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[0733] Virginius Dabney Papers, 1941-1971, Accession # 7690-n

Location: Special Collections Dept., University of Virginia Library, Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia 22904-4110

Description: The papers of Virginius Dabney (1901-1995) contain extensive correspondence carried on by Dabney as editor of the Richmond Times-Dispatch, in his personal life, and as a Pulitzer Prize-winning author. Correspondence with William Frank Buckley, Jr., Harry Flood Byrd, James Francis Byrnes, John Dos Passos, Herbert Clark Hoover, John Edgar Hoover, Ku Klux Klan, Eugene Lyons, Westbrook Pegler, John Powell, Carleton Putnam, Robert Alphonso Taft, Dorothy Thompson, and DeWitt Wallace.

Finding aid:

http://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaxtf/view?docId=uva-sc/viu02982.xml;query=VIRGINIUS%20­DABNEY%20PAPER

S,;brand=default

[0733a] Madeleine Vinton Dahlgren Papers, 1877-1888, GTM.GAMMS122

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

Description: Madeleine Vinton Dahlgren (1825-1889) was a novelist, translator, and authority on social etiquette. An adamant anti-suffragist, she was among a group of women who, in January 1878, went before the U.S. Senate Committee on Privileges and Elections to lead an argument against a delegation proposing a sixteenth amendment to the Constitution that would allow women to vote. The papers consist of one scrapbook intact, containing material dating from 1885 through 1888; a fragment of a scrapbook, containing material dating 1877 through 1879; and one tintype. Contains articles and letters to the editor by or about Dahlgren, including "The Woman Suffragists" (The Baltimorian, January 26, 1878); "A Mild Rebuke" (Washington Post, January 14, 1878); "The Voice of the Voiceless. Mrs. Dahlgren's Argument Against Women's Suffrage" (Washington Post, March 7, 1878); "Anti-Suffrage Women" (Daily Times, St. Louis, March 24, 1878); Dahlgren, "An Appeal to Women as Mothers" (Washington Star, April 3, 1888) [an anti-suffragist letter to the editor]; "A Catholic Lady on Woman Suffrage" (The Michigan Catholic, April 12, 1888); and "Woman's True Sphere" (The Catholic Citizen, July 14, 1888).

Finding aid:

https://repository.library.georgetown.edu/bitstream/handle/10822/558887/GTM.GAMMS122.html?sequence=1

[0734] Daily News Morgue Files of the Bustop Campaign Collection, 1928-1988 (bulk 1962-1982), URB/BUS

Location: Special Collections and Archives, Oviatt Library, California State University, Northridge, 18111 Nordhoff Street, Northridge, CA 91330-8326

Description: The Daily News is the second-largest circulating newspaper in Los Angeles, California, and primarily reports stories pertinent to the San Fernando Valley area of Los Angeles. The collection contains the morgue, or inactive, files of the Daily News relevant to the Bustop Campaign, especially press coverage and other research. The Bustop Campaign was originally organized in March 1976, by San Fernando Valley parents opposed to forced busing to achieve school integration. The primary purpose of the campaign was to stop Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) from busing students from and to the San Fernando Valley. The collection consists primarily of court documents collected by the Daily News, as well as newspaper clippings from the Daily News and Los Angeles Times.

Websites with information:

https://findingaids.csun.edu/archon/index.php?p=collections/collections&browse&page=3

http://library.csun.edu/SCA/Peek-in-the-Stacks/DesegregationBusing

http://library.csun.edu/Collections/SCA/UAC/CollectionCodesOLD

Finding aids:

https://findingaids.csun.edu/archon/index.php?p=collections/controlcard&id=187

https://findingaids.csun.edu/archon/?p=collections/controlcard&id=187

[0735] Daily Worker and Daily World Cartoon Collection, Series I: Biographical Cartoons, 1936-1994, GRAPHICS.024.001 [cartoons]

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: Biographical Cartoons consists of cartoons depicting individuals. The cartoons were pulled from the Daily Worker and Daily World Photograph Collection (PHOTOS 223). Cartoons of Ezra Taft Benson, Theodore Bilbo, Louis F. Budenz, Harry Flood Byrd, James F. Byrnes, Charles E. Coughlin, Martin Dies, James O. Eastland, Hamilton Fish, James Forrestal, Benjamin Gitlow, Barry M. Goldwater, Merwin Kimball Hart, Alger Hiss, Adolf Hitler, Rush Dew Holt, J. Edgar Hoover, Herbert Hoover, H.L. Hunt, Patrick J. Hurley, William F. Knowland, William Lemke, Charles A. Lindbergh, Clare Boothe Luce, Douglas MacArthur, Joseph McCarthy, Draža Mihailović, Oswald Mosley, Karl E. Mundt, William H. Murray, John O'Donnell, Juan Domingo Peron, John E. Rankin, Ronald Reagan, Robert Rice Reynolds, Alfred Rosenberg, Allan Shivers, Gerald L. K. Smith, George E. Stratemeyer, Robert A. Taft, Eugene Talmadge, Dorothy Thompson, James A. Van Fleet, Harold Himmel Velde, George C. Wallace, Francis E. Walter, Burton K. Wheeler, and Robert E. Wood.

Websites with information:

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

Finding aid:

http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/tamwag/graphics_024_001/dscref15.html

[0736] Daily Worker and Daily World Negatives Collection, 1930-2001 (bulk 1968-1990), PHOTOS.223.001 [photographs]

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 official organ of the Communist Party, USA, the Daily Worker covered the major stories of the twentieth century but placed an emphasis on left-wing political movements as well as right wing extremism with an emphasis on fascist and Nazi movements. The collection contains approximately 670,000 photographic negatives in 4 x 5, 8 x 10, 120, 127 and 35 millimeter formats, contact sheets and log sheets related to the 35 millimeter negatives, and several hundred slides. Although materials in the collection were gathered throughout the life of the paper, the bulk of the material dates from 1930 to 1948 and from 1968 to 1990. Includes negatives captioned German American Bund (undated); Women Picketing Congressman's House to Protest H.R. 1776 (Lend-Lease Bill) (Mar 1941); Veterans Picketing the Daily News, Holding Picket Signs That Read: "The News is 100% Anti-Jew, Anti-Negro, Anti-Alien, Anti-American," "Hitler Isn't Dead, He's Writing For the News, See O'Donnell's Column" and "Dust O'Donnell" (Nov 1945); Charles Lindbergh, Jr., in Germany, and German Write-ups About Him (Dec 10, 1946); Copies of Nazi Propaganda Pamphlets (Aug 1945); Copy of Potsdam Conference Picture (seated from left to right, Clement Attlee, Harry S. Truman, Joseph Stalin) (May 1946); Pass Anti-Lynch Bill (Jun 1948); Minutemen Threat to The Worker (Sep 11, 1967); George Wallace For President Supporters Picket W. E. B. Du Bois Centennial Meeting, Carnegie Hall, New York, New York (Feb 23, 1968); George Wallace Rally, Madison Square Garden, New York, New York. Curtis LeMay also pictured (Oct 24, 1968); Pro-War Demonstration, City Hall, New York, New York. Participants include construction workers, longshoremen, members of John Birch Society (May 11, 1970); Daily World Offices (205 West 19th Street, 8th Floor) Attacked by Jewish Defense League Led by Meir Kahane. Film documenting attack exposed and tossed into trash can (June 3, 1970); Aeroflot and InTourist Bombed by Jewish Defense League (Nov 25, 1970); Jewish Defense League Invades American-Soviet Friendship Council, 156 6th Avenue, New York, New York (Dec 23, 1970); Right-Wingers Protest "Anti-Semitism" in Soviet Union. Participants include John Lindsay, Victor Gotbaum, members of Jewish Defense League, John Birch Society and Italian American Anti-Defamation League (Dec 29, 1970); Lobby of Daily World Building (205 West 19th Street, New York, New York) Firebombed by Jewish Defense League (Jan 17, 1971); Jewish Defense League Harasses Soviet Union Diplomats, Soviet Union Mission to the United Nations (67th Street between Lexington and 3rd Avenues), New York, New York (Feb 16, 1971); Jewish Defense League Pickets Communist Party of the United States of America Headquarters, 23 West 26th Street, New York, New York (Mar 30, 1971); Communist Party of the United States Headquarters Bombed by Jewish Defense League, 23 West 26th Street, New York, New York (Mar 30, 1971); Demonstration Against Israeli Aggression and Tactics of Jewish Defense League, Israel Mission to United Nations, 800 2nd Avenue, New York, New York. Radical Zionist Alliance and Jewish Defense League hold counter protest (Nov 23, 1971); Jewish Defense League Breaks Up School Board Meeting, P.S. 19, New York, New York (Jan 26, 1972); Jewish Defense League Kills Women in Bombing, Sol Hurok's Office, 56th Street and 6th Avenue, New York, New York (Jan 26, 1972); Young Workers Liberation League Members Beaten by Thugs from National Caucus of Labor Committees, Temple University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (Apr 11, 1973); National Caucus of Labor Committee Goons Attack Center for Marxist Education (29 West 15th Street), New York, New York (Apr 30, 1973); National Caucus of Labor Committees Goons in Debate with Bill Scott, Penn Garden Hotel (31st Street and 7th Avenue), New York, New York (Apr 27, 1973); National Caucus of Labor Committees Members, New York Criminal Court, 110 Centre Street, New York, New York (Jul 16, 1973).

Websites with information:

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

http://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/blog/?p=228

Finding aid:

http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/tamwag/photos_223_001/photos_223_001.html

[0737] Daily Worker and Daily World Photographs Collection, 1920-2001 (bulk 1930-1990), PHOTOS.223 [photographs]

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 official organ of the Communist Party, USA, the Daily Worker's editorial positions reflected the policies of the Communist Party. The collection consists of approximately 178,000 photographic prints produced by a variety of processes, as well as clippings and graphic material. Series I: Biographical Files, contains files on Jean Louis Rodolphe Agassiz, America First Committee, anti-Communism, anti-Semitism, John M. Ashbrook, Friedrich Ernst Auhagen, Joseph Beauharnais, Byron de la Beckwith, Ezra Taft Benson, George Benson, Theodore Gilmore Bilbo, William Edgar Borah, R. H. Bork, Spruille Braden, Boris Brasol, John W. Bricker, Styles Bridges, Howard Victor Broenstrupp, Anita Bryant, Patrick J. Buchanan, William F. Buckley, Jr., Louis F. Budenz, Edgar C. Bundy, Usher L. Burdick, Harry Flood Byrd, William J. Cameron, Homer E. Capehart, Church League of America, Corneliu Zelea Codreanu, Charles E. Coughlin, Fred Cowan, Edward Lodge Curran, Stephen A. Day, George Deatherage, Prescott F. Dennett, Lawrence Dennis, Elizabeth Kirkpatrick Dilling, Barry Domvile, Karl Dönitz, David Ernest Duke, James O. Eastland, Max Eastman, Charles A. Edison, Virgil F. Effinger, T. S. Eliot, Jerry Falwell, Amintore Fanfani, Orval Eugene Faubus, Paul Findley, Hamilton Fish, Henry Ford, James Forrestal, Patrick J. Frawley, Frank E. Gannett, Virginio Gayda, Benjamin Gitlow, Joseph Goebbels, Hermann Goering, Barry M. Goldwater, Edith Green, Billy James Hargis, Merwin Kimball Hart, Jesse Helms, Rudolf Hess, Alger Hiss, Adolf Hitler, Clare E. Hoffman, Rush Dew Holt, J. Edgar Hoover, Herbert Hoover, House Committee on Un-American Activities, Charles B. Hudson, H. L. Hunt, Edward H. Hunter, Ellis O. Jones, Walter Judd, Harry Jung, Howard Eldred Kershner, Willford Isbell King, William F. Knowland, Ku Klux Klan, Fritz Kuhn, Alfred M. Landon, William Langer, Owen Lattimore, William Lemke, Isaac Don Levine, Robert Ley, Charles A. Lindbergh, Huey Pierce Long, Alice Roosevelt Longworth, Clare Boothe Luce, Douglas MacArthur, Russell Maguire, J. B. Matthews, Harvey Matusow, Joseph McCarthy, Carl McIntire, Joseph Ellsberry McWilliams, Adolphe Menjou, Tom Metzger, Draža Mihailović, József Mindszenty, Raymond Moley, Oswald Mosley, Karl E. Mundt, William H. Murray, Vance Muse, Benito Mussolini, National Renaissance Party, National States Rights Party, Jerry Nims, Oliver North, Gerald P. Nye, W. Lee O'Daniel, Lee Harvey Oswald, Otto F. Otepka, Franz von Papen, John Patler, Wright Patman, J. Westbrook Pegler, William Dudley Pelley, Leander Perez, J. Howard Pew, Herbert A. Philbrick, Gifford Pinchot, Stefan T. Possony, Pierre Poujade, Ezra Pound, Edgar M. Queeny, John E. Rankin, John R. Rarick, John J. Raskob, Ronald Reagan, B. Carroll Reece, Ogden Mills Reid, Ogden R. Reid, William A. Reuben, Robert Rice Reynolds, Joachim von Ribbentrop, Charles Owen Rice, Eddie Rickenbacker, Matthew B. Ridgway, Victor Riesel, Oral Roberts, Pat Robertson, George Lincoln Rockwell, Carlos P. Romulo, Kermit Roosevelt, Elihu Root, Alfred Rosenberg, John H. Rousselot, Jack Ruby, Richard B. Russell, Jr., William Safire, Leverett Saltonstall, John C. Satterfield, Richard Mellon Scaife, Antonin Scalia, Phyllis Schlafly, John G. Schmitz, George S. Schuyler, Fred Schwarz, Clay Shaw, Robert M. Shelton, Allan Shivers, William Shockley, Jouett Shouse, Suzanne Silvercruys, John K. Singlaub, Otto Skorzeny, W. Cleon Skousen, Gerald L. K. Smith, George Sokolsky, Aleksandr Isaevich Solzhenitsyn, Heinz Spanknoebel, John Sparkman, John L. Spivak, Walter S. Steele, Vilhjálmur Stefánsson, John C. Stennis, Jesse Benjamin Stoner, George E. Stratemeyer, Fulvio Suvich, Jimmy Swaggart, Robert A. Taft, Eugene Talmadge, Herman E. Talmadge, Clarence Thomas, Dorothy Thompson, Strom Thurmond, Tokyo Rose, John G. Tower, Francis E. Townsend, James A. Van Fleet, Mrs. Lyril Clark Van Hyning, Harold Himmel Velde, George Sylvester Viereck, Richard A. Viguerie, Oswald Garrison Villard, B. J. Vorster, George R. Wackenhut, Edwin A. Walker, George C. Wallace, Francis E. Walter, Lois de Lafayette Washburn, J. C. Watts, John Wayne, Albert C. Wedemeyer, Robert W. Welch, Rebecca West, Burton K. Wheeler, Harry Dexter White, William Allen White, Alexander Wiley, Wendell L. Willkie, Gerald B. Winrod, Robert E. Wood, and Allen Alderson Zoll. Series II: Subject Files, contains files on Abortion; America First Committee (AFC); American Independent Party; American League Against War and Fascism; American Legion; American Party; American Vindicator (newspaper); Anti-Communism; Anti-Nazi and Anti-Fascist Demonstrations; Anti-Semitism; Birth Control; Black Legion; Bretton Woods Conference (United Nations Monetary and Financial Conference, Bretton Woods, New Hampshire); Christian Crusade; Christic Institute; Church League of America; Civil Rights; Colonialism; Concentration Camps in the United States; Confederate Flag - Display of; Daughters of the American Revolution; Dumbarton Oaks Conference (Washington Conversations on International Peace and Security Organization); Edmund Burke Society; England - Racism; England - Fascists; Euthanasia; Fascism; Fascism - United States; Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) - Fascists; Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) - Racism; Fighting American Nationalists (FAN); France - Fascists; Freedom Train; German American Bund; Germany - Third Reich; Hearst Corporation; Henry Regnery Company; House Internal Security Committee (United States House of Representatives Internal Security Committee); House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC); Integration; Italy - Fascists and Anti-Fascist Demonstrations; Jewish Defense League; John Birch Society; Kennecott Utah Copper Corporation; Ku Klux Klan; Labor-Management Relations Act (Taft-Hartley Act); Libertarian Party; Loyalty Oaths; Lynchings; March for Life; McCarran Internal Security Act; Minutemen (organization); National Association of Manufacturers (NAM); National Caucus of Labor Committees (NCLC); National Council of the Churches of Christ in the USA (NCC); National Renaissance Party (NRP) (United States); National Rifle Association (NRA); National Right to Work Congress; National Socialist White Peoples Party (NSWPP); National States' Rights Party; National Youth Alliance (NYA); Nazis; Nuremberg Trial of Major German War Criminals; Pearl Harbor; Peekskill Riots (New York); Poll Tax; Pornography; Racism; Radio Free Europe; Republican Party; Right-to-work Law; Sam Adams Committee of Public Safety; School Integration; School Integration - Demonstrations against; South Africa - Apartheid; Southern Patriot (magazine); Spain - Fascists; Sterilization; Subversive Activities Control Board (SACB); Townsend Plan (old-age pension); Ultra-Right Wing - United States; United States - Imperialism; White Confederacy (organization); Witch Hunts; Women - Suffrage; Women - Equal Rights Amendment; World Court (The Hague, Netherlands); World Council of Churches; Young Americans for Freedom (YAF); and Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA) - Demonstrations against.

Websites with information:

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

http://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/blog/?p=228

Finding aids:

http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/tamwag/photos_223/

http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/tamwag/photos_223/photos_223.html

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

http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/tamwag/photos_223/dscref1.html

[0737a] Nikolai Trofimovich Dakhov Papers, ca. 1920-1960, Ms Coll/Dakhov

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

Description: Nikolai T. Dakhov (1893- ) was a leader of the Russian émigré fascist movement in Brazil. The collection includes letters of an autobiographical nature; memoirs concerning the Civil War and emigration, the largest part of them entitled "Ot Gallipoli do Brazilii"; copies of photographs and drawings from the Civil War and the Russian émigré fascist movement in the 1930s; and one issue of Russkaia Gazeta (Saõ Paulo, 1935), edited by Dakhov.

Websites with information:

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/320408562

http://www.worldcat.org/title/nikolai-trofimovich-dakhov-papers-1920-1960/oclc/320408562

Finding aids:

http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/archival/collections/ldpd_4077438/

http://www.columbia.edu/cu/libraries/inside/projects/findingaids/scans/pdfs/ldpd_bak_4077438.pdf

[0738] Fondo Ilario dal Ben, bb. 2 (1969-1980), Fondo n. 119

Location: Fondazione Culturale Vera Nocentini, Via Barbaroux 43 - 10122 Torino, Italy

Description: Includes documentation concerning the National Italian Workers' Union (Confederazione Italiana dei Sindacati Nazionali dei Lavoratori; CISNAL) and the neo-Fascist party Italian Social Movement (Movimento sociale italiano; MSI).

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.

Websites with information:

http://www.fondazioneveranocentini.it/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=221:archivio-fondi-archivi-personali&catid=32:uncategorised

[0739] George R. Dale papers, 1922-2011, MSS.045

Location: Ball State University Archives and Special Collections, Alexander M. Bracken Library, Room 210, 2000 W. University Avenue, Muncie, Indiana 47306

Description: George R. Dale (1867-1936), mayor of Muncie from 1930 to 1935, was also the editor and publisher of the Post-Democrat, a local newspaper. Mr. Dale gained national attention in the late 1920s for his battles with the Ku Klux Klan. The collection includes correspondence from 1924 to 1934, including a warning from the Ku Klux Klan in 1923, printed material from the Ku Klux Klan, newspaper clippings, and a scrapbook from the Dale family covering the life of George R. Dale through his battles with the Ku Klux Klan and the United States federal and state court systems. Series 2: Dale, George R., Ku Klux Klan documents, 1922-1944, contains copies of C. Lewis Fowler. The Ku Klux Klan: Its Origin, Meaning, and Scope of Operation, circa 1922; Constitution: Independent Klan of America, 1924; Klan songbook, undated; articles by Virginia Gardner ("Klansmen Crusade for Dewey," New Masses, Oct. 31, 1944; "Meet Grand Kleagle Wolfe, Dewey Stalwart," New Masses, Nov. 7, 1944); The Klan Unmasked, circa 1922; The Klan Inside Out, by Marion Monteval (1924); and The Truth about the Women of the Ku Klux Klan, undated.

References:

Bradford W. Scharlott, "The Hoosier Journalist and the Hooded Order: Indiana Press Reaction to the Ku Klux Klan in the 1920s," Journalism History, Volume 15, No. 4, Winter 1988, pp. 122-31; Ron F. Smith, "The Klan's Retribution Against an Indiana Editor: A Reconsideration," Indiana Magazine of History, Volume 106, Issue 4, December 2010, pp. 381-400, http://scholarworks.iu.edu/journals/index.php/­imh/article/view/12574/18818 and http://scholarworks.iu.edu/journals/index.php/imh/article/­view/12575/18821.

Websites with information:

http://bsu.libguides.com/kkk

http://cardinalscholar.bsu.edu/bitstream/123456789/196681/2/SPEC.084.pdf.txt

http://www.bsu.edu/libraries/archives/guides/KuKluxKlanCollectionGuide.pdf

Finding aid:

http://www.bsu.edu/libraries/archives/findingaids/MSS045.pdf

[0739a] Dalhousie Rudyard Kipling Collection

Location: Killam Memorial Library, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia B3H 4R2, Canada

Description: The Dalhousie Rudyard Kipling Collection, assembled by Halifax lawyer James McGregor Stewart, includes forty-one literary manuscripts; 773 letters written by Kipling to family, friends and editors; 2,600 published books and pamphlets; 2,375 newspaper issues; 1,288 periodical issues; eighty-three original illustrations; selected contemporary criticism; Kipling autographs; forty pieces of sheet music based on Kipling poems; fifteen records; and Kipling ephemera.

Websites with information:

https://libraries.dal.ca/find/special-collections/kipling-collection.html

http://libraries.dal.ca/collection/special_collections/collectionsguide/kipling_collection.html

http://libraries.dal.ca/content/dam/dalhousie/pdf/library/DUASC/KillamMajorSpecialCollections/Kipling_Collection_Special_Collections.pdf

http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/collectionsp-bin/colldisp/l=0/c=138

[0740] Ted Dalton Papers, 1933-1978 (bulk 1952-1959), Mss. 81 D17

Location: Special Collections, Earl Gregg Swem Library, College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia 23187-8794

Description: Ted Dalton (1901-1989) was a Virginia state senator, 1944-1959; Republican candidate for governor of Virginia, 1953, 1957; and U. S. district judge of the Western District of Virginia from 1959. Correspondence, speeches, news clippings, photographs, recordings, and reels of film. Correspondents include J. Lindsay Almond, Ezra T. Benson, Harry F. Byrd, Sr., Dwight D. Eisenhower, J. Edgar Hoover, and Thomas B. Stanley. Subjects covered include segregation and the Gray Commission Report (Commission on Public Education).

Finding aid:

http://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaxtf/view?docId=wm/viw00037.xml

[0741] John Anthony Danaher Papers, 1916-1979 (bulk 1938-1953), MS 165

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

Description: The papers consist primarily of Danaher's files for his one term in the United States Senate from Connecticut (1939-1945) and include political and constituent correspondence, speeches, background material, and copies of legislation. The files highlight his efforts to prevent American involvement in World War II. Series I. U.S. Senate Correspondence Files, contains files on Charles Beard, Committee to Defend America, Hartford, William Langer (senator elect protest), Lend-Lease: H.R. 1776, Fulton Lewis, Clare Boothe Luce, Non-Intervention, and Union Now. Series II. U.S. Senate Subject Files, contains files on America First Committee, Committee to Defend America, Communism, Lend-Lease, Clare Boothe Luce, Pearl Harbor, Union Now, and Wendell Willkie.

Finding aids:

http://hdl.handle.net/10079/fa/mssa.ms.0165

http://drs.library.yale.edu:8083/fedora/get/mssa:ms.0165/PDF

[0742] Charlie Daniel Editorial Cartoon Collection, 1951-2012, MS.3526 [cartoons; partly digital collection]

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

Description: Charles Rufus Daniel (1929- ) was the editorial cartoonist at the Knoxville Journal (from 1958) and the Knoxville News-Sentinel (from 1992). This collection consists of over 20,000 original cartoons drawn by Daniel during his career. Series I: Causes, has cartoons about the Ku Klux Klan. Series V: Tennessee, has cartoons about Frank Clement and Fred Thompson. Series IX: National Politics, has cartoons about George H. W. Bush, George W. Bush, Harry F. Byrd, CIA, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Flag Burning Amendment, Gerald R. Ford, Newt Gingrich, Iran-Contra, Richard M. Nixon, Ronald Reagan, and George Wallace. Series X: International Politics, has cartoons about Communism.

Finding aid:

http://dlc.lib.utk.edu/spc/view?docId=ead/0012_003299_000000_0000/0012_003299_000000_0000.xml

Finding aid to digital collection:

http://digital.lib.utk.edu/collections/danielcartooncollection

[0743] Josephus Daniels Papers, 1829-1948 (bulk 1913-1921), MSS17715

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

Description: Josephus Daniels (1862-1948) was an American diplomat, journalist, and secretary of the navy. As Raleigh News & Observer owner Josephus Daniels consistently pandered to rape fears in the Democratic party's successful effort to regain control of the North Carolina legislature in 1898. Their efforts to defame black men as sexual predators spilled over into overt racial violence in Wilmington, where it served as an excuse for whites to rampage through the black community and seize complete political control. Correspondence, diaries, speeches and writings. The series Correspondence, 1878-1948. [Subseries] Special, 1900-1947, contains files on Calvin Coolidge, George Creel, Thomas Dixon, Charles Edison, Thomas A. Edison, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Carter Glass, Herbert Hoover, Frank Knox, Frank Murphy, and Al Mitchell Palmer. The series Miscellany, 1839-1948, includes a collection of autographs and autograph letters, with files on Brooks Adams, Sherwood Anderson, Hugo Lafayette Black, Cecil B. DeMille, Henry Ford, Charles A. Lindbergh, Douglas MacArthur, and Henry Louis Mencken.

References:

Katharine E. Brand, "The Josephus Daniels Papers," Quarterly Journal of Current Acquisitions Vol. 7, No. 4 (August 1950), pp. 3-10; Andrew Leiter, "Thomas Dixon, Jr.: Conflicts in History and Literature," http://docsouth.unc.edu/southlit/dixon_intro.html.

