Kitabı oku: «Conservatism, the Right Wing, and the Far Right: A Guide to Archives», sayfa 79
Websites with information:
http://natlib.govt.nz/collections/a-z/arthur-nelson-field-collection
http://www.natlib.govt.nz/collections/a-z-of-all-collections/arthur-nelson-field-collection
https://natlib.govt.nz/collections/a-z/arthur-nelson-field-collection
Finding aids to the printed books, pamphlets and serials:
http://nzresearch.org.nz/files/researchguides/Field-Collection-Finding-Aid.pdf
http://www.natlib.govt.nz/downloads/Field-Collection-Finding-Aid.doc
http://natlib.govt.nz/files/researchguides/Field-Collection-Finding-Aid.pdf
http://natlib.govt.nz/collections/a-z/arthur-nelson-field-collection?search[i][primary_collection]=National+Library+Website&search[path]=items
http://natlib.govt.nz/system/resources/BAhbBlsHOgZmSSI9MjAxMi8xMC8xOC8xMF81MF81MV8xOTBfRmllbG
RfQ29sbGVjdGlvbl9GaW5kaW5nX0FpZC5wZGYGOgZFVA/Field-Collection-Finding-Aid.pdf
[0994] George Field Collection of Freedom House Files, 1933-1990 (bulk 1941-1969), MC048
Location: Public Policy Papers, Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library, Princeton University, 65 Olden Street, Princeton, New Jersey 08540
Description: Freedom House was formed in October 1941 as an organization dedicated to the defense of freedom throughout the world--a cause perceived to be in great danger. Founding members included George Field, Dorothy Thompson, and Wendell L. Willkie, among others. An outgrowth of the groups, Fight For Freedom, Inc., and the New York City Chapter of the Committee to Defend America By Aiding the Allies (under the direction of George Field), Freedom House continued their efforts to create an awareness of the concept of freedom as practiced by many individuals in a democracy. Series III: Correspondence, 1934-1985, contains correspondence with Dwight D. Eisenhower and Matthew B. Ridgway. Series IV: Subject Files, 1942-1969, contains files on the John Birch Society, Civil Rights, Joseph McCarthy, and Dorothy Thompson.
Finding aids:
http://findingaids.princeton.edu/collections/MC048
http://findingaids.princeton.edu/collections/MC048.pdf
http://archive.today/92bDv#selection-357.0-357.74
[0995] Field Enterprises Records, 1858-2007 (bulk 1950-1975), Midwest.MS.Field Enterprises
Location: Roger and Julie Baskes Department of Special Collections, The Newberry Library, 60 West Walton Street, Chicago, Illinois 60610-7324
Description: Administrative, promotional, and legal materials, correspondence, photographs, and artifacts of Field Enterprises, the umbrella conglomerate under which the Chicago Daily News, the Chicago Sun and Times company, the Chicago Sun-Times, and Field Communications Corporation eventually fell. Series 3: Chicago Sun-Times, 1934-1984. Sub-Series 1: Milburn P. Akers Files, 1934-1970, contains files on Everett McKinley Dirksen and the McCarthy-Army hearings. Sub-Series 2: Emmett Dedmon Files, 1951-1978, contains a file on J. Edgar Hoover. Series 4: Newspaper Division, 1943-1980. Sub-Series 1: Lawrence S. Fanning Files, 1951-1967, contains a file on the John Birch Society. Series 7: Photographs, 1858-1975. Sub-Series 2: Sun & Times Company, 1933-1948, consists of photographs from the Daily Times and the Chicago Sun dating from before the two papers combined. Included are photographs relating to the Nazis in the U.S. series, 1937, used to accompany a Daily Times exposé of Nazi (German American Bund) groups in the United States by Times reporters masquerading as American Nazis. (The series, by William Mueller, John C. Metcalfe, and James J. Metcalfe, ran from September 9, 1937, to September 24, 1937, and is available online at http://dlib.nyu.edu/undercover/home-grown-nazis-john-c-metcalfe-and-james-j-metcalfe-chicago-daily-times.) The records also contain a Chicago Sun-Times office memorandum regarding the Emmett Till murder trial, September 13, 1955 (digitized at http://publications.newberry.org/outspoken/exhibit/objectlist_section3.html).
