Encoded in EAD3 : Encoded Archival Description (EAD), Version 3 : Release: 1.1.1 : Release Date: 2019-12-16. Validating against latest version of schema.
Contact information: https://hdl.loc.gov/loc.rbc/rbc.contact
Catalog Record: https://lccn.loc.gov/95134182
DACS was used as the primary description standard.
Collection material in English
The Radical Pamphlet Collection was acquired by the Library of Congress through purchase and exchange between 1977 and 1981.
The collection was compiled by David Kennaly in 1995. The finding aid was updated by Michael North 2022-2023.
The Rare Book and Special Collections Division has custody of two other collections relating to American radicalism. The first, the Anarchism Collection, consists of more than 2000 books and pamphlets by and about anarchists relating to anarchism and anarcho-syndicalism. Most pamphlets in the collection were published in the United States for French-, German-, Italian-, and Russian-speaking communities. A finding aid is available in the Rare Book Room for the use of this collection. Second is the House Un-American Activities Committee Collection. This contains 2000 pamphlets by suspected "radicals" and "radical groups" collected by the committee. The division also holds the Paul Avrich Collection and the M & S Collection.
The Manuscript Division has custody of the papers of some of the individuals whose work for a radical revision of the social and political status quo is relevant to the Radical Pamphlet Collection. Among these are the papers of the following: William James Ghent, Lewis Graham Hines, the La Follette Family, Reinhold Niebuhr, Richard Olney, Garfield Bromley Oxnam, A. Philip Randolph, Charles Edward Russell, Margaret Sanger, Horace Traubel. The records of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and of the National Urban League can also be consulted in that division.
Materials from the Radical Pamphlet Collection, (1870-1985) are governed by the Copyright Law of the United States (Title 17, U.S.C.) and other applicable international copyright laws.
The Radical Pamphlet Collection, (1870-1985) is open to research. Researchers are advised to contact the Rare Book and Special Collections Reading Room prior to visiting. Many collections are stored off-site and advance notice is needed to retrieve these items for research use.
Researchers wishing to cite this collection should include the following information: the Radical Pamphlet Collection, (1870-1985), Rare Book and Special Collections Division, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.
The Radical Pamphlet Collection spans the years 1870-1980 but is especially rich in the 1930-49 period. The collection includes pamphlets, newspapers, periodicals, broadsides, posters, cartoons, sheet music, and prints relating primarily to American communism, socialism, and anarchism
Pamphlets written by Browder and Foster in the l930s exemplify the Party’s desire to
recruit the unemployed during the Great Depression by emphasizing social welfare
programs and an isolationist foreign policy. Browder’s:
Additional Communist Party materials included campaign literature for state and local contests in Buffalo, New York; New York City; and Alameda County, California, and pamphlets by elected Communist officials Victor Narcantonio, American Laborite member of the US Congress, and Peter Cacchione and Benjamin Davis, Communist Party New York City Council members.
An interesting part of the collection relates to Blacks in the Communist Party. Prior to 1928 the Communist Party had little success recruiting from the Black community. After the Communist Party’s much publicized defense of the Scottsboro boys, the Communist Party was increasingly perceived by Blacks as the defender of minority rights. Topics of pamphlets addressed to Blacks include lynching, the Negro in sports, and segregation in the Army and industry. Black Communist leaders such as James W. Ford, Communist Party Vice Presidential Candidate in 1932 and 1936, Benjamin Davis, and Henry Winston are represented.
Equally valuable is material dealing with the Communist Party and youth. The
Communist Party through the Young Communist League and its campus arm, the National
Student League, was a major force in the pacifist and isolationist movements on
college campuses in the pre-World War Two era. Pamphlets such as
Most items relating to American socialism in this collection are found arranged under the Socialist Party of America (SP), its members, and affiliates. Included are pamphlets, broadsides, and posters of state and local campaigns in Milwaukee, Wisconsin; Boulder, Colorado; Buffalo, New York; New York City; Portland, Oregon; Texas; and Kansas.
The collection contains pamphlets of the longtime Socialist Party leader Norman
Thomas. A few items relate to his presidential campaigns; most are criticisms of the
New Deal. These include:
Additional resources concerning socialism in America are pamphlets by Victor Berger,
Socialist Party member of 68-70th US Congresses; James P. Cannon; Daniel DeLeon;
William James Ghent, editor of
Although most of the Radical Pamphlet Collection is associated with communism and
socialism there is a significant portion relating to anarchism. Many pamphlets in
the collection were written by leading figures in European anarchism, published in
the United States, and addressed English-speaking native and immigrant anarchists.
In the collection are works by German anarchists Johann Most and Rudolf Rocker;
Russians Emma Goldman, Alexander Berkman, and Petr Kropotkin; Italians Errico
Malatesta and Carlo Tresca; and Frenchman Emile Armand. The collection has many of
Emma Goldman’s works including
The collection is organized in 1 series:
The following terms have been used to index the description of this collection in the LC Catalog. They are grouped by name of person or organization, by subject or location, and by occupation and listed alphabetically.
Correspondence with Comrade Trotsky (New York City, January 24, 1940) 7 p.
The people vs. McCarthyism: the case against the McCarran Act, "An address delivered … October 24, 1953 in New York City ([New York], ca. 1953) 19 p.
Roosevelt, Czolgosz and anarchy by Jay Fox, and Communism by Henry Addis, ([New York?]: published by the New York Anarchists, [1905?]) 15 p.
Democracy and revolution (New York, 1934) 23 p.
One issue of: The Advance: an exponent of anarchism, March 2, 1912 (Mount Juliet, Tenn.) 8 p.
One mailer by the Alameda County Emergency Committee to Defeat Tenney "Thought Control" Legislation (Oakland, CA, June 7, 1949) 1 p.
The Trucks Act: Michigan's blueprint for a Fascist state (New York, October, 1952) 23 p.
Sing America (New York: The Workers Bookshop, ca. 1944-46) 62 p.
William Godwin as a sentimentalist (Reprinted from the Publications of the Modern Language Association of America, XXXIII, 1, 1918) 29 p.
Astrology and socialism, or The new era: a review and forecast (Brooklyn, NY, 1902) 23 p.
[1] Smash the Scottsboro lynch verdict (New York, April 1933) 16 p. -- [2] The crisis in India (New York, September, 1942) 31 p. -- [3] Marshall Plan- recovery or war? (New York, April 1948) 64 p. [2 copies]. -- [4] World cooperation and postwar prosperity (New York, January, 1945) 63 p. -- [5] Who owns America? (New York, June, 1946) 47 p. -- [6] The cartel system (New York, 1946) 32 p. -- [7] Atomic energy and society (New York, 1949) 95 p.
The big squeeze: crisis on campus (New York: American Youth for Democracy, December 1946) 23 p.
Communism and education: an open letter to friends of the University of Washington from President Raymond B. Allen ([Seattle?], October 7, 1948) 11 p.
Gov. John P. Altgeld's pardon of the anarchists and his masterly review of the Haymarket Riot, reprinted from Life of Albert B. Parsons (Chicago, 1915) pp. 286-310.
A reply to the Open letter of Dr. Hendin ([New York?, 1934?]) [4] p. [2 copies]
[1] A strike is criminal syndicalism- in California (New York, March 1931) 12 p. -- [2] The Bill of Rights 150 years after: the story of civil liberty 1938-1939 (New York, June, 1939) 79 p. -- [3] Liberty's national emergency: the story of civil liberty in the crisis year 1940-1941 (New York, June 1941) 79 p. -- [4] The American Civil Liberties Union presents Paul Butash, victim of the Indiana Sedition Law (New York, June 1937) 8 p. -- [5] Let freedom ring! The story of civil liberty, 1936-1937 (New York, June, 1937) 95 p. -- [6] School buildings as public forums: a survey of discrimination against unpopular minorities in the use of public school buildings (New York, May 1934) 16 p. -- [7] The shame of Pennsylvania: the story of how Pennsylvania leads the states in police violence and brutality, prosecutions for opinion, and war on strikers and radicals (New York, 1928) 21 p. -- [8] Foreign dictators of American rights: the Tresca and Karolyi cases (New York, June, 1925) 16 p. -- [9] Why two governors freed political prisoners: what the governors of Illinois and New York say of free speech prosecutions; with the dissenting opinions of Supreme Court judges (New York, February, 1923) 7 p. --[10] Crisis in the civil liberties union: a statement, including the basic documents concerned, giving the minority position in the current controversy in the ACLU (New York, 1940) 46 p. -- [11] Defeat the Omnibus Gag Bill (New York, December 1939) 11 p. -- [12] Civil liberties in the "present emergency": a statement by the Board of Directors of the American Civil Liberties Union (New York, October, 1939) 4 p. -- [13] Sedition! The first federal peace-time prosecution for utterances and publications since the Alien and Sedition Act of 1798 (New York, October, 1941) 11 p. -- [14] Beat the Kramer Sedition Bill, H.R. 6427 (New York, December, 1935) 8 p. -- [15] Beat the "Incitement to Disaffection" Bill (New York, December 1935) 8 p. -- [16] The Post Office ban on "Revolutionary Age" (New York, March, 1931) 6 p. -- [17] What freedom for American students? A survey of the practices affecting student activities and expression (New York, April, 1941) 48 p. -- [18] In the shadow of war: the story of civil liberty, 1939-1940 (New York, June, 1940) 71 p.
[1] From war to peace, American liberties, 1945-46 (New York, July, 1946) 79 p. -- [2] Civil liberties versus the Smith Act (New York, July, 1952) 4 p. -- [3] The Smith Act and the Supreme Court: an American Civil Liberties Union analysis, opinion and statement of policy (New York, April, 1952) 39 p. -- [4] Biennial report, American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California, Freedom and justice for all, 1934-1958 (San Francisco, June, 1958) 28 p. -- [5] ACLU Statement of the Academic Freedom Committee ... on "The rights and responsibilities of universities and their faculties," the March 24, 1953 statement of the Association of American Universities ... (New York, September 15, 1957) 16 p. -- [6] [Brochure, facsimile of a subpoena to California teachers] (Altadena, California, 1959) 4 p.
For release Monday, April 8, [1940], The proposal of the Dies Committee to investigate the political and social affiliations of the authors of textbooks used in schools and colleges … (New York, [1940]) 3 p.
The Schneiderman Case, United States Supreme Court opinion, with an introduction by Carol King (New York, 1943) 46 p.
How Red is the Federal Council of Churches? Read the facts inside and draw your own conclusions (Madison, Wisconsin, [1950?]) 6 p., plus flyer.
Is democratic socialism possible? As discussed on the "Wake Up, America" Radio Forum Broadcast, June 7, 1942, over the Blue Network (Cleveland, Ohio, [1942]) 14 p.
The American Federation of Anarchists (AFA) is a nation-wide, libertarian, membership organization of revolutionary socialists … (Minneapolis, Minnesota, 1970) 2 p.
American Federal of Labor … To the officers and members of all organizations of labor … (Washington, D.C., September 11, 1934) 2 p.
Commentary- on the McCarran Report on the I.P.R. (New York, January, 1953) 94 p.
Ephemera of the American Labor Party: [1] Postcard: "American Labor Party voters: Oppose the third attempt of the Communists to capture our party!" (Buffalo, NY, [1942]) -- [2] Flyer: Some editorial comments on the Anti-Communist resolution of the American Labor Party (New York, 1939) -- [3] Statement by the American Labor Party on its Anti-Communist resolution (New York, 1939) 4 p. -- [4] Fight the Communist attempt to capture the Labor Party, Liberal and Labor Committee to Safeguard the American Labor Party (New York, 1940) 4 p., plus leaflets. -- [5] A special message to enrolled voters of the American Labor Party [re April 2nd 1940 primary] (New York, [1940]).
[1] Capone, Karpis, Luciano … Convicted! How much longer will this vilest racketeer of all get away with it? Peoples' Committee Against Hearst of the American League Against War and Fascism (New York, 1936) 14 p. -- [2] Leaflet: Will American go Fascist? Hear the truth about the antisedition bills now before Congress, speakers Jerome Hellenstein ... Wm. Marvin ... (New York, [1935?]) -- [3] Youth against war and Fascism (New York, [1934]) 11 p. -- [4] What do you mean Fascism? We mean ... (New York, [1935?]) 4 p. -- [5] California's Brown Book (Los Angeles, October, 1934) 15 p. -- [6] Proceedings, Third U.S. Congress Against War and Fascism, United against Fascism for peace (Cleveland, Ohio, January 3-5, 1936) 60 p. -- [7] Flyer: March against war August 3 (New York, 1935).
[1] How Red is the little red schoolhouse? It's high time American parents knew the facts! ([Chicago?, 1949?]) 4 p. -- [2] Report by Homer L. Chaillaux, Director, National Americanism Commission, The American Legion, on the Third United States Congress Against War and Fascism, held in Cleveland, Ohio, January 3-5, 1936 (S.l., [1936?]) 9 p.
[1] What is APM? (New York, [1941]) 11 p. -- [2] Statement of the national staff of the American Peace Mobilization preliminary to meeting of the national board called for Monday, June 30th ([New York?], June 24, 1941). 1 p.
Top-secret documents consisting of: secret Communist Party manual on organizations by J. Peters … You won't believe it … Socialist school Handbook - SLID-Student League for Industrial Democracy … endorsed by Committee on Americanism for Ohio, National Sojourners, Inc ... Compiled by Capt. John E. Wright ([Columbus, Ohio?, 1954?]) 112 p.
[1] Board of Education found responsible: Jim Crow in L.A. City Schools ([Los Angeles, 1936?]) 4 p. -- [2] Nazification without invasion: Hated words to all free people … "Fascism" .. "Nazism" .. "Hitlerism" … (New York, [1939?]) 6 p. -- [3] Flyer: The American Student Union presents the Mob Theatre ... in "Academic Epidemic" ... at New School Theatre ... (New York, [1938]) -- [4] Brochure: Calling young America to the Model Congress of the United States, Milwaukee, July 2-5, 1937 (New York, 1937) -- [5] Join the campus organization for progressive students- American Student Union (New York, 1937) 4 p. -- [6] Students serve democracy: an introduction to the American Student Union (New York, 1938) 30 p.
Flyer: To the American farmer: Do you want to lose your farm? Do you want to suffer the same fate as the Russian farmers did? (New York, [1940]).
[1] This is youth speaking: Record of National Youth Citizenship Institute (New York, 1940) 31 p. -- [2] Youth defends America: Report of the 6th American Youth Congress, July 3-7, 1940 (New York, 1940) 47 p. -- [3] Program of American Youth Congress, adopted by delegates from 79 organizations with total membership of 1,700,000, held in New York City, August 15, 16 and 17, 1934 (New York, 1934) 15 p. [4] Here's a real job for you!! Pass the American Youth Act! Speech delivered by Joseph Cadden ... (New York, 1940) 11 p. -- [5] Youngville, U.S.A.: American youth tells its story (New York, 1937) 63 p. -- [6] Press release: Unlimited emergency for youth spurs preparations for 7th A.Y.C. to meet in Philadelphia, July 3-6 (New York, 1941) 3 p. -- [7] Department of Justice memo re: American Youth Congress, Strictly confidential, from the secret files of the FBI (New York, [1941?]) [16] p. -- [8] Flyer: Youth's answer to the war threat in Ethiopia, Anti-War demonstration and American Youth Congress Celebration (New York, [1935]) 2 p. -- [9] American youth subverters: Communists making alarming headway among America's youth by Rev. L. P. Buroker (Reprinted from the National Republic, Washington, DC) ([No place given, 1940?]) 4 p. [10] Flyer: Youth Independence Day Rally ... A declaration of the rights of American youth ... Clark Park (Detroit, 1935) -- [11] Special bulletin on conscript welfare (New York, 1941) 21 p.
[1] Dust off your dreams: the story of American Youth for Democracy (New York, [1945]) 23 p. -- [2] The case of the missing helicopter, or youth wants that postwar world (New York, [1946?]) 23 p. [3] Flyer: Memo: To Mr. Van Winkle, Berkeley Bowl, … We, the undersigned, firmly believe in American democracy. We believe that discrimination violates the basic tenets of our democracy ... (Berkeley, CA, [1947?]) -- [4] Announcing the A.Y.D.'s softball tournament (NY, [1944?]) 4 p. -- [5] Mailer: Dear Friend, About a month ago, we sent you a letter explaining the case of discrimination at the Berkeley Bowl ... (Berkeley, CA, [1947?]) -- [6] Mailer: A statement of facts regarding the suit of the American Youth for Democracy against the Berkeley Bowl (Berkeley, CA, [1947?]) -- [7] Program: Reaffirm out Declaration of Independence: 7th American Youth Congress, Hotel Stephen Girard, Philadelphia, July 3-6 (NY, 1941) 4 p. -- [8] American Youth Congress cabinet statement on the passage of the Burke-Wadsworth Bill ([New York?, 1940]) 2 p. -- [9] AYD fights Jim Crow, End discrimination in the Armed Forces (New York, [1946?]) 4 p. -- [10] Here's why AYD supports military training (New York, [1946?]) 4 p. -- [11] Flyer: Keep thought control off the campus (New York, [1947?]) -- [12] Flyer: A statement of the facts regarding the revocation of the charter of American Youth for Democracy at San Jose State College ([San Jose, CA?, 1947?]) -- [13] The needs of youth are the needs of the nation: American Youth for Democracy 1947 Program for youth needs (New York, 1947).
[1] Labor and socialism in America by "Americus" ([No place identified], 1948) 46 p. -- [2] Where do we go from here? ([No place identified], 1948) 57 p.
[1] Socialism for the farmer who farms the farm (Saint Louis, MO, 1912) 32 p. -- [2] Socialism: what it is and how to get it (Milwaukee, 1911) 32 p. [3 copies] -- [3] ""Ye who enter here leave hope behind"" (Oklahoma City, [1912?]) 4 p. -- [4] Life and deeds of Uncle Sam: a little history for big children (Milwaukee, 1912) 63 p. -- [5] Life and deeds of Uncle Sam (Oklahoma City, 1938) 79 p.
[1] A labor party for New York workers (New York: Communist Party, 1935) 15 p. [2 copies] -- [2] Social Security in a Soviet America (New York, August, 1935) 46 p. -- [3] Youth and the fight for unemployment and social insurance (New York, [1935?]) 23 p. -- [4] The march against hunger (New York, [1933?]) 15 p. [2 copies] -- [5] May Day 1941 (New York, 1941) 15 p. [2 copies] -- [6] The truth Communists (New York, [1937]) 15 p. -- [7] Working class unity of Fascism? (New York, 1935) 15 p. [2 copies] -- [8] May Day 1939: for labor unity, for social and national security (New York, 1939) 14 p. [4 copies] -- [9] The truth about Finland (New York, [1939]) 15 p. -- [10] A program for Manhattan's millions (New York, [1939]) 15 p. -- [11] Industrial slavery- Roosevelt's "New Deal" [Unemployment series no. 8] (New York, [1935?]) 15 p. -- [12] Why the Workers' Unemployment Insurance Bill? How can it be won? (New York, November 1933) 19 p. -- [13] Americans all! (New York, [1940]) 15 p. [3 copies].
[1] Manifesto on the Russian Revolution ([No place identified], 1922) 15 p. -- [2] Novomirsky. Anarchist-Communist manifesto ([No place identified], 1921) 31 p. -- [3] Manifesto on the Russian Revolution [Modern reprint] ([No place identified], 1922) 15 p.
Three issues of: Anarchos (New York): no.1 February 1968; no. 2 Spring 1968; no. 3 Spring 1969.
The sovereignty of the individual, [with an] introductory note by Josiah Warren (Berkeley Heights, New Jersey: The Freeman Press, 1938).
Poster: Be sure to attend the Western Conference of the Anti-Communist Federation, August 6, 7 and 8 … Auditorium, 634 West 15th St., Los Angeles (Los Angeles, [1946-1952?]).
Appeal answers to questions about Socialism (Girard, Kansas, 1913) 31 p.
[1] Why defend the rights of Communists? (New York, October 1949) 15 p. [2 copies] -- [2] Laureates of imperialism: big business re-writes American history (New York, 1954) 96 p. -- [3] The Negro in the American Revolution (New York, 1940) 47 p. -- [4] The United States and China: peace or war? (New York, October 1958) 23 p. -- [5] The Schlesinger fraud: a critique of the "Third Force" in America (New York, November 1949) 15 p.
Anarchism and individualism (London: S.E. Parker, 1962) 16 p.
[1] The Jewish people today (New York, [1940]) 14 p. -- [2] It's happening in New York: Anti-Semitism must be stopped, by John Arnold and Leon Harris (New York: Published by N. Y. State Jewish Buro, Communist Party, [1938]) 15 p.
Committee on Federal Legislation, Report on proposed "Subversive Activities Control Act, 1949" ([New York, 1949]) 14 p.
[1] One issue of Wayland's Monthly, no. 102, consisting of "Incentive under socialism" (Girard, Kansas, October 1908) 32 p. -- [2] Incentive under socialism (Chicago, [1908]) 64 p. -- [3] Pay and place under socialism (New York, [1932?]) 8 p.
[1] The Communist fifth column: what's the truth about it, and what isn't, reprints from the Chicago Journal of Commerce (Chicago, [1946?]) 47 p. -- [2] The threat of the Fifth Column brought right to management's doorstep: Communist power in U.S. industry, reprints from Chicago Journal of Commerce (Chicago, [1947?]) 61 p.
Mailer: Read carefully … [fundraising appeal for the International Review] (New York, [December, 1938]) 1 p.
Communist trade union trickery exposed (Washington, DC, 1947) 44 p.
[1] The federal jury is stacked against you (New York, January, 1949) 22 p. -- [2] Amnesty! (New York, December, 1952) 23 p. [2 copies] -- [3] Mailer: With the season's greetings. Dear Friend: This holiday is a happy one for me - for the first time in five years I can enjoy it free from the threat of imprisonment [fundraising appeal for the Joint Self-Defense Committee] (New York, [1956]) 1 p.
Slaves to duty (Detroit, 1938) 39 p.
Mailer: Essex Community Church … Dear Friend, The U.S. Board of Parole on October 14, 1959, has again denied parole to Smith Act prisoners, Henry Winston and Gilbert Green … (Chicago, 1959) 4 p.
How are we gouged: a few remarks (Chicago, 1911) 32 p.
Siamo ariani? (New York: International Workers Order, Italian Section, [1939]) 46 p.
An appeal for unity of the socialist movement on a scientific basis (Portland, Oregon, 1937) 31 p.
Barnhill-Tichenor debate on socialism (St. Louis, National Rip-Saw Publishing, [1914]) 63 p. [2 copies].
They gave their freedom! (New York, 1935) 30 p. [2 copies].
The anarchist revolution (London, 1915) 22 p.
[1] Mother Bloor (New York, February, 1935) 23 p. -- [2] Mother Bloor, the spirit of 76 (New York, [1937]) 31 p.
Mailer: To the branches of the Workmen's Circle, Dear Friends: At a meeting of the National Executive Committee… it was decided to endorse the work of the Civil Rights Defense Committee … (New York, March 7, 1944) 1 p.
Why the Negro people should vote Communist (New York, [1940]) 15 p. [2 copies].
Plan for America (New York: Socialist Party, April, 1949) 22 p.
Karl Marx, 1883-1933, by Max Redacht, Sam Don, Earl Browder (New York, March 1933) 32 p.
Edward Carpenter, the English Tolstoi (Los Angeles, The Libertarian Group, 1932) 24 p.
The express companies of the United States: a study of a public utility (New York: The Intercollegiate Socialist Society, 1919) 47 p.
A handbook for project workers … Tells you: About WPA rules and regulations … (New York, March, 1936) 36 p.
[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.
[1] Socialism, the main points (Chicago, [1907?]) 40 p. -- [2] Times change and men change with them (Chicago, 1907) 44 p.
[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.
[1] Old folks' pensions (Milwaukee, [1928?]) 4 p. -- [2] Power interests (Milwaukee, 1928) 4 p.
[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.
Bulgaria, a new Spain, The Communist terror in Bulgaria (Chicago, [1948]) 30 p.
The trial of Sacco and Vanzetti: a summary of the outstanding testimony (New York, 1927) 16 p.
The broken wall (Waterloo, Iowa, 1954) 78 p.
[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.
[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.
10 second and third copies of pamphlets in the previous two folders.
1943 - Merry Xmas- Happy New Year to you and yours from Fred, Elizabeth, and Billy Blair [Poems] ([Wisconsin?], 1943) 18 p.
[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.
[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.
Forgotten men, what now? New Deal "security" (Bronx: Libertarian Publishers, [1935?]) [17] p. [Ownership stamp of Dick Ellington].
What's ahead for textile workers (Boston: Communist Party of New England, December, 1948) 47 p.
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?]
A letter to American Negroes (New York, September, 1948) 15 p.
The Catholic Church and socialism (Chicago, [1913?]) 31 p.
[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.
Liberty luminants: extracted largely from the writings of Montaigne, Paine, Thoreau, Emerson and Tolstoy … (Ithaca, NY, [1902?]) 72 p.
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.
Anarchism and law (Buffalo, NY: Friends of Malatesta, [1970?]) 7 p.
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.
The State (New York: The Resistance Press, 1946-1947) 42 p.
[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.
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.
Next steps in the struggle for Negro freedom (New York, 1953) 48 p.
Workers Party vs. Socialist Labor Party, Arm and Hammer Pamphlets no. eight (New York: Socialist Labor Party, 1925) 32 p.
What is a Soviet? (Chicago, [1920?]) 4 p.
[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]
Tampa's reign of terror (New York: International Labor Defense, [1934?]) 16 p.
[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.
[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]).
[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]).
[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.
[1] The veterans fight for unity (New York: American League of Ex-Servicemen, March, 1935) 47 p.
Why I am a socialist, Little Blue Book no. 1691 (Girard, KS, 1931) 32 p.
[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.
[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.
[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.
[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.
[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.
[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.
[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.
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.
[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.
[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.
[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.
[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.
Memorial [for] Corinne Stubbs Brown ([New York], May 10, 1914) 15 p.
Who are the Communists and what do they stand for? (New York, September, 1936) 12 p.
The message of anarchy (Riverside, Conn.: The Hillacre Bookhouse, 1912) ca. [50] p. -- with 2 tickets to the Chicago Surface Lines.
Young workers in action: a story of the South River Strike (New York, [1932]) 14 p.
Stand up for freedom! The Negro people vs. the Smith Act (New York, March 1952) 15 p.
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.
Why I am a Communist: Bishop Brown's Lectures, no. XII ([Galion, Ohio?, 1932 or 1933]) 48 p.
[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.
People's capitalism: stock ownership and production (New York: International Publishers, 1958) 64 p.
What Cannon will conceal about the degeneration of the Comintern, issued by The Bulletin … Send for a free copy: The Trotsky School of Falsification: a collection of articles in the Bulletin exposing the support given by Trotsky and his cannons and Schachtmans to Stalin in betraying the Workers, Address Communications to: The Red Star Press (New York, May 30, 1943) 3 p.
How to reduce the cost of living ([Eugene, Oregon?, ca 1914]) 32 p.
[1] Social insurance 2nd ed. (New York, 1932) 31 p. -- [2] Unemployment 2nd ed. (New York, 1932) 39 p. -- [3] Work or wages (NY, 1930) 39 p.
[1] The People's Front: the new betrayal (New York, 1937) 64 p. -- [2] Let the people vote on war! (NY, [1939]) 14 p. -- [3] How to fight war: isolation, collective security, relentless class struggle? (NY, March, 1938) 15 p.
[1] … Smash the chains (New York: American Youth for Democracy, [1946?]) 23 p. -- [2] Behind the lynching of Emmet Louis Till (New York: Freedom Associates, December, 1955) 15 p.
Eyes on Washington! A program for people's legislation - what labor and the people can do to influence Congress in 1956 (New York, December, 1955) 15 p.
Must we have depression? How to keep your job (New York, February, 1955) 15 p. -- [2] A new Depression? (NY, September, 1949) 23 p. -- [3] We can have peace and jobs! 92 copies] (NY, May, 1953) 15 p.
[1] The truth about Luigi Antonini ([New York, 1943]) 24 p. -- [2] Public speaking: a speaker's guide book (NY, November, 1942) 30 p. -- [3] Wall Street on the warpath [2 copies] (NY, October, 1947) 23 p. -- [4] Italian Americans and the war [2 copies] (NY, August, 1940) 14 p.
Spain, 1936: findings of an International Youth Commission (New York, [1936]) 22 p.
American panics, 3rd ed. (Dayton, Ohio: Published by the author, 1908) 19 p.
Mailer: "All forward-looking Americans have been shocked by the present nation0wide witch-hunt atmosphere which has been created by the Thomas-Rankin Committee and others … " May 27, 1947 (San Francisco, 1947) 3 p.
[1] The strange case of two newspaper editors and the FBI: the inside story (San Francisco, [1953?]) 12 p. -- [2] The truth goes marching on … (Los Angeles, [1953?]) 14 p. -- [3] It might happen to you- Trial by perjury! (San Francisco, [1950?]) 4 p. -- [4] Fact sheet (January, 1956) on the California Smith Act case (Los Angeles, 1956) 20 p.
Scholar and school- new targets for bigotry (San Francisco, [1955?]) 13 p.
Youth unity for … Keynote and organizational reports from the First California State Convention of the Labor Youth League (San Francisco, [1954?]) 20 p.
Justice (Boston, 1907) 32 p.
[1] In freedom's cause: Soviet youth at war (NY, June, 1943) 31 p. -- [2] Shall it be girls in uniform (NY, May, 1941) 15 p.
Get organized: stories and poems about trade union people (New York, 1939) 48 p.
Socialism and progress (Griffith, Indiana, [1910]) 16 p.
For revolution (New York: The John Day Company, 1932) 28 p.
Poison gas and the coming war [International pamphlets no. 3, 3rd ed.] (New York, 1934) 23 p.
[1] American Stalinism and Anti-Stalinism (New York, July, 1947) 48 p. -- [2] Socialism and democracy [speech … given at the West Coast Vacation School, September 1, 1957] (NY, March, 1959) 21 p. -- [3] The coming American revolution (NY, April, 1947) 31 p. -- [4] The end of the Comintern, with The manifesto of the 4th International [Speech delivered in New York, May 30, 1943] (NY, September, 1943) 34 p. -- [5] America's road to socialism [six lectures given at the Los Angeles Friday Night Forum, December, 1952 - January, 1953] (NY, October, 1953) 79 p. -- [6] Socialist election policy in 1958 (NY, March, 1958) 11 p. -- [7] The workers and the Second World War, speech ... to the Tenth National Convention of the Socialist Workers Party (Oct. 2-4, 1942) with the political resolution adopted by the Convention (NY, November, 1942) 46 p. [2 copies] -- [8] Socialism on trial: the official record of James P. Cannon's testimony in the famous Minneapolis "sedition" trial, with an introduction by Felix Morrow (NY, January, 1942) 116 p. -- [9] The Russian revolution (NY, March, 1944) 30 p. -- [10] The road to peace: according to Stalin and according to Lenin (NY, November, 1951) 48 p. -- [11] Leon Trotsky: memorial address "to the memory of the Old Man" [speech delivered August 28, 1940 at Trotsky Memorial meeting in New York] (NY, [1940]) 15 p.
Prison etiquette : the convict's compendium of useful information / edited with an introduction by Holley Cantine and Dachine Rainer ; with a preface by Christopher Isherwood ; illustrated by Lowell Naeve (Bearsville, NY: Retort Press, 1950) 138 p.; bookplate of Rt. Rev. Dr. Michael Francis Itkin (Mikhail Itkin).
Socialism: the creed of despair: a debate, George B. Hugo vs. James F. Carey, Faneuil Hall, Boston, March 22, 1909 (Boston, 1909) 64 p. ; with two pieces of ephemera laid in, including: Books on socialism, science, etc. for sale by Socialist Literature Co., etc.
Let's get off the dime (San Francisco: Communist Party of California, [1946]) 24 p.
Veterans and labor: a program of action (New York, July, 1946) 23 p.
[1] What is fusion? [2 copies] (New York: Issued by Election Campaign Committee, Communist Party, [1933?]) 15 p. -- [2] Hearst: Labor's enemy no. 1 (NY, May, 1935) 22 p. -- [3] The crisis of the Communist Party [2 copies] (NY: The Arrows Press, [1937?]) 23 p.
Leaflet: Frand charivari of New Deal Reds and 4th-term jobbers for life ([Los Angeles?], 1944).
Meet the Young Communist League (New York, March, 1943) 26 p.
[1] Combatting subversive activities in the United States (Washington, DC, 1935) 29 p. -- [2] Communist propaganda among American youth: an example of material used (Washington, DC, 1936) 39 p. -- [3] A program for Anti-Communist action (Washington, DC, 1948) 56 p. -- [4] Communists within the government: the facts and a program (Washington, DC, 1947) 57 p. -- [5] Communist infiltration in the United States: its nature and how to combat it (Washington, DC, 1946) 40 p. -- [6] Communists within the labor movement: the facts and countermeasures (Washington, DC, 1947) 60 p.
Inventory of the Ralph Chaplin Collection ([Tacoma?], 1967) 30 p.
The North Atlantic Pact: for peace or war? [2 copies] (New York, May, 1949) 16 p.
Your standard of living … What's happening to it? [2 copies] ( New York, March, 1943) 30 p.
We are for the United Front (New York: Youth Publishers, [1934?]) 15 p. ; Young Communist International.
The story of a courageous woman (Los Angeles: California Emergency Defense Committee, [1951]) 10 p.
[1] Friends, When I joined the IWW three years ago … ([Chicago?], Oct., 1970) 4 p. -- [2] Here I go again: another statement by Cheyenne (Chicago, [1971?]) 4 p.
[1] Christian Youth for America (Englewood, Colorado, [1944]) 4 p. -- [2] Mailer: August 6, 1944, Dear Fellow American, We feel it our patriotic and Christian duty to inform you of a group of nationally prominent people, who are fostering Communism amongst our youth ... (Englewood, CO, 1944) 2 p.
Brochure: Answering Eleanor Roosevelt: reprint of an article by Myron C. Fagan published in the DEFENDER Magazine in the July 1954 issue (Hollywood, California, [1954]).
[1] A compilation of public records, 2109 Methodist ministers (Cincinnati, Ohio, July, 1956) 51 p. -- [2] In recognition of the 50th anniversary: the Methodist Federation for Social Action, 1907-1957: fifty years of un-Methodist propaganda (Cincinnati, Ohio, July, 1957) 16 p.
[1] The Browder case: a summary of facts, a brief for justice in America (New York, September, 1941) 22 p. -- [2] Flyer: Free Earl Browder Rally: unjustly imprisoned Anti-Fascist leader: Friday, March 27, 1942 ([Buffalo], 1942) 1 p. -- [3] Mailer: Citizen's petition to free Browder: The honorable Franklin Delano Roosevelt ... (NY, 1941) 2 p.
[1] Courage is contagious: the Bill of Rights versus the Un-American Activities Committee (Los Angeles, April 1953) 30 p. -- [2] Barenblatt and Uphaus- upholding First Amendment, ordered to prison in Supreme Court decisions reversal; 110 California teachers facing job loss in Un-American Activities Committee hearings! Emergency meeting, Monday, June 29 (Los Angeles, 1959) 4 p.
Brochure: Biddle's "evidence" against Harry Bridges? (New York, [August, 1944]).
"Best of the best …" to Harlem mothers (New York" The Teacher's Union, Local 555 U.P.W, November, 1950
[1] Whoever you are … You need CRC … CRC needs you (New York, [1949]) -- [2] Lawyers under fire (NY, May, 1952) 24 p. -- [3] Voices for freedom: a collection of opinions on the recent Supreme Court decision upholding the Smith Act and the conviction of 11 Communist leaders, including the historic dissents of Justices Black and Douglas (NY, July, 1951) 39 p. -- [4] How safe are you? (NY, [1954]) 15 p. -- [5] Deadly parallel (NY, [1948?]) 29 p. -- [6] America's "thought police": record of the Un-American Activities Committee, with a forward by Henry A. Wallace (NY, October, 1947) 46 p. -- [7] It's YOU they're after! (NY, [1948?]) 29 p. -- [8] Voices for freedom #2: An additional collection of opinions on the Supreme Court upholding the Smith Act, and Act for the persecution of all political non-conformists (NY, October, 1951) 39 p. -- [9] Exposed! The conspiracy against the people of Pittsburgh: Statement by Albert E. Kahn (NY, 1951) 4 p. -- [10] The case of the 11 Communist leaders: a fact sheet prepared by the Civil Rights Congress (NY, May, 1951) 4 p. -- [11] The " thought police" are on the prowl! Don't see ... don't hear ... don't speak (NY, [1950?]) 4 p. -- [12] Brochure: Freedom's fight is now (NY, [1950?]) --[13] Mrs. McGee's own story: speech delivered by Mr. Rosalie McGee at the Abyssinian Baptist Church ... April 1st, 1951 (NY: Harlem Civil Rights Congress, 1951) 4 p. -- [14] Your freedom in danger (NY, [1948]) 4 p. -- [15] Mailer: Season's Greetings for a new year of democracy and civil rights (NY, [1950?]) 4 p. -- [16] What's your freedom worth to you? (NY, [1948]) 8 p. -- [17] Per Eriksson did not wait to fight Fascism, will we? (NY, [1948]) 4 p. -- [18] Censored news of you America: Will America become a land of whispers? (NY, September, 1950) 30 p. -- [19] Civil rights news (NY, June 1951) 4 p. -- [20] Civil Rights Congress tells the story ... ([Los Angeles, 1951?]) 64 p. -- [21] Mailer: Trial by hysteria: a forum on what is happening to American freedom of conscience ([Berkeley?, 1950?]) -- [22] Mailer: East Bay Civil Rights Congress (Oakland, July 27, 1948) 3 p. -- [23] Membership appeal: Civil rights for all! (NY, [1948?]) 1 p.
