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[0443a] CIA Declassified Documents Collection [partly digital collection]

Location: National Archives at College Park, MD, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD 20740-6001

Description: In April 1995, the Clinton administration issued Executive Order 12958, mandating that all secret government documents 25 years old or older, and deemed to be of "historical value," be released to the public unless federal agencies sought exemptions for specific files that remained sensitive. The collection contains more than 11 million pages of documents in electronic format that the CIA has declassified since 1995. Files on Arrow Cross Party, Bayerische Volkspartei, Menachem Begin, Junio Valerio Borghese, Ugo Dadone, Léon Degrelle, Stefano Delle Chiaie, Lev E. Dobriansky, Ivan Dochev, Krunoslav Stjepan Draganović, Haj Amin el Husseini, El Salvador death squads, El Salvador right-wing, El Salvador right-wing terrorism, Freedom Party of Austria, Fronte Nazionale, Reinhard Gehlen, Hans Globke, Jörg Haider, Rudolf Hess, Adolf Hitler, Hlinka Guard, Yoshio Kodama, Lyndon H. LaRouche, Johann Von Leers, Likud movement, Richard Nixon, Augusto Pinochet, Ronald Reagan, Hans Ulrich Rudel, Fritz Schwend, Otto Skorzeny, Slovak People's Party, and Ukrainian Congress Committee of America.

Reference:

Bruce Falconer, "Inside the CIA's (Sort of) Secret Document Stash," Mother Jones, Apr. 3, 2009, http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2009/04/cias-open-secrets.

Online index to CREST (CIA Records Search Tool [full-text database]) files by title and date:

http://www.foia.cia.gov/collection/crest-25-year-program-archive

[0444] CIA Name Files - 2nd Release, Records of the Central Intelligence Agency (Record Group 263)

Location: National Archives at College Park, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD 20740-6001

Description: CIA Name Files and Subject Files are composed of documentation on approximately 1100 individuals and subjects. These files include biographical sketches, correspondence, reports, memorandums, messages, telegrams, publications, clippings, dispatches, translations, transcripts, legislative records, legal documents, statements, lists, and other records. Many of the records relate to people in one or both of two categories: Axis personnel accused of committing war crimes, or of belonging to criminal organizations, during World War II; and former Axis personnel who were used by the U. S. as intelligence sources during the Cold War. Contains information on Kodama Yoshio (1911-1984), an ultra right-wing organized crime figure and political power broker in Japan. "The CIA claimed that, in 1934, Kodama founded the Tengyo Society, a right-wing fringe group that sought to bring about a reactionary government by intimidating and murdering leading businessmen and politicians. . . . After release from prison, Kodama started the Japan Youth Movement and quickly gained the attention of many influential arch-conservatives in government and military circles." Files on Stepan Bandera, Krunoslav Stjepan Draganović, Reinhard Gehlen, Adolf Hitler, Johann Von Leers, Otto Remer, Manfred Roeder, Otto Skorzeny, and Viorel Donise Trifa.

References:

Michael Petersen, "The Intelligence That Wasn't: CIA Name Files, the U.S. Army, and Intelligence Gathering in Occupied Japan," in Researching Japanese War Crimes Records: Introductory Essays (Washington, D.C., Nazi War Crimes and Japanese Imperial Government Records: Interagency Working Group, 2006), p. 208; Japanese War Crimes and Related Topics: A Guide to Records at the National Archives, compiled by Greg Bradsher (Washington, D.C.: National Archives, 2006), p. 583, http://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/­Japan/Japanese-War-Crimes-Guide.pdf and http://www.archives.gov/i

wg/japanese-war-crimes/japanese-war-crimes-guide.zip and http://library.uoregon.edu/ec/e-asia/read/jcrimes-g

uide.pdf.

Websites with information:

http://www.archives.gov/iwg/declassified-records/rg-263-cia-records/

http://research.archives.gov/description/640446

Finding aids:

http://www.archives.gov/iwg/declassified-records/rg-263-cia-records/second-release-name-files.pdf

http://www.archives.gov/iwg/declassified-records/rg-263-cia-records/second-release-name-files.html

http://www2.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB150/cia_namesfiles_nara.pdf

http://www.foia.cia.gov/collection/crest-25-year-program-archive

[0445] COSAWR Collection, 1970-1990, BC1005

Location: Manuscripts and Archives, Chancellor Oppenheimer Library, Upper Campus, University of Cape Town, Lovers Walk St, Cape Town, South Africa

Description: The Committee on South African War Resistance (COSAWR) was established to assist war resisters who left South Africa to avoid conscription within the country, and to give support to those who were resisting conscription within the country. Press cuttings and other material related to SA Military, religious and conscientious objectors, international support, End Conscription Campaign, war psychosis, video and audio tapes, other resources. Under the category of South Africa Military and General Files, special attention is given to the role of right wing organisations.

Reference:

Guide to the Manuscripts in the University of Cape Town Libraries. Consolidated Version (UCT Libraries, June 2013), p. 192, http://www.specialcollections.uct.ac.za/sites/default/files/image_tool/images/25/resources/Guide%20to%20Manuscripts%20in%20UCT%20Libraries%20Consolidated%20June%202013.pdf.

Websites with information:

http://uctscholar.uct.ac.za/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=108803&local_base=GEN01

[0445a] CSU Japanese American Digitization Project [digital collection]

Location: Archives and Special Collections Department, California State University Dominguez Hills, 1000 E. Victoria Street, Carson, CA 90747

Description: This collection, generated by a consortium of CSU Archives, features documents, oral histories, photographs, and other materials relating to the incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II. Contains copies of California and the Japanese: A Compilation of Arguments Advertised in Newspapers by the American Committee of Justice in Opposition to the Alien Land Law, Together With the Memorial Addressed by the Said Committee (Oakland, Cal.: The American Committee of Justice, 1920); Digest of the West Coast Newspaper Items, September 24 to October 6, 1945 (United States. War Relocation Authority, 1945), describing the activities of anti-Japanese groups, including the California Preservation Association and the Japanese Exclusion League; Digest of the West Coast Newspaper Items, October 8 to November 2, 1945 (United States. War Relocation Authority, 1945), describing the activities of anti-Japanese groups; and Digest of the West Coast Newspaper Items, December 6, 1945 to January 15, 1946 (United States. War Relocation Authority, 1946), describing a letter to the editor opposing dual citizenship by H.J. McClatchy.

Websites with information:

http://cdm16855.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/

http://csujad.com/csudhcollection.html

Finding aids:

http://digitalcollections.archives.csudh.edu/cdm/landingpage/collection/p16855coll4

http://cdm16855.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/landingpage/collection/p16855coll4

http://cdm16855.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/search/collection/p16855coll4

[0445b] Dozier Cade Papers, 1941-1955, MS.1378

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

Description: Dozier Copeland Cade (1917-2014) was director of the School of Journalism at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, from 1972 to 1978. This collection houses clippings, publications, class materials, and other items documenting Dozier Cade's research into McCarthyism and work as an Assistant Professor of Journalism at Northwestern University from 1941 to 1955. Also included are a variety of materials that Cade accumulated while writing his doctoral dissertation, "A critical analysis of the role of American daily newspapers in the current encroachment by government and society on freedom of expression in the United States" (1954). Files include Material on Federal Anti-Lynch Legislation, undated; Article on Colonel Robert R. McCormick, undated; Materials Regarding McCarthy's Probe of Communists in Government, undated; Materials Regarding the Impact of McCarthyism on the Individual, the Nation, and the Press, undated; Clippings on Historical Background of Red Probe, undated; Clippings on McCarthy's Background and McCarthyism, undated; and Materials on Communist Ideology and Propaganda Techniques and National Security Matters Relating to Communism, undated.

Finding aid:

http://dlc.lib.utk.edu/spc/view?docId=ead/0012_001788_000000_0000/0012_001788_000000_0000.xml;quer

y=;brand=default

[0445c] Patrick Cahill Collection of Belloc and Chesterton Materials, 1909-1973, undated (bulk 1951-1958), MS1986-138

Location: Archives and Manuscripts, John J. Burns Library, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467-3801

Description: Papers pertain to writer Patrick Cahill's research and publication on Hilaire Belloc and G.K. Chesterton. It contains manuscripts and typescripts of Cahill's essays on Belloc and Chesterton; Cahill's research notes; correspondence by Belloc; Distributist League Reports from 1927-1936; a sound recording of Hilaire Belloc; and a photocopy of Hilaire Belloc's will.

Websites with information:

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/33953086

http://www.worldcat.org/title/patrick-cahill-collection-of-belloc-and-chesterton-materials-1909-1973-unda

ted/oclc/33953086

Finding aids:

http://library.bc.edu/finding-aids/MS1986-128-finding-aid.pdf

http://hdl.handle.net/2345/1110

[0446] Mary Steichen Calderone Papers, 1904-1971, 179; M-125

Location: Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard University, 3 James St, Cambridge, MA 02138

Description: Mary Steichen Calderone (1904-1998) was a crusader and pioneer in the field of sex education. Correspondence, speeches, printed material, etc. Series VI. Clippings and Articles on Sex Education Controversy in the United States, 1968-1969, contains clippings and articles, February-June 1969, on the right-wing "hate" campaign waged against Calderone as the focal point of the sex education movement.

Websites with information:

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

Finding aid:

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~sch00177

[0446a] Calgary McCall Progressive Conservative Association of Alberta fonds, 1980-1986

Location: Library & Archives, Glenbow Museum, 130 9th Ave S.E., Calgary, Alberta T2G 0P3, Canada

Description: The Calgary McCall Progressive Conservative Association of Alberta is a political constituency association. Its objects are to promote the interests and principles of the Progressive Conservative Party, and to nominate and support Conservative candidates in provincial and federal elections. The fonds consists of constitution, minutes, correspondence, circulars and lists of executives.

Websites with information:

http://www.albertaonrecord.ca/calgary-mccall-progressive-conservative-association-of-alberta-fonds

http://ww2.glenbow.org/search/archivesMainResults.aspx?TN=MAINCAT&AC=QBE_QUERY&RF=WebResults&

DL=0&RL=0&%0AMF=WPEngMsg.ini&MR=5&QF0=Main%20entry+%7C+Title&QI0=Progressive+Conservative

+Association+of+Alberta+fonds

[0446b] John Caldwell Calhoun Papers, 1784-1980 (bulk 1802-1850), Mss 200,

Location: Special Collections Library, Strom Thurmond Institute Building, Clemson University, 230 Kappa Street, Clemson, SC 29634-3001

Description: John Caldwell Calhoun (1782-1850) was a United States Senator from South Carolina, 16th United States Secretary of State, 7th Vice President of the United States, 10th United States Secretary of War, and member of the U.S. House of Representatives from South Carolina's 6th District. Calhoun was a proponent of nullification and state rights. He strongly expressed his views on that issue when in 1828 he drafted the South Carolina Exposition for the South Carolina State Legislature. The papers consist of agreements, articles, clippings, correspondence, lists, notes, maps, microfilm, photographs, poems, receipts, speeches, statements, a survey book, an autograph draft and a photocopy of the "South Carolina Exposition" and other material.

Websites with information:

http://library.clemson.edu/depts/specialcollections/finding-aids/

Finding aid:

http://media.clemson.edu/library/special_collections/findingaids/Mss/Mss0200r.pdf

[0447] California and West Coast labor and industrial relations, selected publications, 1933-1993 (bulk 1945-1980), IRLE-LB01 [digital collection]

Location: Institute for Research on Labor and Employment Library, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, California 94720-5555

Description: The collection includes original documents, pamphlets, company publications, union reports, student papers and theses. Among the publications are Alert Against Communism in California. Confidential to Subscribers, No. 43, September 20, 1948. Jacoby and Gibbons and Associates, Anti-Subversive Public Relations Specialists; Union Monopoly: Its Cause and Cure, by V. Orval Watts. Studies of the Foundation for Social Research, Vol. III, No. 1, Spring 1954; What to Do About Communism in Unions, No. 2 in the Series. Statement Before a Senate Subcommittee by L.R. Boulware, G.H. Pfeif, and W.J. Barron. Employee and Plant Community Relations, General Electric; Union Monopoly Power: Challenge to Freedom, by Cola G. Parker. National Association of Manufacturers; The Political Responsibility of Businessmen: Its Neglect, The Consequences Thereof, and What Can Be Done About It, by Raymond Moley. New and Revised 1958; Senator Barry Goldwater Speaks Out Against Unrestrained Union Monopoly Power; Personal Freedom and Labor Policy, by Sylvester Petro. Institute of Economic Affairs, New York University; The National Right to Work Committee: the Principle, the Program, the People. National Right to Work Committee, 1959; Facts About The National Right to Work Committee. Section 4 - Special No. 12. Group Research, Inc., December 13, 1962; and National Right to Work Newsletter, Vol. 30, No. 9. National Right to Work Committee, September 30, 1984.

Finding aids:

http://pdf.oac.cdlib.org/pdf/berkeley/cabeurle/lb01.pdf

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt2779q6pf/entire_text/

Digital files for Facts About The National Right to Work Committee (Washington, D.C., Group Research, Inc., 1962):

Description: The National Right to Work Committee (NRTWC), founded in 1955, advocates anti-union legislation. Group Research, Inc., monitored right-wing publications, movements, and broadcasters. This report mentions America's Future, Inc., American Farm Bureau Federation, American Enterprise Association, American Taxpayers' League, Americans for Constitutional Action, Tom Anderson, anti-black, anti-Communism, anti-income tax, anti-Roosevelt, anti-Semitic, Arkansas Free Enterprise Association, L. Nelson Bell, George S. Benson, Ezra Taft Benson, Blue Book (John Birch Society) [online at https://ia800307.us.archive.org/13/items/TheBlueBook/MicrosoftWord-Document1.pdf], Lemuel R. Boulware, Owen Brewster, William Buckley, S. D. "Duke" Cadwallader, Wofford B. Camp, F. Gano Chance, Christian Crusade, Christian Freedom Foundation, Christian Economics, Christian American Association, Inc., Christianity Today, Committee for Constitutional Government, Committee for Equal Anti-Trust Protection, Communism, "Communism on the Map" (filmstrip), "Communist Encirclement" (filmstrip), Conservative Society of America, Rev. John E. Coogan, S.J., Council for Individual Freedom, Kent Courtney, Phoebe Courtney, DeMille Foundation for Political Freedom (DeMille Political Freedoms Foundation), Cecil B. DeMille, Edwin S. Dillard, James L. Doenges, the du Ponts, Robert A. Englander, Farm and Ranch (Tom Anderson), Rev. James W. Fifield, Jr., For America, Foundation for Economic Education, Maurice Franks, P. M. French, Senator Goldwater, Percy L. Greaves, William J. Grede, Glenn A. Green, Alfred P. Haake, Harding College, Rev. Billy James Hargis, William Taylor Harrison, Merwin K. Hart, Fred A. Hartley, Albert W. Hawkes, Heritage Foundation, Human Events, Sherwood Ide, Intercollegiate Society of Individualists, John Birch Society, James T. Karam, Howard Kershner, John Henry Kirby, Walter Knott, Knott's Berry Farm, William F. Knowland, Senator William F. Knowland, Fred Koch, Labor Digest, Labor Policy Association, Reed Larson, Liberty League, Marvin Liebman, Manion Forum, Karl Mundt, Vance Muse, National Committee for Political Realignment, National Committee for Union Shop Abolition, National Council for Labor's Rank and File, National Committee for Economic Freedom (income-tax repeal group), National Association of Manufacturers, National Labor-Management Foundation, National Right to Work Federation, National Council of State Legislators, New Guard (Young Americans for Freedom), Edward O'Neal, Organization for the Repeal of Federal Income Taxes, Cola G. Parker, George Peck, Sylvester Petro, Pro America, John J. Raskob, Ronald Reagan, Henry Regnery, Donald R. Richberg, right-to-work, E. Merrill Root, Allen W. Rucker, Dr. Fred Schwarz, Alfred P. Sloan, Gerald L. K. Smith, Southern States Industrial Council, Southern Tariff Association, Southern Committee to Uphold the Constitution, strike-breaking, Taft-Hartley Act, The Independent American, Nathan Thorington, Tool Owners Union, Senator John Tower, U. S. Chamber of Commerce, Veterans Industrial Association, We The People!, and Young Americans for Freedom.

http://content.cdlib.org/ark:/28722/bk0003z7b8t

http://content.cdlib.org/ark:/28722/bk0003z7b8t/FID1

http://cdn.calisphere.org/data/28722/8t/bk0003z7b8t/files/bk0003z7b8t-FID1.pdf

http://www.prwatch.org/files/rtw_group_research.pdf

[0447a] California and Western Manuscript Collection, ca. 1760-1973, M0119

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

Description: Small collections and miscellaneous single items pertaining to various periods, persons, and phases of California history (1760-1963). Includes letters, journals, diaries, reports, financial and legal documents, pictures, and maps. A copy of American Citizen, San Rafael, May 15, 1936 [a right-wing newspaper]; a letter, typed papers, and a pamphlet by Franklin Hichborn; letters by Hiram W. Johnson; and Personal Recollections of Thomas H. Benton by Edward Dobyns (1882).

Finding aids:

http://cdn.calisphere.org/data/13030/c4/tf7w1006c4/files/tf7w1006c4.pdf

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf7w1006c4/entire_text/

[0448] California Biography Collection, 1827-2001, BIO COLL [ephemera collection]

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

Description: The collection consists of ephemeral items relating to people widely known and relatively unknown in California. Files on Luther Burbank, Dwight D. Eisenhower, William Randolph Hearst, Herbert Hoover, Senator William Knowland, General Douglas MacArthur, John Francis Neylan, Richard Milhous Nixon, Dr. Paul Popenoe, and Ronald Reagan.

Finding aids:

http://pdf.oac.cdlib.org/pdf/chs/bio_coll.pdf

http://cdn.calisphere.org/data/13030/xk/kt8199s2xk/files/kt8199s2xk.pdf

[0449] California Ephemera Collection, 1841-2001 (bulk 1880-1980), CA EPH [ephemera collection]

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

Description: The collection consists of a wide range of ephemera pertaining to the state of California and each of its constituent counties, excluding the City and County of San Francisco. Types of ephemera include: advertisements; brochures; folders; programs; leaflets; pamphlets; announcements; guides; maps; tickets; invitations; newsletters; constitutions and bylaws; surveys and reports; directories and listings; fliers; badges and ribbons; ballots; dance cards; invitations; catalogues; report cards and syllabi; journals and journal articles; and newspaper clippings. Files on America First Committee of California, Inc., California Crusaders, Christian Anti-Communism Crusade, Christian Nationalist Crusade, Eugenics Society of Northern California, Greenback Party, Ku Klux Klan, Loyalty oaths, San Francisco Bay Region School of Anti-Communism, and Ukrainian Congress Committee of America, Inc.

Finding aid:

http://pdf.oac.cdlib.org/pdf/chs/ca_eph.pdf

[0450] California Ephemera Collection, 1860- , Coll. 200 [partly digital collection; ephemera collection]

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

Description: Collection consists of broadsides, clippings, brochures, and other ephemeral materials relating to California. Subjects include: abortion, birth control, Luther Burbank, William Randolph Hearst, Japanese in California - Pre World War II, Hiram Johnson, David Starr Jordan, William Fife Knowland, Robert Andrews Millikan, John Francis Neylan, Paul Popenoe, Ronald Reagan, UNESCO - Los Angeles. Los Angeles Public School controversy, and others. Documents relating to Japanese in California - Pre World War II include Assembly bill no. 78: an act to regulate the ownership or possession of land by aliens, January 8, 1909; Campaign Committee of Asiatic Exclusion League of California, August 9, 1910; Men and women! Protect your homes from loathsome Oriental diseases! ca. 1910; Our Japanese question, ca. 1910; White or Jap: which? 1908; Anti-Jap Laundry League report for 1911, January 11, 1912; Will the Japanese predominate? June 1909; Does the savings justify the risk? ca. 1910; Check the Japanese industrial invasion, January 1912; Jap-laundry patrons: attention! ca. 1910; In the interest of peace with Japan patronize white industries only, June 1913; and Can we count on you? 1908.

Finding aid:

http://cdn.calisphere.org/data/13030/ng/tf5f59p0ng/files/tf5f59p0ng.pdf

[0451] The California Loyalty Oath Digital Collection [digital collection]

Location: University Archives, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720-6000

Description: The California Loyalty Oath Digital Collection brings together a selection of documents and images from the holdings of four repositories at the University of California: the University Archives, The Bancroft Library, UC Berkeley; the University Archives, Young Research Library, UCLA; the Scripps Institution of Oceanography Archives, UC San Diego; and the Office of the Secretary of the Regents, Oakland. The collection comprises more than 3500 pages of electronic text, more than 30 pictorial images, and 15 audio clips, which document the controversy (1949-1951) that damaged the University during the McCarthy Era. Contains letters from Robert Donner to Helen R. MacGregor, Private Secretary to Governor Earl Warren, September 20, 1950; to John Francis Neylan, June 22, 1950; and to Neylan, October 12, 1950; a letter to the Editor, Life Magazine, from Jack B. Tenney, October 25, 1950; a letter from John Francis Neylan to Sidney Hook, November 28, 1950; statements of John Francis Neylan, ca. 1949, 1949, and February 28, 1950; and a letter from George W. Robnett to John Francis Neylan, April 12, 1950.

Reference:

David Farrell and Kathryn M. Neal, "California Loyalty Oath Digital Collection Debuts … and Wins a James Madison Freedom of Information Award," Bancroftiana 132 (Spring 2008), p. 10, http://digitalassets.lib.berkeley.edu/bancroftiana/ucb/text/bancroftiana_132.pdf.

Websites with information:

http://bancroft.berkeley.edu/collections/loyaltyoath.html

Finding aid:

http://bancroft.berkeley.edu/collections/loyaltyoath/

[0452] California Political Publication and Ephemera Collection, 1936-1989 (bulk 1964-1974), MS-R14

Location: Special Collections and Archives, The UC Irvine Libraries, University of California, Irvine, P.O. Box 19557, Irvine, CA 92623-9557

Description: This collection comprises political publications and ephemera distributed in California from 1936 to 1989. Materials document the activities of California and Orange County legislators, politicians, and officials. The majority of the materials relate to Orange County, California. The collection includes newsletters and news releases, campaign pamphlets and newspapers, campaign posters, and several sample ballots as well as distributions from political associations such as Young Americans for Freedom. Contains materials relating to Barry Goldwater, Alf M. Landon, Ronald Reagan, John G. Schmitz, James B. Utt, and Young Americans for Freedom.

Websites with information:

http://libguides.lib.uci.edu/content.php?pid=14352&sid=178380

http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/guidedisplay.pl?index=u000034

Finding aids:

http://pdf.oac.cdlib.org/pdf/uci/spcoll/r14.pdf

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf5580068c/

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf5580068c/entire_text/

[0453] California Republican Assembly Records, 1936-, Collection 2039

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

Description: The California Republican Assembly (CRA), a statewide volunteer organization, was founded in 1934. The CRA furnished Republican candidates with preprimary endorsements as well as financial and volunteer support. The assembly wielded a major influence on modern American politics by serving as a model for other party auxiliaries, such as the California Democratic Council. The collection consists of minutes of board meetings, CRA documents and publications, clippings, correspondence, scrapbooks, election campaign materials, and photographs. Materials on anti-New Deal/Roosevelt books, pamphlets, etc. ca. 1936-38, Barry Goldwater, Herbert Hoover, William Knowland, Alf Landon, Ronald Reagan, John H. Rousselot, John Schmitz, Robert A. Taft, Wendell L. Willkie, and J. Arthur Younger.

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/ft9b69p1ft/entire_text/

[0453a] California Republican Assembly Records, 1955-1969, MS-R128

Location: Special Collections and Archives, The UCI Libraries, P.O. Box 19557, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, California 92623-9557

Description: The California Republican Assembly (CRA), founded in 1932, is a grassroots political organization that promotes conservative values, policies, and candidates related to the Republican Party. Over the years CRA has supported several winning candidates in the national political arena and has helped shape politics in California. Materials include bylaws, meeting minutes, convention materials, and reports.

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt7c6036fk/entire_text/

[0454] Records of California Rural Legal Assistance, Inc. (CRLA)

Location: Department of Special Collections and University Archives, Stanford University Libraries, 557 Escondido Mall, Stanford, California 94305-6064

Description: Founded in 1966 with funding from the Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO), CRLA provides direct legal services to the low income rural population in California, particularly to migrant farmworkers. On December 26, 1970, Ronald Reagan (then Governor of California) vetoed a $1.8 million OEO grant for CRLA's 1971 refunding. His veto was based on a report compiled by Lewis K. Uhler, a former member of the John Birch Society, who had been appointed by Reagan as director of the state's OEO. Uhler submitted to Reagan a report entitled A Study and Evaluation of California Rural Legal Assistance, Inc. (the Uhler Report). The report listed 127 incidents of alleged CRLA misconduct. In response to the outcry against the veto, the new director of the OEO, Frank Carlucci, formed a commission to investigate the claims contained in the Uhler Report. The commission concluded that the charges were irrelevant or unfounded, and its OEO funding was extended. In addition to copies of CRLA's responses to the Uhler Report, records related to this controversy held in the collection include news clippings, press releases, pleadings, hearing transcripts, correspondence, and commission reports, as wells as many letters of support for CRLA sent to President Nixon, Reagan, and Carlucci from a wide range of supporters, including other legal service organizations, law schools, politicians, labor organizations, religious groups, and individual attorneys and clients.

Websites with information:

http://lib.stanford.edu/special-collections-university-archives-blog/crla-and-uhler-report-controversy

[0455] California Surveillance Collection, 1929-1940, larc.ms.0124

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 California Surveillance Collection consists primarily of undercover agent reports and other materials documenting the activities of labor organizations and organizations on the left, 1934-1940, including the Communist Party of San Francisco, and labor leader Harry Bridges. The materials were possibly gathered or created by Harper Knowles during his tenure as director of the Radical Research Committee, later the Subversive Activities Committee, of the American Legion in San Francisco, and Stanley M. Doyle, an associate of Harper Knowles. Series 1: California Surveillance Files, 1934-1940, includes material on the Industrial Association, a San Francisco organization of banks and employers created in 1921 to promote the so-called American Plan, an anti-union effort based on the open shop. Also included are advertising for conservative publications; campaigns against taxes; "A Professor Quits the Communist Party" (reprinted by the Industrial Association); "CIO 'Functionaries' Compiled by American Vigilant Intelligence Federation" (August 1938); Statement by the American Legion to the Dies Committee (October 21, 1938); and a brief prepared by the American Legion, charging Harry Bridges with being subject to deportation.

Reference:

Simon James Judkins, "Under Prying Eyes: Repression, Surveillance and Exposure in California, 1918-1939" (M.A., Victoria University of Wellington, 2014), http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/xmlui/bitstream/handle/­10063

/3557/thesis.pdf.

Websites with information:

http://www.library.sfsu.edu/about/depts/larc/pdfs/larc-holdings.pdf

Finding aids:

http://pdf.oac.cdlib.org/pdf/sfsu/larc/casurveillance.pdf

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c81v5fxt/entire_text/

[0455a] California Tax Reform Association Collection

Location: California History Room, California State Library, Library and Courts Building II, 900 N. Street, Room 200, P.O. Box 942837, Sacramento, California 94237-0001

Description: A group of Californians formed the California Tax Reform Association in 1976 to promote tax reform. The goals were to abolish tax privileges and loopholes, cut property tax and taxes through a more progressive income tax, eliminate levies which hinder small business and redirect the support of education, welfare, and medi-Cal away from the property tax. The collection consists of mass mailings, brochures, clippings, and newsletters.

Websites with information:

http://catalog.library.ca.gov/F/GMDTY1PH76J4KNY6F9524FJC6KPTR3GJG9RGK2UYSTE56L38MQ-27731?fun

c=full-set-set&set_number=000205&set_entry=000001&format=999

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf609nb104/entire_text/

[0456] California Townsend Club records, 1939-1969, Bx 181

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

Description: Earl Tifft was the state director of the California club (chapter) of the Townsend Plan. The collection includes Townsend newsletters and convention materials, Townsend Plan constitution and bylaws, dissolution information, and testimony to the Ways and Means committee, International Members Council interviews, minutes, correspondence, financial records, reel-to-reel audio, memorabilia, a photograph, broadsides, and material from the Le Habre Townsend Club, the Pasadena Townsend Club, the Townsend Clubs of Southern California, and the Greater L.A. Advisory Council.

Websites with information:

http://library.uoregon.edu/tools/blogs/scua/newly-available-collection-california-townsend-club-records/

Finding aid:

http://nwda.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv62515

[0457] California Un-American Activities Committees Records, 1935-1977, Coll. 93-04-12; 93-04-16

Location: California State Archives, 1020 "O" Street, Sacramento, California 95814

Description: In response to allegations that Communists had infiltrated the State Relief Administration, the California State Legislature began in 1940 what was to become a thirty-one-year investigation into un-American activities in California. The legislative committees, variously named, produced or received thousands of documents, audiotapes, approximately 125,000 index cards tracking an estimated 20,000 individuals or organizations, and Dictaphone audio disks. Topics include labor and labor unions; public schools and education; Hollywood and the motion picture industry; civil rights; universities and colleges (in particular, the University of California-Berkeley, the University of California-Los Angeles, and San Francisco State University); political parties (including the California Democratic Party, the American Communist Party, the Los Angeles County Communist Party, and the Black Panther Party); the Soviet Union and Soviet-American relations; Communism in China and Vietnam; fascist and Nazi movements in America; and, the anti-war and peace movements. The Committees paid attention to specific events as well, including the Alger Hiss trial.

Reference:

Records in the California State Archives for the Study of Labor History (Sacramento, California State Archives, 2015), pp. 21-22, http://archives.cdn.sos.ca.gov/pdf/ref-guide-labor.pdf.

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/ft9p3007qg/entire_text/

[0457a] Californians to Defeat Rose Bird Collection

Location: California History Room, California State Library, Library and Courts Building II, 900 N. Street, Room 200, P.O. Box 942837, Sacramento, California 94237-0001

Description: Rose Elizabeth Bird was the first woman ever to serve on the California Supreme Court. Appointed by Gov. Edmund G. Brown, Jr. in January 1975, she became Chief Justice March 16, 1977. In 1985, Californians to Defeat Rose Bird, led by Howard Jarvis and Paul Gann, and other citizens' groups began to campaign to remove her from office for having voted to vacate death sentences 61 times. She lost her seat in an election held in 1986. Clippings, press releases, notes, flyers, photographs, reports, audio and video tapes regarding the campaign to remove Chief Justice Rose Bird from the California Supreme Court. Files on Crime Victims for Court Reform, California Coalition for Court Reform, National Right to Work, Citizens for Law & Order, and Pro-Life Council.

Websites with information:

http://catalog.library.ca.gov/F/GMDTY1PH76J4KNY6F9524FJC6KPTR3GJG9RGK2UYSTE56L38MQ-28374?fun

c=full-set-set&set_number=000214&set_entry=000004&format=999

Finding aids:

http://pdf.oac.cdlib.org/pdf/csl/rosebird.pdf

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf8f59n9bn/entire_text/

[0458] Call To Action Records, 1976-2009, MSS0076

Location: Special Collections and Archives, John T. Richardson Library, DePaul University, 2350 N Kenmore Ave, Room 314, Chicago, IL 60614

Description: Call to Action (CTA) is an organization of Catholics established in 1978 in response to the 1976 U.S. Bishops Call to Action Conference in Detroit, Michigan. In 1990, the Call to Action board developed a Call for Reform in the Catholic Church, a pastoral letter capsulizing the organization's cry for a church responsive to the world's needs and a call for the church to examine its own record on issues of justice, equality, and participation. The statement or pastoral letter was printed as a full page advertisement in the New York Times on Ash Wednesday 1990 [i.e., Feb. 28, 1990, p. B4], along with the names of 4,500 signers and an invitation for more signatures. (The Call for Reform in the Catholic Church is reprinted at http://www.ctaww.org/documents/a_call_for_reform.htm.) The Call To Action records include publications created or collected by the organization, ready reference files documenting issues such as peace and justice, celibacy for priests, birth control, ordination for women, clergy sex abuse, and the nuclear disarmament movement. It also contains files about Call to Action's Annual Conference, their Performing Arts Ministry, and the 1990 Call to Reform pastoral letter. Series 001.002: Other Publications 1947-2008, contains files on Conservative Catholic Influence in Europe 1997 and Opposing Organizations 1992-1997. Series 005.004: Subject Files 1984-2003, contains a file on Right-wing opposition to CTA.

Websites with information:

http://libguides.depaul.edu/catholic

http://libguides.depaul.edu/CommunityArchives/catholic

http://libguides.depaul.edu/CommunityArchives/socialjustice

http://libguides.depaul.edu/content.php?pid=606113&sid=5002856

http://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/883629712

Finding aids:

http://lgdata.s3-website-us-east-1.amazonaws.com/docs/674/1144336/CallToAction.pdf

http://lgdata.s3-website-us-east-1.amazonaws.com/docs/674/1144413/Call_To_Action__Finding_Aid.pdf

http://www.catholicresearch.net/data/ead/html/dep-dpu_ead_mss0076.html

[0459] Patrick Henry Callahan Papers, 1908-1939, CLN

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

Description: Chiefly mimeographed copies of "Callahan Correspondence" letters, 1923-1939, involving Monsignor John A. Ryan, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Joseph Kennedy, Josephus Daniels, H.L. Mencken, and others; concerning such topics as Hitler, Father Coughlin, pacifism, anti-Semitism, profit sharing, and religious tolerance.

Websites with information:

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

http://archives.nd.edu/guide.txt

Finding aid:

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

[0460] Patrick Henry Callahan Papers, 1910-1940, ACUA 019

Location: The American Catholic History Research Center and University Archives, The Catholic University of America, Washington, D.C. 20064

Description: Patrick Henry Callahan (1866-1940) was president of the Louisville Varnish Company and a Catholic layman, active in social reform organizations. Correspondents include Monsignor John A. Ryan and John Raskob. The collection includes correspondence on his various activities, both received and sent, typed or handwritten, on regular and mimeographed paper. Also included are newspaper clippings, publications, and certificates. Mimeographed copies of "Callahan Correspondence" (ca. 1922-1940), circulated nationally by Callahan, discussing such topics as anti-Catholicism, H.L. Mencken, Hitler, Senator Glass, the Knights of Columbus Oath, Senator Nye, Father Charles Coughlin, and anti-Semitism.

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/callahan.cfm

http://archives.lib.cua.edu/findingaid/callahan.cfm?fullsite=1

http://www.catholicresearch.net/data/ead/html/cua-Callahan.html

http://www.aladin0.wrlc.org/gsdl/collect/faids/import/CUcallahan.shtml

[0461] Patrick Henry Callahan papers, 1925-1938 and undated, 85894 Aa 2

Location: Michigan Historical Collections, Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan, 1150 Beal Ave., Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2113

Description: Callahan (1866-1940), a lay Catholic leader, worked in the varnish manufacturing industry, first in Cleveland, later with the Louisville Varnish Company in Kentucky. In addition, Callahan was involved in several organizations, such as the Catholic Industrial Conference and the National Catholic Charities Conference. Callahan was also involved in other causes, many of these relating to his support of the Prohibition (or Eighteenth) Amendment. The papers consist of newsletters and other materials relating to his interest in temperance and the politics of temperance.

Websites with information:

http://bentley.umich.edu/EAD/ead_cd.htm

Finding aids:

http://quod.lib.umich.edu/b/bhlead/umich-bhl-85894?rgn=main;view=text

http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/f/findaid/findaid-idx?c=bhlead;id=navbarbrowselink;cginame=findaid-idx;cc=bhlead

;view=reslist;subview=standard;didno=umich-bhl-85894

[0461a] Cambridge Exhibition Against Fascism and War, 1935 (CDG-B Great Britain)

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

Description: The Cambridge Exhibition Against Fascism and War, organized by the Cambridge Anti-War Council, took place at St. Andrew's Hall, Cambridge, on November 4-9, 1935, and 27 Soho Square, London, November 13-17, 1935. The exhibition included a letter from Ezra Pound to F. L. Lucas, 1935, on the Italian invasion of Abyssinia.

References:

Matthias Schüth, Englands politische Universitätsjugend, 1931-1940: ein Beitrag zur Erforschung politischer Kollektivmentalitäten im Europa der dreissiger Jahre (Münster: LIT Verlag, 2001), p. 371; Amy Margaret Lilly, "'This way to the exhibition': Woolf, Joyce, Rhys and the 1930s fascist culture of exhibitions" (Ph.D., University of Iowa, 2002); Amy M. Lilly, "Three Guineas, Two Exhibits: Woolf's Politics of Display," Woolf Studies Annual 9 (2003), pp. 29-54; "F. L. Lucas," https://en.wikipedia.org/­wiki/F._L._Lucas.

Websites with information:

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

[0462] Wofford Benjamin Camp Papers, 1919-1983, Mss 165

Location: Special Collections Library, Strom Thurmond Institute Building, Clemson University, 230 Kappa Street, Clemson, SC 29634-3001

Description: Wofford B. Camp (1894-1986) was a leader in agricultural innovation in California, government official in the United States Department of Agriculture, and supporter of a variety of conservative causes. He was a proponent of Right-to-Work issues. The Subject Correspondence Series, 1924-1983, includes files on Tom Anderson, anti-Communism, John Birch Society, Christian Anti-Communism, Lt. General Mark W. Clark, Communism, Connally Amendment, Dean Manion Forum, Dr. James W. Fifield, Jr., Henry Ford, Foundation for Constitutional Education, Freedoms Foundation-Valley Forge, Barry Goldwater, Alger Hiss, Herbert Hoover, J. Edgar Hoover, the House Un-American Activities Committee, Human Events, James J. Kilpatrick, David Lawrence, Liberty Belles, Incorporated, Joseph McCarthy, Dean Manion, Operation Abolition, John H. Rousselot, Allan Shivers, Senator Robert Taft, and Strom Thurmond.

Websites with information:

http://library.clemson.edu/depts/specialcollections/finding-aids/

http://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/data/43453448

Finding aids:

http://media.clemson.edu/library/special_collections/findingaids/Mss/Mss1651.pdf

http://media.clemson.edu/library/special_collections/findingaids/Mss/Mss1652.pdf

[0463] Campaign Collection, 1800-1972

Location: Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Libraries, 222 Waverly Avenue, Syracuse, NY 13244-2010

Description: The Campaign Collection consists of ribbons, campaign literature, posters, photographs, clippings, and more relating to nearly two hundred years of American political campaigns. Contains candidate information, literature, memorabilia, photographs, bumper stickers, and speeches relating to the campaigns of Barry Goldwater/William Miller (1964), Everett M. Dirksen (1952), Eisenhower/Nixon (1952, 1956), Herbert Hoover (1928, 1932), Alf Landon/Frank Knox (1936), D. MacArthur (1948), Robert A. Taft (1948, 1952), Strom Thurmond/Fielding L. Wright (States Rights Party, 1948), and Wendell Willkie (1940, 1945). Literature from the Committee for Constitutional Government. Taft campaign song, 1948. Anti-Roosevelt literature, 1940. Literature on the Republican Party, Republican National Convention 1942-1948, and Taft-Hartley Law 1948.

Websites with information:

http://findingaids.syr.edu/xtf/search?brand=ead;collection=ead;sort=title;titleAlpha=CC;

http://library.syr.edu/digital/guides/ead/subj_list_from_db.htm

Finding aids:

http://library.syr.edu/digital/guides/c/campaign_coll.htm

http://library.syr.edu/digital/guides/print/campaign_coll_prt.htm

[0463a] Campaign for a Hate Free Oregon records, 1989-1993, Mss 2988-3

Location: Oregon Historical Society Research Library, 1200 SW Park Avenue, Portland, OR 97205

Description: Ballot Measure 9 on the 1992 general election ballot in Oregon was an attempt by the Oregon Citizens Alliance (OCA) to amend the Oregon constitution to prohibit the enactment of laws by the state, counties, or cities that outlaw discrimination against homosexual or bisexual persons, and to require public schools in Oregon to teach students that homosexuality was "wrong," "unnatural," "perverse," and "abnormal." The Campaign for a Hate Free Oregon (CHFO) was a political organization formed to defeat Measure 9. The organization was also known as the Right To Privacy PAC and the "No On 9" campaign of 1992-1993. Records include correspondence, contribution lists, records and receipts of expenditures, bank statements, volunteer and employee logs, election reports to the Oregon Secretary of State, and organizing and strategy materials. Series A: Right to Privacy PAC - Campaign For A Hate Free Oregon: No On 9 Campaign Materials, 1989-1993, contains Analysis of Passage of Amendment 2 in Colorado and Defeat of Measure 9 in Oregon, circa 1992; a copy of the Springfield Charter Amendment (1992) (an anti-gay charter amendment written by the OCA and adopted by Springfield, Oregon, voters (56%-44%) on May 19, 1992); Text of Measure 9 & Background on OCA (circa 1992); a copy of Freedom Journal (OCA PAC, n.d.), which includes articles such as "Gay rights degrades Black Americans, other minorities"; "Homosexuality is not a minority"; and "Homosexuals are a rich class demanding special rights at the expense of true minorities"; a copy of The Oregon Witness (July 1992), which investigates the Oregon Citizens Alliance and the Christian Right; and miscellaneous information about the OCA, including a report from a private investigator (1992-1993).

Finding aid:

http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv33694

[0464] Campaign for an Independent Britain Collection, 1961-2008, Ref. No. CIB

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

Description: The Common Market Safeguards Campaign was formed in 1969. After the post-entry referendum (1975), the name was changed to Safeguard Britain Campaign in 1976 and changed again in 1982 to the British Anti-Common Market Campaign. It changed its name to the Campaign for an Independent Britain in 1990. Papers of the Campaign for an Independent Britain (CIB), including minutes of meetings, financial records, press releases, newsletters, pamphlets, journals, correspondence, and publicity material. This collection includes the papers of related/predecessor organisations such as the Anti-Common Market League and the National Referendum Campaign.

Websites with information:

http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/library/2015/10/01/papers-of-alan-sked-released-ukip/

http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/accessions/2009/09digests/politics.htm

Finding aid:

http://archives.lse.ac.uk/Record.aspx?src=CalmView.Catalog&id=CIB

[0465] Campaign For International Co-Operation And Disarmament (CICD) Collection, 1892-1988; 1991 (bulk 1953-1988), 79/152; 87/92; 87/93; 88/107; 88/121

Location: University of Melbourne Archives, Cultural Collections Reading Room, 3rd floor, Baillieu Library, University of Melbourne, Grattan St, Parkville VIC 3010, Australia

Description: The Australian and New Zealand Congress for International Co-operation and Disarmament, later known as the Congress for International Co-operation and Disarmament (CICD) and after circa 1987 as the Campaign for International Co-operation and Disarmament, was established at an international Peace Congress staged in Melbourne in 1959. It was set up to support the ideals of the World Congress for Disarmament and International Co-operation, held in Stockholm in 1958. Includes the anti-Communist brochure "Unmasking the Moratorium" (May 1970), published by Citizens for Freedom (a right-wing organisation), and leaflets published by Jennifer McCallum, the leader of People Against Communism (a right-wing extremist group).

Finding aids:

http://www.lib.unimelb.edu.au/collections/archives/collections/pdfs/cicd.pdf

http://gallery.its.unimelb.edu.au/imu/imu.php?request=multimedia&irn=5114

[0465a] Campaign for the 48 States television broadcast transcripts, 1956

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

Description: Relates to the Byrd-Bridges bill to limit the size of the federal budget, and the Reed-Dirksen bill to reform the income tax laws.

Websites with information:

http://searchworks.stanford.edu/view/4086542

[0465b] Campaign Life Coalition Fonds, R5937

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

Description: Campaign Life Coalition is a Canadian pro-life organization, established in Winnipeg in 1978. The series Correspondence with Organizations and Donors contains files on Alliance for Life; Anglicans for Life; Campaign Life of Canada; Catholic Women's League; Coalition for the Protection of Human Life; Prayers for Life; and Pro-Life Groups - Canada. The series Subject Files contains files on Abortion Law: USA - Correspondence; Abortion Laws - Reports; Campaign Life Coalition - Mission - Goals - "Pro-Life Manifesto"; Coalition for the Protection of Human Life; "News Exchange of the World Federation of Doctors Who Respect Human Life"; and Pro-Life Groups - Correspondence - Reports.

Finding aid:

http://data2.archives.ca/pdf/pdf001/p000000735.pdf

[0466] Campaign Materials Collection, 1892-2014, Pam 05

Location: Archives and Special Collections, Maureen and Mike Mansfield Library, University of Montana-Missoula, Missoula, MT 59812

Description: This collection contains materials related to political campaigns and movements from the 1890s to the 2010s. Much of the collection includes candidate-specific materials, such as bumper stickers, newsletters, and posters. It also includes party publications, such as official platforms and handbooks; literature published by interest group organizations; and government publications. Includes copies of "1936 Psalm," an anti-Roosevelt poem; "Promise and Performance," an anti-Roosevelt booklet published by the Republican National Committee (1936); anti-Roosevelt literature from the Republican National Committee, the American Liberty League, and other groups (1940); booklets (3) published by T.J. Priestley of Philadelphia containing anti-New Deal, anti-Federal Reserve, and anti-Communist literature (1949); "Labor Bosses on the New Frontier," an anti-labor, anti-Kennedy brochure directed at Republican precinct workers (1961); The Red Record of Senator Claude Pepper; "Revolution on Campus," a mailer distributed by various Truth about Civil Turmoil [TACT] committees promoting a talk by David Emerson Gumaer on the subject of radicalism on college campuses; and campaign materials related to political campaigns for John Ashbrook, Dwight Eisenhower, Barry Goldwater, Herbert Hoover, Hiram Johnson, Alf Landon, Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, George Wallace, Burton K. Wheeler, and Wendell Willkie.

Finding aids:

http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv79681

http://nwda.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv79681

[0466a] Jameson G. Campaigne papers, 1945-1986, Coll. 86020

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

Description: Jameson G. Campaigne (1914-1985) was an American journalist and editor of the Indianapolis Star, 1960-1969. Correspondence, newspaper columns and other writings, printed matter, and photographs, relating to journalism and conservative political thought in the United States, and to American domestic and foreign policy.

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt396nf0dk/entire_text/

[0467] Carroll Campbell Papers, 1978-1986 (bulk 1982-1985)

Location: Special Collections Library, Strom Thurmond Institute Building, Clemson University, 230 Kappa Street, Clemson, SC 29634-3001

Description: Carroll Ashmore Campbell, Jr. (1940-2005) served South Carolina in Congress (1979-1987) and as Governor (1987-1995). The series Topical contains files on Abortion (Human Life Bill/ Right to Life Act of 1981, Hyde Amendment (Limiting Federal Funds), Respect Human Life Act of 1983 & Hyde/Jepson Respect Life Bill, Unborn Children's Civil Rights Act of 1985 (S. 46)); Civil Rights (Civil Rights Act, Equal Rights Amendment (ERA), Gay Rights, Civil Rights Restoration Act, Voting Rights Act:); Health (Birth Control, Parental Notification; Euthanasia); Labor (Right to Work); Law and Order (Ku Klux Klan); Tax Reform Immediately (TRIM); and Strom Thurmond.

Websites with information:

http://library.clemson.edu/depts/specialcollections/finding-aids/

Finding aid:

http://media.clemson.edu/library/special_collections/findingaids/manuscripts/mss087Campbell/Mss087Cam

pbellUSC.pdf

[0467a] Clarence G. Campbell Collection, 1921-1938, CGC

Location: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Archives, 1 Bungtown Road, Cold Spring Harbor, NY 11724

Description: Clarence G. Campbell (1868-1956) was a noted eugenicist and first president of the Eugenics Research Association as well as the president of the American Eugenics Society in the late 1920s. He was a regular contributor to Eugenical News (the official publication of The Eugenics Research Association) and Eugenics (the official publication of American Eugenics Society). The collection consists of typescripts or reprints of articles, news clippings, ephemera, and letters. Correspondents include Charles B. Davenport, Eugenics Research Association, Irving Fisher, Madison Grant, Cora B. S. Hodson, Harry H. Laughlin, C. C. Little, Frank Lorimer, John C. Merriam (to Madison Grant), Frederick Osborn, and Henry Fairfield Osborn.

Finding aid:

http://internshipweblog.blogspot.com/p/cgc-finding-aid.html

[0468] Will D. Campbell Papers, ca. 1950-2001, M341

Location: Special Collections, The University of Southern Mississippi, 118 College Drive #5148, Hattiesburg, MS 39406-5148

Description: Will Davis Campbell (1924-2013) was a Baptist minister and author and a major supporter of the civil rights movement in Mississippi. Beginning in the 1950s, he worked in race relations with the National Council of Churches. Campbell resigned in 1963 to become the Director of the Committee of Southern Churchmen (formerly the Fellowship of Southern Churchmen), where he worked until the late 1970s. Series 8: Organizations, contains files on National Council of Churches: (Air Force Manual Controversy (1960); Campaign Against Right-Wing Radio Programs (1964); Communism Controversy (1951-1961)); Southern Regional Council: Benjamin Muse (1961-1964); and Tennessee Council on Human Relations: Integration of Tennessee Schools (1955-1956). Series 9: Race-Related Materials, contains files on Desegregation: Articles and Pamphlets (1958-1968) and Race-Related Materials (American Nationalist Literature (Undated); Articles and Pamphlets Concerning White Supremacist and Anti-Semitic Beliefs (1954-1963); Articles and Pamphlets on Race Relations in Mississippi (1955-1964); Bibliography of Race-Related Materials (Undated); Christian Nationalist Crusade Literature (Undated); Citizens Councils of Louisiana-Literature (1957); Civil Rights Materials (1963-1964); "Mixture of Races" (1955-1956); Tracts on the Bible and Race (1957-1958)). Series 10: General Subject Files, contains files on Anti-Communist Literature (Undated); Anti-Semitism (1961-1963); Bombing of 16th Street Baptist Church, Birmingham, AL (1963); Civil Rights Legislation (1963-1966); Allen Eugene "A. E." Cox (1992); Billy Graham (1971-1982); House Committee on Un-American Activities (1958-1961); John Birch Society-Correspondence and Publications (1961); and John Birch Society-Newspaper Articles (1961-1962).

Finding aids:

http://www.lib.usm.edu/legacy/archives/m341.htm

http://www.lib.usm.edu/legacy/archives/m341.htm?m341text.htm~mainFrame

http://lib.usm.edu/spcol/collections/manuscripts/finding_aids/m341

[0469] Campus social and political action collection, 1930-1991, Series No. 248

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

Description: Collection collocates fliers, publications, and ephemera from social and political movements on Emory University's campus. Files on Civil Rights movement; Communism on campus; and Conservative responses (Ad Hoc Committee to Defend our Commitment in Vietnam; Emory Conservative Coalition; Young Americans for Freedom), 1964-1970..

Finding aids:

http://findingaids.library.emory.edu/documents/eua0248socialandpoliticalaction/

http://findingaids.library.emory.edu/documents/eua0248socialandpoliticalaction/printable/

[0469a] Canadian Pamphlet Collection: [3335] [digital collection; pamphlet collection]

Location: W.D. Jordan Special Collections Library, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario K7L 5C4, Canada

Description: Contains numerous pamphlets issued by the Conservative Party of Canada and the Liberal Conservative Party.

Websites with information:

http://qspace.library.queensu.ca/handle/1974/1953

Finding aid:

http://qspace.library.queensu.ca/handle/1974/8681

[0470] Canadian Jewish Congress, Ontario Region fonds, 1936-1992, Fonds 17

Location: Ontario Jewish Archives, Blankenstein Family Heritage Centre, UJA Federation of Greater Toronto, Sherman Campus, 4600 Bathurst Street, Toronto, Ontario M2R 3V2

Description: Fonds consists of the records of the Ontario Region office of the Canadian Jewish Congress. Series 5. Community Relations Committee series. Anti-Semitism Cases sub-series, contains files on the public meeting and demonstration by the Canadian Nazi Party at Allan Gardens, May 30, 1965; John Beattie's involvement in the Canadian Nazi Party; the Canadian Nazi Party (also known as the Canadian National Socialist Party) and its leader John Beattie; John Weisdorf, the Jewish lawyer of John Beattie (leader of the Canadian Nazi Party); Henry Hamilton Beamish, the anti-Semitic leader of the London Britons Society; Andre Bellefeuille, leader of the Canadian National Socialist Party (also known as Canada's Nazi leader and the Canadian Fuehrer); the Canadian Nationalist Party of Canada (also known as the Canadian Nazi Party, the Canadian National Socialist Party, and the National Unity Party of Canada); Wolfgang Droege, a leader of the racist Heritage Front; the anti-Semitic National Unity Front; Paul Fromm, an extreme right-wing leader; anti-Semitic statements and publications by Ron Gostick and the Social Credit party; copies of News Behind the News (National Federation of Christian Laymen); copies of Gostick's publications, The Canadian Intelligence Service and the Voice of Freedom (Mutual Co-operation League of Canada); a flyer of the Christian Action Movement (Ron Gostick was its National Director); Ron Gostick and copies of his anti-Semitic publications, the Canadian Intelligence Service, On Target, and Christian Action Movement newsletters; a Canadian League of Rights meeting invitation and brochure; Charlene Hategan, a member of the neo-Nazi Heritage Front and the first person charged under the hate crime section of the criminal code; Norman Gunn, a Canadian member of the John Birch Society; the hate crime trial of James Keegstra; Western Guard neo-Nazi posters; Kevin Lew, head of a cell of the Ku Klux Klan's National Knight's Network; Rev. A.U. Michelson, a California radio Hebrew Christian missionary who was accused of financial fraud; Viorel Trifa [Valerian Trifa] (accused of being responsible for a 1941 Jewish pogrom in Bucharest); National Federation of Christian Laymen; a publication "Renaissance" of the neo-Nazi Canadian National Socialist Party; Nationalist Party of Canada; National Socialist Underground; George Lincoln Rockwell, head of the American Nazi Party; "The New Citizen," an anti-semitic publication published in Rouyn, Quebec; Janos Pall, a former member of the U.S. Nazi Party and a Canadian resident; the Social Credit party; "The Sphinx," an anti-Semitic publication; the Western Guard white supremacist group; issues of the Western Guard's publication, Straight Talk; Ernst Zündel, a Canadian neo-Nazi, Holocaust denier, and writer of hate literature; Paul Hartmann; THOR, an anti-Semitic publication; and neo-Nazis Gilbert Rondeau and John Ross Taylor. Series 5. Community Relations Committee series. Research Records sub-series. Hate Crimes and Hate Literature sub-sub-series [5-4-6], 1938-1978, consists of documentation of hate crimes committed against, and to intimidate, Jews and other minorities. Also included are examples of anti-Semitic hate literature found in posters, magazines, newspaper articles and books all designed to foster fear and/or hatred for Jews. Contains anti-Semitic hate literature published in Canada; correspondence regarding the anti-Semitic activities and publications of Ron Gostick; correspondence related to references to Jews in a book about Social Credit by John Allen Irving (The Social Credit Movement in Alberta, 1959); correspondence and meeting minutes related to Neo-Nazism; clippings related to the anti-Semitic activities of David Stanley; a publication of the Canadian National Socialist Party; correspondence and clippings regarding the controversy over the CBC interview with George Lincoln Rockwell, an American Nazi, and similar documents concerning the subsequent appearance of the Canadian David Stanley; an article from Maclean's Magazine about hate literature; correspondence related to the German Statute of Limitation on Nazi War Criminals; correspondence and reports regarding concern over the rise of Neo-Nazism in Germany; the proclamation of the Canadian National Socialist Party and recruitment literature for its youth movement; a Canadian National Socialist Party bulletin; a copy of the speech delivered by John Beattie at Allan Gardens on May 5, 1968; correspondence, reports, a news release, and newspaper clippings regarding anti-Semitic and anti-Israel material published by A.C. Forrest in the United Church Observer; "Strictly Confidential" reports and correspondence documenting the activities of Canadian neo-Nazis and white supremacists as well as the Canadian Arab Federation; correspondence, an interview transcript, and newspaper clippings regarding the publication of A.C. Forrest's anti-Semitic book The Unholy Land; an obituary of A.C. Forrest.

Finding aid:

http://oja.andornot.com/Permalink/descriptions17073

[0471] Canadian Jewish Congress organizational records, 1738-present, Fonds CJC0001

Location: Canadian Jewish Congress Charities Committee National Archives, Concordia University, 1590 Docteur Penfield Avenue, Montreal, Quebec, H3G 1C5, Canada

Description: Canadian Jewish Congress (CJC) was founded in Montreal in March 1919 as the democratically elected, national organizational voice of the Jewish community of Canada. CJC ceased operations in July 2011, when it was absorbed into the newly-created Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs (CIJA). The series ZB (General Documentation: Personalia), 1625- , contains files on Jörg Haider, an Austrian right-wing politician who visited Montreal, 2000; Lyndon H. LaRouche, 1987-1990; and Leo Tremblay, founder of La Phalange, a right-wing separatist party, 1968-1969.

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.

Websites with information:

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/2

[0471a] Canadian Labour Congress fonds, MG 28, I 103

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

Description: The Canadian Labour Congress (CLC) is a country-wide labour organization founded in 1956 through a merger of the Trades and Labour Congress of Canada (TLC) and the Canadian Congress of Labour (CCL). Files on Anti-Semitism, Progressive Conservative Party, National Conservative Party, Communist Infiltration of Vancouver Unions, Communism, Communism-Canada, and Taft-Hartley Act. Copies of Ron Gostick, The Architects Behind the World Communist Conspiracy [1959]; United States House of Representatives. Committee on Un-American Activities, Preliminary Report on Neo-Fascist and Hate Groups (1954); American Federation of Labor, The American Federation of Labor vs. Communism (1946); Joseph A. Beirne, Communism is a Criminal Conspiracy (1954); Catholic Information Society. Pamphlets on Communism No. 1 to 26 (1947); Chamber of Commerce of the United States, Communists Within the Labor Movement (1947); Committee on Un-American Activities. 100 Things You Should Know About Communism and Labor (1948); U.S. Senate Committee on Labor and Public Welfare, Communist Domination of Certain Unions (1951); Robert Wynne, American Labour Leaders and the Vancouver Anti-Oriental Riot (1966); C.I.O. Department of Education And Research, What's Behind The Drive for Right to Work Laws? (1955); United States Chamber of Commerce, The Case For Voluntary Unionism [1955]; and H.J. Clawson, Union Security Clauses and the Right to Work (1952).

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 aid:

http://data2.archives.ca/pdf/pdf001/p000001618.pdf

[0472] Andrew M. Canepa collection, 1923-1971, Coll. 84034

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

Description: Printed miscellany, relating to Father Charles E. Coughlin; and 48 prints of Father Coughlin, 1933-1949, including prints of Coughlin with Congressman William Lemke, Gerald L. K. Smith, and Dr. Francis E. Townsend.

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt8z09r8vw/entire_text/

Finding aids to photographs (84034 - 10.A-V):

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

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

[0473] James Cannon papers 1869-1989, RL.00188

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

Description: James Cannon (1864-1944) was a Methodist clergyman, journalist, and leader in the prohibition movement. Diaries, correspondence, reports, minutes, journals, articles, legal papers, pamphlets, obituaries, and other papers. Correspondents include Harry F. Byrd, Carter Glass, Herbert Hoover, H. L. Mencken, and Gerald P. Nye.

Reference:

Guide to the Cataloged Collections in the Manuscript Department of the William R. Perkins Library, Duke University, edited by Richard C. Davis and Linda Angle Miller (1980), http://library.duke.edu/rubenstein/­findingaids/guide/ and http://library.duke.edu/rubenstein/findingaids/guide.pdf

Finding aids:

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

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

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

[0473a] Walter Bradford Cannon Papers, 1873-1945 (inclusive), 1881-1945 (bulk), H MS c40

Location: Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine, Center for the History of Medicine, Harvard Medical Library and Boston Medical Library, Boston, Mass.

Description: Walter Bradford Cannon (1871-1945) was professor of physiology at Harvard Medical School. The collection consists of correspondence, research data, manuscripts, lecture notes, and meeting minutes resulting from Cannon's administrative and committee work at Harvard Medical School, his professional activities on behalf of refugees and other humanitarian interests; and his involvement in scientific organizations. The collection also contains records produced during Cannon's wartime medical service, extensive personal correspondence with his wife, Cornelia Cannon; and several personal items including letters and papers from Cannon's student years. Correspondents include L.A. Alesen; J.R. Angell; Helen Bailie; L.M. Birkhead; Isaiah Bowman; V. Bush; Alexis Carrel; J. McKeen Cattell; Grenville Clark; E.G. Conklin; C.S. Coon; F.R. Coudert, Jr.; Charles B. Davenport; Lydia DeVilbiss (re Maternity Education and Eugenics Health Education Committees); Eugenics Record Office and Biological Laboratories, Cold Spring Harbor, Long Island; Irving Fisher (re Eugenics Committee of the U.S.A.); W.E. Hocking; S.J. Holmes; Sidney Hook; A. Hrdlička; H.S. Jennings; John Harvey Kellogg; Alfred Kohlberg; C.C. Little; H.C. Lodge, Jr.; A. Lawrence Lowell; H.R. Luce; R.A. Millikan; William B. Munro; Frederick Osborn; Porter Sargent; Vilhjalmur Stefansson; Dorothy Thompson; Charles Warren; L.F. Whitney; and Robert M. Yerkes.

Finding aid:

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~med00088

[0473b] Albert F. Canwell: An Oral History. Interviewed by Timothy Frederick (Olympia, Washington, Washington State Oral History Program, 1997) [oral history]

Description: Albert Franklyn "Al" Canwell (1907-2002) was an American journalist and politician who served as a member of the Washington State legislature from 1947 to 1948. He is best remembered for the legislature's Canwell Committee to investigate Communist influence in Washington state, patterned after the House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC) of the United States Congress. After his legislative service Canwell operated the American Intelligence Service (Spokane), which published The Vigilante, an anti-Communist newsletter. Canwell was a leading West Coast supporter of Senator Joseph McCarthy. In 1963 Canwell was the subject of a libel suit when he intimated that Washington state representative John Goldmark and his wife were Communist agents. The jury awarded $40,000 in damages but the verdict was later set aside.

Online edited transcript:

https://www.sos.wa.gov/legacy/collection/pdf/canwell.pdf

[0474] Homer E. Capehart Papers, 1938-1962, Collection #M 0817, CT 1516-1525, OM 0413

Location: Manuscript and Visual Collections Department, William Henry Smith Memorial Library, Indiana Historical Society, 450 West Ohio Street, Indianapolis, IN 46202-3269

Description: Capehart (1897-1979) was a U.S. Senator from Indiana, 1945-1963. This collection is divided into three series; Series 1: Campaign Materials, Series 2: Senate Materials, and Series 3: Business and Home Life. Series 2: Senate Materials, contains a copy of the Capehart Report, 24 May, 1962 (audio tape), in which Senator Capehart welcomes Senator Hickenlooper as his guest.

Finding aid:

http://www.indianahistory.org/our-collections/collection-guides/homer-e-capehart-papers-1938-1962.pdf

[0475] Capitol Office Materials, Record Group 3; Moral Majority

Location: Liberty University Archive, Jerry Falwell Library - 1971 University Blvd MSC Box 710170, Lynchburg, VA 24515

Description: This Record Group contains papers from the capitol office of the Moral Majority, including handbooks and manuals, news articles, information packets, workshop materials, and political campaign materials.

Finding aid:

http://www.liberty.edu/media/1410/archive_finding_aids/MOR%20RG-03.pdf

[0476] Arthur Capper Papers, bulk 1919-1949, Collection 12 [partly digital collection]

Location: Kansas Historical Society, 6425 SW 6th Avenue, Topeka, KS 66615-1099

Description: Arthur Capper (1865-1951) was a United States senator from Kansas, 1919-1949. Correspondence with Sen. Theodore G. Bilbo, Sen. Wm. E. Borah, Sen. Ralph O. Brewster, Sen. Owen Brewster, John W. Bricker, Sen. Harry Byrd, James F. Byrnes, Rev. Charles E. Coughlin, George Creel, Rep. Martin Dies, Charles Edison, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Rep. Hamilton Fish, Henry Ford, James V. Forrestal, William Randolph Hearst, Sen. Bourke B. Hickenlooper, Herbert Hoover, Patrick Hurley, Sen. William E. Jenner, Sen. William F. Knowland, Alfred M. Landon, William Langer, Rep. William Lemke, Fulton Lewis, Jr., Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge, Rep. Clare Boothe Luce, Henry R. Luce, Douglas MacArthur, Sen. George W. Malone, Sen. Gerald P. Nye, W. Lee O'Daniel, Rep. Wright Patman, Rep. John E. Rankin, Ogden Reid, Sen. Robert R. Reynolds, E. V. Rickenbacker, Archibald B. Roosevelt, Sen. Richard B. Russell, Rev. Gerald L. K. Smith, chairman of Committee of 1,000,000, Sen. Robert A. Taft, Sen. Burton K. Wheeler, Sen. Alexander Wiley, Wendell L. Willkie, and R. E. Wood, President Sears Roebuck & America First Committee 1941. General Correspondence files on Nagene Campbell Bethune, one-time Republican candidate for Congress, 4th district Connecticut; Styles Bridges; Communism, including on Hamilton Fish's book, "The Challenge of World Communism" (1946); Dwight David Eisenhower; FBI, consisting almost entirely of personal notes between Capper and J. Edgar Hoover; Global Alphabet 1943, regarding Hon. Robert L. Owen's petition to the Senate; Walter Harnischfeger, Milwaukee; General Douglas MacArthur, with Frank E. Gannett supporting him for President; Taft-Hartley Act 1947; New Deal 1933-1938, with clippings & speeches by Capper showing his swing from supporting FDR in 1933 to being a critical foe in 1938, and containing a copy of Alphabetical agencies created under the Roosevelt New Deal Party, by E.M. Biggers (Houston, Texas, Biggers Printing Company, 1932) [online at http://www.kansasmemory.org/item/217687]; and Gerald B. Winrod. Agricultural Correspondence on the Brannan Plan. Speeches on Sen. Huey Long's assassination; War Bill #1776 as a dictatorship bill; opposition to HR 1776 (lend-lease bill); Dumbarton Oaks; UN Charter & Bretton Woods Agreement; Brannan Farm Plan opposition by American Farm Bureau Association; applauding Joe McCarthy's communist hunt; and applauding Hoover, Taft, and McCarthy.

Websites with information:

http://www.kshs.org/p/manuscripts/13813

http://www.kshs.org/p/guides-and-finding-aids-to-manuscripts-and-state-archives/13813

Finding aid:

http://www.kshs.org/p/arthur-capper-papers/14005

Finding aid for digital collection:

http://www.kansasmemory.org/category/6137

[0477] Carlbergska Stiftelsen, 1926-1960, Refkod: 4199

Location: Arbetarrörelsens arkiv och bibliotek [Labour Movement Archives and Library], Elektronvägen 2, 141 49 Huddinge, Sweden

Description: C.E. Carlberg (1890-1962) was a Swedish officer and gymnast and gold medalist in gymnastics at the 1912 Summer Olympics. Carlberg financed the dissemination of Nazi propaganda in Sweden both before and after World War II. In 1958 he was fined for spreading anti-Semitic writings in several Stockholm schools.

Websites with information:

http://www.tobiashubinette.se/arkiv.pdf

Finding aid:

http://borge.arbark.se?4199

[0478] Carnegie Council on Ethics & International Affairs records, 1914-1996, Ms Coll\CRIA

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

Description: Carnegie Council on Ethics and International Affairs (formerly the Church Peace Union, and later the Council on Religion in International Affairs) is a philanthropic organization founded in 1914 by Andrew Carnegie for the purpose of furthering the role of the religions in promoting world peace. Correspondence, minutes of meetings, financial records, publications, notes, subject files, awards, speeches, reports and audiovisual materials document work by the Church Peace Union, its successors Council on Religion in International Affairs and Council on Ethics and International Affairs, and related organizations such as the World Alliance for International Friendship Through the Churches. The unnumbered series Catalogued Correspondence contains files on William Benton, William E. Borah, Harry Flood Byrd, Taylor Caldwell, Arthur Capper, Samuel Dickstein, Ralph M. Easley, Max Eastman, Dwight David Eisenhower, Hamilton Fish, Jr., Irving Fisher, Frank E. Gannett, Barry Goldwater, Joseph C. Grew, Alger Hiss, Hamilton Holt, Herbert Hoover, John Edgar Hoover, Henry Cabot Lodge, Henry R. Luce, John Spargo, John Sparkman, James P. Warburg, and Wendell L. Willkie. Series Ig. A. William Loos. [Subseries] 6) Organizational Files (A-Z), contains files on American Committee for Aid to Katanga Freedom Fighters, American Committee For Free Russia, Inc., Assembly of Captive European Nations, Christian Economics, Circuit Riders, Citizens Committee for A Free Cuba, Committee against Summit Entanglements, Committee for the Monroe Doctrine, Committee of One Million, Committee on the Present Danger, Congress of Freedom, Inc., Counterattack, Crusade For Freedom, Facts Forum, For America, Foundation for Economic Education, Free Europe Committee, Freedoms Foundation, Freedom House, Freedom Club, Inc., Ford Foundation, Fund for the Republic, The Heritage Foundation, Institute of Pacific Relations, Moral Rearmament, National Association of Manufacturers, National Committee for an Effective Congress, National Committee for Free Europe, Inc., National Review magazine, Society for the Defense of Freedom in Asia, and Spiritual Mobilization.

Finding aids:

http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/archival/collections/ldpd_4079679/

http://www.columbia.edu/cu/libraries/inside/projects/findingaids/scans/pdfs/09_CHAP-COH_13.pdf

http://library.columbia.edu/content/dam/libraryweb/locations/rbml/carnegie/09_chap_coh_13.pdf

[0478a] Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (CEIP) Records, 1910-1954, NYCR89-A126

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

Description: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, founded by Andrew Carnegie in 1910, was initially located in New York City. Columbia University officers were closely associated with the Endowment, most notably Nicholas Murray Butler, who served as the CEIP president from 1925 to 1945. Series I. Secretary's Office. A. Correspondence. 1. Cataloged correspondence, contains correspondence from Warren R. Austin, William Jennings Bryan, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Milton S. Eisenhower, Herbert Hoover, Ezra Pound, and Owen Wister. Other files on Nicholas Murray Butler, Congressional Investigation of the Endowment, Hearst Newspapers Attacks On Endowment, Alger Hiss, Hamilton Holt, David Starr Jordan, Wright Patman, Elihu Root, and George Holden Tinkham.

Websites with information:

http://library.columbia.edu/locations/rbml/units/carnegie/ceip.html

Finding aids:

http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/eresources/archives/rbml/CEIP/index.html

http://library.columbia.edu/content/dam/libraryweb/locations/rbml/carnegie/CEIP%20Indices%20PDF.pdf

[0479] Carnegie Endowment for International Peace pamphlet and microfilm collection, 1817-1950, MS2110

Location: Special Collections Research Center, The George Washington University, 2130 H Street, NW, Washington, DC 20052

Description: This collection consists of over 7,200 items of bound pamphlets, unbound pamphlets, and microfilm. Pamphlets by Harry Elmer Barnes, Dr. Charles Austin Beard, Hastings William Sackville Russell Bedford (Marquis of Tavistock) (When Germany is Defeated - ?, 1942; Some Essays on War and Peace, 1944), William E. Borah, James F. Byrnes, Kenneth Colegrove, Ralph Easley, John T. Flynn, Gannett For President National Committee, Frank E. Gannett, F.A. Harper, Henry Hazlitt, Alger Hiss, Adolf Hitler, Herbert Hoover, Howard E. Kershner, Charles A. Lindbergh, Pat McCarran, Felix Morley, National Committee to Uphold Constitutional Government, Dorothy Thompson, Commendatore Luigi Villari, and Wendell L. Willkie. American Liberty League pamphlets, including works by Jouett Shouse.

Websites with information:

https://library.gwu.edu/scrc/search/finding-aids-by-title

http://library.gwu.edu/scrc/search/finding-aids-by-title

Finding aids:

http://library.gwu.edu/ead/ms2110.xml

https://library.gwu.edu/ead/ms2110.xml

[0480] Carnegie Institution of Washington - Eugenics Record Office Collection, 1902-2003

Location: Library and Archives, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 1 Bungtown Road, Cold Spring Harbor, New York 11724

Description: Charles Davenport (1866-1944) was president of the American Society of Zoologists and in 1910 he founded the Eugenics Record Office (ERO) at Cold Spring Harbor, and appointed Harry H. Laughlin (1880-1943) to direct it. Laughlin became a spokesman for the programmatic side of the eugenics movement, lobbying for eugenic legislation to restrict immigration and sterilize "defectives," educating the public on eugenic health, and disseminating eugenic ideas widely. The Eugenics Record Office Collection contains administrative papers, photographs, publications and supporting materials produced in the collection and analysis of American genetic and family history records. The collection is divided into five series: H. H. Laughlin material, Horse Studies; ERO Publications; ERO Family Studies and ERO Administrative material. Series 1: H. H. Laughlin (1912-1935), contains six boxes of Laughlin authored studies of hereditary afflictions, legislative policies, draft manuscripts, and assorted reprints from 1910 to 1940. Also included are small collections of pedigrees and biological sketches. Series 1: ERO Publications, contains publications by Charles B. Davenport, Irving Fisher, Laughlin, Harry Olson, and Gladys Schwesinger, and copies of The Eugenical News (various issues, 1927, 1930-1934, 1937) and The Eugenics Review (London) (1941, 1945, 1947, 1950-1953) [online at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/journals/1186/].