Websites with information:
http://mms.newberry.org/detail.asp?recordid=163
http://mms.newberry.org/results.asp?subjectid=4580
https://mms.newberry.org/results.asp?alpha=F
http://publications.newberry.org/outspoken/exhibit/objectlist_section3.html
Finding aid:
http://explore.chicagocollections.org/ead/newberry/72/jm23m4b/
http://explore.chicagocollections.org/inventory/newberry/72/jm23m4b/publish/
http://mms.newberry.org/html/FieldEnterprises.html
[0996] Fiery Cross, 1922-1924 [digital collection]
Location: Government Information, Maps and Microform Services, Wells Library 250B, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana 47405
Description: The Fiery Cross (Indianapolis, Ind.) was a Ku Klux Klan publication which made its first appearance on July 20, 1922, and which was discontinued around 1925.
Finding aid:
http://www.libraries.iub.edu/index.php?pageId=4667
[0997] Fight for Freedom Committee. Records, 1941-1947
Location: Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library, 1100 E. 57th Street, Chicago, IL 60637-1504
Description: The national Fight for Freedom Committee, formed in New York City in April, 1941, favored the immediate entry of the United States into World War II to aid in the defeat of Hitler. The principal activity of the Chicago organization was the distribution of interventionist literature in an obvious attempt to counter the influence of Col. Robert McCormick and the Chicago Tribune. The Fight for Freedom Committee Records include correspondence with local supporters and with national headquarters, as well as material dealing with the various activities of the committee, such as motorcades, rallies, speakers, the distribution of literature, press releases, radio scripts, lists of supporters and contributors, correspondence and literature of cooperating organizations, and numerous clippings. Also included in the collection is the correspondence of Courtenay Barber, Jr., after December 7, 1941. This material is mainly concerned with Friends of Democracy, Inc., an organization devoted to investigating anti-democratic and pro-fascist groups and individuals in the United States. These personal papers include extensive correspondence with L. M. Birkhead, director of Friends of Democracy, of which Barber was the unofficial representative in Chicago, and with Arthur Derounian, who as an undercover agent for Friends of Democracy infiltrated several of these anti-democratic groups and published the books Under Cover and The Plotters under the pseudonym of John Roy Carlson. Barber was personally involved in many of Derounian's investigations in the mid-west, such as the placing infiltrators in anti-democratic committee offices in order to have ready access to the files.
Websites with information
https://www.lib.uchicago.edu/scrc/finding-aids/
http://www.lib.uchicago.edu/e/scrc/findingaids/browse.php?alpha=F
Finding aids:
http://www.lib.uchicago.edu/e/scrc/findingaids/view.php?eadid=ICU.SPCL.FFC
http://uncap.lib.uchicago.edu/view.php?eadid=ICU.SPCL.FFC
[0998] Fight for Freedom, Inc. Records, 1922-1942 (mostly 1939-1942), MC025
Location: Princeton University. Library. Dept. of Rare Books and Special Collections, Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library, Public Policy Papers, 65 Olden Street, Princeton, New Jersey 08540
Description: Fight for Freedom, Inc. (FFF), a national citizen's organization established in April 1941, was a leading proponent of full American participation in World War II. FFF monitored the activities of the leading isolationist organization, the America First Committee, and many of its key individuals such as Charles A. Lindbergh, Burton Wheeler, and Gerald Nye. Correspondence with American Mercury, L. M. Birkhead, Spruille Braden, Foreign Policy Association, J. Edgar Hoover, Dorothy Thompson, and James P. Warburg. Subject files on America First Committee, Communism, Fascism and Pro-Fascists, Hamilton Fish, Adolf Hitler, Nazism, and Nazi Sympathizers, The Hour, Isolationism and Isolationists, Keep America Out of War Congress, Lend-Lease Bill, Charles A. Lindbergh, Gerald Nye, Robert Reynolds, Burton K. Wheeler, and Robert E. Wood.
