connally Amendment; Response to Charges of Extremism; Khrushchev's visit; Thomas A. Lane; Charles McManus; Charles McC. Mathias; Ben Moreell; Report on National Committee for an Effective Congress; Jessica Payne; and Report on United Republicans of America.

Reference:

Menzi L. Behrnd-Klodt and Carolyn J. Mattern, Social Action Collections at the State Historical Society of Wisconsin: A Guide (Madison: The Society, 1983).

Finding aid:

http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/wiarchives.uw-whs-mss00309

[0128] Americans for Democratic Action Records, 1932-1965, Mss 3; Micro 854

Location: Wisconsin Historical Society, Library-Archives Division, 816 State St., Madison, WI 53706-1417

Description: Records of the Americans for Democratic Action (ADA), founded in 1947 as a national, independent, liberal organization, and of its predecessor, the Union for Democratic Action, founded in 1941 to combat fascism at home and abroad. Included are correspondence, minutes, reports, membership and financial records, press releases, clippings, and mimeographed and printed materials documenting the organizations' activities. Series 1: Union for Democratic Action Administrative File, 1932, 1935, 1940-1947, 1950, 1951, contains files on Senator Theodore Bilbo; Bretton Woods; Dies Committee; Dumbarton Oaks; Fight for Freedom Inc.; Prof. Friedrich A. Hayek; Frank Kingdon and Robert A. Taft Debate, 1942 July; and Charles A. Lindbergh, Des Moines, Iowa, speech, 1941 September. Series 2: Administrative File, 1946-1965, contains files on Civil Rights; Dwight D. Eisenhower; Douglas MacArthur; Marshall Plan, ERP; Metropolitan government, conference on, 1958;, Westbrook Pegler; Quemoy-Matsu petition, 1955 April-May; Taft-Hartley Act; and United World Federalists. Series 5: Legislative File, 1946-1964, contains files on Brannan Plan, 1950-1952; Bricker Amendment; Civil Rights: Desegregation, School Desegregation, Equal Rights Amendment, Southern Regional Conference on Integration; Civil Rights Bills, 1963-1964; Communism; Communist Party and Fronts; Foundations, Tax-Exempt; House Un-American Activities Committee; Loyalty; Joseph McCarthy; Marshall Plan; Harvey Matusow; Poll Tax; Right Wing; Fulton Lewis, Jr.; School Prayer; Supreme Court; Taft-Hartley; World Court - Connally Amendment; Yalta Conference; and Metropolitan Government - Conference, correspondence, 1957 November-1959 January. Series 7: Public Relations File, 1936, 1946-1965, contains files on Communism, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Facts Forum, Fund for the Republic, Barry Goldwater, Marshall Plan, Joseph McCarthy, National Planning Association, and Right Wing Materials: Americans for Constitutional Action; Christian Anti-Communism Crusade; John Birch Society; and Young Americans for Freedom. Series 8: Campus Division File, 1939-1965, contains files on Communism, House Un-American Activities Committee, Joseph McCarthy, United World Federalists, Civil Rights, and Young Americans for Freedom.

Reference:

Menzi L. Behrnd-Klodt and Carolyn J. Mattern, Social Action Collections at the State Historical Society of Wisconsin: A Guide (Madison: The Society, 1983).

Websites with information:

http://www.loc.gov/folklife/civilrights/survey/view_collection.php?coll_id=2930

Finding aids:

http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/wiarchives.uw-whs-mss00003

http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi/f/findaid/findaid-idx?c=wiarchives;cc=wiarchives;q1=right%20­wing;rgn

=main;view=text;didno=uw-whs-mss00003

http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi/f/findaid/findaid-idx?c=wiarchives;cc=wiarchives;view=text;­rgn=main;did

no=uw-whs-mss00003

[0129] Americans for the Preservation of the White Race (Jackson, MS Chapter) Collection, 1964-1966, MUM00009

Location: Department of Archives and Special Collections, J.D. Williams Library, The University of Mississippi, P.O. Box 1848, University, MS 38677-1848

Description: Collection consists of documents and minutes related to the Jackson, Mississippi, chapter of Americans for the Preservation of the White Race (APWR), a white supremacist organization, created from 1964-1966. Includes a booklet, The White Patriot (published by the Americans for the Preservation of the White Race in Jackson, MS). Mentions Governor Ross Barnett, Citizens Council meeting in Louisiana, Sen. Eastland, Dr. Edward R. Fields, Benjamin Freedman, KKK, Gerald L.K. Smith, and Dr. Swift.

Websites with information:

http://southernstudies.olemiss.edu/media/Special-Collections-List.pdf

http://www.olemiss.edu/depts/general_library/archives/finding_intro/alpha.html

http://www.olemiss.edu/depts/general_library/archives/finding_intro/bynumber.html

http://www.library.olemiss.edu/guides/archives_subject_guide/civil-rights?page=show

Finding aid:

http://www.olemiss.edu/depts/general_library/archives/finding_aids/MUM00009.html

[0130] Americans United Subject Files, 1953-2010, MS#1555

Location: Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Butler Library, 6th Floor, Columbia University, 535 West 114th St., New York, NY 10027

Description: Americans United for Separation of Church and State, founded in 1947, is a non-profit and non-partisan organization dedicated to church-state separation. The Americans United Subject files are approximately 44 linear feet of secondary research material relating to the religious right and religion in government and schools. Over 300 organizations are represented, with most of the material consisting of clippings, mass mailings, and newsletters. The collection consists of the research and subject files of Americans United, a non-profit and non-partisan organization dedicated to church-state separation. Almost all of the 44 linear feet of research files relate to organizations associated with the religious right. Over 300 organizations and individuals are represented, as well as some materials filed by topic. Among the files are those on 700 Club, Acton Institute, Alliance Defense Fund, Alliance for Marriage, American Center for Law and Justice, American Legislative Exchange Council, American Life League, American Society for the Defense of Tradition, Family, and Property, Army of God, Gary Bauer, William Bennett, Samuel Blumenfeld, Pat Buchanan, Campus Crusade, Cardinal Mindszenty Foundation, Catholic Right Wing, Center for Bio-Ethical Reform, Chalcedon Foundation, Christian Coalition, Christian Defense Fund, Christian Family Association, Citizens for God and Country, Citizens for Honest Government, Claremont Institute, Charles Colson, Concerned Women for America, Cops for Christ, Council for National Policy, Council of Conservative Citizens, The Dan Smoot Report, Daughters of the American Revolution, DeMoss Foundation, James C. Dobson, Ethics and Public Policy Center, Jerry Falwell, Family Research Council, Michael Farris, First Things, Focus on the Family (Citizen, Citizen Issues Alert, CitizenLink, Pastor's Weekly Briefing, Prayer Lines-National Day of Prayer, Teachers in Focus), Samuel Francis, Freedom Club, Newt Gingrich, Bishop Rene Gracida, Franklin Graham, Gun Owners of America, Rev. John Hagee, Billy James Hargis, Heritage Foundation, Steve Hotze, Human Life International, Institute for Basic Life Principles, Intercessors for America, John Birch Society, Judicial Watch, D. James Kennedy, Liberty Lobby, LifeLine, Rush Limbaugh, Living Truth Ministries, Thomas Monaghan, Sun Myung Moon, Moral Majority, National Youth Alliance, National Committee Against the UN Takeover, Richard John Neuhaus, New Right, New England Rally for God, Family, and Country, Oliver North, Parents Television Council, Population Research Institute, Priests for Life, Promise Keepers, Radical Right, Ralph Reed, Regent University, Religious Right, Right Wing Jews, Right Wing Women, Right Wing Terrorist Groups, Right Wing Blacks, Pat Robertson, Rutherford Institute, Save America Now, Paul and Robert Schenck, Phyllis Schlafly, Scriptures for America, Secular Humanism, Louis P. Sheldon, Joseph Sobran, Summit Ministries, Cal Thomas, Trinity Broadcasting Network, U.S. Justice Foundation, U.S. Taxpayers Party, Paul Weyrich, and Donald Wildmon.

Reference:

Michael J. McVicar, "Constructing the American Right-Wing: Religion, Domestic Intelligence Gathering, and the Making of Conservatism in the United States. Final report on research at Columbia University's Rare Book and Manuscript Library," 2014, http://library.columbia.edu/content/dam/libraryweb/about/awards/­McVicar%20-%202014.pdf

Websites with information:

http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/archival/collections/ldpd_8412549/

http://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/826933881

http://www.worldcat.org/title/americans-united-subject-files-1953-2010/oclc/826933881

Finding aids:

http://findingaids.cul.columbia.edu/ead//nnc-rb/ldpd_8412549

http://findingaids.cul.columbia.edu/ead/nnc-rb/ldpd_8412549/dsc

http://findingaids.cul.columbia.edu/ead/nnc-rb/ldpd_8412549/print

[0131] The Papers of Leopold Amery, 1858-2007, GBR/0014/AMEL

Location: Churchill Archives Centre, Churchill College, University of Cambridge, Storey's Way, Cambridge CB3 0DS, United Kingdom

Description: Leopold Stennett Amery (1873-1955) was a British politician. From 1911-45, he was Unionist MP for the Sparkbrook (formerly South) Division of Birmingham. The papers consist of public and political correspondence; political papers; speeches and broadcasts; literary material (articles by Amery and correspondence and papers relating to his publications); press cuttings; photographs; material relating to Amery's extensive travels and tour of the British empire; and diaries and personal papers (including family correspondence, financial records, and material relating to Amery's interest in mountaineering). Series 1. Public and Political, 1881-1962. Subseries 5. General political, 1930s, 1887-1953. Sub-subseries 4. Letters on sanctions: A-Z, Oct 1935, consists of letters received in support of Amery's stand against sanctions being imposed on Italy by the League of Nations, following Italy's invasion of Abyssinia [later Ethiopia]. Correspondents include Ezra Pound. Sub-subseries 36. Trade files, Dec 1933-Mar 1950, includes copies of letters from Amery to correspondents including 1st Lord Hankey. Subseries 7. 1940's and post-war, 1926-1955 (bulk 1940-55). Sub-subseries 24. Bretton Woods, sterling etc., Apr 1944-May 1947, contains publications and general notes on Bretton Woods. Sub-subseries 85. Suez Canal, Jun 1951-May 1954, contains correspondence and papers on the Suez Canal Committee, with correspondents including Kenneth de Courcy; a draft letter from Amery to 1st Lord Hankey on the Committee's increasing anxiety about the Canal; and notes by Julian Amery on the importance of the Canal Zone and negotiations with Egypt. Series 2. Correspondence, 1892-1964. Subseries 1. Correspondence year files, 1906-1964 (bulk 1918-1955), contains correspondence with Julian Amery, Lieutenant-General Mark Clark, Rear-Admiral Sir Barry Domvile, 1st Lord Hankey, Christopher Hollis, Malcolm Muggeridge, Benito Mussolini, and Vilhjálmur Stefánsson. Subseries 2. Special correspondence, 1903-1955, contains correspondence with Dwight D. Eisenhower and Edward Spears. Series 8. Literary, 1895-1974, contains correspondence with 1st Lord Hankey and Julian Amery.

Websites with information:

http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/accessions/1997/97digests/politics.htm

http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/accessions/2012/12digests/politics.htm

Finding aid:

http://janus.lib.cam.ac.uk/db/node.xsp?id=EAD%2FGBR%2F0014%2FAMEL;recurse=1

[0132] Amistad Research Center vertical file

Location: Amistad Research Center, Inc., Tilton Hall, Tulane University, 6823 St. Charles Avenue, New Orleans, LA 70118

Description: The Amistad Research Center vertical file consists of an accumulation of hundreds of items, largely ephemeral in nature, in myriad formats and on topics as diverse as the people and institutions who created them. The bulk of the materials are from the 1980s onward. Formats include brochures, event programs, newspaper clippings, buttons, curricula guides, funeral programs, biographical sketches, advertisements, postcards, unpublished conference papers, calendars, genealogical reports, and postage stamps, among other formats and artifacts. Files on David Duke, institutionalized racism, and Huey P. Long - Race relations.

Finding aid:

http://www.amistadresearchcenter.org/archon/?p=collections/findingaid&id=241&q=&rootcontentid=91076#

[0133] Ulius L. Amoss papers, 1941-1964, Coll 005

Location: Special Collections and University Archives, Knight Library, 2nd floor North, Mail: UO Libraries--SPC, 1299 University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403-1299

Description: After his discharge from the army in 1946, Ulius "Pete" Louis Amoss (1895-1961) formed the International Services of Information Foundation, Incorporated (ISI), a non-profit, privately owned and operated intelligence service whose purpose was to collect and disseminate information from overseas countries. He also formed the U.L. Amoss Syndicate in 1948, which in turn invested in other corporations. In 1954, Amoss discovered the hair restoring product Grecian Formula 16; Amoss sold his stock in the formula in 1957 after discovering it had undesirable side effects. Amoss also wrote articles for magazines and gave numerous speeches promoting ISI. The papers include correspondence, manuscripts, speeches, espionage material, military material, and some printed matter. Files on National Review and Sovereign Order of Saint John of Jerusalem.

Websites with information:

http://researchguides.uoregon.edu/scua-politics/conservative

http://library.uoregon.edu/speccoll/nwdalinks.html

http://library.uoregon.edu/tools/blogs/scua/check-out-ulius-l-amoss-papers/

http://library.uoregon.edu/speccoll/guides/conservative.html

http://janus.uoregon.edu/record=b3440601

Finding aids:

http://nwda-db.wsulibs.wsu.edu/findaid/ark:/80444/xv35579

http://nwda-db.wsulibs.wsu.edu/print/ark:/80444/xv35579

http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv35579/

[0133a] Michael Amrine Papers, 1933-1971 (bulk 1940-1970), GTM.760826

Location: Booth Family Center for Special Collections, Georgetown University Library, 37th & O Streets NW, Washington, DC 20057-1174

Description: Michael Amrine was a Washington, D.C.-based freelance writer and formerly the editor of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. Correspondents include Vannevar Bush, James F. Byrnes, Whittaker Chambers (reviews of "Witness"), Barry Goldwater, Sen. Bourke B. Hickenlooper, and William Allen White. Files on Cold War, Communism, Lee Harvey Oswald, and Richard Nixon. Printed article and two typed manuscripts (1950) on Vision of America, a proposal by U.S. Senator Karl Mundt of South Dakota for an international television broadcast equivalent to the Voice of America.

Websites with information:

https://repository.library.georgetown.edu/handle/10822/558780

https://repository.library.georgetown.edu/handle/10822/558685/browse?type=title&rpp=50

https://repository.library.georgetown.edu/bitstream/handle/10822/551516/8-Literature%20and%20­Linguist

ics.pdf

Finding aid:

https://repository.library.georgetown.edu/bitstream/handle/10822/558780/GTM.760826.html?sequence=1

[0133b] Amsterdam News photograph archive, Series B-MT, 1920-2012 (bulk mid-1940s-mid-1990s), Call number 8084

Location: Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, 2B Carl A. Kroch Library, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853

Description: Founded in 1909 by James H. Anderson, the New York Amsterdam News is one of the oldest African-American owned and run newspapers in the country. The collection includes photographs and related materials covering a broad range of topics, with a particular focus on day-to-day life in New York's African-American community during the 20th century. In addition to photographs, the collection includes ephemera and manuscript material, including newspaper article drafts, typescript and mimeographed speeches, correspondence, event programs, magazine and newspaper clippings, employment applications, press releases, and newspaper production materials. Series B. Inactive File, contains an article draft regarding a statement given to the Malcolm X Inquiry Committee by William F. Buckley; a 2-leaf "Statement Issued by Dr. King on Statement of J. Edgar Hoover Regarding F.B.I. Agents"; "George S. Schuyler: Fainting Traveler" by Henry F. Winslow, Sr., reprinted from the Midwest Journal vol. 5, no. 2 (Summer 1953), pp. 24 ff.; "If Powell Comes In, Will 14th Amendment Go Out?" by David Lawrence, U.S. News and World Report LXII.12 (March 20, 1967), p. 124; a letter from Gerald R. Ford to Harrison H. Cain, dated 3-15-1967; 3 issues of newsletter "Your Washington Review" by Gerald R. Ford (dated Mar. 1, 8, and 15, 1967), with attached Jan/Feb. 1967 supplement and one newspaper clipping; a press release dated 2-24-45 concerning Rep. John Rankin's insinuation that Rep. Frank Hook and Adam Clayton Powell had communist ties; a press release dated 5-31-1951 titled "MacArthur Kept Jim Crow, Walter White Asserts" (1 leaf); press release dated 7-6-1951 concerning White's testimony that race prejudice was responsible for a decline of ethics in government; "Max Yergan Warns Negro of True Aims of Communism" by Alice A. Dunnigan; and a letter from Frank E. Gannett to C.B. Powell dated 2-4-1948. Series H. Transfer File, contains a photocopied statement from Richard Nixon on Roy Wilkins' 70th birthday. Series MT. Mel Tapley Collection, contains a letter from the Republican Presidential Task Force, signed by John Heinz.

Websites with information:

http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/EAD/browselists/allRMC.html

http://ebooks.library.cornell.edu/r/rmc/afram.html

Finding aids:

http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/EAD/htmldocs/RMM08084BMT.html

http://ebooks.library.cornell.edu/cgi/f/findaid/findaid-idx?c=rmc;cc=rmc;rgn=Entire20%25­Finding20%25Aid

;view=reslist;subview=standard;didno=RMM08084BMT.xml;focusrgn=allscopecontent

[0134] A. Helen Anderson Collection, 1950-1969, M016

Location: Special Collections & Archives, Penrose Library, University of Denver, 2150 East Evans Avenue, Denver, Colorado 80208

Description: A. Helen Anderson (1891-1975) served as Director of Publications for Denver Public Schools, Denver, CO, from 1929 to 1956. The A. Helen Anderson Collection consists of newspaper clippings, editorials, and correspondence assembled during her tenure as Director of Publications. These materials cover attacks on the public schools and other controversies during the McCarthy Era of the 1950's, as well as busing and desegregation in the Denver Public Schools during the 1960's. The collection also includes correspondence regarding the National Council for American Education, and its organizer Allen Zoll, 1950-1953, and a bibliography of materials concerning attacks on public education.

Websites with information:

http://library.du.edu/collections-archives/specialcollections/collection-list.html

http://lib-anubis.cair.du.edu/About/collections/SpecialCollections/scguides.cfm

Finding aids:

http://digital.library.du.edu/findingaids/view?docId=ead/m016.xml

http://lib-anubis.cair.du.edu/About/collections/SpecialCollections/Anderson/

[0135] Jack Anderson papers, 1930-2004 (Bulk, 1969-2004), MS2001

Location: Special Collections Research Center, The George Washington University, 2130 H Street, NW, Washington, DC 20052

Description: This collection includes articles, correspondence, index cards, book manuscripts, notes, government documents, legal documents, reports, scripts, photographs, drawings, audiovisual recordings, and artifacts that document the professional and, to a lesser extent, personal life of investigative journalist Jack Anderson (1922-2005). Topics of particular interest represented in Anderson's columns include fugitive Nazis, the activities of the FBI under J. Edgar Hoover, and the Liberty Lobby and other far-right organizations. Files on anti-Semitism, Richard Arens, Harry Byrd, Willis Carto, Roy Cohn, Communism, Richard Cotten, James Eastland, Alger FBI Files—Hiss, Fluoridation, Barry Goldwater, Hate, Jesse Helms, J. Edgar Hoover, Craig Hosmer, House Un-American Activities Committee, H.L. Hunt, John Birch Society, Jack Kemp, Ku Klux Klan, Fulton Lewis, Liberty Lobby, Life Line, Trent Lott, Joseph McCarthy, Militia movement, National Youth Alliance, Nazi underground - South America, Nazis, Neo-Nazis, Oliver North, Otto Otepka, Wright Patman, Pearson v. McCarthy files, Right-wing literature, Right wing infiltration, Right wing, Robertson ("Pat") v. McCloskey, Gerald L.K. Smith, John Stennis, Herman Talmadge, The Right, Strom Thurmond, John G. Tower, James Utt, Richard Viguerie, George Wallace, Francis Parker Yockey, and Allen Zoll.

Websites with information:

https://library.gwu.edu/scrc/search/finding-aids-by-title

http://library.gwu.edu/scrc/search/finding-aids-by-title

Finding aid:

http://library.gwu.edu/ead/ms2001.xml

[0135a] James Austin Anderson papers, 1898-1941, MSS.0078 [digital collection]

Location: W.S. Hoole Special Collections Library, The University of Alabama, Mary Harmon Bryant Hall, 500 Hackberry Lane, Box 870266, Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35487-0266

Description: James Austin Anderson (1871-1941) was postmaster of Tuscaloosa and the first archivist of the University of Alabama. The collection consists of copies of newspaper clippings and information about Tuscaloosa, Alabama, and its people. The category Tuscaloosa Ku Klux Klan contains copies of Reconstruction and the Klan, compiled by James A. Anderson, circa 1930, and the chapter "In Tuscaloosa," from When the Ku Klux Rode, by Eyre Damer, 1912.

Finding aid:

http://acumen.lib.ua.edu/legacy/u0003_0000078.xml

[0136] James Douglas Anderson Papers, 1854-[1888-1948]-1951, THS 379

Location: Tennessee Historical Society, Tennessee State Library and Archives, 403 Seventh Avenue North, Nashville, Tennessee 37243-0312

Description: Anderson (1867-1948), a southern Democrat, was a reporter and editorial writer who believed in the superiority of the white race and was firmly dedicated to the continuance of strict racial purity. He was opposed to the New Deal programs of Franklin Roosevelt, federal aid to public schools, the Tennessee Valley Authority, the League of Nations, woman's suffrage, Northern behavior toward the South, the proposed repeal of the poll tax, and the deterioration of society in general. The papers consist of articles, correspondence, a diary, memoirs, accounts, genealogical data, legal documents, pictures, court records, land records, newspaper contributions, and notes on various subjects. Correspondents include Theodore G. Bilbo. Also included are newsletters from the Economic Council and the Pennsylvania Sons of the American Revolution. Contains a copy of Anderson's article "Abraham Lincoln and White Supremacy" (1945).

Finding aids:

http://www.tn.gov/tsla/history/manuscripts/findingaids/ths379.pdf

http://www.tennessee.gov/tsla/history/manuscripts/findingaids/ths379.pdf

http://state.tn.us/tsla/history/manuscripts/findingaids/ths379.pdf

[0137] Mary Anderson papers, 1918-1960

Location: Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University, 3 James St, Cambridge, MA 02138

Description: Mary Anderson (1872-1964) was director of the Women's Bureau of the U.S. Department of Labor from 1920 to 1944. This collection consists mainly of correspondence with labor leaders and others on such topics as equal rights, protective legislation, organization of women workers, and Women's Bureau activities; also correspondence and printed material concerning right-wing accusations of Communist infiltration of women's organizations, and blacklisting of Anderson and others by the Daughters of the American Revolution. Section 2. Accusations of Radicalism (frames 188-395 of the microfilm edition), consists of correspondence, plus some clippings and pamphlets, relating mainly to two episodes: the publication of a pair of articles in Henry Ford's Dearborn Independent in March 1924 [Ford, "Are Women's Clubs 'Used' by Bolshevists?" Dearborn Independent, March 15, 1924, p. 2 [reprinted in Antifeminism in America: a reader: a collection of readings from the literature of the opponents to U.S. feminism, 1848 to the present, edited with introductions by Angela Howard and Sasha Ranaé Adams Tarrant (New York, Garland Pub., 2000)]; "Why Don't Women Investigate Propaganda?" Dearborn Independent, March 22, 1924, p. 1] alleging vast radical influence upon American women's organizations and including the statement that Anderson had had the federal government print a "program of Women's and Children's Work" that was "identical with" one proposed by "the director of welfare in Soviet Russia"; and the circulation within the Daughters of the American Revolution of a "blacklist" of alleged radicals in which Anderson was listed as a "socialist."

Reference:

Directory of Manuscript Collections Related to Federal Judges, 1789-1997. Compiled by Peter A. Wonders (Federal Judicial History Office, Federal Judicial Center, 1998), p. 6, http://www.fjc.gov/public/pdf.nsf/lookup/judms

dir.pdf/$file/judmsdir.pdf and http://www.fjc.gov/public/pdf.nsf/f385048e0431aa3c8525679e0055d35c/2

aca63df6e927c7485256a870045907f/$FILE/JudMsDir.pdf

Websites with information:

http://www.worldcat.org/title/papers-1918-1960-inclusive/oclc/122470953

Finding aids for microfilm of Women's Trade Union League and Its Leaders (Research Publications, 1981):

http://microformguides.gale.com/Data/Introductions/30430FM.htm

http://microformguides.gale.com/Data/Download/3043000R.pdf

http://microformguides.gale.com/BrowseGuide.asp?colldocid=3043000&Page=1

[0137a] Sherwood Anderson Papers, 1872-1992, Midwest.MS.Anderson

Location: The Newberry Library - Modern Manuscripts, 60 West Walton Street, Chicago, Illinois 60610

Description: Sherwood Anderson (1876-1941) was an American novelist. Correspondence, scrapbooks, clippings, photographs, audiovisual material, royalty statements, personal financial records, artifacts, miscellaneous ephemera, autographed works, and literary manuscripts (many unpublished; also fragments, notes, and tentative sketches for short stories). The series Outgoing Correspondence, 1915-1941, contains correspondence to American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born, Harry E. Barnes (Scripps-Howard Newspapers), Cyril Clemens, Jonathan and Josephus Daniels, John Dos Passos, Euthanasia Society of America, Inc., Carter Glass, Granville Hicks, Rush Holt, Paul U. Kellogg (The Survey), H. L. Mencken, Raymond Moley (Today), Burton Rascoe (New York Tribune), Reader's Digest, A. Willis Robertson, Porter Sargent, and George Sylvester Viereck. The series Incoming Correspondence, 1913-1941, contains correspondence from American Committee Against Fascist Oppression in Germany; American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born (Carey McWilliams); American Council Against Nazi Propaganda; American Writers Committee Against Lynching (Lewis Gannett, Benjamin Stolberg, Walter White, Helen Woodward); Harry F. Byrd; Cyril Clemens (International Mark Twain Society); Josephus Daniels; John Dos Passos; Max Eastman; T.S. Eliot; Euthanasia Society of America Inc.; Granville Hicks; Rush Holt; Sidney Hook (Committee for Cultural Freedom); Eugene Lyons (The American Mercury); H.L. Mencken; Raymond Moley (Today Magazine); Fulton Oursler (Liberty); Burton Rascoe; Readers Digest (DeWitt Wallace, Robert Littell); Porter Sargent; and George Sylvester Viereck (The American Monthly).