Reference:

Elizabeth Pessala, "Processing Grant for Eugenics Record Office Collection at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory," Metropolitan Archivist, Volume 18, No. 2 (Summer 2012), pp. 30-31, http://www.scribd.com/­fullscreen/98735764.

Websites with information:

http://library.cshl.edu/personal-collections/charles-delisi/delisi-finding-aid/98-archives/special-collections/e

ugenics

Finding aids:

http://library.cshl.edu/attachments/article/285/Eugenics%20Record%20Office%20Collection%20Detailed%2

0Inventory.pdf

http://archives.cshl.edu/R/755429TVRIQEDISBP97U7JKEI1FRH9BNDEXXKVEH2QC7TYCU3G-02663?func=coll

ections-result&collection_id=1619&pds_handle=GUEST

http://archives.cshl.edu/view/action/singleViewer.do?dvs=1394719718178~735&locale=en_US&DELIVERY_R

ULE_ID=7&application=DIGITOOL-3&forebear_coll=1281&frameId=1&usePid1=true&­usePid2=true

[0481] Papers of (Leonard) Robert Carr, Baron Carr of Hadley, 1942-2004, Shelfmarks: MSS. Eng. c. 7299-329; d. 3669-724; e. 3589

Location: Department of Special Collections and Western Manuscripts, Bodleian Library, University of Oxford, Broad Street, Oxford, OX1 3BG United Kingdom

Description: (Leonard) Robert Carr (1916-2012) was a Conservative politician. Series B. Political correspondence and papers, 1942-99. [Subseries] B.1. General political correspondence, 1942-99, contains correspondence with Edward Heath, John Major, Margaret Thatcher, and Charles, Prince of Wales.

Websites with information:

http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/wmss/online/modern/

http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/accessions/2004/04digests/politics.htm

Finding aid:

http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/wmss/online/modern/carr/carr.html

[0482] Dale Carpenter Papers, 1989-1999, Collection 177

Location: Jean-Nickolaus Tretter Collection in Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Studies, Special Collections and Rare Books, 111 Elmer L. Andersen Library, University of Minnesota, 222 21st Avenue South, Minneapolis, MN 55455

Description: Dale A. Carpenter (1968- ) is a professor at the University of Minnesota Law School. The collection includes professional and personal correspondence, minutes, news clippings, publicity, court documents, policy drafts, speeches, surveys and newsletters reflecting Carpenter's work with and leadership of several Texas gay/lesbian advocacy groups. Documents include Religious Right in Texas Politics Clippings 1992-1996; CC Watch (newsletter exposing the Christian Coalition, 1995); Let Freedom Ring News (newsletter opposed to the religious right in the Houston community, October 1996); and The Link Newsletter (Voter Guide Issue, right wing perspective, 1998).

Finding aids:

http://discover.lib.umn.edu/cgi/f/findaid/findaid-idx?c=umfa;cc=umfa;q1=Dale%20Carpenter%20Papers;­rgn

=main;view=text;didno=scrbt177

http://special.lib.umn.edu/findaid/xml/scrbt177.xml

[0483] Ralph Lawrence Carr Collection, 1897-1951, MSS #1208

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

Description: Carr (1887-1950) was a water law attorney and politician, governor of Colorado, 1939-1943, and member of the Board of Regents, University of Colorado, 1945-1950. Collection consists of correspondence (1897-1951), speeches (1926-1949), writings (1936-1949), legal materials (1898-1950), miscellaneous purged legal files, maps and technical drawings, and oral interview audio tapes. Correspondents include Wendell Willkie.

Reference:

James E. Sherow, An Inventory of the Papers of Ralph L. Carr: A Holding of the Library of the Colorado Historical Society (Denver, Co., The Society, 1988).

Websites with information:

http://c70003.eos-intl.net/C70003/OPAC/Details/Record.aspx?BibCode=2565803

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

[0484] Ralph Lawrence Carr papers, 1924-1957, WH61

Location: Western History Collections, Western History and Genealogy, The Denver Public Library, Level 5, 10 W. Fourteenth Ave. Pkwy, Denver, Colorado 80204-2731

Description: Ralph Lawrence Carr (1887-1950) was Governor of Colorado from 1939 to 1943. Collection contains correspondence, reports, campaign pamphlets, five scrapbooks (chiefly clippings about Carr's political career), speech transcripts, manuscripts and legal documents. Series 2. Governor of Colorado 1941-1948, contains copies of States rights, federal encroachments and the place of the individual, by Ralph L. Carr (1943; Originally published in The Mines magazine (Mar. 1943)); Safeguarding States Rights, Commercial Club, San Francisco, California, July 14, 1941: speech (transcript); and Should the government be responsible for our natural resources? Speakers: Hon. Joseph C. O'Mahoney ... Ralph L. Carr ... Interrogators: Richard H. Rutledge ... Robert S. Palmer ... (Columbus, Ohio, American education press, 1943) (Town meeting; Bulletin of America's town meeting of the air, vol. 9, no. 13).

Websites with information:

http://eadsrv.denverlibrary.org/sdx/pl/western.shtm

Finding aid:

http://eadsrv.denverlibrary.org/sdx/pl/toc.xsp?id=WH61&qid=sdx_q5&fmt=tab&idtoc=WH61-pleadetoc&ba

se=fa&n=15&ss=true&as=true&ai=Advanced

[0485] The Governor Ralph L. Carr Collection, bulk 1939-1943

Location: Colorado State Archives, 1313 Sherman, Room 120, Denver, CO 80203-2274

Description: The Colorado Governors collections include 54 cubic feet of material related to Ralph Lawrence Carr (1887-1950), Governor of Colorado from 1939-1943. The major series included in the collection are speeches and messages, correspondence, the Executive Record, reports, and miscellaneous.

Reference:

Ivona Elenton, Governor Ralph Carr: An Archival Research Handbook to a Colorado Governor's Collection (M.A., Uppsala universitet, 2010), http://www.diva-portal.org/smash/get/diva2:324808/FULLTEXT03

Websites with information:

https://www.colorado.gov/pacific/archives/statehood-governors-1927-1951

Finding aids:

https://www.colorado.gov/pacific/sites/default/files/Carr.pdf

http://192.70.175.163/dpa/doit/archives/govs/carr.html

[0485a] Virginia Spencer Carr collection, 1913-1984, ASM0058

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

Description: The Virginia Spencer Carr Collection contains correspondence, research notes, interviews (transcripts and audio tapes), photographs, manuscript drafts of publications and other materials compiled and created by Virginia Spencer Carr (1929-2012) in the course of her research and writing of John Dos Passos: A Life. Series 1: Correspondence, includes letters and documents solicited and compiled by Virginia Spencer Carr. Files on William F. Buckley, Jr., John Chamberlain, Granville Hicks (and wife Dorothy), Isaac Don and Ruth Levine, and Eugene Lyons. Series 2: General Files, contains extensive research notes, photocopies of original documents and other materials compiled in the course of research on the life of John Dos Passos. Files on William Buckley, John Dos Passos, and Granville Hicks.

Websites with information:

http://proust.library.miami.edu/findingaids/?p=collections/classifications&id=5

Finding aids:

http://proust.library.miami.edu/findingaids/?p=collections/findingaid&id=597&q=

http://proust.library.miami.edu/findingaids/?p=collections/controlcard&id=597&templateset=printcontrolcard

&disabletheme=1#

http://proust.library.miami.edu/findingaids/legacy/asm0058CL.pdf

[0486] Alexis Carrel Papers

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

Description: Papers of the French physician and philosopher Alexis Carrel (1873-1944), recipient of the Nobel Prize for medicine in 1912. Carrel's prodigious writings, much of it unpublished, cover the history of genetics and eugenics among many other subjects. The papers include many of Carrel's research files, the manuscript of his book Man the Unknown, offprints of scientific articles, and a voluminous correspondence with, among others, Charles A. Lindbergh.

Websites with information:

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

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

http://www.clir.org/hiddencollections/registry/hc.0448

[0487] Fonds Alexis Carrel, 1890-1980s

Location: Bibliothèque de l'Académie nationale de médecine, 16 Rue Bonaparte, 75006 Paris, France

Description: Contains copies of Charles Augustus Lindbergh, "An Apparatus for the Culture of Whole Organs," The Journal of Experimental Medicine, vol. 62, n°3, 1 Sept. 1935, pp. 409-431; "Charles Lindbergh i det Allerhelligste," Politiken, 12 Aug. [1936], p. 5; a draft of a letter from Alexis Carrel to Charles Lindbergh; Carrel and Lindbergh, "The Culture of Whole Organs," Science, vol. 81, n°2112, 21 June 1935, pp. 621-623; and articles concerning Charles Lindbergh, Oct. 1937-5 Oct. 1949.

Websites with information:

http://www.calames.abes.fr/pub/#details?id=FileId-1337

Finding aid:

http://bibliotheque.academie-medecine.fr/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/Carrel_Inventaire-version-d%C3%A9

finitive.pdf

[0488] Alexis Carrel papers, Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research Scientific Staff, 1906-1957, FA231

Location: The Rockefeller Archive Center, 15 Dayton Avenue, Sleepy Hollow, New York 10591

Description: Alexis Carrel (1873-1944), born and educated in Lyon, France, was a physician who worked in experimental surgery at The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research from 1906 until his retirement in 1939. He perfected the technique of vascular surgery and was awarded the Nobel prize in medicine in 1912 for his work on the suture of blood vessels and organ transplants. His best-selling popular science book Man the Unknown (1935) showed some eugenic leanings and conservative views. His celebrity increased when he brought Charles Lindbergh into his laboratory to assist with the design and operation of an organ perfusion pump. In his final years, Carrel worked in Occupied France as head of a research institute in Paris that was funded by the Vichy government. The collection consists of biographical articles, newspaper clippings, correspondence (1906-1944), experimental notes (1909), inquiries about Carrel (1936-1970), photographs of Dr. Carrel and his laboratory, and reprints. Includes material relating to the perfusion pump designed with Charles A. Lindbergh for work in tissue culture, and a copy of Alexis Carrel, The Voyage to Lourdes. Translated by Virgilia Peterson, With a Preface by Charles A. Lindbergh (New York: Harper and Brothers, 1950).

Reference:

David Hamilton, "Alexis Carrel's Career at the Rockefeller Institute" (2011), http://www.rockarch.org/publications/resrep/hamilton.pdf.

Websites with information:

http://www.rockarch.org/collections/individuals/ru/

Finding aid:

http://dimes.rockarch.org/xtf/view?docId=ead/FA231/FA231.xml

[0489] Charles Patrick Carroll papers, 1809-1999, 2001C76

Location: Hoover Institution Archives, 434 Galvez Mall, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305-6010

Description: Charles Patrick Carroll (1916-2004) researched German medicine from 1895-1945. The papers consist of correspondence, notes, conference papers, and printed matter, relating to medical ethics, and to medical, legal, moral and theological aspects of euthanasia, sterilization, abortion, assisted suicide, and related issues. Includes copies of transcripts of war crime trials of Nazi doctors at Nuremberg. The series Research materials, contains files on Abortion, Apartheid, Birth control, Robert Bork, Buck vs. Bell 1927, William F. Buckley, Whittaker Chambers, Club of Rome, Eugenics, Euthanasia, Fluoride, Francis Galton, Genocide, Joseph Goebbels, Hermann Göring, Billy Graham, Madison Grant, Rudolf Hess, Adolf Hitler, Holocaust, Clyde Kluckhohn, C. Everett Koop, C.S. Lewis, Malcolm Muggeridge, Bernard Nathanson on abortion, National Organization of Episcopalians for Life, Nazis, Neo-Nazis, Richard John Neuhaus, Michael Novak, Race, Racial hygiene, Ayn Rand, Revisionism, Alfred Rosenberg, Rutherford Institute, Secular humanism, William Shockley, Society For The Protection Of The Unborn (SPUC), Aleksandr Isaevich Solzhenitsyn, Sterilization, Dorothy Thompson, Jozef Tiso, United for Life, Eric Voegelin, Volcom (Value of Life Committee), and West Germany: Right wing extremists 1975.

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt3j49r7v7/entire_text/

[0489a] Peter Carroll papers relating to Phyllis Schlafly, 1952-1983

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

Description: In 1983 Peter N. Carroll (1943- ) interviewed Phyllis Schlafly about her career. She sent him a selection of her writings and publications by the Eagle Forum about her work. Includes a letter from Carroll to Schlafly, and her response (written on the original letter), 1983. Other material includes a 1952 press release from the Schlafly for Congress Committee, a 1967 speech for the Women's National Press Club luncheon, flyers from the Citizens for Schlafly Committee and other papers relating to committee work, 1968; a typescript by Schlafly, "Are we 'Hell-bent on national suicide'?", 1971; Eagle Forum publications, and two cassettes of the Carroll interview of Schlafly, 1983.

Websites with information:

https://searchworks.stanford.edu/view/4328803

https://purl.stanford.edu/kx575hs5796

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/462157006

http://www.worldcat.org/title/peter-carroll-papers-relating-to-phyllis-schlafly-1952-1983/oclc/462157006

[0490] Asa Carter Papers (1 reel microfilm and 1 audio tape), Publications, 1956 and undated, AR1265

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

Description: In 1954, Asa Earl Carter (1925-1979), segregationist, politician, speech-writer, and novelist, moved to Birmingham, Alabama, where his political activities included hosting a radio show for the American States Rights Association and leading the Alabama Council movement. Later he founded the North Alabama White Citizens Council in Birmingham. This collection contains three issues (March, April, and September-October 1956) of Carter's white supremacist newspaper The Southerner and one LP record entitled Essays of Asa Carter, Album 1.

Reference:

Dan T. Carter, "Southern History, American Fiction: The Secret Life of Southwestern Novelist Forrest Carter." In Rewriting the South: History and Fiction. Eds. Lothar Honnighausen and Valeria Gennaro Lerda. Transatlantic Perspectives 3. Tubingen: Francke, 1993, pp. 286-304.

Websites with information:

http://web.archive.org/web/20090517041910/http://www.bplonline.org/archives/collections/civilrightsmo

vementandracerelations.asp

http://www.bplonline.org/resources/archives/collections.aspx?q=5

http://www.bplonline.org/resources/archives/collections.aspx?q=6

http://www.bplonline.org/resources/archives/collections.aspx?q=C

Finding aid:

http://www.bplonline.org/resources/archives/aids/AR1265.pdf

[0491] Dan T. Carter research files, circa 1930-2006, Manuscript Collection No. 777

Location: Emory University, Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library, 201 Dowman Drive, Atlanta, Georgia 30322

Description: Dan T. Carter (1940- ) is an American historian. Research files relating to Dan T. Carter's publication of Scottsboro: a Tragedy of the American South (1970) and The Politics of Rage: George Wallace, the Origins of the New Conservatism, and the Transformation of American Politics (1995), including transcripts of interviews and printed materials including newspaper clippings and articles. Contains files or information on Alabama State Sovereignty Commission, Attacks against NAACP, Tom Brady, William F. Buckley, Chambliss trial - Birmingham bombing: copies of newspaper articles; typed notes taken from transcript of State of Alabama v. Robert E. Chambliss, 1977 [16th Street Baptist Church bombing, Dixiecrats, James Eastland, Facts Forum, Dr. Edward R. Fields, Billy James Hargis, John Edgar Hoover, Ray Jenkins, James Jackson Kilpatrick, Ku Klux Klan, Joseph McCarthy, Robert Shelton, Gerald L. K. Smith, J.B. Stoner, Richard Viguerie, and Governor George C. Wallace. Also includes a copy of Tom Brady, Black Monday, 1955 ("Black Monday" refers to May 17, 1954, the date of the Supreme Court decision to desegregate [Brown v. Board]).

Reference:

Dan Carter, "George Wallace: One of the most important, and neglected, figures in modern American history," Lisa's leaks—'Madness in the Magnolias,' Nov. 15, 2015, http://lisaleaks.com/2015/11/15/george-wallace-one-of-the-most-important-and-neglected-figures-in-modern-american-history/ and https://lisaleaks.com/2015/11/15/ge

orge-wallace-one-of-the-most-important-and-neglected-figures-in-modern-american-history/.

Websites with information:

http://findingaids.library.emory.edu/titles/C/?page=3

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/664135869

http://www.worldcat.org/title/dan-t-carter-research-files-1930-2006/oclc/664135869

Finding aids:

http://findingaids.library.emory.edu/documents/carter777/

https://findingaids.library.emory.edu/documents/carter777/

http://findingaids.library.emory.edu/documents/carter777/printable/

http://larson.library.emory.edu/marbl/findingaids/content.php?id=carter777_103340

[0492] Hodding Carter, II, and Betty Werlein Carter papers, 1872-2000 (bulk 1918-2000), MSS. 127

Location: Manuscripts Division, Special Collections, Mississippi State University Library, 395 Hardy Rd, P.O. Box 5408, Mississippi State, MS 39762-5408

Description: Correspondence, personal papers, literary manuscripts, and publications concerning the Carters and their careers. Hodding Carter (1907-1972) was born in Louisiana and attended Bowdoin College and the Columbia University School of Journalism. He began his career in journalism in the 1920's as a reporter in Jackson, Mississippi, and New Orleans, Louisiana. Carter and Betty Werlein of New Orleans were married in 1931, and soon after started their own newspaper, the Hammond (Louisiana) Courier. With Hodding as editor and Betty as business manager, the Courier consistently opposed the rule of Huey Long. Hodding Carter ran for the House of Representatives in 1935 after Long's death, but was defeated. In 1936, at the invitation of William Alexander Percy, the Carters moved to Greenville, Mississippi, and set up the Delta Star. Two years later the Star was merged to form the Delta Democrat-Times. Carter was best known after World War II for his editorials, magazine articles, books, and speeches advocating racial justice in the South. Carter's 1946 series urging racial tolerance earned him the Pulitzer Prize. In 1954, the Mississippi House of Representatives voted him a "liar" for his articles on the Citizens' Councils. The Carter papers document the important events and social movements to which the Carters were witnesses or participants, such as the political careers of Huey Long and Theodore Bilbo, World War II, the Office of War Information, the rise of the Citizen's Councils in the 1950's, the integration of the University of Mississippi in 1962, and changes in race relations throughout the country.

Websites with information:

http://library.msstate.edu/specialcollections/manuscripts/fulllist.php

http://www.lib.msstate.edu/specialcollections/collections/manuscripts/civilrights/

http://lib.msstate.edu/specialcollections/collections/manuscripts/politics/

http://lib.msstate.edu/specialcollections/collections/manuscripts/journalism/

http://lib.msstate.edu/specialcollections/collections/manuscripts/afam/

[0493] Hodding Carter Periodicals, 1948-1969, MUM00066

Location: The 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 periodicals which contain articles written by or about Hodding Carter. These materials are dated 1948-1969.

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/MUM00066.html

[0494] Margaret B. Carter Papers, 1926-1976 (bulk 1944-1974), AR239

Location: Special Collections, The University of Texas at Arlington Library, 702 Planetarium Place, Arlington, TX 76019

Description: Margaret Carter (1909-1988) was a political strategist for the Democratic Party in Tarrant County, Texas. Her papers relate to various political organizations and activities in the county and state. The papers contain correspondence, minutes, speeches, reports, newspaper clippings, photographs, printed material, and memorabilia. Includes materials on such topics as civil rights, Conservative Organizations and Propaganda, Equal Rights Amendment, Fascism and Communism, McCarthyism, Right Wing Propaganda, and right-to-work.

Finding aids:

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utarl/00119/arl-00119.html

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utarl/00119/00119-P.html

[0495] Robert P. Casey Collection, 1940-2000, Manuscript Group 406

Location: Pennsylvania State Archives, 350 North Street, Harrisburg, PA 17120

Description: Robert P. Casey (1932-2000) was Democratic Governor of Pennsylvania from 1987 to 1995. He was particularly active in the fight against legalized abortion. News Articles, 1985-1995, include "The Gene McCarthy of the War on Abortion," Business Week, January 30, 1995, and "Abortion and the Health Plan - Fatal Coercion," National Right to Life News, January 1994.

Websites with information:

http://www.phmc.state.pa.us/bah/dam/mg/index.htm

http://www.portal.state.pa.us/portal/server.pt/community/1951-present/4285/robert_p__casey/471869

Finding aid:

http://www.phmc.state.pa.us/bah/dam/mg/mg406.htm

[0496] Fondo Mario Cassiano, 1930-1990

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

Description: Mario Cassiano (1915-2005) was a lawyer and founder of the Movimento sociale italiano. He was chief press officer of the Ministero dell'economia in the Repubblica sociale italiana. The collection contains press releases and internal party circulars, weekly bulletins, and material relating to the first five national congresses of the party (1948-56). Serie 1: Attività nella Repubblica sociale italiana, 1941-1945, contains manuscripts, reports, press releases and brochures collected during the activity of Cassiano in the Repubblica sociale italiana and in the Ministero della cultura popolare (1941-1943). Serie 2: Attività nel Movimento sociale italiano, 1930-1990, contains, in Sottoserie 1: Attività del partito, 1947-1965, interim regulations and electoral programs, weekly circulars, circular letters, and bulletins; and in Sottoserie 2: Propaganda e documentazione, 1930-1990, press clippings, posters, and leaflets. Also contains material relating to the Associazione studentesca d'azione nazionale (A.S.A.N.) "Giovane Italia."

References:

Gianni Rossi, La destra e gli ebrei: una storia italiana (Rubbettino Editore, 2003), p. 77 n.48; Francesca Garello and Lucia R. Petese, Inventario dei fondi Mario Cassiano (1930-1990) e Movimento sociale italiano (1946-1995) (Roma, Palombi, 2009).

Websites with information:

http://www.itacultura.it/index.php/archivio/lettorejson/cassiano.json

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

http://www.archivionline.senato.it/scripts/GeaCGI.exe?REQSRV=REQEXPLORE&LEV=1&REQF=,376286,45090

4,1698040,376209,376206,

Finding aids:

http://www.archivionline.senato.it/scripts/GeaCGI.exe?REQSRV=REQEXPLORE&LEV=1&REQF=,376286,45090

4,1698040,376209,376206,#

http://catalogo.archividelnovecento.it/scripts/GeaCGI.exe?REQSRV=REQEXPLORE&ID=164490

http://catalogo.archividelnovecento.it/scripts/GeaCGI.exe?REQSRV=REQEXPLORE&ID=164490&LEV=2&SORT=

[0497] Boyd Cathey Papers, 1965-1998, Coll. 04629

Location: Southern Historical Collection, Manuscripts Department, 4th Floor, Wilson Library CB# 3926, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27515-8890

Description: Boyd Cathey (1950- ) of Raleigh, N.C., is a political conservative; senior editor of The Southern Partisan, a conservative quarterly; and co-editor of The Conservative Perspective: A View from North Carolina (1988). The collection contains a few items relating to The Southern Partisan; copies of The Conservative Perspective, 1984-1988; and materials relating to the political campaigns of Pat Robertson for president, 1987-1988; Jack Kemp campaign, 1988; Jesse Helms for United States Senate, 1988-1990; and Pat Buchanan for president, 1991-1992. Correspondence with Russell Kirk and National Review.

Websites with information:

http://library.unc.edu/wilson/shc/findingaids/browse-finding-aids/

http://www2.lib.unc.edu/mss/inv/c/

Finding aid:

http://www2.lib.unc.edu/mss/inv/c/Cathey,Boyd.html

[0497a] Catholic Pamphlet Collection, 1920-1989 (bulk 1930s-1950s), MS/021 [partly digital collection]

Location: Archives & Manuscript Collections, University Libraries, University of St. Thomas, 2115 Summit Avenue, St. Paul, Minnesota 55105

Description: The Catholic Pamphlet Collection is an artificial collection of published pamphlets on a variety of topics related to the Roman Catholic Church. Series H: Marriage / Divorce / Family / Parenting / Birth Control, contains copies of The Church and Eugenics, by Bertrand L. Conway (The Paulist Press: n.d.) And The CCL Story, For the art of natural family planning (Couple to Couple League, n.d.). Series J: Race / Culture Wars / Political Science / Communism/ Labor / Business Ethics, contains copies of Beware of the 'Patriots', by Lon Francis (Our Sunday Visitor: 1947); Bishop Sheil on McCarthy (UAW-CIO Education Department: 1954); The Church, The State, and Mrs. McCollum, by Clarence Manion (Ave Maria Press: 1950); Climax of Civilization: World Conquest by Communism?, by William J. Smith (The Paulist Press: 1947) [online at http://ucf.digital.flvc.org/islandora/object/ucf%3A5115]; Communism Means Slavery, by William Henry Chamberlin (The Catholic Information Society: 1947); Communism Strategy and Tactics, by Liston M Oak (The Catholic Society: 1947); Communism the Opium of the People, by Fulton J. Sheen ( St. Anthony's Guild: 1937); The Soviet Regime in Practice, by Eugene Lyons (Catholic Information Society: 1947); Stalin's Worldwide Fifth Column, by William Henry Chamberlin (The Catholic Information Society: n.d.); and Why I Ceased to be a Communist, by Freda Utley (Catholic Information Society: 1946).

Finding aid:

https://archon.stthomas.edu/?p=collections/findingaid&id=22&q=

Finding aid to digital collection:

http://cdm16120.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/landingpage/collection/p16120coll9

[0498] George Edward Gordon Catlin fonds, 1893-1979

Location: The William Ready Division of Archives and Research Collections, Mills Memorial Library, Lower Level, McMaster University, 1280 Main St. W., Hamilton, ON, L8S 4L6, Canada

Description: George Edward Gordon Catlin (1896-1979) was a British political scientist, professor of politics at Cornell until 1935, and journalist. He served on the campaign team of Presidential candidate Wendell Willkie during 1940. The fonds contains diaries and notebooks, book manuscripts, articles, reviews, speeches and lectures, memoranda and reports, letters to the editor and interviews, teaching files, lecture tours and conferences, personal and family-related material, biographical material, reviews of his work, promotion and publicity, causes, invitations, news clippings, jottings and notes, publications, greeting cards and programmes, awards and recorded materials, incoming correspondence. First accrual, Part 2. Incoming Correspondence, contains correspondence from L.S. Amery, Anglo-German Association, Assembly of Captive European Nations, Harry Elmer Barnes, Charles Beard, Montgomery Belgion, British Union of Fascists, Conservative and Unionist Central Office, Kenneth de Courcy, Max Eastman, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Milton S. Eisenhower, Irving Fisher, Foreign Policy Association, Henry Regnery Company, Hamilton Holt, C.E.M. Joad, Bertrand de Jouvenel, Wyndham Lewis, Seymour Martin Lipset, Henry Cabot Lodge, Raymond Moley, Oswald Mosley, Malcolm Muggeridge, New English Weekly, New Britain Movement, Richard Nixon, George Pitt-Rivers, Plain Talk (1928), Radio Free Europe, Reader's Digest, Marie C. Stopes, The American Mercury, The American Social Hygiene Association, Peter Viereck, Luigi Villari, Rebecca West, and Wendell L. Willkie.

Finding aid:

https://library.mcmaster.ca/archives/findaids/fonds/c/catlin.htm

[0499] Carrie Chapman Catt Papers, ca. 1840-ca. 1940, M 15 [partly digital collection]

Location: Special Collections, 2nd Floor, Mariam Coffin Canaday Library, Bryn Mawr College, 101 North Merion Avenue, Bryn Mawr, PA 19010

Description: Carrie Lane Chapman Catt (1859-1947) was an internationally recognized suffragist, feminist and political activist.

Finding aid:

http://www.brynmawr.edu/library/speccoll/guides/catt.shtml

Finding aid to Catt Collection Suffrage Photographs [digital collection]:

http://triptych.brynmawr.edu/cdm/search/collection/suffragists

Digital exhibition "Remember the Ladies!": Women Struggle for an Equal Voice:

Contains, from this collection, a copy of The Woman Patriot, IV.39 (Sept. 25, 1920), and a photograph of anti-suffragists at The Hermitage, home of Andrew Jackson, during the Amendment fight, 1920.

http://www.tennessee.gov/tsla/exhibits/suffrage/

[0500] Carrie Chapman Catt Papers, 1848-1950 (bulk 1890-1920), MSS15404

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

Description: Carrie Chapman Catt (1859-1947) was a feminist, lecturer, and author. Correspondence, diaries (1911-1923), drafts of speeches and articles, subject files, biographical papers, newspaper clippings, printed material, and other papers, chiefly 1890-1920, relating primarily to Carrie Chapman Catt's efforts on behalf of the women's suffrage movement, feminism, and the cause of international peace. Subject File, 1848-1950, contains ten folders of attacks on women's organizations.

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.ms998018

http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms998018.3

http://rs5.loc.gov/service/mss/eadxmlmss/eadpdfmss/1998/ms998018.pdf

[0501] Carrie Chapman Catt Papers, 1916-1921, Acc. No. 1972.119; I-J-2; Mf #1077

Location: Tennessee State Library and Archives, 403 Seventh Avenue North, Nashville, Tennessee 37243-0312

Description: Carrie Chapman Catt (1859-1947), president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA), was called upon by Tennessee women to assist in the fight for passage of the Nineteenth Amendment (Susan B. Anthony) to the United States Constitution, in the crucial thirty-sixth state, Tennessee. The papers include correspondence and memorabilia, cartoons, and photographs. The collection is composed of some accounts, correspondence, telegrams, newspaper clippings (reports and political cartoons) and some writings. The clippings from various newspapers give the day-by-day happenings of the suffrage work, as well as some anti-suffrage work, in the state of Tennessee. The writings include several anti-suffrage tracts.

Reference:

"95th Anniversary of the Certification of Tennessee's Ratification of the 19th Amendment," August 24, 2015, http://tslablog.blogspot.com/2015/08/95th-anniversary-of-certification-of.html.

Websites with information:

http://www.tennessee.gov/tsla/history/guides/guide07.htm

https://web.archive.org/web/20120222174217/http://www.tennessee.gov/tsla/educationoutreach/TN%20H

istory%20Day%20Resources%20at%20TSLA.pdf

Finding aid:

http://www.tn.gov/tsla/history/manuscripts/findingaids/72-119.pdf

[0502] James McKeen Cattell Papers, 1835-1948 (bulk 1896-1948), MSS15412

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

Description: Educator, editor, and psychologist, Cattell (1860-1944) was also a believer in eugenics. The papers consist of correspondence, diaries, speeches, lectures, articles, notes, financial papers, biographical and genealogical material, family papers, printed matter, and other papers relating primarily to Cattell's professional and academic affiliations. Correspondents include Harry E. Barnes, Charles A. Beard, William Edgar Borah, Vannevar Bush, Nicholas Murray Butler, Alexis Carrel, John Jay Chapman, Edwin G. Conklin, Charles B. Davenport, Max F. Eastman, Hamilton Fish, Irving Fisher, Henry Ford, Garet Garrett, Henry H. Goddard, Archibald Henderson, Hamilton Holt, Herbert Hoover, David Starr Jordan, Charles A. Lindbergh, Robert A. Millikan, Albert Jay Nock, Robert L. Owen, Amos Pinchot, Paul B. Popenoe, Frederick Soddy, and Vilhjálmur Stefánsson. Subject file on International Commission on Eugenics.

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.ms010157

http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms010157.3

[0503] John Cavanaugh-O'Keefe Papers, 1976-1990, M2003-012

Location: Wisconsin Historical Society, Library-Archives Division, 816 State St., Madison, WI 53706-1417

Description: Papers of pro-life activist John Cavanaugh-O'Keefe (1950- ), who co-founded the Pro-Life Nonviolent Action Project (PNAP) and Prolifers for Survival. The bulk of the papers document the PNAP, Human Life International (Gaithersburg, Maryland), and other affiliate pro-life organizations which worked closely with Cavanaugh-O'Keefe during the 1970s and 1980s. Also included are papers on other national pro-life organizations and activities, Cavanaugh-O'Keefe's personal papers, news clippings, legal documents, and correspondence. The photographs and videotapes document sit-ins and other demonstrations and the sound recordings consist of court hearings involving PNAP members and interviews with other pro-life activists. Series: Professional Papers, contains files on Research and Notes (Pro-life internal debate, Pro-life pregnancy centers, Correspondence with Joan Andrews), Pro-life articles, and Activities (Pro-life conferences and conventions). Series: Affiliate Organizations, contains files on Pro-life Non-violent Action Project (PNAP), Human Life International, and Other Affiliate Pro-life Organizations (Yale students for life, Santa Ana right to life). Series: Videorecordings, contains copies of Operation Rescue, Campaign for Life Coalition. Toronto, 1989 January 14; Rescue with Joan Andrews, Campaign for Life Coalition, undated; "People are Talking...Talk Show," Feminists for Life of America. Kansas City, Missouri, undated; Higher Laws: A Biblical, Historical and Present Day Perspective on Civil Disobedience, Randy Terry and Rev. Daniel J. Little. Includes "Rare Footage of an actual sit-in, showing pro-lifers chaining themselves inside an abortion mill"; and The Silent Scream: Now you can see the whole truth. "A first trimester suction abortion seen on an ultrasound screen from the victim's point of view. Described and explained by Bernard N. Nathanson, M.D.," American Portrait Films, 1984.

Finding aid:

http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/wiarchives.uw-whs-m2003012

[0504] Caxton Printers, Ltd. Records, 1930-1984, MSSM.080

Location: Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections, Terrell Library, Washington State University, PO Box 645610, Pullman, WA 99164-5610

Description: This collection consists of records of the Caxton Printers, Ltd. of Caldwell, ID and papers of its president, J.H. Gipson. Contains a file on the Republican Party.

Websites with information:

https://libraries.wsu.edu/masc/manuscripts/accessions

https://web.archive.org/web/20131010015538/http://www.wsulibs.wsu.edu/masc/msaccessions

Finding aid:

http://ntserver1.wsulibs.wsu.edu/masc/finders/mssm_080.htm

[0505] Caxton Printers, Ltd. Records, 1928-1982, Cage 873

Location: Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections, Terrell Library, Washington State University, PO Box 645610, Pullman, WA 99164-5610

Description: Caxton Printers specialized in publishing works about the American West but also published libertarian books, which were openly anti-Communist. These records of the Caxton Printers, Ltd., of Caldwell, Idaho, consist of "Published Authors" files and another record sequence that the company designated as "Special Files." The bulk of the collection is correspondence, along with documents related to the operation and management of the company.

Finding aid:

http://ntserver1.wsulibs.wsu.edu/masc/finders/cg873.htm

[0506] Censored Japanese Serials of the Pre-1946 Period 1924-1944 (Washington, Scholarly Resources, 1996; 270 microfilm reels]

Description: Part II includes titles by left-wing and right-wing political activists and listings of more than 300 censored titles from the pre-1946 period. "Part II provides listings of over three hundred titles of other censored serials of the pre-1946 period from the same WDC Collection that were previously microfilmed at LC. Of these serials on microfilm, the ones with microfilm number MOJ 073 on eight reels, some seventy-six serial titles, represent right-wing political thinkers or activists." (Checklist). Titles include Aikoku sensen (1933), Bukkyō shisō (1934), Bunka ishin (1942), Chōkoku (1940), Dai Ajia shugi (1939), Dainichi (1933-1940), Dai Ajia (1939-1940), Dai Nihon shugi (1931), Daidō (1933), Dal Nihon sekaikyō Miizu (1936), Gekkan kōdō (1941), Hinomoto (1940), Hito to kokusaku (1934), Hyakushō (1932), Ishin (1935-1937), Junsei Nihon shugi (1935), Ishin kōron (1934), Ishin kōron (1937), Jiei (1932-1933), Kaikō (1936), Kaiten jihō (1932-1933, 1936), Kakushin (1934-1936), Kakushin (1932-1933, 1936), Kami Nihon (1939-1940), Kōdō (1940), Kessen (1934), Ketsurui (1934, 1940), Kinki kōron (1935, 1939), Kinki (1932-1934), Kōkoku (1933), Kohon seikoku (1940), Kokkō (1933, 1940), Kokkyō (1932-1933, 1936), Kōkon (1934-1935), Kokumin sensen (1930), Kokusaku (1936), Kokusui jōhō (1933), Gekkan Nihon oyobi Nihonjin (1939-1940), Kōsei Nihon (1933), Kokutai kagaku (1930), Kokutai genri (1936), Kōkyō (1940-1943), Kunitama no hikari (1940), Kyokoku (1933-1934, 1937), Makoto musubi (1939-1940), Nihon seishin (1940), Nihon shugi bungaku (1933), Nihon ronsō (1939-1940), Nihon shugi hyōron (1932-1933), Nihon shisō (1929, 1932-1933, 1935, 1936, 1939), Nihonjin (1940), Nōhon shakai (1932), Nikkan tsūshin seiken (1937), Seinen Taiyō (1936), Seinen undō (1936), Seisantō no hata no moto ni (1932-1933), Shōtoku (1934), Shakai ōrai (1935-1937), Shakai to kokutai (1933-1935), Sōzō (1939-1940), Sōsei (1939), Shin kokumin undō (1940), Shinkō Bukkyō (1931-1933), Shinkō (1936), Shukoku (1936), Sumera Gakujuku kōza (1940-1942), Chuon (1940), Kōkoku seinen (1933-1934), Sumeragi (1932), Sumeragizumu (1932-1933), Taihō (1925), Taishū Shintō (1939), Taiyō (1933-1937, 1940), Tōa hyōron (1932), Tenshō (1937, 1939-1945), Tōitsu (1940), Uchū jissō (1936), and Yōsei jihyō (1939-1940).

Reference:

Censored Japanese serials of the pre-1946 period: a checklist of the microfilm collection = [Ken'etsu Wazasshi (1945-nen izen): maikurofirumu chekkurisuto], compiled by Yoshiko Yoshimura (Washington, Library of Congress, For sale by the U.S. G.P.O., Supt. of Docs., 1994), http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=pur1.32754064321627;view=1up;seq=7.

Websites with information:

https://web.archive.org/web/20130529045549/http://www.proquest.com/assets/downloads/catalogs/collections

/EastAsianStudiesCatalog.pdf

[0507] A Centennial Celebration: California Women and the Vote [online exhibit]

Location: The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720-6000

Description: On October 10, 1911, a special election was held in California. Appearing on the ballot was Proposition 4, a measure that would grant women the right to vote within the Golden State. The final tally was 125,037 to 121,450, giving woman suffrage a narrow victory of just 3,587 votes. With material drawn from collections held in The Bancroft Library, this exhibit celebrates the centennial anniversary of woman suffrage in California. Brought to light are the faces of the state's suffragists, many from the Bay Area, along with those of the movement's support and opposition. Room Three: The Opposition, contains copies of anti-women's suffrage flyers, including The woman's appeal to the voters of California, Power through independence, A working woman's protest, "The suffragettes" by William Kirk, Some reasons why we oppose votes for women, and A Voice from Los Angeles.

Finding aids:

http://bancroft.berkeley.edu/Exhibits/suffrage/index.html

http://bancroft.berkeley.edu/Exhibits/suffrage/room_03.html

[0508] Center for Democratic Renewal records, 1979-2008, aarl008-010

Location: Auburn Avenue Research Library on African-American Culture and History, Atlanta-Fulton Public Library System, 101 Auburn Avenue, N.E., Atlanta, GA 30303

Description: The Center for Democratic Renewal (1979-2008), founded by Reverend C.T. Vivian and Anne Braden as the National Anti-Klan Network (NAKN), was dedicated to the advancement of a democratic, diverse and just society, free of racism and bigotry. NAKN served as a resource on the Ku Klux Klan for Federal and police agencies, journalists, and religious, labor, and educational groups. In 1985, Vivian and the Board of Directors approved changing the name to the Center for Democratic Renewal (CDR), broadening its mission to include monitoring the radical and far right. The CDR monitored hate crimes and hate groups, and was known for their research, publications, public information, training, and helping local communities to address hate activities. The CDR Records contain correspondence, publications, newspapers, articles, newsletters, notes, financial records, brochures, audio-visual material, books, programs, grant proposals, photographs, reports, and ephemera. Contains files on A Choice Not An Echo, by Phyllis Schlafly (1964); Alabama (black mayor, Selma, rebel flag, Confederate flag, Birmingham, civil rights, prison, Christian Coalition, Eagle Forum, evolution, police brutality, NAACP); American Center for Law and Justice; Americans for truth; Americanism Educational League; Americans Against Union Control of Government; Americans Against Abortion; Americans for Constitutional Action; Americans for Immigration Control; Anti-Semitism (temples, synagogues, bombings, burnings, Vandalism, Anti-Defamation League, swastika, Pokémon, Holocaust denial, Nazi, Jews, housing, Henry Ford, Violence, David Duke, Jerry Fogel, arson, neo-Nazi, Skinheads, schools); Austin App; Richard Arens; Arkansas (White Power, Ralph Forbes, sedition); George Armstrong; Aryan Republican Army/Midwestern Bank Bandits (Terry Nichols, Oklahoma City Bombing); Aryan Nations (Richard Butler, Buford Furrow, Coeur D'Alene Idaho, Neuman Britton, Christian Identity, Posse Comitatus, August B. Kreis III, Aryan Nations World Congress, Vincent Bertollini, Carl Story, 11th Hour Remnant Messenger, Volksfront, Church of Jesus Christ Christian, Gregory Withrow, White Student Union, Aryan Nations Church, skinheads, Dwight McCarthy, Utahns Against the Aryan Nations, Aryan Nations Hour); Aryan Brotherhood (Jason Powell, Alex Witmer, Robert Ryan Rowland); Karl Baarslag; Harry Barnes; Barnes Review; Richard Barrett, Nationalist Movement; David Baxter; Louis Beam, KKK, TX Knights, Legal, Order, Aryan Nations, Essays of a Klansman; Louis Beam (KKK, leaderless resistance, Aryan Nations); Larry Becraft; Don Bell; Ezra Benson; George Benson; Sam Blumenfeld; Bookmailer; Anthony Bouscaren; L. Brent Bozell; Spruille Braden; Frank Britton; Pat Buchanan (Reform Party, David Duke, Anti-Semitism); William F. Buckley, Jr.; Edgar Bundy; Emory Burke; Eric Butler, Canadian League of Rights, IHR; Richard Butler, Aryan Nations, Order, Id.; Arthur Butz, Historical Revisionism; Cardinal Mindszenty Foundation; Asa Carter (a/k/a Forest Carter), KKK, Author; Asa Earl Carter; Willis A. Carto (Liberty Lobby); Willis Carto, IHR, Liberty Lobby, Populist Party; W.A. Carto, Right; W.A. Carto, Imperium Intro; Catholic Traditionalist; Catholic Traditionalist Movement; Right Wing Catholic; Catholics United for Life; right wing attacks upon Catholics; CATO Institute; CDL Report (Christian Defense League); Center for Bio-Ethical Reform; Center for Constitutional Rights; Chalcedon Report, Reconstructionist, Rushdoony; Chalcedon; F. Gano Chance; Chattooga County Christian Guard; Conrad Chapman; Frank Chodorov; Christian Identity (Gerald L.K. Smith, Neuman Britton, Buddy Johnson, August B. Kreis III, Barry Harris, Greg Thatcher, Randy Maczka, Jews, Gordon Winrod, Buford O. Furrow Jr., The Covenant the Sword and Arm of the Lord); Christian Coalition (elections, Pat Robertson, Robert Thoburn, Christian Thoburn Press, Lou Sheldon (Traditional Values Coalition), Randall Terry (Operation Rescue), J.B. Stoner (Christian Knights of the Klan), new right, religious right, Jane Fonda, Randy Tate, Ralph Reed); Christian Family Association, Christian Freedom Foundation, Christian Guard, TN, Christian Patriot Association; Christic Institute; Church League of America; Cinema Educational Guild; Circuit Rider; Citizens Foreign Aid Committee; Roy Cohn; Colorado for Family Values; Ken W. Colegrove; Combat 18; Committee to Restore the Constitution; Committee of the States; Committee of Ten Million; Communism; Bertrand Comparet; Congress of Freedom; Constitution Party, Joseph Birkenstock, Posse Comitatus, James Wickstrom; Richard Cotton, Conservative Viewpoint; Rev. Charles E. Coughlin, Social Justice; Ann Coulter; Kent and Phoebe Courtney; Harold A. Covington; Calvin F. Craig; John Crommelin; Matt Cvetic; Nord Davis; James De Mar; Byron de la Beckwith; Robert DePugh; Defenders of the American Constitution; Pedro Augusto del Valle; Ralph de Toledano; Devin-Adair Company; George Dietz, Liberty Bell Publications, Computer BBS; Elizabeth Dilling; Joseph Dilys; Dispossessed Majority, by Wilmot Robertson (1973); Dispossessed Majority, by Wilmot Robertson (1981); James Dobson; James Doenges; Domvile; Don Bell Reports; Robert Donner; Robert Dresser; Hilaire du Berrier; Duck Club; David Duke (Populist Party, neo-Nazi, KKK, National Organization for European American Rights, white resentment, affirmative action); David Duke, Clips-NY Times 10/91-11/91; Eagle Forum, Phyllis Schlafly, Censorship, Anti-Women; Charles Edison; Pastor Sheldon Emry, Christian Identity, Lords Covenant Church; Harry Everingham, We, The People; Facts Forum; Myron Fagan; Jerry Falwell (Tinky Winky, Anti-Semitism); Family Research Council; Far Right Media Task Force; Fascism; Federal Reserve and Right Wing on Currency Issues; Bonner Fellers; Ed Fields, NSRP, KKK, New Order, The Thunderbolt, IHR, Alfonso Case; Ed Fields (J.B. Stoner, National States Rights Party, New Order Knights, Southern Knights, National Anti-Jewish Party, Christian Anti-Jewish Party, The Truth At Last); Ed Fields; Frank Flick; Flow Chart of Far Right and White Supremacist Movement as of Sept. 92 [in pocket of When Hate Groups Come to Town: A Handbook of Effective Community Responses (Atlanta: Center for Democratic Renewal, 1992)] [online at https://scholarblogs.emory.edu/woodruff/files/2013/06/cdr014.jpg]; Focus on the Family, Dr. James C. Dobson; For America; Ralph Forbes; Foundation for Economic Education; Foundation for Voluntary Welfare; Patrick Frawley; Free Men Speak; William Potter Gale; Paul Gann; Dan Gayman, Church of Israel, Order, Identity, Aryan Nations, Pace Amendment (a constitutional amendment that would repeal the 14th and 15th amendments, proposed by William Daniel Johnson (writing as "James O. Pace"), Mo; Robert Gayre, Roger Pearson, Mankind Quarterly, Eugenics; Georgia (neo-Confederate movement, Emory University, Sabrina Collins, KKK, Forsyth County, school racism, J.B. Stoner, Hindu temple, Temple Beth David (Gwinnett), school Violence, police brutality, housing, skinheads, racist crosses, hate crimes bill, zoning, marches, Hosea Williams, Andrew Young, Indians, Native Americans, desegregation, magnet schools, Indian burial grounds); German American Bund, KKK, Knights, NJ, Germany; Kenneth Goff; Barry Goldwater; Ron Gostick; John Grady; William Grede; Bo Gritz (Fellowship of Eternal Warriors, Dan Gayman, Bob Burney, Fred Gabler, Mike Davis, Jeff Taylor, Richard Flowers, Steve Kukla, Glenn James, Leone Riche, Tom Byl, Larry Sartin, Roy McGrew, Sheldon Robinson, Jack McLamb, Freedom Call); Bo Gritz; Millard Grubbs; Matt Hale (World Church of the Creator); J. Evetts Haley; Frank Hanighen; Billy Hargis; Merwin Hart; Henry Hazlitt; A.G. Heinsohn; Jesse Helms; Bill Hendrix; Historical Revisionism; Michael Hoffman; Honest Money for America, Sen. Jack Metcalf, WA; Hoods and Shirts: The Extreme Right in Pennsylvania, 1925-1950, by Philip Jenkins (1997); Hoskins Report (Richard Kelly Hoskins); Richard Kelly Hoskins; Human Events; Edward Hunter; David Icke; Idaho (Aryan Nations, Christian Identity, Ruby Ridge, Phineas Priesthood, Charles Barbee, Robert Berry, Jay Merrell, Nazi symbols, Randy Weaver, Coeur d'Alene, Libertarian Party, Citizens for Nonviolent Action Against Racism, David Dorr, Deborah Dorr, Edward Hawley, Olive Hawley, Richard Butler, Hayden Lake, Robert Pires, bombing, Church of Jesus Christ Christian, William Wassmuth, neo-Nazis, The Order, David C. Tate, Bertha Edwards, NAACP); Tolbert Robert Ingram; Instauration; Iran-Contra (Oliver North, Ronald Reagan, John Poindexter, Marlin Fitzwater, Nicaragua); Howard Jarvis; Jewish-Americans (Violence/Threats Against, Buford O. Furrow Jr., Los Angeles North Valley Jewish Community Center, Anti-Semitism, Dan Perlov, synagogue/temple burnings/bombings, Scott Hudson, Daniel McIntosh, Carl DeAmicis, Christopher Hampton, Joshua Kudlacek, skinheads, 11th Hour Remnant Messenger, Khazar, Jack Komar, church-state, Juan Sandoval, arson, Jewish extremism); Vigilantes of Christendom: The Story of the Phineas Priesthood, by Richard Kelly Hoskins (1990); John Birch Society; George R. Jordan; K (Stephen Paul Kolokouris, Peter Kazlouski, Mike Kemp, Jeff Randall, Dylan Klebold, Peter N. Kirsanow, John Kasper, George Lincoln Rockwell, J.B. Stoner, Edward R. Fields, Ted Kaczynski, Chevie Kehoe, Cheyne Keho, Nancy Koernke, Kingdom Identity Ministries, Eric Norseman/Dan Gayman, Lawrence E. King Jr., Knightstown Boys); Jim Keegstra; Dr. James Kennedy, Fundamentalist RW, FL, Coral Ridge Ministries, Homophobia, AIDS; Martin Kerr; Howard Kershner; Devvy Kidd; The Klansman; Ben Klassen; Klassen Letters, by Ben Klassen (1989); Frank Kluckhohn; Knights of White Kamellia; Fred Koch; Matt Koehl, National Socialist White People's Party/New Order, VA; Ku Klux Klan (Adopt-a-highway, David Duke, neo-Nazi, Aryan Nation, National Socialist Movement, Jeffery Berry, Ruth Larsen, Ray Larsen, Ron Edwards, Dennis Realm, Jason Realm, Andy Realm, free speech, Barry Black, cross burning, C. Edward Foster, Invisible Empire, church bombing, Eric Rudolph, Mike Mialo, Union Knights of the KKK, Henry Francis Hays, Gregory Eugene Walker, William Mark Mize, Roy E. Frankhouser, parades and rallies, James W. Farrands, Jordan Gollub, Christian Knights of the KKK, Roger Handley, Joseph Lowery, Anti-mask law, Tom Martinez, The Order, Robert Mathews, Forsyth County, Hosea Williams, cable television, Vernon Dahmer, Sam Bowers, White Knights of the KKK); L (Henry Lyons, James Longstreet/Longstreet Society, Richmond Laney, Leaderless Resistance, Lost-Found Nation of Islam, William Law, Common Law, Bert Lance, Lifesavers Legal Defense, Liberty Lobby, Tom Valentine, Radio Free America, Lady Liberty); Tim and Beverly LaHaye, Religious Right; Lyndon LaRouche, Originals; Gerhard Lauck, NSDAP/AO, New Order (see also: Germany); Gary Lauck; Jean-Marie Le Pen; Leaderless Resistance; League of the South (Jim Lear, Howard Phillips, Michael Hill, Walter Kennedy, John Cripps, Charley Reese, Martin Murphy); J. Bracken Lee; Arnold Leese; Robert LeFevre; Liberty Amendment Committee, National Committee for Economic Freedom, Willis Stone, Armin Moths, Tax Protestors, CA; Liberty Lobby Inc. vs. National Review Inc.; Liberty Lobby, Willis Carto; Liberty Lobby, Liberty Letter; Liberty Lobby, Spotlight; Liberty Lobby, Noontide Press; Liberty Lobby, New States Constitution; Liberty Lobby, Tom Valentine; Liberty Bell, RW Publications, George Dietz, Computer BBS; Liberty Univ., Jerry Falwell; Marvin Liebman; Life Line Foundation; Alfred Lilienthal; Rush Hudson Limbaugh, III; Milton Lory; Myers Lowman; Lutheran Research Society, Sons of Liberty, Lawrence Reilly; Eugene Lyons; M (Richard Mack, Richard Masker, Michael McDermott, Justin Merriman, Chuck Morse, Mission to Israel Ministry, Michael Moore, Jim Marrs, Phillip Marsh, Frazier Glenn Miller, Tom Monaghan, Joseph Adams Milteer, Hendrik Möbus, Ruth E. Moskowitz); Lester Maddox, GA; James Madole, National Renaissance Party, Eugenics; Clarence Manion; Manion forum; Texe Marrs, Living Truth Ministries; James Mason, NSV, Liberty Net, OH; Harvey Matusow; William McBirnie; Conde McGinley; Frank McGurk; Carl McIntire; Jack McLamb; John McManus; Timothy McVeigh; Media Research Center; Tom Metzger, White Aryan Resistance; Militias; Militias (Jimmy Wynn, The Committee of 1776, Citizens Against Legal Loopholes, Indiana State Militia, Fred Keuthan, Dallas Fultz, Klamath Falls OR, Militia Corps of Wolverines, Freedom County WA, David Tuttle, Reed Overmyer, Brian Shimkus, Steve Shimkus, Thomas Wayne, Southern Maine Militia, Bo Gritz, White Mountain Militia, Lloyd Conn, Jeff Jarrell, Christina Winans, Military Affiliate Radio System, The Modern Militiaman's Internet Gazette, Larry Roten, Minnesota Minuteman Militia, Coleman David Rydie, Dan Shoemaker, Western Illinois Militia, Americans for Constitutional Government, The 11th Hour Messenger, Militia of Montana, Identity Christian Newsletter, America's Republic Militia, United Patriot Radio, San Joaquin County Militia, Kevin Ray Patterson, Charles Dennis Kiles, Donald Beauregard, New England Militia Alliance, Indiana Citizens Volunteer Militia, Indianapolis Baptist Temple, Georgia Militia, Ron Gaydosh, Martin Lindstedt, Project 7, response to World Trade Center bombing, Southeast Michigan Volunteer Militia); Ludwig Mises; Mississippi (Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission, skinheads, police brutality, Jackson Advocate bombing, confederate flag, prisons, Nationalist Movement, KKK); Missouri (Gordon Winrod, Raymond L. Bledsoe, prisons, police brutality); Jozef Mlot-Mroz, Anti-Communist Federation of Polish Freedom Fighters, J.B. Stoner; Jack Mohr; Monetary Science Publishing, National Americanist, Federal Reserve, State - OH; R.V. Montgomery, NSRP, Christian Rights, Ed Fields, J.B. Stoner; Moral Majority, Jerry Falwell, RW Publications, Fundamentalist RW, New Right; Ben Moreell; Felix Morley; Robert Morris; Eustace Mullins, Sons of Liberty, RW Publications; Bob Muncaster; Lyle H. Munson; Charles Murray, Manhattan Institute for Policy Research, RW Publications; Charles: Murray, The Bell Curve; N (Kerry Noble, North Georgia White Knights of the KKK, Neo-Confederate movement, Nazi Lowriders, National Vastilian Aryan Party, Mark Mize, Micheal New, National Rifle Association, National Right to Life Committee, National Association for the Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, The National Front, National Association for the Advancement of White People, National Organization for European American Rights (NO-FEAR)); National Review; Neo-Nazi/Skinheads (Adolf Hitler, salute, Anti-Semitism, Davis Wolfgang Hawke, Prussian Blue, Lamb Gaede, Lynx Gaede, Bo Gritz, fascism, National Socialist Movement, Holocaust denial, American Nazi Party, National Alliance, William Pierce, Aryan Nations, World Church of the Creator, Resistance Records, White Revolution, Erich Gliebe, Billy Roper, hate-free zone, The Order, Whidbey Island, Robert J. Mathews, Randolph Duey, Bruce Pierce, Gary Yarbrough, Richard Kemp, Andrew Barnhill, Richard Scutari, Revolutionary Communist Youth Brigade, The Bully Boys, White Student Union, Nathan Thill, hate music, white power music, Richard Butler, United Skinheads Against Racism, Billy Wayne Worl); Neo-Confederates; New Christian Crusade Church; John T. Noonan; Noontide Press; North Carolina (Fort Bragg, church-state, militia, slavery, Greensboro Massacre, confederate flag, Eddie Hatcher, Timothy Jacobs); Oliver North; Gary North; Oklahoma City Bombing (Timothy McVeigh, Terry Nichols); Revilo P. Oliver - IHR; Omni Christian Book Club, Anti-Semitic; The Order; Our Savior's Church, Gordon Winrod, Winrod Letter, NSRP, RW Radio; P (Ron Palacioz, Joseph Pearce, Richard Pollard, Anthony Premo, Progressive Friends of Rayosun, Patriot, Michael Pipkins, Roger Pearson, Leonard Peltier, Prosper International League, Elmer Pratt, Charles Pannell, William Pepper, Billy Roy Pitts, Peace Culture, Perspectives on Anarchist, Clarence Pendleton, Earl Paulk, Populists, People Recognizing Individuality & Dignity/Diversity for Everyone PRIDE, "Patriotic Liberator"); Ron Paul; Roger Pearson; Pete Peters; J. Howard Pew; William Pierce (Neo-Nazi Church, Cosmotheist Community Church, The Order); William Pierce (Andrew McDonald); "Neo-Nazi Skinheads and Youth Information packet" (Atlanta, GA: Center for Democratic Renewal, [1990]) (including the "Revolutionary Recruitment Issue" (Aryan Youth Movement/White Student Union); Pioneer Fund, Scientific Racism; R. Carter Pittman; Plain Talk; Populist-Conservative Tax Coalition, Richard Viguerie, Paul Weyrich, Tax PROT, Howard Phillips; Populist Party; Promise Keepers; Promise Keepers (Paul Edwards, Bill McCartney); Protocols of Zion; Fletcher Prouty - Liberty Lobby - LaRouche - Movie "JFK"; Karl Prussion; PTL/Praise the Lord (Jim Bakker, Tammy Faye Bakker, Jessica Hahn); Carleton Putnam; Frank X. Ranuzzi; John Rarick; Redeem Our Country; Lawrence Reilly; Resistance, Harold Covington; Right Wing (Anti-Semitism, skinheads, Libertarians, Fundamentalists, Radical Religious, Jerry Falwell, Lee Bellinger, Martha Headley, Free Inquiry, The Barnes Review, Franklin Graham); Archibald Roberts, Committee to Restore the Constitution; GA Weekend Media; Wilmot Robertson, Dispossessed Majority, Howard Allen Enterprises, RW Publications; Pat Robertson; George Lincoln Rockwell, American Nazi Party, Gerald L.K. Smith; Manfred Roeder, Germany, Terrorists, Teutonic Unity, Keith Gilbert; E. Merrill Root; Alfred Rosenberg, "Race and Race History"; John H. Rousselot - John Birch Society; Eric Robert Rudolph; Phillip Rushton, Eugenics; S (Edwyn Silberling, Society of the Heritage Crest, Thom Satterlee, Bob Westphal, Duane Felix, David Guadalupe, Richard Schaefle, Dan Shoemaker, Harvey Spelkin, Craig Steinagel, Peter Stern, Tom Strassell, Bryan Adair, Michael Sullivan, Special Forces Underground, SS Action Group, Grugyn Silverbristle, George Augustus Stallings Jr., J.B. Stoner, James Sughrue, Self Determination Committee, Johnny Spain, James E. Shaver, Eugene B. Sebree, Society of Friends, Betty Shabazz, The Southern League); John Salvi; John Schlafly; Phyllis Schlafly, Eagle Forum, Anti-Women, Censorship; John Schmitz; Science, Right Wing Use Of - Intelligence Tests; Science, Right Wing Use Of - Genetics, Eugenics; Science, Right Wing Use Of - Biological Determinism; J. Creagh Scott - Hidden Government; Scrapbook (Edward R. Fields, J.B. Stoner, Cecil Cox, Marion Francis "Frank" Shirley, David Wayne Holland, Richard Barrett, Gene Hall, Jimmy Wynn, Lee Bates, Mark Lane Watts, Richard Ford, Mike Eddington, Jerry Lord, Don Willard Sanders, Robert "Bobby" Starnes, Willis, Cecil Reese, Steve Anderson, Avery Coors, Alan Varner, Gary Simms, Randall Wiley Smith, Richard Pounder, Danny/David Satterfield, Bill Roland, Tim McDonald, Vinnie, Charles Lee, James Rudeseal, James Farrands, Danny Carver, Darlene Carver, Reuben Edward Stephens Jr., Jim Blair, Loren Lowdermilk, Mary Chadwick, "Big Bill" Hendrix, Elmer Holland, James and Marilyn Spivey, Louis Ray Beam Jr., Hamilton Hogg, Danny Carver, K.A. Badynski, James Burford, Richard Butler, Jeff Shumate, Donnie Adams, Don Black (former Klan leader and founder of the racist website Stormfront), John Albert Land, James Brown, Greg Walker, Gordon Miller, Chris Webb, David McAndrews, Keith Smith, Robert Miles, Ron Doggett, Gordon Ipock, Willis Carto, William Shearer, Louis Baxter, Stanley McCollum, David Craig, Jarah Crawford, Ed Fields, Shade Miller, Carroll Crawford, Virgil Griffin, Gary Gallo, Joe Greco, Darlene Carver, Alan Werner, Dave Holland, Scott Shepard, Matt Malone, Art Jones, Kirk Lyons, Terry Boyce, Robert McCurry, Tom Metzger, Paul Hollis, William Pierce, Tony Butler, Jackie Quinn, Don Romine, Maureen Salaman, Tupper Saussy, David Bradshaw, Keith Smith, John Stanring, Randall Wiley Smith, James Spivey, Charlie Tate, Will Williams, Ronnie Vining, Ralph Mask, Amy Wharton, Jim Yarborough, John Ingram, Robert Brannen, Sr., Darvin Purcell, Kelly Durden, Jack Poole, Ray Harrelson, Bobby Norton, Randall Smith, Matt Kuhnen, Gerhardt Lauck, Sam Dickson, John Tyndall, Bob Weems, Jerry Lord, Robert Campeau, John McLaughlin, Dave Mehus); Hans Sennholz; Marjorie Shearon; Robert Shelton, KKK, UKA, Minutemen, Southern Poverty Law Center, AL, Donald, Murder; William Shockley, Eugenics; John Singlaub, Contragate, WACL, US Council on World, Freedom, Tom Posey; Skinhead Nazis and Youth Skinheads; W. Cleon Skousen; Gerald L.K. Smith, Christian Nationalist Party, Aryan nations, Wesley Swift, Dan Smoot; Joe Sobran; Sons of Liberty (see also: CDL; NCCC); Sons of Liberty (Bo Gritz, Eric Rudolph); South Carolina (KKK, Confederate flag, The Citadel, Orangeburg Massacre); The Spotlight; Alan Stang, Tax Protestors, Alan Stang RPT, JBS, CA; Lothrop Stoddard; Stone Mountain Rally, 1991; Willis Stone; Stone Mountain, GA, KKK Labor Day March, Marc Comfort City Hall Press Conference; J.B. Stoner; John Stormer, Liberty Bell Press; Stormfront (see also: Computers); Kevin Alfred Strom; Herman E. Talmadge, Segregation; Charles Tansill; Teutonic Unity - Erlanger - Roeder; Euro-American Thule; Ned Touchstone; Truth at Last; Turner Diaries; U.S. Constitution (constitutionalist movement, common law movement), James Van Fleet; Harold Varney; James R. Venable - KKK, National Knights; Edwin Vieira; Richard Viguerie; B.F. Von Stahl; W (White Citizens Council, Nelson Waller, Ryan Wilson, ALPHA HQ, Ralph Wirkus, Wilfred Benzing, Alex Witmer, Jason Powell, Perry J. Watkins, Hosea Williams, George Wallace, Robert Welch, White Patriot Party, White Student Union, Charles Wilson); Chester Ward; James Warner, Christian Patriots, League, CDL; We The People, Tax Protestors, Harry Everingham, AL, OR, MI; Randy Weaver; Randy Weaver, Neo-Nazi, ID; A.C. Wedemeyer, Prisons, Menard Correctional Facility, State - IL; R.R. Welch; Robert Welch; Western Destiny - W.A. Carto; Western Goals; Paul Weyrich, Free Congress PAC, New Right, RW PACS; Robert White; James Wickstrom, Posse Comitatus, Life Science Church; Alice Widener; C.A. Willoughby; Gordon Winrod, Our Saviors Church, MO, Winrod Letter, RW Radio, NSRP; Wise Use Movement; Women and the Far Right; World War II/Holocaust/Nazis (Holocaust denial, Nazi war criminals, Holocaust Memorial Museum); World Church of the Creator (Matthew Hale, Joseph Ferguson, Mike Curtis, Sisterhood of the WCOTC, The Struggle: Dedicated to the Survival, Expansion and Advancement of the White Race); World War II/Holocaust Denial (Yaron Svoray, Ron Furey, Franciszek Piper, Ernst Zündel, David Irving, revisionism, Institute for Historical Review, Willis Carto, Arthur Butz, David McCalden, Mel Mermelstein, "Did Six Million Really Die?", Simon Wiesenthal Center, Committee for Open Debate on the Holocaust); Francis Parker Yockey ("America's Hitler," Willis Carto, American Nazi Party); Francis P. Yockey, Willis Carto, Imperium, RW Publications; Young Americans for Freedom; They Dare To Speak Out, by Paul Findley (1985); Allen A. Zoll; and Ernst Zündel.

References:

Cheryl Oestreicher, "The Center for Democratic Renewal," Emory Libraries Blog, September 28, 2011, https://scholarblogs.emory.edu/woodruff/fyi/the-center-for-democratic-renewal; Cheryl Oestreicher, "Center for Democratic Renewal Records – 'When Hate Groups Come to Town,'" Emory Libraries Blog, October 20, 2011, https://scholarblogs.emory.edu/woodruff/fyi/center-for-democratic-renewal-records-when-hate-groups-come-to-town.

Websites with information:

http://www.clir.org/hiddencollections/registry/hc.0014

https://scholarblogs.emory.edu/woodruff/uncategorized/center-for-democratic-renewal-records-development

-and-fundraising

https://scholarblogs.emory.edu/woodruff/uncategorized/the-center-for-democratic-renewal

Finding aid:

http://aafa.galileo.usg.edu/aafa/view?docId=ead/aarl008-010-ead.xml

[0508a] Center for Libertarian Studies records, 1961-1986 (bulk 1977-1984), Coll. 96043

Location: Hoover Institution Archives, 434 Galvez Mall, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305-6010

Description: The Center for Libertarian Studies (CLS), an American non-profit organization for the promotion of libertarianism and libertarian research, was founded in 1976 by Murray N. Rothbard and Burton S. Blumert. The CLS published The Journal of Libertarian Studies from 1977 to 2000. The collection includes correspondence, reports, conference papers, journal articles and drafts, proposals, organizational rosters, mailing lists, agenda, ephemera, budgets and financial records, photographs, and printed matter relating to libertarianism and its socio-political impact, covering topics such as immigration, education, economics, philosophy, and non-violence. The Journal of Libertarian Studies Publication Files, 1977-1986, contains letters between Murray N. Rothbard and libertarian scholars such as Charles Koch and Hans-Hermann Hoppe.

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt4290334k/entire_text/

[0509] Center for Popular Culture Records, 1988-2003, Coll. 2005C25

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

Description: The Center for the Study of Popular Culture aims to promote traditional conservative values, particularly regarding racial and social issues, and mold public opinion by challenging opposing points of view. Contains writings, correspondence, memoranda, schedules, legal and financial records, printed matter, sound recordings, and video tape, relating to conservatism and the mass media in the United States. Includes papers of David Horowitz, founder and president of the Center. Files on American Enterprise Institute, Americanism Educational League, Dick Armey, Bill Bennett, black anti-Semitism, Robert Bork, CATO Institute, Charles G. Koch Foundation, Inc., Dinesh D'Souza, Eagle Forum, Jerry Falwell, Newt Gingrich, Charlton Heston, Immigration (Alien Nation: Common Sense About America's Immigration Disaster, by Peter Brimelow, 1995), Jack Kemp, Alan Keyes, Bill Kristol, Laurel Foundation, Rush Limbaugh, Frank S. Meyer Society, Oliver North, Paul Revere Society, and George Will. Audio recordings of Dick Armey, William Kristol, and Tom Delay. A copy of The Limbaugh Letter.

Websites with information:

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

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

Finding aids:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt3489q98b/entire_text/

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

[0509a] Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions (CSDI) Collection, Series 12: Audio-Visual, ca. 1956-1987, Mss 18 [audio recordings; partly digital collection]

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

Description: The Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions, established in 1959, grew out of the 'Basic Issues' program of the Fund for the Republic, a grant-making institution designed to combat the rampant abuses of American civil liberties that characterized the McCarthy era. 'Basic Issues' included "the current status" of corporations, trade unions, the common defense, religion, the mass media, political parties, pressure groups, and professional associations. The CSDI was a residential center in Santa Barbara, California, for a core of full-time participants and invited experts to spend extended periods of time examining the issues. Contains ca. 3,500 audio tapes of Center conferences, convocations, meetings and interviews. Also 127 reels of film, and 57 videotapes in various formats. Series 12: Audio-visual Materials. Sub-series A18-1201: Audiotapes. Sub-subseries 12.01.01: Taped Programs ca. 1961-1978, contains copies of A Matter of Genes (July 1, 1969): Educational psychologist Arthur Jensen, of the University of California at Berkeley, discusses his controversial theory that "genetic factors are strongly implicated in the average black-white intelligence difference" in this interview with the Center's Donald McDonald; Population Control Begins at Home (Oct. 30, 1969): Biologist Paul R. Ehrlich, of Stanford University, offers a plan that he sees as a realistic solution to the progressive destruction of life on earth due to overpopulation, a problem compounded by the Western world's avaricious consumption of non-renewable resources; and Foreign Policy - The Kissinger View (Oct. 8, 1973): Secretary of State Henry Kissinger discusses recent changes in the international scene and gives his views of the realities and limits of foreign policy. With an introduction by Robert M. Hutchins. Sub-subseries 12.01.02: Transcription Tapes 1965-1987, contains copies of Jim Garrison - The Assassination, Nov. 16, 1967; Michael Novak - The Church in Society, Feb. 8, 1968; Thomas O'Dea and Michael Novak - The Church in Society, Feb. 9, 1968; Arthur R. Jensen - How Much Can We Boost IQ and Scholastic Achievement, Mar. 28, 1969; William Gorman, John Wilkinson - Discussion of a paper by Arthur R. Jensen entitled "I.Q. And Academic Achievement," May 13, 1969; William Gorman, John Wilkinson - Discussion of a paper by Arthur R. Jensen entitled "I.Q. And Academic Achievement," May 14, 1969; Arthur R. Jensen, Donald McDonald (Library Conversation Interview by McDonald), July 1, 1969; Bertrand de Jouvenel - Discussions - 1970 Plans for Associates, Nov. 21, 1969; Prof. Paul Marx - The Problems of Abortion, Aug. 16, 1972; Bertrand de Jouvenel, John Wilkinson - Library Conversation, Oct. 23, 1972; Bertrand de Jouvenel, Harvey Wheeler, Barnard Norris - Library Conversation, Oct. 26, 1972; Bertrand de Jouvenel- Concentrations, Oct. 26, 1972; Bertrand de Jouvenel- The Role of the Intellectual, Oct. 27, 1972; Michael Wright - Gobineau: Alive and Well in the Promised Land, Dec. 29, 1972; Bertrand de Jouvenel - Is the United States Turning Away from Europe, Feb. 28, 1978; Garrett Hardin - A National Population Policy, Nov. 9, 1978; and Seymour Lipset - The Politics of Unreason: Right Wing Extremism in the United States, 1790-1977, Mar. 5, 1979. Sub-subseries 12.01.05: Chronological ca. 1953-1983, contains copies of Hank Greenspun (publisher of Las Vegas Sun News) - Comments by and about Joseph McCarthy, [ca. 1953]; David Horowitz (3 tapes), Jan. 15, 1962; Story of the Center - Chicago Symposium, June 1963 (Bertrand de Jouvenel - For Story of the Center, June 1963); Michael Novak - Political Morality (2 tapes), Jan. 10, 1972; Bertrand de Jouvenel - Is the United States Turning Away from Europe, Feb. 28, 1978; and Bertrand de Jouvenel interviewed by Donald McDonald, Feb. 28, 1978.

