Книга Conservatism, the Right Wing, and the Far Right: A Guide to Archives - читать онлайн бесплатно, автор Archie Henderson. Cтраница 6
bannerbanner
Вы не авторизовались
Войти
Зарегистрироваться
Conservatism, the Right Wing, and the Far Right: A Guide to Archives
Conservatism, the Right Wing, and the Far Right: A Guide to Archives
Добавить В библиотекуАвторизуйтесь, чтобы добавить
Оценить:

Рейтинг: 0

Добавить отзывДобавить цитату

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

[0034] Alabama Vertical Files, circa 1859-2011, MSS.3437

Location: W. S. Hoole Special Collections Library, Manuscript Collections, The University of Alabama, Mary Harmon Bryant Hall, 500 Hackberry Lane, Box 870266, Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35487-0266

Description: This collection contains materials, both published and unpublished, that document the history of the state of Alabama. Materials include items such as reprints, pamphlets, typescripts, and photocopies of documents relating to individuals, organizations, cities, and a large number of other topics. Folders on African American Segregation, Civil Rights, Ku Klux Klan--Serials, Ku Klux Klan--Alabama, Douglas MacArthur, Henry Louis Mencken, Race Problems--Alabama, and John J. Sparkman.

Reference:

kgmatheny, "What the Heck Is a Vertical File?" What's Cool at Hoole, March 25, 2016, http://apps.lib.­ua.edu/blogs/coolathoole/2016/03/25/what-the-heck-is-a-vertical-file/.

Websites with information:

http://www.lib.ua.edu/content/findingaids/indexsql.php?alpha=a

Finding aids:

http://www.lib.ua.edu/content/findingaids/pdf/mss_3437.pdf

https://www.lib.ua.edu/content/findingaids/pdf/mss_3437.pdf

http://acumen.lib.ua.edu/u0003_0003437

http://purl.lib.ua.edu/38494

http://acumen.lib.ua.edu/legacy/u0003_0003437.ead.xml

[0034a] Tony Alamo Materials, 1976-present, MC 1673

Location: Special Collections, University of Arkansas Libraries, 365 N. McIlroy Ave., Fayetteville, AR 72701-4002

Description: Tony Alamo (born Bernie Lazar Hoffman) (1934- ) is an evangelist. In California in the 1960s, Alamo and his wife Susan (d. 1982) established the Music Square Church, and Alamo preached a pentecostal theology with strong anti-Catholic and conspiratorial undertones. In 1975 the Alamos relocated to Dyer, Crawford County, Arkansas, near Alma. Following his release from prison in 1998 Alamo established the headquarters of his Tony Alamo Christian Ministries in Miller County outside of Texarkana. The collection includes circulars and flyers put forth by the ministry and typically placed on car windshields by Alamo followers. Also included are copies of the Alamo Christian Ministries World Newsletter, as well as a 2006 reprint of Tony Alamo's The Messiah According to Bible Prophecy, originally published in 1980. Other materials include online source materials, newspaper clippings, and six audio CD recordings of Alamo's "How to Have God's Life Living in You," Parts 114-119, dating from July 2006.

Websites with information:

http://libraries.uark.edu/specialcollections/manuscripts/atoz.asp

http://libinfo.uark.edu/specialcollections/manuscripts/atoz.asp

Finding aid:

http://libinfo.uark.edu/specialcollections/findingaids/mc1673.asp

[0035] Alberta Report fonds, 1973-2003, PR0440 [partly digital collection]

Location: University of Calgary Archives, 2500 University Dr NW, Calgary, AB, Canada

Description: The Alberta Report began as a weekly general news magazine called the St. John's Edmonton Report. The main focus was on political figures and events from a socially conservative Christian viewpoint. The magazine opposed gay rights, feminism, and abortion.. It followed the early years of the political birth of the Reform Party of Canada, and later the Alliance Party, as well as the beginning of Preston Manning's and Ralph Klein's political careers. By the mid-1990s, the editorial focus of the magazine shifted to social issues. Plunging into the "Culture Wars", the Report's perspective on feminism, abortion, gay rights, affirmative action, human rights law, subsidized art and political correctness earned the reputation of the magazine as being intolerant, bigoted, and at times racist. The fonds consists of records of the Alberta Report, including magazines, photographs, and negatives. Both the Provincial Archives of Alberta (8555 Roper Road, Edmonton, AB T6E 5W1) and the University of Calgary own the fonds.