Websites with information:

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

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

Finding aids:

http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms010320

http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms010320.3

http://rs5.loc.gov/service/mss/eadxmlmss/eadpdfmss/2010/ms010320.pdf

[0743a] Josephus Daniels Papers, 1863-1947, Collection Number: 00203 [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: Josephus Daniels was the owner and editor of the Raleigh News and Observer; secretary of the Navy in the administration of Woodrow Wilson, 1913-1921; and U.S. ambassador to Mexico in the administration of Franklin D. Roosevelt, 1933-1941. The collection includes correspondence, writings, diaries, and other materials.

Finding aid:

http://finding-aids.lib.unc.edu/00203/

[0743b] Josephus Daniels Papers, 1904-1954 (bulk 1913-1942)

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

Description: Josephus Daniels (1862-1948) was Secretary of the Navy, Ambassador to Mexico, and editor of the Raleigh News and Observer. Series in the collection include Correspondence, 1917-1951 bulk 1929-1942; Letterbooks, 1915-1921; Telegrams, 1916-1920; Pressbooks, 1913-1918; Speeches, Writings, Related Materials, 1919-1946; Topical Series, 1914-1945 and undated; Clippings; Miscellany, 1904-1947 and undated; and Photographs, 1933 and undated.

Finding aid:

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

[0744] Ida M. Darden Collection, 1950-1961, MSS 0072

Location: Houston Metropolitan Research Center, Houston Public Library, 500 McKinney, Houston, Texas 77002

Description: Mrs. Ida Muse Darden (1886-1980) worked as a publicist, fund-raiser, and lobbyist for various conservative organizations, including Pauline Wells and the Texas Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage. She was also the sister of Vance Muse (1890-1950), an oil industry lobbyist, founder of the Christian American Association, and founder of the "right to work" anti-labor campaign. In 1949 she founded The Southern Conservative, a Fort Worth based extreme right-wing, anti-Communist publication, centering topically on national issues. The paper ran from 1950 until 1961. Darden was opposed to United States membership in the United Nations, the Ku Klux Klan, and the Civil Rights movement.

Websites with information:

https://www.tsl.texas.gov/exhibits/suffrage/aftermath/page3.html

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/browse/browse_houpub2.html

Finding aid:

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/houpub/00003/hpub-00003.html

[0745] The Editorial Cartoons of J.N. 'Ding' Darling [cartoons; digital collection]

Location: Iowa Digital Library, University of Iowa Libraries, 100 Main Library (LIB), 125 West Washington St., Iowa City, IA 52242-1420

Description: Jay N. "Ding" Darling (1876-1962) was a Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist. In 1934-1935 Darling headed what is now the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, created the Federal Duck Stamp Program which has since restored thousands of acres of wet lands, and in 1936 founded the National Wildlife Federation. Eleven thousand cartoons are currently represented in this collection. People represented in the cartoons include William Edgar Borah, John William Bricker, Nicholas Murray Butler, Harry Flood Byrd, James F. Byrnes, Arthur Capper, Alexis Carrel, Chiang Kai-shek, Charles Edward Coughlin, George Creel, Martin Dies, Jr., Thomas F. Dixon, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Henry Ford, Frank E. Gannett, Carter Glass, Joseph Goebbels, Hermann Wilhelm Goering, William Randolph Hearst, Adolf Hitler, Herbert Hoover, J. Edgar Hoover, Hiram Johnson, David Starr Jordan, Alfred M. Landon, William Lemke, Charles A. Lindbergh, Henry Cabot Lodge, William Loeb, Huey Pierce Long, Erich Ludendorff, Douglas MacArthur, Raymond Moley, William H. Murray, Benito Mussolini, Gerald Prentice Nye, Robert Latham Owen, George Nelson Peek, J. Westbrook Pegler, Amos Pinchot, Gifford Pinchot, John J. Raskob, James A. Reed, Ogden Reid, Milo Reno, Jouett Shouse, Vilhjálmur Stefánsson, Robert A. Taft, Dorothy Thompson, Strom Thurmond, Alfred von Tirpitz, Francis E. Townsend, Thomas E. Watson, Burton K. Wheeler, William Allen White, and Wendell L. Willkie.

Websites with information:

http://collguides.lib.uiowa.edu/results.php?repo=1

http://collguides.lib.uiowa.edu/search.php

http://collguides.lib.uiowa.edu/?MSC0170

Finding aids:

http://digital.lib.uiowa.edu/ding/?print=true

http://digital.lib.uiowa.edu/ding/

[0745a] Charles Darwin / Evolution Collection, ca. 1786-1968 (bulk 1840s-1920s), Mss 28

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

Description: The collection contains printed and manuscript materials, photo albums, correspondences, pamphlets, diaries, and various ephemera by and relating to Charles Darwin and others interested in natural history and the theory of evolution. Series II: Manuscripts, Letters, and Ephemera, contains a file on Marie Charlotte Carmichael Stopes (1880-1958; includes correspondence, offprints, and clippings, mainly relating to E. W. MacBride's review of Stopes' work), ca. 1927-1937. Series III: Pamphlets and Other Uncataloged Printed Ephemera, contains a file of Anti-Evolution Pamphlets (includes items from Back to the Bible Publishers, The Bible Christian Unity Fellowship, Central Bible Truth Depot, The Evolution Protest Movement, and the International Christian Crusade), most ca. 1962-1968. Series IV: Julian Huxley Papers, contains a copy of "Eugenics and Society" (from Eugenics Review, with a few pencil markings), ca. 1936.

Websites with information:

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

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

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt0d5nc43p/entire_text/

[0746] Charles B. Davenport Collection, 1809-1965

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

Description: The Charles B. Davenport Collection contains the papers of American eugenicist and biologist Charles B. Davenport (1866-1944) and those of his wife Gertrude Crotty Davenport. It consists of family, institutional, and scientific photographs, biographical material, memorabilia, correspondence, photocopies of his articles, and supporting material. It is divided into four record groups: Record Group I: Photographs; Record Group II: Biographical Material; Record Group III: Memorabilia; and Record Group IV: Supporting Material. Contains photographs or other material relating to Louis Agassiz, Irving Fisher, and Harry Hamilton Laughlin.

Finding aids:

http://archives.cshl.edu/R/L7K387RI8NTVI51FR9IU7VUUDLU4682AR9TDC6V6V7ST46GPU7-00507?func=collections-result&collection_id=1562&pds_handle=GUEST

http://archives.cshl.edu/view/action/singleViewer.do?dvs=1394718788648~235&locale=en_US&DELIVERY_

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

[0747] Charles Benedict Davenport Papers, 1874-1946, Mss.B.D27

Location: Library, American Philosophical Society, 105 S 5th St, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19106-3386

Description: The Charles B. Davenport Papers contains the professional correspondence of one of America's best known eugenicists during the period 1915 to 1935. Documenting all phases of Davenport's life and career, the collection is an invaluable resource for study of the history of the eugenics movement in America, the history of genetics, biometrics, and evolutionary thought during the early 20th century, and the history of the Biological Laboratory, the Carnegie Institution Department of Genetics, and the Eugenics Record Office at Cold Spring Harbor. Correspondents include American Eugenics Society, Clarence Gordon Campbell, Edwin Grant Conklin, Eugenics Record Office, Irving Fisher, Henry H. Goddard, C. M. Goethe, Madison Grant, Harry Hamilton Laughlin, Herman Lundborg, Jon Alfred Mjøen, Frederick Henry Osborn, Ernst Rüdin, Leon Whitney, and Albert Edward Wiggam.

Finding aids:

http://www.amphilsoc.org/collections/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.D27-ead.xml

http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.D27-ead.xml

[0748] John A. Davenport papers, 1919-1987, Coll. 99018

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

Description: Davenport (1904-1987) was an economist, author, and journalist. Writings, correspondence, notes, memoranda, and printed matter, relating to economic conditions in the United States, laissez-faire and conservative political thought, right-to-work issues, and political conditions in southern Africa, especially Zimbabwe and South Africa. The Mont Pèlerin Society file consists of materials on meetings, newsletters, and Davenport's speeches and writings as a member of the Society. The National Right to Work Committee and the National Right to Work Legal Defense Committee files consist of materials relating to the labor question in the United States and reflect Davenport's contribution to both organizations. The series Correspondence, 1919-1986, contains correspondence with American Economic Foundation, Brent Bozell, William F. Buckley, James Buckley, Economists National Committee on Monetary Policy, James V. Forrestal, Foundation for Economic Education, Foundation for Free Enterprise, Milton Friedman, Paul Gottfried, Friedrich A. von Hayek, Henry Hazlitt, Jesse Helms, Heritage Foundation, Hillsdale College, Center for Constructive Alternatives, Human Events, Intercollegiate Studies Institute, Intercollegiate Review, Jack Kemp, Henry Luce, Felix Morley, National Review, Ronald and Nancy Reagan, Henry Regnery, and Stephen Tonsor. The series Writings by Others, 1961-1980, contains writings by Whittaker Chambers, Milton Friedman, Friedrich A. von Hayek, Will Herberg, Bertrand de Jouvenel, Irving Kristol, Henry R. Luce, Fritz Machlup, Sylvester Petro, Henry Regnery, Wilhelm Roepke, Ernest Van den Haag, and Ludwig von Mises.

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/kt0s20098j/

[0749] Russell Wheeler Davenport Papers, 1899-1980 (bulk 1930-1954), MSS61549

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

Description: Russell Wheeler Davenport (1899-1954) was an author, editor, and political activist. Correspondence, memoranda, diaries, writings, speeches, research material, political files, biographical material, photographs, and other papers relating primarily to Davenport's career as a writer and editor with Fortune and Life magazines, his involvement with the Republican Party, his work with the Institute for Creative Research, New York, N.Y., his writings including The Dignity of Man (1955), his service in World War I and II, and his personal life. Series II. General Correspondence, 1919-1956, contains files on William Benton, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Herbert Hoover, Henry Cabot Lodge, Clare Boothe Luce, Henry R. Luce, Thruston B. Morton, Edgar M. Queeny, and Dorothy Thompson. Series III. Political File, 1934-1955, contains files on America First Committee; American Destiny Party meeting, 1941; Correspondence (Dwight D. Eisenhower, Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., Henry R. Luce, and Thruston Morton); Dwight D. Eisenhower; Fund for the Republic; Union Now; Wendell Willkie campaign; and Adolph Hitler. Series IV. Subject File, 1903-1972, contains files on American Mercury; Communist activity; Charles E. Coughlin; Everett Dirksen; Dumbarton Oaks; Anti-Semitism; Correspondence (William Benton, Clare Boothe Luce, Henry R. Luce, and Amos Pinchot); Freedoms Foundation, Inc., awards; Taft-Hartley Bill; Lease-Lend bill; Charles A. Lindbergh; Douglas MacArthur; Gerald P. Nye; America First; and World government.

Websites with information:

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

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

Finding aids:

http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms003047

http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms003047.3

http://lcweb2.loc.gov/service/mss/eadxmlmss/eadpdfmss/2003/ms003047.pdf

[0750] Donald Grady Davidson Papers, 1906-1968 (bulk 1920's–1960's)

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

Description: Davidson (1893-1968) was a U.S. poet, essayist, social and literary critic, and author. He was an opponent of the New Deal and one of its projects, the Tennessee Valley Authority. The papers include correspondence and writings by Davidson as well as reviews, research materials, publications materials, publicity for books, legal and financial documents, family records, newspaper clippings and photographs, segregation materials, and manuscripts of writings by others. Box 41, Segregation Materials, includes folders on South, The News Magazine of Dixie, 1956-1957; Allen-Bradley Co.; American Legion; American Opinion; American Progress Foundation; Americans for Constitutional Action; American Progress; Major L. L. B. Angas; The John Birch Society; Christian Economics; Common Sense: The Nation's Anti-Communist Newspaper; and Citizens' Councils (1956 -1960). Box 42, Segregation Materials, includes issues of or folders on The Citizen Council (Citizens' Councils) between 1955 and 1961; The Cross and the Flag; Donald Davidson, A Comment on James Jackson Kilpatrick's The Sovereign States"; Defenders of State Sovereignty and Individual Liberties (1955-1960); and East Tennessee Reporter (April 26, 1957-May 22, 1958). Box 43, Segregation Materials, contains issues of or folders on The Foundation for Economic Education, Inc.; The Solid South; Free Men Speak; Harry Pollard Gamble; Grass Roots League, Inc.; J. Evetts Haley; Human Events; The Independent American; The Independent American - Interim Committee for Independent Political Action; Russell Kirk; Meador Publishing Co.; Herbert S. Phillips; Putnam Letters Committee; The Dan Smoot Report; Southern States Industrial Council; and States Rights Council of Georgia. Box 44, Segregation Materials, contains copies of or folders on Three Races Under God, by Grady Fowler (1956); Tennessee Federation for Constitutional Government; Tennessee Society to Maintain Segregation; The Virginian; The Wanderer (St. Paul, Minnesota); Richard Weaver; John Belding Wirt; Newspaper/Magazine Articles on Segregation (copies); Civil Rights Legislation; Miscellaneous Clippings on Segregation; Association of Citizens' Councils of Mississippi; The Citizens' Report; and Audrey M. Shuey, "The Testing of Negro Intelligence" (carbon copy). Box 48. Subject Files, contains files on TVA.

References:

Edward S. Shapiro, "Donald Davidson and the Tennessee Valley Authority: The Response or a Southern Conservative," Tennessee Historical Quarterly, Vol. 33, No. 4 (Winter 1974), pp. 436-451; Nancy MacLean, Democracy in Chains: The Deep History of the Radical Right’s Stealth Plan for America (New York: Viking, 2017).

Finding aids:

https://web.archive.org/web/20130603164718/http://www.library.vanderbilt.edu/speccol/davidsond.shtml

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

[0751] Eugene Davidson Collection, ca. 1917-2002, Mss 185

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

Description: Eugene Davidson (1902-2002) was an historian, editor of Yale University Press, and editor of Modern Age (Chicago, IL), 1960-1970. The collection contains drafts, correspondence, research files, dealings with publishers, and reviews primarily relating to 20th century German history, including the Weimar Republic, Third Reich, Holocaust, Nuremberg trials, international war tribunals, and the Cold War period. Series I. Biographical/Personal Files, contains correspondence with America First Committee, Charles A. Beard (as subject), Grand Admiral Dönitz, The Freeman, Arthur R. Jensen, Adm. Husband E. Kimmel (as subject), and Modern Age. Series II. Editor's Files, contains a file on Modern Age - Editorials and Index, 1961-1969. Series V. Subject Files, contains files on Eichmann [Adolf] Trial - includes transcripts, minutes of sessions, articles, and related ; Speer [Albert] Files - correspondence (incl. some with Speer), research files, reviews, articles and other related material; Goebbels, 1937; Holocaust; Pearl Harbor; and Ernst Röhm.

Websites with information:

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

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

http://www.library.ucsb.edu/node/1786/#D

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/institutions/UC+Santa+Barbara::Special+Collec?descriptions=show;limit=ead

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt9v19s2zn/entire_text/

[0752] Philip and Rosamund Davies U.S. Elections Campaigns Archive, 1840-2010, MSS. Amer. s. 33

Location: Oxford, Bodleian Library, Vere Harmsworth Library Rothermere American Institute, University of Oxford, 1a South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3UB, United Kingdom

Description: The archive contains campaign material collected by Professor Philip Davies. The material covers all levels of elections. It comprises a wide range of material, from buttons, posters, bumper stickers, flyers and leaflets to more unusual examples of campaign ephemera such as t-shirts, caps, dolls, rain bonnets, jewellery, bars of soap, rain bonnets, playing cards and commemorative plates. Materials on American Independent Party, Tom Anderson (American Independent Party), T. Coleman Andrews (States Rights), Gary Bauer, John Bricker, Pat Buchanan, Conservative Caucus, David Duke, Newt Gingrich, Barry Goldwater, Jesse Helms, Herbert Hoover, Jack Kemp, Alf Landon, Lyndon LaRouche, Trent Lott, Douglas MacArthur, Lester Maddox (American Independent Party), Moral Majority (Jerry Falwell), National Rifle Association, National Tax Limitation Committee, New York State Right to Life Party, Oliver North, Ron Paul, Howard Phillips (Constitution Party), John Rarick (American Independent Party), Ronald Reagan, Pat Robertson, Lincoln Rockwell (American Nazi), John G. Schmitz (American Independent Party), Joseph Sobran (Constitution Party), Robert Taft, Strom Thurmond (States Rights), George C. Wallace, Thomas Werdel (States Rights), Burton K. Wheeler (Progressive Party), and Wendell Willkie.

Reference:

Philip Davies, "American Elections," Resources for American Studies, Issue 52, August 2001, http://www.baa

s.ac.uk/resources-for-american-studies-issue-52-august-2001/#American Elections.

Websites with information:

http://www.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/vhl/finding-resources/elections-archive

http://vhlresources.blogspot.com/2012/10/the-philip-rosamund-davies-us-elections.html

https://www.flickr.com/photos/87768664@N02/

http://researchingamerica.wordpress.com/2012/12/21/the-philip-rosamund-davies-us-elections-campaigns-archive-at-the-university-of-oxford/

Finding aid:

http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/wmss/online/blcas/uselection.html

[0753] James C. Davis papers, 1919-1966, MSS 507

Location: Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library, Woodruff Library, Emory University, 540 Asbury Circle, Atlanta, GA 30322

Description: Correspondence, audio-visual materials, speeches, subject and fact files of James Curran Erskine Davis (1895-1981), attorney, judge, Georgia representative to the United States Congress (1947-1963), and segregationist. Series 5: Correspondence, 1946-1960. Subseries 5.1. General correspondence, 1946-1960, contains files on Bricker Amendment, Communism, Eugene Cook, Fluoridation, Foundations, Genocide Treaty, Marvin Griffin, Katyń Massacre, Ku Klux Klan, General MacArthur, Malmedy, Moral Rearmament, Mundt-Nixon Bill - H.R. 5852, Poll Tax, Carleton Putnam - Letter, Segregation, Segregation in Public Schools, Segregation, Little Rock, Socialism, States' Rights, Supreme Court, Taft-Hartley Act, Voice of America, World Government, and Yalta Papers. Subseries 5.4: Personal, 1946-1956, contains three copies of letter sent to Eisenhower re: Civil Rights Bill, July 12, 1957 [online at http://lcdl.library.cofc.edu/lcdl/catalog/lcdl:87102] and a copy of the Augusta Courier. Series 7. Fact Files, 1937-1966, contains files on Africa - Segregation; Alabama - Segregation; American Legion; American Nationalist; American States Rights Association; Americanism, Clarence Manion; Americans for Constitutional Action; Apartheid (Africa's Segregation); Arkansas - Little Rock; Arkansas - Segregation (Little Rock); Augusta Courier; Better America; Bombings; Bricker Amendment; British Segregation; Bus Segregation; Citizen's Council; Civil Rights; Civil Rights Bill; Civil Rights - Legislation; Common Sense; Communism; Cross and the Flag; Dan Smoot Report; Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR); Disarmament; Dixie - American; Dixie Religious Review; Economic Council Letter; Eisenhower; England and Segregation; Exclusive, Fulton Lewis, Jr.; Facts Forum; Orval Faubus (Arkansas Governor); Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI); Federation for Constitutional Government; Florida - Segregation; Fluoridation; For America; Ford Foundation; Foreign Aid; Free Men Speak; Freedom Agenda (Carrie Chapman Catt Memorial Fund, Inc.); Fund for the Republic; Georgia Segregation; Georgia Segregation Laws; Georgia Tribune (Parson Jack); Georgians Unwilling to Surrender; William S. Girard - Case; Barry Goldwater; Marvin Griffin (Governor); Roy Harris; Highlander Folk School; Housing Segregation; Human Events; Independent American; Integration; Integration Arguments (Pro); Integration in Colleges; Intermarriage; Interposition; Interracial Marriage; John Kasper; Koinonia Farm; Ku Klux Klan; Liberty Ledger (rating of Congressmen); Life Lines; Louisiana Citizen's Council Newsletter; Loyalty Oath; Manion Forum of Opinion; Manion Letters; Ralph McGill, Editorial on Integration; Methodist Challenge; Military "Muzzling"; Militant Truth; Monroe Doctrine; Moral Re-Armament (MRA); National Review; National Association for the Advancement of White People; National Council of Churches of Christ of USA; North Carolina - School Integration; North Carolina - Segregation; Ohio Segregation; Panama Canal; Carleton Putnam - Letters; Radio Free Europe; Ronald Reagan (copy of address by); Red China; Right to Work; Right to Work Laws; Richard B. Russell (Senator); School Desegregation; Schools - Segregation Laws and Legislation (Georgia); segregation; Segregation Cases (Brown, '54-June 20, 1958); Segregation in North; "Sensing the News" (Southern States Industrial Council); Dan Smoot; Socialism; South Africa - Segregation; Southern Conservative; Southern Manifesto; States Rights Council of Georgia; States Rights; Statesman; Straight Talk; Subversive Activities Control Board; Supreme Court; Taft-Hartley; Herman E. Talmadge; Tennessee, Clinton; Tennessee Segregation; Texas Integration; Un-American Activities; Un-American Activities Committee; United Nations; United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO); United States Day; United World Federalists; Veterans Committee against Communism; Vigilant Reporter; Virginia Plan (Gray Report); The Virginian; Washington, D.C. - Integration; Washington School Desegregation; Western Voice; White American News; White Sentinel; and Yalta. Series 12. Speeches, 1948-1964, contains speeches by Eugene Cook and John Bell Williams and speeches and writings on segregation. Series 13. Subject Files, 1946-1959, contains files on American Legion; American Nationalist, October, 1959; American Economic Foundation; Americanism, copy of American Defense newsletter; letter sent to JCD from The American Defense Society, Inc., 1947; Bricker Amendment; Common Sense, 1959; Communism, printed material - report from Subversive Activities Control Board; Conservative Newspapers, Copy of The Solid South and The Texas Councilor, 1959; Cross and Flag, 1957-1959; Desegregation; Economic Council Letter, January, June, Sept., and Oct. 1959; Fluoridation; Fulton Lewis Broadcast Questionnaire, 1951; Georgia Tribune, 1959; Governor Marvin Griffin, copy of Georgia Municipal Roster, 1959; Hate Propaganda, newspaper clippings, correspondence, printed material, 1955-1957; Human Events, 1958-1959; Immigration, newsletter from Federation for Constitutional Government, 1959; Judiciary Committee-Walter McCarran Act; Khrushchev, text of broadcast by Dean Clarence E. Manion, August 30, 1959; Lend Lease; Manion Forum, texts of broadcasts on Manion Forum Network (including one by JCD), 1957-1959; McCarthy Hearings; Methodist Challenge, September, October 1959; Monetary Program, printed report - "Two Programs for Monetary Reform," 1947; Moral Re-Armament; Moral Rearmament Policy; National Association for Advancement of White People, correspondence, typed reports, 1954; National Review, 1958-1959; Ezra Pound, correspondence and report, 1949; Pornographic Literature; Segregation; Segregation (D.C. Schools); Segregation (Supreme Court School Cases); Socialized Medicine; States Rights; Status of Forces Treaty, text of speech, trial reports, 1955; Supreme Court; Taft-Hartley Law; Governor Herman Talmadge; Un-American Activities; Un-American Activities Committee; United Nations; Women's Patriotic Conference, printed material - Resolution of 29th Women's Patriotic Conference, 1955; and World Government, printed material - Freedom and Union, bills; correspondence, 1947.

Websites with information:

http://findingaids.library.emory.edu/titles/D/?page=2

http://guides.main.library.emory.edu/politicalmovements

http://larson.library.emory.edu/marbl/Guides/rg-school-desegregation.html

http://larson.library.emory.edu/marbl/Guides/rg-civil-rights.html

http://larson.library.emory.edu/marbl/Guides/rg-atlanta.html

http://www.lib.odu.edu/specialcollections/dove/scripts/viewitems.php

Finding aids:

http://findingaids.library.emory.edu/documents/davis-james507/

http://findingaids.library.emory.edu/documents/davis-james507/printable/

[0754] Papers of Lucy S. Dawidowicz, undated, 1936-1990, P-675

Location: American Jewish Historical Society, Center for Jewish History, 15 West 16th Street, New York, NY 10011

Description: Historian Lucy S. Dawidowicz (1915-1990) wrote on the Nazi genocide and the historical rise of Christian and German anti-Semitism. A leftist in her youth, Dawidowicz would later become a staunch conservative, anti-Communist, and opponent of feminism. The papers contain documents pertaining to American Jewish history, anti-Semitism in America, Holocaust denial, European Jewish heritage, and the Holocaust (including the American Jewish response). The bulk of the collection consists of extensive research notes and publications by both Dawidowicz and others, as well as correspondence to family, business contacts, and friends. Additional items include photographs, memoir materials and index cards. Files on Anti-Semitism, Henry Ford, Holocaust denial, Holocaust Revisionism, Immigration Restrictions, Institute for Historical Review (IHR), John Birch Society, Journal of Historical Review, Know-Nothings/Nativism, Ku Klux Klan, Leo Frank Case, and Radical Right.

Websites with information:

http://www.cjh.org/p/93

http://16thstreet.tumblr.com/post/45353078101/women-represented-in-the-collections-lucy-s

Finding aids:

http://findingaids.cjh.org//LSDawidowicz02.html

https://archive.is/es4rZ

[0754a] Christopher Dawson Papers, 1915-1983, MS/028 [partly digital collection]

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

Description: Christopher Dawson (1889-1970) was an English Catholic intellectual, historian, and author of books, articles, and scholarly monographs on the relation of religion and culture and the Christian sources for the development of western civilization. The papers include manuscripts of his publications, correspondence with colleagues and publishers, and Dawson's extensive library of works on philosophy, theology, Christian education, the history of religion, Europe, the Middle East, and the United States. Series II: Correspondence, contains files on British League for European Freedom, William F. Buckley, Jr., T.S. Eliot, C.S. Lewis, Michael Novak, and Edmund Opitz.