Websites with information:

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

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

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf3s2006vg/entire_text/

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt4n39s1z9/entire_text/

Finding aid for Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions (CSDI) Audio Archive:

http://digital.library.ucsb.edu/collections/show/15

[0509b] Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions / Princeton University Files, 1957-1969 (bulk 1962-1965), Mss 253

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

Description: The collection mainly contains post-1961 administrative files which the Center had microfilmed, then shipped to Princeton University, and which subsequently were transferred from Princeton University to UCSB in 1999. Series I: Administration, 1962-1965, contains correspondence, financial statements, mailings, membership lists, memoranda, minutes, papers, press clippings, press releases, proposals, reports, and speeches. Files on American Right Wing – Hallock Hoffman; Americans for Freedom; William Benton ("The Economics of a Free Society"); M. Bertrand de Jouvenel; Fund for the Republic; Barry Goldwater; Garrett Hardin – "A Second Sermon on the Mount"; Henry R. Luce; Mass Media – William Benton; Mindszenty Foundation; National Council for Civic Responsibility; John Nef; Wright Patman; Press Clippings (Anatomy of Extremism, John F. Cronin, Right to Work, Edith Kermit Roosevelt); Press Clippings (William F. Buckley, Jr., Ford Foundation, John Birch Society, Edith Kermit Roosevelt, Alice Widener); Press Clippings (American Right Wing, Hugo L. Black, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Ford Foundation, Foundations, A Conservative Looks at War and Peace – John De Blois Wack, Prayer in Schools, Race – Miscellaneous Items, Edith Kermit Roosevelt, Alice Widener); Race Relations; George Santayana – "Spirit in the Sanctuary"; Robert Strausz-Hupé; Technology Symposium, Dec. 19-23, 1965 - Participants ( Marshall McLuhan); and [Birch] John Birch Society.

Websites with information:

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

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

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt309nf2jn/entire_text/

[0509c] Collection of the Center for the Study of Political Graphics, 1900- (bulk 1960- ) [posters]

Location: Center for the Study of Political Graphics, 3916 Sepulveda Blvd., Suite 103, Culver City, California 90230

Description: The collection of the Center for the Study of Political Graphics (CSPG) contains over 85,000 domestic and international political posters and prints relating to historical and contemporary movements for social change. Topics include abortion, abortion clinics, anti-abortion, Anti-Arab racism, anti-black, anti-choice politicians, anti-Communism, anti-gay violence, anti-immigration, anti-labor laws, anti-Sandinista, anti-Semitism, anti-socialism, brainwashing, criminalization of abortion, Jim Bakker, Tammy Faye Bakker, British National Party (BNP), California Proposition 8 (anti gay marriage), Christian fundamentalists, climate change, Roy Cohn, Colorado Amendment 2 (anti-gay rights), Derek Beackon, Communism, conservatism, cults, William E. Dannemeyer, Tom DeLay, Robert Dole, evolution, extreme right-wing politics, far-right, fascism, forced sterilization, Gerald Ford, Newt Gingrich, guns, hate, Jesse Helms, Rudolf Hess, Adolf Hitler, Holocaust, homophobia, J. Edgar Hoover, House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC), Iran-Contra Affair, Islamophobia, Japanese internment, Jeane Kirkpatrick, Ku Klux Klan (KKK), Labor Management Relations Act of 1947 (Taft-Hartley Act), Joseph McCarthy, McCarthyism, Ed Meese, Minutemen, Karl E. Mundt, Nazi Germany, Nazi skinheads, Nazism, neo-Nazi organizations, Richard Nixon, Oliver North, Operation Rescue, patriotism, population control, The Potsdam Conference (1945), pro-gun movement, pro-life, pro-life movement (abortion), pro-life murder, racial integration, racial segregation, racism, racism in the U.S., radical right, Ronald Reagan, the red menace, Red-baiting, reproductive rights, Republican Party for George Wallace, right to bear arms, right-wing, right-wing extremism, right-wing extremists, right-wing fraternities, right-wing fundamentalism, right-wing political parties, right wing politicians, right-wing politics, right-wing propaganda, right wing religious groups, right wing violence, right-wing young organizations, Karl Rove, Antonin Scalia, Phyllis Schlafly, sex education, socialism, Jimmy Swaggart, swastikas, terrorism, Margaret Thatcher, Clarence Thomas, Strom Thurmond, John Tower, ultra-conservative, ultra-right, Unidad Nicaragüense Opositora (UNO), violence against abortion providers, violence against women, George Wallace, white supremacy, World Anti-Communist League (WACL), and xenophobia.

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8959k7m/entire_text/

[0510] Central American Historical Institute Records, 1980-1993, DG 174

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

Description: Central American Historical Institute (CAHI) was established in 1982 as an independent educational and research center based at Georgetown University in Washington D.C. It was affiliated with the Instituto Histórico Centroamericano, a 25-year-old documentation center of the Jesuits of Central America; worked in Belize, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, and Panama. The CAHI ceased operation around 1993. This collection contains reference files on various Central American countries in the 1980s, especially concerning work of Jesuits in Central America; most material is about El Salvador, Guatemala and Nicaragua; in English and Spanish. Files on the Contras, Godoy and Right Wing, 1989- , Right Perspectives, 1990's, The Right, The Right II, Contra Supporters: Recent Activity 1991, North and Company Aid to Contras, El Salvador- ARENA (Alianza Republicana Nacionalista - Nationalist Republican Alliance, a right-wing party founded by Roberto D'Aubuisson), El Salvador- Death Squads, CIA in El Salvador, CIA in Guatemala, and CIA in Nicaragua.

Websites with information:

http://www.swarthmore.edu/library/peace/DGList/DGlist.expanded.htm

Finding aid:

http://www.swarthmore.edu/library/peace/DG151-175/dg174caha.htm

[0511] Central American Political Ephemera Collection, 1983-1986, MSS 684 BC [ephemera collection]

Location: Center for Southwest Research and Special Collections, Zimmerman Library 1st floor, West Wing, MSC05 3020, University of New Mexico, 800 Yale Blvd NE, Albuquerque, NM 87131

Description: This collection contains materials from Central American political campaigns during the mid-1980s, including political material from Honduras, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Panama, and El Salvador. The majority of the collection consists of campaign pamphlets and information about candidates running for the presidency in the 1985 and 1986 elections. In addition to the material specific to the presidential campaigns are numerous stickers, calenders and newspapers. Among the newspapers are multiple issues of Nicaragua Hoy and Hacia Nuestra Liberación, publications of the reactionary, counter-revolutionary forces in Nicaragua, the Contras (Unidad Nicaragüense Opositora (UNO)). Contains copies of Por el rescate democrático de Nicaragua (Unidad Nicaragüense Opositora (UNO), 1986); Hacia Nuestra Liberación (Unidad Nicaragüense Opositora (UNO), 1985-1986); Nicaragua Hoy (Unidad Nicaragüense Opositora (UNO), 1985-1986); and miscellaneous Contra-related materials, 1985-1986.

Finding aid:

http://rmoa.unm.edu/docviewer.php?docId=nmu1mss684bc.xml

[0512] Central office of the State Security Service, 1945-1948, Record Group 305

Location: Department of Archival Collections of the Federal Ministry of the Interior, Na Struze 3, Prague 1, Czech Republic

Description: Materials of diverse character, mainly consisting of messages and investigations of activities of former members and functionaries of Nazi and collaborationist organizations (including the NSDAP, Freikorps, Wehrwolf, Hitlerjugend, Kuratorium, Vlajka). Screening of national and state loyalty of public and state employees. Enquiries, messages and protocol testimonies of persons detained in illegal state border crossings. Reports and investigations into activities of resistance and partisan groups. Reports on the activities of various associations in the Czech Socialist Republic (CSR), their characteristics, political focus and findings on functionaries and members, including the Rotary Club, Association of Friends of Democratic States, Association of Friends of the USA, spiritists, Masons, Jewish and Zionist associations, etc.

Websites with information:

http://www.abscr.cz/en/guide-to-the-collections

http://www.abscr.cz/en/guide-to-the-collections-a

http://www.abscr.cz/en/guide-to-the-collections-a-description

Finding aid:

https://web.archive.org/web/20110904211424/http://www.abscr.cz/data/pdf/abs/inventar-305.pdf

[0513] Centre de Documentation Juive Contemporaine et Mémorial de la Shoah

Location: 17, rue Geoffroy-l'Asnier, 75004 Paris, France

Description: In 1943 the Centre de Documentation Juive Contemporaine (Center of Contemporary Jewish Documentation, or CDJC) was founded in Grenoble as a clandestine organisation. Its specific objective was to document the Shoah by pooling the information of Jewish organizations and scholars and by collecting documentary evidence. After the liberation of France in 1944, the founder, Isaac Schneersohn, and Léon Poliakov, in charge of research, moved the CDJC to Paris to save it from destruction and to sequester the archives of the Vichy government and of the German occupying forces. Among documents that they obtained were the French archives of the Gestapo, part of the Wehrmacht archives, and Vichy documents. Later the CDJC became one of the official repositories of the Nuremberg trial documents. In addition to the minutes and background documentation for the trials, the CDJC obtained original archival material and the personal archives of Alfred Rosenberg, Nazi Party ideologue and ERR chief. (Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg (ERR) was a looting agency set up in July-August 1940 to spoliate western Europe's cultural heritage, but especially Jewish libraries, archives, and private art collections and, later on in the war, to pillage cultural objects in south east Europe and the former Soviet Union.) The archive collections currently contain more than thirty million archive documents, including papers from the Direction Régionale de l'Aryanization Economique de Toulouse; documents from the French Commissariat Général aux Questions Juives (General Commission on Jewish Affairs), the agency principally active in stripping French Jews of their property and transcripts of the trials of the top level of management; the archives of Georges Montandon (1879-1944), a Swiss anthropologist and "expert on racial issues" with the Commissariat Général aux Questions Juives (CGQJ). This partial archive group covers the period from 1924 to 1944 and deals first with his scientific ethnology work, then with his activities in anti-Jewish propaganda from 1938; and records of the Institut d'Étude des Questions Juives or IEQJ (a German organisation created by Theodor Dannecker in 1941 for anti-Jewish propaganda set up under the Occupation).

Websites with information:

http://www.memorial-cdjc.org/index.php/en/archives-and-documentation/the-archives-department/the-catalogue-of-archives

http://www.memorialdelashoah.fr/index.php/en/archives-and-documentation/the-archives-department/the-catalogue-of-archives/

https://www.holocaustremembrance.com/itfdirectory/organization/show/3388

http://www.lootedart.com/MFEU4B37218_print;Y

[0514] Centre for Policy Studies, 1974-1991, Ref. No. CPS

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

Description: The Centre for Policy Studies was established by Margaret Thatcher and Keith Joseph in 1974 as an independent centre right think tank with a remit to develop and publish public policy proposals and arrange seminars and lectures on topical policy issues, with a view to influencing policy world-wide. According to its mission statement, the core principles upon which the Centre bases its policy proposals include the value of free markets, the importance of individual choice and responsibility, and the concepts of duty, family, respect for the law, national independence, individualism, and liberty. This collection is composed of various administrative records, publications, reports, and papers of study groups of the Centre for Policy Studies.

Reference:

The Routledge Guide to British Political Archives: Sources since 1945, [edited by] Chris Cook in association with the LSE Library (London, New York, Routledge, 2006), pp. 258-259.

Finding aid:

http://archives.lse.ac.uk/Record.aspx?src=CalmView.Catalog&id=CPS&pos=8

[0515] Centro operativo tra genitori per l'iniziativa democratica e antifascista nella scuola (Cogidas), bb. 14 (1971-1978)

Location: Istituto romano per la storia d'italia dal fascismo alla resistenza, Piazza di Porta Capena 1 - 00184 Roma, Italy

Description: Documents, flyers, correspondence, newsletters, press clippings, and magazines on the initiatives of Cogidas, as well as a collection of press clippings on neo-fascist violence in schools in Rome and other issues.

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.

[0515a] Century Company records, 1870-1930s (bulk 1886-1918), MssCol 504 [partly digital collection]

Location: Manuscripts and Archives Division, Stephen A. Schwarzman Building, Brooke Russell Astor Reading Room, Third Floor, Room 328, New York Public Library, Fifth Avenue at 42nd Street, New York, NY 10018-2788

Description: The Century Company, founded in New York City in 1881, published the Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine, the children's magazine St. Nicholas, dictionaries, and books. The records chiefly contain correspondence with contributors, readers, public figures, and literary agents. Series I. General Correspondence, contains files on Brooks Adams, Gertrude Breckenridge Beeks (Mrs. Ralph M. Easley), Hilaire Belloc, Charles Francis Brush, Luther Burbank, Nicholas Murray Butler, John Jay Chapman, Arthur Cherep-Spiridovich, Gilbert Keith Chesterton, Ralph Adams Cram, George Creel, Josephus Daniels, Charles Benedict Davenport, Alexander Del Mar, C.F. Dight, Ralph Montgomery Easley, Max Forrester Eastman, Thomas Alva Edison, Livingston Farrand, Irving Fisher, Henry H. Goddard, Madison Grant, Prescott F. Hall, Archibald Henderson, Hamilton Holt, Rossiter Johnson, David Starr Jordan, Paul Underwood Kellogg, Rudyard Kipling, Abbott Lawrence Lowell, David Lubin, Paul Elmer More, National Economic League, Henry Fairfield Osborn, Robert L. Owen, Sir William Mathew Flinders Petrie, Gifford Pinchot, Ezra Pound, Ogden Mills Reid, Edith Kermit (Carow) Roosevelt, Elihu Root, Edward A. Rumely, Jouett Shouse, Marie C. Stopes, George Sylvester Viereck, Oswald Garrison Villard, Luigi Villari, William Allen White, John Sharp Williams, Jennings C. Wise, Owen Wister, and Robert Mearns Yerkes.

Finding aids:

http://archives.nypl.org/mss/504

http://archives.nypl.org/uploads/collection/generated_finding_aids/mss504.pdf

http://digilib.nypl.org/dynaweb/ead/nypl/msscentu/@Generic__BookTextView/

[0516] The Senatorial Papers of John H. Chafee, Washington Office, 1976-1999, Mss. Gr. 115.2

Location: Special Collections and Archives, University of Rhode Island Library, Unit 15 Lippitt Road, Kingston, RI 02881-2011

Description: Chafee (1922-1999) was a senator from Rhode Island, 1976-1999. Series I, Subject File, 1970-1977, contains files on Bilderberg Meetings and Contras: Opposition to Aid. Series II, Defense/Foreign Policy, 1979-1999, contains files on Iran-Contra Investigation, Israeli Attack on USS Liberty, McCarran-Walter Act: Immigration, and Pearl Harbor Commanders Kimmel, Short Resolution, 1999 [a non-binding resolution passed by the Senate to exonerate Kimmel and Short]. Series III, Health Care/Welfare Reform, 1977-1999, contains files on Abortion, Abortion: Anti-Choice Initiatives, and Abortion: Gag Rule, Title X. Series V, News Clippings, 1977-1999, contains files on Abortion, Bork Appointment, Busing, Equal Rights Amendment, Gag Rule (Title X), Global Warming, Gun Control, Iran Arms-Contra Scandal, Prayer in Schools, and Ronald Reagan. Series VI, Press Releases/Subject File, 1977-1999, contains a files on Contras. Series XXX, Nesbit Files, 1976-1991, contains a file on Contras. Series XLIV, Abortion, 1977-1999, contains files on Operation Rescue: Anti-Abortion Group; Title X Regulations (1970-1995), prohibiting the use of federal funds to family planning programs that provide abortion services; and Title X Gag Rule (1991), barring federally financed family planning centers from discussing abortion with pregnant women. Series LXIV, Trips, 1977-1997, contains a file on Bilderberg Meetings. Series LXV, Judicial Nominations, 1987-1994, contains a file on Robert Bork. Series LXIX, Personal Correspondence, 1971-1996, contains a file on William F. Buckley.

Websites with information:

http://www.uri.edu/library/special_collections/political_papers_list.htm

Finding aids:

http://www.uri.edu/library/special_collections/political_papers/chafee_title/chafeetitle.html

http://www.uri.edu/library/special_collections/political_papers/chafee_senate_wash/Mss.%20Gr.%20115.2%2

0f.html

[0517] Victor-Louis Chaigneau Papers, 1910-1954, Coll. XX219

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

Description: Manuscripts of writings, memoranda, political campaign literature, and clippings, relating to social and economic legislation in France, particularly during the Vichy regime, and to French politics. Includes doctoral thesis of V.-L. Chaigneau, La Charte du Travail: Loi d'Octobre 1941. Subject File, 1913-1954, contains files on France - Antisemitism; France - Right-wing newspapers; France - Right-wing organizations; Royalism; Adolf Hitler; persecution of Jews; and Racism.

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf667nb1gp/entire_text/

[0518] David Chalmers Library of Southern History

Location: Samuel Proctor Oral History Program, 241 Pugh Hall, P.O. Box 115215, The University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611

Description: David Chalmers is Emeritus Professor of History at the University of Florida and an historian of the Ku Klux Klan and Southern history. The collection contains books on the Ku Klux Klan, the House Committee on Un-American Activities, the civil rights movement, and extremism. Also contains The National Kourier, v. 4-5, 1925; The Fiery Cross, 1923-25; and a VHS tape of David Duke.

Finding aids:

http://oral.history.ufl.edu/research/david-chalmers-library/

http://oral.history.ufl.edu/files/march-2014-chalmers-library.pdf

[0519] John Chamberlain papers, 1943-1990, Coll. 86004

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

Description: Chamberlain (1903-1995) was an American syndicated journalist. The papers consist of writings, correspondence, and printed matter, relating to world affairs, American politics, economic conditions in the United States, conservative political philosophy, and laissez-faire economics. Most of the material consists of drafts and printed copies of newspaper columns and other writings by Chamberlain.

Finding aids:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt7k40378s/

http://cdn.calisphere.org/data/13030/8s/kt7k40378s/files/kt7k40378s.pdf

[0519a] John Chamberlain Papers, 1954-1959, RL.00210

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

Description: John Chamberlain (1903-1995) was a book reviewer, editor, and author of The Roots of Capitalism (1959). Collection contains Chamberlain's working draft for The Roots of Capitalism, with both handwritten and typescript pages. Also includes a notebook with his thoughts and notes on economic history, a letter of correspondence from a publisher about The Roots of Capitalism, and galley proofs from Citadel, Market, and Altar (1957) and MacArthur 1941-1951 (1954).

Finding aid:

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

[0520] John Chamberlain Papers, 1957-1967

Location: Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Libraries, 222 Waverly Avenue, Syracuse, NY 13244-2010

Description: John Chamberlain (1903-1995) was an American author, journalist, syndicated columnist (King Features Syndicate). The papers include correspondence (1963-1967); manuscript drafts, notes for books and columns; research material; photographs; and press releases.

Websites with information:

http://findingaids.syr.edu/xtf/search?brand=ead;collection=ead;sort=title;titleAlpha=JJ;startDoc=121

http://library.syr.edu/digital/guides/ead/subj_list_from_db.htm

Finding aids:

http://library.syr.edu/digital/guides/c/chamberlain_j.htm

http://library.syr.edu/digital/guides/print/chamberlain_j_prt.htm

[0521] John R. Chamberlain Archive, 1923-1991, AR 2011-360

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: Prior to the 1940s, American journalist and literary critic John R. Chamberlain (1903-1995) was known as a liberal until switching his political beliefs over to conservatism. The archive is composed of approximately 200 typed and handwritten letters, including correspondence between Chamberlain and journalist Dorothy Thompson.

Finding aid:

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/03121/cah-03121.html

[0522] Waldo Chamberlin Papers, 1945-1986, ML-68

Location: Rauner Special Collections Library, Dartmouth College, 6065 Webster Hall, Hanover, NH 03755-3519

Description: Waldo Chamberlin (1905-1986) was a professor of government at New York University and later a professor of history at Dartmouth College. Reference File contains newspaper and magazine clippings, pamphlets, papers by Chamberlin's students and colleagues, mailings of various organizations, notes, memos, and a little correspondence. Files on American Legion; American Security Council; Credibility: Media: Korean Air Lines Flight 007; Ethics and Public Policy Center; Foreign Policy Association; Heritage Foundation; National Council of Churches; Nationalism; Race: Anti-Semitism; Race: Blacks; Race: Ku Klux Klan; Racism; Socialism; USA: Foreign Policy: Alexander M. Haig; and USA: Lobbies: Conservative.

Websites with information:

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

Finding aid:

http://ead.dartmouth.edu/html/ml68.html

[0523] William Henry Chamberlin Papers, 1861-1978

Location: Providence College, Phillips Memorial Library Archives, 1 Cunningham Square, Providence, RI 02918

Description: William H. Chamberlin (1897-1969) was an American historian and journalist. The Chamberlin papers consist of his personal correspondence, news clippings, publications, private journals, photographs, and microfilm. The bulk of the collection is made up of news paper clippings (1925-1969) of articles that Chamberlin wrote during his career as a journalist, which reflect his conservative political viewpoints. Includes correspondence with Dwight D. Eisenhower, Herbert Hoover, and Barry Goldwater.

Websites with information:

http://library.brown.edu/riamco/search.php?keywords1=US-RPPC&field1=institution_id&­operand1=PHRASE

http://providence.libguides.com/sp_collections

http://www.providence.edu/library/spcol/Pages/browsecollections.aspx

http://www.swarthmore.edu/library/peace/conscientiousobjection/co%20website/pages/PrimaryResourcesN

ew.htm

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/71012879

Finding aids:

http://digitalcommons.providence.edu/spcol_findingaids/16/

http://digitalcommons.providence.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1015&context=spcol_findingaids

http://library.providence.edu/spcol/fa/xml/rppc_mschamberlin.xml

http://library.brown.edu/riamco/xml2pdffiles/US-RPPC-chamberlin.pdf

http://www.worldcat.org/title/papers-1912-1969/oclc/71012879

[0523a] Robert E. Chambliss Papers, 1972-1987, AR1969

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

Description: Robert E. Chambliss (1904-1985) was a long-time member of the Ku Klux Klan and a skilled bomb-maker. Chambliss was a suspect in the Sixteenth Street Church bombing as early as 1963 and in 1977 he was convicted for his role in the attack. The papers consist primarily of letters written to and from Chambliss while he was in prison. Also included are a letter received by Willie Mae Walker from J.B. Stoner; newspaper clippings relating to the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church bombing, Robert Chambliss and his trial, J.B. Stoner, and Gary Thomas Rowe; and copies of The Thunderbolt.

Reference:

"Birmingham Public Library, Department of Archives and Manuscripts," The Alabama Archivist Volume 30, Issue 4 (Fall 2010), pp. 5-6 (p. 5), http://alarchivists.org/pubs/SALAF10.pdf.

Finding aid:

http://www.bplonline.org/resources/archives/aids/AR1969.pdf

[0523b] René de Chambrun Copies of material relating to his visit to U.S., 1940-86

Location: Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum, National Archives, 4079 Albany Post Road, Hyde Park, NY 12538

Description: René de Chambrun was a French diplomat.

Websites with information:

http://www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/archives/collections/list.html

http://www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/archives/pdfs/historical_materials.pdf

[0524] René de Chambrun Papers, 1914-1995, Coll. 48006

Location: Hoover Institution Archives, 434 Galvez Mall, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305-6010

Description: Comte René de Chambrun (1906-2002), a descendant of General Lafayette, was an attorney at the Court of Appeals of New York and Paris since 1934 and 1935, respectively. In 1935, he married Josée Laval and shared her determination to rehabilitate the memory of her father after the latter's execution. The papers consist of depositions, correspondence, and printed matter, relating primarily to political conditions in France under the government of Marshal Philippe Pétain and Premier Pierre Laval, 1940-1944. Translations of a portion of the documents are published in English translation in France during the German Occupation, 1940-1944 (Stanford, 1958). Includes depositions by René de Chambrun, Josée de Chambrun, and the Duc de Grantmesnil (Kenneth de Courcy). Also contains copies of Ecrits de Paris: Revue des Questions Actuelles, Paris, 1944-1953.

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf1h4n980s/entire_text/

[0525] Jack Chance collection on Wendell Willkie and the 1940 presidential election, 1939-1940, Mss 0023

Location: Msgr. William Noé Field Archives & Special Collections Center, Walsh Library – First Floor, Seton Hall University, 400 South Orange Avenue, South Orange, NJ 07079

Description: Jack Chance (1921-2011) was one of the founders of the Montclair Historical Society and was involved with historic preservation in New Jersey throughout his adult life. The collection consists of newsclippings scrapbooks, 1939-1940, on the 1940 presidential election, as well as a copy of Willkie's work "The True Liberalism" and an excerpt regarding the 1940 election from the Spring/Summer 1975 issue of New Jersey History.

Websites with information:

http://academic.shu.edu/findingaids/

http://library.shu.edu/content.php?pid=357852&sid=2927547

https://blogs.shu.edu/archives/2013/06/from-the-shelves-the-jack-chance-collection-on-wendell-willkie-and-the-1940-presidential-election/

Finding aid:

http://academic.shu.edu/findingaids/mss0023.html

[0526] Russell Chandler Papers, ca. 1960s-1990 (bulk 1970s-1980s), ARC Mss 2

Location: Department of Special Collections, Davidson Library, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106-9010

Description: Russell Chandler (1932- ) was a religion writer for the Los Angeles Times newspaper from 1974 to 1992. The collection contains about 300 files with correspondence, articles, newsletters, press releases, clippings, research notes, photographs, drafts and copies of Chandler's own articles, and related materials. Included are files on Abortion, American Coalition for Traditional Values, Anita Bryant, Californians for Biblical Morality, Campus Crusade for Christ, Chalcedon, Christian-Patriots Defense League, Christian Voice / "New Right" Lobbies, Christian Coalition, Cults, James Dobson, Jerry Falwell, Jesse Helms, Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship in the U.S.A., Bob Jones, Ku Klux Klan, Tim LaHaye, Hal Lindsey, Moral Majority, New Right, Praise the Lord (PTL), and Traditional Values Coalition.

Websites with information:

http://www.library.ucsb.edu/node/1788/#K

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

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

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

Finding aids:

http://pdf.oac.cdlib.org/pdf/ucsb/spcoll/chandler00.pdf

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt1s2023t4/entire_text/

[0527] Frank A. Chapman collection of Newspaper Political Cartoons, 1913-1984, Coll. 1433 [cartoons]

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: Frank A. Chapman (1909-1985) was an avid collector of political and popular cartoons. The majority of the collection derives from the Los Angeles Times and the Los Angeles Herald-Examiner. Political Topics include abortion (mainly consisting of images hostile to abortion); Bigotry and Racism (including cartoons depicting the Ku Klux Klan, acts of racism and bigotry, and intolerant groups); Censorship and Obscenity (including images of the Moral Majority); Gun Control (including depictions of the National Rifle Association (NRA)); Homosexuality (including California's Proposition 6 which restricted homosexuals from teaching); Equal Rights Amendment (including cartoons about debate over the Equal Rights Amendment and Ronald Reagan's decision to exclude the E.R.A. from the Republican campaign platform); Religion (including cults, anti-Semitism, evangelicals and the Moral Majority); and School Busing and Desegregation. Political Figures include Anita Bryant; Barry Goldwater (including some images about his criticism of the Moral Majority and Reverend Jerry Falwell); J. Edgar Hoover; Howard Jarvis (who led the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association and spearheaded California's Proposition 13 in 1978 and a subsequent tax reform effort via Proposition 9 in 1980); Thomas Linton Metzger (Grand Dragon of the Ku Klux Klan for the State of California who ran for congress and was a Democratic nominee for the district of San Diego in 1980); and Miscellaneous Figures (Everett Dirksen, Jesse Helms, California Superintendent of Public Instruction Maxwell L. Rafferty); and George Wallace. A box of clippings each on Richard M. Nixon and Ronald Reagan.

Finding aid:

http://findaid.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt429018cq/entire_text/

[0528] John Jay Chapman additional papers, 1841-1940, S Am 1854.1 [partly digital collection]

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

Description: John Jay Chapman (1862-1933) was an American poet, dramatist, and critic. Series I. Letters to John Jay Chapman, contains a copy of a letter by William Greenough Thayer to Conrad Chapman, a carbon copy of a letter by [Richard LaFarge?] to Conrad Chapman, and letters from Ernest Hamlin Abbott, American Legion, Bernard Iddings Bell, William Edgar Borah, Boris Leo Brasol, Nicholas Murray Butler, W. J Cameron, James McKeen Cattell, Conrad Chapman, Seward Collins, Frederic René Coudert, Archibald Henderson, Paul Elmer More, Henry Fairfield Osborn, David Starr Jordan, Ku Klux Klan (H. W. Evans), Abbott Lawrence Lowell, George Santayana, James Wolcott Wadsworth, William Allen White, John Sharp Williams, and Owen Wister. Series: II. Letters from John Jay Chapman, contains letters to Bernard Iddings Bell, Conrad Chapman, Abbott Lawrence Lowell, Louis Marshall, and Owen Wister. Series: IV. Letters to Elizabeth Winthrop (Chanler) Chapman, contains letters from Conrad Chapman and Owen Wister. Series: V. Other letters, contains letters from Conrad Chapman, Abbott Lawrence Lowell, Gaetano Salvemini, and Owen Wister. Series: VII. Other compositions, contains items by Conrad Chapman and Owen Wister.

Websites with information:

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

Finding aid:

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~hou00718

[0528a] John Jay Chapman papers, 1841-1940, MS Am 1854

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

Description: John Jay Chapman (1862-1933) was an American poet, dramatist, and critic. In the 1920s, he expressed anti-Bolshevist, anti-Semitic, anti-Catholic, and anti-immigration sentiments. In 1925, Chapman's poem "Cape Cod, Rome and Jerusalem," which traced America's troubles to the "Jesuit and the Jew," appeared in the Ku Klux Klan's National Kourier. Series: I. Letters to John Jay Chapman, contains letters from Bernard Iddings Bell, Nicholas Murray Butler, James McKeen Cattell, Madison Grant, Archibald Henderson, Paul Elmer More, and Owen Wister.

Reference:

Alan Pell Crawford, "The Anti-Alinsky. John Jay Chapman teaches conservatives the spirit of practical agitation," The American Conservative, August 7, 2013, http://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/­the-anti-alinsky/.

Websites with information:

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

Finding aid:

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~hou00932

[0529] Charleston Jewish Community Relations Committee papers, 1958-1967, Mss 1020

Location: Special Collections, College of Charleston Library, 66 George Street, Charleston, SC 29424

Description: Fostered by the Charleston Jewish Welfare Fund and the Charleston Jewish Community Center, the Community Relations Committee began holding regular meetings in 1960. With advice from the National Community Relations Advisory Council, local rabbis, and community officials, the committee worked on such issues as Sunday closing ("Blue") laws, segregation and integration issues, housing and schooling discrimination, antisemitism, religion in the schools, and other issues. Includes correspondence, minutes, typescripts, carbons, newspapers, photocopies of clippings, and printed matter. Many letters refer to anti-Semitism in the South (with some anti-Semitic literature) and mention such groups as the Ku Klux Klan and the Grass Roots League, with a copy of one of latter's publications. Information on the "Israel Cohen" hoax (1963), falsely attributing a Communist plot to stir up racial animosities to a fictitious Jewish author. Clippings cover racial matters of integration and segregation, sit-ins, etc; and Communism and anti-Semitism. Also included are three copies (1960-1965) of the anti-Communist paper, Common Sense, and one copy (c. 1966) of the Ku Klux Klan publication, "The Fiery Cross."

Websites with information:

http://speccoll.cofc.edu/explore-our-collections/manuscript-collections/manuscripts-collections-a-z/

Finding aid:

http://archives.library.cofc.edu/inventories/mss1020.html

[0529a] Dallas Chase Papers, 1991-2004, MSS 227

Location: Special Collections and Archives, Boise State University Library, 1910 University Drive, Boise, ID 83725

Description: Dallas Chase is a Lesbian activist of Boise, Idaho. The papers contains correspondence, newspaper clippings, organizational literature, and other papers, written or collected by Chase, relating to gay rights issues and public controversies in Boise, Idaho, particularly Proposition One, the "anti-gay initiative," which was defeated in a statewide referendum in 1994. Includes materials from both pro-gay and anti-gay rights organizations, including the Idaho Citizens Alliance and Idaho Christian Coalition, and material relating to the campaign in 1999 to prevent Idaho Public Television from broadcasting gay-related programs.

Finding aids:

http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv98901

http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv98901/pdf

[0529b] Lewis Nathaniel Chase Papers, 1836-1947 (bulk 1900-1941), MSS15602

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

Description: Lewis Nathaniel Chase (1873-1937) was an editor, author, and educator. Autographed letters and correspondence with poets, writers, artists, musicians, and actors; family papers; and miscellaneous personal and academic material stemming from Chase's career as a writer and university professor. The series Correspondence with Poets, 1899-1943, contains files on Hilaire Belloc, John Buchan, G. K. Chesterton, T. S. Eliot, Havelock Ellis, Rudyard Kipling, Ezra Pound, and William Butler Yeats. The series Correspondence with Authors, Artists, Musicians, and Actors, 1886-1947, contains files on Charles A. Beard, Nicholas Murray Butler, Archibald Henderson, Owen Lattimore, H. L. Mencken, Paul Elmer More, and Albert Nock. The series General File, 1836-1941, contains files on Charles Beard, Bernard I. Bell, Hilaire Belloc, John Buchan, Nicholas Murray Butler, Gilbert K. Chesterton, Thomas S. Eliot, Evolution, Paul Harvey, William Randolph Hearst, Sven Hedin, Archibald Henderson, C. E. M. Joad, Rudyard Kipling, Owen Lattimore, Wyndham Lewis, Ben B. Lindsey, Huey Pierce Long, H. L. Mencken, John Stuart Mill, Robert A. Millikan, Paul Elmer More, Albert J. Nock, A. R. Orage, Ezra Pound, Race, George Santayana, Suzanne Silvercruys, Socialism, Oswald Spengler, Lothrop Stoddard, George Sylvester Viereck, and William Butler Yeats.

Websites with information:

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

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

Finding aids:

http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms012099

http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms012099.3

http://rs5.loc.gov/service/mss/eadxmlmss/eadpdfmss/2012/ms012099.pdf

[0529c] Ray Park Chase Papers, 1897-1944

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

Description: Ray Park Chase (1880-1948) served as Minnesota state auditor and land commissioner (1921-1931), U.S. congressman (1933-1934), and Republican political researcher (1930s). The papers contain correspondence, notes, reports, news releases, clippings, and printed materials. Materials on Communist, socialist, and pacifist activities in the U.S. and at the University of Minnesota; and alleged Communist influences in the Farmer-Labor party.

Websites with information:

http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/guidedisplay.pl?index=C000331

http://184.168.105.185/archivegrid/collection/data/122508144

http://www.worldcat.org/title/ray-p-chase-papers-1897-1944/oclc/122508144

[0530] Chasovoi records, 1898-1981, Coll. 82067

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

Description: The collection relates to the publication of Chasovoi, a prominent anti-Bolshevik White émigré military journal published in Paris, later in Belgium. This collection of correspondence, serial issues, clippings, brochures, histories, other writings, and photographs relates to its publication, Russian émigré affairs; Russian nationalism, monarchism, and anti-Communism; and events in the Soviet Union since World War I.

Websites with information:

http://www.hoover.org/news/149206

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt5w103302/entire_text/

[0531] Brainard Bartwell Cheney and Frances Neel Cheney Papers, 1841-1989

Location: Special Collections, Jean and Alexander Heard Library, Vanderbilt University, 419 21st Avenue South, Nashville, TN 37203-2427

Description: Brainard Cheney (1900-1990) was a novelist, playwright, journalist, and essayist from Georgia associated with the Agrarian movement. Frances Neel Cheney (1906-1996) was professor of library science at the Peabody Library School. The Brainard and Frances Cheney Papers include correspondence, manuscripts of writings, speeches, research materials, publication materials, publicity for books and play productions, reviews, legal and financial documents, family records, memorabilia, clippings and photographs, programs from cultural events, clippings on race relations, materials from Brainard Cheney's career in politics, and manuscripts of writings by other authors. Contains correspondence with Russell Kirk. Also contains files on Race Relations, Segregation, Integration, John Kasper and Clinton Tennessee Segregation, and New York Integration.

Websites with information:

http://www.library.vanderbilt.edu/special-collections/subjectlist.php

http://web.archive.org/web/20130603163730/http://www.library.vanderbilt.edu/speccol/cheney.shtml

Finding aids:

http://www.library.vanderbilt.edu/speccol/findingaids/cheneybf.pdf

http://web.archive.org/web/20130603183507/http://www.library.vanderbilt.edu/speccol/cheneylist2.shtml

[0532] Anna Chennault Papers, 1939-2004, MC 552

Location: Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard University, 3 James St, Cambridge, MA 02138

Description: Anna Chennault (1923- ) is an author, lecturer, business consultant, and citizen-diplomat. Series IV, Correspondence, 1940-1998, n.d. (#36.13-45.4, 80.3-85.15), contains correspondence with Gerald Ford, Herbert Hoover, J. Edgar Hoover, Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, and Strom Thurmond. Series V, Alphabetical Files, 1941-2001, n.d. (45.5-79.13, 79.15), contains files on Barry Goldwater, Orrin Hatch, Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, Republican Party: National Republican Heritage Groups, Strom Thurmond, Voice of America, and World Anti-Communist League.

Websites with information:

http://guides.library.harvard.edu/schlesinger_republican

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

Finding aids:

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~sch01118

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/deepLink?_collection=oasis&uniqueId=sch01118

[0533] Arthur Kenneth Chesterton Papers, ca 1880-2012, GB 1128

Location: University of Bath Library, University of Bath, Claverton Down, Bath BA2 7AY, United Kingdom

Description: A.K. Chesterton (1899-1973) was a British politician, journalist, and solider. By 1933, fully committed to extreme right-wing politics, Chesterton joined the British Union of Fascists quickly becoming one of its leading spokesman and editor of Blackshirt. Critical of the methods employed to attain its ideals, and of what he saw as weak leadership, Chesterton resigned from the Union in 1938. On the outbreak of World War II, he volunteered for active service and was sent to northern Kenya. In 1954 Chesterton established the League of Empire Loyalists, a political pressure group whose direct action stunts and 'interventions' received widespread publicity and attracted the attention of a new generation of fascists, nationalists and right-wing extremists. In 1967 when the League merged with the British National Party, the Greater Britain Movement, and the Radical Preservation Society to form the National Front, Chesterton was invited to become its first chairman. The collection contains material relating to various aspects of Chesterton's later life including interviews with colleagues and his widow, examples of his literary, journalistic and political writings, and copies of his view-sheet, Candour. Correspondents include the British Union of Fascists, Britons Publishing Company, Rosine De Bounevaille, Aidan Mackey, Oswald Mosley, The National Front, Douglas Reid, and Thomas Serpico (Omni Publications). Includes publications of the League of Empire Loyalists.

Reference:

Paul Stocker, "'Dark and Sinister Powers': Conspiracy Theory and the Interwar British Extreme Right," CFAPS Newsletter (Centre for Fascist, Anti-Fascist and Post-Fascist Studies, Teesside University), Volume 2 (Summer 2015), pp. 6-7, https://www.tees.ac.uk/docs/DocRepo/Research/­CFAPS%20Newsletter%20­2015.pdf.

Websites with information:

http://www.bath.ac.uk/library/services/archives/chesterton.html

https://web.archive.org/web/20131003052431/http://www.bath.ac.uk/library/about/collections/archives/c

hesterton.html

https://www.archivesportaleurope.net/ead-display/-/ead/pl/aicode/GB-1128/type/fa/id/gb1128chesterton

http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/accessions/2009/09digests/politics.htm

http://archiveshub.ac.uk/data/gb1128-chesterton

http://archiveshub.ac.uk/data/gb1128-chesterton.txt

http://archiveshub.ac.uk/data/gb1128-chesterton.pdf

Finding aid:

http://www.bath.ac.uk/library/services/archives/chesterton-complete-catalogue.pdf

[0533a] G.K. Chesterton Autobiography [1936], GKC

Location: University of Notre Dame Archives, Notre Dame, Indiana 46556

Description: Bound typewritten manuscript of Chesterton's autobiography, with autograph corrections.

Finding aid:

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

[0533b] G. K. Chesterton Collection, 1889-1944 (bulk 1905-1936)

Location: Archives and Manuscripts, John J. Burns Library, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467-3801

Description: G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936) was an English author and artist who edited the New Witness and later founded G.K.'s Weekly. The contents include sketches (by Chesterton and others), sketchbooks, typescripts and manuscripts of Orthodoxy and other essays, poetry, non-fiction, novels, short stories, plays, book reviews, and autobiographical works. The collection also has correspondence, both personal and professional, exchanged between Chesterton and a variety of correspondents, including Hilaire Belloc. Other documents include programs of lectures given by Chesterton, sheet music with words by Chesterton, an exercise book, and a G.K.'s Weekly stock certificate.

Reference:

"G. K. Chesterton: the Catholic Apologist," John J. Burns Library's Blog, July 18, 2016, https://johnjburns­library.wordpress.com/2016/07/18/g-k-chesterton-the-catholic-apologist/.

Websites with information:

http://bc-primo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com/bclib:lib_BURNS:ALMA-BC21360409690001021

[0533c] G. K. Chesterton Collection, 1893-1977, MSE/MD 3718

Location: Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, 102 Hesburgh Library, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46556

Description: G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936) was an artist, poet, dramatist, novelist, philosopher, biographer, literary and art critic, Christian apologist, and journalist. The collection includes letters, manuscripts, published articles by Chesterton, published articles about him, photographs, drawings and sketches by Chesterton, and such miscellaneous items as a recording of some of Chesterton's verse.

Websites with information:

http://www.wheaton.edu/wadecenter/Authors/GK-Chesterton/GKC-Resources

https://rbsc.library.nd.edu/

Finding aid:

https://rbsc.library.nd.edu/finding_aids/und:ks65h990t9n

[0533d] G. K. (Gilbert Keith) Chesterton Collection, 1906-1944, undated, Manuscript Collection MS-0769

Location: Harry Ransom Center, The University of Texas at Austin, 300 West 21st Street, Austin, Texas 78712

Description: The collection of British writer G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936) includes manuscripts for several works, including his best-known novel The Man Who Was Thursday (1908), a few letters written by Chesterton, and a few letters written by others about Chesterton.

Websites with information:

http://norman.hrc.utexas.edu/fasearch/curatorial.cfm

Finding aids:

http://norman.hrc.utexas.edu/fasearch/pdf/00724.pdf

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/uthrc/00724/hrc-00724.html

http://norman.hrc.utexas.edu/fasearch/findingAid.cfm?eadid=00724

[0533e] The G.K. Chesterton Family Correspondence Collection

Location: The Marion E. Wade Center, Wheaton College, 351 E. Lincoln Ave., Wheaton, IL 60187

Description: Correspondents include Hilaire Belloc, John Buchan, T.S. Eliot, Rudyard Kipling, Wyndham Lewis, Ezra Pound, and W.B. Yeats.

Websites with information:

http://www.wheaton.edu/wadecenter/Collections-and-Services/Collection-Listings/Letters

Finding aid:

http://www.wheaton.edu/~/media/Files/Centers-and-Institutes/Wade-Center/RR-Docs/Letter-Collections/C-GKC_Family_Correspondence.pdf

[0533f] G. K. Chesterton Library

Location: Oxford Oratory, 25 Woodstock Road, Oxford OX2 6HA, UK

Description: Contains books and papers connected with Distributism and the history of the Distributist League, with related material on alternative economics and Catholic and Anglican social thinking. Includes the Distributist League papers.

Websites with information:

http://www.wheaton.edu/wadecenter/Authors/GK-Chesterton/GKC-Resources

http://www.secondspring.co.uk/spring/chestertonlibrary.htm

http://chestertonlibrary.blogspot.com/

[0533g] G.K. Chesterton Manuscripts, 1882-1931

Location: The Marion E. Wade Center, Wheaton College, 351 E. Lincoln Ave., Wheaton, IL 60187

Description: 134 manuscripts, some reproductions and some fragmented, including poems, a play, short stories, essays, articles, a novel, letters to the editor, artwork, Christmas cards, and notes.

Websites with information:

http://www.wheaton.edu/wadecenter/Collections-and-Services/Collection-Listings/Manuscripts

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/902730457

http://www.worldcat.org/title/gk-chesterton-manuscripts-1882-1931/oclc/902730457

Finding aid:

http://www.wheaton.edu/~/media/Files/Centers-and-Institutes/Wade-Center/RR-Docs/Manuscript-Listings/ChestertonMS.pdf

[0533h] G.K. Chesterton Papers, undated, Collection Number: 11029-z

Location: Rare Book Literary and Historical Papers, The Wilson Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 208 Raleigh Street CB #3916 Chapel Hill, NC 27515-8890

Description: G.K. Chesterton (1874-1936) was an English essayist, literary and social critic, novelist, and poet. The collection includes 26 loose drawings, two small sketchbooks, an illustrated poem, and a separate single page of verse, all in Chesterton's hand.

Websites with information:

http://library.unc.edu/wilson/shc/findingaids/browse-finding-aids/

Finding aid:

http://finding-aids.lib.unc.edu/11029/

[0533i] G. K. Chesterton Papers, 1877-1988, GB 58 Add MS 73186-73484

Location: Western Manuscripts collection, British Library, 96 Euston Road, London NW1 2DB, United Kingdom

Description: Correspondents include Hilaire Belloc, Nicholas Murray Butler, Thomas Stearns Eliot, Christopher Hollis, A. Raven Thomson, and Luigi Villari. Also contains an album of press cuttings of articles by Arthur Kenneth Chesterton, of the League of Empire Loyalists, cousin of G. K. Chesterton, 1921-1924.

Websites with information:

http://www.wheaton.edu/wadecenter/Authors/GK-Chesterton/GKC-Resources

Finding aids:

http://archiveshub.ac.uk/data/gb58-addms73186-73484

http://archiveshub.ac.uk/data/gb58-addms73186-73484.txt

http://archiveshub.ac.uk/data/gb58-addms73186-73484.pdf

http://staging.archiveshub.ac.uk/data/gb58-addms73186-73484

[0534] G.K. Chesterton Papers, 1888-1978 [microfiche]

Location: Archival and Manuscript Collections, John M. Kelly Library, St Michael's College in the University of Toronto, 113 St Joseph St, Toronto, ON, Canada

Description: G.K. Chesterton (1874-1936) was an English writer, journalist, social critic, and Christian philosopher. The collection contains material by and about G. K. Chesterton, including archival material in microform. Originals in the British Library. Series D. Correspondence, contains correspondence with Hilaire Belloc, T. S. Eliot, and Luigi Villari.

Websites with information:

http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/collectionsp-bin/colldisp/l=0/c=195

http://www.wheaton.edu/wadecenter/Authors/GK-Chesterton/GKC-Resources

http://stmikes.utoronto.ca/kelly/collections/working-manuscript-pages/gk-chesterton-microfilm-collection.a

sp

Finding aid:

http://stmikes.utoronto.ca/kelly/collections/working-manuscript-pages/pdf/GK_Chesterton_­Papers_Inventory_Microfiche.pdf

[0534a] G. K. Chesterton Scrapbook, 1893-1936

Location: Special Collections Department / Rare Books & Manuscripts, 123 Hofstra University, 032 Axinn Library, Hempstead, New York 11549-1230

Description: G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936) was an English author and illustrator. The collection consists of one scrapbook with 48 illustrations (33 in pencil, 15 in pen-and-ink) done by Chesterton for The Club of Queer Trades. Also included in the scrapbook are prints of sketches of Chesterton, correspondence, photographs, news clippings, newsletters and ephemera.

Websites with information:

https://www.hofstra.edu/pdf/library/libspc_rbam_collections.pdf

Finding aid:

http://www.hofstra.edu/pdf/Library/libspc_rbam_GK_Chesterton_Finding_Aid.pdf

[0535] Chicago City-Wide Collection 1835-1990 (bulk 1871-1950), Archives_CCW

Location: Special Collections and Preservation Division, Neighborhood History Research Collection, Chicago Public Library, Harold Washington Library Center, 400 S. State Street, Chicago, IL 60605

Description: The Chicago City-Wide Collection consists of manuscript, printed and photographic materials. The focus of this collection is general Chicago history, covering the city as a whole and the communities for which there is no separate neighborhood history collection. The series Biographical Data contains files on Joseph Dilys. Anti-Communist and Anti-Semitic literature, 1947-1970, and Robert Rutherford McCormick, "An Address," 1931 (autographed).

Websites with information:

https://www.chipublib.org/archival_post/

http://www.chipublib.org/archival_post/

http://www.chipublib.org/archival_post/chicago-city-wide-collection/

Finding aids:

http://www.chipublib.org/fa-chicago-city-wide-collection-2/

https://web.archive.org/web/20131005055759/http://www.chipublib.org/cplbooksmovies/cplarchive/archivalcoll/ccw.php

[0536] Chicago Defender Archives Individuals Files, 1928-2007 (bulk 1940s–1990s)

Location: Chicago Defender, 200 S. Michigan Avenue, Chicago, IL 60604

Description: The Chicago Defender is a Chicago-based weekly newspaper founded in 1905 for primarily African-American readers. The Individual Files are arranged alphabetically by last name. They are also searchable by occupation. The files are made up primarily of photographs, with small amounts of other material including press releases, clippings, and correspondence. The collection also includes approximately 200 photographs related to the murder of Emmett Till. Files on Theodore Bilbo, Everett Dirksen, David Duke, James Eastland, William F. Knowland, Joseph R. McCarthy, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Herbert Hoover, Barry Goldwater, Chiang-Kai Shek, Ronald Reagan, Robert (Bobby) Shelton, and Wendell Willkie.

Websites with information:

http://bmrcsurvey.uchicago.edu/collections/2512-1

http://mts.lib.uchicago.edu/collections/findingaids.php

Finding aids:

http://uncap.lib.uchicago.edu/view.php?eadid=MTS.defender-individuals

http://www.lib.uchicago.edu/e/scrc/findingaids/view.php?eadid=MTS.defender-individuals

http://mts.lib.uchicago.edu/collections/findingaids/index.php?eadid=MTS.defender-individuals

[0537] Chicago Federation of Labor records, 1890-1983

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

Description: The Chicago Federation of Labor (CFL), an umbrella organization for unions in the Chicago area, was founded in 1896 as an affiliate of the American Federation of Labor (AFL). John Fitzpatrick (1872-1946) served as CFL president in 1900-1901, 1906-1946, and William Lee served as president in 1946-1984. Series 3. CFL records part 1: John Fitzpatrick office files, etc. 1890-1947 (box 1-38 & 3 scrapbooks). Subseries 1. Fitzpatrick chronological files, etc. (box 1-25), contains correspondence with Herbert Clark Hoover and William Allen White. Series 3. CFL records part 1: John Fitzpatrick office files, etc. 1890-1947 (box 1-38 & 3 scrapbooks). Subseries 2. Fitzpatrick topical files, etc. (box 26-38 & 3 scrapbooks), contains a file on the American Vigilant Intelligence Federation. Series 4. CFL records, part 2: William Lee office files, etc. (box 39-50), contains files on Right to Work, Illinois, 1967-1969, and Taft-Hartley.

Finding aid:

http://chsmedia.org/media/fa/fa/M-C/CFL-inv.htm

[0537a] Chicago Historical Society Collection on the New York Council to Abolish HUAC, 1946-1970, TAM.431

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 New York Council to Abolish HUAC circulated literature and staged rallies and protests to try to abolish the United States Congress's House Committee on Un-American Activities. The collection includes press releases, newsletters, flyers and memoranda. The collection also contains flyers, leaflets and outreach collected from the National Lawyers Guild and other organizations on the left interested in law reform.

Finding aids:

http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/tamwag/tam_431/

http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/tamwag/tam_431/tam_431.html

[0537b] Chicago Police Department, Red Squad selected records, c. 1930s-86 (bulk 1963-74)

Location: Chicago History Museum, 1601 North Clark Street, Chicago, IL 60614

Description: The collection concerns surveillance of suspected "subversive" groups by the Chicago Police Department (CPD), ca. mid-1950s-74. Card indexes; files containing reports and correspondence about persons and organizations investigated as possible political subversives, scattered photographs, and some materials created by the persons or organizations under investigation, such as newsletters, brochures, and correspondence; plus some administrative records of the Chicago Police Department's Security Operations Section.

Reference:

Julie Thomas, "Unlikely Sources for Government Information. The Chicago Historical Society, A Case Study," DttP: Documents to the People vol. 33, no. 4 (Winter 2005), pp 27-29 (p. 27), http://wikis.ala.org/­godort/images/5/5d/Dttp_v33n4.pdf.

Websites with information:

http://chicagohistory.org/research/resources

http://chicagohistory.org/research/resources/archives-and-manuscripts/red-squad

http://libguides.chicagohistory.org/redsquad

http://chsmedia.org/media/fa/fa/M-C/Introduction.htm

[0537c] Roy A. Childs papers, 1933-1994, Coll. 93053

Location: Hoover Institution Archives, 434 Galvez Mall, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305-6010

Description: Roy A. Childs (1949-1992) was a libertarian thinker, an editor of the Libertarian Review, and a scholar at the Cato Institute. Correspondence, speeches and writings, reports, studies, memoranda, bulletins, serial issues, pamphlets, clippings, and sound recordings relating to libertarian thought and activities in the United States, laissez-faire economics, and proposals for decriminalization of drug use. Series 1. Correspondence File, 1967-1992, contains files on Peter Bauer, Robert Bauman, Daniel Bell, Nathaniel Branden, David Brooks, Patrick Buchanan, Jameson Campaigne, Jr., Ed Clark, Midge Decter, Milton Friedman, F. A. Harper, Friedrich A. Hayek, Henry Hazlitt, Karl Hess, James Jackson Kilpatrick, Irving Kristol, Robert LeFevre and Rampart College, Roger Lea MacBride, Felix Morley, Robert Nisbet, Robert Nozick, Ron Paul, Howard Phillips, Norman Podhoretz, Justin Raimondo, Leonard E. Read, Reason, and Murray N. Rothbard. Series 3. Speeches and Writings, 1933-1994. [Subseries] Research Notes, 1933-1992, contains files on Cato Institute, Cold War, conservatives, defense, drug legalization, foreign policy, Holocaust, Institute for Humane Studies, Laissez-Faire-Books, Rose Wilder Lane, LeFevre, Libertarian Party, Libertarian Review, Libertarians, Neoconservatives, Robert Nozick, Objectivism, Ayn Rand, Murray N. Rothbard, George Will, and Young Americans for Freedom. [Subseries] Writings by Others, 1945-1992, contains files on Frédéric Bastiat, Nathaniel Branden, Cato Institute, Lawrence V. Cott, Justus D. Doenecke, John T. Flynn, Milton Friedman, F. A. Harper, Friedrich Hayek, Henry Hazlitt, Jr. Karl Hess, Russell Kirk, Charles Koch, Irving Kristol, Rose Wilder Lane, Robert LeFevre, The Libertarian Newsletter, H. L. Mencken, Charles Murray, Robert A. Nisbet, Albert Jay Nock, Robert Nozick, Norman Podhoretz, Justin Raimondo, Ayn Rand, Leonard E. Read, Murray N. Rothbard, Hans F. Sennholz, Joseph Sobran, and Ernest Van Den Haag.

Reference:

Nancy MacLean, Democracy in Chains: The Deep History of the Radical Right’s Stealth Plan for America (New York: Viking, 2017).

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf7g5005dj/entire_text/

[0538] Art Chimes Collection, 1927-1987 [audio recordings]

Location: Walter J. Brown Media Archives and Peabody Awards Collection, Hargrett Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Russell Special Collections Building, University of Georgia, 300 S. Hull Street, Athens, GA 30602

Description: Art Chimes is a journalist at the Voice of America. The collection consists primarily of ¼" open reel recordings containing over 3100 radio programs taped off-air. Programs include the following: Hitler Addresses Danzig Meeting, Broadcast with translation by NBC 9/19/39; Lee Harvey Oswald Right-wing propaganda 8/21/63; Let Freedom Ring Right-wing telephone message, Atlanta. 12/13/73; Let Freedom Ring, Right-wing telephone message, Atlanta. 4/6/74; and Studio One: Americans All (on H. L. Mencken), VOA 10/14/84.

Websites with information:

http://www.libs.uga.edu/media/collections/audioradio/chimes.html

Finding aids:

http://www.libs.uga.edu/media/collections/audioradio/findingaids/chimes_findingaid.pdf

http://www.libs.uga.edu/media/collections/homemovies/findingaids/chimes_web.pdf

[0538a] Chinese American: Exclusion/Inclusion

Location: New-York Historical Society, 170 Central Park West, at Richard Gilder Way (77th Street), New York, NY 10024 [online exhibition]

Description: Throughout the 1870s, anti-Chinese sentiment began to infiltrate American political discourse. Led primarily by legislators in California, Congress began to seek laws to restrict Chinese immigration, resulting in passage of the most restrictive immigration law ever adopted by Congress: the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882. The Chinese Exclusion Act was repealed by the Magnuson Act on December 17, 1943, and in 2012 Congress issued a formal apology to Chinese-American people, expressing regret for the discriminatory law. The online exhibition treats, in part, the Exclusion Act of 1882, which barred most Chinese from entering the United States, and the Chinese American activists who used the American justice system to try to overturn the Exclusion Act. The exhibition includes George Frederick Keller's cartoon "What shall we do with our boys?" (The Wasp, March 3, 1882), which illustrates the stereotype of unemployed white workers forced to turn to loitering and crime because Chinese immigrants took their jobs. Also included is a newspaper advertisement, sponsored by Friends of China and Advocates of Justice ("Write Your Congressman," Chinese Press, September 10, 1943), urging Americans to write their congressman and demand the repeal of Chinese Exclusion.

Websites with information:

http://blog.nyhistory.org/george-frederick-seward-and-the-chinese-exclusion-act/

https://www.nyhistory.org/exhibitions/chineseamerican

http://chineseamerican.nyhistory.org/

http://chineseamerican.nyhistory.org/exhibition-highlights/what-shall-we-do-with-our-boys/

[0539] The Chinese in California Virtual Archive, 1850-1925 [digital collection]

Location: The Bancroft Library, Berkeley, California 94720-6000; The Ethnic Studies Library, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, California 94720-6000; California Historical Society, North Baker Research Library, San Francisco, California 94105-4014

Description: The Chinese in California, 1850-1925, illustrates nineteenth and early twentieth century Chinese immigration to California through about 8,000 images and pages of primary source materials. Included are photographs, original art, cartoons and other illustrations; letters, excerpts from diaries, business records, and legal documents; as well as pamphlets, broadsides, speeches, sheet music, and other printed matter. From their arrival during the Gold Rush, the Chinese experienced discrimination and often overt racism, and finally exclusion. Legislation was used against Chinese immigrants beginning with the 1850 Foreign Miners' License Tax law. During the economic downturn in the 1870s, racist labor union leaders directed their actions and the anger of unemployed workers at the Chinese, blaming them for depressed wages and lack of jobs, and accusing them of being morally corrupt. The theme Anti-Chinese Movement and Chinese Exclusion, contains such items as William Tell Coleman statements: and other material 1870-1893, concerning his Committee of Public Safety (1877), which worked to quash anti-Chinese riots promoted by Dennis Kearney, leader of the Workingmen's Party of California, and his followers; and copies of For the re-enactment of the Chinese Exclusion Law (San Francisco: Star Press, c [1901]); Eugene Casserly, The Chinese evil—Contracts for Servile Labor—Chinese Immigration the Great Danger ([Washington, 1870]); The Labor agitators, or, The battle for bread (San Francisco: Geo. W. Greene, [Workingman's Party, 1879?]); and Charles N. Felton, The evils of Mongolian immigration: the Chinese question ([Washington, D.C.: s.n., 1892]).

Websites with information:

http://bancroft.berkeley.edu/collections/chineseinca/

http://bancroft.berkeley.edu/collections/chineseinca/antichinese.html

http://chineseamerican.nyhistory.org/resources/

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt5p3019m2/entire_text/

Online exhibition:

Reproduces the cover illustration "The Chinese: Many Handed But Soulless" from The Wasp, v. 15, July - Dec. 1885.

http://bancroft.berkeley.edu/collections/chineseinca/

http://vm136.lib.berkeley.edu/BANC/collections/chineseinca/

[0539a] Chinese Nationalist Party, Sacramento Branch Records, 1920-1950, D-047

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

Description: The Chinese Nationalist Party (Kuomintang) of Sacramento was founded in 1920 to support the effort of the nationalist movement led by Chiang Kai-shek. Pamphlets, photographs, correspondence, and posters regarding the Chinese Nationalist Party of Sacramento.

Websites with information:

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

https://www.library.ucdavis.edu/special-collections/manuscript/chinese-nationalist-party-collection/

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8ff3v3v/entire_text/

[0540] Choice Foundation Collection, 1980-2000, Mss. 683

Location: Texas Woman's University, The Woman's Collection, P.O. Box 425528, Denton, TX 76204

Description: The Choice Foundation is a non-profit, educational organization working at the local level in Dallas, Texas, to promote and protect full reproductive freedom for all women. Correspondence, educational pamphlets and brochures, photographs, posters, and clipping files educating the public about the issue of abortion rights. Also includes correspondence, files, brochures, signs and posters, and hate mail from pro-life groups and individuals. Series 2: Subject Files, contains files on Abortion Abolition Society, Action League for life, American Center for Law and Justice, American Rights Coalition, American Coalition of Life Activists, Anthony (the Susan B. Anthony List), Anti-Abortion Measures before Congress 1981, Bork Opposition 1987, Catholics United for Life, Center For Constitutional Rights CCR, Civil Rights Restoration Act, Collegians For Life, Concerned Women For America, Dallas Right to Life, Dallas Rescues, Fake Clinics, Feminists For Life of America, Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act, Human Life Bill, Ku Klux Klan (KKK), Lambs of Christ, Life Amendment Political Action Committee, Life Chain, (The) Meeting Place, Moral Majority, Operation Rescue, Pittsburgh Center For Peace, Pro Life, Pro Life Action League, Right To Life, Rutherford Institute, Saint Martin de Porres Lay Dominican Community New Hope, Kentucky, Silent Scream: American Portrait Films (Anti), Texans United For Life (Bill Price), Texas Freedom Alliance, and White Rose Women's Center. Series 3: Biofiles, contains files on Joan and Rick Blinn (Operation Rescue Supporters), Brookline Massacre (See also John Salvi), Barbara Bush, George Bush, George W. Bush, Paul Hill, Norma McCorvey, Bill Price of Texans United for Life (Pro-Life anti Charlotte Taft), John C. Salvi,(Brookline Massacre), Joseph Scheidler (anti-abortion activist), Phyllis Schlafly, and Randall Terry. Series 4: Organizations, contains files on Dallas Pro-Life and Right To Life Literature.

Finding aids:

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/twu/00019/twu-00019.html

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/twu/00019/00019-P.html

[0541] Choice leaflets, 1981-1983, COLL MISC 0977

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

Description: Letter and leaflets from the Fight-Back campaign, organised by Jane Birdwood's journal "Choice." The campaign opposed a multi-racial Britain.

Websites with information:

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

Finding aids:

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

http://archives.lse.ac.uk/Record.aspx?src=CalmView.Catalog&id=COLL+MISC+0977

[0542] Christian Action Council Records, 1933-1996 (bulk 1942-1985)

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

Description: The records of the Christian Action Council (1933-1996) document the social and religious activities and interests of South Carolina's first ecumenical organization. Series V. Subject Files, 1948-1989, undated, contains files on Abortion, 1973-1985, n.d.; Civil Rights; Desegregation; Gun Control; Local Option; Prayer in School; Race Relations; and Voting Rights. Series VI. Outside Organizations, 1942-1986, undated, contains files on Columbia Citizens' Council and Ku Klux Klan.

Websites with information:

http://library.sc.edu/socar/mnscrpts/findaids.html

Finding aids:

http://library.sc.edu/socar/mnscrpts/cac.html

http://library.sc.edu/socar/mnscrpts/cac.pdf

http://library.sc.edu/socar/mnscrpts/cac.doc

[0543] Christian Anti-Communism Crusade Collection, circa 1977-1991, ARC Mss 11

Location: Department of Special Collections, Donald C. Davidson Library, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106-9010

Description: The Christian Anti-Communism Crusade was founded by Dr. Fred C. Schwarz (1913-2009) in 1953 in the State of Iowa, where it still retains its legal identity. Its headquarters was moved to Long Beach, California, for most of its existence. Upon Dr. Schwarz' retirement in 1998, it has made its most recent move to Manitou Springs, Colorado, where the organization is presently under the leadership of Dr. David A. Noebel, former president of Summit Ministries. For 45 years Dr. Schwarz led the Crusade writing a monthly newsletter and speaking throughout the United States on the evils of Communism.

Websites with information:

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

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

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

http://www.library.ucsb.edu/node/1785/#C/

http://www.wrs.vcu.edu/ARCHIVES/American%20Religions%20Collection.pdf

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/881050093

http://www.worldcat.org/title/christian-anti-communism-crusade-collection-circa-1977-1991/oclc/8810500

93

[0544] Christian Anti-Communism Crusade Collection, 1964, ARS.0079 [sound recordings]

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

Description: Recordings produced by the Christian Anti-Communism Crusade in 1964, containing lectures and panel discussions about politics, foreign policy, and anti-Communist activism from a workshop held in Washington, D.C. Many of the lectures are by CACC founder Fred Schwarz (1913-2009), who organized several five-day workshops (called "schools") around the country beginning in 1960. This collection is a complete set of what was referred to as "Washington D.C. School Tapes," purchased in October 1964 from the Crusade, then based in Houston, Texas. Fifteen open reel tapes, marked 1-WDC-64 through 15-WDC-64.

Websites with information:

http://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/data/697778985

http://www.worldcat.org/title/christian-anti-communism-crusade-collection/oclc/697778985

Finding aids:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt0p3034cc/

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt0p3034cc/admin/

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt0p3034cc/entire_text/

[0545] Christian Century Foundation archives, 1908-2003 (bulk 1950-2002), Coll. 1/2/MSS 036

Location: Special Collections Research Center, 605 Agriculture Drive, Southern Illinois University Carbondale, MC 6632, Carbondale, IL 62901

Description: The Christian Oracle was a small weekly paper established in Chicago in 1884 by the Disciples of Christ. It was renamed The Christian Century in 1900. The collection consists of editorial correspondence and reference material, and Christian Century Foundation business files including founding documents, correspondence with the Board of Trustees, promotional and fund raising material, and financial records. There are files on Communist propaganda, Freedom Newspapers (Hoiles Chain), Barry Goldwater, House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC), John Birch Society, Joseph R. McCarthy, Minute Women, Mississippi Citizens Councils, Herbert A. Philbrick (Editorial of Herald Tribune 1956), Prayer in Public Schools, Race Relations, Right Wing, and Dr. Fred C. Schwarz.

Finding aids:

http://archives.lib.siu.edu/?p=collections/findingaid&id=2087&q=

http://archives.lib.siu.edu/index.php?p=collections/findingaid&id=2087

[0546] Christian Family Movement Records, 1946-1999, CFM

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

Description: Christian Family Movement was a national, and later international, movement of the specialized lay apostolate of the Catholic Church inspired by the social principles of papal encyclicals and related to the European Jocist movement founded by Canon Joseph Cardijn. Correspondence (1946-1969); files on CFM chaplains; correspondence, agenda, and minutes of the national coordinating committee (1949-1969); correspondence, minutes, and research material associated with the publication of the CFM monthly magazine Act, and copies of the magazine itself (1946-1971); newsletters of local CFM federations; programs, reports, financial records, evaluation forms and speeches; a series of files concerning crises of the CFM in the 1960s; surveys, dissertations, and articles on the CFM; files on interaction with related groups; books, scrapbooks, and tape recordings. The series on CFM Crises contains numerous letters protesting the favorable references to the UN and the Foreign Policy Association in the annual inquiry booklet for 1961 on the topic "international Life." The protest was inspired by an American Legion post in Georgia, which had persuaded the grand jury of their county to force the Foreign Policy Association's publications out of their school system due to the "subversive" nature of the organization. The "Crises" series also contains correspondence related to the attack on the international life inquiry program and the CFM leadership by the Cardinal Mindszenty Foundation, an ultra-right wing Catholic group. There are numerous press clippings from the early sixties on the American right-wing and a short article by Edward Gargan of Loyola University, Chicago, on "Radical Conservatism among United States Catholics." This series contains folders covering the civil rights movements, and the activities of right-wing extremists during the period 1960-1965. There are letters supporting and attacking CFM's support of both the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and the Pacem in Terris convocation sponsored by the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions. There are numerous extremely bitter letters concerning these matters, and a number of relevant newspaper and magazine clippings.

Websites with information:

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

http://archives.nd.edu/guide.txt

Finding aids:

http://archives.nd.edu/findaids/ead/html/CFM.htm

http://www.catholicresearch.net/data/ead/html/una-cfm.html

http://www.catholicresearch.net/vufind/Record/unaead_GnOXP9/Details

[0546a] Christian Identity and Far Right Wing Politics collection, 1910-2015 (bulk 1970-2010), ARC Mss 83

Location: Library, Department of Special Collections, University of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California 93106-9010

Description: The collection consists of over 100 pamphlets, booklets, books, and audiovisual works concerning Conservative Christian ideologies and political philosophies, mainly that of the Christian Identity movement. Series I. Christian Identity and Other Christian Conservative Tenets 1925-2015, includes copies of "The Civil War and The Jews," undated; "His Example. Tom Anderson's Christmas essay," by Tom Anderson, 1969; "The Promise Keepers: Politics and Promises," by Bryan Brickner, 1999; "Book of Esther," by Reverend Bertrand Comparet, undated; "The Cain-Satanic Seed Line," by Reverend Bertrand Comparet, undated; "Your Heritage: an identification of the True Israel through Biblical and Historic Sources," by Reverend Bertrand Comparet, undated; "An Open Letter to Any Minister Who Teaches 'the Jews are Israel,'" by Sheldon Emry, undated; "The Old Jerusalem is Not, The 'New' Jerusalem," by Sheldon Emry, undated; "Jesus Christ The Galilean," by Sheldon Emry, undated; "Heirs of the Promise," by Sheldon Emry, undated; "Cinderella: A Bible Story," by Sheldon Emry, undated; "Who Killed Christ?," by Sheldon Emry, 1977; "Racial and National Identity," by William Gale, 2002; "Did you Say You were from the Church of Israel?" by Pastor Dan Gayman, undated; "The Wolf and The Sheep," by Richard Kelly Hoskins, 2002; "Exploding the 'Chosen People' Myth," by Col. Gordon Mohr, undated; "Things Christians need to know (about Jews, Judaism, and Zionism)," by Col. Gordon Mohr, undated; "Thank God!: my Savior was not a Jew!: a critical look at the historical Christ, free of Jewish distort!," by Col. Gordon Mohr, circa 1990s; "The Inadvertent Confessions of a Jew" by Pastor Peter J. Peters; "The Real Hate Group," by Pastor Peter J. Peters, 1987; "The Bible and Space Travel," by Howard Rand, 1969; The Ku Klux Klan in Prophecy, by Bishop Alma White, 1925; "The Bible Devil and Satan Defined," by America's Promise Ministries, circa 1990s; The Dragon Slayer Newsletter, 2003-2015 [newsletters from Scriptures for America Worldwide, an international Christian Identity outreach ministry of the LaPorte Church of Christ directed by Pastor Peter J. Peters]; Aryan Nation Newsletters and Aryan Nation Youth Korps Quarterly, 1992-1999; and Silver Legion of America publications. Series II. Far Right and Christian Identity Political Theory, 1910-2015, contains copies of anti-abortion materials, including anti-abortion pamphlets; Abortion: Genocide in America, by John Coleman, 2009; Thou Shalt Not Kill, ed. Richard Ganz, 1978; Anti-Socialism and Anti-Communism materials, circa 1910-1966, including The Phoenix Papers, If Not Treason What? by James Bales, 1966; Strange Fire, by Kenneth Goff, 1954; "Communism...a religion!" by William Strube, undated; "Communism, Diagnosis & Treatment," by Fred Schwarz,; "How Red is the Federal Council of Churches?" undated; "World Government and American Freedom," by Edward D. Gates, 1952; "The Bible says: Russia Will Invade America! (And Be Defeated)," by Sheldon Emry, undated; Anti-communism ephemera, undated; anti-homosexuality materials, including "Death Penalty for Homosexuals is Prescribed in the Bible" by Pastor Peter J. Peters, 1993; Ephemera and educational pamphlets by the Family Research Institute, 1998; extreme Right Wing and Anti-Government Rhetoric, circa 1960s-2015, including "The Cliches of Zoning," by Raymond Buker, circa 1990s; "Firearms and Freedom! Gun Control Means People Control," by Col. Gordon Mohr, undated; "Warning! Vaccinations Are Dangerous," by Pastor Peter J. Peters, 1993; "The Marriage License Issued by God or the State?" by Kingdom Identity Ministries, undated; "Will you Let Your Church be Destroyed?" by Christian Defense League, 1965; "Saving the Environment: New World Order Style," by Pastor Peter J. Peters, 1992; Baal Worship, by Pastor Peter J. Peters, 1995; "The Hitler Cult," by Col. Gordon Mohr, undated [online at https://israelect.com/reference/JackMohr/jm030.htm]; "Right? or Wrong? God and Lincoln on Negro-White Marriages," by Sheldon Emry, undated; "God, Man, Nations and the Races," by Wesley Swift, 1972; "Authority: Resistance or Obedience," by Pastor Peter J. Peters, undated; "God Wrote the Law of Segregation and the Ten Commandments on the Two Tables of Stone," by Mrs. B. J. Gaillot; and "George Washington's Vision and Prophecy for America," by John Grady, undated [online at http://famguardian.org/subjects/LawAndGovt/history/gwvisionprophecy.htm].