Websites with information:

http://www.asc.ucalgary.ca/collections/archival/political

https://asc.ucalgary.ca/collections/archival/political

Finding aid:

http://www.asc.ucalgary.ca/files/lcr_asc/alberta-report_1.pdf

Emerging Alberta Image Database:

The Emerging Alberta Image Database includes 3200 photographs and political cartoons taken from the Alberta Report fonds held at the Provincial Archives of Alberta.

http://emergingalberta.ucalgary.ca

http://emergingalberta.ucalgary.ca/searchcollection

[0036] Alberta Social Credit, 1934-1938, COLL MISC 0090

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

Description: William Aberhart (1878-1943), founder of the Social Credit Party, began his career as a high school teacher and religious-radio-show host in Calgary, Alberta. During the Great Depression of the 1930s, Aberhardt formed a political party that proposed that the government set fair prices for all goods and that a dividend of $25 be paid by the government to all consumers. Aberhart added his own brand of religious fundamentalism to these radical economic theories, which became popular in Alberta. The Social Credit party controlled the province's legislature until the early 1970s. Collection of pamphlets, reports, cartoons, etc of William Aberhardt's social credit proposals for the province of Alberta, Canada.

Websites with information:

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

Finding aid:

http://library-2.lse.ac.uk/archives/handlists/CollMisc0090/CollMisc0090.html

[0037] Alberta Social Credit League. Offerdale Social Credit Group fonds, 1935-1986, wet-108

Location: City of Wetaskiwin Archives, 4904 - 51 Street, Wetaskiwin, Alberta, T9A 1L2, Canada

Description: The fonds consists of materials created the Offerdale Group of the Alberta Social Credit Party from 1935- 1986. The fonds consists of these series: 1. Minutes (1935-1985) Series consists of the minute books of the Offerdale Group of the Alberta Social Credit Party. 2. Financial (1942- 1986) consists of bank statements, receipts, receipt books and other materials related to the group's financial operations. 3. Miscellaneous (ca.1940-ca. 1980) consists of third party publications, ephemera, and other materials created or collected by the Offerdale Group of the Alberta Social Credit League.

Finding aid:

http://www.albertaonrecord.ca/alberta-social-credit-league-offerdale-social-credit-group-fonds

[0038] C. Earl Albrecht papers, 1905-1996, HMC-0375

Location: Archives and Special Collections, Consortium Library, University of Alaska Anchorage, 3211 Providence Drive, Anchorage, AK 99508

Description: Conrad Earl Albrecht (1905-1997) was a Matanuska Colony doctor, health commissioner, and circumpolar health advocate. The collection consists of papers and publications documenting C. Earl Albrecht's career in medicine and public health administration, primarily in Alaska. Part VII. Health-related subject files, 1934-1989, contains legislative and legal papers on the Alaska Mental Health Act (H.R. 6376), including reports and correspondence on the need for a mental health hospital in Alaska.

Websites with information:

http://consortiumlibrary.org/archives/CollectionsList/alphalists/A.html

Finding aid:

http://consortiumlibrary.org/archives/FindingAids/hmc-0375.html

[0039] Hugh Meade Alcorn, Jr., Papers, 1957-1963, ML-85

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

Description: The materials that make up the collection are exclusively concerned with the years that Meade Alcorn (1907-1992) served as Chairman of the Republican National Committee during the second Eisenhower Administration (1957-1959). The materials themselves consist of correspondence, clippings, newsletters, pamphlets, reports, proposals, financial records, news releases, and many other items. Includes "What Is 'The Law of the Land?'" by Samuel B. Pettengill, in Human Events, October 5, 1957; "Who Profits From Free Enterprise?" by Benjamin F. Fairless, in Spotlight for the Nation, published by Committee For Constitutional Government, Inc., New York, 1954; excerpt from Businessmen's Complex, by Raymond Moley; The State of the Unions, excerpts, by Ralph W. Gwinn, M.C., at Allegheny County League of Women Voters, Pittsburgh, February 27, 1958; "Why the Republicans Lost the Congress and How They Can Win It Back," by Ralph W. Gwinn, in Human Events, January 26, 1957; What Has Happened to the Republican Party in Michigan?, by Barry Goldwater; at United Republican Dinner, Detroit, January 20, 1958; Proposal: 1958 Budget Proposals, Young Republican National Federation, John M. Ashbrook, Chairman; December 1957; and Exclusive, by Fulton Lewis, Jr., September 18, 1957.

Websites with information:

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

Finding aid:

http://ead.dartmouth.edu/html/ml85.html

[0039a] Alert America Association flyers, 1962-1969

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

Description: The Alert Americans Association (also known as Alert America Association) was an extreme right organization based in Los Angeles, Calif. Collection comprises flyers distributed by the Alert America Association during the 1960s. Topics include the Nixon administration, promotion of segregation, the Vietnam War, and opposition to the United Nations and to fluoridated water.

