Devin A. Garrity Papers

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Devin A. Garrity Papers http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt9s20396n No online items Inventory of the Devin A. Garrity papers Finding aid prepared by Richard E. Duboc and Elizabeth Phillips Hoover Institution Library and Archives © 2013, 2014 434 Galvez Mall Stanford University Stanford, CA 94305-6003 [email protected] URL: http://www.hoover.org/library-and-archives Inventory of the Devin A. Garrity 82032 1 papers Title: Devin A. Garrity papers Date (inclusive): 1912-1981 Collection Number: 82032 Contributing Institution: Hoover Institution Library and Archives Language of Material: English Physical Description: 52 manuscript boxes, 1 oversize box, 30 motion picture film reels(24.2 Linear Feet) Abstract: Correspondence, manuscripts and galleys of books, reviews, printed matter, photographs, and motion picture film relating to publishing activities of the Devin-Adair Company. Creator: Garrity, Devin A. Creator: Devin-Adair Company Hoover Institution Library & Archives Access The collection is open for research; materials must be requested at least two business days in advance of intended use. Publication Rights For copyright status, please contact the Hoover Institution Library & Archives. Acquisition Information Acquired by the Hoover Institution Library & Archives in 1982. Preferred Citation [Identification of item], Devin A. Garrity papers, [Box no., Folder no. or title], Hoover Institution Library & Archives. Biographical/Historical Note American publisher; president, Devin-Adair Company, 1939-1981. Scope and Content of Collection Correspondence, manuscripts, published materials, reviews, articles, photographs, and motion picture film relating to the publishing activities of the Devin-Adair Company and editor-in-chief Devin A. Garrity. Subjects of interest include ecological conservation, Irish culture, Africa, Spain, and conservative politics in America. Includes comprehensive alphabetical lists of correspondence and published authors. Subjects and Indexing Terms Motion pictures Publishers and publishing -- United States Biographical File 1954-1980 box 19, folder 2-4 Articles and speeches 1954-1980 Scope and Contents note Includes correspondence, newsletters, news clippings, and writings of Devin Garrity and others. box 22, folder 6 Articles and notes, general 1957 April-1970 November box 20, folder 7 Head shots, photographs 1965 box 23, folder 7 Personal file, correspondence, articles 1969 November-1971 June Correspondence 1938-1981 General 1939-1980 Scope and Contents note Includes correspondence with multiple authors and general subjects. box 22, folder 3 1939-1963 April box 45, folder 6 1949 September-1979 March box 20, folder 1 1951 July-1976 August Inventory of the Devin A. Garrity 82032 2 papers Correspondence 1938-1981 General 1939-1980 box 47, folder 7 1952 January-1972 February box 47, folder 8 1967 December-1972 May box 47, folder 1 1972 July-1980 December box 45, folder 7 For signature 1970 January-1976 November box 29, folder 6 Flynn-F.D.R 1950 April-1961 November Scope and Contents note Also includes miscellaneous columns, articles, and newspaper clippings. box 20, folder 8 American Book Club, Gordon Schendel, Herbert Sass 1950 November-1965 August Scope and Contents note Also includes articles. box 51, folder 19 Donal Rechberg and Fred Hartley 1955 February-1958 March box 51, folder 7 William F. Buckley, B. H. Liddell Hart, et al. 1956 February-1959 February box 51, folder 11 Victor von Hagen, Marjory Sanger, and Richard C. Potter 1957 March-1958 January box 51, folder 13 George R. Jordan, Louis P. Lochner, et al. 1958 January-1963 September box 51, folder 14 William La Varre, Admiral Karl Donitz, et al. 1958 February-1962 May box 51, folder 15 Alden Stahr, Herbert R. Sass, et