Finding aids:

http://pdf.oac.cdlib.org/pdf/ucsb/spcoll/ARC_Mss_83.pdf

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c82z1b60/entire_text/

[0547] Christian Nationalist Crusade Collection, 1945-1968, S0467

Location: The State Historical Society of Missouri, 222 Thomas Jefferson Library, University of Missouri-St. Louis, One University Blvd., St. Louis, Missouri 63121

Description: The Christian Nationalist Crusade collection documents racist and anti-Semitic sentiments in St. Louis primarily in the 1940s and 1950s. It contains the group's political tracts and issues of its newsletter, The Cross and The Flag, from 1947-1952. The collection also includes literature from related groups such as the Patriotic Tract Society, Associated Industries of Missouri, the National Citizens Protective Association, the Minutemen, and the United States Constitution Council. Pamphlets, books and other publications by Frank L. Britton, John W. Hamilton, Gerald L. K. Smith, John E. Rankin, Don Lohbeck, Robert DePugh, Gordon Winrod, and Herbert G. Moore ("The Plot Against the McCarran-Walter Act," National Republic, December 1952); literature of the Patriotic Party (Robert B. DePugh); issues of The White Sentinel (National Citizens Protective Association); anti-United Nations and anti-fluoridation tracts.

Finding aids:

http://shsmo.org/manuscripts/stlouis/s0467.pdf

http://shs.umsystem.edu/stlouis/manuscripts/s0467.pdf

http://web.archive.org/web/20120929005247/http://www.umsl.edu/~whmc/guides/whm0467.htm

[0548] Records of Christianity Today International, 1930, 1954-2002, Collection 8

Location: Archives, Billy Graham Center, Wheaton College, 500 College Ave., 3rd floor, Wheaton, IL 60187-5593

Description: Correspondence, memos, forms, financial reports, minutes of meetings, study papers, clippings and other records of the Evangelical Christian publishing organization. Correspondence from or information about Bill Bright, Campus Crusade, Charles Colson, Dr. Edgar C. Bundy, James Dobson, Jerry Falwell, Billy James Hargis, H. L. Hunt, T. Robert Ingram, D. James Kennedy, J. Howard Pew, Pat Robertson, and Francis A. Schaeffer.

Websites with information:

http://www2.wheaton.edu/bgc/archives/GUIDES/g2.htm

Finding aid:

http://www2.wheaton.edu/bgc/archives/GUIDES/008.htm

[0549] Rouben Chublarian Papers, ca. 1960s-1970s, MssCol 4194

Location: Manuscripts and Archives Division, Stephen A. Schwarzman Building, Brooke Russell Astor Reading Room, Third Floor, Room 328, New York Public Library, Fifth Avenue at 42nd Street, New York, NY 10018-2788

Description: Rouben Chublarian ( -1975), an Armenian anti-Communist writer, fled Stalinist-controlled Russia to Germany during World War II before entering the United States as a displaced person in 1950. The papers consist of typescript and mimeographed copies of various writings, open letters to editors and publications relating his beliefs and writings, and correspondence related to publications and speaking engagements.

Finding aids:

http://archives.nypl.org/mss/4194

http://archives.nypl.org/mss/4194/pdf

[0550] Rouben Chublarian Papers, 1949-1974, Coll. 130

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

Description: Rouben Chublarian (d. 1975) was an Armenian anti-Communist writer who entered the United States in 1950 after having fled from Russia to Germany during World War II. The Collection includes outgoing and incoming correspondence, unidentified letters, articles, manuscripts, and miscellaneous items such as newspaper clippings. Correspondents include the All-American Conference to Combat Communism, American Christian College (Billy James Hargis), American Conservative Union, American Mercury, American Security Council, Richard Arens, Anthony T. Bouscaren, Christian Crusade (Gerald S. Pope, editor), Christian Educational Association (Fred Farrel), Christian Anti-Communism Crusade, Committee to Restore the Constitution (Arch E. Roberts), Conservative Viewpoint (Richard Cotton), Conservative Book Club, Council Against Communist Aggression (Marx Lewis), Council for Statehood (Mary M. Davison), Defenders of the American Constitution, Incorporated (Pedro A. del Valle), Freedom Fund, Incorporated, Freedoms Foundation at Valley Forge, Barry Goldwater, Henry Regnery Company, Publishers, Human Events, David Lawrence, Liberty Lobby, Life Line, National Rifle Association of America, National States Rights Party, National Review (William Buckley), John R. Rarick, Gerald L. K. Smith, Society for Individual Freedom, The John Birch Society, The National Society of the Sons of the American Revolution, Strom Thurmond, and John G. Tower.

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-rouben-chublarian-papers/

Finding aid:

http://nwda-db.wsulibs.wsu.edu/findaid/ark:/80444/xv04118

[0551] Sheldon Chumir fonds, [ca. 1946]-1997, M 8846

Location: Glenbow Museum, 130 9th Ave S.E., Calgary, Alberta T2G 0P3, Canada

Description: Sheldon Mervin Chumir (1940-1992) established a sole law practice, Sheldon M. Chumir Professional Corporation, specializing in civil liberties cases. Chumir was a founder of the Calgary Civil Liberties Association. The fonds consists of Sheldon Chumir's personal correspondence and records of his education; business records; client files of taxation and civil liberties cases; speeches, news releases, correspondence, caucus notes, campaign materials, and subject files from his career in provincial politics; subject files; and newsclippings. Series 14, Doug Christie lawsuit, 1979-1988, concerns a defamation lawsuit brought against Chumir in 1987 by Doug Christie, a lawyer who defended anti-Jewish activists such as Jim Keegstra and Ernst Zündel. The suit apparently was dropped by Christie. This series contains correspondence and newsclippings related to the case, and collected newsletters and pamphlets of extreme right-wing organizations. Files on Citizens for Foreign Aid Reform, revisionist propaganda, ultra-conservatives Paul Fromm and Daryl Reside, Jim Keegstra, Duncan McKillop (an attorney for Keegstra), Western Canada Concept, and Ernst Zündel. Photocopies of issues of Aryan; Straight Talk!: Newsletter of the Western Guard, formerly the Edmund Burke Society, edited by Paul Fromm; Countdown (published by Paul Fromm); and David McCalden revisionist newsletter.

Websites with information:

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/chumir.cfm

[0551a] Frank Church Papers, 1941-1984, MSS 56

Location: Special Collections and Archives, Boise State University Library, 1910 University Drive, Boise ID 83725

Description: Frank Church (1924-1984) was a U.S. Senator from Idaho, 1956-1980. Senator Church was under constant attack by ultra-conservative letter writers who took issue with his public positions. The papers consist of correspondence, memoranda, speeches, articles, press releases, reports, studies, legislation, case files, campaign files, scrapbooks, photos, films, audiotapes, and other papers, relating chiefly to Church's career in the Senate. Series 6: Political affairs. [Subseries] Radical right, contains files on Barry M. Goldwater; None Dare Call It Treason; Free Enterprise; Carl McIntire; Ronald Reagan; Robert Shelton; Anti-Frank Church; Nuclear Test Ban; Cuba; United Nations; Civil Rights; Kennedy Assassination; J. Edgar Hoover; Federal Bureau of Investigation; John Birch Society; "Conspiracy-U.S.A.", Look, January 26, 1965; "Report On The Ku Klux Klan", Anti-Defamation League [online at https://ia800203.us.archive.org/28/­items/ReportOnTheKuKluxKlan_708/report2.pdf]; and Religion. Series 7: Public relations. [Subseries] Radical right, contains files on Ezra Taft Benson, Alan Stang, Gary Allen, John T. Flynn, John C. Stennis, Katanga, UNESCO, J. Edgar Hoover, John Birch Society, Robert Welch, "Operation Abolition," James O. Eastland, Karl E. Mundt, A. Willis Robertson, Freedom Academy, and "Communism On The Map."

Reference:

The Frank Church Papers: A Summary Guide, including the papers of Bethine C. Church and Carl Burke, by Ralph W. Hansen and Deborah J. Roberts, assisted by Ellen Koger and David Kennedy (Boise: Boise State University Library, Special Collections Department, 1998).

Finding aid:

http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv50912

[0552] The Church League of America Collection of the Research Files of Counterattack, the Wackenhut Corporation, and Karl Baarslag, 1928-1973 (bulk, 1945-1973), TAM.148

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 research files of this collection were obtained by the right-wing Church League of America from several prominent anti-Communist organizations and individuals: American Business Consultants, Inc. (publishers of Counterattack), Karl Baarslag, and the Wackenhut Corporation. All of these organizations and individuals had connections to the intelligence agencies of the United States government, kept detailed research files on individuals and organizations as part of their organizational or professional activities, and were a part of a right-wing research and information network that monitored Communists and other perceived threats to their interpretation of the American way of life. The research files contain newspaper and magazine clippings, reports, flyers, internal and external correspondence, pamphlets, brochures, circulars, and government publications. Series I: Counterattack Research Files, 1928-1967, contains files on "The Tablet" Editorials [Catholic Weekly Newspaper]; Foundations, 1942-1966; Alger Hiss; American Coalition of Patriotic Societies; American Legion; American Friends of the Captive Nations; Anti-Communist Legislation; Canadian Intelligence Service; Christian Anti-Communism Crusade; Circuit Riders; Bildenberg Group conferences; Council Against Communist Aggression; Council Against Communist Aggression and Alexis de Tocqueville Society; Dr. Fred C. Schwarz [Christian Anti-Communism Crusade]; Fascism; Fluoridation; Foreign Policy Association; Fund for the Republic; Gordon Hall; Harry Elmer Barnes; Hate Groups; Highlander Folk School; Hilaire du Berrier; Alger Hiss Trial; HUAC; Immigration; Circuit Riders, Inc.; Congress of Freedom, Inc.; J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI; Joseph P. Kamp; Fulton Lewis, Jr.; Liberty Book Club; Louis Budenz; Mental Health [Dr. Fred Schwarz and Christian Anti-Communism Crusade]; Owen Lattimore; Paul Crouch; Plain Talk; Reference Material on Compulsory Sickness Insurance - Issued by the National Physicians Committee for the Extension of Medical Service; Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) United Nations Educational; Sen. William F. Knowland; The John Birch Society; and World Court. Series II: Wackenhut Corporation Research Files, Bulk, 1955-1973 1931-1973, contains files on American Nazi Party; Common Sense; Group Research, Inc.; Highlander Folk School; John Birch Society; Ku Klux Klan; Life Line; Reverend Carl McIntire; The Minutemen; Moral Re-Armament; National Indignation Committee; National States Rights Party; On Target - Minutemen publication; The Reuther Memorandum [online at http://unqualified-reservations.blogspot.com/2011/08/reuther-memorandum-1961.html]; Major General Edwin Walker; and Washington Observer / American Mercury. Series III: Karl Baarslag Research Files, 1930-1968, contains files on "For America" [ The Dan Smoot Report]; Amerasia [The Amerasia Case]; American Committee to Free Cuba; American Nazi Party; American Committee for Aid to Katanga Freedom Fighters; American Coalition of Patriotic Societies, Inc.; Americans for Constitutional Action; Bilderberg Group (Bilderbergers) [1957 St. Simon Island Conference]; Brainwashing [by Communists]; Bricker Amendment; Captive Nations Week; Cardinal Mindszenty Foundation [Includes the Mindszenty Report]; Citizens Foreign Relations Committee; Citizens Councils; Citizens Foreign Aid Committee; Committee of One Million Against the Admission of Communist China to the United Nations; Committee for Pillion Resolution; Committee for the Monroe Doctrine; Fluoridation; Forced Repatriation; Ford Foundation and Adjuncts; Foreign Policy Association; Foundations [and Relationship to Communism]; Fund for the Republic; Genocide Treaty; Group Research, Inc. [Index of the "Non-left"]; Hate Groups; Highlander Folk School; The Independent (formerly Exposé); Institute of Pacific Relations; John Birch Society; Koinonia Foundation; Ku Klux Klan; Liberty Lobby; Lifeline Foundation, Inc.; Loyalty Oath; Mental Health; National Renaissance Party [Neo-Nazi Group]; National States Rights Party (The Thunderbolt); National Indignation Convention; National Right to Work Committee; and The Northern League.

References:

Meyer Peter Filardo, "The Counterattack research files on American Communism, Tamiment Institute Library, New York University - weekly anti-Communism newsletter published by American Business Consultants, Inc., 1947-1968," Labor History, May, 1998; Keith Call, "Edgar C. Bundy," December 12, 2011, http://recollections.liblog.wheaton.edu/2011/12/12/edgar-c-bundy/, Ernie Lazar, "Edgar C. Bundy and Church League of America...rev. March 2013," https://sites.google.com/site/ernie124102/bundy-1; Matthew Glazebrook, How to Be an American: Community Anticommunism and the Grassroots Right, 1948-1956 (Ph.D., University of Sussex, 2013), http://sro.sussex.ac.uk/45257/1/Glazebrook,_Matthew.pdf.

Websites with information:

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

http://ilgwu.ilr.cornell.edu/otherArchives.html

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/476988874

http://www.worldcat.org/title/counterattack-research-files-1932-1968/oclc/476988874

Finding aids:

http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/tamwag/tam_148/

http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/tamwag/tam_148/tam_148.html

http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/tamwag/tam_148/dscref2581.html

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

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

http://dlib.nyu.edu/eadapp/transform?source=tamwag/counter.xml&style=tamwag/tamwag.xsl&part=body

[0553] John V. Ciceu papers, 1962-1965, Coll. 142

Location: Nevada Historical Society, 1650 North Virginia Street, Reno, Nevada 89503

Description: Records and other papers (correspondence, reports, office files, and account books) relating to Ciceu's activities as chapter leader of the John Birch Society in Reno, Nev., and his work in other organizations, including Nevada Anti-Communist Freedom Forum, Nevada Educational Foundation, and American Independent Party of Nevada. Correspondents include John Hensley DeTar, Everett M. Dirksen, Thruston B. Morton, James B. Utt, Robert Welch, and Dan Smoot.

References:

See A Guide to the Manuscript Collections at the Nevada Historical Society (1975)

Websites with information:

http://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/612365840

http://www.worldcat.org/title/john-v-ciceu-papers-1962-1965/oclc/612365840

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

http://quest.grainger.uiuc.edu/RussianManuscripts/Guide/Collection/350

http://www.museums.nevadaculture.org/resources/1/Nevada%20Historical%20Society_mastermslist.pdf

[0554] Cincinnati, Ohio-- American Jewish Committee Records, 1966-1991, MS-703

Location: Jacob Rader Marcus Center of the American Jewish Archives, 3101 Clifton Ave., Cincinnati, OH 45220

Description: The American Jewish Committee (AJC) was founded in 1906 to safeguard the rights of Jews and to alleviate the consequences of persecution or disaster affecting them at home or abroad. The AJC Cincinnati Chapter, founded in 1944, combats bigotry and works to promote tolerance and mutual respect. Series A. Correspondence and Subject Files, 1966-1990. Subseries 1. General Files, contains files on Anti-Israel, Anti-Semitism and Extremism Task Force, Farm Crisis and Extremism, Holocaust materials, Martin Luther, Nazism, New Right, Scientific Creationism, Skinhead Recruitment, and Skinheads/Neo-Nazis.

Websites with information:

http://americanjewisharchives.org/collections/findingAids.php

Finding aids:

http://americanjewisharchives.org/collections/ms0703/

http://ead.ohiolink.edu/xtf-ead/view?docId=ead/xOCAJA0703.xml

[0555] Circuit Riders, Inc. Records 1928-1975, Coll. Bx 167

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

Description: Circuit Riders, Incorporated was a group, formed in Cincinnati, Ohio, whose purpose was to spread the gospel of Christ. However, during the late 1950s and 1960s, the focus of the Circuit Riders expanded to include the investigation of socialist-communist infiltration into all churches, government, education and the civil rights movement. Myers G. Lowman, as executive secretary of the Circuit Riders, distributed a newsletter to Circuit Rider members. On behalf of the Circuit Riders, Lowman organized the review of textbooks which were being used in some of the public schools in the 1950s. The collection includes Circuit Rider Publications and Research Files with correspondence, pamphlets and audiotapes. Files on American Coalition of Patriotic, Civic and Fraternal Societies, American Vigilant Intelligence Federation, Atlantic Union, Bricker Amendment, Edgar C. Bundy, Christian Crusade, Paul Crouch, Communist Party, Robert Donner, Florida Legislative Investigation Committee, Freedoms Foundation at Valley Forge, Ben Gitlow, Green Mountain Rifleman, Ralph Gwinn, Billy James Hargis, Highlander Folk School, House Committee on Un-American Activities, Alfred Kohlberg, Joseph Brown Matthews, Mental Health, Lucille S. Miller, Panama Canal, Walter Steele, George E. Sullivan, Supreme Court, textbooks, United Nations, James B. Utt, and World Government. Pamphlets by or published by Marilyn R. Allen; Alliance, Inc.; America First Committee; America Plus; America's Future; American Bar Association; American Center for Education; American Defense Society, Inc.; American Heritage Protective Committee; American Institute for Economic Research; American Jewish Committee; American Jewish League against Communism; American Legion; Americanism Finance Committee/National Sojourners Incorporated; Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith (Primer on Communism); Gregor Aronson; Asian Peoples' Anti-Communist League; Association of Citizens' Councils of Mississippi; Karl Baarslag; James D. Bales; Ivor Benson; Aldrich Blake; Tom P. Brady; Britons Publishing Society; Louis Francis Budenz; Frank A. Capell; Christian Anti-Communism Crusade; Christian Beacon Press; Christian Crusade; Christian Nationalist Crusade; Church League of America; Cinema Educational Guild, Inc.; Citizens Committee for Constitutional Liberties; Reuben Clark; Corneliu Codreanu; Committee for Constitutional Government, Inc.; Committee of 100; Committee to Restore the Constitution; Constitutional Educational League; Earnest Sevier Cox; Lucille Cardin Crain; The Cross and the Flag; Daughters of the American Revolution; Zygmund Dobbs; Gordon V. Drake; Education Information, Inc.; Myron C. Fagan; Denis Fahey; Faith and Freedom Forum; Reverend Raymond T. Feely; Bonner Fellers; A.N. Field; Foundation for Economic Education, Inc.; Free Enterprise Student Seminar; Wesley Critz George; Georgia Commission on Education; Kenneth Goff; Guardians of American Education; Gordon D. Hall; Anne Burrows Hamilton; Harding College Freedom Forum Presentation; F. A. Harper; Hawaii Foundation for American Freedoms; Hawaii Residents' Association; Headlines; Heads up; Henry Regnery Company; The Herald of Freedom; Heritage Foundation; Frank E. Holman; Richard Kelly Hoskins; Hubbard Dianetic Research Foundation; Imperial Fascist League; Independence Foundation; Industrial Defense Association; Japanese Exclusion League of California; Manning Johnson; Joseph Kamp; Keep America Free; Knott's Berry Farm; Arnold S. Leese; Don Lohbeck; Major Hamilton A. Long; Sumter L. Lowry; Clarence Manion; Mankind Quarterly; Fred R. Marvin; J. B. Matthews; V. S. McClatchy; Ben Moreell; Mothers Organized for Moral Stability; James DeForest Murch; National Association of Manufacturers; National Catholic Welfare Conference; National Economic Council; National Putnam Letters Committee; National Republic; National Sojourners; John Noble; J. Frank Norris; R. T. Osborne; Homer L. Owen; J.E. Perkins; Herbert A. Philbrick; Murray Plavner; Karl Prussion; Arch E. Roberts; Col. E. N. Sanctuary; G. Davis Schine; Fred Schwarz; Gerald L.K. Smith; Archibald E. Stevenson; Subversive Activities Control Board; 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]; Jack B. Tenney; Dorothy Thompson; Oswald Garrison Villard; Virginia Commission on Constitutional Government; Ludwig von Mises; Robert H. W. Welch; White American Society; R.M. Whitney; Robert H. Williams; and Robert Wood.

Note:

See also Myers G. Lowman Papers, Hoover Institution Archives.

Websites with information:

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

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

https://library.uoregon.edu/speccoll/guides/afram2.htm

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

http://janus.uoregon.edu/record=b1490292

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/75691449

http://www.worldcat.org/title/circuit-riders-inc-publications-and-research-files-1928-1975/oclc/75691449

Finding aids:

http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv69783

http://nwda-db.wsulibs.wsu.edu/findaid/ark:/80444/xv69783

http://nwda.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv69783

[0555a] Walker and Gertrude Cisler Library Records, 1964-1971, bulk 1969-1971, WSR000341

Location: Walter P. Reuther Library, Wayne State University Archives, Wayne State University, 5401 Cass Ave., Detroit, MI 48202

Description: Walker L. Cisler (1897-1994), chairman of the board for Detroit Edison, financially supported the foundation of The Walker and Gertrude Cisler Library, which was created by the Walker and Gertrude Cisler Library Foundation in 1970. This collection primarily contains documents created by the library itself, as well as copies of the National Renaissance Bulletin (1971), Common Sense (Christian Educational Association) (1970-1971), and Liberty Letter (Liberty Lobby) (1970-1971).

Finding aid:

https://reuther.wayne.edu/files/WSR000341.pdf

[0556] Citizens Committee for a Free Cuba Records, 1962-1974, Coll. 73092

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

Description: Clippings, newsletters, press releases, reports, conference papers, speeches, and printed matter, relating primarily to the political, economic, and social effects of Communism in Cuba, Communist subversion in Latin America, U.S. foreign policy toward Cuba, and activities of the Cuban émigré community.

Websites with information:

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/754870030

http://www.worldcat.org/title/citizens-committee-for-a-free-cuba-records-1962-1974/oclc/754870030

Finding aids:

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

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf8k40066w/entire_text/

http://content.cdlib.org/view?docId=tf8k40066w&doc.view=entire_text&brand=default

[0557] Citizens Committee for the Preservation of Payrolls records, 1956-1958, Coll. 1955, 1983

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

Description: The Citizens Committee for the Preservation of Payrolls was formed by the Joint Council of Teamsters no. 28 in opposition to Initiative 198 (1956) and Initiative 202 (1958), right to work initiatives in the state of Washington. Contains correspondence, legislative material, resolutions, speeches, petitions, reports, and clippings concerning the campaign against those right-to-work initiatives.

Reference:

Historical Records of Washington State: Records and Papers held at Repositories, Project Administrator and Supervisory Editor: John F. Burns (Washington State Historical Records and Archives Project, 1981), http://www.sos.w

a.gov/_assets/archives/WASRAB.pdf

Finding aid:

http://digital.lib.washington.edu/findingaids/view?docId=CitizensCommitteePreservationPayrolls1955_1983.x

ml

[0558] The Citizens' Council, Jackson, Miss., Vol. I, No. 1 (Oct. 1955)-Vol. 6, No. 11 (Sept. 1961) [digital collection]

Description: The Citizens' Council was the newspaper of the white supremacist Citizens' Council of Mississippi between October 1955 and September 1961. Edited by W.J. Simmons. Contributors include Thomas R. Waring.

Databases:

http://www.citizenscouncils.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=newspaper&Itemid=53

http://archive.org/search.php?query=Citizens%27%20Council%20AND%20collection%3Aopensource%20AND

%20subject%3A%22White%20Citizens%27%20Council%22

http://www.fultonhistory.com/my%20photo%20albums/all%20newspapers/Newspapers%20%20Out%20of

%20NY/Jackson%20Miss%20Citizen%20Council%201955-1961/index.html

[0559] Citizen's Council/Civil Rights Collection, 1954-1977, 1987-1992, M 99

Location: Special Collections, The University of Southern Mississippi Libraries, 18 College Drive #5148, Hattiesburg, MS 39406-5148

Description: Research collection of historian Dr. Neil McMillen consists of materials related to the Citizens' Council, the Ku Klux Klan, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, and other civil rights groups and related individuals. Series I - Citizens' Council, contains newspaper clippings, publications, and other items. Series II - Ku Klux Klan, contains a copy of Kloran, Knights of the Ku Klux Klan White Book, 1916, and other materials. Series IV - Other Groups, contains Mark Margoian Hate Flyers, 1987-1992, Byron De La Beckwith Letter, 1964, 1994-1995, and Erle Johnston Correspondence, 1986-1991 and undated.

Reference:

Jennifer Brannock, "Documenting the Civil Rights Movement in Mississippi: An Overview of the Collections at the University of Southern Mississippi," The Primary Source (Society of Mississippi Archivists), Vol. 33, Issue 1 (Summer 2014), pp. 21-26 (p. 24), http://aquila.usm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?­article=1006&context=theprimarysource.

Websites with information:

http://www.lib.usm.edu/spcol/collections/manuscripts/lists-of-collections/alphabetical.html

http://www.lib.usm.edu/spcol/collections/manuscripts/lists-of-collections/subjects/subj-cr.html

http://www.lib.usm.edu/legacy/archives/m416.htm

Finding aids:

http://www.lib.usm.edu/legacy/archives/m099.htm

http://www.lib.usm.edu/legacy/archives/m099.htm?m099text.htm~mainFrame

http://lib.usm.edu/spcol/collections/manuscripts/finding_aids/m099

[0560] Citizens' Council Collection, 1947-1979, MUM00072 [digital collection]

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

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. Thomas Pickens Brady, a circuit court judge and Citizens' Council leader, published a handbook entitled Black Monday, outlining the group's goals, including the abolition of public schools, nullification of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, and establishment of a separate black state. The publication of this handbook inspired many Mississippians to join the Citizens' Council movement. Other Citizens' Council chapters were formed around the state, and soon a statewide body, the Association of Citizens' Councils of Mississippi, was founded 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. A national group, the Citizens' Councils of America, was formed by 1956. The Council published a national magazine, The Citizen, and produced a weekly telecast, "Forum," on WLBT-TV in Jackson. The collection consists of correspondence, speeches, flyers, newsletters, and other ephemera.. Included are correspondence from Robert B. Patterson and W. J. Simmons; "Civil Rights and the Negro Revolution," a lecture presented by William J. Simmons at the University of Hawaii, 1964; pamphlets, including Thomas Brady, "Segregation and the South," 1957; Thomas Brady, "A Review of Black Monday," 1954 [online at http://digilib.usm.edu/cdm/ref/collection/­manu/id/1778]; Ross Barnett: Strength Through Unity, 1960; James F. Byrnes: The Supreme Court Must Be Curbed, 1956; James O. Eastland: We've reached era of judicial tyranny, 1955 [online at http://dig

ilib.usm.edu/cdm/ref/collection/manu/id/1896]; Joseph P. Kamp: Trickery, Treachery, Tyranny and Treason in Washington, 1957; John Bell Williams: Interposition, the Barrier Against Tyranny, 1956; Judge M. M. McGowan: Interposition or Nullification, undated; Carleton Putnam: Second Putnam Letter Cuts Root of Integration Fallacy, 1959; Rev. G. T. Gillespie: A Christian View on Segregation, 1954 [online at http://digilib.usm.edu/cdm/ref/collection/manu/id/1880]; Louis W. Hollis: Integrity, 1965; John Bell Williams, Where is the Reign of Terror?, 1956; Robert B. Patterson, The Truth Cries Out, 1966; Statement by George Wallace, undated; Carleton Putnam: High Court's 'Arrogance' is Viewed by Northerner, 1958; John Bell Williams: Where is the Reign of Terror?, 1956; Statement by George Wallace, undated; and Martin Luther King at Communist Training School, undated; broadsides and broadsheets, including W. J. Simmons, "Organization: The Key to Victory," 1962; and copies of The Citizen, the "official journal of the Citizens' Councils of America," The Citizens' Council (newspaper), and Augusta Courier (Augusta, Ga.).

Reference:

Jesse Curtis, "'Will the Jungle Take Over?' National Review and the Defense of Western Civilization in the Era of Civil Rights and African Decolonization," Journal of American Studies, published online: 9 May 2018.

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/politics/manuscript-20th?page=show

http://www.library.olemiss.edu/guides/archives_subject_guide/religion/manuscript?page=show

http://www.library.olemiss.edu/guides/archives_subject_guide/civil-rights?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/MUM00072.html

Finding aids to digital collection:

Includes High Court's "Arrogance" Is Viewed by Northerner: A Letter to the President, by Carleton Putnam (1958); Second Putnam Letter Cuts Root of Integration Fallacy, by Carleton Putnam (1959); "The Ugly Truth About the NAACP," an address by Attorney General Eugene Cook of Georgia before the 55th Annual Convention of the Peace Officers Association of Georgia, printed by the Citizens' Council, circa 1955; "Statewide Scholarship, Essay Contest for Mississippi High School Students, 1959-60," printed by the Citizens' Council, whose "Subject" is "(a) Why I believe in social separation of the races of mankind. (b) Subversion in racial unrest. (c) Why the preservation of States Rights is important to every American. (d) Why separate schools should be maintained for the white and negro races."; and a publisher's announcement for States' Rights vs. The Supreme Court, by Thomas Wilcox (Boston, Mass., Forum Publishing Company, undated).

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

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

[0561] Citizens' Council collection, 1955-1967, MSS. 331

Location: Manuscripts Division, Special Collections, Mississippi State University Library, 395 Hardy Rd, P.O. Box 5408, Mississippi State, MS 39762-5408

Description: Includes correspondence, annual reports, and publications of the Association of Citizens' Councils of Mississippi, the Citizens' Council of America, and various other organizations. Pamphlets, including Segregation and the South, Address by Judge Tom P. Brady, October 4, 1957; Conflicting views on segregation, by Dr. Dotson McGinnis Nelson (circa 1955), A Christian View on Segregation, by Rev. G. T. Gillespie, November 4, 1954 [online at http://digilib.usm.edu/cdm/ref/collection/manu/id/1880]; A Jewish View on Segregation [online at http://dig

ilib.usm.edu/cdm/compoundobject/collection/manu/id/1948]; The Citizens' Council: A History. An Address by Robert B. Patterson (1963); The Citizens' Council; The Road Ahead, a speech by Robert Patterson, January 15, 1965; John Bell Williams: Where is the Reign of Terror?, 1956; Interposition, the barrier against tyranny, by John Bell Williams, January 25, 1956; Southerners Unite!; The Truth Cries Out, by Robert B. Patterson; Famous Quotations; Educational fund of the Citizens' Council (n.d. [1956]); How to Keep Schools Open; Mixed Schools and Mixed Blood, by Herbert Ravenel Sass (1956); How to Save Our Public Schools; The Story of the NAACP; The Ugly Truth About the NAACP, an address by Attorney General Eugene Cook of Georgia, circa 1955; Racial Facts; James F. Byrnes: The Supreme Court Must Be Curbed, 1956; "We've reached era of judicial tyranny," an address by James O. Eastland, December 1, 1955 [online at http://digilib.usm.edu/cdm/ref/collection/manu/id/1896]; High Court's "Arrogance" Is Viewed by Northerner: A Letter to the President, by Carleton Putnam [online at http://clio.lib.olemiss.edu/cdm/compoundobject/collection/citizens/id/934/rec/1]; Second Putnam Letter Cuts Root of Integration Fallacy, by Carleton Putnam [online at http://clio.lib.olemiss.edu/cdm/ref/collection/­citizens/id/628]; The Majority Consensus; The Mid-west hears the South's story: An address by William J. Simmons, February 3, 1958 [online at http://digilib.usm.edu/cdm/ref/collection/manu/id/1452]; Civil Rights, States' Rights, and the Reconstruction Background, by Alfred H. Stone (1948) [online at http://clio.lib.olemiss.edu/cdm/ref/collection/civ_rights/id/1320]; Rebuilding the Tower of Babel: a study of Christianity and segregation, by Stuart O. Landry (New Orleans: Pelican Publishing Company, 1957); Voter Qualifications Laws in Louisiana; The Supreme Court–The Broken Constitution and the Shattered Bill of Rights; Negroes Menaced by Red Plot; Race Mixing–A Religious Fraud; Truth About Supreme Court's Segregation Ruling (Charleston, S.C.: Grass Roots League, Inc., 1955); Red Infiltration of the National Council, Protestant Episcopal Church; Congressman James C. Davis speaks to the States' Rights Council, by James C. Davis, November 28, 1956; A Resolution Requesting Impeachment of Six Members of the United States Supreme Court; Trickery, treachery, tyranny and treason in Washington, by Joseph P. Kamp, April 1957; "The Hybrid Race Doctrine: A Critical Analysis of Some Teachings of Modern Anthropology by Bela Hubbard, Ph.D." (San Francisco, CA: Liberty & Property, Inc.); and The Pending Tragedy in the South, by George W. Cheek. Broadside: "Freedom Bus to Any City in the North or West." Copies of The Citizens' Council. Newspapers, including Dixie-American, East Tennessee Reporter (Clinton, Tenn.), Free Men Speak, Nationalist Party Bulletin, News and Views, Southern Digest, The American Nationalist, The People's Peace Party Forum, The South African Observer, and The Virginian.

Websites with information:

http://library.msstate.edu/specialcollections/manuscripts/fulllist.php

http://www.lib.msstate.edu/specialcollections/collections/manuscripts/civilrights/

http://lib.msstate.edu/specialcollections/collections/manuscripts/politics/

http://lib.msstate.edu/specialcollections/collections/manuscripts/afam/

Finding aids:

http://library.msstate.edu/FindingAid/Citizens'_Council_collection_finding_aid_MSS.331.pdf

http://library.msstate.edu/FindingAid/Citizens%27_Council_collection_finding_aid_MSS.331.pdf

[0562] Citizens' Council Forum Films Collection 1955-1966, MP 1986.01 [films]

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 first Citizens' Council was formed in 1954 in Indianola, Mississippi, to resist integration. By March 1955, 167 Citizens' Councils were reported in Mississippi; these were loosely affiliated into a state organization. In 1955, the state organization began producing fifteen-minute weekly films under the name Citizens' Council Forum Films. These films consisted of interviews by producer Dick Morphew with leading American and foreign conservatives and were shown on local television stations throughout the country. The discussions centered on race, Communism, the Supreme Court, religion, and integration. The programs were created to influence public opinion on integration and Communism. Some of the films in this collection were not produced by the Citizens' Council Forum Films, but activities of similar groups. Contained in the collection are 132 reels of film, approximately 90,000 feet. Names include Representative Bruce Alger, Citizens Council, Communism, Representative James Davis, Representative William Jennings Bryan Dorn, Senator James O. Eastland, Dr. Medford Evans, Dr. Robert Gayre, Dr. W. C. George, Senator Barry Goldwater, Mr. Edward Hunter, Reverend T. Robert Ingram, August E. Johansen, Dr. Robert Kuttner, Myers G. Lowman, Representative Noah M. Mason, Carleton Putnam, John C. Satterfield, Senator John C. Stennis, Senator Herman Talmadge, Senator Strom Thurmond, Senator John Tower, John B. Trevor, Representative James Utt, Major General Edwin Walker, George Wallace, Representative Francis Walter, and Representative John Bell Williams. Also includes 'The San Francisco Story', a documentary about the House Committee on Un-American Activities hearings in San Francisco, held on May 12 and 13, 1960.

Reference:

Preston Everett, "Audio-Visual Collections," The Primary Source (Society of Mississippi Archivists) Vol. 23, No. 1 (Summer 2001), pp. 1-11 (p. 5), http://aquila.usm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1110&­context=theprimarysource

Websites with information:

http://mdah.state.ms.us/new/research/collections/

http://mdah.state.ms.us/arrec/digital_archives/

Finding aid:

http://mdah.state.ms.us/arrec/digital_archives/ccffc/

[0563] Citizens' Council Radio Forum collection, 1957-1966, MSS. 597 [sound recordings]

Location: Special Collections, Mississippi State University Libraries, 395 Hardy Rd, P.O. Box 5408, Mississippi State, MS 39762-5408

Description: Radio programs produced by the Citizens' Council of Jackson, Mississippi, and featuring political leaders of the time, covering issues like states rights and integration. 418 reels. Transcripts available for the bulk of the tapes. Speakers include George Wallace and Strom Thurmond.

Reference:

Preston Everett, "Audio-Visual Collections," The Primary Source (Society of Mississippi Archivists) Vol. 23, No. 1 (Summer 2001), pp. 1-11 (p. 6), http://aquila.usm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1110&­context=theprimarysource

Websites with information:

http://library.msstate.edu/specialcollections/manuscripts/fulllist.php

http://www.lib.msstate.edu/specialcollections/collections/manuscripts/civilrights/

http://lib.msstate.edu/specialcollections/collections/manuscripts/politics/

http://lib.msstate.edu/specialcollections/collections/manuscripts/journalism/

http://lib.msstate.edu/specialcollections/collections/manuscripts/afam/

http://lib.msstate.edu/specialcollections/collections/manuscripts/list/#c

http://lib.msstate.edu/specialcollections/collections/manuscripts/civilrights/

[0564] Citizens' Councils of America. Jackson, Mississippi. Literature, 1947-1969, MS C49

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

Description: Pamphlets, leaflets, and other material published, distributed, or utilized by the Councils in propagation of their political and social views on federalism, public schools, ethnology, Communism, and, especially, race relations in the United States.

Reference:

Guide to Selected Manuscript Collections, by Samuel A. Sizer (University of Arkansas Libraries, 1976).

Websites with information:

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

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

http://libinfo.uark.edu/specialcollections/research/guides/sizer/default.asp

http://libraries.uark.edu/specialcollections/findingaids/sizer/index.html#CITIZENS

http://uark.libguides.com/content.php?pid=365012&sid=2987680

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/28896833

http://www.worldcat.org/title/citizens-councils-of-america-literature-1947-1969/oclc/28896833

[0565] Citizens Electoral Council of Australia ephemera material

Location: Petherick Reading Room (Ephemera Collection), National Library of Australia, Parkes Place, Canberra ACT 2600, Australia

Description: The Citizens Electoral Council of Australia is a minor nationalist political party in Australia affiliated with the international LaRouche Movement led by American political activist Lyndon LaRouche. The original CEC was established by members of the Australian League of Rights, an extreme right-wing group led by Eric Butler, in the 1980s in Queensland.

Catalogue record:

http://catalogue.nla.gov.au/Record/6418090

[0566] Citizens for Community Action records, 1969-2003, File no. 00877, Accession number: 16,206

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

Description: Citizens for Community Action was a grassroots, St. Paul-based pro-life group established to protest the Planned Parenthood Highland Park neighborhood location, which offered abortions in addition to its other family planning services. In 2003, it merged with Pro-Life Action Ministries and the Highland Life Care Center. Materials include annual meeting and board meeting files, audiocassettes, videocassettes, photographs, news clippings, pamphlets and brochures, mailings, correspondence, and other materials. There is information about picketing activities at the Planned Parenthood clinic, prayer vigils, fund raising, the involvement of local Protestant, Catholic, and Jewish religious figures in the organization, and an annual memorial service held by the group. Sound cassettes include The Apostolate for God's Precious Infants (Minneapolis, MN: Human Life International Conference, October 1994); Corporate Funding of Planned Parenthood (Pomona, CA: Focus on the Family, 1990); Critical Look at Planned Parenthood, by Mary Senander (1981); A Day on the Hill, by Dr. George Grant (Minneapolis, MN: Greater Minneapolis Association of Evangelicals [GMAE], March 1990); and Planned Parenthood (Orlando, FL: National Right to Life Conference [NRLC], 1983).

Websites with information:

http://www2.mnhs.org/library/findaids/index_C.htm

Finding aid:

http://www2.mnhs.org/library/findaids/00877.xml

[0566a] Citizens for Educational Freedom: Part 1, 1956-2003, M-259

Location: Special Collections, St. Louis Mercantile Library, University of Missouri–St. Louis, 1 University Blvd., St. Louis, MO 63121-4400

Description: Citizens for Educational Freedom is a national, non-profit, non-sectarian corporation founded in St. Louis in 1959, with headquarters in the Washington, D.C. area since 1962, of citizens and supporting groups of every race, color, creed and political party to promote the primary rights of parents with regard to freedom of choice, justice and quality and education for all, regardless of wealth, color or creed by allocating a fair share of educational tax dollars to each child to take to the school of the parents' choice while protecting parents and schools from undue government regulation and control. Files on Bus Bill; National, Senate Responses to Bork Letter, 1987; Correspondence with Heartland Institute, 1986; President George H.W. Bush Early Review of his Administration, copy, 1989; White House Correspondence, 1991 "America 2000", G. Bush Sr.; "Families for President Bush" – Campaign Organization, 1992; "Reagan for President" Campaign Materials, 1976; Election 1980 / Reagan GOP; Paul M. Weyrich Plan for Voucher Coalition, 1986; and Women for Faith & Family.

Websites with information:

http://www.umsl.edu/mercantile/collections/mercantile-library-special-collections/special_collections/slma-259.html

Finding aid:

http://www.umsl.edu/mercantile/collections/mercantile-library-special-collections/assets/pdf/special-collections/finding-aid/M-259_Citizens_for_Educational_Freedom.pdf

[0566b] Citizens for Educational Freedom: Part 2, M-283

Location: Special Collections, St. Louis Mercantile Library, University of Missouri–St. Louis, 1 University Blvd., St. Louis, MO 63121-4400

Description: The collection contains CEF Board minutes, papers, documents, and promotional material.

Websites with information:

http://www.umsl.edu/mercantile/collections/mercantile-library-special-collections/special_collections/slma-283.html

[0566c] Citizens for Educational Freedom (Wisconsin Federation) Records, 1961-1978

Location: Special Collections & University Archives, Raynor Memorial Libraries, Marquette University, 1355 West Wisconsin Avenue, Milwaukee, WI 53233

Description: An offshoot of the national organization of Citizens for Educational Freedom (CEF), the Wisconsin Federation was founded in 1961 to promote passage of the state's Fair Bus Bill, a measure intended to provide public busing to students who attended non-public schools. The law passed but was later reversed. Nevertheless, the Federation—inspired by its short term success—lobbied for further educational benefits, such as tax credits, government grants, and vouchers for parents of non-public school students. The Wisconsin Federation shared the same basic goal as its national counterpart—to secure the equal distribution of public financial education benefits for students in non-public schools. It ceased operations in 1978. The records consist of general subject files, financial records, minutes of meetings, correspondence, files, and scrapbooks. Series 1. Alphabetical Subject Files, 1961-1974, contains files on Bus Bill; Governor Lucey; and Richard M. Nixon; On Parochial Aid, clippings.

Finding aid:

https://library.oakland.edu/collections/special/http://www.marquette.edu/library/archives/Mss/CEF/CEF-main.shtml

[0566d] Citizens for Reagan Records, 1975-1986, Coll. 81141 [partly digital collection]

Location: Hoover Institution Archives, 434 Galvez Mall, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305-6010

Description: The collection relates to the campaign of Ronald Reagan for the Republican Party presidential nomination in 1976. Materials include correspondence, position papers, press releases, memoranda, public opinion polling data, financial records, sound recordings, and video tapes. Includes a few post-1976 records of Citizens for the Republic, the successor organization to Citizens for Reagan. Files on Abortion; Conservative Political Action Conference; "The Democratic Presidential Watch," Report prepared by the Republican National Committee, 1976; Equal Rights Amendment (ERA); Barry Goldwater; Barry Goldwater - Letter announcing support for Gerald R. Ford, 1976; Gun control; Lyn Nofziger; Lyn Nofziger correspondence regarding right to work; Rarick letters, 1975; Right-To-Work; Nelson A. Rockefeller; William A. Rusher's letter regarding Third Party Commission, 1975; Young Americans for Freedom (YAF); Books by Gary Allen, 1976; Clippings on Ronald Reagan; Master catalogue (Abortion, Big government, Bureaucracy, Busing, Capitalism, Capitalism/Socialism, Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), Communism, Calvin Coolidge/Dwight D. Eisenhower, Covert activities, Crime - Racial discrimination, Decentralization, Détente, Drug control, Equal rights for women, Gun control, National health insurance, Panama Canal, Rhodesia and South Africa, Right to work, Strategic Arms Limitation Talk - Soviet Union, Tax limitation, Lyn Nofziger - United Republicans of California (UROC), Ronald Reagan - United Republicans of California (UROC)); Youth for Reagan; Young Americans for Freedom (YAF); Young Republican Leadership Conference; Republican National Convention, 1976; Senator James L. Buckley; President Gerald R. Ford; The China Issue, Anna Chennault, 1976; and Platform - Statement by Jesse Helms, 11 August 1976. Boxes 112-120. Compact sound cassettes (phonotapes), 1970-1980, undated, contains tapes of How to Defend America, M. Stanton Evans and Admiral Chester Ward: Two interviews, late 1967, late 1971; Phyllis Schlafly, Disarming Henry Kissinger, 1975; and Professor Friedman, undated.

Finding aids:

http://pdf.oac.cdlib.org/pdf/hoover/81141.pdf

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt7w1036nz/entire_text/

[0567] Citizens for Traditional Values Records, 1984-2000 (bulk 1986-1992), 0369; Bt 2

Location: Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan, 1150 Beal Ave., Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2113

Description: The Citizens for Traditional Values record group documents four separate but interrelated organizations having many of the same members and sharing a strategy aimed at uniting conservative Christians on behalf of similarly-minded candidates for office. These organizations were The Freedom Council (FC) (1985-1987), the Michigan Committee for Freedom (MCFF) (1986-1992), the MCFF offshoot organization Celebrate Life (1989-1992), and the Citizens for Traditional Values (1991-present). The records contains a variety of documentary materials such as office files, correspondence, budgets, reports, fundraising information, draft materials, and news clippings to give a well-rounded view of the conservative Christian political scene in Michigan. The series Background Information, 1986-1992, includes an oral history interview made with James Muffett describing the delegate selection process leading to the 1987 Michigan Republican presidential candidate nomination for Pat Robertson. The series The Freedom Council, 1985-1988, contains files on Pat Robertson and Americans for Robertson. The series Michigan Committee For Freedom, 1986-1992. Subseries Fundraising, 1985-1991, contains files on Fundraising Assistance to Pat Robertson (donor list) and Fundraising Events by Pat Robertson, Oliver North, and John Stormer. Subseries Visual, ca. 1988, contains videos by Marlene Elwell, Pat Robertson, and Americans for Robertson on behalf of the campaign of Pat Robertson. Subseries Delegates, 1985-1987, contains files on Action 86 (Right to Life Political Action Committee) and Pat Robertson at Freedom Rally. The series Celebrate Life, 1989-1992. Subseries Phase I, 1989-1990, includes information about the creation of newspaper inserts distributed across the state promoting a pro-life viewpoint.

Websites with information:

http://bentley.umich.edu/EAD/ead_cd.htm

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/81640737

http://www.worldcat.org/title/citizens-for-traditional-values-records-1984-2000/oclc/81640737

Finding aids:

http://quod.lib.umich.edu/b/bhlead/umich-bhl-0369?rgn=main;view=text

http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/f/findaid/findaid-idx?c=bhlead;id=navbarbrowselink;cginame=findaid-idx;cc=bhlead;view=reslist;subview=standard;didno=umich-bhl-0369

[0568] Civil Rights Collection of the Nashville Public Library, 2001- ongoing

Location: Special Collections Division, Nashville Public Library, 615 Church Street, Nashville, TN 37219

Description: The collection consists of primary and secondary sources documenting the modern civil rights movement, with material on events, participants, and social movements aimed at dismantling public and private acts of segregation. Materials in the collection include published audio and video imprints, ephemera and memorabilia, oral histories, periodicals, photographs, and records and manuscripts. Series II. Civil Rights Ephemera Collection, contains copies of A First Step Toward School Integration, by Anna Holden (Nashville CORE, May 1958) [on John Kasper in Nashville, Tennessee, in the fall of 1957; online at http://www.crmvet.org/docs/5806_nashv_school.pdf]; Tennessee White Citizens Council. Membership Application; and White Racism: Communication and Confrontation (Tennessee Council on Human Relations, 1968). Series IV. Civil Rights Periodicals Collection, includes a copy of Kansas City Star, Vol. 120, No. 218, September 11, 1957, containing articles on John Kasper and school desegregation.

Websites with information:

https://catalog.library.nashville.org/Record/.b18287797/

http://www.library.nashville.org/localhistory/his_spcoll_coll_findingaids.asp

http://www.library.nashville.org/civilrights/collection.htm

Finding aids:

https://library.nashville.org/sites/default/files/civil_rights_collection.pdf

http://www.library.nashville.org/localhistory/findingaids/Special_Collections_Division_Finding_Aid_Civil_Righ

ts_Collec.pdf

[0569] The Civil Rights Congress of Michigan Collection, 1933-1963 (bulk 1935-1955), UR000304

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

Description: The Civil Rights Congress of Michigan was organized in 1935 as the Conference for the Protection of Civil Rights. The Conference opposed, among other things, the Black Legion and the Ku Klux Klan, fascism, and discrimination. About 1938 the name of the group was changed to the Civil Rights Federation. From 1941 the group attacked the Dies Committee, the Mundt-Nixon Bills, and the Smith Act. About 1945 the name of the organization changed to the Civil Rights Congress. They dissolved in 1955. Correspondents include Charles Beard and Granville Hicks. Part 1, Series II, Black Legion - KKK, 1936-1952, contains files on Black Legion, KKK, and KKK - United Sons of America. Series III, Fascism, 1933-1947, contains files on America First Committee, American Legion, American Mothers, Anglo-Saxon Federation, Anti-Communist Propaganda, Anti-Nazi Activity, Axis radio, Senator Bilbo, John Bugas, Father Coughlin, Father Coughlin - Social Justice, The Cross and The Flag, Leo Donnelly, Fascism, Fifth Column, Hamilton Fish, Hamilton Fish (George Hill trial), Friends of Democracy, German-American Bund, Adolf Hitler, Clare Hoffman, Industrial Legion of America, Charles Lindbergh, National Workers League, Native Fascist Organizations, Nazi Germany, Nazi spies, Nazis in United States, Nazi propaganda, Pegler, G.L.K. Smith, Harvey Springer, George Viereck, Professor Van Moltke case, Louis B. Ward, Gerald B. Winrod, Anti-Nazi Bulletin, The Fundamentalist, Germany Today, The Hour, Social Justice, and Henry Ford. Series IV, Un-American Activities, 1935-1955, contains files on Communism, Communist Party, Harry Dexter White, Dies Committee, McCarran Bill, Mundt Bills, Mundt Nixon bill, Loyalty, McCarthy, McCarthy Book burning, Red Baiting, Smith Bill - HR 5138 - 1940, Smith Act, and un-American Activities Committee. Series VII, Discrimination, 1932-1954, contains files on Anti-lynching, Anti Semitism, Discrimination - Negro, Restrictive Covenants, Anti Lynching Bill, Hobbs Concentration camp bill - 1941, McCarran Act, Anti Poll Tax Bill, and Detroit Riots - 1943. Part 2. Series XIII. Civil Rights Issues, 1933-1963, contains files on Discrimination, Anti-Semitism; Discrimination, Black Legion; Discrimination, Racial; Discrimination, Poll Tax Bill; Mundt-Nixon Bill; and Smith Act.

Websites with information:

http://reuther.wayne.edu/node/3144

http://reuther.wayne.edu/guides.html

http://reuther.wayne.edu/pdf/1984_newsletter_v5.2.pdf

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/32321154

http://www.worldcat.org/title/civil-rights-congress-of-michigan-records-1933-1963/oclc/32321154

Finding aid:

http://reuther.wayne.edu/files/UR000304.pdf

[0570] Civil Rights Database, Archives & Special Collections [online database]

Location: Valdosta State University, 1500 N. Patterson St., Valdosta, GA 31698

Description: The Civil Rights Database is an index of the Southern Patriot, a progressive southern newspaper that ran from 1942-1973 out of South Carolina. The newspaper supported and advocated desegregation before and after the Civil Rights Movement. Topics include American Independent Party, anti-lynching legislation, anti-communism, anti-labor, anti-union laws, apartheid, Association of Wallace Voters, Citizens Council, Citizens Against Busing, civil rights, William M. Colmer, Communism, Kent Courtney, cross burning, desegregation, Dirksen Amendment, James O. Eastland, Equal Rights Amendment (ERA), Equal Educational Opportunities Bill (anti-busing bill) (92-HR-13915: To further the achievement of equal educational opportunities), Florida HB 74 (right-to-work legislation), House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC), integration, John Birch Society, John Kasper, Ku Klux Klan, lynching, Joe McCarthy, McCarthyism, Lester Maddox, James Meredith, Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission, Leander H. Perez, Herbert Philbrick, poll tax, race relations, race-baiting, racism, Right-to-work law, right wing politics, right wing press, Phyllis Schlafly, school integration, Dan Smoot, John Stennis, school busing, school integration, segregation, Taft-Hartley Act, George Wallace, Lurleen Wallace, and John Bell Williams.

Websites with information:

http://www.valdosta.edu/academics/library/depts/archives-and-special-collections/finding-aids/welcome.php

Database search engine:

http://archives.valdosta.edu/research/civilrightssearch.shtml

[0571] The Civil Rights Digital Library [digital collection]

Location: Digital Library of Georgia, University of Georgia Libraries, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602-1641

Description: The Civil Rights Digital Library features a collection of unedited news film from the WSB (Atlanta) and WALB (Albany, Ga.) television archives held by the Walter J. Brown Media Archives and Peabody Awards Collection at the University of Georgia Libraries. In addition to the news film, the digital library includes related collections from 75 libraries, archives, and museums across the nation. Most are original documentation of the period, such as oral histories, letters, diaries, FBI files, and photographs. Among the 261 collections are Baldy Editorial Cartoons, 1946-1982, 1997: Clifford H. Baldowski Editorial Cartoons at the Richard B. Russell Library (0226); Clinton High School Desegregation from the Knoxville Journal Collection (0598); Eyes on the Prize Interviews (0936); Los Angeles Daily News Negatives, 1925-1954 (1755); Series 2515: Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission Records Online, 1994-2006, Folders (1934); Series 2515: Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission Records Online, 1994-2006, Photographs (1934); Sixteenth Street Baptist Church Bombing Collection (2673); Southern Courier: A Weekly Newspaper Covering Civil Rights in the South, 1965-68; Southern School News, Volume 1, Issue 1 (September 1954)-Volume 11, Issue 12 (June 1965) (139 items); and Stetson Kennedy Papers (1492). Items include a WSB-TV newsfilm clip of governor Marvin Griffin addressing the General Assembly on segregation and keeping public schools open, Atlanta, Georgia, 1956; Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission photograph of Edward R. Fields, Macon, Georgia, 1960s; a Barnett Bumper Sticker; Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission reports and correspondence; a letter from Erle Johnston, Jr., to Northern newspaper editors, 1969; and the following pamphlets: Review of Black Monday, by Thomas P. Brady, October 28, 1954; Interposition or nullification, by M. M. McGowan (n.d. [1954]); Lawyer challenges the U. S. Supreme Court, by Hugh V. Wall, June 23, 1955; We've reached era of judicial tyranny, by James O. Eastland, December 1, 1955 [online at http://digilib.usm.edu/cdm/ref/collection/manu/id/1896]; Interposition, the barrier against tyranny, by John Bell Williams, January 25, 1956; Educational fund of the Citizens' Council (n.d. [1956]); Mixed schools and mixed blood, by Herbert Ravenel Sass (1956); Congressman James C. Davis speaks to the States' Rights Council, by James C. Davis, November 28, 1956; Trickery, treachery, tyranny and treason in Washington, by Joseph P. Kamp, April 1957; Segregation is constitutional but compulsory integration is unconstitutional, by W. L. Eason (n.d. [1958]); Are you aware of the planned Negro invasion? (1959); Mississippi State Junior Chamber of Commerce. Oxford: a warning for Americans, October 1962; Blueprint for Total Federal Regimentation: Analysis of the Civil Rights Act 1963, by Loyd Wright and John C. Satterfield (Washington, D.C., The Co-ordinating Committee for Fundamental American Freedoms, 1963) [online at http://digilib.usm.edu/cdm/compoundobject/collection/manu/id/494/rec/1]; Attitudes in Mississippi, by Erle Johnston (1967); and Jewish view on segregation ([n.d.]) [online at http://digilib.usm.edu/cdm/­compoundobject/collection/manu/id/1948].

List of collections:

http://crdl.usg.edu/collections/

http://crdl.usg.edu/collections/?Welcome

Finding aids:

http://crdl.usg.edu/

http://crdl.usg.edu/export/html/usm/crmda/crdl_usm_crmda_eej010.html

[0572] Civil Rights During the Eisenhower Administration, Part 1: White House Central Files. Series A: School Desegregation (Bethesda, MD, A UPA Collection from LexisNexis, 2006) [microfilm]

Description: The documents reproduced in this publication are from the Papers of Dwight D. Eisenhower in the custody of the Dwight D. Eisenhower Library, National Archives and Records Administration. Contains material on the crisis in Little Rock, Arkansas, where Governor Orval E. Faubus ordered the Arkansas National Guard to prevent nine black children from entering Central High School; the Faubus decision to close Little Rock public schools in the fall of 1958, rather than allow them to integrate, as well as their reopening and permanent integration in 1959. Also contains material on the integration in 1956 of Clinton High School in Clinton, Tennessee, including the deployment of National Guard troops, the tactics and arrest of agitator Frederick J. Kasper, and the stabilizing actions of principal D. J. Brittain, Jr. Correspondents include Bruce Alger, Byron De La Beckwith, Tom P. Brady, Virginius Dabney, Everett M. Dirksen, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Milton S. Eisenhower, Orval E. Faubus, W. C. George, G. T. Gillespie, Marvin Griffin, Roy V. Harris, David Lawrence, Noah M. Mason, Theodore R. McKeldin, Westbrook Pegler, Leander H. Perez, Samuel B. Pettengill, Carleton Putnam, Maxwell M. Rabb, Fred Schwarz, W. J. Simmons, Dan Smoot, John Sparkman, John Stennis, Herman E. Talmadge, Henry J. Taylor, Strom Thurmond, Kenneth D. Wells, and J. Arthur Younger. Topics include alleged biblical support for segregation; American States' Rights Association; anti-Semitism; anti-integration actions; D. J. Brittain, Jr.; Brown v. Board of Education; Central High School (Little Rock, Arkansas); church bombings; Citizens Councils of America; citizens' councils; Clinton, Tennessee; Communism; desegregation; Orval E. Faubus; House Un-American Activities Committee; integration; Frederick J. Kasper; Ku Klux Klan; Little Rock, Ark., crisis; lynching; miscegenation as "un-American"; mixed marriage ban; NAACP as Communist front; Westbrook Pegler; Carleton Putnam; racial violence; racial discrimination; school desegregation; school bombing; segregation; "Southern Manifesto" (March 12, 1956), opposing desegregation; states' rights; States' Rights Council of Georgia; John Stennis; and Horace V. Wells.

Finding aids:

http://cisupa.proquest.com/ksc_assets/catalog/101150.pdf

http://www.roosevelt.nl/sites/zl-roosevelt/files/civil_rights_during_the_eisenhower_administration_­part_1__

white_house_central_files_series_a__school_deegregation.pdf

[0573] Civil Rights During the Kennedy Administration, 1961-1963. Part 1: The White House Central Files and Staff Files and the President's Office Files. A collection from the holdings of The John F. Kennedy Library, Boston, Massachusetts (Frederick, Maryland, University Publications of America, Inc., 1986) [microfilm]

Description: Part 1 of Civil Rights during the Kennedy Administration is drawn from three major record groups found at the John F. Kennedy Library: the White House Central Files (in particular, the Subject File), the White House Staff Files, and the President's Office Files. Names and subjects include anti-poll tax amendments, anti-Semitism, Ross R. Barnett, bombings, civil rights legislation, civil rights, Communism, desegregation, discrimination, Orval E. Faubus, Senator Philip A. Hart, J. Edgar Hoover, integration, Jim Crowism, Curtis E. LeMay, massive resistance, Benjamin Muse, poll tax, pro-segregation groups, race relations, racism, reverse Freedom Riders, school integration, segregated schools, segregation, Senator John Sparkman, Senator Strom Thurmond, University of Mississippi integration, George C. Wallace, and White Citizens' Councils.

Finding aid:

http://cisupa.proquest.com/ksc_assets/catalog/1348_CivRtsKennedyPt_1.pdf

[0574] Civil Rights During the Kennedy Administration, 1961-1963. Part 2: The Papers of Burke Marshall, Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights. A collection from the holdings of The John F. Kennedy Library, Boston, Massachusetts (Frederick, Maryland, University Publications of America, Inc., 1986) [microfilm]

Description: Files on Governor Ross Barnett; Citizens Councils of Louisiana; civil rights; Communist Party (U.S.); desegregation; discrimination; Highlander Folk School; integration; Ku Klux Klan; Lester Maddox; James Meredith; Mississippi File—"Ole Miss" integration; Benjamin Muse; poll tax legislation; poll tax; Racial violence; United States v. Association of Citizens Councils of Louisiana; and Governor George Wallace.

Finding aid:

http://cisupa.proquest.com/ksc_assets/catalog/1350_CivilRtsJFKAdminPt2.pdf

[0575] Civil Rights During the Kennedy Administration, 1961-1963. Part 3: The Civil Rights Files of Lee C. White. A collection from the holdings of The John F. Kennedy Library, Boston, Massachusetts (Bethesda, MD, A UPA Collection from LexisNexis, 2007) [microfilm]

Description: The documents in this microfilm collection were filmed from the Papers of John F. Kennedy, Presidential Papers, White House Staff Files: Lee C. White, at the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library, Boston, Massachusetts. Subjects include Anti-Poll Tax Amendments; Anticommunism; Christian Crusade; civil rights; Communism and communist parties; Barry Goldwater; John Birch Society; poll tax; racial discrimination; segregation; and states' rights.

Finding aid:

http://cisupa.proquest.com/ksc_assets/catalog/101773.pdf

[0576] Civil Rights Greensboro [digital collection]

Location: Martha Blakeney Hodges Special Collections and University Archives, The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, University Libraries, 222B Jackson Library, P.O. Box 26170, Greensboro, NC 27402

Description: Civil Rights Greensboro provides access to archival resources documenting the modern civil rights era in Greensboro, North Carolina, from the 1940s to the early 1980s. Historical materials include correspondence, reports, speeches, photographs, newspaper clippings, and oral histories held at five cultural heritage institutions in North Carolina. Clippings and other materials on the Greensboro Massacre, 1979; American Nazi Party; Harold A. Covington; Ku Klux Klan; and segregation.

Finding aids:

http://libcdm1.uncg.edu/cdm/landingpage/collection/CivilRights

http://libcdm1.uncg.edu/cdm/search/collection/CivilRights

http://libcdm1.uncg.edu/cdm/ref/collection/CivilRights/id/2024

[0577] Civil Rights in Mississippi Digital Archive [digital collection]

Location: The University of Southern Mississippi, 118 College Drive, Hattiesburg, MS 39406-5053

Description: The Civil Rights in Mississippi Digital Archive includes a selection of digitized photographs, letters, diaries, oral history transcripts, finding aids for manuscript collections, and other documents. Among the 2233 items are the following: a list of the Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission Schedule of payments to the White Citizens Council forum between the years 1960 and 1965; a press release from the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, May 26, 1964, identifying organizations involved in statewide opposition to civil rights workers and the Freedom Summer 1964 project, including the Association of Tenth Amendment Conservatives (ATAC), based in Cleveland, Mississippi; the White Citizens councils; the Association for the Preservation of the White Race (APWR); and the Ku Klux Klan; a letter from William J. Simmons to Erle Johnston, Jr., November 18, 1987; photographs of Thomas P. Brady and William J. Simmons; and the following pamphlets: A Review of Black Monday, by Judge Tom P. Brady, October 28, 1954, which stresses the need for segregation among the races to protect the United States from decline as a civilization; A Christian view on segregation, by Rev. G. T. Gillespie, November 4, 1954, in which Gillespie states that racial separation is the way to support racial harmony. He says that Soviet Communists are behind the Civil Rights movement, because they want to break down the barriers between races so that racial amalgamation will occur. He contends that school integration will lead to intermarriage, and he cites Biblical and pseudoscientific reasons that segregation must continue. He also quotes Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln and Booker T. Washington; Conflicting views on segregation (circa 1955), a pamphlet containing a series of letters from Dr. Dotson McGinnis Nelson, President of Mississippi College, who believes in the segregation of the white and Negro races, and from Tom, an alumnus of the College, who believes in the contrary views; Ugly truth about the NAACP, an address by Attorney General Eugene Cook of Georgia before the 55th Annual Convention of the Peace Officers Association of Georgia, printed by the Citizens' Council, circa 1955, in which Cook alleges that the people who direct and subsidize the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) have records of affinity for, affiliation with, and participation in Communist, Communist-front subversive organizations, activities, and causes; "We've reached era of judicial tyranny," an address by James O. Eastland, December 1, 1955, in which Eastland defends states' rights and segregation in schools, proclaims the integration efforts of such organizations as the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the National Council of Churches of Christ, and the Rockefeller Foundation are Communist-inspired organizations, which use the national media to foster their views; Interposition: The Barrier Against Tyranny, Speech of Representative John Bell Williams, January 25, 1956, in which Williams maintains the states have the right to declare a decision of the federal government, such as the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka decision, as illegal, invalid, and of no force and effect; Mixed schools and mixed blood, by Herbert Ravenel Sass (1956); Segregation and the South, Address by Judge Tom P. Brady, October 4, 1957, which presents the southern rationale for segregation, and describes African Americans as having an inherent deficiency in mental ability, and a natural indolence; Mid-west hears the South's story: An address by William J. Simmons, February 3, 1958, in which Simmons discusses segregation in the South, compares it to segregation in the Mid-west and in the North, argues segregation is a constitutionally protected right, and maintains the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the Urban League are Communist-dominated organizations; South's Just Cause, by W. M. Caskey, April 22, 1961, which presents a defense of States' Rights, and argues the states have a legal right to continue the segregationist way of life; Race relations and civil rights: a southern point of view, an address by William J. Simmons, February 28, 1963, which stresses segregation is a successful system, because it is based on the realization that the races get along best when they are not forced to mingle socially; and A Jewish view on segregation, circa 1950-1960s [online at http://digilib.­usm.edu/cdm/compoundobject/collection/manu/id/1948]. [Harry P. Gamble, Sr.], Segregation of the White Race must Be Preserved (New Orleans, La., Society for the Preservation of State Government and Racial Integrity, June 1955) [online at http://digilib.usm.edu/cdm/compoundobject/collection/manu/id/1785/rec/1].

Finding aid:

http://digilib.usm.edu/crmda.php

[0578] Civil Rights miscellaneous collection, 1937-1969 and undated, MSS. 500

Location: Manuscripts Division, Special Collections, Mississippi State University Library, 395 Hardy Rd, P.O. Box 5408, Mississippi State, MS 39762-5408

Description: Broadsides, leaflets, circulars, publications, comics, and other materials documenting Anti-Communism, anti-Semitism, anti-left-wing activities, segregationism, and the American Eugenics Party in the United States.

Websites with information:

http://library.msstate.edu/specialcollections/manuscripts/fulllist.php

http://www.lib.msstate.edu/specialcollections/collections/manuscripts/civilrights/

http://lib.msstate.edu/specialcollections/collections/manuscripts/afam/

[0579] Civil Rights Movement in North Carolina from the 1950s to the 1970s [digital collection]

Location: State Archives of North Carolina, 109 E. Jones St., Raleigh, N.C. 27601

Description: This digital collection contains materials related to the Civil Rights Movement in North Carolina from the 1950s to the 1970s, including letters, speeches, reports, booklets, photographs, news clippings, court records, and proposed legislation. Topics covered include school desegregation and busing, voting rights, and civil rights protests and demonstrations. Includes N.C. House Bills (1955-1956) which tried to preserve racial segregation in public schools even after the Supreme Court's decision in the case of Brown v. Board of Education; North Carolina's Public Schools Face a Crisis (Governor's Committee for the Public School Amendment, 1956), a brochure encouraging North Carolina voters to vote for a constitutional amendment to suspend public schools in order to prevent forced integration; Address by Governor Luther H. Hodges of North Carolina on State-Wide Radio-Television Network, August 8, 1955, on the topic of public schools and segregation, expressing his views opposing racial integration; The Segregation Problem in the Public Schools of North Carolina, Summary of Statements and Actions by Governor Luther H. Hodges, March 25, 1956 (1956); and Assorted Clippings on School Segregation, 1950s -1960s.

Websites with information:

http://ncarchives.wordpress.com/2014/02/05/civil-rights-movement-digital-collection/

Finding aids:

http://digital.ncdcr.gov/cdm/home/collections/civil-rights

http://digital.ncdcr.gov/cdm/search/collection/p16062coll17/display/200/order/date/ad/asc

[0580] Civil Rights Movement scrapbooks. Alabama events, 1950-1969 [digital collection]

Location: Birmingham Public Library, 2100 Park Place, Birmingham, AL 35203-2794

Description: Over the years Birmingham Public librarians collected newspaper articles about the Civil Rights Movement in Alabama and arranged them in eight scrapbooks. The articles were clipped from several newspapers including The Birmingham News, Birmingham Post-Herald, and the Montgomery Advertiser. Topics covered include bus segregation ordered halted by Interstate Commerce Commission; Montgomery bus boycott; attempts at school desegregation; Supreme Court rules bus segregation is unconstitutional; and George Wallace defiance.

Websites with information:

http://bpldigital.blogspot.com/2010/05/alabama-civil-rights-1950-1969.html

Finding aid:

http://bplonline.cdmhost.com/cdm/search/collection/BPLSB02/searchterm/Civil%20Rights%20Movement%

20scrapbooks.%20Alabama%20events/field/title/mode/all/conn/and/cosuppress/

[0581] Civil Rights Movement scrapbooks. Mississippi events, 1948-1968 [digital collection]

Location: Birmingham Public Library, 2100 Park Place, Birmingham, AL 35203-2794

Description: Over the years Birmingham Public librarians collected newspaper articles about the Civil Rights Movement in Mississippi and arranged them in three scrapbooks. The articles were clipped from several newspapers including The Birmingham News, Birmingham Post-Herald, and the Montgomery Advertiser. Topics covered include Governor Ross Barnett bars James H. Meredith from "Ole Miss" and University of Mississippi rioting.

Websites with information:

http://bpldigital.blogspot.com/2010/05/mississippi-civil-rights-1948-1968.html

Finding aid:

http://bplonline.cdmhost.com/cdm/search/collection/BPLSB02/searchterm/Civil%20Rights%20Moveme

nt%20scrapbooks.%20Mississippi%20events%20volume/field/title/mode/exact/conn/and/cosuppress/

[0582] Civil Rights Movement scrapbooks, National events, 1945-1969 [digital collection]

Location: Birmingham Public Library, 2100 Park Place, Birmingham, AL 35203-2794

Description: Over the years librarians of the Birmingham Public Library collected newspaper articles about the Civil Rights Movement and arranged them in twelve scrapbooks. The articles were clipped from several newspapers including The Birmingham News, Birmingham Post-Herald, Montgomery Advertiser, and The Tuscaloosa News. Topics covered include Georgia "White Supremacy" Bill; Truman Civil Rights proposals; Southern reaction to Truman proposals; MacArthur speech to Congress; Eisenhower State of the Union Address; racial violence in Tennessee; Kentucky racial problems; bus boycott in Montgomery, Alabama ends; Texas defies integration plans; Florida, Louisiana, Arkansas vow to continue segregation; civil rights bill approved; Georgia defies federal integration policy; Little Rock, Arkansas asks halt to integration; Virginia and Arkansas to defy integration; Governor John Patterson of Alabama warns Congress on civil rights; Atlanta, Georgia ordered to form integration plan; racial violence in Little Rock, Arkansas; peaceful integration in North Carolina and Virginia; New Orleans, Louisiana defies integration; racial violence in Greenville, South Carolina; Jacksonville, Florida racial violence; racial violence in New Orleans, Louisiana; Freedom Riders assailed by MacDonald Gallion; U.S. Marshals ordered into Alabama; Freedom Riders linked to Communist Cuba; "Reverse Freedom Riders"; Albany, Georgia racial violence; school desegregation continues throughout the South; federal judge orders University of Mississippi to admit James H. Meredith; Civil Rights Bill of 1963; civil rights murder case in Mississippi [Byron de la Beckwith]; Lester Maddox cafeteria goes out of business; and Birmingham, Alabama bombings.