Websites with information:

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/881278132

http://www.worldcat.org/title/alert-america-association-flyers-1962-1969/oclc/881278132

[0040] Fred D. Alexander Papers, 1908, 1931-1998 (bulk 1946-1980), MS0091

Location: J. Murrey Atkins Library Special Collections, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, 9201 University City Blvd, Charlotte, NC 28223-0001

Description: Public papers of Frederick Douglas Alexander (1910-1980), a Charlotte politician and civil rights leader. Includes a copy of "Here is what the 'Civil Rights' proposals would do in Georgia: F. E. P. C. explained," a pamphlet (ca. 1948) supporting Herman Talmadge for governor of Georgia against Ellis Arnall, who is condemned for his support of the Fair Employment Practices Commission (FEPC); a flier (1950) from Know the Truth Committee accusing U. S. Senator Frank Porter Graham of favoring "mingling of the races" and urging support for his opponent Willis Smith; a letter (ca. 1956) from Patriots of North Carolina, Inc. opposing school integration; a report (ca. 1957-58) from North Carolina Virginia office of Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith concerning Ku Klux Klan activities in North Carolina; the platform (n.d.) of the North Carolina Defenders of States Rights, Inc.; and a letter (9-25-72) from Democrats for Helms supporting Jesse Helms for the United States Senate.

Websites with information:

https://libaws.uncc.edu/specialcollections/manuscripts

https://web.archive.org/web/20150929061913/http://specialcollections.uncc.edu/specialcollections/manuscripts

Finding aids:

https://findingaids.uncc.edu/repositories/4/resources/427

http://library.uncc.edu/manuscript/ms0091

https://library.uncc.edu/manuscript/ms0091

[0041] Robert Jackson Alexander Papers, 1890(1945)-1999, MC 974

Location: Special Collections and University Archives, Rutgers University Libraries, 169 College Ave, New Brunswick, NJ 08901

Description: A professor of economics at Rutgers University, Robert J. Alexander (1918-2010) conducted interdisciplinary research focused on Latin America, where he frequently traveled to conduct interviews, Spain (particularly the opposition to Franco) and international radical movements. Subject files include files on fascist, radical, and national revolutionary parties in Latin America. Folders on Communists and International Right Opposition, 1930-1940; Fascists--Argentina, 1925-1956; Fascists--Bolivia, 1942-1976; Fascists--Bolivia--Falange, 1967-1982; Fascists--Brazil, 1934-1965; Fascists--Chile--Nazis, 1933-1966; Fascists--Chile--Partido Nacional (Conservative), 1969-1972; Fascists--Colombia, 1940-1942; Fascists--Latin America--History and Miscellany, 1933-1944; Fascists--Mexico, 1935-1958; and U.S.--Politics--Conservatives, 1990; U.S.--Politics--New Right, 1983-1986.

Reference:

John D. French, "The Robert J. Alexander Interview Collection," Hispanic American Historical Review, 84:2 (2004), pp. 315-326, https://fds.duke.edu/db/attachment/41

Websites with information:

http://www.libraries.rutgers.edu/scua/manuscripts

http://www2.scc.rutgers.edu/ead/

http://www.libraries.rutgers.edu/rul/libs/scua/manuscripts/manuscripts.shtml

Finding aids:

http://www2.scc.rutgers.edu/ead/manuscripts/alexanderb.html

http://www2.scc.rutgers.edu/ead/manuscripts/alexanderf.html

[0041a] Ruth Alexander Papers, 1920-1973, Coll. 05136

Location: American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming, 1000 E. University Ave., Laramie, WY 82071

Description: Ruth Alexander (1899- ) was a conservative writer and lecturer. She was associate editor of "Finance" from 1942-1944, participated in several of the American Economic Foundation's "Wake Up, America!" radio broadcasts from 1940-1946, and was an editorial columnist for the New York "Mirror" from 1944-1963. She wrote a weekly column entitled "Our America" from the 1950s to the early 1970s. Alexander also had a short career as a concert pianist from 1929-1930. Collection includes manuscripts of "Our America" columns (1957-1973); transcripts of her "Wake Up, America!" broadcasts (1940-1946); speeches; manuscripts of articles by Alexander; photographs; a scrapbook of her career; and miscellaneous other materials.