Finding aids:
http://findingaids.princeton.edu/collections/MC025
http://findingaids.princeton.edu/collections/MC025.pdf
[0999] Fight for Freedom, Inc. Archives, 1922-1942, Filmed from the holdings of the Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library, Princeton University (Primary Source Microfilm, An imprint of Thomson Gale, 2005) [microfilm]
Description: Correspondence with L. M. Birkhead, Spruille Braden, J. Edgar Hoover, and James P. Warburg. Subject files on American Protestant Defense League; Communism; Fascism and Pro-Fascists; Hamilton Fish; Adolf Hitler, Nazism, and Nazi Sympathizers; Isolationism and Isolationists; Charles A. Lindbergh; Gerald Nye; Dorothy Thompson; Burton K. Wheeler; and Robert E. Wood.
Finding aids:
http://microformguides.gale.com/Data/Download/9060000C.rtf
http://microformguides.gale.com/Download.asp?CollDocid=9060000&page=1
[1000] Fight the Right Network subject binders, circa 1994, SC.0031
Location: John J. Wilcox Jr. GLBT Archives of Philadelphia, William Way Community Center, 1315 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, PA 19107
Description: The Fight the Right Network (FTRN) was formed in Philadelphia in 1994 to build campaigns against the agenda of right-wing political groups. In September 1996 the FTRN dissolved. The Fight the Right Network subject binders, circa 1994, are composed of binders of newsletters from leftist groups, clippings on right-wing groups, and "think tank" reports on social/political issues. There are also a number of published books and reports.
Finding aids:
http://hdl.library.upenn.edu/1017/d/pacscl/HSP_JJWSC0031
http://dla.library.upenn.edu/cocoon/dla/pacscl/ead.html?fq=top_repository_facet%3A"John%20J.%20Wilcox%
20Jr.%20GLBT%20Archives%20of%20Philadelphia"&id=PACSCL_HSP_JJWSC0031&
[1000a] Louis Filler Papers, 1944-1993, and undated, 2012-172
Location: Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, University of Texas at Austin, 2300 Red River St., Sid Richardson Hall, Unit 2, Room 2.106, Austin, Texas 78712-1426
Description: Louis Filler (1911-1998) was a professor of American studies at Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio, from 1953 until his death. Correspondence, manuscripts, schedule books, publishing proofs, microfilm, and research files relating to Filler's Dictionary of American Conservatism and Dictionary of Social Change. Files on Populism; Russell Kirk; Hillsdale; Filler and The University Bookman; Peter Viereck; Segregation; Race relations; Ludwig von Mises; Conservatism; DeWitt Wallace; and Racism.
Finding aid:
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/03188/cah-03188.html
[1001] George Finch Collection, 1907-1960 (Bulk 1945-1954), MSS-014 [partly digital collection]
Location: Georgetown Law Library, 111 G. Street, N.W., Washington, DC 20001
Description: The George Finch Collection is a collection of documents, correspondence, photographs, and other material related to the careers of George Finch (1884-1957) and James Brown Scott (1866-1943), whose work and research ultimately led to the establishment of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, the Hague Academy of International Law, and the Georgetown School of Foreign Service, and the drafting of the Bricker Amendment. Finch was a supporter of the Bricker Amendment. One of the subject files in the collection concerns the Bricker Amendment.
Finding aids:
https://repository.library.georgetown.edu/bitstream/handle/10822/708756/mss_014.pdf
Finding aids to digital collection:
Includes a pro-Bricker Amendment leaflet (Committee for Constitutional Government, Inc.); Joint Senate Resolution 181 (August 5, 1954); a Life Magazine editorial opposing the Bricker Amendment ("The Bricker Amendment is the wrong way to deal with a real problem for American Institutions," Life Magazine, February 1, 1954); and a transcript of a radio broadcast, Genocide: Fact and Convention (Georgetown University Forum, June 10, 1954), moderated by Matthew Warren and with participants Raphael Lemkin (author of the Genocide Convention), George Finch (opposing the Genocide Convention), and Lev E. Dobriansky,
http://cdm15850.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/landingpage/collection/p15850coll31
http://cdm15850.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/search/collection/p15850coll31
[1001a] Leonard V. Finder Papers, 1930-69 (bulk 1960-1969)
Location: Dwight D. Eisenhower Library, 200 S.E. 4th Street, PO Box 339, Abilene, KS 67410