Websites with information:

http://bpldigital.blogspot.com/2010_04_01_archive.html

http://bpldigital.blogspot.com/2010/04/united-states-civil-rights-1947-1969.html

http://www.bplonline.org/virtual/ContentDMSubjectBrowse.aspx?subject=African%20Americans--Civil%20Ri

ghts--United%20States

Finding aid:

http://bplonline.cdmhost.com/cdm/search/collection/BPLSB02/searchterm/Civil%20rights%20movement%2

0scrapbooks.%20national%20events%20volume/field/title/mode/all/conn/and/order/date/ad/f/cosuppress/

[0583] The Civil Rights Oral History Project Collection, 2002- [oral history; partly digital collection]

Location: Special Collections Division, Nashville Public Library, 615 Church Street, Nashville, TN 37219

Description: The collection includes audiocassettes, videocassettes, and transcripts of oral history interviews conducted by library staff and volunteers. Interviewees are civil rights veterans, educators, community members, journalist, police officers, observers, students, church leaders, and activists recalling events related to the civil rights movement in Nashville and the nation during the 1950s and 1960s. There are one hundred and twenty interviews and seventy-nine of these are transcribed. Includes a recorded interview with Bobby Cain, one of the "Clinton 12," and the first student to desegregate public schools in the South.

Websites with information:

http://www.library.nashville.org/localhistory/his_spcoll_coll_findingaids.asp

http://www.library.nashville.org/localhistory/findingaids/special_Collections_Division_Finding_Aid_Civil_Right

s_Collec.pdf

Finding aid:

http://www.library.nashville.org/localhistory/findingaids/Special_Collections_Division_Finding_Aid_CROHP.pdf

Finding aids to Nashville Public Library Digital Collection with excerpts of oral history interviews:

http://digital.library.nashville.org/cdm/landingpage/collection/nr

http://digital.library.nashville.org/cdm/search/collection/nr

[0583a] Kit Clardy Papers, 1950-1954, c.00278

Location: University Archives & Historical Collections, Michigan State University, Conrad Hall, 888 Wilson Road, Rm. 101, East Lansing, MI 48824-1327

Description: Kit Clardy (1892-1961), an East Lansing lawyer, was elected to represent Michigan's 6th district in Congress in 1952, serving one term. During his term, Clardy served on the House Un-American Activities Committee, concentrating his efforts on removing all Communist influences from American life. He brought a sub-committee to Michigan to investigate Communist activities in the state, particularly in the labor unions. This collection contains campaign literature, letters to constituents, newspaper clippings, and weekly "Washington Reports", which described Clardy's work to his constituents.

Websites with information:

http://archives.msu.edu/documents/LocalHistory.pdf

http://archives.msu.edu/documents/East_Lansing.pdf

http://archives.msu.edu/collections/documents/resourcelist.pdf

http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/guidedisplay.pl?index=C000416

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/850933234

http://www.worldcat.org/title/kit-clardy-papers-1950-1954/oclc/850933234

Finding aid:

http://archives.msu.edu/findaid/c278.html

[0583b] Adèle Goodman Clark papers, 1849-1978, M 9 [partly digital collection]

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

Description: Adèle Goodman Clark (1882-1983) was a founding member of the Virginia suffrage movement and a prominent supporter of the arts in Virginia. The collection contains correspondence, reports, memoranda and publications reflecting the sentiments and political positions of both the pro- and anti- suffrage movement from 1913 until the passage of the Nineteenth Amendment in 1920. Series III: Equal Suffrage League of Virginia (ESLV), 1892-1926. Subseries E: Topical File, undated, 1892-1920, contains printed literature documenting the anti-suffrage movement, including copies of Woman Patriot, 1919-1920.

Websites with information:

https://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaead/vivaeadbrowse

Finding aid:

http://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaxtf/view?docId=vcu-cab/vircu00102.xml

Finding aid to digital collection:

Social Welfare History Image Portal (Ephemera from Women's Suffrage, Temperance, Civil Rights and Other Social Movements):

Copies of Diagram Showing Percentage of Increased Vote in New York with Woman Suffrage. Rural Representation Loses With Women Voting (New York: Women Voters' Anti-Suffrage Party, n.d.) [anti-suffrage handbill]; The Dark and Dangerous Side of Woman Suffrage (New York: Women Voters' Anti-Suffrage Party, n.d.) [anti-suffrage publication]; The Red Behind the Yellow, Socialists Working for Suffrage (New York: New York State Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage, 1915) [anti-suffrage handbill]; Beware! Men of the South (n.d.) [anti-suffrage handbill]; H. P. Petersen, Anti Suffrage Bill. By Woman, was Eden lost, and man cursed (n.d.) [anti-suffrage handbill]; and George Creel, "What Have Women Done With the Vote?" (Century Magazine (March 1914), reprinted in pamphlet form by the National American Woman Suffrage Association).

http://images.socialwelfare.library.vcu.edu/

[0584] Carter Blue Clark Printed materials, 1922-1974

Location: Western History Collections, University of Oklahoma Libraries, 401 West Brooks Street, Norman, OK 73019

Description: Carter Blue Clark (1946- ) is an historian. Photocopies of articles (1923-1927) from Ku Klux Klan journals such as Kourier Magazine and Imperial Night-Hawk, including many with articles about the Klan in Oklahoma; newspaper articles (1922-1924) on the Klan in Oklahoma; papers (1923-1924) relating to Oklahoma Governor John C. Walton and the Klan; Klan pamphlets and handbooks (1920s) and interview transcripts (1972-1974) with Ira M. Finley, Albert S. Giles, and Leon Hirsch regarding the Klan in Oklahoma. Includes "The Klan's Mission--Americanism," The Kourier Magazine, Vol. 1, no. 12, November 1925, pp. 8-12; "Address by Dr. H.W. Evans," The Kourier Magazine, Vol. 2, no. 1, December 1925, pp. 3-4; "Dr. Evans, Imperial Wizard, Defines Klan Principles and Outlines Klan Activities," The Imperial Night-Hawk, Vol. 1, no. 43, January 23, 1924, pp. 2-3, 6-7; "The Meaning of 100% Americanism," The Imperial Night-Hawk, Vol. 2, no. 5, April 30, 1924, pp. 2-3; and Kloran. White Book, Knights of the Ku Klux Klan.

Reference:

Guide to manuscripts in the Western History Collections of the University of Oklahoma, compiled by Kristina L. Southwell (Norman, University of Oklahoma Press, 2002).

Websites with information:

http://libraries.ou.edu/locations/docs/westhist/pdf/

http://guides.ou.edu/westernhistory

Finding aid:

http://libraries.ou.edu/locations/docs/westhist/pdf/ClarkCarterBlue.pdf

[0584a] Ed Clark papers, 1972-1994, Coll. 2002C2

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

Description: Ed Clark (1930- ) was the Libertarian Party candidate for governor of California in 1978 and for president of the United States in 1980. His papers, which primarily document these two campaigns, include correspondence, speeches and writings, press releases, clippings, election campaign literature, polling data, minutes, financial records, video tapes, sound recordings, and photographs. The series California gubernatorial campaign of 1978 file 1972-1981, contains correspondence with Charles Koch, copies of Libertarian Party News newspapers, and subject files on Gay rights and Proposition 13. The series United States presidential campaign of 1980 file 1975-1982, contains correspondence with Milton Friedman, Roger MacBride, and Murray Rothbard. The series Libertarian Party file 1972-1988, contains a copy of the Libertarian Party platform, 1972.

Reference:

Nancy MacLean, Democracy in Chains: The Deep History of the Radical Right’s Stealth Plan for America (New York: Viking, 2017).

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt5779r70z/entire_text/

[0585] Fred G. Clark Papers, 1921-89

Location: Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum, P.O. Box 488, 210 Parkside Drive, West Branch, IA 52358-0488

Description: Clark (1890-1973) was a businessman, educator, and founder and chairman, American Economic Foundation and the Young Crusaders, an anti-Prohibition organization that later became an antiracketeering group; moderator of the National Broadcasting Corporation (NBC) radio program Wake Up America, 1939-46; author of four books on economics. The papers consist of correspondence, publications, and photographs that document the activities of the American Economic Foundation, as well as other facets of his life including his long friendship with Herbert Hoover. Files on American Economic Foundation, Citizens Foreign Aid Committee, Arthur O. Dahlberg, John Chamberlain, Dwight Eisenhower, The Freeman, Barry Goldwater, Herbert Hoover, Edward F. Hutton, Carl H. Mote, J. Howard Pew, Robert A. Taft, Henry J. Taylor, and A.C. Wedemeyer.

Websites with information:

https://hoover.archives.gov/research/collections/manuscriptcollections.html

http://www.ecommcode2.com/hoover/research/historicalmaterials/hmother.html

Finding aids:

https://hoover.archives.gov/research/collections/manuscriptfindingaids/clark.html

http://www.ecommcode2.com/hoover/research/historicalmaterials/other/clark.htm

[0586] The Papers of Grenville Clark, 1636-1972, ML-7

Location: Rauner Special Collections Library, Dartmouth College, 6065 Webster Hall, Hanover, NH 03755-3519

Description: Grenville Clark (1882-1967) was a Wall Street lawyer and the author of the book World Peace Through World Law. Clark opposed Roosevelt's attempt to "pack" the Supreme Court in 1937. Series II. Plattsburg: Military Training Camps Association; Correspondence, Finances, and Publicity, 1914-1963, contains a file on John Jay Chapman. Series V. National Economy League, has files on Warren R. Austin, William E. Borah, H. Styles Bridges, Harry F. Byrd, James F. Byrnes, Arthur Capper, Robert B. Dresser, Carter Glass, Merwin K. Hart, Herbert Hoover, Raymond Moley, George Van Horn Moseley, Wright Patman, Edgar M. Queeny, Archibald B. Roosevelt, and James P. Warburg. Series VI. Civil Rights Work, has files on Charles Beard, Homer E. Capehart, Kenneth Colegrove, Everett Dirksen, Foundation Freedoms, Frank E. Gannett, Bourke B. Hickenlooper, Alger Hiss, William F. Knowland, William Langer, Owen Lattimore, Joseph McCarthy, George Van Horn Moseley, Richard M. Nixon, Edward A. Rumely, Richard B. Russell, John J. Sparkman, Dorothy Thompson, and Alexander Wiley. Series 13. World Peace Through World Law, 1934-1971, contains files on Bernard Iddings Bell, Imperial Policy Group and Walter H. Judd. Series XXVII. Miscellaneous Correspondence, has files on Warren R. Austin, H. Styles Bridges, Robert B. Dresser, Ralph M. Easley, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Foreign Policy Association, Ulysses S. Grant, 3rd, Joseph C. Grew, Merwin K. Hart, Herbert Hoover, Alf M. Landon, Henry Cabot Lodge, Pat McCarran, George Van Horn Moseley, Karl E. Mundt, Archibald B. Roosevelt, Leverett Saltonstall, George Santayana, The Awakener [Joseph P. Kamp], James P. Warburg, and Owen Wister.

Reference:

A microfiche inventory of the papers of Grenville Clark as preserved within the library of Dartmouth College / with a biographical introduction "Grenville Clark (1882-1967)," by J. Garry Clifford ([Hanover? N.H., Dartmouth College Library, 1974?]).

Websites with information:

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

Finding aids:

http://ead.dartmouth.edu/html/ml7.html

https://ead.dartmouth.edu/html/ml7_fullguide.html

[0587] Clarkana Papers of Joshua Reuben Clark, Jr., 1873-1962, MSS 303

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

Description: Clark (1871-1961) was an educator, lawyer, statesman, and Mormon Church leader. The papers consist of correspondence, diaries, drafts of writings, speeches, articles, notes, photographs, and other papers relating to Clark's career in government as Solicitor for the Dept. of State, U.S. Ambassador to Mexico, and Under Secretary of State, and his activities as a member of the First Presidency of the Mormon Church. The papers contain anti-Semitic pamphlets and information on The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion. There is also correspondence with the America First Committee, Ezra Taft Benson, William E. Borah, Herbert Hoover, Alfred M. Landon, and J. Bracken Lee. The Pamphlet File contains materials on the Committee for Constitutional Government and the Bricker Amendment. The Topic File and Subject File contain files on Communism.

Reference:

David C. Nelson, "Private Diplomacy During the Interwar Years: A Confluence of Mormonism, Nazism, and Investor Advocacy," EUCE Research 2005-2006, p. 11, http://eucenter.tamu.edu/sites/default/files/Research­Papers/Nelson.pdf.

Websites with information:

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

Finding aids:

http://files.lib.byu.edu/ead/XML/MSS303.xml

http://files.lib.byu.edu/ead/XML/MSS303addendum.xml

https://findingaid.lib.byu.edu/printView.php?ead=UPB_MSS303

[0588] Mark W. Clark Collection, 1916-1984

Location: The Citadel Archives & Museum, 171 Moultrie Street, Charleston, South Carolina 29409

Description: Mark W. Clark (1896-1984) was an American general. In 1954, after retiring from the Army, he was named to the national policy committee of For America. In 1960, Gen. Clark stated that the United States should withdraw from the United Nations because "no useful purpose is served by the United States being a member." The papers consist of Gen. Clark's official and personal correspondence, diaries, documents, speeches, films, photographs, clippings, and manuscripts relating to his military career in World War II, Austria, and Korea, and his presidency of The Citadel. The bulk of the material pertains to General Clark's commands in World War II. Contains letters from General Joseph McNarney (re: operation of recreational facilities without racial segregation) and General Edward Almond.

Websites with information:

http://www.eisenhower.archives.gov/research/subject_guides/pdf/Civil_Rights_Guide_to_Studies.pdf

Finding aid:

http://www3.citadel.edu/museum/Clark_Inventory.pdf

Finding aid (microfilm copy in the Dwight D. Eisenhower Library, 200 S.E. 4th Street, PO Box 339, Abilene, KS 67410):

http://www.eisenhower.archives.gov/research/Finding_Aids/pdf/Clark_Mark_Papers.pdf

[0589] Frederick H. Clausen papers, 1898, 1904-1945

Location: Wisconsin Historical Society, Library-Archives Division, 816 State St., Madison, WI 53706-1417

Description: Frederick H. Clausen (1875-1944) was president of the Van Brunt Manufacturing Company at Horicon and president of the Wisconsin Manufacturers Association. Papers consist largely of speeches and writings on the farm equipment industry, grain seeders manufactured by Van Brunt, conservation, and good government. There is a letter from H.A. Jung of the American Vigilant Intelligence Federation to Clausen's brother Leon R. Clausen, president of the J.I. Case Co., about the enthusiastic response to one of the National Recovery Administration speeches.

Websites with information:

http://184.168.105.185/archivegrid/collection/data/145787467

http://www.worldcat.org/title/frederick-h-clausen-papers-1898-1904-1945/oclc/145787467

[0590] Leon R. Clausen Papers, 1905-1965, Mss 1021; PH 6518

Location: Wisconsin Historical Society, 816 State Street, Madison, WI 53706-1417

Description: Papers of Leon R. Clausen (1877-1965), president (1924-1948) and chairman of the board (1948-1958) of the J.I. Case Company, a manufacturer of tractors and farm equipment located in Racine, Wisconsin. The papers consist of memoirs, speeches and writings, personal and business correspondence, and subject files. They primarily document Clausen's conservative, anti-Communist political views and his pre-Case business career. Correspondence or subject files on Harry Byrd, the Bricker Amendment, Communism, Dwight Eisenhower, Foundation for Economic Education, Barry Goldwater, Merwin K. Hart (National Economic Council), Frank E. Holman, James L. Wick (Human Events), Harry Jung (American Vigilant Intelligence Federation), Joseph P. Kamp (Constitutional Educational League), Verne Kaub (American Council of Christian Laymen), David Lawrence, and Joseph R. McCarthy.

Websites with information:

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/272956008

http://www.worldcat.org/title/leon-r-clausen-papers-1905-1965/oclc/272956008

Finding aid:

http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi/f/findaid/findaid-idx?c=wiarchives;cc=wiarchives;view=text;­rgn=main;didno=uw

-whs-mss01021

[0591] Robert Howard Claxton Collection on Central America, 1966-1992, Collection 112

Location: The Latin American Library, Tulane University, 7001 Freret Street, New Orleans LA 70118

Description: This collection consists of Guatemalan newspapers and clippings from U.S. newspapers, left or right-wing oriented, relating to events in Guatemala in the 1960's to the 1980's.

Finding aid:

http://lal.tulane.edu/collections/manuscripts/claxton_central

[0591a] Cyril Clemens Collection, 1686-1982 (bulk 1927-1970), MSS16154

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

Description: Biographer and editor (1902-1999). Letters received from prominent people relating to the International Mark Twain Society or to some aspect of Samuel Langhorne Clemens's life or literary works written by him under the name Mark Twain. Also includes production materials for several works on him by Cyril Clemens, and copies of historical documents collected by Cyril Clemens.

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.ms010263

http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms010263.3

http://rs5.loc.gov/service/mss/eadxmlmss/eadpdfmss/2010/ms010263.pdf

[0591b] Cyril Clemens Papers, 1912-1982

Location: Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum, National Archives, 4079 Albany Post Road, Hyde Park, NY 12538

Description: A relative of Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain), Cyril Clemens (1902-1999) was a Mark Twain scholar and founder and editor of the journal, Mark Twain Quarterly. He also collected memorabilia and other materials pertaining to Franklin Roosevelt. This collection consists of clippings, correspondence, and memorabilia relating to Franklin Roosevelt. Also included are several publications written or edited by Cyril Clemens, including copies of Mark Twain Journal and Mark Twain Quarterly.

Websites with information:

http://www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/archives/collections/list.html

http://www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/archives/pdfs/historical_materials.pdf

Finding aid:

http://www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/archives/collections/franklin/index.php?p=collections/findingaid&id=93&q

=&rootcontentid=10850

[0591c] Cyril Clemens Manuscript Collection, 1632-1995 (bulk 1890-1960), DOC MSS 32

Location: Archives and Manuscripts, Special Collections, Pius XII Memorial Library, Saint Louis University, 3650 Lindell Blvd., St. Louis, MO 63108

Description: Cyril C. Clemens (1902-1999) was founder and president of the International Mark Twain Society. Series 2: Autographs, 1659-1993, contains files on William F. Buckley, Jr.; James Forrestal; President Herbert Hoover; J. Edgar Hoover; Alf Landon; Clare Boothe Luce; Benito Mussolini; Ezra Pound (an article from the Italian publication Tempo, with a typewritten inscription probably by Pound); Ronald Reagan; George Santayana; Strom Thurmond; George C. Wallace; John Wayne; Owen Wister; and W.B. Yeats. Series 3: Clippings, 1803-1995, contains a copy of Archibald Henderson's sketch of Twain from Harper's (May 1909). Series 4: Correspondence, 1814-1994, contains correspondence with Madame Chiang Kai-shek, Mark Clark, Representative Thomas B. Curtis, Karl Dönitz, Sam Ervin, Gerald Ford, Orrin Hatch, Henry Hazlitt, Charlton Heston, J. Edgar Hoover, Malcolm Muggeridge, Augusto Pinochet, Owen Wister, and W.B. Yeats. Series 12: Manuscripts, contains copies of a handwritten manuscript by Sven Hedin; an essay on democracy by C.S. Lewis; "Mark Twain on Practically Anything," a collection put together by Ralph de Toledano; and an autographed tribute to Mark Twain by Owen Wister. Series 15: Pamphlets, 1865-1993, contains copies of Italy's Foreign Policy, by Galeazzo Ciano (1937); speeches by President Calvin Coolidge, 1925-1929; Quotes! (Christian Nationalist Crusade, 1963), with quotations purporting to establish the connection between Jews and Communism; and Tributes to Mark Twain, 1930, including tributes from G.K. Chesterton and Knut Hamsun. Series 18: Press Releases, 1945-1984, contains items from the National Education Program, 1979-1984: George S. Benson, president of the National Education Program based in Searcy, Arkansas, writes on private enterprise, inflation, budget deficits, the need for knowledge about the Constitution of the United States, family life, and anti-Communist efforts. Series 19: Publications, 1794-1994, contains copies of Fortune, Volume 10, Number 1, 1934, which focuses on Fascist Italy; The Defendant, 1953-1954, a magazine which stands "for liberty and property," with articles on the evils of centralization, the arrogance of scientists, and overregulation as a form of enslavement; The Magazine of Sigma Chi, Number 4, October-November 1944, comprising a memorial to American humorist George Ade, with tributes from H.L. Mencken and others; Gems from Hilaire Belloc; a transcript of Texas Senator John Tower's appearance on the NBC radio program "Meet the Press," autographed by Tower; Lee Meriwether's speech "America at the Fork of the Road" while president of the Missouri Jeffersonian Democrats [anti-New Deal] in 1952; The Point, 1952-1959, issued by the St. Benedict Center in Cambridge, Massachusetts, concentrates on defending Catholics against Jews, Unitarians, "the new American super-religion: Interfaith," the intellectual vagaries of Harvard University, Masons, the New York Times, etc.; Pro-Life, 1977-1984: These publications, issued by the Archdiocese of St. Louis, speak against abortion. The April 1981 issue announces 2 books on "medical holocausts" in Nazi Germany and the United States by William Brennan, professor in the School of Social Service of Saint Louis University; and Christianity and Jehovah's Witnesses Contrasted, by F.W. Thomas (Pilgrim Tract Society, n.d.). Series 20: Scrapbooks. Sub-Series 4: Clemens, Cyril, 1928-1939, contains an article by Clemens describing his meeting with Benito Mussolini (St. Louis Globe-Democrat, December 5, 1930). Sub-Series 16: Mussolini, Benito, C.1933, contains a series of interviews with Mussolini done by Emil Ludwig, as well as 2 articles by Mussolini himself: "Mussolini Sees Signs of Recovery with 1933 as the Decisive Year," and "Mussolini Sees Monument Destruction by Jugo-Slavia an Insult to Italy." Series 22: Subject Files, 1867-1993, contains tributes to Roosevelt upon his death in 1945 by Francis J. Spellman and J. Edgar Hoover, among others.

Websites with information:

http://archon.slu.edu/index.php?p=collections/collections&char=C

Finding aid:

http://archon.slu.edu/?p=collections/findingaid&id=66&q=

[0591d] Cyril Clemens Papers, 1927-1982

Location: Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Libraries, 222 Waverly Avenue, Syracuse, NY 13244-2010

Description: Cyril Coniston Clemens (1902-1999) was founder and editor of the Mark Twain Quarterly, 1936-1982. The papers contain correspondence, writings, and memorabilia. Correspondence from H.J. Anslinger, George S. Benson, Harry Flood Byrd, Anna Chennault, J.P. Coleman, Thomas J. Dodd, Orval E. Faubus, Francisco Franco, Luther H. Hodges, Carlos Peña Romulo, John Sparkman, Herman E. Talmadge, and Walter Trohan.

Finding aid:

http://library.syr.edu/digital/guides/c/clemens_c.htm

[0591e] Cyril Clemens Papers, 1930-1961

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

Description: Cyril Clemens (1902-1999) was an author and editor from Webster Groves (Saint Louis County), Mo. Principally letters from George Santayana, poet, novelist, and philosopher, to Clemens, editor of the Mark Twain Quarterly and cousin of Samuel Clemens. Santayana discusses personal matters, his own writing, and the writing of others based on his life and philosophy. The collection also contains a manuscript of Santayana's article, "Tom Sawyer and Don Quixote," and galleys of other pieces with Santayana's corrections.

Websites with information:

http://www.worldcat.org/title/papers-1930-1961/oclc/19465436

[0592] Frank Goad Clement (First and Second Terms) Papers, 1953-1959, Mf #GP 47

Location: Tennessee State Library and Archives, 403 Seventh Avenue North, Nashville, Tennessee 37243-0312

Description: Frank G. Clement (1920-1969) served as Tennessee Governor from 1953-1959. The collection consists of 321 boxes of materials that consist of correspondence, subject files, extraditions and renditions, speeches, financial records, clippings, photographs, scrapbooks, and press releases. Contains files on Civil rights/race relations, Oct. 1955; Clinton-Tenn., Sept.-Nov. 1956; Highlander Folk School; "Report on the Problem Created as a Result of the Decisions of the United States Supreme Court in the School Desegregation Cases" Oct. 1956; and Segregation, Jan. 1955-Dec. 1957. Correspondents include Fulton Lewis, Jr., and Horace V. Wells, Jr.

Websites with information:

https://web.archive.org/web/20120222174217/http://www.tennessee.gov/tsla/educationoutreach/TN%20H

istory%20Day%20Resources%20at%20TSLA.pdf

Finding aid:

http://www.tn.gov/tsla/history/govpapers/findingaids/gp47.pdf

[0593] Frank Goad Clement Papers, 1920-1969 (bulk 1952-1969), Accession Number: 94-007

Location: Tennessee State Library and Archives, 403 Seventh Avenue North, Nashville, Tennessee 37243-0312

Description: Frank Goad Clement (1920-1969) was Governor of Tennessee from 1953 to 1958 and from 1963 to 1967. The papers contain a file on segregation, 1956.

Websites with information:

http://www.tn.gov/tsla/educationoutreach/TN%20History%20Day%20Resources%20at%20TSLA.pdf

Finding aid:

http://www.tn.gov/tsla/history/manuscripts/findingaids/94-007.pdf

[0594] Rita Crocker Clements Personal Papers 1932-2001

Location: Cushing Memorial Library, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843-5000

Description: Rita Crocker Clements (1931-2001) was a Dallas-area Republican Party organizer, heritage preservationist, and former First Lady of the U.S. state of Texas. Alphabetical Subject Files 1932-1972, mention U. S. Representative Bruce Alger, U. S. Representative John M. Ashbrook, John Birch Society, Cinema Educational Guild, Inc., Communism, Connally Reservation, Dan Smoot Report, Freedom Forum, Barry Goldwater, Percy L. Greaves, Jr., Harding College Freedom Forum, F. A. Hayek, Herbert Hoover, John Edgar Hoover, T. Robert Ingram, Katanga Crisis, Howard E. Kershner, Fred C. Koch, Manion Forum, J. B. Matthews, Ben Moreell, U. S. Senator Karl Mundt, Operation Abolition, Otto Otepka, Ayn Rand, U. S. Representative John R. Rarick, Congressman John H. Rousselot, U. S. Representative John H. Rousselot, Willis E. Stone, W. P. Strube, Senator Strom Thurmond, U. S. Senator John G. Tower, UNESCO, U. S. Representative James B. Utt, Harold Lord Varney, and Richard M. Weaver. Alphabetical Subject Files 1960-1990, mention American Mercury, George S. Benson, Dan Smoot Reports, Jo Hindman, Human Events, T. Robert Ingram, E. Merrill Root, and University Bookman. Alphabetical Subject Files 1973-1986, mention U. S. Representative John M. Ashbrook, U. S. Senator Barry Goldwater, Ronald Reagan, Phyllis Schlafly, Hans F. Sennholz, Senator John Tower, U. S. Representative James B. Utt, George Wallace, and Washington Report.

Finding aids:

http://libraryasp.tamu.edu/Cushing/collectn/modpol/rcc/files.htm

http://libraryasp.tamu.edu/Cushing/collectn/modpol/rcc/files2.htm

http://libraryasp.tamu.edu/Cushing/collectn/modpol/rcc/files4.htm

[0595] Cleveland/Wilson Collection, 1962-1964, MUM00076

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

Description: Dr. Thomas Cleveland was the president of the University of Mississippi's Associated Student Body in 1963-64. At the fortieth anniversary of James Meredith's admission, Dr. Cleveland donated the correspondence he and his predecessor, Richard Wilson, received during that period. Collection consists of correspondence, manuscripts, and ephemera related to the admission of James Meredith into the university. Contains a letter from James O. Eastland, U.S. Senator, to Gray Jackson, Campus Senate University of Mississippi May 22, 1963. Also contains copies of The Dan Smoot Report, 8 (October 8, 1962); Human Events: Your Washington Report (October 20, 1962); The Augusta Courier (Augusta, GA) (October 15, 1962); Common Sense (August 1, 1958, and June 15, 1962); The Thunderbolt: The White Man's Viewpoint (July 1962 and September 1962); New Mexico Lobo (University of New Mexico) (September 27, 1962) [with lead article "Mississippi Continues To Keep Meredith Out"], online at https://repository.unm.edu/­bitstream/handle/1928/16508/Volume%2066%20No%203%209-27-1962.pdf; The Crusader (Baton Rouge, LA, c.1962); The Aryan Views + White Folk News, 4 July 1962, 10 September 1962, 1 October 1962, 2 October 1962, 5 October 1962, 1 December 1962, and 3 different issues with no dates; "September-October Bulletin by Charles B. Hudson" (Englewood, CO; October 23, 1962); "Please!" (Los Angeles, CA: Common Sense, n.d.); "It's Also Your Problem!" (Los Angeles, CA: American Birthright Committee, n.d.); "Wake Up! Christians—Gentiles—Patriots" (Los Angeles, CA: Keep America Committee, n.d.); "International Press News Brief, June 5, 1985" (Los Angeles, CA: Keep America Committee, n.d.); "$1,600 Per Person" (Brooklyn, NY: National States Rights Party, c.1962); "From now on tell your WHITE CHILDREN"; and "I'am fo integration."

Websites with information:

http://www.library.olemiss.edu/guides/archives_subject_guide/university-of-mississippi/manuscript?­page=show

http://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/191475184

Finding aid:

http://www.olemiss.edu/depts/general_library/archives/finding_aids/MUM00076.html

[0596] James Weldon Click Addenda, 1933-1963, S0357

Location: The State Historical Society of Missouri, 222 Thomas Jefferson Library, University of Missouri-St. Louis, One University Blvd., St. Louis, Missouri 63121

Description: James Weldon Click (1917-1988) was chief steward of Local 1102 of the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America. The addenda document Click's effort to rid Local 1102 of Communist influence. Series 2. House Un-American Activities Committee Hearings and Proceedings, 1944-1955, contains reports and committee hearing minutes, including Hearings Regarding Communist Infiltration of Labor Unions, Part I (Local 601, United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America CIO, Pittsburgh, PA) Hearing Before the Committee on Un-American Activities, House of Representatives, 1949; Hearings Regarding Communist Infiltration of Minority Groups, Part 1, Committee on Un-American Activities, 7/13, 14 & 18/49; Hearings Regarding Communist Infiltration of Labor Unions, Part 2 (Security Measures Relating to Officials of the UERMWA-CIO), December 5 and 6, 1949; Hearings Regarding Communist Infiltration of Labor Unions, Part 3, 8/29-30/50; Documentary Proof That The Communist Party, USA, Teaches and Advocates the Overthrow and Destruction of the U. S. Government by Force and Violence, 1952; and Organized Communism in the U. S., Committee on Un-American Activities, 8/19/53. Series 4. James Click's Files, 1933-1963, contains newsclippings on Gerald L. K. Smith.

Websites with information:

http://shs.umsystem.edu/manuscripts/descriptions/desc-labor.html

Finding aid:

http://shs.umsystem.edu/stlouis/manuscripts/s0357.pdf

[0597] James Weldon Click Papers, 1937-1963, S0507

Location: The State Historical Society of Missouri, 222 Thomas Jefferson Library, University of Missouri-St. Louis, One University Blvd., St. Louis, Missouri 63121

Description: James Weldon Click (1917-1988) was chief steward of Local 1102 of the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America. The James Weldon Click papers primarily document Click's efforts to rid UE Local 1102 of Communist influence and to establish the new International Union of Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America-CIO, IUERNWA, of which he was elected district president.

Websites with information:

http://shs.umsystem.edu/manuscripts/descriptions/desc-labor.html

Finding aid:

http://shs.umsystem.edu/stlouis/manuscripts/s0507.pdf

[0598] Clinton High School Desegregation from the Knoxville Journal Collection, 1956, 1958 [digital photograph collection]

Location: Calvin M. McClung Historical Collection, Knox County Public Library, 601 S. Gay Street, 3rd Floor, Knoxville, TN 37902

Description: Black-and-white photograph from September 1956 of speechwriter and segregationist Asa Carter, a member of the White Citizens Council in Alabama, speaking against the integration of Clinton High School in Anderson County, Tennessee. Carter is surrounded by white children as he speaks. Federal courts ordered schools in Clinton, Tennessee, to integrate "with all deliberate speed" in 1956. On September 1, Carter, who wrote fiction under the name Forrest Carter, and fellow segregationist John Kasper made speeches against the school's integration by twelve African American students. After the speeches, violence in the city grew to the point that National Guard troops were brought into the city to keep order. Kasper was later charged with inciting a riot for his speech. Also, photographs of Clinton High School desegregation (1956), National Guardsman patrol the Clinton, Tennessee community (1956), National Guardsmen at Clinton High School (1956), Students opening doors at Clinton High School (1956), National Guardsmen outside Clinton High School (1956), Students walking to Clinton High School (1956), and Clinton High School after bombing (1958).

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://www.academia.edu/500202/On_the_White_Right_Christian_Side_of_Every_Issue_­The_Life_and_Death_o

f_Byron_de_la_Beckwith.

Websites with information:

http://crdl.usg.edu/collections/knoxjournal/

http://crdl.usg.edu/cgi/crdl?query=id:tnkcl_knoxjournal_000200

Finding aid and photographs:

http://diglib.lib.utk.edu/cgi/b/bib/bib-idx?type=simple&c=vvs-bib­&sid=­fa93c666437c8c79d8bcc6af6de1db4

8&Submit=search&sort=A-Z&q1=Clinton+High+School+De­segregation+from+the+Knoxville+Journal+Collection

&rgn1=collection

[0599] Clinton 12 oral history collection [oral history]

Location: Green McAdoo Cultural Center, 101 School Street; P.O. Box 1214, Clinton, Tennessee 37717

Description: This collection includes video recordings, digital audio files, and thirteen transcripts of oral histories of those involved with school desegregation in Clinton, Tennessee. Members of the Clinton 12 are interviewed along with teachers and others involved with the process.

Websites with information:

http://www.loc.gov/folklife/civilrights/survey/view_collection.php?coll_id=1513

[0600] James W. Clise Papers, 1932-1961, Coll. 114

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

Description: James W. Clise (1900-1961) held executive positions in Asbestos Supply Companies and several vermiculite companies and was involved in libertarian political activities. He worked in numerous organizations, including For America, the Church League of America, Foundation for Economic Education, and Youth for Goldwater. Clise corresponded with conservatives and libertarians such as T. Coleman Andrews, Henry Hazlitt, James C. Ingebretsen, Robert LeFevre, Lawrence Timbers, and William C. Mullendore. Clise also supported conservative authors such as Bryton Barron, Ludwig von Mises and Elwood Smith. The collection includes correspondence, subject files, personal and business files, speeches, articles, and published letters. Correspondence and subject files on American China Policy Association (Alfred Kohlberg); American Council of Christian Laymen (Verne P. Kaub); American Economic Foundation; American Enterprise Association; American Mercury; Americans for Constitutional Action (Ben Moreell); America's Future (John T. Flynn); T. Coleman Andrews; Anti-subversion laws; Bryton Barron: "Inside the State Department"; Frank S. Bayley, Sr.; Campaign for the 48 states (Robert B. Snowden); Caxton Printers, Caldwell, Idaho (J. H. Gipson, Sr.); Frank Chodorov; Christian Freedom Foundation (Howard E. Kershner); Church League of America; National Laymen's Council (George Robnett); Committee against Summit Entanglements (Robert Welch); Committee for Constitutional Government (Will I. King; Edward A. Rumely); Committee for One Million (Marvin Leibman); Committee to Defend America by Aiding Anti-Communist China; Communism; Congress of Freedom, San Francisco, California; Kent Courtney; Jasper E. Crane; DeMille Foundation; Devin-Adair Company, Publishers; Economists' National Committee on Monetary Policy (Walter E. Spahr); Charles Edison; Dwight D. Eisenhower; Faith and Freedom (February 1957); Foundation for Economic Education (Leonard E. Read, W. M. Curtiss, Edmund A. Opitz); Foundation for Economic Education: "The Remnant"; James W. Fifield, Jr.; Fluoridation; For America; George B. Fowler (Valley Paper Company); Free Men Speak, Incorporated (Kent and Phoebe Courtney); Freedom Forum; Freedoms Foundation, Valley Forge; Freedom Fund (Carl T. Chadsey); The Freeman; Milton Friedman; Barry Goldwater; Ralph Gwinn; Harding College; Harding College: Freedom Forum; F. A. Harper: "Public dis-utilities," William Volker Fund, and Foundation for Voluntary Welfare; Henry Hazlitt: "The Seamy Side of TVA"; Henry Regnery Company; House un-American Activities Committee; Human Events; James C. Ingebretsen (Spiritual Mobilization; Foundation for Social Research); Intelligence Digest; Intercollegiate Society of Individualists; Jeffersonian Democrats; Jewish problem; John Birch Society (Robert Welch); Walter H. Judd; William F. Knowland; Alfred Kohlberg; David Lawrence; J. Bracken Lee (American Statesman); Robert LeFevre (Freedom School); Fulton Lewis, Jr.; Life Line (Wayne Poucher); McCarran Immigration Law; Carl McIntire (Twentieth Century Reformation Hour); "Mainspring" by Henry Grady Weaver [online at http://fee.org/files/doclib/mainspring-of-human-progress.pdf]; Clarence Manion; William C. Mullendore; National Economic Council (Merwin K. Hart); National Education Program (Harding College); National Republic; National Review (William F. Buckley, Jr.); "Nine Men Against America" by Rosalie Gordon; Richard M. Nixon; Edmund A. Opitz: "The powers that be; cause studies of the church in politics"; Sylvester Petro: "labor policy of the free society"; J. Howard Pew; Daniel A. Poling: "Anti-reds"; Reader's Digest; Bryson Reinhardt; SPX (Tom R. Hutton); Fred C. Schwarz; Single tax; Dan Smoot; Oswald Spengler; Willis E. Stone (American Progress Foundation); Taft-Hartley Act; Lawrence Timbers (advertising Specialty Company); Un-American activities; United Nations and UNICEF; Voluntary Unionism (Right to work); Ludwig von Mises; V. Orval Watts; "Wolf pack is now after Senator Eastland," by G. W. Robnett; and Young Americans for Freedom.

Reference:

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.

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-james-w-clise-papers/

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

http://janus.uoregon.edu/record=b1975699

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/18766403

http://www.worldcat.org/title/james-w-clise-papers-1932-1961/oclc/18766403

Finding aid (microfiche): Included in National Inventory of Documentary Sources in the United States (ProQuest UMI's microfiche series).

Finding aids:

http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv02407

http://nwda.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv02407

http://nwda-db.wsulibs.wsu.edu/print/ark:/80444/xv02407

http://janus.uoregon.edu/record=b1975699

http://janus.uoregon.edu/record=b1975699~S8

http://nwda.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv02407/op=pretrieve.aspx

[0600a] Adam Clymer Papers, 1976-1980, Accession Number: 08-04

Location: Jimmy Carter Presidential Library and Museum, 441 Freedom Parkway NE, Atlanta, GA 30307

Description: Adam Clymer (1937- ) is the author of the book "Drawing the Line at the Big Ditch: the Panama Canal Treaties and the Rise of the Right." This collection contains research papers and background materials for his book, including notes from newspaper articles, interviews, presidential library documents, and conservative organizations' documents and financial records. The papers cover topics such as the National Conservative Political Action Committee, Ronald Reagan's 1976 and 1980 presidential candidacy, 1976-1980 elections of conservative senators, and the overall growth of conservatism. The series Adam Clymer's Subject Files contains files on American Conservative Union (ACU); Robert E. Bauman - Congressional Race, 1980; Committee for the Survival of a Free Congress; Conservative Caucus; Conservative Digest; Phil Crane - Presidential Campaign; Group Research Files - Columbia University; Larry McDonald; National Conservative Political Action Committee; Nixon Administration; Opposition to Treaties; Ronald Reagan; Herman E. Talmadge - Senate Re-election Race, 1980; Richard Viguerie; John Wayne; Paul Weyrich - and Committee for the Survival of a Free Congress, Inc. Six computer diskettes contain files on Reagan; Reagan and New Right; Reagan approval among conservatives; William Rusher Book; Herman Talmadge book; Thurmond's 1974 and 1975 resolutions; ACU at BYU research; Group Research Reports research notes, Butler Library Columbia; Talmadge 1980 Senate race research notes from Russell Library, UGA; TV ads, Kanter archive University of Oklahoma; Vanderbilt Archive; John Wayne; Paul Weyrich; ADA pamphlet re: Citizens for the Republic; William C. Berman, book on Right; William F. Buckley, books and articles; Correspondence, Brent Bozell; Phil Crane Presidential campaign; Lee Edwards book; Dwight Eisenhower on Panama; Milton Eisenhower report; New Right help for Orrin Hatch; Human Events; Lyn Nofziger book; Interview - Phil Crane; Interview - Bob Dole; Interview - Stan Evans; Interview - Gerald R. Ford; ints, Lyn Nofziger; ints, Richard Viguerie; and ints, Paul Weyrich.

Websites with information:

http://www.jimmycarterlibrary.gov/library/findingaids/

Finding aid:

http://www.jimmycarterlibrary.gov/library/findingaids/Clymer_Adam.pdf

[0601] Coalition for Central America Records, 1979-1996 (bulk 1986-1996), MG 405

Location: Special Collections & Archives, University of Idaho Library, 875 Perimeter Drive MS 2350, Moscow, ID 83844-2350

Description: The Coalition for Central America was a grassroots organization based in Moscow, Idaho from 1985 until 1996. The group was originally called the Moscow Central America Solidarity Organization. The name was changed in 1986 to reflect a wider outreach effort. The purpose of the coalition was to raise public awareness and change U.S. foreign policy in Central America. Later, the group's efforts included other countries and causes in the region around Central America, South America, and Mexico. Series II. Resource Material, contains numerous files on the Contras, Contra Aid, and Oliver North.

Websites with information:

http://www.lib.uidaho.edu/special-collections/searchall.html

http://www.lib.uidaho.edu/special-collections/Manuscripts/

Finding aids:

http://www.lib.uidaho.edu/special-collections/Manuscripts/mg405.htm

http://nwda.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv83796

http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv83796

[0602] Cheryl Coatney collection on Proposition 8, 2008-2009, MSS 6801

Location: L. Tom Perry Special Collections; 21st Century Western & Mormon Manuscripts; 1130 Harold B. Lee Library; Brigham Young University; Provo, Utah 84602

Description: Contains newspaper clippings, email printouts, and a political banner related to Proposition 8, the bill proposing an amendment to the California constitution to define marriage between one man and one woman, collected by Cheryl Coatney, September 2008-March 2009. Proposition 8 was approved in the November 2008 election.

Websites with information:

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

Finding aid:

http://findingaid.lib.byu.edu/viewItem/MSS%206801

[0602a] Osro Cobb Collection, 1929-1980, M96-11

Location: UCA Archives, Torreyson Library, University of Central Arkansas, 201 Donaghey Ave., Conway, AR 72035

Description: Osro Cobb (1904-1995) was an Arkansas lawyer, state representative, state chairman of the Republican Party of Arkansas, U.S. Attorney for the District during the 1957 Little Rock School Integration Crisis, and judge on the Arkansas Supreme Court. Files on Governor Orval E. Faubus; Hoxie School District vs. White America, Inc., 1955-1956; and Little Rock School Integration.

Websites with information:

http://uca.edu/archives/manuscript-collections/

Finding aid:

http://uca.edu/archives/m96-11-osro-cobb-collection/

[0603] Charles Coburn papers, 1892-1959, MS 1126

Location: Hargrett Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Russell Special Collections Building, University of Georgia, 300 S. Hull Street, Athens, GA 30602

Description: Charles Douville Coburn (1877-1961), born in Macon, GA, was a prominent stage and screen actor, manager, director, and producer. The collection includes scrapbooks, scripts, photographs, and interviews. Three political scrapbooks, dated 1950-53, 1953-56, and 1959, 1960-61, contain various politically oriented newspaper and magazine clippings dealing with Coburn's involvement in Republican politics, anti-Communism, anti-income tax, McCarthyism, and 'Jeffersonian' ideals.

Finding aids:

http://hmfa.libs.uga.edu/hmfa/view?docId=ead/ms1126-ead.xml

http://fax.libs.uga.edu/hmans/1f/hargrett_manuscripts_Ca.txt

http://fax.libs.uga.edu/hmans/1f/hargrett_manuscripts_Coa.pdf

[0604] Oscar Cohen Papers, 1955-1985, Manuscript Collection No. 294

Location: The Jacob Rader Marcus Center of the American Jewish Archives, 3101 Clifton Ave., Cincinnati, OH 45220

Description: Oscar Cohen (1908-1985) was National Program Director of the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith (ADL), 1954-1975. The papers contain materials pertaining to Cohen's activities as National Program Director and his research into the area of Jewish-Christian relations. The collection consists of correspondence, speeches, reports, polls, bibliographies, proposals, newsclippings and miscellaneous items. Series B. Anti-Semitism. Sub-Series 1. General, contains files on Anti-Semitism, "Anti-Semitism in America, 1654-1930" (report, 1969), "Anti-Semitism in the U.S." (report, 1981), Anti-Zionism, Catholic anti-Semitism, Charles E. Coughlin, Harold Covington, Dreyfus Case, Employment Discrimination, Extremism, Henry Ford, Leo M. Frank Case, German-American Bund, Ulysses S. Grant (General Order No. 11 (1862)), History of American anti-Semitism, Holocaust, Immigration Restriction, Ku Klux Klan, Charles A. Lindbergh, Tom Metzger, Nazi Party, U.S.A., Philadelphia, Pa. Nazi Rally 1979, Protestant anti-Semitism, race relations in armed forces, Red Scare Era, and Swastika Epidemic. Series D. Contemporary Social Issues, contains files on Arthur R. Butz, John Birch Society, and J.B. Stoner.

Websites with information:

http://americanjewisharchives.org/collections/findingAids.php

Finding aids:

http://americanjewisharchives.org/collections/ms0294/

http://collections.americanjewisharchives.org/ms/ms0294/ms0294.html

[0605] COINTELPRO: The Counterintelligence Program of the FBI (Wilmington, DE: Scholarly Resources, Inc., 1978) [microfilm]

Description: The FBI Counterintelligence Program file contains details of the bureau's attempts to "expose, disrupt, and neutralize" groups that J. Edgar Hoover perceived as threatening to national security. The file, spanning COINTELPRO's existence from 1956 to 1971, contains Federal Bureau of Investigation memoranda and directives documenting the FBI's investigation of, infiltration of and other activities relative to such groups as the Communist Party of the USA, Black Nationalist Hate Groups, White Hate Groups (Ku Klux Klan, American Nazi Party, the National States Rights Party), the Socialist Workers Party, and Cuban groups supporting Fidel Castro.

Websites with information:

https://web.archive.org/web/20131005055240/http://www.chipublib.org/branch/details/library/woodson-regional/p/HarshMicro//

http://libguides.princeton.edu/aas

[0606] Bainbridge Colby Papers, 1863-1950 (bulk 1912-1950), MSS16360

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

Description: Colby (1869-1950), a lawyer, assisted in organizing the Progressive Party and supported the presidential candidacy of Theodore Roosevelt in 1912. He was Woodrow Wilson's secretary of state in 1920-21. The papers consist of correspondence, letterbooks, speeches, notebooks, scrapbooks, printed matter, photographs, and other papers. Although he was an early supporter of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Colby eventually became a critic of the New Deal, formed the anti-Roosevelt American Liberty League, and supported the Republican Party candidate Alfred M. Landon in the 1936 presidential election. Scrapbooks include material on these topics. Also contains correspondence with John Spargo.

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.ms011091

http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms011091.3

[0607] The Cold War and Internal Security Collection

Location: Joyner Library, East Carolina University, East Fifth Street, Greenville, NC 27858-4353

Description: The Cold War and Internal Security (CWIS) Collection includes over 1,000 volumes of congressional hearings, committee prints and committee reports from the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC), its successor the House Committee on Internal Security (HCIS), the Senate's Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations (SPSI), and the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee (SISS), covering the years 1934-1976. The contents of the collection cover congressional investigations of organizations deemed "subversive" or "un-American", primarily the Communist Party USA and its allies. Other subjects of investigation include the New Left, the Ku Klux Klan (including the Ku Klux Klan in North Carolina), the Black Panthers, 1930s and 40s pro-Nazi organizations, the World War II internment of Japanese-Americans, Hiss v. Chambers, the Army-McCarthy hearings, the German-American Bund, and the Silver Legion of America.

References:

"The Cold War and Internal Security (CWIS) Collection," Joyner Library's eNews (Mar. 2013), p. 4, http://media.lib.ecu.edu/development/eNewsletter/jl_enews_marchfinal2013.pdf; "Cold War & Internal Security (CWIS) Collection," http://blog.ecu.edu/sites/cwis/; William Joseph Thomas, "Lagniappe: Joyner Library's Cold War and Internal Security Collection," North Carolina Libraries, Volume 71, No 1 (Spring/Summer 2013), pp. 48-50, http://www.ncl.ecu.edu/index.php/NCL/article/view/394/482, http://www.ncl.ecu.edu/index.php/NCL/article/viewFile/394/482.

Websites with information:

http://libguides.ecu.edu/cwis

Blog:

http://blog.ecu.edu/sites/cwis/

[0607a] Cold War Collection, 1938-

Location: Special Collections & Archives, University Library, University of Liverpool, Liverpool L69 3BX, United Kingdom

Description: More than 500 texts on the culture of the Cold War, including spy fiction, novels describing nuclear war, historical studies of the CIA, espionage and intelligence agencies - European and American, memoirs, political tracts, and military studies of topics like war games. Titles include Inside the Company: CIA diary, by Philip Agee (1975); The iron curtain over America, by John Beaty (1951); The American inquisition, 1945-1960: a profile of the "McCarthy era," by Cedric Belfrage (1989); Spytime: the undoing of James Jesus Angleton: a novel, by William F. Buckley, Jr. (2000); The coming defeat of communism, by James Burnham (1950); The struggle for the world, by James Burnham (1947); Modern arms and free men: a discussion of the role of science in preserving democracy, by Vannevar Bush (1949); McCarthy, by Roy Cohn (1968); Psychic dictatorship in the U.S.A., by Alex Constantine (1995); Virtual government: CIA mind control operations in America, by Alex Constantine (1997); The facts about Nixon: an unauthorized biography, by William Costello (1960); Destroying the village: Eisenhower and thermonuclear war, by Campbell Craig (1998); Early Reagan: the rise of an American hero, by Anne Edwards (1988); The great challenge, by Louis Fischer (1947); The conscience of a Conservative, by Barry Goldwater (1960); In the court of public opinion, by Alger Hiss (1957); Recollections of a life, by Alger Hiss (1988); Masters of deceit: the story of communism in America and how to fight it, by J. Edgar Hoover (1959); Brain-washing in Red China: the calculated destruction of men's minds, by Edward Hunter (1951); Brainwashing: the story of men who defied it, by Edward Hunter (1957); The story of Mary Liu, by Edward Hunter (1957); The strange case of Alger Hiss, by the Earl Jowitt (1953); The Matusow affair: memoir of a national scandal, by Albert E. Kahn; introduction by Angus Cameron (1987); Mind control, Oswald & JFK: were we controlled?, by Lincoln Lawrence & Kenn Thomas (1997); The mind of an assassin, by Isaac Don Levine (1959); Joseph R. McCarthy, edited by Allen J. Matusow (1970); False witness, by Harvey Matusow (1955); A version of Major William E. Mayer's (1956 address 'Brain-washing: the ultimate weapon' [spoken record]); McCarthy: a documented record (1954); The real war, by Richard Nixon (1981); The Rosenberg file: a search for the truth, by Ronald Radosh and Joyce Milton (1983); With enough shovels: Reagan, Bush and nuclear war, by Robert Scheer; with the assistance of Narda Zacchino and Constance Matthiessen (1982); None dare call it treason, by John A. Stormer (1964); Official and confidential: the secret life of J. Edgar Hoover, by Anthony Summers (1993, 2011); Perjury: the Hiss-Chambers case, by Allen Weinstein (1978); The politician, by Robert Welch (1963); Venona: the greatest secret of the Cold War, by Nigel West (2000); and Thirteen who fled, by editor Louis Fischer; subeditor Boris A. Yakovlev; translators Gloria and Victor Fischer (1949).

Websites with information:

https://www.liverpool.ac.uk/library/sca/colldescs/coldwar.htm

https://www.liverpool.ac.uk/library/sca/colldescs/azindex.html

Database:

http://library.liv.ac.uk/search/l?SEARCH=spec+cold%20war

[0608] James William Cole Papers, 1863, 1946-1967, Manuscript Collection #40

Location: Joyner Library, East Carolina University, East Fifth Street, Greenville, NC 27858-4353

Description: James William "Catfish" Cole (1924-1967) was a leader of the North Carolina Knights of the Ku Klux Klan. Papers consist of correspondence, speeches, news releases, pamphlets, tracts, broadsides, booklets, newspaper and magazine clippings, photographs, and miscellaneous. Numerous bulletins, leaflets, pamphlets, and newsletters pertain to Klan operations. Also included are many broadsides advertising various Klan rallies in North and South Carolina. There is also a certificate of incorporation (1955) from the state of North Carolina for the State's Rights League whose objective was to maintain the purity and culture of the white race and Anglo-Saxon institutions. Photographs of Robert M. Shelton (Imperial Wizard of the KKK) are included. The collection contains numerous newspaper and magazine clippings, most of which deal with race relations, Civil Rights, and Klan activities. Publications include The Constitution and Bylaws of the Klan, The Klovan, The Klan in Action, and The Sins or Evils of Integration.

Websites with information:

http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/special/ead/browse.aspx?by=title&s=C

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/268958859

http://www.worldcat.org/title/james-william-cole-papers-1863-1946-1967/oclc/268958859

Finding aids:

http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/special/ead/findingaids/0040/

http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/special/ead/findingaids/0040/0040.pdf

[0609] Reverend Walton E. Cole Collection, 1934-1950

Location: Special Collections, Honnold/Mudd Library, Libraries of The Claremont Colleges, 800 N. Dartmouth Avenue, Claremont, CA 91711

Description: The Reverend Walton E. Cole Papers consist of correspondence, clippings, and publications on the radio battle fought in the late 1930s between Cole and Father Charles E. Coughlin, a Catholic priest who was among the first to exploit the possibilities of preaching on the air. Coughlin became highly controversial when his broadcasts took a political turn toward Nazism and anti-Semitism. Walton Cole, a Unitarian minister in Toledo, Ohio, tried to prevail upon the Catholic hierarchy to have his inflammatory broadcasts stopped. Files include Coughlin Speech: National Union for Social Justice, 1934; Accounts of the two visits of Walton E. Cole and Father Coughlin, 1939; Interview with Archbishop Mooney; The Christian Front, 1939-1941; Lincoln and Rothschilds, Social Justice Magazine, 1940-1942; and Social Justice Magazine, 1936-1942. Books include An Answer to Father Coughlin's Critics (1940); Government Monetary Control, by Hon. Chas G. Binderup (1938); Eight Lectures on Labor Capital and Justice, by Charles E. Coughlin (Royal Oak, MI: The Radio League of the Little Flower, 1934); and Father Coughlin, His "Facts" and Arguments (New York, General Jewish Council, 1939) [online at https://ia800303.us.archive.org/7/items/FatherCoughlinHisFactsAndArguments_201502/Father%20Coughlin%20his%20facts%20and%20arguments.PDF].

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt387030d8/

[0610] Wayne S. Cole Research Collection, 1930-1964

Location: Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum, P.O. Box 488, 210 Parkside Drive, West Branch, IA 52358-0488

Description: Cole was an historian of isolationism and Professor of History, Iowa State University, 1954-1965; University of Maryland, 1965-1992. The research notes pertain to the following subjects among others: America First Committee, Anti-Semitism, Harry Elmer Barnes, Charles A. Beard, Senator William E. Borah, Communists, Father Charles E. Coughlin, Council Against Anti-Semitism, Bronson Cutting, Stephen A. Day, Prescott Dennett, Lawrence Dennis, Elizabeth Dilling, Fascism, Hamilton Fish, Flanders Hall, John T. Flynn, Merwin K. Hart, Internationalism, Interventionism, Isolationism, Tyler Kent, Senator William Langer, Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh, McCarthyism, Joe McWilliams, Noninterventionism, Senator Gerald P. Nye, William Dudley Pelley, Amos R. E. Pinchot, Edward Rickenbacker, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Scribner's Commentator, Sedition Trial, Silver Shirts, Gerald L. K. Smith, Edward J. Smythe, Robert A. Taft, Townsend Movement, Walter Trohan, Lyrl Van Hyning, George Sylvester Viereck, Henry A. Wallace, Senator Burton K. Wheeler, Wendell Willkie, General Robert E. Wood, and the Yalta Conference.

Websites with information:

https://hoover.archives.gov/research/collections/manuscriptcollections.html

http://www.ecommcode2.com/hoover/research/historicalmaterials/hmother.html

Finding aids:

https://hoover.archives.gov/research/collections/manuscriptfindingaids/cole.html

http://www.ecommcode2.com/hoover/research/historicalmaterials/other/cole.htm

[0611] Kenneth W. Colegrove Papers, 1917-1954, Coll. 11/3/22/4

Location: Northwestern University Archives, Deering Library, Room 110, 1970 Campus Dr., Evanston, IL 60208-2300

Description: Kenneth Wallace Colegrove (1886-1975) was a professor of political science at Northwestern University, 1919-1952. Colegrove also was active in government and community service. He was a consultant to the U.S. Office of Strategic Services (O.S.S.) from 1943 to 1945 and in 1946 was a political consultant on Japanese constitutional revision attached to General Douglas MacArthur's headquarters in Tokyo. He served as editor for the Institute of Fiscal and Political Education in New York and was a member of the editorial board of Amerasia, a review of American and Asian affairs. His papers include correspondence, administrative records, research files, published works, and records of legal proceedings before which Colegrove appeared, gave testimony or was mentioned in the testimony of others. Colegrove's pamphlets and reprints include Senator McCarthy, ca. 1950. The series Professional Correspondence and Related Materials, contains correspondence with Amerasia, Dr. Anthony Bouscaren, Senator Owen Brewster, Senator Styles Bridges, Professor Louis F. Budenz, The Honorable James F. Byrnes, The Honorable Martin Dies, Senator Everett M. Dirksen, Educational Reviewer, Brigadier General Bonner F. Fellers, Mr. Hamilton Fish, Senator Bourke B. Hickenlooper, The Honorable Herbert C. Hoover, General Patrick J. Hurley, Senator William E. Jenner, Dr. Walter H. Judd, Senator William F. Knowland, Mr. Alfred Kohlberg, Mr. David Lawrence, Dr. Felix Morley, Congressman Karl E. Mundt, Mr. Henry Regnery, and Senator Burton Kendall Wheeler.

Websites with information:

http://www.library.northwestern.edu/libraries-collections/evanston-campus/university-archives/holdings/fin

ding-aids

Finding aids:

http://findingaids.library.northwestern.edu/catalog/inu-ead-nua-archon-1223

http://uncap.lib.uchicago.edu/view.php?eadid=inu-ead-nua-archon-1223

http://www.lib.uchicago.edu/e/scrc/findingaids/view.php?eadid=inu-ead-nua-archon-1223

[0612] Kenneth W. Colegrove Papers, 1896-1974

Location: Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum, P.O. Box 488, 210 Parkside Drive, West Branch, IA 52358-0488

Description: Kenneth Wallace Colegrove was an anti-Communist historian and political scientist. The Subject File 1896-1974, contains folders on American Friends of the Captive Nations, Karl Baarslag, Harry Elmer Barnes, Charles A. Beard, William E. Borah, Brainwashing, John W. Bricker, Bricker Amendment, William F. Buckley, Edgar C. Bundy, Church League of America, Citizens Foreign Aid Committee, Citizens' Foreign Relations Committee, Committee of One Million, Communist Front Organizations, Communist Infiltration: Education, Federal Government, News Media, William T. Couch, Council Against Communist Aggression, Lucille Cardin Crain, Doenitz Release from Spandau, Educational Reviewer (Lucille Cardin Crain), Bonner Fellers, For America (Bonner Fellers), Foundation for Economic Education, Freedoms Foundation, Devin A. Garrity, J. H. Gipson, Barry Goldwater, Alger Hiss, J. Edgar Hoover, Herbert Hoover, House Un-American Activities Committee, Human Events, William E. Jenner, Jews, John Birch Society, Walter H. Judd, Willmoore Kendall, Russell Kirk, William F. Knowland, Alfred Kohlberg, Eugene Lyons, Douglas MacArthur, George W. Malone, J. B. Matthews, Pat McCarran, Joseph R. McCarthy, Robert R. McCormick, Modern Age, National Review, B. Carroll Reece, Henry Regnery, George Washington Robnett, Archibald Roosevelt, Robert A. Taft, Mrs. Garvin E. ("Bazy") Tankersley, John J. Theobald, Strom Thurmond, Walter Trohan, Freda Utley, Harold H. Velde, Francis E. Walter, Robert H. W. Welch, Jr., Charles A. Willoughby, Robert E. Wood, Yalta, and Young Americans for Freedom.

Websites with information:

https://hoover.archives.gov/research/collections/manuscriptcollections.html

http://www.ecommcode2.com/hoover/research/historicalmaterials/hmother.html

Finding aids:

https://hoover.archives.gov/research/collections/manuscriptfindingaids/colegrove.html

http://www.ecommcode2.com/hoover/research/historicalmaterials/other/colegrov.htm

[0612a] J.P. Coleman collection, 1949-1985, MSS.381

Location: Special Collections, Mississippi State University Libraries, 395 Hardy Rd, P.O. Box 5408, Mississippi State, MS 39762-5408

Description: Speeches, public statements, clippings, campaign advertisements, government documents, scrapbooks, oral history interviews, M.A. thesis and seminar paper, concerning the public career of J. P. Coleman, Mississippi governor (1956-1960) and judge of U. S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. Included is a copy of letter from Sam Ervin. Names include Ross Barnett, Theodore Bilbo, James O. Eastland, Medgar Evers, Carroll Gartin, Paul B. Johnson, Martin Luther King, Jr., James Meredith, Walter Sillers, and John C. Stennis. Subjects include Civil Rights Movement, Constitution, Democratic Party, Race Relations, and University of Mississippi.

Finding aid:

http://library.msstate.edu/FindingAid/J.P._Coleman_collection_finding_aid_MSS.381.pdf

[0613] J. P. Coleman Papers, ca. 1930s-1960s, Z 1877.000 S

Location: Archives and Library Division, William F. Winter Archives and History Building, Mississippi Department of Archives and History, 200 North Street, Jackson, MS 39201

Description: James Plemon Coleman (1914-1990) was elected governor of Mississippi in 1955 in the wake of the landmark 1954 Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas decision of the United States Supreme Court and its mandate for racial integration of public schools. In 1957, Coleman insisted that all legal remedies at his disposal would be used to maintain segregation, and he urged the public not to provoke racial disturbances that would prompt President Eisenhower to send federal troops to Mississippi. Throughout his administration, the Citizens' Council, including one of its leaders Judge Tom P. Brady, publicly criticized Coleman for his moderate views on race. In 1965, he won confirmation as judge on the United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit, where he served for nineteen years. This collection contains the incoming and outgoing correspondence and other papers and records documenting J. P. Coleman's tenure as district attorney of the Fifth Circuit Court District of Mississippi (elected 1939); circuit judge of the Fifth Circuit Court District of Mississippi (elected 1946); Mississippi Supreme Court justice in September 1950; attorney general of Mississippi from October 1950 to January 1956; and governor of Mississippi from January 1956 to January 1960. Correspondents include Senator John C. Stennis and Congressman Jamie L. Whitten. Also included are letters concerning the Dixiecrat movement and states' rights issues, and files on the lynching of Emmett Till near Money in 1955.

Reference:

Anders Walker, The Ghost of Jim Crow: How Southern Moderates Used Brown v. Board of Education to Stall Civil Rights (New York: Oxford University Press, 2009).

Websites with information:

http://mdah.state.ms.us/manuscripts/?C=S;O=D

http://mdah.state.ms.us/manuscripts/index.html%3fC=S%3bO=D

Finding aid:

http://mdah.state.ms.us/manuscripts/z1877.html

[0614] Collected Magazine Articles About Huey Pierce Long, 1932-1941, RG 300

Location: Louisiana State Museum Historical Center, 400 Esplanade Ave., New Orleans, LA 70116

Description: Huey P. Long (1893-1935) was a Louisiana politician and lawyer who served as governor of the state from 1928 to 1932, and as a U.S. Senator from 1932 to 1935. This collection houses magazine articles about Huey Long from various publications including American Mercury, New Outlook, American Magazine, Atlanta, Collier's, Real America, Plain Talk, Liberty, Harper's, Time, Life, Famous Detective, and Saturday Evening Post.

Websites with information:

http://www.crt.state.la.us/louisiana-state-museum/collections/historical-center/manuscript-collections/finding-aids/index

http://www.crt.state.la.us/Assets/Museum/collections/historiccenter/manuscripts/LHC_collectionsb.pdf

Finding aid:

http://www.crt.state.la.us/Assets/Museum/collections/historiccenter/manuscripts/RG_300.pdf

[0614a] Collection of alternative student newspapers at Purdue University, 1942-2008, MSP 99, OS M 1

Location: Virginia Kelly Karnes Archives and Special Collections, Research Center, Purdue University Libraries, 504 West State Street, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907-2058

Description: Student newspapers documenting various aspects of life at Purdue University, including countercultural movements. Series 1. 1. Underground and Political Student Newspapers, 1942-2008, contains 12 issues of the Purdue Review, which was distributed by the University Conservative Action Network. The Purdue Review featured primarily news and conservative commentary on current events.

Finding aid:

http://collections.lib.purdue.edu/fa/pdf/msp99_student.pdf

[0614b] A collection of American right wing publications and periodicals, chiefly published by Liberty & Property, Inc., 1955-1960

Location: Manuscripts and Archives, Sterling Memorial Library, Yale University, 128 Wall Street, New Haven, CT 06520-8240

Description: The collection consists of a quarto volume containing various publications bound together. The bulk of the collection is a full run of Right: A Monthly Bulletin of, by, and for the American Right Wing (No. 1 (October 1955)-No. 60 (September 1960)), a newsletter published by Liberty & Property, Inc. of San Francisco. Issues discuss such topics as William F. Buckley's National Review, Robert LeFevre's Freedom School in Colorado Springs, and the addition of fluoride into the public water supply. Contributors include Austin J. App, Byram Campbell, Willis A. Carto, Robert Kuttner, Lambert Schuyler, and Glenn O. Young. Also included are copies of The first national directory of "Rightist" groups, publications and some individuals in the United States (and some foreign countries) (3rd ed. San Francisco: Liberty and Property, 1957) with a 1960 typescript addendum of "Additions to the Directory"; 10 numbered tracts of excerpts from "Right" titled "From Right Newsletter" (San Francisco, Calif.: "Right"); The hybrid race doctrine: a critical analysis of some teachings of modern anthropology, by Bela Hubbard (San Francisco: Liberty and Property, [195-?]); and A three-part essay on cultural dynamics: with introductory comments on the philosophy of evolutionary ethics (Evotism) and a bibliography, by E. L. Anderson, Ph.D. [pseudonym of Willis A. Carto] (Sausalito, Calif.: Published by the League for Cultural Dynamics), containing reprints of articles which first appeared in "Right."

Reference:

David J. Gary, "A Grassroots View of the American Right, 1955-1960," Manuscripts and Archives Blog, November 13, 2014, http://campuspress.yale.edu/mssa/a-grassroots-view-of-the-american-right-1955-1960/.

Catalogue description:

http://hdl.handle.net/10079/bibid/12283339

[0614c] Collection of Autographs, 1619-1984 (bulk 1800-1950), BridColl 01

Location: BridArch 208.26, Bridwell Library, Perkins School of Theology, Southern Methodist University, 6425 Boaz Lane, Dallas TX 75205

Description: This manuscript collection comprises autographs and other documents bearing the signatures of more than two hundred seventeenth- through twentieth-century celebrities who lived in the United States, Canada, Mexico, Great Britain, Ireland, and Germany. Documents by Calvin Coolidge; Josephus Daniels; Gerald R. Ford; Herbert Hoover; J. Edgar Hoover; George C. Marshall typed document ("The Marshall Plan"), 1947 June 5; Richard M. Nixon; and Elihu Root.

Finding aid:

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/smu/00249/smu-00249.html

Websites with information:

http://www.smu.edu/-/media/Site/Bridwell/Archives/BridArchCollectionList.ashx?la=en

[0615] [A collection of clippings and pamphlets on immigration restriction published in the U.S. in the 1890's. Collected by Prescott F. Hall, secretary of the Immigration Restriction League, Boston, Mass.] (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard College Library Imaging Services, 1979), Film W 7850 [microfilm]

Description: Includes copies of Charles Stewart Smith, "Our National Dumping-Ground. A Study of Immigration," The North American Review, Vol. 154, Issue 425 (April 1892), pp. 432-439 [online at http://ebooks.library.cornell.edu/cgi/t/text/pageviewer-idx?c=nora;cc=nora;rgn=full%20text;idno=nora0154-4;didno=nora0154-4;view=image;seq=0436;node=nora0154-4%3A5]; Vernon R. Andrew, "The Nation's Duty Toward Her Citizens," American Journal of Politics, Vol. 3 (October 1893), pp. 426-429 [online at https://books.google.com/books?id=oUA8AQAAIAAJ

&pg=PA426#v=onepage&q&f=false and https://ia801406.us.archive.org/2/items/americanjournal09unkngoog/ame

ricanjournal09unkngoog.pdf]; and Arnold White, "Immigration of Aliens," Charities Review, Vol. 3 (December 1893), pp. 70-78 [online at https://books.google.com/books?id=asJCAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA70#v=onepage&q&f=false].

Reference:

S.A. Pletnev, "Neytivizm v obshchestvenno-politicheskoy zhizni SSHA na iskhode XIX stoletiya" (Moscow, 1996), http://mirznanii.com/a/333473-1/neytivizm-v-obshchestvenno-politicheskoy-zhizni-ssha-na-iskhode-xix-stoletiya.

Websites with information:

http://id.lib.harvard.edu/aleph/004924295/catalog

http://hollis.harvard.edu/primo_library/libweb/action/display.do?tabs=detailsTab&ct=display&fn=search&doc=HV

D_ALEPH004924295

http://lms01.harvard.edu/F/NT3FDHI68T1QNS8INVY9N2PRKCQSUL4FIJHAQ7A7YSDMUHSD4Y-08762?func=fi

nd-acc&acc_sequence=040880240

[0615a] Collection of newspaper clippings compiled by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation

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

Description: The Kansas Bureau of Investigation (KBI) is the criminal investigative arm of the state of Kansas. Photocopied clippings about the American Agricultural Movement—American Heritage Fellowship—Citizens Grand Jury of Kansas (Posse Comitatus)—Farm foreclosures—Farm foreclosures - Alvin Matzke, Stanley Matzke—Farm foreclosures - Jerry Wright—Farmers Liberation Army—Federal Reserve System/IRS - evasion of—Grain elevator bankruptcies - Wayne Cryts—Gordon Kahl—Kansas Farmers Defense Fund—KTTL-FM, Charles & Nellie Babbs—Ku Klux Klan - Christian Patriots Defense League—Militancy—Paramilitary training legislation (Posse Comitatus)—Paramilitary training legislation (Posse Comitatus) - Tom Wempe—Payment in Kind (PIK program)—Posse Comitatus.

Websites with information:

http://catalog.lib.ku.edu/cgi-bin/Pwebrecon.cgi?bbid=8246496

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/939974470

http://www.worldcat.org/title/collection-of-newpaper-clippings-compiled-by-the-kansas-bureau-of-investigation/oclc/939974470

[0615b] A Collection of Scrapbooks, 1850-1950, Coll. 155

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

Description: Collection consists of scrapbooks, containing clippings, broadsides, manuscripts, portraits, photographs, and ephemera covering a variety of subjects. Includes the following scrapbooks: Corinne Griffith scrapbook, 1926-1927; Alfred Guido Castles scrapbooks, ca. 1920-1935 (2 vols.), with newspaper clippings relating chiefly to Charles Lindbergh; Fascism in America, Utopians, Silver Shirts, Other Organizations, Civil Liberties & anti-communism scrapbook, ca. 1934, with clippings mainly from Los Angeles; Hollywood for Dewey scrapbook, 1944, containing photographs, clippings, publicity and correspondence of the Hollywood committee to support the 1944 Thomas E. Dewey presidential campaign; and McCarthy era scrapbooks, 1948-1953 (2 vols.), with newspaper clippings relating to anti-Semitism and anti-Communism abroad and in the United States and clippings on the Hollywood Ten.