Finding aid:

https://archon.stthomas.edu/?p=collections/findingaid&id=81&q=

Finding aid to digital collection:

http://cdm16120.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/landingpage/collection/p15186coll13/

[0755] Dayton Right to Life Collection, 1990-2009, CSC11

Location: U.S. Catholic Special Collections, 302 Roesch Library, University of Dayton, 300 College Park, Dayton, OH 45469

Description: Dayton Right to Life was founded in 1972. It is a non-profit, non-denominational, and non-partisan group. Their mission is "to promote life through education and action." This includes the rights of the unborn, elderly, and disabled. This collection includes materials published by Dayton Right to Life, including informational brochures, letters soliciting donations, and copies of "Life Advocate," the organization's bimonthly newsletter, 2000-2009.

Finding aid:

http://ead.ohiolink.edu/xtf-ead/view?docId=ead/ODaU0035.xml

[0756] Dayton Women's Health Center Records, 1972-1997, MS-479

Location: Special Collections and Archives, Paul Laurence Dunbar Library, Wright State University, Dayton, OH 45435-0001

Description: Established in Kettering, Ohio, in September 1973, the Dayton Women's Health Center provided a variety of women's reproductive health services, including pregnancy tests, contraceptives, and abortions. This collection consists of the DWHC's administrative records, legal records, newspaper clippings, photographs, audiovisual materials, and memorabilia. Also included are materials on the abortion debate, such as pro-choice and pro-life brochures, pamphlets, newsletters, and other literature; records of picketers at the clinic; and correspondence from the DWHC's opponents and supporters. Series II: Abortion Controversy, 1973-1997. Subseries IIB: Pro-Life Materials, 1980-1997, contains newsletters, brochures, flyers, ads, and other literature from pro-life organizations such as Rescue Dayton/The Jericho Project, Dayton Right to Life, the Pro-Life Action Line, and the Army of God. Many of these materials were sent to the DWHC by pro-life activists or left by picketers. This subseries also includes "hate mail" and letters from pro-life advocates, including one folder containing correspondence from David Enix, a picketer with whom the DWHC was involved in lengthy court cases. Series III, Newspaper Clippings and Scrapbook, 1973-1997, consists of newspaper clippings and one scrapbook documenting the history of the Dayton Women's Health Center and abortion in Ohio and the United States. The majority of the newspaper clippings are from the Dayton Daily News. Many of the clippings feature the activities of pro-life and abortion protest groups, including the picketers who frequented the DWHC in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

Finding aid:

http://www.libraries.wright.edu/special/collection_guides/guide_files/ms479.pdf

[0757] Kenneth Hugh De Courcy papers, 1934-1991, Coll. 79080 [microfilm]

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

Description: De Courcy (1909-1999) was editor of Intelligence Digest, 1938-1976. Microfilm of correspondence, memoranda, depositions and other legal documents, minutes, and writings, relating to world politics, British foreign policy, espionage in Great Britain, the Imperial Policy Group, political views of the Duke of Windsor, and business affairs of and legal proceedings against British financier and publisher K. H. De Courcy.

Finding aids:

http://cdn.calisphere.org/data/13030/g3/kt9d5nd5g3/files/kt9d5nd5g3.pdf

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt9d5nd5g3/

[0758] Carte Renzo De Felice, 1956-1996, identificativo:IT-ACS-AS0001-0004207

Location: Archivio Centrale dello Stato, Piazzale degli Archivi, 27, 00144 Roma, Italy

Description: Renzo De Felice (1929-1996) was an Italian professor and historian, focusing especially on the history of the fascist dictatorship. Correspondence and documentation relating to his studies, writings, research, and publications.

Websites with information:

http://search.acs.beniculturali.it/OpacACS/guida/IT-ACS-AS0001-0004207

[0758a] Lee De Forest papers, 1884-1955, MSS18168

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

Description: Lee de Forest (1873-1961) was a radio pioneer and inventor. In the 1950s he was a member of the executive council of Defenders of the American Constitution, Inc., and a member of the advisory board of We, the People! The papers include biographical sketches, booklets, correspondence, diaries, drawings, essays, newspaper and magazine clippings, photographs, poetry, and research notes.

Websites with information:

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

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

Finding aids:

http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms998006

http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms998006.3

http://rs5.loc.gov/service/mss/eadxmlmss/eadpdfmss/1998/ms998006.pdf

[0758b] Lee de Forest papers, 1896-1971, MS 1210

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

Description: Lee de Forest (1873-1961) was a contributor to the development of wireless telegraphy in the United States and an inventor. The papers consist of correspondence as well as two versions of his autobiography, Father of Radio: Autobiography of Lee de Forest (1950), a copy of the published volume, typescripts of his diary, an article by him, newspaper clippings about him, and several miscellaneous items.

Finding aids:

http://hdl.handle.net/10079/fa/mssa.ms.1210

http://drs.library.yale.edu/fedora/get/mssa:ms.1210/PDF

[0758c] Lee and Marie de Forest Papers, 1873-1977 (bulk 1890-1961), Coll. 2003-34

Location: History San Jose Research Library, 1650 Senter Road, San Jose, CA 95112

Description: Papers of electronics inventor, radio and film pioneer Lee de Forest (1873-1961) and his fourth wife, Marie Mosquini de Forest. The collection includes correspondence, manuscripts, sketches and diagrams, notebooks, patents, memoirs, patent notes and legal papers, scrapbooks, speeches, poems, photographs, and articles and other printed material, and awards.

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8js9r0x/entire_text/

[0758d] Kenneth Dean Film collection, 1972, MP/1993.01 [films]

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: Reel 1 consists of footage of Thomas Albert Tarrants, a Ku Klux Klan bomber, describing to WLBT reporter Lincoln Warren his religious conversion while in prison at the Mississippi State Penitentiary, Parchman, Miss.

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://catalog.mdah.state.ms.us/cgi-bin/koha/opac-detail.pl?biblionumber=96238#

http://library.msstate.edu/FindingAid/WLBT_archives_finding_aid_MSS.366.pdf.

[0759] Vera Micheles Dean Papers, 1929-1973, A-17

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: Vera Micheles Dean (1903-1972) was a Russian-American international affairs specialist, author, and editor. After earning her doctorate, she joined the staff of the Foreign Policy Association, where she spent most of her professional life. The papers consist of biographical material, articles, travel and research notes. speeches, and typescript drafts of books and articles. Box 24. Accusations of being pro-Communist and subversive, 1960-1963, contains documentation of charges leveled by conservative groups that Foreign Policy Association literature was left-wing and subversive.

Websites with information:

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

Finding aid:

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~sch00545

[0760] Dearborn Independent Aaron Sapiro v. Henry Ford Lawsuit Collection, 1919-1929, Accession 48

Location: Benson Ford Research Center, The Henry Ford, 20900 Oakwood Boulevard, Dearborn, MI 48124-5029

Description: Aaron Sapiro was an agricultural cooperative advocate In 1924, Sapiro initiated a libel lawsuit against Henry Ford for anti-Semitic articles that appeared in the Dearborn Independent newspaper. The articles, appearing over Henry Ford's signature, accused Sapiro of using the cooperative movement to seize control of American farmers for Jewish bankers and financiers. Ford's defense centered around William Cameron and Ernest Liebold, who claimed editorial control of the newspaper over Henry Ford. Hoping to avert additional negative publicity and avoid taking the stand in court, Ford agreed to an out of court settlement with Sapiro involving a cash payment and a written apology in the Dearborn Independent. The collection includes correspondence and transcripts of the trial as well as information on similar cases around the country. Series IV: Publications, contains selected issues of the Dearborn Independent, 1919-1927.

Finding aid:

http://www.dalnet.lib.mi.us/henryford/docs/DearbornIndependentAaronSapiroVHenryFordLawsuitCollection

_Accession48.pdf

[0761] Déclaration commune sur la situation politique: typescript, 1944, Coll. YY119

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

Description: Relates to proposed changes in Vichy government policy following the Allied landings in Normandy. Written by a group of right-wing French political figures.

Finding aids:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt3q2nd7p8/

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt3q2nd7p8/entire_text/

[0761a] Defence Regulation 18B Internee's Autograph Book, Second World War, 1941-1945, Documents.2008

Location: Department of Documents, Imperial War Museum, Lambeth Road, London SE1 6HZ, United Kingdom

Description: Autograph book (108pp), compiled during 1941-1945, containing handwritten messages and signatures of some 100 individuals detained in British prisons and camps under the provisions of Defence Regulation 18B, including leading members of the BUF and its supporters, notably Sir Oswald Mosley, John Beckett, Alexander Raven Thomson, Archibald Ramsay MP, and Admiral Sir Barry Domvile. There are also contributions by Captain H W Luttman-Johnson.

Websites with information:

http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/1030001744

[0762] Defence Regulation 18B Research Papers, 1934-1997, MS 287

Location: Special Collections, The University Library, The University of Sheffield, Western Bank, Sheffield S10 2TN, UK

Description: The collection consists of documents and correspondence assembled by Professor A.W. Brian Simpson (1931-2011) during the writing of his book In the Highest Degree Odious: Detention Without Trial in Wartime Britain (Clarendon Press, 1992). Most of the British citizens detained were members of Fascist or extreme right-wing groups, who were generally opposed to the war with Germany. As the most prominent Fascist group active in Britain at the time, Sir Oswald Mosley's movement British Union (whose full title was "British Union of Fascists and National Socialists"), which had campaigned vigorously against the war up to and beyond its outbreak, was particularly affected by the measure, with many leading members arrested and interned. Both Mosley and his wife, Lady Mosley (Diana Mosley) were imprisoned. In addition there is an appendix on the spy Tyler Kent, an American citizen who worked at the U.S. Embassy in London. Kent stole highly sensitive documents relating to communications between Churchill and Roosevelt. Names include Action, Guy A. Aldred, John Amery, J. Larratt Battersby, John Warburton Beckett, Francis Beckett, formerly Marquess of Tavistock, Duke of Bedford, British Union, British Peoples Party, British Council for Christian Settlement in Europe, Britons Publishing Society, The Britons, Brixton Prison, John W. Charnley, Winston Churchill, Conservative Party, Sir Barry Domvile, Stephen Dorril, Sir Oscar Dowson, Nellie Driver, 18B Publicity Council, 18B Club, J.F.C. Fuller, R.C. and Mrs. Gordon-Canning, Benjamin Greene, Lord Halifax, E. Jeffrey Hamm, Adolf Hitler, Italian Fascist Party, January Club, William Joyce, Tyler Kent, League of Christian Reform, Arnold S. Leese, Liberty Restoration League, The Link, R.W. Liversidge, H.W. Luttman-Johnson, John Angus Macnab, Arthur Marson, Hector G. McKechnie, Sir Oswald Mosley, Nicholas Mosley, Diana Mosley, George H.L-F. Pitt-Rivers, Captain Maule Ramsay, Right Club, Robert Saunders, John Scanlon, Brocard Sewell, Henry St. George, Press Strickland, Margaret Thatcher, Leigh Vaughan-Henry, John Warburton, Henry Williamson, Anna Wolkoff, and John Wynn.

Websites with information:

http://www.shef.ac.uk/library/special/specalphae

Finding aids:

http://www.shef.ac.uk/library/special/defreg

http://cdm15847.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/p15847coll6/id/129/rec/3

http://cdm15847.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p15847coll6/id/129

https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/polopoly_fs/1.522304!/file/DR18BResearchPapers.pdf

[0763] Defenders of State Sovereignty and Individual Liberties. Records, 1956-1963, Organization records collection, Accession 39469

Location: The Library of Virginia, 800 East Broad Street, Richmond, Virginia 23219-8000

Description: The Defenders of State Sovereignty and Individual Liberties was chartered in 1954 to prevent the desegregation of Virginia's public schools. It was the most powerful segregationist organization in Virginia and proved instrumental in the passage of the Massive Resistance laws enacted by the General Assembly in 1956. The records include a special bulletin reminding members to encourage their state representatives to support the continuation of segregation in the special session of the General Assembly in 1956, a statement, 1959, from its president, Robert B. Crawford, and a statement, 1963, by the state board of directors on the organization's beliefs on the communist influence on race relations, and miscegenation.

Finding aid:

http://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaxtf/view?docId=lva/vi00569.xml

[0764] Amos S. Deinard Papers, undated, 1895-1986, umja0010

Location: Nathan and Theresa Berman Upper Midwest Jewish Archives, Elmer L. Andersen Library, University of Minnesota, 222 – 21st Avenue South, Minneapolis, MN 55455

Description: Amos S. Deinard (1898-1985) was a Minneapolis lawyer and an outspoken critic of ethnically and racially motivated injustice in the United States. This collection consists of personal and professional papers collected by Deinard. Series 3: Pamphlets undated, 1895-1976, contains copies of Father Coughlin: His "Facts" and Arguments, 1939 [online at https://ia800303.us.archive.org/7/items/FatherCoughlinHisFactsAndArguments_201502/Father%20Co

ughlin%20his%20facts%20and%20arguments.PDF]; Coughlin Defiles Lincoln (Ohio, Toledo Committee, Unitarian Fellowship For Social Justice [1940]); newspaper articles on Charles Coughlin, 1938; "Father Coughlin's Facts," The Commonweal, Vol. 29 No. 10, 1938; "Father Coughlin: Priest and Politician," Propaganda Analysis, Vol. 2 No. 9, 1939; To Bigotry No Sanction: A Documented Analysis of Anti-Semitic Propaganda, 1941 [online at https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=wu.89095883377;view=1up;seq=5]; Talmudic Forgeries: A Case Study in Anti-Jewish Propaganda, by Ben Zion Bokser, 1939; Anti-Semitic Activity in the United States, report by American Jewish Committee, 1954; Information on the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, by American Jewish Committee, 1934; Propaganda Kit Made in Germany, exposed by National Americanism Committee, undated; Anti-Semitic Propaganda in America, by Richard E. Gutstadt, undated; The International Jew: The World's Foremost Problem, 1920; Are Americans Falling Into the Nazi Trap?, by Richard C. Rothschild, 1940; Hitlerism and our Liberties, by Charles A. Beard, 1934; A Reporter Tells the Truth about the Silver Shirts, by Eric Sevareid (1938); The Poison Pen: Further Revelations concerning Anti-Semitic Propaganda in the United States, undated ([1919?]) [online at http://pds.lib.harvard.edu/pds/view/42276830]; One Million Silvershirts by 1939, undated; and Commentary Report: The John Birch Society, by Alan F. Westin, undated.

Finding aids:

http://discover.lib.umn.edu/cgi/f/findaid/findaid-idx?c=umfa;cc=umfa;q1=Amos%20S.%20Deinard%20Papers

;rgn=main;view=text;didno=umja0010

http://discover.lib.umn.edu/cgi/f/findaid/findaid-idx?c=umfa;cc=umfa;rgn=main;view=text;didno=umja0010

[0765] Fondo Riccardo Del Giudice, 1911-1985

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

Description: Riccardo Del Giudice (1900-1985) was an Italian union leader and collaborator of Giuseppe Bottai. The archive consists of documentation of fascist trade union policy from 1921 to 1939 and correspondence.

Websites with information:

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

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

http://www.fondazionespirito.it/delgiudice.asp

[0766] Fonds Jacques Delarue: L'extrême-droite néo-nazie en France. Notes et synthèses (années 1960-1970). F delta res 0851

Location: Archives de la Bibliothèque de documentation internationale contemporaine, Université Paris Ouest Nanterre La Défense, 6 allée de l'université, 92001 Nanterre, France

Description: Contains official police reports, press clippings, a poster, and information bulletins. Files on Centre des républicains libres? (Paris), Groupe action jeunesse (Paris), Groupe d'intervention nationaliste (France), Groupe union et défense (France), Ordre nouveau (France), Parti prolétarien national-socialiste (France), Parti des forces nationalistes (France), Union de Défense des Étudiants et Lycéens (France), and World Union of National Socialists.

Finding aid:

http://www.calames.abes.fr/pub/#details?id=Calames-20111122211449536

[0767] Reminiscences of Pedro Augusto Del Valle: oral history, 1966 [oral history]

Location: Columbia Center for Oral History, Columbia University, 535 West 114th Street, 801 Butler Library, Box 20, MC1129, New York, NY 10027

Description: Family background, Naval Academy, 1911-1915; World War I: sea duty, surrender of German Fleet; Naval War College; Haiti, Nicaragua, training duty; Assistant Naval Attaché, Rome, observer with Italian forces, Italo-Ethiopian War; duty in Office of Naval Intelligence, 1935-1937; Army War College; Division of Plans and Policies, 1938-1941; evolution of Fleet Marine Force and fleet landing exercises; World War II: Guadalcanal, Guam, Okinawa; Inspector General of Marine Corps and Director of Personnel, 1945-1948.

Websites with information:

http://oralhistoryportal.cul.columbia.edu/document.php?id=ldpd_4074518

http://www.history.navy.mil/sources/ny/zcl.htm

http://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/122527404

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/122527404

http://www.worldcat.org/title/reminiscences-of-pedro-augusto-del-valle-oral-history-1966/oclc/122527404

http://www.inthefirstperson.com/firp/firp.detail.documents.aspx?documentcode=OHI0018552-13995

[0768] Pedro A. del Valle Papers, 1949-1978, Coll 126

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

Description: Pedro A. del Valle (1893-1978) was a Lieutenant General in the United States Marine Corps and commanded the 1st Marine Division in the Pacific Theater of Operations during World War II. After the war he became Inspector General for the Marine Corps and Director of Personnel until his retirement. He helped found the Defenders of the American Constitution (DAC), an non-profit educational organization dedicated to defending the ideals of patriotism, constitutionalism, and Christian society. Del Valle also supported conservative organizations such as the National Economic Council, Christian Crusade, and the Committee to Restore the Constitution. The collection includes incoming and outgoing correspondence, articles written by del Valle, Speeches by del Valle, Defenders of the American Constitution, Incorporated, miscellaneous materials and the book he wrote, Semper Fidelis, as well as his periodicals Alerts and Task Force. Correspondents include Lee J. Adamson (Liberty Line); America Plus, Incorporated (Aldrich Blake, Irvin Borders); American Association for Justice (John G. Crommelin; P. A. Del Valle; Marque O. Nelson; Clyde J. Watts); American Challenge; American Coalition of Patriotic Societies, Incorporated (Milton M. Lory; Madalen D. Leetch; John B. Trevor, Jr.; Mrs. James H. Williams); American Security Council (John M. Fisher); American Flag Committee (W. Henry MacFarland); Americanism Educational League (William E. Fort, Jr.); Americans Against Union Control of Government (Ralph de Toledano); Americas Future, Incorporated (R. K. Scott); Austin J. App (Boniface Press, Maryland); John M. Ashbrook (Conservative Victory Fund); Josephine Powell Beaty; John W. Bricker; Olga Butterworth; Wally Butterworth; Frank A. Capell (The Herald of Freedom); Catholic Traditionalist Movement, Incorporated (Gommar A. De Pauw); A. K. Chesterton (Candour Publishing Company); Paul Chiera; Christian Educational Association (Katherine Littig); Rouben Chublarian; Committee on Pan-American Policy (Harold Lord Varney); Congress of Freedom; Richard B. Cotton (Conservative Viewpoint; National Documentation Institute); Council for Statehood (Mrs. Earl Cunningham); John G. Crommelin; Curtis Bean Dall (Liberty Lobby); Mary M. Davison (Council for Statehood; Women for Constitutional Government); Kenneth De Courcy (Review of World Affairs); Robert B. DePugh (Minutemen; Patriotic Party; Biolab Corporation; National Alliance to Keep and Bear Arms; Patriots Inter-Organizational Communication Center); Destiny: Editorial Letter Service (Howard B. Rand); Robert Donner; John Dowdy; Robert B. Dresser; R. A. Ellsworth; Harry T. Everingham (We the People); Myron Fagan (Cinema Educational Guild Incorporated); Schuyler Ferris; LaVonne D. Furr (The American Mercury; Washington Observer); William P. Gale; Devin A. Garrity (Devin-Adair Company); Conrad Grieb; Rosalind Wood Guardabassi; Mrs., J. Evetts Haley; Billy James Hargis (American Christian College); Jesse Helms; W. D. Herrstrom; Jo Hindman; West Hooker; T. David Horton; Charles B. Hudson; Edward Hunter (Tactics); Theodore Jackman; August E. Johansen; Joseph Peter Kamp; Ben Klassen; George Knupffer; W.C. Lemly; Liberty Amendment Committee of the U.S.A., Maryland Branch (Helem M. Burton); Liberty Lobby (June Main); Life Line (Melvin T. Munn); Joseph B. Lightburn; Clarence Manion; Marine Corps (Department of the Navy)-- James Forrestal (Secretary of Navy); Maryland Petition Committee, Incorporated for States Rights (Mrs. Linda L. Beilas); Massachusetts Friends of Rhodesia (E. William Gaedtke); Irving G. McCann; Pat McCarran; Conde McGinley (Common Sense; Christian Educational Association); Carl McIntire (International Council of Christian Churches); A. B. McReynolds (Kiamichi Clinic); H. A. Metzger; Military and Religious Order of Saint George, Incorporated (Alfred von Kupferberg); Jozef Mlot-Mroz (Anti-Communist Confederation of Polish Freedom Fighters in U.S.A., Incorporated; National Youth Alliance (Patrick Tifer); New England Committee for Captive Nations); Monetary Science Institute (Peter Cook); Robert Muncaster; Norbert Murray (The Revere Press); National States Rights Party (Dr. Edward R. Fields); National Economic Council (McKay Twombly; Conrad Chapman; D. E. Denton; David Heaphy; Constance G. Hart; Merwin K. Hart; Mark M. Jones); National Socialist White Peoples Party (Matt Koehl); National Spotlight (James P. Tucker); New Christian Crusade (James K. Warner); Merritt Newby (American Challenge); Revilo P. Oliver; Otto F. Otepka; Lawrence T. Patterson; Paul Revere Associated Yeomen, Incorporated (H. S. Riecke, Jr.); Charles L. T. Pichel (International Committee for Monetary Reform; Sovereign Order of Saint John of Jerusalem); Eugene C. Pomeroy; Karl Prussion; Frank Purinton; John R. Rarick; Jess M. Ritchie; Archibald E. Roberts (The Committee to Restore the Constitution Incorporated); A. Willis Robertson; George Lincoln Rockwell (American Nazi Party); John G. Schmitz; Thomas P. Serpico (Omni Publications; Christian Book Club of America); Gordon E. Small; George L. K. Smith (The Cross and the Flag); John Howland Snow (The Long House, Incorporated Publishers); George E. Stratemeyer; Sophie Taber (Women for Constitutional Government); Robert A. Taft; Herman E. Talmadge; Texas Committee for the Constitution, Inc. (M. Hendrix Davis, Jr.); Mrs. Garvin E. ("Bazy") Tankersley; Jack B. Tenney; The John Birch Society, Incorporated (M. L. Robert); The Foundation for Economic Education, Incorporated (Leonard E. Read); The Christianform (Nicholas T. Nonnenmacher); The American Mercury (Russell Maguire); The American Party (Tom Anderson; Mark Andrews); The Greater Nebraskan (George J. Thomas); The New Patriot (Roger Pearson); H. W. Totten; The Truth About Cuba Committee, Incorporated (Rafael Pérez Doreste; Luis V. Manrara); The Virginian (William Stephenson); Strom Thurmond; Ralph Townsend; M. Trail-Smith (Candour-The British Views-Letter); James B. Utt; Lyrl Clark Van Hyning; Wicklife B. Vennard (Americans for America); James W. Von Brunn; G. Von Trier (The Military and Religious Order of Saint George, Incorporated; Out Western World); B. F. M. Von Stahl (Sovereign Order of Saint John of Jerusalem); Edwin A. Walker; George C. Wallace; Clyde J. Watts; A. C. Wedemeyer; Robert Welch (American Opinion; John Birch Society; Committee Against Summit Entanglements); Thomas H. Werdel; Robert H. Williams (Williams Publications); John Bell Williams; Paul N. Winter (Law Enforcement League of Pennsylvania; Sovereign Order of Saint John of Jerusalem); Glenn O. Young (The American Adviser); and Louis Zoul.

Reference:

Jeffrey H. Caufield, General Walker and the Murder of President Kennedy: The Extensive New Evidence of a Radical-Right Conspiracy (Moreland Press, 2015).

Websites with information:

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

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

http://library.uoregon.edu/tools/blogs/scua/check-out-pedro-del-valle-papers/

https://library.uoregon.edu/speccoll/guides/afram2.htm

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

http://janus.uoregon.edu/record=b1951512

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/19081869

http://www.worldcat.org/title/pedro-a-del-valle-papers-1949-1978/oclc/19081869

Finding aids:

http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv35240

http://nwda-db.wsulibs.wsu.edu/findaid/ark:/80444/xv35240

http://nwda.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv35240/op=pretrieve.aspx

[0768a] Linda DeLeon papers, 1981-2013, 2013100 Aa 2

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

Description: Linda DeLeon is an anti-pornography and anti-abortion activist, a member of the Christians for Decency (CFD), and president of CFD Anti-Pornography Information Center in Wayne County, Michigan. The papers consist of correspondence, publications, mailing, petitions, and other material. Files on abortion, American Decency Association of Michigan, American Family Association of Michigan, Americans for Responsible Television, Focus on the Family, Christians for Decency, National Federation for Decency Greater Detroit Chapter, and other Michigan and national organizations.