[1] Workers on trial! Life stories of the 28 defendants now on trial by the U.S. Government in Minneapolis (New York, November, 1941) 6 p. -- [2] Mailer: Give now to the Minneapolis Labor Case Christmas Fund for the pirsoners and their families (NY, 1944) -- [3] Mailer: 18 Minneapolis defendants ordered to prison on New Year's Eve! (NY, [1944?]) -- [4] Trade union contributors to Minneapolis case ([NY?, 1944?]) 3 p. -- [5] Flyer: Free the 18 (San Francisco, [1944?]) -- [6] Flyer: The New Leader: Jailing of Trotskyists is a clear and present danger to civil liberties ([NY?], January 29, 1944) -- [6] Points to be incorporated in letters of protest to President Roosevelt asking for pardon for the Eighteen ([NY?, 1944?]) 2 p. -- [7] Minneapolis labor case: a report on work for 1944 in defense of the victims of the Smith "Gag" Act (San Francisco, 1944) 2 p. -- [8] Flyer: Minneapolis case prisoners released: Celebration meeting and social ([Brooklyn?, 1945]) -- [9] Brochure: 18 victims of the Smith "Gag" Act face prison for their loyalty to labor- unless you act (NY, [1943]) -- [10] Labor organizations representing 3,000,000 workers demand freedom for these 18 CIO and Socialist Workers Party leaders imprisoned under the anti-labor Smith "Gag" Act (NY, [1944]) 4 p. -- Free the 18 ... (NY, [1944]) 4 p. -- Sample letters of support and other ephemera from Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., Motor Transport and ALlied Workers Industrial Union Local 544-C.I.O (Minneapolis), and New Jersey State Industrial Council of the C.I.O.
[1] Social attitudes towards war and peace (New York, 1934) 15 p. [2 copies] -- [2] The logic of socialism (NY, 1921) 51 p. -- [3] The democratic way of life (NY, September, 1940) 30 p. -- [4] A manual for socialist speakers: a brief text book on the technique of public speaking and Socialist propaganda meetings (NY, 1933) 32 p.
[1] Men of liberty (New York, 1942) 14 p. -- [2] The atom bomb and you (with William Weinstone) (NY, September, 1950) 15 p. -- [3] We the people (NY, September, 1937) 31 p. -- [4] Life with a purpose: why you should join the Young Communist League (NY,[1940?]) 15 p. -- [5] Who wants war? How the Soviet Union builds for peace: an eye-witness report (NY, June, 1951) 15 p. -- [6] Who are the young Communists? (NY, May, 1941) 15 p. -- [7] What's behind the Berlin Crisis? (NY, August, 1948) 23 p.
Build a labor party now [2 copies] (New York, August, 1946) 15 p.
Daniel DeLeon versus the S.L.P. (Los Angeles, December, 1928) 7 p.
The truth about the American Youth Congress (Detroit, 1935) 26 p.
[1] Food now or coffins later: the meaning of the world food crisis (New York: Farm Research, Inc, July, 1946) 32 p. -- [2] Farmers in 1944 (NY, March, 1944) 55 p., with advertisement flyer laid in.
Some questions and an appeal / by Dr. Michael A. Cohn, Brooklyn, NY (New York, [1927]) 11 p.
Anarchism in the May Movement in France (Van Nuys, CA, [1968]) [20] p.
Betrayal of the workless, Little Blue Book no. 1700 (Girard, KS, 1931) 31 p.
[1] Democracy in danger [3 copies] (New York, September, 1938) 15 p. -- [2] The fight for recovery: stop the sit-down strike of big business [3 copies] (NY, September, 1938) 23 p.
Why Socialism is opposed to trade and labor unions, Bulletin no. 3, Social Service Commission of the American Federation of Catholic Societies (Milwaukee, [1911?]) 32 p.
Night riders in gallup (New York: International Labor Defense, May, 1935) 14 p.
The case against waterfront screening: questions and answers of interest to Americans (San Francisco, 1956) [16] p.
Flyer: The case of William Schneiderman (San Francisco, [1941])
The conspiracy against the schools: an analysis of Rapp-Coudert, March, 1940 to January, 1941 (New York, January, 1941) 32 p.
Reports of the February Conference on Non-Violent Revolution held at Chicago, January 6-9, 1946 ([Chicago?, 1946]) 8 p.
The Russian Lie! (New York, [1939?]) 2 p.
Is there a Pink Fringe in the Methodist Church? If so, what shall we do about it? A report to Methodists from the Committee for the Preservation of Methodism (Houston, Texas, April, 1951) 34 p.
The case of Carl Marzani (New York, [1947]) 15 p.
A message from Alameda County … Communists who believe that an ideological struggle to save the Party from the wreckers can no longer be delayed / Joe Sturdevant (Oakland, CA, 1948) 15 p.
Publisher on trial: a symposium: the case of Alexander Trachtenberg (New York, 1952) 47 p.
In defense of human rights: a petition to the Commission on Human Rights of the United Nations on May 10, 1950, by a group of citizens interested in justice for the victims of the House Committee on Un-American Activities (New York, 1950) 15 p.
Mailer: Dear Friend: We enclose a fine exposition by Mr. I.F. Stone on the use of sedition laws in our country today [reference to the Steve Nelson case] (Pittsburgh, [1954]) 3 p.
Petition to the President of the United States on behalf of the Hollywood Ten (Hollywood, CA, [1950]) 1 p.
Newspaper format: The coming Red dictatorship: Asiatic Marxist Jews control the entire world as last world war commences- thousands of plotters placed in key positions by invisible government- few ever elected- thousands more on their way (Union, New Jersey, [1953]) 4 p.
[1] Bulletin no. 2, November 21, 1934: Wholesale expulsions begin in the Party! (New York, 1928) 1 p. -- [2] Mailer: To all embers of the Communist Party (Opposition): Dear Comrades, With great regret I find it necessary to submit to you my resignation from the Communist Party (Opposition) ... / Herbert Zama (New York, August 13, 1934) 4 p. -- [3] Mailer: To all branches: Dear Comrades: Field and Caldas have completed their break with the league / Arne Sawbuck (New York, February 22, 1934) 1 p. -- [4] Mailer: To all the branches: Dear Comrades: The Field group has carried its rupture with League policies and its discipline to the point of a break ... / Arne Sawbuck (NY, February 10, 1934) 3 p.
Mailer: Declaration of the Communist Left Opposition Youth to the Student Congress Against War, To all participants: Your presence at this Congress signifies that you … ([Chicago?, December 27, 1932) 2 p.
Manual for Community Club leaders: a handbook for the use of officers and committees of Communist Community Clubs (New York, March, 1944) 64 p.
2 decades of progress: Communist Party L.A. County, 1919-1939 ; Twenty years of growth and progress of the Communist Party, U.S.A. (Los Angeles, September, 1939) 68 p.
A confession of faith: we state our case to the Legislative Committee [Special Legislative Committee to Investigate Communist, Fascist and Nazi Activities and Propaganda in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts] (Boston, September, 1937) 32 p.
Resolution and control of tasks, April 1st - August 1st, 1934 (Cleveland, 1934) 24 p.
[1] "Why don't they go back where they came from?" Pamphlet no. 3 in the "Who are the Reds" Series (Chicago, [no date given]) 6 p. -- [2] Thirteen on trial: 12 Communists … and your freedom (New York, [1949]) 4 p. -- [3] An open letter to all members of the Communist Party (NY, 1933) 23 p. -- [4] Frame up for war! (NY, 1948) 4 p. -- [5] The great train robbery ... Wall Street has its own technique today (NY, [n.d.]) 6 p. -- [6] Election platform of the Columnist Party 1940 (NY, 1940) 13 p. -- [7] Do you want to go to war? (San Francisco, [1940?]) 4 p. -- [8] The sixty-four cent question, The minute series, no. 1 (Chicago, [1947]) 4 p. -- [9] An American accepts! Program for victory! Acceptance speech of Israel Amter, Communist candidate for governor (NY, 1942) 6 p. -- [10] Veterans join the Communist Party (NY, 1947) 6 p. -- [11] Unite! for peace, democracy, security (NY, [1947?]) 6 p. -- [12] Unity on the rails (NY, [1946]) 6 p. -- [13] The American way to jobs, peace, equal rights and democracy: program of the Communist Party (NY, September, 1954) 32 p. -- [14] Platform of struggle for urgent needs of toilers: election platform of the Communist Party, New York State, 1934 (NY, 1934) 23 p. -- [15] Browder (SF: Waterfront Committee of the Communist Party, [1943?]) 4 p. -- [16] Whom and how to recruit ([SF or LA, 1938?]) 23 p. -- [17] Communist election program (NY, 1931) 24 p. -- [18] Nothing for the farmer (NY, 1939) 4 p. -- [19] The Communist election platform (NY, 1937) 15 p. -- [20] Fight the blacklist! (Los Angeles, [1950?]) 4 p. -- [21] The Klan threatens again! (LA, [1946]) 4 p. -- [22] The case of the $10-a-week robbery (Birmingham: Communist Party of Alabama, [1948]) 10 p. -- [23] Day of solidarity and united in struggle (NY, [1935?]) 22 p. -- [24] For peace, jobs and security: Alfred Newell Johnson, candidate for Congress, 7th District (Oakland, CA, [1948?]) 4 p. -- [25] Welcome! New member of the Communist Party ([SF. or LA?, 1938?]) 31 p.
[1] Wall Street is guilty of blocking all efforts to ban the A-Bomb ([Baltimore]: Communist Party of Maryland, [1950?]) 4 p. -- [2] Isidore Begun says register to vote October 9th to 14th (Bronx, [1939]) 1 p. -- [3] Defend America's unions! (Los Angeles, 1948) 4 p. -- [4] Attack Hitler now! A May Day call (NY, [1940?]) 13 p. -- [5] The Soviet-Finnish peace: a blow to warmongers (NY, 1940) 4 p. -- [6] Censored (Los Angeles, [1948?]) 4 p. -- [7] Flyer: Meeting advertisement- Earl Browder and James W. Ford (Chicago, [1936]) -- [8] Flyer: Help build a daily labor paper on the Pacific coast!! ([Oakland?, 1940?]) -- [9] Arrest Jim Crow and lynching, not working-class leaders! (Baltimore: Communist Party of Maryland and Washington, D.C., [1940?]) 4 p. -- [10] Smith Act: Fellow Americans ... (NY, [1951]) 6 p. -- [11] Conscription means war and Fascism (NY, August, 1940) 2 p. -- [12] How to vote against Republican reaction ... (NY, [1946?]) 4 p. -- [13] Hold the home front: our country is in danger! (NY, [1943]) 4 p. -- [14] Hail to the Soviets! May Day proclamation by the Central Executive Committee of the Communist Party of America (NY?, 1920?]) 2 p. -- [15] Father Coughlin vs. General Johnson: the battle of words ([NY], 1935) 2 p. -- [16] Hear the message of peace, jobs, civil rights, security: tune in on the broadcasts listed inside (Buffalo, [1940]) 4. -- [17] Unemployment relief and social insurance (NY, October, 1931) 31 p. -- [18] The fight is on! The people will veto Wall Street! (Chicago, [1947]) 4 p. -- [19] For jobs, security, peace and democracy ... Reaction in Alameda County (Oakland, [1938?]) 4 p. -- [20] Communist election platform 1938 (New Haven: Issued for the Connecticut State Committee, Communist Party, 1938) 15 p. -- [21] 1948 Election platform of the Communist Party (NY, 1948) 14 p. -- [22] Platform of the Communist Party in the 1934 California elections ([SF or LA?], 1934) 4 p. -- [23] 1937 Election platform of the Communist Party of Erie County (Buffalo, 1937) 4 p. -- [24] [Newspaper subscription postcard] (NY, [1936?]) -- [25] Support the USSR in its fight against Nazi war: statement of the Communist Party ([NY, 1941]) 1 p.
[1] Wall Street uses Finland for war ( San Francisco, [1939?]) 4 p. -- [2] Flyer: Meeting invitation for James W. Ford (Buffalo, September 24, 1940) -- [3] Will beer bring back prosperity? (NY, September, 1932) 16 p. -- [4] National budget: what's in it for you? (Chicago, 1948) 4 p. -- [5] Buddies, patriots, Communists (NY, [1946]) 6 p. -- [6] Declaration of the National Committee, Communist Party, U.S.A.: Keep America out of the Imperialist War! (NY, [1939?]) 4 p. -- [7] Witch-hunters menace academic freedom (Phoenix: Communist Party of Arizona, [1938?]) 4 p. -- [8] Proceedings: Youth Conference, New York State Communist Party, March 2, 1946 (NY, 1946) 40 p.
[1] card: membership application "receipt" filled out by George Markstall, endorsed by Edward Lasky, dated September 6, 1937. -- [2] 10,000 party members by Jan. 1st, 1939: Membership director at work (San Francisco, 1938) 14 p. -- [3] Flyer: Anita Whitney election rally ([Oakland?, ca. 1940?]) -- [4] Guide for study and discussion of William Z. Foster's pamphlet, In defense of the Communist Party (SF or LA?: Communist Party of California, August, 1949) 8 p. -- [5] Why you should vote Communist (NY, 1934) 23 p. -- [6] The women's fight for equality: maternity and childhood protection, 1935 election platform of the Communist Party (NY, 1935) 23 p. -- [7] Communist election platform: against imperialist war- for jobs and bread (NY, June, 1932) 16 p. -- [8] Why you should join the Communist party (SF, [1939]) 6 p. -- [9] Communist election platform (NY, July, 1936) 13 p. -- [10] The mystery of 1000 "vanished" ships / by Al Lannon and Harry Mann ([SF]: Waterfront Sections of the Communist Pary, U.S.A., [1946?]) 15 p. -- [11] Resolution N.Y. District Plenum Communist Party: political guide to Party membership ... (NY, [1937]) 15 p. -- [12] "We are many": Hear Mother Bloor (Oakland, [1943?]) 4 p. -- [13] Vote for President Earl Browder, Vice-President James W. Ford (NY, 1936) ca. 24 p. -- [14] Chronological material: Browder's revision of Marxism-Leninism and his struggle against the Party, Issued by National Education Department CPUSA ([NY?, 1946]) 15 p. -- [15] What about the executions in Soviet Russia? (NY, December, 1934) 4 p. -- [16] Flyer: Win the war rally, Friday, September 4, 1942 (Milwaukee) -- [17] Flyer: Rally advertisement: Earl Browder, Pat Toohey, October 12 (Milwaukee, [1940]) -- [18] To build Berkeley: Frank H. Brown for City Council ([1946?]) 2 p. -- [19] Flyer: A blow against America's peace and freedom! (buffalo, [1941]) -- [20] Flyer: Bessarabia and North Bukovina liberated! Soviet Union frees millions from oppression! (NY, [1945?]) -- [21] Flyer: Mass rally, Communist Party State Nominating Convention, hear Bob Minor ... (Milwaukee, [1940?]) -- [22] Flyer: The meaning of the German-Soviet war (SF, [1939?]) -- [23] Flyer: Put America back to work! Hear James W. Ford ... (Berkeley, [1936]) -- [24] Flyer: Peace through 'Big Three Unity': statement of the National Board, Communist Party U.S.A. (NY, [April, 1946]) -- [25] Flyer: Open letter to our mayor! (Buffalo, [August, 1941]).
[1] Flyer: Negro and white workers united! Defend Ethiopia! (Ithaca, NY, [1935?]) -- [2] Free Earl Browder (NY, [1940]) 2 p. -- [3] Flyer: An underhanded drive on the Bill of Rights (NY, [1939]) -- [4] Flyer: What Lewis' action means (Buffalo, [1947?]) -- [5] Flyer: Defend America now! Defeat dictatorship, defeat the draft (NY, [August, 1940]) -- [6] Flyer: Stop conscription! Save democracy! (Buffalo, [August, 1940]) -- [7] Flyer: Who burned the Tabernacle ... [re: fire at Calvary Tabernacle at S.E. 28th Ave and Hawthorne Blvd] (Portland, Oregon, December, 1936) -- [8] Flyer: Let's have real democracy at home (Buffalo, [March, 1942?]) -- [9] Mailer: Dear Friend ... "Mother" Ella Reeve Bloor will speak on the war crisis at the Lincoln-Lenin Memorial Meeting ... (Buffalo, January, 1940) -- [10] The auto workers convention: 700,000 unionists mobilize to help destroy Fascism (Buffalo, August, 1942) 4 p. -- [11] Flyer: "First step to Fascism"- Philip Murray ; Excello workers: you union is in danger (Detroit, [1937?]) -- [12] Flyer: Warning! Fascist war hysteria bills at Washington and Albany menace entire American people! (Buffalo, [1941]) -- [13] Flyer: Vote Communist Nov. 5, election rally Sunday, Nov. 3 (Oakland, [1950]) -- [14] Stop the plot to bring back the open shop and the blacklist! Stop the growing frame-ups against labor and Communists! (Boston, [1948?]) -- [15] Americans must eat and so must Europe (San Francisco: Communist Party of California, [1948?]) 4 p. -- [16] A threat to free elections (SF, [1940]) 2 p. -- [17] A challenge to the candidates of the Boss Parties: open letter to the candidates of the 23rd Congressional District, Bronx ... by the Communist Candidate ... Moissaye J. Olgin (Bronx, 1934) 2 p. -- [18] Who are the conspirators? (NY, 1948) 4 p. -- [19] Flyer: Stop Hitler, stop Chamberlain-Daladier betrayal of Czechoslovakia! (NY, [1938]) -- [20] Flyer: Stop this outrage! Defend the independence of Indonesia! (SF, [1949?]) -- [21] Flyer: Southern "justice" The pattern of Southern justice is spreading to San Francisco, Street rally (SF, 1946?]) -- [22] An open letter on wages to the members of the American Federation of Labor ( SF, [1947]) 4 p. -- [23] Flyer: People of New York! Catholic workers! Jewish people! Negro and white- all enemies of Hitler Fascist terror! (NY: Jewish Buro of the Communist Party, 1935) -- [24] Flyer: Police attack telephone strikers! (SF, [1947?]) - [25] Protective custody? [Spanish version on verso] (Los Angeles, 1947).
[1] Flyer: Protest Hitler war acts against Czechoslovakia ([Scranton?]: Lackawanna Branch Communist Party, [1938]) -- [2] Flyer: John L. Lewis's speech and the elections: statement of Communist Party of California (Oakland, [1940]) -- [3] Flyer: Don't fail to attend: Election rally for LaRue McCormich (Los Angeles: Issued by Aliso Village Communist Club, [1940?]) -- [4] Flyer: Act now! Defeat the Truman Bill! (LA: Los Angeles County Communist Party, [1950?]) -- [5] Mailer: Boycott the Olympics in Nazi Germany! (Buffalo, [1936]) -- [6] Flyer: Clear the track for the Freedom Train (NY, [1936?]) -- [7] Flyer: Defend democratic rights! (Redwood City, CA: Issued by Communist Party, San Mateo County, [1947?]) -- [8] Flyer: Hail, 17th anniversary of victorious Russian Revolution, Attend big celebration in your neighborhood (NY, [1934]) -- [9] Flyer: Heard Wm. Z. Foster ... ([Buffalo, 1939]) -- [10] Flyer: 100 times more for Spanish democracy! ([Oakland or Berkeley, 1936?]) -- [11] Flyer: Safeway stores yield on job discrimination (LA, 1947) -- [12] Keep America out of war! Fight for peace, security and Socialism (San Francisco, 1940) 4 p. -- [13] Flyer: Protest the outrages against Sorrell and the studio unions! (Los Angeles, [1946?]) -- [14] Meet Pete: Peter V. Cacchione, Kings County Communist candidate for City Council (Brooklyn, [1939]) 4 p. -- [15] Mailer: The man with the Wall Street ears: Carter Glass (Birmingham, AL: Communist Party of Alabama, [1940]).
[1] Is Japan the champion of the colored races? The Negro's stake in democracy (NY: Issued by the Negro Commission, National Committee, CPUSA, August, 1938) 47 p. -- [2] The Party organization, with an introduction by Jay Lovestone (Chicago, [1924?]) 48 p. -- [3] Constitution of the Communist Party of the United States of America (NY, October, 1948) 22 p. -- [4] Working class against Capitalist class: is the main election issue of the Communist Party: Election platform, Communist Party USA (NY, 1930) 30 p. -- [5] Wm. Z. Foster, Irish-American Labor Leader (National Chairman of Communist Party), "Everything for Victory", Lee Harris, popular Negro baritone (Minneapolis, [1943?]) 4 p. -- [6] Hope in Ohio for jobs, security, democracy, peace (Cleveland, [1934]) 14 p. -- [7] A policy for American labor (NY, August, 1958) 19 p. -- [8] On the struggle against revisionism (NY, January, 1946) 112 p. -- [9] Acceptance speeches, Communist candidates in the presidential elections: for President Earl Browder, for Vice-President James W. Ford (NY, July, 1936) 15 p. -- [10] What the Party gives and expects from a new member (San Francisco: Communist Party of California, [1943?]) 4 p. -- [11] 1944 ... Year of decision! (NY, February, 1944) 6 p. -- [12] Race hatred on trial (NY, [1932?]) 47 p. -- [13] Fundamentals of Communism (NY, [1932?]) 47 p. -- [14] Why every worker should join the Communist Party (NY, [1929]) 31 p. -- [14] The way out: a program for American labor: manifesto and principal resolutions adopted by the 8th Convention of the Communist Party USA (NY, May, 1934) 99 p. -- [15] Campaign book, presidential elections 1940 (NY, 1940) 128 p. -- [16] The ashes of six million Jews / by Fred Blair (Milwaukee: People's Book Shop, 1946) 23 p.
[1] The present situation and the next tasks (New York, September, 1945) 31 p. -- [2] The Communist position on the Negro question: self determination for the Black Belt (NY, [1932]) 64 p. -- [3] You are cordially invited to a Lenin Memorial meeting, Friday February 1 ((San Diego County Committee, Communist Party, [1944?]) 4 p. -- [4] The American Legion and the Communists discuss democracy (NY, July 1938) 79 p. -- [5] The meaning of the Palestine partition / Earl Browder, John Arnold, Statement of the C.P., Great Britain [Jewish life pamphlet no. 1] (NY, September, 1937) 32 p. -- [6] The path of Browder and Foster (NY, March, 1941) 22 p. -- [7] Vote for Israel Amter, Communist Candidate for Congressman-at-Large (NY, [1938]) 4 p. -- [8] Brochure: To Italian-American trade unionists, to our Italian-American neighbors, to all our Italian-American friends (NY: Communist Political Association, [1944?]) -- [9] Defend your home, vote for peace! (NY, [1940?]) 4 p. -- [10] A handbook for club officers (in outline form) (San Francisco, June, 1946) 16 p. -- [11] It's up to you brother ... and sister (NY, [1945]) -- [12] An invitation from friends of yours (NY, 1945) -- [13] If this is what you're thinking ... We would like to try to convince you to join the CPA (NY, [1944]) -- [14] We women (NY, [1937]) -- [15] Vote for Isidore Begun, Communist candidate for City Councilman (NY, [1937]) -- [16] To all building trades workers: support the Federal Building Program ... (Boston, [1938]) -- [17] Stop American imperialist intervention in China! Bring our boys back home! (NY, [1948?]) -- [18] Why we should work together (NY, [1944]) -- [19] Communist Party broadcast: The Landon-Hearst threat against labor: a Labor-Day message (NY, 1936) -- [20] Let's fight together: a message to you from Israel Amter (NY, 1944) 4 p. -- [21] "As one farmer to another" / by Fred Briehl (Walkill, NY, [1943]) -- [22] Independence Day: celebrate July 4th in the revolutionary spirit of 1776 (Buffalo, 1936) -- [23] 20th century methods! ([NY?, 1936]) 8 p. -- [24] Quiz program no. 2: On the Cold War! [For aircraft workers] (Los Angeles, [1949]) -- [25] What do Communists really want? (NY, March, 1947) 10 p.
[1] Stages in the history of the Communist Party: a political review (NY, [1941]) 39 p. -- [2] Theory and practice of the Communist Party (NY, September, 1948) 48 p. -- [3] The constitution and by-laws of the Communist Party of the United States of America (NY, August, 1938) 31 p. -- [4] "A small number of very rich men have been able to lay upon the masses of the poor a yoke little better than slavery." His Holiness, Pop Leo XIII (NY, [1937]) -- [5] State legislative program for 1947 (NY, 1947) -- [6] State legislative program for 1944 (NY, 1944) -- [7] "we have begun to fight": State legislative program for 1937 (NY, 1937) -- [8] No blackout for the people after this war (Buffalo, [1945]) -- [9] Vote Communist: our party never broke a promise (NY, [1940]) -- [10] Quiz program no. 3: On the Cold War! [For aircraft workers] (Los Angeles, [1949?]) -- [11] The Communist Party and the 1956 elections: a policy statement (NY and SF, 1956) 4 p. -- [12] An appeal to Socialist voters! (NY, [1938]) -- [13] Main political resolution adopted by the 16th National Convention of the Communist Party, USA, February 9-12, 1957 (NY, 1957) 81 p. -- [14] Souvenir program: 1940 State Nominating Convention of the Communist Party of Ohio (Akron, 1940) 18 p. -- [15] A municipal program for Los Angeles (LA: Communist Party of Southern California, April, 1959) 15 p. -- [16] Seven billion dollars-- for death or for life? (NY, 1941) 4 p. -- [17] Republican promises ... Republican deeds ... A bulletin, of, by, and for the farmer (NY, [1940]) 4 p. -- [18] Report of the Resolutions Committee to the Communist National Convention (NY, May 20, 1944) 31 p. -- [19] Decent homes to live in: the Communist position on housing (NY, [1936]) -- [20] A farmer's questions and our answers ... (Newburgh, NY, [1939]) -- [21] What New York State needs: a analysis and answer to Governor Dewey's Annual message (NY, [1945]) 23 p. -- [22] Souvenir program: State Convention, Communist Party of Ohio (Akron, 1938) approx. 20 p. -- [23] Welcome to the ranks of the Communist Party ([SF, 1945?]) approx. 16 p. -- [24] Flyer: Mass meeting for a workers daily paper ([Brooklyn], October 10, 1923) -- [25] Mailer: To you-- a member of our party! (SF, [1936?]).
[1] Mailer: Dear Friend, As you know, the Communist Party is now fighting for its legal existence … which the Mundt Bill (H.R. 5852) would destroy (NY, May 7, 1948) -- [2] You must unite, workingmen! Proclamation by the Communist Party of America ([NY?, 1934?]) 2 p. -- [3] Mailer: Leading Americans defend the right of Communists to be on the ballot (NY, August, 1940) -- [4] America and the international situation: resolution unanimously adopted ... by the Political Committee, Communist Party, USA ([NY?], October, 1939) 4 p. -- [5] "We are an American party, composed of American citizens. We view all our problems in the light of the national interests of the United States" Earl Browder (NY, [1939]) 4 p. -- [6] Wanted: lower prices now! (NY, 1947) -- [7] Mailer: To every member of the Communist Party: Dear Comrade: As you read this letter let your thoughts turn to our beloved leader, Earl Browder. May 20th is his 50th birthday .. (NY, April 30, 1941) -- [8] Stop the Roosevelt war drive!! May Day- the power that will end war! (San Francisco, [1941]) 4 p. -- [9] Long live Poland! Statement of the Polish Buro, State Committee Communist Party: Americans of Polish descent! The War is on! (In Polish on the verso] (NY, September, 1939) 2 p. -- [10] An election appeal to the Negro voter (NY, [1938]) 4 p. -- [11] Who are the Reds? (Newburgh, NY, [1940]) 4 p. -- [12] Women united to defeat Hitler! (NY, [1941]) 4 p. -- [13] They're fixing your future in Washington now! (NY, March, 1947) 4 p. -- [14] Tom Mooney said ... [advertisement for "A song about America" by Hoffman Hays] (NY, [1939]) 4 p. -- [15] The truth about Finland and the Wall Street war drive (NY, [1939]) 4 p. -- [16] Defeat the trusts' rebellion! ([Buffalo?, 1946]) 4 p. -- [17] Flyer: Ben Gold urges funds to defend '12' (NY, [1944?]) -- [18] Mailer: Browder-Foster rally conference (LA, July 20, 1938) -- [19] Another war coming! (NY, [1934?]) 31 p. -- [20] The Communist position on the farmers' movement (NY, September, 1933) 48 p. -- [21] Constitution of the Communist Party of the United States of America (NY, September, 1945) 23 p. -- [22] The Constitution of the ... (NY, [1942?]) 22 p. -- [23] A people's constitution for New York (NY, [1938]) 29 p. -- [24] Program and Constitution of the United Communist Party of American ([NY?], 1921) 31 p. -- [25] Sure- I'm a Red! The story of an American longshoreman (NY, NY: Waterfront Section, Communist Party of USA, 1939) 8 p.
[1]The American way to jobs, peace, democracy: draft platform of the Communist Party (NY, March, 1954) 23 p. -- [2] Hague over Jersey (Newark, NJ: Communist Party of New Jersey, [1938]) 19 p. -- [3] Communist election program against hunger, wage cuts, speed-up & war: New York elections, 1931 (NY, 1931) 25 p. -- [4] The farm crisis: a program for farmer-labor unity to meet the problems confronting agriculture in the United States today (NY, June, 1955) 23 p. -- [5] Recruit! 100,000 Communists in 1947 if you do your part! ([NY?], 1947) 12 p. -- [6] This is the story of May Day: this is your story ... the story of American labor (Chicago, 1947) 4 p. -- [7] Teachers! Where do you stand today 1934? (NY, 1934) 14 p. -- [8] How to organize mass meetings (NY, August, 1939) 48 p. -- [9] Post this on your radio: The Voice of Labor against reaction and Tammany Hall: Election Radio time table (NY, [1937]) 4 p. -- [10] Toward revolutionary mass work (NY, May, 1932) 64 p. -- [11] Communist call to the toiling farmers (NY, October, 1931) 16 p. -- [12] Earl Browder ... J.W. Ford ... Frances Brown, Communist Candidate 3rd A.D. ([NY, 1936]) 4 p. -- [13] Flyer: Hear the Communist Party candidate for President: Earl Browder (San Francisco, [1940]) 2 p. -- [14] 2nd front now! This is the will of the people (SF: California Communist Party, [1939]) 4 p. -- [15] The Communist election platform, 6th A.D. Bronx, Samuel Nesin for Assembly, George Primoff for Congress, Benjamin Levy for Senate (Bronx, 1936) 4 p. -- [16] Labor Day and the price of eggs [vote for Archie Brown, write-in Communist candidate for Governor] (SF, [1946]) 4 p. -- [17] The Mundt police state bill is Fascism: your freedom is in danger! (Los Angeles [1948]) 4 p. -- [18] Party building: a handbook for branch officers (NY, [1940?]) 15 p. -- [19] Flyer: America's real defense against the Rome-Berlin-Tokyo Pact ([Buffalo, 1940]) -- [20] Flyer: Hitler put his ideas over with movies, too! "Song of the South" insults Negro people (Communist Party of San Diego, [1946]) -- [21] Flyer: The G.M. strikers fight for all of us ([Buffalo], 1946) -- [22] Flyer: Hear Earl Browder, Civic Opera House ([Chicago?, 1936?]) -- [23] Flyer: Cacchione for Councilman ([Brooklyn, 1939]) -- [24] Here's where YOU make the news ... that helps make for victory and enduring peace! 1944 press fund drive (NY, 1944) 4 p. -- [25] Mailer: Dear Comrade: I welcome this opportunity to communicate with you ... William Z. Foster (NY, [1947?]) 4 p.
[1] Appeal to Socialists (New York, [1936]) 15 p. -- [2] Poster: Free the framed! Free the Cold War victims! In 1918 it was Gene Debs, in 1950 it's Gene Dennis, champion fighter for peace! ([Los Angeles?, 1950]) -- [3] Shop paper manual: a handbook for comrades active in shop paper work (NY, 1931) 42 p. -- [4] Flyer: Demonstrate for peace! Celebrate the 22nd anniversary of the Soviet Union, fortress of peace and democracy! (Milwaukee, [1939]) -- [5] Break the blockade of Russia! Declaration issued by the Central Executive Committee of the Communist Party ([NY?, 1919?]) 2 p. -- [6] 7 cards or handbills for various events: Celebrate 18th anniversary Russian Revolution (Buffalo, [1935]); Halt American imperialist intervention in China! (NY, [January, 1946]); On the air! Voice of Labor (Buffalo, [1936]); Open second front in Europe now, you are invited to hear Earl Browder (Buffalo, 1943); Lincoln-Lenin memorial meeting (Buffalo, 1942); Communist Party broadcasts (Buffalo, 1938); The hit lecture of the season ... Joseph Freeman ([Chicago, 1936?]).
[1] Campaign against the frame up of the Communist leaders (New York, [1948]) 23 p. -- [2] On the road to Bolshevization (NY, August, 1929) 46 p. -- [3] Who ruptured our duck? What's the deal for veterans? (NY, [1946?]) 15 p. -- [4] Resolutions of the Ninth Convention of the Communist Party (NY, 1936) 64 p. -- [5] For a powerful united A. F. of L. (NY, February, 1936) 14 p. -- [6] 13th Plenum: Theses and decision ... Draft resolution, Eight Convention of the S.P., U.S.A. (NY, March, 1934) 47 p. -- [7] Mr. President: the American and European people need relief! (Los Angeles, [1946]) 4 p. -- [8] An appeal to the American people! (LA, [1948?]) 4 p. -- [9] For peace, freedom, prosperity, Socialism: the 1948 election platform of the Communist Party (San Francisco: Communist Party of California, 1948) 15 p. -- [10] The McCarran conspiracy against the Bill of Rights (NY, April, 1951) 23 p. -- [11] Patriotism against McCarthyism (NY, [1953?]) 15 p. -- [12] Flyer: Stop police brutality! in San Pedro! (San Pedro, CA, [1940?]) -- [13] Flyer: Think as $ [the wealthy] tell you (SF, [1946?]) -- [14] Flyer: They died because they were Negroes!! [Martinsville Seven] (LA, [1949?]) -- [15] Soviet birthday, Born twenty-nine years ago ... (Sonoma County Committee, Communist Party, [1946?]) -- [16] Flyer: Verboten! [re Taft Hartley Act] (SF, [1947]) -- [17] Mailer: An urgent appeal to you by the Communist Party! [signed Carl Brodsky] (NY, [1935]) -- [18] Flyer: Wages can go up without prices going up! (San Jose: Issued by Warehouseman's Club, [1946]) -- [19] Flyer: We plead guilty! ([LA?], March, 1947) -- [20] Flyer: What does it mean to you? Don't be a jerk: race and religious hate hurts you! ([Phoenix?]: Thomas Jefferson Club, Communist Party, [1946?]) -- [21] Flyer: What next? (Communist Party of Contra Costa County, [1946]) -- [22] Flyer: You and all shipyard workers [Long Beach] (San Pedro: Communist Party, Harbor Section, [1946?]) -- [23] Smash the frame-up of the 12 Communist leaders (LA, [1948?]) -- [24] Flyer: J. Edgar Hoover on "snakes" (Worcester Communist Political Association, [1944]) -- [25] Flyer: Back the attack! [D Day invasion] (Phoenix, [1944]).
[1] Flyer: Which way, America- democracy or Fascism? (San Francisco, [1938?]) -- [2] Flyer: You are invited to attend a Communist election rally [Archie Brown] (Los Angeles, [1946]) -- [3] Discussion material from the Daily Worker (NY, 1938) 4 p. -- [4] Flyer petition: What will you contribute towards the fight for peace and democracy? (West Side Section of the Communist Party, [1946?]) -- [5] Study course on the Communist Party, the working class and industrial concentration, Outline and guide for schools, classes, study groups (New York, [1949]) 23 p. -- [6] Flyer: Your neighborhood problems will be discussed at an open forum ... (Oakland, [1946?]) -- [7] Unity: hail the unity of the A.F. of L. and C.I.O. around the freedom of Tom Mooney! (Buffalo, [February, 1938]) 4 p. -- [8] Your vote in '38 for jobs, security, peace, democracy: California gripped by reaction (LA, 1938) 4p. -- [9] The "foreign agent" hoax exposed! (NY, 1947) 4 p. -- [10] Flyer: Separation, layoffs, extra board: to all railroad workers (SF, 1946) -- [11] Flyer: Stop the KKK! It must not happen here (LA, [1946?]) -- [12] The struggle against Trotskyism, a supplement to "Oust Trotskyites from labor's ranks" by Max Weiss (SF, 1946) 14, 2 p. -- [13] This speech by Comrade Cannon was delivered seventeen years ago ... Our aims and tactics in the trade unions, a speech delivered at the Party Conference of Coal Miners at St. Louis, Mo., July 27, 1924 ([no place stated, 1941]) 7 p. -- [14] Mailer: Our pledge to Comrade Foster February 25th-March 5th (NY, [1949]) 4 p. -- [15] Give a party for the Party (NY: Party Entertainment Committee, [1938?]) 14 p. -- [16] [Record book] "This record book has been printed in order to enable you to keep an accurate account of the literature activity of every comrade in your branch or unit" ([NY?, 1936?]) -- [17] Party building: a handbook for branch officers: strengthen national unity and the war effort by building the Communist Party (NY, [1940?]) 15 p. -- [18] 20th anniversary of the Communist Party, United States of America (Chicago Stadium, September 1, 1939) 48 p. -- [19] The LaFollette third party: will it unite or split the progressive forces? (NY, May, 1938) 31 p. -- [20] The crisis in the Communist Party, U.S.A.: statement of principles of the Communist Party (Majority Group) (NY, February, 1930) 77 p. -- [21] For unity of the world Communist movement: a letter to the Independent Labor Party of Great Britain from the Communist Party USA (Opposition) (NY, March, 1934) 13 p.