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c87d2sm5/entire_text/

[0615c] Collection of Select Letters from American Political Figures, 1788-1949, MS 91-12

Location: Special Collections and University Archives, Wichita State University Libraries, 1845 Fairmount, Wichita, KS 67260-0068

Description: This collection contains single letters from various American diplomats and politicians, including Harry F. Byrd (agreeing that the Taft-Hartley Bill should not be repealed), Hiram Johnson, Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. (agreeing that President Roosevelt should not be given power to enlarge the Supreme Court), Elihu Root, and Robert A. Taft.

Websites with information:

http://specialcollections.wichita.edu/collections/ms/msub-a.html

Finding aid:

http://specialcollections.wichita.edu/collections/ms/91-12/91-12-A.HTML

[0615d] Collection on Politics, 1774-2015 (bulk 1860-1997), PRO2014.12

Location: Museum of the City of New York, 1220 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10029

Description: The collection consists of materials relating to both New York City and national politics. Series I: 1789-2013 (bulk 1880s), contains materials relating to the local or national campaigns, elections and inaugurations of political figures. Material formats include leaflets, petitions, circulars, invitations, and programs. New York City political materials include campaign literature from Rudy Giuliani (1993 and 1997). Materials related to national campaigns include materials related to Dwight D. Eisenhower's first Presidential campaign, including tickets to an October 1952 Eisenhower rally at Madison Square Garden, and the program for an October 1952 Eisenhower-Nixon dinner held at the Waldorf-Astoria. Both events were affiliated with the New York County Republican Committee. Series II: 1774-2004, contains materials relating to local and national political groups, parties and events. Parties represented include the Independent Greenback Party and Republicans.

Websites with information:

https://mcnycatablog.org/category/manuscript-collections/

https://mcnycatablog.org/2016/11/17/museum-of-the-city-of-new-york-collection-on-politics-1774-2013-bulk-1860-1997/

Finding aid:

https://mcnycatablogdotorg.files.wordpress.com/2016/11/politics-finding-aid.pdf

[0615e] Collection on World War I and World War II, 1917-1945 (bulk 1917-1919 and 1941-1945), PRO2014.11

Location: Museum of the City of New York, 1220 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10029

Description: The collection contains materials related to New York during the two World Wars. Materials found in the collection include pamphlets with information on volunteer services, ration books, certificates of honorable service, and emergency information booklets. World War I Files on American Defense Society and American Protective League.

Websites with information:

https://mcnycatablog.org/category/manuscript-collections/

https://mcnycatablog.org/2014/12/22/collection-on-world-war-i-and-world-war-ii-1917-1945-bulk-1917-1919-and-1941-1945/

Finding aid:

https://mcnycatablogdotorg.files.wordpress.com/2014/12/war-finding-aid2.pdf

[0616] Collections and secret police reports on the Black Hundred

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: The reports include discussions of members' activities, reports on monarchist congresses, and relevant clippings from both the left-wing and right-wing press.

Reference:

Jacob Langer, "Corruption and the Counterrevolution: the Rise and Fall of the Black Hundred" (Ph.D., Duke University, 2007), http://dukespace.lib.duke.edu/dspace/bitstream/handle/10161/438/­D_Langer_Jacob_a_­200712.pdf?seque

nce=1.

State Archive web page:

http://statearchive.ru

[0616a] College of Charleston Library vertical file on Citizens for Decency Through Law, 1976-1981, Mss 0034-076

Location: Special Collections—Manuscripts, Marlene and Nathan Addlestone Library, College of Charleston Libraries, 66 George Street, Charleston, South Carolina 29424

Description: The collection consists of newsletters, pamphlets, and correspondence created by Citizens for Decency through Law. The bulk of the collection is copies of the organization's newsletters, the National Decency Reporter and the CDL Reporter. Each of the items warns of the dangers of obscenity and pornography.

Websites with information:

http://speccoll.cofc.edu/explore-our-collections/manuscript-collections/manuscripts-collections-a-z/

http://libcat.cofc.edu/record=b1446082

[0617] College of Charleston Library Vertical File on the Christian Anti-Communism Crusade, 1973-1985, Mss 0034-046

Location: Special Collections—Manuscripts, Marlene and Nathan Addlestone Library, College of Charleston Libraries, 66 George Street, Charleston, South Carolina 29424

Description: The collection includes numerous publications published by or distributed by the Christian Anti-Communism Crusade of Long Beach, California.

Websites with information:

http://libcat.cofc.edu/record=b1439505

http://153.9.241.200/wordpress/explore-our-collections/manuscript-collections/manuscripts-collections-a-z/

http://speccoll.cofc.edu/explore-our-collections/manuscript-collections/manuscripts-collections-a-z/

[0618] College of Charleston Vertical File on "The Christian Confederate Star," 1969-1971, Mss 0034-023

Location: Special Collections—Manuscripts, Marlene and Nathan Addlestone Library, College of Charleston Libraries, 66 George Street, Charleston, South Carolina 29424

Description: The collection includes three issues of "The Christian Confederate Star." It was a conservative newsletter published in Fletcher, Missouri. The file includes the April to May, 1969, September to October 1970, and June-July 1971 editions of the paper. Each of the issues support the cause of "states' rights" and the creation of a Christian theocracy based on the government of the Confederate States of America.

Websites with information:

http://libcat.cofc.edu/record=b1446767

http://153.9.241.200/wordpress/explore-our-collections/manuscript-collections/manuscripts-collections-a-z/

http://speccoll.cofc.edu/explore-our-collections/manuscript-collections/manuscripts-collections-a-z/

[0619] College of Charleston Library Vertical File on the Citizens' Councils of America, 1973-1986, Mss 0034-039

Location: Special Collections—Manuscripts, Marlene and Nathan Addlestone Library, College of Charleston Libraries, 66 George Street, Charleston, South Carolina 29424

Description: The collection includes numerous documents published by the Citizens' Councils of America between 1973 and 1986.

Websites with information:

http://libcat.cofc.edu/record=b1439503

http://153.9.241.200/wordpress/explore-our-collections/manuscript-collections/manuscripts-collections-a-z/

http://speccoll.cofc.edu/explore-our-collections/manuscript-collections/manuscripts-collections-a-z/

[0619a] College of Charleston Library vertical file on the Greensboro Incident of 1979, 1979-1980, Mss 0034-065

Location: Special Collections—Manuscripts, Marlene and Nathan Addlestone Library, College of Charleston Libraries, 66 George Street, Charleston, South Carolina 29424

Description: The collection consists of numerous clippings and pamphlets concerning the Greensboro Incident of 1979. The materials describe the murder of 5 members of the Communist Workers Party by members of the Ku Klux Klan and the National Socialist Party of America. Most of the materials were published by the Communist Workers Party.

Websites with information:

http://speccoll.cofc.edu/explore-our-collections/manuscript-collections/manuscripts-collections-a-z/

http://libcat.cofc.edu/record=b1442356

[0620] College of Charleston Library Vertical File on "The Independent American," 1958-1973, Mss 0034-087

Location: Special Collections—Manuscripts, Marlene and Nathan Addlestone Library, College of Charleston Libraries, 66 George Street, Charleston, South Carolina 29424

Description: The collection includes three publications produced by the staff of the "Independent American." It was a conservative newsletter published in Louisiana from 1955 until 1971 by "Free Men Speak, Inc." After 1971, it was published in Littleton, Colorado. The file includes a special issue of the newsletter from 1968 titled "Special Emergency Mailing Regarding Riots," and two pamphlets. Both pamphlets decry the abuse of power by federal authorities.

Websites with information:

http://libcat.cofc.edu/record=b1446020

http://153.9.241.200/wordpress/explore-our-collections/manuscript-collections/manuscripts-collections-a-z/

[0621] College of Charleston Library Vertical File on the Ku Klux Klan, 1973-1981, Mss 0034-066

Location: Special Collections—Manuscripts, Marlene and Nathan Addlestone Library, College of Charleston Libraries, 66 George Street, Charleston, South Carolina 29424

Description: The collection includes numerous newspaper clippings concerning the Ku Klux Klan and some documents published by the Klan.

Websites with information:

http://libcat.cofc.edu/record=b1441329

http://153.9.241.200/wordpress/explore-our-collections/manuscript-collections/manuscripts-collections-a-z/

http://www.worldcat.org/title/college-of-charleston-library-vertical-file-on-the-ku-klux-klan-1973-1981/oclc/

51854290

http://speccoll.cofc.edu/explore-our-collections/manuscript-collections/manuscripts-collections-a-z/

[0622] College of Charleston Library Vertical File on the National Socialist White People's Party, 1973-1979, Mss 0034-041

Location: Special Collections—Manuscripts, Marlene and Nathan Addlestone Library, College of Charleston Libraries, 66 George Street, Charleston, South Carolina 29424

Description: The collection includes numerous documents published by the National Socialist White People's Party. It also includes correspondence between an unidentified member of the library staff concerning a subscription to the organization's newsletter.

Websites with information:

http://libcat.cofc.edu/record=b1439504

http://153.9.241.200/wordpress/explore-our-collections/manuscript-collections/manuscripts-collections-a-z/

http://speccoll.cofc.edu/explore-our-collections/manuscript-collections/manuscripts-collections-a-z/

[0622a] College of Charleston Library vertical file on The Southern Libertarian Messenger, 1981-1983, Mss 0034-088

Location: Special Collections—Manuscripts, Marlene and Nathan Addlestone Library, College of Charleston Libraries, 66 George Street, Charleston, South Carolina 29424

Description: The collection consists of six issues of The Southern Libertarian Messenger, a Libertarian Party newsletter published in Florence, South Carolina, beginning in 1972 by Quality Education, Inc. and John Harllee. The file includes the January 1981, February 1981, March 1981, April 1981, August 1983, and September 1983 issues. The issues feature political opinions and official Libertarian Party news for the Libertarian Party of South Carolina.

Websites with information:

http://speccoll.cofc.edu/explore-our-collections/manuscript-collections/manuscripts-collections-a-z/

http://libcat.cofc.edu/record=b1458980

[0622b] College Republican National Committee Records, 1967-1974, Coll. 85009

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

Description: Correspondence, memoranda, minutes, financial records, campaign material, and printed matter, relating to student involvement in Republican political activity. Files on the Republican National Committee.

Websites with information:

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/754872160

http://www.worldcat.org/title/college-republican-national-committee-records-1967-1974/oclc/754872160

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf1779n4px/entire_text/

[0623] Charles Wallace Collins papers, 1915-1972 (bulk 1925-1970), Coll. 86-127

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

Description: Charles Wallace Collins (1879-1964) was a lawyer, writer, and librarian. He wrote several books and pamphlets expressing his views supporting "states' rights" and segregation. His book Whither Solid South? a pro-segregation treatise published in 1947, rallied the Dixiecrat Party in the presidential election of 1948. Other significant works included a pamphlet titled "The South Must Not Surrender" (1948), and The Race Integration Cases (1954). The papers consist of correspondence, clippings, essays, articles, pamphlets, and other publications generated or collected by Collins and his wife, Sue Spencer Collins. Series 2: Writings, 1921-1957, contains clippings on state's rights and segregation, 1948-1951; pieces by CWC on civil rights, states's rights; documents on the United Nations, 1949-1953; pieces by CWC on segregation, state's rights, political parties, and democracy, 1949-1954; pamphlets on integration and civil rights, 1950-1954; Henry Regnery Company, Publishers-correspondence, 1952-1953; correspondence and writing on segregation, 1953-1954; and Whither Solid South?—Drafts.

Finding aid:

http://hdl.handle.net/1903.1/1724

[0624] Seward Collins Papers, 1918-1952 (bulk dates 1927-1937), YCAL MSS 12

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

Description: Seward Bishop Collins (1899-1952) was an American editor and publisher. In 1928 Collins, who had bought The Bookman the previous year, came under the influence of Irving Babbitt and the other leading humanist author of the day, Paul Elmer More. Around the same time, Collins's politics changed from leftist to ultra-conservative and, in certain aspects, pro-fascist, and his new philosophical and political views became more and more evident in the pages of The Bookman. In April 1933 The Bookman was succeeded by The American Review. This new monthly became a vehicle to publish the views of the revolutionary or conservative right, as Collins sought to present an Americanized version of fascism as a solution to the politically troubled 1930s. The journal was devoted to contemporary American economics, politics, philosophy, and literature, and for a little over four years served as a major forum for several "conservative-traditionalist" movements, notably the Humanists (Irving Babbitt and Paul Elmer More), the Neo-Scholastics (in Collins' terminology, this would include T. S. Eliot and Wyndham Lewis), the Distributists (G. K. Chesterton, Hilaire Belloc, and A. J. Penty), the Monarchists (Hoffman Nickerson and Ralph Adams Cram), and the Agrarians (Donald Davidson and numerous others). The papers contain correspondence, subject files, business papers, and other papers documenting Collins's editorship of The Bookman and The American Review. Correspondence with Irving Babbitt, Hilaire Belloc, William E. Borah, John Chamberlain, G. K. Chesterton, Ralph Adams Cram, Donald Davidson, Max Eastman, T. S. Eliot, Norman Foerster, Wyndham Lewis, J. B. Matthews, Paul Elmer More, Hoffman Nickerson, Ezra Pound, Porter Sargent, Robert Shafer, Lothrop Stoddard, and Dorothy Thompson. Subject files on Irving Babbitt, Hilaire Belloc, John R. Chamberlain, G. K. Chesterton, Donald Davidson, Distributionism, T. S. Eliot, Fascism, Griebl Nazi Spy Case [Dr. Ignatz T. Griebl], and Paul Elmer More.

References:

Seward Collins, "Monarch as Alternative," American Review (Apr. 1933), pp. 22-27, reprinted in Conservatism in America since 1930: A Reader, edited by Gregory L. Schneider (New York and London, New York University Press [2003]), pp. 16-28, http://www.wpia.uni.lodz.pl/cms/pliki_upload/MX-5001N_20110308_154022_Compressed.pdf; Albert E. Stone, Jr., "Seward Collins and the American Review: Experiment in Pro-Fascism, 1933-37," American Quarterly 12 (Spring 1960): 3-19; Edward S. Shapiro, "American Conservative Intellectuals, the 1930's, and the Crisis of Ideology," Modern Age, Vol. 23, No. 4 (Fall 1979), pp. 370-380, https://isistatic.org/journal-archive/ma/23_04/shapiro.pdf; Mark Royden Winchell, Where No Flag Flies: Donald Davidson & the Southern Resistance (Columbia and London, University of Missouri Press [2000]); Michael Jay Tucker, And Then They Loved Him: Seward Collins & the Chimera of an American Fascism (Peter Lang, 2006).

Finding aid:

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

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

[0625] William M. Colmer Papers, 1933-1973, Coll. M24

Location: Special Collections, McCain Library and Archives, The University of Southern Mississippi, 118 College Drive #5148, Hattiesburg, MS 39406-5148

Description: Colmer (1890-1980) was elected to his first term in the U.S. House of Representatives in 1933. Although he entered the Congress as a Franklin D. Roosevelt New Dealer and remained a life-long member of the Democratic Party, he frequently supported Republican candidates and his political philosophy evolved toward conservatism. Correspondence, legislative files, speeches, newsletters, photographs, motion picture film, newspaper clippings, scrapbooks and artifacts. Correspondence from James F. Byrnes, Senator Pat McCarran, Dorothy Thompson, and Ex-Senator Wheeler. Statement on the Supreme Court's school segregation decision, May 17, 1954. Congressional Record copy of the Southern Manifesto called "Statement of Constitutional Principles," etcetera); 1954, 1956 (Manila envelope with signatures on second Southern Manifesto called "Warning of Grave Danger" - July 13, 1956 [online at http://clio.lib.olemiss.edu/cdm/ref/collection/JWS_race/id/2054 and at https://library.cqpress.com/cqalmanac/document.php?id=

cqal56-1349403]); 1954, 1953-55. Files on Anti-Communist Legislation, Anti-Lynch Bill, Anti-Poll Tax Bill, Senator Bilbo, Citation of Joseph P. Kamp, August 31, 1950, David Lawrence, General MacArthur, Senator McCarthy, Raymond Moley, Wright Patman, Poll Tax, Putnam Letter, January 29, 1959, School Segregation, Share-The-Wealth - 1935 (Huey Long's proposal), States' Rights, Senator Stennis, Senator Talmadge, and Senator Thurmond; and Four-page letter to President Eisenhower re Civil Rights Bill - July 12, 1957 - mimeographed [online at http://lcdl.library.cofc.edu/­lcdl/catalog/lcdl:87102].

Reference:

Alan Brinkley, "Huey Long, The Share Our Wealth Movement, and the Limits of Depression Dissidence," Louisiana History 22.2 (Spring 1981), pp. 117-134, http://vi.uh.edu/pages/buzzmat/Radhistory/radical%20­history%20articles/Huey%20Long%20and%20Limits%20of%20US%20Dissent.pdf.

Websites with information:

http://www.lib.usm.edu/spcol/collections/manuscripts/lists-of-collections/alphabetical.html

Finding aids:

http://www.lib.usm.edu/legacy/archives/m024.htm

http://www.lib.usm.edu/legacy/archives/m024bfl.htm

http://www.lib.usm.edu/legacy/archives/m024bfltext.htm

http://www.lib.usm.edu/legacy/archives/m024.htm?m024text.htm~mainFrame

http://www.lib.usm.edu/legacy/archives/m024bfl.htm?m024bfltext.htm~mainFrame

http://lib.usm.edu/spcol/collections/manuscripts/finding_aids/m024

[0625a] Harry W. Colmery Collection, ca. 1911-ca. 1979 (bulk ca. 1925-ca. 1965), Ms. Collection no. 795

Location: Kansas Historical Society, 6425 SW 6th Avenue, Topeka, KS 66615-1099

Description: Harry Walter Colmery (1890-1979) was a lawyer, insurance agent, and politician of Topeka, Kan., Washington, D.C. Colmery was elected National Commander of the American Legion in 1936. During the 1940 presidential campaign, Harry was the National Chairman of the Willkie War Veterans National Committee, and in 1964 he chaired the Veterans Task Force for Goldwater-Miller. Series 3. Political. [Subseries 2]. 1940 Wilkie Presidential Campaign: Folder Index, contains files on Republican National Committee Publicity Releases and Other Statements; Willkie; and Willkie War Veterans National Committee. [Subseries 4]. 1964 Goldwater Presidential Campaign, contains files on Citizens for Goldwater Committee; Barry Goldwater; Republican National Convention – 1964; and Veterans for Goldwater Committee. [Subseries 5]. Political Matters, 1935-1936, contains files on Frank Knox for Vice-President and Alf F. Landon for President. [Subseries 6]. Republican Party, contains files on National Republican Congressional Committee Pamphlets; Veterans Advisory Committee, Republication National Committee; and Republican War Veterans. [Subseries 7]. Miscellaneous, contains a file on The Dan Smoot Report. [Subseries 8]. Books and Publications, contains copies of A Great Constructive Contribution to the First of the Sciences by the President of the United States: Letter to the President on Foreign Trade, by George N. Peek (New York: Chemical Foundation, Inc., June 1934); and A Primer: Comment on the Great Constructive Work of the President of the United States in Making Arithmetic the Basic Science of Government, by Samuel Crowther (New York: Chemical Foundation, Inc., November 1934).

Finding aids:

http://www.kshs.org/archives/45598

http://www.kshs.org/research/collections/documents/personalpapers/findingaids/colmery_harry_collection.pdf

[0626] Nikki Colodny papers, 1978-1995, Coll. 2188

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

Description: Dr. Nikki Colodny (1948- ) was a pro-choice activist, abortion provider, and women's health advocate operating in Toronto, Ontario, throughout the 1980s and 1990s. Most prominently, she worked with Dr. Henry Morgentaler, providing medical care and abortion services which at the time were illegal. Their arrests and repeated harassment brought publicity to their cause, eventually precipitating the 1988 overturn of abortion law by the Supreme Court of Canada. This collection contains records from several clinics and advocacy organizations with which she was active, in addition to press coverage of her activities and research materials. Files on Campaign Life Coalition News (December 1987, March 1988), Dr. Morgentaler and Dr. Colodny arrests. 1987, Protests/ Harassment outside of abortion clinics, Homophobia, Abortion shooting media coverage, and anti-choice materials.

Websites with information:

http://www.csw.ucla.edu/publications/MakingInvisibleHistoriesVisiblePartII.pdf

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8sn0c7w/entire_text/

[0626a] Colorado for Family Values Collection, 1992-1997, MSS #1699

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

Description: Collection consists of editorials and other printed material, as well as videos, detailing Colorado for Family Values' advocacy of the anti-gay legislation Amendment Two.

Websites with information:

http://c70003.eos-intl.net/C70003/OPAC/Details/Record.aspx?BibCode=3492206

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

[0627] [Colorado Right-to-Work battle of 1958].

Location: Denver Area Labor Federation, AFL-CIO, 140 Sheridan Boulevard, Suite 303, Denver, CO 80226

Description: In 1958, right to work was on the Colorado ballot but went down to defeat at the polls. The Denver Area Labor Federation archives contain material on the 1958 Colorado Right-to-Work battle.

Reference:

Labor Archives in the United States and Canada: A Directory Prepared by the Labor Archives Roundtable of the Society of American Archivists (2011), https://www.lib.washington.edu/specialcollections/laws/­copy_of_labor-archives-in-the-united-states-canada-a-directory, http://www2.­archivists.org/sites/all/files/Directory%20of%20Labor%20Archives

%20(2011).pdf, http://www.lib.washington.edu/specialcollections/laws/copy_of_labor-archives-in-the-united-states

-canada-a-directory.

Website:

http://www.denverlabor.org/

[0627a] Colorado Subject Collection CSC.BIO Biographical files, 1829-2011

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

Description: The Biographical files contain information on numerous individuals, either residents of Colorado or important figures in Colorado history. They are part of a larger collection of material, the Colorado Subject Collection, which is composed of Biographical files, Geographical files, and Subject files. Materials include birth certificates, marriage certificates, deeds, correspondence, certificates of military service, biographical sketches, newspaper clippings, obituaries, and genealogical information. Files on Gov. William H. Adams [Brochure titled Adams and the Ku Klux Klan, by Carrol Joe Carter (1980)]; Charles F. Brannan; Gov. Ralph L. Carr; Sen. Peter H. Dominick; Kenneth Goff; Herbert Hoover; Dr. John Galen Locke; Gifford Pinchot; and Philip S. Van Cise [Philip S. Van Cise, by Edwin P. Van Cise (n.d.)].

Finding aid:

http://www.historycolorado.org/sites/default/files/files/Researchers/CSC%20Biographical.pdf

[0628] Papers of Charles Wendell Colson, 1960-1990; n.d., Collection 275

Location: Archives, Billy Graham Center, Wheaton College, 500 College Ave., 3rd floor, Wheaton, IL 60187-5593

Description: Colson (1931-2012) was a Special Counsel to President Richard Nixon from 1969 to 1973, and later a noted Evangelical Christian leader and cultural commentator. Memos; correspondence; book, article and editorial manuscripts; text of speeches; legal papers; newspaper clippings; testimony transcripts; magazine articles; audio tapes; and photographs that document many of the major phases of Colson's life, including his work as a political advisor to President Richard Nixon, his involvement in the Watergate scandal, his conversion to Christian faith that caused him to plead guilty to one of the charges against him, his imprisonment, and his life after incarceration as a leading Evangelical writer and speaker and as the founder of the country's leading prison ministries. Series: I. Professional and Ministry Files, contains correspondence with Richard Nixon, Patrick Buchanan, Alexander Haig, and Ronald Reagan. Series: II. Watergate Files, contains a file on Wallace Assassination Attempt. Series: III. Manuscript Files, contains files on his book Kingdoms in Conflict (with Ellen Santilli Vaughn), 1987, with comments by Richard John Neuhaus. Series: IV. Ellen Santilli Vaughn Files, contains files on Abortion Clinic Bombings, Pat Robertson's presidential campaign, and Paul Harvey Material.

Websites with information:

http://www2.wheaton.edu/bgc/archives/GUIDES/g2.htm

Finding aid:

http://www2.wheaton.edu/bgc/archives/GUIDES/275.htm

[0628a] Braxton Bragg Comer Papers, 1905-1940, Collection Number: 00168

Location: Southern Historical Collection, Manuscripts Department, 4th Floor, Wilson Library CB# 3926, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27515-8890

Description: Braxton Bragg Comer (1848-1927) was governor of Alabama, 1908-1911, and U.S. senator, 1920. Personal, plantation and other business, and political papers of Comer. Series 1. Correspondence and Other Papers, 1907-1940 and undated, contains correspondence on subjects including anti-Catholicism, anti-evolution, anti-Semitic texts that he ordered from the Dearborn Publishing Company (including "The International Jew" and "Aspects of Jewish Power in the United States"), anti-union, the Catholic question, integration (to which he was adamantly opposed), the Ku Klux Klan in Alabama politics in the 1920s, opposition to African-Americans in the U.S. Army, Prohibition, race relations, the Tom Watson trial [a charge brought against Watson for sending "obscenity" by mail, based on an editorial attack on the Catholic church in which he reprinted Latin questions that a priest might ask his female parishioners in confession], and women's suffrage.

Websites with information:

http://library.unc.edu/wilson/shc/findingaids/browse-finding-aids/

Finding aid:

http://finding-aids.lib.unc.edu/00168/

[0629] Commentary Magazine Archive, 1942-2004 (1957-1995)

Location: Harry Ransom Center, The University of Texas at Austin, 300 West 21st Street, Austin, Texas 78712

Description: The Commentary Magazine Archive comprises editorial correspondence, administrative files, Contentions newsletter issues, newspaper clippings of Norman Podhoretz's New York Post columns, and a small portion of the proofs, galleys, and original manuscripts submitted for publication. Correspondents include William J. Bennett, Robert H. Bork, Patrick J. Buchanan, William F. Buckley, James Burnham, Milorad M. Drachkovitch, First Things, Milton Friedman, Ernest van den Haag, Jesse Helms, Will Herberg, Heritage Foundation, Richard Hofstadter, Sidney Hook, Irving Kristol, William Kristol, Seymour Martin Lipset, Charles A. Murray, George H. Nash, National Right To Life News, National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation, Richard John Neuhaus, Robert A. Nisbet, Grover Glenn Norquist, Norman Podhoretz, Ronald Reagan, Henry F. Regnery, Rockford Institute, Thomas Sowell, Henry J. Taylor, Ralph de Toledano, Stephen J. Tonsor, Peter Viereck, and George F. Will.

Reference:

A Guide to the Collections: Jewish Studies Resources at the University of Texas at Austin (Austin: Schusterman Center for Jewish Studies, The University of Texas at Austin, n.d.), https://liberalarts.­utexas.edu/scjs/_files/pdf/researchguide.pdf.

Websites with information:

http://norman.hrc.utexas.edu/fasearch/curatorial.cfm

Finding aids:

http://norman.hrc.utexas.edu/fasearch/pdf/00672.pdf

http://norman.hrc.utexas.edu/fasearch/findingaid.cfm?eadid=00672

[0629a] Commissione speciale d'indagine sui problemi del neo-fascismo e dell'eversione contro le istituzioni e la legalità repubblicana, 1974-1980

Location: Regione Toscana. Consiglio regionale. Archivio, via Cavour, 4, 50129 Firenze (Firenze), Italy

Description: Meetings and minutes of the Commission; press conferences; questionnaires from the municipalities and the provinces of Tuscany and other materials on socio-economic and political-cultural aspects, with particular reference to the presence of neo-fascist groups and any subversive episodes; material from similar commissions set up in other regional councils (Lazio, Piedmont, Emilia-Romagna, Calabria, Lombardy, Campania, Marche) and the national conference "Le inchieste delle regioni sul neofascismo" (Reggio Calabria, 15 to 16 December 1974); meetings and minutes of the consultations carried out by the Commission in Tuscany; reports from organizations and individuals; agendas of municipal and provincial councils on subversive and terrorist facts occurring at the national and regional level; studies carried out by the Istituto storico della Resistenza in Toscana, and the final report, comprising a chronology of episodes of subversion occurring in the region, analytical cards for stenciled neo-fascist periodicals that were examined, an outline of active subversive organizations in Tuscany; and reports from the Istituto di sociologia della Facoltà di Magistero di Firenze, including an essay by Antonio Carbone and Armando Testi, "Neo-fascismo in Toscana: ricerca sociologica sulla Valdinievole."

Websites with information:

http://siusa.archivi.beniculturali.it/cgi-bin/pagina.pl?TipoPag=comparc&Chiave=350749

http://siusa.archivi.beniculturali.it/cgi-bin/pagina.pl?TipoPag=prodente&Chiave=53568

http://san.beniculturali.it/web/san/dettaglio-soggetto-produttore?id=52377

[0629b] Committee for a Free Asia collection, 1951-1953, Coll. XX282

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

Description: The Committee for a Free Asia Inc. (CFA) was established in 1951 "to promote, aid and assist the cause of individual and national freedom in Asia, as opposed to Communist and other totalitarian doctrines." Radio Free Asia (RFA) was officially run by the CFA out of San Francisco between September 1951 and 1953. Programs were broadcast in "three Chinese dialects and in English" and comprised of "principally anti-Communist propaganda, except for news and music." The collection consists of clippings and press releases relating to political, social, and economic conditions in China and Taiwan. Includes clippings from Chinese, Hong Kong and Chinese-language American newspapers, and press releases issued by Radio Free Asia. Collected by the Committee for a Free Asia.

References:

Richard H. Cummings, "March 12, 1951: The Original Radio Free Asia Incorporated," March 12, 2013, http://coldwarradios.blogspot.com/2013/03/march-12-1951-original-radio-free-asia.html; Mareike Ohlberg, "The 'Other' Radio Free Asia: 1951 to 1953," May 10, 2015, http://mareikeohlberg.com/the-other-radio-free-asia-1951-to-1953/.

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt129030s1/entire_text/

[0630] Committee for the Free World Records, 1980-1991, Coll. 89007

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

Description: The Committee for the Free World, founded in February 1981, was an anti-Communist think tank in the United States. Midge Decter served as Executive Director. Correspondence, conference proceedings, bulletins, press releases, financial records, booklets, phonotapes, and videotapes, relating to American foreign and domestic policy, the moral and intellectual climate in the Western world, relations between the United States and Europe and the Soviet Union, and international Communism and anti-Communist movements. The series Correspondence/Subject Files, 1980-1986, contains files on Committee for the Free World (U.K.), Irving Kristol, Nicaraguan Freedom Fund, Norman Podhoretz, R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr., George S. Weigel, Jr., and Women and Families for Defence. Copies of Contentions (Bulletin of the Committee for the Free World), 1981-1988.

Finding aids:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf7q2nb2gr/

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf7q2nb2gr/entire_text/

[0631] Committee of One Million sound recordings, Coll. XX619 [sound recordings]

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

Description: Speeches relating to the proposed admission of communist China to the United Nations. 3 phonorecords.

Finding aids:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt158031h1/entire_text/

http://pdf.oac.cdlib.org/pdf/hoover/XX619.pdf

[0632] Committee on the Present Danger records, 1967-1992, Coll. 92073

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

Description: The Committee on the Present Danger (CPD) is a neoconservative American foreign policy interest group. The records consist of correspondence, minutes, reports, studies, memoranda, press releases, financial records, clippings, and other printed matter, relating to American politics and foreign policy, Soviet-American relations, and American and Soviet defenses and military policy. Files on American Conservative Defense Alliance (ACDA), Patrick Buchanan, William F. Buckley, Conservative Caucus, Conservative Network, Robert Dole, Barry Goldwater, Alexander M. Haig, Jr., Jesse Helms, Iran-Contra affair, Representative Jack Kemp, Jeane J. Kirkpatrick, Clare Boothe Luce, Richard Nixon, Norman Podhoretz, Radio America, Radio Liberty, Ronald Reagan, General M. B. Ridgway, Richard Scaife, and John Tower.

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt6w1038fh/entire_text/

[0633] Committee to Defend America by Aiding the Allies, 1940-1942, MS67

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

Description: The Committee to Defend America by Aiding the Allies was formed in 1940 to encourage American interest in aiding Great Britain, and ultimately in entering the war in Europe and defeating the Axis powers. Also included are publications issued by the National Committee to Uphold Constitutional Government, an anti-New Deal organization, including S.B. Pettengill, The Case against a third term for any president, n.d. Includes a copy of Ernest Lundeen, Six men and war: speech of Hon. Ernest Lundeen of Minnesota in the Senate of the United States, July 11, 1940.

Websites with information:

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

http://www.library.northwestern.edu/libraries-collections/special-collections/our-manuscript-archives.html

Finding aid:

http://findingaids.library.northwestern.edu/catalog/inu-ead-spec-archon-1526

https://findingaids.library.northwestern.edu/repositories/7/resources/553

[0634] Committee to Defend America By Aiding the Allies Records, 1940-1942, MC011

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 Records of the Committee to Defend America by Aiding the Allies (CDAAA) document the Committee to Defend America from its inception in May 1940 to its official dissolution in October 1942. With the bombing of Pearl Harbor, CDAAA acknowledged that its work had come to an end, and in January, 1942, CDAAA merged with the Council for Democracy to form Citizens for Victory: To Win the War, To Win the Peace. The Committee to Defend America was a propaganda organization that worked to persuade the American public that the United States should supply the Allies with as much material and financial aid as possible in order to keep the United States out of the war. During its year and a half tenure the Committee successfully garnered support from across the country and from other parts of the world. Consists of files relating to the political, educational, and fund-raising activities of the Committee to Defend America by Aiding the Allies. Included are 1) correspondence (such as that of Roger S. Greene, associate director of the Committee), daily reports, and subject files of the Committee's administrative management division at its national headquarters office in New York City; 2) executive committee correspondence and minutes; 3) state and local chapters material—correspondence, field representatives files, chapter records; 4) records of college, labor, and women's divisions; 5) fund-raising files from the Committee's NYC headquarters; and 6) published materials put out by the Committee, such as cartoons, Christmas cards, newsletters, pamphlets, press releases, radio transcripts, and speeches. Publications include flyers, pamphlets, cartoons, newsletters, newspaper advertisements and clippings, postcards, press releases, a syndicated column called "It Makes Sense" (July-December 1941), radio transcripts, speeches, petitions, and policy statements. The Subject Files (1940 May-1941 December) document the many organizations with which the Committee was sympathetic, as well as the many isolationist organizations to which the Committee was opposed. Subject Files on Amerasia, America First Committee, American Legion, Anti-Semitism – Congress: Rankin (Miss.) and Edelstein, 194[1] Jun 7, Lend-Lease Bill H.R. 1776, Neutrality Act, and Senator Burton K. Wheeler.

Finding aids:

http://findingaids.princeton.edu/collections/MC011

http://findingaids.princeton.edu/collections/MC011.pdf

http://archive.is/vkhJP#selection-435.0-435.712

Finding aids to microfilm edition (Woodbridge, CT, Primary Source Microfilm, An imprint of Thomson Gale, 2005):

http://microformguides.gale.com/Download.asp?CollDocid=9053000&page=1

http://microformguides.gale.com/Data/Download/9053000C.pdf

[0635] Committee to Ratify the Massachusetts State Equal Rights Amendment Additional records, 1976-1982, 84-M145; T-163

Location: Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard University, 3 James St, Cambridge, MA 02138

Description: This collection contains the reports liquidating the Committee to Ratify the Massachusetts ERA, financial (including fund-raising) statements, letters and endorsements from supporters, press releases, legislative surveys, and card files of project contacts, volunteers and supporters.. Contains audiocassettes of CLUM [Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts] meeting, 5/1/1976, Springfield: Barney Frank vs. Margaret Mahoney, and WHDH: Phyllis Schlafly on David B[Brudnoy?] Show, 6/25/1976.

Websites with information:

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

Finding aids:

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~sch00523

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu//oasis/deliver/deepLink?_collection=oasis&uniqueId=sch00523

[0636] Committee to Ratify the Massachusetts State Equal Rights Amendment. Records, 1975-1976, 77-M104--77-M196

Location: Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard University, 3 James St, Cambridge, MA 02138

Description: The Massachusetts State ERA Coalition (consisting of representatives of 40 civic, religious, business and professional groups), was formed to lobby for the passage of the state ERA through the legislature. In May, 1974 the ERA was endorsed and in the summer of 1975 the Coalition was phased out and the Committee to Ratify the Massachusetts State ERA was created to campaign for ratification in the November 1976 referendum. The papers consist of campaign files: correspondence, speeches, lists of events and speakers; also clippings about the campaign. Series I. ERA campaign files. 5-77: Committee to Ratify the Massachusetts State Equal Rights Amendment, contains a file of Anti-ERA material and files on Stop ERA and Margaret Mahoney. Series II. ERA campaign clippings, 1976, contains Anti-ERA articles.

Websites with information:

http://guides.library.harvard.edu/schlesinger_equal_rights_amendment

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

Finding aids:

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~sch00522

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu//oasis/deliver/deepLink?_collection=oasis&uniqueId=sch00522

[0636a] Chester Commodore Papers, 1914-2004, Coll. 2007/01 [cartoons]

Location: Chicago Public Library, Carter G. Woodson Regional Library, Vivian G. Harsh Research Collection of Afro-American History and Literature, 9525 S. Halsted St., Chicago, IL 60628

Description: Chester Commodore (1914-2004) was a cartoonist for the Chicago Defender. The papers include his personal correspondence, photographs, original cartoon drawings, cartoon photocopies, newsclippings of Commodore cartoons, other clippings, and varied memorabilia. Cartoons on Abortion; anti-busing amendment; Anti-busing demonstration; Aurora Klan activity; Black church burnings; Black separatism; Brown v. Board of Education; [Pat] Buchanan/Right wing attacks; George H.W. Bush; busing; Robert Cherry/Klan bomber; Church bomb kills 4 girls/Alabama; civil rights; contract with America; Bob Dole; Dwight D. Eisenhower; Orville Faubus; Gerald Ford; Newt Gingrich; Billy Graham; Greensboro jails KKK members; Jesse Helms; J. Edgar Hoover; Iran-Contra; Jim Crow; Henry Kissinger; lynching; Nazis march in Skokie; Nazis/Washington Park; Richard M. Nixon; Nixon Administration; Panama Canal Treaty; Colin Powell; Dan Quayle; racism; Ronald Reagan; Sixty-three bombing/Thomas Blanton suspect; states rights; Strom Thurmond; Waco Standoff; George Wallace; and white power.

Website with information:

http://www.chipublib.org/archival_subject/african-american/

Finding aids:

http://www.chipublib.org/fa-chester-commodore-papers/

http://uncap.lib.uchicago.edu/view.php?eadid=MTS.commodore

http://explore.chicagocollections.org/marcpdf/publish/chipublib/86/959cp0m/

http://explore.chicagocollections.org/marcpdf/publish/chipublib/86/b854r2d/

[0637] Commonwealth Club of California Records, 1903-2012, Coll. 2003C87

Location: Hoover Institution Archives, 434 Galvez Mall, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305-6010

Description: The Commonwealth Club of California is a private, nonprofit organization for the nonpartisan study of public issues based in San Francisco, California. Minutes, correspondence, reports, studies, speech transcripts, membership and financial records, printed matter, and sound and videotape recordings, relating to international, national, state and local public issues. Program File, 1916-2006, contains files on Dick Armey, Robert H. Bork, Sam Brownback, Patrick J. Buchanan, James L. Buckley, William F. Buckley, Robert Dole, Milorad Drachkovitch, Dinesh D'Souza, Jerry Falwell, Steve Forbes, Henry Ford, Milton Friedman, Newt Gingrich, Barry Goldwater, Billy Graham, Phil Gramm, Alexander M. Haig, Paul Harvey, Orrin Hatch, Herbert Hoover, Howard Jarvis, Jack F. Kemp, Jeane Kirkpatrick, C. Everett Koop, William Kristol, David Lawrence, Rush Limbaugh, Seymour Martin Lipset, Clare Boothe Luce, Patrick Lucey, Joseph McCarthy, Edwin Meese, Charles Murray, Richard Nixon, Robert Novak, Dan Quayle, Ronald Reagan, Ralph Reed, Pat Robertson, William A. Rusher, William Safire, Antonin Scalia, Phyllis Stewart Schlafly, John K. Singlaub, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Thomas Sowell, Alan Stang, Margaret Thatcher, Clarence Thomas, John Tower, Donald Trump, R. Emmett Tyrrell, Lewis Uhler, Richard A. Viguerie, George Wallace, and George Will.

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt3g5032c1/entire_text/

[0638] Commonwealth Club of California Sound Recordings Database, 1944–present

Location: Hoover Institution Archives, 434 Galvez Mall, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305-6010

Description: Since 1903, the day's premier leaders, crusaders, and elected officials have spoken at the Commonwealth Club of California, with many such talks subsequently broadcast on the club's nationwide radio network. More than two thousand sound recordings of speakers addressing the Commonwealth Club of California are housed at the Hoover Archives. Speakers include John M. Ashbrook, Haley Barbour, Bob Barr, William J. Bennett, Robert H. Bork, Anthony Trawick Bouscaren, Pat Buchanan, James L. Buckley, William F. Buckley, Claire Lee Chennault, Mark W. Clark, John Crommelin, Matthew Cvetic, Dinesh D'Souza, Cecil B. DeMille, Robert J. Dole, Milorad M. Drachkovitch, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Jerry Falwell, Milton Friedman, Newt Gingrich, Barry M. Goldwater, Billy Graham, Alexander Meigs Haig, Orrin Hatch, Herbert C. Holdridge, Sidney Hook, David Horowitz, Mike Huckabee, Howard Jarvis, Walter Henry Judd, Jack Kemp, Hugh Kenner, Jeane J. Kirkpatrick, William F. Knowland, Alfred Kohlberg, Arthur Bliss Lane, Clare Boothe Luce, David Lawrence, Seymour Martin Lipset, Jay Lovestone, Clare Boothe Luce, Henry Robinson Luce, Pat McCarran, Edwin Meese, Charles Murray, Richard M. Nixon, Ron Paul, Stefan Thomas Possony, Max Lewis Rafferty, Leonard Edward Read, Ronald Reagan, Eddie Rickenbacker, Matthew B. Ridgway, Carlos P. Romulo, Kermit Roosevelt, William Safire, J. F. Schlafly, Jr., Phyllis Schlafly, Fred Schwarz, William Shockley, John K. Singlaub, George E. Sokolsky, Thomas Sowell, Jack B. Tenney, Ralph de Toledano, Ron Unz, Harold Himmel Velde, Richard A. Viguerie, Edwin A. Walker, George C. Wallace, and Albert C. Wedemeyer.

Database:

http://hoohila.stanford.edu/commonwealth/

[0639] Correspondence files of the Commonwealth Investigation Service, 1916-1960, Series A8911 [partly digital collection]

Location: National Archives of Australia, Queen Victoria Terrace, PARKES ACT 2600, Australia

Description: The Investigation Branch of the Attorney-General's Department, which included the Counter Espionage Bureau, was created in 1919. The Investigation Branch was responsible for internal security up to the end of World War II, including internees and prisoners of war. After the war, the Investigation Branch was re-organised and renamed the Commonwealth Investigation Service (CIS). Includes files on "The Link"- Organisation to promote Anglo-German Friendship - Mrs Melanie O'Loughlin, 1940; "The Record" (Seditious West Australian Roman Catholic Paper), 1918; Australia First Movement, 1935-1946 (partly digital); CIB. P. R. Stephensen. Copies of Transcript of Evidence at Inquiry (into Australia First Movement), 1944; Communist Activities, 1943-1945; Jews - Anti Jewish propaganda (Letter to West Maitland "Mercury" newspaper), 1942; Nazi Activities - Western Australia. [with lists of names of Germans], 1935-1946; Russian Fascists (in North Queensland), 1942-1945; and Russian Fascists and the White Russian Situation, 1941-1942.

Websites with information:

http://www.naa.gov.au/collection/fact-sheets/fs33.aspx

Finding aid:

http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/DetailsReports/SeriesDetail.aspx?series_no=A8911&singleRecord=T

[0639a] Communism, Socialism, and Left-Wing Politics Collection, 1891-1998, MS 452

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

Description: The collection consists of printed materials, correspondence, journals and organizational records documenting women's involvement in socialist and communist movements in the United States, United Kingdom, and internationally. The series Printed Materials contains newspaper clippings, pamphlets, and printed material on Communism in the United States and Great Britain. These reflect both pro- and anti-Communist perspectives. Includes a copy of "Since the Buford Sailed" (1920) (on the Palmer Raids).

Finding aid:

http://asteria.fivecolleges.edu/findaids/sophiasmith/mnsss85.html

[0639b] Archives of the Communist International (Comintern)

Location: Russian State Archives for Social and Political History (Rossiiskii gosudarstvennyi arkhiv sotsialno-politicheskoi istorii - RGASPI), ul. Bolshaya Dmitrovka, 15, 125009 Moscow, Russia

Description: Contains more than 100,000 personal files maintained by the Comintern, including files on persons who were prominent opponents of the Communist movement. USA: fond 495, opis 261 [Collection 495, Inventory 261], contains files on Warren Austin, Daniel Bell, William Benton, Theodore Bilbo, Spruille Braden, Ralph Owen Brewster, Styles Bridges, Earl (Dixon) Browder, Louis Budenz, Mark Clark, Paul Crouch, Martin Dies, Bella Dodd, Max Eastman, Dwight Eisenhower, Julius Epstein, Henry Pratt Fairchild, Henry Ford, James Forrestal, Benjamin Gitlow, Joseph Grew, Herbert Hoover, J. Edgar Hoover, Patrick Hurley, John Kasper, William Knowland, Owen Lattimore, David Lawrence, Jay Lovestone, Henry and Clare Luce, Douglas MacArthur, A.B. Magil, Karl Mundt, John Rankin, Carroll Reece, Leverett Saltonstall, Robert Taft, Dorothy Thompson, and Albert Wedemeyer. Great Britain: fond 495, opis 198 [Collection 495, Inventory 198], contains files on Leopold Amery, Jeffrey Hamm, Emrys Hughes, William Joyce, Oswald Mosley, and Freda Utley.

References:

The INCOMKA Project. Communist International (Comintern) Archives Project (European Reading Room, Library of Congress), http://www.loc.gov/rr/european/comintern/comintern-project.html.

Index to digitized collection:

http://www.loc.gov/rr/european/comintern/comintern-home.html

Finding aids for USA: fond 495, opis 261:

http://www.loc.gov/rr/european/comintern/docs/usa-f495-op261-part1-a-br.doc

http://www.loc.gov/rr/european/comintern/docs/usa-f495-op261-part2-br-fl.doc

http://www.loc.gov/rr/european/comintern/docs/usa-f495-op261-part3-fo-h.doc

http://www.loc.gov/rr/european/comintern/docs/usa-f495-op261-part4-i-kra.doc

http://www.loc.gov/rr/european/comintern/docs/usa-f495-op261-part5-krc-mc.doc

http://www.loc.gov/rr/european/comintern/docs/usa-f495-op261-part6-me-pr.doc

http://www.loc.gov/rr/european/comintern/docs/usa-f495-op261-part7-ps-sil.doc

http://www.loc.gov/rr/european/comintern/docs/usa-f495-op261-part8-sim-v.doc

http://www.loc.gov/rr/european/comintern/docs/usa-f495-op261-part9-w-z.doc

http://www.loc.gov/rr/european/comintern/docs/usa-add-a-j%20.doc

http://www.loc.gov/rr/european/comintern/docs/usa-add-k-z.doc

Finding aids for Great Britain: fond 495, opis 198:

http://www.loc.gov/rr/european/comintern/docs/greatbritain-f495-op198-part1-a-f.doc

http://www.loc.gov/rr/european/comintern/docs/greatbritain-f495-op198-part2-g-me.doc

http://www.loc.gov/rr/european/comintern/docs/greatbritain-f495-op198-part3-mi-z.doc

http://www.loc.gov/rr/european/comintern/docs/greatbritain-collective.doc

[0640] The Communist Party of Great Britain archive, 1920, 1943-1991 (microfilmed from the archive at Manchester's People's History Museum), Microform Academic Publishers [microfilm]

Description: The Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB) was formed as a section of the Moscow-based Communist International (Comintern) in 1920. With the dissolution of the party in 1991, the archives were deposited in Manchester's People's History Museum. Central Party records, Organisation Department: Among the responsibilities of the CPGB's national Organisation Department, created in 1943, were the maintenance of membership and cadre records, internal discipline and liaison with the districts. The subseries CP/CENT/ORG/01/09 contains a file on anti-Communist activities of authorities incl. correspondence re police opening of letters and alleged harassment by employers, MI5 infiltration, etc. Creation dates: 1950s. The series Files on non-Communist Party individuals and organisations. [Subseries] CP/CENT/ORG/12/04, contains a fragment of file (surnames beginning with G) of personal notes on alleged fascists and extreme right-wingers. Creation dates: c1943. [Subseries] CP/CENT/ORG/12/07 contains a file on fascist activities incl. copies of fascist literature. Creation dates: c1948-1957. Scope and Content: Letter from Patricia Hunt with information on fascist activities in Birmingham, 1953; reports on local fascist activities of CP districts 1948 incl. report of meeting in Derby market place; letters from J. Tarver on fascist activity in Oxford University, 1952. The series Individual files. [Subseries] CP/CENT/ORG/21/04-CP/CENT/ORG/21/17, contains biographical notes on non-CPGB individuals. Mainly right-wing and establishment figures "A"-"R". Creation dates: 1940s. Central Party records, Miscellaneous central subject files: The central subject files comprise materials generated by ad hoc committees or of unclear provenance at the time that the archives were catalogued. The series Fascism & Anti Fascism. [Subseries] CP/CENT/SUBJ/04/01, contains Leaflets including Speakers Notes No 4 "Jews take away the Britishers Jobs". [Subseries] CP/CENT/SUBJ/04/10 contains British Union of Fascists material (leaflets, etc.), 1930s. [Subseries] CP/CENT/SUBJ/04/11 contains German propaganda from the Fichte Association printed in English, 1930s. [Subseries] CP/CENT/SUBJ/04/12 contains various leaflets from other or unknown fascist organisations including the Imperial Fascist League & the Nationalist Association, 1920s & 1930s. [Subseries] CP/CENT/SUBJ/04/13 contains various cuttings, 1933-1937, reflecting on anti-fascist and fascist demonstrations at Olympia, Hyde Park & Cable Street among others. Includes copy of "The Eye" (Nov 1936). [Subseries] CP/CENT/SUBJ/04/14 contains various leaflets dealing with immediate post war fascism, 1940s-1950s. [Subseries] CP/CENT/SUBJ/04/16 contains leaflets, pamphlets, etc., 1960s-1980s, from various fascist groups including the Racial Preservation Society, the National Socialist Movement, the National Front, National Party, British National Party, Board of Deputies of Jewish Control, & National Front Ex-Servicemen's Association. [Subseries] CP/CENT/SUBJ/04/17 contains newspaper cuttings re various fascist & anti-fascist demonstrations, etc., 1973-1981.

Reference:

Daniel Tilles, British Fascist Antisemitism and Jewish Responses, 1932-40 (London, Bloomsbury Academic, 2015).

Websites with information:

http://www.communistpartyarchive.org.uk

http://www.communistpartyarchive.org.uk/9781851171354.php

http://ah.cheshire3.org/features/0505cpgb.html

Finding aid for Organisation Department:

http://www.microform.co.uk/guides/CP-CENT-ORG.pdf

Finding aid for Miscellaneous central subject files:

http://www.microform.co.uk/guides/CP-CENT-SUBJ.pdf

[0641] Communist Party of the United States of America Collection (CPUSA), 1919-1950's, MSS 357

Location: Special Collections, Michigan State University Libraries, 100 Main Library, 366 W. Circle Drive, East Lansing, MI 48824

Description: This collection of approximately 3,700 titles consists of works published by and about the Communist Party and its front organizations, books, pamphlets, newspapers and mimeographed reports. Included are materials not only from the Communist Party of the U.S.A. but also from a number of Trotskyist groups including the American Workers Party, the Communist League of America, the Revolutionary Workers League, and the various youth branches and front organizations of the Left for the years between 1919 and the 1950's. There are anti-Communist materials from governmental agencies and commercial publishers as well. Among the titles are Conservative Society of America, An invitation (New Orleans, La.?); Conservative Society of America, A declaration (New Orleans, La.? 1961); Ralph M. Easley, His collection ... (n.d.); Ralph M. Easley, What does it mean (1937); John Birch Society, miscellaneous pamphlets (4); and The John Birch Society, From our mail (Belmont, Mass., 1962?).

Websites with information:

http://catalog.lib.msu.edu/record=b5855979~S39a

http://www.lib.msu.edu/findingaids/

https://www.lib.msu.edu/findingaids/

http://spcexhibits.lib.msu.edu/html/materials/collections/radicalism_coll_communist.jsp

Finding aid:

http://findingaids.lib.msu.edu/spc/index.php?p=collections/controlcard&id=195

[0641a] Files of the Communist Party of the USA (CPUSA), 1912-1944 (bulk 1922-1936) (Leiden, IDC Publishers, 2003) [326 microfilm reels]

Description: The Russian State Archive of Social and Political History in Moscow ("Rossiiskii gosudarstvennyi arkhiv sotsial'noi i politicheskoi istorii" or RGASPI) holds 20 million pages of records of the Communist International (Comintern), the agency that supervised foreign Communist parties. The Comintern archive consists of all the records created under the authority of the Executive Committee (ECCI) of the Third Communist International. It contains original documents in more than thirty languages from seven Congresses and thirteen ECCI Plenums, by more than seventy Communist and Left Socialist parties, together with different international organizations. Associated with the Comintern collections are collections of the records of individual Communist parties, including the CPUSA. The CPUSA collection is fond 515, opis 1 (there is no opis 2). Fond 515 consists of more than 400,000 pages of the original records of the Communist Party USA along with other American-related material. The files contain the original incoming mail, carbons of outgoing correspondence, reports from regional and local organizers, and internal memoranda produced by officials and offices of the national headquarters. Contains files on American Vigilant Intelligence Federation, anti-Fascism, Civil Rights in the South, Dies Committee, and Farmers' Holiday Association.

References:

Library of Congress Opens to Researchers the Records of the Communist Party, USA, January 18, 2001, http://www.loc.gov/today/pr/2001/01-007.html; "Red Ink. Records of the Communist Party USA Opened," Library of Congress Information Bulletin, Vol 60, No. 2 (February 2001), http://www.loc.gov/loc/lcib/0102/­red_ink.html; Gifts to the Nation. Americana. Preservation and Filming of American Records in Russian Archives, http://www.loc.gov/bicentennial/gifts/gift180.html; "Comintern Archives: Files of the Communist Party of the USA (CPUSA)," http://www.brill.com/comintern-archives-files-communist-party-usa-cpusa; "Files of the Communist Party of the USA in the Comintern Archives," http://www.brill.com/sites/default/­files/ftp/downloads/31721_Brochure.pdf; Microform Collection: Files of the Communist Party of USA (CPUSA), Yale University Library Slavic and East European Collection, http://www.library.yale.edu/­slavic/microform/cpusa.html; ArcheoBiblioBase: Archives in Russia: B-12, http://www.iisg.nl/abb/rep/B-12.tab5.php.

Finding aids:

http://www.brill.com/sites/default/files/ftp/downloads/31721_Guide.pdf

https://web.archive.org/web/20071214090500/http://www.idc.nl/pdf/353_guide.pdf

Online index to finding aid:

http://www.idcpublishers.info/cpusa/

[0642] Communist Party of the United States of America Records, 1892-2009 (bulk 1950-1990), TAM.132

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 Communist Party of the United States of America (CPUSA) is a Marxist-Leninist political organization that was founded in Chicago in 1919. The collection includes a diverse mix of correspondence, convention and conference materials, essays and manuscripts, internal discussion documents, reports, speech transcripts, research files, printed ephemera, clippings, legal documents, and a wealth of personal papers. Series X: General Files, 1892-2009. Subseries E: Subject Files of Jim West, 1956-2003, contains subject files on American Nazi Party, American Opinion Bookstore, Anti Semitism (Anti-Communism), Aryan Nations Network, Aryan Resistance Movement, Black Legion, Conservative Action Foundation, Exposures of Ultra Right, Ku Klux Klan, Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr., Liberty Forum, National Alliance Party, National Caucus of Labor Committees, National Caucus of Labor Committees (Communist Party, USA, Surveillance of), National Caucus of Labor Committees: US Labor Party, National Committee for an Effective Congress, Nationalist Socialist White People's Party, Neo-Nazis, Religious Right, Rockford Institute, Roster of Ultra-Right Media Names, Major General J.K. Singlaub, Spotlight, The Populist Party, Ultra-Right, Ultra-Right in Education, Ultra Right Newspapers, and World Anti-Communist League.

Reference:

Patricia Cohen, "Communist Party USA Gives Its History to N.Y.U.," New York Times (March 20, 2007), http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/20/arts/20nyu.html.

Websites with information:

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

Finding aids:

http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/tamwag/tam_132/

http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/tamwag/tam_132/tam_132.html

http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/tamwag/tam_132/dscref7847.html

[0642a] The Communist Party USA and Radical Organizations, 1953-1960: FBI Reports from the Eisenhower Library (Bethesda, MD, University Publications of America, An Imprint of CIS, 1990) [microfilm]

Description: During the Eisenhower administration, the FBI, bolstered by public and government support for surveillance of radical organizations, engaged in an extensive program to survey, analyze, and research the activities of various organizations. Radical organizations under surveillance included the CPUSA, the Nation of Islam, the Ku Klux Klan, the Socialist Workers Party, and the National Party of Puerto Rico. Contains copies of The Ku Klux Klan. Section 1, 1865-1944. August 26, 1958, and The Ku Klux Klan. Section II, 1944-1958. August 1958.

Finding aid:

http://academic.lexisnexis.com/documents/upa_cis/10834_CPUSAFBIDDELib.pdf

[0643] Concerned Women for America (Washington, D.C.) Records, 1992

Location: Wisconsin Historical Society, Library-Archives Division, 816 State St., Madison, WI 53706-1417

Description: Concerned Women for America (CWA) is a Christian action group founded in 1979 by Beverly LaHaye and nine other women. This anti-feminist, pro-life organization promotes traditional and Judeo-Christian values through education and legislative programs, and coordinates legal defense and humanitarian relief activities. Included in the collection is a brochure describing the organization, plus a tape recording of a broadcast interview with Carol Everett (identified as a "former abortionist") on the "Beverly LaHaye Live" show.

Websites with information:

http://arcat.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/Pwebrecon.cgi?BBID=11804

http://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/173701926

http://www.worldcat.org/title/records-1992/oclc/173701926

[0644] Minutes of the Executive Board of the Congress of Industrial Organizations, 1935-1955 (Bethesda, MD, University Publications of America, An Imprint of CIS, 1994) [microfilm]

Description: The Executive Board of the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) consisted of the leader of each of the thirty or so unions in the federation as well as top-ranking officers of the CIO itself. The Board met at least three times each year and often as many as six. Major topics on anti-labor include right-wing congressional investigating committees proposed; federal anti-labor legislation; anti-labor legislation in southern state legislatures; anti-union propaganda within U.S. military; anti-labor practices of U.S. companies; anti-union legislation; Ball-Burton-Hatch Federal Industrial Relations Bill; Smith-Connally Act; CIO efforts to repeal Smith-Connally Act; right to labor mobility; CIO opposition to Goldwater anti-Communist labor bill (1954); Taft-Hartley Act; Federal Concentration Camp (Hobbs) bill (1941); Mundt-Nixon bill; anti-racketeering bill as a threat to labor; Smith bill (1941); Smith Investigating Committee; CIO opposition to efforts to weaken National Labor Relations Act; federal bills against unions and aliens; and anti-Communist and anti-labor bills. Other topics include anti-lynching bill, anti-poll tax bill, anti-Semitism, Bricker Amendment, equal rights amendment, and fascism in the United States.

Finding aids:

http://reuther.wayne.edu/files/LR000751_pub.pdf

http://cisupa.proquest.com/ksc_assets/catalog/10791.pdf

[0645] Congress of Industrial Organizations. Organizing Committee. South Carolina Papers, 1946-1953

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

Description: Papers of the South Carolina Organizing Committee of the Congress of Industrial Organizations (C.I.O.) principally relate to efforts to organize workers in the textile industries of the Piedmont region of South Carolina. Scattered papers concern issues such as the Ku Klux Klan and anti-union propaganda.

Reference:

Guide to the Cataloged Collections in the Manuscript Department of the William R. Perkins Library, Duke University, edited by Richard C. Davis and Linda Angle Miller (1980), http://library.duke.edu/­rubenstein/­findingaids/guide/ and http://library.duke.edu/rubenstein/findingaids/guide.pdf.

[0646] Edwin Grant Conklin Papers, 1885-1939, RL.00253

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

Description: Edwin Grant Conklin (1863-1952) was a biologist, eugenicist, and educator. Chiefly family and professional correspondence.

Finding aids:

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

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

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

[0645a] Congressional Papers, 1947-1950

Location: Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum, 18001 Yorba Linda Boulevard, Yorba Linda, California 92886

Description: Richard Nixon represented California in the United States House of Representatives for two terms (1947-48 and 1949-50), serving on the House Education & Labor Committee and playing an active role on the House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC). Nixon's Congressional papers include correspondence with constituents and other government officials as well as documents pertaining to HUAC, the Hiss-Chambers Case and the Herter Committee. Series I: Correspondence, contains files on U.S. Cong. House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) and Republican National Committee. Series II: Lists, News Releases, & Notes, contains files on Hiss-Chambers Case and Mundt-Nixon Bill. Series III: U.S. Cong. House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC), contains files on Mundt-Nixon Bill; Statement of Whittaker Chambers; General Leslie R. Groves, Louis J. Russell, and George Racey Jordan. Testimonies; Karl E. Mundt's "What the Hiss Trial Actually Means" speech; Sorge Espionage Case; Counterattack; and Printed Materials re: Hiss-Chambers Case. Series IV: Grand Jury Testimony, contains files on Elizabeth Bentley, Louis Budenz, Whittaker Chambers, Paul Crouch, Alger Hiss, Robert E. Stripling HUA investigator, Isaac Don Levine, Karl E. Mundt, Richard Nixon, Harold H. Velde, Harry Dexter White, and Max Yergan.

Finding aid:

https://www.nixonlibrary.gov/forresearchers/find/textual/findingaids/findingaid_congressional.pdf

[0647] Edwin Grant Conklin Papers, 1897-1952, C0322

Location: Dept. of Rare Books and Special Collections, Manuscripts Division, Princeton University Library, One Washington Road, Princeton, New Jersey 08544

Description: Edwin Grant Conklin (1863-1952) was chairman of the biology department at Princeton from 1908 to 1933. His collection consists of personal and professional correspondence, documents, manuscripts and notes of articles, lectures, and speeches. Correspondents include James R. Angell, Charles B. Davenport, Madison Grant, Aleš Hrdlička, David Starr Jordan, Frederick Osborn, and Gifford Pinchot.

Finding aid:

http://findingaids.princeton.edu/collections/C0322

[0648] Connecticut State Labor Council, AFL-CIO Records, undated, 1909-1991, MSS 1989.0080

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

Description: In 1957, the Connecticut Federation of Labor and the Connecticut State Industrial Union Council (CSIUC) merged to form the Connecticut State Labor Council, AFL-CIO, generally referred to today as the Connecticut State AFL-CIO. The stated purpose of the new organization was to provide a more effective means of promoting and coordinating the principles and objectives of the AFL-CIO in Connecticut. The collection contains a wide variety of materials documenting the activities of organized labor in Connecticut. Included are the files of several Council officers, proceedings, publications, administrative and financial records in addition to publications and information concerning the activities of the AFL-CIO nationally. The majority of the materials date from the 1950s through the 1980s. The collection contains files on right to work, right wing data, Fascism, fluoridation, the John Birch Society, anti-labor, right wing, subversive activities, and the House Un-American Activities Committee.

Websites with information:

http://doddcenter.uconn.edu/asc/dodda2z/AToZ.cfm

Finding aids:

http://doddcenter.uconn.edu/asc/findaids/CSLC/MSS19890080.html

http://137.99.31.136:8080/xtf/view?docId=finding_aids/MSS19890080.xml

[0649] Connecticut Woman Suffrage Association records, 1869-1921, RG 101

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

Description: The Connecticut Woman Suffrage Association (CWSA) was organized at a meeting in Robert's Opera House in Hartford on October 28th and 29th, 1869. Its primary aim having been achieved with the ratification by Connecticut of the 19th Amendment on September 14, 1920, the Association voted to dissolve itself on June 3, 1921. The CWSA collection not only contains records of meetings, correspondence, photographs and pamphlets, but also numerous scrapbooks that include relevant newspaper clippings. Includes files on Senator Frank Brandegee, who opposed woman suffrage.

Finding aid:

http://www.cslib.org/archives/finding_aids/rg101.html

[0650] Connecticut Woman Suffrage Movement Collection, 1876-1982 (bulk 1906-1925), MS 003

Location: Western Connecticut State University Archives and Special Collections, 181 White St, Danbury, CT 06810

Description: Collection contains Connecticut State Librarian Robert Schnare's research on the Connecticut suffrage movement between 1910 and 1920, and additional information on the movement prior to 1910 and from the relatively recent past. Includes research notes, bibliographies, inventories, indexes, newspaper articles, clippings, and a biography and notes regarding Senator Frank B. Brandegee, who opposed woman suffrage.

Finding aid:

http://archives.library.wcsu.edu/findingaids/suffrage.xml

[0651] Philip Marshall Connelly Collection of Los Angeles CIO Industrial Union Council Records, 1942-1957, Coll. 2015

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

Description: Philip "Slim" Connelly (1903-1981) worked at the Los Angeles Herald-Express and was president of the Los Angeles Newspaper Guild and a leader of the Los Angeles Industrial Union Council (CIO) in the 1930s and 1940s. Collection includes materials about attack on council sponsored personnel on community agencies by right wing; activities surrounding the CIO's protest of Gerald L.K. Smith's visit to Los Angeles, 1945; anti-Mundt-Nixon Bill [requiring the registration of all Communist-front organizations and Communist Party members] campaign photos; and anti-Taft-Hartley campaign.

Websites with information:

http://lgdata.s3-website-us-east-1.amazonaws.com/docs/261/763117/Social_Movements_Query.pdf

http://guides.library.ucla.edu/loader.php?type=d&id=763117

Finding aids:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt2k4017k0/

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt2k4017k0/entire_text/

[0652] Paul Conrad Cartoons, 1963-1969 [cartoons]

Location: Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Libraries, 222 Waverly Avenue, Syracuse, NY 13244-2010

Description: Paul Conrad (1924-2010) was an American Pulitzer Prize winning editorial cartoonist. The Paul Conrad Cartoons contain approximately 1,089 original editorial cartoons from 1963 to 1969. The cartoons from 1963 as well as several from 1964 date to Conrad's time at the Denver Post. The remaining the cartoons (the bulk of the collection) were published by the Los Angeles Times. People and subjects appearing in the editorial cartoons in this collection include abortion, American Independent Party, anti-Semitism, Association of American Physicians and Surgeons, Ezra Taft Benson, civil rights, Everett Dirksen, Dwight Eisenhower, Amintore Fanfani, fascism, Barry Goldwater, Adolph Hitler, HUAC, integration, John Birch Society, Ku Klux Klan, Mark Lane, Curtis LeMay, Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., Clare Boothe Luce, Douglas MacArthur, Lester Maddox, Joseph McCarthy, National States Rights Party, National Rifle Association, Nazism, Richard M. Nixon, prayer in schools, racism, Max Rafferty, Ronald Reagan, right to work law, right-wing extremists, George Lincoln Rockwell, Jack Ruby, segregation, Taft Hartley Act, Strom Thurmond, voting rights, George Wallace, Lurleen Wallace, John Wayne, and Young Republicans.

Websites with information:

http://findingaids.syr.edu/xtf/search?brand=ead;collection=ead;sort=title;titleAlpha=PP;

Finding aids:

http://library.syr.edu/digital/guides/c/conrad_p.htm

http://library.syr.edu/digital/guides/print/conrad_p_prt.htm

[0653] Conservative and Unionist Associations and Clubs, 1892-1985, MS152

Location: Perth & Kinross Council Archive, AK Bell Library, York Place, Perth PH2 8EP, UK

Description: Includes account books, cash books, committee minutes, cuttings books, election information folders, letter books, minutes, and registers of members.

Websites with information:

http://www.pkc.gov.uk/CHttpHandler.ashx?id=14002&p=0

http://www.pkc.gov.uk/CHttpHandler.ashx?id=796&p=0

Finding aid:

http://www.pkc.gov.uk/CHttpHandler.ashx?id=797&p=0

[0654] Conservative and Unionist Party of Great Britain leaflet collection, 1929-1953

Location: The William Ready Division of Archives and Research Collections, Mills Memorial Library, Lower Level, McMaster University, 1280 Main St. W., Hamilton, ON, L8S 4L6, Canada

Description: The Conservative and Unionist Party of Great Britain was formed in 1886 when the Liberal Unionists allied with the Conservative Party although the name was not formally adopted until 1909. The leaflets and other publications in this collection were published by the National Union of Conservative and Unionist Associations, the administrative and propaganda arm of the party.

Finding aids:

http://library.mcmaster.ca/archives/findaids/fonds/c/conparty.htm

http://library.mcmaster.ca/archives/findaids/findaids/c/conparty.htm

[0654a] Conservative catalogs and promotional literature collection, approximately 1960-approximately 1990, P-008 114:33

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

Description: The collection consists of catalogs and promotional materials primarily for anti-Communist books and other media. Other materials cover a wide spectrum of conservative and evangelical Christian topics.

Websites with information:

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/870465632

http://www.worldcat.org/title/conservative-catalogs-and-promotional-literature-collection/oclc/870465632

[0654b] Records of the Conservative Caucus

Location: Liberty University Archive, Jerry Falwell Library - 1971 University Blvd MSC Box 710170, Lynchburg, VA 24515

Description: The Conservative Caucus was founded by Howard Phillips in 1974 for the purpose of advocating conservative causes at the State and Congressional district level. The Conservative Caucus has campaigned against the Equal Rights Amendment, the surrender of the Panama Canal, the SALT II Treaty, and socialized medicine. The Caucus has advocated tax cuts and missile defense systems for America. Howard Phillips also helped to found Concerned Women for America (CWA) and the Council for National Policy. In 2014 the Conservative Caucus changed its name to Americans for Constitutional Liberty (ACL). Record Group 1: Correspondence of Howard Phillips, 1978-1983, contains the business and personal correspondence of Conservative Caucus founder Howard Phillips, including letters, memos, newspaper articles, journal articles, brochures, newsletters, reports and miscellaneous materials.

Finding aid:

http://www.liberty.edu/media/1420/documents/archivefindingaids/CC_RG-01.pdf

[0655] Conservative Collection, 1952-1982 (bulk 1960s), SPEC.004

Location: Ball State University Archives and Special Collections, Alexander M. Bracken Library, Room 210, 2000 W. University Avenue, Muncie, Indiana 47306

Description: The Conservative collection documents the history, policies, and activities of organizations perceived as conservative or the right wing of the political spectrum. This collection includes monographs, newsletters, flyers, brochures, pamphlets, and other ephemera, often with limited distribution. Subjects include anti-Semitism, civil rights, disarmament, foreign aid, immigration, integration, law enforcement, pornography, public welfare, race, religion, state rights, taxation, voting rights, and world government. Monographs, 1960-1964, includes The Secret Government of the United States, by Mary M. Davison (1962); 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]; The Fearful Master: A Second Look at the United Nations, by G. Edward Griffin (1964); Disarmament: Weapon of Conquest, by Robert Morris (1963); Pass the Poverty Please, by Patty Newman (1966); America's Promise, by Dan Smoot (1960); and It's Very Simple: The True Story of Civil Rights, by Alan Stang (1965) [online at https://sites.google.com/site/heavenlybanner/its-very-simple-the-true-story-of-civil-rights]. Newsletters, 1957-1977, includes AIMS Newsletter; Between the Lines; Christian Crusade; Church and State; Common Sense; Counterattack; Cross and the Flag; Dan Smoot Report; Economic Council Letter; Focus/Midwest; Freedom Club Bulletin; Freedom Magazine; Freedom & Union; Heads Up; Human Events; Independent American; Individualist; Intercollegiate Review; Intercollegiate Society of Individualists, Inc., Essay Series; John Birch Society, Bulletin; Liberty; Liberty Letter; Life Lines; Manion Forum Newsletter; National Program Letter; New Guard; News from the Free Society; Notes from FEE; Oklahoma Christian College Letter; Petitioner; Pink Sheet on the Left; POLIS; Reason: A Review of Politics; Report on Freedom; Review of the News; Right Guard; Task Force; Washington Report; Washington Observer Newsletter; and Weekly Crusader. Organizational Flyers and Brochures, 1955-1976, includes Alabama Committee to Support Your Local Police; America's Future, Inc.; American Committee for Liberation; American Economic Foundation; American Opinion; American Eagle Publishing Company; American Bar Association; American Education Council; American Conservative Union; Arkansas Committee to Support Your Local Police; Bookmailer, Inc.; Chamber of Commerce, Fort Lauderdale, Florida; China Policy Study Group; Christian Nationalist Crusade; Christian Educational Association; Christian Information Bureau; Christian Anti-Communism Crusade; Christian Crusader; Churchman Associates, Churchman; Cinema Educational Guild; Citizen's Committee; Citizen's Councils of America; Cleanamation, Inc.; Committee of One Million Against the Admission of Communist China into the U.N.; Committee of Christian Laymen Inc. of Woodland Hills; Committee to Free the Korean War Prisoners; Conservative Viewpoint; Conservative Book Club; Constitutional Alliance, Inc.; Constructive Action, Inc.; Council of 1776; Council for Statehood; Council on American Relations; Crestwood Books; Defender of the American Constitution; Delaware County Christian Laymen's Association; Delmarva to Restore American Independence Now Committee; Earlham College Conservative Club; Factual Reports, Inc.; Free Society Association; Freedom Center; Freedom Information Center Book Store; Freeman Institute; Grand Central Industrial Centre; History Study Club; Honest Dollar Committee; Independent American; Intercollegiate Society of Individualists; International Association for the Advancement of Ethnology and Eugenics; International Youth Federation for Freedom, Inc.; John Birch Society; Korean Cultural and Freedoms Foundation, Inc.; Ku Klux Klan, articles, letters; Laymen's Commission of the American Council of Christian Churches; Liberty Lobby; Liberty Amendment Committee; Liberty Bell; Life Line; Long House, Inc.; MARAH, Inc.; Minute Women of the USA, Inc.; Movement to Impeach Earl Warren; Nathaniel Branden Institute; National Committee for a Free Europe; National Council of Churches of Christ; National Defense Committee, NSDAR; National Council of American-Soviet Friendship; National Education Program; New World Christian; Operation Truth, Inc.; Patrick Henry Group; Paul Revere Associated Yeoman, Inc.; Sons of the American Revolution; State Textbooks Committee; Stop the War Committee; T.R.A.I.N. Committee of Maryland; Truth about Cuba Committee; Women for Constitutional Government; and Young Americans for Freedom.