Websites with information:

https://web.archive.org/web/20160621230535/http://bentley.umich.edu/legacy-support/african_americans/­women.php

https://web.archive.org/web/20160622003158/http://bentley.umich.edu/legacy-support/detroit/detroit_­search.php?heading=6

https://web.archive.org/web/20160622041603/http://bentley.umich.edu/legacy-support/detroit/detroit_­search.php?id=1742

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/857795988

http://www.worldcat.org/title/linda-deleon-papers-1981-2013/oclc/857795988

Finding aids:

http://quod.lib.umich.edu/b/bhlead/umich-bhl-2013100?view=text

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

hlead;view=reslist;subview=standard;didno=umich-bhl-2013100

[0769] Cecil B. DeMille Archives, 1863-1983, MSS 1400

Location: L. Tom Perry Special Collections, Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT 84602

Description: DeMille (1881-1959) was an American motion picture producer and director, considered the archetype of the American film mogul. The archives consist of personal and business correspondence, audio and videotape recordings, financial ledgers, and memorabilia. DeMille was expelled from radio for his refusal to pay the one-dollar political campaign assessment by the American Federation of Radio Artists. In response, DeMille organized the DeMille Foundation for Political Freedom in 1945 to campaign in favor of right-to-work laws and against Communist infiltration. A supporter of the Taft-Hartley Act, which prohibited the closed shop and placed labor unions under restrictions, DeMille testified before the House Committee on Education and Labor in 1947 and endorsed President Truman's executive order to establish standards of loyalty for federal employees. Series XV: DeMille Foundation for Political Freedom, contains the records of this organization, which was in force from 1945 to 1959. The subseries Correspondence contains files on E. M. Biggers (Houston, Texas), Upton Close, Committee for Political Freedom, Herb Cornuelle, Cathrine Curtis, Women Investors Research Institute, Daughters of the American Revolution, Reverend James W. Fifield, Jr., Freedoms Foundation (Kenneth D. Wells), Freedoms Foundation/Valley Forge, Fred Hartley, Jr., Herbert Hoover, J. Edgar Hoover, addresses, E. F. Hutton, James C. Ingebretsen, Governor Goodwin J. Knight, right-to-work statement, Fulton Lewis, Jr., "Model" State Right-to-Work Act, New York Times, clipping regarding DeMille's speech against the closed shop, February 1947, Newsreel "Right-to-Work", Samuel B. "Pettengill," broadcast from Indiana, Joseph Newton Pew and J. Howard Pew, The Reader's Digest letters, Ronald Reagan, 1951, Professor O. Glenn Saxon, "Eastern Representative," New York area, Chief W. Cleon Skousen, Subversive organizations, 1950, Senator Robert A. Taft, House Un-American Activities Committee, Thomas H. Werdel. The series General Files, 1945-1959, contains files on Marilyn R. Allen (Salt Lake City), George S. Benson (Searcy, Arkansas), Campaign for the 48 States, J. W. Clise (Seattle), Counterattack, John J. Fleck, Freedom Clubs, Incorporated, General Electric Company, L. R. Boulware, J. H. Gipson (The Caxton Printers), H. L. Hunt (Dallas), Vivien Kellems, William F. Knowland, David Lawrence, Senator Joseph R. McCarthy, Colonel Robert R. McCormick, Manion Forum of Opinion (L. F. Reardon), The Minute Women of the U.S.A., National Americanism Commission (Karl H. W. Baarslag), National Association of Manufacturers (Earl Bunting, President), "News From Behind the Iron Curtain", Senator Richard M. Nixon, Patriotic Education, Incorporated, Carroll Reece, Spiritual mobilization, Taft Hartley Act, Jack B. Tenney, and George H. Todt (Valley Times, North Hollywood, Calif.).The subseries Files By State, contains files on American Enterprise Association (William J. Baroody), Citizens Committee for Voluntary Unionism (Ashley E. Holden), J. W. Clise, Foundation for Economic Education, Freedom Club, Senator Barry Goldwater, Fred A. Hartley, Sister M. Margaret Patricia McCarran, National Right-to-Work Committee, National Association of Manufacturers, Reader's Digest, Spiritual Mobilization, Tennessee, Farm and Ranch Magazine (Thomas J. Anderson), and George Todt (Valley Times, North Hollywood Calif.).

Websites with information:

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

Finding aid:

http://files.lib.byu.edu/ead/XML/MSS1400.xml

[0770] Cecil B. DeMille Photographs, ca. 1900s-1950s, 1881-1959, MSS P 146 [photographs]

Location: Photographic Archives, L. Tom Perry Special Collections, Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT 84602

Description: Cecil B. DeMille (1881-1959) was an American motion picture producer and director. The collection consists of 6000 photographs including oversize, 61 slides in molded case and viewing equipment, 2 glass plates, and 1 panoramic photograph. Includes a photograph of the first page of Articles of Incorporation of the "DeMille Political Freedoms Foundation." Photographs relating to right to work, including Art Wolf of the Centron Corp. of Lawrence, KS, handing DeMille the script for his part of the narration in the Kansas Right to Work film; the text of the proposed "right to work" amendment to the United States Constitution and editorials (one in The Dallas Morning News) in favor of the proposed amendment; DeMille and Fred A. Hartley, Jr., author of the Taft-Hartley Labor Bill, Washington, D.C., 11 May 1948; and DeMille speaking of 'The Right to Work' before The House Committee on Education and Labor, Washington, D.C., 11 May 1948. Photographs relating to Freedoms Foundation at Valley Forge, 1949, 1953, 1957, 1958. A photograph taken at the ninth annual awards presentation ceremonies of Freedoms Foundation, 22 February 1958, showing, L-R: Graham Patterson, Dr. Robert L. Johnson, Dr. Kenneth D. Wells, Cecil B. DeMille, Gen. Curtis E. LeMay, Charles Stewart Mott, Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, and Roger Firestone.

Websites with information:

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

Finding aid:

http://files.lib.byu.edu/ead/XML/MSSP146.xml

[0771] Democratic Party (Ala.) State Executive Committee records 1875-1986 (bulk 1919-1951, 1959-1963), LPR99

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

Description: The State Democratic Executive Committee, established in the 1800s, provides the infrastructure for the Democratic Party in Alabama. The State Democratic Executive Committee records, 1875-1986, document over a century of virtual single party politics in Alabama. The primary correspondents include committee officers and various state, local and national committee members and political figures. The records, primarily the correspondence, minutes and printed materials, provide information on many topics such as Anti-Smith Democrats, Hoovercrats, white supremacy, state's rights, poll tax, segregation, Ku Klux Klan, Communism, and civil rights. Subgroup XXI: E. W. Pettus Administration (1931-1935). Series: A: Administrative Files, contains Jouett Shouse correspondence with E. W. Pettus, 1931-1932.

Websites with information:

http://adahcat.archives.alabama.gov/vwebv/holdingsInfo?bibId=9353

http://adahcat.alabama.gov/vwebv/holdingsInfo?searchId=1411&recCount=10&recPointer=1&bibId=9353

http://www.kcarchivists.org/kcaa/files/4413/1654/7072/Vol15No3-1996.pdf

Finding aid:

http://www.archives.state.al.us/findaids/v9353.pdf

[0772] Democratic Study Group Records, 1912-1995 (bulk 1960-1990), MSS57125

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

Description: In 1959, a group of liberal Democratic members of the House of Representatives organized the Democratic Study Group (DSG) to counterbalance a conservative Republican-Dixiecrat coalition. The DSG was a legislative service organization operating from 1959 to 1995 to assist Democratic members of the United States House of Representatives by providing a constant flow of information to its members in publications. Records include research publications, reports, position papers, draft legislation, correspondence, legal documents, government records, voting and whip records, hearing statements, committee and caucus records, surveys, media files, campaign records, photographs, and training material provided to members in support of common political and legislative goals. Also includes financial and administrative records of the organization. Part I: Subject File, 1940-1975, contains files on Group Research, Inc., 1964-1968; National Committee for an Effective Congress, 1957-1966; Right-wing related material, 1957, 1965-1966; School prayer decision [Engel v. Vitale, 370 U.S. 421 (1962), prohibiting the use of a Regent's prescribed prayer in New York public schools], 1963-1964; and Taft-Hartley Act, repeal of section 14(b) [right to work: Nothing in this act shall be construed as authorizing the execution or application of agreements requiring membership in a labor organization in any State or Territory in which such execution or application is prohibited by State or Territorial law], 1952, 1965. Part II: Subject File, 1912-1995, contains files on Coalition of southern Democrats and conservative Republicans, 1950-1965; Democratic Party - Discipline - John R. Rarick, 1967-1969 [for supporting George Wallace]; Albert W. Watson and John Bell Williams, 1964-1967 [for supporting Goldwater]; National Committee for an Effective Congress, 1964-1968, 1978; Nicaragua and contra aid, 1986-1988; and Republican Party - Right-wing groups, contributions to, 1965-1967.

Websites with information:

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

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

Finding aids:

http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms011050

http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms011050.3

http://memory.loc.gov/service/mss/eadxmlmss/eadpdfmss/uploaded_pdf/ead_pdf_batch_16_may_2011/ms0

11050.pdf

[0772a] Democrats-for-Willkie Papers, July-November 1940

Location: Rare Books, Special Collections and Preservation, Rush Rhees Library, Second Floor, Room 225, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY 14627-0055

Description: Democrats-For-Willkie was a splinter group of the Democratic Party which was organized to back Wendell L. Willkie in his campaign for the presidency in 1940. The group was opposed to the re-election of Franklin D. Roosevelt for a third term, believing that a third term went against American tradition, and feeling that a third and fourth term could eventually lead to dictatorship. In July of 1940 Lewis W. Douglas, John W. Hanes, Mrs. Roberta Campbell Lawson and Alan Valentine organized the National Committee of Democrats-For-Willkie. Alan Valentine was chosen the Executive Director with headquarters in New York City. The Democrats-For-Willkie functioned at the state level through the appointment of State Advisory Chairmen as well as through direct communication with local Democratic organizations which sympathized with Willkie. The National Committee was dissolved after Willkie's defeat on November 5, 1940. The Subject File contains files on Bulletins, miscellaneous propaganda; "No Third Term" Mats; Releases; Associated Willkie Clubs of America; Releases; Republican State Committee; Republican National Committee; Republican State Central Committees; Wendell L. Willkie; No Third Term Day; and No Third Term Day Committee.

Websites with information:

http://rbscp.lib.rochester.edu/mssalpha

Finding aid:

http://rbscp.lib.rochester.edu/1196

[0773] Records of the Demokratisk allians, 1970-1976, SE/O258G/GSAF_5362

Location: Region- och Stadsarkivet Göteborg med Folkrörelsernas Arkiv [Regional and City Archives Gothenburg with the popular movements archive], Otterhällegatan 5, 411 18 Göteborg, Sweden

Description: Demokratisk allians [Democratic Alliance] was a extreme right-wing youth organization founded in 1967 in Stockholm, with branches later established in Göteborg (1970), Malmö, and other locations. It defined itself as opposed to all totalitarian movements, including both Communism and Nazism. Nominally politically autonomous, Demokratisk allians seems to have connections to Moderata ungdomsförbundet [the Moderate Youth League]. The records contain extensive series of press clippings.

Websites with information:

http://sok.riksarkivet.se/?postid=Arkis+EDE97631-22C4-4BD7-9DC8-147D16A0CE97&s=TARKIS08_Siv

[0774] Ján Dend'úr Papers, 1890-1987 (bulk 1920-1987), Collection 3032

Location: The Historical Society of Pennsylvania, 1300 Locust Street, Philadelphia, PA 19107

Description: Ján Dend'úr (1898-1988) was a Slovak-American journalist, writer, editor, publisher, and teacher. The collection consists of papers relating to all aspects of Ján Dend'úr's career and interests, as well as family materials. The papers are rich in press clipping scrapbooks and notebooks of transcripts from the press, which comprise almost two-thirds of the collection. Additionally, the collection includes correspondence; Ján Denïúr's writings and speeches; miscellaneous printing business samples; materials of cultural, fraternal, beneficial, political, religious organizations; and press releases from information agencies. Series 1. Correspondence, Writings, and Ephemera. a. Correspondence, contains files on Jozef Lettrich and Štefan Osuský. Series 2. Slovak-American Press Clippings and Notebooks. a. Individuals, contains files on Štefan Osuský and Jozef Tiso.

Websites with information:

https://hsp.org/collections/catalogs-research-tools/finding-aids

Finding aid:

https://hsp.org/sites/default/files/mss/finding_aid_3032_dendur.pdf

[0775] Lawrence Dennis Papers, 1921-1975, Coll. 84036

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

Description: Lawrence Dennis (1893-1977) was an American economist, political theorist, and advocate of fascism. Correspondence and writings, relating to fascist and isolationist movements in the U.S., and to American politics and foreign policy. Includes copies of the newsletters edited by Dennis, and subscription records. Correspondents include Harry Elmer Barnes, Charles A. Beard, William F. Buckley, Jr., Willis A. Carto, William H. Chamberlin, Bronson Cutting, George E. Deatherage, Max Eastman, Garet Garrett, Devin A. Garrity, DeWest Hooker, Herbert Hoover, Willmoore Kendall, Alf M. Landon, William Langer, Clare Boothe Luce, Ernest Lundeen, Russell Maguire, Felix Morley, General George Van Horn Moseley, W.C. Mullendore, Henry Regnery, Porter Sargent, George E. Sokolsky, Lothrop Stoddard, Charles C. Tansill, Dorothy Thompson, George Holden Tinkham, Francis Everett Townsend, Ralph Townsend, Freda Utley, General A.C. Wedemeyer, Burton K. (and Mrs.) Wheeler, General Robert E. Wood, and John T. Wood.

Reference:

Gerald Horne, The Color of Fascism: Lawrence Dennis, Racial Passing, and the Rise of Right-Wing Extremism in the United States (New York and London: New York University Press, 2006).

Finding aids:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf7n39n994/entire_text/

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/view?docId=tf7n39n994;query=;style=oac4;doc.view=entire_text

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/data/13030/94/tf7n39n994/files/tf7n39n994.pdf

[0776] The Christopher DeNoon Collection for the Study of New Deal Culture

Location: Special Collections and Archives, The Wolfsonian-Florida International University, 1001 Washington Avenue, Miami Beach, FL 33139

Description: This collection contains more than 250 rare books, guides, periodicals, pamphlets, playbills, and other ephemera produced in America during Franklin D. Roosevelt's Administration, including leftist and rightwing critiques of FDR's policies and projects. Critiques from the right are such works as Hell Bent for Election, by James P. Warburg (Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, Doran & Company, Inc., 1935); The Roosevelt Red Record and its Background, by Elizabeth Dilling (Kenilworth, Ill., Chicago, Published by the author [c1936]); and Smoke-Screen, by Samuel B. Pettengill (New York, Chicago, Kingsport, Tennessee, Southern Publishers, Inc. [c1940]), which warned that the United States was moving toward socialism.

Websites with information:

http://www.wolfsonian.org/research-library/research-at-the-museum/special-collections-and-archives/the-christopher-de-noon-collection

http://wolfsonianfiulibrary.wordpress.com/2010/12/01/roosevelt-the-reds/

[0777] Denver Police Department Intelligence Bureau Files, late 1950s-2002 (bulk 1980-2002), WH1911

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

Description: The Denver Police Department Intelligence Bureau was founded in 1953 to develop and process information on organized crime, activity by the criminal element, individuals in groups of special interest regarding the safety of the public, dignitary protection, the background investigation of police applicants, and the arrest of outstanding fugitives. In addition, the bureau performs specialized investigations. The collection contains primarily copies of newspaper clippings documenting political and social protest groups; organized crime, especially gangs; and specific types of crime such as forgery, robbery, and homicide. Files regarding political and social protest groups from the last 30 years of the 20th century contain the most historically significant material. Organizations from all sides of the political spectrum are represented in these files, including the American Indian Movement, Operation Rescue and the Ku Klux Klan. Material includes copies of brochures, flyers, photographs, articles, handbooks and newsletters. The photographs document public gatherings. Files on Abortion; American Life League: Lifefax (weekly newsletter); Anti-Defamation League: Special Report Paranoia as Patriotism: Far-Right Influences on the Militia Movement, Federation of Klans Handbook (copies); Aryan Nations; Christian Defense Coalition; Christian Advocates Serving Evangelism; Christian Crusade for Truth; Colorado Right for Life; Colorado Minutemen; Colorado First Light Infantry; Colorado March for Liberty; Colorado March for Life; Committee to Restore the Constitution; Constitutionalists; Cults; Demonstrations - Anti-Abortion: photographs; Demonstrations - Pro-Life: photographs; Extremism of the Right by Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith; Freemen; Fully Informed Jury Association; Gospel Plow; Hate Crimes: Hate Groups in America: A Record of Bigotry and Violence (Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, 1988) [online at https://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/Digitization/122995NCJRS.pdf]; Hate Crimes; Jewish Armed Resistance (JAR); John Birch Society bulletin; Ku Klux Klan; Militia; Militia groups; National Association for the Advancement of White People: NAAWP News (newsletter), The Road Back (Noontide Press); National Caucus of Labor Committees: The New Federalist (newsletter), New Solidarity (newsletter), Law Enforcement Reform Act of 1976 by Lyndon LaRouche, Jr.; National Socialist White People's Party; Operation Rescue; Posse Comitatus; Pro-Life Action Network; The Denver Ghost (Rocky Mountain Resistance); and We the People.

Websites with information:

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

Finding aid:

http://eadsrv.denverlibrary.org/sdx/pl/toc.xsp?id=WH1911&qid=sdx_q5&fmt=tab&idtoc=WH1911-pleadetoc

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

[0778] Department of Human Resources, Eugenics Commission, General file, 1933-1974

Location: North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, 2001 Mail Service Center, Raleigh, NC 27699-2001

Description: The Eugenics Board of North Carolina (EBNC) was formed in July 1933 to ensure the constitutionality of the state's sterilization laws. Courts deemed the 1929 sterilization law to be unconstitutional because it lacked an appeal process. With the Eugenics Board's creation in 1933, an appeal process was incorporated. North Carolina was the only state to include non-institutionalized citizens. The Eugenics Board of North Carolina practiced negative eugenics (discouraging reproduction by persons having genetic defects or presumed to have inheritable and undesirable traits). From 1929 to 1940, for instance, whites comprised almost four-fifths of the sterilizations. During the 1960s, when social workers had the authority to recommend sterilizations, the number of African American sterilizations increased dramatically (approximately ninety nine percent). In 1971, an act of the legislature transferred the EBNC to the then newly created Department of Human Resources (DHR), an umbrella organization which consolidated more than 300 state agencies. The department later became the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS). Under a 1973 law, the Eugenics Board was transformed into the Eugenics Commission. Correspondence and subject files relating to the Commission's activities, including minutes of administrative conferences of county welfare directors, attorney general's opinions, biennial reports, 1934-1968, budgets, information on relationships with other state agencies, newspaper clippings, miscellaneous reports, and information on the NC Maternal Health League and the American Birth Control League. Includes 1948 Eugenics Board Manual (Eugenics Board of North Carolina, 1948) and 1960 Eugenics Board Manual (Eugenics Board of North Carolina, 1960).

Reference:

Lutz Kaelber, "Eugenics/Sexual Sterilizations in North Carolina," 2014, http://www.uvm.edu/~lkaelber/eugenics/NC/NC.html.

Websites with information:

http://www.northcarolinahistory.org/commentary/315/entry

Finding aids:

http://www.sterilizationvictims.nc.gov/documents/DCR_Presentation_Handout_A_%20Finding_Aid.pdf

http://www.webcitation.org/66tc2DDHL

[0779] General Records of the Department of Justice [DOJ], Record Group 60, 1790-1989, 1991

Location: National Archives, 8601 Adelphi Rd, College Park, MD 20740

Description: Subgroup 60.3. General Records of the Department of Justice, 1849-1989 (bulk 1870-1981). Sub-subgroup 60.3.4. Central files and related records, contains Straight numerical files, 1904-74, including File Number 158260, which identifies names of individuals and organizations that requested the United States government to support a federal anti-lynching bill in the United States Congress; and Classified Subject Files, 1930-1987, Case File: 144-19-233, which includes correspondence relating to an anonymous letter to A. T. Walden, a National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) attorney in Atlanta. The case relates to Brown (1954), involving a white citizen conspiring to murder black citizens if they tried to attend white schools. The file also includes correspondence relating to Tom Linder, candidate for governor of Georgia in 1954, and his speech to preserve segregation in public schools.

References:

Federal records pertaining to Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas (1954), comp. by Walter B. Hill, Jr. and Trichita M. Chestnut, (Reference Information Papers 112, 2004) (National Archives and Records Administration, 2004); Lynching and Race Riots Finding Aid [Record Group 60, General Records of the Department of Justice, Straight Numerical, 1904-1937, File Number 158260 (National Archives at College Park, MD, Textual Research Consultation Room).

Websites with information:

http://www.archives.gov/publications/ref-info-papers/112-brown-board-educ/exec-records.html

http://blogs.archives.gov/blackhistoryblog/2013/03/01/other-finding-aids-relating-to-african-american-history-post-the-black-history-guide-to-civilian-records-in-the-national-archives-and-records-administration/

Finding aid:

http://www.archives.gov/research/guide-fed-records/groups/060.html

[0779a] Records of the Department of National Health and Welfare, RG 29

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

Description: The Department of National Health and Welfare kept documents relating to the health aspects of abortion. The records contain a copy of A.F. Guttmacher, "Historical Developments of Contraception." Paper presented to the Fourth Conference of the International Planned Parenthood Federation, 1964. Files on family planning, abortion, birth control, abortion law, Alliance for Life, abortion legislation, Right to Life Society, Dr. Henry Morgentaler, and Catholic Women's League of Canada.

Websites with information:

http://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/discover/politics-government/Pages/thematic-guides-abortion.aspx

http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/le-public/005-1142.02-e.html

[0780] Department of Records Photo Gallery [digital photograph collection]

Location: New York City Department of Records and Information Services, 31 Chambers Street, New York, NY 10007

Description: The NYC Municipal Archives Online Gallery contains over 900,000 items digitized from the Municipal Archives' collections, including photographs, maps, motion-pictures, and audio recordings. Includes photographs of political groups monitored by the New York City Police Department's "Alien Squad." These photographs range from Communist Party rallies in Madison Square Garden to an America First Committee rally at Madison Square Garden, May 23, 1941; a meeting of Christian Mobilizers at Innesfield Park, September 20, 1939; and Camp Siegfried, Yaphank, Long Island, and various representatives of the German American Bund at the camp, May 22, 1938. Also includes photographs of General Douglas MacArthur.

Finding aids:

http://www.nyc.gov/html/records/html/gallery/home.shtml

http://www.nyc.gov/cgi-bin/exit.pl?url=http://nycma.lunaimaging.com/luna/servlet/view/group/2965

[0780a] General Records of the Department of State, 1763-2002, Record Group 59

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

Description: The series Voice of America (VOA) Historical Files, 1946-1953 (National Archives Identifier 5635478), consists of airgrams, charts, correspondence, despatches, magazines, magazine excerpts, maps, memoranda, minutes, newsletters, newspaper clippings, notes, pamphlets, photographs, posters, questionnaires, reports, scripts, speeches, telegrams, and transcripts related to the post-World War II continuation of the Voice of America (VOA) radio programming. The series contains files on specific VOA radio programs; jamming of VOA broadcasts; radio equipment distribution; transmitters and broadcasting facilities; publicity and audience building; relations with news agencies; evidence of program effectiveness; the U.S. Advisory Committee on Information; Radio Free Europe; newspaper and magazine articles about the VOA; government officials' speeches about the VOA; and the Katyń Massacre. The folders of material concerning the Katyń Massacre are titled "Katyń Forest Massacres I," "Katyń Forest Massacres II," and "Katyń Forest Massacres III."

Reference:

Selected Records Relating to the Katyń Forest Massacre at the National Archives and Records Administration, http://www.archives.gov/research/foreign-policy/Katyń-massacre/selected-records.pdf.

Catalogue description:

https://catalog.archives.gov/id/5635478

[0781] Robert DePugh Interview, 1966, Audio 1409A [sound recording]

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

Description: Interview by William Turner with Robert DePugh (1923-2009) of the Minutemen organization at Norborne, Missouri. Turner is author of a book on right wing organizations entitled Power on the Right.

Websites with information:

http://arcat.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/Pwebrecon.cgi?BBID=2996

http://socialarchive.iath.virginia.edu:8888/xtf/view?docId=99166-w6127b4d.xml

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/173699486

http://www.worldcat.org/title/interview-1966/oclc/173699486

[0781a] Avedis Derounian papers

Location: Edward and Helen Mardigian Reference and Research Library, National Association for Armenian Studies and Research, Inc., 395 Concord Avenue, Belmont, MA 02478

Description: Avedis Derounian, aka John Roy Carlson (1909-1991), was the antifascist author of the best-sellers Under Cover (1943) and The Plotters (1946). The papers contain files on more than 100 organizations and individuals, including the American Legion and the German American Bund.

Reference:

Christopher Vials, "UConn Scholar on Importance of Derounian Archive at NAASR," NAASR Newsletter (National Association for Armenian Studies and Research) (Fall/Winter/Spring 2011-2012), p. 9, https://cdn.shopi

fy.com/s/files/1/0860/2240/files/2011-2012_Fall-Winter-Spring.pdf.

Websites with information:

http://www.naasr.org/pages/mardigian-library

[0781b] The Desegregation Collection, 1976-1983, Coll. 56

Location: Chicano Studies Research Center Library, 144 Haines Hall, University of California, Los Angeles, Box 951544, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1544

Description: These files consist of personal notes, index cards, articles, and newspaper clippings. Files on Citizens' Advisory Committee on Student Integration; Crawford vs. Board of Education, City of Los Angeles; "Proposed Position and Policy Statement to the Chicano Subcommittee of the Citizens' Advisory Committee on Student Integration"; Bustop, a Corporation, Petitioner vs. Superior Court of the State of California for the County of Los Angeles, Respondent; and Jeanne Thiel Landis, "The Crawford Desegregation Suit in Los Angeles 1977-1981: The Multiethnic Community Versus BUSTOP" (Ph.D., UCLA, 1984).

Finding aids:

http://pdf.oac.cdlib.org/pdf/ucla/clucs/csrcdc.pdf

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt8r29r2nk/entire_text/

[0782] John Hensley DeTar Papers, 1956-73, Coll. 113

Location: Nevada Historical Society, 1650 North Virginia Street, Reno, Nevada 89503

Description: Dr. John H. (Jake) Detar (1925-2011), a Reno physician, was organizer and director of the John Birch Society in Nevada in the early 1960s. He was also associated with the American Independent Party, American Friends of Katanga, and the National States Rights Party. In 1964 he proposed a congressional investigation of Communist influence in folk singing. An opponent of the ecumenical council Vatican II and of the abandonment of the Latin mass by the Catholic Church, DeTar formed a publishing company, Athanasius Press, to publish his book To Deceive the Elect, written with Thomas Manion. The papers consist of letters, reports, literary manuscripts, miscellaneous documents, and considerable printed matter (many Birch Society publications), relating to anti-Communist, right-wing political groups and activities, mostly in Nevada. Includes correspondence with many Nevada political leaders and politically conservative periodicals.