[1] Draft resolution for the 16th National Convention of the Communist Party, U.S.A., adopted Sept. 13, 1956 (NY, 1956) 62 p. -- [2]Call to 16th National Convention, Communist Party U.S.A. (NY, 1957) 4 p. -- [3] Vote against war (NY, [1940]) -- [4] Card: Communist Party of the U.S.A. Application for Membership (NY, [193-]) -- [5] Quiz program no. 1 On the Cold War! [For aircraft workers] (Los Angeles, [1948?]) -- [6] Quiz program no. 4 On the Cold War! [For aircraft workers] (LA, [1948?]) -- [7] Quiz program no. 5 On the Cold War! [For aircraft workers] (LA, [1948?]) -- [8] What you should know about the Communists (NY, March, 1947) 15 p. -- [9] A message to the South, Rob F. Hall of the Communist Party of Alabama (Birmingham, 1942) -- [10] Let's win- this year! (NY, 1942) -- [11] Twentieth anniversary celebration of the Soviet Union (NY, 1937) 4 p. -- [12] Anita Whitney for State Controller (San Francisco, [1936?]) 4 p. -- [13] Flyer: A blow to Jim Crow ([Phoenix?]: Thomas Jefferson Club, Communist Party, [1948]) -- [14] Flyer: Labor unity for the New Year, AFL, Railroad Brotherhood (SF: Mission Club, Communist Party of San Francisco, [1948?]) 2 p. -- [14] Flyer: Mammoth election rally! [Earl Browder] (Buffalo, [1936]) -- [15] Flyer: No arbitration! To the A.F.L cannery workers ... [partly in Spanish] (Communist Party of San Diego, [1948?]) -- [16] Flyer The people vs. the monopolies [Taft Hartley veto] (San Diego, [1947]) -- [17] Flyer: Figure it yourself: This is the seventh Saturday that a picketline has been thrown around Woolworth's Phoenix and Tucson stores to protest discriminatory policies against Negroes ... ([Phoenix]: Thomas Jefferson Club, [1948?]) -- [18] Flyer: Hear John Gates, veteran of two anti-Fascist wars, National Veterans' Director of the Communist Party ... (San Pedro: Harbor Station Communist Party, [1948?]) -- [19] Flyer: The American people can win the battle ... The Smith Act can be defeated (San Francisco: Waterfront Section, Communist Party, [1948?]) -- [20] Flyer: Death penalty to lynchers ([Phoenix]: Communist Party of Arizona, [1948?]) -- [21] Flyer: The job ahead June 23- Pearl Harbor Day for American labor (San Diego Communist Party, [1947]) -- [22] Flyer: Hitlerism has no place in the U.S. Senate [re Theodore Bilbo] (Boston, Communist Party of Massachusetts, 1945) -- [23] Flyer: For an independent, united Ireland (NY, [March, 1940]) -- [24] Flyer: Nov. 5 is your busy day (San Pedro, [1940?]) -- [25] Mailer: An open letter! Dear Friends ... (Communist Party of San Mateo County, [1947?])
[1] Flyer: Race hatred in Phoenix! ([1950?]) -- Flyer: Safeway shows the way; Why not fair job hiring at Woolworths? ([Phoenix, 1950?]) -- [3] Flyer: 30,000 homes for vets in 90 days! (Brooklyn, 1946) -- [4] Flyer: Red baiters vs. pork chops: shipowner throws red herring into C.M.U. (San Pedro, CA, 1947) -- [5] Flyer: Come! Hear! Communist Party's write-in candidate for Governor: Archie Brown (San Pedro, [1946]) -- [6] Plan of work of National Committee, CPUSA, July 15, Labor Day 1950 ([New York?]) 4 p. -- [7] Mailer: Communist League of America ... Dear Comrades: From the daily press you have received the news of the raid upon comrade Trotsky's home in France ... (NY, April 18, 1934) 2 p. -- [8] Flyer: An open letter to the rank and file of the Communist Party [re Trotsky] (Rochester, [1938?]) -- [9] Report to Communist Party National Committee ... on National Board Youth Memorandum / by Max Weiss ([NY?], February 15, 1946) 5 p. -- [10] Souvenir Program: Second Front Now Rally (Cleveland, October 14, 1942) 16 p. -- [11] Smash! the Copperheads of 1942 / issued by Young Communist League (Los Angeles, 1942) 4 p. -- [12] V: Vote for Victory over Hitlerism with these tried and tested anti-Nazi can didates (Buffalo, 1941) 4 p. -- [13] Questionnaire to all party members on the Daily and Sunday Worker (NY, 1938) 1 p. -- [14] Flyer: The people's program of struggle for the defeat of Hitler and Hitlerism: statement of the National Committee, Communist Party, USA ([NY, 1941]) 2 p. -- [15] Discussion outline on the Capitalist press and The Daily Worker and The Worker ([NY?, 1947]) 6 p. -- [16] Make your vote count: vote for jobs, peace and democracy ([Buffalo, 1954]) 4 p. -- [17] The struggle against white chauvinism: outline for discussion and study guide for schools, classes, study groups (NY, September, 1949) 19 p. -- [18] Fight for what you voted for! Demand that President Truman live up to his campaign promises on civil rights! (Los Angeles, [1949?]) 4 p. -- [19] The fight is on for jobs and security, vote for [Herbert] Nugent for Supervisor (San Francisco, [1945?]) 6 p. -- [20] A fighting party and a fighting press (San Francisco, June 15, 1947) 4 p. -- [21] Alarm: World War III in the making! (Communist Party of Los Angeles, [1946?]) 4 p. -- [22] Flyer: Bring the boys home! Why the demobilization slow up? (SF: Twin Peaks Communist Club, [1946?]) -- [23] Is your newspaper fighting for you? [Ad for The Worker] (NY, [1945]) 4 p. -- [24] The Negro question: outline and study-guide for five session course (NY, January, 1949) 10 p. -- [25] 8th Convention, Communist Party, USA, April 2, 1934 (Cleveland).
[1] Program and constitution of the Communist Party of America: adopted at the Joint Unity Convention of the United Communist and Communist Parties, May, 1921 [Ownership stamp of Henry J. Lenon] ([NY?], 1921) 61 p. -- [2] The way out: a program for American Labor / introduction by J. J. Olgin [Eighth Convention of the Communist Party, USA] (New York, 1934) 99 p. -- [3] Struggles ahead! (NY, 1930) 32 p. -- [4] Security for Wall Street of for the masses (Philadelphia, [1930?]) 15 p. -- [5] The platform of the class struggle: National platform of the Workers (Communist) Party (NY, 1928) 64 p. -- [6] Constitution of the Communist Party of the United States of America (NY, September, 1945) 23 p. -- [7] Will beer bring back prosperity? (NY, September, 1932) 16 p. -- [8] Working class against capitalist class is the main election issue of the Communist Party: Election platform, Communist Party U.S.A. (NY, [1930]) 30 p. -- [9] Constitution of the Communist Party (NY, October, 1948) 22 p. -- [10] Constitution and by-laws of the Communist Party of the United States of America (NY, October, 1939) 31 p. -- [11] The Democratic twin of the Hoover hunger government (NY, October, 1932) 15 p. -- [12] Manifesto and program: Constitution, Report to the Communist International (Chicago, [1920?]) 40 p.
[1] The Communist position on the Negro question: self-determination for the Black Belt ([New York?, 1932?]) 64 p. -- [2] Race Hatred on trial ([NY, 1932?]) 47 p. -- [3] Brochure: Negro rights must be granted now! Communists declare ([NY, 1942]) -- [4] Proceedings, 16th National Convention, Communist Party, U.S.A., February 9-12, 1957 (NY) 351 p. [5] More brains than an ostrich! (NY: Cultural Division of the New York State Communist Party, [1947?]) 8 p.
Mimeograph (?) report to the Comintern by CPUSA [about 40 pages] -- The Polcom's revision of the Sixth Congress Decisions and of the Basic Principles of Leninism, 15 p.
Flyer: Thank youse! Thank youse! Comrades & fellow workers … the 12 members of the Portland Communist Party (1932)
[1] Brochure: An invitiation from friends of yours (Communist Political Association of New York, 1945) -- [2] Brochure: It's up to you brother … and sister (NY, 1945) -- [3] Constitution of the Communist Political Association [photocopy] ([NY, 1945?]) 23 p.
Flyer: Your child may be next! Six local Negro boys spent their Xmas vacation in the Juvenile Detention Home … (Oakland, [1945?])
Bulletin of the February Conference on Non-Vilent Revolutionary Socialism (Chicago, January, 1946) 20 p.
CPLA- Program policies (New York, [1932?]) 16 p.
[1] Official reports on the expulsion of Communist dominated organizations from the CIO (Washington, DC, September, 1954) 125 p. -- [2] The CIO News: November 3, 1941: Locals back Teamsters on trial ([Pittsburgh?], 1941)
[1] Flyer: Student union under thumb of Reds, convention shows (New Haven, [January, 1940?]) -- [2] Ford Motor Company and American Bar Association help Communist conspiracy by joining plot against "McCarthyism" (New York: Committee FOR McCarthyism, 1953) 8 p. -- [3] We must win! We will Win! But why win the war ... and lose what we're fighting for? ([New Haven?, 1942?]) 30 p. -- [4] Flyer: Enroll for vital volunteer service on the home front! (New Haven, [1943?]).
Leaflet: Our 'Gene … The above poem was written in the court room by Edmund Vance Cook who is not a Socialist [poem about Eugene Debs] ([no place named, 1919?])
UMT: Universal Military Training: program for peace or weapon for war? / Illustrated by Charles Keller (New York, March, 1948) 23 p.
The rent strike: an address made at Lyric Hall, Sixth Avenue, near Forty-second Street, before the Liberty Congregation (New York City: The Corwill Publishing Company, [1907?]) 16 p.
The high cost of living: how to bring it down (New York, December, 1937) 15 p. -- [2] Women and equality (NY, February, 1935) 14 p. -- [3] Women and equality [2nd copy, different cover] (NY, February, 1935) 14 p.
The Santana case: tragedy of a Puerto Rican youth [re: Frank Santana] (New York, April, 1957) 16 p.
Freedom is everybody's job! The crime of the government against the Negro people: summation in the trial of the 11 Communist leaders (New York: National Non-Partisan League, [1949]) 16 p.
True freedom for Negro and white labor / with introduction by Norman Thomas (New York City: Negro Labor News Service, [1933]) 59 p.
The party press, 1900 [to] 1904 [pamphlet re The Daily People newspaper with numerous photographs of staff and production] (New York, 1904) 32 p.
Ten years: the story of a people's newspaper / by Al Richmond (San Francisco, January, 1948) 31 p.
[1] Mailer: Dear Comrade: William Z. Foster and Ben Gitlow are running for President and Vice-President in the coming election on the Workers Party Ticket / signed Moritz J. Loeb (Chicago, [1928?]) -- [2] You subscription expires in 10 days. Renew now! (New York, [1930s?]) -- [3] Mailer: [Fundraising appeal] (NY, [1930s]) -- [4] Flyer: Who is financing Fascism in the U.S.? Startling revelations, unearthed by [Marguerite] Young, [John L.] Spivak, [Sender] Garlin (NY, [1937?]) -- [5] How to build it! (NY, [1937?]) 15 p. -- [6] How to sell The Daily Worker (NY, [1936?]) 30 p. -- [7] Red sparks / by Jorge (NY, [1936?]) 31 p. -- [8] Steel workers: your liberties are in danger! "Defense Program" gigantic hoax, blueprint for American dictatorship: to the steel workers of Buffalo and Lackawanna City! ([Buffalo?, 1940]) 4 p. -- [9] Eleventh anniversary Daily Worker [event program] (NY, January, 1935) 4 p. -- [10] Are you one of the 5 million? (NY, 1937) 10 p. -- [11] Brochure: What's happening? ([NY, 1938]) -- [12] Communism: 20th century Americanism: follow the elections in the Daily and Sunday Worker ([NY,1938?]) 4 p.
Proudhon and his "Bank of the people", being a defense of the great French Anarchist, showing the evils of a specie currency, and that interest on capital can and ought to be abolished by a system of free and mutual banking. A series of newspaper articles written by Charles I Dana (New York, 1896) 67 p.
[1] The challenge of youth: why every young worker should join the Young Workers Communist League (Chicago: Young Workers Communist League of America, 1926) 52 p [2 copies] -- [2] A Marxist exposure of the fallacy of technocracy (San Francisco: Western Worker Publishers, [1930?]) 16 p. -- [3] The battle for production to invade Europe now (NY, April, 1942) 47 p.
Argument of Clarence Darrow in the case of the Communist Labor Party in the Criminal Court, Chicago (Chicago, 1920) 116 p.
[1] The Negro people on the march: report for the National Committee of the Communist Party, U.S.A. (NY, 1956) 48 p. [2 copies] -- [2] The Negro people in the struggle for peace and freedom: report to the 15th convention, Communist Party (NY, February, 1951) 23 p. [2 copies] -- [3] Police brutality: lynching Northern style, with a special message from Councilman Benjamin J. Davis [text by Horace Marshall] (NY, 1947) 32 p. -- [4] In defense of Negro rights: Benjamin J. Davis, Former Councilman of New York, testifies in the Trial of the Communist Twelve at Foley Square (NY, January, 1950) 64 p. [2 copies] -- [5] The Negro people and the Communist Party (NY, March, 1943) 15 p. -- [6] The path of Negro liberation (NY, April, 1947) 22 p. [2 copies].
Let us build a National Negro Congress (Washington, DC, October, 1935) 31 p.
The story of the Trenton Six (New York, December, 1949) 23 p. [2 copies].
[1] Anarchism and American traditions (Chicago: Free Society Group, 1932) 20 p. -- [2] Direct action: a lecture delivered in Chicago, January 21, 1912 (New York: Mother Earth Publishing Association, 1912) 19 p. -- [3] The dominant idea (NY: Mother Earth Publishing Association, 1910) 16 p. -- [4] The heart of Angiolillo at the end of the alley where the White Rose died [The Libertarian Magazine, Vol. I, no. 12, July, 1916] ([Chicago?], 1916) 24 p.
[1] Debs' Address to the jury and statement to the court (Chicago, [1919?]) 20 p. -- Childhood ([Chicago?, 1910?]) 4 p. -- [3] Woman- Comrade and equal (Chicago, [1908?]) 4 p. -- [4] Liberty (Chicago, [1910?]) 30 p. -- [5] Eugene V. Debs' Canton speech (Chicago, [1919]) 32 p. -- [6] Wayland's Monthly: Here comes a man / by George Bicknell ; The issue / by Eugene Debs [No. 97, May 1908] (Girard, Kansas) 16 p. -- [7] Broadside: Woman ([Chicago?, 1915?]) -- [8] The children of the poor (Chicago, [1912?]) 4 p. -- [9] The forbidden speech of Eugene V. Debs, Socialist Party candidate for President ([Philadelphia?], 1908) 4 p. -- [10] The Debs White Book: full text of important documents in famous Debs case, dedicated to Appeal Army (Girard, Kansas, [1920?]) 96 p. -- [11] To the women of America (Chicago, [1920]) 2 p. -- [12] The indictment of our leaders (Chicago, [1918]) 2 p.
This man challenged an insult to 15,000,000 Negro Americans (New York, [1950?] 4 p.
[1] Capitalism means war! (Brooklyn: New York Labor News, 1970), 32 p. -- [2] The burning question of trades unionism … How the workers must organize to abolish Capitalism (Palo Alto, CA, 1977) 44 p. -- [3] A Socialist in Congress: his conduct and responsibilities (NY, 1963) 104 p. -- [4] Socialism vs. 'individualism', Debate: DeLeon vs. Carmody (NY, 1942) 46 p. -- [5] Anti-Semitism: its cause and cure ([NY?], 1921) 26 p. -- [6] Unity: An address (NY, 1914) 27 p. -- [7] Woman's suffrage: an address delivered by Daniel DeLeon under the auspices of The Socialist Women of Greater New York (NY, 1911) 48 p. -- [8] Revolutionary Socialism in U.S. Congress, "Parliamentary idiocy" vs. Marxian Socialism (NY, 1931) 104 p. -- [9] The socialization of money [People's Pocket Series no. 170] (Girard, Kansas, [1924?]) 40 p.
[1] "Dangerous thoughts": the case of the indicted twelve (New York, October, 1948) 15 p. [2 copies] -- [2] The case for the Communist Party: opening statement to the jury / introduction by Elizabeth Gurley Flynn (NY, April, 1949) 32 p. -- [3] Let the people know: the truth about the Communists which the Un-American Committee tried to suppress (NY, April, 1947) 32 p. -- [4] Is Communism un-American? 9 questions about the Communist Party answered (NY, March, 1947) 13 p. -- [5] What America needs: a Communist view / by Eugene Dennis and John Gates (NY, March, 1956) 23 p. -- [6] The Communists take a new look: report to the National Committee of the Communist Party, U.S.A. (NY, May, 1956) 48 p. -- [7] 21 questions about war and peace answered (NY, August, 1950) 47 p. [2 copies] -- [8] America at the crossroads: postwar problems and Communist policy / forward by William Z. Foster (NY, December, 1945) 48 p. -- [9] The elections and the outlook for national unity (NY, December, 1944) 46 p. -- [10] Peace or war: the people against the warmakers! (NY, May, 1946) 16 p. -- [11] The people against the trusts: build a democratic front to defeat reaction NOW and to win a peoples victory in 1948 (NY, December, 1946) 64 p. -- [12] What America faces: the new war danger and the struggle for peace, democracy and economic security (NY, March, 1946) 62 p. -- [13] The MacArthur ouster: a letter to members of the Communist Party (NY, April, 1951) 16 p. [2 copies] -- [14] The Communists take a new look: report of the National Committee of the Communist Party, U.S.A. (NY, May, 1956) 48 p. -- [15] The menace of American imperialism / by William Z. Foster ; America needs the Communist Party / by Eugene Dennis (NY, October, 1945) 30 p. -- [16] An open letter to all members of the Communist Party (NY, [1948]) 11 p. -- [17] The Fascist danger and how to combat it (NY, August, 1948) 63 p. [2 copies] -- [18] "I challenge the Un-Americans" (NY, May, 1947) 16 p. [2 copies] -- [19] Eugene Dennis indicts the Wall Street conspirators (NY, August, 1948) 15 p. -- [20] Brochure: "My liberty is dear to me ... But more dear to me is the liberty of the whole American people" (NY, [1948]) -- [21] The Un-Americanism of Hearst's John Sentinel (Milwaukee: Communist Party of Wisconsin, [1947?]) 16 p. -- [22] The red-baiters menace America (NY, October, 1946) 11 p. -- [23] The third party and the 1948 elections (NY, March, 1948) 61 p. -- [24] "My liberty as an individual is, of course dear to me. But more precious is the liberty of the whole American people ([NY, 1948]) 4 p.
Flyer: Congress has the power to declare amnesty / Albert DeSilver Director of the American Civil Liberties Union [re Eugene Debs] ([New York?, 1920?]) 2 p.
Rhapsodies in red: songs for the social revolution (New York: Rand School Press, 1933) 48 p.
Address delivered at the meeting of the Sons of the American Revolution New York Chapter at the Hotel Plaza January 19th, 1939. 16 p.
[1] Red network bulletin: Dare we oppose Red treason? (Kenilworth, Illinois, [1937]) 15 p. -- [2] An open letter to Keith L. Brooks from Elizabeth Dilling (Chicago, June, 1940) 8 p.
Trade union problems (New York, [1941?]) 43 p.
[1] The Labor Party illusion: a Libertarian League publication (New York, 1961) 14 p. -- [2] Ethics and American unionism and the path ahead for the working class (NY, 1958) 24 p.
[1] The defense of a revolutionist by himself: the story of the trial of James H. Dolsen who defended himself on the charge of criminal syndicalism, Superior Court, Oakland, California, March 23 - April 23, 1920 (Oakland, CA, 1920) 128 p. -- [2] The awakening of China (Chicago, 1926) 267 p.
The study of Marxism-Leninism and the role of the Party in promoting national unity (New York, [1942?]) 20 p.
[1] The highway of hunger: story of America's homeless youth (New York, June, 1933) 14 p. -- [2] Get wise- organize: what every young steel worker should know, with an introduction by William Z. Foster (NY, [1937]) 22 p.
Hunger strikers fight for bail: five men on a hunger strike by Chalres A. Doyle, Gerhart Eisler, Irving Potash, Ferdinand C. Smith, John Williamson (New York, [1948]) 15 p.
The emancipation of society from government [Free Society Library, March, 1898, no. 3] (San Francisco, 1898) 16 p.
Are you ready for war? (New York: Young Peoples Socialist League, [1937?]) 18 p.
[1] Jim Crow in Los Angeles (Los Angeles, [1946]) 22 p. [2 copies] -- [2] "Out of their own mouths": a documentary study of the new line of the Comintern on war / edited by Harold Draper (New York, [1935?]) 39 p.
Answer to the United States Civil Service Commission (Portland, Oregon, March 20, 1957) 11 p.
I take my stand for peace (New York, June, 1951) 15 p. [2 copies]
La dissolution du Parti communiste americaine: extrait des Cahiers du Communisme (Paris, 1945) 16 p.
[1] What war means to the workers: answering the question … Will war bring back prosperity? (New York, October, 1933) 23 p. -- [2] Spying on workers [second edition] (NY, 1933) 31 p. -- [3] The Palmer raids / prepared by Labor Research Association; edited by Robert W. Dunn (NY, 1948) 80 p. -- [4] The Bill of Rights in danger! (NY, January, 1940) 30 p.
[1] The Supreme Court's challenge to labor: the N.I.R.A. decision a signal for intensified attacks on the workers (New York, June, 1935) 22 p. [2 copies] -- [2] Gastonia, citadel of the class struggle in the New South (NY: National Textile Workers Union, September, 1929) 58 p. -- [3] Why Hearst lies about Communism: three open letters to William Randolph Hearst (NY, March, 1935) 47 p. [2 copies] -- [4] The great San Francisco general strike (NY, October, 1934) 79 p. -- [5] The struggle against opportunism in the labor movement, for a Socialist United States (NY, [1947]) 87 p.
The trial of Eugene Debs, with Debs' Address to the court on receiving sentence (New York: The Liberator Publishing Co., [1918]) 29 p.
Economic revolution [International Workers of the World IWW] (Yellow Springs, OH, [1970?]) 4 p.
Radical labor in the Nevada mining booms 1900-1920 (Carson City, NV, 1963) 71 p.
[1] A plot against the Commonwealth of Massachusetts [re Struik-Winner case] ([New York?, 1948?]) 8 p. -- [2] The Smith Act: its origin, use, poison (NY, March, 1956) 16 p.
[1] Mailer: Dear Friend: Three hundred and forty leading citizens of the Bay Area have signed their names to the enclosed petition declaring their opposition to the Mundt-Nixon bill …[signed Holland Roberts] (San Francisco, June 5, 1948) -- [1] Mailer: For an emergency committee of 1000 against the Mundt-Nixon bill (SF, [1948]) 2 p. -- [3] Keep America free: we the undersigned ... (SF, [1948]) 3 p. -- Two typed postcards.
[1] Sedition! To protest and organize against war, hunger and unemployment (New York: International Labor Defense, [1930]) 31 p. -- [2] Debs and O'Hare in prison ([Chicago, 1919]) 45 p.
Questions & answers on The Woman Question (New York: The Jefferson School of Social Science, March, 1953) 19 leaves.
[1] The role of the trade unions: their economic role under Capitalism [Second edition] (New York, Educational Dept., Workers Party, January, 1947) 30 leaves -- [2] Erber statement of resignation [Workers Party] ([New York?], September 28, 1948) 32 p.
The fight for peace: report on the preparations for Imperialist war and the tasks of the Communist International, delivered August 13, 1935 (New York, November, 1935) 96 p.
Outstanding features of the Sacco-Vanzetti case together with letters from the defendants (Boston, New England Civil Liberties Committee, American Civil Liberties Union, January, 1924) 46 p.
Reds in the Anti-Defamation League [no. 9] ([Los Angeles]: Cinema Educational Guild, June, 1950) 42 p.
Issues for January and March, 1891 (Sioux City, Iowa)
The Spanish triangle [SRAPHLET] ([no place identified], January 1972) 16 p.
Who are the 18 prisoners in the Minneapolis labor case? How the Smith "Gag" Act has endangered workers rights and free speech (New York: Civil Rights Defense Committee, [1942]) 27 p.
Communism or Capitalism? Which way for us? (New York: National Foremen's Institute, 1948) 30 p.
[1] Ben Davis walks on Freedom Road [Re-elect Benjamin J. Davis, Jr.] (New York, [1945?]) 8 p. -- [2] May Day, 1947 [illustrations by Rockwell Kent] (NY: United May Day Committee, 1947) 13 p -- [3] Intellectuals in the fight for peace (NY, June, 1949) 32 p. [2 copies] -- [4] Spain and peace (NY: Joint Anti-Fascist Refugee Committee, April 1952) 16 p. -- [5] Literature and reality (New York: International Publishers, 1950) 128 p.
Does God exist? [English version by Aurora Alleva and D. S. Menico] (Stelton, NJ: Kropotkin Library, [1945?]) 40 p.
Anonymous pamphlet entitled, Fear and powerlessness [history of anarchism] ([No place specified, 1974?]) 8 p.
Brochure: Fear is like a cancer that murders the mind of man: Fight the Levering Act! (San Francisco, [1950?]).
Our position: war, Fascism, Bolshevism, United Front, political prisoners ( [New York?, 1934]) 12 p.
Social progress: a Marxian point of view (Philadelphia: Neo-Seminar, October, 1935) 32 p.
[1] The modern school (New York: Truth Seeker, [1910?]) 8 p. -- [2] The Ferrer Modern School / by W. J. Durant, Principal (New York: The Francisco Ferrer Association, [1912?]) 8 p. -- [3] The modern school (New York: Mother Earth Publishing Association, [1908?]) 8 p. -- [4] The "trial" of ferrer, a clerical judicial murder / by Jaime de Angulo [Editorial from the New York Daily People, January 22, 1911] 45 p. -- [5] The Ferrer Modern School / by Harry Kelly (Stelton, NJ: The Modern School Association of N.A., 1920) 8 p. -- [6] Francisco Ferrer: hes life, work and martyrdom, with messages written especially for this brochure by Ernst Haeckel, Maxim Gorky, Edward Carpenter, Havelock Ellis, Jack London, and others. (NY: Francisco Ferrer Association, [1915?]) 95 p.
Free Ferrero and Sallitto: demand right of political asylum, deportation is a weapon against labor and liberty [re Vincent Ferrero and Domenick Sallitto] (New York, [1936?]) 16 p.
Prospects of American Capitalism ["Problems of the American Revolution" no. 1] (New York: Organization Publishing Co., [1935]) 32 p. [3 copies].
Behind the war headlines (New York, [1939]) 15 p.
An American holiday: May Day 1939 (New York: United May Day Provisional Committee, April, 1939) 14 p.
What is Socialism? (New York, [1940]) 64 p. [2 copies].
McCarthyism in the courts: the story of the Steve Nelson frame-up (New York: Provisional Committee to Free Steve Nelson, 1953) 30 p.
The higher unionism (New Orleans, [1905?]) 20 p.
[1] Woman's place- in the fight for a better world (New York, March, 1947) 16 p. -- [2] The Twelve and you: what happens to democracy is your business too! (NY, September, 1948) 22 p. -- [3] Questions and answers on the Browder case (NY, 1942) 4 p. -- [4] Communists and the people: summation speech to the jury in the second Foley Square Smith Act trial of thirteen Communist leaders (NY, May, 1953) 48 p. -- [5] Women in the war (NY, November, 1942) 31 p. -- [6] A message to all women Communists from Elizabeth Gurley Flynn on Mother's Day, May, 1950 (NY, 1950) 4 p. -- [7] I didn't raise my boy to be a soldier- for Wall Street (NY, February, 1940) 15 p. -- [8] An appeal to women (NY, [1948]) 4 p. -- [9] Daughters of America: Ella Reeve Bloor, Anita Whitney (NY, June, 1942) 14 p. -- [10] Labor's own, William Z. Foster: a Communist's fifty years of working-class leadership and struggle (NY, March, 1949) 48 p. -- [11] The plot to gag America (NY, April, 1950) 14 p. -- [12] Meet the Communists (NY, March, 1946) 23 p. -- [13] Brochure: Women and the Communists (NY, [1940?]) -- [14] Women have a date with destiny (NY, October, 1944) 31 p. -- [15] Elizabeth Gurley Flynn speaks to the court (NY, 1952) 30 p. -- [16] Debs, Haywood, Ruthenberg (NY, September, 1939) 48 p. -- [17] Stool-pigeon (NY, July, 1949) 23 p. -- [18] Mailer: Mother Bloor: [Letter to William Schneiderman] ([San Francisco?], October 17, 1940) 4 p. -- [19] Horizons of the future for a Socialist America (NY, December, 1959) 40 p.
[1] Sabotage: the conscious withdrawal of the workers' industrial efficiency (Cleveland, October, 1918) 31 p. -- [2] Earl Browder: the man from Kansas (New York, November, 1941) 30 p. -- and duplicate pamphlets from previous folder.
Syndicalism (Chicago, Published by William Z. Foster, [1907?]) 47 p.
[1] War in Africa: Italian Fascism preparies to enslave Ethiopia / by James W. Ford and Harry Gannes (New York, June, 1935) 31 p. -- [2] The war and the Negro people (NY, January, 1942) 15 p. -- [3] The Negroes in a Soviet America / by James W. Ford and James S. Allen (NY, June, 1935) 46 p. [2 copies] -- [4] Imperialism destroys people in Africa (NY: Harlem Section of the Communist Party, [1935?]) 15 p. -- [5] The right to revolution for the Negro people (NY, [1935?]) 19 p. -- [6] World problems of the Negro people (a refutation of George Padmore) (NY, [1931?]) 23 p. -- [7] The Communists and the struggle for Negro liberation: their position on problems of Africa, of the West Indies, of war, of Ethiopian Independence, or the struggle for peace (NY, [1936?]) 67 p. [2 copies] -- [8] Communists in the struggle for Negro rights / James W. Ford, Benjamin J. Davis, Jr., William Patterson, Earl Browder (NY, January, 1945) 23 p. -- [9] Brochure: The Negro people in the elections (NY, September, 1936) -- [10] Brochure: The Negro people and the elections (San Francisco, October, 1940) -- [11] Anti-Semitism and the struggle for democracy (NY: National Council of Jewish Communists, 1938) 19 p. [2 copies] -- [12] Earl Browder, foremost champion of Negro rights ; Open letter to the Negro people from James W. Ford (NY, [1940?]) 4 p. -- [13] Win progress for Harlem, I. Amter, Communist Candidate to City Council (NY, 1939) 31 p.
The world gone mad (New York: New Masses, 1936) 11 p.
[1] The Soviet Union: key bastion of world freedom, friend and ally of the American people (New York, October, 1941) 31 p. -- [2] Wrecking the labor banks [Labor herald library no. 10] (Chicago: Trade Union Educational League, November, 1927) 60 p. -- [3] Defend America by smashing Hitlerism (NY, September, 1941) 15 p. -- [4] World Capitalism and world Socialism (NY, March, 1941) 30 p. -- [5] Victorious socialist construction in the Soviet Union (NY: Trade Union Unity League, [1932]) 46 p. -- [6] Socialism: the road to peace, prosperity and freedom (NY, March, 1941) 46 p. [2 copies] -- [7] The meaning of the 9-Party Communist Conference (NY, November, 1947) 23 p. -- [8] Insurgency, or the economic power of the middle class: a discussion between Wm. Z. Foster ... and Hermon F. Titus (Seattle, 1910) 14 p. -- [9] The meance of a new world war (NY, March, 1946) 15 p. -- [10] From defense to attack (NY, February, 1942) 15 p.
[1] Roosevelt heads for war ( New York, February, 1940) 15 p. -- [2] Capitalism, socialism, and the war (NY, June, 1940) 23 p. -- [3] The railroad workers and the war (NY, May, 1941) 15 p. -- [4] American democracy and the war (NY, February, 1942) 14 p -- [5] For speedy victory: the second front now (NY, October, 1943) 31 p. -- [6] Fight against hunger: statement drafted by C.P.U.S.A. and presented to Fish Commit[t]ee (NY, December, 1930) 32 p. -- [7] The war crisis: questions and answers (NY, January, 1940) 63 p. -- [8] Steel workers and the war (NY, August, 1942) 15 p. -- [9] Russia in 1924 [Labor herald library no. 11] (Chicago: Trade Union Educational League, 1924) 31 p. -- [10] Workers, defend your unions! (NY, January, 1947) 7 p. -- [11] Soviet democracy and the war (NY, December, 1943) 23 p. -- [12] What's what about the war: questions and answers (NY, July 1940) 46 p. -- And duplicate pamphlets.
[1] Stop wage-cuts & layoffs on the railroads: a reply to President T.C. Cashen of the Switchmen's Union of North America (New York, April, 1938) 23 p. -- [2] Halt the railroad wage cut (NY, October, 1938) 14 p. -- [3] Industrial unionism (NY, April, 1936) 46 p. -- [4] Party building and political leadership / Wm. Z Foster, ALex Bittleman, James W. Ford, Charles Krumbein (NY, August, 1937) 127 p. -- [5] Our country needs a strong Communist Party (NY, February, 1946) 23 p. -- [6] Acceptance speeches: William Z. Foster, candidate for President, and Benjamin Gitlow, candidate for Vice-President of the Workers (Communist) Party (NY, May, 1928) 47 p. -- [7] Strike strategy [Labor herald library no. 18] (Chicago: Trade Union Education League, 1926) 87 p. -- [8] The crisis in the Socialist Party (NY, November, 1936) 70 p. -- [9] The United States and the Soviet Union (NY, December, 1940) 14 p. -- And duplicate pamphlets.
[1] W.Z. Foster: renegade or spy! / by Arnold Petersen (New York: New York Labor News Co., 1935) 39 p. -- [2] Technocracy and Maxism / by William Z. Foster, Earl Browder ; together with, The technical intelligentsia and socialist construction / by V.M. Molotov (NY, January, 1933) 32 p. -- [3] Trade unionism: the road to freedom (Chicago: International Trade Union Educational League, [1921?]) 29 p. -- [4] The need for unity among the maritime workers ([NY?]: Issued by Waterfront Section of the Communist Party, U.S.A., [1935?]) 7 p. -- [5] Photostat of book chapter: The war and labor unity (1942) pp 708-720 -- [6] The Railroaders' next step [Labor herald pamphlets no. 1] (Chicago, 1921) 47 p. -- [7] The steel workers and the fight for labor's rights (NY, Jnue, 1952) 31 p. -- [8] Problems of organized labor today (NY, July, 1946) 48 p.
[1] The revolutionary crisis of 1918-1921 in Germany, England, Italy and France [Labor herald library no. 3] (Chicago, 1921) 63 p. -- [2] Russian workers and workshops in 1926 [Labor herlad library no. 16] (Chicago, 1926) 60 p. -- [3] What means a strike in steel (New York, February, 1937) 63 p. -- And duplicate pamphlets.
[1] Your questions answered on politics, peace, economics, Fascism, Anti-Semitism, race prejudice, religion, trade unionism, Americanism, democracy, socialism, Communism (New York, June, 1939) 127 p. -- [2] Towards a mass Communist Party! Every party member a party builder! (NY, [1946]) 4 p. -- [3] Defend America by smashing Hitlerism (NY, September, 1941) 15 p. -- [4] The new Europe (NY, 1947) 128 p. -- [5] Marxism-Leninism vs. Revisionism / William Z. Foster, Jaques Duclos, Eugene Dennis, John Williamson, forward by Max Weiss (NY, February, 1946) 111 p.
[1] Communism versus Fascism (New York, June, 1941) 31 p. -- [2] In defense of the Communist Party and the indicted leaders (NY, July 1949) 96 p. -- [3] The technique of the mass campaign, reprinted form The Communist, May 1939 (San Francisco, May, 1946) 9 p. -- And duplicate pamphlets.
[1] Danger signals for organized labor (NY, August, 1953) 31 p. -- [2] The menace of American imperialism / by William Z. Foster ; America needs the Communist Party / by Eugene Dennis (NY, October, 1945) 30 p. -- [3] Labor and the Marshall Plan (NY, March , 1948) 23 p. -- [4] Organized labor and the Fascist danger (NY, August, 1947) 15 p. -- [5] Little brothers of the big labor fakers: report of a speech against the Conference for Progressive Labor Action, made in New Star Casino, New York City on May 10, 1931 (NY, 1931) 31 p. -- [6] A manual of industrial unionism: organizational and structure policies (NY, August, 1937) 63 p. -- [7] On improving the Party's work among women, reprinted from Political Affairs, November, 1948 (NY, 1948) 9 p. -- [8] A letter to Congress: defeat the Anti-Labor Smith Bill! (NY, June, 1952) 15 p. -- [9] The Soviet trade unions and allied labor unity (NY, June, 1943) 47 p. -- And duplicate pamphlets.
[1] Danger ahead for organized labor (New York, July, 1948) 15 p. -- [2] The fight against Hitlerism / Wm. Z Foster and Robert Minor (NY, July, 1941) 32 p. -- [3] Quarantine the war mongers (NY, November, 1947) 15 p. -- [4] Reaction beats its war drums (NY, May, 1946) 15 p. -- [5] The New York Herald Tribune's 23 questions about the Communist Party aswered by William Z. Foster (NY, January, 1948) 31 p. -- [6] The U.S.A. and the U.S.S.R.: war allies and friends (NY, October, 1942) 15 p. -- And duplicate pamphlets.
[1] Organized labor faces the new world (NY, May, 1945) 23 p. -- [2] The strike situation and organized labor's wage and job strategy (NY, November, 1945) 23 p. -- [3] The people and the Congress (NY, February, 1943) 15 p. -- [4] The trade unions and the war (NY, June, 1942) 46 p. -- And duplicate pamphlets.
[1] Labor and the war (New York, January, 1942) 23 p. -- [2] The crime of El Fanguito: an open letter to President Turman on Puerto Rico (NY, April, 1948) 15 p. -- [3] The coal miners: their problems in war and peace (NY, February, 1945) 24 p. -- [4] The bankruptcy of the American labor movement [Labor herald library no. 4] (Chicago, [1922?]) 62 p. -- [5] The LaFollette third party: will it unite of split the Progressive forces? (NY, May, 1938) 31 p. -- [6] The words and deeds of Franklin D. Roosevelt ([NY, 1932]) 15 p. -- And duplicate pamphlets.