Websites with information:

http://as20452.http.sasm3.net/academics/libraries/collectionsanddept/archives/collections/rarebooks/speci

alcollections

https://cms.bsu.edu/academics/libraries/collectionsanddept/archives/collections/rarebooks/specialcollection

s/conservative

http://cms.bsu.edu/academics/libraries/collectionsanddept/archives/collections/rarebooks/specialcollections

/conservative

http://cms.bsu.edu/Academics/Libraries/CollectionsAndDept/Archives/Collections/RareBooks/SpecialCollecti

ons/Conservative.aspx

http://as20452.http.sasm3.net/en/academics/libraries/collectionsanddept/archives/collections/rarebooks/sp

ecialcollections/conservative

Finding aids:

http://www.bsu.edu/libraries/archives/findingaids/SPEC004.html

https://cardinalscholar.bsu.edu/bitstream/123456789/196651/1/SPEC.004.pdf

http://cardinalscholar.bsu.edu/bitstream/123456789/196651/2/SPEC.004.pdf.txt

http://cardinalscholar.bsu.edu/bitstream/handle/123456789/196651/SPEC.004.pdf.txt;jsessionid=70CCEF916

0D6EB81EE3C14A5D2F5DBF1?sequence=2

[0656] Conservative Dissent Literature Collection, 1949-1987, Coll. 185

Location: Northwest Louisiana Archives, Noel Memorial Library, Louisiana State University in Shreveport, One University Place, Shreveport, LA 71115

Description: Publications and writings of an ultra-conservative nature. Publications by Americanism Forum (Shreveport, La.), W. A. Criswell, Jerry Falwell, Billy James Hargis, John Birch Society, Carl McIntire, Gerald L. K. Smith, and George C. Wallace.

Websites with information:

http://scripts.lsus.edu/libarchives/collections.php?collection=185

http://web.archive.org/web/20121111022943/http://www.nwla-archives.org/guide/coll019.htm

[0657] Conservative groups clippings 1963-1992

Location: Monterey Public Library, California History Room, 625 Pacific Street, Monterey, CA 93940

Description: On the John Birch Society and other groups.

Websites with information:

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

[0657a] Conservative National Party Papers, 1966-1968, PV 92

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: The Conservative National Party was founded in February 1966 by the Pretoria Conservative Study Group. In the 1966 election it contested one seat unsuccessfully.

Websites with information:

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

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

[0657b] Conservative National Party Study Group Papers, PV 92

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: The Conservative National Party Study Group was established in Pretoria on 5 February 1966.

Websites with information:

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

[0658] Conservative Party Archive, 1867-present

Location: Department of Special Collections and Western Manuscripts, Bodleian Library, University of Oxford, Broad Street, Oxford, OX1 3BG United Kingdom

Description: Established in 1978, the Conservative Party Archive is the official repository for the historic records of the Conservative Party's central organisation, 1867-present, including papers of Conservative Central Office from the 1930s and the National Union of Conservative and Unionist Associations, the Party's grass-roots membership organisation, from 1867, and certain regional records, and a library of published and printed material. The Archive contains thousands of policy papers, speeches, election leaflets, posters and photographs. Conservative Party Archive: Published Material, 1868-2005, Shelfmarks: PUB 1-229, consists of Party publications, including leaflets, pamphlets, campaign guides and journals. The section Conservative Central Office (CCO), 1892-1993, contains, within PUB 27/1, a copy of "Admission of Foreign Paupers" (1892) (reproduced online at http://conservativepartyarchive.blogspot.com/2013/12/the-admission-of-foreign-paupers.html), an anti-immigration election pamphlet published during the General Election campaign in June 1892. Published Material: Conservative Party newsletters, journals and periodicals, 1893-2002, Shelfmarks: PUB A, contains, as PUB 220/1, etc., a file of the Party's official journal of record, National Union Gleanings, published from 1893 to the present (known from 1912 as Gleanings & Memoranda), and, as PUB 214/1, a file of Tory Challenge, Jul 1947-Sep 1953, a Conservative Party newsletter published monthly by Conservative Central Office, under editor-in-chief E.D. O'Brien. Papers of the Vice Chairmen, 1948-75, Shelfmarks: CCO 60/1-4, in CCO 60/1/1, contains Republican National Committee ephemera for the U.S. presidential election of 1956 [online in part at http://conservativepartyarchive.blogspot.com/2012/10/i-like-ike-and-media-events-of-first.html]. Published Material: Conservative Party pamphlets, 1868-2008, Shelfmarks: PUB B, includes, under the section Conservative Political Centre (CPC) pamphlets, 1945-1998, as PUB 165/21, a copy of The Literature of Politics, by T.S. Eliot, with a foreword by the Rt. Hon. Sir Anthony Eden, MP (June 1955); and, under the section Miscellaneous publications, 1878-1989, as PUB 190/8, a copy of Armaments and Policy 1919-1939, The Plain Facts (1945), and, as PUB 190/13, a copy of Solon - A Right-Wing Journal, Vol. 1 No. 1-Vol. 1 No. 4 (Oct. 1969-Oct. 1970). Published Material: Think Tanks, 1943-2006 (58 shelfmarks), consists of pamphlets, journals, and newsletters published by Conservative-leaning think tanks, including files on The Monday Club, 1960-1989, a group which promoted a policy of voluntary, or assisted, repatriation for non-white immigrants; it was ultimately because of its race and immigration policies that the Conservative Party suspended its long-standing link with the Monday Club in October 2001. Monday Club Pamphlets, 1960-89, include Rhodesia: A Minority View, speeches delivered at a meeting on 3 Feb. 1966, featuring the speeches of Lord Salisbury, Julian Amery, Stephen Hastings, Patrick Wall, John Biggs-Davison, and Gerald Sparrow (1966) (PUB 117/18), and Towards a Solution, by Julian Amery (1974) (PUB 117/38). Papers of Swinton College, [Minutes and papers,] 1948-78, Shelfmarks: S 1-17, concerns the administration of Swinton College near Masham in Yorkshire, the third and final Conservative College, and includes correspondence between the Principal and the Governors, various committee meetings, course scholarships, and copies of its published journal. Contains, as S 17, Swinton Conservative College (Conservative Colleges Ltd.) - minute book, 1949-52. Conservative Party-affiliated organisations for which records are held in the Conservative Party Archive include Association of Conservative Clubs, Conservative Health, Conservative Foreign & Commonwealth Council, Conservative Group for Europe, Conservative Councillors' Association, Conservative Future, Conservative Women's Organisation, Conservative Friends of Poland, Federation of Conservative Students, Federation of Conservative Graduates, Junior Imperial League, National Society of Conservative & Unionist Agents, Society of Conservative Lawyers, Young Conservatives, and Young Britons' Organisation.

References:

Archives of the British Conservative Party 1867-1986: A Detailed Guide to the Microform Collections (Reading, 1989); Archives of the British Conservative Party 1867-1992: A Detailed Guide to the Microform Collections (Reading, Primary Source Microfilm, an imprint of the Gale Group, 1998); Ilaria Favretto, "British Political Parties' Archives: an exemplary case," Journal of the Society of Archivists, Vol. 18, No. 2, 1997, pp. 205-213.

Websites with information:

http://www.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/bodley/finding-resources/special/western_rarebooks/?a=77981

http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/wmss/online/modern/

http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/wmss/online/online.htm

http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/wmss/online/modern/cpa/conservative-colleges.html

http://conservativepartyarchive.blogspot.com

Finding aids:

http://www.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/cpa

http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/wmss/online/modern/cpa/catalogue.html

http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/wmss/online/modern/cpa/cco/cco.html

http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/wmss/online/modern/cpa/swinton/swinton.html

http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/wmss/online/modern/cpa/cco/cco60.html

https://web.archive.org/web/20131031122519/http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/wmss/online/mod

ern/cpa/library/pub.html

http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/wmss/online/modern/cpa/library/puba.html

http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/wmss/online/modern/cpa/library/pubb.html

http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/wmss/online/modern/cpa/library/pubh.html

http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/wmss/online/modern/cpa/think-tanks.html

Finding aids to the microfilm edition (Primary Source Microfilm, an imprint of the Gale Group):

http://microformguides.gale.com/Download.asp?CollDocid=9015000&page=1

http://microformguides.gale.com/Data/Download/9015000.pdf

http://images.crl.edu/193.pdf

[0659] Conservative Party (Great Britain) sound recording: The Conservatives: a history of the party, undated, Coll. 77057 [sound recording]

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

Description: Relates to the history of the British Conservative Party.

Reference:

Guide to the Hoover Institution Archives, by Charles G. Palm and Dale Reed (Stanford, Calif., Hoover Institution Press, 1980), p. 53

Finding aids:

http://pdf.oac.cdlib.org/pdf/hoover/77057.pdf

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt0z09r255/entire_text/

[0660] Conservative Party Inc. Collection, 1962

Location: Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Libraries, 222 Waverly Avenue, Syracuse, NY 13244-2010

Description: Conservative Party Inc. (1962- ), or the Conservative Party of New York, is an American political party in New York State. The party was formed in 1962 in an attempt to counter the perceived liberalism of the Republican Party. The collection contains a variety of materials related to the Conservative Party's 1962 campaign. Included in the collection are an interview with David H. Jaquith (candidate for Governor), a press release announcing Jaquith's nomination, campaign literature, and copies of typescript speeches given by Jaquith and Kieran O'Doherty (candidate for U.S. Senator), as well as a series of correspondence.

Websites with information:

http://findingaids.syr.edu/xtf/search?brand=ead;collection=ead;sort=title;titleAlpha=CC;startDoc=121

Finding aids:

http://library.syr.edu/digital/guides/c/conserv_part.htm

http://library.syr.edu/digital/guides/print/conserv_part_prt.htm

[0661] Conservative Party Leaflets, 1946-1974, Shelfmark PP CONS 1

Location: Nuffield College Library, University of Oxford, New Road, Oxford, OX1 1NF, UK

Description: 438 items, including copies of Swinton Conservative College: calendar of courses, January – August, 1969, and Swinton Conservative College: calendar of courses, August – December, 1969.

Websites with information:

http://www.nuffield.ox.ac.uk/Resources/Library/Pages/Political%20History.aspx

Finding aid:

http://www.nuffield.ox.ac.uk/Resources/Library/Documents/PP%20CONS%201%20(Conservative%20Party

%20leaflets).pdf

[0662] Conservative Party of New York State Records, 1962-2004, APAP-060

Location: Archives of Public Affairs and Policy, M. E. Grenander Department of Special Collections & Archives, University Libraries, University at Albany, State University of New York, 1400 Washington Avenue, Albany, New York 12222

Description: The Conservative Party of New York State, also commonly referred to as the New York State Conservative Party, was officially founded in 1962. Series 7: Subject Files, 1962-1986, contains files on Abortion; Accuracy in Media; Actions Speak Louder: The Story of the New York Conservative Party; Alexander Hamilton Conservative Club; America First Committee; American Cause; American Challenge; American Conservative Union; American Council for Free Asia; American Council for World Freedom; American Economic Foundation; American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research; American Fair Play Institute, Inc.; American Friends of Anti-Bolshevik Bloc of Nations, Inc.; American Heritage Crusade; American Independent Party; American Legislative Exchange Council; American Party; American Security Council; Americans Against Union Control of Government; Americans for a Safe Israel; Americans for Constitutional Action; Americans for Effective Law Enforcement; Americans for Responsibility and Patriotism; Thomas J. Anderson; John M. Ashbrook; Spruille Braden; Patrick J. Buchanan; James L. Buckley; George Bush; Busing; Canada; Frank Capell; Captive Nations; Cardinal Mindszenty Foundation; Catholic Freedom Foundation--Anti-Communism; Church League of America; Citizens Against Sacrilege in the Media, Inc.; Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms; Citizens for Responsible Government; Citizens for the Republic; Citizens Legal Defense Fund for the FBI; Citizens Tax Council; Citizens for Educational Freedom--Operation Tax Credit; Citizens Foreign Aid Committee; Roy M. Cohn; Colorado Conservative Union; Committee on Public Safety--New York; Committee for the Protection of Family Life; Committee to Retire Jacob Javits; Committee of One Million (Against the Admission of Communist China to the United Nations); Committee to Free Ken Duggan; Committee for the Survival of a Free Congress; Committee for the Monroe Doctrine; Committee of Ten Million; Communism; Congo; Connally Reservation; Conservatism; Conservative Book Club; Conservative Campaign Committee; Conservative Caucus; Conservative Digest; Conservative Journal; Conservative Party of the United States; Conservative Viewpoint; Conservative Voters' Guide; Conservative Women of America; Conservatives; Constitution Party of New York; Constitutional Party of Pennsylvania; Constitutional Convention for a Balanced Federal Budget; Constitutional Alliance, Inc.; Constructive Action, Inc.; Contras (Nicaragua); Council for National Policy; Council on Foreign Relations; Phil Crane; Cuba; Bella Dodd; Douglas MacArthur Republican Club; Kenneth J. Duggan; Eagle Forum; Lee Edwards; Dwight D. Eisenhower; Equal Rights Amendment; M. Stanton Evans; Evans-Novak Political Report; Family Rights Coalition (Abortion); Federal Bureau of Investigation; Federation of Greater New York Rifle & Pistol Clubs, Inc.; First Amendment; Hamilton Fish, Jr.; Flat Tax; Florida Perspective, Florida Conservative Union, Inc.; Fluoridation; Flying Saucers; "For America"; Gerald R. Ford; Ford Foundation; Foreign Aid; Foreign Policy; Foundation for Economic Education, Inc. (FEE); Foundation of Law & Society; Free Congress Foundation: The Political Report; Free China; Free Enterprise; Free Trade; Free Congress Research & Education Foundation; Freedom House; Freedom School; Freedom Party; , Milton Friedman; Fund for Life, Inc.; Fund for a Conservative Majority; Gay Rights; Gay Rights Legislation; Genocide Treaty; Barry Goldwater; Gun Control; Alexander M. Haig, Jr.; Orrin Hatch; Jesse Helms; Hillsdale College; Alger Hiss; Homosexuality; Homosexuality--Legislation; J. Edgar Hoover; House Committee on Un-American Activities; Howard Allen Enterprises, Inc.; Human Life Foundation, Inc.; Human Events; Independence Party; Institute for American Strategy; Integration of Schools; Intercollegiate Studies Institute, Inc.; International Youth Federation for Freedom; Jacob Javits--Research from Americans for Constitutional Action; John Birch Society; Jack Kemp; Libertarian Party; Liberty Lobby; Liberty Amendment; Long Island Conservative (newsletter); Clare Boothe Luce; Manhattan Right to Life Committee; Maryland Conservative Union; Massachusetts Conservative Party; Morality for Media; National Committee for an Effective Congress; National Committee for Responsible Patriotism, Inc.; National Committee for an Effective Congress; National Conservative Party; National Council for Civic Responsibility; National Association of Manufacturers; National Conservative Political Action Committee; National Committee Against U.S. Recognition of Communist Vietnam; National Citizens' Committee for Fairness to the Presidency; National Alliance; The New Right Report; None Dare Call it Treason--Reviews; NYS Conservative Political Association; Obscenity; Operation Wake Up--Anti-Equal Rights Amendment; Panama Canal Treaty; Patrick Henry Group--Desegregation and Race Relations; Pennsylvania Conservative Union; The Phyllis Schlafly Report; Ronald Reagan; "Right to Life" Organizations; Rocky Mountain Conservative--Political Action Conference; U.N.I.C.E.F.; U.S. Senate Ratings by Conservative Organizations; United Nations; Vietnam--Ad Hoc Committee Against United States Recognition of Communist Vietnam; VIVA (Voice for Innocent Victims of Abortion); and Young Americans for Freedom (YAF). Series 8: Clippings File, 1962-1987, contains files on Lee Alexander; Robert S. Allen; American Conservative Union; American Party; John Ashbrook; Robert Bauman; Bilderberg; Robert H. Bork; Anita Bryant; Pat Buchanan; James L. Buckley; William Buckley; George Bush; Busing; Captive Nations; CPAC (Conservative Political Action Conference); Equal Rights Amendment; First Amendment; Gay Rights; Libertarian Party; Henry Cabot Lodge; William Loeb; Clare Boothe Luce; Marijuana--Decriminalization; Joseph McCarthy; Hon. Larry McDonald; Medicaid Abortion; Mental Hygiene; Frank Meyer; William Miller; Sun Myung Moon; Moral Decline (NYC and NYS); Morality; Rupert Murdoch; National Renaissance Party; National Health Insurance Plan; National Security; Nazi Party--U.S.; Richard Nixon; Kieran O'Doherty; Paul O'Dwyer; Obscenity; P.A.T. (Parents and Taxpayers); Panama Canal; Patriotism; Howard Phillips; Population Control; Pornography; Prayer in School; Private School Aid; Private Schools; Ronald Reagan; Reagan Administration; China Red; Ogden Reid; Republican National Convention (1972, 1976) ; Republican Party; Republican Party National Platform, 1972; Reverse Discrimination; Rhodesia; Victor Riesel; Right to Life; Right to Work; Ripon Society; Julius and Ethel Rosenberg; William Rusher; William Safire; Phyllis Schlafly; John Schmitz; School Prayer; Sex Education; Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn; Sterilizations; Tax Revolt--Proposition 13; Terrorism; Margaret Thatcher; Donald Trump; United Nations; Vietnam; Richard Viguerie; Vouchers; George Wallace; John Wayne; YAF; and Young Republicans. Series 10: Buckley Files, 1963, 1965-80, 1982, contains the records of James L. Buckley and William F. Buckley. Subject and clippings files on America First Committee, American Challenge, American Conservative Union, American Economic Foundation, American Independent Party, American Legislative Exchange Council--Program for State Senators, American Party, American Security Council, Americans for Constitutional Action, Thomas J. Anderson, John M. Ashbrook, Bilderberg, Robert H. Bork, Spruille Braden, Anita Bryant, Patrick J. Buchanan, William Buckley, Frank Capell, Cardinal Mindszenty Foundation, Church League of America, Citizens Foreign Aid Committee, Roy M. Cohn, Committee of One Million (Against the Admission of Communist China to the United Nations), Committee for the Monroe Doctrine, Communism, Connally Reservation, Conservatism, Conservative Viewpoint, Conservative Book Club, Contras (Nicaragua), Council for National Policy, Eagle Forum, Fluoridation, Foundation for Economic Education, Inc., Freedom School, Genocide Treaty, Barry Goldwater, Jesse Helms, Hillsdale College, Alger Hiss, J. Hoover, House Committee on Un-American Activities, Human Events, Integration of Schools, Intercollegiate Studies Institute, Inc., John Birch Society, Liberty Lobby, Liberty Amendment, Clare Boothe Luce, Clarence Manion, Joseph McCarthy, Frank Meyer, National Renaissance Party, National Alliance, National Council for Civic Responsibility, Nazi Party--U.S., None Dare Call it Treason--Reviews, Kieran O'Doherty, Operation Wake Up--Anti-Equal Rights Amendment, Panama Canal Treaty, Patrick Henry Group--Desegregation and Race Relations, The Phyllis Schlafly Report, William Rusher, Phyllis Schlafly, John Schmitz, Richard Viguerie, George Wallace, and Young Americans for Freedom (YAF).

Websites with information:

https://library.albany.edu/speccoll/documentinglabor/apap_listing1.htm

https://library.albany.edu/speccoll/political.htm

http://library.albany.edu/speccoll/list.htm

http://library.albany.edu/archive/women

Finding aids:

https://library.albany.edu/speccoll/findaids/apap060.htm

http://library.albany.edu/speccoll/findaids/apap060.htm

[0663] Conservative Party Pamphlets, 1946-1969, Shelfmark PP CONS 2

Location: Nuffield College Library, University of Oxford, New Road, Oxford, OX1 1NF, UK

Description: Includes a copy of The literature of politics, by T. S. Eliot (1955).

Websites with information:

http://www.nuffield.ox.ac.uk/Resources/Library/Pages/Political%20History.aspx

Finding aid:

http://www.nuffield.ox.ac.uk/Resources/Library/Documents/PP%20CONS%202%20(Conservative%20Party%

20pamphlets).pdf

[0663a] Conservative Party Papers, PV638

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: The Conservative Party of South Africa was a far-right conservative party formed in 1982 when it broke away from the ruling National Party.

Websites with information:

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

[0664] Conservative Party press-cuttings, 1931-1970, MSS.209

Location: Modern Records Centre, University Library, University of Warwick, Coventry, CV4 7AL, UK

Description: This collection of press-cuttings was created by the Conservative Party Central Office. It includes press-cuttings on political figures such as Ralph Assheton, later Baron Clitheroe of Downham; Walter Elliot; (Leonard) David Gammans; Harry Hylton-Foster; David Vivian Penrose Lewis, later 1st Baron Brecon; Gwilym Lloyd George, later Viscount Tenby; Edward Martell, publisher and founder of the People's League for the Defence of Freedom; Frank Medlicott; Percy Mills, later Viscount Mills; Osbert Peake, later Viscount Ingleby of Snilesworth; and (George Edward) Peter Thorneycroft, later Baron Thorneycroft.

Finding aid:

http://web.warwick.ac.uk/services/library/mrc/ead/209col.htm

[0664a] Conservative Political Direct Mail Collection, 1985-1987, GC 1197

Location: Seaver Center for Western History Research, Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, 900 Exposition Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90007

Description: Campaign mail and political publications as well as copies of The Spotlight on Washington and the World, published by Cordite Fidelity Corporation, Washington, D.C. (Feb. 1985-Feb. 1986); New Solidarity Nonpartisan National Newspaper of the American System, published by Campaigner Publications, New York, N.Y. (Jun. 1986-Feb. 1987; and Executive International Review, published by New Solidarity International Press Service (May-Dec. 1986).

Websites with information:

http://www.nhm.org/site/research-collections/seaver-center/general-collections-index

http://www.nhm.org/site/research-collections/seaver-center/general-collections-guide

Finding aids:

http://pdf.oac.cdlib.org/pdf/calanhm/c8028s33.pdf

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8028s33/entire_text/

[0665] Conservative Revolution in Germany during the Weimar Period: Armin Mohler Collection (history of rightist consciousness in Germany during the Inter-War Period)

Location: Special Collections, Hokkaido University Library, Kita-8, Nishi-5, Kita-ku, Sapporo, Hokkaido 060-0808 Japan

Description: Armin Mohler (1920-2003) was a Swiss-born far right journalist and historian of modern Germany and France. The collection contains 5,300 books.

Websites with information:

http://www.lib.hokudai.ac.jp/en/un-eu-oecd/

http://www.lib.hokudai.ac.jp/collections/special/konse-deutsch/

http://www.lib.hokudai.ac.jp/collections/special/konse-deutsch/list

[0666] Archive of Conservative Video Broadcasting [videos]

Location: Berkeley Center for Right-Wing Studies, Institute for the Study of Societal Issues, 2420 Bowditch Street, MC5670, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720-5670

Description: The video archive consists of approximately 2,200 DVDs with content transferred from the videotape collection of People For the American Way (PFAW). Televangelist broadcasts occupy a good portion of the archive, including such television programs as Pat Robertson's 700 Club, The Old Time Gospel Hour, and Falwell Live, among others. In many instances the archive catalog indicates the guests or issues covered on a particular show. The archive also includes speeches by important figures on the Right (e.g. Ronald Reagan, Pat Buchanan); coverage of important Congressional proceedings (e.g. the Bork nomination); coverage of important conservative events (e.g., The Conservative Political Action Convention); and one-off productions on particular subjects by right-wing groups (e.g., Falwell's film on the Clintons, Circle of Power).

Websites with information:

http://crws.berkeley.edu/video-archive/about

http://crws.berkeley.edu/resources

http://crws.berkeley.edu

Database search engine:

http://crws.berkeley.edu/video-archive/search

[0666a] Conservative viewpoint and related ephemera, 1965-1971, MISC 576

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

Description: Relating to Richard Cotten (1919-1998), spokesman for the Committee of Christian Laymen of Kern County, California, and to Richard Cotten's Conservative Viewpoint, a radio program and later a newsletter. Cotten began his radio broadcasts with the following introduction: "This is Richard Cotten, spokesman for the Committee of Christian Laymen of Kern County, California, and wholly dedicated to exposing socialism, commUNism, one-worldism, and any other form of totalitarianism that is undermining our way of life. We are for individual responsibility, for a return to constitutional government, for less centralization of power, for States' rights, and we are for exposing the Federal Reserve. We are for the sovereignty of the United States of America and are unalterably opposed to any plan to surrender our God-given republic to any form of totalitarian rule. Now, won't you join us and take one more look at the ever-increasing evidence that we are indeed being surrendered to a one-world government."

Websites with information:

https://searchworks.stanford.edu/view/4084782

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/122566343

http://www.worldcat.org/title/conservative-viewpoint-and-related-ephemera-1965-1971/oclc/122566343

[0667] Conservative women opposed to the Equal Rights Amendment, 1970-1980, MSS SC 1827

Location: L. Tom Perry Special Collections; 20th Century Western & Mormon Manuscripts; 1130 Harold B. Lee Library; Brigham Young University; Provo, Utah 84606

Description: Papers, newsclippings, flyers, notes, correspondence, statements, and miscellaneous items relating to conservative women's groups. Most of the women were either Catholic or Mormon living in Hawaii. They express resistence to the Equal Rights Amendment and other liberal causes for women.

Websites with information:

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

Finding aid:

http://findingaid.lib.byu.edu/viewItem/MSS%20SC%201827

[0668] Conservatism on Campus

Location: Student Life and Cultural Archival Program, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Room 105, 1707 South Orchard, Urbana, IL 61801

Description: A list of archival materials on conservatism in various campus collections. Includes The New Voice: A Publication of the Conservative Club at the University of Illinois 1962-64.

Websites with information:

http://guides.library.illinois.edu/c.php?g=348250&p=2350886

[0669] Records of Consumers' Research, Inc., 1910-1983 (bulk 1928-1980), MC 3

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

Description: Located for most of its existence in rural Washington, New Jersey, Consumers' Research, Inc., was the first American product testing organization to systematically document the reliability of twentieth century consumer goods. Administrative files. Series 8. Personnel--employees, directors and policies, 1917-1983, contains a file on Personnel: M. Stanton Evans (Board Member). Administrative files. Series 12. Publicity, 1927-1981, contains a file on Publicity: Speeches-J.B. Matthews. General Files. Series 21. Consumerism-Consumers Union, 1933-1980, contains pamphlets, handouts and other information documenting the alleged Communist connections of Consumers Union (CU), a rival organization which was formed by ex-CR associates or employees in 1935. The red scare information is particularly substantial in 1939-1940, when the House Un-American Activities Committee (Dies Committee) released a controversial report--written by Committee researcher and former CR Vice-President J.B. Matthews, on Communist infiltration in the consumer movement--and in 1953-1954 when CU was placed in and then removed from a list of "front organizations" by the Un-American Activities Committee. Several anti-CU broadsides or articles were produced by CR. General Files. Series 30. Government-National Recovery Administration (NRA), 1930-1958 (1933-1934-bulk), contains a file on Senators Borah & Nye Attacks on NRA, 1934-1937. General Files. Series 34. Labor, 1919-1980, contains files on Labor: CIO Communist Link and Labor: Anti-Labor Attitudes and Practices, 1935-1943. General Files. Series 41. Politics-Anti-Communism & Other Movements, 1930-1980, contains files on Fascism; Fascism-Agrarian Distributionism; Fascism in America; Fascism in America-Huey Long; Communism; Anti-Communism; Anti-Anti Communism; Martin Dies Un-American Activities Committee-J.B. Matthews Testimony; Martin Dies Un-American Activities Committee, F.J. Schlink letters to J.B. Matthews; Martin Dies Un-American Activities Committee, F.J. Schlink letters & News Release re Communist Connections in the Consumer Movement; and Senator Joseph McCarthy-Senate Permanent Investigation Sub-Committee. Publications include The American Legion Firing Line, ANR Report (American National Research Inc.), Borger (TX) News-Herald, reprints, 1952 (probably "We Owe a Debt" (April 16, 1952) by J.C. Phillips), The Communist Line Bulletin, Constitutional Educational League Pamphlets by Joseph P. Kamp, Counterattack, Exposure, Fighters For Freedom publications, Guardpost For Freedom (VFW), Headlines And What's Behind Them, Jews Against Communism, The Lewis-Bruce Report, J.B. Matthews publications, National Council For American Education- Educational Guidelines, Summary of Trends and Developments Exposing the Communist Conspiracy, Spotlight (American Legion), and VFW American Security Reporter. General Files. Series 42. Politics-Left-Wing Infiltration, 1930-1980, contains files on Exposé, Friday, Left-Wing Infiltration in Advertising Circles, Foundations (Fund For the Republic), Television-"Red Channels", 1949-1964, and Church League of America. General Files. Series 43. Politics-Front Organizations & Fellow Travelers, 1935-1980, contains files on Highlander Folk School, Uncensored, Attorney General's List of Communist or Subversive Organizations, American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), Federated Press, Foreign Policy Assn., Friday, Institute of Pacific Relations, Keep America Out of War Committee, and YMCA & YWCA.

References:

A Guide to the Manuscript Collection of the Rutgers University Library. Compiled by Herbert F. Smith (New Brunswick, New Jersey, Rutgers University Library, Distributed by the Rutgers University Press, 1964), p. 130, https://rucore.libraries.rutgers.edu/rutgers-lib/41241/PDF/1/; Gregory L. Williams, "Buyer Beware: The Consumers' Research Archives at The Rutgers University Libraries," Journal of the Rutgers University Libraries, Vol. LVII, Nos. 1 and 2 (1995), pp. 25-39, http://reaper64.scc-net.rutgers.edu/journals/index.php/­jrul/article/viewFile/1737/3179.

Websites with information:

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

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

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

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

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/122358315

http://www.worldcat.org/title/politics-general-files-anti-communism-and-other-movements-1930-1980/oclc/

122358315

Finding aids:

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

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

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

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

http://www2.scc.rutgers.edu/ead/manuscripts/consumers_gen1b.html

http://www2.scc.rutgers.edu/ead/manuscripts/consumers_gen1f.html

http://www2.scc.rutgers.edu/ead/manuscripts/consumers_gen2b.html

http://www2.scc.rutgers.edu/ead/manuscripts/consumers_gen2f.html

http://archive.is/QMMm

[0669a] Silvio O. Conte Congressional Papers, 1950-1991, MS 371

Location: Special Collections & University Archives, UMass Amherst Libraries, University of Massachusetts Amherst, 154 Hicks Way, Amherst, Mass. 01003-9275

Description: Silvio O. Conte (1921-1991) was Massachusetts State Senator for the Berkshire District, 1950-1958, and representative for Massachusetts's First District in the United States Congress for 17 terms, 1959-1991. The papers reflect his anti-abortion stance while also documenting his major support for federal funding of family planning facilities. There is much correspondence from both pro-choice and anti-abortion lobbyists and family planning center administrators. Subgroup II. Legislative. Series 3. House Appropriations Committee Files. Subseries 3g-4: Interior Subcommittee, General Subject Tim Shea, 1983-1990, contains files on Abortion Issues, Global Warming, and March for Life. Subgroup II. Legislative. Series 3. House Appropriations Committee Files. Subseries h: Labor, Health and Human Services, Education Subcommittee, 1981-1990. Part 2: Health and Human Services Files (HHS), contains files on Abortion and National Right to Life Newspaper. Subgroup II. Legislative. Series 6. Legislative Subject/Correspondence Files, contains mostly constituent correspondence and the office's response on such issues as the Civil Rights movement, Communism, firearms control, abortion, the Equal Rights Amendment, and federal aid to education. Subgroup V. Office Administration. Series 1: Pat Larkin Files (Administrative Asst.), 1980-1991, contains files on Abortion.

Finding aids:

http://scua.library.umass.edu/ead/mums371.html

http://scua.library.umass.edu/ead/mums371.pdf

http://asteria.fivecolleges.edu/findaids/umass/mums371.html

[0669b] Contempo Collection, 1925-1945, undated, Manuscript Collection MS-0908

Location: Harry Ransom Center, The University of Texas at Austin, 300 West 21st Street, Austin, Texas 78712

Description: Includes letters to the Great Depression-era literary magazine Contempo (Chapel Hill, North Carolina), as well as works by its contributors, mostly addressed to editors Milton Abernethy and Anthony Buttitta. Letters (except where noted) by Harry Elmer Barnes, Charles Austin Beard, Seward Collins, Max Eastman (with enclosure), Lewis Stiles Gannett, J. H. Gipson, Henry Hazlitt, Archibald Henderson, Granville Hicks, Carey McWilliams, Henry Louis Mencken, Gorham Bert Munson, Isabel Bowler Paterson, Ezra Loomis Pound (with enclosures), Edward Merrill Root, George Samuel Schuyler, Dorothy Thompson, George Sylvester Viereck, and Oswald Garrison Villard.

Websites with information:

http://norman.hrc.utexas.edu/fasearch/curatorial.cfm

Finding aids:

http://norman.hrc.utexas.edu/fasearch/pdf/01041.pdf

http://norman.hrc.utexas.edu/fasearch/findingAid.cfm?eadid=01041

[0669c] Contempo Records, 1930-1934, Collection Number: 04408 [partly digital collection]

Location: Southern Historical Collection, Manuscripts Department, 4th Floor, Wilson Library CB# 3926, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27515-8890

Description: This collection consists chiefly of letters from contributors or potential contributors to Contempo (Chapel Hill, North Carolina, 1931-1934), and typescripts of their poetry, fiction, and articles. There is also correspondence of a more routine nature, with booksellers and publishers, and a few clippings, photocopies of articles, and photographs. Series 1. Material from Contributors, 1931-1933, contains files on Donald Davidson, Max Eastman, T.S. Eliot, Havelock Ellis, H.L. Mencken, Gorham B. Munson, Ezra Pound, E. Merrill Root, and George Sylvester Viereck.

Websites with information:

http://library.unc.edu/wilson/shc/findingaids/browse-finding-aids/

Finding aid:

http://finding-aids.lib.unc.edu/04408/

[0670] Contemporary Culture Collection

Location: Special Collections Research Center, Samuel Paley Library (017-00), 1210 Polett Walk, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA 19122

Description: Established in 1969, the Contemporary Culture Collection (CCC) is a source of primary research materials documenting social, political, economic and cultural history as it pertains to minority groups, the counterculture, and the fringe. The CCC includes small press journals, newsletters, and newspapers, books, and pamphlets as well as microfilm, sound recordings, posters, broadsides, and related ephemera. Includes materials produced by alternative, independent, and small literary publishers, political organizations of the far left and right, social reform and liberation movement organizations, alternative lifestyle and energy advocates, and radicals in the professions. There are alternative and radical left- and right-wing press ephemera and polemical writings, along with taped interviews with neo-Nazi leaders and others.

Reference:

Martin J. Manning, Historical Dictionary of American Propaganda (Greenwood Publishing Group, 2004), p. 355.

Websites with information:

http://library.temple.edu/collections/scrc/contemporary-culture

http://asteria.fivecolleges.edu/findaids/amherst/ma1.html

[0671] Contemporary Issues Collection, 1950-1975, D-213

Location: Department of Special Collections, General Library, University of California, Davis, 100 NW Quad, Davis, California 95616-5292 [apparently transferred from California State University, Fullerton, which received it from the University of Nevada, Reno]

Description: Pamphlets, newsletters, and ephemera dealing with contemporary issues such as abortion, capital punishment, and civil rights. Files on 1st Republicans for Ronald Reagan; Alberta Social Credit League; Alert America Association; Alert North Texans (Olney, Tex.); All-American Conference to Combat Communism; Alpha 66; America in Danger; America's Future, Inc.; American Business Consultants; American Conservative Union; American Council of Christian Laymen; American Council of Christian Churches; American Eagle Publishing Co.; American Economic Foundation; American Education Lobby; American Enterprise Institute; American Eugenics Party; American Flag Committee; American Friends of Katanga; American Friends of John Rarick; American Friends of Rhodesia; American Independent Party; American National Party; American Nazi Party; American Party; American Protestant Defense League; American Security Council; American White Nationalist Party; Americanism Educational League; Americans for America; Americans for Freedom; Americans for Katanga; Americans for the Restoration of Freedom to the Captive Nations; Anglo-Saxon Federation of America; Anti-Catholic literature; Anti-Semitism; The Augusta Courier; Back to Africa Movement; Berkeley Fascist; Birmingham Immigration Control Association; Bob Jones University; British-Israel Asso. of Greater Vancouver; Buckley for Senator; California League of Christian Parents; Campus Crusade for Christ; Canadian Intelligence Service; The Catholic Challenger; Catholic Traditionalist Movement; Catholics for Life Inc.; Christian Amendment Movement; Christian Anti-Communism Crusade; Christian Book Club of America; Christian Citizens Crusade, Inc.; Christian Constitutional Education League, Inc.; Christian Crusade; Christian Educational Association; Christian Free Press List; Christian Freedom Foundation, Inc.; Christian Information Center; Christian Nationalist Crusade; Christian Research; Christian Scientists to Combat Communism in the Christian Science Movement; Church League of America; Church of Scientology; Cinema Educational Guild, Inc.; Circuit Riders, Inc.; Citizen's Intelligence Digest; Citizens Committee For a Free Cuba; Citizens Committee of Correspondence; Citizens Congressional Committee; Citizens Councils of America; Citizens for Decent Literature, Inc.; Citizens for Goldwater; Citizens Heeding Righteousness instead of Satanic Tyranny; College Republicans; Committee for Constitutional Government, Inc.; Committee for The Monroe Doctrine; Committee for the Preservation of the Constitution; Committee of 100; Committee of One Million Caucasians to March on Congress; Committee of the States; Committee Russian Slaves of Jewish Communism; Committee to Restore the Constitution; Common Sense (New Jersey); Communist Control Amendment; Communist Party, U.S.A.; Communist Propaganda; Conservative Action Committee; Conservative Book Club; Conservative Coordinating Council, University of Illinois; Conservative Digest; Conservative Party of California; Conservative Party, Kansas; Conservative Society of America; Conservative Thunder, Inc.; Constitution Study Group of North Dakota, Inc.; Constitutional Alliance, Inc.; Constitutional Educational League; Constitutional Government of the United States; Constitutional Provisional Government of the U.S.; Continental League for Christian Freedom; Council Against Communist Aggression; Council for Statehood; Counter-Spy; Crusaders for Economic Liberty; Cup of Cold Water Ministry; Davis Right to Life; Davis Students United for Life; Defenders of the American Constitution; Defenders of the Christian Faith; Defenders of the USA Republic; Defense Legion of Registered Americans, Inc.; Delaware Defenders of the Republic, Inc.; Destiny of America; Destiny of America Foundation (Berryville, Arkansas); Destiny Publishers; Extremist Politics; Facts Forum News; Faith and Freedom Foundation, Inc.; Farmers Liberty League; Federation of Republican Women Los Angeles; Fighting Homefolks of Fighting Men; First National Spirit of Freedom Crusade; For America Crusader (Grandville, MI); Foundation for Economic Education, Inc.; Free Enterprise Federation; Free Men Speak, Inc.; Freedom Center Knott's Berry Farm; Freedom Center, Portland, Ore.; Freedom House; Freedom News; Freedom School; Freedom's Voice; Friends of Free Asia, Inc.; Goldwater; Group Research Report; Guardians of our American Heritage; Gun Control; H. du B. Reports; Hawaii Foundation for American Freedoms, Inc.; Headlines, and What's Behind Them; Heads Up; Herald of Freedom; House Un-American Activities Committee; How the "Levelers" Are Destroying America (an issue of Calling our nation (Hayden Lake, Idaho, Aryan Nations-Teutonic Unity, 1984); Human Betterment Association of America; Human Events; Hungarian Freedom Fighter; IACP International Association of the Chiefs of Police; Independence Foundation, Inc.; Independent American Party; Intercollegiate Society of Individualists, Inc.; Intercollegiate Studies Institute, Inc.; International Association for the Advancement of Ethnology and Eugenics; International Youth Federation for Freedom, Inc.; Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship; Iowa Libertarian Association; Is there a "Radical Right" in America?; Jewish Defense League; John Birch Society; Joseph Dilys; Keep America Committee; Ku Klux Klan; Legion for the Survival of Freedom, Inc.; Let Freedom Ring; Libertarian League; Liberty Amendment Committee of the USA; Liberty Lobby; Life Line Foundation, Inc.; Manion Forum; Maryland Petition Committee, Inc.; Michigan Committee for Economic Freedom; Minutemen; Minutewomen of the USA; Morality in Media; Mothers' Crusade for Victory Over Communism; National Alliance to Keep and Bear Arms; National Americanism Commission; National Associated Businessmen, Inc.; National Association for the Preservation of White People; National Association for the Advancement of White People; National Caucus of Labor Committees; National Christian Association; National Christian News; National Citizens Protective Association; National Committee Against Fluoridation, Inc.; National Conservative Council; National Council for American Education; National Council for the Encouragement of Patriotism, Inc.; National Defense Committee; National Eagle; National Economic Council, Inc.; National Renaissance Party; National Republican Congressional Committee; National Review; National Rifle Association of America; National Right to Work Legal Defense and Education Foundation, Inc.; National Right to Work Newsletter; National Socialist Movement; National Socialist Movement: Great Britain; National Socialist White People's Party; National Socialists White People's Party; National Society of the Sons of the American Revolution; National States Rights Party; National White Americans Party; National White People's Party; New Jersey Conservative Club; New Outlook Publishers; New Party of Florida; New Patriot: Chicago; New Spirit of '76 Foundation; New Yorkers for the Constitution; Nixon for President Committee; Richard M. Nixon; Noontide Press; Occult Americana; Omni Publications; Patriot Party; Patriotic Party; Pink Sheet on the Left; Pitysmont Post; Polish Freedom Fighters in U.S.A.; Pro-American Forum; Pro-Life Students Association at UCD; Rampart College; Reason; a Review of Politics; Republican National Committee; Richmond News Leader; Right, National Journal of Forward-Looking Americanism; Rockford Citizens Committee to Warn of Communist Imports; Russian Slaves of Jewish Communism; S.O.S.!!!, U.S.A., Ship of State; Sacramento Right-to-Life Committee; San Diego Patriotic Society; Sandtown Story; Schmitz-Anderson Campaign; Scientology; The Seventh Trumpet; Social Credit Association of Canada; Sons of Liberty; South African National Party; South, The News Magazine of Dixie; Southern Libertarian Messenger; SPX Research Associates; Statecraft; States' Rights Constitution Press; Steppingstones; Stop ERA; Sun Myung Moon; Support Your Local Police Committee; Tenney Reports; Texans for America; Texas Voters for Enforcing the Constitution; The American Legion; The American Opinion Forum of Ann Arbor; The Aryan Sun - Work-Shop and Broom; The Association to Preserve Our Right to Keep and Bear Arms, Inc.; The Cardinal Mindszenty Foundation; The Catholic Freedoms Foundation; The Center for Libertarian Studies; The Committee for Personal Freedom; The Committee of One Million; The Committee to Warn of Communist Imports; The Councilor; The Crusader; The Dan Smoot Report; The Fact Finder; The Freedom Press; The Greater Nebraskan; The Independent American; The Individualist; The John Birch Society; The National Education Program; The National Sentinel; The Nationalist Party; The Network of Patriotic Letter Writers; The New Patriot Sacramento Area; The New Right; The Northern California Republican; The Patrick Henry Group; The Phyllis Schlafly Report; The Plain Truth; The Quillon; The Review of the News; The San Diego Committee to Support Your Local Police; Showers of Blessing; The Spirit of '76 House; The Summit Sun; The Sword of the Lord; The Thunderbolt; The Truth About Cuba Committee, Inc.; The Truth Crusader; The United States Anti-Communist Congress, Inc.; The University Republican; The Voice of the Martyrs; The Wanderer; The Western Messenger; The White Horse Crusade; Through to Victory; Timber!; Truth and Liberty Magazine; Truth Seeker; U.S. Labor Party; U.S. Nationalist Party; U.S.A. Magazine; Ukrainian Congress Committee of America; United Front Against Communism; University of Alabama Conservatives Club; James B. Utt Washington Report; Voice of Americanism; Voice of Liberty Association; Voice of Truth; Wake up, America; Wallace Committee; We, The People; Western Destiny; Western Unity Movement; Western Voice; White Party of America; Williams Intelligence Summary; Winrod Letter; Wisconsin Patriot; Women Investors Research Institute; Women's Voice; World Union of National Socialists; World Youth Crusade for Freedom; Young Americans for Freedom; Young Men for America; Young Republicans; and Youth for the Voluntary Prayer Amendment.

Websites with information:

https://www.library.ucdavis.edu/special-collections/manuscript/contemporary-issues-collection/

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

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

Finding aids:

http://cdn.calisphere.org/data/13030/8r/c8j9688r/files/D213_Contemporary_Issues_Collection.pdf

http://pdf.oac.cdlib.org/pdf/ucdavis/spcoll/c8j9688r.pdf

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8j9688r/entire_text/

[0672] Contemporary Issues Pamphlet Collection, MS 81-07a

Location: Special Collections and University Archives, Wichita State University Libraries, 1845 Fairmount, Wichita, KS 67260-0068

Description: This collection includes representative samples of publications from many organizations, presenting diverse points of view on 20th century political and social issues. The collection contains over 10,000 pieces. Items produced by the following organizations (and many other organizations) are available in the collection: Alternatives to Abortion International, American Patriots for Freedom, John Birch Society, and Moral Majority.

See also 20th Century American Political Pamphlets [digital collection], http://cdm15942.­contentdm.oclc.or

g/cdm/landingpage/collection/p15942coll11.

Websites with information:

http://specialcollections.wichita.edu/collections/ms/msub-c.html

http://specialcollections.wichita.edu/collections/ms/81-07/81-7-A.HTML

http://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/33081506

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

[0673] Contemporary Political & Social Trends, Subject Files, 1837-1972, Alumni Association, Alumni Archives, Record Series Number 26/21/13

Location: University of Illinois Archives, Room 19 Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1408 W. Gregory Drive, Urbana, IL 61801

Description: Subject Files compiled by Stewart Howe (LAS '28) include articles, maps, sheet music and publications relating to contemporary political and social trends in the United States with emphasis on youth and political activity among other topics. Boxes 1-2, Conservative Groups and Writers, contain files on Anti-Communist Movements of 1950's, John M. Ashbrook, correspondence and articles, 1967, Cinema Educational Guild, 1968-69, Barry Goldwater, 1964, Samuel I. Hayakawa, clippings and columns, 1969-72, National Review in Combat, 1968-72, National Youth Alliance, 1971, The New Guard, 1964-67, Organizations, 1969-72, Publications, 1954-1962, Writers, 1970-72, Young Americans for Freedom, 1965-71, and VIVA. Boxes 8-9, Publications (Sample Issues), contain copies of Common Sense, Human Events, The Thunderbolt: The White Man's Viewpoint, U.S.A., and Washington Observer Newsletter.

Finding aid:

http://archives.library.illinois.edu/uasfa/2621013.pdf

[0674] Archibald Stinson Coody Papers, 1910-1968, Z 1228.000

Location: Archives and Library Division, William F. Winter Archives and History Building, Mississippi Department of Archives and History, 200 North Street, Jackson, MS 39201

Description: Archibald Stinson Coody, IV (1883-1969) served as Mayor of Lucedale in 1915, and was secretary of the State Tax Commission from 1918 until 1940. His correspondence concerns race problems, race relations and politics. Correspondents include Theodore G. Bilbo, James O. Eastland, John Stennis, John Bell Williams, and James K. Vardaman. Subject files on civil rights act, 1957, New Party, states' rights, the Supreme Court, and textbooks.

Websites with information:

http://mdah.state.ms.us/manuscripts/?C=S;O=D

http://mdah.state.ms.us/manuscripts/index.html%3fC=S%3bO=D

Finding aid:

http://mdah.state.ms.us/manuscripts/z1228.html

[0675] Archibald Stinson Coody Papers, 1912-1940, undated (bulk 1923-1940), Mss. 2446

Location: Louisiana and Lower Mississippi Valley Collections, Special Collections, Hill Memorial Library, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA 70803-3300

Description: Archibald Stinson Coody (1883-1969) was a secretary of the Mississippi State Tax Commission, a state agent for insurance companies, and a politician. Correspondence, speeches, and political writings relate to Coody's professional life and his interest and participation in local, state, and national politics. General correspondence (1925-1940) consists of letters from political figures, many by Mississippi Governors and U.S. Senator Theodore G. Bilbo, on topics such as Huey Long, the Ku Klux Klan, James K. Vardaman, and the political treatment of African Americans and a scheme to support the return of African Americans to Africa. Includes copies of The Kourier Magazine (Atlanta, Ga., Knights of the Ku Klux Klan), monthly publication of the Ku Klux Klan, and Biographical Sketches of James Kimble Vardaman, by A. S. Coody (Jackson, Miss., 1922).

Websites with information:

http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/findaid/

Finding aid:

http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/findaid/2446.pdf

[0676] Fred J. Cook Papers, 1958-1967

Location: Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Libraries, 222 Waverly Avenue, Syracuse, NY 13244-2010

Description: Fred J. Cook (1911-2003) was an American investigative journalist and author. He wrote numerous books on political topics, including Alger Hiss, the FBI, Barry Goldwater, the Cuban Missile Crisis, organized crime, the Ku Klux Klan, and Watergate. When Cook's 1964 book Goldwater: Extremist on the Right was published, it—and Cook—were attacked by Conservative evangelist and radio broadcaster Billy James Hargis on his radio show on station WGCB, based in Red Lion, Pennsylvania. Cook sued, arguing that under the Fairness Doctrine he was entitled to free air time to respond to the attack. Papers consist of correspondence, book manuscripts, and galley proofs. Correspondence, both incoming and outgoing, relates primarily to Cook's lawsuit against Billy James Hargis and WGCB.

Websites with information:

http://findingaids.syr.edu/xtf/search?brand=ead;collection=ead;sort=title;titleAlpha=FF;startDoc=61

http://library.syr.edu/digital/guides/ead/subj_list_from_db.htm

Finding aids:

http://library.syr.edu/digital/guides/c/cook_fj.htm

http://library.syr.edu/digital/guides/print/cook_fj_prt.htm

[0676a] Charles Maynard Cooke Papers, 1920-1964, Coll. 68005

Location: Hoover Institution Archives, 434 Galvez Mall, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305-6010

Description: Charles Maynard Cooke, Jr. (1886-1970) was a United States Navy four star admiral. In the 1950s, after his retirement, Cooke was a member of the Aid Refugee Chinese Intellectuals, the anti-Communist Committee of Endorsers of a Program to Govern Our Foreign Relations, and the Committee of One Million Against the Admission of Communist China to the United Nations, and was one of the national endorsers of the anti-Khrushchev Committee for Freedom for All Peoples. The papers consist of correspondence, speeches and writings, reports, dispatches, memoranda, and photographs, relating to American naval operations in World War II, inter-Allied diplomacy in World War II, the defenses of Taiwan, and American domestic and foreign policy. The series Correspondence, 1928-1964, contains correspondence with L. Brent Bozell (Committee for the Goldwater Book); Raymond Leslie Buell; General Claire Chennault; A. K. Chesterton; Chiang Kai-shek; Madame Chiang Kai-shek (Soong May-ling); Committee of One Million Against the Admission of Communist China to the United Nations; Committee to Defend America by Aiding Anti-Communist China (Mrs. Geraldine Fitch); Commonwealth Club of California; Constitution Party (California) (Mrs. Samuel G. (Lena Lee) Clark); Charles Edison; President Dwight D. Eisenhower; John M. Fisher (American Security Council); Secretary of the Navy (and Defense) James V. Forrestal; Senator Barry Goldwater; Congressman Clare E. Hoffman; Stanley K. Hornbeck; Roy Howard (Scripps-Howard Newspapers); Vice Admiral Charles Turner Joy; Congressman Walter H. Judd (Aid Refugee Chinese Intellectuals, Inc.; American-Asian Educational Exchange, Inc.; American Bureau for Medical Aid to China); Admiral Husband E. Kimmel; Senator William F. Knowland; Alfred and Ida Kohlberg (Alfred Kohlberg, Inc.; American China Policy Association; Citizens Foreign Relations Committee); Fulton Lewis, Jr.; Liberty Lobby; Marvin Liebman (Committee of One Million; American-Asian Educational Exchange, Inc.; American Emergency Committee for Tibetan Refugees); William Loeb; Henry R. Luce; General Douglas MacArthur; Minute Women of the U. S. A. (Anita Phister); Admiral Ben Moreell; Vice President Richard M. Nixon; Stefan T. Possony; Admiral Arthur W. Radford; Reader's Digest; George Sokolsky; Senator John J. Sparkman; Senator Robert Taft; H. Keith Thompson; General Albert C. Wedemeyer; Robert Welch (John Birch Society); Major General C. A. Willoughby (Foreign Intelligence Digest); and Young Americans for Freedom, Bay Area Association (James Ashley). The series Subject File, ca. 1937-1961, contains files on Aid Refugee Chinese Intellectuals, Inc.; American-Asian Educational Exchange, Inc.; American Bureau for Medical Aid to Free China; American China Policy Association; American Coalition of Patriotic Societies; Chiang Kai-shek; Committee for Freedom for All People; Committee for the Voice of Free China; Committee of One Million Against the Admission of Communist China to the United Nations; Committee to Defend America by Aiding Anti-Communist China; Communism; Constitution Party (California); John Birch Society; Alfred Kohlberg; Patriotism; Our Country, 1958; Right: A Monthly Newsletter of, by and for the American Rightwing, 1958; and Task Force, 1957.

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf2h4n98wj/entire_text/

[0677] E. H. Cookridge fonds, 1905-1979, RC0033

Location: The William Ready Division of Archives and Research Collections, Mills Memorial Library, Lower Level, McMaster University, 1280 Main St. W., Hamilton, ON, L8S 4L6, Canada

Description: E. H. Cookridge (born Edward Spiro) (1908-1979) was a foreign correspondent, broadcaster, and prolific author. Contains clippings on right-wing concerns, including anti-trade union and anti-socialist organizations; mercenaries; John Banks; private armies, anti-terror organizations; pacifists; Oswald Mosley; National Front; CIA Fronts; Ross McWhirter; National Front before 1975; Lewisham march (National Front, 1977); Nazis and Fascists in Britain; Welsh Nationalists; Scottish "Tartan Army"; American "Ultras": e.g. the Minutemen, Ku Klux Klan, etc.

Websites with information:

http://archives.mcmaster.ca/index.php/literature-and-writing

Finding aids:

http://library.mcmaster.ca/archives/findaids/fonds/c/cookridg.htm

http://library.mcmaster.ca/archives/findaids/findaids/c/cook.htm

[0677a] Calvin Coolidge Collection, 1895-1933 (bulk 1895-1924), Ms. Coll. 19

Location: Special Collections Department, State Library of Massachusetts, 24 Beacon Street, State House, Room 55, Boston, MA 02133

Description: John Calvin Coolidge, Jr. (1872-1933) was the 30th President of the United States, from 1923 to 1929. This collection documents Calvin Coolidge’s work as a member of local Massachusetts government (State Representative and Mayor of Northampton, Massachusetts), as a State Senator, as Governor of Massachusetts, and as President of the United States.

Reference:

Kaitlin Connolly, "Legislative Research: Archival Collections," State Library of Massachusetts Blog, February 29, 2016, http://mastatelibrary.blogspot.com/2016/02/legislative-research-archival.html.

Finding aid:

http://archives.lib.state.ma.us/bitstream/handle/2452/119329/ocm16570871-MsColl19.pdf?sequence=4

[0677b] Coolidge Family Papers, 1802-1932, Doc 215

Location: Vermont Historical Society Library, 60 Washington Street, Barre, VT 05641-4209

Description: The Coolidge family papers are a collection of correspondence, financial and legal papers, and photographs of the Coolidge family of Plymouth, Vermont, 1802-1932. Series V. Calvin Coolidge (1872-1933) papers, consists of Subseries A. Correspondence, 1884-1932; B. Education papers, ca. 1886-1896; C. Financial records, 1890-1932; and D. Miscellaneous.

Finding aid:

http://vermonthistory.org/documents/findaid/coolidge.pdf

[0678] Carleton S. Coon Papers, 1925-1980

Location: National Anthropological Archives, Smithsonian Institution Museum Support Center, 4210 Silver Hill Road, Suitland, MD 20746

Description: Carleton Stevens Coon (1904-1981) was an American physical anthropologist. Coon produced several general and sometimes quite controversial works in anthropology. With Eliot D. Chapple, he published Principles of Anthropology in 1942. Other works include The Races of Europe (1939), The Story of Man (1954), The Origin of Races (1962), and The Living Races of Man (1965). Correspondents of Carleton Coon include Robert Gayre, Carleton Putnam, and Edith Roosevelt.

Reference:

Anthropological Resources: A Guide to Archival, Library, and Museum Collections, ed. Lee S. Dutton (New York & London: Garland Publishing, 1999), p. 163.

Finding aids:

http://www.nmnh.si.edu/naa/guide/_c3.htm

http://www.nmnh.si.edu/naa/guide/jrg446c.htm

[0679] Cooper Collection, 1917-1954 (bulk 1930s), MS 181

Location: Special Collections, The University Library, The University of Sheffield, Western Bank, Sheffield S10 2TN, UK

Description: This is a miscellaneous collection of ephemeral anti-Semitic materials. Some of the items are inscribed F.T. Cooper, a cartoonist associated with the Imperial Fascist League, which issued a number of the pamphlets in the collection. Contains printed pamphlets, leaflets and ephemera, manuscripts and typescripts, and newspapers and newsletters. Includes some 117 issues (of 123 issues?) covering the period from 1st December 1933 to the (final?) issue of 15th July 1939 of the English language version of World Service, published by U. Bodung Verlag in Erfurt and edited by Colonel Ulrich Fleischhauer. Pamphlets and leaflets by Karl Bergmeister, A.K. Chesterton, Robert Edward Edmondson, L. Fry, O.B. Good, Arthur Kitson, Arnold S. Leese, J.B. Matthews, and William Dudley Pelley. Flyer for a book by Harold Sherwood Spencer. Printed letter by Judge H. W. Rogers. Radio Speech by J.H. Blackmore, M.P. Typescripts by H.R. Hoffmann.

Websites with information:

http://www.shef.ac.uk/library/special/specalphae

http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/accessions/1996/96digests/politics.htm

Finding aids:

http://www.shef.ac.uk/library/special/cooper

http://cdm15847.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/p15847coll6/id/127/rec/4

http://cdm15847.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p15847coll6/id/127

https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/polopoly_fs/1.521361!/file/CooperCollection.pdf

[0680] Barry Cooper, Jodi Bruhn and John von Heyking interviews, 1995-1999, 2007C62 [sound recordings]

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

Description: Sound recordings of interviews of associates of the philosopher Eric Voegelin, relating to his life. Interviews conducted by Cooper, Bruhn and von Heyking for a planned biography.

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt3z09r66j/entire_text/

[0681] The Co-operative Commonwealth Federation and the New Democratic Party Records, 1905, 1912-1983, MG 28, IV 1

Location: Political and Public Affairs Archives Section, Manuscript Division, Library and Archives Canada, 395 Wellington St, Ottawa, ON K1A 0N4, Canada

Description: The Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) was founded in August of 1932 in Calgary at a conference which united various farm, labour and socialist groups from across the country into a federal political party. In 1956, after the birth of the Canadian Labour Congress (CLC), negotiations began between the CLC and the CCF to bring about an alliance between organized labour and the political left in Canada. In 1958 a joint CCF-CLC committee, the National Committee for the New Party (NCNP), was formed to create a "new" social democratic political party. The NCNP spent the next three years laying down the foundations of the 'New Party.' In 1961, at the end of a five-day long convention, the New Democratic Party was born and T.C. Douglas (1904-1986) was elected its first leader. The records contain much Social Credit and Social Credit Party material as well as material on Canadian right-wing political parties.

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 aid:

http://data2.archives.ca/pdf/pdf001/p000001492.pdf

[0682] Marcello Coppetti, bb. 244 (1960-1980)

Location: Archivio centrale dello stato, Piazzale degli Archivi 27 - 00144 Roma, Italy

Description: Marcello Coppetti (1926-2003) was an ANSA journalist. The archive is composed entirely of printed material: collections of newspapers, press clippings, flyers and magazines grouped by topic. The ACS library also houses approximately 4,000 volumes from Coppetti's library, including texts on neo-fascists.

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.

[0683] Bayliss Corbett papers, 1970-1989, Coll. 09456

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

Description: The Bayliss Corbett papers is a collection of printed material published by assorted right-wing, racist, and anti-Semitic organizations. It also contains a few advertising fliers for "Censored!" that were produced by Corbett.

Websites with information:

https://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/_files/collection_guides/politics_guide_2009_ed2016.pdf

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/62128890

http://www.worldcat.org/title/bayliss-corbett-papers-1970-1989/oclc/62128890

Finding aid:

http://rmoa.unm.edu/docviewer.php?docId=wyu-ah09456.xml

[0684] Bayliss Corbett papers, 1973-1988, RH WL MS 27

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

Description: These papers of writer and publisher Bayliss "Jim" Corbett (1919-1989) include letters written and received by him from 1974 to 1988, including several of Corbett's form letters and writings in support of conservatism and anti-Communism in American life and politics.

Websites with information:

http://etext.ku.edu/search?browse-creator=cc;sort=creator;route=ksrlead;brand=ksrlead

Finding aid:

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

[0684a] Andrew W. Cordier papers, 1918-1975, Ms Coll\Cordier

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

Description: Andrew Wellington Cordier (1901-1975) was executive assistant to successive Secretaries-General of the United Nations from 1946 until 1961. He was Dean of the School of International Affairs, Columbia University, New York, 1962-1972, and President of the University, 1969-1970. Correspondence, manuscripts, documents, printed material, and photographs of Cordier. Series I: Cataloged Correspondence, contains files on Warren R. Austin, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Milton S. Eisenhower, Alger Hiss, Philip C. Jessup, Henry Alfred Kissinger, Alf M. Landon, Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., John Davis Lodge, Clare Boothe Luce, Henry R. Luce, John J. McCloy, Nelson Aldrich Rockefeller, Carlos P. Romulo, John Sparkman, Cardinal Francis Joseph Spellman, and Kurt Waldheim. Series II: Catalogued Manuscripts, Documents and Photographs, contains files on Philip C. Jessup and Carlos P. Romulo. Series V: The United Nations Period And Related Files. Subseries V.2: Personal Correspondence and Administrative Files of Cordier. Sub-subseries V.2.2: Personal correspondence, 1950-1962, contains files on Philip C. Jessup, Henry A. Kissinger, Henry Cabot Lodge, Nelson A . Rockefeller, and Carlos P. Romulo. Subseries V.3: United Nations Administration. Sub-subseries V.3.5: US Government --Security Investigations, UN Staff Members, contains files on O. Lattimore; US House of Representatives Com. on Un-American Activities (hearing 1949); and US Senate, McCarran Bill, 1953. Sub-subseries V.3.6: Miscellaneous UN Subjects, contains files on Ford Foundation, Foreign Policy Association, Freedom House, and Moral Re-armament. Subseries V.4: The Secretaries General. Sub-subseries V.4.3: Secretary-General Files, contains files on Dwight D. Eisenhower (SG correspondence with); Cardinal Mindszenty (legal issues) 1949; and Ezra Pound (SG letters re status 1957).

Reference:

Guide to the Archives of International Organizations, Part II, compiled by Peter Walne (Paris: Unesco, 1985), http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0006/000674/067454eo.pdf.

Finding aids:

http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/archival/collections/ldpd_4078651/

http://findingaids.cul.columbia.edu/ead//nnc-rb/ldpd_4078651

[0685] Bertha V. Corets Papers, 1930-1965 (bulk 1933-1940), MS-307 [partly digital collection]

Location: The Jacob Rader Marcus Center of the American Jewish Archives, 3101 Clifton Ave., Cincinnati, OH 45220

Description: Bertha Vera Corets (1897-1973) was a wife, mother, businesswoman, and store-owner. Correspondence, reports, minutes, booklets, pamphlets and newsclippings pertaining to Bertha V. Corets' activities for the Anti-Nazi Boycott and as a champion of human rights. Series A. Papers. 1930-1965, contains copies of 1942-1943 issues of News from Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League to Champion Human Rights, Inc. Subjects include Gerald L.K. Smith and The Cross and the Flag, anti-poll tax bill, William Griffin (New York publisher indicted for sedition), Joseph P. Kamp's Constitutional Educational League, Edward James Smythe's National Council for Civil Liberties, and Clare Hoffman.

Websites with information:

http://americanjewisharchives.org/collections/findingAids.php

Finding aid:

http://americanjewisharchives.org/collections/ms0307/

[0685a] Cornell University Lecture Tape Collection, 1970-1995 [sound recordings; digital collection]

Location: Carl A. Kroch Library, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853

Description: The Cornell Lecture Tapes Collection comprises 5,650 presentations (more than 8,500 individual audio tapes) of extra-curricular academic lectures and symposia that took place on the Cornell campus from 1970 to 1995. Includes The Future of Abortion [https://ecommons.cornell.edu/­handle/1813/43503], a debate between Phyllis Schlafly and Sarah Ragle Weddington recorded in Ithaca, NY, by Cornell University, March 14, 1989. Weddington and Shlafly debate the ethical aspects of abortion and the future of legislation on abortion in the United States. Weddington argues that abortion is a woman's legal and moral right of choice; Shlafly argues that abortion is murder and should be made illegal.

Websites with information:

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/63898180

http://www.worldcat.org/title/future-of-abortion/oclc/63898180

Finding aid:

https://ecommons.cornell.edu/handle/1813/42947

[0686] Ruby Pendergrass Cornwell Papers, 1944-2003 (bulk 1950-1969), AMN 1039

Location: Avery Research Center for African American History and Culture, College of Charleston, 125 Bull Street, Charleston, SC 29424

Description: Ruby Madelene Pendergrass Cornwell (1902-2003) was an educator and civil rights activist. It was through her association with the NAACP that she developed close ties with United States District Judge Julius Waites Waring and his wife Elizabeth. Series 2. Correspondence from Judge Waites Waring and Elizabeth Waring, 1950-1967, contains letters which discuss topics including white supremacy and prejudice in the Deep South; the KKK; Southern racial attitudes resulting from segregation; opposition of "segregation profiteers"; civil rights; resistance movements to school integration; opinions on Charleston's News and Courier newspaper; Communist "witch hunts"; "gradualism"; Highlander Folk School; Governor James Byrnes' attitude regarding segregation; South Africa's segregation; possible screening for Communist infiltration of the Charleston N.A.A.C.P.; McCarthyism; the Supreme Court decision in Brown vs. Board of Education; journalist [William] Hodding Carter [II]; the South's desegregation plan; public school desegregation; Emmett Till's murder; "communism conspiracy"; Sarah Patton Boyle's writing a book [eventually entitled The Desegregated Heart: A Virginian's Stand in Time of Transition]; book 58 Lonely Men: Southern Federal Judges and School Desegregation, by J. W. Peltason (1961), featuring Judge Waring; and news clippings regarding the objection to News and Courier editor Thomas R. Waring's receiving an honorary degree from Sewanee, the University of the South.

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. 206, http://www.fjc.gov/public/­pdf.nsf/lookup/judmsdir.pdf/$file/judmsdir.pdf and http://www.fjc.gov/­public/pdf.nsf/f385048e0431aa3c8525679e0055d35

c/2aca63df6e927c7485256a870045907f/$FILE/JudMsDir.pdf

Finding aid:

http://avery.cofc.edu/archives/Cornwell_Ruby.html

[0686a] Correspondence Files of Special Collections, University of Virginia Library, 1931-1990s, Accession # RG-12/11/4.021

Location: Special Collections Department, Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia 22904-4110

Description: The Special Collections Correspondence files consist chiefly of the general correspondence files of Special Collections of the University of Virginia Library and like files of its predecessors, the Rare Book Department and the Manuscripts Department. Series I: Correspondence (General), contains files on Charles Beard, Duke of Bedford, Thomas Hart Benton, Buckley Amendment, Harry Flood Byrd, Sr., John C. Calhoun, Civil Rights Collections, Virginius Dabney, Daughters of the American Revolution, John Dos Passos, T.S. Eliot, Dr. Henry Garrett, Carter Glass, Hitler, Herbert Hoover, James Jackson Kilpatrick, Rudyard Kipling, Libertarian Party, Henry Louis Mencken, Benjamin Muse, Ezra Pound, John Powell, A. Willis Robertson, George Santayana, Sons of the American Revolution, United Daughters of the Confederacy, Ludwig Von Mises, George Wallace, and William B. Yeats.

Finding aid:

http://search.vaheritage.org/vivaxtf/view?docId=uva-sc/viu02299.xml

[0687] Giovanni and Amne Costigan Papers, 1818-1990 (bulk circa 1930-1990), Accession No. 4338-001

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

Description: Giovanni Marie Denis George Costigan (1905-1990) was a history professor at the University of Washington, a staunch defender of human rights, and a leader in the peace movement. The Giovanni Costigan papers include correspondence, notes, writings, diaries, clippings, photographs, pamphlets and publications, and subject files. Subject files on Anti-Communism, Patrick Buchanan, William F. Buckley, Jr., Christian Crusade, Communism on the Map, Debate - Costigan vs. William F. Buckley (Including: Tapes Photos), Goldwater, John Birch Society, Nazis, Oliver North, Right Wing, William Rusher, Edwin A. Walker, George Wallace, White Power, and George Will.

Finding aids:

http://nwda.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv30112

http://digital.lib.washington.edu/findingaids/view?docId=UA19_19_4338CostiganGiovanni.xml

[0688] Howard Costigan Papers, 1933-1989, Coll. 4262

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

Description: Howard Costigan (1904-1985) was a long-time political organizer, researcher, and writer. He was noted mostly for his work as co-founder and executive secretary of the Communist-dominated Washington Commonwealth Federation, and then later as a fervent anti-Communist in both Washington and California. The papers contain a copy of "A Program for American Survival, 1973-1978" by the American Conservative Union, and subject files on Council Against Communist Aggression, Sidney Hook, Richard M. Nixon, Progressive League Against Communists [and Fascists], and Ward Warren (Progressive League Against Communists and Fascists).

Finding aids:

http://digital.lib.washington.edu/findingaids/view?docId=CostiganHoward4262.xml

http://nwda.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv26351

[0689] Lawrence V. Cott Papers, 1964-1975, Coll. 11293

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

Description: Cott was a free lance writer who wrote articles for politically conservative magazines reporting on the activities of political left-wing extremists. The magazines he wrote for included Combat, Human Events, and National Conservative Weekly (1964-1975).