Websites with information:

http://mms.newberry.org/results.asp?subjectid=4580

http://mms.newberry.org/detail.asp?recordid=87

Finding aid:

http://mms.newberry.org/xml/xml_files/anderson.xml

[0138] Tom Anderson Papers, 1924-1994 (bulk 1943-1994), Coll. 7120

Location: American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming, 1000 E. University Avenue, Laramie, WY 82071

Description: Tom Anderson (1910-2002) was owner of a farm magazine publishing company, Southern Farm Publications, from 1947 to 1971. A political conservative, his views were disseminated through his weekly column "Straight Talk," American Way Features, a national newspaper syndicate which he owned, and through radio commentaries and lectures. Anderson was a member of the council of the John Birch Society from 1959 to 1976 and was the American Party candidate for vice-president in 1972 and president in 1976. Collection contains correspondence chiefly related to his publishing and political activities and involving numerous conservative activists; files of publications, correspondence, notes, manuscripts, and research files on various subjects including anti-Communism, the United Nations, civil rights, conservative Christianity, the John Birch Society, and limited government; scripts of his radio broadcasts; and audiotapes of broadcasts and speeches. Also contains biographical materials, periodicals published by Anderson or carrying articles by him, reprints and pamphlets, newspaper clippings, and phonograph records of political speeches. American Party materials include national committee minutes, correspondence, party constitution, political platforms, and campaign materials. Series I. Correspondence, contains files on American Opinion Speaker's Bureau, John Birch Society, John Birch Society - Robert Welch Correspondence, KKK, and Liberty Amendment Letters. Series II. Research Files, contains files on Abortion; Spiro Agnew; American Nazis; American Council for World Freedom; American Council of Christian Churches; Americans for Constitutional Action; Anarchy; Anti-Semitism; Appeasement; Back to Africa; Peter D. Beter; Big Government; Bigotry; Bilderbergers; Brainwashing (Psychopolitics); Bretton Woods; Bricker Amendment; British Israel; William F. Buckley, Jr.; Campus Crusade for Christ; Capitalism; Captive Nations; Willis A. Carto; Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions; Central Intelligence Agency; Christian View on Communism; Christian Network; Church and State; Cold War; Collectivism; Colonialism; Common Market; Communism in the Church; Communism; Communism on Campuses; Communist Party USA; Conspiracy; Constitution; Constitutional Amendments; Council on Foreign Relations; Bob DePugh; Disarmament; Discrimination; Drugs; Eisenhower; Equal Rights Amendment; Espionage; Eurocommunism; Euthanasia; Evolution; Extremists; Fabianism; Fact Finders Forum; Fanaticism; Farm Bureau; Federal Land Control; Federal Bureau of Investigation; Federal Reserve; Federal Communications Commission; Federal Aid; Fluoridation; Food for Freedom; Gerald Ford; Foreign Aid; Foreign Policy; Foreign Trade; Foundations; Fourteenth Amendment; Free Enterprise; Free China; Freedom Academy; Freedom; Genocide Treaty; George Bush; Goldwater; Government Debt; Government Schools; Government Spending; Guaranteed Annual Income; Gun Control; Billy James Hargis; Jesse Helms; Homosexuality; House Committee on Un-American Activities; Humanism; Identification Cards; Illuminati; Immigration; Individualism; Inflation; Institute of Pacific Relations; Institute for American Democracy; Insurrection; Integrated Schools; Integration; Internal Revenue Service; Internal Security; Jews; John Birch Society; Kennedy Assassination; KGB; Kissinger; KKK; Liberalism; Libertarianism; Liberty Lobby; Liberty Amendment; , Douglas MacArthur; Lester Maddox; Marxism; Masonry; McCarran Act; Joe McCarthy; Mental Health; Mind Control; Minimum Income Proposal; Minutemen; Monroe Doctrine; Moral Rearmament; Morality; Mormonism; Movement to Restore Decency (MOTOREDE); Muzzling Military; National Health Insurance; National Justice Foundation; National Conservative Council; National Council of Churches for Christ; National Conference for New Politics; National Youth Alliance; New World Order; Richard Nixon; Otto Otepka; Panama Canal; Patriotic Americans; Population Expansion; Pornography; Posse Comitatus; Prayer Decision; Pro-America; Progressive Labor Party; Prohibition Party; Propaganda; Property Rights; Proportional Representation; Public Lands; Public Schools; Race; John Rarick; James Earl Ray; Ronald Reagan; Red China; Reds in Government; Republic of China - Free China; Rhodesia; Right to Work; Rock and Roll; Nelson Rockefeller; Phyllis Schlafly; School Integration; Fred Schwarz; Secular Humanism; Segregation; Self Determination; Sensitivity Training; Sexual Education; Sexual Perversions; Shortages; Silver; Smears; Social Security; Socialism; Socialist Worker's Party; Socialized Medicine; Solzhenitsyn; South Africa; South America; Southern Conference Educational Fund; Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty; Subversion; Supreme Court; Tax Reform; Tax Rebellion; Taxation; Tennessee Valley Authority; The Family; Third Party; Third World; Meldrim Thomson; Thought Control; Treason; Treaties; UNESCO; UNICEF; United States Labor Party; United Nations; United World Federalist; Up with People; Vietnam; George Wallace; and World Bank. Series III. Political and Professional papers, contains files on American Party and John Birch Society. Series V. Audio Recordings, A/V Recordings, and Photographs, contains Straight Talk Radio Programs - Reel-to-Reel, 1966-1970; Straight Talk Radio Programs - Transcripts, 1966-1970; Anderson for President - Reel-to-Reel Audio, 1976; and General Politics - Panama Canal Debates - Reel-to-Reel Audio, 1978.

Reference:

Jeffrey H. Caufield, General Walker and the Murder of President Kennedy: The Extensive New Evidence of a Radical-Right Conspiracy (Moreland Press, 2015).

Websites with information:

https://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/_files/collection_guides/politics_guide_2009_ed2016.pdf

https://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/_files/annual-reports/ahc-annual-report-2009-10.pdf

https://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/_files/collection_guides/journalism_guide_2005_ed2016.pdf

http://ahc.uwyo.edu/documents/use_archives/guides/journalism.pdf

https://web.archive.org/web/20160919110928/https://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/collections/guides/politics.pdf

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/30956241

http://www.worldcat.org/title/tom-anderson-papers-1924-1994/oclc/30956241

Finding aid:

https://rmoa.unm.edu/docviewer.php?docId=wyu-ah07120.xml

[0139] Tom Anderson Papers, 1943-1986, Coll. 157

Location: Special Collections and University Archives, Knight Library, 2nd floor North, Mail: UO Libraries--SPC, 1299 University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403-1299

Description: Thomas Jefferson Anderson (1910-2002) was a member of the John Birch Society National Council, publisher of farm magazines, editorialist, public speaker, and political activist in the American Party. Most noted for his "Straight Talk" editorials, Anderson became one of the country's foremost advocates of right wing conservatism. Correspondents and subjects include the American Party, T. Coleman Andrews, Ezra Taft Benson, William F. Buckley, Willis A. Carto, Kent Courtney, Harry T. Everingham, Barry Goldwater, J. Evetts Haley, A. G. Heinsohn, John Birch Society, John H. Rousselot, Edward A. Rumely, Phyllis Schlafly, Robert B. Snowden, Willis E. Stone, George C. Wallace, and Robert Welch.

Unpublished inventory in the Library.

Reference:

Jeffrey H. Caufield, General Walker and the Murder of President Kennedy: The Extensive New Evidence of a Radical-Right Conspiracy (Moreland Press, 2015).

Websites with information:

http://researchguides.uoregon.edu/scua-politics/conservative

https://library.uoregon.edu/speccoll/guides/conservative.html

http://janus.uoregon.edu/record=b1981716

http://janus.uoregon.edu/record=b1981716~S8

http://www.worldcat.org/title/papers-1943-1986/oclc/28409983

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/28409983

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/19639724

http://www.worldcat.org/title/papers-1943-1986/oclc/19639724

[0140] Tom Anderson Papers, 1953-1972, Texas MSS 00041

Location: Cushing Memorial Library, Texas A&M University 5000 TAMU College Station, TX 77843-5000

Description: Anderson (1910-2002) was an editor, publisher, and conservative political activist. Papers consist of newspaper clippings containing information on income tax reform bills, vocational agriculture, and the Grass Roots Tax Revolt, reprints of the "Straight Talk" editorials from Farm and Ranch magazine, the author's copy of the 1958 third edition of Straight Talk, pamphlets, and newspaper articles relating to Tom Anderson. One photograph. Contains documents that mention the John Birch Society and Edwin Anderson Walker and a pamphlet (Why Not Be Independent?) by Evetts Haley, Jr.

Websites with information:

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/37557146

http://www.worldcat.org/title/tom-anderson-papers-1958-1970/oclc/37557146

Finding aids:

http://archon.di.tamu.edu/index.php?p=collections/controlcard&id=17

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tamucush/00041/tamu-00041.html

http://archon.di.tamu.edu/index.php?p=collections/findingaid&id=17&q=

[0141] Landshövding Georg Andréns papper

Location: Göteborgs universitetsbibliotek, Renströmsgatan 4, 405 30 Göteborg, Sweden

Description: Georg Andrén (1890-1969) was a Swedish politician and a member of Parliament for the Moderata samlingspartiet [the Moderate Party].

Websites with information:

http://www.ub.gu.se/sok/handskrift/arkiv/index.xml?id=48&detail=1

[0142] Rhoda Sheelah Andrew Papers relating mostly to water fluoridation, 1950s-2000, MS-2077

Location: Hocken Library, 90 Anzac Ave, Dunedin, New Zealand

Description: Rhoda Sheelah Andrew (1916-2008) was a Dunedin woman who campaigned for many years against the fluoridation of water supplies. She was for some years secretary of the Dunedin Anti-Fluoridation Society. She had other political interests, notably in the Social Credit movement, and the papers include a few items relating to these other interests. The collection includes correspondence, subject files, submissions, petitions, official reports, newspaper clippings, periodicals and books. There are numerous 'miscellaneous' papers, which generally include clippings, photocopies of articles and sometimes correspondence. Other items include catalogues of Sheelah Andrew's book collection, which specialised in 'social credit and related subjects'.

Finding aid:

http://hakena.otago.ac.nz/nreq/Welcome.html

[0143] T. Coleman Andrews Papers, 1931-1965, Coll. 119

Location: Special Collections and University Archives, Knight Library, 2nd floor North, Mail: UO Libraries--SPC, 1299 University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403-1299

Description: Andrews (1899-1983) is probably best known as the independent candidate for president in 1956. From 1931 to 1933 he was Auditor of Public Accounts, Commonwealth of Virginia; chairman of the accounting and auditing group of the first Hoover Commission in 1948; and Commissioner of Internal Revenue of the United States from 1953 to 1955. He was one of the founders of the John Birch Society. The papers consist of correspondence, material on the American Institute of Accountants and tax reform, a campaign file, and personal material. Includes about 10,000 letters as well as various reports, documents, and manuscripts of speeches documenting his activities. Correspondents include Lee J. Adamson; American Economic Foundation; John U. Barr; Spruille Braden; William F. Buckley, Jr.; Harry Flood Byrd; James G. Campaigne; Frank Chodorov; Citizens Foreign Aid Committee; Committee for Constitutional Government; Kent H. Courtney; Virginius Dabney; Robert B. Dresser; Philip Lee Eubank; Bonner Fellers; Edward R. Fields; Foundation for Economic Education; Barry Goldwater; Corinne Griffith; Ralph W. Gwinn; Harding College (Searcy, Ark.); Robert M. Harriss; A. G. Heinsohn; Herbert C. Hoover; Sherwood C. Ide; Intercollegiate Society of Individualists, Inc.; John Birch Society; Mark M. Jones; Vivien Kellems; Joseph S. Kimmel, Sr.; Fred C. Koch; J. Bracken Lee; Clarence E. Manion; Patrick Henry Group; Westbrook Pegler; Samuel Pettengill; Leonard E. Read; A. Willis Robertson; Archibald Roosevelt; Howard W. Smith; Dan Smoot; Robert B. Snowden; Sally Stratton; Paul H. Talbert; Herman E. Talmadge; Strom Thurmond; John G. Tower; William M. Tuck; Robert Welch; and Thomas H. Werdel.

Unpublished inventory in the Library.

References:

Martin Schmitt, An Inventory of the Papers of T. Coleman Andrews (Eugene, University of Oregon Library, 1967; Occasional Paper no. 5); Catalogue of Manuscripts in the University of Oregon Library, compiled by Martin Schmitt (Eugene, University of Oregon, 1971), http://library.uoregon.edu/ec/e-asia/read/schmitt.pdf; Jeffrey H. Caufield, General Walker and the Murder of President Kennedy: The Extensive New Evidence of a Radical-Right Conspiracy (Moreland Press, 2015); Nancy MacLean, Democracy in Chains: The Deep History of the Radical Right’s Stealth Plan for America (New York: Viking, 2017).

Websites with information:

http://researchguides.uoregon.edu/scua-politics/conservative

https://library.uoregon.edu/speccoll/guides/conservative.html

http://janus.uoregon.edu/record=b1975951

http://libweb.uoregon.edu/speccoll/guides/conservative.html

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/18939977

http://www.worldcat.org/title/papers-1931-1965/oclc/18939977

[0144] Sir Norman Angell Papers, 1890-1976, SPEC 010

Location: Ball State University Archives and Special Collections, Alexander M. Bracken Library, Room 210, 2000 W. University Avenue, Muncie, Indiana 47306

Description: Sir Ralph Norman Angell (1872-1967) was an English lecturer, journalist, author, and member of Parliament for the Labour Party. Correspondents include American Mercury, Julian Amery, Anti-Socialist and Anti-Communist Union, Hilaire Belloc, John Buchan, Nicholas Murray Butler (Columbia University), Dwight D. Eisenhower, Christopher T. Emmet, Jr., Louis Fischer, Irving Fisher, Alfred Kohlberg, Clare Boothe Luce, Henry R. Luce (Time Incorporated), Eugene Lyons, Ezra Pound, and Dorothy Thompson.

Finding aids:

http://www.bsu.edu/libraries/archives/findingaids/SPEC010.pdf

http://cms.bsu.edu/academics/libraries/collectionsanddept/archives/collections/rarebooks/specialcollections

/sirnormanangel

[0144a] Alfred Williams Anthony Collection, 1679-1944, MssCol 115

Location: Humanities and Social Sciences Library, Manuscripts and Archives Division, The New York Public Library, Room 315, 476 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 10018-2788

Description: Alfred Williams Anthony (1860-1939) was a theologian, author, and educator. The collection consists mainly of 18th-century autographs, with the bulk from the mid-19th to 20th centuries, representing both primary and secondary figures from diverse fields including literature, music, education, politics, and royalty. Series I. Prominent Correspondents, c 1600-1930 (bulk dates 1800-1930), contains files on Charles Austin Beard, Thomas Hart Benton, Luther Burbank, Edmund Burke, Nicholas Murray Butler, Calvin Coolidge, George Creel, Thomas Alva Edison, Irving Fisher, Henry Ford, Frank Harris, Hamilton Holt, Herbert Hoover, David Starr Jordan, Rudyard Kipling, Benjamin Barr Lindsey, H.L. Mencken, Robert Andrews Millikan, Henry Fairfield Osborn, Gifford Pinchot, Elihu Root, Margaret Sanger, William Allen White, and Owen Wister.

Websites with information:

https://web-beta.archive.org/web/20081024150939/http://www.nypl.org:80/research/chss/spe/rbk/result.c

fm?find=1

Finding aids:

http://archives.nypl.org/mss/115

http://archives.nypl.org/uploads/collection/pdf_finding_aid/anthonyalfred.pdf

https://web-beta.archive.org/web/20070611195031/http://www.nypl.org/research/chss/spe/rbk/faids/anth

onyalfred.pdf

[0145] John R. Anthony Collection: 1912-1977, TAMU MSS 00042

Location: Cushing Memorial Library, Texas A&M University 5000 TAMU College Station, TX 77843-5000

Description: John Robert Anthony (1889-1977) was an oil company lawyer and professor of law. Series 1. Writings by other authors, 1923-1974, contains books or pamphlets by numerous right-wing authors, including Gary Allen, Austin J. App, George W. Armstrong, Herbert W. Armstrong, W. J. Cameron, Earnest Sevier Cox, Curtis Dall, Martin Dies, James O. Eastland, Lee Edwards, Medford Evans, John T. Flynn, Victor J. Fox, Frank Gannett, W.O.H. Garman, Kenneth Goff, Goldwater for President Committee, Rosalie M. Gordon, David Emerson Gumaer, Billy James Hargis, F. A. Harper, Manning Johnson, Joseph P. Kamp, H. S. Kenan, Willford I. King, Frank Kluckhohn, Fulton Lewis, Jr., Liberty Lobby , W. S. McBirnie, Joe McCarthy, Carl McIntire, Clarence Manion, The Protocols of The Learned Elders of Zion, Reuben Maury, Ben Moreell, Carleton Putnam, Max Rafferty, B. Carroll Reece, Arch E. Roberts, William A. Rusher, Phyllis Schlafly, Hilaire du Berrier, Frank E. Holman, Fred Schwarz, Allan Shivers, Gerald L. K. Smith, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Kent H. Steffgen, John A. Stormer, Wickliffe B. Vennard, Robert Welch, Robert H. Williams, and Wallis W. Wood. Series 3. Subject files, clippings, 1924-1977, includes folders on Communism, the Bricker Amendment, the Status of Forces Agreement, the John Birch Society, and the States' Rights Party.

Finding aids:

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tamucush/00042/00042-P.html

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tamucush/00042/tamu-00042.html

http://archon.di.tamu.edu/index.php?p=collections/findingaid&id=91

http://archon.di.tamu.edu/?p=collections/findingaid&id=91&q=

[0146] Ruth F. Anthony papers, 1962-1994, RH WL MS 19

Location: University of Kansas, Kenneth Spencer Research Library, Wilcox Collection, Kansas Collection, 1450 Poplar Lane, Lawrence, KS 66045-7616

Description: These papers of native Kansan Ruth F. Anthony (1914-1994) contain her correspondence with various Christian right wing political organizations which she supported over the years. Included are membership cards, certificates of appreciation, contribution receipts, and several organizational newsletters. In the correspondence are letters from and about Robert Bolivar DePugh, founder of the anti-Communist organization known as the Minutemen.

Websites with information:

http://etext.ku.edu/search?browse-creator=aa;sort=creator;route=ksrlead;brand=ksrlead

Finding aid:

http://etext.ku.edu/view?docId=ksrlead/ksrl.kc.anthonyruthf.xml

[0147] Anti-Catholic documents collection, 1844-1930 (bulk 1844-1888), undated, MS2006-59

Location: Archives and Manuscripts, John J. Burns Library, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467-3801

Description: This collection documents popular and political manifestations of anti-Catholic prejudice in the United States during the 19th century. Materials document the burning of the Ursuline convent in Charlestown, MA in 1834; riots targeting Catholics in Philadelphia, PA; and the American Party during the 1850s-1860s. One of the most famous incidents of anti-Catholic sentiment expression occurred August 11, 1834; non-Catholic rioters looted and burned the Ursuline Convent of Mount Benedict in Charlestown, MA. Anti-Catholic violence also erupted in Philadelphia when 13 people were killed in riots in 1835. Activities by the American Nativist Party in Kensington, Pennsylvania, in 1844 also sparked anti-Catholic riots. In the 1850s, the American Party, also known as the Know-Nothing Party, was partly founded on an anti-Catholic platform. Material documenting popular violence against Catholics include an account of the burning of the Ursuline Convent in Charlestown, Massachusetts, in 1834; a biography of an Ursuline nun; a student essay on the Ursuline Convent from 1930; and a piece of correspondence giving an account of the anti-Catholic riots in Pennsylvania. In addition, the collection contains material relating to the American Party. This includes party constitutions, records books, membership lists, and meeting minutes.

Websites with information:

http://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/232957797

http://www.worldcat.org/title/anti-catholic-documents-collection-1844-1930/oclc/232957797

Finding aid:

http://dcollections.bc.edu/webclient/StreamGate?folder_id=0&dvs=1425359623823~356

[0148] Anti-Catholic Literature Collection, 1912, 1924-1928, ACUA 213

Location: The American Catholic History Research Center and University Archives, The Catholic University of America, Washington, D.C. 20064

Description: Mounted photostats plus a few originals of pamphlets, cartoons and posters, some of a sensational nature, distributed by various anti-Catholic groups, including the Ku Klux Klan, during the 1928 presidential campaign for the purpose of undermining the Democratic candidate, Alfred E. Smith. A few items refer to the murderous Knights of Columbus Oath and several graphics and pamphlets depict the Ku Klux Klan as the patriotic solution.

Websites with information:

http://archives.lib.cua.edu/findingaid/

http://archives.lib.cua.edu/manulist.cfm

http://archives.lib.cua.edu/manua-k.cfm

Finding aids:

http://archives.lib.cua.edu/findingaid/anticath.cfm

http://archives.lib.cua.edu/findingaid/anticath.cfm?fullsite=1

http://www.catholicresearch.net/data/ead/html/cua-AntiCatholicLit.html

http://www.aladin0.wrlc.org/gsdl/collect/faids/import/CUanticath.shtml

[0149] Anti-Catholic Printed Material Collection, 1827-1991, ANT

Location: University of Notre Dame Archives, 607 Hesburgh Library, Notre Dame, IN 46556

Description: Anti-Catholic printed material and printed material concerning anti-Catholicism: books, pamphlets, leaflets, periodicals, offprints, and printed ephemera on such topics as the Ku Klux Klan, the 1928 presidential campaign of Alfred E. Smith, and the bogus Knights of Columbus Oath. Pamphlets include H.S. Burwell, Three in One- Knights of Columbus Oath Priest Oath and from their own lips: Shall this Banner or Rome's rule America? (1913); Sam Robertson, Genuine Knights of Columbus Oath & The Spurious One (Knights of Columbus, 1924); Congressional Committee Condemns Publication of the Spurious Knights of Columbus Oath- Containing also Report of Masonic Committee and Speech of Congressman Kettner, of California (1914?); Report of Commission on Religious Prejudices ([Seattle] Supreme Council, Knights of Columbus, 1915); Fake Oaths and Bogus Documents (Huntington, Ind., Our Sunday Visitor Press, 1923-1929?); Senator Thomas E. Watson's Slanders against the Good Shepherd Sisterhood (National Catholic Welfare Council, 1918); Sermon on the Burning of the Ursuline Convent, by Caleb Stetson (1834); The Truth Unveiled; or, a Calm and Impartial Exposition of the Origin and Immediate Cause of the terrible Riots and Rebellion in Philadelphia, May and June '44, by A Protestant and Native Philadelphian (The Baltimore Metropolitan Tract Society, 1844); The Forum, by The American Protective Association (1894); The A.P.A. - American Protestant Association, by Rev. J.J. Tighe (1894); Crusaders - comic books, by Jack T. Chick (Chino, CA: Chick Publications, 1974-1978); Crusaders: Alberto - comic books, by Jack T. Chick (Chino, CA: Chick Publications, 1980s); King of Kings - comic book, by Jack T. Chick (Chino, CA: Chick Publications, 1980); Is There Another Christ? and The Death Cookie - cartoon booklets, by Jack T. Chick (Chino, CA: Chick Publications, 1983, 1988); The Pope's Secrets, by Tony Alamo (1984); and Alamo Christian Ministries World Newsletter, January-March 2003.

Websites with information:

http://archives.nd.edu/findaids/ead/

Finding aids:

http://archives.nd.edu/findaids/ead/xml/ant.xml

http://archives.nd.edu/findaids/ead/html/ANT.htm

[0150] Anti-Communism Films of the Early 1960s [online]

Location: Pepperdine Digital Collections, Pepperdine University Special Collections and University Archives, Room 326, Payson Library - Malibu Campus, 24255 Pacific Coast Highway, Malibu, CA 90263

Description: In the early 1960s at the height of the Cold War, Pepperdine College sponsored a four-part, Hollywood-produced film series titled Crisis for Americans. Utilizing newsreel footage and scripted narration, each film sought to expose the threat of Soviet-based communism to capitalism and free societies around the globe. The films describe how communism preys on susceptible youth (Communist Accent on Youth, 1961), spreads through violent aggression (Communist Imperialism, 1962), and cloaks itself behind the discourse of “peaceful coexistence” (Communism and Coexistence, 1963). The fourth film, The Questions and the Answers (1965), argues for the necessity of congressional investigations that root out communist activities within the United States. All four films can now be viewed online alongside supplementary archival materials about the films, including internal memos, correspondence, scripts, and newspaper clippings.