References:

"What's Going On. The John H. Detar Collection," Nevada Historical Society Quarterly, XVII.1 (Spring 1974), p. 30, http://nsla.nevadaculture.org/statepubs/epubs/210777-1974-1Spring.pdf; A Guide to the Manuscript Collections at the Nevada Historical Society (1975), http://quest.grainger.uiuc.edu/Russian­Manuscripts/Guide/Collection/350; Dennis Myers, "John DeTar 1925-2011," Dec. 8, 2011, http://www.­newsreview.com/reno/news

view/blogs?date=2011-12-01 and http://www.newsreview.com/­reno/newsview/­blogs/post?oid=4591891; John DeTar (1925-2011), http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/rgj/obituary.aspx?­n=john-detar&pid=154745276.

Websites with information:

http://www.museums.nevadaculture.org/resources/1/Nevada%20Historical%20Society_mastermslist.pdf

[0783] Detroit Commission on Community Relations Records, 1940-1984, Accession #267

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

Description: The City of Detroit Commission on Community Relations evolved from the City of Detroit Mayor's Interracial Committee. The Interracial Committee was instituted by Mayor Edward Jeffries late in 1943 as a response to the Detroit race riot of June 1943. The collection consists of correspondence, reports, minutes, membership information, newspaper clippings, speeches, press releases, publications and case files documenting its efforts to overcome racial discrimination and improve race relations in the Detroit metropolitan area. Files on America Plus, Inc., America First Party, American Conservative Union, American Independence Party, anti-lynching organization meetings, anti-Semitism, anti-Semitic incidents in Detroit, Christian Patriots of Michigan, Christian Anti-Communism Crusade, desegregation, Detroit Committee on Truth About Civil Turmoil, hate groups, integration, John Birch Society, Ku Klux Klan, Let Freedom Ring, Liberty Lobby, Life Line, Michigan White Citizens Council, Minutemen, Nazi Party, Patriotic Party, race prejudice, racism, racist literature, radical right, school desegregation, Statecraft, States' Rights Council, and Young Americans for Freedom.

Websites with information:

http://reuther.wayne.edu/guides.html

Finding aids:

http://reuther.wayne.edu/files/UR000267.pdf

https://web.archive.org/web/20100818015243/http://www.reuther.wayne.edu/files/UR000267.pdf

[0784] Detroit Feminist Women's Health Center Collection, 1961-1980, Accession # 1063

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

Description: The Detroit Feminist Women's Health Center emerged in the wake of Roe v. Wade, along with other centers in California, Utah, Iowa, Massachusetts and Florida, as part of the national women's health movement. The Center provided gynecological services, pregnancy screening, nutritional counseling, prenatal care, and abortion and birth control services to women in a community-based, self-help atmosphere. The collection consists of correspondence, reports, meeting minutes, conference materials, and publications documenting women's health issues and the activities of various feminist organizations. Files on abortion, anti-Communism, birth control, homosexuality, population control, racism, right-wing viewpoints, sterilization, and violence to women.

Websites with information:

http://reuther.wayne.edu/node/2448

Finding aid:

https://reuther.wayne.edu/files/UR001063.pdf

[0785] Detroit News Lansing Bureau scrapbooks, 1931-1972, 851119 Bb.1 2

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

Description: Newspaper clippings detailing all aspects of Michigan state government, including gubernatorial administrations between 1947 and 1969; also; miscellaneous reference files, including political and governmental press releases.

Websites with information:

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

Finding aids:

http://quod.lib.umich.edu/b/bhlead/umich-bhl-851119?rgn=main;view=text

http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/f/findaid/findaid-idx?c=bhlead&idno=umich-bhl-851119

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-851119

[0785a] Detroit Red Squad Collection, 1939-1974

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

Description: From the 1940s to 1974, the Detroit Red Squad was a group within the Detroit Police Department that monitored and collected information on suspected communist and socialist individuals and organizations within the greater Southeast Michigan area. The collection contains items from files on Michigan-area communist parties and perceived-leftist organizations, including over 100 files on the Michigan Communist Party.

Websites with information:

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

[0786] Hermann B. Deutsch Collection, ca. 1920-1945 (bulk 1930-1940), Mss 8

Location: Earl K. Long Library, University of New Orleans, 2000 Lakeshore Dr, New Orleans, LA 70122

Description: Hermann Bacher Deutsch (1889-1970) was employed by the Times-Picayune (1916), the States (1918), and the Item and its successor, the States-Item (1918-1970), serving between 1949 and 1970 as associate editor, chief editorial writer, and daily columnist. Papers and memorabilia, mainly on Louisiana politics, produced and/or accumulated by Deutsch while working as a reporter for the New Orleans Item. Includes much material on Huey P. Long. Series I. Books and Pamphlets, contains Why?? Huey P. Long Was Murdered; The True Story Told; Gruesome Facts Detailed; The "Inside" Story; Exposé of Senator Long's Tragic Assassination Gathered and Welded Together, by Denis Flynn (New Orleans, [19--]); Address to the Legislature Convening May 9, 1932: The Strange Case of Louisiana and Huey P. Long, by Harry Gamble ([New Orleans, 1932]); Share Our Wealth, Every Man A King ... Containing authorities, laws, statistics and published comments of Leaders of all times, by Huey P. Long (Washington, D.C., [19--]); Long's Pratt ([New Orleans, 1935]); and Huey P. Long, by George H. Maines ([S.l.: s.n., 19--]). Series VII. Miscellany, contains Huey P. Long, "Share Our Wealth Plan" (2-page typescript, n.d.).

Websites with information:

http://library.uno.edu/specialcollections/lacol_findingaids.cfm

http://library.uno.edu/specialcollections/subguidepages/lacol_politics.cfm

Finding aid:

http://library.uno.edu/specialcollections/inventories/008.htm

[0787] Deutsche Freiheitsliga leaflets, undated, YY120

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

Description: Anti-Communist West German organization. Anti-communist propaganda leaflets, distributed by the Deutsche Freiheitsliga. Also includes other anti-Communist leaflets.

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt0779r3wx/entire_text/

[0788] Deutsches Notgeld currency album, 1914-1928 (bulk 1914-1924), MS 084

Location: Woodson Research Center, Rice University, Fondren Library MS-44, 6100 Main Street, Houston, Texas 77005

Description: This album of emergency paper currency contains approximately 640 separate pieces of the paper currency (Notgeld) issued by regional institutions in Germany and Austria-Hungary, primarily around the end of the World War I. Not issued by a central bank, Notgeld was not legal tender but rather an accepted means of payment in a particular locale.

Finding aid:

http://library.rice.edu/collections/WRC/finding-aids/manuscripts/084

[0789] Sam DeVincent Collection of American Sheet Music [sheet music]

Location: The Lilly Library, Indiana University, 1200 East Seventh Street, Bloomington, Indiana 47405-5500

Description: Sam DeVincent (1918-1997) was a musician and radio entertainer and a collector of published sheet music. The Sam DeVincent Collection of American Sheet Music contains approximately 24,000 pieces of sheet music, songbooks, and folios. Contains sheet music about Dwight D. Eisenhower, the Ku Klux Klan, and Wendell L. Willkie.

Websites with information:

http://www.indiana.edu/~liblilly/devincent.shtml

http://www.indiana.edu/~liblilly/collections/music/devincent.shtml

http://www.indiana.edu/~liblilly/collections/sheetmusic.shtml

Database:s:

http://webapp1.dlib.indiana.edu/inharmony/instportal.jsp?inst=ll

http://www.letrs.indiana.edu/cgi/b/bib/bib-idx?g=sheetmusic&page=collpick

Database (Sheet Music Consortium, hosted by UCLA Digital Library Program):

http://digital2.library.ucla.edu/sheetmusic/

[0790] The Sam DeVincent Collection of Illustrated American Sheet Music, ca. 1790-1980, NMAH.AC.0300 [sheet music]

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: Sam DeVincent (1918-1997) was a musical performer and radio show personality. He began collecting sheet music with lithographs at an early age. Series 5: Politics and Political Movements, ca. 1817-1982, Subseries 5.2: Politicians and Political Figures, ca. 1817-1982, contains sheet music about Dwight D. Eisenhower, Herbert Hoover, Alfred Landon, Ronald Reagan, and Wendell L. Willkie. Series 5: Politics and Political Movements, ca. 1817-1982. Subseries 5.3: Politicians and Political Parties, ca. 1825-1970, contains sheet music about Native American Party (Know-Nothings), ca. 1856. Series 5: Politics and Political Movements, ca. 1817-1982. Subseries 5.4: Ku Klux Klan, contains Ku Klux Klan sheet music from small publishing firms mostly in the Midwest and the west, 1913-1928, but most dating from 1923-1924, and photocopies of other items, 1922-1924.

References:

Register of the Sam DeVincent Collection of Illustrated American Sheet Music, ca. 1790-1980. Series 2--Armed Forces, ca. 1810-1980, by Karen Linn; with an introduction by John Edward Hasse ([Washington, D.C.]: Archives Center, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution, 1989); Register of the Sam DeVincent Collection of illustrated American sheet music, ca. 1790-1980. Series 4, Songwriters, 1847-1975, by Robert S. Harding; with an introduction by John Edward Hasse (Washington: Archives Center, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution, 1994).

Finding aids:

http://amhistory.si.edu/archives/ac0300.pdf

http://amhistory.si.edu/archives/d5300.htm

[0791] Emma Smith DeVoe Papers, MS 171 [digital collection]

Location: Washington State Library, PO Box 42460, Olympia, WA 98504-2460

Description: Emma Smith DeVoe (1848-1927) was a leader in the suffrage movement and the president of the Washington Equal Suffrage Association in 1906. The Bernice A. Sapp scrapbooks, 1910-1913, contain a copy of "Two Harvard Men And Anti-Suffrage" (a newspaper account of two men rejecting an appeal for support from the Massachusetts Association Opposed to the Extension of Suffrage to Women). Scrapbooks assembled by Emma Smith DeVoe, 1910, contain the following clippings: "Anti-Suffragists Protest," Tacoma News (Apr. 14, 1910); [short article about The Remonstrance, the magazine of the anti-suffragists], Spokesman-Review (May 4, 1910); "Anti-Suffragists Modest As Gentle Violet, So They Don't Talk Much," Post-Intelligencer (June 12, 1910); "English Women Who Oppose Ballots For their Own Sex," North Yakima Republic (Nov. 24, 1909) [on the English Anti-Suffrage Association, secretary, Mrs. Arthur Somervell, and the Anti-Suffrage Review]; and "Suffragists and Anti-Suffragists in Debate," Seattle Week-End (Feb. 19, 1910) [anti-suffragists to be represented in the debate by Ida M. Tarbell and Agnes Repplier].

Websites with information:

http://www.washingtonhistory.org/research/whc/WHCcollections/wsl/

Finding aid to digital collection:

http://digitum.washingtonhistory.org/cdm/landingpage/collection/devoe

[0791a] Wesley A. D'Ewart Papers, 1936-1973, Collection 294, MtBC, us

Location: Merrill G. Burlingame Special Collections, Montana State University-Bozeman Library, P.O. Box 173320, Bozeman, MT 59717-3320

Description: Wesley Abner D'Ewart (1889-1973) was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives from Montana in 1945, winning reelection four times. D'Ewart was an avowed opponent of Socialism and Communism. In 1954, during his unsuccessful campaign for the U.S. Senate seat held by Montana's Democratic U.S. Senator, James Murray, the Montana for D'Ewart Committee compiled and published a booklet entitled "Senator Murray and the Red Web Over Congress." The collection contains campaign materials, speeches and writings, correspondence, and research materials accumulated by D'Ewart. Series 5: Communism and Socialism, circa 1950s, contains papers, correspondence, and materials pertaining to Communism and Communists. Includes copies of the booklets "Senator Murray and the Red Web Over Congress" and "The Red Record of Senator James E. Murray," as well as publications and articles on Socialism.

Finding aid:

http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv00207

[0791b] Anita and Peter Deyneka, Jr. Papers, 1951-2003 (bulk 1984-2000), SC/048

Location: Wheaton College Archives & Special Collections, 501 College Ave., Wheaton, IL 60187-5593

Description: Peter Simon Deyneka, Jr. (1931-2000) was general director of the Slavic Gospel Association from 1975 to 1991, when, with his wife Anita (1942-), he created a new organization called Peter Deyneka USSR Ministries (later changed to Peter Deyneka Russian Ministries). Series 9: Secondary. Sub-Series 6: Information about other Russian ministries, contains files on Accuracy in Media; Campus Crusade for Christ; Christian Action; Christian Anti-Communism Crusade; Christian Research Institute, Inc.; Christianity Today; Church League of America; Institute for Creation Research; Jesus to the Communist World, Inc.; Moody Bible Institute; National Council of Churches; Promise Keepers; The Rutherford Institute; and Summit Ministries.

Finding aid:

http://archon.wheaton.edu/index.php?p=collections/findingaid&id=31

[0791c] Carte Cornelio Di Marzio, 1919-1943, IT-ACS-AS0001-0004220

Location: Archivio Centrale dello Stato, Piazzale degli Archivi, 27, 00144 Roma, Italy

Description: Cornelio Di Marzio (1896-1944) was an Italian journalist and editor of Il Meridiano di Roma. From 1939 to 1943 he was president of the Confederazione dei professionisti e artisti (Confederation of Professionals and Artists). The papers contain correspondence as well as manuscripts, typescripts, and press articles regarding his work as a journalist.

Websites with information:

http://search.acs.beniculturali.it/OpacACS/guida/IT-ACS-AS0001-0004220

[0792] Edwin Diamond Political Audiovisual Collection [audio and video recordings], 1960-1996

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

Description: Edwin Diamond (1925-1997) was a journalist, author, and professor. The collection contains a wide range of politically-related audio and audiovisual material. Topics covered include Pat Buchanan, Busing, Desegregation, Bob Dole, David Duke, Eisenhower, Freedom Forum, Barry Goldwater, Alexander Haig, Jesse Helms, Jack Kemp, Joseph McCarthy, Richard Nixon, PTL Club, Ronald Reagan, Oral Roberts, Pat Robertson, Robert Schuller, Donald Trump, UK Conservative Party, and George Wallace.

Finding aid:

http://library.syr.edu/digital/guides/d/diamond_e.htm

[0793] Sara Diamond Collection on the U.S. Right, approximately 1950-1997 (bulk 1980-1997), BANC MSS 98/70 cz

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

Description: Sara Diamond is a practicing attorney in Berkeley, California. The Sara Diamond Collection on the U.S. Right consists of mostly primary source material—publications, newsletters and other documents—published by and gathered directly from right-wing organizations. Contents include all of the early newsletters from the Christian Coalition, anti-gay conservative propaganda, material relating to anti-abortion movements and "pro-violence" groups, and papers showing the right's involvement in Central American politics of the early 1980s. Other topics covered include the Promise Keepers Christian men's movement, home schooling, racism and the right, conservative think tanks, and foreign affairs activities linked with conservatives. Series 1: Christian right organizations and topics approximately 1980-1997, contains files on About My Father's Business, Incorporated; Acton Institute; Ray Allen; Alliance Defense Fund; American Center for Law and Justice; American Coalition for Traditional Values; American Family Association; American Freedom Coalition; David Balsinger; Berean Call; David Bradshaw and Associates; William Marrion Branham; California Christian right; California Pro-Life Council; Campus Crusade; Morris Cerullo; Chalcedon Foundation; Reverend Paul Cho; Christ for the Nations; Christian Action Network; Christian Anti-Communism Crusade; Christian Coalition (Ralph Reed books; Christian American (publication); Road to Victory files); Christian Legal Society; Christian Reconstructionism (files on Gary North); Christian Rescue Effort for the Emancipation of Dissidents (CREED); Christian Research Institute; Christian Voice; Christian Voters' League; Church League of America; Coalition for Christians in Government; Coalition for Religious Freedom; Ed Cole Ministries; Christian Information Network, Colorado Springs; Committee on Moral Concerns; Concerned Women for America; Family Caucus Congress; Conservative Caucus; Coors; Kenneth Copeland; Coral Ridge; Council for National Policy; Culture Wars (publication); Bill Dannemeyer; Mike Evans Ministries; Family Research Council; Focus on the Family; Francis Schaeffer Institute; Free Congress; Ben Gilmore; Billy Graham; Lindsey Hall; Marilyn Hickey Ministries; Rex Hurtt; Imprimus (publication of Hillsdale College); Jesus to the Communist World, Inc.; Knights of Malta; Last Days Ministries; Larry Lea; Leadership Institute; Liberty Counsel; Living Truth Ministries; Don McAlvany; Jim McCotter; Ministries Behind the Iron Curtain; Moral Majority; Moral Rearmament; National Evangelical Association; Network of Christian Ministries; Oliver North; Luis Palau; Earl Paulk; Phyllis Schlafly Report; Promise Keepers; Republican National Coalition for Life; Republican Roundtable; Pat Robertson; Rutherford Institute; Shepherding Movement (Protesting wing); Shepherding Movement (Catholic) (Sword of the Spirit; Tom Yoder; charismatic renewal; Center for Pastoral Renewal; pastoral renewal; Catholic cults); Traditional Values Coalition; Wise Use Memo (Center for the Defense of Free Enterprise, Bellevue, WA); Washington for Jesus; and Western Center for Law and Religious Freedom. Series 2: Religious media approximately 1985-1997, contains files on Christian Broadcasting Network (Pat Robertson), National Religious Broadcasters organization, televangelism, Trinity Broadcasting Network, Jimmy Swaggart, and Oral Roberts. Series 3: Education and family life issues approximately 1985-1997, contains files on abortion clinic bombings; Anti-abortion movement; anti-gay rights; Christian Action Council; Christian schools; Citizens Alliance of Washington; College Republicans; Bob Dole/GOP on abortion; Mike Farris; Grove City; homeschooling; David Horowitz; Idaho Citizens Alliance; Intercollegiate Studies Institute; Life Advocate; National Association of Christian Educators; Operation Rescue; Oregon Citizens Alliance; Reagan Youth; school choice; school prayer; sex education; textbooks; VHS tape of U.S. Taxpayers Party of Wisconsin-State Convention 1994; VHS tapes of the following films: The Ultimate Target of the Gay Agenda, Stonewall: 25 Years of Deception, and Gay Rights/Special Rights; VHS tape of Unholy Alliance (Planned Parenthood); Young America's Foundation; and Young Conservative Foundation. Series 4: The racist right approximately 1950-1996, contains files on American Party; California Statesman; California Patriot; The Citizen; Constitution Party; Dixon Line; Fiery Cross; First National Directory of Rightist Groups; Florida States Rights Party; George Wallace; Gerald L.K. Smith; Identity Christianity; Independent American; Ku Klux Klan; Liberty Lobby; Liberty Bell; Liberty Lowdown; National Association to Keep and Bear Arms (NAKBA); National States Rights Party (NSRP); National Youth Alliance; Nationalist Party; Patrick Henry Press; The Patriot Movement; Putnam letters; Southern racist politics; and Tax Strike News. Series 6: Think tanks approximately 1980-1998, contains files on American Enterprise Institute; Barry Goldwater Institute; Cato Institute; Claremont Institute; Competitive Enterprise Institute; Ethics and Public Policy Center; Foreign Policy Research Institute; Foundation for Economic Education; Freedom House; Heritage Foundation; Hoover Institution; Hudson Institute; Institute for Humane Studies; Institute for Policy Studies; International Freedoms Foundation; International Society for Individual Liberty; Manhattan Institute; National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc.; Pioneer Institute; Rand Corporation; Reason Foundation; The Heartland Institute; and World Freedoms Foundation. Series 7: Foreign affairs approximately 1984-1995, contains files on U.S. right and South Africa; Contras; Council for Inter-American Security; Oliver North's deals; right wing press clips on Central America; and the Right and the Gulf War. Series 8: Politics, miscellaneous approximately 1950-1996, contains files on Republican Party, Patrick Buchanan, Paleoconservatives, Libertarians, The New Right (secular), Unification Church, and Craig Hulet (conspiracy theory). Series 9: Materials from anti-right research organizations approximately 1985-1995, contains files on the Coalition for Human Dignity; Institute for First Amendment Studies "Challenging the Christian Right Handbook;" People for the American Way; Planned Parenthood; Political Research Associates; Chip Berlet; Public Eye; and a VHS recording of a film entitled Narrowcasting: Technology and the Rise of the Christian Right (Paper Tiger Television, 1996).

References:

"Sara Diamond Collection on the U.S. Right," Bancroftiana 112 (Spring 1998), p. 4, http://digitalassets.lib.berkeley.edu/bancroftiana/ucb/text/bancroftiana_112.pdf; Jean H. Lee, "Conservative Collections at UC," Associated Press News, Sept. 29, 1998, https://apnews.com/cf328424d32801e22d32a52b5b02841b.

Websites with information:

http://crws.berkeley.edu/resources/archives

http://web.archive.org/web/20080517175140/http://bancroft.berkeley.edu/events/bancroftiana/112/acquisitions.html

http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/AboutLibrary/CUNews/cu_100198.html

http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/98legacy/09-28-1998.html

http://web.archive.org/web/20080720031036/http://bancroft.berkeley.edu/events/bancroftiana/news112.pdf

http://www.berkeley.edu/news/berkeleyan/1998/1014/rightwing.html

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/907544951

http://www.worldcat.org/title/sara-diamond-collection-on-the-us-right-approximately-1950-1997-bulk-1980-199

7/oclc/907544951

Finding aids:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8h998j5/entire_text/

http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8h998j5/entire_text/

[0794] Samuel Dickstein Papers, 1923-1944, Coll. 8

Location: American Jewish Archives, 3101 Clifton Ave., Cincinnati, OH 45220

Description: The Samuel Dickstein Papers (1923-1944) consist of the personal papers of Representative Dickstein as Vice-Chairman of the House Special Committee on Un-American Activities. The collection contains correspondence, iconographic material, nearprint, legislative records and miscellaneous items relating to Dickstein's investigation of Fascist activities in the United States during the pre-World II period. Contains issues of Voelkischer Beobachter, Deutscher Weckruf, Christian Free Press, Liberation, National Republic, News Research Service, Inc. News Letter, and Social Justice, and files on Charles E. Coughlin, Henry Ford, Ku Klux Klan, Fritz Kuhn, Westbrook Pegler, and Anastase A. Vonsiatsky.

Websites with information:

http://americanjewisharchives.org/collections/findingAids.php

Finding aid:

http://americanjewisharchives.org/collections/ms0008/

[0795] Martin Dies Papers, 1916-1972 (bulk 1930-1958), AC 1983.141

Location: Texas State Library and Archives Commission, 1201 Brazos St., Austin, TX 78701, held at Sam Houston Regional Library & Research Center, 650 FM 1011, Liberty, TX 77575

Description: Martin Dies, Jr. (1900-1972) was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Texas's 2nd district, 1931-1945 and from Texas's at-large district, 1953-1959, and Chairman of the House Committee Investigating Un-American Activities, 1938-1944. This collection is arranged in three series that reflect Dies' political career: papers from his years as Congressman from the Second District; papers from the interim years, between Congressional service; and papers from his years as Congressman-at-Large. While documents comprise the greatest volume of the collection, there are scrapbooks, sound recordings, artifacts, publications, and photographs as well. Series 1. Congressman Second District. Subseries 7. Congressional Committees, 1931-1944. Sub-subseries. HUAC Investigations, contains files on Christian Mobilizers, Israel Moses Sieff, and Nathaniel Weyl. Sub-subseries. HUAC Reports, contains files on Nazi-Fascist Organizations, Peace Now Movement, and Testimony of Fritz Kuhn, President of the German-American Bund 1938. Subseries 9. Correspondence with Individuals outside the Second District, 1931-1944, contains correspondence with John Henry Kirby, President of the Kirby Lumber Company. Series 1. Congressman Second District. Subseries 10. Papers related to The Trojan Horse in America, 1939-1944, contains files about this book, which discusses the dangers of foreign "isms" to the United States. Series 1. Congressman Second District. Subseries 11. Publications, 1934-1942, contains files on "Nationalism Spells Safety" by Martin Dies, National Republic, March 1934, and Manuscripts of Magazine Articles on Immigration by Dies, c. 1935. Series 3. Congressman-at-Large. Subseries 1. Legislative Topical Files, 1953-1958, contains files on Alaska Mental Health Bill; American Military to be Tried in American Courts 1955-1956 (Bow Resolution); Civil Rights; Equal Rights Amendment; Fluoridation; Alger Hiss--Pension 1954; Immigration Restrictions due to National Origin; Integration; Labor Unions (Taft-Hartley Act); Munitions Makers (Nye Resolution) 1934-1936; Natural Gas Report--Women Investors Research Institute 1956; Right to Work; Socialism; States' Rights; and Treaties--Bricker Amendment. Subseries 7. Subject Files, 1951-1958, contains files on American Heritage Protective Society, Communism, H.R. Cullen, John Dowdy, President Dwight D. Eisenhower, Fluoridation of Water, General Douglas MacArthur, Joseph R. McCarthy, Minute Women, Pro America, Segregation, Gerald L.K. Smith, and States' Rights. Subseries 5. House Committees. Sub-subseries 1. House Committee Publications, 1947-1953, contains files on Guide to Subversive Organizations and Publications HUAC 1951; Menace of Communism Statement of J. Edgar Hoover HUAC 1947; and One Hundred Things You Should Know about Communism and Labor HUAC ca. 1952. Subseries 9. Periodicals and Publications, 1950-1958, contains files on Americanism vs. All other Isms, Louisa Eldredge 1953; The Dan Smoot Report, Miscellaneous Issues 1956-1958; "Do You Approve of Statehood for Hawaii?" Article by Martin Dies, Facts Forum News 1954; Know Your Enemy, Robert H. Williams 1950; Marxism: Evangel of the Red Beast, by Lewis Valentine Ulrey (1950); McCarthyism: The Fight for America, Senator Joe McCarthy 1952; National Council of Churches of Christ in the U.S.A.: Why Christians Should Get Out of It, Charles W. Rankin ca. 1957; Roman Catholicism vs. Freedom, V.E. Howard 1954; "They Tried to get Me Too: Exclusive Interview with Martin Dies, Former Chairman of the House Committee on Un-American Activities," Excerpt from U.S. News and World Report, August 20, 1954; To Communism via Majority Vote: An Address Delivered to the American Petroleum Institute, Ben Moreell 1952; and "Where Do We Stand Today with Communism in the United States?" by J. Edgar Hoover (excerpt from American Legion Magazine, Volume 56, Number 3, March 1954, pp. 14-15, 58-61, online at http://archive.legion.org/bitstream/handle/123456789/3857/americanlegionma­563amer.pdf?sequence=1). Series 3. Congressman-at-Large. Subseries 10. Correspondence with Publishers and the Media, 1952-1958, contains files of correspondence with U.S. News and World Report, "Facts Forum" Television Producers, and "Meet the Press" Television Producers. Series 7. Scrapbooks, 1935-1964, contains a scrapbook of newspaper clippings from 1937 documenting Communist involvement in maritime unions.