Websites with information:

https://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/_files/collection_guides/politics_guide_2009_ed2016.pdf

https://web.archive.org/web/20160919110928/https://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/collections/guides/politics.pdf

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/77562162

http://www.worldcat.org/title/lawrence-v-cott-papers-1964-1983/oclc/77562162

Finding aids:

http://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/_files/pdffa/11293.pdf

https://rmoa.unm.edu/docviewer.php?docId=wyu-ah11293.xml

[0690] William T. Couch Papers, 1926-1988, Coll. 03825

Location: Southern Historical Collection, Manuscripts Department, 4th Floor, Wilson Library CB# 3926, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27515-8890

Description: William Terry Couch (1901-1988) had a long publishing career at university presses and encyclopedia companies. From Couch's later years, there are letters from conservative thinkers such as William F. Buckley and Russell Kirk and writings by Couch about his anti-Communist sentiments. In letters to Henry E. Garrett and to J. J. Kilpatrick, Couch also expressed his support for segregation and his unhappiness with liberal propaganda. Among the other correspondents are Kenneth Colegrove, David S. Collier (the editor of Modern Age: A Quarterly Review), Willmoore Kendall, Henry Regnery, Richard M. Weaver, and Robert H. W. Welch, Jr. Series 5. Center for American Studies, 1963-1964, contains files on David Hoggan and R. J. Rushdoony.

Websites with information:

http://library.unc.edu/wilson/shc/findingaids/browse-finding-aids/

http://www2.lib.unc.edu/mss/inv/c/

http://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/27190223

http://www.worldcat.org/title/william-t-couch-papers-1926-1988/oclc/27190223

Finding aid:

http://www2.lib.unc.edu/mss/inv/c/Couch,William_T.html

[0691] Father Coughlin Broadcasts, 1937-1940, 1978 [sound recordings; digital collection]

Description: Titles include "A Living Wage Pt 1," "A Living Wage Pt 2," "An Appeal to the Laboring Man," "Bonds and Neutrality," "Bonds Federal Reserve Bank," "Cash and Carry Will Evolve into Credit and Carry," "Concerns to the Christian Family," "Czechoslovakia Problem Is in America," "Declaration and Washington Farewell," "Discussing a Christian Front," "Easter Broadcast," "FDR Message to Congress," "Feast of Christmas," "Government by Man," "History of Holy Week," "I Take My Stand," "Jews Support Communism," "More Bonds," "Mother's Challenge to Warmongers," "Nation Wide Anti War Context," "No Father Coughlin Announcements," "No Prosperity in Machinegunning Our Brothers in Christ," "The Popular Front," "Popular Front vs Christian Front," "Primer on Communism vs Christianity," "Propaganda at Work" (Sunday, May 7, 1939; text online at https://repository.library.nd.edu/view/984/000741043.pdf], "Recap of Previous Week," "Relief That Fails to Relieve," "Response to Elliott Roosevelt," "The Resurrection," "Review of past 10 Years," "So this Is Democracy," "Start of Flower," "Still Paying for WW1," "Strict Neutrality and No Cash and Carry," "To the Laboring Men" (Sunday, August 13, 1939; text online at https://repository.library.nd.edu/view/1021/000746244.pdf], "Unjust Aggressors," and "Where Do We Stand."

Finding aids:

https://archive.org/details/Father_Coughlin

http://otrsignal.com/htdocs/cat/index.php?n3=65_547789979&pwd=TXVzaWMsIFZhcmlldHkgU2hvd3MsIFR

hbGsgU2hvd3MsIEVkdWNhdGlvbmFsLw%3D%3D&d=0

[0692] Father Charles Edward Coughlin Collection, MS25

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

Description: The Father Coughlin Collection consists of materials collected by Sheldon Marcus, Coughlin's biographer. It contains Marcus's typescript, interviews with people who knew Coughlin, a tape of one of his broadcasts, and the topical files Marcus created for writing his biography. Correspondence files from people who knew Coughlin are also included.

Reference:

Michael R. Beschloss, Kennedy and Roosevelt: The Uneasy Alliance (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1980)Ronald H. Carpenter, Father Charles E. Coughlin: Surrogate Spokesman for the Disaffected (Westport, Conn. and London: Greenwood Press, 1998); Victoria Marie Harwood, "Reexamining a National Disaster: The Local Charles E. Coughlin and the Community's Response" (M.A., Bowling Green State University, 2016), https://etd.ohiolink.edu/!etd.send_file?accession=bgsu1460070904&disposition=inline.

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/coughlin.pdf

http://web.archive.org/web/20100607153732/http://www.library.northwestern.edu/spec/pdf/coughlin.pdf

[0693] Charles E. Coughlin Collection

Location: Royal Oak Public Library, 222 E. Eleven Mile, Royal Oak, MI 48067

Description: Includes clippings on Father Charles E. Coughlin (1891-1979) from an unknown local newspaper (April 1933) and from such papers as the Daily Tribune (1937-1942) and the Detroit News (1969).

Reference:

Victoria Marie Harwood, "Reexamining a National Disaster: The Local Charles E. Coughlin and the Community's Response" (M.A., Bowling Green State University, 2016), https://etd.ohiolink.edu/!etd.send_file?accession=bg

su1460070904&disposition=inline.

[0694] Charles E. Coughlin Collection, 1909-1979, 2016.3129 (NMAH Acc.)

Location: Archives Center, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution, P.O. Box 37012, Suite 1100, MRC 601, Constitution Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20013-7012

Description: Father Charles E. Coughlin (1891-1979) was a controversial Catholic priest, based in Royal Oak, Michigan, who broadcast a weekly radio show from 1926-1940, in which he criticized immigrants, bankers, Communists, Jews, and other groups. He also published a weekly paper called "Social Justice", starting in 1936. He was eventually forced off the airwaves and spent the rest of his life presiding over his parish in Michigan, though he continued to publish. The collection contains 136 books, booklets, published sermons, published lectures, pamphlets, and other printed materials. Of these, 57 were written by Coughlin. The rest relate to him directly or have chapters or passages relating to him. Additionally, there are periodicals, including newspaper and magazine articles, and a full set of Coughlin's weekly publication, "Social Justice", 1936-1942; other periodicals such as William Dudley Pelley's weekly "Liberation Journal", 1938-1948; a few copies of Henry Ford's "Dearborn Independent"; original photographs, including images of Coughlin and of his church; letters; copies of the FBI's files on Coughlin; and (non-original) recordings of his broadcasts.

Finding aid:

http://collections.si.edu/search/tag/tagDoc.htm?recordID=siris_arc_381346

[0695] Charles Coughlin Collection, 1930-1940, CGH

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

Description: Charles E. Coughlin (1891-1979), a Roman Catholic Priest of the Archdiocese of Detroit, became famous as a radio preacher. 62 booklets containing radio sermons and lectures. Also includes The Challenge of the Pact and Social Justice: What of the Future? by Reverend Edward Lodge Curran (1939), Father Coughlin - His "Facts" and Arguments (United Jewish Council, 1939), and An Answer to Father Coughlin's Critics (1940).

Websites with information:

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

Finding aids:

http://archives.nd.edu/findaids/ead/html/CGH.htm

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

[0696] Father Charles E. Coughlin Collection, 1932-1936, C43

Location: Special & Digital Collections, University of South Florida Tampa Library, 4202 East Fowler Ave., LIB122, Tampa, Florida 33620

Description: This collection primarily contains published monographs and pamphlets of sermons delivered by Father Coughlin between 1932 and 1936. Writings by Coughlin on social and economic justice are also included, in addition to printed fundraising correspondence, application and pledge forms for the National Union for Social Justice, and postcards featuring the Shrine of the Little Flower. Publications include The New Deal and the New Men, a lecture by Charles Coughlin from March 12, 1933, and The Secret is Out, a sermon by Coughlin from February 14, 1932.

Websites with information:

http://digital.lib.usf.edu/eads/all/table/4

Finding aid:

http://digital.lib.usf.edu/SFS0031921

[0696a] Father Charles Coughlin FBI Files, 1936-1974 (bulk 1942-1944), UP001842

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

Description: Sympathy for the fascist politics of Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini resulted in security investigations by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). His papers consist of photocopies, obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, of communications produced by the FBI during these investigations.

Websites with information:

http://reuther.wayne.edu/guides.html

http://reuther.wayne.edu/abstracts?page=3

http://reuther.wayne.edu/pdf/fall10.pdf

Finding aids:

http://reuther.wayne.edu/node/6557

http://reuther.wayne.edu/files/UP001842.pdf

https://web.archive.org/web/20120902060222/https://www.reuther.wayne.edu/files/UP001842.pdf

[0696b] Charles Edward Coughlin fonds, 1911-1979

Location: University of St Michael's College Archives, 81 St. Mary Street, Toronto, Ontario M5S 1J4, Canada

Description: Charles Edward Coughlin (1891-1979), alumnus of St. Michael's College (1911) was ordained a priest of the Congregation of St. Basil and later transferred to the Archdiocese of Detroit. This fonds contains memorabilia, photos, and audio visual (broadcast discourse April 4, 1937).

Websites with information:

http://www.archeion.ca/charles-edward-coughlin-fonds

[0696c] Charles E. Coughlin Sermons and Sunday Evening Radio Addresses, 1930-1940, DA 2; C854; S486; Box

Location: Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan, 1150 Beal Ave., Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2113

Description: Father Charles E. Coughlin was Roman Catholic priest, renowned as founder and pastor of the Shrine of the Little Flower in Royal Oak, Michigan. Father Coughlin gained a wide following for his Sunday afternoon radio addresses on political and economic subjects. Coughlin was a vocal opponent of Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal. The collection consists of 112 published sermons and Sunday evening radio addresses given by Father Coughlin in the period 1930-1940.

Websites with information:

http://bentley.umich.edu/EAD/ead_cd.htm

Finding aids:

http://quod.lib.umich.edu/b/bhlead/umich-bhl-02156?rgn=main;view=text

http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/f/findaid/findaid-idx?c=bhlead;id=navbarbrowselink;cginame=findaid-idx;cc=bhlead;view=reslist;subview=standard;didno=umich-bhl-02156

[0697] E. Merton Coulter pamphlet collection, 1830s-1980s, ms2334

Location: Hargrett Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Russell Special Collections Building, University of Georgia, 300 S. Hull Street, Athens, GA 30602

Description: Ellis Merton Coulter (1890-1981) began teaching at the University of Georgia in 1919. He became head of the history department in 1941 and retired as professor emeritus in 1958. Contains examples of Populist literature, 1873-1910; Horace Greeley speeches on Virginia and the KKK, 1872; campaign bulletins, brochures, articles and speeches by and about Herbert Hoover, 1925-1936; Georgia political ephemera, circa 1915-1938, including Eugene Talmadge; and pamphlets by Garet Garrett, Peter Viereck, and James P. Warburg. Also contains copies of Tom P. Brady, "A Review of Black Monday," Association of Citizen's Councils of Mississippi, Winona, Miss., 1954 [online at http://digilib.usm.edu/­cdm/ref/collection/­manu/id/1778]; Edith Essig, "Ghosts of A Dead Era Live Again" and "Long Shadows on The New Year," Keeping The Record Straight, Glendale, Ariz., January and February 1970; and W.H. Harvey, Financial School, Coin Pub. Co., Chicago, Ill., Vol. 1, No.3, June, 1894.

Finding aid:

http://hmfa.libs.uga.edu/hmfa/view?docId=ead/ms2334-ead.xml

[0698] Kent Courtney Collection, 1800s-1990s (bulk 1960s)

Location: Northwestern State University Libraries, Northwestern State University, Watson Memorial Library, Natchitoches, LA 71497

Description: The bulk of the materials include correspondence, audiotapes, newspapers and pamphlets pertaining to Kent Courtney's conservative, anti-Communist political agenda. The bulk of the items date from the 1960s. The majority of the audiotapes document Courtney's weekly radio broadcasts and are reel-to-reel format (see separate index). Information on Bruce Alger, American Coalition of Patriotic Societies, American Flag Committee, The American Volunteer Group, Americans for Freedom, Tom Anderson, Ezra Taft Benson, Hilaire du Berrier, John Birch Society, Brainwashing, Sen. Styles Bridges, Major Edgar Bundy, Canadian Intelligence Service, Citizens Councils, Communism, Communism on the Map, Richard Cotton, Counter Attack, Dan Smoot Report, Representative William Jennings Bryan Dorn, Dr. Medford Evans, Facts Forum News, Governor Orval Faubus, fluoridation, Foundation For Economic Education, Devin Garrity, Kenneth Goff, Barry Goldwater, Frank Hanighen, Billy James Hargis, Congressman Edgar Hiestand, Independent American, Sen. William E. Jenner, J. Bracken Lee, Let Freedom Ring, Liberty Amendment, Lester Maddox, Clarence Manion, Manion Forum, Sen. Joseph McCarthy, North Carolina Defenders of States' Rights, Revilo Oliver, Panama Canal, Herbert Philbrick, Eddie Rickenbacker, Right To Work Committee, John Rousselot, Dan Smoot, State Rights Convention, State Rights Party, Willis E. Stone, Task Force, General Edwin A. Walker, Governor George Wallace, Albert Wedemeyer, Robert Welch, and Felix Wittmer.

Reference:

Jeffrey H. Caufield, General Walker and the Murder of President Kennedy: The Extensive New Evidence of a Radical-Right Conspiracy (Moreland Press, 2015).

Finding aids:

http://library.nsula.edu/assets/CGHRC_Finding/courtneykent.htm

http://web.archive.org/web/20070927234833/http://www.nsula.edu/watson_library/cghrc_core/courtney_kent.htm

[0699] Helen Courtois Collection, 1950s, RH WL MS 12

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

Description: Helen Courtois was the secretary and founder of the Keep America Committee, an anti-Communist organization based in Los Angeles which was active in the 1950s. The Committee acted as a reprint service, reproducing and disseminating articles from far-right publications. Courtois was also involved in Mankind United, a religious cult active during the World War II era. This collection of her papers reflects her participation in these organizations, as well as a collection of newspapers, newsletters, and other sociopolitical pamphlets and documents. The collection also contains correspondence to Courtois from several of these organizations. Files on Beacon Light Herald, Canadian Intelligence, Christian Veterans of America, Destiny Magazine, National Economic Council, Educational Reviewer, Georgia Tribune, Human Events, John Birch Society, Alfred Kohlberg, Mankind United, Patriotic Research Bureau, Wesley Swift, Task Force, Strom Thurmond, W. Henry MacFarland, Jr., and Women's Voice.

Websites with information:

http://etext.ku.edu/search?browse-creator=cc;sort=creator;route=ksrlead;brand=ksrlead

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/181100148

http://www.worldcat.org/title/helen-courtois-papers/oclc/181100148

Finding aids:

http://hdl.handle.net/10407/5358361803

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

[0700] Carl Alford Cowan Papers, 1950-1971

Location: East Tennessee History Center (on loan from the College Archives, Knoxville College Library), 601 S Gay St, Knoxville, TN 37902

Description: Carl Alford Cowan (1902-1985) was an attorney who handled litigation to desegregate several school systems in East Tennessee and other places. The papers contain every issue of The Knoxville Journal and News Sentinel that mentioned the school desegregation issue in Knoxville between 1954 and 1972; transcripts of segregationist speeches made by Asa Carter and John Kasper on Sept. 30, 1956, when the White Citizens Council was organized at the Diehl farm on Callahan Road in Knox County; and files that refer to Clinton, Tenn.

References:

Robert Booker, "Booker: Carl Alford Cowan's treasured collection," Knoxville News Sentinel, Oct 28, 2008, http://www.knoxnews.com/opinion/columnists/booker-carl-alford-cowans-treasured-collection; Rachel L. Martin, "Riding the research high," May 13, 2009, http://rachelmartin.wordpress.com/2009/05/13/riding-out-the-research-high/.

Websites with information:

http://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/70972036

[0701] A. Eugene Cox Papers, 1953-1968, Small Manuscripts (b1976.3) [digital collection]

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

Description: A. Eugene Cox (1905-1992) was former resident director of Providence Cooperative Farm, Holmes County, Mississippi, and later executive director of the Delta Foundation. The papers include newspaper clippings from 1955 discussing a mass meeting under the auspices of the pro-segregation White Citizens Councils in which Cox and Dr. David R. Minter were "invited" to leave Holmes County for allegedly teaching racial integration. The clippings include John Herbers, "Citizens Councils Behind Tchula 'Protest' Meeting," ca. Sept. 28, 1955; "Angry Citizens Ask White Men to Leave. Pair Accused of Advocating Racial Integration in Holmes County," ca. Sept. 29, 1955; "Memo To Some Holmes Countians" [editorial], Delta Democrat-Times, Friday, Sept. 30, 1955; Kenneth Toler, "[missing text] Over Farm Project Activities," ca. Sept. 30, 1955; Tom Karsell, "Accused Holmes Men Deny 'Red' Charges; Claim They Not Listed As Subversives," ca. late Sept. 1955; W.F. Minor, "Cox, Minter 'Bewildered' at Requests by Citizens," Times-Picayune, ca. Oct. 2, 1955; and "Elders Ask Minister to Resign in Durant," Commercial Appeal, ca. Oct. 7, 1955.

Websites with information:

http://www.olemiss.edu/depts/general_library/archives/finding_aids/MUM00400.html

http://www.library.olemiss.edu/guides/archives_subject_guide/civil-rights?page=show

Finding aid for digital collection (from the Civil Rights Archive, University of Mississippi):

http://clio.lib.olemiss.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/A.%20Eugene%20Cox%20Papers,%201953-1968%20(in

%20Small%20Manuscripts%201976)/mode/exact

http://clio.lib.olemiss.edu/cdm/search/collection/civ_rights/searchterm/a.%20eugene%20cox%20papers%2C

%201953-1968%20(in%20small%20manuscripts%201976)/field/origin/mode/all/conn/and/­order/title/ad

/asc

[0702] Allen Eugene Cox papers, 1880-1996 (bulk 1935-1987), MSS.45

Location: Special Collections Department, Mississippi State University Libraries, 395 Hardy Rd, P.O. Box 5408, Mississippi State, MS 39762-5408

Description: Cox (1905-1992) was former resident director of Providence Cooperative Farm, Holmes County, Mississippi, and later executive director of the Delta Foundation. The papers include correspondence, ledgers, newspaper clippings, publications, photographs and films. Series 1. Original Accession, 1967-1970, contains files on Alabama State Sovereignty Commission; Association of Christian Conservatives; Ross Barnett; Byron De La Beckwith; Letter: Hodding Carter to Cox, 12/8/1965; 'The Southern Patriot,' July 1946; Report on White Citizens' Councils by H. L. Mitchell, 1956; 'A Christian View on Segregation' by Rev. G.T. Gillespie, 1954 [online at http://digilib.usm.edu/cdm/ref/collection/­manu/id/1880]; Circuit Riders; a copy of The Citizens' Council; Communism-Socialism; Senator James O. Eastland; Oliver Emmerich, "A Positive Plan to Help Solve Our Racial Dilemma," Editorial, State Times, Jackson, Mississippi, Nov. 3, 1961; Federation for Constitutional Government; Percy Greene; Group Research Report; Highlander Folk School; "Highlander Folk School Communist Training School, Monteagle, Tenn." (Georgia Commission on Education, 1957); John Kasper; Ku Klux Klan; "McCarthy: A Documented Record," The Progressive, Vol. 18, No. 4, April 1954 [online at http://content.wisconsinhistory.org/cdm/ref/collection/­tp/id/63472]; Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission; National Council of Churches-Air Force Manual; Form letter from R. B. Patterson, Secretary, Citizens' Council; Robert L. Rands, "A Mississippi Anthropologist Takes a Scientific Look at Putnam's 'Race and Reason,'" The Chronicle, Pascagoula and Moss Point, Miss., Jan. 21-24, 1963; a copy of 'Rebel Underground'; A Review of Black Monday, by Judge Tom Brady (1954); John C. Satterfield; School Desegregation-Mississippi; address by William J. Simmons, 2/3/1958; correspondence (copies): W. J. Simmons (Pres. of Citizens' Council Forum Inc. (Miss.)) to Erle Johnston, Jr. (Dir. of Miss. State Sovereignty Commission); Senator John Stennis; White Christian Protective and Legal Defense Fund; White Citizens' Council-Alabama; White Citizens' Council-Arkansas; White Citizens' Councils; White Citizens' Councils-Freedom Rides-Reverse, 1962; White Citizens' Councils-Jackson Mississippi; White Citizens' Councils-Tennessee; White Citizens' Legal Fund, Greenwood, Mississippi; The Woman Constitutionalist, Feb. 6, 1965; Press release by Mary D. Cain, president, Miss. Women for Constitutional Government. Series 2. 1971 Addendum, contains files on Citizens Council; xerox copy of 'The Klan Ledger', July, 1965; xerox copy of 'The Klansman'; Ku Klux Klan; and School Desegregation. Series 3. 1972 Addendum, contains files on Americans for the Preservation of the White Race, Byron De La Beckwith, and Governor George Wallace. Series 4. 1973 Addendum, contains files on Citizen's Councils, 1955-1972, including a copy of Reese Cleghorn, Radicalism: Southern Style. A Commentary on Regional Extremism of the Right, Southern Regional Council, 1968; National States Rights Party, 1972 and undated, including copies of "The Historical Documentation of the Benjamin Franklin Statement", pub. by Dr. Edward R. Fields, Georgia, and J.B. Stoner, "Christ Not a Jew---"; John Birch Society, 1961-1971, with clippings, pamphlets, lists of right wing radio programs, lists of right wing periodicals; Churches Burned, 1964-1970; Group Research, 1963-1968, including copies of 'Group Research Report', vol.2, nos. 11-15, 18-24, 1963; vol. 3, nos. 1-3, 6,7,12-19, 1964; Vol. 5, nos. 18-22, 1966; Vol. 6, nos. 2-10, 12-20, 22-24, 1967; Vol. 7, nos. 4-11, 1968; Ku Klux Klan: 1, 1939-1972; Ku Klux Klan: 2, 1972, with copies of Fiery Cross, Vol. 7, No. 1, 3-12, 1972; Governor George Wallace, American Party: 1, 1972, with a copy of Gary Allen, None Dare Call It Conspiracy, 1972; Governor George Wallace, American Party: 2, 1972; Governor George Wallace, American Party: 3, 1972; Governor George Wallace, American Party: 4, 1972; Mass Meeting-J.P. Coleman, 1955; Cox & Minter-Holmes County: 1, 1955; Cox & Minter-Holmes County: 2, 1955-1957; and Mass Meeting-Minter & Cox, 1955-1986. Series 5. 1974 Addendum, contains files on Governor John Bell Williams, 1968-1972; School desegregation: 1, 1963-1973; School desegregation: 2, 1964-1973; Ku Klux Klan, 1961-1973, with copies of Fiery Cross, Vol. 7, No. 5, 6, 1972; Vol. 8, No. 1-6, 1973; Citizens' Council, 1972-1973; Governor George Wallace, 1972-1973; Greenwood, Mississippi: 1, 1960-1973, with clippings on De La Beckwith, race relations; and The Thunderbolt, No. 153-167, 972 September-1973 December. Series 6. 1975 Addendum, contains files on Governor George Wallace, The Thunderbolt, and Ku Klux Klan. Series 7. 1978 Addendum, contains files on Byron De La Beckwith, Ku Klux Klan, Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission, The Thunderbolt, and George A. McNeely, "For God and Country: The True Story of the Ku Klux Klan." Series 8. 1996 Addendum, contains files on A Compilation of Public Records: 42% of the Unitarian Clergymen and 450 Rabbis (Circuit Riders, Inc., 1961); copies of The Thunderbolt, States' Rights Voters League Quarterly Report, The Monitor, and pro- and anti-Klan literature; Ross Barnett; a copy of a Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission report; Communism; race relations; and Senator James O. Eastland.

Websites with information:

http://library.msstate.edu/specialcollections/manuscripts/fulllist.php

http://library.msstate.edu/charm/manuscripts

http://www.lib.msstate.edu/specialcollections/collections/manuscripts/civilrights/

http://lib.msstate.edu/specialcollections/collections/manuscripts/politics/

http://lib.msstate.edu/specialcollections/collections/manuscripts/afam/

Finding aid:

http://library.msstate.edu/FindingAid/MSS.45.html

[0703] The Earnest Sevier Cox Papers, 1821-1973, 1900-1964 (bulk), RL.00262

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

Description: The papers of Earnest Sevier Cox (1880-1966), racial separatist, real estate agent, and military officer of Richmond, Va.. The primary focus of the collection is Cox's advocacy for the separation of the races, which he actively pursued through his support for the repatriation of American blacks to Africa, and his belief in the superiority of the Caucasian race. Highlighted is his work with both blacks and whites: Mittie Maude Lena Gordon, founder of the Peace Movement of Ethiopia; Marcus Garvey, Universal Negro Improvement Association; Benjamin Gibbons, Universal African Nationalist Movement; Senators Theodore G. Bilbo and William Langer, who introduce repatriation bills in Congress (ca. 1938 to 1947 and 1949 to 1959, respectively; for Langer, the bills are 81-S-1880 (1949), 82-S-389 (1951), 83-S-138 (1953), 84-S-276 (1955), 85-S-759 (1957), and 86-S-352 (1959)); John Powell and W.A. Plecker, who promoted the Virginia Racial Integrity Law of 1924; and others, including S.A. Davis and Madison Grant. Correspondents include Willis A. Carto, S. A. Davis, Thomas Dixon, Jr., Wickliffe P. Draper, Amy Jacques Garvey (widow of Marcus Garvey), Madison Grant, W. A. Plecker, and John Powell. The series Printed Material includes files on Marilyn R. Allen, Association of Citizens' Councils, Christian Patriots Crusade, Keeping the Record Straight (Edith Essig), Liberty Lobby, Liberty Letter, National Citizens Protective Association, Northern League, Northern World, Peace Movement of Ethiopia, Right, South African Observer, South African Scope, Universal African Nationalist Movement, Universal Negro Improvement Association, Western Destiny, and Williams Intelligence Summary.

References:

Ethel Wolfskill Hedlin, "Earnest Cox and Colonization: a White Racist's Response to Black Repatriation, 1923-1966" (Ph.D., Duke University, 1974); John David Smith, "'My Books Are Hard Reading for a Negro': Tom Dixon and His African American Critics, 1905-1939," Thomas Dixon Jr. and the Birth of Modern America, edited by Michele K. Gillespie and Randal L. Hall (Baton Rouge, Louisiana State University Press [2006]), pp. 76, 77, 79.

Websites with information:

http://search.library.duke.edu/search?id=DUKE000813440

http://guides.library.duke.edu/content.php?pid=465452&sid=3845968

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/18219168

http://www.worldcat.org/title/earnest-sevier-cox-papers-1821-1973/oclc/18219168

Finding aids:

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

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

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

http://library.duke.edu/digitalcollections/rbmscl/cox/inv/

[0704] Jack Cox Papers, 1950-1964, Acc. No. 66-93

Location: Briscoe Center for American History, The University of Texas at Austin, 2300 Red River St., Sid Richardson Hall, Unit 2, Room 2.106, Austin, Texas 78712-1426

Description: Jack Cox (1921-1990) served in the Texas State Legislature as a Democrat from 1946-1952. During the mid-1950s, Cox became active in conservative politics. He changed his party affiliation and ran as a Republican for governor, the U. S. Senate, and the U. S. House of Representatives. Contains subject files on Bruce Alger, American Legion, National Americanism Committee, Americans for Constitutional Action, Communism, Constitution Party, USA, Constitution Party of Texas, Freedoms Foundation at Valley Forge, Freedoms Foundation Award, Senator Barry Goldwater, House Un-American Activities Committee, Human Events, Senator Joe McCarthy, Moral Re-armament, Operation Abolition, Poll tax, Right to work, Allan Shivers, Smoot Report, Socialized medicine, John G. Tower, Edwin A. Walker, and Young Americans for Freedom. A reel-to-reel tape with Side 1; Youth and Conservative Government, by Jack Cox, Side 2; Major Edgar C. Bundy, general chairman, Church League of America, April 25, 1960 July 1959. July 13, 1959. Conservative publications, including A Businessman Looks at Communism, by Fred C. Koch, 1961; The United States as a Communist Nation... Under Which Flag?, statement of Austin T. Flett, 1958; Usurpers--Foes of Free Men, by Hamilton A. Long, 1957; America's Unelected Rulers, by Kent and Phoebe Courtney, 1962; Planned Patriotism, A Ten Point Program for Teaching Americanism in Our Schools, by Everett E. Cooke, 1961; A Blessing of Extremism, by Leonard E. Read, 1963; and Race and Reason, A Yankee View, by Carleton Putnam, 1961.

Websites with information:

http://www.cah.utexas.edu/research/archives_index.php?manuindex=c

Finding aid:

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/00085/cah-00085.html

[0705] Charlotte Crabtree papers, 1960-2004, Coll. 1785

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

Description: Charlotte Crabtree (1927-2006) was a Professor of Education at the University of California, Los Angeles. She produced history standards for kindergarten-12th grade education from 1986-1996, after which she coauthored a book about the intense political response from Lynne V. Cheney and others to the newly multicultural history standards. The National Center for History in the Schools was established at UC Los Angeles through Charlotte Crabtree's winning grant proposal. Under her direction in collaboration with UCLA Professor of History Gary Nash, the Center led the creation of the 1995 National Standards for World History and the National Standards for United States History. Beginning in 1994, the standards served as a lightning rod for debates of what have been called the American culture wars. Conservative politicians such as Lynne V. Cheney protested that the standards' multicultural inclusiveness smacked of historical revisionism, lacked proper patriotism, and excessively scrutinized shameful moments in American history. In an editorial for the Wall Street Journal, Cheney criticized the authors of the National Standards for United States History for saving "their unqualified admiration for people, places and events that are politically correct." Collection material includes conference records, meeting records, hearing records, field report feedback, community feedback, clippings of political responses in the media, textbooks, and academic publications. Series 1. National History Standards Project 1983-2004, contains textual and audio cassette records of National Council for History Standards meetings, feedback from focus groups, community groups, and others, political responses to the History Standards, copies of the 1995 World History and United States History Standards, and correspondence. Files on Pat Buchanan, Lynne V. Cheney, conservative political context, Bob Dole, John Fonte, Newt Gingrich, Ken Jost and Congressional Quarterly, Rush Limbaugh, and House Representative Lamar Smith. Series 3. California History—Social Science Framework 1986-1991, contains feedback on the Framework (also referred to as the "History—Social Studies Framework") from teachers, community groups, individuals, and special interest groups, including Creation Scientists and the Traditional Values Coalition. Includes a copy of the 1988 Model Curriculum for Human Rights and Genocide, and right to life group feedback on human rights and genocide.

Reference:

Lynne V. Cheney, "The End of History," Wall Street Journal, October 20, 1994, http://online.wsj.com/media/EndofHistory.pdf.

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt1489r7nw/entire_text/

[0706] Calvin Fred Craig papers, 1953-1979, Coll. 612

Location: Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library, Woodruff Library, Emory University, 540 Asbury Circle, Atlanta, GA 30322

Description: The collection consists of papers of Calvin Fred Craig (1928-1998), a dry cleaner by trade who served as Grand Dragon of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan for the state of Georgia. Materials include Klan broadsides, brochures, bulletins, and press releases, constitution and by-laws; membership and information cards; minutes and notes, printed material, photographs, and Klan memorabilia. There are also materials related to the Klan's opposition to homosexuality and "sex deviants," as well as information regarding civil rights activism among lesbian feminist organizations. Files on Eldon Edwards [photos], George C. Wallace [photos], House Committee on Un-American Activities, James R. Venable [photos], J. Robert Jones [photos], National Knights of the Ku Klux Klan [video recordings], Lester Maddox [photos], and Robert M. Shelton. Speech by Tom P. Brady, "The Red Death," 1957. Speech by William J. Simmons, Citizens' Council of America, to the Organizational meeting of the Atlanta Citizens' Council, May 14, 1962. Robert Welch, "The Truth about Vietnam" and "More Truth about Vietnam," John Birch Society, [1967] [video recording]. Copies of American Opinion, Armed Citizen News (Medford, Oregon), Christian Crusade Weekly (Tulsa, Oklahoma), The Free American (Reading, Pennsylvania), The Fiery Cross Newsletter (Tuscaloosa, Alabama), Georgia Klansman, and Imperial Office Newsletter.

Websites with information:

http://larson.library.emory.edu/marbl/Guides/rg-civil-rights.html

http://findingaids.library.emory.edu/titles/C/?page=11

http://guides.main.library.emory.edu/lgbtrare

http://www.atlantahighered.org/civilrights/collection_detail.asp?ID=196

Finding aids:

http://findingaids.library.emory.edu/documents/craig612/printable/

http://findingaids.library.emory.edu/documents/craig612/

[0707] Barclay Craighead Papers, 1924-1949, MC 182

Location: Montana Historical Society Archives, 225 N. Roberts, PO Box 201201, Helena, MT 59620-1201

Description: Barclay Craighead (1895-1978) served as secretary to U.S. Senator Burton K. Wheeler and secretary of the Wheeler for President Club. This collection consists of correspondence, writings, clippings, printed materials, photographs, and miscellany relating to Craighead's various positions. Correspondents include Jacob Thorkelson and Senator Burton K. Wheeler.

Websites with information:

http://nwda.orbiscascade.org/repositories/mtl-ids.html

Finding aids:

http://nwda-db.wsulibs.wsu.edu/findaid/ark:/80444/xv52330

http://nwda-db.wsulibs.wsu.edu/print/ark:/80444/xv52330

[0708] Lucille Cardin Crain Papers, 1920-1978, Coll. 95

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

Description: Lucille Cardin Crain (1901-1983) was an American author, editor, and conservative political activist. From 1949 to 1953 she edited The Educational Reviewer, a quarterly publication published by William F. Buckley, Sr. The Educational Reviewer reviewed high school and college textbooks, analyzing their contents for a "leftist" or "collectivist" bias.. Collection consists correspondence with conservative individuals and organizations, 1920-1978; correspondence (1949-1955) and organizational records of The Educational Reviewer; writings and speeches; and subject files containing articles, brochures, and documents about various individuals, organizations, and topics of interest. Correspondence and subject files include America's Future, Inc., American Economic Foundation, American Education Association, American Forum of the Air, American Conservative Union, American Security Council, John O. Beaty, Arthur G. Blazey, Leo Brent Bozell, Bricker Amendment, William F. Buckley, Jr., Louis Budenz, Howard Buffett, Mary Dawson Cain, William Henry Chamberlin, Frank Chodorov, Christian Freedom Foundation, Citizens Foreign Aid Committee, Kenneth Colegrove, Committee to Restore the Constitution, Communism, Congress of Freedom, Council for Statehood, Mary M. Davison, Robert Donner, Robert B. Dresser, Hilaire du Berrier, Charles Edison, Harry T. Everingham, Bonner Fellers, Firing Line, John J. Fleck, fluoridation, John T. Flynn, Foundation for Economic Education, Inc., The Freeman, Garet Garrett, Genocide Convention, James H. Gipson, Benjamin Gitlow, Goldwater for President Committee, Percy L. Greaves, Jr., Conrad Grieb, Ralph W. Gwinn, Frank C. Hanighen, Walter Harnischfeger, Frank E. Holman, Human Events, James C. Ingebretsen, Intercollegiate Studies Institute, John Birch Society, Harry A. Jung, Verne P. Kaub, Vivien Kellems, Russell Kirk, Alfred Kohlberg, Rose Wilder Lane, Thomas A. Lane, Fulton Lewis, Liberty Lobby, Liberty Amendment, J.B. Matthews, Robert R. McCormick, mental health, Metropolitan government (urban renewal), B.M. Miller, Lucille S. Miller, Minute Women of the U.S.A., Inc., Raymond C. Moley, Ben Moreell, Felix Morley, Mothers' Crusade for Victory over Communism, Karl E. Mundt, National Republic, National Association of Pro America, National Review, National Right to Work Committee, National Economic Council, Network of Patriotic Letter Writers, John O'Donnell, Panama Treaty, Westbrook Pegler, Samuel B. Pettengill, J. Howard Pew, Charles W. Phillips, Plain Talk, Eugene C. Pomeroy, Pro America, George Washington Robnett, Archibald B. Roosevelt, Edith Kermit Roosevelt, E. Merrill Root, Polly King Ruhtenberg, Edward A. Rumley, O. Glenn Saxon, Phyllis Schlafly, Dan Smoot, George E. Sokolsky, Spiritual Mobilization, Walter S. Steele, Supreme Court, The Southern Conservative, The Tablet, United Nations, United World Federalists, Rena M. Vale, Vigilant Women for the Bricker Amendment, George Wallace, We, the People, Robert Welch, Alice and William Widener, Felix Wittmer, Women Taxpayers, Inc., Women for Constitutional Government, Women's National Republican Club, world government, and Young Americans for Freedom.

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-lucille-cardin-crain-papers/

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

https://library.uoregon.edu/speccoll/guides/women/activist.html

http://janus.uoregon.edu/record=b1970852

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/18266141

http://www.worldcat.org/title/papers-1920-1978/oclc/18266141

Finding aids:

http://nwda.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv68414

http://nwda.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv68414/op=pretrieve.aspx

http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv68414

[0709] Ralph Adams Cram Papers, 1618-1997 (bulk 1885-1949), FA 2015.01

Location: Fine Arts Department, Boston Public Library, 700 Boylston St., Boston, MA 02116

Description: Cram (1863-1942) was the leading American ecclesiastical architect of the 20th century and a monarchist. The Cram Collection includes correspondence, watercolors, sketches, journals, scrapbooks, photographs, manuscripts, and a genealogy. Series II: Personal Correspondence and Letters, c. 1880s-1997, n.d. Sub-Series 1: Letters written to RAC, 1891-1942, n.d., contains correspondence from Hamilton Holt, Henry Louis Mencken, and Albert Jay Nock. Sub-Series 2: Letters written by RAC, c. 1880s-1941, contains correspondence to Hamilton Holt.

Websites with information:

http://www.bpl.org/research/special/collections.htm

https://digital.lib.washington.edu/architect/architects/790/

http://archon.bpl.org/index.php?p=collections/collections&browse

Finding aid:

http://archon.bpl.org/index.php?p=collections/controlcard&id=93

[0709a] Jasper E. Crane papers, 1893-1970 (bulk 1926-1969), Accession 1416

Location: Manuscripts and Archives Department, Hagley Museum and Library, PO Box 3630, Wilmington, Delaware 19807

Description: Jasper Crane (1881-1969) was an executive with E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Company. This collection consists largely of Crane's correspondence with public officials and conservative organizations who, like Crane, actively opposed Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal and the activist state that emerged from the Second World War. Crane was prominently associated with the National Association of Manufacturers, the Foundation for Economic Education, and the National Council of the Churches of Christ. Crane was a board member of the latter organization, and his papers include board of directors minutes, budgets, and correspondence which document the organization's role in the anti-Communist crusade of the early 1950s. Crane and J. Howard Pew of the Sun Oil Company underwrote The Freeman between 1950 and 1957. Late in life he established the Curran Foundation to advance conservative principles in education. Files on Everett McKinley Dirksen; John Foster Dulles; Gerald R Ford; Barry M Goldwater; Rose Wilder Lane; Felix Morley; Thruston B Morton; Richard M Nixon; J. Howard Pew; Ayn Rand; Hans F. Sennholz; and Robert B Snowden. Materials on American Economic Foundation; Americans for Constitutional Action; Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America; Mont Pèlerin Society; Republican National Committee (U.S.); Communism and Christianity; Communism and religion; Conservatism; and Free enterprise.

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://www.worldcat.org/title/papers-1893-1970/oclc/122355312

[0710] Arthur Whipple Crawford Papers, 1931-1965, Ax 237

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

Description: Arthur Whipple Crawford (1885-1970s?) was an economist and newspaper correspondent. The collection includes an autobiography, published material, scrapbooks, papers on the World Peace Conference, miscellaneous writings, manuscripts, records of the American Liberty League, anti-New Deal manuscripts, records of the Economists National Committee on Monetary Policy, and other miscellaneous items. Records of the American Liberty League include manuscripts by Crawford and press releases (1934-1938). The records of the Economists National Committee on Monetary Policy include press releases, mimeograph letters to members, objectives and clippings.

Websites with information:

http://library.uoregon.edu/tools/blogs/scua/newly-available-collection-arthur-whipple-crawford-papers/

Finding aid:

http://nwda.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv43905

[0711] George A. Crawford Papers, 1854-1861, MS 75-07

Location: Special Collections and University Archives, Wichita State University Libraries, 1845 Fairmount, Wichita, KS 67260-0068

Description: George A. Crawford (1827-1891) was an editor and gubernatorial candidate. While editor and proprietor of the Clinton Democrat (Pennsylvania), Crawford took an active part in politics against the Know-Nothings and in 1855 was a delegate to the Pennsylvania Democratic State Convention. The papers consist of correspondence, excerpts from speeches, and news clippings from 1854 to 1861. Know-Nothingism comprises a prominent part of the collection with extensive portions of speeches, notes and editorials given by Crawford in opposition to the anti-foreign and anti-Catholic policies perpetrated by the secret organization of Know-Nothings.

Websites with information:

http://specialcollections.wichita.edu/collections/ms/msub-c.html

http://specialcollections.wichita.edu/collections/ms/mscrcol1.html

Finding aids:

http://specialcollections.wichita.edu/collections/pdf/75-7-A.pdf

http://specialcollections.wichita.edu/collections/ms/75-07/75-7-A.HTML

[0711a] Crawford et al. v. Board of Education of the City of Los Angeles et al. records, 1976-1980, Coll. 0234

Location: USC Libraries Special Collections, Doheny Memorial Library 206, University of Southern California, 3550 Trousdale Parkway, Los Angeles, California 90089-0189

Description: Crawford et al. v. Board of Education of the City of Los Angeles et al. was a case in which the California Supreme Court ordered the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) to formulate a feasible plan to desegregate its schools. In 1977, the LAUSD devised with a stringent plan that called for mandatory student reassignment. In response to the proposal, the group Bustop Inc. filed two lawsuits which were petitioned to the United States Supreme Court to stop the enforced busing plan. In the lawsuits, each entitled Bustop, Inc. v. Los Angeles Board of Education, the Supreme Court denied the petitions. The collection consists of court case transcripts, court exhibits, depositions, reports, office memos, correspondence, articles clippings, notes, files from the superintendent's office, plans considered in desegregating schools, and other miscellaneous documents from the time the defense was being prepared. Files on "Summary of Integration Proposals by the Citizens' Advisory Committee on Student Integration" (1977 August 5) and "Philosophy" plan submitted by BUSTOP (1977 August 17).

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt067nf108/entire_text/

[0712] George Creel Papers, 1857-1953 (bulk 1896-1953), MSS17210

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

Description: Author, editor, and government official (1876-1953). Scrapbooks and bound volumes of writings by and about Creel form the bulk of the collection. Includes correspondence, notes, speeches, lectures, book reviews, and campaign material. A series on Woodrow Wilson and the United States Committee on Public Information contains correspondence with Wilson as well as his corrections of drafts of Creel's cables, letters, speeches, and other writings relating to the Wilson administration during World War I and subsequent peace negotiations. Correspondence with Harry Flood Byrd, Robert Donner, Garet Garrett, Carter Glass, Henry Hazlitt, Herbert Hoover, William F. Knowland, Arthur Bliss Lane, Joseph McCarthy, Raymond Moley, Felix M. Morley, Karl E. Mundt, J. Westbrook Pegler, Robert A. Taft, Albert C. Wedemeyer, and Burton K. Wheeler.

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.ms010162

http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms010162.3

[0713] Conrad G. Creitz papers, 1966, RH MS P265

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

Description: Conrad Creitz was a University of Kansas student in the middle and late 1960's. The collection consists of scattered notes on SDS activities in the spring of 1966, a list of right-wing organizations in Houston, Texas, SDS membership card, May 2nd movement membership cards, and a clipping from SDS New Left Notes.

Websites with information:

http://etext.ku.edu/search?browse-creator=cc;sort=creator;route=ksrlead;brand=ksrlead

Finding aid:

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

[0714] Takey Crist Papers, 1944-2002 and undated, RL.00270

Location: Sallie Bingham Center for Women's History and Culture, David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Duke University, Box 90185, 103 Perkins Library, Durham, North Carolina 27708-0185

Description: Dr. Takey Crist, a long-time supporter of women's reproductive rights, opened The Crist Clinic for Women in Jacksonville, NC, in 1973. The clinic provides a variety of women's healthcare services, including abortions. Accession 2003-0118, comprises materials related to the issue of abortion and the anti-abortion movement, and consists primarily of documents pertaining to lawsuits involving Dr. Crist as a litigant or witness, including correspondence, transcripts, depositions, photographs, and other legal papers (1975-1993). The Abortion Series. [Subseries] Subject Files, includes files on Anti-Abortion Cartoons, Anti-Abortion Counseling Centers, Anti-Abortion Publicity, Robert Bauman, Birthchoice, Jerry Falwell, Jesse Helms, Mary Mason, anti-abortion activist [Mary Kay Mason of Wilmington (N.C.) Right to Life], North Carolina Right to Life, Pro-Life Merchandise, Ronald Reagan, Pat Robertson, Joseph Scheidler, Jimmy Swaggart, and Women Exploited by Abortion (WEBA). The Abortion Series. [Subseries] Organizations, includes files on American Association of Pro-Life Obstetricians and Gynecologists, Christian Life Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention, Presbyterians Pro-Life, The Christian Activist, and Life and Family News.

Websites with information:

http://guides.library.duke.edu/c.php?g=289440&p=1929939

Finding aids:

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

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

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

[0714a] Benedetto Croce Collection, 1916-1929, undated, Manuscript Collection MS-0985

Location: Harry Ransom Center, The University of Texas at Austin, 300 West 21st Street, Austin, Texas 78712

Description: The collection of Italian critic, philosopher, and politician Benedetto Croce (1866-1952) contains two manuscripts by him as well as letters he wrote to Hans Feist-Wollheim and others.

Websites with information:

http://norman.hrc.utexas.edu/fasearch/curatorial.cfm

Finding aids:

http://norman.hrc.utexas.edu/fasearch/pdf/00825.pdf

http://norman.hrc.utexas.edu/fasearch/findingAid.cfm?eadid=00825

[0714b] Fondo: Cronache sul Neofascismo, 1/12/1947-4/2/1975; - altre carte sd. [1950-1980]

Location: Istituto storico della Resistenza e della società contemporanea in provincia di Cuneo, Largo Barale, 11, 12100 Cuneo, Italy

Description: A collection of miscellaneous materials, including photocopies, flyers, leaflets, brochures, photographs, and other materials, relating to the activity of the Movimento sociale italiano in the province of Cuneo and beyond from the 1950s to the 1980s, with emphasis on the 1970s.

Websites with information:

http://beniculturali.ilc.cnr.it:8080/Isis/servlet/Isis?Conf=/usr/local/IsisGas/InsmliConf/Insmli.sys6.file&Obj=@In

smlid.pft&Opt=get&Type=Doc&Id=025863

http://beniculturali.ilc.cnr.it:8080/Isis/servlet/Isis?Conf=/usr/local/IsisGas/MetaInsmliConf/metaopacStar.sys.file

[0715] John F. Cronin Papers, 1935-1977 (bulk 1958-1977), CRO

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

Description: Father John Francis Cronin, S.S. (1908-1994) was a Catholic priest of the Society of St Sulpice (Sulpicians) and a vocal opponent of Communism during the McCarthy era. He was also director of social action for the National Catholic Welfare Conference (1946-1967) and a faculty member of St. Mary's Seminary, Baltimore (1967-1977). Pamphlets, reprints of articles, newspaper clippings, bibliographies, and unpublished papers relating to social issues such as labor unions, Communism, economics, and civil rights, as well as a wide range of topics in moral theology (1935-1977); notes and syllabi for courses Cronin taught at St. Mary's Seminary (1967-ca.1974); copies of Cronin's unpublished report "The Problem of American Communism in 1945" (1945; online at http://mdhistory.net/hiss/cronin-report.pdf) completed for the National Catholic Welfare Conference; correspondence and newspaper clippings concerning his anticommunist activities, particularly his role in the Alger Hiss spy case (1950s-1970s); and occasional letters to and from Richard M. Nixon (ca.1969-1975). Files on Communist Party, Free Enterprise - Individualism, Labor Unions- General Ethics, Joe McCarthy, Richard M. Nixon, Alger Hiss, and Race.

Websites with information:

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

http://archives.nd.edu/guide.txt

Finding aid:

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

[0716] Crossroads to Freedom Digital Archive [digital collection]

Location: Rhodes College, 2000 N. Parkway, Memphis, TN 38112-169

Description: Crossroads to Freedom connects the world with Memphis history through an archive of documents, newspapers, images and oral histories. Includes newspaper articles from the Memphis World on such persons, organizations, and topics as American Nazi Party, Gov. Ross Barnett, Bryant W. Bowles, Asa Carter, James A. Colescott, Adm. John Crommelin, Sam Engelhardt, Jr., Gov. Orval Faubus, Sen. Barry Goldwater, integration, John Birch Society, John Kasper, Ku Klux Klan, lynching, William E. Miller, National Association for the Advancement of White People, National State's Rights Party, Ezra Pound, George Lincoln Rockwell, segregation, J. B. Stoner, Tennessee Realm of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, and Major General Edwin Walker.

Databases:

http://www.crossroadstofreedom.org/home.user

http://connect.rhodes.edu/harvester/index.php/index

[0716a] Paul Crouch Papers, 1925-1958, Coll. 70045

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

Description: Paul Crouch (1903-1955) was a longtime member of the Communist Party of the United States of America (CPUSA) who became an anti-Communist informant in the late 1940s. The papers consist of writings, transcripts of court testimony, correspondence, and clippings, relating to Communism in the United States, especially in Hawaii, and to the anti-Communist movement. Includes typescript memoirs, entitled "Broken Chains," describing his career in the CPUSA, 1925-1942.

Reference:

CWIS Bibliography: Paul Crouch (1903-1955), http://blog.ecu.edu/sites/cwis/2014/10/cwis-bibliography-paul-crouch-1903-1955/.

Finding aids:

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

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf4580036k/entire_text/

[0717] Enoch H. Crowder Papers, 1884-1942, C1046

Location: The State Historical Society of Missouri, 1020 Lowry Street, Columbia, Missouri 65201

Description: Correspondence and other papers of judge advocate general Enoch H. Crowder (1859-1932), who administered Selective Service in World War I, served as ambassador to Cuba, and, after his retirement from public life, advised sugar interests. Subjects include William E. Borah, Arthur Capper, Joshua Reuben Clark, Jr., Communism, George Creel, Cornelius Van Hemert Engert, Hamilton Fish, Ulysses Simpson Grant, III, Joseph Clark Grew, Herbert Hoover, Patrick J. Hurley, David Lawrence, Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., Douglas MacArthur, Louis T. McFadden, Ewing Y. Mitchell, Jr., George Nelson Peek, John J. Raskob, James A. Reed, Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt, George Holden Tinkham, Burton K. Wheeler, and Robert E. Wood.

Websites with information:

http://shs.umsystem.edu/manuscripts/descriptions/desc-gov.html

Finding aid:

http://shs.umsystem.edu/manuscripts/invent/1046.pdf

[0717a] Brian Crozier Papers, 1936-1993, Coll. 85035

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

Description: Brian Crozier (1918-2012) was a journalist, commentator, and author. In 1970, Crozier founded the Institute for the Study of Conflict, based in London, to study insurgencies and terrorism. The papers consist of writings, correspondence, memoranda, book reviews, and printed matter, relating to the Cold War and world politics since World War II, international communism, terrorism, espionage and insurgency movements, and the Institute for the Study of Conflict. The series Correspondence, 1966-1991, contain correspondence with Julian Amery, Priscilla Buckley, James Burnham, George Bush, Hilaire du Berrier, Jesse Helms, Walter Judd, William Kintner, Henry A. Kissinger, William C. Mott, Malcolm Muggeridge, Benjamin Netanyahu, Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, Sir Edward Spears, Margaret Thatcher, and Albert C. Wedemeyer.

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf358002hf/entire_text/

[0717b] Crusading Mothers of Pennsylvania Collection

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

Description: Catherine Veronica Brown of Philadelphia was president of the Crusading Mothers of Pennsylvania, an anti-war, anti-Semitic organization organized by Father Coughlin's followers in Philadelphia. In 1943 the name was changed to National Blue Star Mothers of America, whose stated purpose was "To retain our republic and our constitutional form of government. Outlaw political Zionism--Communism."

Websites with information:

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

[0718] Cuban Freedom Committee records, 1947-1993, Coll. 97004

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

Description: The United States Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) set up the Cuban Freedom Committee in late 1960 to sponsor anti-Castro radio broadcasts similar to those of Radio Free Europe. The committee appeared as a private activist group that solicited donations for the operation, later identified as a funding conduit for CIA domestic operations. The Cuban Freedom Committee produced Free Radio Cuba, a stridently anti-Castro program that was broadcast before, during, and after the Bay of Pigs invasion on licensed stations in the United States and overseas including WKWF, Key West; WGBS, Miami; and Radio Swan from the Swan Islands off the coast of Honduras. Correspondence, speeches, reports, radio broadcast transcripts, financial records, press releases, sound recordings, clippings, and other printed matter, relating to Communism, political conditions and civil rights in Cuba, Cuban influence elsewhere in Latin America, and Cubans in exile in the United States, and especially to broadcasting activities of Free Cuba Radio from the United States to Cuba. Includes a few later papers of Mariada C. Arensberg (later Bourgin), executive secretary of the Cuban Freedom Committee. Files on Free Cuba News Citizens Committee; Latin America Report, Free Cuba News; a mailing list for Citizens Committee for a Free Cuba; and a copy of Communist Propaganda Organizations and Activities in Latin America, United States Information Agency, Office of Policy and Research, 1966-1967.

Finding aid:

http://cdn.calisphere.org/data/13030/ff/kt000030ff/files/kt000030ff.pdf

[0719] Joseph Stephen Cullinan Collection, 1893-1939, 07/2006-009

Location: Special Collections, University of Houston Libraries, 114 University Libraries, Houston, TX 77204-2000

Description: Cullinan (1860-1937) was a Texas oil magnate. Correspondence files on American Liberty League, Wright Patman, Irving Fisher, Jeffersonian Democrats of Texas, National Committee to Uphold Constitutional Government, and Southern Committee to Uphold the Constitution.

Websites with information:

http://archon.lib.uh.edu/index.php?p=collections/collections&browse&page=2

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/browse/browse_houpub2.html

Finding aid:

http://archon.lib.uh.edu/index.php?p=collections/findingaid&id=181&q=&rootcontentid=3077

Finding aids (for the microfilm copy at the Houston Metropolitan Research Center, Houston Public Library):

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/houpub/00071/hpub-00071.html

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/houpub/00071/00071-P.html

[0720] Cult Awareness Network (CAN) Collection, ca. 1972-2001, ARC Mss 19

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

Description: The Cult Awareness Network (CAN) Collection includes files (correspondence, clippings, articles) relating to hundreds of religious groups, as well as internal administrative, financial, and legal files of a cult watchdog group which ceased operations in the mid 1990s. Files on American Family Association, American Freedom Coalition, America's Promise Ministries, Anglo Saxon Federation of America, Aryan Nations, Jim and Tammy Bakker, Branhamism [William Marrion Branham], [Bundy] - Edgar Bundy Ministries, Inc., Campus Crusade for Christ, Christian Coalition, Christian Reconstructionism, Christic Institute, Citizens Anti-Communist Committee, Coalition of Concerned Citizens, Concerned Women for America, The Covenant the Sword and the Arm of the Lord, Dr. James Dobson, Jerry Falwell, Focus on the Family, George Gordon's School of Common Law, Identity Movement, Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, Jewish Defense League [JDL], Ku Klux Klan, Lyndon LaRouche, Rev. Tim LaHaye, Liberty Lobby, MKULTRA (CIA), Texe Marrs, Nazism, Oklahoma Bombings, Operation Rescue, Opus Dei, The Order, Political Research Associates, Praise the Lord [PTL] - Jim and Tammy Bakker, Promise Keepers, Religious Right, Oral Roberts, Pat Robertson, James Robison, The Rockford Institute, Robert Schuller, Skinheads, Skinheads, KKK, Nazi, Aryan, Society for the Defense of Tradition, Family & Property, Traditional Catholics, Trinity Broadcasting Network (Paul Crouch), Nesta H. Webster, White Aryan Resistance [WAR], Gordon Winrod, World Anti-Communist League, and Young Americans for Freedom (YAF).

Websites with information:

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

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

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

Finding aids:

http://pdf.oac.cdlib.org/pdf/ucsb/spcoll/cusb_arcmss19.pdf

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8p26zqp/entire_text/

[0721] Cult of Saint Germain Collection, 1951-1969, MUM00095

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

Description: The Cult of Saint Germain is an offspring of the I AM Movement founded in 1930 by Guy Ballard (1878-1939), a mining engineer. According to the movement, America was destined to be the nation of ascended masters, a role foreordained by St. Germain. Because of the movement's focus on America as the appointed nation of masters, followers tended to be super-patriotic. Followers were also conservative in social and economic affairs. They opposed strikes, labor unions, and Communism. Members of the I Am Movement also opposed Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal program which was in existence during the movement's peak years. The collection consists of dictations related to the Cult of Saint Germain created from 1951-1969.

Finding aid:

http://www.olemiss.edu/depts/general_library/archives/finding_aids/MUM00095.html

[0722] Constance E. Cumbey Papers, 1920-2004 (bulk 1980-1999), 04101 Aa 2

Location: Michigan Historical Collections, Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan, 1150 Beal Avenue, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2113

Description: Constance Elizabeth Cumbey (1944- ) is a Michigan lawyer. Between the years 1981 and 1988 Constance Cumbey ceased her law practice and dedicated her life to investigating the New Age Movement. The Constance Cumbey collection consists of her publications, research files and other material related to her investigations of alleged connections between New Age cults and the New World Order and various politicians, organizations and institutions. There are also files documenting her interest in Christian fundamentalism and prominent evangelists and their ties to cults. The collection has been divided into three series: Topical Files (three subseries), Personal Files, and Other Media. The series Topical Files. Subseries Group 1, contains files on Abortion, Acton Institute, Albionic Research, American Center for Law and Justice, American Family Association, American Freedom Coalition, American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), American Liberty Association, Anti-Semitism, Aryan Nations, Jim Bakker, Christian Coalition, Christian Identity Movement, Christian Reconstructionism, Civil Rights Movement, Committee to Restore the Constitution, Communism, Council for National Policy, Eugenics, Euthanasia, Jerry Falwell, Louis Farrakhan, Fascism, Financial Advice-Gary North, Focus on the Family, Newt Gingrich, Hal Lindsey Ministries, Hillsdale College, Adolph Hitler, Home Schooling, Homosexuality, Human Life International, John Birch Society, Journal of Historical Review, The Kibbo Kift Foundation, Lyndon H. LaRouche, Libertarians, Texe Marrs, McAlvany Intelligence Advisor, Militia Groups, Nazi and Nazism, Nazis and United States Support, New World Order (NWO), Patriot Network, Population Research Institute, Pro-Choice Movement, Pro-Life, Promise Keepers, Psychopolitics, Racism, Ralph Reed, The Religious Right, Republic of Texas, Right Wing Movements, Pat Robertson, The Rutherford Institute, Robert Schuller-Hour of Power, Tradition, Family, and Property Magazine, White Supremacy, and White Supremacy-Stormfront Website. The series Topical Files. Subseries Group 2, contains files on Albionic Consulting (Alpine Enterprises), Abortion, Accuracy In Media, American Enterprise Institute, American Freedom Coalition, American Opinion Libraries, Anti-Semitism, Don Bell Reports, Samuel Blumenfeld, Bob Jones University, Brainwashing Techniques, William Branham, Maj. Edgar Bundy, Campus Crusade For Christ, Frank Capell, Christian Reconstruction Movement, Christian Defense League, Christian Reconstructionist Movement, Church League of America, News and Views, Dr. John Coleman, Charles W. Colson, Communism, Conspiracy Theories, Constitutional Reform Movements, Corporate Mind Control, Council for National Policy, Phoebe Courtney, Dr. James Dobson, Dominion Theology, Eagle Forum (Schlafly), T.S. Eliot, Eugenics, Rev. Jerry Falwell, Fund To Restore An Educated Electorate (F.R.E.E.), Billy James Hargis, Paul Harvey, Heritage Foundation, Hillsdale College, Imprimis Newsletter, Home Education, Human Events, Identity Movement, John Birch Society, Jack Kemp, Khazar Jew Theories, Knights of Malta, Order of St. John of Jerusalem, Charles Koch, Ku Klux Klan, Tim and Beverly LaHaye, Lyndon LaRouche, Liberty Lobby, Alfred M. Lilienthal, Hal Lindsey, Tex Marrs, Dr. W.S. McBirnie, Mind Control Systems, Brig. Gen. Jack Mohr, Mont Pèlerin Society, Moral Majority, Moral Rearmament, Eustace Mullins, Nazism, Neo-nazi, Gary North, New Right Political Movement, Omni Publications, "Orage and The New Age Circle," by Paul Selver, Ezra Pound, Prayer In Schools Issue, Protocols of The Learned Elders of Zion, PTL Television Network [Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker], Racism, Reconstructionalism, Right To Life Movement, Oral Roberts, Pat Robertson, Rockford Institute, Rushdoony, Rutherford, Phyllis Schlafly, Robert Schuller, Simon Wiesenthal Center, Skinhead Movement, Cleon Skousen, Social Credit, Alexander Solzhenitsyn, Sons of Liberty, Alan Stang, Trilateral Commission [Conspiracy Theories], Trilateral Commission, "The Conspiracy Behind the Trilateral Commission," by the Executive Intelligence Review, 1981, Trinity Broadcasting Network, Nesta Webster (incl. "The Specialist Network," by Nesta Webster, 1926), and Paul Weyrich. The series Topical Files. Subseries Group 3, contains files on Abortion, Gary Allen, Anti-Abortion, Anti-Semitism, Aryan Nations, Sam Blumenfeld, William Branham, An Exposition of the Church of the Ages, Pat Buchanan, Christian Coalition, Christian Identity Movement, Club of Rome, Concentration Camps, United States and Canada [printed at https://web.archive.org/

web/20000817011219/http://www.inforamp.net/~jwhitley/CAMPREP.HTM], Constitutional Convention, Covert Action Information Bulletin, Creationism, Dennis Cuddy, David Duke, Euthanasia, Fascism, Jerry Falwell, Focus on the Family, Newt Gingrich, Bo Gritz, Heritage Foundation, Homosexuality, Bob Jones University, Ku Klux Klan, Tim LaHaye, Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr., Liberty Lobby, Hal Lindsey, Tex Marrs, Mind Control, Eustace Mullins, National ID, Nazism, Neo-Nazism, New Right, Operation Rescue, Opus Dei, Population Research Institute, Populist Party, Ezra Pound, Pro-family Forum, Promise Keepers, Ayn Rand Institute, Reconstructionists, Reconstruction, Crosswinds: The Reformation Digest, Ritual Murders, Pat Robertson, Rockford Conference, Phyllis Schlafly, Robert Schuller, Social Credit Movement, Sons of Liberty, Tradition, Family, and Property, The Trilateral Commission, and World Government.

Websites with information:

http://bentley.umich.edu/EAD/ead_cd.htm

http://miarchivists.files.wordpress.com/2012/03/open-entry-newsletter-2005-spring-18mar2005copy.pdf

Finding aids:

http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/f/findaid/findaid-idx?c=bhlead;cc=bhlead;view=text;rgn=main;didno=umich-bhl-04101

http://quod.lib.umich.edu/b/bhlead/umich-bhl-04101?rgn=main;view=text

http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/f/findaid/findaid-idx?c=bhlead;id=navbarbrowselink;cginame=findaid-idx;cc=bh

lead;view=reslist;subview=standard;didno=umich-bhl-04101

[0723] E. E. Cummings additional papers, 1870-1969, MS Am 1892-1892.11

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

Description: E. E. Cummings (1894-1962) was an American poet, painter, essayist, author, and playwright. Series: I.MS Am 1892: Letters to E. E. Cummings, contains correspondence from James Angleton, Irving Babbitt, The Conservative Party, Inc., John Dos Passos, Max Eastman, The Freeman; a monthly journal of ideas on liberty. N.Y, Eustace Clarence Mullins, Ezra Pound, and H. Keith Thompson. Series: II. MS Am 1892.1: Letters from E. E. Cummings, contains correspondence to Irving Babbitt, John Dos Passos, Ernest Hocking, and Ezra Pound.

Websites with information:

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

Finding aid:

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~hou01075

[0724] E. E. Cummings additional papers, 1917-1962, MS Am 1892.13

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

Description: Series: I. Letters by Edward Estlin Cummings to various correspondents, contains correspondence to John Dos Passos, Max Eastman, William Ernest Hocking, Ezra Pound, Noel Stock, and H. Keith Thompson.

Websites with information:

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

Finding aid:

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~hou01861

[0725] E. E. Cummings papers, 1870-1969, MS Am 1823-1823.10

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

Description: Series: I. MS Am 1823: Letters to E. E. Cummings, contains correspondence from J. J. Angleton, Committee of One Million Against the Admission of Communist China to the United Nations, John Dos Passos, Max Eastman, Thomas Stearns Eliot, Ernest Hocking, John Kasper, Eustace Clarence Mullins, Ezra Pound, W. Dallam Simpson, Noel Stock, H. Keith Thompson, and George Sylvester Viereck. Series: II. MS Am 1823.1: Letters from E. E. Cummings, contains correspondence to John Dos Passos, Max Eastman, John Kasper, Eustace Clarence Mullins, Ezra Pound, Noel Stock, and H. Keith Thompson.

Websites with information:

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

Finding aid:

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~hou00946

[0726] Helen Norris Cummings Papers, 1865-1949, Accession #72

Location: Local History/Special Collections, Alexandria Library, 717 Queen Street, Alexandria, VA 22314

Description: Helen Norris Cummings, daughter of Norris Cummings (1834-1904) and Emma Ricketts Cummings (d. 1930), resided in Alexandria from about 1894 until 1949, the time of her death. Correspondence from the National Republic, The Movement Against Socialism in the Church, and the Industrial Defense Association. Subject files on American Vigilant Intelligence Federation, American Defense Society, American Legion, Anti-Patriotic Activities, Better American Federation, Bolshevism, William E. Borah, Earl Browder, Communism/Socialism, Communist Party, Daughters of the American Revolution, Foreign Policy Association, Carter Glass, William R. Hearst, Adolf Hitler, Herbert Hoover, Immigration, Jews, Frederick J. Libby, National Patriotic Council, Rosika Schwimmer, Townsend, and United States Flag Assoc. There are also a few anti-Communism and anti-Socialism posters and a clip sheet from the National Patriotic Council.

Websites with information:

http://www.alexandria.lib.va.us/custom/web/lhsc/lhsc_pdfs/archive_index.pdf

Finding aids:

http://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaead/published/apl/vaallhs00004.xml

http://www.alexandria.lib.va.us/custom/web/lhsc/onlinecollectionguides/archive/box_072.pdf

[0727] Papers of Homer Stille Cummings, 1850-1956, Accession # 9973

Location: Special Collections, University of Virginia Library, Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia 22904-4110

Description: Homer Stille Cummings (1870-1956) was United States Attorney General from 1933 to 1939. The papers consist of correspondence, memoranda, diaries, speeches, articles, legal case files, daily schedules, photographs, daguerreotypes, engravings, newspaper clippings, scrapbooks, films, phonograph records, memorabilia, and other items. Included are papers that document Cummings' role in the Supreme Court Reorganization Bill, better known as the court-packing bill, as well as Attorney General Personal Files on Lynching, Anti-Lynching Bills 1935 Feb-1937 April, and The "Silver Shirts" (Asheville, NC anti-Semitic group) 1938 May.

Finding aid:

http://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaxtf/view?docId=uva-sc/viu01993.xml

[0728] Glenn Clarence Cunningham Papers: 1957-1970, RG1849.AM

Location: Nebraska State Historical Society, P.O. Box 82554, 1500 R Street, Lincoln, NE 68501

Description: Cunningham (1912-2003) was Mayor of Omaha from 1949-1954. Cunningham was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives representing Nebraska's 2nd Congressional District from 1957-1971. This collection consists of 133 boxes of legislative files, correspondence, subject files, newspaper clippings, reports, etc. relating to Glenn C. Cunningham's service in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1957-1970. Files on Americans for Constitutional Action, Bricker Amendment, Captive Nations, Captive Nations Week, Civil Rights, Committee for the Monroe Doctrine, Communism, Communist Propaganda, Connally Amendment, Conservatism, Fluoridation, General Douglas MacArthur, and Status of Forces Agreement.

Finding aid:

http://nebraskahistory.org/lib-arch/research/manuscripts/politics/glenn-cunningham.pdf

[0729] Cathrine Curtis papers, 1918, ca. 1930-ca. 1955 (bulk dates 1930-1953), MssCol 708

Location: Manuscripts and Archives Division, Stephen A. Schwarzman Building, Brooke Russell Astor Reading Room, Third Floor, Room 328, New York Public Library, Fifth Avenue at 42nd Street, New York, NY 10018-2788

Description: During the 1930's through 1950's, Curtis served as National Director and Board Chairperson of Women's Investors in America, Inc.; National Chairperson of Women's National Committee to Keep U.S. Out of War, and President of the organization Women Investors Research Institute, Inc. These organizations are represented in the collection.

Finding aids:

http://archives.nypl.org/mss/708

http://www.nypl.org/archives/1147

http://www.nypl.org/sites/default/files/archivalcollections/pdf/curtisc.pdf

[0730] Thomas B. Curtis Papers, 1950-1969, C3300 [microfilm]

Location: The State Historical Society of Missouri, 1020 Lowry Street, Columbia, Missouri 65201

Description: Thomas Bradford Curtis (1911-1993) was a U.S. Representative from Missouri, 1951-1969. The Thomas B. Curtis Papers contain constituent correspondence and congressional committee material during Curtis's terms as a Republican U.S. representative from Missouri. The bulk of committee material pertains to Ways and Means and Joint Economic Committees. The papers are filed chronologically by topic within each year. Subjects include Bruce Alger, American Nazi Party, American Conservative Union, Americans for Constitutional Action, John Milan Ashbrook, Atlantic Union, Becker Amendment, Ezra Taft Benson, Brainwashing, Bricker Amendment, William F. Buckley, Jr., Harry Flood Byrd, John W. Byrnes, Homer Earl Capehart, China Lobby, Christian Crusade, Christian Nationalist Crusade, Committee for Constitutional Government, Committee of One Million Against the Admission of Communist China to the United Nations, Common Sense, Communism, Connally Amendment, Conservatism, Everett McKinley Dirksen, James O. Eastland, Paul Findley, Ford Foundation, Foreign Policy Association, Incorporated (New York, New York), James Vincent Forrestal, Incorporated Fund for the Republic, Genocide, Barry Morris Goldwater, Billy James Hargis, Henry Hazlitt, Alger Hiss, J. Edgar Hoover, Herbert Hoover, H. L. Hunt, Edward Hunter (Black Book on Red China), Internal security, John Birch Society, Katanga, Frank L. Kluckhohn (Lyndon's Legacy), William Fife Knowland, Ku Klux Klan, Alfred Mossman Landon, Lend-Lease, Liberty Amendment, Liberty Lobby (Washington, D.C.), Clare Boothe Luce, Douglas MacArthur, Joseph R. McCarthy, McCarthyism, Carl McIntire, Joseph Cardinal Mindszenty, Raymond Charles Moley, Ben Moreell, Otto F. Otepka, Wright Patman, Race and Intelligence, Racism 1960s, Ayn Rand, George Lincoln Rockwell, Phyllis Schlafly, School integration, Segregation 1960s, State rights 1950s, Robert A. Taft, Strom Thurmond, John Goodwin Tower, Townsend Plan, Moïse K. Tshombe, Edwin Anderson Walker, George Corley Wallace, Water--Fluoridation, Robert H. W. Welch Jr., John Bell Williams, Women Investors Research Institute, Inc., and Young Americans for Freedom.

Websites with information:

http://shs.umsystem.edu/manuscripts/descriptions/desc-gov.html

http://shs.umsystem.edu/manuscripts/descriptions/desc-usreps.html

Finding aid:

http://shs.umsystem.edu/manuscripts/invent/3300.pdf

[0731] Selected records related to A.C. Cuza and the National Christian Party, 1834-1948 (bulk 1934-1943), RG-25.059M [microfilm]

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

Description: Contains records relating to A. C. Cuza (1857-1946), a leading anti-Semite in Romania and the leader of the Partidul Naţional Creştin (National Christian Party (PNC)), which was in power from December 1937 to February 1938. Also contains records relating to Istrate Micescu, the Justice Minister of the PNC administration.

Websites with information:

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

https://www.ushmm.org/online/archival-guide/detail.php?id=1430

https://portal.ehri-project.eu/units/us-005578-irn39073

Catalogue description:

http://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/irn39073

[0732] Czech and Slovak inter-war right wing publications

Location: Matica slovenská, Mudronova 1, 036 52 Martin, Slovakia

Description: Complete collections of all the Slovak newspapers, both national and local; ultra-nationalist pamphlets banned during the inter-war period and published outside the Republic; biographies on key political figures and ideologues (Andrej Hlinka; Jozef Tiso; Karol Sidor); as well as obscure, yet important, publications published by Czech right-wingers during the 1920s.

Websites with information:

http://users.ox.ac.uk/~oaces/guidebook/guide.html

Conservatism, the Right Wing, and the Far Right: A Guide to Archives

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