Duplicate pamphlets held in previous folders.
[1] Beware of the war danger! Stop, look and listen! (New York, April, 1948) 23 p. -- [2] Why trade unionists should join the Communist Party (NY, [1936?]) 4 p. -- And duplicate pamphlets.
[1] Roosevelt, Czolgosz and anarchy / by Jay Fox ; and, Communism / by Henry Addis ([New York?]: Published by the New York Anarchists, [1902?]) 15 p. -- [2] Trade unionism and anarchism: a letter to a brother unionist (Chicago: Social Science Press, 1908) 16 p.
National defense (New York: American League Against War and Fascism, April, 1936) 19 p.
The fight for free speech: a supplement to "Law-breaking by the police", including a legal opinion by Theodore Schroeder (East Orange, [1909]) 36 p.
A debate: should Progressives work in the Democratic Party? "Yes," says Carl Haessler (form editor, Federated Press), "No," says George Breitman (former editor, The Militant) (Detroit, 1959) 32 p.
How's your health? The fight for a national health program (New York, February, 1947) 32 p.
[1] Joe Kamp: peddler of propaganda and hero of the Pro-Fascists (Kansas City, [1945]) 21 p. -- [2] Press release: Anti-democracy propaganda intensified in U.S. (New York, [1945?]) 2 p.
Satire: Bourgeoisie University, Peace march questionaire number 10 (compiled annually) (San Francisco, April, 1971) 1 p.
Sugar coating Communism for Protestant churches: chart showing interlocking membership of churchmen, Socialists, pacifists, internationalists, and Communists (Washington, DC, [1932?]) 80 p.
Oklahoma witch hunt (Oklahoma City: Oklahoma Committee to Defend Political Prisoners, October, 1941) 23 p.
Is the University of California to be seized by Communists? (La Jolla: California League of Christian Parents, 1950) 30 p.
Socialism: the plain English of it: a practical study of the subject (Healdsburg, California: Published by the author, 1915) 95 p.
Decision of Gov. Alvan T. Fuller in the matter of the appeal of Bartolomeo Vanzetti and Nicola Sacco from sentence of death imposed under the laws of the Commonwealth [signed at end: Robert Grant, A. Lawrence Lowell, S.W. Stratton (Boston, 1927) 8+20 p.
Democracy, security, peace on trial: Nat Ganley speaks to the jury [re Michigan 6] (Detroit, 1953) 23 p.
[1] Youth under Americanism / by Harry Gannes and George Oswald (Chicago: Young Workers League of America, [1920]) 64 p. -- [2] Graft and gangsters (New York, [1931?]) 63 p. -- [3] The Munich betrayal (NY, October, 1938) 15 p.
[1] The Communist Party and you (New York, Nauary, 1947) 48 p. -- [2] The Communist program and the fight for Jobs, peace, equal rights, democracy (NY, October, 1954) 40 p.
When Teddy reigns: more truth than philosophy (San Francisco, [1908?]) 4 p.
Cold Mountain Farm: an attempt at community (California, March, 1970) 63 p.
[1] The real Rickenbacker (New York, April, 1943) 23 p. -- [2] The truth about Reader's Digest / illustrations by William Gropper (NY: Forum Publishers, 1943) 29 p. -- [3] The real Huey P. Long (NY, May, 1935) 46 p. -- [4] Is Dewey the man? / with illustrations by William Gropper (NY, July, 1944) 32 p. -- [5] Red tape and barbed wire: close-up of the McCarran Law in action (NY: Civil Rights Congress, [1950?]) 48 p.
On guard against Browderism, Titoism, Trotskyism (New York, May, 1951) 15 p. [3 copies].
Socialism is coming now / by Winfield R. Gaylord ; and, The labor movement in Germany / by John C. Kennedy (St. Louis, 1912) 46 p. [incomplete?].
[1] Open letter to President Harding from 52 members of the I.W.W. in Leavenworth Penitentiary who refuse to apply for individual clemency (Chicago, [1922?]) 28 p. -- [2] Public opinion: where does it stand on the question of amnesty of political prisoners? (Chicago, 1923) 31 p. [ownership stamp of Jim McCrary, Oakland, CA].
[1] Is freedom dead? Sequel to the suppressed pamphlet, Shall freedom die? (Chicago, 1918) 22 p. -- [2] This 4th of July (New York, June, 1937) 15 p. [2 copies] -- [3] A noon-hour talk on the Communist Party / illustrations by Bill Gropper (NY, [1934?]) 31 p. -- [4] The red dawn: the Bolsheviki and the I.W.W. (Chicago: I.W.W. Publishing Bureau, [1918?]) 26 p. [2 copies].
A comrade looks at the 1938 election campaign ([New York], 1938) 14 p.
[1] Either the Constitution or the Mundt Bill: America can't have both! (New York, June, 1950) 15 p. -- [2] It is happening here (NY, February, 1941) 15 p. [2 copies].
[1] To skeptics and doubters (New York: Intercollegiate Socialist Society, 1911) 32 p. [2 copies] -- [2] The National Socialist handbook no. 2 ([Washington, DC?], 1913) 32 p.
Editions of Appeal Socialist Classics, edited by Ghent, all published: Girard, Kansas: Appeal to Reason, 1916: [1] No.1, Elements of Socialism, 64 p. -- [2] No. 3, Socialism: a historical sketch, 64 p. [2 copies] -- [3] No. 5, Socialism and government: working programs and records of Socialists in office, 64 p. -- [4] No. 6, Questions and answers, 64 p. -- [5] No. 7, Socialism and organized labor, 64 p. -- [6] No. 11, The Socialist appeal: prose passages which voice the call for a new social order, 63 p.
[1] Industrial peace through Socialism (New York: The Comradee Cop-operative Company, 1905) 24 p. -- [2] Socialism: what is it? (New York: The New York Call, 1912) 24 p.
The progress of the working classes in the last half century (New York: The Society for Political Education, 1885) 43 p.
America for the people! Why we need a farmer labor party (New York: Labor Party Association, [1930?]) 15 p. -- with ephemera of the Labor Party Association laid in.
Argument to the jury of Richard Gladstein in the New York Communist trial (San Francisco: Civil Rights Congress, [1948?]) 18 p.
A new look at the Rosenberg-Sobell case (New York: The Tamiment Institute, [1956]) 23 p.
[1] They would destroy our way of life (Delavan, Wisconsin: The Enterprise, 1944) 48 p. -- [2] Confessions of Stalin's agent: this is my story (Englewood, Colorado, 1948) 78 p.
The damned agitator and other stories (Chicago, [1927?]) 31 p.
[1] Why we defend the Soviet Union (New York: Pioneer Publishers, [1939]) 31 p. [2 copies] -- [2] From Communism to Socialism ([NY?, 1935) 14 p. -- [3] What is Socialism? Three lectures for workers (NY, 1938) 47 p. [3 copies] -- [4] The truth about the Minneapolis trial of the 28, speech for the defense (NY: Civil Rights Defense Committee, [1942]) 14 p. -- [5] Charge: rioting; verdict? not guilty! A plea to a jury (Chicago: International Labor Defense, [1932?]) 47 p. -- [6] In defense of Socialism: the official court record of Attorney Albert Goldman's final speech for the defense in the famous Minneapolis "sedition" trial (NY, March, 1942) 95 p.
[1] Preparedness, the road to universal slaughter (New York: Mother Earth Pubishing Association, [1919?]) 9 p. [2 copies] -- [2] The tragedy of Woman's emancipation (NY, [1909?]) 11 p. -- [3] Marriage and love (NY, 1911) 15 p. -- [4] Marriage and love [Second edition] (NY, 1914) 15 p. [2 copies] -- [5] Patriotsim: a menace to liberty [Third edition] (NY, [1909?]) [2 copies] -- [6] Trotsky protests too much (Glasgow: Anarchist Communist Federation, [1939?]) 15 p. [2 copies] -- [7] Philosophy of atheism and the failure of Christianity: two lectures (NY, 1916) 16 p. -- [8] A fragment of the prison experiences of Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman in the State Prison at Jefferson City, Mo., and the U.S. Penitentiary at Atlanta, Ga., February 1918 - October 1919 (NY: Stella Comyn, [1920?]) 25 p. -- [9] The truth about the Boylsheviki (NY, [1918]) 12 p. -- [10] The place of the individual in society (Chicago: Free Society Forum, [1940?]) 16 p.
[1] The psychology of politcal violence (Indore City [India?]: Modern Publishers, [no date]) 41 p. -- [2] The crushing of the Russian Revolution (London, Freedom Press, 1922) 42 p. [2 copies] -- [3] Anarchism: what it really stands for [Second edition] (New York, 1914) 23 p. [2 copies] -- [4] What I believe (NY, 1908) 15 p. -- [5] Victims of morality and the failure of Christianity: two lectures (NY, 1913) 15 p. -- [6] Emma Goldman: Rebel! (Mountain View, CA: SRAFPRINT Co-op, [1970?]) 35 p. -- [7] Emma Goldman: a tribute (NY: Libertarian Book Club, 1960) 29 p.
Ideas behind bars? The story of the frame-up of 140,000,000 Americans (New York: Civil Rights Congress, [1948]) 31 p.
The Communist Political Association: some things you may want to know about what it is, what it stands for, how it works (New York, [1945?]) [2 copies]
Step-children of a nation: the status of Mexican-Americans (New York: American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born, [1947]) 14 p.
The black flag of anarchism (Corinth, Vermont: Black Mountain Press, 1968) 9 p.
Weaving the future / introduction by Elizabeth Gurley Flynn (New York, November, 1937) 23 p.
Hard times: the cause and cure [Progressive thought, April 1900, No. 11] (Terre Haute, Indiana, 1900) 31 p.
Capitalist terror against Negro workers in U.S.A. (Moscow: International Press, 1931) 15 p.
Anarchism and the world revolution: an asnwer to Robert Minor [Second edition] ([New York?], 1921) 70 p. [2 copies]
The issues in the present war (London: Freedom Press, November, 1943) 32 p.
[1] A worker looks at Jesus (Los Angeles: Christian Front for Peace and Against Fascism, [1938?]) 48 p. -- [2] Attack now! Knock out Hitler in '42 (New York, April, 1942) 15 p.
Truth about Supreme Court's segregation ruling [Research bulletin no. 2] (Charleston, SC, October 1, 1954) 12 p.
[1] The deportation terror: a weapon to gag America (New York: American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born, January, 1950) 23 p. -- [2] The Walter-McCarran Law: police state terror against foreign-born Americans (NY, May, 1953) 47 p. -- [3] In the shadow of liberty: the inhumanity of the Walter-McCarran Law (NY, September, 1954) 46 p. -- [4] In defense of the right to defend foreign born Americans / with an introduction by Prof. Louise Pettibone Smith (NY, 1955) 14 p. -- [5] The deportation drive vs. the Bill of Rights: the McCarran Act and the foreign born (NY, February, 1951) 23 p.
[1] Three questions concerning the war [reprinted from "Clarity" Summer edition 1941] ([no publication information]) 6 p. -- [2] Young Communists and unity of youth (New York: youth Publishers, October, 1935) 15 p. -- [3] Make your dreams come true: Report to the Eighth National Convention of The young Communist League (NY, June, 1937) 47 p. -- [4] The truth about Soviet Russia (NY, March, 1938) 47 p. -- [5] United we stand for peace and Socialism: Report on the Sixth World Congress of the Young Communist International (NY, 1935) 63 p. [3 copies] -- [6] Facing the 8th Convention of the Young Communist League: Report to the National Conference of the Young Communist League, delivered January 1, 1937 (NY, 1937) 24 p. -- [7] Young Communists and unity of the youth (NY, October, 1935) 15 p. -- [8] America must act now! (NY, November, 1941) 14 p. -- [9] Youth confronts the blue eagle (NY, November, 1933) 29 p. -- [10] Marxism and the world of today (NY, 1944) 23 p. -- [11] New York in the 1944 election line-up [Reprint from The Communist of July, 1944] (NY, 1944) 14 p.
Some reasons why farmers should be Socialists [Wayland's Monthly No. 43, November, 1903] (Girard, Kansas, 1903) 13 p.
A letter to the Rev. Henry W. Foote, Minister of King's Chapel, in vindication of the poorer class of the Boston working-women (Princeton, Mass., Co-operative Publishing Company, 1873) 24 p.
My college daze in the youth movement / by Mark Gross, Swarthmore '39 (Huntingon, Indiana: Our Sunday Visitor Press, [1939]) 48 p.
Uncle Sam's Devil's Island: experiences of a conscientious objector in America during the World War (Boston: The Excelsior Press, [1933]) 26 p.
[1] Organize mass struggle for social insurance: tasks of the American Communist Party … / by S.I. Gusev and Earl Browder (New York, September, 1933) 32 p. -- [2] The next step in Britain, America and Ireland (speeches and reports, XII Plenum E.C.C.I.) (London: The Blackfriars Press, [1933?]) 87 p.
Why physicians should be Socialists (Terre Haute, Indiana: The Standard Publishing Company, 1902) 24 P.
[1] Hands off Korea and Formosa (New York, July, 1950) 15 p. -- [2] Peace can be won! Report to 15th Convention Communist Party (NY, January, 1951) 79 p. [2 copies] -- [3] Which way for young Americans? (NY, October, 1950) 30 p. -- [4] Marxism and Negro liberation (NY, May, 1954) 24 p. [3 copies]
[1] The record of Truman's 81st Congress (New York, August, 1949) 23 p. [3 copies] -- [2] FEPC: how it was betrayed, how it can be saved (NY, February, 1950) 15 p. [2 copies] -- [3] This 4th of July, 1776 - 1939 (NY, June, 1939) 15 p. [2 copies].
Why I resigned from the Trotsky Defense Committee (New York, January, 1937) 14 p. [2 copies].
The house of the masses trial: Socialist vs. Communist (Detroit: The Masses Publishing House, 1921) 33 p.
I was branded with the number 666 … This is the life story of a young man trained to be a leader in the Communist Party who today is giving his full time as a Christian crusader … (St. Louis: Christian Nationalist Crusade, [1948?]) 32 p.
Two kinds of unionism (New Castle, PA, [1924?]) 4 p.
What workingmen's votes can do [The Agitator, no. 9] (New York: Comrade Co-operative Co., July, 1903) 23 p.
[1] Too many babies? A Marxist answer to some frightening questions: Is a "population explosion" the world's main danger? … (New York, [1960?]) 48 p. -- [2] American workers need a Labor Party (NY, November, 1944) 44 p. -- [3] Wall Street's war- not ours! ([NY, 1940]) 16 p. -- [4] The Socialist Workers Party: what it is- what it stands for (NY, May, 1958) 54 p. -- [5] Father Coughlin: Fascist demogogue ([NY, 1940?]) 30 p. -- [6] The Socialist Workers Party: what it is, what it stands for (NY, October, 1948) 30 p.
Two articles reprinted from the Western Socialist: "We who are about to live" and "If we are to survive" (Boston, [1940?]) 23 p.
The truth about the Prague trial / Interview with Czech Chief Rabbi by Sam Russell (New York: Jewish Life, 1953) 31 p.
[1] Motherhood in freedom ([Chicago?, 1900?]) 12 p. -- [2] The persecution and the appreciation: brief account of the trials and imprisonment of Moses Harman because of his advocacy of the freedom of women from sexual enslavement and of the right of children to be born well ... (Chicago: [Self published?], 1907) 58 p.
Photographic reproductions of Los Angeles newspaper headline articles [re labor negotiations] (Hollywood, CA, [1939])
A debate on the tactics of the S.T. & L.A. toward trade unions between Daniel De Leon of the Socialist Labor Party and Job Harriman of the Social Democratic Party, New Haven Conn., November 23, 1900 ([New York], 1900) 32 p.
Crisis on the campus (New York: Students for Democratic Action, [1956?]) 12 p.
Meat: a national scandal (New York, November, 1946) 23 p.
The Sacco-Vanzetti anthology of verse / edited by Henry Harrison (New York: Henry Harrison, publihser, 1927) 32 p.
Walled in this tomb: questions left unanswered by the Lowell Committee in the Sacco-Vanzetti Case and their pertinence in understanding the world at this hour. For especial consideration by the Almuni of Harvard University during its Tercentenary Celebration (Boston: The Excelsior Press, 1936) 29 p.
Can we afford academic freedom? A discussion by Carey McWilliams, Allen A. Zoll, McGeorge Bundy, Moderator: Robert Braucher (Boston: The Beacon Press, 1952) 34 p.
[1] Socialism: world without race-prejudice (New York: Socialist Labor Party, [1945]) 30 p. -- [2] Dave Beck, labor merchant: case history of a labor leader (NY, 1955) 30 p. -- [3] The labor draft … step to industrial slavery (NY, 1943) 31 p. [2 copies]-- [4] Fascism is still a menace! (NY, 1948) 61 p. [2 copies] -- [5] The Reactionary Right: incipient Fascism (Brooklyn, 1966) 78 p. -- [6] Socialism answers Anti-Semitism (NY, 1944) 48 p. -- [7] Socialist industrial unionism: the workers' power (NY, 1940) 62 p. -- [8] The Americanism of Socialism (NY, 1942) 45 p.
Law of Socialism: a treatise on the origin and authority of social law, the inalienable rights and obligations of members of society, and their irrevocable duty to each other (New York: The Metaphysical Publishing Co., 1901) 30 p.
[1] Collective security: the road to peace (New York, January, 1938) 15 p. -- [2] The people vs. the Supreme Court (NY, March, 1937) 16 p. [2 copies] -- [3] Who are the friends of the Negro people? James W. Ford, Commuist Candidate for Vice-President (NY, July 1932) 16 p.
What's anarchism? (Chicago: International Anarchist Relation Committee of America, 1932) 20 p. [2 copies].
[1] Lynching: a weapon of national oppression [with Milton Howard] (New York, 1932) 15 p. -- [2] The road to Negro liberation: report to the Eighth Convention of the Communist Party of the U.S.A. (NY, June, 1934) 63 p.
[1] Industrial Socialism [with Frank Bohn] (Chicago, 1911) 64 p. -- [2] Testimony of William D. Haywood before the Industrial Relations Commission (Chicago: I.W.W. Publishing Bureau, [1915?]) 70 p. [2 copies] -- [3] The general strike / by William D. Haywood ; also, The last war by G.B. (Chicago, 1911) 48 p. -- [4] Speech of Wm. D. Haywood on the case of Ettor and Giovannitti, Cooper Union New York (Lawrence, Mass., 1912) 16 p. -- [5] The gneral strike (NY: Buccafori Defense Committee 1911) 20 p.
Mailer: Statement of Comrade Heller to the Executive Committee of his club ([no place given], March 25, 1946) 3 p.
The A B C of Socialism (Reading, PA, Peoples Printing, [no date]) 16 p.
The Scottsboro Boys: four freed! Five to go! (New York: August, 1937) 15 p.
Why I am a Socialist: address at a mass meeting of the Social Democratic Party at Central Music Hall, Chicago, Sept 29, 1900. 32 p.
Patriotism and the worker (Chicago: I.W.W. Publishing Bureau, 1912) 32 p.
Uncivil liberty: an essay to show the injustice and impolicy of ruling woman without her consent (Princeton, Mass: Cooperative Publishing Company, 1870) 23 p.
Principles and fallacies of Socialism (New York John W. Lovell Company, 1885) 96 p.
[1] Mr. Mallock's "ability" [Fearless books II] (New York: Socialist Literature Co., [1915?]) 31 p. -- [2] Socialism summed up [Fifth revised edition] (NY: Rand School of Social Science, 1917) 78 p. -- [3] Recent progress of the Socialist and Labor movements in the United States: Report of Morris Hillquit, Representative of the Socialist Party at the International Socialist Bureau, to the International Socialist Congress, held at Stuttgart, Germany, August 18, 1907 (Chicago, 1907) 32 p. -- [4] Foundations of Socialism (Chicago: Socialist Party Headquarters, 1934) 24 p. [2 copies] -- [5] Shall a Labor Party be formed in America? Morris Hillquit of New York: Affirmative ; Edw F. Keating of Colorado: Negative (NY: National Labor Forum, 1923) 32 p. -- [6] Why we are at war / by John D. Works ; and, American Socialists and the war / by Morris Hillquit (Milwaukee: The People's Council of Milwaukee, September, 1917) 22 p. -- [7] Socialism summed up [Revised edition] (NY, 1917) 78 p. -- [8] Present-day Socialism (NY: Rand School of Social Science, 1920) 84 p.
[1] Sheet music: The rebel girl [Includes illustration of Elizabeth Gurley Flynn by Arthur Machia] ([Chicago: Wm. D. Haywood, 1915]) 4 p. -- [2] Sheet music: Workers of the world awaken! ([Chicago: Wm. D. Haywood, 1916?]) 4 p.
[1] American youth acts: the story of the American Youth Congress (New York, [1936]) 15 p. -- [2] Youth speaks for itself (NY, [1936]) 15 p. -- [3] Youth seeks peace, freedom and progress (NY, [1936]) 22 p.
[1] Public enemies in public office (New York, July, 1951) 24 p. -- [2] Terror at Trumbull (NY, October, 1955) 15 p.
Consumption of wealth, individual and collective (Boston: The Socialist Party Clubs of Massachusetts, [1912?]) 15 p.
[1] Mayor Hoan answers critics ([Milwaukee, 1933]) 8 p. -- [2] Abraham Lincoln: a real American (Chicago: Socialist Party of the U.S.A., [1936?]) 16 p. -- [3] Taxes and tax dodgers (Chicago: Socialist Party of America, [1936]) 15 p.
Manual for leaders of children's groups (Berlin-Schoeneberg: Publishing House of the Young Communist International, [1923?]) 62 p.
Money: its nature and function [Wayland's Monthly, no. 9] (Girard Kansas, November, 1915) 30 p.
[1] Communism's iron grip on the CIO: from the Congressional Record (New Haven, CT: Constitutional Educational League, [1937]) 60 p. -- [2] Battalions of death: the destroyers are marching (New Haven: Constitutional Educational League, [1937]) 16 p.
[1] Frances Willard's views on Socialism / compliled by Rev. H. J. Hollingsworth (Terre Haute, Indiana, [1900?])-- [2] Eugene V. Debs: what his neighbors say of him ([Terre Haute?, 1914]) 27 p.
Mailer: Letter to Mr. George Novak, Civil Rights Defense Committee, March 30, 1944, signed John O. Holly, President, The Future Outlook League (Cleveland, 1944).
Socialism: aim methods and tactics as applied to twentieth century conditions (New York: National Executive Committee, Socialist Labor Party, 1918) 16 p.
Socialism according to the Los Angeles Plan (Los Angeles: For sale by author, [1911]) 29 p.
The trade unions since the N.R.A.: the A.F. of L., company unions T.U.U.L., independent unions (New York: Labor Unity Publishers, April, 1934) 31 p.
United States Constitution and Socialism: concealed history of Revolutionary Period exposed to the light of day (Milwaukee: Social-Democratic Publishing Company, 1911) [2 variant editions] 31 p.
Rebuilding the world: an outline of the principles of anarchism ([No place stated, 1920?]) 32 p.
Fabian Anarchism: a fragmentary exposition of mutualism, Communism and Freeland (San Francisco: The Freeland ptg. & Pub. Co., January, 1911) 30 p.
Analysis of testimony given before the Seditious Activities Investigation Commission with regard to the investigation of University of Chicago and Roosevelt College, together with comments and additional material collected ([Chicago, 1949]) 23 p.
[1] This 4th of July (New York, June, 1938) 15 p. -- [2] McCarthyism and the big lie (NY, November, 1953) 16 p.
Against both war camps: a program to defeat war and totalitarianism (Chicago: Socialist Education Committee, 1949) 55 p.
Jesus was an anarchist [handwritten note: To Agnes from Laurance: rec'd from Anges Inglis, July 12, 1939, Publ. bu Laurance Labadie (Detroit or Ann Arbor, Michigan] 14 p.
[1] In memoriam: The Communist Party, born 1919 - died 1937, Burial performed by Earl Browder at the Symphony Hall, Boston, Sept. 19, 1937 (New York, [1937]) 4 p. -- [2] American CP writes its own epitaph: Earl Browder's new constitution (NY, May, 1938) 4 p.
Why every worker should LEAVE the Communist Party: an appeal to the members and followers of the Communist Party of the U.S.A. (New York, [1939]) 2 p.
[1] Historical catechism of American unionism (Chicago, [1923]) 95 p. -- [2] The I.W.W.: in theory and practice (Chicago, [ca. 1938]) 124 p. -- [3] Il progresso muto di Sacramento, Cal. [The silent trial of Sacramento, Cal. (in Italian)] / by Iacopo Tori (Brooklyn, [1919?]) 23 p. -- [4] Che cosa e l'I.W.W.? Una candida dichiarazione dei suoi principii, scopi e metodi [traduzione di Mario de Ciampis (Chicago, 1923) 32 p. -- [5] The general strike for industrial freedom (Chicago, June, 1946) 48 p.
[1] I.W.W. songs: songs of the Workers [Twenty-seventh edition, January 1939] (Chicago, 1939) 64 p. -- [2] Songs of the workers, issued July 1945 in commemoration of 40th anniversary of the I.W.W. [Twenty-eighth edition] (Chicago, 1945) 64 p. -- [3] Songs of the workers, issued July, 1956 in commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the I.W.W. [Twenty-ninth edition] (Chicago, 1956) 64 p. -- [4] Songs of the workers to fan the flames of discontent, issued May, 1962 [Thirtieth-edition] (Chicago, 1962) 63 p. -- [5] Preamble and consitituion of the Industrial Workers of the World (Chicago, 1933) 40 p. -- [6] Preamble and constituion of the Industrial Workers of the World (Chicago, 1946) 44 p. -- [7] Skandinavisk sang bok IWW (Seattle: Skandinaviska Propoganda Gruppen, [1937?]) 64 p. -- [8] Patriotism and the worker: being a speech delivered on the 30th of December, 1905, at the trial of the Paris Anti-Militarists New / by Gustave Herve (New Castle, PA, [1912]) 31 p. -- [9] Craft unionism- why it fails (Chicago, [1923?]) 45 p. -- [10] Un gran union de los Trabajadores Industriales del Mundo con el plano industrial (Chicago, [1920s?]) 24 p. -- [11] 10 Flyers, mostly undated: Strike: Natron cut off, Demands ... -- Will you join today? -- Something must be done! -- "It used to be that you rode the bus to work. Now you work to ride the bus" (Chicago CTA) -- General strike! Release class-war prisoners -- How much good can a union do? -- Emergency program, submitted to the membership by the General Executive Board of the I.W.W. (1924) -- Organization versus disruption -- The I.W.W. and political parties (1924) -- Vermin: the employment agencies
[1] Shall freedom die? 166 men in jail for labor (Chicago, [1917?]) 23 p. [2 copies] -- [2] Twenty five years of industrial unionism (Chicago, 1930) 79 p. -- [3] A union for all railroad workers (Chicago, [1948?]) 32 p. -- Unemployment and the machine (Chicago, 1934) 48 p. -- [4] Una sola y grande union de todos los trabajadores (Chicago, [1920s?]) 23 p. -- [5] One big union of all the workers (Chicago, [1910s?]) 31 p. -- [6] The I.W.W. reply to the Red Trade Union International (Moscow) by the General Executive Board (Chicago, 1922) 32 p. -- [7] Let's act union: what sort of union is the I.W.W. asking you to build? (Chicago, [1960s?]) 4 p. -- [8] The history of the I.W.W.: a discussion of its main features (Chicago, [1923?]) 31 p. -- [9] Minutes of 26th Constitutional General Convention (Chicago, 1950) 36+ p. -- [10] Minutes of the Twenty-seventh Constitutional General Convention of the Industrial Workers of the World, June 27-30, 1955 (Chicago) 11, 12 p. -- [11] Minutes of the Twenty-Ninth Constitutional General Convention ... Nov. 29, 1969 (Chicago) 16 p. -- [12] The Rebel Printer (Chicago: The J.S. Jordan Memorial Printing Co-op, [ca. 1970]) 8 p. -- [13] Chicago replies to Moscow! (Chicago, 1945) 4 p. -- 5 flyers, mostly undated: Thousands of workers are now on strike in the U.S. ([1923?]) -- Out of a job! ([1920s?]) -- Emergency notice from the General Executive Board (May, 1972) -- Can unionism be a force for radical scoail change? Hear a militant labor unionist speak(San Francisco, [1970s?]).
[1] Books on Socialism and allied subjects / by Harry W. Laidler (New York, February, 1919) 15 p. -- [2] Mailer: Voting blank [ballot], executive Committee, 1919-1920 (NY, [1919]) -- [3] [Ballot on constitutional amendment of ISS].
[1] International Labor Defense Membership book, 1939-1940 [Photostat] -- [2] Under arrest! Workers' self-defense in the courts (New York, [1930s?]) 31 p. -- [2] Passaic / by Mary Heaton Vorse (Chicago, [1926]) 23 p. -- [3] The work of the International Labor Defense for aid to labor's prisoners and to maintain and enlarge democratic rights (NY, 1937) 12 p. -- [4] Act before October 6! To save a life and beat "white supremacy", wire Governor Coke Stevenson; demand: life and freedom for L.C. Akins, Negro, sentenced to die October 6, 1945, because his skin is black (NY, 1945) 4 p. -- [5] Stop lynchings and lynch-murder (NY, [1945]) 4 p. [2 copies] -- [6] Status of bills in Congress to nullify the Bill of Rights (NY, [1939]) 6 p. -- [7] Mailer: May Day for Labor's prisoners (NY, 1944) -- [8] What to do when held for deportation [photostat] (NY, [1930s?]) -- [9] Charles Krumbein, no. 2379, political prisoner (NY, October, 1935) 15 p. [2 copies] -- [10] Labor defense: manifesto, resolutions, constitution (illustrated), adopted by the First National Conference, held in Ashland Auditorium, Chicago, June 28, 1925 (Chicago, 1925) 15 p. -- [11] What is the I.L.D.? (NY, 1934) 24 p. -- [12] The International Labor Defense: its constitution and organization resolution adopted by the Fourth National Convention held in Pittsburgh, Pa., Dec. 29 - 31, 1929 (NY, 1929) 15 p. -- [13] Free the Imperial Valley prisoners: appeal to the United States Supreme Court by the seven workers convicted of Criminal Syndicalism in Imperial Valley, California, June 14, 1930 (NY, March, 1932) 48 p.
Let us sweep out the Stalinists! / Cacciamo gli Stalinisti colla ramazza! (New York, [1940])
Because a man stood up for human rights! What the late Mr. Justice Frank Murphy said about the first three attempts against Harry Bridges (San Francsico, 1949) 16 p.
Ephemera from the First International Symposium on Anarchism, February 17-24, 1980, Lewis and Clark College, Portland, Oregon, USA. [1] Anarchists seen by painters / by Pietro Ferrua [exhibition catalog] 30+ p. -- [2] Newsletter no. 1, November 30, 1979 [meeting logistics] 7 p. -- [3] Anarchists in films / by Pietro Ferrua [program] 15 p. -- [4] Concert [program] 4 p. -- [5] Conference program, 22 p. -- [6] Newsletter no. 2, November 30, 1980, 4 p. -- Newspaper clippings.
[1] A youth fraternal order: IWO: athletics, dramatics, sick benefits, social features, cultural activity, mutual insurance (New York, 1931) 16 p. -- [2] Brochure: Protection for the whole family: here's insurance you can afford in an organization you can call your own (NY, 1939).
[1] The International Working Men's Association, I.W.M.A.: its policy, its aim, its principles [written by Alexander Schapiro] ([No place stated], 1933) 18 p.
Mailer: To members … April 7, 1950 / signed Dael Wolfle.
A practical program to kill Jim Crow (New York: Socialist Workers Party, December, 1945) 22 p. [2 copies].
This is my husband: fighter for his people, political refugee (Brooklyn: National Committee to Defend Negro Leadership, March, 1953) 36 p.
The South's new challenge (New York, 1957) 20 p.
Anarchism and Malthus (New York: Mother Earth Publishing Association, 1910) 32 p.
An interpretation of history: speech delivered by Edward Holton James at Winter Garden in Lawrence, Mass., May 27, 1927 in behalf of Sacco and Vanzetti (Concord, Mass.: Published by Edward H. James, [1927]) 8 p.
Night riders in sunny Florida: the KKK murder of Joseph Shoemaker (New York, September, 1936) 23 p.
[1] [Bulletins listing coursework, schedules, etc. for Jefferson School of Social Science for years 1944, 1945, 1947, 1953] -- [2] Course outline and assigned readings: Capitalism and the class struggle [Revised] (New York, 1949) 18 p. -- [3] Course outline and assigned readings: Political economy I: wages, prices and profits [Revised] (New York, 1949) 22 p. -- [4] Brochure: A day at a Jefferson School Camp [Arrowhead Lodge at Ellenville, NY] (New York, [1950s?]) -- [5] Why does our government want to close this school? (NY, May, 1953) 8 p. -- [6] Man's right to knowledge: the case of the Jefferson School (NY, February, 1954) 20 p.
[1] Social Democracy and the war (New York, March, 1940) 47 p. [3 copies] -- [2] Intellectuals and the war (NY, 1940) 63 p. -- [3] A world "Christian Front"? (NY, 1946) 19 p. -- [4] Grasp the weapon of culture! (NY, 1951) 24 p. [2 copies].
Victims of the system: how crime grows in jail and City Hall (Chicago, [1908]) 31 p.
Why Negroes should oppose the war (New York: Socialist Workers Party, [1939]) 30 p.
Color, Communism and common sense / forward by Archibald Roosevelt (New York: The Alliance, May, 1958) 78 p.
[1] May Day vs. Labor Day (New York: Socialist Labor Party, 1936) 40 p. -- [2] Daniel de Leon: American Socialist pathfinder (NY, 1923) 48 p. [2 copies] [and 1930 secon printing, 1 copy] [and 1935 third printing, 2 copies] -- [3] Revolution / by Olive M. Johnson and Arnold Petersen (NY, 1936) 64 p. -- [4] Woman and the Socialist movement [published under the auspices of the Socialist Women of Greater New York] (NY, 1908) 48 p. [2 copies] -- [5] Karl Marx: Forty years after / by Olive M. Johson ; Karl Marx / by Daniel De Leon [Amr & Hammer Pamphlets, no. 6] (NY, 1924) 31 p. -- [6] Industrial-government: industrial feudal autocracy versus industrial democracy / by Olive M. Johnson and Arnold Petersen (NY, 1931) 31 p.
The Reds in Dixie: who are the Communists and what do they fight for in the South? [Revised edition] (Birmingham, Alabama: The Southern Worker, April, 1936) 47 p.
"Wisdom, justice and moderation"- Motto of the state of Georgia, The case of Angelo Herndon [Second edition] (New York, October, 1935) 15 p.
Terror against the people: the story of the WPA witch hunt ( New York, [February, 1941]) 13 p.
Reporter and Socialist: an interview explaining the aims and objects of Socialism (New York: The Author, 1885) 60 p.
[1] Jim Crow in uniform (New York, July 1940) 23 p. -- [2] Ben Davis: fighter for freedom / with an introduction by Eslanda Goode Robeson (Brooklyn: National Committee to Defend Negro Leadership, November, 1954) 48 p. [2 copies].
Seamen and longshoremen under the red flag [At the top: "In a Soviet America"] (New York, June, 1935) [2 copies].
Plutocracy (its certain end): rights for all, malice toward none (Girard, Kansas: Press of Appeal to Reason, 1907) 51 p.
At fifty: two profiles of Ben Josephson: The man behind the mask / by William E. Bohn ; My favorite Socialist / by Ben Stolberg ; with foreword by Algernon Lee for the Board of Directors of Camp Tamiment (New York, 1945) 16 p.
[1] Agents of peace (New York: National Committee to Defnd Dr. W. E. B. Du Bois and Associates, Peace Information Center, [1948]) 16 p. -- [2] Treason in Congress: the record of the Un-American Activities Committee / with an introduction by O. John Rogge (NY: Progressive Citizens of America, [1948]) 31 p. -- [3] Vengeance on the young: the story of the Smith Act children (NY: Families of the Smith Act Victims, June, 1952) 21 p. -- [4] McCarthy on trial: an account of an investigation into the activities of Joseph R. McCarthy conducted by a New York Trade Union Veterans Committee, relating to the dramatic circumstances surrounding this event and presenting verbatim testimony, given at a public hearing, and additional documentary evidence / edited by Albert E. Kahn (NY, 1954) 64 p.
The conflict in the Socialist Party of the United States (New York: League for Democratic Socialism, [1935]) 15 p.
[1] Behind the plot to Sovietize the South [Fourth printing] (Westport, CT: Headlines, 1956) 35 p. -- [2] Will President Eisenhower join the ADL book burners? (New York: Constitutional Educational League, Inc., [1953]) 21 p. -- [3] Behind the lace curtains of the YWCA: a report on the extent and nature of infiltration by Communist, Socialist and other left wing elements, and the resultant red complexion of propaganda disseminated in, by and through the young Women's Christian Association (NY, 1948) 63 p. -- [4] The Fay case [re Frank Fay] (NY, [1945]) 32 p. -- [5] Don't way we didn't warn you! (NY, [1946]) 28 p. -- [6] The Fifth Column vs. the Dies Committee: millions for Communism, nickels and dimes for Dies (New Haven, 1941) 34 p. -- [7] How to live on @25,000 a year? You'll live on $129 a year and like it! Class war on the home front (New Haven, 1943) 14 p. -- [8] Camine in America: home grown by the farmers from Union Square (New Haven, 1943) 49 p. -- [9] Anything but the truth ... the story of the man who lied to Congress [re Elmer Davis] (NY, [1945]) 32 p. -- [10] Communist carpet-baggers in Operation Dixie (NY, 1946) 32 p. -- [11] The Fifth Column in the South (New Haven, 1940) 42 p. -- [12] The Fifth Column in Washington! Un-Americans on the government payroll (New Haven, 1940) 33 p.