Finding aids:

https://www.tsl.texas.gov/shc/dies.html

https://www.tsl.texas.gov/shc/diesfindingaid.html

https://www.tsl.state.tx.us/arc/findingaids/martindies.html

[0795a] La Difesa della Razza (August 5, 1938, to June 20, 1943) [digital collection]

Location: Special & Digital Collections, USF Tampa Library, University of South Florida, 4202 E. Fowler Ave., LIB122, Tampa, FL 33620

Description: La Difesa della Razza (In Defense of Race) was a biweekly newspaper in Fascist Italy which began publication in August 5, 1938, and continued until June 20, 1943. Like the "Manifesto degli Scienziati Razzisti" (Manifesto of Racial/Racist Scientists) (1938), the publication's goal was to foster racism through biological and scientific rather than political arguments. Contributors include Giorgio Almirante, Julius Evola, Telesio Interlandi, Giovanni Preziosi, Massimo Scaligero, and Francesco Scardaoni.

Finding aid:

http://digital.lib.usf.edu/ladifesa

[0796] John P. Diggins letters received, 1969-1989, Coll. 91025

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

Description: John Patrick Diggins (1935-2009) was an intellectual historian, university professor, and author. Letters by the American philosopher Sidney Hook and the American journalist and author James Burnham, relating primarily to the influence of Marxism on various American intellectuals.

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt0x0nd97w/entire_text/

[0797] John P. Diggins Papers, 1966-2008, MssCol 18353

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: John Patrick Diggins (1935-2009) was an intellectual historian, university professor, and author. The John P. Diggins papers consist of correspondence, project files, and teaching files. Series I. Correspondence, 1966-2008, includes correspondence with James Burnham, Will Herberg, Sidney Hook, Arthur Schlesinger Jr., Daniel Bell, and Heritage Foundation official Robert Huberty. Series III. Teaching and lecture files, contains files on Civil rights, Communism and Fascism, Conservatism and the Constitution, Long and Coughlin, New American Right, Populism, and Race.

Finding aids:

http://archives.nypl.org/mss/18353

http://archives.nypl.org/mss/18353/pdf

http://archives.nypl.org/uploads/collection/pdf_finding_aid/diggins.pdf

http://www.nypl.org/sites/default/files/archivalcollections/pdf/diggins.pdf

[0798] Charles Fremont Dight papers, 1883-1984, File no. P1628 [partly digital collection]

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

Description: C. F. Dight (1856-1938) was a physician, professor, and Minneapolis alderman. In the early 1920s Dight launched a crusade to bring the eugenics movement to Minnesota. He believed that many of society's evils could be eliminated through selective breeding. His main lines of approach included eugenics education, changes in marriage laws, and the segregation and sterilization of "defectives." He organized the Minnesota Eugenics Council in 1923 and began campaigning for a sterilization law. In 1925 the Minnesota legislature passed a law allowing the sterilization of the "feeble-minded" and insane who were resident in the state's institutions. For the next several legislative sessions Dight fought unsuccessfully for expansion of the law to include sterilization of the unfit outside of institutions. The Minnesota Eugenics Society became moribund by the early 1930s, but Dight continued his legislative efforts as late as 1935 and also continued to speak and write on the subject of eugenics. In 1935 he published History of the Early Stages of the Organized Eugenics Movement for Human Betterment in Minnesota, a 69-page pamphlet. In 1936 he published Call for a New Social Order, a 181-page book comprising three parts: memoirs of his years as a socialist Minneapolis alderman, 1914-1918; published versions of his radio talk on eugenics; and essays on "mental faculties" and other subjects. The papers consist of correspondence (undated and 1892-1936), photographs (1879-1930s), lecture notes (1900-1908), essays, article manuscripts (1906-1910, 1933-1936), newspaper clippings (1900-1927), scrapbooks (1914-1930s), radio scripts (1928, 1933), editorials (ca. 1921-1935), income tax forms (1919-1936), pamphlets, flyers, bills, minutes, and printed matter. Includes correspondence with Adolf Hitler [a letter to Hitler is reproduced at http://libguides.mnhs.org/eugenics/primary]; mimeographed copies of correspondence between Theodore Roosevelt and Ernest Lundeen (Oct.-Nov. 1917) regarding Lundeen's patriotism and his views on the war in Europe; Minnesota Eugenics Society records; and files on Eugenics Record Office and Eugenics Research Association, including Dight's correspondence with Harry H. Laughlin regarding eugenics, sterilization, and eugenics conferences; American Eugenics Society (New Haven, Conn.); National Committee on Federal Legislation for Birth Control, including form letters signed by Margaret Sanger, president; and Human Betterment Foundation (Pasadena, Calif.), including correspondence of Dight with E. S. Gosney (foundation president) and Paul Popenoe (secretary). Includes correspondence with Adolf Hitler [online at http://www2.mnhs.org/library/findaids/P1628/pdfa/P1628-00001.pdf].

Websites with information:

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

http://www2.mnhs.org/library/findaids/index_D.htm

Finding aid:

http://www2.mnhs.org/library/findaids/P1628.xml

[0799] Dight Institute Records, undated, 1930-1989, uarc 1012

Location: University of Minnesota Archives, 218 Elmer L. Andersen Library, University of Minnesota, 222 21st Avenue South, Minneapolis, MN 55455

Description: In the summer of 1941, the University of Minnesota established The Charles Fremont Dight Institute for the Promotion of Human Genetics, whose benefactor was Charles Fremont Dight (1856-1938). Dight was an advocate of sterilization of the "unfit" (anyone deemed a criminal or mentally handicapped). In 1925, a sterilization law did go into effect in Minnesota, the 17th state to pass such a law; it was to remain on the books until 1975. This sterilization law was intended to delay marriages of the feeble-minded, epileptic, and insane, until they could be sterilized, was "voluntary," and applied only to institutionalized individuals. Dight's furor in support of the eugenics of the 1920s and 1930s included possible support of Hitler's eugenics program, honoring Lindbergh for his "hereditary endowment," and advocating the selective breeding of humans. Underlying this early eugenics, enthusiastically supported by many prominent people, including scientists and ministers, was a reflection of the racism always present within the society. His will left the balance of his estate, approximately $75,000, to the University of Minnesota "to promote biological race betterment, better human brain structure and mental endowment by spreading abroad the knowledge of the laws of heredity and the principles of eugenics." Dr. Clarence P. Oliver was the Institute's first director. He resigned in 1946 to establish a center of human genetics at the University of Texas at Austin. Includes correspondence with C.M. Goethe.

Finding aids:

http://discover.lib.umn.edu/cgi/f/findaid/findaid-idx?c=umfa;cc=umfa;q1=Dight%20Institute%20­Records;rgn

=main;view=text;didno=uarc01012

http://special.lib.umn.edu/findaid/xml/uarc01012.xml

[0800] Correspondence, Literary Manuscripts and Other Papers of Sir Charles Wentworth Dilke, 2nd Bart. 1869, P.C., M.P., [1823-1922], Add MS 43874-43967, 49385-49455, 49610-2, 58227-58234

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

Description: Sir Charles Wentworth Dilke (1843-1911) was a British politician and supporter of the Imperial Federation League. Correspondence, literary manuscripts and other papers. Add MS 43916 includes a letter from Arthur H. Loring, Secretary, Imperial Federation League, to Dilke, 1897.

Websites with information:

http://www.bl.uk/reshelp/pdfs/readerguide1.pdf

http://www.bl.uk/reshelp/findhelprestype/manuscripts/namedmanuscripts/namedmanuscriptsd/index.html

Catalogue description:

http://searcharchives.bl.uk

http://molcat1.bl.uk/

[0801] Elizabeth Dilling Papers

Location: Christian Liberty Academy, 502 West Euclid Avenue, Arlington Heights, Illinois 60004

Description: Elizabeth Dilling Stokes (1894-1966) was an American anti-Communist, isolationist, and later anti-Semitic social activist. The papers contain correspondence with George Deatherage.

References:

Glen Jeansonne, Women of the Far Right: The Mothers' Movement and World War II (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996), p. xvi; Christine K. Erickson, "'So much for men': Conservative Women and National Defense in the 1920s and 1930s," American Studies, 45:1 (Spring 2004): 85-102 (p. 101 n.45), https://journals.ku.edu/index.php/amerstud/article/viewFile/3010/2969.

[0801a] Mary Earhart Dillon, Series XIII (Suffrage Miscellany) of the Mary Earhart Dillon Collection, 1879-1920, A-68

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 series consists of flyers, brochures, pamphlets, political cartoons for and against suffrage (both clippings and original drawings, 1913-1920, n.d.), postcards, posters, photographs, drawings of women, poems, songs, a play, autographs, a scrapbook of clippings, and memorabilia.

Websites with information:

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

Finding aid:

http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~sch01005

[0802] Joseph Dilys commentaries [manuscript], ca. 1970s, MSS Alpha2 D

Location: Chicago History Museum Research Center, 1601 N. Clark St., Chicago, IL 60614

Description: Joseph Dilys (1903-1997) was a Chicago-based anti-Semitic propagandist.

Websites with information:

http://www.chsmedia.org:8081/ipac20/ipac.jsp?session=139OC08N44880.7140&profile=public&source=~!ho

rizon&view=subscriptionsummary&uri=full=3100046~!66153~!0&ri=9&aspect=subtab112&menu=search&ip

p=20&spp=20&staffonly=&term=Anti-communist+movements&index=SUBJECT&uindex=­&aspect=subtab112&

menu=search&ri=9

[0803] Directorio Revolucionario Estudiantil en el Exilio (DRE) Records, 1960-1996, CHC0510

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

Description: El Directorio Revolucionario Estudianil en el Exilio (Students Revolutionary Directorate in Exile), also known as the Directorio Revolucionario 13 de Marzo, was founded in Miami in 1960 by former University of Havana students exiled as a result of the Cuban Revolution. The mission of the organization was to make trips to the island with the aim of starting clandestine movements against the Communist ideology established in Cuba. Series 3: Political Activity and Propaganda Files, n.d., 1960-1996, contains files that include proclamations (broadsides) and circulars, clippings, posters, reports, audiovisual materials, articles, etc. about anti-Communist propaganda campaigns in and outside of Cuba. Series IV: Subject Files, n.d., 1960-1996. Sub-series A: Associations n.d., 1960-1996, contains files on Alpha 66, Anti Communist Movements, Cuban Freedom Committee, and Truth about Cuba Committee.

Finding aids:

http://proust.library.miami.edu/findingaids/index.php?p=collections/findingaid&id=148&q=puig

http://proust.library.miami.edu/findingaids/legacy/chc0510.pdf

[0804] Everett M. Dirksen Papers

Location: The Dirksen Congressional Center, 2815 Broadway, Pekin, Illinois 61554

Description: The Dirksen Papers consist predominately of files accumulated during Everett Dirksen's years as a U.S. Senator, 1951-69. The Working Papers, a topically arranged reference file for legislation, selected constituent cases, speeches, and other matters, include folders on the Connally Amendment, Human Events, H. L. Hunt, Patrick J. Hurley, William Langer, Douglas MacArthur, Joseph McCarthy, Monroe Doctrine, Negros, Otto Otepka, Arthur Radford, Reed-Dirksen Amendment, Right-Wing Radio-T.V. Broadcasts, State's Rights, Status of Forces Treaty, Robert Taft, and Yalta.

Finding aid:

http://www.dirksencenter.org/guides_emd/Workingpapers1857-69/intro.htm

[0805] Everett McKinley Dirksen Oral Histories, 1968-1969 [oral history]

Location: Oral History Collection, The Lyndon Baines Johnson Presidential Library, 2313 Red River Street, Austin, Texas 78705-5702

Description: Dirksen (1896-1969) was Senator, Illinois, 1951-1969; Senate Minority Leader, 1959-1969. The interview by William S. White, May 8, 1968, mentions President Eisenhower. The interview by Joe B. Frantz, March 21, 1969, mentions President Eisenhower. The interview by Joe B. Frantz, July 30, 1969, mentions President Eisenhower and the effort to repeal section 14-B of the Taft-Hartley Act [the right-to-work clause].

Finding aid:

http://www.lbjlibrary.net/collections/oral-histories/dirksen-mckinley-everett.html

Transcript of the interview by William S. White of May 8, 1968:

http://www.lbjlibrary.net/assets/documents/archives/oral_histories/dirksen_e/dirksen1.pdf

Transcript of the interview by Joe B. Frantz, March 21, 1969:

http://www.lbjlibrary.net/assets/documents/archives/oral_histories/dirksen_e/dirksen2.pdf

Transcript of the interview by Joe B. Frantz, July 30, 1969:

http://www.lbjlibrary.net/assets/documents/archives/oral_histories/dirksen_e/dirksen3.pdf

[0805a] The Dirksen Center's Editorial Cartoon Collection [cartoons; digital collection]

Location: The Dirksen Center, 2815 Broadway Road, Pekin, IL 61554

Description: Over the years, Senator Dirksen's staff compiled a scrapbook containing more than 300 editorial cartoons. Topics covered include civil rights, Dixiecrats, Dwight Eisenhower, Gerald R. Ford, Barry Goldwater, labor unions, Richard Nixon, Nixon Administration, the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, Prayer Amendment, reapportionment, Republican Party politics, Right-to-Work, school prayer, Southern Bloc, Taft-Hartley Act, Taft-Hartley 14(b), and Vietnam.

Finding aid:

http://www.dirksencenterprojects.org/cartoons/

[0806] Brice Pursell Disque Papers, 1899-1957, Coll. 115

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

Description: The Brice P. Disque Papers contain the personal and professional records of General Brice P. Disque. The collection contains manuscripts, personal and professional correspondence, business dealing records, scrapbooks, and photographs. Correspondents include American Crusaders, American Economic Foundation, Ezra T. Benson, the Committee for Constitutional Government, Robert B. Dresser, Merwin K. Hart, Herbert Hoover, George Van Horn Moseley, and Edward A. Rumely. There is also a file on the Bricker Amendment.

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-brice-p-disque-papers/

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

http://janus.uoregon.edu/record=b1975701

https://www.nal.usda.gov/exhibits/speccoll/exhibits/show/usda-history-collection/reference-pages/ezra-taft-benson

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/18766494

http://www.worldcat.org/title/brice-p-disque-papers-1899-1957/oclc/18766494

Finding aids:

http://nwda.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv69776/

http://nwda.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv69776/op=pretrieve.aspx

http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv69776

[0806a] Brice P. Disque papers, 1906-1960, Coll. 0316

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

Description: Brice P. Disque (1879-1960) was a public official and businessman who commanded the U.S. Army's Spruce Production Division and founded the Loyal Legion of Loggers and Lumbermen during the First World War. Disque was charged with accelerating the logging of spruce and other trees for the war effort, a process which had been slowed by a series of strikes and slowdowns led by the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW). The Loyal Legion of Loggers and Lumbermen, an organization headed by army officers, enrolled all of the roughly 20,000 soldiers working as loggers and about 100,000 civilian loggers during the war. All enrollees had to sign a loyalty oath and agree not to strike. Enrollees could be members of the IWW or American Federation of Labor (AFL), but they had to promise not to organize workers into any union other than the legion. The series Loyal Legion of Loggers and Lumbermen, contains copies of the legion's monthly bulletins from 1917 to 1919. The series United States War Department, Spruce Production Division, includes the correspondence of Disque, his advisors, and other Spruce Division officials from 1917 to 1921.

Websites with information:

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/39388849

http://www.worldcat.org/title/brice-p-disque-papers-1906-1960/oclc/39388849

Finding aid:

http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv72520/

[0807] Distributist Party, 1933-1935, COLL MISC 0791

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

Description: Distributionists believe that the means of production should be distributed as widely as possible among the populace. Distributism opposes Communism and Socialism and any form of centralisation. It embraces property of ownership, small economies of scale, belief in God and maintaining families, and sensible technology. Distributism is generally against big systems and in favour of small and private systems. Distributism promotes independence and self-reliance provided they are understood to be subsequent to higher values such as religious faith and promotion of the family. The Distributist League was founded in 1926. Its President was the writer G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936). The Distributist Party was formed at a meeting at the Charing Cross Hotel on 25th May 1933. A resolution was passed at the meeting that the party should pursue "...the encouragement of individual ownership in the means of livelihood; the dispersal of unnecessarily large aggregates of industrial and commercial capital..." Papers of Harry Hutchinson, relating to the Distributist Party.

Websites with information:

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

Finding aid:

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

[0807a] Records of the District Courts of the United States, 1685-2009, Record Group 21

Location: National Archives at Fort Worth (RM-FW), 1400 John Burgess Drive, Fort Worth, TX 76140

Description: Records of the Jonesboro Division of the Eastern District of Arkansas, 3/3/1911- (Most Recent), contains Case File: Civil Case J918, filed October 13, 1955—Hoxie School District No. 46, et al. v. Brewer, et al. The Hoxie School District attempted to desegregate its schools in accordance with the Brown decision and the 14th Amendment. The school district asked the Jonesboro Federal court for an injunction against intimidating actions taken by the defendants, Herbert Brewer; Amis Guthridge; White America, Inc.; Citizens Committee Representing Segregation in the Hoxie Schools; and the White Citizens Council of Arkansas.

Reference:

Federal Records Relating to Civil Rights in the Post-World War II Era. Compiled by Walter B. Hill, Jr., and Lisha B. Penn. Reference Information Paper 113. National Archives and Records Administration. Washington, DC, 2006, p. 216, http://www.archives.gov/publications/ref-info-papers/rip113.pdf.

Websites with information:

https://catalog.archives.gov/id/610911

[0808] Records of the District Courts of the United States, 1716-1988, Record Group 21

Location: National Archives at Atlanta, 5780 Jonesboro Rd., Morrow, GA 30260

Description: Records of the Northern District of Alabama, 1824-1970, divisions at Anniston, Birmingham, Florence, Gadsden Huntsville, Jasper, and Tuscaloosa, include records of cases involving the Enforcement Act of 1870 against members of the Ku Klux Klan. Records of the Middle District of Alabama, 1839-1969, divisions at Dothan, Montgomery, and Opelika, include records of a suit involving attacks on the Freedom Riders, who tested bus segregation practices by participating in an integrated bus ride through Alabama and Mississippi (United States v. U.S. Klans, Inc.). Records of the Northern District of Mississippi, 1838-1964, divisions at Aberdeen, Clarksdale, Greenville, and Oxford, include records of cases involving the Enforcement Act of 1870 and the Ku Klux Klan in northern Mississippi. Records of the Southern District of Mississippi, 1819-1966, divisions at Biloxi, Hattiesburg, Jackson, Meridian, and Vicksburg, include records of civil rights cases, including some against members of the Ku Klux Klan. Records of the Eastern District of North Carolina, divisions at Elizabeth City (first held at Edenton), Fayetteville, New Bern, Raleigh, Washington, Wilmington, and Wilson, include records of cases involving the Enforcement Act of 1870 and members of the Ku Klux Klan. Records of the Southern District of Georgia, 1789-1979, divisions at Augusta, Brunswick, Dublin, Savannah, Swainsboro, and Waycross, include records of a World War I period equity suit, Jeffersonian v. West, in which Tom Watson's newspaper was denied second class mailing privileges under the Espionage Act because he used the paper to encourage draft evasion and oppose U.S. entry into the war. Records of the Northern District of Georgia, 1847-1978, divisions at Atlanta, Gainesville, Newnan, and Rome, include records of civil rights cases involving the desegregation of the Atlanta public schools and the Pickrick Restaurant, owned by future governor, Lester Maddox. Records of the Eastern District of Tennessee, 1852-1988, include approximately 3000 pages of court transcripts from the Federal Court in Knoxville for the various cases related to the desegregation of Clinton, TN, High School.

Reference:

Rachel L. Martin, "Overwhelming!!!!!!!!!" May 13, 2009, http://rachelmartin.wordpress.com/2009/05/13/­riding-out-the-research-high/.

Websites with information:

http://friendsnas.org/education/S2_OriginalRecords_Atl/RG_Descriptions.pdf

[0808a] Frank M. Dixon Papers, 1924-1965, LPR33

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

Description: Frank Murray Dixon (1892-1965) served as the 40th Governor of Alabama from 1939 to 1943. The papers consist of correspondence, letters, telegrams, memoranda, advertisements, speeches, clippings, photographs, minutes, platforms, resolutions, lists, reports, receipts, budgets, scrapbooks, maps, and published materials. Among the correspondents are Governors Ellis Arnall of Ga.; Ross R. Barnett of Miss.; Leverett Saltonstall of Mass.; J. Strom Thurmond of S.C.; and George C. Wallace of Ala. U.S. Senators include Owen Brewster, Harry F. Byrd, James O. Eastland, and John Sparkman. Alabama politicians include Eugene "Bull" Connor, Sam Engelhardt, and Walter Givhan. Prominent newspapermen include Virginius Dabney of the Richmond Times-Dispatch. Series V. States' Rights and Dixiecrats, 1940-1956, and n.d.. Subseries A. Correspondence, 1948-1951, contains correspondence, memoranda, and telegrams that detail the activities of the Dixiecrats. Correspondents include Strom Thurmond, Harry F. Byrd, and Eugene "Bull" Connor. Subseries B. Organization Materials and Activities, 1948-1951, contains membership lists, committee lists, press releases, the names of delegates attending conventions, and an organization plan. Includes material from both the National States' Rights Committee and the Alabama States' Rights Committee. Subseries C. Published Materials, 1940-1956, contains various types of printed matter that Dixon collected which related to states' rights, such as the 1940 debate on the issue, "That the Power of the Federal Government Should Be Increased," in which Dixon argued in the negative. There is also a 1947 address by Strom Thurmond; a 1948 address by William H. Tuck; a 1949 pamphlet on the U.S. Constitution published by the National States' Rights Committee; and other publications, most of which were anti-labor, anti-Communist, and / or anti-civil rights. Series VI. Correspondence, Personal and Political, 1948-1965, contains files on Americans for Constitutional Action and Committee for Constitutional Government.

Websites with information:

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/122387780

http://www.worldcat.org/title/papers-1924-1965/oclc/122387780

Catalogue search engine:

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

Finding aid:

http://www.archives.state.al.us/findaids/v2210.pdf

[0809] Thomas Dixon Papers, 1892-1959

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

Description: Thomas Frederick Dixon, II (1864-1946) was a believer in white supremacy and the author of The Clansman (1905), which was to become the inspiration for D. W. Griffith's film, The Birth of a Nation (1915). Correspondence, papers, and writings of Thomas Dixon. Correspondence contains material on the Mt. Mitchell Association of Arts and Sciences, apparently having to do with land development, 1927-1928; the publication of Dixon's last novel, The Flaming Sword, 1939-1940; and letters relating to the religious beliefs of Dixon's second wife, Madelyn (Donovan) Dixon. There is a miscellaneous group of financial papers and a number of legal papers concerning copyrights and contracts with companies producing Dixon's plays. Writings include bound holograph drafts of The Sins of the Father and The Sun Virgin, proofs of The One Woman, pasted and bound; typed drafts of Dixon's plays; the first unrevised sketch of Dixon's dramatic adaptation of The Clansman and a scenario for the filmed version of Birth of a Nation.

References:

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; 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]), p. 77; Alexander J. Beringer, "The Pleasures of Conspiracy: American Literature 1870-1910" (Ph.D., The University of Michigan, 2011), http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/­bitstream/handle/2027.42/86459/beringer_1a.pdf.

Websites with information:

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

[0809a] Thomas Dixon papers, 1901-1905, Manuscript Collection No. 23

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

Description: Thomas Dixon (1864-1946) was a clergyman, lecturer, and novelist. Dixon published his first of twenty-two novels, The Leopard's Spots, in 1902. That novel and two others, The Clansman (1905) and The Traitor (1907), comprised his bestselling trilogy of books defending the South. Dixon wrote the screenplay for the movie The Birth of a Nation (1915), based on The Clansman. His three anti-socialist novels, beginning with The One Woman (1903), sold widely. The collection contains one folder of correspondence (1901-1905), which includes thirteen detailed letters from Thomas Dixon to publishers. One letter to Walter Hines Page (1855-1918) of Doubleday, Page & Company mentions Dixon's work on plot development for The Clansman (February 7, 1904). The collection has one folder of miscellaneous items (1902-1903) and a typescript (381 pp.) of The One Woman with penciled revisions.

Websites with information:

http://guides.main.library.emory.edu/c.php?g=50199&p=324597

Finding aids:

http://findingaids.library.emory.edu/documents/dixon23/

http://findingaids.library.emory.edu/documents/dixon23/printable/

[0810] Lev E. Dobriansky papers, 1959-1982, Coll. 78035

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

Description: Correspondence, messages, pamphlets, programs, proclamations, reports, resolutions, and clippings, relating to American foreign policy, the National Captive Nations Committee, the Ukrainian Catholic Church, China and Mao Zedong.

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt9w10382r/

[0811] Lev E. Dobriansky Papers 2, 1950-2002 (bulk 1980-1998), GTM.GAMMS447

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

Description: Lev E. Dobriansky (1918-2008) was a professor of Economics at Georgetown University (1948-1986) and U.S. Ambassador to the Bahamas (1982 to 1986). Dobriansky served as the chairman of the National Captive Nations Committee and the Victims of Communism Foundation, and as president of the American Council for World Freedom from 1976 to 1979 and the Ukrainian Congress Committee of America from 1949 to 1982. Correspondents include presidents Eisenhower, Ford, Nixon, and Reagan. Files on American Legion, James Burnham, George W. Bush, Heritage Foundation, Human Events, Jesse Helms, Katyń Forest Massacre, Trent Lott, National Review, Gingrich Newt, Grover G. Norquist, László Pásztor, Ronald Reagan, John K. Singlaub, Rama Swarup, Strom Thurmond, George Weigel, and World Anti-Communist League.

Finding aid:

https://repository.library.georgetown.edu/bitstream/handle/10822/559184/GTM.GAMMS447.html

[0812] Documentation Center on Contemporary Japan Newspaper Clipping Files

Location: Documentation Center on Contemporary Japan Collections, Fung Library, Harvard University, Knafel Building, Concourse Level, 1737 Cambridge Street, Cambridge, MA 02138

Description: The DCJ's newspaper clipping files include clippings under the heading Nationalism—Right wing.