al. 1958 April-December box 50, folder 12 Otto Eisenschiml and Raphael Plumpelly 1958 September-1959 November box 51, folder 10 James Plunkett, Elizabeth Rivers, et al. 1961 July-1963 March box 25, folder 6 C.L. Sonnichsen, U.T.E.P. 1966 January-1968 October Scope and Contents note Also includes articles and newspaper clippings. box 19, folder 1 Graham Carey, Christopher Derrick, and C. Stillman 1966 July-1968 January box 47, folder 2 Good Health To You 1969 September box 37, folder 20 Al J. Venter and Zambesi Salient 1974 July-1975 July Scope and Contents note Also includes receipts. Alphabetical 1938-1981 A box 23, folder 8 1953 January-July box 13, folder 10 1961 December-1967 January box 15, folder 4 1964 October-1965 December box 40, folder 5-6 1977-1979 July box 51, folder 6 Gregory Allen 1957 December-1962 November B box 51, folder 4 1958 January-1960 November box 23, folder 1 1961 December-1963 December box 15, folder 2 1965 February-December box 13, folder 6 1966 February-1967 January box 26, folder 8 1967 January-December box 40, folder 7 1978 box 39, folder 4 1979 October-November box 40, folder 9 John W. Blodgett, Jr. 1973 January-1977 February box 49, folder 1 John N. Booth 1976 Scope and Contents note Also includes a newsletter. C box 23, folder 2 1959 March-1961 October box 15, folder 3 1965 January-December box 13, folder 5 1965 December-1966 December Inventory of the Devin A. Garrity 82032 3 papers Correspondence 1938-1981 Alphabetical 1938-1981 box 39, folder 5 1978 October-November box 39, folder 6 1979 August-September box 48, folder 1 Philip S. Callahan 1975 July-1977 December box 39, folder 3 Norine Campbell 1973 July-1981 February box 48, folder 4 Linda Clark 1975 November-1977 November box 51, folder 20 Stuart Cloete 1964 November-1965 March Scope and Contents note Also includes clippings. box 39, folder 2 Dorothy Crispo 1973 August-1975 November D box 36, folder 18 1957 December-1963 November box 15, folder 1 1965 February-1966 September box 13, folder 4 1966 February-December box 26, folder 7 1967 January-December box 39, folder 10 1979 October box 48, folder 5 Christopher Derrick 1972 February-1977 February box 39, folder 9 John Henry Dick 1971 February-1980 November box 37, folder 23 Lord Dunsany 1953 August-November E box 24, folder 8 1958 December-1961 September box 36, folder 17 1962 January-1963 April box 13, folder 3 1964 December-1966 November box 16, folder 14 1965 February-December box 26, folder 6 1966 June-1967 December box 39, folder 13 1978 January-July box 39, folder 11 1979 box 36, folder 16 Catharyn Elwood 1958 January-1963 September box 48, folder 6 Catharyn Elwood 1973 May-1975 October box 48, folder 2 Julius Epstein 1955 August-1975 November F box 36, folder 4 1961 January-1962 December box 16, folder 13 1964 June-1965 December box 13, folder 2 1966 February-November box 26, folder 2 1967 box 39, folder 14 1978 box 39, folder 16 1979 G box 36, folder 5 1961 April-1963 November box 16, folder 12 1965 February-1966 February box 13, folder 1 1966 box 26, folder 5 1967 box 39, folder 17 1978 box 39, folder 18 1979 H box 36, folder 7 1961 March-1963 January box 16, folder 11 1964 December-1965 December box 14, folder 3 1966 February-1967 June box 26, folder 4 1967 box 39, folder 19 1978 box 39, folder 20 1979 box 39, folder 22 Maurice Hennessy 1974 March-1980 November I box 36, folder 10 1962 box 14, folder 4 1964 October-1966 December box 16, folder 10 1964 December-1965 November box 26, folder 3 1967 March-October box 39, folder 24 1977 October-1978 June Inventory of the Devin A. Garrity 82032 4 papers Correspondence 1938-1981 Alphabetical 1938-1981 box 38, folder 1 1979 J box 36, folder 9 1961 February-1962 February box 16, folder 9 1965 March-October box 14, folder 5 1966 February-October box 26, folder 1 1967 May-December box 38, folder 