Kitabı oku: «Conservatism, the Right Wing, and the Far Right: A Guide to Archives», sayfa 12

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Finding aid:

http://findingaids.cjh.org/?pID=2062158

[0109] American Jewish Committee Records, Subject Files, 1930-1973 (bulk 1941-1961), RG 347.17.10

Location: YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, Center for Jewish History, 15 West 16th Street, New York, NY 10011

Description: The American Jewish Committee (AJC) was founded in New York in 1906 to defend Jewish civil and religious rights throughout the world. The collection documents American Jewish Committee's efforts to combat all forms of discrimination against the Jews in the United States. Additionally, there are materials pertaining to AJC's work regarding other minority groups in the United States. The American Jewish Committee Records, Subject Files consists of materials created by executive offices, departments, local offices and chapters of the Committee concerning a variety of matters; foremost Jewish civil and religious rights, immigration, and the Holocaust. The records consist of briefs, cartoons, conference procedures, correspondence, discussion guides, interviews, legal documents, manuscripts, memoranda, minutes of meetings, opinion polls, printed materials, questionnaires, reports, resolutions, scrapbooks, speeches, statements, studies, surveys, and television and radio scripts. Subject files on Anti-Semitism, including Anti-Semites, Anti-Semitic groups, Hate literature, Protocols of the Elders of Zion, and Swastika Epidemic; Extremism, including Radical Right; Genocide Convention; Group Libel Legislation, including Hate mail literature sent though the postal service; Hate and Violence, including Bombings, Terminiello case, Ku Klux Klan, Mothers, White Citizens, Anti-Lynching Legislation, Merchants (Austin Hancock, American Heritage Protective Society; Merwin K. Hart; Joseph Kamp; Conde McGinley; Gerald L.K. Smith), and Quarantine; Immigration, including McCarran-Walter Act; and Integration, including Hate and violence, Hate groups.

Websites with information:

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

Finding aid:

http://findingaids.cjh.org/?pID=1863758

[0110] AJC Subject Files (Gen-10), 1930-1962, RG 347.17.10 [digital collection]

Location: American Jewish Committee Information Center and Digital Archives, 165 East 56th Street, New York, NY 10022

Description: This series consists of alphabetical subject files. Main subjects include: anti-Semitism, bigotry and prejudice, church-state, civil liberties and rights, immigration, intergroup relations, race relations, restitution, and Zionism. The physical files are housed at the YIVO Archives. The subject file Anti-Semitism includes folders on Anti-Semitic groups 1934-1960, Hate literature articles and editorials 1933-1962, [Protocols of the] Elders of Zion, The New Nazis in Western Europe and Latin America (pamphlet, 1960-1962), Swastika Epidemic, and Neo-Nazi Youth Groups. The subject file Extremism contains a folder on the Conference on Preserving the Democratic Process, sponsored by the American Jewish Committee and held in Greenwich, Connecticut, January 25-27, 1962. The subject file Hate and Violence includes folders on Bombings, Terminiello case, Ku Klux Klan, Mothers groups, White Citizens, Anti-Lynching, Austin F. Hancock (American Heritage Protective Society), Merwin K. Hart, Joseph Kamp, Conde McGinley, and Gerald L.K. Smith. The booklet Anti-Semitic Activity in the United States: A Report and Appraisal (New York, American Jewish Committee, 1954) mentions American Heritage Protective Committee (San Antonio, Texas), George W. Armstrong, John Owen Beaty, Joseph Beauharnais, Frank L. Britton, Catherine V. Brown, Max A. X. Clark, Constitution Party, Edward A. Fleckenstein, Millard J. Flenner, Stephen Goodyear, John Hamilton, Merwin K. Hart, Jessie Welch Jenkins, Dan Kurtz, Andrew B. McAllister, W. Henry MacFarland, Jr., Conde McGinley, Kurt Mertig, George Van Horn Moseley, Eustace Mullins, National Renaissance Party, Stephen Nenoff, Gerald L. K. Smith, Jack B. Tenney, H. Keith Thompson, James R. White, Robert H. Williams, Gerald Winrod, Peter L. Xavier, and Allen A. Zoll. A mimeographed report on "The Dissident Political Movement—1956" (March 1956) cites American Good Government Society, Inc., American Mercury, The American Reporter (Sacramento, California), Prof. John O. Beaty, Black Monday (Judge Tom P. Brady), Judge Tom P. Brady, Mary D. Cain, Coalition Now (J. Harvie Williams), Christian Anti-Jewish Party (J. B. Stoner), Christian Nationalist Party (Gerald L. K. Smith), Committee for the 48 States, Congress of Freedom, Constitution Coalition Council, Constitution Party (San Antonio), Kent Courtney, Defenders of the American Constitution, Lt. Gen. Pedro A. del Valle (USMC ret.), Facts Forum (H. L. Hunt), Federation for Constitutional Government (John U. Barr), General Bonner Fellers, John T. Flynn, For America, Free Men Speak, Interim Committee for a New Party (ICNP), Iron Curtain Over America (John O. Beaty), Know Your Enemy, Colonel Robert R. McCormick, W. Henry MacFarland, Jr., Dean Clarence Manion, National Renaissance Party, Nationalist Conservative Party of Chicago (William B. Wernecke), Nationalist Party (West Hooker), Right (C. W. Thomas, San Francisco), W. J. Simmons, Dan Smoot, Gen. Stratemeyer, The Summit Sun, We, The People, White Citizens' Council, and Zion's Trojan Horse (Jack B. Tenney).