[1] Vote CIO … and get a Soviet America (New York: Constitutional Educational League, 1944) 63 p. [2 copies] [and 1937 edition, 61 p.] -- [2] Native Nazi purge plot: the conspiracy against Congress (New Haven, 1942) 66 p. -- [3] The hell of Herrin rages again: a story of lawlessness, violence and death under the reign of John L. Lewis (New Haven, 1937) 121 p. -- [4] America betrayed ... the tragic consequences of Reds on the government payroll (NY, 1950) 63 p. -- [5] Folding map: The Fifth Column conspiracy in America: authentic map and directory (New Haven, [1941]) -- [6] How to be an American, to organize for America, to fight un-Americanism: the ABC's and the Do's and Don'ts for contructive patriotic action (NY, 1946) 32 p. -- [7] Strikes ... and the Communists behind them (NY, 1947) 64 p. -- [8] It isn't safe to be an American (NY, 1950) 59 p.
[1] The Socialist Party at the Cross Roads: notes on the Declaration of Principles adopted at the National Convention, Socialist Party, Detroit, June 3, 1934 (New York: Copies of this pamphlet may be obtained from Max Delson …, July 23, 1934) 15 p. [3 copies] -- [2] Towards Socialist reorientation [ASQ: American Socialist Quarterly Reprints, no. 1] (NY, [1934]) 22 p. -- [3] Problems of Revolutionary Socialism / postscript by Anna Bercowitz ([NY, 1936]) 34 p. [2 copies].
[1] Unionism: fraudulent or genuine ["Abolish the wage system"; "A fair day's wage!"] (Palo Alto: New York Labor News, 1975) 58 p. -- [2] The Great Depression: its Capitalist cause, its inflationary legacy, can it happen again? (Palo Alto, 1980) 41 p.
The assassination of Kirov: proletarian justice versus White-Guard terror (NY, February, 1935) 23 p.
[1] Gov. Altgeld's pardon and The modern tragedy, downfall of the small producer ; and The Crisis: its cause and cure as explained and proposed by Socialism [by Karl Ibsen] (New York, June 1894) 23 + p. -- [2] The class struggle / translated and adapted to America by Daniel de Leon (NY: National Executive Committee of the Socialist Labor Party, March, 1900)
United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America: Labor arm of the Communist Party? [Second printing] (Canton, Ohio, [1952]) 84 p.
Build for Socialism! A manual on organization (Chicago: Socialist Party of America, [1930s?]) 31 p.
Socialism now! Democracy's only defense (New York: Young People's Socialist League, [1940]) 22 p.
Lewis-Kennedy debate on the question: is the Marxian theory of value exploded? Yes: Prof. John Curtis Kennedy ; No: Arthur M. Lewis (Girard, Kansas: Haldeman-Julius Publications, [1950]) 23 p.
[1] Producers and parasites (Chicago, 1935) 28 p. -- [2] How the gods were made (A study in historical materialism) (Chicago, [1929]) 52 p. -- [3] Why unemployment? (Chicago, 1935) 23 p. -- [4] Crime: its causes and consequences: a Marxian interpretation of the causes of crime ([Chicago, 1937]) 42 p. -- [5] Economics for beginners: elementary economics in simple language (Chicago, 1935) 40 p.
[1] What Socialism [is]? ([Chicago?, 1902?]) -- [2] Socialist songs with music [Second edition] (Chicago, 1902) -- [3] What to read on Socialism (Chicago, [1902?]) 63 p. -- [4] What Socialism is (Chicago, [1902?]) 31 p.
Socialism and the home [Pocket Library of Socialism, no. 28] (Chicago, June, 1901) 32 p.
Work or war? The President's 1940 budget [Second edition] (New York: Workers Alliance of New York, March, 1940) 15 p.
Think or surrender (Girard, Kansas: Appeal to Reason, 1916) 96 p.
The road to woman's freedom (New York, January, 1935) 15 p. [2 copies].
[1] Chirstian veterans awake! (Chicago: Christian Veterans of America, [1945]) 4 p. -- [2] Flyer: Workers of the world unite! The Communists use a false premise to deceive you … Don't be a sucker! (Chicago, [1946?]).
The situation at present: why shall we have any economic misery? A plain explanation of Socialism (Poughkeepsie, NY: The Author, 1908) 46 p.
The Socialist primer: a book of first lessons for the little ones in words of one syllable: deisgned for use in Socialist schools and for private use / illustrated by Ryan Walker ; to which is added The boy-town railroad by Fred D. Warren (Girard, Kansas: The Appeal to Reason, 1908) 52 p.
Constitution of the General Assembly, District Assemblies, and Local Assemblies of the Order of the Knights of Labor ([No place stated, 1885?]) 80 p.
[1] Fascism, Social-Democracy and the Communists: Thirteenth Plenum of the Executive Committee of the Communist International, December 1933 (New York, March, 1934) 47 p. -- [2] [Same pamphlet] (Moscow and Leningrad: Co-operatuve Publishing Society of Foreign Workers in the U.S.S.R., 1934) 52 p.
Oklahoma story - 1940 / with a note by Carey McWilliams (Washington, DC: National Federation for Constitutional Liberties, [1940]) 15 p.
Communism and the family (New York: Contemorary Publishing Association, 1920) 24 p.
Ten years of the Communist International (New York: Workers' Library Publishers, [1929]) 46 p.
The life of Debs [People's pocket series no. 69] [Third edition] (Girard Kansas: Appeal to Reason, [1927?]) 128 p.
Brainwashing and Senator McCarthy (New York: The Alliance, 1954) 18 p.
Are there classes in America? (Chicago: The Socialist Party, 1914) 34 p.
"Shoot to kill!" Labor drama in 1 act (New York: The Co-Operative Press, 1905) 24 p.
[1] Another fountain: poems ([New York?: The author], 1940) 32 p. -- [2] The golden trumpet (NY: International Publishers, 1949) 32 p.
[1] The state: its historic role (Albuquerque, NM: Ammon A. Hennacy, [1944?]) 12 p. -- [2] Organized vengeance called justice (London: Freedom Press, 1948) 12 p. -- [3] Revolutionary government (London: Freedom Press, January, 1943) 16 p. -- [4] An appeal to the young (New York: Max N. Maisel, [1921?]) 16 p. -- [5] Agriculture (London: James Tochatti, 1896) 18 p. -- [6] An appeal to the young, memorial edition (NY: The International Anarchist Relation Committee of America, 1931) 20 p. -- [7] Centennial expressions on Peter Kropotkin / by pertinent thinkers (Los Angeles: Rocker Publications, [1942]) 44 p. -- [8] An appeal to the young (NY: The Resistance Press, 1948) 20 p. -- [9] Anarchism Communism ([No place or publisher given], 1916) 7 p.
[1] Russia: land without colour bar … The race problem solved (Cape Town: Issued by the Communist Party of South Africa, [1941?]) 32 p. -- [2] End hunger in the midst of plenty! Jobs and security for all the people! (Chicago: Socialist Party, [1940]) 16 p.
Dollars for democracy / Charles Krumbein and Israel Amter (New York: NY State Communist Party, [1936?]) 13 p.
Why you buy books that sell Communism: Some book stores push Red-slanted books because the owners or employees think that way. Other shops feature such books because left-wing reviewers have praised them (New York: American Legion Magazine, January, 1951) 12 p.
Souvenir program: Civil rights at the crossroads: the case of the legless veteran: James Kutcher Civil Rights Banquet (Los Angeles, July, 1949) 16 p.
[1] Prepare for power: the international situation and the tasks of the sections of the Comintern [Twelfth Plenum of the E.C.C.I.] (New York: Workers Library Publishers, [1932]; London: Printed by the Utopia Press) 159 p. -- [2] Fascism, the danger of war and the tasks of the Communist Parties [13th Plenum] (NY, [1934?]) 95 p.
[1] Anarchism (Detroit: The Labadie Shop, 1932) 24 p. -- [2] Russian verses (Detroit: The Labadie Shop, 1932) 15 p. -- [3] What is love? (Detroit: The Labadie Shop, 1910) 24 p. -- [4] Anarchism: genuine and asinine (Bubbling Waters, Wixom, Michigan: The Labadie Shop, 1925) 41 p. -- [5] Anarchism: what it is and what it is not (Detroit: Published by Liberty Club of Detroit, [1925?]) 6 p. -- [6] Leaflet: Help one another (Detroit, 1911) 1 p. -- [7] Flyer: The state [poem] (Detroit, 1909) 1 p.
[1] Flyer: Sniping ([Detroit, 1933?]) 1 p. -- [2] Reflections on socio-economic evolution (Detroit, 1934?]) 2 p. -- [3] Flyer: Superstition and ignorance versus courage and self-reliance (Detroit, 1934) 1 p. -- [4] Anarchism applied to economics (Detroit: International Anarchist Group of Detroit, 1933) 2 p. [2 copies].
[1] NRA from within / Wm. O. Thompson, Member of the Darrow Board, Mary van Kleeck ; The Communist position / by Earl Browder [International pamphlets no. 41] (New York, 1934) 23 p. -- [2] Monopoly in the United States: facts revealed by the TNEC investigation (NY: International Publishers, 1942) 48 p. -- [3] Railroads in crisis: a program for re-employment, rehabilitation and government ownership (NY, September, 1939) 48 p. [membership leaflet laid in] -- [4] Press release?: "Join the C.I.O. and help build a Soviet America" ["A 64-page pamphlet under this title by Joseph P. Kamp, issued by the Constitutional Educational League of New Haven, Conn., first appeared in March 1937 ..."] (NY, [1937]) 5 p.
[1] There are all kinds of students … (New York, 1954) 11 p. -- [2] Our generation will not be silent! Statement of the Labor Youth League in answer to the Attorney General's charges under the McCarran Act (NY, September, 1953) 24 p. -- [3] We accuse McCarthyism (NY, February, 1954) 48 p.
Communism's threat to democracy (New York: The America Press, 1937) 16 p.
[1] Karl Marx, the man (Brooklyn: New York Labor News, 1972) 62 p. -- [2] The religion of capital and Social effect of machinery and Do you know what Socialism means? (New York: New York Labor News Company, February, 1894) -- [3] The religion of capital: a satirical exposure of capital's claims to sanctity [Ninth edition] (Brooklyn, 1967) 32 p. -- [4] Socialism at the intellectuals / authorized translation by Charles H. Kerr (Chicago, 1900) 22 p.
Statement and platform of Robert M. LaFollette, independent progressive candidate for President of the United States, presented July 24, 1924 to the Conference for Progressive Political Action, Cleveland, Ohio (San Francisco, Cal.: Reprinted by The World PRess, [1924]) 20 p.
[1] Unemployment and its remedies (New York: League for Industrial Democracy, 1931) 103 p. -- [2] Socialism in the United States (NY, 1952) 25 p. -- [3] Recent developments in Socialism with bibliographies and directory (NY, [1922]) 16 p. -- [4] Roads to freedom: a syllabus for discussion groups [fourth printing] (NY, 1930) 40 p. -- [5] How America lives [fourth printing revised] (NY, 1932) 64 p. -- [6] Public ownership here and abroad: before during and after the war [fourth edition] (NY, 1931) 69 p. -- [7] America in the Depression: supplement to How America lives (NY, 1935) 32 p. [with ephemera of the League for Industrial Democracy lad in] -- [8] How America lives: a handbook of industrial facts (NY, 1924) 39 p. -- [9] An appeal to white collar workers and the professions (NY: The Socialist Party, [1930]) 15 p. -- [10] The new Capitalism and the Socialist (NY, 1931) 47 p. -- [11] Putting the Constitution to work (NY, April, 1936) 38 p. -- [12] Incentives under Capitalism and Socialism (NY, 1933) 54 p. [2 copies] -- [13] Public ownership throughout the world: a survey of the extent of government control and operation (NY: Rand School of Social Science, 1918) 48 p. -- [14] The Federal Government and functional democracy (NY, September, 1940) 32 p. -- [15] Flyer: What is Socialism? ... Socialist candidate for U.S. Senator ... (NY, [1938]) 1 p.
[1] On understanding Soviet Russia (New York: Friends of the Soviet Union, [1932?]) 29 p. -- [2] Soviet Russia and the Post-War world ([NY]: National Council of American-Soviet Friendship, [1943]) 24 p. -- [3] Soviet Russia and religion [International pamphlets no. 49] (NY: International Publishers, 1936) 23 p -- [4] The civil liberties crisis [Basic pamphlets no. 2] (NY, February, 1952) 38 p. -- [5] Challenge to McCarthy [Basic pamphlets no. 7] (NY, February, 1954) 32 p. -- [6] What is the fight for civil liberty? Questions and answers in a radio program on the Public Service Forum (NY: American Civil Liberties Union, October, 1936) 8 p. -- [7] The right to travel [Basic pamphlets no. 10] (NY, December, 1957) 41 p. -- [8] Back to the Bill of Rights [Basic pamphlets no. 5] (NY, 1952) 30 p. -- [9] The Congressional inquisition [Basic pamphlets no. 8] (NY, May, 1954) 35 p. -- [10] Soviet Russia versus Nazi Germany (NY: American Council on Soviet Relations, 1942) 44 p.
[1] The Socialist attitude on the war: a debate between Robert Rives La Monte and Louis C. Fraina (New York: Socialist Publication Society, 1917) 43 p. -- [2] Science and Socialism (Chicago: Charles H. Kerr & Company Co-Operative, [1919?]) 28 p. [2 copies].
Marxism and the woman question (New York, July, 1943) 64 p. [2 copies].
The maritime workers and the Imperialist war (New York: Waterfront Section, Communist Party, [1939]) 23 p.
[1] Your stake in the elections (New York, September, 1941) 35 p. [2 copies] -- [2] The Un-American Dies Committee (NY, January, 1939) 31 p. [3 copies] -- [3] The 3rd party / illustrated by Anton Refregier (San Francisco: The Daily People's World, [1948?]) 31 p. -- [4] The nation's biggest racket (NY, September, 1952) 15 p. -- [5] Washington's "Cliveden Set" McLean Mansion Center for group hit by F.D.R. (NY: Daily Worker, February, 1942) 4 p.
Party vigilance against enemy infiltration (New York, February, 1953) 23 p. [2 copies].
[1] The campus strikes against war (New York: Student League for Industrial Democracy, 1935) 46 p. -- [2] Towards a 'closed shop' on the campus: a report to the Second Annual Convention of the American Student Union (New York, December, 1936) 31 p. -- [3] The campus: a fortress of democracy (NY, December, 1937) 46 p.
What is capital? / freely translated by F. Keddell, from Chapter IV of "Herr Bastiat Shultze [sic] von Delitsch" (New York: New York Labor News Company, 1918) 27 p.
Profits for everybody: a plan for the preservation of Capitalism by a more equitable distribution of work and profits (Portsmouth, VA: The author, 1933) 12 p.
[1] The spy at your counter (New York, [1937?]) 31 p. -- [2] 20 years on the chain gang? Angelo Herndon must go free! (NY, May, 1935) 14 p. -- [3] The reign of witches: the struggle against the alien and sedition laws / with an introduction by William L. Patterson (NY: Civil Rights Congress, 1952) 64 p.
"We hold these truths …" Statements on Anti-Semitism by 54 leading American writers, statesmen, educators, clergymen and trade-unionists (New York, 1939) 128 p.
Brochure: L.I.D. Summer School: laboratory for labor and social action, June 15th to July 28th, 1939 (New York, 1939).
[1] The nature of the Revolutionary Youth League (New York, 1937) 9 p. -- [2] 3 flyers: New study class: "Problems of the revulitionary movement, a series of ten lectures … Instructor: B. J. Field. -- Labor front, labor school [address change notice] -- Mass meeting: back to the Socialist Party or forward to the New Revolution Party? Speaker: B. J. Field, at Germania Hall ...
On to social democracy! (New York, 1940?]) 4 p.
Autarchy versus anarchy [Rampart journal of individualist throught, reprint, from the Winter 1965 issue] (Larkspur, CO: Pine Tree Press, 1965) 20 p.
The truth about the Lusk Committee: a report (New York: The Nation Press, March, 1920) 32 p.
[1] The Soviets at work: the international position of the Russian Soviet Republic and the fundamental problems of the Socialist Revolution / by Nikolai Lenin, Premier, Russian Soviet Republic (New York: The Rand School of Social Science, 1918) 48 p. -- [2] A new letter to the workers of Europe and America / by Nicholas Lenin (Brooklyn: The Socialist Publication Society, 1919) 13 p.
Questions for the Left / introduction by A. J. Muste (New York: American Forum for Socialist Education, November, 1957) 29 p.
[1] 20 years after, 1914-1934 (New York: Youth Section, American League Against War and Fascism, 1934) 18 p. -- [2] Youth demands Peace (NY: National Youth Committee, American League Against War and Fascism, April, 1936) 23 p.
The St. Lawrence Seaway and Power Project (New York and Buffalo: Communist Political Assocation of New York, [1945]) 13 p.
The Atomic Age: suicide … slavery or Socialism? (New York: Socialist Party, [1946]) 39 p.
Is it true they say about Cohen? / illustrations by Ad Reinhardt (New York: American Jewish Labor Council, August, 1948) 32 p.
Socialism explained by a plain workingman in plain language [Volkszeitung Library, vol. Vii, no. 2] (New York, January, 1905) 29 p.
[1] Lewis-Harriman debate, Socialist Party vs. Union Labor Party [Job Harriman] (Los Angeles: Common Sense Publishing Co., 1906) 28 p. -- [2] Debate between Tom Mann and Arthur M. Lewis, at the Garrick Theatre, Chicago (Chicago, Charles H. Kerr, 1914) 77 p.
Proletarian and petit-bourgeois (Chicago: Industrial Workers of the World, [1909?]) 32 p.
How to make every Socialist local a success: an open letter to the Socialists of America (Oklahoma City, Warden Company, 1917) 31 p.
The Fulton Lewis Jr. report on the Fund for the Republic (Washington, DC: Special Reports, Inc., [1955]) 108 p.
Flyer: Wake up! Read the Liberator! (Chicago, [1921]) 2 p.
Issues of Vews & Comments published by the Libertarian League (New York and Seatlle): Nos. 2-22.
Issues of Vews & Comments published by the Libertarian League (New York): Nos. 23-50.
[1] Provisional statement of principles (New York, [1955?]) 7 p. -- [2] Flyer: Budapest 1956 (New York) -- [3] Flyer: Police state methods [re disappearance of Dr. Jesus de Galindez] (New York, March, 1957) -- [4] Internal bulletin no. 2, June, 1957, 9 p. -- [5] Internal bulletin no. 3, December, 1957, 7 p.
The dissolution of Capitalism by greed, crime and wars [Second edition] ([New York?], 1950) 49 p.
Socialism: what it is and what it seeks to accomplish / translated by May Wood Simons (Chicago: Charles H. Kerr & Company, [1897?]) 64 p.
[1] An American looks at Russia: can we live together in peace? (New York, January, 1951) 23 p. [2 copies] -- [2] The callenge of the '56 elections: report of the National Committee of the Communist Party, U.S.A. (NY, June, 1956) 24 p.
The case of Claude Lightfoot / by Claude Lightfoot (New York, June, 1955) 15 p. -- [2] The case of Claude Lightfoot (Chicago, The Lightfoot Defense Committee, [1955?]) 15 p.
From fireside to factory (New York: The Rand School of Social Science, 1916) 66 p. [2 copies].
How Communists injure teachers' unions [Reprinted by permission from The social frontier, vol. V, no. 43 pp. 173-176] ([New York, 1939?]) 13 p.
Monopoly and big business [L.I.D. pamphlet series] (New York: League for Industrial Democracy, June, 1940) 56 p.
[1] Wake up and live: report of John Little, State Executive Secretary to the 267 delegates at the Empire State Convention of the Young Communist League, held in Livingston Hall, Brooklyn, November 26-28, 1937 (New York, December, 1937) 47 p. -- [2] Life for America's sons and daughters (NY, March, 1939) 46 p.
Radicalism in Washington: a notable address of national importance .. At the First Annual Conference Dinner of Patriotic Societies under the auspices of the Key Men of America, at the Hotel Roosevelt, New York, April 18, 1927 (New York: Key Men of America, 1927) 30 p.
The Socialist Party and its purposes / assisted by Isaac Edw. Ferguson (Chicago: The Goodspeed Press, 1918) 40 p.
[1] The priest and the billy goat [Number one] (Kalamazoo, Michigan: Lockwood Publishing Co., [1912?]) 32 p. -- [2] The soldier and the billy goat [Number two] (Kalamazoo, [1912?]) 32 p.
The anatomy of McCarthyism / by Mark Logan and Sam Douglas [A political affairs pamphlet] (New York, August, 1953) 22 p.
The dream of Debs (Chicago: Charles H. Kerr & Company Co-Operative, [1920?]) 31 p.
Citizens without rights / by Harry Carlisle (Los Angeles, 1952) 13 p.
Lenin and the trade union movement / foreword by Wm. Z. Foster (Chicago: Trade Union Educational League, [1921?]) 36 p.
"I read it in the newspapers": being an account of the attack made by the House Committee on Un-American Activities [VELDE] on Rev. Donald G. Lothrop … and his defense based upon the published records (Boston: Published by the Community Church of Boston, [1955]) 23 p.
The new social structure (Oakland, CA: The International Press, [1920]) 24 p.
[1] What's what- about Coolidge? (Chicago: Workers Party of America, [1924?]) 16 p. -- [2] American Imperialism (Chicago, [1924?]) 32 p. -- [3] New frontiers for labor (New York: Workers Age, [1940?]) 22 p. [2 copies] -- [4] The Coolidge program: Capitalist democracy & prosperity exposed [Workers library no. 2] (New York: Workers Library, December, 1927) 16 p. [2 copies] -- [5] Mailer: [Appeal for Workers Age] (NY, July 20, 1939) 2 p.
The Negro in sports / illustrations b y Pele Edises (San Francisco: The Daily People's World, [1947?]) 31 p.
Practical Socialism and Ferrer incident [Second edition] (Little Rock, Arkansas: Catholic Publication Society, March, 1910) 28 p.
The saga of a class-conscious couple [broadside poem] (Cleveland, OH, January 5, 1946).
[1] Economics of anarchy: a study of the industrial type (New York, [1890?]) 59 p. -- [2] Philosphy of trade unions: an essay devoted to the interests of the thousands who in the daily struggle for labor's rights, do battle for the true freedom of the human race (Washington, DC: American Federation of Labor, [1892]) 19 p.
[1] The professional informer (New York, November, 1955) 23 p. -- [2] The promise of automation and how to realize it (NY, June, 1956) 23 p.
Plenty for all: the meaning of Socialism (New York: The Workers Party, [1943]) 66 p.
Red baiting and civil liberties: two notable articles from Monthly Review = Open letter to a member of the ADA by Florence Luscomb and Behind the civil rights crisis by Athur K. Davis (New York: Monthly Review, 1953) 20 p.
Panics: a Socialist analysis: a lecture (Spokane, Washington: Press of The New Time, [1905?]) 39 p.
Modern Socialism (St. Louis: Central Bureau of the G. R. Central Society, [1919?]) 14 p.
[1] Crisis in the Middle East: Which way Israel? (New York, February, 1956) 23 p. -- [2] The real Father Coughlin (NY, June, 1939) 31 p. -- [3] The truth about Father Coughlin [Second revised edition] (NY: May, 1935) 46 p. -- [4] The people's message to Congress (NY, January, 1938) 31 p. [3 copies] -- [5] Socialism: what's in it for you (NY, April, 1946) 62 p. + (Revised edition, March, 1947) 63 p. -- [6] America needs Earl Browder (NY, August, 1941) 14 p.
Professionals in a Soviet America (New York, November, 1935) 38 p.
Who are the foreign agents? (New York: Communist Party U.S.A., June, 1948) 15 p.
[1] A talk between two workers [Edition of 1933] (No place or publisher listed, 1933 [Reprint?]) 31 p. -- [2] The Anarchist revolution (Van Nuys, CA: SRAFPrint for Industrial Workers of the World, [1970?]) 12 p. -- [3] Anarchist Communism (Los Altos, CA, SRAFPrint, April, 1971) 7 p.
The Stalin heritage, 1879-1953 [Speeches at the Funeral of Joseph Stalin by Georgi M. Malenkov, Laurenti P. Beria, and Vyacheslav M. Molotov] (New York: New Century Publishers, April, 1953) 15 p.
Our national kitchen: the substance of a speech on Socialism (Minneapolis: The People's Press, 1916) 62 p. [2 copies].
The citizen writer: essays in defense of American culture (New York: International Publishers, 1950) 48 p.
Anarchism … a solution to world problems: a presentation of ten essays (Los Angeles: Issued by MAN!, 1940) 23 p. [2 copies].
Man bites dog: report of an unusual hearing before the McCarran Committee (New York: National Guardian, [1952]) 23 p.
Stalin's thought illuminates problems of Negro freedom struggle: for discussion in clubs and classes (New York: Communist Party U.S.A., January, 1953) 47 p.
Youth marches for peace (Newark: New Jersey State Committee, American Youth Congress, [1936]) 16 p.
[1] The U.S.S.R. and the world proletariat: report at the XII Plenum of Executive Committee of the Communist International, September 14, 1932 (New York: Workers' Library Publishers, [1932]; London: The Utopia Press Ltd.) 48 p. -- [2] The revolutionary crisis is maturing: speech by D.Z. Manuilsky at the Seventeenth Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (New York, May, 1934) 48 p. -- [3] Social democracy- stepping stone to Fascism ... or Otto Bauer's latest discovery (NY, March, 1934) 63 p. -- [4] The work of the Seventh Congress of the Communist International (NY, May, 1936) 80 p. [2 copies] -- [5] The rise of Socialism in the Soviet Union: report on the results of Socialist construction in the U.S.S.R., Delivered August 17, 1935 (NY, November, 1935) 62 p.
[1] We accuse! The story of Tom Mooney (New York: International Labor Defense, 1938) 31 p. [3 copies] -- [2] Should America go to war? (NY: American People's Mobilization, 14 p. -- [3] Security with FDR / foreword by Max Bedacht (NY: Issued by National Fraternal Committee for the Re-Election of President Roosevelt (Sponsored by members of the International Workers Order), September, 1944) 31 p. -- [4] The man on the flying trapeze, and Two letters by Luigi Antonini (NY: Published by S. Romualdi and S. J. Levitas, [1936]) 22 p.
[1] Why Catholic workers should be Socialists (Chicaog: Kerr, [1914?]) 31 p. -- [2] Industrial autocracy (Chicago, 1919) 58 p. -- [3] Shop talks on economics (Chicago: Kerr, 1911) 58 p. + Another edition, 59 p.
The "free press": portrait of a monopoly (New York, July, 1946) 48 p.
Why I am a revolutionist (San Francisco: The Progressive Educational League, [1910?]) 20 p.
Did Trotsky collaborate with Stalin: a reply to J. R. Johnson of the Workers Party (New York, October, 1940) 13 p.
Cold War on the campus (New York: Socialist Youth League, November, 1950) 16 p.
Stenographer's report of the Seligman vs. Waton debate: "Is the failure of Socialism, as evinced by the recent partial return to Capitalism, due to the fallacies of Marxian theory? Affirmative: Professor Edwin R. A. Seligman … Negative: Harry Waton (New York: Marx-Engels Institute, 1922) 62 p.
Flyer: Debate, subject: "Can unemployment be solved under Capitalism?" Affirmative: I. Paul Taylor … Negative: Al. Renner ... Sunday, February 28, 1932 … Ann Arbor High School Auditorium (Detroit: Marxian Labor College, 1932) 1 p.
The principles of Anarchism / translated from the Yiddish by A. Grossner (New York: Published by The Jewis Anarchist Federation of America, 1935) 31 p.
We want to live! (New York: Youn Communist League, [1937]) 31 p.
[1] Tactics and methods of Communism in America: a Harding College Freedom Forum presentation, a timely reprint from the National Education Program (Searcy, Arkansas: Harding College, 1952) 29 p. -- [2] American Mercury: Communism and colleges,a reprint (New York: The American Mercury, May, 1953) pp. 111-143 -- [3] The "United Front" exposed: the prepared statement of Mr. J. B. Matthews, a "fellow traveler," before the Congressional Committee Investigating Un-American Activities (NY: League for Constitutional Government, November, 1938) 30 p. -- [4] Reds and our churches ([NY]: The American Mercury, [1953]) 13 p. -- [5] The religious Fifth Column in the United States: an address delivered at Orchestra Hall, Chicago, Ill., Monday evening, August 9, 1954 (Minneapolis: Sunshine News, 1954) 19 p. -- [6] The Commies go after the kids: like their Nazi and Fascist counterparts, the Communists believe in snaring children. Here are the methods they use to get them (NY: National Council for American Education, 1949) 4 p. -- [7] Mailer: Communist infiltration and religion (Cincinnati, Ohio: Circuit Riders, Inc., January, 1957) 6 p.
[1] What do you read? The big money press and the workers press (New York, February, 1941) 15 p. -- [2] Nazi army or peaceful Germany (NY, May, 1952) 15 p. -- [3] May Day 1938 for democracy, jobs, security peace! (NY, April, 1938) 15 p. [2 copies].
Little sermons in Socialism by Abraham Lincoln, culled an commented on by Burke McCarthy, run in The Chicago Daily Socialist in 1910 (Chicago, 1910) 16 p.
How I answered Joe McCarthy / by Anonymous (Chicago: Atomic Age Publishers, 1952) 45 p.
Women, war and Fascism (New York: The American League Against War and Fascism, December, 1935) 18 p.
[1] Socialism: a paper read before the Albany Press Club, "Socialist Night" (New York: National Executive Committee of SLP, 1896) 48 p. -- [2] [Same title] (New York: New York Labor News, 1900) 32 p.
Communism and American youth (New York: The America Press, 1936) 24 p.
The "Socialist" Roosevelt, savior of the system, or, "Socialists whom you can work," some side-lights on the genealogy of the "Bull Moose" (San Francisco: Book Omnorium, 1912) 20 p. [2 copies],
Bolshevism in Russia and America (New York: The Paulist Press, [1917?]) 45 p.
[1] Longshot O'Leary's garland of practical poesie: Poems (New York: International Publishers, 1949) 32 p. -- [2] The gates of ivory, the gates of horn: a satirical novel of politics and terror in the not impossible future (NY, 1957) 128 p.
Has the Methodist Church gone mad? (Miami, Florida, 1955) 32 p.
Russia's most effective fifth column in America: a series of radio messages (Collingswood, New Jersey: Christian Beacon Press, 1948) 36 p.
Browder and Ford for peace, jobs and Socialism (New York, 1940) 15 p. [3 copies].
The ABC's of economic action (Chicago: McElroy Publishing Co., December, 1912) 23 p.
Southern labor in revolt / by Kenneth Meiklejohn and Peter Nehemkis (students at Swarthmore College) (New York: The Intercollegiate Student Council of the League of Industrial Democracy, 1930) 24 p.
La "Bande a Bannot" [originally titled "The Truth about the Bonnot Gang"] (Chicago: Reprinted from Coptic Press by Solidarity Bookstore [Bookshop?], 1969) 16 p.
The Labor Youth League fights back (New York, [1953?]) 7 p.
The approaching collapse of American Capitalism (Reading, Pennsylvania: [Socialist Party], 1932) 64 p.
[1] The Krushchev report and the crisis in the American Left (Brooklyn: Independence Publishers, 1956) 111 p. -- [2] History and conscience: the face of Howard Fast (New York: Anvil Atlas Publishers, 1958) 63 p.
Youth marches towards Socialism: report to the Sixth World Congress of the Young Communist International (New York, 1936) 63 p.
"Without fear or favor": The case of the Michigan students (Detroit, September, 1940) 7 p.
Introducing … The Communist Political Association of Michigan (Detroit, June, 1944) 4 p.
Mailer: Happy New Year … (Chicago, [1941?]) 4 p.
Mid-West youth in action (St. Paul, MN, February, 1935) 12 p.
McCarthyism: American Fascism on the march [reprinted from the Dec. 7 1953 issue of the weekly newspaper The Militant] (New York: Pioneer Publishers, 1953) 15 p.
Woman against myth (New York: International Publishers, 1948) 24 p.
The Socialists: an address delivered by E. C. Miller before the Winter's Night Club of Brooklyn, New York, January 16th, A.D. 1918 ([Brooklyn?, 1918]) 32 p.
[1] Crisis in Palestine (New York, September, 1946) 32 p. -- [2] A Jew looks at the war (New York: Jewish Peoples Committee, June, 1940) 31 p. -- [3] A message to American Jewry (NY: Jewish Peoples Committee, March, 1941) 63 p.
[1] Thine alabaster cities: a poem for our times (Brooklyn, 1952) [32] p. -- [2] Scouting and the Boy Scout Jamboree / by Martha Millet and Sam Strong (New York, August, 1935) 23 p. -- [3] Dangerous Jack: a fantasy in verse / with illustrations by Robert Joyce (New York: Sierra Press, 1953) 78 p.
The revolutionary movement in the colonial countries: speech revised and augmented, delivered August 7, 1935 [Seventh World Congress of the Communist International] (New York, 1935) 64 p.
Criminal syndicalist or renegade? (Sacramento: Non-Partisan Labor Defense, March10, 1935) 4 p.
[Leaflet]: Warren K. Billings urges workers and liberals to help free the Eighteen (New York, [1944]) 2 p.
[1] Invitation to join the Communist Party (New York, 1943) 15 p. -- [2] The year of great decision: 1942 (NY, May, 1942) 47 p. [2 copies] -- [3] Our ally, the Soviet Union (NY, January, 1942) 15 p. [2 copies] -- [4] Stedman's red raid (Cleveland: Toiler Publishing Association, May, 1921) 19 p. -- [5] The heritage of the Communist Political Association (NY, August, 1944) 63 p. -- [6] One war to defeat Hitler (NY, November, 1941) 62 p. -- [7] The struggle against war and the peace policy of the Soviet Union (NY, October, 1936) 47 p. -- [8] Free Earl Browder! (NY, March, 1941) 14 p. [2 copies] -- [9] Tell the people how Ben Davis was elected [Second printing] (NY, April, 1946) 24 p.
[1] America's housing crisis (New York, May, 1946) 31 p. -- [2] Food prices and rationing [a Daily Worker pamphlet] (NY, January, 1943) 15 p. -- [3] How to fight high prices (NY, November, 1947) 15 p. [2 copies] -- [4] Hold that rent ceiling (NY, January, 1947) 15 p.
Socialism on the Eastern trial: essence of Socialism ([Great Britain?], 1933) 126 p.
Memo: Frontier Magazine ([No place given], September, 1955) 12 p.
Sound the alarm [on North Korea] / signed Leo Huberman, Paul M. Sweezy (New York, May, 1949) 13 p.
The foreign born in the United States (New York: American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born, August, 1936) 82 p.
[1] The Vatican conspiracy in the trade union movement [reprinted from Political affairs] (New York, June, 1950) 14 p. -- [2] Reconversion: 60,000,000 jobs or 15,000,000 jobless (NY, September, 1945) 39 p. -- [3] The black legion rides (NY, August, 1936) 47 p. -- [4] Labor and Anti-Semitism (NY, May, 1953) 23 p. -- [5] The C.I.O. today (NY, March, 1950) 31 p. [2 copies] -- [6] The Red baiting racket and how it works (NY, October, 1947) 39 p. [2 copies] -- [7] Labor unity: what AFL-CIO merger means for workers (NY, March, 1955) 15 p. -- [8] The Smith ... McCarran ... Taft-Hartley conspiracy to strangle labor (NY, October, 1951) 24 p. -- [9] The Trotskyite 5th column in the labor movement (NY, January, 1945) 31 p. -- [10] Inside Hotel Local 6! [reprinted from The Worker] (NY, [1950]) 23 p. -- [11] A tale of two waterfronts (NY: Daily Worker, [1952]) 31 p. -- [12] Where is the CIO going? A program for militant trade unionism (NY, March, 1949) 32 p. -- [13] How Wall Street picks your pocket (NY, October, 1946) 15 p.
What's happening in Korea? (New York, [1950]) 23 p. [2 copies].
[1] Women organize against Reds (New York, [1940]) 8 p. -- [2] [Mailer]: American Women Against Communism: Dear American (NY, April 2, 1942).
An easy outline of modern Socialism (New York: Rand School Press, 1940) 30 p.
Labor's answer to conscription (New York, [1940]) 15 p.
Social revolution ([No place given, 1935?]) 12 p.
Blackout (Chicago: Solidarity Bookshop, [ca. 1966]) 13 p.
[1] McCarthy: the man and the Ism (San Francisco, [1953]) 31 p. -- [2] How the cradle of liberty was robbed: the awful truth about a law to muzzle people and leash nations (New York, January, 1955) 15 p. [2 copies].
Down with the anarchists! ([New York?, 1901?] 16 p.
[Catalog]: Anarchist literature (New York, [1909?]) 4 p.
Students' answer to the Marxist challenge: official hand book (Hollywood, CA: Students for America [and National Collegiate MacArthur Clubs], 1952) 44 p. [2 copies] + mailer.
Defense policy in the Minneapolis trial / Grandizo Munis and James P. Canon (New York, June, 1942) 64 p.
[1] The Harry Bridges case, "a burden on the conscience of the American people" / [with] Dissenting opinion of Judge William Healy and Judge Francis Garrecht of the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit (San Francisco, 1945) 16 p. -- [2] The whole case against Bridges is built on hatred and prejudice ... Speech ... in support of Harry Bridges, at the Sixth Constitutional Convention of the C.I.O., November 4, 1943, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (San Francisco, 1943) 4 p.
Ireland's fight for freedom and the Irish in the U.S.A. (New York: Published for the Irish Workers' Club, June, 1934) 13 p.
Communism and civil liberties : reprinted from Fellowship, a monthly magazine published by the Fellowship of Reconciliation (New York: FOR, [1949?]) 8 p.
What Mutualism is (Los Angeles, [1927?]) 8 p.
America arms the schools / Introduction by Al Hamilton (Chicago: Young People's Socialist League, 1937) 23 p.
