References:
"The Cold War and Internal Security (CWIS) Collection," Joyner Library's eNews (Mar. 2013), p. 4, http://media.lib.ecu.edu/development/eNewsletter/jl_enews_marchfinal2013.pdf; "Cold War & Internal Security (CWIS) Collection," http://blog.ecu.edu/sites/cwis/; William Joseph Thomas, "Lagniappe: Joyner Library's Cold War and Internal Security Collection," North Carolina Libraries, Volume 71, No 1 (Spring/Summer 2013), pp. 48-50, http://www.ncl.ecu.edu/index.php/NCL/article/view/394/482, http://www.ncl.ecu.edu/index.php/NCL/article/viewFile/394/482.
Websites with information:
http://libguides.ecu.edu/cwis
Blog:
http://blog.ecu.edu/sites/cwis/
[0607a] Cold War Collection, 1938-
Location: Special Collections & Archives, University Library, University of Liverpool, Liverpool L69 3BX, United Kingdom
Description: More than 500 texts on the culture of the Cold War, including spy fiction, novels describing nuclear war, historical studies of the CIA, espionage and intelligence agencies - European and American, memoirs, political tracts, and military studies of topics like war games. Titles include Inside the Company: CIA diary, by Philip Agee (1975); The iron curtain over America, by John Beaty (1951); The American inquisition, 1945-1960: a profile of the "McCarthy era," by Cedric Belfrage (1989); Spytime: the undoing of James Jesus Angleton: a novel, by William F. Buckley, Jr. (2000); The coming defeat of communism, by James Burnham (1950); The struggle for the world, by James Burnham (1947); Modern arms and free men: a discussion of the role of science in preserving democracy, by Vannevar Bush (1949); McCarthy, by Roy Cohn (1968); Psychic dictatorship in the U.S.A., by Alex Constantine (1995); Virtual government: CIA mind control operations in America, by Alex Constantine (1997); The facts about Nixon: an unauthorized biography, by William Costello (1960); Destroying the village: Eisenhower and thermonuclear war, by Campbell Craig (1998); Early Reagan: the rise of an American hero, by Anne Edwards (1988); The great challenge, by Louis Fischer (1947); The conscience of a Conservative, by Barry Goldwater (1960); In the court of public opinion, by Alger Hiss (1957); Recollections of a life, by Alger Hiss (1988); Masters of deceit: the story of communism in America and how to fight it, by J. Edgar Hoover (1959); Brain-washing in Red China: the calculated destruction of men's minds, by Edward Hunter (1951); Brainwashing: the story of men who defied it, by Edward Hunter (1957); The story of Mary Liu, by Edward Hunter (1957); The strange case of Alger Hiss, by the Earl Jowitt (1953); The Matusow affair: memoir of a national scandal, by Albert E. Kahn; introduction by Angus Cameron (1987); Mind control, Oswald & JFK: were we controlled?, by Lincoln Lawrence & Kenn Thomas (1997); The mind of an assassin, by Isaac Don Levine (1959); Joseph R. McCarthy, edited by Allen J. Matusow (1970); False witness, by Harvey Matusow (1955); A version of Major William E. Mayer's (1956 address 'Brain-washing: the ultimate weapon' [spoken record]); McCarthy: a documented record (1954); The real war, by Richard Nixon (1981); The Rosenberg file: a search for the truth, by Ronald Radosh and Joyce Milton (1983); With enough shovels: Reagan, Bush and nuclear war, by Robert Scheer; with the assistance of Narda Zacchino and Constance Matthiessen (1982); None dare call it treason, by John A. Stormer (1964); Official and confidential: the secret life of J. Edgar Hoover, by Anthony Summers (1993, 2011); Perjury: the Hiss-Chambers case, by Allen Weinstein (1978); The politician, by Robert Welch (1963); Venona: the greatest secret of the Cold War, by Nigel West (2000); and Thirteen who fled, by editor Louis Fischer; subeditor Boris A. Yakovlev; translators Gloria and Victor Fischer (1949).