2 1978 box 38, folder 4 1979 box 38, folder 3 Wallace Johnson 1975 July-1976 November box 48, folder 3 Dorothea V.G. Jones 1973 August K box 36, folder 8 1961 February-1963 March box 16, folder 8 1964 December-1966 March box 14, folder 10 1966 February-December box 27, folder 10 1966 October-1967 December box 38, folder 5 1978 box 38, folder 6 1979 box 49, folder 16 Howard Kershner 1971 April-1979 August Scope and Contents note Also includes articles. box 13, folder 7 K-L 1961 April-1963 August L box 36, folder 11 1961 March-1963 September box 16, folder 6 1965 box 14, folder 6 1966 February-December box 24, folder 5 1966 December-1968 December box 27, folder 9 1967 January-November box 38, folder 10 1978 box 38, folder 11 1979 box 46, folder 2 Lee Layton 1975 October box 49, folder 14 Dell Leonardi 1975 March-1976 July box 38, folder 9 Dell Leonardi 1977 January-1980 January M box 14, folder 22 1955 August-1966 December box 50, folder 3 1958 August-1961 August box 51, folder 2 1961 January-1963 October box 16, folder 5 1964 December-1966 February box 27, folder 6 1966 September-1967 December box 27, folder 5 1968 box 24, folder 6 1969 January-October box 38, folder 12 1978 box 38, folder 18 1979 box 50, folder 2 Seumas MacManus 1957 September-1958 November box 51, folder 17 Jorge Manach 1950 box 36, folder 1 Wayne Martin 1948-1976 April box 49, folder 17 Wayne Martin 1975 February-1977 December Scope and Contents note Also includes articles. box 38, folder 16 Wayne Martin 1977 November-1979 November box 50, folder 1 Denis Meadows 1959 June-1963 September Scope and Contents note Also includes notes. Inventory of the Devin A. Garrity 82032 5 papers Correspondence 1938-1981 Alphabetical 1938-1981 box 50, folder 11 John F. Montgomery 1947 May-1949 September Scope and Contents note Also includes clippings and a photograph.
Recommended publications
  • William F. Buckley Jr., National Review E a Crítica Conservadora Ao Liberalismo E Os Direitos Civis Nos Eua, 1955-1968
    UNIVERSIDADE FEDERAL FLUMINENSE CENTRO DE ESTUDOS GERAIS INSTITUTO DE CIÊNCIAS HUMANAS E FILOSOFIA PROGRAMA DE PÓS-GRADUAÇÃO EM HISTÓRIA RODRIGO FARIAS DE SOUSA WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY JR., NATIONAL REVIEW E A CRÍTICA CONSERVADORA AO LIBERALISMO E OS DIREITOS CIVIS NOS EUA, 1955-1968. NITERÓI 2013 RODRIGO FARIAS DE SOUSA WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY JR., NATIONAL REVIEW E A CRÍTICA CONSERVADORA AO LIBERALISMO E OS DIREITOS CIVIS NOS EUA, 1955-1968. Tese apresentada ao curso de Pós-Graduação em História Social da Universidade Federal Fluminense, como requisito parcial para o exame de qualificação para o obtenção do Grau de Doutor. Área de concentração: Poder e Sociedade. Orientador: Prof.ª Dra. CECÍLIA AZEVEDO Niterói 2013 Ficha Catalográfica elaborada pela Biblioteca Central do Gragoatá S725 SOUSA, RODRIGO FARIAS DE. William F. Buckley Jr., National Review e a crítica conservadora ao liberalismo e os direitos civis nos EUA, 1955-1968 / Rodrigo Farias de Sousa. – 2013. 371 f. Orientador: Cecília da Silva Azevedo. Tese (Doutorado em História Social) – Universidade Federal Fluminense, Instituto de Ciências Humanas e Filosofia, Departamento de História, 2013. Bibliografia: f. 343-371. 1. Conservadorismo. 2. Estados Unidos. 3. Ideologia. 4. Direita (Ciência Política). 5. Liberalismo. 6. National Review (Periódico). 7. Guerra Fria. 8. Raça. 9. Direito Civil. I. Azevedo, Cecília da Silva. II. Universidade Federal RODRIGO FARIAS DE SOUSA WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY JR., NATIONAL REVIEW E A CRÍTICA CONSERVADORA AO LIBERALISMO E OS DIREITOS CIVIS NOS EUA, 1955-1968 Tese apresentada ao curso de Pós-Graduação em História da Universidade Federal Fluminense, como requisito parcial para obtenção do título de Doutor. Área de concentração: História social.
