Websites with information:
http://shs.umsystem.edu/manuscripts/descriptions/desc-labor.html
Finding aid:
http://shs.umsystem.edu/stlouis/manuscripts/s0357.pdf
[0597] James Weldon Click Papers, 1937-1963, S0507
Location: The State Historical Society of Missouri, 222 Thomas Jefferson Library, University of Missouri-St. Louis, One University Blvd., St. Louis, Missouri 63121
Description: James Weldon Click (1917-1988) was chief steward of Local 1102 of the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America. The James Weldon Click papers primarily document Click's efforts to rid UE Local 1102 of Communist influence and to establish the new International Union of Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America-CIO, IUERNWA, of which he was elected district president.
Websites with information:
http://shs.umsystem.edu/manuscripts/descriptions/desc-labor.html
Finding aid:
http://shs.umsystem.edu/stlouis/manuscripts/s0507.pdf
[0598] Clinton High School Desegregation from the Knoxville Journal Collection, 1956, 1958 [digital photograph collection]
Location: Calvin M. McClung Historical Collection, Knox County Public Library, 601 S. Gay Street, 3rd Floor, Knoxville, TN 37902
Description: Black-and-white photograph from September 1956 of speechwriter and segregationist Asa Carter, a member of the White Citizens Council in Alabama, speaking against the integration of Clinton High School in Anderson County, Tennessee. Carter is surrounded by white children as he speaks. Federal courts ordered schools in Clinton, Tennessee, to integrate "with all deliberate speed" in 1956. On September 1, Carter, who wrote fiction under the name Forrest Carter, and fellow segregationist John Kasper made speeches against the school's integration by twelve African American students. After the speeches, violence in the city grew to the point that National Guard troops were brought into the city to keep order. Kasper was later charged with inciting a riot for his speech. Also, photographs of Clinton High School desegregation (1956), National Guardsman patrol the Clinton, Tennessee community (1956), National Guardsmen at Clinton High School (1956), Students opening doors at Clinton High School (1956), National Guardsmen outside Clinton High School (1956), Students walking to Clinton High School (1956), and Clinton High School after bombing (1958).
Reference:
Jane S. Row, "Breaking the Gender Barrier: June Adamson," The Library Development Review (University of Tennessee Libraries, Knoxville, Tennessee) (2009-2010), pp. 2-4, http://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_libdevel/103 and https://www.academia.edu/500202/On_the_White_Right_Christian_Side_of_Every_Issue_The_Life_and_Death_o
f_Byron_de_la_Beckwith.
Websites with information:
http://crdl.usg.edu/collections/knoxjournal/
http://crdl.usg.edu/cgi/crdl?query=id:tnkcl_knoxjournal_000200
Finding aid and photographs:
http://diglib.lib.utk.edu/cgi/b/bib/bib-idx?type=simple&c=vvs-bib&sid=fa93c666437c8c79d8bcc6af6de1db4
8&Submit=search&sort=A-Z&q1=Clinton+High+School+Desegregation+from+the+Knoxville+Journal+Collection
&rgn1=collection
[0599] Clinton 12 oral history collection [oral history]
Location: Green McAdoo Cultural Center, 101 School Street; P.O. Box 1214, Clinton, Tennessee 37717
Description: This collection includes video recordings, digital audio files, and thirteen transcripts of oral histories of those involved with school desegregation in Clinton, Tennessee. Members of the Clinton 12 are interviewed along with teachers and others involved with the process.
Websites with information:
http://www.loc.gov/folklife/civilrights/survey/view_collection.php?coll_id=1513
[0600] James W. Clise Papers, 1932-1961, Coll. 114
Location: Special Collections and University Archives, Knight Library, 2nd floor North, Mail: UO Libraries--SPC, 1299 University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403-1299
Description: James W. Clise (1900-1961) held executive positions in Asbestos Supply Companies and several vermiculite companies and was involved in libertarian political activities. He worked in numerous organizations, including For America, the Church League of America, Foundation for Economic Education, and Youth for Goldwater. Clise corresponded with conservatives and libertarians such as T. Coleman Andrews, Henry Hazlitt, James C. Ingebretsen, Robert LeFevre, Lawrence Timbers, and William C. Mullendore. Clise also supported conservative authors such as Bryton Barron, Ludwig von Mises and Elwood Smith. The collection includes correspondence, subject files, personal and business files, speeches, articles, and published letters. Correspondence and subject files on American China Policy Association (Alfred Kohlberg); American Council of Christian Laymen (Verne P. Kaub); American Economic Foundation; American Enterprise Association; American Mercury; Americans for Constitutional Action (Ben Moreell); America's Future (John T. Flynn); T. Coleman Andrews; Anti-subversion laws; Bryton Barron: "Inside the State Department"; Frank S. Bayley, Sr.; Campaign for the 48 states (Robert B. Snowden); Caxton Printers, Caldwell, Idaho (J. H. Gipson, Sr.); Frank Chodorov; Christian Freedom Foundation (Howard E. Kershner); Church League of America; National Laymen's Council (George Robnett); Committee against Summit Entanglements (Robert Welch); Committee for Constitutional Government (Will I. King; Edward A. Rumely); Committee for One Million (Marvin Leibman); Committee to Defend America by Aiding Anti-Communist China; Communism; Congress of Freedom, San Francisco, California; Kent Courtney; Jasper E. Crane; DeMille Foundation; Devin-Adair Company, Publishers; Economists' National Committee on Monetary Policy (Walter E. Spahr); Charles Edison; Dwight D. Eisenhower; Faith and Freedom (February 1957); Foundation for Economic Education (Leonard E. Read, W. M. Curtiss, Edmund A. Opitz); Foundation for Economic Education: "The Remnant"; James W. Fifield, Jr.; Fluoridation; For America; George B. Fowler (Valley Paper Company); Free Men Speak, Incorporated (Kent and Phoebe Courtney); Freedom Forum; Freedoms Foundation, Valley Forge; Freedom Fund (Carl T. Chadsey); The Freeman; Milton Friedman; Barry Goldwater; Ralph Gwinn; Harding College; Harding College: Freedom Forum; F. A. Harper: "Public dis-utilities," William Volker Fund, and Foundation for Voluntary Welfare; Henry Hazlitt: "The Seamy Side of TVA"; Henry Regnery Company; House un-American Activities Committee; Human Events; James C. Ingebretsen (Spiritual Mobilization; Foundation for Social Research); Intelligence Digest; Intercollegiate Society of Individualists; Jeffersonian Democrats; Jewish problem; John Birch Society (Robert Welch); Walter H. Judd; William F. Knowland; Alfred Kohlberg; David Lawrence; J. Bracken Lee (American Statesman); Robert LeFevre (Freedom School); Fulton Lewis, Jr.; Life Line (Wayne Poucher); McCarran Immigration Law; Carl McIntire (Twentieth Century Reformation Hour); "Mainspring" by Henry Grady Weaver [online at http://fee.org/files/doclib/mainspring-of-human-progress.pdf]; Clarence Manion; William C. Mullendore; National Economic Council (Merwin K. Hart); National Education Program (Harding College); National Republic; National Review (William F. Buckley, Jr.); "Nine Men Against America" by Rosalie Gordon; Richard M. Nixon; Edmund A. Opitz: "The powers that be; cause studies of the church in politics"; Sylvester Petro: "labor policy of the free society"; J. Howard Pew; Daniel A. Poling: "Anti-reds"; Reader's Digest; Bryson Reinhardt; SPX (Tom R. Hutton); Fred C. Schwarz; Single tax; Dan Smoot;