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Conservatism, the Right Wing, and the Far Right: A Guide to Archives
Conservatism, the Right Wing, and the Far Right: A Guide to Archives
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Conservatism, the Right Wing, and the Far Right: A Guide to Archives

Websites with information:

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

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

Finding aid:

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

Finding aid for digital collection:

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

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

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

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

Websites with information:

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

Finding aid:

http://borge.arbark.se?4199

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

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

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

Finding aids:

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

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

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

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

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

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

Websites with information:

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

Finding aids:

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

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

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

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

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

Websites with information:

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

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

Finding aids:

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

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

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

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

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

Reference:

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

Websites with information:

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

ugenics

Finding aids:

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

0Inventory.pdf

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

ections-result&collection_id=1619&pds_handle=GUEST

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

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

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

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

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

Websites with information:

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

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

Finding aid:

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

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

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

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

Finding aids:

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

=main;view=text;didno=scrbt177

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

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

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

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

Reference:

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

Websites with information:

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

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

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

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

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

Websites with information:

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

Finding aid:

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

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

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

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

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

Reference:

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

Websites with information:

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

Finding aids:

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

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

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

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

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

Websites with information:

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

Finding aids:

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

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

&disabletheme=1#

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

[0486] Alexis Carrel Papers

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

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

Websites with information:

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

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

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

[0487] Fonds Alexis Carrel, 1890-1980s

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

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

Websites with information:

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

Finding aid:

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

finitive.pdf

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

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

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

Reference:

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

Websites with information:

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

Finding aid:

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

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

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

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

Finding aid:

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

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

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

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

Websites with information:

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

https://purl.stanford.edu/kx575hs5796

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

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

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

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

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

Reference:

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

Websites with information:

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

vementandracerelations.asp

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

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

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

Finding aid:

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

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

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

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