    [Show full text]
  • The Liberal Mind by William F
    The Liberal Mind By William F. Buckley, Jr . William F. Buckley, Jr ., author of God and Man at Yale, co-authored with L. Brent Bozell the widely-discussed book McCarthy and His Enemies. Buckley, a 1950 Yale graduate, is a lecturer and regular panelist on Fact s Forums ANSWERS FOR AMERICANS . Buckley has projected a new maga- zine, National Weekly, which, according to Newsweek, is slated to begin publication in September. N recent years, a number of importan t nists, and they, quite evidently, do no t I books and articles have been written, understand the Communists . I believe and important things thought and sai d that our most immediate challenge is to understand our leaders ; and having about the Communist. What is he like ? stream of contemporary political and What goes on in his mind? What is he understood them we must either dis- possess them of power, or make them philosophical thought. the swollen an d afraid of? How can we move him? How irrepressible stream fed for so man y does he operate? What is he likely to d o understand, or prepare to die. For our n leaders, call them what you will—socia l years by the waters of rationalism, posi- in this situation, or that one? How ca tivism, Marxism, and utopianism . we vanquish him here, contain him democrats, Fabians, progressive moder- there, coexist with him over there? W e ates ; I call them Liberals, and I spel l As regards contemporary American haven't mastered the Communist tem- that word with a capital "L"—are the controversies, the Liberal is likely to feel perament, or the Communist mind, true ; unknown in the great equation .
    [Show full text]
  • Alfred M. Lilienthal Papers
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf9k40070k No online items Register of the Alfred M. Lilienthal papers Finding aid prepared by Linda Bernard Hoover Institution Archives 434 Galvez Mall Stanford University Stanford, CA, 94305-6010 (650) 723-3563 [email protected] © 1998 Register of the Alfred M. 82070 1 Lilienthal papers Title: Alfred M. Lilienthal papers Date (inclusive): 1936-1999 Collection Number: 82070 Contributing Institution: Hoover Institution Archives Language of Material: English and Arabic Physical Description: 260 manuscript boxes, 2 cubic foot boxes, 9 oversize boxes, 1 card file box, 189 envelopes, 2 motion picture film reels(129.2 linear feet) Abstract: Speeches and writings, correspondence, notes, memoranda, press releases, serial issues, conference papers, interviews, studies, clippings, other printed matter, photographs, motion picture film, and sound recordings relating to the Middle East, Arab-Israeli relations, and American foreign policy in the region. Also available on microfilm (157 reels). Physical Location: Hoover Institution Archives Creator: Lilienthal, Alfred M. Access Collection is open for research. Use copies of some sound recordings and motion picture film in this collection are available for immediate access. To listen to other sound recordings or to view videos during your visit, please contact the Archives at least two working days before your arrival. We will then advise you of the accessibility of the material you wish to see or hear. Please note that not all audiovisual material is immediately accessible. Publication Rights For copyright status, please contact the Hoover Institution Archives. Preferred Citation [Identification of item], Alfred M. Lilienthal papers, [Box no.], Hoover Institution Archives. Acquisition Information Acquired by the Hoover Institution Archives in 1982.