Websites with information:
https://www.liverpool.ac.uk/library/sca/colldescs/coldwar.htm
https://www.liverpool.ac.uk/library/sca/colldescs/azindex.html
Database:
http://library.liv.ac.uk/search/l?SEARCH=spec+cold%20war
[0608] James William Cole Papers, 1863, 1946-1967, Manuscript Collection #40
Location: Joyner Library, East Carolina University, East Fifth Street, Greenville, NC 27858-4353
Description: James William "Catfish" Cole (1924-1967) was a leader of the North Carolina Knights of the Ku Klux Klan. Papers consist of correspondence, speeches, news releases, pamphlets, tracts, broadsides, booklets, newspaper and magazine clippings, photographs, and miscellaneous. Numerous bulletins, leaflets, pamphlets, and newsletters pertain to Klan operations. Also included are many broadsides advertising various Klan rallies in North and South Carolina. There is also a certificate of incorporation (1955) from the state of North Carolina for the State's Rights League whose objective was to maintain the purity and culture of the white race and Anglo-Saxon institutions. Photographs of Robert M. Shelton (Imperial Wizard of the KKK) are included. The collection contains numerous newspaper and magazine clippings, most of which deal with race relations, Civil Rights, and Klan activities. Publications include The Constitution and Bylaws of the Klan, The Klovan, The Klan in Action, and The Sins or Evils of Integration.
Websites with information:
http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/special/ead/browse.aspx?by=title&s=C
https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/268958859
http://www.worldcat.org/title/james-william-cole-papers-1863-1946-1967/oclc/268958859
Finding aids:
http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/special/ead/findingaids/0040/
http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/special/ead/findingaids/0040/0040.pdf
[0609] Reverend Walton E. Cole Collection, 1934-1950
Location: Special Collections, Honnold/Mudd Library, Libraries of The Claremont Colleges, 800 N. Dartmouth Avenue, Claremont, CA 91711
Description: The Reverend Walton E. Cole Papers consist of correspondence, clippings, and publications on the radio battle fought in the late 1930s between Cole and Father Charles E. Coughlin, a Catholic priest who was among the first to exploit the possibilities of preaching on the air. Coughlin became highly controversial when his broadcasts took a political turn toward Nazism and anti-Semitism. Walton Cole, a Unitarian minister in Toledo, Ohio, tried to prevail upon the Catholic hierarchy to have his inflammatory broadcasts stopped. Files include Coughlin Speech: National Union for Social Justice, 1934; Accounts of the two visits of Walton E. Cole and Father Coughlin, 1939; Interview with Archbishop Mooney; The Christian Front, 1939-1941; Lincoln and Rothschilds, Social Justice Magazine, 1940-1942; and Social Justice Magazine, 1936-1942. Books include An Answer to Father Coughlin's Critics (1940); Government Monetary Control, by Hon. Chas G. Binderup (1938); Eight Lectures on Labor Capital and Justice, by Charles E. Coughlin (Royal Oak, MI: The Radio League of the Little Flower, 1934); and Father Coughlin, His "Facts" and Arguments (New York, General Jewish Council, 1939) [online at https://ia800303.us.archive.org/7/items/FatherCoughlinHisFactsAndArguments_201502/Father%20Coughlin%20his%20facts%20and%20arguments.PDF].
Finding aid:
http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt387030d8/
[0610] Wayne S. Cole Research Collection, 1930-1964
Location: Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum, P.O. Box 488, 210 Parkside Drive, West Branch, IA 52358-0488
Description: Cole was an historian of isolationism and Professor of History, Iowa State University, 1954-1965; University of Maryland, 1965-1992. The research notes pertain to the following subjects among others: America First Committee, Anti-Semitism, Harry Elmer Barnes, Charles A. Beard, Senator William E. Borah, Communists, Father Charles E. Coughlin, Council Against Anti-Semitism, Bronson Cutting, Stephen A. Day, Prescott Dennett, Lawrence Dennis, Elizabeth Dilling, Fascism, Hamilton Fish, Flanders Hall, John T. Flynn, Merwin K. Hart, Internationalism, Interventionism, Isolationism, Tyler Kent, Senator William Langer, Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh, McCarthyism, Joe McWilliams, Noninterventionism, Senator Gerald P. Nye, William Dudley Pelley, Amos R. E. Pinchot, Edward Rickenbacker, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Scribner's Commentator, Sedition Trial, Silver Shirts, Gerald L. K. Smith, Edward J. Smythe, Robert A. Taft, Townsend Movement, Walter Trohan, Lyrl Van Hyning, George Sylvester Viereck, Henry A. Wallace, Senator Burton K. Wheeler, Wendell Willkie, General Robert E. Wood, and the Yalta Conference.
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