References:

Inventory of records of the American Jewish Committee, 1906-80, by Seymour J. Pomrenze (New York, N.Y., American Jewish Committee, Institute of Human Relations, 1981); Index to the Inventory of records of the American Jewish Committee, 1906-80, by Jessica L. Milstead and Beverly A. Pajer (New York, N.Y., American Jewish Committee, 1994).

Websites with information:

http://www.yivoarchives.org/index.php?p=collections/controlcard&id=33740

Finding aids:

http://digifindingaids.cjh.org/?pID=1863758

http://www.yivoarchives.org/index.php?p=collections/controlcard&id=33847

http://www.ajcarchives.org/ajcarchive/DigitalArchive.aspx

[0111] Records of American Jewish Congress, undated, 1916-2006 (bulk 1949-2003), I-77

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

Description: The records of the American Jewish Congress, a national Jewish agency, concerned primarily with Jewish and other minority civil rights, include the constitution, by-laws, and minutes of the Administrative and Executive Committees and Governing Council of the Congress. The American Jewish Congress Records collects archival material from the creation of the organization to its later years, from 1915 through 2005. Files on "Benjamin Franklin Vindicated" (November 1938), "Father Coughlin: His 'Facts' and Arguments" (1939) [online at https://ia800303.us.archive.org/7/items/FatherCoughlinHisFactsAnd­Arguments_201502/Father%20Coughlin%20his%20facts%20and

%20arguments.PDF], "The Claim of 'Nordic' Race Supremacy," by Johan J. Smertenko (1924), Academic freedom and Shockley [William Shockley], American Mercury, Anti-Semitic literature collection, Institute of Jewish Affairs, Anti-Semitism in the U.S., Richard Arens, Becker Amendment, Benjamin Franklin forgery, Bombings, 1958-1962, Bricker Amendment, Bricker Resolution, Patrick Buchanan, Camps for Subversives, Church and State - Religion in Public Schools (Becker Amendment), Church and State - Religion and Politics (Contract with the American Family, Moral Majority, New Christian Right, Religious Right, Pat Robertson, Thomas G. Tancredo, Paul Weyrich), Conde McGinley, Discrimination - Private Club Discrimination, 1952-2001, Discrimination - Ku Klux Klan and Extremist Groups (David Duke, Knight Riders of the Ku Klux Klan, Military and white supremacist activity, Neo-Nazi and Aryan Nation, Paramilitary training camps, Recruitment on internet, Skinheads), Discrimination - Anti-Semitism and Race Relations, Discrimination - Hate Crimes and Vandalism, Robert Dole, Equal rights amendment, Evangelical Right, Extremist speech, Jerry Falwell, Family Research Council, Farm crisis, Father Feeney, Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Paul Findley, Flag salute and burning, Leo Frank, Genocide and Human Rights Treaties, Newt Gingrich, Gun control, Hate speech, Helms Amendment, Heritage Foundation, Holocaust revisionism, House Un-American Activities Committee, International anti-Semitism, Jewish Defense League, Jewish religious right, John Birch Society, Meir Kahane, Jeane Kirkpatrick, Ku Klux Klan, Liberty Lobby, McCarthyism, Moral Majority, National Rifle Association, Nazis, Neo-conservatives, Neo-Nazism, Oberammergau, Pat Robertson, Prayer amendments (Helms/Byrd), Promise Keepers Movement, Queens Nazi movement, Racial Segregation, Ronald Reagan, Reese Investigation of tax exempt organizations, Religious Freedom Restoration Act, Resolution regarding censure of Senator McCarthy, Pat Robertson, George Rockwell, School Desegregation, School prayer, School vouchers, Segregation, Skokie, Illinois, Skokie v. National Socialist Party of America, Soviet anti-Semitism, Valerian Trifa, United States Citizen vs. Senator Theo. G. Bilbo, and James P. Warburg.