Websites with information:

https://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/_files/collection_guides/journalism_guide_2005_ed2016.pdf

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/30790521

http://www.worldcat.org/title/papers-1920-1973/oclc/30790521

Finding aids:

https://rmoa.unm.edu/docviewer.php?docId=wyu-ah05136.xml

http://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/_files/pdffa/05136.pdf

[0042] Bruce Alger Collection, 1954-1979, MA 83-11

Location: Texas/Dallas History & Archives, Dallas Public Library, 1515 Young St, Dallas, TX 75201

Description: Alger (1918– ) was a U.S. representative from Texas (1954-1964). The Bruce Alger Collection begins with campaign and election in 1954, continues through his tenure in office and follows his political interests and activities up to 1979. Correspondence, speeches, legislative files, photographs, tape recordings, campaign material, unpublished manuscripts, and books. Files on American Challenge, American Coalition of Patriotic Societies, Americans for Constitutional Action (ACA), Anti-Semitic pamphlets, Cong. John Ashbrook, Communism, Conservative organizations, Conservative Society of America, Constitution Party, Dan Smoot Report, Don Bell Reports, Charles Edison, Facts Forum, Barry Goldwater, H. R. 9905 (1962) (to rescind and revoke membership of the United States in the United Nations and the specialized agencies thereof, and for other purposes), H. R. 263 (1963) (to rescind and revoke membership of the United States in the United Nations and the specialized agencies thereof, and for other purposes), Billy James Hargis, House Un-American Activities Committee, Human Events, Jews, John Birch Society, Liberty Amendment, Liberty Lobby Letter, Manion Forum, Congressman Noah M. Mason, Monroe Doctrine, Adm. Ben Moreell, National Indignation Convention, National Right to Work Newsletter, Panama Canal, Archibald Roberts (Lt. Col. Aus. Ret.), Phyllis Schlafly, Texas Committee for the Constitution, Inc., James B. Utt, General Edwin Walker, and George Wallace. Tape Recordings of Arch E. Roberts, Dan Smoot, and William F. Buckley.

Websites with information:

http://dallaslibrary2.org/texas/archives/findguides.htm

http://dallaslibrary2.org/texas/archives/a.htm

Finding aids:

http://dallaslibrary.org/CTX/archives/MA83-11.html

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/dalpub/08311/dpub-08311.html

http://dallaslibrary2.org/texas/archives/MA83-11.html

[0043] All-American Conference to Combat Communism records, 1950-1962, RH WL MS 18

Location: Kenneth Spencer Research Library, Wilcox Collection, Kansas Collection, University of Kansas, 1450 Poplar Lane, Lawrence, KS 66045-7616

Description: The All-American Conference to Combat Communism was formed in 1950 to defend American liberties and to expose and curtail Communism within the United States. These records of the organization were collected by Frederick S. Harris, one of the Conference leaders who was also National Commander of the Jewish War Veterans of the United States. The records consist primarily of Harris's correspondence with other leaders of the Conference, and include meeting programs and published statements of the organization's purpose.

Websites with information:

https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/191201290

Finding aid:

http://etext.ku.edu/view?docId=ksrlead/ksrl.kc.allamericanconferencetocombatcommunism.xml

[0044] All-Russian National Union collection, fond 1/19

Location: Gosudarstvennyi arkhiv Rossiiskoi Federatsii (State Archive of the Russian Federation, or GARF), 119435, Moscow, ul. Much pirogovskaya 17, and 121059, Moscow, Berezhkovskaya nab., 26, Russia

Description: All-Russian National Union was a right-wing, nationalist organization.

Reference:

Collections of the State Archive of the Russian Federation on the History of Russia in the 19th and Early 20th Centuries. A Research Guide. Volume 1. 1994, http://guides.rusarchives.ru/browse/guidebook.html?­sid=680338&bid=201&

enc=eng

State Archive web page:

http://statearchive.ru

[0045] All Volunteer Clinic Escort for the Summit Women's Center Records, 1995-2002, MS 546

Location: Sophia Smith Collection, Smith College, Northampton, MA 01063

Description: The All Volunteer Escort Service for the Summit Women's Center in Bridgeport, Connecticut, was founded by Patricia Hendrickson in 1993. The Summit Women's Center is an abortion facility. The All Volunteer Escort Service was formed to escort patients and staff from the parking lot of the Summit Women's Center to the building, shielding them from harassment by anti-abortion protestors. The All Volunteer Clinic Escort Service Records include legal documents relating to court cases and legal actions involving the service, memorabilia including photographs and volunteer vests, and videotapes created by Donald Hendrickson documenting the anti-abortion protestors who formed around the Summit Medical Center.

Websites with information:

https://www.smith.edu/library/libs/ssc/orgsaf.html

https://asteria.fivecolleges.edu/findaids/sophiasmith/list/

Finding aids:

http://asteria.fivecolleges.edu/findaids/sophiasmith/mnsss366.html

http://asteria.fivecolleges.edu/findaids/sophiasmith/mnsss366_main.html

[0046] Norman Allderdice Collection, 1895-1984, Coll. 2000C53

Location: Hoover Institution Archives, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305-6010 [formerly the Social and Political Action Documents Collection at Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ]