Websites with information:

http://library.pepperdine.edu/news/index.php/2011/11/new-digital-collection-anti-communism-films-of-the-early-1960s/

Digital collection:

Contains all four films, a partial script, clippings, and a Radio Free Europe advertisement.

http://pepperdine.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/landingpage/collection/p271401coll9

http://pepperdine.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/search/collection/p271401coll9

http://pepperdine.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/search/searchterm/Anti-Communism%20Films%20of%20the%20

­Early%201960s/

[0150a] Anti-communism manuscripts from the Harry S. Truman Library, 1945-1953 [microfilm]

Location: Archives and Special Collections, Maureen and Mike Mansfield Library, University of Montana, 32 Campus Dr. #9936, Missoula, MT 59812-9936

Description: The documents are drawn from a variety of collections, but all documents pertain to the red scare, Senator Joseph McCarthy, the federal loyalty program, anti-communism, and civil liberties.

Websites with information:

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/42929411

http://www.worldcat.org/title/anti-communism-manuscripts-from-the-harry-s-truman-library-1945-1953/ocl

c/42929411

[0151] Anticommunist Movement Collection, 1951-1965

Location: The University Archives and West Florida History Center, University of West Florida Libraries, Bldg. 32, 11000 University Pkwy, Pensacola, FL 32514

Description: Collection of publications of anticommunist organizations in America, 1951-1965, including booklets, periodicals, and brochures dealing with communist conspiracies and threats to America. Key writers and organizations include the Christian Nationalist Crusade and its magazine, The Cross and the Flag, the Cinema Educational Guild, Canadian Intelligence Publications, Carl McIntire, John Birch Society, William L. Dickinson, Myron C. Fagan, George B. Fowler, Gerald L. K. Smith, Ron Gostick (The Architects behind the World Communist Conspiracy), Harold Lord Varney, and Robert H. Williams. Subjects include anti-Semitism, anti-Communism, Cuba, fluoridation of water, John F. Kennedy, Joseph R. McCarthy, racism, the Selma-Montgomery Rights March (1965), UNICEF, and the United World Federalists.

Websites with information:

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/49698674

http://www.worldcat.org/title/anticommunist-movement-collection-1951-1965/oclc/49698674

Finding aid:

http://143.88.66.76/Archon/?p=collections/findingaid&id=241&q=&rootcontentid=9496

[0152] Anti-Defamation League John Birch Society Collection. Records, undated, 1928-1980 (bulk 1958-1975), I-510

Location: American Jewish Historical Society, Center for Jewish History, 15 West 16th Street, New York, N.Y. 10011

Description: Robert Welch organized the John Birch Society to spur conservative activism and counter what he saw as a vast Communist conspiracy. The records consist of documentation of the Anti-Defamation League efforts to track and counter activities of the John Birch Society from its founding in 1958 through the mid-1970s. The bulk of the material is from the ADL New England regional office and consists of correspondence, memoranda, a large volume of newspaper clippings, as well as pamphlets, publications and reports. Subject files on "God and Country," "None Dare Call it Conspiracy," "Operation Abolition," "Review of the News," Gary Allen, American Opinion Forum, American Nazi Party, American Opinion, American Party, Tom Anderson, Anti-Communist Amateur Radio Network, Anti-Semitism, Dr. Austin J. App, Don Bell, Ezra T. Benson, Samuel Blumenfeld, Frank C. Brophy, William F. Buckley Jr., Col. Laurence E. Bunker, Eric D. Butler, Taylor Caldwell, California Senate Fact-Finding Committee on Un-American Activities, Willis A. Carto, Catholic Traditionalist Movement, Citizens Council, Coast Federal Savings & Loan, Communism, Kent Courtney, Thomas J. Dodd, Slobodan M. Draskovich, Robert B. Dresser, Hilaire du Berrier, Medford Evans, Fluoridation, Barry M. Goldwater, Billy James Hargis, A.G. Heinsohn, Jr., George J. Hess, Edgar W. Hiestand, J. Edgar Hoover, Integration, Jewish Society of Americanists, John Birch Society Bulletin, Katanga, Hubert W. Kregeloh, Ku Klux Klan, Liberty Amendment Committee, Myers G. Lowman, Jim Lucier, Norman D. MacLeod, Clarence Manion, J.B. Matthews, Conde McGinley, John F. McManus, Mindszenty Report, Minutemen, Gordon "Jack" Mohr, Movement to Restore Decency (MOTOREDE), National Education Program, New England Committee for Captive Nations, 1976 Committee, Hargrove S. Norris, Revilo P. Oliver, James Oviatt, Westbrook Pegler, Herbert A. Philbrick, Poor Richard's Book Store, Rhodesia, Robert Welch, Inc., Arch E. Roberts, E. Merrill Root, John H. Rousselot, John G. Schmitz, George S. Schuyler, W. Cleon Skousen, Gerald L.K. Smith, Alan Stang, TRAIN (To Restore American Independence Now), TRIM (Tax Reform Immediately), Truth About Civil Turmoil (TACT) Committee, Edwin Walker, George C. Wallace, Clyde J. Watts, Robert H.W. Welch, Jr., Western Island Publishers, White Citizens Council, and Young Americans for Freedom. Pamphlets, books, and other publications by Samuel L. Blumenfeld, Medford Evans, W. Cleon Skousen, Revilo P. Oliver, Alan Stang, Robert Welch, E. Merrill Root, and Gary Allen.

Websites with information:

http://www.cjh.org/p/93

http://aphdigital.org/internships/american-jewish-historical-society/

Finding aids:

http://findingaids.cjh.org/?pID=1287902

http://digifindingaids.cjh.org/?pID=1287902

[0153] The Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith Lodge 171 (Denver, Colo.) records, 1947-1977, B090

Location: Ira M. Beck Memorial Archives, Special Collections and Archives, Penrose Library, University of Denver, 2150 East Evans Avenue, Denver, Colorado 80208

Description: This collection contains material relating to Soviet Jewry, anti-Semitism, and community relations with ethnic groups (e.g. African Americans and Hispanics) and other religious groups on a local, national and international level. The collection contains correspondence, press releases, photographs, publications, reel-to-reel audio tapes and 16 millimeter films, and administrative files. Series 4 is entitled Anti-Defamation League of B'Nai B'Brith: Soviet Jewry, Anti-Semitism, Conversion Materials, etc. 1969-1977. Series 5: Anti-Defamation League of B'Nai B'Brith: Audio Visual Records, Tapes, Films from ADL 1969-1977, contains Arnold Forster, Radical Right. Series 17: Anti-Defamation League - Miscellaneous Files, contains files on school integration.

Websites with information:

http://library.du.edu/collections-archives/specialcollections/collection-list.html

http://library1.du.edu/site/about/specialCollections/listOfCollections.php

http://lib-anubis.cair.du.edu/About/collections/SpecialCollections/ADL/Index.cfm

http://lib-anubis.cair.du.edu/About/collections/SpecialCollections/scguides.cfm

http://web.archive.org/web/20081014044753/http://www.penlib.du.edu/about/collections/SpecialCollecti

ons/adl/index.cfm

Finding aid:

http://rmoa.unm.edu/docviewer.php?docId=codu90ADL.xml

[0154] Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith Race Relations Work records, 1946-1982

Location: Amistad Research Center, Inc., Tilton Hall, Tulane University, 6823 St. Charles Avenue, New Orleans, LA 70118

Description: The bulk of the collection is made up of reports, pamphlets, and other publications of the ADL, as well as reports the ADL collected from other organizations. Reports on Desegregation, Little Rock Desegregation Project, Radical Right; Pamphlets: Anti-Semitism, Communism, Desegregation, Nazism, Radical Right; Reproductions of Periodical Articles: Anti-Semitism, Desegregation, Radical Right; Collected Reports: Anti-Semitism, Communism, Desegregation, Radical Right; Collected Speeches: Desegregation, Radical Right; Collected Press Releases: Desegregation.

Finding aid:

http://www.amistadresearchcenter.org/archon/index.php?p=collections/controlcard&id=112

[0155] Anti-Defamation League of San Diego Collection, 1946-1998, MS-0424

Location: Special Collections and University Archives, Library and Information Access, San Diego State University, 5500 Campanile Dr. MC 8050, San Diego, CA 92182-8050

Description: The Anti-Defamation League, also known as the ADL, is a special human relations agency founded in 1913 by B'nai B'rith in the United States, the oldest continually operating Jewish Service Organization in the world. The San Diego Regional Office of the ADL has been serving the San Diego and Imperial Counties since 1978. Social topics addressed by comments and actions of the ADL include anti-Semitism, Christian anti-Semitism, racial discrimination and reverse discrimination, hate crimes, the Holocaust, and the founding of the State of Israel. Organizations investigated by the ADL and exposed for their alleged social injustices include the John Birch Society, the Ku Klux Klan, Islamic extremists, Christian "cults", etc. The collection consists solely of paper records, including correspondence, newspaper articles, and publications of the ADL, from 1946-1998. There are folders on anti-Semitism, Christian anti-Semitism, the John Birch Society, the Ku Klux Klan, hate crimes, and the Holocaust.

Websites with information:

http://scua2.sdsu.edu/archon/?p=collections/collections&char=A

http://dsc.calstate.edu/3324?r=cam

http://libpac.sdsu.edu/search/m?SEARCH=MS-0424++&SUBMIT=Search

Finding aids:

http://scua2.sdsu.edu/archon/index.php?p=collections/controlcard&id=265

http://jhssandiego.pastperfect-online.com/31752cgi/mweb.exe?request=record&id=8EA26D34-43C2-4BA3-B

513-466774456174&type=301

http://findaid.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt0w1033nb/

http://findaid.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt0w1033nb/entire_text/

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt0w1033nb/entire_text/

[0156] Anti-Discrimination and Racial Equality collection, 1939-1960 (bulk 1940-1949), Pam 12

Location: Archives and Special Collections, Maureen and Mike Mansfield Library, University of Montana-Missoula, The University of Montana—Missoula, Missoula, MT 59812

Description: This is a compiled collection of pamphlets, booklets, leaflets, and book-length literature published in the United States during the mid-twentieth century regarding civil rights and race discrimination. Series I: Topical, 1939-1954, contains copies of "We Hold These Truths ...": Statements on Anti-Semitism by 54 Leading American Writers, Statesmen, Educators, Clergymen and Trade-Unionists (New York, N.Y.: League of American Writers, 1939); To Bigotry No Sanction: A Documented Analysis of Anti-Semitic Propaganda (Philadelphia: American Jewish Committee, 1941) [online at https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/­pt?id=wu.89095883377;view=1up;seq=5]; and Stetson Kennedy, We Must Clamp Down on the Klan Again! Dixie Disruptions (Chapel Hill: Fellowship of Southern Churchmen, 1946). Series II: Organizations and Special Interest Groups, 1940-1960, contains copies of Don't Be Fooled! (New York: Community Relations Service, American Jewish Committee, n.d. [ca. 1953]) (this pamphlet mentions the names of several prominent right-wing radical activists, including Gerald L.K. Smith, who have attacked the United Nations) and Lester B. Granger and Jackie Robinson, Communist Influence among Negroes--Fact or Illusion? Statements Presented at Washington Before the House Committee on Un-American Activities (New York: National Urban League, 1949).

Finding aid:

http://nwda.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv36880

[0157] Anti-Fascist/Anti-Communist Printed Material Collection, 1947-1953, K0421

Location: The State Historical Society of Missouri, 302 Newcomb Hall, University of Missouri-Kansas City, 5123 Holmes Street, Kansas City, Missouri 65110-2499

Description: Printed material concerning the Fascism and Communism scare in America.

Websites with information:

http://shs.umsystem.edu/manuscripts/invent/inventlist_kc.html

[0157a] Anti-Labor Reactions and Labor Espionage [digital collection]

Location: Special Collections, University of Washington Libraries, Box 352900, Seattle, WA 98195-2900

Description: During World War I, the United States military needed spruce to construct airplanes. When labor unrest in the Pacific Northwest logging industry slowed production, the U.S. Army established the Spruce Production Division, which sent soldiers into logging camps to limit unionizing activity and help ensure a steady supply of lumber. These efforts were bolstered by the creation of the Loyal Legion of Loggers and Lumbermen, an organization conceived of by Colonel Brice P. Disque, the Spruce Division's commanding officer. The Loyal Legion, an alliance between loggers and employers, was designed to limit especially the influence of the Industrial Workers of the World. The collection contains photographs and documents relating to the creation and activities of the Spruce Production Division, as well as documents describing the creation and activities of the Loyal Legion of Loggers and Lumbermen. The collection also contains speeches, articles and correspondence by the Associated Industries of Seattle, an organization of Seattle's business interests which was founded after the General Strike in 1919. The Associated Industries was the first group to advocate for the "open shop" – an approach they called the "American Plan" – which became the model for similar organizations nationwide. The collection also contains labor spy reports from inside the Seattle labor movement in 1919 and 1920, primarily from two spies who infiltrated labor organizations, particularly the Central Labor Council of Seattle.

Websites with information:

http://content.lib.washington.edu/portals/law/index.html

Finding aid:

http://content.lib.washington.edu/portals/law/antilabor.html

[0158] Antisemitic Literature Collection, undated, 1869-1993, P-701

Location: American Jewish Historical Society, Center for Jewish History, 15 West 16th Street, New York, N.Y. 10011

Description: The Anti-Semitic Literature Collection documents journalistic source materials (newspapers, newsletters, and illustrations) regarding views of anti-Semitism in the United States during the 20th-century. Items from periodicals and by authors such as Action, Action Magazine, Adult Educational Forum, Advocates of Our Lady, Einar Åberg, Alert, Alerte! (South Bend, Ind., Advocates of Our Lady), Marilyn R. Allen, America First, America in Danger, American Action, The American Adviser, American Anti-Communist Militia, American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, American Birthright Committee, American Bulletin, The American Business Menace, American Challenge, American Christian Party (Los Angeles, CA), American Coalition, American Fascist Union, American Gentile, American Heritage Protective Committee, American Immigration Conference Board, American Mercury, American National Labor Party, American Nationalist, American Nationalist Committee, American Nationalist Party, American Nazi Party, American Ranger (originally Jews! Jews! Jews!), American Society for Suppressing the Jewish Race, American Vigilant Intelligence Federation, America's Future, The Anti-Communist, Austin J. App, George W. Armstrong, Aryan League of America, Attack, Hugh J. Bauerlein, The Beacon Light, The Bi-Weekly Unionette, William L. Blessing, Frank L. Britton, The Broom, The Canadian Intelligence Service, Frank A. Capell, Christ's Crusaders, Christ's Party of the People (Kent, WA), Christian American Action, Christian Anti-Communism Crusade, Christian Anti-Jewish Party, Christian Crusaders Against Communism, Christian Defense League, Christian Defense News, Christian Educational Association, Christian Free Press, Christian Front, Christian Journal, Christian Nationalist Crusade, Christian Nationalist Party, Christian Patriots' Crusade, Christian Research, Christian Social Action, Christian Vanguard, Christian Veterans of America, Christian Youth Corps, Christian Youth for America, Cinema Educational Guild, Circuit Riders, Clarinada, Clearing House for National Interests, Upton Close, Committee for Constitutional Government, Committee for Open Debate on the Holocaust, Committee for the Preservation of the Constitution, Committee Russian Slaves of Jewish Communism, Committee to Save the McCarran Act, Common Sense, Commoner Party (Conyers, GA), Conservative Viewpoint, Constitutional Educational League, Father Coughlin, The Councilor, The Cross and the Flag, The Crusader (Knights of the Ku Klux Klan), The Crusader (Union of Christian Crusaders), Crusader White Shirts, Crusaders for Americanism, Inc., Crusading Mothers of Pennsylvania, The Dan Smoot Report, Jacob De Tonge (A Caution to the Public), Dearborn Independent, Dearborn Publishing Company, La Defensa, The Defender, Defensive Legion of Registered Americans, Destiny, Deutscher Weckruf und Beobachter, Elizabeth Dilling, Don Bell Reports, Economic Council Letter, Economic Council Review of Books, Robert Edward Edmondson, Elmore County White Citizens Council (Wetumpka, AL), Sheldon Emry, Edith Essig, Fact for Fact, Myron Fagan, Federated Americans Against Imperialism and Racism, Federation of American Citizens of German Descent, Fellowship Press, The Fiery Cross, Fighters for a Free World, Fighting American Nationalists, Benjamin Franklin forgery, The Free American, Benjamin H. Freedman, Leslie Fry, The Gaelic American, Gentile News, Gentile Refuge, German American Bund, German-American Front, German American League for Culture, German-American Vocational Alliance, Kenneth Goff, Grass Roots, The Green Mountain Rifleman, Grey Shirts of America, The Guildsman, Carl A. Hadland, Samuel Evans Hayes, Headlines, Healey's Irish Weekly, The Herald, The Herald of Freedom, Hypocrisy, The Independent Patriot, The Individualist, Industrial Control Reports, Industrial Defense Association, Institute for Historical Review, Junges Volk, Joseph P. Kamp, John Kasper, Keep America Committee, Kill Magazine, Klan Bulletin, Henry H. Klein, Ku Klux Klan, League for Cultural Dynamics, Liberation, Liberty Letter, Liberty Lobby, Library of Liberal Endeavor, Lutheran Research Society, The Menace, Militant Christian Americans, Militant for Christ, Al Misegadis, Jozef Mlot-Mroz, Modern Paul Revere, Eustace Mullins, Nacion Arabe, Nation & Race, National American, National American Bulletin, National Blue Star Mothers of America, National Blue Star Mothers of Pennsylvania, National Christian Citizen Committee, National Christian News, National Citizens Union, National Committee to Free America from Jewish Domination, National Council for American Education, National Economic Council, National Federation of Christian Laymen, National Gentile League, National Patrick Henry Organization, National Renaissance Bulletin, National Renaissance Party, National Right to Life Committee, National Social Workers Party, National Socialist Bulletin, National Socialist White People's Party, National Socialist World, National Socialist Youth Movement, National States Rights Party, National White Americans Party, National Youth Alliance, National Youth Alliance Action, The Nationalist, Nationalist White Party, New Christian Crusade Church, New England National Socialist, New Foundations, The New American, The New Liberator, The New Patriot, News & Views, Our Lady's Crusaders, Pan Aryan Alliance, The Patriot, Patriotic Tract Society, Pelley's Weekly, Pelley Publishers, Johnny Pelton, Jonathan Ellsworth Perkins, The Pilgrim Torch, Pioneer News Service, The Point, The Political Reporter, Polzin Publications, Portions in Due Season (Denver, CO), Prima Facie, Prophetic Herald, Realpolitical Institute, Reflection, The Revealer, The Revere, Revisionist Letters, Right, The Right Brigade, William E. Riker, Lincoln Rockwell, The Rockwell Report, Roll-Call, SE Guard, S.O.S.!!!, Ship of State, St. Michael's News, E.N. Sanctuary, Save America Now, The Silhouette, Silver Legion Ranger, Skinheads, Gerald L.K. Smith, Social Justice, Sons of Liberty, The Spotlight, The Stormtrooper, Statecraft, George E. Sullivan, Task Force, Jack B. Tenney, Rev. A.W. Terminiello, Think Weekly, Thunderbolt, Tom-Toms of Tomorrow, Trades Union News Publishing Co. (reprint from 1944), Truth Seeker, Twentieth Century Crusaders, Valerian D. Trifa, W.B. Tuttle, U.S.A., Hugo Valentin, The Virginian, The Voice of Liberty, The White American, The White Party of America, The White Sentinel, Wickliffe B. Vennard, Vereinigte Deutsche Gesellschaften, Otto H.F. Vollbehr, Washington Constitutional Guards, Washington Observer Newsletter, Frederick Charles F. Weiss (a.k.a., "x.y.z"), West Virginia Anti-Communist League, Western Front, White Horse Crusade, White Power, Robert H. Williams, Williams Intelligence Summary, Gerald B. Winrod, Women's Voice, World Service, The X-Ray, and Youth Action News. A sound recording of a speech by Father Coughlin (1938) is with the curatorial collection.

Websites with information:

http://www.cjh.org/p/93

Finding aids:

http://findingaids.cjh.org/index2.php?fnm=antisemlit2&pnm=ajhs

http://findingaids.cjh.org/index2.php?fnm=AntisemLit2&pnm=AJHS

http://findingaids.cjh.org/?pID=109172

http://digifindingaids.cjh.org/?pID=109172

http://archive.today/UYl3u

https://archive.is/KOcLv

http://web.archive.org/web/20110812012945/http://findingaids.cjh.org/index2.php?fnm=AntisemLit2&pnm

=AJHS

[0159] Anti-Semitic Publications, 1920-1951, MS 4953

Location: Western Reserve Historical Society, 10825 East Boulevard, Cleveland, Ohio 44106

Description: The collection consists of magazines, pamphlets, and books relevant to Jewish life and anti-Semitism in the first half of the twentieth century. Included are copies of The International Jew: The World's Foremost Problem, Dearborn Publishing Co. (A reprint of a series of articles appearing in The Dearborn Independent from May 22 to October 2, 1920), November 1920; The Dearborn Independent (Weekly publication by The Dearborn Publishing Company, President Henry Ford), October 17, 1925, January 30, 1926, April 3, 1926, and May 1, 1926; The Triumph of an Idea: The Story of Henry Ford, Ralph H. Graves, Doubleday, Doran & Company, 1934; What Henry Ford Thinks of War, Frank Bonville, Bonville Bureau of Information, 1925; The Tragedy of Henry Ford, Jonathan Norton Leonard, G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1932; and Der Schulungsbrief (Monthly publication of National Socialist Party of Germany; in German), 1930, 1938, and 1939.

Finding aids:

http://ead.ohiolink.edu/xtf-ead/view?docId=ead/OCLWHi3181.xml

http://catalog.wrhs.org/collections/view?docId=ead/MS4953.xml

[0160] [Entry deleted.]

[0161] Antisemitic, Zionist, social, and political pamphlets, Parts 1-11

Location: Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.

Description: Includes, as number [1.1]-[1-46], 46 American anti-Jewish pamphlets published in the 1930s by Robert Edward Edmondson (1872-1959) (including Advanced Russian revolution, American vigilanteism, Capitalist-jews backing communists?, F.D.R. money changer no. 1, FDR's "CAMCO wildcat, Frankfurter's A.C.L.U. sidesteps Edmondson case free press issue, Franklin's Jewish-revolutionary prophecy, Government bonds for promises, How Roosevelt is following Marx, Is the League of Nations and its world court, the Jewish super-government of the Protocols?, Jersey goes Jewish, Jewish religion "practices" a menace to gentile states? Jews financed Russian revolution, Jews and communism, Letter to the managing editor, Minority war danger, Onward Christian soldiers, Our inflating credit-money balloon—"false recovery", Our "imaginary" money, Our inflating credit-money balloon—"false recovery", Proof of plot, Roosevelt's Supreme Council, The basis for solution, The money wreckers pervert Federal Reserve System, and The jews confess); as number [140] The hidden hand of Judah, by O.B. Good (1936); and, as number [444], The Jewish war of survival, by Arnold Leese (1947).

