Эротические рассказы

Conservatism, the Right Wing, and the Far Right: A Guide to Archives. Archie HendersonЧитать онлайн книгу.

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


Скачать книгу
from the same WDC Collection that were previously microfilmed at LC. Of these serials on microfilm, the ones with microfilm number MOJ 073 on eight reels, some seventy-six serial titles, represent right-wing political thinkers or activists." (Checklist). Titles include Aikoku sensen (1933), Bukkyō shisō (1934), Bunka ishin (1942), Chōkoku (1940), Dai Ajia shugi (1939), Dainichi (1933-1940), Dai Ajia (1939-1940), Dai Nihon shugi (1931), Daidō (1933), Dal Nihon sekaikyō Miizu (1936), Gekkan kōdō (1941), Hinomoto (1940), Hito to kokusaku (1934), Hyakushō (1932), Ishin (1935-1937), Junsei Nihon shugi (1935), Ishin kōron (1934), Ishin kōron (1937), Jiei (1932-1933), Kaikō (1936), Kaiten jihō (1932-1933, 1936), Kakushin (1934-1936), Kakushin (1932-1933, 1936), Kami Nihon (1939-1940), Kōdō (1940), Kessen (1934), Ketsurui (1934, 1940), Kinki kōron (1935, 1939), Kinki (1932-1934), Kōkoku (1933), Kohon seikoku (1940), Kokkō (1933, 1940), Kokkyō (1932-1933, 1936), Kōkon (1934-1935), Kokumin sensen (1930), Kokusaku (1936), Kokusui jōhō (1933), Gekkan Nihon oyobi Nihonjin (1939-1940), Kōsei Nihon (1933), Kokutai kagaku (1930), Kokutai genri (1936), Kōkyō (1940-1943), Kunitama no hikari (1940), Kyokoku (1933-1934, 1937), Makoto musubi (1939-1940), Nihon seishin (1940), Nihon shugi bungaku (1933), Nihon ronsō (1939-1940), Nihon shugi hyōron (1932-1933), Nihon shisō (1929, 1932-1933, 1935, 1936, 1939), Nihonjin (1940), Nōhon shakai (1932), Nikkan tsūshin seiken (1937), Seinen Taiyō (1936), Seinen undō (1936), Seisantō no hata no moto ni (1932-1933), Shōtoku (1934), Shakai ōrai (1935-1937), Shakai to kokutai (1933-1935), Sōzō (1939-1940), Sōsei (1939), Shin kokumin undō (1940), Shinkō Bukkyō (1931-1933), Shinkō (1936), Shukoku (1936), Sumera Gakujuku kōza (1940-1942), Chuon (1940), Kōkoku seinen (1933-1934), Sumeragi (1932), Sumeragizumu (1932-1933), Taihō (1925), Taishū Shintō (1939), Taiyō (1933-1937, 1940), Tōa hyōron (1932), Tenshō (1937, 1939-1945), Tōitsu (1940), Uchū jissō (1936), and Yōsei jihyō (1939-1940).

      Reference:

      Censored Japanese serials of the pre-1946 period: a checklist of the microfilm collection = [Ken'etsu Wazasshi (1945-nen izen): maikurofirumu chekkurisuto], compiled by Yoshiko Yoshimura (Washington, Library of Congress, For sale by the U.S. G.P.O., Supt. of Docs., 1994), http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=pur1.32754064321627;view=1up;seq=7.

      Websites with information:

      https://web.archive.org/web/20130529045549/http://www.proquest.com/assets/downloads/catalogs/collections

      /EastAsianStudiesCatalog.pdf

      [0507] A Centennial Celebration: California Women and the Vote [online exhibit]

      Location: The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720-6000

      Description: On October 10, 1911, a special election was held in California. Appearing on the ballot was Proposition 4, a measure that would grant women the right to vote within the Golden State. The final tally was 125,037 to 121,450, giving woman suffrage a narrow victory of just 3,587 votes. With material drawn from collections held in The Bancroft Library, this exhibit celebrates the centennial anniversary of woman suffrage in California. Brought to light are the faces of the state's suffragists, many from the Bay Area, along with those of the movement's support and opposition. Room Three: The Opposition, contains copies of anti-women's suffrage flyers, including The woman's appeal to the voters of California, Power through independence, A working woman's protest, "The suffragettes" by William Kirk, Some reasons why we oppose votes for women, and A Voice from Los Angeles.

      Finding aids:

      http://bancroft.berkeley.edu/Exhibits/suffrage/index.html

      http://bancroft.berkeley.edu/Exhibits/suffrage/room_03.html

      [0508] Center for Democratic Renewal records, 1979-2008, aarl008-010

      Location: Auburn Avenue Research Library on African-American Culture and History, Atlanta-Fulton Public Library System, 101 Auburn Avenue, N.E., Atlanta, GA 30303