    [Show full text]
  • Platt on Hendershot, 'What's Fair on the Air? Cold War Right-Wing Broadcasting and the Public Interest'
    JHistory Platt on Hendershot, 'What's Fair on the Air? Cold War Right-Wing Broadcasting and the Public Interest' Review published on Thursday, December 13, 2012 Heather Hendershot. What's Fair on the Air? Cold War Right-Wing Broadcasting and the Public Interest. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2011. 272 pp. $27.50 (paper), ISBN 978-0-226-32678-8; $91.00 (cloth), ISBN 978-0-226-32677-1. Reviewed by Daniel Platt (Brown University)Published on Jhistory (December, 2012) Commissioned by Heidi Tworek “I’m not just an entertainer,” the songwriter-turned-television-demagogue Lonesome Rhodes crowed in the 1957 film A Face in the Crowd: “I’m an influence, a wielder of opinion, a force--a force!” Alas, Rhodes’s celebrity proves transient and his grand ambitions a touch too grand, and this begs a question: what status is due to history’s underachieved zealots? In What’s Fair on the Air? Heather Hendershot examines the careers of four such mid-century figures whose extremist conservative harangues on radio and television anticipated the New Right that would rise after their own stars had faded. Seeking to shed light on the relationship between media and political change, Hendershot, a professor in the Department of Media Studies at Queens College, argues that these broadcasters--H. L. Hunt, Dan Smoot, Carl McIntire, and Billy James Hargis--not only tilled “the ground ... for the eventual triumph of [Ronald] Reagan” but also “were the embarrassing nuts who had to be left behind for a more legitimate and effective conservative movement to emerge” (pp.
    [Show full text]
  • «Jf HALE's Mccarthy Stand Unaltered
    WSONESDAY, BECEMBEB I; . ATtraft Dtiljr Nti Pm h w m U'-b h m lianrlfrBter ^Sttraitts 'm r n m r t m H anchuU r^A City of FUJage Chahn ^ - -- ---------- " «jf HALE'S VOL. LXXin. NO. M A4«urM4af o« tags M) M A h p iE 8n !il. CONN.. THURSDAY. DRCEMBER 3,1958 (EIGHTBCN PAGES). PRICK PIVB CENTS '30Pro-R^d Ungchediiled Stop H oldbacks McCarthy Stand Unaltered Rejec t UN Panmunjom, Dec. 8 ifPy— k second group of 80 South Koreans today unanimouily. ute chose life under the Commu* niste, giving .'Allied perauad* era a total blank for two days of effprts to woo home balky Telb of Being Buried Alive war prisoners. Senate Unit|i There was no violence, but many Denies Ike prieonera were mors talkative than tha so who yesterday llstoMd pas* atvely to 'KOiC axplalnara, than T o R esum e choee CommunUm. Challenged Tha D.N. Command said SO more South Koreans of S28 who refused 'repatriation will be interviewed to* Spy P r o b e A s L e a d e r morrow starting at t a. ra. (7 p. m. E8T Thursdayi. Washington, Doc. 3 (/P)— Waahington, Dec. 3-(/P )^ Others SUII Walt Thera was no Indication when The Senate Internal Security Sen. McCarthy (R*Wis) stuck S3 Americans and 1 Briton who aubcomqiittee decided today to hie guns today in hie die* stayed with the Communiata wUl to go ahead with public hear­ agreement with the admin- be called. ings in Waahington after ac­ stration on foreign policy, Allied officers expreiaed the doM get you placet with \ / opinion that Communist leaders in cepting the Canadian gov­ )ut aaid any contention that the FOW compound probably had ernment’s terms for a secret ie ia challenging Preaident sent'their most thoroughly 'indoc* interview with Igor Gouzen­ Eiaenhower’s GOP leadership trinated fellow prisonera to the ko in Canada.
    [Show full text]
  • Open Cho YS Thesis.Pdf
    The Pennsylvania State University The Graduate School College of Communications COMPETITION AND PROGRAM TYPE DIVERSITY IN THE OVER-THE-AIR TELEVISION INDUSTRY, 1943-2005 A Thesis in Mass Communications by Young Shin Cho © 2007 Young Shin Cho Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy August 2007 The thesis of Young-Shin Cho was reviewed and approved* by the following: Richard Taylor Palmer Chair of Telecommunications Studies and Law Thesis Advisor Chair of Committee Matt Jackson Associate Professor of Communications Krishna Jayakar Associate Professor of Communications Lynette Kvasny Assistant Professor of Information Sciences and Technology John S. Nichols Professor of Communications Associate Dean for Graduates Studies and Research *Signatures are on file in the Graduate School ABSTRACT Competition and diversity are touchstones in media policy, but the relationship between them is not clear despite a great number of studies because even studies dealing with their relationship, did not measure the intensity of competition. This paper investigates the relationship between market competition and program type diversity in the over-the-air television industry. Specifically, market competition is divided into intra-network competition and intra-media competition, i.e. terrestrial television vs. cable TV. Also this paper uses a comprehensive model of program types, with 281 program type categories, which have never been used in previous studies. The results show that program type diversity keeps decreasing over time and intra-network competition has a negative effect on program type diversity. Also, intra- network competition is a more important factor on program type diversity than inter- media competition.