Finding aids:

http://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/32394897

http://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/32396487

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/32396268

http://www.worldcat.org/title/antisemitic-zionist-social-and-political-pamphlets-part-7/oclc/32396268

http://catalog.loc.gov

[0162] Anti-Semitism and Nationalism at the end of the Soviet Era Collection, ca. 1988-1992 (Leiden: IDC Publishers, 1993) [microfiche]

Description: A documentary exhibition on microfiche prepared and co-ordinated by the Institute of Humanitarian Political Research and "Memorial" (Moscow), the Second World Center and the International Institute of Social History (Amsterdam). Originals at the M-Bio archive of the Institute of Humanitarian Political Research and 'Memorial', Moscow. Reproduces over one thousand pieces of material evidence (books, leaflets, newspapers, posters, documents, photographs, and cartoons) documenting anti-Semitism and nationalism in the Soviet Union. Includes leaflets of the Nacional'no-Patrioticeskij Front 'Pamjat' and other right-wing nationalist political parties and organizations in Russia. Also includes a selection of nationalist newspapers, including "Rodniye Prostori", Istoriko-culturnaya Gazeta, Siberia; "Tsara", Izdaniye Narodnogo Fronta Moldovy, Kishinev; "Otechestvo", Oppozitsionaya Gazeta Russkogo Patrioticheskogo Dvizheniya, Leningrad; "Volya Rossii", Ekaterinaburg; "Zemshchina", Russkaya Gramota Soyuza, Moscow; "Istoricheskaya Pamyat", Russkaya Patrioticheskaya Gazeta, St. Petersburg; "Narodnaya Gazeta", Vse-Soyuzny Yezhedelnik Fonda Sotsialnykh Initsiativ, Moscow; "Nashe Mneniye", Nezavisimy Informatsionny Listok, Saratov province; "Istoki", Vse-Soyuznaya Gazeta and Nezavisimaya Voennaya Gazeta, Moscow; "Golos Rossii", Gazeta Respublikanskoy Narodnoy Partii Rossii i Rossiiskogo Obshchenatsionalnogo Dvizheniya, Petrograd; "Velikoross", Vestnik t.o. "Russky Tsentr" pri SP SSSR, Moscow; "Vestnik Yuzhnoy Osetin", Tskhinvali; "Vestnik Kryma"; "Otchizna", Za Poitiku Narodnogo Soglosiya i Rossiskogo Vozrozhdeniya, Leningrad; "Moskovsky Traktir", Gazeta Russkogo Natsionalno-Osvoboditelnogo Dvizheniya; "Nakanune", Russkaya Gazeta, Zlatoust; "Narodnoye Delo", Nazodno-Sotsialnaya Partiya, St Petersburg; "Nashe Vremya", Gazeta Natsionalno-Respublikanskoy Partii Rossii, Petrograd; "Russky Stag", Moscow; "Russkaya Gazeta", Moscow; "Russkoye Znamya", Moscow; "Russky Put", Izdaniye Soyuza Dukhovnogo Vozrozhdeniya Otechestva, Moscow; "Polozheniye Del", Popechitelsky Fond Kazanskoy Bozhey Materi, Moscow; "Russkoye Delo", Natsionalno-Demokraticheskaya Partiya, Petrograd; "Rod", Gazeta Sankt-Peterburgskogo Muzhkogo Kauba, Russkoye Osvoboditelnoye Dvizheniya, St. Petersburg; "Russky Zov", Pravoslavno-patrioticheskaya Gazeta, Nizhni Tagil; "Russky Vestnik", Moscow; "Russky Golos", Nezavisimaya Gazeta Patrioticheskykh Sil, Ulyanovsk; "Pamyat", Izdaniye Natsionalno-Patrioticheskago Fronta "Pamyat", Moscow; "Russkiye Vedomosti", Moscow; "Pamyat", Gazeta Patrioticheskogo Dvizheniya "Pamyat", Novosibirsk; "Russkoye Voskreseniye", Gazeta Russkogo Natsionalno-Osvoboditelnogo Dvizheniya, Moscow; "Russky Puls", Moscow; "Spektr", Tbilisi; "Osvobozhdeniye", Natsionalno-Demokraticheskaya Partiya Petrogradskaya Regionalnaya Organizatsiya; "Rus", Gazeta Russkogo Natsionalnogo Dvizheniya; "Russkoye Delo", Novosibirsk; "Rus", Politichesky Yezhedelnik, Leningrad; "Russky Klich", Gazeta Soyuza Za Natsionalno-Proportsionalnoye Preclstavitelstvo; "Puls Tushina", Moscow; "Slavyansky Vestnik," Fond Slavyanskoy Pismennosti i Kulturi, Moscow; "Sivtsev Vrazhek", Moscow; "Stolichnaya", Moscow; "Spetsialny Vypusk press-tsentra Verkhovnogo Soveta Respubliki Armeniya"; "Informatsiya dlya Razmyshleniya", Leningrad?; "Dnestrovskaya Pravda," Tiraspol; "Pravda o Pridnestrove", Spetsvypusk gazety "Dnestrovskaya Pravda", Tiraspol; "Yedinstvo", Informatsionny Byulleten Soveta Interdvizheniya Sovetskoy Sotsialislicheskoy Respubliki Moldova, Kishinev; "Trudovoy Tiraspol", Organ Obedinennogo Soveta Trudovykh Kollektivov, Pridnestrovskaya Moldavskaya Sovetskaya Sotsialisticheskaya Respublika, Tiraspol; "Ekho", Izdaniye Vologodskoy Pisatelskoy Organizatsii, Vologda; "Respublika no. 5", Nezavisimaya Gazeta, vyrazhdayushaya interesi Tatarskogo Natsionalnogo Dvizheniya, Kazan; and "Hepryadva", Moscow.

Reference:

Anti-Semitism and nationalism at the end of the Soviet era. Guide to the microform collection: a documentary exhibition on microfiche, prepared and co-ordinated by the Institute of Humanitarian Political Research and "Memorial" (Moscow), editors, Nanci Adler, Huub Sanders; texts, Boris Belenkin, Mikhail Gnedovskii, and Marina Razorenova (Leiden, IDC, 1995), http://www.brill.com/sites/default/files/ftp/­downloads/31646_Guide.pdf

Websites with information:

http://www.iisg.nl/archives/en/files/a/ARCH01702.php

http://search.socialhistory.org/Record/ARCH01702/Description

http://search.socialhistory.org/pdf/ARCH01702.pdf

http://www.brill.com/files/brill.nl/specific/downloads/31646_Brochure.pdf

http://guides.lib.uchicago.edu/c.php?g=297241&p=1984094

http://igpi.ru

http://www.memo.ru

http://www.archivesportaleurope.net/ead-display/-/ead/s/F272761/2/right_wing

http://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/data/122307892

http://www.worldcat.org/title/anti-semitism-and-nationalism-at-the-end-of-the-soviet-era-collection-ca-1988-1992/oclc/122307892

[0162a] Anti-Semitism Collection

Location: Special Collections and Archives, Daniel Burke Library, Hamilton College, 198 College Hill Road, Clinton, NY 13323

Description: A collection consisting of uncatalogued pamphlets, broadsides, and ephemera.

Websites with information:

https://web-beta.archive.org/web/20120519123430/http://www.hamilton.edu/library/collections/specialcollections

[0162b] Anti-Semitism collection, 1930-1961, 1978.621

Location: Yeshiva University Archives, Mendel Gottesman Library, 500 W. 185th St., New York, NY 10033

Description: The collection consists of reports, clippings, notes, and correspondence, probably from the files of the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, concerning reactions to the trial of Adolf Eichmann (1961), anti-Semitism in Germany (1948-1957), and anti-Semitic publications. Also includes anti-Semitic and racist newspapers, magazines, flyers, and brochures from the United States, England, and South America, including editions of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, by Benjamin Wolf Segel, and publications of Gerald L.K. Smith, Father Charles E. Coughlin, Dan Smoot, Oswald Mosley, Citizen's Councils, American Board of Missions to the Jews, and other Christian, Nazi, and fascist material, as well as anti-racist pamphlets.

Websites with information:

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/122688362

http://www.worldcat.org/title/anti-semitism-collection-ca-1930-1961/oclc/122688362

Finding aid:

http://libfindaids.yu.edu:8082/xtf/view?docId=ead/antisemitism/antisemitism.xml;query=Anti-Semitism%20

collection;brand=default

[0163] Anti-Semitism Collection, 1954-1964, MS-290

Location: The Jacob Rader Marcus Center of the American Jewish Archives, 3101 Clifton Ave., Cincinnati, OH 45220

Description: The Anti-Semitism Collection contains anti-Semitic newspapers, pamphlets, articles and magazines published by numerous organizations and individuals. Files on Marilyn R. Allen; Alliance, Inc.; America's Future, Inc.; American National Book Store; American Challenge; American Nazi Party; American Mercury; American Statesman; American Capsule News (Morris Bealle); American Spectator; Appeal to Reason; Assembly of Captive European Nations; Association of Citizens' Councils; David M. Baxter; Howard. Bechert; William L. Blessing; California League of Christian Parents; Canadian Intelligence Service; Capsule; Christian Patriots of America; Christian Patriots Crusade; Christian Youth Against Communism; Christian Nationalist Crusade. The Cross and the Flag; Christian Freedom Foundation. Christian Economics; Closer Up; Committee for the Preservation of the Constitution; Common Sense; Mrs. M. Conan; Constitutionalist and Traditional American; Council on American Relations; Defenders of State Sovereignty and Individual Liberties; Elizabeth Dilling; Robert Edward Edmondson; Keeping the Record Straight (Edith Essig); For America; Free Hungarians; Benjamin H. Freedman, Facts are Facts; Freedom School; Freethinkers of America; Georgia Tribune; Kenneth Goff; Green Mountain Riflemen; Billy James Hargis, Christian Crusade; Charles B. Hudson; Humanitarian Society; Independent American; Institute for Special Research; Intelligence Digest; John Birch Society; Joseph P. Kamp; Knights of the White Camellia; Ku Klux Klan; Robert P. LeRoy; J.A. Lovell, Kingdom Digest; U.S.A. Memo; Methodist Challenge; Militant Truth; Minute Women of the U.S.A.; Minute Men Associates; Mississippi Citizen's Council Forum; John H. Monk, Grass Roots; National Renaissance Bulletin; National State's Rights Party; National Forecast; National Christian Association; National Republic; National State's Rights Party. The Thunderbolt; National Program Letter; National Economic Council; Nationalist World Book Service; Nationalist Party; New Letter; Northern World; Operation Beanstalk; Our Christian Stewardship; Palestine Arab Refugee Office; William D. Pelley; Pisgah; Polzin Publications; Prophetic Herald; Protect America League; Republican Committee of One Hundred; Right Brigade; Right; Seaboard White Citizens Council; Seventh Trumpet; Sun-Work-Shop; The Virginian; The Defender; The Putnam Sun; The Freeman; The Farmers Voice; The Candle; The Voice of Liberty; Truth Seeker; U.S. Flag Committee; United Society of Methodist Laymen; Walterick Publishers; Western Voice; White Sentinel; Robert H. Williams; Gordon. Winrod; Women for Law and Order; Women's Voice; and Young Americans for Freedom.

Websites with information:

http://americanjewisharchives.org/collections/findingAids.php

http://americanjewisharchives.org/catalog/Record/vtls000000488

Finding aids:

http://americanjewisharchives.org/collections/ms0290/

http://ead.ohiolink.edu/xtf-ead/view?docId=ead/xOCAJA0290.xml

http://collections.americanjewisharchives.org/ms/ms0290/ms0290.html

[0164] Antisemitism in South Africa: Various Papers, 1929-1939, Document collection: 695

Location: The Wiener Library for the Study of the Holocaust & Genocide, 29 Russell Square, London WC1B 5DP, England

Description: This miscellaneous collection of papers documents anti-Semitism in various forms in South Africa mostly during the 1930s. The collection includes a typescript extract from the anti-Semitic encyclopedia, Sigilla Veri (Bodung Verlag, Erfurt, 1929), in which a South African describes the extent to which Jews have infiltrated every layer of society; a letter of 12 Oct 1937, documenting the activities of South African nationalists including the founding of a new newspaper, De Transvaler, their annual congress, and their connections with the expatriate German community; and a report, dated 20 Sept. 1939, concerning a lawsuit against a leading South African anti-Semite, Salomon Gerhardus Maritz (General Manie Maritz). The collection also includes a memorandum entitled 'South Africa: Synopsis of memorandum on the in-roads of Nazism' (1946) in which the vulnerability of South Africa to Nazi ideology is discussed; and a copy of an extract from a typescript letter (1934?) reporting on the trial of Johannes von Strauss von Moltke, a Greyshirt, and his anti-Semitic activities.

Websites with information:

http://www.aim25.ac.uk/cgi-bin/vcdf/detail?coll_id=8332&inst_id=104&nv1=search&nv2=

Finding aid:

http://www.wienerlibrary.co.uk/Search-document-collection?item=670

[0165] Antisemitism in the USA: Printed Tracts and Related Correspondence, 1925-1930s, Coll. 1001

Location: The Wiener Library for the Study of the Holocaust & Genocide, 29 Russell Square, London WC1B 5DP, England

Description: The central themes of the collection are the views of Judge H. W. Rogers, a virulent anti-Semite, who believed in the Protocols of the Elders of Zion and that the financial world was controlled by international Jewry. He sent one of his pamphlets and two others of a similar nature to Hugo Valentin, professor at the University of Uppsala in Sweden, with a letter in which he reasserts his anti-Semitic arguments. Printed tracts in the collection include "The Warburgs: International Currency Crooks," The British Guardian, Volume 6, No. 11, March 20th, 1925; "Ben Franklin not Misquoted: Judge H. W. Rogers Charges Historian Beard with Suppressing the Sage's Comments on Jews, by Judge H. W. Rogers" [1938], in which it is asserted that Franklin was anti-Semitic, and the text of a speech in the Congressional Record by Louis T. McFadden, 29 May 1933, entitled "In the United States Today, the Gentiles Have Slips of Paper While the Jews have the Gold and the Lawful Money."

Websites with information:

http://www.aim25.ac.uk/cgi-bin/vcdf/detail?coll_id=8448&inst_id=104&nv1=search&nv2=

Finding aid:

http://wienerlibrary.co.uk.wienerlib.vm.bytemark.co.uk/Search-document-collection?item=193

[0166] Anti-socialist activities in Great Britain: typescript, 1928, Coll. YY017

Location: Hoover Institution Archives, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305-6010

Description: Relates to socialist, communist, anti-socialist, and anti-Communist organizations in existence in Great Britain.

Finding aids:

http://pdf.oac.cdlib.org/pdf/hoover/YY017.pdf

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt300031pg/entire_text/

[0167] Anti trade-union publications and propaganda, 1978-1983?

Location: Special Collections and University Archives, Archibald S. Alexander Library, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, 169 College Avenue, New Brunswick, NJ 08901-1163

Description: Collection of leaflets, periodicals, reports, press releases, etc., published between 1978 and 1981, criticizing American trade unions and the labor movement. The organizations and journals represented include the National Right to Work Committee (Free Choice, National Right to Work Newsletter), Public Service Research Council (Issue analysis. Forewarned!, The Government union critique), Americans Against Union Control of Government, National Right to Work Foundation, National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation (Foundation Action, Foundation News Advisory) and Concerned Educators Against Forced Unionism (Recaps).

Finding aids:

https://www.iris.rutgers.edu/uhtbin/cgisirsi/x/0/0/5/?searchdata8=ocm55161981

http://www.worldcat.org/title/anti-trade-union-publications-and-propaganda/oclc/055161981

[0167a] Anti-vaccination scrapbook, undated, Z8c 11

Location: Historical Medical Library, The College of Physicians of Philadelphia, 19 South 22nd Street, Philadelphia, PA 19103

Description: Objections to vaccinations have evolved over the years from disagreements on religious grounds to opposition to the compulsory nature of anti-vaccination laws, to mistrust in the governments and medical doctors that pushed for vaccinations.

Websites with information:

http://histmed.collegeofphysicians.org/for-students/the-anti-vaccination-movement/

[0167b] Records of the Anti-Vaccination Society of America, 1885-1898, 10c 98

Location: Historical Medical Library, The College of Physicians of Philadelphia, 19 South 22nd Street, Philadelphia, PA 19103

Description: The Anti-Vaccination Society of America, founded in 1879, opposed compulsory smallpox vaccination from is founding through the 1910s. The records consist of minutes, correspondence, etc. Materials include correspondence between Frank D. Blue, secretary of the Society and editor of the Society's periodical, Vaccination, and the American Anti-Vaccination League in New York and other societies. Also included is a clipping of an article by Blue (no date) in Vaccination about effective ways that activists could respond to the resurgence of smallpox epidemics that occurred around the turn of the century.

Reference:

Karie Youngdahl, "The Anti-Vaccination Society of America: Correspondence," History of Vaccines Blog, March 8, 2012, http://www.historyofvaccines.org/content/blog/anti-vaccination-society-america-correspondence.

Websites with information:

http://www.collegeofphysicians.org/histmed/for-students/the-anti-vaccination-movement/

[0167c] Scrapbook of Anti-Vaccinations Clippings, 1892-1997, 8c242

Location: Historical Medical Library, The College of Physicians of Philadelphia, 19 South 22nd Street, Philadelphia, PA 19103

Description: Includes an anti-vaccination cartoon, 1890s.

Websites with information:

http://histmed.collegeofphysicians.org/for-students/the-anti-vaccination-movement/

[0168] Austin J. App Papers, 1923-1981, Coll. 8817

Location: American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming, 1000 E. University Avenue Laramie, WY 82071

Description: Collection includes business and personal correspondence including correspondence with revisionist historian Harry Elmer Barnes; research files chiefly related to political, historical and social issues including correspondence, notes, manuscripts, newspaper clippings and printed materials; manuscript; speeches; financial records; biographical information; scrapbooks; photographs; and books and other printed materials, many in German, on topics related to his historical, racial and social interests, revisionist history, anti-Semitism, anti-Communism, and anti-integration. Letters from Everett McKinley Dirksen and Gross Admiral Donitz. Research Files (clippings, pamphlets, notes, manuscripts, correspondence and related material) on America First; American Fascism; American Legion; Boniface Press; Brooklyn Tablet; Captive Nations; Catholic Reactionism; Communism; Communism Control Bill; Conservative Anti-Germanism; Anti-Anti-Semitism; Eisenhower; Genocide; German-Americans for Reagan; Henry Morgenthau - Harry Dexter White; Hitler; Holocaust; Immigration; Jewish Problem; Katyń Massacre; Lend-Lease; Liberty Lobby; Lindbergh; Mercy Killing - Experimenting; Operation Keelhaul; Panama Canal; Pearl Harbor; Revisionistic-Post War Debunking; Solzhenitsyn; Taft; and Yalta. Books, including E. Åberg (ed.), Behind Communist, Communist Treason Exposed, n.d.; E. Aguila, Underground Facts of the Watergate Affair, The Jewish Conspiracy to Seize the United States Government, n.d.; G. Allen, None Dare Call it Conspiracy, 1971; G. Allen, Kissinger, The Secret Side of the Secretary of State, 1976; G. Allen, The Rockefeller File, 1976; American Legion, The Truth about the Foreign Policy Association, 1960; Anti Bolshevik Bloc of Nations, Our Alternative, 1970; A. J. App, et al., Der erschreckendste Friede der Geschichte, n.d.; A. J. App, The Germans, 1967; A. J. App, Lancelot in English Literature, 1929; A. J. App, The Six Million Swindle, 1973; H. E. Barnes, Was Roosevelt Pushed into War by Popular Demand in 1941, 1950; H. E. Barnes, Blasting the Historical Blackout, n.d; H. E. Barnes, The Court Historians versus Revisionism, n.d.; H. E. Barnes, In Quest of Truth and Justice, 1928; H. E. Barnes, Perpetual War for Perpetual Peace, 1953; B. Barron, The Untouchable State Department, 1962; F. Bastiat, The Law and Cliches of Socialism, 1964; J. Beaty, The Iron Curtain over America, 1951; H. Belloc, The Jews, n.d.; A. R. Bosworth, America's Concentration Camps, 1935; A. Bouscaren, Tshombe, 1967; F. L. Britton, Behind Communism, n.d.; W. F. Buckley, Up from Liberalism, 1959; W. F. Buckley, Rumbles Left and Right, 1963; J. Burnham, The Web of Subversion, 1959; J. F. Byrnes, Speaking Frankly, 1947; F. A. Capell, Treason Is the Reason, 1965; J. R. Carlson, Under Cover, 1943; W. G. Carr, Pawns in the Game, n.d.; Charles Carroll, The Negro, Beast or in the Image of God; C. Cherep-Spiridovich, The Secret World Government or "The Hidden Hand", 1926 [online at https://ia601407.us.archive.org/7/items/TheSecretWorldGovernmentOrHiddenHand/13065735-­The-Secret-World-Government-or-The-Hidden-Hand-The-Unrevealed-in-History-Paperback.pdf]; A. K. Chesterton, et al., The Tragedy of Anti-Semitism, 1948; Citizens for Decent Literature, Commentaries on the Law of Obscenity, 1966; W. S. Cole, America First the Battle Against Intervention 1940-1941, 1953; Conservative Viewpoint, Palestine and the Bible, n.d.; P. Courtney, Nixon and the CFR, 1971; P. Courtney, et al., The Council on Foreign Relations America's Unelected Rulers, 1962; E. S. Cox, Teutonic Unity, 1951; E. S. Cox, White America, 1923; E. S. Cox, Lincoln's Negro Policy, 1938; J. F. Cronin, Communism: Threat to Freedom, 1962 [online at https://repository.library.nd.edu/view/1193/000777696.pdf]; C. B. Dall, Amerikas Kriegspolitik, 1975; C. B. Dall, F. D. R., My Exploited Father-in-Law, 1968; M. M. Davison, The Secret Government of the U. S., 1962; M. M. Davison, The Second Rebellion, 1971; R. de Toledano, Spies, Dupes and Diplomats, 1967; Dearborn Publishing Co., The International Jew, 4 volumes, 1920; E. L. Delaney, False Freedom, 1954; R. B. DePugh, Beyond the Iron Mask, 1973; M. Dies, Martin Dies' Story, 1963; E. Dilling, The Plot Against Christianity, 1964; D. M. Dozer, The Panama Canal in Perspective, 1978; S. M. Draskovich, Will America Surrender?, 1973; E. F. Elmhurst, The World Hoax, 1938; J. R. Elsom, Lightning over the Treasury Building, 1941; D. Fahey, The Rulers of Russia, 1960; D. Fahey, The Kingship of Christ and the Conversion of the Jewish Nation, 1953; J. T. Flynn, While You Slept, 1951; J. T. Flynn, The Lattimore Story, 1953; J. T. Flynn, The Decline of the American Republic, 1955; Henry Ford, Edison as I Know Him, 1966; H. Ford, Sr., The International Jew the World's Foremost Problem, n.d.; M. Friedman, et al., Free to Choose, 1980; L. Fry, Waters Flowing Eastward, 1965 [online at http://www.pdfarchive.info/­pdf/F/Fr/Fry_Leslie_-_Waters_flowing_eastward_The_war_against_the_­kingship_of_christ.pdf]; G. Garrett, Ex America, 1952; R. Gehlen, The Service, The Memoirs of General Reinhard Gehlen, 1972; J. Goebbels, The Goebbels Diaries, 1948; B. Goldwater, Freedom Is His Flight Plan, 1963; B. Goldwater, Where I Stand, 1964; B. Goldwater, The Conscience of a Conservative, 1960 [online at http://catalog.hathitrust.org/­Record/001141317]; G. E. Griffin, The Fearful Master, 1964; J. E. Haley, A Texan Looks at Lyndon, 1964; M. K. Hart, America Look at Spain, 1939; A. G. Heinsohn, Anthology of Conservative Writing in the U. S. 1932-1960, 1962; H. Hoover, The Ordeal of Woodrow Wilson, 1958; S. Huddleston, France The Tragic Years 1939-1947, 1956; E. Hunter, The Black Book on Red China: The Continuing Revolt, 1958; E. Hunter, Brainwashing, 1958; E. Hunter, In Many Voices, n.d.; P. J. Huxley-Blythe, The East Came West, 1964; Institute for Historical Review, Failure at Nuremberg, 1983; John Birch Society, The Blue Book of the John Birch Society [online at https://ia800307.us.archive.org/13/items/TheBlueBook/MicrosoftWord-Document1.pdf], 1961; F. W. Johnson, The Octopus, 1940; G. R. Jordan, From Major Jordan's Diaries, 1952; E. M. Josephson, The Truth about Rockefeller, 1964; J. P. Kamp, Open Letter to Congress, 1948; J. P. Kamp, We must Abolish the United States - the Hidden Facts Behind the Crusade for World Government, 1950; R. F. Keeling, Gruesome Harvest, The Costly Attempt to Exterminate the People of Germany, 1947; H. S. Kenan, The Federal Reserve Bank, 1967; B. Klassen, Nature's Eternal Religion, 1973; F. L. Kluckhohn, America: Listen!, 1962; F. Kluckhohn, et al., The Drew Pearson Story, 1967; G. Knupffer, Der Kampf um die Weltmacht, 1974; G. Knupffer, The Struggle for World Power, 1963; Jack Lait and Lee Mortimer, Washington Confidential, 1951; T.A. Lane, The Leadership of President Kennedy, 1965; T. A. Lane, The War for the World, 1968; William Langer, The Famine in Germany, 1946; M. A. Larson, The I.R.S. vs. the Middle Class, 1980; M. A. Larson, Tax Rebellion USA, 1974; I. D. Levine, Hands off the Panama Canal, 1976; A. M. Lilienthal, The Other Side of the Coin, An American Perspective of the Arab-Israeli Conflict, 1965; M. G. Lowman, Recognize Red China?, 1958; M. Luther, The Jews and Their Lies, 1948; Lutheran Research Society, The Sedition Case, 1953; E. Lyons, Workers' Paradise Lost, 1967; C. Manion, Let's Face It, 1955; V. Marsden, Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion, n.d; J. J. Martin, Revisionist Viewpoints, 1971; I. G. McCann, Case History of the Smear by CBS of Conservatives, 1966; J. McCarthy, McCarthyism the Fight for America, 1952; J. R. McCarthy, America's Retreat from Victory the Story of George Catlett Marshall, 1951; F. S. Meyer, In Defense of Freedom: A Conservative Credo, 1962; B. Mussolini, The Fall of Mussolini, His Own Story, 1948; n. a., Who Killed Christ?, n.d.; F. Neilson, The Churchill Legend, 1954; P. C. Neipp, Win Now or Lose All, 1964; R. P. Oliver, All America must Know the Terror That Is Upon Us, 1975; F. Penabaz, Crusading Preacher from the West, n.d.; M. Pinay, The Secret Driving Force of Communism, n.d.; M. Pinay, The Plot Against the Church, 1967; I. B. Pranaitis, The Talmud Unmasked, 1892, Reprint; A. H. M. Ramsay, The Nameless War, 1954; B. C. Reece, Peace Through Law, 1965; Research Dept. of the White Power Movement, China, The Jews and WWII, n.d.; A. E. Roberts, Victory Denied, 1966; W. Robertson, The Dispossessed Majority, 1972; G. W. Robnett, Conquest Through Immigration, How Zionism Turned Palestine into a Jewish State, 1968; J. P. Roche, Courts and Rights, 1961; P. Schlafly, et al., The Gravediggers, 1964; W. G. Simpson, Which Way Western Man?, 1978; W. C. Skousen, The Naked Communist, 1962; M. Smith, The Diminished Mine, a Study of Planned Mediocrity in Our Public Schools, 1954; G. L. K. Smith, Matters of Life and Death, 1958; D. Smoot, The Business End of Government, 1973; D. Smoot, The Invisible Government, 1962; J. H. Snow, The Case of Tyler Kent, 1962; O. Spengler, Der Untergang des Abendlandes, 1922; A. Stang, It's Very Simple the True Story of Civil Rights, 1965 [online at https://sites.google.com/site/heavenlybanner/its-very-simple-the-true-story-of-civil-rights]; S. Stetsko (ed.), Revolutionary Voices Ukrainian Political Prisoners Condemn Russian Colonialism, 1971; L. Stoddard, The Revolt Against Civilization, 1922; J. A. Stormer, None Dare Call it Treason, 1964; J. A. Stormer, The Death of a Nation, 1968; O. Strasser, Deutschlands Erneuerung, 1946; Paul Struve (ed.), 46 Angry Men, The 46 Civilian Doctors of Elisabethville Denounce U. N. O. Violations in Katanga, 1962; P. M. Sturdza, The Suicide of Europe, Memoirs of Prince Michel Sturdza, Former Foreign Minister of Rumania, 1968; R. A. Taft, A Foreign Policy for Americans, 1951; C. C. Tansill, America Goes to War, 1938; C. C. Tansill, Back Door to War, The Roosevelt Foreign Policy 1933-1941, 1952; J. B. Tenney, The Tenney Committee . . . the American Record, 1952; The Dearborn Independent, Aspects of Jewish Power in The U. S., 1922; The Duke of Bedford, Straight Speaking from a Pacifist to a Militarist, 1953; H. K. Thompson, et al. (eds.), Doenitz at Nuremburg: A Re-Appraisal, 1976; A. O. Tittmann, Americanism Betrayed: Fact vs. Fiction, 1952; W. Trohan, Political Animals, 1975; F. Utley, The China Story, 1951; F. Utley, Odyssey of a Liberal, 1970; F. Utley, Will the Middle East Go West?, 1957; F. Utley, The High Cost of Vengeance, 1949; U. Varange, Imperium the Philosophy of History and Politics, 1963; F. J. P. Veale, Schuld and Suhne, 1964; C. C. Veith, Citadels of Chaos, 1949; W. B. Vennard, Conquest or Consent, 1963; W. B. Vennard, The Federal Reserve Hoax, 1963; G. S. Viereck, The Kaiser on Trial, 1937; L. von Mises, Socialism an Economic and Sociological Analysis, 1951; A. C. Wedemeyer, Wedemeyer Reports, 1958; R. Welch, The Politician, 1964; Richard Merrill Whitney, Reds in America, 1924; R. H. Williams, The Anti-Defamation League, 1975; R. H. Williams, The Ultimate World Order, 1957; C. A. Willoughby, Shanghai Conspiracy, 1952; F. Wittmer, The Yalta Betrayal, 1953; R. Wurmbrand, The Wurmbrand Letters, 1967; R. Wurmbrand, In God's Underground, 1968; and E. Zündel, An mein Volk besonders die Vater und Mutter, n.d.