Description: Norman Allderdice (1894-1961) was vice president and director of Pennsylvania Central Airlines from 1927 to 1935. Allderdice assembled this collection as an outgrowth of his conservative beliefs and interest in individual freedom. Contains pamphlets, leaflets, and other printed ephemera issued by right-wing, left-wing and other political organizations, and by governmental, business, labor, religious, educational and other organizations, relating to political, social and economic conditions in the United States and abroad, and especially to right-wing and left-wing movements in the United States. Information on Einar Åberg; Alabama Legislative Commission to Preserve the Peace; Alert Americans Association; Alerted Americans; Gary Allen; Allen-Bradley Company (Milwaukee, Wisconsin); Alliance, Inc. ("Race, Heredity, and Civilization," by Wesley Critz George (1963)); Alliance, Inc. ("Brainwashing and Senator McCarthy," by Joseph Zack Kornfeder (1954)); America First Committee (Chicago, Illinois); American Afro-Asian Educational Exchange, Inc.; American Bar Association; American Birthright Committee (Los Angeles, California); American Coalition of Patriotic Societies (Washington, D.C.); American Committee on Immigration Policies; American Committee to Free Cuba (Arcadia, California); American Conservative Union (Washington, D.C.); American Council for Judaism; American Council of Christian Laymen (Madison, Wisconsin); American Council of Christian Churches (New York); American Economic Foundation (New York); American Education Association; American Educational League; American Enterprise Association (Washington, D.C.); American Eugenics Party (Los Angeles, California); American Flag Committee (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania); American Friends of the Captive Nations; American Heritage Protective Committee (San Antonio, Texas); American Heritage Protective Committee ("Unfolding Social Security" (1952)); American Institute for Economic Research, Great Barrington, Massachusetts; American League for the Defense of Jewish Rights (later the Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League to Champion Human Rights); American Legion; American Legion National Americanism Commission; American Legion--Anti-Subversive Committee, Seattle, Washington; American Medical Association--Physicians opposed to fluoridation, Detroit, Michigan; American Mercury; American Nationalist, Inglewood, California; American Nazi Party, Arlington, Virginia; American Opinion; American Party; American Patriots in Defense of Christian Observances; American Progress Foundation; American Public Relations Forum ("Brainwashing: A Synthesis of the Russian Textbook on Psychopolitics" (undated)); American Public Relations Forum, Inc.; American Renaissance Book Club, Chicago, Illinois; American Renaissance Book Club ("The Chickens of the Interventionist Liberals Have Come Home to Roost," by Harry Elmer Barnes (1953)); American Security Council (ASC), Washington, D.C.; American States' Rights Party; American Survival Party; American Taxpayers Union of California, Inc.; American Way Program; American-Asian Educational Exchange, New York; American-Southern Africa Council; Americanism Educational League; Americans for America; Americans for Conservative Education; Americans for Constitutional Action ACA Index; Americans for Constitutional Action, Washington, D.C.; Americans for Freedom, Santa Barbara, California (Karen McKay); Americans for Mental Freedom, Merced, California; Americans for National Security; Americans United Council; Americans United for Separation of Church and State; America's Future; Thomas J. Anderson, Editorial articles; Tom Anderson "Farm Ranch"; Anglo-Saxon Committee; Anti-Communist Liaison (Committee of Correspondence), Arlington, Virginia; Appeal to Reason; Arizona Captive Nations Committee; Arizona Committee for Economic Freedom; Arizona Committee of Taxpayers, Inc.; Arizonans for America; Arizonans for General Walker, Phoenix, Arizona; Arizonans for Mental Freedom; Herbert W. and Ted Garner Armstrong; George W. Armstrong; John M. Ashbrook; "A Jewish View on Segregation" (Association of Citizen's Councils of Mississippi, undated) [online at http://digilib.usm.edu/cdm/compound­object/collection/manu/id/1948]; Assembly of Captive European Nations; Associates for Americanism; Association of Citizen's Councils, Greenwood, Mississippi; Australian League of Rights; Karl Baarslag; Harry Elmer Barnes; Barry Goldwater for President Committee; Fanchon Battelle; Bay Area Conservatives; Hilaire Belloc; Ezra Taft Benson; Bible News Flashes ("The Seven Judgments," by W. D. Herrstrom (1934)); E. M. Biggers; Bilderberg conferences; Bill Knowland for Governor Committee; Aldrich