    [Show full text]
  • I. ELECTION YEAR ISSUES by Judith E
    I. ELECTION YEAR ISSUES by Judith E. Kindell and John Francis Reilly 1. Introduction In a presidential election year, many exempt organizations become more active in what has been loosely termed "political activity". Some exempt organizations use this opportunity to encourage people to participate in the electoral process. Others increase their advocacy activity to take advantage of the heightened awareness given to many issues during the course of a campaign. This advocacy activity may be to raise public awareness of particular issues, to influence the passage of legislation concerning particular issues (lobbying), or to elect candidates based upon their position on particular issues (electioneering). The Internal Revenue Code distinguishes between these types of activities, potentially resulting in differing tax consequences. This article focuses on the federal tax rules applicable to exempt organizations concerning electioneering activities.1 Questions frequently arise regarding the interplay of political campaign activities and exemption from federal income tax. This article addresses many of these questions in three areas: the prohibition on political campaign activities of IRC 501(c)(3) organizations, the taxation of political organizations under IRC 527, and the political campaign activities of IRC 501(c) organizations other than those described in IRC 501(c)(3). Much has happened since the publication of this article's predecessor, "Election Year Issues," in the Exempt Organizations Continuing Professional Education Technical Instruction Program for Fiscal Year 1993 (hereinafter 1993 CPE Text). A development of singular importance occurred on July 1, 2000, when President Clinton signed Public Law 106-230, which amends the treatment of political organizations under IRC 527.
    [Show full text]
  • Si[[ INDI, Six Billion Slash Asked in Arms Spending
    V . ^ 'I V- : \ , ' ' -t/ -V X,, ■ f r ' X i ‘r ■/ - ■ ■ r- —;r---f- • r f I PAGE EIGHTEEN / t Ulmtrljpatifr lEwanlitg ^aralb raiDAY, A rtn. JT, 19W x i A. DqnH Forget the Men aM Women in the Service~^Give tg^ th& i^^ ; . Group B of the Center Congre­ Tha 'second degree will be work­ ■Mra, C harles B axter, president. MUi June C. Chambers of 156 A boutTow iiN gational Church will meet Monday ed on a..cla.ss of 25 Candidates to­ Slid members of the' executive Main street has recently been n ight a t 8 o'clock at the church'. night at'A:30 at St. James' .School board of the Women’s Club, wjiich elected treasurer of the' tipaala Average Daily. Net Pre^ Run Guest speaker wrfll be Dr. Robert by the offleers .of CampbelrCoiin- College, East Orange, N. J., chap­ ROfiltRY CLUB'S Oroup 518, Polish^Women’* Al­ T. Parson, dean of. the Kennedy cil, Knights of Columbus, led by la bringing Dorothy Rankin Sind For the Ended The Weather ter of Pal Chi, national honorary A pril 11, 1958 liance., will serve the traditional School, of Missions in Hartford. Grand Knight Charles McCarthy. ■her Marionettes for a return en­ psychology fraternity. Miss BOYS' AND GIRLS' WEEK » ■ Forecast of U. S. Weather Bnrena Swiedonka dinner on Sunday, w!,o wilt talk on Africa from which The third degree will l>e exempll- gagement to MancheaterXfor the Chambers, a high honors aludent, ___ ■ ^ 'JV / April 19, at 3 p.' m. In White he has just returned after spend- fled on this cla.s* Sunday a fte r­ benefit , of children, will serve as is also a member ■ of the college TALENT SHOW, MAY 8,1953 ; 10,936 /IJght rain changing to some Eacle Hall, North street.