Websites with information:

https://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/_files/collection_guides/politics_guide_2009_ed2016.pdf

http://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/collections/guides/military-history.pdf

https://web.archive.org/web/20160919110928/https://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/collections/guides/politics.pdf

http://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/collections/guides/cold-war.pdf

http://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/collections/guides/authors.pdf

http://cthulhuwho1.files.wordpress.com/2010/09/authors.pdf

https://web.archive.org/web/20040204095627/http://www.pitt.edu/~cacst9/app/

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/29643278

http://www.worldcat.org/title/papers-1923-1981/oclc/29643278

Finding aids:

https://rmoa.unm.edu/docviewer.php?docId=wyu-ah08817.xml

http://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/_files/pdffa/08817.pdf

https://web.archive.org/web/20020105211020/http://www.pitt.edu/AFShome/c/a/cacst9/public/html/ap

p/boxes/all-boxes.txt

[0168a] Appleton-Century mss., 1846-1962, LMC 1023

Location: Lilly Library, Indiana University, 1200 E. Seventh St., Bloomington, IN 47405-5500

Description: D. Appleton & Co. was founded in 1825 by Daniel Appleton as a general store which featured books among other items. In 1831 Appleton began to publish books. In 1933 this company merged with the Century Co., founded in 1881, to form the D. Appleton-Century Co. Consists of the office files of the publishing company, its two predecessors, D. Appleton & Co., and the Century Co., and to a small extent its successor, Appleton-Century Crofts, Inc. The papers in the collection consist of contracts with authors for the publication of their works, and for dramatizations, motion picture rights, foreign editions, and translations of books published by the firm; business correspondence with authors, executors of their estates, publishers and others; royalty statements; copies of the wills of some of the authors; and other business papers. Files on Hilaire Belloc, Thomas Hart Benton, Thomas Dixon, Archibald Henderson, Rudyard Kipling, and Rebecca West.

Finding aids:

http://www.indiana.edu/~liblilly/lilly/mss/index.php?p=appleton

http://webapp1.dlib.indiana.edu/findingaids/view?doc.view=entire_text&docId=InU-Li-VAA1233

http://webapp1.dlib.indiana.edu/findingaids/view?brand=general&docId=InU-Li-VAA1233

[0169] Aprónyomtatványok gyujteménye, 1939-2010

Location: Holokauszt Emlékközpont [Holocaust Memorial Center], Páva utca 39, Budapest 1094, Hungary

Description: The collection holds placards, leaflets, fliers and other kinds of printed material created by various organizations and institutions, mostly by Hungarian right-wing and extreme right-wing parties and movements before and during World War II, including the Arrow Cross Party and several national socialist and race protectionist organizations.

Websites with information:

https://portal.ehri-project.eu/units/hu-002736-aprónyomtatványok_gyujteménye

[0170] Papers of José Maria Arana, 1904-1921, MS 09 [digital collection]

Location: University of Arizona Library Special Collections, 1510 E. University Blvd., Tucson, AZ 85721

Description: Arana was a prominent businessman and politician in Magdalena, Sonora, Mexico. He was also the leader of anti-Chinese campaigns in Sonora, Sinaloa, and Baja California. Chiefly letters to Arana from supporters and opponents of an anti-Chinese campaign in Sonora, Sinaloa, and Baja California. Also included are official government communications, newspaper clippings, political campaign leaflets, and business letters.

Finding aids:

http://content.library.arizona.edu/collections/asdo/arana/

http://content.library.arizona.edu/cdm/search/collection/arana

[0171] Fondo Eveno Arani, 1929-1997

Location: Fondazione Ugo Spirito e Renzo de Felice, Via Genova, 24, 00184 Roma, Italy

Description: Eveno Arani (1911-1998) was a lawyer and a leader of the Partito nazionale sociale fusionista, one of the first neo-fascist organizations to emerge in Italy after 1945. Arani subsequently became one of the leaders of the Movimento sociale italiano (MSI) after the two organizations merged in 1949. Serie 1: Uomo qualunque e altre organizzazioni, 06/04/1929-10/12/1946, contains correspondence with Gruppo universitario fascista di Roma. Serie 2: Partito nazionale sociale fusionista, 09/02/1946-20/09/1948, contains correspondence with Ezio Maria Gray. Serie 3: Movimento sociale italiano, 23/05/1946-01/06/1997, contains correspondence with Giorgio Almirante, Ezio Maria Gray, and Pino Rauti, as well as newspaper clippings, mostly taken from the "Secolo d'Italia", related to the Italian right.

Websites with information:

http://catalogo.archividelnovecento.it/Spirito.htm

http://www.fondazionespirito.it/sito2012/archiviostorico.asp

http://www.fondazionespirito.it/sito2012/arani.asp

Finding aids:

http://catalogo.archividelnovecento.it/scripts/GeaCGI.exe?REQSRV=REQEXPLORE&ID=350107

http://catalogo.archividelnovecento.it/scripts/GeaCGI.exe?REQSRV=REQEXPLORE&ID=350107&LEV=2&SORT=

http://www.archiviodelledestre.it/arani-inventario.pdf

[0172] Adrien Arcand Collection, 1931-1986, Fonds P0005

Location: Canadian Jewish Congress Charities Committee National Archives, Concordia University, 1590 Docteur Penfield Avenue, Montreal, Quebec, H3G 1C5, Canada

Description: Adrien Arcand (1899-1967) was the leader of a French-Canadian anti-Semitic movement in the 1930s, the Parti National Social Chrétien (National Social Christian Party), which, under his leadership, later merged with other fascist groups to form the National Unity Party. He published and/or wrote for numerous anti-Semitic publications such as Le Miroir, Le Goglu, Le Fasciste Canadien, L'Unité Nationale, and Serviam. He fought against Jewish rights in education and was interned by the Canadian government during WWII, from 1940-1945. After his release he continued his anti-Semitic and political activities. The collection contains documents pertaining to the actions of the National Unity Party of Canada (Parti National Social Chrétien), a political party founded by Arcand in February 1934. Documents include copies of the periodical Serviam; photocopies of correspondence between Arcand and numerous individuals (in French and English); Fascist newspapers, pamphlets and newsletters; press clippings by and about Arcand; and Canadian Jewish Congress correspondence relating to Arcand and anti-Semitism.

Websites with information:

http://library.concordia.ca/services/collections/special/descriptions.php

http://www.cjhn.ca/en/explore/inventory-of-fonds.aspx

http://www.cjccc.ca/en/cjccc-national-archives/inventory-of-collections

Finding aid:

http://www.cjhn.ca/permalink/113

[0172a] Bill Archer Papers, Part 1, 1970-2000

Location: Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, University of Texas at Austin, 2300 Red River St., Sid Richardson Hall, Unit 2, Room 2.106, Austin, Texas 78712-1426

Description: William Reynolds Archer, Jr. (1928– ) was elected to state office as a member of the Texas House from 1967 to 1970, and subsequently won election to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1970 and served until his retirement in January 2001. The papers consist of chronological records of political service, political action on topics of interest, and personal files. Topics include Apartheid; George H. W. Bush; George W. Bush; Busing; Tom DeLay; Bob Dole; Congressman Mickey Edwards; Gerald Ford; Free Congress Foundation; Goldwater; Harris County Republican Party; Jack Kemp; Military ban on homosexuals; National Taxpayer's Union; Richard Nixon; Panama Canal; Ron Paul; Dan Quayle; President Ronald Reagan; and John Tower.

Finding aid:

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/00259/cah-00259p1.html

[0172b] Bill Archer Papers, Part 2, 1970-2000

Location: Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, University of Texas at Austin, 2300 Red River St., Sid Richardson Hall, Unit 2, Room 2.106, Austin, Texas 78712-1426

Description: Files on American Conservative Union; American Legion; American Pistol and Revolver Association; American Security Council; Americans for Constitutional Action; Busing; Citizens' Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms; Communism; Communist China; Connally Amendment; Conservative Caucus; Representative Tom DeLay; Gun Owners of America; H.R. 11827, Amendment to the National Labor Relations Act National Right to Work law; Harris County Republican Party; Harris County Young Republicans; J. Edgar Hoover; Houston Republican Women's Club; Kemp; National Federation of Republican Women; National Republican Congressional Committee; National Right to Work Committee; National Tax Limitation Committee; National Taxpayers Union; Panama Canal; Ron Paul; Dr. Ralph E. Reed; Republican National Committee; Republican National Convention, 1976, 1980, 1988; Republican Party of Texas; Republican Policy Committee; Ripon Society; Phyllis Schlafly; Sons of Confederate veterans; St. Thomas Episcopal School; Taxpayers Union Inc.; Teenage Republicans; Texas Eagle Forum; Texas Right to Life; Texas Right to Work Committee; and Cal Thomas.

Finding aid:

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/00259/cah-00259p2.html

[0172c] Bill Archer Papers, Part 3, 1970-2000

Location: Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, University of Texas at Austin, 2300 Red River St., Sid Richardson Hall, Unit 2, Room 2.106, Austin, Texas 78712-1426

Description: Files on Abortion (con); Anti-spending; Busing; Contract with America; H. R. 2915, Right to Work Act, 1991; House Joint Resolution 61, balanced budget constitutional amendment; House Joint Resolution 322, Constitutional amendment, flag desecration; House Joint Resolution 350, Constitutional amendment, flag desecration; Flat rate tax; Free Enterprise; Free enterprise system; Genocide treaty; Immigration; Colonel North; Panama Canal; Pro Balanced budget; United Nations; Value Added Tax (VAT); and Voting rights.

Finding aid:

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/00259/cah-00259p3.html

[0172d] Bill Archer Papers, Part 4, 1970-2000

Location: Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, University of Texas at Austin, 2300 Red River St., Sid Richardson Hall, Unit 2, Room 2.106, Austin, Texas 78712-1426

Description: Files on Anti-balanced budget amendment; Anti-gun control; Anti-special gay rights; Anti-spending; Anti-tax cut; Anti-U.N.; Anti H-1B Visas; Anti Illegal Immigration; Anti National Testing; Balanced Budget Constitutional Amendment; Border Control; Born Alive (abortion); China, Anti Permanent Normal Trade Relations; China, Pro Permanent Normal Trade Relations; Contract with America; Defense of Marriage Act; Family Planning; Flat Tax; Fundamental tax reform; Hate Crimes; H.R. 929, Ban Partial Birth Abortions; H.R. 1279, National Right to Work Act; House Joint Resolution 7, Balanced Budget Amendment; House Joint Resolution 54, Flag-burning amendment to Constitution; House Joint Resolution 79, Flag Protection Amendment; Panama Canal; Pro-abortion and pro-Title X; Pro-balanced budget amendment; Pro English; Pro Gun; Pro-gun control; Pro H-1B Visas; Pro-life; pro-Regulatory reform; Pro tax cut; Pro World Trade Organization; Regulatory reform; Religious Freedom Amendment; Republican National Convention; Right-to-Work; RU-486/Abortion Pill; Pro-Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA), special gay rights; Taxpayers' Bill of Rights (TBOR); Tax Reform; Title X and Pro Abortion; United Nations; Value Added Tax (VAT); Violence Against Women Act; and Vouchers.

Finding aid:

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/00259/cah-00259p4.html

[0173] Gleason Leonard Archer Personal Papers, 1790-1999 (bulk 1899-1962), MS 108 [partly digital collection]

Location: Moakley Archive and Institute, Suffolk University, 73 Tremont Street, Boston, MA 02108

Description: The papers document the personal and professional activities of Suffolk University's founder, Gleason Leonard Archer (1880-1966). In addition to being an educator, Archer was also a prolific writer and popular radio broadcaster. By 1936, Archer had associated himself with the National Jeffersonian Democrats, an anti-Roosevelt splinter organization. Archer's book On the Cuff (Boston: Suffolk University Press, 1944) was a scathing attack on the New Deal and its programs. The materials in the collection include manuscripts and typescripts of his books, journals, articles, speeches, and radio addresses; correspondence; biographical information; genealogy records; photographs; and personal artifacts. Correspondence from Wendell Willkie to Elizabeth Archer. Correspondence from former Senator Harry F. Byrd (D-VA) to Gleason L. Archer.

Websites with information:

http://www.suffolk.edu/explore/24553.php

Finding aids:

http://www.suffolk.edu/documents/MoakleyArchive/ms108_findingaid.pdf

http://www.suffolk.edu/documents/MoakleyArchive/ms108_.pdf

Finding aid to digital collection:

http://moakleyarchive.omeka.net/collections/show/11

[0174] Archiv der sozialen Bewegungen Bremen [Archive of Social Movements Bremen]

Location: St. Pauli Strasse 10/12, 28203 Bremen, Germany

Description: The Archive of Social Movements contains material from the various resistance and protest movements of the last decades up to the present. Documents include books, newspapers and magazines, handbills, newspaper articles, brochures, and posters. Topics include National Socialism, Communist groups, anti-Fascism, and racism/anti-Semitism.

Websites with information:

http://www.archivbremen.de/uk.htm

[0175] Archival Biographical Files, circa 1890-2010

Location: Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library, 1100 East 57th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637

Description: The Archival Biographical File was established in order to organize and make accessible information on faculty members, officers, trustees, staff members, and other individuals related to the University. Files on William Benton, Yale Brozen, Nicholas Murray Butler, William T. Couch, Milton Friedman, Friedrich A. Hayek, Archibald Henderson, Maynard C. Krueger, Charles E. Merriam, Raymond Moley, John Ulric Nef, Jr., Henry C. Simons, and Richard M. Weaver.

Websites with information:

https://www.lib.uchicago.edu/scrc/finding-aids/

Finding aids:

http://www.lib.uchicago.edu/e/scrc/findingaids/view.php?eadid=ICU.SPCL.ARCHBIO

http://www.lib.uchicago.edu/e/scrc/findingaids/pdf/ICU.SPCL.ARCHBIO.pdf

https://www.lib.uchicago.edu/e/scrc/findingaids/pdf/ICU.SPCL.ARCHBIO.pdf

[0176] Archival collections of territorial SNB and StB units

Location: Department of Archival Collections of the State Security Service (StB), P.O.Box 29, Vlkova 2481/4, 628 00 Brno, Czech Republic

Description: The archival collections of territorial SNB (Sbor národní bezpecnosti – National Security Corps) and StB (Státní bezpecnost – State Security Service) units contain papers concerning fascist and Nazi parties and organizations (NSDAP, SD, Vlajka, Hitlerjugend, etc.) and individual issues, including right-wing-opportunist forces.

Websites with information:

http://www.abscr.cz/en/guide-to-the-collections

http://www.abscr.cz/en/guide-to-the-collections-g

http://www.abscr.cz/en/guide-to-the-collections-g-description

[0177] Archivbestände des Otto-Stammer-Zentrums [Archives of the Otto Stammer Centre], 1950-1990

Location: Antifaschistisches Pressearchiv und Bildungszentrum Berlin e. V. (Antifascist Press Archive and Education Center (apabiz)), Lausitzerstr. 10 (Stadtplan), 10999 Berlin, Germany

Description: The Anti-Fascist Press Archive and Educational Center in Berlin has an extensive historical archive and repository of right-wing extremist artifacts, including product catalogs, flyers, stationary, political brochures, and other material objects. The Archives of the Otto Stammer Centre contain extreme right-wing periodicals and other primary sources from the old Federal Republic between 1950 and 1990, press reports dating back in part to 1950, thematic evaluations in more than 200 folders, interviews with leading figures of the Nazi scene from the 1970s and 1980s, and more.

Reference:

Cynthia Miller-Idriss, "The Extreme Goes Mainstream? Commercialized Right-Wing Extremism in Germany," Perspectives on Europe, Volume 42, Issue 1 (Spring 2012), pp. 15-21, https://councilforeuropean­studies.org/file

s/Perspectives/Spring2012/s5_Miller-Idriss.pdf

Websites with information:

http://www.apabiz.de/archiv/material/Sondersammlungen/Sondersammlungen.htm

http://www.apabiz.de/verein/WeAboutUs.htm

[0178] Archives of Contemporary History - Documentation Centre Jewish Contemporary History

Location: ETH Zürich, Archives of Contemporary History at the Federal Institute of Technology Zurich (ETHZ) [Das Archiv für Zeitgeschichte der ETH Zürich], Hirschengraben 62, 8092 Zürich, Switzerland

Description: The Documentation Centre Jewish Contemporary History collects private personal papers and institutional archives that shed light on Jewish life in Switzerland from the second half of the 19th century up to the present. Topics include anti-Semitism and right-wing extremism in Switzerland. The Bibliothek des Archivs für Zeitgeschichte (AfZ) is a supplement to the archives, with materials on right-wing extremism, including National Socialism and revisionism.

Websites with information:

http://onlinearchives.ethz.ch/detail.aspx?guid=667cecb9f44748459d2415da927f9498

https://www.afz.ethz.ch/about_us/departments/jewish-contemporary-history

http://web.archive.org/web/20040529175916/http://www.afz.ethz.ch/english/afz/doku_juedisch.html

http://web.archive.org/web/20050623023209/http://www.afz.ethz.ch/english/fsdokustellen.html

http://www.infoclio.ch/en/node/133051

https://web.archive.org/web/20101027101641/http://www.infoclio.ch/de/node/8027

[0179] Archives Organization File. Part 1, 1875-1986, Coll. 5583/1

Location: Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives, Martin P. Catherwood Library, 227 Ives Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853

Description: Publications, manuals, policies, and plans issued by a large sample of Fortune 500 corporations and by a variety of organizations, such as professional and trade associations, government agencies, and educational and cultural organizations. Includes materials from Americans Against Union Control of Government; Council Against Communist Aggression (U.S.); Employers' Labor Relations Information Committee; and Foundation for Economic Education, Inc.

Reference:

Kim Phillips-Fein, Invisible Hands: The Making of the Conservative Movement from the New Deal to Reagan (New York and London: W.W. Norton, 2009).

Websites with information:

http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/EAD/browselists/allKCL.html

http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/EAD/

http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/EAD/browselists/labor.html

Finding aid:

http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/EAD/htmldocs/KCL05583-1.html

[0180] Archivio delle associazioni e rappresentanze studentesche universitarie

Location: Via Oreste Tamassini 1 - 00162 Roma, Italy

Description: The Archive is an association that seeks to preserve the papers produced by student institutions. Contains files on Fronte universitario di azione nazionale (Fuan), which brought together students from the right.

Reference:

Guida alle fonti per la storia dei movimenti in Italia (1966-1978), a cura di Marco Grispigni and Leonardo Musci (Roma: Ministero per i beni e le attività culturali, 2003), http://www.archivi.beniculturali.it/dga/­uploads/documents/Strumenti/Strumenti_CLXII.pdf.

[0181] Argentine Subject Collection, 1933-2003, Coll. XX797

Location: Hoover Institution Archives, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305-6010

Description: Speeches, bulletins, pamphlets, flyers, serial issues, reports, and sound recordings, relating to political, social and economic conditions in Argentina, and especially to the presidential administration of, and political movement led by, Juan Peron. The series Oversize File, 1953-1985, contains serial issues relating to the Peronist movement. The series Audiovisual File, 1975-1992, contains audiotape cassettes concerning the Perons. The series Subject File, 1933-1994, contains extreme right and anti-Semitic pamphlets, 1964-1979; material from the Fundación Libertad, a conservative policy organization, and serials relating to right-wing Peronism.

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf300002b3/entire_text/

[0182] Arizona AFL-CIO Records, 1905-2003 (bulk 1933-1997)

Location: Arizona Collection, Arizona State University Libraries, P.O. Box 871006, Tempe, AZ 85287-1006

Description: This collection documents the AFL-CIO's work in Arizona (under the name Arizona AFL-CIO). Materials include federal and local laws and regulations; workshop and convention proceedings; budget information; COPE papers; public employee information; correspondence; studies; newspaper articles; AFL-CIO handbooks; speeches; posters; awards; scrapbooks; subject files; business records; and a wide variety of audio-visual materials. Series II: State and National AFL-CIO, contains files on Civil Rights; Civil Rights: School Integration; Committee on Political Education (COPE): "Right Wing" Material; Committee on Political Education (COPE): Right-to-Work; Right Wing; Right-to-Work; and Right-Wing Material Compiled by the Committee on Political Education. Series III: United Steelworkers of America, Local Union #938, contains files on Civil Rights. Series V: Committee on Political Education (COPE), contains files on Civil Rights; Committee on Political Education (COPE): Right to Work; and Right-to-Work Survey.

Finding aid:

http://www.azarchivesonline.org/xtf/view?docId=ead/asu/aflcio_eng.xml

[0183] Arizona Civil Liberties Union records, 1958-1968, AZ 182

Location: University of Arizona Library Special Collections, 1510 E. University Blvd., Tucson, AZ 85721

Description: Correspondence, financial reports, minutes of meetings, publications, clippings, tape recordings of radio broadcasts, and material on various local cases and projects. Series III: Projects and Cases, 1959-1966, contains files on House Un-American Activities Committee; miscegenation law, Arizona; "Operation Correction" and "Operation Abolition," 1961; Prayers in Schools; and segregation.

Websites with information:

http://speccoll.library.arizona.edu/collections/political-affairs

Finding aids:

http://speccoll.library.arizona.edu/collections/records-arizona-civil-liberties-union

http://www.azarchivesonline.org/xtf/view?docId=ead/uoa/UAAZ182.xml

[0183a] Arizona Collection Small Manuscripts, 1701-2009 (bulk 1850-2009), CM MSM 1-CM MSM 250

Location: Arizona Collection, Arizona State University Libraries, P.O. Box 871006, Tempe, AZ 85287-1006

Description: The small manuscript collections generally consist of 1-2 folders and document Arizona as a territory and state. Manuscripts, personal papers, and professional papers are included. Among the collections are the following: CM MSM:25 Anti-Catholicism of the Ku Klux Klan in Arizona: Two Unpublished Letters... , Undated; CM MSM:26 The Ku Klux Klan in Arizona 1921-1925, 1971; CM MSM:57 The Night the Klan Came to Arizona, Undated [on Arizona Klan violence, attempted election takeovers, and eventual disappearance of Klan activity in 1922]; and CM MSM:183 Fulton Lewis, Jr. Interview of Senator Carl T. Hayden, circa 1950.