Blake; Bookmailer, Inc.; Anthony T. Bouscaren; Spruille Braden; John W. Bricker; Bricker Amendment; British Israel Association; The Buckman Press; "How the Communists Use Religion," by Edgar C. Bundy (undated); Eric D. Butler; California Free Enterprise Association; California Freedom Forum II; California League of Christian Parents; Californians' Committee to Combat Communism; Campaign for the 48 States; Canadian Intelligence Publications; Canadian League of Rights; Candour Publishing Company ("B.B.C.: A National Menace," by A. K. Chesterton (1972)); Cardinal Mindszenty Foundation, St. Louis, Missouri; The Catholic Challenger (W. L. King); Catholic Race Preservation Committee; Caxton Printers Limited; Caxton Printers ("Ex America," by Garet Garrett (undated)); "Persecution--Jewish and Christian," by Charles E. Coughlin; Chedney Press ("Wake Up America!" by Emanuel Josephson (1958)); A. K. Chesterton; Christian Alliance Against Illuminism; Christian Anti-Communism Crusade; Christian Anti-Communism Crusade--Fred Schwarz; Christian Beacon Press; Christian Crusade Publications; Christian Crusade, Tulsa, Oklahoma; Christian Crusader; Christian Educational Association, Union, New Jersey; Christian Freedom Foundation--Howard E. Kershner; Christian Nationalist Crusade, Los Angeles, California; Christian Nationalist Party, Los Angeles, California; Christian Patriotic Rally; Christian Patriots, Chester, Pennsylvania; Christian resistance; Christian Scientists to Combat Communism in the Christian Science Movement; Christian Youth against Communism, Los Angeles, California; Church League of America, Wheaton, Illinois; Church infiltration by communists; Cinema Educational Guild, Hollywood, California; Circuit Riders, Inc., Cincinnati, Ohio; Circuit Riders, Inc. ("Recognize Red China?" (1958)); Citizens Committee for a Free Cuba; Citizens Committee for Constitutional Liberties; Citizens Committee on Fluoridation; Citizens Committee to Restore U.S. Constitutional Sovereignty, Dallas, Texas; Citizens Council, Jackson, Mississippi; Citizens for Educational Freedom; Citizens Foreign Aid Committee, Washington, D.C.; Citizens Foreign Aid Committee ("Foreign Aid and You" (1959)); Citizens Protective Association, St. Louis, Missouri; Citizens' Council of Greater New Orleans; Citizens' Councils of America; Upton Close; Closer Ups ("The Anti-Defamation League and its Use in the World Communist Offensive," by Robert H. Williams (1947)); Committee for Survival of a Free Congress, Washington, D.C.; Committee on Anti-Communist Action, Centerville, Ohio; Committee of the States ("Save the Republic," by Robert C. Olney (1967)); Committee for 48 States, Washington D.C.; Committee of One Million ("Red China and the United Nations," by Peter H. Dominick (undated)); Committee on State Sovereignty ("The Citizen in Politics" (1958)); Committee of Russian Slaves of Jewish Communism, Union, New Jersey; Committee against Summit Entanglements, Belmont, Massachusetts; Committee on New Alternatives in the Middle East; Committee on Un-American Activities; Committee for the Hollywood Ten, Hollywood, California; Committee for McCarthyism ("The Red-addled 'brain' behind the Scripps-Howard smear of Senator Joe McCarthy," by Joseph P. Kamp (1954)); Committee on Pan-American Policy ("The Panama Canal: it must remain American," by Dr. Charles Callan Tansill (1963); Committee of Christian Laymen; Committee for Constitutional Government, Inc., New York; Committee for Pillion Resolution; Committee of Endorsers; Committee of One Million against the Admission of Communist China; Committee to Defend the Rights of the Arab Students and Workers, San Francisco, California; Committee to Save the McCarran Act; Committee for the Preservation of the Constitution ("What Is Metropolitan Government?" (1958); Common Sense, Union, New Jersey; Communism; "Israel's Fingerprints: Biblical Identification of the True Israel," by Bertrand L. Comparet (1949); Congress of Freedom ("The Secret Government of the United States," by Mary M. Davison (undated)); Congress of Freedom, Inc., Omaha, Nebraska; Connally Amendment; Conservative Book Club, New Rochelle, New York; Constitution Party U.S.A. ("To Restore and Preserve ..."); Constitution Party; Constitutional Educational League; "Communist Psychological Warfare (Brainwashing)," consultation with Edward Hunter (1958); Council for Statehood--Mary M. Davison (The Robbers' Roost (1964), The Second Rebellion (1971), and The Tale of the Guinea Pigs "greeting girls" (1960s)); Counterattack, New York; Kent Courtney; Kent and Phoebe Courtney; John G. Crommelin; Cathrine Curtis; Dan Smoot Report; Daughters of the American Revolution; Mary Davison; Defenders of the Christian Faith--Gerald B. Winrod ("The Great