    [Show full text]
  • Alfred Kohlberg Papers
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf0b69n3tv No online items Register of the Alfred Kohlberg papers Finding aid prepared by Pruda L. Lood Hoover Institution Archives 434 Galvez Mall Stanford University Stanford, CA, 94305-6010 (650) 723-3563 [email protected] © 1998 Register of the Alfred Kohlberg 61002 1 papers Title: Alfred Kohlberg papers Date (inclusive): 1937-2005 Collection Number: 61002 Contributing Institution: Hoover Institution Archives Language of Material: English Physical Description: 232 manuscript boxes, 5 card file boxes, 3 oversize boxes, 2 oversize folders (102.8 linear feet) Abstract: Correspondence, memoirs and other writings, newsletters, clippings, printed matter, photographs, and sound recordings relating to communism in the United States, China, and other parts of Asia, and to anti-communist movements in the United States. Physical Location: Hoover Institution Archives Creator: Kohlberg, Alfred, 1887-1960. Access The collection is open for research; materials must be requested at least two business days in advance of intended use. Publication Rights For copyright status, please contact the Hoover Institution Archives. Preferred Citation [Identification of item], Alfred Kohlberg papers, [Box no.], Hoover Institution Archives. Acquisition Information Acquired by the Hoover Institution Archives in 1961, with increments received in subsequent years. Accruals Materials may have been added to the collection since this finding aid was prepared. To determine if this has occurred, find the collection in Stanford University's online catalog at http://searchworks.stanford.edu/ . Materials have been added to the collection if the number of boxes listed in the online catalog is larger than the number of boxes listed in this finding aid.
    [Show full text]
  • COMPOSITE INDEX H. Res
    I- COMPOSITE INDEX TO HEARINGS, APPENDIX, AND REPORT OF THE SPECIAL COMMITTEE TO INVESTIGATE TAX-EXEMPT FOUNDATIONS AND COMPARABLE ORGANIZATIONS EIGHTY-THIRD CONGRESS SECOND SESSION ON H. Res. 217 [Index to Select Committee on Tax Exempt Foundations, Cox Committee, H . Res. 561, 82d Cong., is a supplement to this index . See p . 135 .] UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 49720 WASHINGTON : 1955 COMPOSITE INDEX TO HEARINGS OF THE SPECIAL COM- MITTEE TO INVESTIGATE TAX-EXEMPT FOUNDATIONS AND COMPARABLE ORGANIZATIONS Key to symbols Symbol Publication Date Pagination h Hearing, Part 1 May 10, 11, 18-20, 1-943 24-26, June 2-4, 8, 9, 15-18, July 2, 9, 1954 . Appendix, Part II June 21, 1954 945--1241 r House Report No.2681 Dec. 16, 1954 1-432 Cox Committee Hearings Index pre- Nov. 1S to Dec . 1-16 pared for Russell Sage Foundation 30, 1952. by Sydney S . Spivacka I This index Supplement will be found at the end of the Composite Index. III COMPOSITE INDEX A Paso AAA r400 ABA Committee a 1054 ABA Journal a 1054 Abbott, Leonard D h 220 Abel, Theodore a 1184,1185 Aberle, S. D a 1137 About the Kinsey Report (publication) h 131 ; r 69 Abraham Lincoln Brigade h 223, 253-255, 286, 317-319, 597, 598, 603, 643 ; a 989 ; r 251, 261, 292, 294, 332, 333, 337, 347, 349, 385 . Abramovitz . (See Harrison & Abramovitz .) Abrams, Charles h 779, 793 ; a 984, 990, 995 Abrams, Frank W h 346, 349, 376 ; a 1021 Abt,John r 287 Academic Freedom Rally r 342 Academy of Pedagogical Sciences h 838 Academy of Political Science h 872 Academy of Sciences of the USSR h 838, 847, 848 Acheson, Dean h 893, 918 Across Africa on Foot (publication) h 927 Across the Gobi Desert (publication) h 927 Action Committee to Free Spain Now r 228 ADA (Americans for.