Websites with information:

http://www.azarchivesonline.org/xtf/view?docId=ead/asu/cosner.xml

Finding aid:

http://www.azarchivesonline.org/xtf/view?docId=ead/asu/az_small_mss_1.xml;query=;brand=default

[0184] Arizona Historical Foundation Small Manuscript Collection, 1776-2011, FM MSM 1-600

Location: Arizona Historical Foundation, Charles T. Hayden Library, Arizona State University, Box 871006, Tempe, AZ 85287-1006 [former location was the Arizona Historical Foundation, which closed on June 8, 2012; current location unknown]

Description: The Small Manuscript collection includes correspondence, eye witness reports, genealogies, diaries, old newspaper clippings, reminiscences, short stories, early histories of cities and towns, small maps, surveys, and military documents. Box 22 contains Papers of the American Protective League, 1918. Box 62 contains in 12 folders a Ku Klux Klan Collection, 1923-1973, consisting of such materials as Forms for the Grand Dragon, Realm of Arizona Report Forms Membership and Interest Cards Brochures Forms and Cards Regarding Women in KKK, Publications of the Women of the Klan, Correspondence regarding financial reports, donations, and other Klan business, Kaktus Klan, Realm of Arizona, Application Questionnaires, Articles on Intolerance, and The Ku Klux Klan in Arizona.

Websites with information:

http://www.ahfweb.org/collections_manuscripts_A.html

Finding aids:

http://www.ahfweb.org/download/SmManuscripts.pdf

http://www.arizonahistoricalsociety.org/wp-content/upLoads/library_Small-Manuscripts.pdf

[0185] Arkansas Archives of Public Communication, 1890-1996, MC 942 [sound recordings]

Location: Special Collections Department, University of Arkansas Libraries, 365 N. McIlroy Avenue, Fayetteville, AR 72701-4002

Description: The Arkansas Archives of Public Communication consists of materials relating to politics, with an emphasis on politics in Arkansas. The Archives include materials from the political campaigns of Bill Clinton, Orval Faubus, and almost 400 other politicians.. Series 3. Audio and Video Tapes. Subseries 4. B Series Audio Tapes, contains 543 tapes from the conservative National Education Program's "Behind the News" radio show, featuring George Benson, president of Harding College in Searcy, and his successor, J. Terry Johnson of Enterprise Square, Oklahoma. These tapes are dated from March 1975 to August 1985. Topics discussed include Abortion, Anti-Catholicism, Anti-Communism, Busing, Communism, Communism--World Domination, Conservatism--Assaults on, Conservative Ideology, Conspiracy Theory, Constitutional Convention--Need for, Council on Foreign Relations, Cuba, Cults, Equal Rights Amendment, Fairness Doctrine, Federal Gov.--Limiting of, Federal Gov.--Socialistic Trends, Federal Reserve System, First Amendment, Ford Foundation, Foundations--Tax-Exempt, Free Enterprise System, Freedom House, Gun Control, Edward Hunter, Individualism, Dr. Walter Judd, Douglas MacArthur, Monroe Doctrine, Moral Decay, National Education Program, National Health Insurance, Nicaragua, Operation Rescue, Panama Canal, Prayer in Schools, Private Property--Right to, Pupil Rights Amendment, Race Relations, The Reuther Memorandum [online at http://unqualified-reservations.blogspot.com/2011/08/reuther-memorandum-1961.html], Right to Work, Sagebrush Rebellion, Alexander Solzhenitsyn, Sons of the American Revolution, Texas Free Enterprise Project, Textbook Evaluation, Trilateral Commission, UNESCO, United Nations, United States Day, Ludwig von Mises, and World Government.

Websites with information:

http://libraries.uark.edu/specialcollections/manuscripts/atoz.asp

http://libinfo.uark.edu/specialcollections/manuscripts/atoz.asp

Finding aids:

http://libinfo.uark.edu/specialcollections/findingaids/aapc.html

https://libraries.uark.edu/specialcollections/findingaids/aapc.html

[0186] Arkansas Council on Human Relations Office Records, 1954-1968, MS Ar4 ACHR

Location: Special Collections Department, University of Arkansas Libraries, 365 N. McIlroy Avenue, Fayetteville, AR 72701-4002

Description: The records pertain to the creation, organization, and functioning of the Council, and to the activities and interests of its officers, directors, staff, membership, supporters, and opponents in regard to race relations in Arkansas. Subject files on Richard Arens, "The Communist Campaign Against Our Immigration Service," The American Mercury Magazine (March 1958); Association of Citizen's Councils of Arkansas; Association of the Citizen's Council, Greenwood, Mississippi; Augusta Courier [Roy V. Harris]; Circuit Riders, Inc.; Common Sense; Communism; The Cross and the Flag; James O[liver] Eastland; Far Right; Orval Eugene Faubus; Firing Line; John T. Flynn, "Fifty Americans in Search of a Party," The American Mercury Magazine (Feb. 1955); John W. Hamilton; J. Edgar Hoover; John Birch Society; The Lowdown on Little Rock, by Joseph P. Kamp (New York, 1957); "We Do Not Believe In God"... said Walter Reuther, by Joseph P. Kamp (New York, 1958); John Kasper; Ku Klux Klan; National Citizens Protective Association; "Operation Abolition"; R. Carter Pittman; R. Carter Pittman, "The Federal Invasion of Arkansas in the Light of the Constitution," Georgia Bar Journal, Vol. XX, No. 3 (February 1958); Pro-Segregation Groups; George Lincoln Rockwell; School Desegregation; George E. Sokolsky, "Air Force Manual Charge Against the Churches"; Tennessee White Citizens Councils; Un-American Activities Committee; The Virginian; The Virginian Pilot (Norfolk - Portsmouth, Va.) - 1955 clippings; Thomas R. Waring, "The Southern Case Against Desegregation," Harpers (January 1956); Robert H. W. Welch, Jr.; White Citizens Groups; White Sentinel (National Citizens Protective Association); White America, Inc.; White Citizens Council; and John Bell Williams. A file of attacks on the Southern Regional Council, Dec. 10, 1954-Apr 14, 1961, contains copies of "Help Save America", a publication of "The Grass Roots League" of Charleston, South Carolina, and The Firing Line, published by the American Legion's National Americanism Commission.

Websites with information:

http://libraries.uark.edu/specialcollections/manuscripts/atoz.asp

http://libinfo.uark.edu/specialcollections/manuscripts/atoz.asp

Finding aids:

http://libinfo.uark.edu/specialcollections/findingaids/achr/

http://libinfo.uark.edu/specialcollections/findingaids/achr/indextosubjects.asp

[0187] Arkansas Gazette and Arkansas Democrat-Gazette Indexes, 1880s-1990s [online newspaper index]

Location: Library, Arkansas Tech University, 305 West Q Street, Russellville, AR 72801

Description: Searchable PDFs of many years of the Arkansas Gazette Index. The documents are organized by themes and citations of newspaper articles. The 1963 index, for example, includes the following topics: George S. Benson, John Birch Society, Civil Rights and Discrimination, Communism, Desegregation, Medford Evans, Gov. Orval Faubus, Harding College, Billy James Hargis, Ku Klux Klan, Patriots League at Pine Bluff, Edwin A. Walker, and White Citizens Council.

Reference:

Shannon J. Henderson, Arkansas Gazette Index: An Arkansas Index (Russellville, Arkansas, Arkansas Tech University Library, 1993), http://library.atu.edu/research/AGI/PDF/AGI-1963-64_ABOR-GRAN.pdf, http://library.atu.e

du/research/AGI/PDF/AGI-1963-64_GRAP-ZOOS.pdf

Websites with information:

http://library.atu.edu/research/AGI/

[0188] Arkansas Ku Klux Klan materials, 1923-1972, BC.MSS.04.30

Location: Butler Center for Arkansas Studies, 100 Rock Street, Little Rock, Arkansas, 72201

Description: This collection contains materials related to the Ku Klux Klan in Arkansas and across the South. Copies of "The Menace of Modern Immigration" address by Dr. H. W. Evans, Imperial Wizard, Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, 1923; Booklet: "The Pope Clutches at World Supremacy," reprint from The Kourier Magazine, June 1929; Pamphlet: "You Are Being Robbed," by Russell Maguire, from American Mercury Magazine, LXXXV.402, July 1957, p. 162, online at http://unz.org/Pub/AmMercury-1957jul:164; Flyer: "Patriots and Klansmen of Arkansas Beware," with an open letter to George F. Edwards from R. E. Davis, National Imperial Dragon, November 1959; Pamphlet: "Know the United Nations: a Page from American History 1945-1962" from the United Klans of America, Inc.; Pamphlet: "The Ugly Truth About Martin Luther King," undated; Two page flyer: "What We Can Do as an Individual to to [sic] Preserve White America," Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, undated; Flyer: "We Challenge the Jews!" undated; Flyer: "Conquer and Breed," undated; Pamphlet: "Mystic Knights of the Ku Klux Klan Ride Again!," Little Rock, Ark., undated; Derogatory NAACP membership application; The Cross and the Flag (Christian Nationalist Crusade), Vol. 23 No.8, November 1964; The Fiery Cross, Vol. 1 No. 1, Alabama, June 1959, Vol. 1 No. 2, Alabama, July 1959; The Fiery Cross, Vol. 1 No. 1, Dallas, Texas, November 1959; The Kourier: The Magazine of Americanism, Vol. 7 No. 2, January 1931; Voice of Freedom, Vol. 7 No. 1, January 1959; Declaration of Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, undated; Oath of Allegiance. One copy with a heading for U.S. Klans, Knights of the Klu[sic] Klux Klan, Inc. and one copy with a heading for Mystic Nights[sic] of the Ku Klux Klan, undated; Kloran, U.S. Klans of Georgia, Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, 1953 [The Kloran is the handbook of the KKK]; Copyright certificate for Kloran U.S. Klans of Georgia Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, by Eldon Edwards, 1953; Constitution and Laws, of U.S. Klans, Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, 1955; Copyright certificate for Constitution and Laws, of the U.S. Klans, Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, by Eldon Edwards, 1957; Constitution and Kloran, Association of Arkansas Klans of the Ku Klux Klan, 1959-1961; Knights of Columbus Oath (blank), written on and stamped with the name of Rubin Johnson, Little Rock, Ark., undated; Informational card for Mystic Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, Little Rock, Ark., 1959-1961; Ku Klux Klan Application, Little Rock, Ark., 1959; "Kaukasia Krusade," application (blank) for membership in the Knights Ku Klux Klan, Little Rock, Ark., undated; Klipgrapp's Quarterly Report for Klan No. 1, Realm of Arkansas, 2nd Quarter, 1959; Mystic Knights of the Ku Klux Klan Inc., The Klonklave meeting structure and ceremony outlines, undated; Certificate of Acceptance appointing A. C. Hightower Grand Dragon of the Realm of Arkansas, signed by E. L. Edwards, Imperial Wizard, Invisible Empire, May 20, 1959; Booklet: "Kloran of Ritual of The Women of the Ku Klux Klan," Imperial Headquarters, Women of the Ku Klux Klan, Little Rock, Ark., ca. 1925; Booklet: "Constitution and Laws of the Women of the Ku Klux Klan," adopted at the First Imperial Klonvocation at St. Louis, Missouri, January 6, 1927; and Booklet: "Musiklan," Imperial Headquarters, Women of the Ku Klux Klan, Little Rock, Ark., Membership certificate, Women of the Ku Klux Klan, Little Rock, Ark. (blank).

Finding aids:

http://arstudies.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/compoundobject/collection/findingaids/id/7397/show/7395/rec/3

http://arstudies.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/compoundobject/collection/findingaids/id/7397/show/7396/rec/4

http://arstudies.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/compoundobject/collection/findingaids/id/7397/rec/5

[0188a] Arkansas Women's Project Collection, 1980-early 1990's, M95-03

Location: UCA Archives, Torreyson Library, University of Central Arkansas, 201 Donaghey Ave., Conway, AR 72035

Description: The Arkansas Women's Project was founded in 1980 as a grass roots organization intended to promote support for women's issues in the state of Arkansas. Originally called The Arkansas Women's Training Project, it was operated under the direction of Suzanne Pharr (1939- ). The collection consists of organizational records, correspondence, staff notes, project materials, publications, and newsletters. Series II. Projects and programs, contains files on Homophobia; Same Sex Marriage; Hate Groups in Arkansas; Hate Crimes: Black Church Burning; Hate Crimes Bill; Hate Crimes: Asian Americans; Violence Against Women; Newspaper Articles on Hate Crimes; Book – When Hate Comes To Town by Center for Democratic Renewal, 2001-"02 Edition; Fight The Right; Promise Keepers – Organizations Against; Promise Keepers Organization; "Institute in Basic Life Principles" of Rev. Bill Gothard; Pastor W. N. Otwell; and Religious Right in Arkansas. Series IV. Suzanne Pharr materials, contains a file on Religious Right. Series V. Photographs, contains photographs of Anti-Klan Rally November 1990; KKK Rally to Save the Flag: State Capital Little Rock Arkansas, July 1990; anti-David Duke Demonstration at Walnut Ridge, Arkansas, April 17, 1991; and Ku Klux Klan (KKK) Demonstration and Anti-Klan Demonstration, June 1994.

Websites with information:

http://uca.edu/archives/manuscript-collections/

Finding aid:

http://uca.edu/archives/m95-03-arkansas-womens-project-collection/

[0189] Richard K. Armey Collection, 1939-2002 (bulk 1985-2002)

Location: Congressional Archives, Carl Albert Congressional Research and Studies Center, University of Oklahoma, 630 Parrington Oval, Room 101, Norman, OK 73019

Description: Richard Keith "Dick" Armey (1940- ) was a U.S. Representative from Texas' 26th congressional district (1985-2003) and House Majority Leader (1995-2003). Series 1: Clippings, 1983-2002, includes materials from national and Texas newspapers on a variety of topics, including abortion, anti-Semitism, burned black churches, conservatism, Contract with America, Contras in Nicaragua, Tom DeLay, Newt Gingrich, gun control, homosexuality, Jack Kemp, morality, prayer in schools, printed transcript of Rush Limbaugh interview with Richard K. Armey, racism, religious right, and school vouchers. Series 5: Schedules, 1985-2002, includes topics such as abortion, Conservative Opportunity Society, March for Life, National Right to Work Committee. Correspondents include American Security Council, Americans United for Life, Bill Archer, Cass Ballenger, Haley Barbour, Patrick J. Buchanan, William F. Buckley, Jr., George W. Bush, Cato Institute, Concerned Women for America, Conservative Digest, Philip M. Crane, Tom DeLay, Robert K. Dornan, Jack Fields, Newt Gingrich, Phil Gramm, Jesse Helms, Heritage Foundation, Jack Kemp, Trent Lott, National Religious Broadcasters, National Taxpayers Union, Oliver North, Pat Robertson, Karl Rove, Phyllis Schlafly (president of Eagle Forum), Strom Thurmond, Paul M. Weyrich, George F. Will, and Young America's Foundation. Series 12: Legislative, 1985-2002, contains files on abortion, freedom of access to clinic entrances, partial birth abortion ban, and The House Republican Plan for a Better America.

Websites with information:

http://www.ou.edu/special/albertctr/archives/collect.htm

Finding aids:

http://www.ou.edu/special/albertctr/archives/ArmeyInventory/armey.htm

http://cacarchives.ou.edu/?p=collections/findingaid&id=4&q=

[0190] J.A. Armfield Papers, ca. 1979-1983 [partly digital collection]

Location: Greensboro Historical Museum Archives, 130 Summit Ave., Greensboro, NC 27401

Description: The J.A. Armfield Papers consist primarily of items relating to the Greensboro Police Department, ca. 1979-1983, where Armfield was employed. Materials pertaining to the November 3, 1979, anti-Klan march that left five protestors dead comprise the bulk of the papers. Included are a police operations plan, posters, flyers, and newspaper articles.

Finding aid to digital collection:

https://library.uncg.edu/dp/crg/collection.aspx?c=69

[0191] George W. Armstrong Papers, 1891-1976, bulk 1914-1954, AR335

Location: Special Collections Division at The University of Texas at Arlington Libraries, 702 Planetarium Place, Arlington, TX 76019

Description: George W. Armstrong (1866-1954) was a businessman, lawyer, and politician. Correspondence, financial records, legal documents, research notes, and publications. The George W. Armstrong Papers include his business and personal papers, 1914-1954; the papers of his wife, Mary C. Armstrong, 1949-1975; the George Van Horn Moseley Papers, 1947-1954; the Armstrong publication and pamphlet collection, 1909-1976; and posters, newspapers, and scrapbooks, 1891-1961. Armstrong's political correspondence reflects his activities with the Judge Armstrong Foundation and the Texas Educational Association, and his relationships with right-wing exponents including the Ku Klux Klan and leaders of the American anti-Semitic movement of the period, such as Gerald L. K. Smith and Elizabeth Dilling. The papers of George Van Horn Moseley, who headed the Judge Armstrong Foundation, 1949-1954, consist of his correspondence with Armstrong and others during this time and other records pertaining to the business of the foundation and the Texas Education Association. The Armstrong publication and pamphlet collection includes writings by Armstrong and others, research material, and correspondence. The last series contains notebooks, clippings, and flyers related to Armstrong's early political and business activities in Tarrant County; clippings of articles by Armstrong; ledgers from the Mississippi plantations; and newspapers, political posters, books, and pamphlets which reflect Armstrong's political philosophy. Series I. George W. Armstrong Correspondence and Papers, 1914-1954, contains correspondence with Marilyn R. Allen; Mrs. Ed C. Alumbaugh; American Gentile Protective Association; George W. Armstrong, Jr.; John Beaty; George S. Benson, president of Harding College in Arkansas; Grace Billings, editor of the anti-Semitic newsletter Women's Voice; Congressman Charles G. Binderup; The Britons, an English Fascist organization; Emory Burke; W. J. Cameron, editor of the Dearborn Independent; Frank W. Clark, President of the War Veterans Guardians; Upton Close (Josef Washington Hall); Calvin Coolidge; Bruce B. Corbin, an anti-Semitic Methodist minister; Fr. Charles E. Coughlin; Walter Crick, an English monetary reformer and associate of Arthur Kitson; J. S. Cullinan; Ida M. Darden, an Austin-based right-wing journalist and former associate of John H. Kirby, editor of the Southern Conservative; W. E. De Witt, of the Monetary Reform League; George Deatherage; Martin Dies; Elizabeth Dilling; Senator James O. Eastland; Economic Reform Club of England; Robert E. Edmondson, publisher of an anti-Semitic newsletter; Milton Elrod, editor of the Klansman, the official Klan paper; H. W. Evans, a national leader of the Ku Klux Klan; Farmers' Holiday Association; A. N. Field, a New Zealand anti-Semite and monetary theorist; Col. Ulrich Fleischhauer, editor of the World Service Newsletter, a Nazi publication; Frank E. Gannett of the Gannett newspapers; Senator Carter Glass; William A. Hanger, a Tarrant County State Senator and local leader of the Klan; J. V. Hardy of the Anti Al Smith Democrats; Merwin K. Hart, founder of the National Economic Council; W. H. "Coin" Harvey; Brown Harwood, a Klan leader; Senator J. Thomas Heflin; Will Hogg; Honest Money Founders; Charles B. Hudson, publisher of America In Danger!, an anti-Semitic newsletter; Harry A. Jung, editor of the American Vigilant Intelligence Federation, an anti-Semitic newsletter; Justice For Pelley Committee; Joseph Kamp; H. M. Keeling, an official of the Farmers' Holiday Association; Ann H. P. Kent, the mother of Tyler Kent; John Henry Kirby; Frederick Kister; Arthur Kitson; V. N. Kositsin, a White Russian anti-Semitic propagandist; Thomas B. Lee, a banker and amateur monetary theorist; Arnold S. Leese, an English anti-Semitic propagandist and Fascist political figure; Congressman William Lemke; Fulton Lewis; M. D. Lightfoot, Chairman of the National Constitutional Democrats Committee [anti-Smith]; Don Lohbeck; Senator Huey Long; Douglas MacArthur; Henry MacFarland; Col. W. G. MacKindric, Canadian monetary reformer, and anti-Semite; Dr. Ulrich Marquardt, an anti-Semitic propagandist; Z. E. Marvin, Dallas Klan leader; Russell Massey, a banker who wrote tracts on monetary reform; Col. Billy Mayfield, editor of Billy Mayfield's Weekly, a pro-Klan Texas newspaper; Senator Joseph McCarthy; Conde McGinley; Eugene Meyer; Alvin S. Moody, chairman of the "Hoover Democrats" and an official of the Texas Anti-Al Smith Democrats; George Van Horn Moseley; J. T. Newsom, an officer of the Farmers' Holiday Association; W. Lee O'Daniel; Willis Overholser, of the National Monetary Conference; Senator Robert Owen, President of the National Monetary Conference; Congressman Wright Patman; Adelaide Pelley Pearson, William Dudley Pelley's daughter; Westbrook Pegler; William Dudley Pelley; Pelley Publications, the propaganda organ for William Dudley Pelley's Silver Shirt fascist party; Gibbons Poteet, a Roxton, Texas, banker and monetary reformer; John E. Rankin; Milo Reno, president of the Farmers' Holiday Association; George W. Robnett (Church League of America); Col. Eugene N. Sanctuary; Fredrick H. Schmalz, an anti-Semitic propagandist; A. C. Shuler, of the Ku Klux Klan; Robert L. Slimp, a young States Rights Democrat; Gerald L. K. Smith; Jeremiah Stokes, Elizabeth Dilling's second husband; Herman Talmadge; Fr. A. W. Terminiello; the Texas Regulars, the Dixiecrat faction of the Texas Democratic party; Senator Elmer Thomas; Congressman Jacob Thorkelson; Strom Thurmond; James True, editor of the anti-Semitic newsletter Industrial Control Reports; Agnes Waters; Tom Watson; Atticus Webb, chairman of the Texas Anti-Saloon league; M. I. Woodward, an editor of the Dearborn Independent; M. B. Yeary, Secretary of the Farmer's Mercantile Association, an old Populist and monetary reform advocate; and Allen Zoll. Series II. Mary C. Armstrong Papers, 1949-1975, contains correspondence with George Armstrong, Jr.; Ida M. Darden; Mary Isham Keith Chapter Daughters of the American Revolution; Merwin K. Hart; Joseph Kamp; Liberty Lobby; Conde McGinley; George Van Horn Moseley; National Economic Council; and Gerald L. K. Smith. Series III. George Van Horn Moseley Papers, 1949-1954, contains correspondence with Marilyn R. Allen; George W. Armstrong; George W. Jr. Armstrong; American Heritage Protective Committee; H. H. Beamish; Emory Burke; Elizabeth Dilling; Ida M. Darden; James O. Eastland; William Henry MacFarland; Charles B. Hudson; Joseph Kamp; Conde McGinley; W. Lee O'Daniel; John E. Rankin; Gerald L. K. Smith; A. C. Shuler; and Strom Thurmond.

References:

A Guide to Archives and Manuscript Collections in the Special Collections Division at The University of Texas at Arlington Libraries (Arlington, Texas: UTA, 2000); History of Texas: Fort Worth and the Texas Northwest Edition, ed. Capt. B.B. Paddock (4 vols., Chicago: Lewis, 1922), v. 4, p. 726; Texans and their state, a newspaper reference work, ed. Harry T. Warner (1918), v. 1, p. 44.

Websites with information:

http://web.archive.org/web/20070420060547/http://library.uta.edu/guideToArchives/guideHist1.jsp

http://libraries.uta.edu/speccoll/findaids/guideHist1.htm#A15

https://archive.is/I3MPt#selection-1163.30-1163.39

http://libraries.uta.edu/speccoll/findaids/guideHist1.htm

Finding aid:

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utarl/02416/arl-02416.html

[0192] Charles W. Arnade Collection of Boliviana – Books and Pamphlets

Location: University of South Florida Libraries, 4202 E. Fowler Ave., LIB122, Tampa, FL 33620

Description: The Arnade Collection consists of roughly 3000 books and pamphlets, among which are publications from right wing opposition parties, including a copy of Bolivia: After three years of Revolutionary Dictatorship, by Demetrio Canelas, Head of the Bolivian Democratic Union Party [La Unión Democrática Boliviana] (November 1955), and a document in English issued in 1953 by Óscar Únzaga de la Vega, leader of the FSB [the Falange Socialista Boliviana (Bolivian Socialist Falange)].

Websites with information:

http://www.lib.usf.edu/special-collections/arnade-boliviana-books-pamphlets/

[0193] Papers of Hugh Oakeley Arnold-Forster, 1886-1910, Add MS 50275-50357

Location: Western Manuscripts collection, British Library, 96 Euston Road, London NW1 2DB, United Kingdom

Description: Hugh Oakeley Arnold-Forster (1855-1909) was a British politician and writer. He was among the founders of the Imperial Federation League in 1884, and became its secretary.