Description: Leonard V. Finder (1910-1969) was editor and publisher of the Sacramento (California) Union from 1962 to 1966. The series Eisenhower File, 1946-1969 and undated, contains Finder-Eisenhower Correspondence, 1947-51, 1955-69. The series Subject and Correspondence Files, 1930-1950 and undated, contains files on American Action, Inc., and Anti-Semitism, and correspondence with Styles Bridges, Thomas E. Dewey, Joseph C. Grew, Richard Nixon, and Max Rabb. The series Subject and Correspondence Files, 1951-1961 and undated, contains correspondence with Maxwell M. Rabb. The series General and Personal Correspondence, 1962-1966 and undated, contains correspondence with Ezra Taft Benson, Milton Eisenhower, Barry Goldwater, Herbert Hoover, Walter Judd, Goodwin J. Knight, William F. Knowland, Richard M. Nixon, Max Rafferty, Nelson A. Rockefeller, and Carlos P. Romulo. The series Subject File, 1962-1966 and undated, contains files on Extremist Associations (John Birch Society, Citizens Council [Civil Rights], Jack V. James); Extremist --Other Papers [Survey of other newspapers re: attacks by extremist groups]; Human Events; and Republican Party. The series General and Personal Correspondence, 1965-1969 and undated, contains correspondence with Leo Cherne, Richard M. Nixon, Organizations: Birch Society, Carlos P. Romulo, Ronald Reagan, and Nelson A. Rockefeller. The series Subject File, 1965-1969 and undated, contains a file on the John Birch Society. The series Editorial Reference File, 1962-1966 and undated, contains files on Anti-Communism; Civil Rights; Foreign Aid; Liberty Amendment; National Defense; and Schools - Segregation.
Reference:
John A. Andrew III, The Other Side of the Sixties: Young Americans for Freedom and the Rise of Conservative Politics (New Brunswick, NJ, and London: Rutgers University Press, 1997).
Websites with information:
https://www.eisenhower.archives.gov/research/finding_aids/f.html
Finding aid:
https://www.eisenhower.archives.gov/research/finding_aids/pdf/Finder_Leonard_Papers.pdf
[1002] Solomon Andhil Fineberg Papers, 1914-1984, Coll. 149
Location: American Jewish Archives, 3101 Clifton Ave., Cincinnati, OH 45220
Description: The papers describe the career of Solomon Andhil Fineberg (1896-1990) as an organizational executive for the American Jewish Committee with interests in promoting human relations and preventing anti-Semitism and prejudice. The collection includes correspondence, reports, writings, and an oral history transcript. Files on Anti-Semitic canards, 1939-1963, undated; Anti-Semitic vandalism, 1951-1960; Quarantine [i.e., silent treatment or paying no attention to in public] of anti-Semitic agitators, 1946-1972; Quarantine - Beaty and Crommelin, 1952-1972; Quarantine - George Lincoln Rockwell, 1959-1966; Quarantine - Gerald L.K. Smith, 1944-1972; Southern anti-Semitism, 1956-1973; and Soviet anti-Semitism, 1949-1965, undated.
Websites with information:
http://americanjewisharchives.org/collections/findingAids.php
Finding aids:
http://americanjewisharchives.org/collections/ms0149/
http://ead.ohiolink.edu/xtf-ead/view?docId=ead/xOCAJA0149.xml
[1002a] William W. Finlator Papers, 1935-1977, Micro 822 [microfilm]
Location: Wisconsin Historical Society, Library-Archives Division, 816 State St., Madison, WI 53706-1417
Description: William W. Finlator (1913-2006) was a North Carolina Baptist minister and a social and political activist concerned with civil rights, civil liberties, ecumenism, and the Vietnam War. The papers consist mainly of correspondence, writings, and an alphabetical subject file. Series: Speeches and Writings, includes articles, addresses, book reviews, invocations, letters to editors, broadcast commentaries, a few sermons, and related correspondence and clippings. These deal with ecumenism, labor relations, prison reform, prayer in public schools, prohibition, and Billy Graham. The series also contains copies of "The White Sentinel, published by the White American News Service, Fort Lauderdale, Florida, with its classification of well-known Americans as Communist Party affiliates; The Augusta Courier, Augusta, Georgia, with its attack on the Supreme Court; Are All White Men Israelites? a book about white supremacy by Theodore Fitch, Council Bluffs, Iowa; The American Nationalist, Los Angeles, California, emphasizing the evils of integration; Tax Fax, published by the Independent American of New Orleans, Louisiana, describing Communist infiltration in the churches" (Lechtreck, p. 194). Series: Subject File, contains a file on right to work laws.