Christian Pledge" (1954) and "The United Nations, a tower of Babel" (1953)); Defenders of American Education; Defenders of State Sovereignty and Individual Liberties, Arlington Chapter, Virginia; Defenders of State Sovereignty and Individual Liberties; Defenders of the American Constitution, Washington, D.C.; Defenders of the Christian Faith; Defenders, Inc.; "Blueprint for Victory," by Robert DePugh (1966) [online at http://www.resist.com/Instauration/OtherPubs-20120723/BlueprintForVictory-DePugh.pdf]; Devin-Adair Company ("The Constitution Be Damned," by Orson Kilborn (1952)); Martin Dies; Elizabeth Dilling; Hilaire du Berrier; Eagle Forum ("The Real World of Working ..." (undated)); James Oliver Eastland (The Supreme Court's Modern Scientific Authorities in the Segregation Cases. Speech of Hon. James O. Eastland of Mississippi in the Senate of the United States Thursday, May 26, 1955) [online at http://digital.lib.uh.edu/­collection/integ/item/234]; Edmondson Economic Service; Education Information, Inc.; Educational Fund of the Citizen's Councils--"The Ugly Truth about the NAACP," by Eugene Cook (circa 1955)); Educational News Service; "The American Eagle Weapons for Freedom," by Edwin A. Walker (1961); Elmore County White Citizens Council, Wetumpka, Alabama; Harry T. Everingham; Facts Forum ("The Communist Party of the United States of America: What it Is, How it Works: A Handbook for Americans" (1955); Myron C. Fagan; Fascism; Federation for Constitutional Government; Bonner Fellers; Fellowship of Reconciliation; Florida Minuteman; Florida Coalition of Patriotic Societies, Tampa, Florida; Fluoridation; John T. Flynn; For All Comprehensive Truth Committee; For America; For America of Arizona; For America of California; For America, Washington, D.C.; Foreign Policy Association; Foundation for Economic Education, Irvington-on-Hudson, New York; Foundation for Re-education (Samuel Evans Hayes); Foundations; Free Enterprise Institute; Free Gold Market; Free Men Speak; The Free Society; Free Trade Union Committee of the American Federation of Labor [publisher of "Gulag"-Slavery, Inc. The Documented Map of Forced Labor Camps in Soviet Russia (1951)]; Flick-Reedy Corporation; Benjamin H. Freedman; Freedom Builders of America; Freedom Center (Portland, OR); Freedom Club of Downtown Chicago (Harry T. Everingham); Freedom Fighters; The Freedom School (The Pine Tree Press, Colorado Springs, Colorado); Freedoms Foundation at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania; Freeman, New York; Friends of General Walker, Dallas, Texas; Friends of Louis F. Budenz; Friends of Rhodesian Independence; Fundamental American Freedoms, Washington, D.C.; Garet Garrett; Goldwater for 1964; Greater Phoenix School of Anti-Communism; Greater Nebraskan; Elmore D. Greaves; Guardians of our American Heritage; Billy James Hargis; Headlines; Heads-Up; W. D. Herrstrom; Highlander Folk School, Knoxville, Tennessee; Alger Hiss; Adolf Hitler; Frank E. Holman; J. Edgar Hoover; Housewives Organized for Better Living; Bela Hubbard, Tucson, Arizona; Human Events; Humanitarian Society--R. Swinburne Clymer; Independent American, New Orleans, Louisiana; Industrial Defense Association, Inc.; Institute for American Democracy, Inc.; Institute for Special Research; Intercollegiate Society of Individualists, Inc.; Interim Committee for a New Party; International Alliance Against Communism; International Youth Federation for Freedom, Inc.; "Let's Try Freedom Again," by Jack B. Tenney (1954); "Mind-washing in America; a conspiracy against liberty," by Jack B. Tenney (undated); "Zion's Trojan Horse," by Jack B. Tenney (1954); Joint Council for Repatriation (Willis Carto); John Birch Society, Belmont, Massachusetts; George Racey Jordan; Justice for Pelley Committee; Joseph P. Kamp; Verne P. Kaub; Keep America Committee, Los Angeles, California; Kingdom Tract Society; Granville F. Knight; William F. Knowland; Fred C. Koch; Ku Klux Klan; Bracken Lee; Fulton Lewis, Jr.; League for Peace with Justice in Palestine (Benjamin H. Freedman); Liberation, New York; Liberation News Service; Liberty Amendment Committee of the U.S.A.; Liberty and property; Liberty Bell Press, Florissant, Missouri; Liberty Line, Bellingham, Washington; Liberty Lobby, Washington, D.C.; Life Line, Dallas, Texas; Charles Lindbergh; Lutheran Research Society, Detroit, Michigan; Douglas MacArthur; Joseph R. McCarthy; W. Henry MacFarland; Carl McIntire; MacArthur Freedom Association; George Malone; Clarence Manion; Manion Forum, South Bend, Indiana; MARAH, Inc., Florida; Vito Marcantonio; Maricopa County Co-ordinating Council of Federated Women's Republican Clubs; Victor E. Marsden; Maryland Constitutionalists, Baltimore, Maryland; J. B. Matthews; Mental