Catalogue description:

http://searcharchives.bl.uk

http://molcat1.bl.uk/

[0194] Harriette Simpson Arnow papers, 1907-2004, 81M2

Location: Special Collections, University of Kentucky Libraries, Margaret I. King Building, Lexington, Kentucky 40506-0039

Description: Harriette Simpson Arnow (1908-1986) was a novelist and historian. The papers include photographs, speeches, and materials documenting Arnow's political interests such as the House Un-American Activities Committee, the Vietnam War, and the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). Series II. Correspondence, 1918-1986. v. General Correspondence, 1918-1985, includes a request from HSA to the Veterans' Action Committee of Syracuse, New York for information about its anti-Communist activities, and a letter from HSA to Michigan Senator Pat McNamara concerning Communism and fascism. Series II. Correspondence, 1918-1986. v. General Correspondence, 1918-1985. B. Bickhoff and Gomon Correspondence, 1955-1985. b. Josephine Gomon, 1955-1977, discusses such topics as Chiang Kai-Shek, foreign policy, Henry Ford, Richard Nixon, Communism, John Birch Society, and integrated bussing. Series VII. Subject Files. i. Authors, contains files on T.S. Eliot, Granville Hicks, and Ezra Pound. Series VII. Subject Files. ii. Political, contains files on Anti-Communist and HUAC clippings, 1950-1953, 1954-1960, and undated; A Quarter-Century of Un-Americana, 1963; Common Sense, Anti-Communist newsletter, October 1957 to February 1960; Communist Activities among Aliens and National Groups, circa 1952; and Guide to Subversive Organizations and Publications.

Finding aids:

http://kdl.kyvl.org/catalog/xt7d7w674d0t/guide

https://nyx.uky.edu/fa/findingaid/?id=xt7d7w674d0t

[0194a] Nachlass Dr. Rudolf Aschenauer, 1940-1983, N 642

Location: Bundesarchiv-Militärarchiv, Wiesentalstraße 10, 79115 Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany

Description: Rudolf Aschenauer (1913-1983) was a defense attorney for Nazi war criminals at Nuremberg.

Reference:

Le stragi nazifasciste in Toscana 1943-45. 4. Guida archivistica alla memoria. Gli archivi tedeschi. A cura di Carlo Gentile. Prefazione di Enzo Collotti (Roma: Carocci editore, Regione Toscana - Giunta Regionale, 2005), p. 52.

Websites with information:

http://www.nachlassdatenbank.de/viewsingle.php?category=A&person_id=402&asset_id=371&sid=747c10595

70148baa70b2

https://www.deutsche-digitale-bibliothek.de/item/5JEGMCKZJRAKHBLROWS7RXPJKVCYA2WK

https://invenio.bundesarchiv.de/basys2-invenio/main.xhtml

[0195] John M. Ashbrook Diaries, 1952-1982, MS 1168 mf

Location: Center for Archival Collections, William T. Jerome Library, 5th Floor, University Libraries, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, OH 43403

Description: Daily entries, personal and professional, of a U.S. Congressman, representing the 17th Ohio Congressional District (1960-1982).

Permission required from Ashland University for any copies of the microfilm other than paper.

Websites with information:

http://ul2.bgsu.edu/finding_aids/items/browse?tag=Political&collection=23&sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CTitle

http://www.bgsu.edu/colleges/library/cac/bib/page39361.html

Finding aid:

http://ul2.bgsu.edu/finding_aids/items/show/1385

[0196] John M. Ashbrook political collection

Location: Ashland University Archives, 401 College Avenue, Ashland, Ohio 44805

Description: John Ashbrook's congressional office records. Ashbrook served as a Republican representative from Ohio from 1961 until his death in 1982. The collection includes files on the American Conservative Union, Americans for Constitutional Action, Conservatives, Communism, Fringe Groups, John Birch Society, HUAC House Committee on Un-American Activities, and Otto Otepka.

Websites with information:

http://www.auarchives.com/John%20M.%20Ashbrook.html

[0197] Papers of Wayne Ashcroft, 1939-1999 (bulk 1990s), GB 0152 MSS.412

Location: Modern Records Centre, University Library, University of Warwick, Coventry, CV4 7AL, United Kingdom

Description: Wayne Ashcroft (later George Ashcroft) (1977- ) was a member of the National Front when it changed its name to the National Democrats in 1995. He joined John McAuley in the breakaway group which retained the original name, becoming organiser of the Dudley and Wolverhampton Branch, the Walsall Branch and the West Midlands Region. He was also elected to the National Directorate in 1996 as organiser of the reformed Young National Front. The papers include publications and papers relating to the National Front; Young National Front; British National Party; National Democrats; other right wing publications and artefacts, 1939-1999; and newspaper cuttings, 1993-1999. MSS.412/HQ Papers relating to National Front Headquarters 1991-1998. 4. Publications 1975-[199-]. 1. Serials 1975-1998, contains copies of Britain First, Bulldog, Eastern Front, England, My Country, The Flag, The Flame, Herts, Beds & Bucks Bulldog, Lionheart, National Front News, The Nationalist, New Dawn, New Nation, Newcastle Patriot, True Brit, and Vanguard. 2. Monographs 1978-[199-], contains a copy of Attempted Murder, by Nick Griffin (N T Press, 1986). MSS.412/BNP Papers relating to British National Party 1975-1998. 4. Publications 1975-1998, contains copies of British Countryman; British Nationalist; Nationalism Today; New Frontier; Patriot; The Rune; Spearhead; BNP Book Service Catalogue [199-]; The Enemy Within: How TV brainwashes a nation [19--] By John Tyndall; No to Maastricht and No to Europe! Exploded: The myth that Britain has no future outside the EC [19--]; A New Way Forward: The political objectives of the British National Party [19--]; Activists' Handbook [19--] [online at http://www.bnp.org.uk/PDF/activists.pdf]; Spreading the Word: British National Party handbook on propaganda [19--]; Who Are the Mind-Benders? The people who rule Britain through control of the mass media [19--]; Fight Back! 1992 (BNP election manifesto); Vote for Britain 1994 (BNP election manifesto); Britain Reborn: A programme for the new century 1997 (BNP election manifesto). MSS.412/ND Papers relating to National Democrats 1995-1998. 4. Publications 1995-1997, contains copies of The Flag July/August 1995-1997 and Vanguard June 1995-1997. MSS.412/5 Other publications 1939-1999. 1. Serials arranged in alphabetical order 1976-1999, contains copies of Action; Anthology 21 1993 Issue 1 (collection of verse edited by D. Owens); The Anvil (International Third Position); Backlash; Berserker; Blitzkrieg; Blood and Honour [links with Combat 18]; British Freepress; British Oi!; British Worker; Broadsword; Candour; Choice; Choose Democracy (United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP)); Chronicle; Combat 18; Comrade (Truth at Last); Confederate Underground; Conquest (Third Position); Counter Culture (Third Way); Crusader; Eastern Eye; The European; Final Conflict; Focal Point (Focus Policy Group, chaired by David Irving); Freemasons News (Political Research Association); Gothic Ripples (Colin Jordan); Highlander; Holocaust News (Historical Review Press, which has links to David Irving); Independence (United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP)); The Individual; League Sentinel (League of St George); Mainlander; Marxism; Marxist Monthly; Middle American News; Mirth; National Socialist Worldwide Web; National Review; National Vanguard; New Order; New Ulster Defender; The Order; Private Eye; Putsch; Race Equality News; Racial Loyalty; Reader's Digest; Rebellion; Redwatch (Combat 18); Regional News; Right Now; The Scorpion; Scottish Freedom Fighter; Searchlight; South African Patriot; The Sunday Mirror; Storm; Target; The Third Way; This England; Tomorrow's Job; The Truth at Last; Ulster Sentinel; Ulster Unionist; The Voice; The Voice of St George (Third Position); The Weekly Journal; White Dragon; White Eagle; White Resistance; White Rose; White Skins: White Pride; and White Warriors. MSS.412/5/2 Monographs arranged in alphabetical order 1939-1998, contains The Biology of the Race Problem, by Wesley C. George (Historical Review Press, 1963) [online at http://www.pdfarchive.info/pdf/G/Ge/George_Wesley_Critz_-_The_biology_of_the_race_problem.pdf]; Behind Communism, by Frank L. Britton; A Candidate for the Order, by Michael A. Hoffman II (New Traditional Press, USA, 1988); The Controversy of Zion, by Douglas Reed (Veritas Publishing Co Pty Ltd, Australia, 1985); Cromwell and the Jews; Deadlier than the H-Bomb, by Wing Commander Leonard Young (Inter-City Research Press, 1992); In Defence of Hilaire Belloc (Church in History Information Centre, UK); A Dog's Tale (Combat 18); Edict of Expulsion 1290 (Public Record Office, London, 1985); Enemies of the Queen, by Kitty Little (Steven Books, Middlesex, 1982); England and Europe, by John Amery (1943); Fascism in England, 1928-1940 (Final Conflict, 1997); The Grand Design, by Douglas Reed (Dolphin Press, 1977); The Hoax of the 20th Century, by Arthur R. Butz (Historical Review Press, 1977); Holocaust Denial: New Nazi lie or new Inquisition? by Alexander Baron (Anglo-Hebrew Publishing, 1994); The Holy Book of Adolf Hitler, by James Larratt Battersby (German World Church in Europe, 1952); Hunter, by Andrew Macdonald (National Vanguard Books (1994); Is the Diary of Anne Frank Genuine? by Robert Faurisson (Institute for Historical Review, 1985); IQ and Racial Differences, by Henry E. Garrett (Noontide Press and the Historical Review Press, 1980) [online at http://www.pdfarchive.info/pdf/G/Ga/Garrett_Henry_Edward_-_IQ_and_racial_differences.pdf]; Jewish Press-Control, by Arnold Leese (Stevens, Middlesex, 1939); The Longest Hatred: An examination of anti-Gentilism (Inter-City Research Press, London, 1991); Mammon Versus God, by Kitty Little (Inter-City Research Press, London, 1993); Martyrs: The Falange; Merrie England - 2000, by Colin Jordan (Gothic Ripples, Harrogate, 1993); Nationalist Doctrine, by Joe Pearce (Freedom Books, London, 1987); The New Unhappy Lords, by A. K. Chesterton (Candour Publishing, Hampshire, 1975); None Dare Call it Conspiracy, by Gary Allen (Concord Press, California, 1972); November 9th Society Organisation Book, by Terry Flynn; Otto Strasser: The German contribution to revolutionary nationalism (The Rising Press, London, 1995); Our Financial Masters, by A. Raven Thomson (Stevens Books, Middlesex); Our Jewish Aristocracy: A revelation, by Arnold Leese (Historical Reprint Series); The Political Soldier: A statement, by Derek Holland (Third Position, London, 1994); Political Soldier: Thoughts on sacrifice and struggle, by Derek Holland (Burning Books, Surrey, 1989); Race and Politics, by H. B. Isherwood (Racial Preservation Society, Warwickshire, 1978); Race and Reality: A search for solutions, by Carleton Putnam (Howard Allen, USA, 1967); Religion and the Racial Controversy, by H. B. Isherwood (Racial Preservation Society, Warwickshire, 1970); Satanism and its Allies (Final Conflict, 1998); Skrewdriver Songbook; The Turner Diaries, by Andrew Macdonald (National Vanguard Books, 1990); Usury, by Hilaire Belloc (St George Educational Trust); White Lies: Anti-Fascist action (Leeds Nationalist Council, 1995); and A World Coup d'Etat Is Planned (Inter-City Research Centre, 1984).

Finding aids:

http://mrc-catalogue.warwick.ac.uk/records/WAS

http://www.warwick.ac.uk/services/library/mrc/ead/412.htm

http://web.warwick.ac.uk/services/library/mrc/ead/412.htm

http://dscalm.warwick.ac.uk/DServe/dserve.exe?dsqIni=Dserve.ini&dsqApp=Archive&dsqDb=Catalog&dsqCm

d=NaviTree.tcl&dsqField=RefNo&dsqItem=WAS

[0198] Robert T. Ashmore Papers, 1914-2002

Location: South Carolina Political Collections, Ernest F. Hollings Special Collections Library, University of South Carolina Libraries, 1322 Greene Street, Columbia, SC 29208

Description: Robert T. Ashmore (1904-1989) represented South Carolina's 4th District in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1953 to January 1969. Contains files on Civil Rights and Communism. Documents include constituent letters concerning Ashmore's claim that Communism was infiltrating the American way of life and Ashmore's attack on Protestant ministers and educators, 1958; a variety of anti-Communist propaganda distributed within the United States in the 1950s; and a 1951 House Report on the spread of Communism in the American way of life.

Websites with information:

http://library.sc.edu/p/Collections/SCPC/Collections

http://library.sc.edu/blogs/scpc/2012/03/01/scpc-research-guide-the-cold-war-part-2/

Finding aids:

http://library.sc.edu/scpc/ashmore.html

http://library.sc.edu/scpc/Ashmore.pdf

[0198a] Asian People's Anti-Communist League

Location: Wilson Center Digital Archive, One Woodrow Wilson Plaza - 1300 Pennsylvania Ave, NW, Washington, DC 20004-3027 [digital collection]

Description: The Asian Peoples' Anti-Communist League included South Korea, the Philippines, South Vietnam, and a number of other Asian countries and territories. The collection contains 58 documents on several of the early conferences convened by the Asian Peoples' Anti-Communist League in South Korea, the Philippines, and Vietnam and attended by delegations from across Asia.

Finding aid:

http://digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org/collection/193/asian-peoples-anti-communist-league

[0199] Asiatic Exclusion League records, 1906-1910, larc.ms.0145

Location: Labor Archives and Research Center, J. Paul Leonard Library, Room 460, San Francisco State University, 1630 Holloway Ave, San Francisco, CA 94132-1722

Description: The Asiatic Exclusion League was founded in 1905 in San Francisco, California, as the Japanese and Korean Exclusion League. In 1908 the organization changed its name to the Asiatic Exclusion League. The bulk of the Asiatic Exclusion League records consist of the minutes and proceedings of monthly meetings and the first convention of the League, spanning the years 1906-1910; the collection also contains the proceedings of the first two conventions of the Anti-Japanese Laundry League founded in 1908; the transcript of a debate at St. Ignatius College; a pamphlet by Samuel Gompers on Asian workers entitled "Meat vs. Rice"; and a detailed index to its contents. In addition to these items, photocopies of selected articles on Asian exclusion from the Labor Clarion between 1904-1915 were added to the collection in 2006.

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c89k4c1p/entire_text/

[0200] Association for the Liberation of Ukraine (ALU) Records, 1966-1989, IHRC #250

Location: Ukrainian American Collection, Immigration History Research Center, University of Minnesota, 311 Elmer L. Andersen Library, 222 21st Ave S, Minneapolis, MN 55455

Description: The Association for the Liberation of Ukraine (Soiuz Vyzvolennia Ukrainy) was founded in Germany in 1952. Since 1959, its headquarters have been in New York City, with branches in other countries. The Association is a political organization which maintains a conservative-right view and publishes occasionally the journal Misiia Ukrainy (Mission of Ukraine). Records of the Association for the Liberation of Ukraine (ALU) consist of materials pertaining to the organization's activities in the United States.

Finding aid:

http://ihrc.umn.edu/research/vitrage/all/am/ihrc250.html

[0201] Association for Voluntary Sterilization Records, 1929-1981 (bulk 1945-1977), SW 15

Location: Social Welfare History Archives, 320 Elmer L. Andersen Library, University of Minnesota, 222 21st Avenue South, Minneapolis, MN 55455

Description: The Association for Voluntary Sterilization (AVS) promoted the benefits of voluntary sterilization as a means of family planning and population control. Its predecessor, The Sterilization League of New Jersey, was formed in 1937 to promote the eugenic sterilization of the physically and developmentally disabled and persons with mental illness. Various name changes reflected the association's growing emphasis on voluntary sterilization as a means of birth control and ongoing efforts to disassociate itself from eugenic sterilization. Includes records of predecessor organizations that promoted eugenic sterilization. Contains primarily: minutes, correspondence, clippings, financial records, reports, and statistics showing sterilizations by state. Topics include: eugenic sterilization of mentally ill and developmentally disabled persons; medical, legal, and socio-economic aspects of sterilization; efforts to educate doctors, social workers, and the public about sterilization; referrals and financial assistance for individuals seeking sterilization; lawsuits against hospitals that denied sterilization procedures; regional and international voluntary sterilization programs in Appalachia and developing countries; public responses for and against sterilization; and the administration of AVS and its predecessors. Series 1.1 AVS Predecessors, 1929-1969, contains minutes and papers of the five predecessors of AVS: Sterilization League of New Jersey, Sterilization League for Human Betterment, Birthright, Human Betterment Association of America, and Human Betterment Association for Voluntary Sterilization. Subseries Sterilization League of New Jersey contains a model sterilization bill presented to the New Jersey legislature and material pertaining to Roman Catholic opposition to sterilization. Correspondents include the American Birth Control League and H. L. Mencken. Subseries Birthright includes material re the proposal of W. P. Draper to sterilize 100,000 in the South to prevent the advance of miscegeny and on the impact of the Nazi sterilization program on activities in the U.S. Among the correspondents are Sheldon Reed, director of the University of Minnesota Dight Institute, and C. M. Goethe. Series 4.3 General Correspondence, 1950-1974, contains files on Hon. James L. Buckley, Senator Everett Dirksen, Wickliffe Draper, Euthanasia Educational Fund, Inc., Euthanasia Society of America, Heredity, Human Betterment Federation, Human Betterment Foundation, Immigration, H. L. Mencken, Frederick Osborn, and the Scaife Family of Pittsburgh. Series 4.4 International Correspondence, 1951-1973, contains a file on C. M. Goethe. Series 7. Sterilization Statistics, 1935-1969, contains sterilization statistics which were gathered annually or biennially by the Human Betterment Foundation. The Foundation was established in 1928 by Ezra S. Gosney, a Pasadena philanthropist, to "foster and aid constructive and educational forces for the protection and betterment of the human family." Series 9.9 Newspaper Clippings 1945-1976, consists of newspaper clippings regarding sterilization-related subjects, including material re sterilization in Nazi Germany. The subseries Newspaper clippings: Syndicated Columnists contains clippings of columns by John Chamberlain and Paul Harvey.

Finding aids:

http://discover.lib.umn.edu/cgi/f/findaid/findaid-idx?c=umfa;cc=umfa;q1=Association%20for%20­Voluntary

%20Sterilization%20Records;rgn=main;view=text;didno=SW0015

http://special.lib.umn.edu/findaid/xml/sw0015.xml

[0202] Assembly of Captive European Nations, Records, 1953-1972, IHRC #136

Location: Immigration History Research Center, University of Minnesota, 311 Elmer L. Andersen Library, 222 21st Ave S, Minneapolis, MN 55455

Description: The Assembly of Captive European Nations (ACEN) was a coalition of representatives from nine nations who found themselves under the yoke of Soviet domination after World War II. Membership in the organization consisted of former government and cultural leaders from Albania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, and Romania. Founded on September 20, 1954, the ACEN was established to "symbolize in one name both the plight and the aims of the Central and Eastern European nations," which were either unrepresented or misrepresented in the United Nations. Series I. Internal Organization. Subseries 4 - Committee Members, has files on Vilis Masens, George M. Dimitrov, Brutus Coste, and Nuci Kotta. Series II. ACEN Member Organizations, has files on Jozef Lettrich, Aleksander Kutt, and Béla Fábián/Federation of Hungarian Former Political Prisoners. Series IV.- General Committee. Subseries 4 - Speakers Bureau. Speakers on East-Central Europe, contains files on George Dimitrov, Stefan Korbonski, Ferenc Nagy, Štefan Osuský, and Vaclovas Sidzikauskas. Series IX - Relations with Governments. Subseries 6 - United States Senate, has a file on William F. Knowland. Subseries 7 - United States House of Representatives, has files on Committee on Foreign Affairs - Pillion Resolution and Committee on Un-American Activities. Series X. Relations with Non-governmental Organizations and Individuals, Subseries 1. Political Organizations, contains files on All American Conference to Combat Communism, Americans to Free Captive Nations, American Friends of Anti-Bolshevik Bloc of Nations, American Friends of the Captive Nations, American Legion, American National Committee for the Freedom of Enslaved Nations, American Security Council, Anti-Communist Organizations, Asian People's Anti-Communist League, Citizens' Foreign Relations Committee, Committee for Freedom for All Peoples, Committee of One Million, Council Against Communist Aggression, Crusade Against Communism, Crusade For Freedom, Foreign Policy Association, Information Council of the Americas, and Liberty Amendment Committee of the USA. Subseries 6. Individuals, has files on Alfred Kohlberg, Clarence Manion, and Herbert A. Philbrick.

Finding aids:

http://archives.ihrc.umn.edu/vitrage/all/am/GENassembly.htm

http://www.ihrc.umn.edu/research/vitrage/all/am/GENassembly.htm

http://ihrc.umn.edu/research/vitrage/all/am/GENassembly.htm

[0203] Association of Citizens Councils of Mississippi Papers

Location: Archives and Records Services Division, William F. Winter Archives and History Building, The Mississippi Department of Archives and History, 200 North Street, Jackson, MS 39201

Description: The Association of Citizens Councils of Mississippi was founded in Winona, Mississippi, in 1954 as a statewide body.

References:

Charles C. Bolton, "Mississippi's School Equalization Program, 1945-1954: 'A Last Gasp to Try to Maintain a Segregated Educational System,'" Journal of Southern History, 66(4) (2000), pp. 781-814, http://libres.uncg.edu/

ir/uncg/f/C_Bolton_Mississippi_2000.pdf; Charles C. Bolton, The Hardest Deal of All: The Battle Over School Integration in Mississippi, 1870-1980 (University Press of Mississippi, 2005); David L. Chappell, A Stone of Hope: Prophetic Religion and the Death of Jim Crow (Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 2005).

[0204] Association of Citizens' Councils of Mississippi records, 1961-1967 and undated

Location: David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Duke University, Box 90185, 103 Perkins Library, Durham, North Carolina 27708

Description: The first Citizens' Council (also known as the White Citizens' Council) was formed in Indianola, Mississippi, following the United States Supreme Court's 1954 Brown v. Board of Education ruling, which struck down segregation in public schools. White businessmen, planters, and professionals organized the group to prevent the court's ruling from taking hold in Mississippi. Other Citizens' Council chapters were formed around the state, and within three months a statewide body, the Association of Citizens' Councils of Mississippi, began in Winona, Mississippi. By 1956, the group claimed eighty thousand members in Mississippi. It was particularly active in the Delta region and also had a powerful Jackson chapter, led by William J. Simmons (1916-2007). A national group, the Citizens' Council of America, was formed by 1956. The Citizens' Council received its revenue from membership dues and grants from the publicly-funded Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission, an agency that promoted segregation and investigated the activities of civil rights groups. The Citizens' Council officially eschewed violence as a strategy, although many Council members privately condoned the violent tactics used by the Ku Klux Klan. The Council was active for more than a decade, but began to lose some of its influence by the late-1960s. Collection comprises Association of Citizen's Councils' position statements, directives, articles, and handbills on the subjects of voting rights, school integration, civil rights protests, infiltration of the Southern Civil Rights movement by Communists, and segregation. Reprinted newspaper articles from newspapers across the country comprise the majority of the material. There are also requests for funding and assistance in influencing politicians. There are handbills with quotations, position statement, cartoons, and editorial photographs. Some of the material is from the national Citizens' Council, and some is printed by Lawrence Printing Company of Greenwood, Miss.

Websites with information:

http://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/880720420

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/880720420

http://www.worldcat.org/title/association-of-citizens-councils-of-mississippi-records-1961-1967-and-undated/oclc/880720420

[0205] James B. Aswell Family Papers, 1892-1959 (bulk 1909-1931), Mss. 1408, 1426, 1468, 1483, 1620, 1621

Location: Louisiana and Lower Mississippi Valley Collections, Special Collections, Hill Memorial Library, Louisiana State University Libraries, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, La. 70803-3300

Description: James B. Aswell (1869-1931) was a politician and educator from Natchitoches, La. Correspondence, diaries, scrapbooks, speeches, and other related items pertain principally to Aswell's political career and Louisiana politics; World War I; and post-war European conditions. Other topics include the Ku Klux Klan. Notable individuals mentioned include Huey Long and Herbert Hoover.

Websites with information:

http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/findaid/

http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/research/msg.php?display=single&q=Politics

Finding aids:

http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/findaid/1408.pdf

http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/findaid/politicalpapers/r1408m.inv.pdf

[0206] Atlanta Jewish Federation Records, 1906-1980, Mss 82

Location: The Cuba Family Archives for Southern Jewish History, The William Breman Jewish Heritage Museum, 1440 Spring Street NW, Atlanta, Georgia 30309

Description: The Atlanta Jewish Federation was formally incorporated in 1967 and is the result of the merger of the Atlanta Federation for Jewish Social Service founded in 1905 as the Federation of Jewish Charities; the Atlanta Jewish Welfare Federation founded in 1936 as the Atlanta Jewish Welfare Fund; and the Atlanta Jewish Community Council founded in 1945. Over the years the Federation operated the majority of the social service functions within the Jewish community of Atlanta. The records consist of minutes, reports, correspondence, administrative files, and scrapbooks. Files on American Nazi Party - George Lincoln Rockwell, Anti-Semitism, Anti-Semitism - propaganda - Israel Cohen, October Bombing - The Temple, Bombings - general, Christian Anti-Jewish Party, Upton Close, Columbians, Communism, Crusade for Freedom, Desegregation - Atlanta Public Schools, Benjamin Franklin and the Pickney Diary, Ku Klux Klan, McCarran-Walter Immigration Act, Mental Health, Nazism, Protocols of the Elders of Zion, Right wing movements - John Birch Society, Segregation, States' Rights Council of Georgia, and White Citizens Council.