Reference:
Elaine Allen Lechtreck, "Southern White Ministers and the Civil Rights Movement" (Ph.D., Union Institute & University, 2007).
Websites with information:
http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi/f/findaid/findaid-idx?c=wiarchives;page=browse;key=title;cc=wiarchives;value=wi
Finding aids:
http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/wiarchives.uw-whs-micr0822
http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi/f/findaid/findaid-idx?c=wiarchives;view=reslist;subview=standard
;didno=uw-whs-micr0822
[1003] John Finnegan Papers, 1959-1972, Coll. 4237
Location: American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming, 1000 E. University Avenue, Laramie, WY 82071
Description: John Finnegan of Butte, Montana, was actively involved in conservative politics. He was state chairman of the Constitution Party, resigning this position in 1970. He also ran unsuccessfully for the Montana House of Representatives in 1970 as an Independent. Political causes supported by Finnegan included abolishment of the Federal Reserve System, resignation of the United States from the United Nations, an end to urban renewal programs, and halting efforts towards regional governmental consolidation and cooperation. Collection includes correspondence (1963-1971); newsletters and publications of conservative organizations; newspaper clippings; notes; and miscellaneous other materials. Correspondents include Council for Statehood, Curtis B. Dall, James O. Eastland, Jo Hindman, Karl Mundt, The Network of Patriotic Letter Writers, Richard M. Nixon, Wright Patman, John R. Rarick, Julien G. Sourwine, Strom Thurmond, Wickliffe B. Vennard Sr., and Robert Welch.
Websites with information:
https://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/_files/collection_guides/politics_guide_2009_ed2016.pdf
https://web.archive.org/web/20160919110928/https://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/collections/guides/politics.pdf
http://www.worldcat.org/title/papers-1959-1972/oclc/29603242
https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/29603242
Finding aids:
http://rmoa.unm.edu/docviewer.php?docId=wyu-ah04237.xml
http://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/_files/pdffa/04237.pdf
[1003a] Richard Fipps papers, circa 1990-1999, Manuscript Collection No. 904
Location: Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library, Emory University, Atlanta, GA 30322
Description: Richard Fipps was a member of the Unified Ku Klux Klan, an organization headquartered in Gulf, North Carolina. Papers include membership cards, a membership certificate, and a copy of the Unified Ku Klux Klan constitution and bylaws. The collection also contains several fliers (mostly photocopies) produced by the Unified Knights of the Ku Klux Klan and the Aryan Nations Church of Jesus Christ and a panoramic photograph from the 1920s of the Imperial Wizard Guard, Akron, Ohio, depicting Fipps' grandfather.
Finding aids:
https://findingaids.library.emory.edu/documents/fipps904/
https://findingaids.library.emory.edu/documents/fipps904/printable/
[1004] Firing Line (Television Program) Broadcast Records, 1966-1999, Coll. 80040 [videotapes, partially online]
Location: Hoover Institution Archives, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305-6010
Description: The broadcast archive of William F. Buckley, Jr.'s television series Firing Line is at the Hoover Institution Archives. Firing Line was broadcast from 1966 to 1999, first as an hour-long program and later as a half-hour show, with occasional specials and two-hour debates. The Firing Line collection includes videotapes of 1,505 shows, as well as transcripts, still photographs, preparation materials, and other items. Guests include John Ashbrook, Robert Bork, Brent Bozell, Pat Buchanan, James Burnham, Roy Cohn, Rev. Jerry Falwell, Milton Friedman, Barry Goldwater, Friedrich Von Hayek, Jesse Helms, Sidney Hook, Jack Kemp, James J. Kilpatrick, Bill Kristol, Rush Limbaugh, Trent Lott, Clare Boothe Luce, Sir Oswald Mosley, Charles Murray, Oliver North, Ron Paul, Leander Perez, Norman Podhoretz, Ralph Reed, Pat Robertson, Phyllis Schlafly, William Shockley, Joseph Sobran, Strom Thurmond, Ralph De Toledano, George Wallace, Paul Weyrich, and George Will. Topics include the ACLU's defense of the American Nazi Party in its efforts to hold a march in Skokie, IL, a predominantly Jewish community (1977), anti-Communism, the John Birch Society, black anti-Semitism, Robert Bork, Whittaker Chambers, Communism, Barry Goldwater, Alger Hiss and the Hiss-Chambers case, Clare Boothe Luce, Joseph McCarthy, McCarthyism, Panama Canal Treaty, right wing extremist groups, Clarence Thomas, and George Wallace.