Websites with information:

http://hcl.harvard.edu/libraries/fung/dccj/dccj_clippings.cfm

[0813] Thomas J. Dodd Papers, undated, 1919-1971, MSS 1994-0065 [partly digital collection]

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

Description: Dodd (1907-1971) was a U.S. representative from Connecticut, 1953-1957, and a senator from Connecticut, 1959-1971. During World War II, Dodd handled cases for the U.S. Justice Department involving espionage and sabotage that helped cripple Nazi fifth column efforts to destabilize the United States war effort. His work led to the convictions of Count Anastase Vonsiatsky and others on spying charges. The collection consists primarily of material from Dodd's Senate years and the Nuremberg war crimes trial before the International Military Tribunal from 1945-1946. Series I: Outgoing Correspondence, 1959-1970, contains files on Styles Bridges, Harry F. Byrd, James O. Eastland, Robert M. Harriss, J. Edgar Hoover, Vivien Kellems, Edith K. Roosevelt, Archibald Roosevelt, and Strom Thurmond. Series III: Administrative and Legislative Files, 1949-1971, Subseries A: Correspondence with Members of Congress, undated, 1959-1970, contains files on Everett McKinley Dirksen, Robert J. Dole, James O. Eastland, Barry Goldwater, Karl E. Mundt, John C. Stennis, Herman Talmadge, Strom Thurmond, and John Tower. Subseries E: Speeches, Articles, and Press Releases, 1959-1971, contains statements, speeches, remarks, press releases, memoranda, and articles on anti-Semitism, the Swastika Epidemic, and Communism; black anti-Semitism; Senator Styles Bridges; William Buckley; Senator Harry Byrd, Sr.; Whittaker Chambers; The Coming Defeat of Communism, by James Burnham; Communist infiltration of anti-Vietnam agitation; Communist infiltration of the Nuclear Test Ban Movement; Communist infiltration of the SANE Nuclear Test Movement; Communist propaganda and infiltration; repeal of the Connally Reservation; the Genocide Convention; Alger Hiss attack on Richard Nixon; Herbert Hoover; J. Edgar Hoover and the Federal Bureau of Investigation; testimony of Edward Hunter before the Internal Security Subcommittee; John Birch Society; KKK legislation; the Katanga Crisis; Fulton Lewis, Jr.; General Douglas MacArthur; Owen Lattimore; Clare Boothe Luce; Nasser's anti-Jewish propaganda; Otto Otepka and the Otepka case; right wing extremism; George E. Sokolsky; States' Rights Bill (1959; opposed by Dodd); and Congressman Francis E. Walter. Series IV: Investigative Files, 1956-1970, Subseries D: Congo, undated, 1960-1969, contains files on American Committee for Aid to Katanga Freedom Fighters, American Committee for Aid to Katanga Freedom Fighters: Report, Free Cuba News, and Citizens Committee for a Free Cuba, Inc. Series VII: Nuremberg Trial, undated, 1919-1995, Subseries E: Conduct of Trial, undated, 1934-1959, 1995, contains files on Franz von Papen addressing the Tribunal [1945-1946] and Karl Doenitz addressing the Tribunal [1945-1946]. Series VIII: Personal Papers, 1920-1971, Subseries A: Personal Correspondence, 1955-1970, contains files on John W. Bricker, William F. Buckley, Jr., Kenneth De Courcy, Everett McKinley Dirksen, Herbert Hoover, J. Edgar Hoover, and Clare Boothe Luce.

Reference:

Klaus Graf, "IMT at Nuremberg documents available online," English Corner | Archivalia, 14 November 2013, https://archivalia.hypotheses.org/5863.

Websites with information:

http://doddcenter.uconn.edu/asc/dodda2z/AToZ.cfm

Finding aids:

http://doddcenter.uconn.edu/asc/findaids/Dodd_Thomas/MSS19940065.html

http://137.99.31.136:8080/xtf/view?docId=finding_aids/MSS19940065.xml&doc.view=print;chunk.id=

Finding aid to digital collection:

http://archives.lib.uconn.edu/islandora/object/20002%3A20

[0814] Nachlass Karl Dönitz

Location: Bibliothek für Zeitgeschichte [Library of Contemporary History], Württembergische Landesbibliothek, Konrad-Adenauer-Str. 8, 70173 Stuttgart, Germany

Description: Karl Dönitz (1891-1980) was a German admiral who, in accordance with Hitler's last will and testament, was named Adolf Hitler's successor and served a twenty-three day term as President of Germany after Hitler's suicide.

Reference:

Michael L. Hadley, "Grand Admiral Dönitz (1891-1980): A Dramatic Key to the Man behind the Mask," The Northern Mariner/Le Marin du nord, X, No. 2 (April 2000), pp. 1-21, http://www.cnrs-scrn.org/northern_mariner/vol10/tnm_10_2_1-21.pdf.

Websites with information:

http://kalliope-verbund.info/de/ead?ead.id=DE-611-BF-313

[0815] Dole Archives Vertical File, 1945-2005 (bulk 1960-2005), 04/c023

Location: Robert J. Dole Archive and Special Collections, University of Kansas, 2350 Petefish Drive, Lawrence, KS 66045

Description: The Dole Archives Vertical File serves as a source of basic background information on a wide variety of people, subjects, events, pieces of legislation, campaigns, and organizations represented in the Dole collections. It contains a wide variety of document types like newsclippings and printouts of online articles, pamphlets, press releases, speeches, correspondence, bills, and copies from the collection. Files on James Buckley, Civil Rights, Cold War and President Reagan, Conservatism, Contract with America, President Dwight D. Eisenhower, Sam Ervin, President Gerald R. Ford, Barry Goldwater, Alf Landon (Nixon Speech),

Richard Nixon, Patriot Act, Ronald Reagan, Right to Life, Margaret Thatcher, and Strom Thurmond.

Websites with information:

http://dolearchivecollections.ku.edu/?p=collections/collections

Finding aids:

http://dolearchivecollections.ku.edu/?p=collections/controlcard&id=77

http://dept.ku.edu/~dolearch/index.php?p=core%2Fsearch&flags=192&collectionid=77&content=2&

[0816] Robert J. Dole House of Representatives Papers, 1960-1969, 01/001

Location: Robert J. Dole Archive and Special Collections, University of Kansas, 2350 Petefish Drive, Lawrence, KS 66045

Description: The main body of the papers documents Dole's campaign for the U.S. House of Representatives in 1959-1960, subsequent Congressional campaigns, and the eight years (1961-1969) he spent as a congressman from Kansas' Sixth and later First Congressional Districts. The 119 cartons of material include correspondence, memos, reports, newsletters, speeches, casework, statements, testimony, campaign and Republican Party records. Files on Alger, Bruce (9th District, Texas); Americans for Constitutional Action (ACA); William Jennings Bryan Dorn; Connally Amendment; Barry Goldwater; Civil Rights; Communism; Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) (J. Edgar Hoover); Prayer in Public Schools; Right to Work; Un-American Activities Committee; Richard Nixon; John Birch Society; Kansas Conservative Party; and Stephen Shadegg.

Websites with information:

http://dolearchivecollections.ku.edu/?p=collections/collections

Finding aids:

http://dolearchivecollections.ku.edu/?p=collections/controlcard&id=5

http://dept.ku.edu/~dolearch/index.php?p=core%2Fsearch&flags=192&collectionid=5&content=2&

[0817] Robert J. Dole Press Clippings, 1939-1995, 01/017

Location: Robert J. Dole Archive and Special Collections, University of Kansas, 2350 Petefish Drive, Lawrence, KS 66045

Description: This collection contains press clippings from newspapers, magazines, and other published sources, as well as some additional unpublished material, such as press releases or letters from Dole. About 80% of the items (about 2300 articles) are from Kansas newspapers, with the rest from national publications and a few items from Dole's office or other non-published sources. Clippings on such topics as Abortion, ACU, Anti-Abortion Record, Bork, Contras, Iran-Contra, Buchanan, Clarence Thomas, Oliver North, School Prayer, George Wallace, Gingrich, Goldwater, Helms, Jack Kemp, Nixon, Phil Gramm, and Reagan.

Websites with information:

http://dolearchivecollections.ku.edu/?p=collections/collections

Finding aids:

http://dolearchivecollections.ku.edu/?p=collections/findingaid&id=53

http://dept.ku.edu/~dolearch/index.php?p=core%2Fsearch&flags=192&collectionid=53&content=2&

[0818] Robert J. Dole Republican Leadership Collection, 1985-1996, 01/007

Location: Robert J. Dole Archive and Special Collections, University of Kansas, 2350 Petefish Drive, Lawrence, KS 66045

Description: This collection comprises the legislative and political activities of the Office of the Senate Republican Leader during Senator Dole's time in that position, 1985-1996. Files on Abortion; Robert H. Bork; Contras; Flag Burning; Grove City Bill, 1987-1988; Jesse Helms; Iran-Contra; Trent Lott; Ruby Ridge and Randy Weaver; and John Salvi - Abortion Clinic Killing, 1996.

Websites with information:

http://dolearchivecollections.ku.edu/?p=collections/collections

Finding aids:

http://dolearchivecollections.ku.edu/?p=collections/controlcard&id=26

http://dept.ku.edu/~dolearch/index.php?p=collections/findingaid&id=26

[0819] Robert J. Dole Republican National Committee Chairman Papers, 1969-1973, 01/011

Location: Robert J. Dole Archive and Special Collections, University of Kansas, 2350 Petefish Drive, Lawrence, KS 66045

Description: The papers contain correspondence, photographic and audio-visual materials, invitations, newspapers and clippings, speeches, itineraries, research, and publications from Senator Bob Dole's tenure as the Chairman of the Republican National Committee from 1971-1973. Files on Abortion, Civil Rights, Communism and Cold War, Pat Buchanan, Busing, Charles W. Colson, Governor George Wallace, John Ashbrook, László Pásztor, and Richard Nixon.

Websites with information:

http://dolearchivecollections.ku.edu/?p=collections/collections

Finding aids:

http://dolearchivecollections.ku.edu/?p=collections/controlcard&id=45

http://dept.ku.edu/~dolearch/index.php?p=core%2Fsearch&flags=192&collectionid=45&content=2&

[0820] Robert J. Dole Senate Papers-Legislative Relations, 1969-1996, 01/003

Location: Robert J. Dole Archive and Special Collections, University of Kansas, 2350 Petefish Drive, Lawrence, KS 66045

Description: Legislative records include a variety of materials such as Congressional Research Service reports, memoranda and correspondence, personal notes, published material, bill drafts, Senate committee proceedings, press materials, and other information. Files on Abortion, Panama Canal Treaty, Kerala and Katyń Massacres, Senator Helms, and Reagan.

Websites with information:

http://dolearchivecollections.ku.edu/?p=collections/collections

Finding aid:

http://dolearchivecollections.ku.edu/?p=collections/controlcard&id=23

[0821] Robert J. Dole Senate Papers-Personal/Political Files, 1969-1996, 01/005

Location: Robert J. Dole Archive and Special Collections, University of Kansas, 2350 Petefish Drive, Lawrence, KS 66045

Description: This series documents the Senator's political activities during his tenure in the Senate. The material is primarily concerned with his daily activities, meetings, correspondence, and issues of particular interest to him. Files on Frank T. Bow, David Duke, Barry Goldwater, Alexander Haig, Alf M. Landon, Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, Strom Thurmond, and Milton R. Young.

Websites with information:

http://dolearchivecollections.ku.edu/?p=collections/collections

Finding aids:

http://dolearchivecollections.ku.edu/?p=collections/controlcard&id=21

http://dept.ku.edu/~dolearch/index.php?p=core%2Fsearch&flags=192&collectionid=21&content=2&

[0822] Alexander Dolgopolov Collection, ASL-MS-DOLGOPOLOV

Location: Alaska Historical Collections, Alaska State Library, PO Box 110571, Juneau, AK 99811-0571

Description: These files contain manuscripts, correspondence, newspaper and magazine clippings, photocopies of book and periodical articles, miscellaneous publications, and other printed material collected by Alexander Dolgopolov. The series Russians in the United States, Dol B-162. Folder 8, has leaflets, newsletters, and clippings, in English and Russian, on the anti-Communist movement in the U.S. Folder 9 has newspaper clippings, in English, on Anastase A. Vonsiatsky (leader of the anti-Communist Russian National Revolutionary Fascist Party). Folder 10 has the anti-Communist writings (a report and letters) of Gerald L.K. Smith, in English, and issues of The Cross and the Flag.

Finding aids:

http://cdm1.library.uaf.edu:8080/cgi-bin/showfile.exe?CISOROOT=/cdmg21&CISOPTR=5975&­filename=5901.pdf

http://vilda.alaska.edu/utils/getfile/collection/cdmg21/id/5975/filename/5901.pdf

http://vilda.alaska.edu/cdm/singleitem/collection/cdmg21/id/5975

http://cdm1.library.uaf.edu:8080/cdm4/item_viewer.php?CISOROOT=/cdmg21&CISOPTR=5975&CISOBOX=1&RE

C=1

[0822a] James A. Dombrowski Papers, 1918-1983, Mss 566

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

Description: James Dombrowski (1897-1983) was a leader of the Southern Conference for Human Welfare (SCHW), 1941-1948, and executive director of the Southern Conference Educational Fund (SCEF), 1948-1966. The papers consist largely of post-l966 letters and notes about his interest in social causes and in art, as well as some material from the 1920s and the 1930s. Series: Correspondence, contains correspondence on the subjects of abolition of HUAC; African Americans and right to vote; anti-war activities; anti-Ku Klux Klan activities; CIA; Christian Socialism; Civil rights; Civil Rights Bill H.R. 6127 [Civil Rights Act of 1957] [online at http://www.crmvet.org/docs/cra57.pdf]; Communism; Communism and; Communism and SCEF; Dombrowski v. Eastland; Eastland, James O.; FBI surveillance of Dombrowski; Greensboro Massacre; Highlander Folk School / Highlander Research and Education Center; House Committee on Internal Security; HUAC; Ku Klux Klan; Labor unions; Labor; Louisiana Joint Legislative Committee on Un-American Activities; Louisiana Un-American Activities Committee (LUAC); McCarran Act law suit; Racism; SCEF and red-baiting; unions; and George Wallace. Series: Subject Files, contains files on C.I.A. and F.B.I. files (CIA and FBI surveillance of Dombrowski); Highlander Center; Jessica Mitford; Southern Conference Educational Fund (raid; listed as "subversive" organization); Southern Organizing Committee, Expanded Executive Committee Meeting, 1979-1980 (National Anti-Klan Network); Gary Tyler Defense Fund (Ku Klux Klan and anti-busing demonstrations); and Miscellaneous articles, 1949-1952, on African Americans and discrimination, Highlander Folk School/Highlander Research and Education Center, Myles Horton, and school segregation. Series: Frank Adams Files, contains correspondence on the subjects of African Americans and right to vote; Quentin N. Burdick; Civil Rights; James O. Eastland; Highlander Folk School/Highlander Research and Education Center; Joint Legislative Committee on Un-American Activities of the State of Louisiana and SCEF raid; Ku Klux Klan; labor unions and organizing; labor; Southern Conference Educational Fund (SCEF) and Communism; School desegregation; Segregation laws; Senate Internal Security Subcommittee (SISS); Senate Internal Security Subcommittee (SISS) hearing in New Orleans in March 1954; and Voter intimidation; and files on Christian Socialism; Court Cases: Dombrowski v. Eastland; Eastland Committee hearings transcript, 1954, Volume 1; FBI file (FBI surveillance of Dombrowski); Highlander Folk School; and Southern Conference Educational Fund (General, 1950-1967; New Orleans Item, 1957; Raid, 1963; Louisiana Committee on Un-American Activities, Reports 8 and 9, 1967).

Finding aid:

http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/wiarchives.uw-whs-mss00566

Finding aid to microfilm edition:

Civil Rights and Social Activism in the South. Series 3: James A. Dombrowski and the Southern Conference Educational Fund (Woodbridge, CT, Primary Source Media, 2009) [microfilm]

This microfilm publication is Series 3 of the Primary Source Media series Civil Rights and Social Activism in the South. It is composed of the papers of James A. Dombrowski, 1918-1983 (Mss 566) at the Wisconsin Historical Society.

http://microformguides.gale.com/Data/Download/9179000C.pdf

[0823] Peter H. Dominick Collection, 1940-1976, M085

Location: Special Collections & Archives, Penrose Library, University of Denver, 2150 East Evans Avenue, Denver, Colorado 80208

Description: Peter H. Dominick (1915-1981) served as U.S. Senator from Colorado from 1963 to January 1975. His papers consist primarily of materials from his years in the U.S. Senate and include record vote analyses, correspondence, photographs, newsletters, radio scripts, press releases, newspaper clippings, reports, audio cassette tapes, 16 mm. films, voicewriter tapes, a dictaphone recording, and L. P. sound recordings. Series 1: Youth through 1962, 1940-1962, contains files on Centralization of Government, Central Control, Civil Rights, and Communism. Series 2, Part 1: 88th Congress 1963-1964, contains files on Bruce Alger, Communist Propaganda, Representative Thomas B. Curtis, Dirksen, Senator Barry Goldwater, J. Edgar Hoover, Henry Cabot Lodge, Rev. McIntire Program, Representative William E. Miller, Karl E. Mundt, Senator Karl E. Mundt, John Sparkman, Senator John Sparkman, Robert Taft, and Senator John G. Tower. Series 2, Part 2: 88th Congress 1963-1964, contains files on Senator Harry Flood Byrd, Communist Propaganda, Senator Everett McKinley Dirksen, Senator Barry Goldwater, Philip A. Hart, General MacArthur, Senator Karl E. Mundt, Taft-Hartley Act, John G. Tower, and Moïse Tshombe. Series 3, Part 1: 89th Congress 1965-1966, contains files on Representative John M. Ashbrook, Harry F. Byrd, Captive Nations, Senator Everett McKinley Dirksen, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Senator Bourke B. Hickenlooper, J. Edgar Hoover, Indiana Conservative Club, John Birch Society, Senator Karl E. Mundt, Ronald Reagan, John Sparkman, Robert Taft, Herman E. Talmadge, and Strom Thurmond. Series 3, Part 2: 89th Congress 1965-1966, contains files on Harry F. Byrd, Senator Everett McKinley Dirksen, B. B. Hickenlooper, Richard B. Russell, Taft-Hartley, Senator Strom Thurmond, James B. Utt, and Milton R. Young. Series 4, Part 1: 90th Congress 1967-1968, contains files on Senator Everett Dirksen, Senator Bourke B. Hickenlooper, J. Edgar Hoover, Richard M. Nixon, Otto Otepka, Ronald Reagan, and Senator John Tower. Series 4, Part 2: 90th Congress 1967-1968, contains files on Harry F. Byrd, Senator Everett McKinley Dirksen, Philip A. Hart, Dr. Carl McIntire, Richard M. Nixon, Senator Richard Russell, Senator John S. Stennis, Taft-Hartley Act, Herman E. Talmadge, Senator Strom Thurmond, John Tower, and Senator Milton R. Young. Series 5, Part 1: 91st Congress 1969-1970, contains a file on J. Edgar Hoover. Series 5, Part 2: 91st Congress 1969-1970, contains files on Everett McKinley Dirksen and D.D. Eisenhower. Series 6: 92nd Congress 1971-1972, contains files on Senator Barry Goldwater, Philip A. Hart, Jesse Helms, Herbert Clark Hoover, J. Edgar Hoover, President Richard M. Nixon, Governor Ronald Reagan, John Rousselot, Senator John C. Stennis, Robert Taft, Strom Thurmond, John G. Tower, and Senator Milton R. Young. Series 7: 93rd Congress 1973-1974, contains files on Senator James L. Buckley, Barry Goldwater, Herbert Hoover, Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, John C. Stennis, and Senator Milton R. Young. Series 10: Public Relations, contains files on Captive Nations, Captive Nations Week, Senator Dirksen, Senator Goldwater, Goldwater Interview, and Manion Forum.

Websites with information:

http://library.du.edu/collections-archives/specialcollections/collection-list.html

http://lib-anubis.cair.du.edu/About/collections/SpecialCollections/scguides.cfm

http://lib-anubis.cair.du.edu/About/collections/SpecialCollections/polpapers.cfm

Finding aids:

http://digital.library.du.edu/findingaids/view?docId=ead/m085.xml

http://lib-anubis.cair.du.edu/About/collections/SpecialCollections/Dominick/

http://lib-anubis.cair.du.edu/About/collections/SpecialCollections/Dominick/index.cfm

[0824] Admiral Sir Barry Edward Domvile Papers, 1892-1970, DOM

Location: The Caird Library, National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London SE10 9NF, England

Description: Admiral Sir Barry Edward Domvile KBE CB CMG (1878-1971) was a Royal Navy officer. He ended his service career as President of the Royal Naval College, Greenwich, 1932 to 1934. Subsequently he became known for his pro-German views and in June 1940 was detained under the Defence Regulations. He was released from Brixton Prison in 1943. The papers consist mainly of a series of detailed diaries extending from 1892 almost until Domvile's death. There is also a collection of paper cuttings and photographs relating to the Greenwich Pageant of 1933 and to Anglo-German relations. Also contains a typescript of his autobiographical work From Admiral to Cabin Boy (London, 1947), relating to his imprisonment.

Reference:

Richard Griffiths, What Did You Do During the War? The Last Throes of the British Pro-Nazi Right, 1940-45 (London and New York: Routledge, 2017).

Finding aid:

http://collections.rmg.co.uk/archive/objects/491728.html

[0824a] Michael Donald Papers, 1981-2004, Accession: 06-09-466

Location: The Doy Leale McCall Rare Book and Manuscript Library, University of South Alabama, 5901 USA Drive North, Suite 300, Mobile, AL 36688

Description: On March 21, 1981, in retribution for the mistrial of a black man accused of killing a white police officer in Birmingham, James "Tiger" Knowles (1964- ) and Henry Francis Hays (1952- ), local members of the United Klans of America, lynched Michael Donald (1961-1981). This is sometimes considered to be the last recorded lynching in the United States. Knowles and Hays were convicted of Donald's murder in February 1983. In 1987, Morris Dees, founding partner of the Southern Poverty Law Center, sued the United Klans of America on behalf of Michael Donald's mother. Beulah Mae Donald v. United Klans of America resulted in a $7 million verdict for the Donald family and bankrupted the UKA and its founder, Robert Shelton. The papers of contain selected Hays and Knowles court proceedings, the bulk of which is related to Hays. Also included are FBI investigation files, coroner's report, and several articles relating to the cases and the Ku Klux Klan.

Websites with information:

http://www.southalabama.edu/mccallarchives/guides_to_collections/manuscripts1.shtml

https://www.southalabama.edu/libraries/mccallarchives/manuscripts.html

https://www.southalabama.edu/libraries/mccallarchives/manuscript_sub_african.html

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/162154119

http://www.worldcat.org/title/papers-1981-2004/oclc/162154119

Finding aid:

http://www.southalabama.edu/mccallarchives/pdf/donald.pdf

https://www.southalabama.edu/libraries/mccallarchives/donald.pdf

[0824b] Correspondence and papers of George A. Dondero, 1960-1969 (bulk 1957-1968)

Location: Burton Historical Collection Manuscripts Collection, Detroit Public Library, 5201 Woodward Ave., Detroit, MI 48202

Description: George A. Dondero (1883-1968) was a U.S. congressman from Michigan's 17th district, Royal Oak, Mich. (1933-1957). An anti-Communist, Dondero was famous for his attacks on modern art as a Communist plot to undermine the principle of eternal beauty. Biography, letters, speeches, certificates, scrapbooks, phonograph records of speeches, photographs of family and public figures, medals, and memorabilia.

References:

Guide to the manuscripts in the Burton Historical Collection, compiled by Bernice Cox Sprenger (Detroit, Mich.: the Burton Historical Collection, Detroit Public Library, 1985); "Anticommunism and Modern Art," http://www.writing.upenn.edu/~afilreis/50s/dondero-art.html.

Websites with information:

http://dplopac.detroitpubliclibrary.org/uhtbin/cgisirsi/?ps=9kAIYsSYo8/MAIN/115900018/9

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/56036484

[0824c] George Dondero Papers, Microfilm reel 722 [microfilm]

Location: Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Headquarters and Research Center, 750 9th Street, NW, Victor Building, Suite 2200, Washington, DC 20001

Description: George A. Dondero (1883-1968) was a Republican Congressman from Michigan. Papers relating to Dondero's efforts to alert the Congress and the public to the alleged dangers of Communism in the arts. Included are correspondence, 1950-1965; two addresses on art and Communism, 1957; two photos of Dondero and twelve of a mural which he criticized; bibliographic notes by Dondero; selections from the Congressional Record and from the American Legion Firing Line; a copy of a memorandum from the House Un-American Activities Committee, 1956; and a few clippings.

Finding aid:

https://www.aaa.si.edu/collections/george-anthony-dondero-papers-7581

[0825] James Doneghy Papers, 1954-1980, 1954-1972 (bulk)

Location: Special Collections, Christoph Keller, Jr. Library, General Theological Seminary, 440 West 21st Street, New York, NY 10011

Description: Right-wing Episcopal lay activist. Circulars, pamphlets, and leaflets reflecting his interest in segregationist, anti-Communist, fundamentalist, and anti-National Council of Churches causes.

Websites with information:

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

[0826] Elaine Chenevert Donnelly Papers, 1973-2003 (bulk 1985-2001), 86998 Aa 2

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

Description: Elaine Donnelly, an anti-ERA activist from Livonia, Michigan, was National Media Chair of Phyllis Schlafly's Eagle Forum and founder of the Michigan Stop-ERA Committee, 1974-1983. The series Topical consists of clippings, correspondence, articles, press releases, newsletters, brochures, and schedules. Subjects include anti-ERA materials (1973-1986), FCC Fairness Doctrine, and material concerning her endorsement of political candidates, including Ronald Reagan (1980, 1984), Jack Kemp (1986-1988), and Richard Chrysler (1986).

Reference:

William Gillis, "Say No to the Liberal Media: Conservatives and Criticism of the News Media in the 1970s" (Ph.D., Indiana University, 2013), https://scholarworks.iu.edu/dspace/bitstream/handle/2022/17960/­Gillis_indiana_0093A_12

373.pdf.