Websites with information:

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

Finding aids:

http://digifindingaids.cjh.org/?pID=365446

http://findingaids.cjh.org/?pID=365446

http://www.cjh.org/nhprc/AmericanJewishCongress.pdf

[0112] American Jewish Congress, Northern California Division records, 1957-1988, Coll. BANC MSS 2010/702

Location: Western Jewish Americana, The Magnes Collection of Jewish Art and Life, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, California, 94720-6000

Description: The American Jewish Congress (AJC) was founded in 1916, and reorganized in 1920 and 1938. The Northern California Division was officially founded in December 1943. The collection documents the activities of the American Jewish Congress' Northern California Division from 1960 through the mid-1980s. It contains minutes (1960-1982, incomplete), financial records, membership records, annual reports, articles, programs, newsletters, press releases, clippings, correspondence, briefs and published material, and some photographs. Series 4 Subject Files. 1957-1988, contains files on Holocaust, Institute of Historical Review ("Holocaust Debunkers"), Jewish Defense League (JDL), John Birch Society, Nazi Activity in San Francisco (Vincent Suit), and Programs—Nazis and the First Amendment/L. A. Greenfeld

Websites with information:

http://www.magnes.org/collections/archives/western-jewish-americana

http://www.magnes.org/collections/archives/western-jewish-americana/american-jewish-congress-northern-california-division-

Finding aids:

http://pdf.oac.cdlib.org/pdf/berkeley/bancroft/m2010_702_cubanc.pdf

http://cdn.calisphere.org/data/13030/n2/kt9j49q6n2/files/kt9j49q6n2.pdf

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt3m3nf1j3/entire_text/

[0113] American Labor Conference on International Affairs. Records, 1939-1950, TAM.038

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

Description: The American Labor Conference on International Affairs (ALCIA), a non socialist group, was organized in February 1943 by several labor leaders. The primary purpose of ALCIA was to engage in research on international economic and political problems for the benefit of the American labor movement. ALCIA published reports on political, economic, labor, and educational questions, and a monthly magazine entitled Modern Review between March 1947 and 1949, whose contributors included Louis Fischer and Granville Hicks. The collection includes correspondence, resolutions, constitutions and by laws, reports, conference papers, financial papers, press releases, speeches, minutes, memoranda, newspaper clippings, pamphlets, rough drafts of articles, and form letters. Series 1. Correspondence, 1941-1947, n.d., contains subject files on Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America, Foreign Policy Association, Foundations, and Institute of Pacific Relations. Correspondents include Max Eastman and Wendell Willkie. Series 2. Office files, 1940-1947, n.d., contains Albert Halasi's essay on the Bretton Woods agreements and George Denicke's article on the Dumbarton Oaks proposals, as well as files on Christopher Emmet, Alfred Kohlberg, and Gaetano Salvemini. Series 3. Modern Review files, 1939-1950, n.d., contains a file on Daniel Bell and his work as editor of the Modern Review in 1949. Correspondents include Richard Hofstadter, Seymour Martin Lipset, and Granville Hicks.