    [Show full text]
  • Glen Makahonuk 1979 Outline of Guide
    GUIDE TO TH E P. A. SOROKIN MANUSCRIPTS AND PAPERS Glen Makahonuk 1979 Outline of Guide Page Manuscripts by P.A. Sorokin A. Books and Monographs B. Articles, Addresses and Papers C. Forwards and Prefaces. D. Rev iews . E. Lecture and Research notes. Published works by P.A. Sorokin A. Articles, Addresses and Papers. B. Reviews . I. Works by Others A. Reviews of Sorokin's books. B. Soroki n ' s scrapbooks. Clippings about Sorokin and his theories, A. Lecture series. B. Sorokin's studies and theories. Photographs of Sorokin and others. 11 Published works by others. 11 A. Articles about Sorokin and his theories. 11 B. Reviews of books about Sorokin and his theories. 13 C. Reviews of books which make reference to Sorokin and his theories. 14 D. Sorokin Lecture Series. 14 E. Articles not about Sorokin. 15 F. Other published material not about Sorokin. 23 Page . Miscellaneous material 24 Addendum to Sorokin Coll ecti on Correspondence Papers about Sorokin Theses Correspondence Harvard University - Administrative Files Research Center for Creative Altruism - Administrative Files Sorokin's Publications - Correspondence Microfilm and cassette tapes Sorokin project Sorokin's obituary clippings Foreign Language material Sorokin's Library - Correspondence Sorokin, Pitirim A. Manuscripts Box 1 I. Manuscripts A. Books and Monographs by P. A. Sorokin 1. The Criminality of Ruling Groups - typescript with holograph corrections - pp 1 - 82 11 published copy not in collection 2. A Long Journey: Autobiography of Pitirim A. Sorokin i)Typescript with manuscript corrections, pp 1 - 270 ii ) Carbon copy of typescript with MSS corrections, pp 1 - 264 3. The Nature of Sociology and Its Relation to Other Sciences - typescript with MSS corrections pp 1 i 138 (missing p 1 & 2 in chapter 2 and p 9 - 13 chapter 5) 4.
    [Show full text]
  • Report on Blacklisting: II. Radio-Television
    $1.25 reporton BLACKLISTING II Radio -Television JOHN COGLEY THE FUND FOR THE REPUBLIC, INC. report on BLACKLISTING II Radio - Television JOHN COGLEY THE FUND FOR THE REPUBLIC, INC. Copyright 1956 by The Fund for the Republic, Inc. CONTENTS Acknowledgment v Foreword vii Counterattack and Red Channels 1 The First Cases 22 Blacklisting: An Institution 49 Newsmen and Commentators 7 1 "Clearance" 89 The Syracuse Crusade 1 00 "Take Their Word" 110 Security on Madison Avenue 115 "Clearance" at CBS 122 Aware, Inc. 129 The Theatrical Unions 1 43 Some Interviews 163 Blacklisting Experiences 173 Industry Viewpoints 192 Blacklisting and Broadway 210 Appendix 218 Anti-Communism and Employment Policies in Radio and Television 221 by MARIE JAHODA Research Center for Human Relations New York University Index 282 iii Acknowledgmento THIS REPORT is based on the findings of a staff of researchers and reporters Edward Engberg, Harriet Davis, Gwendolyn Boulkind, Saul Blackman, Margaret Bushong and William Pfaff. The study conducted by Dr. Marie Jahoda of the Research Cen- ter for Human Relations, New York University, was wholly independent. I am indebted to the Fund for the Republic, which sponsored the study, and to all who supplied the material on which the report is based. This latter group includes not only the research staff but some two hundred persons in the radio-television industry who gave are freely of their time for lengthy interviews. Special thanks due to my assistant Michael Harrington, who gave invaluable help in organizing the mass of material collected, and to James Greene, the project secretary. The conclusions found in these pages are mine alone.
    [Show full text]