Websites with information:

http://bentley.umich.edu/research/topics/femini2.php

Finding aids:

http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/f/findaid/findaid-idx?c=bhlead&idno=umich-bhl-86998

http://quod.lib.umich.edu/b/bhlead/umich-bhl-86998?rgn=main

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-86998

[0827] Ignatius Donnelly and family papers, 1812-1973 (bulk 1855-1901), File no. 00782 [partly digital collection]

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

Description: Correspondence, literary materials, pamphlets, speeches, diaries, scrapbooks, financial records, and other materials documenting Donnelly's long and active career as townsite speculator at Nininger (Dakota County, Minn.), politician, author, editor and publisher of three newspapers, lieutenant governor of Minnesota (1860-1863), member of Congress (1863-1869), member of the Minnesota Senate (1874-1878, 1891-1893) and House (1887, 1897), and a national leader in third-party movements. Correspondents include Carter Glass and Thomas E. Watson. Subjects include the American Protective Association [anti-Catholic and anti-foreign nativist organization]; Anti-Monopoly Party, Minnesota; anti-Semitism; currency question; Farmers' Alliance; Greenback Labor Party; Greenbackism and currency reform; nativism; and People's Party of the United States.

Reference:

Helen McCann White, Guide to a Microfilm Edition of The Ignatius Donnelly Papers (St. Paul, Minnesota Historical Society, 1968), http://www2.mnhs.org/library/findaids/m0138.pdf.

Websites with information:

http://www2.mnhs.org/library/findaids/index_D.htm

Finding aid:

http://www2.mnhs.org/library/findaids/00782.xml

[0828] Frank J. Donner papers, 1897-1992 (inclusive), MS 1706

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

Description: Frank Donner (1911-1993) was a lawyer, journalist, historian, and civil libertarian who was best known for his research and writings on government surveillance and the use of informers. From 1971 until his death in 1993, he was director of the ACLU Project on Political Surveillance, which was housed at the Yale Law School. The papers consist of clippings, court documents, correspondence, publications, interview transcripts, writings, and other materials documenting the research, writing, and activism of Frank Donner. The collection includes extensive documentation on every major political informer from the anti-Communist wave of the 1950s to the social protest movements of the 1960s and 1970s. The informer files include biographical information, court documents and testimonies, and interview transcripts with and about individual informers. The collection also holds files on a significant cross-section of the social and political protest groups of the 1960s through the 1980s. Series II. Informers and Surveillance Files 1897-1983, contains files on Elizabeth Bentley, Louis Budenz, Whittaker Chambers, Paul Crouch, Matthew Cvetic, Bella Dodd, Martha N. Edmiston, Benjamin Gitlow, Kenneth Goff, Gordon Hall, Sidney Hook, Joseph Zack Kornfeder, John Lautner, Joseph B. Matthews, Harvey Matusow, Frank S. Meyer, Herbert A. Philbrick, Rena Vale, Max Yergan, and Louisiana Joint Legislative Committee on Un-American Activities. Series III. Subject Files1941-1992, contains files on Accuracy in Media, American Opinion, Robert Bork, California Assembly Committee on Constitutional Amendments [hearings regarding limitations on the rights of Communists], Chicago Police Department [spying activities], Christic Institute, Communist Party of the United States of America (CPUSA), Counter Spy, Covert Action Information Bulletin, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Group Research Report, Group Watch [profiles on the Western Goals Foundation and the World Anti-Communist League], Heads Up, Heritage Foundation, House Committee on Un-American Activities, Iran/Contra, Jewish Defense League, Joseph McCarthy, People for the American Way, Antonin Scalia, and The Smith Act. Series IV. Writings, contains copies of "Old Nazis, the New Right and the Reagan Administration: The Role of Domestic Fascist Networks in the Republican Party and Their Effect on U.S. Cold War Politics," by Russ Bellant (1988); "The American Right Wing," by Ralph E. Ellsworth and Sarah M. Harris (1960) [online at https://www.ideals.illinois.edu/bitstream/handle/2142/3928/­gslisoccasionalpv00000i00059.pdf?sequence=1]; "The Politics of the Word: Meaning as Power on the Religious Right," by Richard French (1981); "Bringing It All Back Home: A Strategy to Deal with the Radical Right," by Michael Lerner, Laurie Zoloth, and Wilson Riles, Jr. (ca. 1981); "Anti-Abortion, Anti-Feminism, and the Rise of the New Right,'" by Rosalind Petchesky (1981); and "The American Ultras: The Extreme Right and the Military Industrial Complex," by Irwin Suall (1962). Accession 2003-M-016. Additional Material, contains topical files on Abortion, Abortion gag rule, Patrick Buchanan, Newt Gingrich, Iran/Contra, Edwin Meese, Pornography, and Antonin Scalia.

Websites with information:

http://www.loc.gov/folklife/civilrights/survey/view_collection.php?coll_id=2190

http://yufind.library.yale.edu/yufind/Record/4284624/Description

Finding aids:

http://hdl.handle.net/10079/fa/mssa.ms.1706

http://drs.library.yale.edu:8083/fedora/get/mssa:ms.1706/PDF

[0829] Frank J. Donner Papers, circa 1958-1966, TAM.456

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: This collection contains the papers of Frank J. Donner (1911-1993), author of an account of HUAC's abuse of power and its opposition. The papers contain collected clippings, editorials, and reports on the hearings, hearing transcripts, related flyers and newsletters and correspondence with Donner.

Websites with information:

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

Finding aid:

http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/tamwag/tam_456/tam_456.html

[0830] Robert Donner Collection. Donner Shelved Holdings

Location: Callie Faye Milliken Special Collections/Abilene Christian University Archives of the Margaret and Herman Brown Library, 760 Library Court, Abilene, Texas 79699-9208

Description: The Robert Donner collection consists of books, serials, pamphlets and ephemera on American history, political science, economics, Americanism, minority groups, and Communist and Socialist activities within America. Robert Donner, Sr. (1891-1964), a steel executive and investment banker, collected most of his library, which he housed in his Colorado Springs, Colorado, office, after his retirement from the Donner Corporation in 1957. His collection consisted of about 4,000 volumes of books and over 3,000 pamphlets and ephemera. Contains a copy of Alerte (Advocates of Our Lady), November 1954. Authors of books and pamphlets include Silas Walter Adams, Lewis Albert Alesen, Marilyn R. Allen, Gary Allen, T. Coleman Andrews, Adrien Arcand, Richard Arens, George W. Armstrong, Karl H.W. Baarslag, Jack Barbash, Harry Elmer Barnes, John U. Barr, Paul C. Bartholomew, Fanchon Battelle, Morris A Bealle, Henry Hamilton Beamish, Don Bell, Ezra Taft Benson, George S. Benson, Elizabeth Bentley, William Benton, L.P. Beria, Hilaire du Berrier, Aldrich Blake, Anthony T. Bouscaren, Frank T. Bow, Tom P. Brady, Styles Bridges, Frank L. Britton, William F. Buckley, Louis Francis Budenz, Edgar C. Bundy, Usher L. Burdick, James Burnham, Eric D. Butler, Harry F. Byrd, James F. Byrnes, William Guy Carr, William Henry Chamberlin, A.K. Chesterton, Frank Chodorov, Fred G. Clark, Grenville Clark, J. Reuben Clark, Upton Close, R. Swinburne Clymer, Roy M. Cohn, Kenneth Colegrove, Eugene Cook, Oscar W. Cooley, Hilary Cotter and R. de Roiste (World Dictatorship by 1955? Why Forrestal Threw Himself Out of the Window), Charles E. Coughlin, Earnest Sevier Cox, Lucille Cardin Crain, Cathrine Curtis, Matt Cvetic, Ira M. Darden, Christopher Dawson, Bertrand De Jouvenel, G.E. Deatherage, P.A. Del Valle, Martin Dies, Elizabeth Dilling, Everett McKinley Dirksen, Milovan Djilas, Robert Donner, John Dos Passos, Robert B. Dresser, James O. Eastland, Robert Edward Edmondson, Dwight D. Eisenhower, T.S. Eliot, John R. Elsom, Edith Essig, Harry T. Everingham, Myron C. Fagan, Denis Fahey, Raymond T. Feely, Bonner Fellers, Lawrence Fertig, A.N. Field, Hamilton Fish, Austin T. Flett, John T. Flynn, L. Fry, William Fulton, W.O.H. Garman, Garet Garrett, Wesley Critz George, G.T. Gillespie, Hermann Goering, Kenneth Goff (including "Reds Promote Racial War" (1958), Barry Goldwater, Rosalie M. Gordon, R. Gordon-Canning, Ron Gostick, J. Peter Grace, Joseph C. Grew, Elgin Groseclose, Ralph W. Gwinn, Ernest van der Haag, Alfred P. Haake, Anne Burrows Hamilton, Billy James Hargis, F.A. Harper, Merwin K. Hart, Vincent W. Hartnett, Paul Harvey, F.A Hayek, Henry Hazlitt, Karl Hess, Clare E. Hoffman, Paul G. Hoffman, Frank E. Holman, Sidney Hook, John Edgar Hoover, Herbert Hoover, Bela Hubbard, T.W. Hughes, Edward Hunter, P.J. Huxley-Blythe, Newton Jenkins, William E. Jenner, B. Jensen, August E. Johansen, Jenkin Lloyd Jones, George Racey Jordan, Emanuel M. Josephson, Joseph Peter Kamp, Verne P. Kaub, Willmoore Kendall, T.G. Kent, Husband E. Kimmel, Henry H. Klein, William F. Knowland, Fred C. Koch, Joseph Zack Kornfeder, Irving Kristol, Irene Corbally Kuhn, Rose Wilder Lane, Owen Lattimore, Arnold S. Leese, Robert LeFevre, Fulton Lewis, Charles A. Lindbergh, Don Lohbeck, Milton M. Lory, Eugene Lyons, Douglas MacArthur, Russell Maguire, George Malone, Victor E. Marsden, Fred R. Marvin, Joseph Brown Matthews, Reuben Maury, Irving G. McCann, Joe McCarthy, Colonel Robert R. McCormick, Louis T. McFadden, Carl McIntire, Philip M. McKenna, Arthur U. Michelson, Robert A. Millikan, Ludwig von Mises, Raymond Moley, Ben Moreell, George V.H Moseley, Carl H. Mote, John Francis Neylan, Richard Nixon, Revilo Pendleton Oliver, Edmund A. Opitz, Winfred Overholser, Melchior Palyi, Paul O. Peters, Samuel B. Pettengill, George Pitt-Rivers, R. Carter Pittman, A Plot for the World's Conquest (1936), Paul L. Poirot, Stefan T. Possony, Eugene C. Pulliam, Howard B. Rand, Leonard E. Read, B. Carroll Reece, Lawrence Reilly, Bryson Reinhardt, Victor Riesel, Richard Stanton Rimanoczy, Jess M. Ritchie, George Washington Robnett, Archibald B. Roosevelt, E. Merrill Root, Murray N. Rothbard, Edward A. Rumely, Eugene Nelson Sanctuary, John C. Satterfield, Phyllis Schlafly, Fred C. Schwarz, Marjorie Shearon, William J. Simmons, Earnest Sincere, Gerald L. K. Smith, Dan Smoot, John Howland Snow, Frederick Soddy, Harvey H. Springer, Dillard Stokes, Jeremiah Stokes, George Edward Sullivan, Robert A. Taft, Herman E. Talmadge, Jack B. Tenney, T.H. Tetens, J. Thorkelson, Strom Thurmond, Nora de Toledano, Ralph Townsend, Rufus S. Tucker, James B. Utt, Hugo Valentin, Harold Lord Varney, Harold Velde, Wickliffe B. Vennard, Ludwig von Mises, Edwin A. Walker, Francis E. Walter, James P. Warburg, Louis B. Ward, J.K. Warner, V. Orval Watts, Nesta H. Webster, Robert H.W. Welch, Alice Widener, Robert H. Williams, John Bell Williams, Charles A. Willoughby, Gerald B. Winrod, Jennings C. Wise, Felix Wittmer, Frederick Woltman, Felix Edgar Wormser, Glenn O. Young, and Leonard Young.

Websites with information:

http://www.acu.edu/academics/library/cfm/collectdonner/index.html

http://www.acu.edu/academics/library/cfm/collectdonner/donind.html

http://www.acu.edu/academics/library/cfm/collectdonner/NCABarticle.html

http://blogs.acu.edu/specialcollections/2013/09/12/richard-donner-collection/

Finding aids:

http://blogs.acu.edu/specialcollections/files/2013/10/Donner-Shelved-Holdings-Finding-Aid.pdf

http://www.acu.edu/academics/library/cfm/collectdonner/donncollS1.html

http://www.acu.edu/academics/library/cfm/collectdonner/donncollS2.html

http://www.acu.edu/academics/library/cfm/collectdonner/donncollS3.html

http://www.acu.edu/academics/library/cfm/collectdonner/donncollS4.html

http://www.acu.edu/academics/library/cfm/collectdonner/donncollS5.html

[0831] Robert Donner Collection. Donner Vertical Files, 1932-1982

Location: Callie Faye Milliken Special Collections/Abilene Christian University Archives of the Margaret and Herman Brown Library, 760 Library Court, Abilene, Texas 79699-9208

Description: The vertical files consist of pamphlets on American history, political science, economics, Americanism, minority groups, and Communist and Socialist activities within America. Authors include Karl Baarslag, Elizabeth Terrill Bentley, Gregory G. Bern (ed., "Annual Report to Republicans," 1951-52 (Partisan Republicans of California)), Anthony T. Bouscaren, Frank Cullen Brophy, Louis Francis Budenz, Edgar C. Bundy, Harry F. Byrd, Whittaker Chambers, Council for Statehood, Lucille Cardin Crain, Matt Cvetic, Martin Dies, Elizabeth Dilling, Robert Donner, Myron C. Fagan, Denis Fahey, John T. Flynn, Kenneth Goff, W.D. Herrstrom, Clare E. Hoffman, J. Edgar Hoover, Zora Neale Hurston, Emanuel M. Josephson, Joseph P. Kamp, Irene Corbally Kuhn, William La Varre, Eugene Lyons, Ben Moreell, Felix Morley, National Council for American Education, Thurman Sensing, Freda Utley, Robert Welch, and Gerald B. Winrod (including "Philip Dru: Administrator").

Reference:

Jeff Hasseman, "American Studies and Campus Politics at Abilene Christian College, 1958-1970," http://www.ange

lfire.com/alt/americafirst/ChurchesofChrist/hassentiredoc3.htm

Websites with information:

http://www.acu.edu/academics/library/cfm/collectdonner/

http://www.acu.edu/academics/library/cfm/collectdonner/index.html

http://www.acu.edu/academics/library/cfm/collectdonner/donind.html

http://www.acu.edu/academics/library/cfm/collectdonner/NCABarticle.html

http://blogs.acu.edu/specialcollections/2013/09/12/richard-donner-collection/

Finding aids:

http://blogs.acu.edu/specialcollections/files/2013/10/Donner-Vertical-Files-Finding-Aid.pdf

http://www.acu.edu/academics/library/cfm/collectdonner/donncollVF.html

[0832] Dmytro Dontsov fonds, 1898-1987, MG 31 D 130

Location: Library and Archives Canada, 395 Wellington St, Ottawa, ON K1A 0N4, Canada

Description: Dmytro Dontsov (1883-1973) was a Ukrainian nationalist writer, publisher, journalist and political thinker. He was active in Ukrainian political and revolutionary organizations promoting the cause of an autonomous and later independent Ukraine. At the end of the Second World War he sought refuge in England and in 1948 immigrated to Canada, where he taught at the Université de Montréal. Fonds consists of biographical information relating to Dontsov and includes diaries, memoirs, personal, financial and educational material. Fonds also consists of correspondence with various individuals and organizations, notebooks, lecture material, draft articles and manuscripts of works completed by Dontsov. Also included is a series of published material consisting of periodicals, bulletins, newspapers, newspaper clippings and pamphlets collected by Dontsov during the course of his career, n.d., 1898-1987.

Websites with information:

http://www.archives.gov.ua/Eng/canada.php

http://www.archives.gov.ua/Eng/ukrainian-collections.php

Finding aids:

http://www.archivescanada.ca/english/search/ItemDisplay.asp?sessionKey=1382740681003_142_78_200_14

&l=0&v=0&lvl=1&coll=1&rt=1&itm=263791

http://data2.archives.ca/pdf/pdf001/p000000465.pdf

[0833] William Jennings Bryan Dorn Papers, 1912-1995

Location: South Carolina Political Collections, Ernest F. Hollings Special Collections Library, University of South Carolina Libraries, 1322 Greene Street, Columbia, SC 29208

Description: William Jennings Bryan Dorn (1916- 2005) represented South Carolina's Third District in the United States Congress for thirteen terms between 1947 and 1974. The series Congressional Papers. [Subseries] Topical Files, 1947-1974, contains files on Abortion; American Party; American Security Council; "Americanism Preferred" (radio show); Americans for Constitutional Action; Bob Jones University Greenville, S.C.; Bricker Amendment; Busing; Civil Rights; Communism; Conservative Groups; Desegregation; Hilaire du Berrier (Foreign Correspondent for H. du B. Reports, American Opinion, etc.); Equal Rights Amendment; General Bonner Fellers, National Director of Citizens Foreign Aid Committee; Flag Desecration; Fluoridation; Barry Goldwater; Gun Control; Dr. Billy James Hargis (of the anti-Communist organization Christian Crusade, Tulsa, OK); Jesse Helms (WRAL-TV Vice-President, Raleigh, N.C.); House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC); John Birch Society; Olin D. Johnston; Bob Jones, Sr. correspondence; Katanga; Fulton Lewis, Jr. Poll; Liberty Lobby (conservative political advocacy group); Little Rock (Arkansas); Lynching; Douglas MacArthur; Manion Forum; Moral Rearmament, World Assembly for Moral Rearmament in Switzerland; National Council of Churches; Operation Abolition, film screenings (1960); Operation Free Enterprise, booklet on economic literacy; Prayer in School; Project Alert of Kershaw Co. (anti-Communist organization); Right-to-Work; Segregation; States' Rights; Strom Thurmond; Townsend Plan; Voice of America; Edwin A. Walker case (anti-Communist military commander); Walter-McCarran Act; and Young Americans for Freedom. Files on Douglas MacArthur, 1951-1955, concern the relief of General MacArthur from duty in Korea by President Truman; Dorn's defense of MacArthur; the possibility of a MacArthur bid for the presidency; and his proposed appointment in 1955 as General of the Armies. The series Audio-Visual material contains audio recordings of Dorn interview with Kent Courtney on the radio program "The Independent American" (1959); Dorn interview in D.C. with C.W. Burpo on the Bible Institute of the Air, Mar. 30, 1960; and recordings of Lee Harvey Oswald prior to assassination (1963).

Websites with information:

http://library.sc.edu/p/Collections/SCPC/Collections

Finding aid:

http://library.sc.edu/scpc/Dorn.pdf

[0833a] John Dos Passos Collection

Location: Rare Books and Special Collections, University Libraries, Northern Illinois University, 1425 W. Lincoln Hwy., DeKalb, IL 60115

Description: This is a collection of publications written by and about John Dos Passos, in various editions. The collection includes ephemeral materials, such as publications about Dos Passos in scholarly journals, article offprints, dealer catalogs, and newspaper reviews. There is also a small cache of manuscript materials related to Martin Kallich's bibliographical work on Dos Passos. Includes a copy of John Dos Passos: An Appreciation, by Max Eastman ... [et al.] (New York: Prentice-Hall, c1954).

Websites with information:

http://libguides.niu.edu/rarebooks/dospassos

Online catalogue:

https://vufind.carli.illinois.edu/vf-niu/Search/Home?lookfor=dos+passos%2C+john&type=all&start_over=1&su

bmit=Find&search=new&filter[]=locations:"niu_RBSC"

[0833b] John Dos Passos Collection, 1930-1966, undated, Manuscript Collection MS-1197

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

Description: Includes manuscripts and letters by the American novelist John Dos Passos (1896-1970).

Websites with information:

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

Finding aids:

http://norman.hrc.utexas.edu/fasearch/pdf/01064.pdf

http://norman.hrc.utexas.edu/fasearch/findingAid.cfm?eadid=01064

[0834] Papers of John Dos Passos, 1865-1998, Accession #5950

Location: Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia 22904-4110

Description: Dos Passos (1896-1970) was an American novelist. In the 1950s, Dos Passos, whose politics had moved from the left to the right, contributed to publications such as the libertarian journal The Freeman and the conservative magazine, National Review. The papers comprise manuscript material (published and unpublished) of most of his novels, plays, poems, articles, speeches, lectures, readings and his reportage on history, politics, society and travel; corrected and uncorrected typescripts, galley and page proofs, notes, outlines, related research material; publisher and literary agent correspondence; diaries and notebooks; letters written to him over his lifetime from close friends, literary associates, and random correspondents; and Dos Passos family papers. Series I. General correspondence with Dos Passos, contains files on William F. Buckley, Max Eastman, Lewis Gannett, Sidney Hook, Clare Boothe Luce, Henry R. Luce, H. L. Mencken, Richard Nixon, Albert Jay Nock, Westbrook Pegler, Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., Vilhjálmur Stefánsson, Rama Swarup (Asian People's Anti-Communist League), and H. Keith Thompson. Series II: Writings. [Subseries] Contributions to books, periodicals and newspapers, contains copies of his contributions to National Review and a copy of The American Cause, by Russell Kirk, Foreword by John Dos Passos (1966).

Reference:

John Dos Passos Newsletter 6 (Summer 2000).

Websites with information:

http://small.library.virginia.edu/collections/featured/john-dos-passos-collection/

http://arch.oucs.ox.ac.uk/detail/86016/index.html

Finding aid:

http://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaxtf/view?docId=uva-sc/viu01215.xml

[0834a] John Dos Passos papers, 1923-1970 (bulk 1925-1933), Collection number: 73-28

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

Description: John Dos Passos (1896-1970) was an American novelist and a newspaper correspondent during World War II. The papers include manuscripts and notes relating to his translation of Panama; or, The Adventures of My Seven Uncles, by Blaise Cendrars (1931), his play Fortune Heights (1934), and his novel Manhattan Transfer (1925), as well as correspondence and manuscripts related to his work in the theater.

Websites with information:

http://hdl.handle.net/1903.1/7433

http://digital.lib.umd.edu/archivesum/rguide/amlit.jsp

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/516040742

http://www.worldcat.org/title/john-dos-passos-papers-1930-1933/oclc/516040742

[0834b] John Dos Passos papers, 1939-1946, Collection 1972-001

Location: Department of Special Collections and University Archives, McFarlin Library, University of Tulsa, 2933 E. 6th St., Tulsa, OK 74104-3123

Description: Consists of 4 typed short stories, 6 handwritten letters to Sherwood Grover, and miscellaneous items.

Finding aid:

http://www.lib.utulsa.edu/speccoll/collections/dospassosjohn/index.htm

[0834c] Frank N. Doubleday and Nelson Doubleday Collection, 1734-1966 (bulk 1890s–1940s), C0162

Location: Princeton University. Library. Dept. of Rare Books and Special Collections, Manuscripts Division, One Washington Road, Princeton, New Jersey 08544

Description: Consists primarily of papers of Frank Nelson Doubleday and his son, Nelson, relating to their personal and business relationships with prominent authors and artists published under the Doubleday imprint. Files on John Buchan, Calvin Coolidge, Herbert Hoover, Rudyard Kipling, Charles A. Lindbergh, Kenneth Lewis Roberts, Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt, Vilhjálmur Stefánsson, and Owen Wister.

References:

Howard C. Rice, Jr.,"'Into the hold of Remembrance': Notes on the Kipling Material in the Doubleday Collection," The Princeton University Library Chronicle, Volume XXII, Number 3 (Spring 1961), http://libweb5.princeton.edu/visual_materials/pulc/pulc_v_22_n_3.pdf; Something of Kipling 1865-1965: An Exhibition in the Princeton University Library October 30, 1965 - January 15, 1966. Catalogue compiled by H. C. Rice, Jr. (Princeton University Library, 1966), http://libweb2.princeton.edu/rbsc2/exh-cat/%28ExB%29%200639.739%20no.%2036.pdf.

Finding aids:

http://findingaids.princeton.edu/collections/C0162

http://findingaids.princeton.edu/collections/C0162.pdf

[0834d] Cardinal Dennis Joseph Dougherty Correspondence, 1918-1851, MC-78

Location: Philadelphia Archdiocesan Historical Research Center (PAHRC), 100 E. Wynnewood Rd., Wynnewood, PA 19096

Description: Dennis Joseph Dougherty (1865-1951) was Archbishop of Philadelphia from 1918 until his death in 1951. Correspondence with A. Reynolds Allison [of Knights of the Tiger's Eye, Inc., an anti-Ku Klux Klan organization], Jane Anderson, Isaiah Bowman, Spruille Braden, Miss Bessie R. Burchett, Luigi Criscuolo, Reverend John F. Cronin [on Communism], Reverend Edward L. Curran [on the American Association Against Communism], Richard L.G. Deverall (co-editor, The Christian Front), Ralph M. Easley, Charles Edison, H.W. Evans [Imperial Wizard, Knights of the Ku Klux Klan], Hamilton Fish [on the American Alliance, an anti-Communist group], James Forrestal, John H. Galbraith [on Veterans Committee Against Communism], Clarence J. Gamble, M.D., Herbert Hoover, J. Edgar Hoover, Ku Klux Klan, National Blue Star Mothers of America [Anti-Jewish Propaganda], Margaret Sanger, Walter S. Steele [the National Republic Lettergram], Robert A. Taft, Edmund A. Walsh, S.J., and Wendell Willkie. Folder of booklets, etc., against Communism, Nazism, Coughlinism. A copy of The Herald of the Epiphany for March 5, 1924, with article accusing the Pope of having political pull in America. Second folder of Anti-Communist material (literature). House Investigation of Communist Activity in the United States, 01/17/1931. Copies of several birth control pamphlets, "The Church and Eugenics" (1929), and Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion.

Websites with information:

http://www.pahrc.net/research-and-collections/manuscript-collections/archdiocesan-manuscripts/

Finding aid:

http://www.pahrc.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/Cardinal-Dougherty-Correspondence1.pdf

Conservatism, the Right Wing, and the Far Right: A Guide to Archives

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