      Description: The Center for Democratic Renewal (1979-2008), founded by Reverend C.T. Vivian and Anne Braden as the National Anti-Klan Network (NAKN), was dedicated to the advancement of a democratic, diverse and just society, free of racism and bigotry. NAKN served as a resource on the Ku Klux Klan for Federal and police agencies, journalists, and religious, labor, and educational groups. In 1985, Vivian and the Board of Directors approved changing the name to the Center for Democratic Renewal (CDR), broadening its mission to include monitoring the radical and far right. The CDR monitored hate crimes and hate groups, and was known for their research, publications, public information, training, and helping local communities to address hate activities. The CDR Records contain correspondence, publications, newspapers, articles, newsletters, notes, financial records, brochures, audio-visual material, books, programs, grant proposals, photographs, reports, and ephemera. Contains files on A Choice Not An Echo, by Phyllis Schlafly (1964); Alabama (black mayor, Selma, rebel flag, Confederate flag, Birmingham, civil rights, prison, Christian Coalition, Eagle Forum, evolution, police brutality, NAACP); American Center for Law and Justice; Americans for truth; Americanism Educational League; Americans Against Union Control of Government; Americans Against Abortion; Americans for Constitutional Action; Americans for Immigration Control; Anti-Semitism (temples, synagogues, bombings, burnings, Vandalism, Anti-Defamation League, swastika, Pokémon, Holocaust denial, Nazi, Jews, housing, Henry Ford, Violence, David Duke, Jerry Fogel, arson, neo-Nazi, Skinheads, schools); Austin App; Richard Arens; Arkansas (White Power, Ralph Forbes, sedition); George Armstrong; Aryan Republican Army/Midwestern Bank Bandits (Terry Nichols, Oklahoma City Bombing); Aryan Nations (Richard Butler, Buford Furrow, Coeur D'Alene Idaho, Neuman Britton, Christian Identity, Posse Comitatus, August B. Kreis III, Aryan Nations World Congress, Vincent Bertollini, Carl Story, 11th Hour Remnant Messenger, Volksfront, Church of Jesus Christ Christian, Gregory Withrow, White Student Union, Aryan Nations Church, skinheads, Dwight McCarthy, Utahns Against the Aryan Nations, Aryan Nations Hour); Aryan Brotherhood (Jason Powell, Alex Witmer, Robert Ryan Rowland); Karl Baarslag; Harry Barnes; Barnes Review; Richard Barrett, Nationalist Movement; David Baxter; Louis Beam, KKK, TX Knights, Legal, Order, Aryan Nations, Essays of a Klansman; Louis Beam (KKK, leaderless resistance, Aryan Nations); Larry Becraft; Don Bell; Ezra Benson; George Benson; Sam Blumenfeld; Bookmailer; Anthony Bouscaren; L. Brent Bozell; Spruille Braden; Frank Britton; Pat Buchanan (Reform Party, David Duke, Anti-Semitism); William F. Buckley, Jr.; Edgar Bundy; Emory Burke; Eric Butler, Canadian League of Rights, IHR; Richard Butler, Aryan Nations, Order, Id.; Arthur Butz, Historical Revisionism; Cardinal Mindszenty Foundation; Asa Carter (a/k/a Forest Carter), KKK, Author; Asa Earl Carter; Willis A. Carto (Liberty Lobby); Willis Carto, IHR, Liberty Lobby, Populist Party; W.A. Carto, Right; W.A. Carto, Imperium Intro; Catholic Traditionalist; Catholic Traditionalist Movement; Right Wing Catholic; Catholics United for Life; right wing attacks upon Catholics; CATO Institute; CDL Report (Christian Defense League); Center for Bio-Ethical Reform; Center for Constitutional Rights; Chalcedon Report, Reconstructionist, Rushdoony; Chalcedon; F. Gano Chance; Chattooga County Christian Guard; Conrad Chapman; Frank Chodorov; Christian Identity (Gerald L.K. Smith, Neuman Britton, Buddy Johnson, August B. Kreis III, Barry Harris, Greg Thatcher, Randy Maczka, Jews, Gordon Winrod, Buford O. Furrow Jr., The Covenant the Sword and Arm of the Lord); Christian Coalition (elections, Pat Robertson, Robert Thoburn, Christian Thoburn Press, Lou Sheldon (Traditional Values Coalition), Randall Terry (Operation Rescue), J.B. Stoner (Christian Knights of the Klan), new right, religious right, Jane Fonda, Randy Tate, Ralph Reed); Christian Family Association, Christian Freedom Foundation, Christian Guard, TN, Christian Patriot Association; Christic Institute; Church League of America; Cinema Educational Guild; Circuit Rider; Citizens Foreign Aid Committee; Roy Cohn; Colorado for Family Values; Ken W. Colegrove; Combat 18; Committee to Restore the Constitution; Committee of the States; Committee of Ten Million; Communism; Bertrand Comparet; Congress of Freedom; Constitution Party, Joseph Birkenstock, Posse Comitatus, James Wickstrom; Richard Cotton, Conservative Viewpoint; Rev. Charles E. Coughlin, Social Justice; Ann Coulter; Kent and Phoebe Courtney; Harold A. Covington; Calvin F. Craig; John Crommelin; Matt Cvetic; Nord Davis; James De Mar; Byron de la Beckwith; Robert DePugh; Defenders of the American Constitution; Pedro Augusto del Valle; Ralph de Toledano; Devin-Adair Company; George Dietz, Liberty Bell Publications, Computer BBS; Elizabeth Dilling; Joseph Dilys; Dispossessed Majority, by Wilmot Robertson (1973); Dispossessed Majority, by Wilmot Robertson (1981); James Dobson; James Doenges; Domvile; Don Bell Reports; Robert Donner; Robert Dresser; Hilaire du Berrier; Duck


Скачать книгу
Яндекс.Метрика