| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
|
The Radical Pamphlet
Collection
(continued) |
BOX/FOLDER 3/15 |
Bedacht, Max, 1933
|
|
Karl Marx, 1883-1933, by Max Redacht, Sam Don, Earl Browder (New York,
March 1933) 32 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 3/16 |
Bell, Thomas H., 1932
|
|
Edward Carpenter, the English Tolstoi (Los Angeles, The Libertarian
Group, 1932) 24 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 3/17 |
Benedict, Bert, 1919
|
|
The express companies of the United States: a study of a public utility
(New York: The Intercollegiate Socialist Society, 1919) 47 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 3/18 |
Benjamin, Herbert, 1936
|
|
A handbook for project workers … Tells you: About WPA rules and
regulations … (New York, March, 1936) 36 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 3/19 |
Benson, Allan L., 1908-1916
|
|
[1] Why I left the Socialist Party and what the War has done to socialism
([No place identified], 1916) 15 p. -- [2] What help can any workingman
expect from Taft or Bryan? (Chicago, 1908) 40 p. -- [3] The bombshell
that Henry Ford fired (Chicago, 1914) 16 p. -- [4] The usurped power of
the courts (Chicago, 1911) 64 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 3/20 |
Benton, Wilbur, 1907
|
|
[1] Socialism, the main points (Chicago, [1907?]) 40 p. -- [2] Times
change and men change with them (Chicago, 1907) 44 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 3/21 |
Berenberg, David P.,
1918-1934
|
|
[1] Socialism (New York: The Rand School of Social Science, 1918) 43 p.
-- [2] A worker's world (New York, 1932) 15 p. -- [3] We the people (New
York, 1934) 14 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 3/22 |
Berger, Victor L., 1928
|
|
[1] Old folks' pensions (Milwaukee, [1928?]) 4 p. -- [2] Power interests
(Milwaukee, 1928) 4 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 3/23 |
Berkman, Alexander, 1912-1930
|
|
[1] Alexander Berkman sixtieth birthday celebration, November twentieth,
nineteen thirty, Central Opera House, New York City (New York, 1930)
[24] p. -- [2] Flyer: Statement of Alexander Berkman in re deportation
made to the officials of the U.S. Federal Immigration Service at the
Federal Penitentiary, Atlanta, Ga. Sept 18, 1919 ([No place identified],
1919) 1 p. -- [3] The martyrdom of Berkman by F. Thaumazo (Brooklyn,
[1912]) 38 p. -- [4] The Russian tragedy (a review and an outlook)
(Berlin, 1922) 31 p. -- [5] Memorial: Alexander Berkman, rebel and
anarchist; essays by Abe Bluestein, Harry Block, Hyppolyte Havel, Harry
Kelly, Leonard Abbott, Erich Muhsam, (New York, 1936) 8 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 3/24 |
Alexander Berkman Aid
Fund, 1948
|
|
Bulgaria, a new Spain, The Communist terror in Bulgaria (Chicago, [1948])
30 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 3/25 |
Bernheimer, Louis, 1927
|
|
The trial of Sacco and Vanzetti: a summary of the outstanding testimony
(New York, 1927) 16 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 3/26 |
Birnie, Helen Wood
(Christian Anti-Communist Crusade),
1954
|
|
The broken wall (Waterloo, Iowa, 1954) 78 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 4/1 |
Bittelman, Alex, 1 of 3,
1932-1948
|
|
[1] To secure Jewish rights, the Communist position (New York, March,
1948) 39 p. -- [2] A documentary account: The advance of the United
Front, introduction by Alex Bettelman (NY, December, 1934) 70 p. -- [3]
Leninism, the only Marxism today: a discussion of the characteristics of
declining Capitalism, with V. J. Jerome (NY, February, 1934) 63 p. --
[4] Revolutionary struggle against war vs. pacifism (NY, [1932?]) 48 p.