health; Mesa Citizens Information Center; Methodist Laymen of North Hollywood; Metropolitan government; Minute Women; Minute Women U.S.A., Inc., Virginia Branch; Minutemen; Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission; Modern Age; Ben Moreell; George Van Horn Moseley; Mothers' Crusade for Victory over Communism; Karl E. Mundt--Historical and Educational Foundation, Washington, D.C.; Lyle H. Munson; National Association for the Preservation of White People, Columbia, South Carolina; National Blue Star Mothers of America, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; National Christian Association, Chicago, Illinois; National Citizens Protective Association; National Citizens Union; National Committee against Fluoridation, Washington, D.C.; National Committee for Economic Freedom, Los Angeles, California; National Committee of Christian Laymen, Phoenix, Arizona; National Committee to Uphold Constitutional Government, New York; National Council for American Education; National Defense Committee of the Daughters of the American Revolution; National Economic Council, New York; National Education Program; National Indignation Convention, Dallas, Texas; National Policy Committee; National Putnam Letters Committee; National Renaissance Party, New York; National Republic; National Research Bureau, Inc.; National Review; National Right to Work Committee, Washington, D.C.; National States Rights Party, Louisiana branch, New Orleans; National States Rights Party, Birmingham, Alabama; National Strategy Committee (American Security Council); National White Americans Party; National White People's Party, Asheville, North Carolina; National Youth Alliance, Washington, D.C.; Network of Patriotic Letter Writers; 1976 Committee (William J. Grede); New Republic: "The Financial Affairs of McCarthy ...," 1953; Nuremberg trials; Revilo P. Oliver; OMNI Publications, Hawthorne, California; Operation America, Washington, D.C.; Organization to Repeal Federal Income Taxes, Los Angeles, California; Patrick Henry Group, Richmond, Virginia; Patrick Chenoweth Defense Committee, Oakland, California; Patrick Henry League, Yonkers, New York; Patriotic Research Bureau--Chicago; Patriotic Order--Sons of America, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Paul Revere Associated Yeomen, Inc.; Paul Revere Patriots, Phoenix, Arizona; Westbrook Pegler; Plain-Speaker Publishing Company; Potsdam Agreement; Ezra Pound; Karl Prussion; Rampart College; Ronald Reagan; "Treaties to Destroy America," by Bryson Reinhardt (1954); Review of the News; Eddie V. Rickenbacker; Right, San Francisco, California; Rockwell reports; Archibald B. Roosevelt; Murray Rothbard; John H. Rousselot; Russian Slaves of Jewish Communism, Union, New Jersey; S. O. Sanderson, Rochester, Minnesota; Schlafly for Congress Committee, Alton, Illinois; John G. Schmitz, Santa Ana, California; J. Creagh Scott; Segregation; W. Cleon Skousen; Gerald L. K. Smith; Dan Smoot; George Sokolsky; Spiritual Mobilization; Standard Publications, Hollywood, California ("The Jews Won't Take Jack Tenney," by Jack B. Tenney (undated)) Alan Stang; States sovereignty; States' Rights Council of Atlanta, Georgia; Jeremiah Stokes; Subversive organizations; George Edward Sullivan (Wolves in sheep's clothing (Washington, D.C.: Sodality Union, 1937)) [online at https://ia800406.us.archive.org/1/items/wolvesinsheepscl00sull/wolvesinsheepscl00sull.pdf]; Supreme Court Amendment League (SCALE), Washington, D.C.; Charles Callan Tansill; Strom Thurmond; Ralph de Toledano; Torchbearers of America, Inc.; Truth about Civil Turmoil; Truth about Cuba Committee, Miami, Florida; Twentieth Century Evangelism; Twentieth Century Reformation Hour, Collingswood, New Jersey; United Klans of America, Inc.; United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO); United Republicans of America; United Societies of Methodist Laymen, Inc.; United States Day Committee, Inc., Tulsa, Oklahoma; United States Flag Committee; United World Federalists, Inc.; University of Arizona Young Republicans; Wickliffe B. Vennard; Vigilant Women for the Bricker Amendment, Hinsdale, Illinois; Virginia Commission on Constitutional Government; Voice of Americanism; Volunteers for Goldwater; Edwin A. Walker; Walker Defense Fund, Dallas, Texas; George C. Wallace, Montgomery, Alabama; Agnes Waters; We the People; Robert Welch; White American; Alice Widener; Robert H. Williams; Charles A. Willoughby; Gerald B. Winrod; Women Investors Research Institute, Washington, D.C.; Women's Voice, Chicago, Illinois; World Youth Crusade for Freedom; Yalta Agreement; Glenn O. Young; Young Americans for Freedom - National; Young Americans for Freedom - Phoenix Chapter; and Youth for the Voluntary Prayer Amendment.