Websites with information:

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

Finding aid:

http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/tamwag/tam_038/

[0114] Records of the American League for an Undivided Ireland (ALFUI), 1940-1965 (bulk 1947-1957)

Location: University Archives and Special Collections, St. John's University, St. Augustine Hall - Room B20, 8000 Utopia Parkway, Jamaica, New York 11439

Description: The American League for an Undivided Ireland was organized in New York City in March 26, 1947. The aim of the organization was to make every possible effort to abolish the partition of Ireland. The vast majority of the documents are letters between members of the organization, their correspondence with individuals from the U.S. Congress and with members of the Irish government, especially from the Parliament of Northern Ireland. Correspondents include Edward Lodge Curran, Everett M. Dirksen, Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., John Davis Lodge, Joe McCarthy, and Burton K. Wheeler.

Websites with information:

http://www.stjohns.edu/libraries/archives/special-collections

http://stjohnsarchives.wordpress.com/2014/01/27/american-league-undivided-ireland/

Finding aid:

http://www.stjohns.edu/sites/default/files/mc_american_league_undivided_ireland.pdf

[0114a] American Left Ephemera Collection, 1894-2008, AIS.2007.11 [digital collection]

Location: Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh, 7500 Thomas Boulevard, Pittsburgh, PA 15208

Description: This is a collection of ephemera accumulated by Dr. Richard J. Oestreicher, Associate Professor of History at the University of Pittsburgh. The collection includes periodicals, photographs, letters, pamphlets, books, posters, flyers, labels, pins and other objects. The collection contains copies of The Fascist Revival...the Inside Story of the John Birch Society...Who is in it? Who is Behind it? Who Directs and Finances it?, by Mike Newberry, June, 1961 [online at http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/31735061658757.pdf]; Pattern for American Fascism, by John L. Spivak, September, 1947 [online at http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/­pdf/31735061537779.pdf and http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/31735061659094.pdf]; The Fascist Danger and How to Combat it, by Eugene Dennis, August, 1948 [online at http://digital.library.­pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/31735061537613.pdf and http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/­ulsmanuscripts/pdf/31735066246087.pdf]; The Truth About Father Coughlin, by A.B. Magil, 1935 [online at http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/31735061659508.pdf]; The Real Father Coughlin, by A.B. Magil, May, 1939 [online at http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/3173506

1658427.pdf]; How Can We Share the Wealth? The Communist Way Versus Huey Long, by Alex Bittelman, April, 1935 [online at http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/31735061659979.pdf]; The Real Huey P. Long, by Sender Garlin, May, 1935 [online at http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/­31735061658872.pdf]; Treason in Congress: A Record of the Un-American Activities Committee, by Albert E. Kahn (1948 April) [online at http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/31735061656488.pdf]; San Francisco and the Un-American Activities Committee (San Francisco, Americans for Democratic Action, Northern California Chapter, 1960) [online at http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/­31735061540922.pdf]; The Red Baiters Menace America, by Eugene Dennis (New York, New Century Publishers, 1946) [online at http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/317350

61537621.pdf]; In the Shadow of Liberty, The Inhumanity of the Walter-McCarran Law, by Abner Green (1954) [online at http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/31735061657205.pdf]; Behind the Lynching of Emmet [sic] Louis Till, by Louis Burnham (New York, Freedom Associates, Inc., 1955) [online at http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/31735061656116.pdf]; Hate Groups and the Un-American Activities Committee, by David Wesley (New York, NY., Emergency Civil Liberties Committee, 1962) [online at http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/31735061657270.pdf]; and Myra Tanner Weiss, Vigilante Terror in Fontana; The Tragic Story of O'Day H. Short and His Family (1946) [on vigilante and other fascist-type formations terrorizing minorities and labor organizations] [online at http://digital.­library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/­pdf/31735058194139.pdf]. The Rankin Witch Hunt, By William Z. Foster, December, 1945 [online at http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/317350

61658195.pdf].