Finding aids:

http://cubafamilyarchives.wordpress.com/2013/12/18/mss-82-atlanta-jewish-federation-records/

http://www.thebreman.org/research-n-collections/finding-aids/Atlanta-Jewish-Federation.pdf

[0207] Atlanta Journal-Constitution Photographic Archives, bulk 1950s-1980s [photographs; partly digital collection]

Location: Special Collections and Archives, Georgia State University, 100 Decatur St., SE, Atlanta, GA 30303-3202

Description: The Atlanta Journal-Constitution Photographic Archives consist of approximately six million prints, negatives, and slides from the newspaper's photo morgue. Topics include anti-integration, civil rights, integration, Ku Klux Klan, pro-segregation, and segregation.

Websites with information:

http://digitalcollections.library.gsu.edu/cdm/collections

http://dp.la/info/2014/06/25/putting-it-on-the-line-citizen-participation-in-the-democratic-process-georgia-state-universitys-digital-collections/

Finding aids to digital collection:

http://digitalcollections.library.gsu.edu/cdm/landingpage/collection/ajc

http://digitalcollections.library.gsu.edu/cdm/search/collection/ajc

http://dp.la/search?provider%5B%5D=Georgia+State+University.+Libraries.+Special+Collections&q="atlanta+journal+constitution"

[0208] Audio Collection, 1954-2008, The Harvard Law School Forum [audio recordings; digital collection]

Location: Harvard Law School, Cambridge, MA 02138

Description: Harvard Law School Forum is a non-partisan student organization of Harvard Law School dedicated to bringing open discussion of a broad range of legal, political and social issues to the Harvard Law School campus. On March 8, 1946, the Forum presented its first program, a discussion of the war crimes trials. The Audio Collection is a collection of speeches and panel discussions by speakers including Barry Goldwater and others ("The First Hundred Days" – April 30, 1961 [discussing Kennedy's first hundred days]); Billy Graham ("Evangelism and the Intellectual"- April 1, 1962); Allen Dulles ("The Role of Intelligence in Policy Making" – December 13, 1963); Bishop Fulton Sheen ("God and the Intellectual" – February 13, 1966); Phyllis Schlafly ("The ERA – Is There a Future?" – April 25, 1984); Rev. Jerry Falwell ("The Role of Religion in Politics" (introduction by Professor Laurence Tribe) – September 20, 1984; "The Evangelical Vote: Is It Monolithic?" – October 6, 1986); Edwin Meese III ("Freedom, Free Speech and the Courts" – February 10, 1992); and Charlton Heston ("Winning the Cultural War" – February 16, 1999).

Guide to Past Programs:

https://web.archive.org/web/20071215014838/http://www.law.harvard.edu/students/orgs/forum/40s.html

Websites with information:

https://web.archive.org/web/20071227033700/http://www.law.harvard.edu/students/orgs/forum/index.html

https://web.archive.org/web/20071227033655/http://www.law.harvard.edu/students/orgs/forum/history.html

Finding aid:

https://orgs.law.harvard.edu/hlsforum/multimedia/

[0209] Friedrich Ernst Auhagen Collection, 1939-1952, MS110

Location: Manuscripts and Archives, McCormick Library, Northwestern University Library, 1970 Campus Drive, Evanston, IL 60208-2300

Description: In September 1940 Dr. Auhagen was arrested and called to testify before the Dies Committee in October regarding possible subversive Nazi activities. He was released, but kept under Justice Department surveillance until March 1941, when a federal grand jury issued an indictment against him for failing to register as a German agent. The articles, newspaper clippings, and correspondence in the collection were collected between 1939 and 1952 by Henry Pope, a prominent Republican and Chicago area businessman. Includes files on Dorothy Thompson, including "On the Record" column on Dr. Auhagen, October 23, 1940; Pilot Radio transcript, Dorothy Thompson on Dr. Auhagen, October 20, 1940; and Lawrence Dennis to Dorothy Thompson in published, Weekly Foreign Letter, December 9, 1940; and on American Fellowship Forum, including a copy of Today's Challenge (American Fellowship Forum), v. 1 no. 1, June/July 1939 (contains 3 articles by Auhagen, one under the pseudonym of "Ferdinand Cooper") and the American Fellowship Forum platform and program.

Websites with information:

http://www.library.northwestern.edu/libraries-collections/evanston-campus/special-collections/manuscripts-and-archives

Finding aid:

http://findingaids.library.northwestern.edu/catalog/inu-ead-spec-archon-1426

[0210] Warren R. Austin Collection, 1877-1962

Location: Special Collections, Bailey/Howe Library, University of Vermont, 538 Main Street, Burlington, VT 05405-0036

Description: Warren Robinson Austin (1877-1962) served as United States Senator from Vermont, 1931-1946, and U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, 1947-1953. The Warren Robinson Austin Papers include correspondence, speeches and writings of Austin, notes and notebooks, legislative bills and drafts, printed and published material, memoranda, newspaper clippings, documents, photographs, slides and assorted memorabilia. Series 3. U. S. Senate Period 1931-1946, contains files on Bretton Woods Proposals: International Monetary Fund, Dumbarton Oaks (United Nations Charter), Equal Rights Amendment: National Woman's Party Publications, President Herbert Hoover: Article on World Depression, 1933, March 11, Alfred Landon, Senator William Langer: Correspondence, Notes and Clippings, 1941-1942 n.d., Lend Lease (H.R. 1776), Money, 1932-1933, Neutrality Act: Willkie and the Republican Position, Wendell Willkie: Speeches and Clippings, 1940-1944, and Yalta Agreement. Series 4. United Nations Period and After 1946-1963, contains files on Bricker Amendment, James F. Byrnes, Committee of One Million (Re: China), Communism and Subversive Activities, Dwight Eisenhower, Foreign Policy Association Publications, Genocide, Alger Hiss, Herbert Hoover, Institute of Pacific Relations, Isaac Don Levine (Plain Talk), Henry Cabot Lodge, Douglas MacArthur, Negro Question, Matthew Ridgway, Carlos Romulo, Robert A. Taft, United World Federalists, A Warning on World Government by Warren R. Austin 1949-1951, Alexander Wiley, and World Government.

Websites with information:

http://cdi.uvm.edu/findingaids/browseEAD.xql?cat=all&rep=

Finding aid:

http://cdi.uvm.edu/archives/finding%20aids/austin.xml

[0211] [Australia First Movement: ephemera material collected by the National Library of Australia]

Location: Petherick Reading Room (Ephemera Collection), National Library of Australia, Parkes Place, Canberra ACT 2600, Australia

Description: The Australia First Movement, a political pressure group with a strongly anti-British, anti-Semitic, anti-democratic, and pro-Fascist programme, was formed in October 1941 by Percy Reginald Stephensen (1901-1965), an Australian writer, editor and publisher.

Websites with information:

http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/stephensen-percy-reginald-8645

http://catalogue.nla.gov.au/index.php?module=Record&id=2598696

[0212] Australia First Movement (The Publicist), 1939-1942, A6335, 3 [digital collection]

Location: National Archives of Australia, Queen Victoria Terrace, Parkes, ACT 2600, Australia

Description: The Australia First Movement grew out of strong anti-British sentiment and vigorous Australian nationalism. Several elements fuelled its creation, including the severity of the Great Depression and the imperialistic attitude of some prominent Britons living in Australia. Influences on the movement included writer Percy Reginald Stephensen and William John Miles, a Sydney businessman. Over a six-year partnership they attracted the wholehearted opposition of the Labor left and the tolerance of the right due only to their strong anti-Communism. The movement was attributed with a growing sympathy towards the German, Italian and Japanese governments. Between 1936 and 1942 the movement published 16 volumes of a newsletter titled The Publicist. This publication stated that its aim was to 'arouse in Australians a positive feeling, a distinctive Australian patriotism of a thoroughly realistic kind'. Its leaders and some of its members were secretly interned in March 1942. Their internment was based on the suspicion that the movement might attempt to provide help to Japanese invaders.

Websites with information:

http://www.naa.gov.au/collection/fact-sheets/by-number/index.aspx

http://www.naa.gov.au/collection/fact-sheets/fs28.aspx

Finding aid:

http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/DetailsReports/ItemDetail.aspx?Barcode=241502

&isAv=N

[0213] Australian League of Rights Collection

Location: Karl Schmude Special Collections Room, Dixson Library, University Library, University of New England, Armidale, NSW, 2351, Australia

Description: The Australian League of Rights is a right-wing movement based on the theory of Social Credit as espoused by the English engineer and economic theorist C. H. Douglas (1879-1952). Eventually, Douglas concluded that the main obstacle to the success of Social Credit was a world-wide Jewish conspiracy, in which Freemasons, International Finance, Communists and Nazis colluded to destroy Christian civilisation. Founded in the 1960s by the late Eric Butler (1916-2006), the ALR is still one of the more influential far right wing movements in Australia. The collection consists of magazines, pamphlets, books, audio cassettes, videos and other often elusive and ephemeral League publications.

Websites with information:

http://www.une.edu.au/library/special/alr.php

http://www-personal.une.edu.au/~tcooper/shelf/shelfs1.htm

[0213a] Australian Security Intelligence Organization, Central Office, Subject files, Series A6122 [partly digital collection]

Location: National Archives of Australia, Queen Victoria Terrace, PARKES ACT 2600, Australia

Description: The Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) is Australia's national security service. The ASIO Central Office is in Canberra. Files on "Empire of Fear" by Vladimir and Evdokia Petrov (1956); Douglas Social Credit Movement; National Front of Australia; the New Guard; and Petrovs Book. Procedure in writing it (Empire of Fear) (1955-1956).

See also National Archives of Australia (entry [2021]).

Finding aid:

http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/DetailsReports/SeriesDetail.aspx?series_no=A612

2&singleRecord=T

References:

Richard Evans, "'A Menace to this Realm': the New Guard and the New South Wales Police, 1931-32," History Australia, vol. 5, no. 3 (2008), pp. 76.1-76.20, https://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30037028/evans-amenacetothe-2008.pdf; New Guard Movement, 1931–35 – Fact sheet 183, http://www.naa.gov.au/collection/fact-sheets/

fs183.aspx.

[0214] Authors and Poets Collection, 1880-1989 and undated (bulk 1946-1968), Coll. 72-278; 72-296; 74-30; 95-130; 2001-87; 2002-164

Location: Special Collections, University of Maryland Libraries, Hornbake Library, College Park, MD 20742

Description: This is a diffuse collection of correspondence, manuscripts, page and galley proofs, publications, serials, sound recordings, photographs, and ephemera relating to various literary figures. Series 1: Correspondence, 1880-1974 and undated, contains files on H. L. Mencken, Ezra Pound, and William Butler Yeats. Series 2: Manuscripts and Notes, 1915, 1930, 1938-1939, 1949, 1966, 1968, 1970, 1973, 1975, 1977 and undated, contains a file on Margaret Sanger. Series 3: Proofs and Publications, 1903, 1924-1925, 1929, 1931, 1934, 1939, 1941-1942, 1945, 1949-1950, 1954, 1956-1957, 1959, 1962-1967, 1971-1973 and undated, contains a file on H. L. Mencken. Series 4: Printed Matter, 1923, 1926-1927, 1931-1933, 1937, 1945-1948, 1958-1962, 1964, 1966-1972, 1972 and undated, contains files on H. L. Mencken.

Websites with information:

http://digital.lib.umd.edu/archivesum/rguide/amlit.jsp

http://digital.lib.umd.edu/archivesum/rguide/geogbc.jsp

Finding aid:

http://hdl.handle.net/1903.1/1516

http://digital.lib.umd.edu/archivesum/actions.DisplayEADDoc.do?source=MdU.ead.litms.0025.xml&style=ead

[0214a] Authors Collection, 1665-2005 (bulk 1790-1900), MS.1986.087

Location: Archives and Manuscripts Department, John J. Burns Library, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467

Description: The Authors collection consists primarily of letters and lithographs. Notable correspondents represented in this collection include Jeremy Bentham, Calvin Coolidge, Rowland Gibson Hazard, Helen Kendrick Johnson, Rossiter Johnson, Henry Cabot Lodge, and H. L. Mencken.

Finding aid:

http://library.bc.edu/finding-aids/MS1986-087-finding-aid.pdf

[0214b] Authors Collection, 1795-1974

Location: Special Collections Department / Rare Books & Manuscripts, 123 Hofstra University, 032 Axinn Library, Hempstead, New York 11549-1230

Description: The collection consists of correspondence with some manuscript materials, printed materials, and photographs. Among the authors represented in the collection are Hilaire Belloc, Gilbert Keith Chesterton, T.S. Eliot, Wyndham Lewis, Carey McWilliams, Henry Louis Mencken, Ezra Pound, Matthew B. Ridgway, Nelson A. Rockefeller, Henry Junior Taylor, Wendell L. Willkie, Owen Wister, and William Butler Yeats.

Websites with information:

https://www.hofstra.edu/pdf/library/libspc_rbam_collections.pdf

Finding aid:

http://www.hofstra.edu/pdf/library/libspc_rbam_authors_fa.pdf

[0214c] Autograph Collection, MS 92-14

Location: Special Collections and University Archives, Wichita State University Libraries, 1845 Fairmount, Wichita, KS 67260-0068

Description: The autograph collection is a compilation of letters and cards from various manuscripts. Files on William F. Buckley, Jr., Arthur Capper, Robert Dole, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Gerald Ford, James Forrestal, Barry Goldwater, Herbert Hoover, Alfred M Landon, Richard Nixon, Gifford Pinchot, Eddie Rickenbacker, Nelson A. Rockefeller, John Sparkman, and William Allen White.

Websites with information:

http://specialcollections.wichita.edu/collections/ms/msub-a.html

Finding aid:

http://specialcollections.wichita.edu/collections/ms/92-14/92-14-A.HTML

[0214d] Autograph Collection, undated, Coll. XX000

Location: Hoover Institution Archives, 434 Galvez Mall, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305-6010

Description: Autographs of various famous persons. Included are documents signed by Galeazzo Ciano, Thomas E. Dewey, Karl Dönitz, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Joseph Goebbels, Hermann Göring, Rudolf Hess, Reinhard Heydrich, Heinrich Himmler, Adolf Hitler, Herbert Hoover, Huey P. Long, Richard M. Nixon, A. Mitchell Palmer, Franz von Papen, Ernst Röhm, Alfred Rosenberg, Baldur von Schirach, Albert C. Wedemeyer, and Alexander Wiley.

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf7870055m/entire_text/

[0214e] Autograph Collection, 1400-1975 (bulk 1772-1955)

Location: Loyola University of Chicago Archives, Cudahy Library Room 218, 1032 West Sheridan Road, Chicago, IL 60660

Description: The collection includes autographed photographs, correspondence, clipped signatures, magazine articles, photos, and other materials. Letters or other signed documents by Hilaire Belloc, John Buchan, Roy Campbell, Alexis Carrel, Gilbert Keith Chesterton, Christopher Dawson, Thomas Dixon, Leonard Feeney, S.J., Frank Harris, Rudyard Kipling, Douglas MacArthur, George Santayana, Rebecca West, and William Butler Yeats.

Websites with information:

https://www.luc.edu/archives/autographs.shtml

http://www.luc.edu/archives/collectionsatoz/

https://www.luc.edu/archives/manuscripts.shtml

Finding aid:

http://www.luc.edu/media/lucedu/archives/pdfs/autograph_collection.pdf

[0214f] Autograph Collection, 1559-1962 (bulk 1795-1920), MS 393

Location: University of Arizona Libraries, Special Collections, University of Arizona, PO Box 210055, Tucson, AZ 85721-0055

Description: The collection consists mainly of handwritten letters by individuals in Europe and North America. Some files also include original envelopes, newspaper clippings, printed materials, or photographs. Series 1: Louis Schellbach Autograph Collection, 1559-1962, contains letters by Herbert Hoover, Elihu Root, and Wendell Willkie.

Finding aid:

http://www.azarchivesonline.org/xtf/view?docId=ead/uoa/UAMS393.xml

[0214g] Autograph Collection, ca. 1600-1975

Location: L. Tom Perry Special Collections, Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT 84602

Description: Autograph collection of important individuals from several centuries. Files on Luther Burbank, Ralph Adams Cram, Ignatius Donnelly, Thomas A. Edison, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Thomas Stearns Eliot, Rossiter Johnson, Rudyard Kipling, Henry Louis Mencken, Paul Elmer More, Henry Fairfield Osborn, Ezra Loomis Pound, William Allen White, and Owen Wister.

Finding aid:

http://files.lib.byu.edu/ead/XML/VMSS2.xml

[0214h] Autograph collection, 1621-1985, undated, 11 MWalB02467

Location: Robert D. Farber University Archives and Special Collections Department, Brandeis University Libraries, Goldfarb Library, 415 South Street, Waltham, MA 02453

Description: The collection consists of signed documents, correspondence, autograph manuscripts, photographs, and etchings. Letters by Whittaker Chambers, Calvin Coolidge, Rev. Charles E. Coughlin, Thomas E. Dewey, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Gerald Ford, William Randolph Hearst, Richard Nixon, Archibald Roosevelt, Dorothy Thompson, George Viereck, Wendell Willkie, and W. B. Yeats.

Reference:

"Autograph collection, 1621-1985, undated," Brandeis Special Collections Spotlight, December 31, 2011, http://brandeisspecialcollections.blogspot.com/2011/12/autograph-collection-1621-1985-undated.html.

Websites with information:

http://guides.library.brandeis.edu/c.php?g=301922&p=2014838

http://guides.library.brandeis.edu/c.php?g=301741&p=2016964

Finding aid:

http://findingaids.brandeis.edu/repositories/2/resources/32

[0214i] Autograph Collection, ca. 1680-1993, MG 31

Location: The New Jersey Historical Society, 52 Park Place, Newark, NJ 07102

Description: A collection of letters and documents signed by prominent New Jersey and national figures. Includes are letters of Nicholas Murray Butler, John C. Calhoun, Calvin Coolidge, Charles Edison, Thomas A. Edison, Herbert C. Hoover, and Wendell L. Willkie.

Finding aid:

http://www.jerseyhistory.org/findingaid.php?aid=0031

[0214j] Autograph Collection, 1893-2009, UA.01.048

Location: Connelly Library, La Salle University Archives, La Salle University, 1900 W. Olney Ave, Philadelphia, PA 19141

Description: The Autograph Collection includes letters, notes, and other documents signed by prominent political, cultural, and religious figures. Files on James L. Buckley, William F. Buckley, Jr., George H. W. Bush, Robert F. Drinan, Thomas Stearns Eliot, Sam James Ervin, Jr., Philip A. Hart, Sidney Hook, Fritz Machlup, Richard Nixon, George F. Will, and Garry Wills.

Websites with information:

http://www.lasalle.edu/library/universityarchives/finding-aids/

Finding aids:

http://www.lasalle.edu/ConnellyLibrary/Archives/Finding-Aids/UA.01.048.pdf

http://www.lasalle.edu/library/universityarchives/finding-aids/autographs/

[0214k] Autograph File [partly digital collection]

Location: Houghton Library, Harvard College Library, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138

Description: The Autograph File is an alphabetically arranged collection of single letters, manuscripts, and drawings received from various sources at various times. Documents from Louis Agassiz, Irving Babbitt, Hilaire Belloc, Thomas Hart Benton, Orestes Augustus Brownson, Edmund Burke, John Jay Chapman, G. K. Chesterton, Ralph Adams Cram, Thomas Dixon, Ignatius Donnelly, John Dos Passos, Alfred Dreyfus, Irving Fisher, Ernst Franz Sedgwick Hanfstaengl, Sven Hedin, William Ernest Hocking, Hamilton Holt, Herbert Hoover, Rudyard Kipling, Ku Klux Klan, Alfred Massman Landon, Johann von Leers, Clive Staples Lewis, Douglas MacArthur, John Stuart Mill, Paul Elmer More, Richard M. Nixon, Henry Fairfield Osborn, Alexander Mitchell Palmer, Franz von Papen, Gifford Pinchot, Ezra Pound, Kermit Roosevelt, Elihu Root, George Santayana, Oswald Garrison Villard, James Wolcott Wadsworth, Robert DeCourcy Ward, William Allen White, Wendell Lewis Willkie, Owen Wister, and William Butler Yeats.

Websites with information:

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/allFindingAids?_collection=oasis

Finding aids:

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~hou01424

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~hou01425

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~hou01426

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~hou01427

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~hou01429

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~hou01431

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~hou01434

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~hou01435

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~hou01436

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~hou01437

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~hou01438

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~hou01439

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~hou01441

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~hou01442

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~hou01445

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~hou01446

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~hou01447

[0215] Autograph Files, 1783-1983

Location: Archives and Special Collections Library, Vassar College Libraries, Box 20, 124 Raymond Ave., Poughkeepsie, NY 12604-0020

Description: Letters with some manuscripts, speeches, poems, and other items, primarily resulting from an official connection with Vassar College, written by Vassar students, faculty or staff, or of historical and cultural significance. Files on William Benton, Nicholas Murray Butler, James McKeen Cattell, John Jay Chapman, Josephus Daniels, John Dos Passos, Max Eastman, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Henry Pratt Fairchild, Hamilton Fish, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Archibald Henderson, Granville Hicks, Hamilton Holt, Herbert Hoover, Alf M. Landon, Owen Lattimore, Henry Cabot Lodge, H.L. Mencken, John Stuart Mill, Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei, Henry Fairfield Osborn, Ezra Pound, Kenneth Roberts, Carlos P. Romulo, Margaret Sanger, John Spargo, Vilhjálmur Stefánsson, Dorothy Thompson, Oswald Garrison Villard, and Robert M. Yerkes.

Websites with information:

http://specialcollections.vassar.edu/collections/manuscripts/alphanumeric.html

Finding aids:

http://specialcollections.vassar.edu/collections/manuscripts/findingaids/autograph_files.html

http://specialcollections.vassar.edu/findingaids/autograph_files.html

http://64.72.72.152:8080/xtf/view?docId=ead/npv/autograph_files.xml

[0215a] Autograph Letters, ca 1580-ca 1970

Location: Rare Books and Special Collections, McLennan Library Building, 4th floor - 3459 McTavish Street, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec H3A 0C9 Canada

Description: This extensive collection consists of autograph letters from figures of social, intellectual and political importance in Western Europe and North America. Includes correspondence by Louis Agassiz, Thomas Edison, and W.B. Yeats.

Websites with information:

http://www.archives.mcgill.ca/resources/guide/vol2_3/gen08.htm

http://www.archives.mcgill.ca/resources/guide/vol2_3/gen04.htm

[0215b] Ruth Stigler Avery Tulsa Race Riot Archive

Location: Special Collections and Archives, Oklahoma State University - Tulsa Library, 700 N. Greenwood Ave., Tulsa, OK 74106

Description: The Tulsa Race Riot was a large-scale assault by a group of whites on the black community of Tulsa, Oklahoma, on May 31 and June 1, 1921. During the riot, the Greenwood District, also known as 'the Black Wall Street and the wealthiest black community in the United States, was burned to the ground. The archive consists of research notes, photocopied documents, audio tapes and transcripts of interviews, and handwritten and computer generated writings, produced by Ruth Sigler Avery for her proposed book, "Fear, The Fifth Horseman: A Documentary-Anthology of the 1921 Tulsa Race Riot." Series 2: Research. [Subseries]. Source material, contains files on Billy Bruner (head of Tulsa's Ku Klux Klan in the 1920s); Thomas Dixon; Colonel Robert G. Shaver (Grand Dragon of the Arkansas Ku Klux Klan); and Bill Wilkinson (Imperial Wizard and national head of the Ku Klux Klan); and copies of The Negro's Place in Call of Race, by William H. Murray (1948); The Jews and Their Lies, by Dr. Martin Luther (Los Angeles, California: Christian Nationalist Crusade, 1948); The International Jew. The World's Foremost Problem. Abridged from the original as published by Henry Ford, Sr. Foreword by Gerald L.K. Smith, National Director, Christian Nationalistic Crusade; "Abolish the FBI" (Byron, Michigan, Committee to Abolish the FBI) [flyer]; The Clansman. An Historical Romance of the Ku Klux Klan, by Thomas Dixon (1905); The Genocide Plot (United Klans of America); Kloran. 5th Edition, by W.J. Simmons (1918) [photocopy]; The Law of the Land (United Klans of America); A Note from the Grand Klaliff (The Michigan Klan, 1971); "Announcing the Formation of the National Christian Party" (advertisement appearing in the Tulsa Sunday World, 9 Apr 1972); photocopy of a memo from C.E. Hoffman, Grand Dragon, Realm of Oklahoma (Oklahoma City) to all Klansmen, Realm of Oklahoma. 7 Jan 1926, in reference to the entrance of the U.S. into the World Court; and The Technique of Soviet Propaganda. A study presented by the Sub-Committee to Investigate the Administration of the Internal Security Act and other internal security laws of the Committee on the Judiciary U.S. Senate 89th Congress, 2nd Session. 1960.

Websites with information:

http://libraryschool.libguidescms.com/content.php?pid=669757&sid=5546088

http://www.lib.utulsa.edu/speccoll/collections/RaceRiot/related.htm

Finding aids:

https://www.osu-tulsa.okstate.edu/library/Tulsa%20Race%20Riot%20Final.htm

http://libguides.osu-tulsa.okstate.edu/content.php?pid=472496&sid=3867515

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