Websites with information:
http://hoohila.stanford.edu/firingline/index.php
https://www.tvrage.com/shows/id-23008/printable
https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/754871114
http://www.worldcat.org/title/firing-line-broadcasts-1966-1999/oclc/754871114
Database:
http://hoohila.stanford.edu/firingline/programList2.php
Finding aids:
http://cdn.calisphere.org/data/13030/8c/kt6m3nc88c/files/kt6m3nc88c.pdf
http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt6m3nc88c/
http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt6m3nc88c/entire_text/
[1005] "Firing Line with William Buckley" transcripts, 1966-1967 [microfiche]
Location: Manuscripts and Archives, Sterling Memorial Library, Yale University, 128 Wall Street, New Haven, CT 06520-8240
Description: Transcripts of one hundred and thirteen "Firing Line" programs aired on WNET-TV and the Public Broadcasting System from January 1966-December 1967. William F. Buckley, Jr. discusses political, social, religious, economic, and literary topics with several prominent American and international figures, including Barry M. Goldwater, Ronald Reagan, Roy M. Cohn, and Milton Friedman. Original transcripts, video tapes, and audio tapes of these interviews are arranged in the William F. Buckley, Jr. Papers (ID 84A-494).
Websites with information:
http://www.worldcat.org/title/firing-line-with-william-buckley-transcripts-1966-1967-inclusive/oclc/122370
047
[1005a] First Appearances Collection, 1915-1977
Location: Special Collections, University of Maryland Libraries, Hornbake Library, College Park, MD 20742
Description: The First Appearances Collection consists of over 1,300 periodicals containing the "first appearance," or first public dissemination, of many noteworthy 20th century literary works. Authors represented in this collection include Sherwood Anderson, William F. Buckley, Jr., James Burnham, Louis-Ferdinand Céline, John Dos Passos, Dwight D. Eisenhower, T.S. Eliot, Medford Evans, Knut Hamsun, Henry Hazlitt, Granville Hicks, Sidney Hook, Philip C. Johnson, Hugh Kenner, Rudyard Kipling, Russell Kirk, Henry A. Kissinger, Irving Kristol, Wyndham Lewis, H. L. Mencken, Gorham B. Munson, Ezra Pound, George Santayana, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Rebecca West, Garry Wills, Walter Winchell, and William Butler Yeats.
Finding aid:
http://digital.lib.umd.edu/archivesum/actions.DisplayEADDoc.do?source=MdU.ead.rare.0007.xml
[1006] Louis Fischer Papers, 1890-1977 (bulk 1935-1969), MC024
Location: Dept. of Rare Books and Special Collections, Public Policy Papers, Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library, Princeton University, 65 Olden Street, Princeton, New Jersey 08540
Description: Louis Fischer (1896-1970) was a journalist, writer, and commentator on international affairs. The papers include correspondence, interviews, articles and notes, lectures and speeches, photographs, and audiovisual materials. Correspondence with Charles Beard, William Henry Chamberlin, Milovan Djilas, Foreign Policy Association, Isaac Don Levine, Clare Boothe Luce, Raymond Moley, Benito Mussolini, Gerald P. Nye, Robert A. Taft, and Dorothy Thompson.
Websites with information:
http://libguides.princeton.edu/c.php?g=84171&p=541473
http://libguides.princeton.edu/mudd_journalism
Finding aids:
http://findingaids.princeton.edu/collections/MC024
http://findingaids.princeton.edu/collections/MC024.pdf
[1006a] Louis Fischer Papers, 1938-1949
Location: Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum, National Archives, 4079 Albany Post Road, Hyde Park, NY 12538
Description: Louis Fischer (1896-1970) was an author and historian. Author of Men and Politics. Correspondence with Eleanor Roosevelt, Malvina Thompson, and other government officials regarding efforts to obtain permission of the Soviet government for the emigration of his wife and sons, 1938-1945; with President Franklin D. Roosevelt about Fischer's conversation with Mahatma Gandhi, 1942; correspondence and interviews with Sumner Welles, Felix Frankfurter, Jawaharlal Nehru, Cordell Hull, Edward R. Stettinius, and others, 1938-1949; and drafts of a portion of Men and Politics that he submitted to Eleanor Roosevelt in 1940.