-- [5] From Left Socialism to Communism (NY, September, 1933) 23 p. --
[6] Program for survival: the Communist position on the Jewish question
(NY, January, 1947) 63 p. -- [7] How can we share the wealth? The
Communist way versus Huey Long (NY, April, 1935) 31 p. -- [8] The Jewish
people face the Post-War world (NY, December, 1945) 31 p. [9] Trotsky
the traitor (NY, February, 1937) 30 p. [10] The Townsend Plan: what it
is and what it isn't (NY, 1936) 46 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 4/2 |
Bittelman, Alex, 2 of 3,
1924-1946
|
|
[1] 15 years of the Communist Party (New York, August, 1934) 51 p. -- [2]
Support the Teheran Decisions, speech to Conference of International
Ladies Garment Workers Union, "translated from Yiddish" (NY, [1943?]) 21
p. -- [3] The Communist Party in action (NY, May, 1934) 71 p. -- [4]
Parties and issues in the election campaign (Chicago, [1924?]) 23 p. --
[5] The Advance of the United Front ( (NY, December, 1934) 70 p. -- [6]
Going left: the Left Wing formulates a 'Draft for a program for the
Socialist Party of the United States' (NY, March 1936) 46 p. [7] How to
win social justice: can Coughlin and Lemke do it? (NY, August, 1936) 47
p. -- [8] The Jewish people will live on! (NY, 1944) 47 p. -- [9]
Milestones in the history of the Communist Party (NY, August, 1937) 92
p. -- [10] Palestine: what is the solution? (NY, 1946) 15 p. -- [11]
Problems of party building (NY, August, 1937) 30 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 4/3 |
Bittelman, Alex, 3 of 3,
1924-1948
|
|
10 second and third copies of pamphlets in the previous two folders. |
BOX/FOLDER 4/4 |
Blair, Fred, 1943
|
|
1943 - Merry Xmas- Happy New Year to you and yours from Fred, Elizabeth,
and Billy Blair [Poems] ([Wisconsin?], 1943) 18 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 4/5 |
Blake, George, 1949-1950
|
|
[1] Who pays for the Cold War? How the Marshall Plan affects your living
standards (New York, May 1949) 23 p. [2 copies] -- [2] The ideological
struggle against white chauvinism: from the Report made by George Blake
at the Communist Party Industrial Conference on the struggle for Negro
rights and against white chauvinism, held in New York, on Oct. 8, 1949
(New York: New York State Communist Party, January, 1950) 6 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 4/6 |
Blanshard, Paul, 1931-1933
|
|
[1] Forces making for socialism, Little Blue Book no. 1702 (Girard, KS:
Haldeman-Julius Publications, 1931) 32 p. -- [2] Technocracy and
socialism (New York: League for Industrial Democracy, 1933) 14 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 4/7 |
Bluestein, Abe, 1935
|
|
Forgotten men, what now? New Deal "security" (Bronx: Libertarian
Publishers, [1935?]) [17] p. [Ownership stamp of Dick Ellington]. |
BOX/FOLDER 4/8 |
Blum, Emanuel, and
Figueiredo, Joseph C., 1948
|
|
What's ahead for textile workers (Boston: Communist Party of New England,
December, 1948) 47 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 4/9 |
Blumenfield, Frank B.,
1937
|
|
A blueprint for Fascism: what the Industrial Mobilization Plan holds for
America (New York, February, 1937) 23 p. [Includes leaflet laid in: Are
you interested in preserving our democratic institutions?] |
BOX/FOLDER 4/10 |
Bohannan William E.,
1948
|
|
A letter to American Negroes (New York, September, 1948) 15 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 4/11 |
Bohn, Frank, and McGrady,
Thomas, 1913?