Finding aid:

http://digital.library.pitt.edu/cgi-bin/f/findaid/findaid-idx?c=ascead;cc=ascead;view=text;rgn=main;­didno=US-PPiU-ais200711

[0115] American Legion anti-Communist material, 1946-1952, Collection 793

Location: Special Collections, Margaret Herrick Library, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, 333 S. La Cienega Boulevard, Beverly Hills, California 90211

Description: The American Legion is an American veterans service organization chartered in 1919 by Congress to benefit veterans of the United States armed forces. The American Legion's national headquarters is in Indianapolis, Indiana. The material relates to the Legion's National Americanism Commission and includes reports, articles, memos, and research material. The research material includes publications generated by Jacoby & Gibbons and Associates, anti-subversive public relations specialists in Los Angeles; the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC); and others. Vertical files 31-f.276. Miscellaneous 1947-1952, undated, includes: (1) "How You Can Fight Communism"; (2) "Inquiry Concerning Quasi-Military Forces Organized by the Communists"; (3) "Know Your Enemy"; (4) "Inquiry on Racial Incitations Practiced by Communists"; (5) "'Peace' Sign-Up Bait for Gullible"; (6) "Crippling Courts Taught by Book"; (7) "The Plot against the McCarran-Walter Act" by Herbert G. Moore, National Republic, December, 1952; (8) "World War III, Russian Style, Is Here," November 2, 1951; (9) "Darkness at Noon in American Colleges" by E. Merrill Root, July 30, 1952; (10) "Alert," no. 147, November 16, 1950; (11) "Alert," no. 153, December 28, 1950; (12) memos, 1947-1952; and (13) research material, "Daily People's World," January 1, 1949. Vertical files 31-f.276a. Miscellaneous 1946-1951, undated, includes: (1) "Communism in Action," 1946; (2) "Un-American Activities in California," March 24, 1947; (3) "Un-American Activities in California," June 23, 1949; (4) "What the Hiss Trial Actually Means" by Senator Karl E. Mundt, January 25, 1950; (5) "Testimony of Edward G. Robinson," October 27, 1950 and December 21, 1950; (6) "Guide to Subversive Organizations and Publications," March 3, 1951; (7) "Report on the Communist 'Peace' Offensive," April 1, 1951; (8) "100 Things You Should Know about Communism," May 14, 1951; (9) research material, "A Great Nation Like Ours Can Neither Stand Still nor Turn Back"; (10) research material, "Communist Manifesto" by Karl Marx (Chicago: Foundation Books).

Library Catalog description:

http://catalog.oscars.org/vwebv/holdingsInfo?bibId=70918

Finding aid:

http://collections.oscars.org/link/msinvent/793/

[0115a] American Library Association Archives, 1920s to the present

Location: Archives Research Center, 105 Horticulture Field Lab, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1707 South Orchard St, Urbana, IL 61801