The socialization of money: a treatise presenting a practical solution of the money problem ([New York?, 1920]) 29 p. [2 copies].
Constructive Socialism (Milwaukee, [1910?]) 32 p.
Communism in the United States: a survey by the N.C.W.C. Department of Social Action (with study outline), November 15, 1937 (Washington, DC, 1937) 35 p.
[1] The law of the Debs case: constitutional construction by the Supreme Court (New York, [1919?]) 4 p. -- [2] The outrage on Rev. Herbert S. Bigelow of Cincinnati, Ohio (NY, March 1918) 15 p. -- [3] The conviction of Mrs. Kate Richards O'Hare, and North Dakota politics (NY, March, 1918) 12 p.
Is peace a crime? The case of the Peace Information Center (New York, [1951]) 4 p.
[1] Did the Rosenbergs have full measure of justice? Three U.S. Supreme Court justices reveal the Rosenbergs did not have their day in court (New York, [1953]) 7 p. -- [2] An appeal to President Dwight D. Eisenhower to spare the lives of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg: Triboro Stadium, Randall's Island, Sunday April 26th, at 2:00 P.M. (NY, [1953]) 8 p. -- [3] "Never losing faith ..." for Julius and Ethel Rosenberg (NY, [1953]) 1 v.
Can Americans tolerate prison for ideas? (New York, April 1954) 24 p.
[1] Mailer: Dear Friends: The call printed on the reverse side of this letterhead speaks for itself … (New York, February 16 and 17, 1918) -- [2] Mailer: Dear Friend: The world is being remade … (NY, May 3rd, 4th, and 5th, 1918)
Flyer: New Year Opportunity … (Washington, DC, January, 1948)
A fifty-year project to combat Socialism on the campus (New York, [1950]) 10 p.
[1] Transcript of remarks by Bishop R. R. Wright … at a "Right to Advocate for Peace" meeting at Town Hall New York City, Friday, September 28th, 1951 (New York, October 12, 1951) 4 p. -- [2] Flyer: Stop the blacklist: prominent speakers dramatic presentation, public rally (New York, November 20, [1950])
[1] "… The only sound policy for a democracy …" A statement by leading Americans on the criteria for Army commissions and other appointments (New York, [1944]) 8 p. -- [2] Witch hunt, 1941, hits government workers (Washington, D.C., 1941) 24 p. -- [3] Press release: Administration denial of the use of the Labor Department Auditorium by American Youth Congress for its National Town Meeting ... (Washington, D.C., February 4, 1941) 2 p.
How to stop the Junior Fifth Column: a pro-American manual for youth / by Murray Plavner and Samuel Mines, foreword for Gene Tunney, illustrated by Jess Fremon (New York, 1941) 38 p.
[1] An appeal to reason: the proposals of the Attorney General to list the National Lawyers Guild as "subversive" - its implications for the democratic process and the Bar (New York, 1953) 19 p. -- [2] Report of the Civil Liberties Committee, National Lawyers Guild, Oregon Chapter ([Portland?], May 24, 1938) 53 p. -- [3] Offer of proof of the unconsitutionality of the Smith Act / published as a public service by the Los Angeles & Beverly Hills Chapters, National Lawyers Guild ([Los Angeles?, 1952]) 64 p. -- [4] In the court of public opinion: People of the United States of America vs. the Dies Committee: Indictment / The San Francisco Chapter, National Lawyers Guild, attorneys for the People (SF, 1939) 48 p.
Special report on the Communistic-Front-Organization movement in America / Special news and views report no. 166, May 14, 1946 (Chicago, 1946) 10 p.
A petition .. To the United Nations on behalf of 13 million oppressed Negro citizens of the United States of America / foreword by Max Yergan (New York, [1946]) 15 p.
[1] The big plot: froof of the Justice Department's plan to jail 21,105 Americans (New York, 1949) 10 p. -- [2] Due process in a political trial: the record vs. the press (NY, 1949) 64 p.
Pioneer song book: songs for workers' and famers' children / words edited by Harray Alan Potamkin, music edited by Gertrude Rady, drawings by Mary Morrow (New York: New Pioneer Publishing Co., 1935) 30 p.
Two issues of the National Republic Lettergram: No. 184: Trojan horse taking American youth on fatal ride; and No. 195: Communists seek to stengthen youth movement in U.S. (Washington, DC)
Before the Congress of the United States of America, in re: Proceedings for investigation of subversive propaganda affecting public schools in the several states ([No place given], 1950) 4 p.
[1] Building a militant student movement: program and constitution of the National Student League (New York, 1935) 23 p. -- [2] Building a militant student movement: program of the National Student League (NY, 1934) 26 p. -- [3] Students fight war (NY, March, 1935) 30 p. -- [4] Flyer: Why Italy invades Ethiopia / by Celeste Strack, California student ([Ithaca, NY, 1935])
Consitution and regulations of the National Unemployment Council / foreword by Herbert Benjamin (New York, August, 1934) 23 p.
[1] The Debs decision / published by the Rand School of Social Science [Second edition] (New York, 1919) 47 p. -- [2] Before the court: Nearing - Debs: 1. Nearing's summing-up speech, 2. Debs statement to the court (NY, [1919]) 22 p. -- [3] International debate of the day! Can the Soviet idea take hold of America, England and France? Bertrand Russell versus Scott Nearing / introduction by Samuel Untermyer (NY: League for Public Discussion, 1924) 69 p.
[1] The Debs decision [First edition?] (New York: Rand School of Social Science, 1919) 47 p. -- [2] Stopping a war: the fight of the French workers against the Moroccan campaign of 1925 (NY: Social Science Publishers, 1926) 31 p. -- [3] Vilence or solidarity? or will guns settle it? (NY: People's Print, [1919]) 15 p. -- [4] Free speech and free press go to trial with Scott Nearing ([NY?, 1919?]) 8 p. -- [5] A nation divided or, Plutocracy versus Democracy (Chicago: Socialist Party of the United States, 1920) 32 p. -- [6] The great madness: a victory fot the American plutocracy (NY: Rand School of Social Science, 1917) 44 p. -- [7] Irrepressible America (NY: League for Industrial Democracy, 1922) 30 p. -- [8] The rise and decline of Christian civilization (Ridgewood, NJ, [1940?]) 23 p. -- [9] Work and pay (Philadelphia: Published by Charles W. Ervin, [1917?]) 50 p. -- [10] An A B C of Communism (NY: Vanguard Press, [1932?]) 28 p. -- [11] Glimpses of the Soviet Republic (NY: Social Science Publishers, 1926) 32 p.
[1] Russia turns east: the triumph of Soviet diplomacy in Asia (New York: Social Science Publishers, 1926) 30 p. -- [2] Europe in revolution: a letter from Scott Nearing (NY, 1920) 30 p. -- [3] The future of Capitalism and Socialism in America: a symposium by Sam. A. Lewisohn, Dr. Scott Nearing, Colonel M.C. Rorty, Morris Hillquit (NY: League for Industrial Democracy, 1927) 43 p. -- [4] Should Socialism prevail? A debate between (Affirmative) Professor Scott Nearing, Mr. Morris Hillquit, (Negative) Rev. Dr. John L. Belford, Prof. Frederick M. Davenport (NY: Rand School of Scoial Science and New York Call, 1915) 48 p. -- [5] The one way out: an answer to hard times (NY: Urquhart Press, [1932]) 42 p. -- [6] The menace of militarism: an analysis, a criticism, a protest, and a demand (NY: Rand Book Store, 1917) 52 p. -- [7] The one big union of business (NY: Rand Book Store, [1920?]) 32 p.
Three issues of The Needle: volume 1, no. 1, 2, and 3 (San Francisco, 1956)
A challenge by the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, U.S.A. to the A.F. of L. and Socialist Union bureaucrats ([New York?, 1933?]) 15 p.
Farmers: where are we going? / Issues of the Day, No. 5 (Chicago: Socialist Party of America, October 10, 1934) 15 p.
God and government: the Siamese twins of superstition / Free Soceity Library no. 3 (San Francisco: Free Society Library, December, 1899) 20 p.
Morals in politics: a collection of essays: Pragmatic value of liberty / by William Chamberlin ; Creative democracy / by John Dewey ; Morals and politics / by Max Eastman ; The moral force of Socialism / by Sidney Hook (New York, 1945) 32 p.
[1] Brochure: When were you born? (New York, 1936) -- [2] Flyer: Should the U.S. Government join in concerted action against the Fascist states? Yes, says Earl Browder; No, says Frederick J. Libby (NY, 1936?)
Nine issues of New Trends: volume 1, issues 1-10 (#5-6 a double issue), September, 1945-August, 1946 (New York)
A letter on agitation: to the New York Branch of the Communist League from the Workers Modern Library (Kansas City, Missouri, [1945?]) 13 p.
Academic freedom & New York University: the case of Professor Edwin Berry Burgum (New York, February, 1954) 80 p.
[1] War and unemployment: Capitalism the cause, Socialism the solution: a Socialist Labor Party statement (New York: New York Labor News Company, 1958) 14 p. -- [2] The SLP & the USSR (Palo Alto, CA: New York Labor News, 1978) 61 p. -- [3] Why is Capitalism running out of gas? A Socialist analysis of the energy crisis (Palo Alto, 1977) 20 p. -- [4] Socialism today: a reply to Time Magazine (Palo Alto, 1978) 24 p. -- [5] Socialist industrial unionism: the workers' power (Brooklyn, 1974) 55 p.
Good soup (New York, 1967) 1 v.
Academic freedom in a time of crisis: a report / prepared by Celia Lewis, Vera Shlakman, Louis Jaffe with the assistance of the Academic Freedome Committee of the New York Teachers Union ([New York], April, 1948) 31 p.
New York Workers School announces its sixth year of full time summer day schools to be held in New York City during July and August, 1943 ([New York, 1943]) 4 p.
No slave labor: exposing plans to regiment youth in forced labor battalions, proposing a real program for jobs and training for American youth (New York, [1936?]) 15 p.
Political Socialism: capturing the government (Portland, OR, [1913?]) 31 p.
Statement of the Non-Partisan Labor Defense concerning Communist Party and International Labor Defense publications on the Sacramento ciminal syndicalism case (New York, [1935]) 3 p.
[1] The case of Earl Browder: why he should be freed (New York: Citizens' Committee to Free Earl Browder, March, 1942) 15 p. [3 copies] -- [2] Verdict against freedom: your stake in the Communist trial (NY, November, 1949) 23 p. [2 copies] -- [3] Behind the Florida bombings: who killed NAACP leader Harry T. Moore and his wife? (NY, February, 1952) 23 p. -- [4] William Z. Foster: an appreciation, for his 75th anniversary (NY: International Publishers, 1955) 48 p.
Honor roll of distinguished Americans; qualifications: must have been attacked by Congressional Inquisitorial Committee (San Francisco, [1959]) 8 p.
The notorious case of Sacco and Vanzetti / edited by E. Haldeman-Julius [Little Blue Book no. 1378] (Girard, KS, 1929) 64 p.
[1] Witch hunt in Minnesota: the federal prosecution of the Socialist Workers Party and Local 544-C.I.O. / by George E. Novack, foreword by James T. Farrell (New York: The Civil Right Defense Committee, [1941]) 23 p. -- [2] The Bill of Rights in danger! The meaning of the Minneapolis convictions / foreword by James T. Farrell (NY, [1941]) 14 p.
[1] Palestine: the Communist position, the colonial question (New York: The Jewish Buro of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the U.S.A., 1936) 27 p. -- [2] Zionism today: the Zionist movement, Labor Zionism, Palestine realities, questions and answers (NY: The Jewish Buro of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the U.S.A., 1936) 58 p. -- [3] Jews in the Soviet Union: citizens and builders / by Paul Novick & J. M. Budish (NY: New Century Publishers, May, 1948) 47 p. -- [4] Solution for Palestine: the Chamberlain White Paper (NY: National Council of Jewish Communists, Summer, 1939) 32 p.
An open letter to American Liberals, with a note on recent dopcuments (New York: The Socialist Publication Society, September, 1918) 31 p.
How Mellon got rich [International pamphlets no. 36] (New York, 1933) 23 p.
Americanism or Communism? Every political, economic and moral question with which the American people are concerned resolves itself into the question of a choice between Americanism and Communism (Portland, OR: [Self published], 1935) 49 p.
America's role in Germany (Philadelphia: Communist League of America (Opposition), [1933]) 18 p.
The lost chord: a description of the future society (Chicago: [Self published?], 1922) 62 p.
[1] Wimmin ain't got no kick / published by the Woman's National Committee of the Socialist Party (Chicago, [1920?]) 4 p. -- [2] What happened to Dan / illustrated by Atlanta Phifer (Kansas City: The Burd & Fletcher Ptg. Co, 1904) 63 p. -- [3] Church and the social problem ([St. Louis?, 1912?]) 32 p. -- [4] In prison: being a report by Kate Richards O'Hare to the President ... as to the conditisions under which women federal prisoners are confined in the Missouri State Penitentiary ... (St. Louis: Frank P. O'Hare, 1920) 64 p.
[1] Kate O'Hare's prison letters (Girard, KS: Appeal to Reason, 1919) 95 p. -- [2] Socialism and the World War [The Kate O'Hare Booklets no. 1] (St. Louis: Frank P. O'Hare, 1919) 30 p. -- [3] The truth about the O'Hare case / by W. E. Zeuch [The Kate O'Hare Booklets no. 2] (St. Louis, 1919) 30 p. -- [4] Americanism and Bolshevism [The Kate O'Hare Booklets no. 3] (St. Louis, 1919) 46 p. -- [5] "Nigger" equality / this is reprinted from the National Rip-Saw (St. Louis, [1919?]) 8 p.
[1] Leaflet: Oil workers attention! Are we men or are we weaklings! ([Kern County, CA?, 1913?]) -- [2] Oil field workers unite! (Chicago, [1918?]) 4 p.
[1] Trotskyism: counter-revolution in disguise (New York: Workers Library Publishers, 1935) 160 p. -- [2] M. J. Olgin: leader and teacher / compiled and edited by the staff of the Morning Freiheit (NY, December, 1939) 31 p. -- [3] That man Browder: Communist candidate for president (NY, September, 1936) 23 p. [2 copies] -- [4] Why Communism? Plain talks on vital problems (NY, December, 1933) 94 p. -- [5] The Socialist Party: last bulwark of Capitalism (NY, [1932]) 32 p. [2 copies] -- [6] Capitalism defends itself: through the Socialist Labor Party (NY, October, 1932) 40 p. -- [7] Why Communism? Plain talks on vital problems [Second revised edition] (NY, May, 1935) 71 p.
[1] Militant Socialism [Rip-Saw series no. 11] (St. Louis, 1912) 33 p. -- [2] "Resolved: that the terms of the Third International are inacceptable to the Revolutionary Socialists of the world": Affirmative: James Oneal, Negative: Robert Minor (New York: The Academy Press, [1921]) 31 p. [2 copies] -- [3] Labor and the next war: a study of American imperialism and its effect upon the workers (Chicago: Socialist Party of the United States, [1923?]) 40 p. [3 copies] -- [4] Socialism versus Bolshevism (NY: Rand School Press, 1935) 27 p. [2 copies] -- [5] Some pages of party history ... With observations on Dr. Shadid and Upton Sinclair ... (NY, [1934]) 28 p. [2 copies].
Vote for John L. Lewis and Communism: a tale of three cities / distributed in New York by Independent Veterans Committee on Americanism (New Haven: Constitutional Educational League, 1937) 30 p. [2 copies].
One newspaper issue of The Open Letter, with headline: What they think of Eugene Debs, Socialist Candidate for President: Higher praise no man could receive (Monroe, NY, October, 1920).
Economic basis of education (New York: New York Labor News Company, 1942) 62 p.
Connolly in America / Irish Communist Organization ([Dublin], August, 1971) 81 p.
The truth about Socialism (Oakland, CA, The International Press, 1912) 32 p. [2 copies].
What about the McNamara case? [Reprinted by request from Regeneracion (Official organ of Mexican Liberal Party)] (Los Angeles, [1911?]) 4 p.
Socialism for America (New York: Rand School Press, [1934?]) 15 p.
In the Supreme Court of the State of Washington, in the matter of Bernard Parent for a writ of Habeas Corpus ([Seattle?, 1920?]) 60 p.
[1] Negroes in the Post-War world ([New York, 1942]) 15 p. -- [2] Negroes march on Washington (NY: Pioneer Publishers, [1941?]) 15 p. -- [3] The March on Washington, one year after …(NY, June 1942) 15 p.
Organizing the Party for victory over reaction: report delivered at the National Conference of the Communist Party (New York: New Century Publishers, 1953) 48 p. [2 copies].
The principles of anarchism: a lecture (Chicago: [Self published], [1890?]) 12 p. [2 copies].
Confessions of a drone: Marshall Field's will and the Socialist machine [Pocket Library of Socialism no. 45] (Chicago: Charles H. Kerr & Company, [1902?]) 8 p.
Karl Marx & modern Socialism (Manchester: National Labour Press, Ltd., [1910]) 15 p. -- [2] Socialism and science [Reprinted from the Socialist Review, April, 1909] (Keighley: [Self published], 1909) 12 p.
[1] Scientific Socialism: its revolutionary aims & methods (Glasgow: Socialist Labour Press, [1917?]) 32 p. -- [2] Karl Liebknecht: the man, his work, and message (Glasgow, [1920?]) 21 p.
Industrial government (Usk, Washington, July, 1945) 10 p.
Democratic Socialism / by Roger Payne and George Hartmann / edited by E. Haldeman-Julius [B-763] (Girard, KS: Haldeman-Julius Publications, 1948) 123 p.
The Crime Prevention Committee's Report on subversive activities (Fresno, 1940) 19 p.
How the rich live (and whom to tax) (New York: Workers Library Publishers, May, 1939) 31 p.
[1] "Underground radicalism": an open letter to Eugene V. Debs and to all honest workers within the Socialist Party (New York: Workers Party of America, [1923?]) 48 p. -- [2] Why every miner should be a Communist: the Workers (Communist) Party: what it is, what it stands for, why every miner should join (NY: Workers Library Publishers, [1928?] 16 p. [2 copies] -- [3] For a Labor Party: recent revolutionary changes in American politics [Third edition, revised] (Chicago: Workers Party of America, [1923]) 86 p.
Karl Marx (New York: Workers Library Publishers, [1930?]) 63 p.
The Negro in Southern agriculture (New York: International Publishers, 1953) 128 p.
The Revolutionary I.W.W. ; How scabs are bred / by the same author ; Constructive program of the I.W.W. by B. H. Williams (Cleveland, July, 1916) 28 p.
[1] The November elections and the fight for jobs, peace, equal rights, democracy (New York: New Century Publishers, 1954) 38 p. -- [2] White chauvinism and the struggle for peace (NY, February 1952) 22 p. -- [3] The Communist Party: vanguard fighter for peace, democracy, security, Socialism (NY, April, 1953) [2 copies] -- [4] Negro representation: a step towards Negro freedom / with an introduction by Betty Gannett (NY, 1952) 24 p. -- [5] Pettis Perry speaks to the court: opening statement to the court and jury in the case of the sixteen Smith Act victims in the trial at Foley Square, New York (NY, July, 1952) 16 p. -- [6] The party of Negro and white: from his summation speech to the jury in the thought-control Smith Act trial at Foley Square, New York, Jan. 13, 1953 / with an introduction by Herbert Aptheker (NY, March, 1953) 15 p.
The Communist Party: a manual on organization (New York: Workers Library Publishers, July, 1935) 127 p.
[1] Labor conscription: what does it mean … Involuntary servitude! [Fourth printing] (New York: New York Labor News, 1945) 31 p. -- [2] From reform to bayonets (NY, 1964) 29 p. -- [3] Was … Why? (Brooklyn, 1972) 62 p. -- [4] Daniel de Leon: social architect (Brooklyn, 1966) 59 p. -- [5] Daniel de Leon, internationalist (NY, 1948) 48 p .-- [6] Daniel de Leon: disciplinarian (Brooklyn, 1968) 32 p.
[1] Deleonist milestones (New York: New York Labor News, 1952) 44 p. -- [2] The truth about inflation: inflation of prices or deflation of labor? (Palo Alto, 1974) 32 p. -- [3] Daniel de Leon, pioneer Socialist editor (Brooklyn, 1966) 48 p. -- [4] Reviling of the great (NY, 1949) 110 p. -- [5] Democracy ... past, present and future [Seventh edition] (Brooklyn, 1972) 80 p.
[1] Democracy .. Past, present and future (New York: New York Labor News, 1940) 78 p. -- [2] The freeman's vote (NY, 1940) 15 p. -- [3] Daniel de Leon: from reform to revolution, 1886-1936 (NY, 1937) 53 p. -- [4] Daniel de Leon, orator (NY, 1942) 32 p. -- [5] Revolutionary milestones, 1890-1930 (NY, 1931) 31 p. [2 copies] -- [6] Karl Marx and Marxism: a universal genius: his discoveries, his traducers (NY, 1934) 63 p.
[1] From reform to bayonets (New York: New York Labor News, 1941) 29 p. -- [2] The Freeman's vote (NY, 1940) 15 p. [2 copies] -- [3] Daniel de Leon, disciplinarian (NY, 1943) 32 p. -- [4] "All power to the Socialist Industrial Union": Proletarian democracy vs. dictatorships and despotism (NY, 1932) 63 p. -- [5] The virus of anarchy: Bakuninism vs. Marxism / by Arnold Petersen and Olive M. Johnson (NY, 1932) 30 p. -- [6] Marxism vs. Anti-Marxism / with an essay entitled "Karl Marx" by Daniel de Leon (NY, [1931]) 30 p. -- [7] High cost of living / and Money by Daniel de Leon (NY: Socialist Labor Party, 1914) 45 p.
[1] War (New York: New York Labor News, 1937) 47 p. -- [2] Commuist Jesuitism … Communist Party dishonesty exposed (NY, 1939) 110 p. -- [3] Program: 35 years of service: Arnold Petersen commemoration (NY, May, 1949) [signed by Petersen] -- [4] W. Z. Foster: renegade or spy? (NY, 1935) 31 p. -- [5] Capitalism is doomed: Socialism is the hope of humanity (NY, 1953) 30 p. -- [6] Daniel de Leon, social scientist (NY, 1945) 79 p. -- [7] Daniel de Leon, emancipator (NY, 1946) 62 p.
[1] The old order and the new (New York: New York Labor News, 1942) 63 p. -- [2] The Nazi beast roars (NY, 1939) 79 p. -- [3] The Stalinist corruption of Marxism (NY, 1941) 156 p. -- [3] Socialism and human nature (NY, 1942) 48 p. -- [and duplicate pamphlets].
A demon's scheme (Burlington, Colorado, [1935?]) 4 p.
[1] Quiz & 'tis (Toledo, Ohio: W. F. Ries, [1910?]) 64 p. [2 copies] -- [2] Push philosophy (Toledo, [1910?]) 64 p. [2 copies] -- [3] The road to Socialism (Girard, KS: Appeal to Reason, 1913) 32 p.
The twenty-one conditions of admisstion into the Communist International (New York: Workers Library Publishers, February, 1934) 31 p. [2 copies].
Freedom, peace and bread! The activities of the Executive Committee of the Communist International (NY, October, 1935) 103 p.
To the members of the Socialist Labor Party: a statement by Julian Pierce relative to his discharge from the New York Labor News Company (New York, May 28, 1902) 22 p. [2 copies].
Debs' treachery to the working class (Chicago, May 3, 1911) 9 p.
Brochure: Free press? Some facts ([New York, 1938?]) 4 p.
[1] Here are the facts: is the American Youth Congress a Communist front? Its history, what it is, how it works (New York: [Self published], 1939) 93 p. -- [2] Youth congress commits suicide / reprint from The New York Herald Tribune, December 22, 1939 (NY, 1939) 1 p.
Karl Marx or Thomas Jefferson? A debate on individualism-Socialism between Hon. Charles Solomon and Hon. George Gordon Battle / foreword by Norman Thomas (New York, September, 1931) 30 p.
[1] America for all: the Commonwealth plan (Chicago: The Socialist Party of the U.S.A., 1934) 31 p. [2 copies] -- [2] Which way for the Socialist Party? (Milwaukee, 1937) 47 p. + a copy of the Second printing.
The International / adapted from Charles H. Kerr's translation, harmonized by Rudolf Liebich [including sheet music] (Chicago: IWW, [1955?]) 4 p.
[1] Stalinists on the waterfront: a documented record of betrayal (New York: Socialist Workers Party, April, 1947) 31 p. [3 copies] -- [2] A fighting program for labor: Jobs for all! (NY, August, 1945) 22 p. -- [3] "Welfare state" or Socialism? (NY, July, 1950) 35 p.
Marxism vs. Keynesism (Los Angeles, September, 1955) 29 p.
Thought Control in U.S.A. Series of pamphlets: No. 1: The conference, the opening session, the legal aspects; No. 2: The press, the radio; No. 3: Literature, music, the arts, architecture; No. 4: Medicine, science, and education; No. 5: The film, the actor; No. 6: Toward freedom of thought (All published: Hollywood, California, July, 1947) -- [2] Flyer: Who is un-American? An open letter to the Berkeley Board of Education ([1947?]).
[1] The Proletarian Party- its principles and practices (Chicago, [1938?]) 4 p. -- [2] Flyer: What do three P's stand for? Proletarian Party Picnic. When? Sunday, August 29 ([Chicago, 1937?]) -- [3] Flyer: "Election results of America and Germany" will be the subject of Irvin Thomas at the Proletarian Forum (Buffalo, 1932) -- [4] Manifesto and program of the Proletarian Party of America (Chicago, 1932) 8 p. -- [5] Flyer: Second World War (The proeltarian Party's proclamation to the Working Class) (Chicago, September, 1939) 2 p.
Immediate organizational tasks of the Marxist-Leninist Caucus in the C.P.U.S.A.: report submitted to the East-Mid-West Conference by A. Marino (New York, August 16-17, 1958) 9 p.
Handbook on Puerto Rican work [Communist Party U.S.A.?] (New York, January, 1954) 82 p.
[1] Ashcan the M-Plan: the Yanks are not coming (San Francisco: The Yanks Are Not Coming Committee, [1940]) 23 p. -- [2] The enemy within (SF: The People's World, May, 1941) 31 p.
The development of Socialism from science to action (Chicago: Communist Party of America, [1920?]) 30 p. [2 copies]
Daniel De Leon: the struggle against opportunism in the American Labor Movement (New York: New York Labor News Company, 1932) 36 p.
Why does Anarchism progress so slowly? [MAN! Pamphlet no. 1] (San Francisco, 1935) 11 p. [2 copies].
[1] Should the workers form a party of their own? A debate: Morris Hillquit, Yes; Matthew Woll, No (New York: Rand Press, 1932) 31 p. -- [2] Brochure: A challenge to college men and women (NY, [1941?]) 4 p. -- [3] Must we arm? Hillquit-Gardner debate (NY, 1915) 44 p. -- [4] Brochure: Bulletin, Fall Term 1944: Youth School for Social Studies (NY, 1944) 4 p.
Victory's victims? The Negro's future / based on a radio discussion by A. Philip Randolph and Norman Thomas (New York: Socialist Party, 1943) 21 p.
[1] The milk steal (New York: New York State Committee of the Communist Party, October, 1936) 14 p. [2 copies] -- [2] Dixie comes to New York (Story of the Freeport GI slayings / introduction by City Councilman Benjamin J. Davis, Jr. (NY, February, 1946) 14 p. -- [3] The Ingrams shall not die! Story of Georgia's new terror / introduction by New York City Councilman Benjamin J. Davis (NY, March, 1948) 14 p. -- [4] The Ingrams / by Harry Raymond, Mason Roberson / introduction by New York City Councilman Benjamin J. Davis (San Francisco: Daily People's World, [1948]) 15 p.
Five issues of The Rebel Worker, from Winter 1965 to January 1966 [i.e., 1967]: Nos. 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7 (Chicago: Chicago Branch, IWW).
Flyer: Our own Fifth Column: The New Deal, since its very inception, has given encouragement and aid to subversive elements in the United States (Washington, D.C.: Republican National Committee, [1940]).
Five issues of, Retort: A Quarterly Journal of Social Philosophy and the Arts: Vol. 1, no. 3 (Dec. 1942); vol. 4, no. 1 (Autumn 1947); vol. 4 no. 2 (Spring 1948); vol. 4, no. 4 (Winter 1951); and vol. 5, no. 1 (Autumn 1951; final issue); (Bearsville, NY).
To secure justice in the Rosenberg case (New York: National Committee to Secure Justice in the Rosenberg Case, [1951]) 31 p. [3 copies].
Hymns of labor: remodeled from old songs (Pittsburgh: Barrows & Osbourne, Office of American Glass Worker, [1900?]) 23 p.
Look at Socialism / Walter Reuther, Wright Patman, James H. McGraw, Jr ([No place given: no publisher given, 1949?]) 20 p.
An appeal to the membership of the Socialist Party by the Revolutionary Policy Committee [Second edition] ([New York], April, 1934) 11 p.
[1] Why the Revolutionary Workers League (Chicago: Demos Press, November, 1945) 12 p. -- [2] Mailer: The fighting worker / published by Demos Press (Chicago, July 1944) -- [3] Flyer: Debate … Is social revolution necessary to solve the workers' problems? (Chicago, December, 1939) -- [4] Flyer: Fight the 15% wage cut! (Chicago, [1938]) -- [5] Flyer: The Mexican oil struggle (Chicago, [1938]) -- [6] Flyer: Woar is inveitable under Capitalism: Lenin answers the reformists and opportunists (Cleveland, February 2, 1947) + variant dated: April 3, 1947 -- [7] Flyer: We are living in an epoch of wars and revolutions ... Lenin: Ring out the wars, ring in the revolutions, New Year's Party for the fighting worker ([Chicago?, 1939]) -- [8] Mailer: May Day manifesto (Chicago, 1941) -- [9] Mailer: To all friends of the workers revolution (Chicago, June 29, 1938) 2 p. -- [10] Mailer: Demos Press, Attention: Mailing clerk, Dear Friend ... (Chicago, [1941]) -- [10] The truth about the Moscow frame-up trials (Chicago, 1937) 8 p.
The Party's work (New York: Socialist Labor Party, 1925) 47 p.
How to de-control your union of Communists ([No place given, 1948]) 8 p.
[1] Milk for millions (New York: New York State Committee, Communist Party, [1938]) 45 p. -- [2] Your taxes: an explanation and a program (NY, 1939) 31 p. [2 copies].
[1] How and why I became a Socialist (Indianapolis: [Self published, 1931?]) 16 p. -- [2] Socialism explained (Indianapolis, 1932) 48 p.
[1] Methods of acquiring national possession of our industries (Chicago: Charles H. Kerr & Co., [1903?]) 30 p. -- [2] Introduction to Socialism [Wayland's monthly, no. 37] (Girard, KS: J. A. Wayland, May, 1903) 62 p.
[1] Why we acquiesce to win the war: where Socialists stand now / by A.W. Ricker, William McDevitt, and Max Eastman (San Francisco: People's Library, 1918) 16 p. -- [2] Free love and Socialism: the truth as to what Socialists believe about marriage [Rip-Saw series no. 7] (St. Louis, 1911) 31 p. -- [3] Socialism in action: what Socialists want, what Socialists are accomplishing where in power, how Socialists propose to get possession [Rip-Saw series no. 9] (St. Louis, 1912) 30 p. [2 copies].
[1] Men and mules [No. One of series] (Toledo, Ohio, [1909]) 62 p. -- [2] Monkeys and monkeyettes: a reply to ex-President Roosevelt (Toledo, 1909) 63 p. -- [3] Heads and hands [No. 4 of series] (Toledo, 1910) 63 p. -- [4] Roosevelt exposes Socialism [No. 5 of series] (Toledo, [1910]) 64 p. -- [5] Bees and butterflies [No. of series] (Toledo, [1910]) 63 p.
Women- vote for life! (New York: Workers Library Publishers, [1940]) 15 p.
[1] The Negro people and the Soviet Union (New York: New Century Publishers, January, 1950) 15 p. [2 copies] -- [2] Forge Negro-Labor unity for peace and jobs (New York: Harlem Trade Union Council, August, 1950) 15 p. -- [3] For freedom and peace: address by Paul Robeson at Welcome Home Rally, New York, June 19, 1949 (NY: Council on African Affairs, 1949) 14 p.
Rebuilding the world: an outline of the principles of anarchism [Second edition] ([No place stated, 1920?]) 32 p.
Brochure: Communism … McCarthyism … Americanism (Prescott, Arizona: [Self published?], [1954])
Can we preserve our "American system" in the Postwar World? (Chicago: Distributed by National Laymen's Council, 1944) 101 p.
[1] Profits and wages [International pamphlets no. 16] (New York: Labor Research Association, 1932) 31 p. -- [2] Wall Street [International pamphlets no. 30] (NY, 1932) 15 p. -- [3] Farmers and the war (NY: Workers Library Publishers, March, 1943) 30 p. [2 copies].
[1] Socialism and the state, with a short biography of Rudolf Rocker (Indore City: Modern Publishers, 1946) 33 p. -- [2] The truth about Spain (New York: Freie Arbeiter Stimme, [1936?]) 15 p. -- [3] The tragedy in Spain (NY, October, 1937) 47 p. -- [4] Testimonial to Rudolf Rocker, 1873-1943 (Los Angeles: Rocker Publications Committee, 1944) 47 p. -- [5] [Card, in Yiddish, announcing a memorial meeting for Rocker, to be held in 1958, in Los Angeles, sponsored by Kropotkin Branch 413, Arbeiter Ring].
Broaden the fight for peace and democracy! (New York: New Century Publishers, September, 1952) 35 p.
Thoreau, "The cosmic Yankee": Centennial appreciations (Los Angeles, 1946) 40 p.
The American worker / by Paul Romano and Ria Stone (New York: [No publisher given], 1947) 70 p.
The student's epitome of scientific Socialism (Astoria, OR: Western Workmen's Publishing Society, May, 1917) 60 p.
[1] Let freedom ring for Earl Browder (New York: New Age Publishers, February, 1942) 15 p. -- [2] Let's pull together for jobs security, democracy and peace (NY: National Council of the Young Communist League, September, 1938) 15 p. [2 copies] -- [3] Youth meets the challenge of 1940: towards the Ninth National Convention of the Young Communist League (NY, February, 1939) 46 p. [2 copies].
The I.W.W.in the lumber industry (Seattle: Lumber Workers Industrial Union, 1919) 64 p.
[1] Gouged, or the national crisis (Newark, New Jersey: Clarion Publishers, [1912?]) 23 p. [2 copies] -- [2] Socialism, the only remedy (New York: Socialist Party, [1910?]) 24 p. -- [3] Socialism and the national crisis (NY: Socialist Literature Co., 1910) 20 p.
[1] From the Third through the Fourth Convention of the Workers (Communist) Party of America (Chicago: Daily Worker, [1923?]) 23 p. -- [2] Are we growing toward Socialism? (Cleveland, 1917) 48 p. -- [3] The Workers (Communist) Party: what it stands for, why workers should join (Chicago, [1920?]) 14 p. [2 copies].
Congress and you (New York: Workers Library Publishers, June, 1943) 64 p. [2 copies].
[1] The story of a Proletarian life / translated from the Italian by Eugene Lyons, Foreword by Alice Stone Blackwell, with an appreciation by Upton Sinclair (Boston: 1924) 24 p. -- [2] Massachusetts the murderer [published in May 1927 under the title, Massachusetts' reputation at stake!!!] (Boston, 1927) 20 p. -- [3] Financial report of the Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee, from the date of organization May 5, 1920 to July 31, 1925 (Boston, 1925) 96 p.
There is justice: a summary of the Sacco-Vanzetti case (New York, [1927]) 21 p.
[1] Marx and the east (New York: Workers Library Publishers, February, 1934) 47 p. -- [2] The far east ablaze (London: The Utopia Press, [1934?]) 47 p.
The Anarchist basis of Pacifism ([London]: Published by the Stuart Morris Memorial Fund, [1967]) 19 p.
Flyer: Fellow workers: The Industrial Workers of the World unites under the Black flag of anarchy … (San Francisco, [1972]).
[1] Revolution and the real Fifth Column (New York, 1940) 19 p. -- [2] Communism- its heart and its goal / by Col. E. N. Sanctuary (New York, 1936) 12 p.
[1] The currency problem: the problem of the Socialist Party today (Chicago: Published by the author, 1915) 48 p. -- [2] The money trust: the issue of 1912 (Chicago: [Self published], [1912]) 95 p.
How things will be done under Socialism (Bloomington, Illinois: [Self published], [1910?]) 16 p.
General bankruptcy or Socialism: facts and figures heretofore withheld from the public eye and showing the futility of any legislative "reform" (New York: The Co-Operative Press, [1913]) 19 p.
The Black Legion union busters (Chicago: Revolutionary Workers League, [1936]) 4 p.
The struggle for Negro equality / by John Saunders and Albert Parker, with an introduction by Charles Jackson [Third edition] (New York: Pioneer Publishers, 1945) 46 p. + [First edition, June, 1943] 30 p.
The new social system, or the correct basis of economics and ethics ([No place given]: [Self published], [1905?]) 53 p.
The Chinese Anarchist movement / by Robert A. Scalapino and George F. Yu (Berkeley, CA: Center for Chinese Studies, University of California, February, 1961) 81 p.
Quintessence of Socialism / translated from the eighth German edition by Bernard Bosanquet [The Humboldt Library no. 124] (New York, March 25, 1880) 55 p.
Algernon Lee, an appreciation, reprinted from the Spring 1954 issue of the Institute of Social Studies Bulletin (New York: Rand School, 1954) 4 p.
[1] The Daily Worker: heir to the great tradition (New York, January, 1944) 30 p. -- [2] Jews in American democratic movements: facts and aspects / for use in Jewish History Week, prepared for the Jewish People's Fraternal Order ([New York?], 1949) 13 p.