Websites with information:
http://www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/archives/collections/list.html
http://www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/archives/pdfs/historical_materials.pdf
http://www.loc.gov/coll/nucmc/oclcsearch.html
[1007] Nachlass Theodor Fischer, ca. 1855-1964 (bulk 1895-1957)
Location: Documentation Centre Jewish Contemporary History, ETH Zürich, Archives of Contemporary History at the Federal Institute of Technology Zurich (ETHZ) [Das Archiv für Zeitgeschichte der ETH Zürich], Hirschengraben 62, 8092 Zürich, Switzerland
Description: Theodor Fischer (1895-1957), an architect, was the founder and "Führer" of the Nationalsozialistische Eidgenössische Arbeiterpartei (NSEAP) (also called the Bund Nationalsozialistischer Eidgenossen (BNSE). He was one of the main defendants in the Berne trial of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, 1934. Contains files on the BNSE. Correspondents include Mahmoud Saleh (Alfred Zingler).
Reference:
Martin Finkenberger, "Johann von Leers as Part of an International Network of Postwar Fascism," Movements and Ideas of the Extreme Right in Europe: Positions and Continuities, ed. Nicola Kristin Karcher and Anders Granås Kjøstvedt (Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang, 2013), pp. 141-162, https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Anders_Kjostvedt/publication/297737936_Movements_and_Ideas_of_the_Extreme_Right_Positions_and_Continuity/links/56e2839008ae3328
e077cd7c.pdf.
Websites with information:
https://www.afz.ethz.ch/lesesaal/recherche/C23/
Finding aid:
http://onlinearchives.ethz.ch/detail.aspx?guid=351221d8b3054c499224b7d222a25fa0
[1007a] John Fischetti cartoon collection, ca. 1967-1980, 1990.0834 [cartoons]
Location: Chicago History Museum Research Center, 1601 North Clark Street, Chicago, IL 60614-6038
Description: John R. Fischetti (1916-1980) was an editorial cartoonist for the Chicago Sun-Times (in the 1970s) as well as for the New York Herald Tribune and the Chicago Daily News. The collection consists of original cartoon drawings, proofs, and photostats. Topics include the Vietnam War, inflation, racism, foreign relations, and U.S. presidents Nixon and Ford, and their policies.
Websites with information:
http://chsmedia.org:8081/ipac20/ipac.jsp?session=1STX468552964.35398&profile=public&source=~!horizo
n&view=subscriptionsummary&uri=full=3100046~!144005~!3&ri=1&aspect=subtab112&menu=search&ipp
=20&spp=20&staffonly=&term=Fischetti&index=.GW&uindex=&aspect=subtab112&menu=search&ri=1
http://explore.chicagocollections.org/marcxml/chicagohistory/30/707xg9s/
http://explore.chicagocollections.org/marcxml/chicagohistory/31/pk07708/
Finding aid:
http://chsmedia.org/media/fa/fa/1990/834.htm
http://explore.chicagocollections.org/marcpdf/publish/chicagohistory/31/pk07708
[1008] John Fischetti Cartoons, 1962-1967 [cartoons]
Location: Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Libraries, 222 Waverly Avenue, Syracuse, NY 13244-2010
Description: John Fischetti (1916-1980) was an American Pulitzer Prize winning editorial cartoonist. The John Fischetti Cartoons consists of more than a hundred original editorial cartoons from the New York Herald Tribune (1962-1967). Of particular interest are Fischetti's cartoons that drew attention to the emergence of right-wing Republicans as well as the racist influence of the Ku Klux Klan and the civil rights movement. Topics appearing in the editorial cartoons include William Buckley, civil rights, communism, discrimination, Barry Goldwater, John Birch Society, Ku Klux Klan, James Meredith, Mississippi, Nazism, Richard M. Nixon, race, racism, Republican Party, right-wing extremists, and George Wallace.