Description: The American Library Association, the world's oldest and largest national library association. The ALA Archives consists of official records, correspondence, publications, photographs, sound recordings, films, and videotapes. Record Group 6. Series Number 6/1/6. Office for Intellectual Freedom Subject Files, 1965-2008, contains files on Abortion; Accelerated Christian Education; Accuracy in Academia; Accuracy in Media; Accuracy in Media, Inc. (AIM) Reports; Ad Hoc Committee in Defense of Life; Alamo [Tony and Susan Alamo] Christian Foundation of Alma, Arkansas; Alliance Defense Fund; America's Future; American Center for Law and Justice; American Christian Cause; American Coalition for Traditional Values; American Conservative Union; American Constitution Society; American Family Association (Donald Wildmon); American Legislative Exchange Council; American Life Education and Research Trust [later the American Life League]; American Life League; American Life Lobby; American Party; Americanism Educational League; Americans against Abortion; Americans for a Sound Foreign Policy; Americans for Constitutional Freedom; Americans for Quality Education; Americans United for Life; Answers in Genesis; Arthur S. DeMoss Foundation; Aryan Nations; Attacks on ALA; Berean League of Minnesota; Bethany Baptist Academy; Birthright, Inc.; Californians for Biblical Morality; Campus Conservative Packs; Cardinal Mindszenty Foundation; Edwin Castagna's Response to an Article in "Let Freedom Ring" about Communist Influence in ALA, 1965; Catholic Alliance; Center for Constitutional Rights; Center for Constructive Alternatives; Center for the Study of Popular Culture; Center on the Family in America; Centre for Independent Studies; Children's Legal Foundation, Inc. [prev. Citizens for Decency through Law]; Christian Action League; Christian Action Network; Christian Anti-Communism Crusade; Christian Broadcasting Network; Christian Century Foundation; Christian Coalition; Christian Defense League; Christian Family Renewal (Anti-Smut, Anti-Abortion); Christian Leaders for Responsible Television; Christian Librarian's Fellowship; Christian Ministry; Christian School Action; Christian Voice; Church and State, Separation of; Church League of America; Church of Scientology; Citizens against Pornography; Citizens Concerned for the Constitution [later Advance America]; Citizens for Community Values; Citizens for Decency through Law [formerly Citizens for Decent Literature]; Citizens for Excellence in Education; Citizens for the Protection of Children; Citizens for True Freedom; Clippings on Right Wing Groups; Coalition against Pornography in Kansas City; Coalition for Freedom; Concerned Charlotteans (NC); Concerned Women for America; Conservative Caucus; Conservative Majority; Conservatives for America; Constitutional Heritage Club; Constitutional Revival; Coors [Coors Beer Corporation's involvement in Politics]; Coral Ridge Ministries; Council for National Righteousness; Council for National Policy; Creationism III; Crusade for a Christian Civilization; James Dobson; Dove Foundation; Eagle Forum (Education Reporter, Phyllis Schlafly Report, Stop Textbook Censorship Committee); Educational Research Analysis; Fairness in Media; Faith and Values Coalition; Jerry Falwell; Family Focus; Family Research Council; Far Right Media Task Force; FCC (Federal Communications Commission); FCC Fairness Doctrine; Federal Government - McCarran Walter Act - Ideological Exclusion; Federalist Society; Fellowship of Christian Athletes; Flag Amendment; Flag Desecration; Flashpoint [Evangelical Christian Minister Texe Marrs]; Focus on the Family (Citizen Newsletter, Community Impact Handbook, Family in Focus, Newsletters); Foundation to Defend the First Amendment; Free Congress Foundation; Freedom Alliance; Freedom Facts; Freedom Institute; Freemen Institute; Friends of Newt Gingrich; Front Lines Research; Hate Speech; Hawkeye Review; Heritage Education and Review Organization; Heritage Foundation; Heritage Today; Holocaust; Home Schooling; Howard Center for the Family, Religion, and Society; Human Events; Human Life Center; Human Life International; Hyde Amendment; Illinois Citizens for Family Life; Illinois Family Institute; Indiana Family Institute; Indiana Home Circle; Individual Rights Foundation; Institute for American Democracy; Institute for Historical Review; Institute for the study of the Religious Right; Intelligent Design; Interfaith Committee against Blasphemy in the Media; Iowa Freedom Foundation; John Birch Society; Key Project for Decency; Kitsap Educational Information Council; Ku Klux Klan; Law and Justice; Leadership Foundation; Leadership Institute; Let's Improve Today's Education; Liberty Foundation; Liberty Lobby; Life Amendment Political Action Committee; Loyalty Oaths; Media Research Center; Morality in Media [see also: National Obscenity Law Center]; National Association of Christian Educators; National Congress for Educational Excellence; National Conservative Political Action Committee; National Empowerment Television; National Family Legal Foundation; National Federation for Decency; National Forum Foundation [formerly Coalition for Decency]; National Justice Foundation; National Obscenity Law Center; National Pro-Life Political Action Committee; National Right to Life Committee; National Schools Committee; New Christian Crusade Church; New Right Report; Oklahomans for Children and Families; Operation Rescue; Opus Dei; Oregon Anti-Gay Initiative 1996 Ballot; Oregon Ballot Measure 9; Parents Aiding Education, Inc.; Parents for Unalienable Rights in Education; Parents of Minnesota; Parents of New York - United; Paul Reveres of America; People Concerned with Education; People for the American Way; People of America Responding to the Educational Needs of Today's Society; People Using Legislation Legally; Planned Parenthood (Planned Parenthood of the Columbia/Willamette, Inc. v. American Coalition of Life Activists, et. al.), 1999; Political Research Associates; Posse Comitatus; Prince George's County Coalition for Children; Probe Ministries; Pro-Family Forum; Progress and Freedom Foundation; Pro-Life Action League; Promise Keepers; Prospect House [Richard Viguerie]; Ralph Reed; Religious Alliance against Pornography; Religious Freedom Amendment 1997; Revisionist Literature (regarding the Holocaust); Right Wing; Right Wing Watch [People for the American Way]; Right Wing Watch Online; Rockford College; Roundtable Issues and Answers; Rutherford Institute; Joseph M. Scheidler [Anti-Abortion]; Dr. Laura Schlessinger; Southern Baptist Convention; Summit Ministries; Tom Tancredo; Taxpayer's Education Lobby; Randall Terry; Texas Freedom Network; The "New Right"; The American Cause [Patrick Buchanan]; The American Sentinel; The Limbaugh Letter; The National Conservative Foundation; The New American; The Religious Roundtable; The Right Woman; The Rockford Institute; Cal Thomas; Traditional Values Coalition; Truth Missions; U.S. Justice Foundation; United Families of America; University Conversion Project; USA Patriot Act Sec. 215; Violence Against Women; Voice of America; Voice of Liberty; Washington Educational Information Council; Washington Inquirer; Washington Legal Foundation; Watch on the Right; Western Center for Law and Freedom; Western Goals Foundation; White Power Publications; Wilcox Report Newsletter; Women's Watchcare Network; World Creation Science Association; Young Americans for Freedom; Young America's Foundation; Young Parents Alert; and Young Republicans (New). Record Group 97. Series Number 97/1/44. Personal Members. Papers. James P. Danky Papers, 1965-2001, consists of the papers of James P. Danky (1947– ), newspapers and periodicals librarian at the State Historical Society of Wisconsin, including correspondence, publications, photographs, clippings, cassette recordings, bibliographies, coursework, and conference materials. Folders on Ku Klux Klan, 1981; Politics, Right-Wing, 1980; Right-Politics (3 folders), 1973-79, 1983-88; Siege (James N. Mason), 1983-86; "The Heart of Darkness" (Radical Right Publishing), 1985; and The Right in America: An Annotated Guide to the Literature, 1985 (2 folders).