|
|
The Catholic Church and socialism (Chicago, [1913?]) 31 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 4/12 |
Bookchin, Murray, 1967-1970
|
|
[1] Listen, Marxist! (New York: Anarchos, May, 1969) 30 p. -- [2]
Liberate me! Desire and need (NY: Anarchos, [1967]) 11 p. -- [3] Anarchy
and organization / Murray Bookchin; Anarchism, terrorism and
individualism / Bob Dickens (NY, [1969]) 7 p. -- [4] Ecology and
revolutionary thought [inside: "Lewis Herber is a pen-name for Murray
Bookchin"] (NY: Anarchos, [1969?]) 22 p. -- [5] Toward a liberatory
technology (NY: Anarchos, [1970?]) 38 p. -- [6] Toward an ecological
solution: Ecology Center Reprint no. 6 (Berkeley, CA, [1970]) 5 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 4/13 |
Bool, Henry, ca. 1902
|
|
Liberty luminants: extracted largely from the writings of Montaigne,
Paine, Thoreau, Emerson and Tolstoy … (Ithaca, NY, [1902?]) 72 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 4/14 |
Borough, Reuben W., 1954
|
|
Mr. President, meet John Adams! An address on political amnesty
(Delivered before various groups during the Christmas season, 1954) (Los
Angeles: The Pamphleteer, 1954) [12] p. |
BOX/FOLDER 4/15 |
Borovoi, Alexei, ca. 1970
|
|
Anarchism and law (Buffalo, NY: Friends of Malatesta, [1970?]) 7 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 4/16 |
Boucher, Anthony, 1952
|
|
Mailer: Families of the Smith Act Victims, Peggy Dennis, Chairman: Dear
Friend, we are the families of eighty men and women in New York … who
have been persecuted under the thought-control provisions of the Smith
Act … [with a carbon copy reply by Anthony Bouchard] (New York, November
1952) [5] p. |
BOX/FOLDER 4/17 |
Bourne, Randolph, 1946-1947
|
|
The State (New York: The Resistance Press, 1946-1947) 42 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 4/18 |
Boyer, Richard 0., 1948-1952
|
|
[1] If this be treason (New York, December, 1948) 31 p. [2 copies] -- [2]
The Cold-War murder: the frame-up against Ethel and Julius Rosenberg
(New York: Civil Rights Congress, 1952) 47 p. -- [3] Pettis Perry: the
story of a working class leader (New York, April, 1952) [17] p. |
BOX/FOLDER 5/1 |
Boyesen, Bayard (The
FranciscoFerrer Association), [1911]
|
|
The Modern School in New York, with a message from Joseph McCabe and a
history of the Ferrer Association by Leaonard Abbott (New York, [ca.
1911]) 8 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 5/2 |
Bradley, Hugh, 1953
|
|
Next steps in the struggle for Negro freedom (New York, 1953) 48 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 5/3 |
Brandon, Joseph, 1925
|
|
Workers Party vs. Socialist Labor Party, Arm and Hammer Pamphlets no.
eight (New York: Socialist Labor Party, 1925) 32 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 5/4 |
Branstetter, Otto, ca. 1920
|
|
What is a Soviet? (Chicago, [1920?]) 4 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 5/5 |
Breitman, George, 1943-1952
|
|
[1] Wartime crimes of big business (New York, October 1, 1943) 14 p. --
[2] Jim Crow murder of Mr. and Mrs. Harry T. Moore: new dangers and new
tasks facing the Negro struggle (New York, March, 1952) 31 p. [2
copies] |
BOX/FOLDER 5/6 |
Brenner, Anita, and
Winthrop, S. S., [1934]
|
|
Tampa's reign of terror (New York: International Labor Defense, [1934?])
16 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 5/7 |
Brewer, George D., 1910
|
|
[1] The rights of the masses, a lecture (Chicago, [1910?]) 32 p. -- [2]
The fighting editor, or Warren and the Appeal (Girard, KS, 1910) 134
p. |
BOX/FOLDER 5/8 |
Harry Bridges
DefenseCommittee, 1939-1955
|
|
[1] Dean Landis speaks on the case of Harry Bridges (New York, [1939?])
15 p. -- [2] Harry Bridges: who he is …. What he has been doing in the
labor movement … Why he is on trial for deportation (San Francisco, CA,
[1939?]) 12 p. -- [3] The Bridges showdown (SF, April, 1941) 5 p. -- [4]
The everlasting Bridges case (SF, May, 1955) 14 p. -- [5] Brochure:
Citizenship for Harry Bridges now! (SF, [1944]) -- [6] Mailer:
International Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union, Bridges Defense
Committee, June, 1955, Dear Friend, The fifth trial of Harry Bridges ...
(SF, 1955) -- [7] Brochure: Landis said no! Sears said yes! (SF,
[1939]). |
BOX/FOLDER 5/9 |
Bridges-Robertson-Schmidt
Defense Committee, 1952-1955
|
|
[1] The law and Harry Bridges (San Francisco, February, 1952) 28 p. --
[2] Indict these perjurers! (SF, [1952?]) 4 p. -- [3] Printed petition
to Hon J. Howard McGrath, US Attorney General, and Hon. Frank Hennessey
(SF, [1952]). -- [4] Why? The fourth frame-up against Harry Bridges (SF,
[1952]) [22] p. -- [5] The record in the contempt action against the
defense of Harry Bridges, J. R. Robertson and Henry Schmidt in the
Federal Court, Northern California District (SF, [1952]). |
BOX/FOLDER 5/10 |
Harry Bridges Victory
Committee, 1945
|
|
[1] Biddle's private war against Harry Bridges (San Francisco, [1945?])
[16] p. [2 copies] -- [2] The Bridges case … is an attack on all labor
(SF, 1945) 4 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 5/11 |
Briggs, H. E., 1935
|
|
[1] The veterans fight for unity (New York: American League of
Ex-Servicemen, March, 1935) 47 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 5/12 |
Broun, Heywood, 1931
|
|
Why I am a socialist, Little Blue Book no. 1691 (Girard, KS, 1931) 32
p. |
BOX/FOLDER 6/1 |
Browder, Earl, 1 of 12
folders, 1932-50
|
|
[1] Unemployment insurance: the burning issue of the day (New York,
April, 1935) 23 p. -- [2] Shall the Communist Party change its name?
(NY, February, 1944) 23 p. -- [3] Free the Anti-Fascist prisoners in
North Africa: address delivered by Earl Browder (NY, [1944?]) 4 p. --
[4] Earl Browder talks to America (NY, February, 1937) 47 p. -- [5]
Keynes, Foster and Marx: Part I: State capitalism and progress (Yonkers,
NY, 1950) 55 p. -- [6] Keynes, Foster and Marx: Part II: Progress and
Socialism (Yonkers, 1950) 93 p. -- [7] Citizens' Committee to Free Earl
Browder (NY, [1942) 4 p. -- [8] America speaks for Earl Browder (NY,
November, 1941) 31 p. -- [9] The fight for bread: keynote speech by Earl
Browder at the Communist Party National Nominating Convention held in
Chicago, May 28-29, 1932 (NY, June, 1932) 16 p. -- [10] The decline of
the Left Wing of American Labor (NY, 1948) 38 p. -- [11] In defense of
Communism, against W. Z. Foster's 'New Route to Socialism' (Yonkers,
1949) 70 p. -- [12] An American foreign policy for peace (NY, 1940) 13
p. -- [13] Lincoln and the Communists (NY, February, 1936) 14 p. -- [14]
Teheran and America (NY, January, 1944) 48 p. -- [15] Trotskyism against
world peace (NY, February, 1937) 15 p. -- [16] The Communists in the
People's Front (NY, July, 1937) 126 p. -- [17] How do we raise the
question of a Labor Party? (NY, February, 1935) 23 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 6/2 |
Browder, Earl, 2 of 12
folders, 1933-1946
|
|
[1] The speech the papers lied about: read what Earl Browder DID say in
Chicago (New York, October, 1943) 15 p. -- [2] The Communists and the
People's Front (NY, 1937) 126 p. -- [3] Democracy or Fascism: Early
Browder's report to the Ninth Convention of the Communist Party (NY,
1936) 47 p. -- [4] The Browder case: a summary of facts, a brief for
justice and fair play in America (NY, September, 1941) 22 p. -- [5] Who
are the Americans? (NY, July, 1936) 14 p. -- [6] The Democratic front
for jobs, security, democracy, and peace (NY, 1938) 95 p. -- [7] The
meaning of Social-Fascism: its historical and theoretical background
(NY, September, 1933) 47 p. -- [8] The results of the elections and the
People's Front (NY, 1936) 87 p. -- [9] Early Browder Talks to America
(NY, February, 1937) 47 p. -- [10] Whose war is it? (NY, 1939) 15 p. --
[11] Stop the war (NY, 1939) 14 p. -- [12] Socialism, war and America
(NY, November, 1939) 15 p. -- [13] Make 1943 the decisive year (NY,
October, 1943) 15 p. -- [14] Trotskyism against world peace (NY,
February, 1937) 15 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 6/3 |
Browder, Earl, 3 of 12
folders, 1925-1943
|
|
[1] Social and national security (New York, December, 1938) 46 p. -- [2]
Earl Browder takes his case to the people (NY, January, 1940) 31 p. [2
copies] -- [3] Whose war is it? (NY, September, 1939) 15 p. -- [4]
Concerted action or isolation: which is the road to peace? (NY, 1938) 64
p. -- [5] The Communist Party of the U.S.A.: its history, role and
organization (NY, May, 1941) 47 p. -- [6] Stop the war (NY, November,
1939) 15 p. [2 copies] -- [7] The 1940 elections: how the people can win
( NY, May, 1939) 47 p. -- [8] America and the second imperialist war
(NY, September, 1939) 14 p. -- [9] Unemployment insurance: the burning
issue of the day (NY, April, 1935) 23 p. -- [10] Wage policy in war
production (NY, April, 1943) 23 p. -- [11] Class struggle vs. class
collaboration: the Little Red Library no. 2 (Chicago, [1925?]) 31 p. [2
copies] -- [12] The people against the war makers (NY, February, 1940)
31 p. -- [13] Production for victory (NY, December, 1942) 48 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 6/4 |
Browder, Earl, 4 of 12
folders, 1931-1944
|
|
[1] Economic problems of the war and peace (New York, October, 1944) 15
p. -- [2] Who are the Americans? (NY, July, 1936) 14 p. -- [3] Earl
Browder on the Soviet Union (NY, February, 1942) 47 p. -- [4] A talk
about the Communist Party (NY, December, 1943) 23 p. -- [5] Earl Browder
says ... (NY, May, 1941) 22 p. -- [6] The future of the
Anglo-Soviet-American coalition (NY, September, 1943) 15 p. -- [7]
Victory must be won: Independence Day speech, Madison Square Garden,
July 2, 1942 (NY, July, 1942) 15 p. -- [8] Build the United People's
Front (NY, January, 1936) 70 p. -- [9] Shall the Communist Party change
its name? (NY, February, 1944) 23 p. -- [10] War against workers' Russia
([NY, 1931]) 30 p. -- [11] Finding the Road to peace: radio address
delivered August 29, 1939 (NY, August, 1939) 4 p. -- [12] An American
foreign policy for peace (NY, October, 1940) 13 p. -- [13] The economics
of Communism: Soviet economy in its world relation (NY, March, 1939) 23
p. -- [14] Theory as a guide to action (NY, January, 1939) 15 p. --
Democracy or Fascism (NY, 1936) 47 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 6/5 |
Browder, Earl, 5 of 12
folders, 1938-1952
|
|
[1] The Democratic Front for jobs … (New York, 1938) 95 p. -- [2] Four
letters concerning peaceful co-existence of Capitalism and Socialism,
together with Speech of June 2, 1945 (Yonkers, NY, 1952) 68 p. -- [3]
More about the economic crisis: discussion on the coming economic crisis
before the Discussion Circle, at the Woodstock Hotel, New York City,
March 14, 1949 ([NY?, 1949?]) 16 p. -- [4] American decisive battle (NY,
March, 1945) 31 p. -- [5] Whose war is it? (NY, 1939) 15 p. -- [6] Free
the Anti-Fascist prisoners in North Africa (NY, [1940?]) 4 p. -- [7]
Hearst's "secret" documents in full (NY, September, 1936) 21 p. and
other duplicate pamphlets. |
BOX/FOLDER 6/6 |
Browder, Earl, 6 of 12
folders, 1933-1950
|
|
[1] Traitors in American history: lessons of the Moscow Trials (New York,
April, 1938) 31 p. -- [2] Religion and Communism (NY, March, 1939) 15 p.
-- [3] Internationalism - Results of the 1940 election: two reports (NY,
November, 1940) 31 p. -- [4] The way out of the Imperialist War (NY,
January, 1941) 14 p. -- [5] The economics of all-out war: reprint from
The Communist of October, 1942 (NY, 1942) 20 p. -- [6] The road to
victory (NY, September, 1941) 46 p. -- [7] Toward an American peace
policy (Yonkers, NY, 1950) 23 p. -- [8] The road ahead to victory and
lasting peace (NY, June, 1944) 39 p. -- [9] A message to Catholics (NY,
June, 1938) 15 p. -- [10] Study guide and outline for The People's Front
(NY, [1938]) 23 p. -- [11] The 1940 elections: how the people can win
(NY, May, 1939) 47 p. -- [12] The Communist position in 1936: radio
speech broadcast March 5, 1936 (NY, 1936) 14 p. -- [13] How do we raise
the question of a Labor Party? (NY, January, 1935) 23 p. -- [14] The
People's Front in America (NY, September, 1936) 15 p. -- [15] Socialism,
war, and America (NY, November, 1939) 15 p. -- [16] Is planning possible
under capitalism? (NY, March, 1933) 15 p. -- and duplicates
pamphlets. |
BOX/FOLDER 7/1 |
Browder, Earl, 7 of 12
folders, 1934-1950
|
|
[1] Communism and culture (New York, August, 1941) 17 p. -- [2] Earl
Browder before U.S. Senate: the record and some conclusions (Yonkers,
NY, 1950) 60 p. -- [3] Lenin and Spain (NY, February, 1937) 13 p. -- [4]
Policy for victory (NY, May, 1943) 96 p. -- [5] The Communist Party and
the emancipation of the Negro people / issued by the Harlem Section of
the Communist Party (NY, 1934) 16 p. -- [6] Theory as a guide to action
(NY, January, 1939) 15 p. -- New steps in the United Front (NY,
November, 1935) 31 p. -- [7] Moscow, Cairo, Teheran (NY, January, 1944)
23 p. - and duplicate pamphlets. |
BOX/FOLDER 7/2 |
Browder, Earl, 8 of 12
folders, 1938-1953
|
|
Ephemera: [1] The message they tried to stop! (New York, September, 1940)
4 p. -- [2] A Lincoln's birthday message to you … (NY, [1944?]) 4 p. --
[3] Finding the road to peace: radio address delivered August 29, 1939
(NY, 1939) 4 p. -- [4] Only victory is indispensable! Earl Browder on
the issues of the 1944 election (NY, 1944) 6 p. brochure -- [5] 'The
American way of life (NY, 1940) 4 p. -- [6] A talk about the Party (NY,
1943) 4 p. -- [7] Collective security- the road to peace (NY, 1938) 4p.
-- [8] Appeal of Earl Browder to the members of the C.P.U.S.A.! (NY,
1946) 4 p. -- [9] Mailer: Is war nearer? An ex-Communist's view; Reds
ex-chief blasts Kremlin war on Jews (Yonkers, 1953) 6 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 7/3 |
Browder, Earl, 9 of 12
folders, 1936-1945
|
|
[1] The heritage of Jefferson / Claude G. Bowers, Earl Browder, Francis
Franklin (New York: Workers School, [1943]) 48 p. -- [2] Zionism:
address at the Hippodrome Meeting, June 8, 1936 (NY: Yidburo Publishers,
1936) 24 p. -- [3] Speed the second front (NY, October, 1942) 15 p. --
[4] The people's road to peace (NY, [1940]) 63 p. -- [5] America's
decisive battle (NY, March, 1945) 30 p. -- [6] The Nazi pogrom: an
outcome of the Munich betrayal (NY, [1938]) 11 p. -- [7] The results of
the elections and the people's front (NY, December, 1936) 87 p. -- [8]
Mr. President- Free Earl Browder! [prepared by Sasha Small](New York:
Citizens Committee to Free Earl Browder, 1942) 47 p. -- [9] A talk about
the Communist Party (NY, December, 1943) 23 p. -- and ten duplicate
pamphlets. |
BOX/FOLDER 7/4 |
Browder, Earl, 10 of 12
folders, 1939-1951
|
|
[1] The "miracle" of Nov. 2nd [A lecture delivered before the Discussion
Circle, at the Capitol Hotel, New York City, on November 29, 1948]
([Yonkers, NY?, 1948?]) 40 p. -- [2] Chinese lessons for American
Marxists [a lecture delivered before the Discussion Circle, at the
Woodstock Hotel, New York City, January 17, 1949] ([Yonkers, NY?, 1949])
48 p. -- [3] Communists and national unity: an interview of PM with Earl
Browder (NY, April, 1944) 23 p. -- [4] The meaning of the elections (NY,
December, 1944) 47 p. -- [5] Jew-baiting is cannibalism /William
Gallacher, Earl Browder (Sydney, Nauary, 1944) 32 p. -- [6] Unity for
peace and democracy (NY, September, 1939) 95 p. -- [7] The meaning of
MacArthur: letter to a friend ([Yonkers, NY?], June, 1951) 13 p. -- [8]
"Is Communism a menace?" a debate between Earl Browder and George
Sokolsky (NY, April, 1943) 47 p. -- an duplicate pamphlets. |
BOX/FOLDER 7/5 |
Browder, Earl, 11 of 12
folders, 1931-1949
|
|
[1] The coming economic crisis [A lecture delivered before the Discussion
Circle, at the Woodstock Hotel, New York City, February 14, 1949]
([Yonkers, NY?, 1949]) 47 p. -- [2] The Browder case: a summary of
facts, a brief for justice and fair play in America (NY, September,
1941) 22 p. -- [3] How to halt crisis and war: an economic program for
progressives [a lecture delivered to the Forum Group, Pythian Temple ...
New York City, May 2, 1949] ([Yonkers, NY?, 1949]) 40 p. -- [4] Secret
Hoover-Laval war pacts (NY, November, 1931) 15 p. -- [5] USA and USSR:
their relative strength [a lecture delivered before the Forum Group, at
Pythian Temple ... New York City, June 6, 1949] (Yonkers, NY?, 1949]) 48
p. -- and duplicate pamphlets. |
BOX/FOLDER 7/6 |
Browder, Earl, 12 of 12
folders, 1930-1950
|
|
[1] Modern resurrections & miracles (Yonkers, NY, 1950) 56 p. -- [2]
Out of a job ( NY, [1930?]) 32 p. -- [3] Is Russia a socialist
community? Debate: affirmative (Yonkers, NY, 1950) 24 p. -- [4] New
steps in the united front: report to the Seventh World Congress of the
Communist International delivered at Madison Sq. Garden in New York City
(NY, November, 1935) -- and duplicate pamphlets. |
BOX/FOLDER 8/1 |
Brown, Corinne Stubbs,
1914
|
|
Memorial [for] Corinne Stubbs Brown ([New York], May 10, 1914) 15 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 8/2 |
Brown, F., 1936
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Who are the Communists and what do they stand for? (New York, September,
1936) 12 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 8/3 |
Brown, Jethro, 1912
|
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The message of anarchy (Riverside, Conn.: The Hillacre Bookhouse, 1912)
ca. [50] p. -- with 2 tickets to the Chicago Surface Lines. |
BOX/FOLDER 8/4 |
Brown, Lloyd (Young
CommunistLeague), 1932
|
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Young workers in action: a story of the South River Strike (New York,
[1932]) 14 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 8/5 |
Brown, Lloyd L., 1952
|
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Stand up for freedom! The Negro people vs. the Smith Act (New York, March
1952) 15 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 8/6 |
Brown, Rome G, 1918
|
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The disloyalty of Socialism: annual address before the Iowa State Bar
Association at Des Moines, Iowa, June 28, 1918 ([Minneapolis?, 1918]) 28
p., American Bar Association Committee to Oppose Judicial Recall. |
BOX/FOLDER 8/7 |
Brown, William Montgomery
(Bishop Brown), 1932-1933
|
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Why I am a Communist: Bishop Brown's Lectures, no. XII ([Galion, Ohio?,
1932 or 1933]) 48 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 8/8 |
Budenz, Louis F., 1937-1951
|
|
[1] Save your union! Meaning of the 'Anti-Trust' persecution of Labor
(New York, May, 1940) 30 p. -- [2] A Harding College Freedom Forum
presentation: The Communist conspiracy: a timely reprint from the
National Education Program ([Searcy, Arkansas?, 1951?]) 31 p. -- [3] Red
baiting: enemy of Labor, with a letter to Homer Martin by Earl Browder
(New York, October, 1937) 23 p. -- [4] May Day 1937: what it means to
you (NY, March, 1937) 15 p. -- [5] May Day 1940 (NY, [1940]) 15 p. |
BOX/FOLDER 8/9 |
Budish, J. N., 1958
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