[1] Brochure: We the undersigned … (San Francisco, [1940]) 6 p. -- [2] Flyer: Censored news: Wide protests greet attempts to railroad Schneiderman and Darcy … (SF, 1940) 2 p.
[1] Everything for unity and victory (San Francisco: State Committee, California Communist Party, 1941) 15 p. [2 copies] -- [2] The Pacific Coast maritime strike (SF: Western Worker Publishers, March, 1937) 31 p. -- [3] California political perspectives and the 1948 elections [Reprinted from the Daily People's World, June 18, 19, & , 1947] ([SF?, 1948?]) 4 p.
The relation of Anarchism to organization: a paper read before The Franklin Club, Cleveland, OhioSunday, September, 18, 1898 (Cleveland, 1899) 15 p.
Socialist masquerades and masqueraders [Bulletin of the National Association for Constitutional Government, November, 1923, No. 11, second edition] (Washington, DC, 1923) 44 p.
Socialism and sacrifice (New York: Socialist Literature Co., [1910]) 24 p.
Give us your hand! Poems and songs for Ethel and Julius Rosenberg in the Death House at Sing Sing: a People's Artists Publication (New York: People's Artists Inc, 1953) 24 p.
Capitalism? Socialism? Communism? A debate / Prof. Edwin R. A. Seligman, Fenner Brockway, Prof. Scott Nearing (Linden, NJ: Political Science Pocket Library, [1930]) 46 p.
The bankruptcy of reform (New York: Industrial Union League, 1932) 15 p.
[1] 1871, the Paris Commune [Number 8 in the Little Red Library] (Chicago: Daily Worker Publishing, [1929?]) 64 p. -- [2] Ten years: history and principles of the Left Opposition (New York: Communist League of America, November, 1933) 79 p. [2 copies] -- [3] Lenin, Liebknecht, Luxemburg / with an introduction by Robert T. Minor (Chicago: Young Workers (Communist) League of America, [1929?]) 32 p. [2 copies] -- [4] For a cost-plus wage (NY: The Workers Party, 1943) 25 p. -- [5] An open letter to Dean Acheson, "The Marine Corporal is right!" (NY: Socialist Youth League, May, 1952) [16] p. -- [6] Socialism: the hope of humanity (NY: New International Publishing, [1945]) 23 p. [2 copies] -- [7] New perspectives fo American Socialism: the case for unity: Resolution adopted by the July 1957 Convention of the Independent Socialist League / introduction by Max Schachtman (NY, 1957) 15 p.
Stenographic report of the Sharts-O'Brien debate on Resolved: "That the citizens of Dayton should elect candidates pledged to international Socialism", Memorial Hall … (Dayton: Miami Valley Socialist, 1921) 46 p.
Student America convenes! [Reprinted from Political Affairs, October, 1947] (New York, The Council of Student Clubs, Communist Party, 1947) 16 p.
[1] The tactics of Communism (New York: The Paulist Press, [1937]) 24 p. -- [2] Communism answers questions of a Communist (NY: The Paulist Press, [1937]) 47 p.
[1] Pittsburgh: peace on trial [Reprinted from the April 1951 issue of Masses & Mainstream] (Pittsburgh: Committee to defend the Pittsburgh Frame-Up, 1951) 16 p. -- [2] Unemployment: the wolf at the door (New York: December, 1958) 22 p.
Fighting for freedom (Kansas City: Simplified Economics, [1951?]) 160 p.
The meaning of Social Democracy (New York: Social Democratic Federation, [1943?]) 15 p.
I speak to my neighbors / Communist candidate for State Assembly of the Sixth Assembly District (New York: Section 29, Communist Party, [1936]) 31 p. [2 copies]
Lift every voice! The second people's song book / with an introduction by Paul Robeson, edited by Irwin Silber, illustrated by Jim Lee (New York: People's Artists, 1953) 96 p.
Cold War in the classroom (New York: Masses & Mainstream, April, 1950) 24 p. [2 copies]
De Leonism versus burlesque Communism [Arm & Hammer pamphlets no. 13] (New York: Socialist Labor Party, [1929]) 45 p.
Why I am in favor of Socialism: symposium: original papers (Sacramento, CA: [Self published?], 1913) 36 p.
Desegregation! Labor's stake in the fight for Negro equality (New York: Pioneer Publishers, October, 1955) 16 p.
[1] Wasting human life ([Chicago, 1910?]) 96 p. [+ variant edition] -- [2] Single tax vs. Socialism: a comparative discussion (Chicago: Charles Kerr & Company, [1910?]) 29 p. -- [3] The philosophy of Socialism (Chicago, [1910?]) 26 p. -- [4] Packingtown (Chicago, [1910?]) 30 p. -- [5] Class struggles in America (Chicago, [1906?]) 64 p. [+ Second edition]
[1] Woman and the social problem (Chicago: Charles H. Kerr & Company, [1910?]) 31 p. -- [2] Socialism and the organized labor movement (Chicago, [1910?]) 23 p.
Hands of Cuba (New York: Workers Library Publishers, [1933]) 15 p.
[1] Singing jailbird: a drama in four acts (Long Beach, CA: Published by the author, 1924) 95 p. -- [2] Letters to Judd: an American workingman (Girard, Kansas: Haldeman-Julius Publications, [1934]) 64 p. -- [3] Our bourgeois literature: the reason and the remedy (Chicago: Charles H. Kerr & Company, [1905?]) 31 p. -- [4] Limbo on the loose: a midsummer night's dream (Girard, KS, [1947]) 62 p.
[1] The old red flag of peace, industry and universal brotherhood: Socialism (Pittsburgh: [Self published?], [1910?]) 16 p. -- [2] Criminology, crimes and criminals, and the United States Consitution, a class document (Allegheny, PA: [Self published?], [1910?]) 62 p.
[1] Women in action (New York: Workers Library Publishers, February, 1935) 15 p. [2 copies] -- [2] 20,000 unknown soldiers (NY: International Labor Defense, December, 1936) 14 p. -- [3] You've got a right: defending democracy [Pamphlet no. 2] (NY: International Labor Defense, 1938) 31 p. [3 copies] -- [4] Ten years of labor defense (NY, 1935) 31 p. [2 copies] -- [5] Civil liberties in the U.S.A.: a short history of the origin and defense of the Bill of Rights (NY, [1940]) 63 p.
From young Socialists to young Communists / by George Smerkin and Sol Larks (New York: Youth Publishers, January, 1934) 30 p.
[1] Dangerous enemies: a warning and an appeal to all Americans ([Detroit: Committee of 1,000,000]. 1939) 95 p. -- [2] Hollywood High School speech: exposing Reds and their dupes in the film colony ([St. Louis: Christian Nationalist Crusade, 1952?]) 30 p.
Socialistic tenets: a criticism ([No place given: Self published?], 1911) 19 p.
Sabotage: its history, philosophy & function [Reprinted from original of 1913] (Chicago: Black Swan Press, [1972?]) 32 p.
[1] Mission of the Social Democratic Federation (Washington, DC, [1937?]) 12 p. -- [2] Social Democratic Federation U.S.A.: principles and program (Washington, DC, [1938?]) 14 p. -- [3] Aims of the Social Democratic Federation ([New York?, 1943?]) 4 p. -- [4] The "new" Communist line: another Bolshevik fraud and a danger ([NY?, 1945]) 4 p.
[1] Flyer: Join the Social Democratic Youth of City College / Declaration of principles of the Social Democratic Youth (New York, April, 1941) 1 p. -- [2] Flyer: British Labor & world democracy must not go down / hear Irving B. Altman / City College (NY, [1941?]) 1 p.
Flyer: The case for the "Social Problems Club" [at City College, NYC?] ([New York, 1932?]) 1 p.
Brochure: A call to action: the twice a week Appeal (New York, December, 1938) 4 p.
Debate: Which road for American Workers, Socialist or Communist? Norman Thomas vs. Earl Browder, Madison Square Garden, November 27, 1935 (New York: Socialist Call, January, 1936) 46 p.
[1] Report of the Socialist women of greater New York to the International Socialist Congress, Copenhagen, Denmark ([New York?], 1910) 15 p. -- [2] The party press, 1900-1904 ([NY, 1904]) 1 v. -- [3] Manifesto on war: decay and corruption of international Capitalism (NY, October, 1937) 29 p. -- [4] Socialist freedom or Capitalist serfdom? Peace and plenty or war and want? Manifesto of the Socialist Labor Party of America (NY, September, 1945) 31 p. -- [5] War and poverty: the brood of Capitalism: manifesto issued September 1940 (NY, 1940) 15 p. -- [6] What is Socialism? Answering questions most frequently asked (NY, 1942) 48 p. -- [7] Socialism: hope of humanity (NY, 1941) 14 p. -- [8] Workers of the world unite! Declaration: on the dissolution of the Communist International (NY, 1943) 31 p. -- [9] The menace of militarism (NY, [1939?]) 4 p. -- [10] The Socialist aim (NY, [1948?]) 4 p. -- [11] Peace, plenty, freedom: the 1956 platform of the Socialist Labor Party (San Francisco, 1956) 4 p. -- [12] How to build a sane world (SF, [1956]) 4 p. -- [13] What causes war? (Brooklyn, [1958]) 4 p. -- [14] Is labor a commodity? (NY, [1920?]) 4 p. -- [15] Platform of the Socialist Labor Party (NY, 1936) 4 p. -- [16] Fascism, or industrial feudalism, means absolute economic slavery for the workers- organize industrially to prevent it (NY, [1936?]) 4 p. -- [17] The case for Socialism: peace, abundance, freedom for all! (NY, [1950?]) 4 p. -- [18] Capitalism must be destroyed! (NY, [1945?]) 4 p. -- [19] Tome Mooney at the class struggle: an open letter of felicitation and warning (NY, [1936]) 4 p. -- [20] Workers, organize for industrial government (NY, [1935?]) 2 p.
[1] Survival is the issue! (Sydney, NSW, Australia, [1964?]) 4 p. -- [2] What is Socialism? (Sydney, [1964?]) 4 p. -- [3] I can get it for you wholesale! The commodity: labor (Sydney, [1964?]) 4 p. -- [4] Greatest robbery in history (Sydney, [1964?]) 4 p. -- [5] Strikes and the "public" [cartoon comic] (Sydney, [1964?]) 4 p. -- [6] The 35 hour week (Sydney, [1963?]) 4 p. -- [7] Statement of the National Executive Committee of the sections of the Socialist Labor Party (New York, 1902) 24 p. -- [8] Manifesto of the Socialist Labor Party to the working class of America: changing tides around the Rock of Gibraltar (NY, 1921) 41 p. -- [9] To the sections of the Socialist Labor Party: Shall the Party hold a special national convention? ([NY?, 1903?]) 7 p. -- [10] Report of the National Executive Committee to the Tenth National Convention, Socialist Labor Party (Rochester, NY, January, 1900) 12 p. -- [11] National Convention, Socialist Labor Party, May 5-10, 1920: reports, resolutions, platforms, etc. (NY, 1921) 55 p. -- [12] Proceedings of the Socialist Labor Party of Pennsylvania, Convention, May 30, 1901 (Pittsburgh, 1901) 19 p. -- [13] Proceedings of the Socialist Labor Party of Pennsylvania, Convention, July 4, 1900 (Pittsburgh, 1900) 18 p. -- [14] Down with War! Declaration on the outbreak of war by the Socialist Labor Party of America (NY, 1939) 28 p. -- [15] Unemployment and "overproduction": workers unemployed and starving because they produce too much: the cause and remedy [Arm and Hammer pamphlets no. eleven] (New York, 1937) 31 p. -- [16] Socialism: the world of tomorrow / by Arnold Petersen (NY, 1939) 48 p.
[1] 1948 national platform, Socialist Party U.S.A. (New York, 1948) 18 p. -- [2] Socialist hand book, Campaign 1916 (Chicago, 1916) 63 p. -- [3] The crisis in the Socialist Party: The Detroit Convention (NY: Committee for the Preservation of Socialist Party, [1932]) 8 p. -- [4] Socialism: what it is and isn't (NY, [1936?]) 4 p. -- [5] Full employment, peace, industrial democracy: platform of Albert Clark, Socialist write-in candidate for Governor of California (Los Angeles, 1946) 4 p. -- [6] Money isn't everything, but ... (Portland, OR, [1940s?]) 4 p. -- [7] Toward total democracy: a program for 1941 (NY, 1941) 6 p. -- [8] Should Socialism be crushed? (Chicago, 1910) 31 p. -- [9] But two parties and but one issue: Eugene V. Debs' opening speech, the campaign of 1912 (Chicago, 1912) 8 p. -- [10] Flyer: This certifies that [blank] by supporting the Socialist Party ... ([Chicago?], 1918) -- [11] To the Socialists of Colorado: a historial statement ([Denver, 1914]) 39 p. -- [12] National constitution of the Socialist Party adopted in National Convention of Indianapolis, Ind, August 1st, 1901 (St. Louis, 1901) 4 p. -- [13] Social Democratic Party (Socialist Party) (NY, [1902?]) 32 p. -- [14] Constitution of the Socialist Party of Texas, adopted January 4, 1910, amended 1911-1912 ([Austin?, 1912]) 13 p. -- [15] India's revolution: its challenge and meaning / by Lillian Symes [Second printing] (NY, February, 1943) 31 p. -- [16] The National Industria Recovery Act [Issues of the day no. 1] (Chicago, [1933]) 16 p. -- [17] Address to organized labor: adopted by the Socialist Party of AMerica, in National Congress assembled at Chicago, May 15 to 21, 1910 (Chicago, 1910) 4 p. -- [18] We take our stand for Socialism and against Communism, Fascism or any other form of dictatorship and exploitation ... (NY: Issued by the Socialist Teachers League, [1937?]) 4 p. -- [19] How to end war (Chicago, May, 1931) 4 p. -- [20] Five lessons in Socialism / by S. M. Stallard (Fort Scott, Kansas: [Self published?], [1908?]) 31 p. -- [21] Flyer: What Socialists want ([Chicago?, 1920?] -- [22] A militant program for the Socialist Party of America [Socialism in our time no. 1] (NY, [1932?]) 15 p. -- [23] Rules of the Socialist Party National COnvention, 1912 ([Chicago?], 1912) 4 p. -- [24] Debs and the War: his Canton speech and his trial in the Federal Court at Cleveland, September, 1918 (Chicago, 1919) 64 p. -- [25] Public ownership of railways / by Carl D. Thompson [Second edition, revised and enlaged] (Chicago, [1913?]) 64 p.
[1] Ticket: Socialist picnic, Seeleyville, Indiana, July 21, 1901 -- [2] Campaign ephemera: For School Board, Socialist Party, Mrs. S. E. McLeod ([No place given, ca. 1910?]) -- [3] National constitution and declaration of principles of the Socialist Party (Chicago, [1932?]) 30 p. -- [4] National constitution of the Socialist Party as amended in convention at Pittsburgh, May 1, 1926 (Chicago, 1926) 34 p. -- [5] Congressional platform of the Socialist Party (Chicago, 1918) 24 p. -- [6] Does the national platform of the Socialist Party for 1932 answer: Who wants the New Deal? (New York: The League for Constitutional Government, 1932) 4 p. -- [7] Your questions answered (NY, [1945?]) 15 p. -- [8] A plan for America: Official 1932 campaign handbook of the Socialist Party (Chicago, 1932) 127 p. -- [9] If New York were Socialist! / by Paul Blanshard, Heywood Broun, Nathan Fine, Morris Hillquit, Edward Levinson, Henry J. Rosner, Norman Thomas (NY, [1931?]) 39 p. -- [10] A Socialist plan for New York / articles by Norman Thomas, Morris Hillquit, Louis Waldman, Harry W. Laidler (NY, 1933) 48 p. -- [11] Modern homes for the people at low rents (NY, [1933]) 4 p. -- [12] Socialist Party, candidates and platform, Norman Thomas for President, James H. Maurer for Vice President (Chicago, 1932) 6 p. -- [13] Flyer: Down with conscription ... Mass meeting for peace and against conscription, Public Square, Sunday, May 20, Socialist Party of Cleveland (Cleveland, [1917]) -- [14] Stop war now! Why spill your blood to pull our bankers' investments out of the Far Eastern fire? (NY, [1931]) 4 p. -- [15] Socialist platform, Buffalo, NY, 1933 for mayor, Herman J. Hahn (Buffalo, 1933) 4 p. -- [16] Is it a crime to be old? (Chicago, [1930?]) 6 p. -- [17] Socialism today (NY, 1928) 56 p. -- [18] Call for a national convention of Socialists of the United States (Pittsburgh, May, [1937]) 6 p. -- [19] Open the dorrs of U.S. to victims of Nazi terror! Manifesto of the Socialist Workers Party (Fourth INternational) (NY, [1938]) 1 p. -- [20] Read this an pass it on: The Soviet: How the workers of Russia govern their country (Oakland, CA, [1918?]) 4 p. -- [21] Flyer: Shal tolerance by lynched? (NY: Young Peoples Socialist League, [1939]).
[1] National Socialist platform for 1916 (Girard, Kansas, 1916) 4 p. -- [2] Phil La Follette's new party: who is behind it? What is its program? Where is it going? (Chicago, [1938]) 4 p. -- [3] Referendum C 1905, Socialist Party: Membership referendum ballot ([Chicago?, 1905]) 1 p. -- [4] Flyer: Report of Committee on Resolutions: Attitude of the Party toward labor organizations ([Chicago?, 1910?]) -- [5] Report of Farmers' Committee ([Chicago?, 1910?]) 2 p. -- [6] Flyer: Socialist Lyceum Course: It builds ([Chicago?, 1910?]) 2 p. -- [7] Flyer: May first, 1943, labor and Social Democratic International Holiday (New York, 1943) -- [8] Mailer: October 16, 1946, Dear Friend (fund raiser) (Los Angeles, 1946) 1 p. -- [9] Frances Willard on Socialism (Chicago, [1908?]) 4 p. -- [10] Flyer: Come and hear! Ella Reeve Bloor on "The future of Socialism" at Wiggin's Hall ... (Yonkers, 1918) -- [11] Flyer: Democrats, Republicans, Bull Moose, Prohibitionists: will you tell us what benefit it will be to the people of Colorado to place you in power in this state? (Billings: Socialists of Boulder, [1912?]) 2 p. -- [12] Socialist Party Platform (Chicago, 1909) 2 p. -- [13] Flyer: National Headquarters, Socialist Party, Member's individual ballot, Referendum "B", 1916, proposed by Local Marion County, Indiana, That Victor L. Berger be recalled as a member of the National Executive Committee (Chicago, 1916) -- [14] Flyer: On the eve of war: Keep out of War meeting, carnegie Hall, Monday April 2nd ([NY?, 1917]) -- [15] What shall we do for food? (Chicago, [1909?]) 4 p. -- [16] Why join the Socialist Party? (Chicago, [1910?]) 4 p .-- [17] Why Socialists pay dues (St. Louis, [1910?]) 4 p. -- [18] Flyer with cartoon: Did your boss ask you? (Chicago, [1910?]) 2 p. -- [19] An appeal to all Socialists / issued by the Committee for Unity in the Socialist Party (NY, [1930s?]) 5 p. -- [20] Flyer: Socialist the issue ... W. P. Collins will speak (Denver, [1920s?]) -- [21] Flyer: Socialism as a world movement / George F. Hibner ... (Girard, Kansas, [1920s?]) -- [22] Flyer: Resolution by L. D. Hosman (Denver, [1920s?]) -- [23] Program: Karma: a allegorical drama in a prologue and 3 acts will be presented by the Kal Marx Players in Foresters' Hall (Oakland, [1910?]) 4 p. -- [24] Mr. Wage Worker: Do you know what war means? A few more whispers from George R. Kirkpatrick ([Oakland?, 1909?]) 4 p.
[1] Out of work / by George R. Kirkpatrick (Chicago, 1933) 4 p. -- [2] A word with you, brother farmer, on present conditions (Chicago, [1915]) 2 p. -- [3] Blank form: National Socialist Convention, Indianapolis, May 1912, Roll call, on the motion of ... (Indianapolis, 1912) 2 p. -- [4] Flyer: Free lecture at Courth House Park ... W. P. Collins (Kansas City, [1915?]) -- [5] Flyer: Socialist ticket and platform (Boulder, CO, [1930?]) -- [6] Platform of the Socialist Party of Colorado ([Denver?, 1916?]) -- [7] The Socialist platform, adpoted by the Socalist Party in National Convention at Indianapolis, Ind., July 31, 1901 (St. Louis, [1901?]) 2 p. -- [8] Socalist platform, adopted at the National Socialist Convention, May 12-18, 1912 (Girard, Kansas, [1912]) 2 p. -- [9] Flyer: The only issue now is Socialism: Socialism or Capitalism ... Come out and hear W. Penn Collins (([No place given, 1915?]) -- [10] Mailer: Boulder, Colo, Dear Comrade ... W. Penn Collins (Boulder, [1915?]) -- [11] Report on the Commission Form of Government for Cities [and] Supplementary Report ... ([Chicago?, 1920?]) 3, 2 p. -- [12] Report of the Finnish Translator-Secretary to the Socialist Party National COnventioin, 1912 ([Chicago?], 1912) 4 p. -- [13] Report to the National Convention of the Socialist Party ... 1912, by the Executive Committee, National Lettish Organization, S. P. (Indianapolis, 1912) 7 p. -- [14] Campaign flyer: Socialism ([Chicago?, 1915?]) 4 p. -- [15] Socialist methods (Chicago, [1910?]) 4 p. [and "third edition"] -- [16] Socalist Party platform, 1908 ([Chicaog?], 1908) 4 p. -- [17] Crimes of Capitalism / John M. Work (Chicago, [1910?]) 4 p. -- [18] Socalist Party platform ... 1912 (Denver, 1912) 4 p. [+ another printed in Chicago] -- [20] What did Debs say? (Chicago: Debs Amnesty Committee, [1919?]) 4 p. -- [21] Socialist Party: 35th anniversary journal, 1936 National Convention, Cleveland (Cleveland, 1936) 52 p. -- [22] Robot revolution: the implications of automation (Pennsylvania: The Socialist Society, 1955) 47 p.
[1] The Supreme Court, J. P. Morgan, and the Workd War: excerpts from an opinion of the United States Supreme Court (Chicago, 1937) 12 p. -- [2] Flyer: Student Socialist: why wouldn't Wendell Wilkie debate with Norman Thomas on the issues of the 1940 caompaign? ([Oakland?], 1940) -- [3] Proclamation! by the National Executive Commitee of the Socialist Party (Chicago, [1920?]) 4 p. -- [4] Supplemental member's individual ballot, Referendum C (a), 1916, National platform... Industrial demands ... (Chicago, 1916) 1 p. -- [5] Flyer: Strikers of Portland [re Thomas Mooney?] (Portland, OR, [1916?]) -- [6] Flyer: Read this: at a meeting to be held at the Rhone School House ... ([Colorado?, 1910?]) -- [7] Flyer: Socialism exposed! of the A, B, C of Socialism (Girard, Kansas, [1910?]) 2 p. -- [8] The Socialist candidate for president says / by Allan L. Benson [numbers 5, 6, 7, 8] (Chicago, [1916]) 2 p. each -- [9] Flyer: Save the Appeal! It must not suspend! [fundraiser for the Socialist Appeal] ([No place given, 1919?]) -- [10] America's duty today: Isolationism does not mean peace .. / by Algernon Lee (NY, [1939]) 4 p. -- [11] Who are the Socialists (Chicago, [1905?]) 4 p. -- [12] Your the goat who bears the brunt of Depression? (NY, 1936) 4 p. -- [13] Flyer: The difference (Portland, OR, [1936?]) 2 p. -- [14] Both Hughes and Wilson stand for Capitalist class / by Allan L. Benson (Girard, KS, [1916]) 2 p. -- [15] Young and old together: every attempt to divide the workers on age lines does harm to all ... / by James Oneal (NY, [1940]) 4 p. -- [16] Committing economic suicide- the great American pastime / by Albert Streiff (Portland, [1935]) 4 p. -- [17] Flyer: No more war! (Chicago, [1919?]) -- [18] The aims of the Socialist Party (Milwaukee: Socialist Party of Wisconsin, [1935?]) 4 p. -- [19] Flyer: Socialism vs. Communism? A question American workers will have to decide in the near future, answered by Frank R. Crosswaith ([Portland, 1930s?]) -- [20] Communists show their hand! IN allying with Fascists ... (Portland, [1939]) 2 p. -- [21] Commission government, partinsanship, old and new (Chicago, [1920s?]) 2 p. -- [22] Flyer: City of Boulder, Socialists' Party platform, 1909 (Boulder, 1909) -- [23] Flyer: Socialism: a talk will be given at ... at ... Come and listen (Billings, [1930?]) -- [24] Flyer: Socialist campaign ... -- [25] Labor politics / by A. M. Simons (Chicago, [1930s?]) 4 p.
Local Omaha's position on the Chicago platform (Omaha, June, 1904) 4 p.
Towards a militant program for the Socialist Party of America (New York, May, 1934) 44 p.
Platform and campaign book (Oklahoma, 1916) 80 p.
The Socialist attitude on the War, discussed by Robert Rives La Monte … and Louis C. Fraina … [reprint from the July-August, 1917 issue of The Class Struggle] (New York: Socialist Publication Society, 1917) 43 p.
Where we stand! (Brooklyn, [1939]) 15 p.
[1] Why we are in prison: farewell speeches of the 18 SWP and 544-CIO Menneapolis prisoners ([New York], March, 1944) 54 p. -- [2] Watch a judicial frame-up at work .. The Militant, Fourth International (NY, [1941]) 4 p. -- [3] The Farmer-Labor Party: a program, an open letter to Governor Benson ([St. Paul?], September, 1938) 15 p. -- [4] The United States and the Second World War: the European revolution and tasks of the revolutionary party: resolutions of Eleventh Convention of the American Trotskyist Movement (NY, March, 1945) 46 p. -- [5] Trotskyism vs. Browder-Shachtman (NY, [1948]) 2 p. -- [6] The new international: caucus bulletin or discussion issue? ([NY?, 1939]) 2 p. -- [6] The truth about Kronstadt / by John G. Wright [Marxist Handbooks no. 2] (NY, [1938?]) 17 p. -- [7] Proletarian military policy of the SWP ([Chicago?, October, 1940?]) [multiple pagings] -- [8] Mailer: To all Militant subscribers: Why the Militant has been delayed (NY, November 20, 1942) 3 p. -- [9] Mailer: To all our subscribers: Dear friend, re: suppression of the Militant (NY, January 6, 1942) -- [10] Flyer: Minneapolis "Seditious conspiracy" trial exposed as a frame-up ([Buffalo], February, 1942) -- [11] The truth about the auto crisis (the petty-bourgeois leaders before the test of the class struggle / by George Clarke [Confidential, for members only] ([NY?], March, 1940) 25 p. -- [12] From "science" to slander: some notes on a student in the Burnham School of "Science" / by Joseph Hansen ([NY?], February 22, 1940) 13 p. -- [13] The roots of the party crisis / J. R. Johnson [= C. L. R. James] ([NY?, 1940?]) 27 p.
[1] Vote against Jim Crow! / by Albert Parker [Vote for George Breitman for U.S. Sentor] (Newark, NJ, [1940]) 16 p. -- [2] Declaration of pricinples and constitution of the Socialist Workers Party, adopted at the Foundation Convention, Chicago, Dec. 31, 1937-Jan. 1-2-3, 1938 (New York, [1938]) 31 p. -- [3] The fight against Hagueism: a program of action / issued by the Socialist Workers Party North Jersey District ([Newark, 1938]) 20 p. -- [4] A programmatic basis for discussion of Socalist unity: regroupment (NY, February, 1957) 8 p. -- [5] Revolution in Hungary and the crisis of Stalinism (NY, 1957) 34 p .-- [6] The class-struggle road to Negro equality (NY, November, 1957) 22 p. -- [7] Vote for Socialism in 1956: Farrell Dobbs for President, Myra Tanner Weiss for Vice President (NY, [1956]) 15 p. -- [8] Reults of the convention / SWP Opposition ([NY?, 1940?]) 3 p. -- [9] Pain talk on war (NY, May, 1941) 29 p. -- [10] "My friends": a fireside chat on the war / by Native Son (NY, 1940) 12 p. -- [11] 1952 election platform: Dobbs for President, Weiss for Vice President (NY, 1952) 16 p. [12] Stop McCarthyism! Your stake in the fight (NY, April, 1954) 15 p. -- [13] The voice of Socialism: radio speeches by the Socialist Workers Party candidates in the 1948 election: Farrell Dobbs for President, Grace Carlson for Vice-President (NY, August, 1948) 31 p. -- [14] Today's fight against the bosses: expropriate the war industries! (NY, [1941]) 8 p. -- [15] Fight the slave labor law! Taft-Hartley Act (NY, July, 1947) 15 p. -- [16] Down with the war-makers: anti-war rally! [Hands off Mexico!] (NY, April [1938]) 4 p. -- [17] Down with the Stalin-Hitler pact! Down with the war! (NY, [1939?]) 2 p. -- [18] In defense of Marxism: a symposium on Leon Trotsky's latest book N.Y. Local (NY, April, 1943) 24 p. -- [19] Open letter to the organized labor movement of San Francisco (Bay Area) ... (San Francisco, [1939]) 4 p. -- [20] Trotskyism in the United States, 1940-47: Balance sheet: the Workers Party and the Johnson-Forest Tendency ([NY?], August, 1947) 32 p. -- [21] Internal bulletin: Trade union movement, and the immediate tasks of the Party in the development of mass work (Resolution adopted by the Third National Convention of the SWP) [Vol. 3, no. 1] (NY, April, 1940) 28 p.
[1] Karl Marx or Thomas Jefferson? A debate on individualism-Soclialism, between Hon. Charles Solomon and Hon. George Gordon Battle, foreward by Normal Thomas [The following debate was broadcast over Radio Station WOR, Sunday afternoon, September 13th, 1931] (New York: Political Science Pocket Library, 1931) 30 p. -- [2] Detroit and the Party / by Charles Solomon (NY, Committee for the Preservation of Socialist Policies, [1934]) 12 p. [2 copies]
Union-smashing in Sacramento: the truth about the criminal syndicalism trial / with prefatory notes by Smauel S. White and Travers Clements (New York: National Sacramento Appeal Committee, August, 1935) 31 p.
The struggle against Anti-Semitism: a program of action for American Jewry (New York: Jewish Buro of the National Committee, Communist Party, 1938) 62 p.
Spain: July 19, 1936 … July 19, 1937 (New York: Libertarian Publishers, under the auspices of the Anarchist Federation of America, 1937) 7 p.
One last chance to prevent war (Los Angeles: presswork by Joe E. McCaffree, [1950s?]) 4 p.
"Gleanings": Americanism versus Communism, or American Federation of Labor versus Committee for Industrial Organization (Jackson, Mississippi, 1937) [30] p.
[1] Forces that make for Socialism in America (Chicago: Charles H. Kerr & Company, 1905) 32 p. -- [2] Where we stand: a lecture [The Agitator, No. 10, vol.?] (New York: The Comrade Co-operative Company, Aug. 1903) 24 p. -- [3] The allied cause is the cause of Socialist Internationalism: an address to the Socialists of all lands, issued on behalf of The Social Democratic League of America and The Jewish Socialist League / by John Spargo ... and William Edlin (NY, April 6, 1918) 15 p.
What is Socialism? (Los Angeles: Communist Party of Los Angeles, November, 1947) 32 p.
Communism is un-American [J. Edgar Hoover's article, "Communism is a menace," begins on page 11] (New York: Constitutional Educational League, [1946?]) 17 p.
Stenographic report of the debate between George Spiess, Jr. … and David Goldstein … on the subject: "Resolved, that Socialism is not opposed to Christianity," Minicipal Auditorium, Springfield, Sunday, December 28, 1913 (Springfield, Mass: Socialist Party Club, 1913) 96 p.
Pattern for American Fascism (New York: New Century Publishers, September, 1947) 72 p.
"A dangerous woman": Stella Petrosky held for deportation (New York: American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born, June, 1935) 23 p.
Liberty in theory and practice [The Libertarian, vol. 1, nos. 10-11, March and April, 1916] (Chicago: Rationalist Association Publications, 1916) 22 p.
Bolshevism: its roots, role, class view, and methods (New York: International Review, [1939?]) 48 p.
Five lessons in Socialism: the class struggle, democracy, co-operation, the Socialist Party, why you should joint the Party (Fort Scott, Kansas, [1912?]) 31 p.
[1] The true story of Alter and Ehrlich (New York: Issued by the New York State Committee, Communist Party, [1942]) 6 p. -- [2] It's up to you! (NY: New Age Publishers, [1940]) 22 p. -- [3] The San Francisco world security conference: your questions answered (NY, April, 1945) 24 p. -- [4] Should Americans back the Marshall plan? (NY, February, 1948) 23 p. -- [5] The life and death of an American hero: the story of Dave Doran (NY, June, 1938) 45 p.
"Creeping Socialism" vs. limping Capitalism (New York: Union for Democratic Socialism, [1953?]) 32 p.
From a statement on Anarchism by a west coast sister [… if this approach interests you, subscribe to the new magazine, Siren: a journal of Anarcho-Feminism] (Chicago, [1971?]) 2 p.
New opportunites in the fight for peace and democracy: main report delivered at the National Conference of the Communist Party, U.S.A. (New York, 1953) 94 p.
The Church and the workers [International pamphlets no. 15; prepared under the direction of the Labor Research Association] [Third edition] (New York, 1935) 31 p.
Socialism: a speech delivered in Faneuil Hall, February 7, 1903 by Frederic J. Stimson … in joint debate with James F. Carey (Boston, 1903) 48 p.
The false principle of our education, or Humanism and Realism / translated from German by Robert H. Beebe, edited, with annotations and an introduction by James J. Martin (Colorado Springs: Ralph Myles, publisher, c1967) 28 p.
The I.W.W.: its history, structure, and methods [Revised 1919] (Chicago: Industrial Workers of the World, 1919) 47 p.
Opinion: The case of the Trotskyites ([No place given]: PM Magazine, December 31, 1943) 1 p.
The attitude of the Socialists toward the trade unions: an address delivered at the National Convention of the Socialist Labor Party at Rochester, N.Y., on March 28, 1900 [The Volks-Zeitung Library, vol. 2, no. 3] (New York, 1900) 23 p.
Why you should be a Socialist (London: Victor Gollancz, 1938) 96 p.
Facts relevant to the Struik case [Dirk J. Struik] ([Massachusetts, 1952]) 11 p.
Criminal syndicalism: what Communism will do to your job: compiled from genuine secret documents of the Communist Party: facts- not opinions [Copyright by D. B. Wagner] (Columbus, Ohio, c1936) 63 p.
[1] Italian intellectuals under Fascism: facts and documents (New York, 1934) 22 p. -- [2] "Once upon a time …" (NY, [1934?]) 4 p. -- [3] Flyer: Complete your education through the student movement ([New York?, 1934?]) 1 p.
This is Socialism! (New York: Young People's Socialist League, [1936?]) 19 p.
Flyers, mailers and other ephemera relating to Sunday Worker newspaper, dated ca. 1936.
The fight against revisionism in the U.S. Communist Party (Long Island City, NY: [Self published], [1946?]) 34 p.
Murder Inc. in Greece (New York: New Century Publishers, April, 1948) 23 p.
Unemployment and the American working class (New York: Printed for The Communist League of America (Opposition) by the Pioneer Publishers, [1933?]) 22 p.
Reuther's seizure of the Ford Local: its lessons for Labor [reprinted from Political Affairs, July, 1952] (New York, 1952) 19 p.
Communism- world revolution to Red Imperialism (Chicago: Socialist Party, [December, 1939]) 42 p.
The Tresca case [re: assassination of Carlo Tresca] ([New York?, 1943]) 16 p.
Here's how we see it, Mr. Perkins … An exchange of views between an American and a Soviet citizen (New York: New Century Publishers, December, 1946) 16 p.
Pages of Socialist history: teachings and acts of social democracy (New York: C. B. Cooper, 1902) 106 p.
[1] The courage to be free … A statement by teachers in Los Angeles now under subpoena to appear before September, 1959, hearings of the House Committee on Un-American Activities (Los Angeles, [1959]) 7 p. -- [2] Why did they fire my teacher? (Los Angeles, February, 1954) 6 p.
[1] Academic fredom "redefined" / issued by College Chapter, Teachers Union, Local 555, UPW-CIO (New York, [1950]) 12 p. -- [2] Conformists, informers or free teachers: excerpts from the trials of seven New York City teachers, dismissed on Thursday, January 8, 1953 (NY, 1953) 48 p. -- [3] Statement of Local 5 on proposed revocation of its charter / Teachers Union of the City of New York (NY, 1941) 43 p.
The British reconstruction programs [Reprinted from Political Science Quarterly, vol. XXXIII, no. 1, March 1918, through The Research Bureau of the Intercollegiate Socialist Society] (New York, 1918) pp. 56-76.
The Tenney Committee … The American record [Order extra copies from Christian Nationalist Crusade, St. Louis, MO] ([St. Louis?], c1952) 96 p.
West Coast longshoremen and the "Bridges Plan" ([California?], 1943) 25 p. [2 copies]
[1] Shall … Communism take over the U.S.A.? (Los Angeles: The Christian American Crusade, [1936?]) 4 p. -- [2] Shall … Communism take over California? (Los Angeles, [1938?]) 4 p. -- [3] Soviet tendencies of Socialist control in America ([Los Angeles?, 1936?]) 32 p.
[1] A plan for America: official campaign handbook of the Socialist Party / articles by Norman Thomas, James H. Maurer and eighteen others, illustrated by Art Young (Chicago, 1932) 127 p. [2 copies] -- [2] The plight of the share-cropper (New York: The League for Industrial Democracy, c1934) 34 p. -- [3] What is industrial democracy? [Second printing] (NY, 1925) 62 p. -- [4] Martin Dies and Socialism (New York: Socialist Party, 1943) 11 p. -- [5] Why I am a Socialist (NY: Socialist Party, [1926?]) 8 p. -- [6] A Socialist looks at the United Nations [Syracuse University Press Series] (Syracuse, NY, 1945) 51 p. -- [7] War as a Socialist sees it (NY, c1936) 30 p. -- [8] Eugene Victor Debs (1855-1955): the centennial year (NY: Socialist Party, 1956) 53 p.
[1] In the League and out, discussed by Norman Thomas, Mary Agnes Hamilton, Raymond Leslie Buell, 121st New York Luncheon Discussion, Jamuary 4, 1930 (New York: Foreign Policy Association, 1930) 31 p. -- [2] Socialism and the individual [Little Blue Book no. 1704] (Girard, KS, c1931) 32 p. -- [3] The truth about Socialism [Freedom for All Series, pamphlet #3] (NY, December, 1943) 22 p. -- [4] "Is outlawing the Communist Party wise?" [Offprint from The American Forum, vol. XVII, no. 35, August 29, 1954] (Washington, DC, 1954) 11 p. -- [5] Democracy versus dictatorship [Industrial Democracy, vol. V, no. 9, December, 1937) (NY, 1937) 36 p. -- [6] War's heretics: a plea for the conscientious objector [Reprinted by the Civil Liberties Bureau of the American Union Against Militarism] (NY, 1917) 12 p. .-- [7] World government, war and peace (New York: Post War World Council, 1948) 8 p. -- [8] World federation: what are the difficulties? (New York: The Post War World Council, 23 p. -- [9] Russia: democracy or dictatorship? / by Norman Thomas and Joel Seidman (NY: League for Industrial Democracy, December, 1939) 71 p. -- [10] The challenge of war: an economic interpretation [Second edition, revised, 1924] 44 p. -- [11] Is the New Deal Socialism? an aswer to Al Smith and the American Liberty League (Chicago, 1936) 12 p. -- [12] The New Deal: a Socialist analysis [Issue of the Day no. 3] (Chicago: Spcialist Party of America, [1934?]) 19 p. -- [13] "Hagueism is Fascism" (NY: Workers Defense League, [1938]) 18 p. -- [14] Stop the draft! An appeal to the American people: text of speech delivered at Anet-Consription Mobilization, August 1, 1940 in Washington, DC (NY, 1940) 4 p. -- [15] Why I am a Socialist (NY, [1936]) 14 p. -- [16] Conscription: the test of peace (NY, [1944]) 13 p. -- [17] Why you should vote for a Socialist alderman ([NY, 1932?]) 6 p. -- [18] The state of the nation (NY: Socialist Party, [1941]) 4 p. -- [19] Statement in opposition to the Austin-Wadswroth bill before the Senate Committee on Military Affairs ([NY, April, 1943]) 8 p. -- [20] Resolution on universal disarmament under effective international control (NY: Post War World Council, [June, 1947]) 2 p. -- [21] A Socialist plan for New York / articles by Norman Thomas, Morris Hillquit, Louis Waldman, Harry W. Laidler (NY, 1933) 48 p.
[1] Public ownership of railways (Chicago, [1908]) 64 p. -- [2] The constructive program of Socialism: as illustrated by measures advanced by Socialists in municipal, state and national legislation (Milwaukee, 1908) 80 p.
World Labor needs a union (Chicago: Industrial Workers of the World, November, 1969) 21 p.
[1] The path of a renegade: why Earl Browder was expelled from the Communist Party (New York, April, 1946) 23 p. -- [2] On the Communist Party: four weeks after he was released from prison, Bob Thompson made the follwing speech at a Welcome-Back Mass Rally at the Carnegie Music Hall in New York City (NY, [1960?]) 8 p. -- [3] The Communist Party policy in the New York State elections: a report made to city-wide leaders' meeting at the Hotel Diplomat, May 17, 1946 (NY, 1946) 12 p.
[1] The evils of Capitalism: a reply to W. F. Lemmons' book, The evils of Socialism, with national Socialist platform appended [Rip-Saw Series no. 10] (St. Louis: National Rip-Saw Publishing Co., [1912]) 35 p. -- [2] A wave of horror: a comparative picture of the Los Angeles tragedy [Rip-Saw Series no. 8] (St. Louis, [1912]) 31 p. -- [3] The dictatorship of the profiteering class (St. Louis: The Melting Pot, [1918?]) 28 p.
The revolution in America: an appeal to Socialists, Communists, Industrial Unionists, and all raical proletarians, to adopt a common program of action (New York, [1925?]) 8 p.
The Harvey Matusow story [From the American Mercury, July, 1955] ([No place given], 1955)
How Communism demoralizes youth (New York: Catholic Information Society, c1947) 16 p.
[1] The American Socialists and the war: a documentray history of the attitude of the Socialist Party toward war and militarism since the outbreak of the Great War / edited by Alexander Trachtenberg, with an introduction by Morris Hillquit (New York: Rand School of Social Science, 1917) 48 p. -- [2] The heritage of Eugene Debs (NY: International pamphlets, 1930) 31 p.
The Smith Act: a threat to labor (New York, 1951) 30 p.
Smith Act frame up! (San Francisco, [1953?]) 4 p.
[1] Direct action and sabotage (Pittsburgh: Socialist News Company, 1912) 43 p. -- [2] Why strikes are lost! How to win! (New Castle, PA: I.W.W. Publishing Bureau, [1912?]) 23 p.
The unemployed and the I.W.W. (San Francisco, [1975?]) 14 p.
Who killed Carlo Tresca? / forewords by Arturo Giovannitti, John Dos Passos ([New York], October, 1945) 28 p.
Prospects of a Proletarian dictatorship / by Leon Trotsky ; Peace and the solidarity of the Proletariat / by Jean Jaures ; "Zapataland" by Gen. Nicholas Senn Zogg [The Proletariat, vol. 1, no. 1, May-June 1918] (San Francisco: The Jack London Memorial Institute, 1918) 64 p.
The devil in the book [First printing] (Los Angeles: California Emergency Defense Committee, May, 1956) 42 p.
Was it a fair trial? An appeal to the Governor of Illinois ([Chicago?, 1887?]) 20 p. [Ownership stamp of Lucy E. Parsons?]
The practice of Bolshevik self-criticism: how the American Communist Party carries out self-criticism and controls fulfillment of decisions (New York: Central Committee, Communist Party U.S.A., September, 1932) 32 p.
[1] Anarchism or anarchy? A discussion between William H. Tillinghast and Bnj. R. Tucker, prefaced by an open letter to Rev. William J. Potter (Boston: Benj. R. Tucker, publisher, 1881) 12 p. -- [2] Henry George, traitor (New York, 1896) 15 p. -- [3] State Socialism and Anarchism: how far they agree, and wherein they differ (NY, 1899) 33 p. -- [4] The attitude of Anarchism toward industrial combinations (NY, 1903) 20 p. -- [5] A blow at trial by jury: an examination of the special jury law passed by the New York legislature in 1896 (NY, 1898) 46 p. -- [6] Benj. R. Tucker's unique catalogue of advanced literature: the literature that makes for egoism in philosophy, Anarchism in politics, iconoclasm in art (NY, 1906) 8 p. -- [7] [Same as previous with French titles, 1907] -- [8] The attitude of Anarchism toward industrial combinations (Detroit: Laurance Labadie, 1933) 14 p. -- [9] Why I am an Anarchist (Detroit: Laurance Labadie, 1934) 8 p.
[1] Why you should fight (Chicago: Socialist Party, [1917) 2 p. -- [2] Now it must be done (Chicago, Socialist Party, 1920) 37 p.
American Youth Congress: nature will take its course [Reprinted from America, July 27, 1940] (New York: The America Press, 1940) 8 p.
[1] [Communist?] Guide to courses [at University of California, Berkeley] (Berkeley, January, 1940) 7 p. -- [2] Guide to courses [Fifth edition] Berkeley, January, 1941) 20 p.
Youth fights war! (Chicago: young People's Socialist League, [1936?]) 23 p.
Hard times [New Labor Library, no. 8] (New York: New York Labor News Company, [1902]) 4 p.
Summary and analysis of Harrisburg Convention, June 5th-6th, called to form state federation of unaffiliated unemployed leagues ([Pennsylvania, 1932?]) 8 p.
Workers! What is coming? Proclamation by the United Communist Party ([No place given, 1920?]) 2 p.
Declaration of aims and principles, constitution and by-laws (New York, June, 1929) 12 p.
Executive Order 9835 threatens your civil liberties (Washington, DC, 1947) 8 p.
Creeping Socialism? (New York, [1953?]) 15 p.
Aero-notes: Let us march (Long Island City, NY, January 12, 1944) 1 p.
[1] To bring you the facts … A message for all officers and Council members of the Alumni Associations of the University of California ([Berkeley or Sacramento?], 1950) 18 p. -- [2] Interim report of the Committee on Academic Freedom to the Academic Senate, Northern Section, of the University of California ([Berkeley?], February, 1951) 58 p.
Are we afraid of freedom? A statement from the Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the University of Chicago (Chicago, 1949) 14 p.
A look at the A.L.A.W.F. [American League Against War and Fascism] ([Minneapolis?, 1934?]) 11 p.
Communism and academic freedom: the record of the tenure cases at the University of Washington, including the findings of the Committee on Tenure and Academic Freedom and the President's recommendations (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1949) 125 p.
[1] Principles of Scientific Socialism (Chicago: Charles H. Kerr & Company, c1899) Approx. 200 p. -- [2] The Socialist movement (Chicago: Charles H. Kerr & Company, [1900]) 31 p.
This is treason! / foreword by Joseph Curran and Congressman S. Dickstein ([New York]: International Workers Order, [1943]) 25 p.
Fundamentals in reform [Liberty Library] (Columbus Junction, Iowa: E. H. Fulton, May, 1896) 8 p.
[One issue of] Vanguard: A Libertarian Communist Journal, Kropotkin Memorial Number, vol. II, no. 6., January-February, 1936: In this issue: Tom Mooney on the frame-up system ; Emma Goldman on Sanctions and the working class ; The First International by Kropotkin (New York: The Vanguard Group, 1936) 31 p.
Background of the Plymouth trial (Boston: Road to Freedom Group, [1926?]) 38 p.
The Negro and the U.S. Army (New York: Pioneer Publishers for the Socialist Workers Party, [1920?]) 29 p.
Food and the people: the problem of the high cost of living in the New York legislature (New York: The Rand School of Social Science, 1918) 45 p.
Guns are ready (New York: The American League Against War and Fascism, January, 1935) 19 p.
[1] Communism and conscience; Pentecost and paradox; crimes and criminals (New York: [Self published], 1904) 77 p. [2 copies] -- [2] What the young need to know: a primer of sex rationalism [Second edition] (New York, 1905) 50 p. -- [3] Love and the law [Lucifer Radical Tracts no. 3] ([New York?: Self published?, 1900?] 8 p. -- [4] Our worship of primitive social guesses (NY: Fair Play Publishing Co., November, 1899) 62 p.
Labor-Union Socialism and Socialist Labor-Unionism (Chicago: Charles Kerr & Company, 1912) 96 p.
Communism and Socialism: Minutes of the First German Evangelical Lutheran Congregation, U. A. C. at St. Louis, Missouri: a stenographic report of four lectures delivered, and by resolution of the congregation, first published by Prof. C. F. W. Walther, translated from the German by Rev. D. Simon and published in 1879 by Concordia Publishing House, St. Louis Missouri (Detroit: The Lutheran Research Society, 1947) 78 p.
War or revolution? An Anarchist statement, translated from the Italian by the editorial staff of Why? (New York: Why? Publications Committee, 1944) 72 p.
National defense for whom? (New York: The American League Against War and Fascism, March, 1935) 18 p.
The development of Fascism in the United States (New York: The American League Against War and Fascism, November, 1935) 7 p.
Toward bright tomorrows: world youth unites for peace and freedom (New York: Published by Challenge, June, 1950) 22 p.
[1] Freeman or slave: a book of suppressed information [Wayland's Monthly, no. 61, May, 1905] 64 p. -- [2] The Catholic Church and Socialism (Girard, Kansas: Appeal to Reason, 1914) 16 p. -- [3] The Appeal's arsenal of facts, 1914 [Revised and amended] (Girard, Kansas: Appeal to Reason, 1914) 192 p.
The wolves: a fable with a purpose / illustrated by G. Weiser (Chicago: Charles H. Kerr & Company, 1908) 31 p.
Slavery in the making (Madison, Wisconsin: [Self published?], [1937?]) 4 p.
[1] Nature and historic function of Socialism and Communism ([New York]: American Labor Party, [1934?]) 7 p. -- [2] The course of revolutionary progress and the immediate task of the revolutionary movement (Brooklyn: American Labor Party, [1934?]) 11 p. -- [3] What should be the attitude of the revolutionary movement towards the industrial and the political action of the Proletariat (NY: American Labor Party, [1934?]) 16 p.
[1] The essence of Socialism ([Sandusky, Ohio]: [Self published], c1910) 47 p. [2 copies] -- [2] Mailer: To: Mr. Geo. H. Goebel … Dear Comrade: I am handing you herewith a copy of my little booklet, The Essence of Socialism … (Sandusky, OH, May 25, 1911) 1 p.
America's new foe: the red peril, Bolshevism (Mt. Jewett: [Self published], [1919?]) ~30 p.
The case of the stubborn editor (New York, 1955) 15 p.
[1] Unity of the Jewish people: the answer to Anti-Semitism and Fascism [Report delivered at the enlarged session of the Executive Committee of the Jewish Peoples Committee on February 5th, 1939, at Washington, D.C.] (New York: Jewish People's Committee, 1939) 16 p. -- [2] Anti-Semitism: a weapon of Fascism [3rd edition] (NY: New York District of the International Workers Order, April, 1944) 11 p.
Hawaii: a story of Imperialist plunder [International Pamphlets no. 37] (New York: Labor Research Association, 1934) 31 p.
[1] The case against David Dubinsky (New York: New Century, June, 1946) 112 p. -- [2] The great sit-down strike (NY: Workers Library Publishers, March, 1937) 45 p. [2 copies]
For a new Communist International! (New York: Communist League of Struggle, October, 1933) 30 p.
Lenin lives [Poetry] [Cover design by John C. Rogers, introduction by Jack Conroy] (Holt, Minnesota: Published by B.C. Hagglund, c1935) 31 p.
[1] Happy days for American youth (New York: Young Communist League of the U.S.A., [1936]) 45 p. -- [2] What price profits? (NY, April 1947) 48 p. -- [3] The meaning of the XXth Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union: report to the National Committee of the Communist Party, U.S.A. (NY, 1956) 40 p. -- [4] Youth's road to peace and security [Based on Report to the Plenum of the National Council, Y.C.L., U.S.A. on December 21, 1940] (NY, [1941?]) 46 p. -- [5] Youth serves the nation (NY, February, 1942) 43 p. -- [6] Youth for victory in 1943 (NY, February, 1943) 30 p. -- [7] Fight for your future now! (NY, November, 1942) 14 p. -- [8] In a Soviet America: happy days for American youth (NY: Workers Library Publishers, August, 1935) 45 p. -- [9] One issue, one enemy, one war: destroy Hitlerism (NY, August, 1941) 31 p. -- [10] The twentieth anniversary of the Young Communist League ([No place given, 1942]) 8 p.
Vigilante terror in Fontana: the tragic story of O'Day H. Short and his family [Introduction by Carrie Stokes Morrison] (Los Angeles: Socialist Workers Party, February, 1946) 20 p.
[1] The best years of their lives: UMT: the plot to put young America under the brass thumb (New York, March, 1955) 15 p. -- [2] What's behind "juvenile delinquency" (NY, May, 1955) 15 p.
Wilson and the issues of today: a Socialist revision of George Creel's famous book (Seattle, Washington: Socialist Party, 1918) 125 p.
An illustrative crime of the American Federation of Labor and notes on the interrelations of Anarchists and U.S. and A.F.L. officials ([No place given]: [Self published?], [1920?]) 64 p.
Declaration against war, adopted by Socialist Youth League, Libertarian Socialist League, Young Peoples Socialist League ([Los Angeles?], November, 1950) 4 p.
Can everybody be rich and still be honest? (New York: Communist Party, U.S.A., April, 1951) 31 p.
War and the workers ([New York?]: Published by Workers Party of U.S., [1936?]) 47 p.
The disastrous import of the Smith Act on the Negro people: a memorandum to the U.S. Supreme Court urging reversal of the Smith Act convictions / submitted by Richard E. Westbrooks, Earl B. Dickerson ([Chicago?, 1951]) 8 p.
Blocking them at the canal: failure of the Red attempt to control local workers in the vital Panama Canal area ([Panama?, 1952]) 67 p.
Plenty of money: a new and scientific plan by which credit in the form of paper money is provided and substituted for credit in the form of goods … (New York: Louis Weiss & Co., 1899) 13 p.
Free Angelo Herndon (New York: Youth Publishers, June 1934) 15 p.
La Follette Socialism Communism (New York: The Beckwith Press, c1924) 64 p.
[1] Why Negroes are joining the Communist Party (New York: The Communist Party, U.S.A., March, 1946) 14 p. [2 copies] -- [2] The Negro people and the Communists (NY, April, 1944) 23 p. [2 copies]
Now is the time!! The fight for civil liberties (New York: American Youth Congress, [1940]) 23 p.
[1] Know your enemy: counter-intelligence information for governors, mayors, police personnel … [Ninth edition] (Santa Ana, CA: [Self published?], 1952) 56 p. -- [2] Can the police protect us? (Santa Ana, 1952) 25 p. -- [3] The Anti-Defamation League and its use in the World Communist Offensive [Closer-ups, Supplement no. 1] (Hollywood, CA: Closer-Ups, 1947) 44 p.
Win Ohio for progress and democracy [Report delivered to the State Convention of the Communist Party of Ohio, held May 14-15, 1938 in Akron, Ohio] (Cleveland: Communist Party of Ohio, 1938) 30 p.
L.Y.L. in the struggle of Negro rights: report by the National Vice-Chairman of the Labor Youth League to the National Council Meeting of the League June 4, 5, and 6, 1954 (New York, August, 1954) 11 p.
[1] Trusts and imperialism [Pocket library of Socialism, no. 29, July 15, 1901] (Chicago, Chalres H. Kerr & Co., 1901) 26 p. -- [2] Why a workingman should be a Scolialist [Pocker library of Socialism no. 59] (Chicago, [1901?]) 22 p. -- [3] Debate on Socialism: Wilshire - Seligman: a verbatim report of the greatest debate in the history of Socialism in the United States, which took place in Cooper Union, January 16, 1903, New York City [Wilshire Leaflet no. 3] (New York: Wilshire's Magazine, 1903) ~ 30 p.
[1] American Legion and civil liberty (New York: American League Against War and Fascism, [1936?]) 32 p. -- [2] [Same pamphlet published by the American Civil Liberties Union].
Communism and the Roosevelt brain trust (Witchita, KS: Defender Publishers, c1933) 26 p.
[1] Old Jim Crow has got to go! (New York: New Age Publishers, March, 1941) 15 p. -- [2] Life begins with freedom (NY, November, 1937) 39 p. -- [3] Character building and education in the spirit of Socialism (NY, 1939) 30 p. -- [4] What it means to be a Communist (NY, February, 1951) 15 p.
Wobbly [No. 3] ([Berkeley: Berkeley Branch of the General Recruiting Union, Industrial Workers of the World, October, 1963) 24 p.
[1] Youth fights for its future (New York: Labor Youth League, July, 1952) 40 p. -- [2] For a new youth organization dedicated to education and in the spirit of Socialism! Report to the gathering of youth leaders which launched the National Organization Conference for a Labor You League: Peoples Auditorium, Chicago, Illinois, May 28-29, 1949 ([New York, 1949]) 32 p. -- [3] Stop McCarthy now! (NY: Labor Youth League, March, 1954) 30 p.
What makes Shachtman run? The life and death of a tendency ([No place given]: [Self published?], August, 1957) 22 p.
[1] What is the Communist Opposition? (New York City: Workers Age Publishing Assn., [1930?]) 38 p. -- [2] What is the Communist Opposition? [Second enlarged edition] (NY, [1933?]) 52 p. -- [3] Our heritage from 1776: a working class view of the first American Revolution / by Bertram D. Wolfe, Jay Lovestone, William F. Dunne [Workers School Library vol. 1] (NY: The Workers School, [1932?]) 23 p. -- [4] Things we want to know (NY: Workers Age Pub. Assn, June, 1934) 31 p.
The shocking story of the Amerasia case: the Scripps-Howard newspapers ([No place given], [1950]) 44 p.
Socialism, the hope of the world [Reprinted from Wilshire's Magazine, November, 1906] (New York: Wilshire Book Co., 1906) 24 p.
[1] The advancing Proletariat: a study in the movement of the working class from wage slavery to freedom (Chicago: IWW Publishing Bureau, February, 1917) 32 p. [2 copies] -- [2] The evolution of industrial democracy (Chicago: IWW, [1917?]) 45 p.
[1] What's so and what isn't ([No place given]: [Self published?], 1909) 80 p. -- [2] Where you get off (Chicago, The Socialist Party, [1911?]) 48 p. -- [3] Let's be practical (New York: The Astoria Press [Self published?], [1947?]) 35 p.
What do you think of the beef trust? [From The Worker, May 1, 1902] (New York, 1902) 4 p.
[1] The United States to-day! Program of the Workers Party of America ([New York?], [1922?]) 4 p. -- [2] For a Communist Party of action: against liquidating the Workers (Communist) Party, against substituting the Workers (Communist) Party by a sham Farmer-Labor Party! An appeal to the members of District no. 2, Workers Party (New York: The Cooperative Press, [1924?]) 27 p. -- [3] Program and constitution, Workers Party of America, adopted at National Convention, New York City, December 24-25-26, 1921 (NY: Lyceum and Literature Department, Workers Party, [1921]) 31 p. [2 copies] -- [4] Our immediate work: program adopted by the Central Executive Committee of the Workers Party of America (Chicago, [1922?]) 21 p. -- [5] The white terrorists ask for mercy: a comparison of the persecution of revolutionists by the White Terror and the treatment of counter-revolutionists in Soviet Russia (Chicago, February, 1925) 15 p. -- [6] Poems for workers: an anthology edited by Manuel Gomez [Little Red Library no. 5] (Chicago, [1922?]) 55 p. -- [7]The second year of the Workers Party of America: report of the Central Executive Committee for the Third National Convention: theses, program, resolutions. (Chicago, 1924) 127 p.
[1] This is not our war! A declaration by the Workers Party ([New York?, 1940?]) 15 p. -- [2] CWP factional situation and SYL [Spartacus Youth League] ([No place given], Issued by the Left Wing of the Workers Party, August, 1935) 4 p. -- [3] Flyer: Protest the lynching of Elbert Williams (NY: Auspices of Workers Party (Harlem Branch), [1940]) 2 p. -- [4] Flyer: The 7th Congress of the Communist International ... (NY, [1935]) 2 p. -- [5] Declaration of principles and constitution of the Workers Partyof the U.S. (NY, [1935]) 31 p. -- [6] Mailer: To be read in full to all branches: Dear Comrades: ... On November 3rd, Mr. A. F. Spigner, who identified himself as a member of the FBI, solicited and obtained an interview with the National Secretary of the Party ... [Attached is a typed letter signed from RNB of the American Civil Liberies Union to Max Shachtman about the FBI and the Worker's Party] (NY, November 7, 1942) 2 p. -- [7] ABC of Marxism / by Paul Temple (NY, [1938?]) ~40 p. -- [8] Mailer: To be read and discussed at all Branch Executive Committees ... Max Shachtman ([NY, 1942?]) 1 p. -- [9] Supplement to Information Bulletin no. 8 of the Workers Party (National Office): 1. Statement of resignation of James Burnham from the Workers Party, 2. Statement of the Political Committee on the resignation of James Burnham from the Workers Party ([NY?,
Announcement of courses for: Spring Term, 1938; Fall Term, 1942; and Spring Term, 1943 (New York: [Communist Party of U.S.A.?], 1938-1943)
History of the "400": A.W.O., the one big union (New York: Published by One Big Union Club, 1939 [i.e. 1917?]) 22 p. [AWO, Agricultural Workers Organization, was renamed Agricultural Workers Industrial Union in 1917]
The Yanks are not coming: The Yanks Are Not Coming Committee, District Council no. 2, Maritime Federation of the Pacific [8th edition] (San Francisco, [1940]) 15 p.
The meaning of the Soviet trials, including official text of the indictment of the Bukharin-Trotskyite Bloc / Introduction by William Z. Foster (New York: Workers Library Publishers, March, 1938) 46 p.
The Negro and justice: a plea for Earl Browder / by Dr. Max Yergan and Paul Robeson (New York: Citizens' Committee to Free Earl Browder, November, 1941) 11 p.
The threat of Red sabotage. Reprinted from the New York Herald Tribune / by Fendall Yerxa and Ogden R. Reid [Introduction by J. Edgar Hoover] ([New York]: New York Herald Tribune Inc., 1950) 36 p.
[1] Constitution of the Young Communist League, U.S.A. [Adopted at the National Convention … in May, 1939 and amended at Special Convention held in December, 1940] ([New York?], [1940]) 23 p. -- [2] Bulletin: International Youth Week, September 12-19, 1941 ([NY?], 1941) 8 p. -- [3] Flyer: Workers, farmers, lovers of democracy and liberty! Support the struggle of Soviet Union against Hitlerism! ([Buffalo], [1941]) -- [4] Flyer: Young workers & students! Fight Imperialist war and Fascism! ([Elmira, NY], [1935]) -- [5] Convention song sheet ([Ohio?], [1939?]) 3 p. -- [6] Petition to pass the Anti-Lynching and Anti-Poll Tax Bills (NY, [1940?]) 1 p. -- [7] Flyer: Students! Students! Mobilize against war-- Nov. 8th (NY, [1936?]) -- [8] Flyer: Whose peace meeting? ([Berkeley?], [1940?]) -- [9] Flyer: Tomahawks perform miracles (Buffalo, [1942]) -- [10] Save America's youth- stop the Imperialist war! (NY, [1939]) 4 p. -- [11] Think ... because ... [Not one cent, not one gun, not one man for Imperialist war] (Chicago: Issued by Young Communist League of Illinois, Indiana, Missouri and Wisconsin, [1940]) 4 p. -- [12] To the American mother (NY: New York State Young Communist League, [1941?]) 4 p. -- [13] Flyer: Drop that shovel and take this gun!! (Elmira and Ithaca, NY, [1935]) -- [14] Join the march of youth (NY, [1936]) 4 p. -- [15] A mixed regiment: more power for America (Los Angeles: Young Communist League of Los Angeles, [1942]) 4 p. -- [16] Flyer: National Youth Day Against Imperialist War and Fascism! (Ithaca, NY, [1935]) -- [17] Reshaping the world of today- Building the world of tomorrow: call to the Ninth National Convention of the Young Communist League, U.S.A. in New York, May11 to 15, 1939 (NY, 1939) 4 p. -- [18] Flyer: Repeal the draft! The draft has passed! What now? (San Francisco, [1940]) -- [19] Mailer: Young Workers (Communist) League of America: Appeal of the National Executive Committee to the membership of the Young Workers (Communist) League of America! (Chicago, 1927 [i.e. 1937?]) 2 p. -- [20] Flyer: Salvage for victory! Uncle Sam says save ([Buffalo], [1942]) -- [21] We take our stand: declaration of principles and by-laws of the Young Communist League of the U.S.A. (NY, 1937) 22 p. -- [21] An election message to all young people of New York (NY, [1935?]) 21 p. -- [22] Fix bayonets- against whom? What a young worker learned about the National Guard (NY, March, 1933) 39 p. -- [23] A short history of the Y.C.I. Young Communist International [Printed in England by the Dorrit Press, London] (NY, [1929?]) 43 p.
[1] Postcard: Calling young America: Earl Browder, Communist candidate for President of the United States will speak … (New York, October, 1936) -- [2] Postcard: 4-6-8-9 Vote yes on these constitutional amendments- a signal for progress … (NY: NY State Young Communist League, [1938?]) -- [3] The constitution of the Young Communist League of the U.S.A., adopted at the Ninth National Convention, May 11-15, 1939 (NY: New Age Publishers, June, 1939) 12 p. -- [4] $50,000 war chest: Young Communist League (NY, 1942) 15 p. -- [5] We take our stand: declaration of principles and by-l;aws ... (NY, May, 1937) 22 p. -- [6] Brochure: Our all American eleven lined up for progress (NY, 1938) -- [7] Bayonets against whom? (NY, [1936?]) 39 p. -- [8] A program for American youth: manifesto and resolutions of Seventh National Convention, Young Communist League of U.S.A., June 22-27, 1934 (NY: Youth Publishers, August, 1934) 32 p. -- [9] It's all yours ... (NY, [March, 1935?]) 4 p. -- [10] Towards a mass Young Communist League: resolutions adopted by the July Plenum of the Young Communist League (NY, 1933) 16 p. -- [11] Youth fights for peace, jobs, civil rights (NY, 1940) 76 p. -- [12] Flyer: To all Agricultural 'workers' in the Palaro Valley aroun Watsonville: To all American and Filipino workers: Unite against the farm owners! American and Filipino workers must stand together! A Filipino lettuce worker on the Murphy ranch was murdered. ... (San Francisco: Young Communist League, [1930-1931?]) 1 p. -- [13] An appeal to American youth (NY, [1941?]) 4 p. -- [14] 4th Empire State Convention news ... (NY, March, 1943) 2 p. -- [15] Brochure: A mixed regiment: more power for America! (NY, [1942]) -- [16] Brochure: New frontiers for California's youth (San Francisco, [1936?]) -- [17] The Roosevelt war deal (NY, March, 1940) 14 p. -- [18] Do you want to help save Stalingrad! Do you want to avert national catastrophe for America? Read inside ... ([Cleveland?], [1942?]) 4 p. -- [18] Who are the young Communists? (NY, [1932?]) 23 p. -- [19] Small flyer: 4,000,000 jobless youth want jobs, not guns! The Yanks are not coming! ([No place given], [1939?])
Two issues of The Young International: nos. 1 and 3 (Chicago, 1920)
[1] Brochure: My friend Jim Jones (New York, [1943]) -- [2] Over here (NY, [1935?]) 8 p. -- [3] Tenth Annual Convention Young People's Socialist League song book (Cleveland, 1939) 11 p .-- [4] Dear politicians- Just to remind you of something you'd like to forget: war, jobs and our future (NY, [1940) 14 p. -- [5] Against conscription! Youth rejects Wall Street's goosestep plan (NY, [1940?]) 14 p. -- [6] Journal and handbook of the National Convention, July 22nd, 23rd, 24th, Cleveland, OH (Cleveland, 1932) 48 p. -- [7] Youth want jobs (NY, [1939?]) 11 p. -- [8] Why we refused to register: a pamphlet stating the causes of some of the non-registrants to the Selective Service Act. Published jointly by the following organizations: Fellowship of Reconciliation, Keep America Our of War Congress, National Council for Prevention of War, Youth Committee Against War, Young People's Socialist League, War Resisters League ([New York?], [1940]) 11 p. -- [9] Young People's Socialist League, Cultural Department: List of plays (Chicago, [1934?]) 1 p. -- [10] Mailer: Dear friend: As you know, both Houses of Congress are trying to railroad the conscription bill (NY, July, 1940) -- [11] Flyer: Solidarity meeting for "I take my stand ..." Stan Rappeport and fellow political and conscientious objectors (NY, May, 1941) -- [12] Suggestions for Circle Cultural Directors: Dramatic work (Chicago, [1934?]) 1 p. -- [13] Report to YPSL, 11th National Convention / by National Secretary ([Place not given], [1941]) 21 p. -- [14] We take our stand: resolutions adopted by the National Executive Committee, Young People's Socialist League meeting at Columbus, Ohio, January5-6, 1946 (NY, 1946) -- [15] 20 p. -- [15] Flyer: Don't duck this issue!! ([Oakland?], [1946?]) -- [16] Flyer: America prepares for war (Chicago, [1937?]) -- [16] Complete set [nos. 1-18]: Free youth: Semi-monthly organ of the Young People's Socialist League (NY, 1931)
[1] YSL: what is the Young Socialist League? (New York, [1957]) 12 p. -- [2] Revised draft constitution for the Young Socialist League ([NY?], [1954?]) 5 p.
Manifesto, program, resolutions and constitution: adopted by the First National Convention, May 13-15, 1922 (Chicago, 1932) 39 p.
Young Communists at work (New York Young Communist League, January, 1934) 30 p.
Massachusetts on trial: Massachusetts acquitted ([Boston]: Boston School of Social Science, c1913) 4 p.
[1] The American League Against War and Fascism / by Hillman M. Bishop (New York, c1936) 46 p. -- [2] The American League Against War and Fascism: a study in Communist tactics [Revised edition] (NY, c1937) 52 p.
The Anarchists to the people [In Italian on verso: Gli Anarchici al popolo] ([New York?], [1937?]) 2 p.
Abolition campaign against the House Committee on Un-American Activities & other inquisitorial committees of Congress / submitted bu Frank Wilkinson ([Los Angeles], September 26, 1959) 8 p.
Facts & comments: the "harboring" case ([San Francisco], [1948?]) 13 p.
[1] Communist League of America (Opposition) (New York: November 1, 1932) 4 p. -- [2] Mailer?: To all districts, re: The trial of the Twelve Communist Leaders and the Bill of Rights (NY, February 17, 1950) 3 p. -- [3] Resolution adopted by the 16th National Convention, CPUSA: The situation today: for a prosperous America; for an end to poverty; for a new program of social advance ([No place given]: February, 1957) Various pagings.
What the courts say about the I.W.W. ([Place not given], [1927?]) 4 p.
A fighting generation in 1954: The following is a summary of the main report delivered by Herb Nalibow and discussion at the November meeting of the National Council of the Labor Youth League held in New York … ([New York?], January, 1954) 20 p.
Draft principles ([New York?], [1920?]) 6 p.
Bulletin of the Fourth National Convention, December 25, 26, 27, 28, 1934 (St. Louis, Missouri, 1934) 13 p.
Flyer: To the people of Hunts Point ([New York], [1935?]) 1 p.
Circulated by Socialist Party: petition to the Board of Commissioners of the City of Jersey City ([Jersey City], [1913]) 4 p.
[1] Minutes of the First National Convention of the Spartacus Youth League of America, December 3, 4, 5, 1934 (New York, 1934) 15 p. -- [2] Communication: Introduction and instructions to S.Y.L. members on the fusion of the N.S.L. and the S.L.I.D. ([Chicago?], December, 1935) 8 p. -- [3] Open letter of the Provisional National Committee of Spartacus Youth Clubs to the members of the Young People's Socialist League (New York, August 1922) 3 p. --[4] Organizational bulletin on Organizational principles and problems of the Spartacus Youth League [Educational bulletin no. 1, January 1935] (New York, 1935) 9 p.
Labor Youth League: Main report, delivered at National Conference, May 8-9, 1952 / by Leon Wofsy ([Chicago?], 1952) 30 p.
[1] Report to the branches on Philadelphia incident (New York, August 31, 1935) 3 p. -- [2] The relation of the Party to the youth organization [Circular letter, March 4, 1935] (New York, 1935) 2 p. -- [3] Flyer: Cast a Socialist vote in '48 ([New York?], 1948) 1 p. -- [4] Statement to the Political Committee of the Workers (Communist) Party of America ([New York?], October 27, 1928) 5 p. -- [5] [Report] (New York, August 14, 1935) Various pagings.
[1] Broadside: To-day is the day! ([New York?, 1920?]) -- [2] The Anarchist Soviet bulletin [Volume 1, no. 5] ([New York?], August 1919) 2 p.
[1] Broadside: Railroad workers - Don't take it lying down / Railroad Workers Industrial Union no. 520 of the IWW (Chicago, [1948?]) -- [2] Broadside: Your own gang: the rank and file membership of the I.W.W. / San Pedro Branch M.T.W. no. 510 of the I.W.W. (San Pedro, CA, 1946?])
Broadside: Manifesto: to the workers of the world / signed by the Organizing Junta of the Mexican Liberal Party in the City of Los Angeles … April 8, 1911; Ricardo Flores Magon, Antonio de P. Araujo, Librado Rivera, Anselmo L .Figueroa, Enrique Flores Magon (Los Angeles, 1911)
[1] 101 facts / reviewed by Gerald L. K. Smith, National Chairman of the Committee of 1,000,000 (Detroit, [1939?]) 4 p. -- [2] Broadside: American Youth Congress: Russia's first line of defense in the U.S.A.! / A. Cloyd Gill (New York, 1940) -- [3] 23,000! Crowd into Olympia Stadium for monster rally, November 2, 1939, under the auspices of the Committee of 1,000,000. Principal speaker, Gerald L. K. Smith ([Detroit, 1939]) 2 p.
[1] Broadside: National Office, Socialist Party, Chicago, July 18, 1916, Member's Individual Ballot, National referendum "C", 1916 ... (Chicago, 1916) -- [2]Broadside: Norman Thomas, outstanding American Socialist, speaks on "Socialism and the crisis," Eagles auditorium … Thur. Feb. 27, 1936 (Buffalo, [1936]) --
[1] Progressive Party: Peekskill: it might have been you! (New York, [1948?]) 4 p. -- [2] American Coalition: Flyer: Don Henry: a young victim of Communist propaganda (Washington, DC, November, 1937) -- [3] Citizens Committee to Free Earl Browder: Broadside: Tom Mooney's spirit marches on! ([Buffalo?, 1942]) -- [4] American Labor Party: Broadside: Plot to wreck Labor Party exposed (New York, [1940]) -- [5] Communist Party of California: Your questions on Teheran answered by Earl Browder [Bulletin no. 1] (San Francisco, February 15, 1944) 2 p. -- [6] The Socialist daily: May flowers: issued for the benefit of the Socialist Daily Fund ([Brooklyn?], May, 1902) 16 p. -- [7] New York State Civil Rights Congress: Broadside: Amnesty now! Before it adds up to 152,250,000 (New York, [1950]) -- [8] United Communist Party of America: Broadside: Stand by Soviet Russia! ([No place given, no date: 1922?]).