Reference:

Guide to the American Library Association Archives. By Maynard Brichford. Chicago: American Library Association, 1979. 2 microfiche and 8p. pamphlet

Websites with information:

http://archives.library.illinois.edu/ala/

http://archives.library.illinois.edu/alasfa/

http://archives.library.illinois.edu/alaarchon/?p=collections/classifications

Finding aids to Office for Intellectual Freedom Subject Files, 1965-2008:

http://archives.library.illinois.edu/alasfa/0601006a.pdf

http://archives.library.illinois.edu/alaarchon/?p=accessions/accession&id=132

http://archives.library.illinois.edu/alaarchon/?p=collections/controlcard&id=7402

Finding aids to James P. Danky Papers, 1965-2001:

http://archives.library.illinois.edu/alaarchon/?p=collections/controlcard&id=7997

http://archives.library.illinois.edu/alasfa/9701044a.pdf

[0115b] American Nazi Party Recruiting Materials, c.1966, Ms2015-060

Location: Special Collections, University Libraries (0434), 560 Drillfield Drive, Newman Library, Virginia Tech University, Blacksburg, Virginia 24061

Description: This collection includes materials from a membership recruiting packet for the American Nazi Party, including a letter signed by Matt Koehl, the National Secretary for the American Nazi Party, a biographical article about George Lincoln Rockwell, founder of the American Nazi Party, a copy of the Program of the World Union of National Socialists describing the party platform, an order form for the party magazine, The Rockwell Report, an order form for political flyers called "'Back to Africa' tickets," and a copy of a short comic book called Here Comes Whiteman.

Türler ve etiketler

Yaş sınırı:
0+
Litres'teki yayın tarihi:
25 mayıs 2021
Hacim:
5250 s. 1 illüstrasyon
ISBN:
9783838266053
Yayıncı:
Telif hakkı:
Автор
İndirme biçimi: