Manchester Voters Select Dewey But

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Manchester Voters Select Dewey But ■’V^ '(n fy C W E r.rv ■'■ X i . TtTESDAY. NOVEilBER 2,194$*^ PACJi Tito WealKw' iftlinrlifBtrr lEornins Unatb Net Press Run PMoeoat at d : 8.'W W ha ■th of Ogtoher. 19U Mr. and Mrs. A. Hyatt Sutllffe of offioeia fuf Um oowlng year. Itoto with Sttto and son Garry, have moved, from They are: Prestdent, Miss Jahat peratoto thto W Congratulations in Order LocalGroiip Tracy; vice president, Mrs. Carl About Town Center street to the house they re­ 9,594. oMl tow ctoto cently purchased at 47 Clinton Ricmer; treasurer. Alec McBride, and secretary Mrs. Clara Agnew. for men Mbcr of ttw A oilt M c:.l4 toolshSt D:1U Ctoaptef. No. 81, street. Mr. Sutllffe Is a teacher at Holds Banquet m at OtoeolattMW the Manchester Green school. The retiring president Is ElmOT Arch Muona, win confer the Hark Borst. g o o d J"- Manche»ter-^'A City of Village Charm M uUr degree at a regular The Wesley group of the SouUi The members enjoyed a baked cation tomorrow «vening at 7:30 House and Hale Qub ham dinner followed by entertain­ (TWENTY PAGES) PRICE FOUR CENTS In the Maaonlc Temple. A ao^al Methodist WSCS will meet tomor­ Per Men'— SkUled oad Beml-SkUled. The woric to totenMtagt ASvOTttotag 0* Poga M ) . MANCHESTER, CONN., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3,1948 ment and dancing to the muaio of LXVIL, NO. 886 Jiovr with rtfreihmcnts wlu lol- row evening in the parlors. Hos­ Members Honored; Of> the Sold ~ aTtodhig todtotey. We seed VfL. tesses will be Mrs. Francis Mc- Ihe DuBaldo Brothers. Highlight lov. ■ ' of the entertainment for the even­ Culloni, Mrs. John Muschko, Mrs. ficers Are Selected Drm Prtos Mtoatota laterSal Griadera C. R. Smith, Mrs. Russell Weln- ing was the peifortpanee of MUIU- Bodtol DrUI Opetatora Mr. «nd Mri. Lotria Stoltenberg; gan. the professlonat maglolah. Egteiaal Orladcia of 174 Main atreet and their two hold. Three House and Hale employes MBSag Machlae Opetators Btoeh Meehaalea children left today for D*v«iport. with 25-year service records were Turret Lathe Opeiatorm Sheet Metal Meehaales I owa whore they will visit Mr. Manchester Girl Scout Council honored last night at a meeting of Baglae Latim Opetatore Beolrtaace WeMen . Stoitenberg'a mother. It la his first members will meet this evening at the House and Hale club at the T, Splaalag Lathe OperatMn visit to his naUve city In 17 y^rs. 7:45 with Miss Emily Smith of 55 M. C. A. They were Camtllo Andl- Hiey expect to be absent Middle Turnpike, east. \ sio, Mary Sargeant and Mrs. Ag­ d tooia Dewey for Nto S to' street — Jaet oS tbwn ten da>*a. nes Chartier. They were all pre­ Lakota Council No. 61, Degree sented with gifts of savings Ixmds., Mala street— Bast BartfoM. The Woodland Park Association of Poe^ontas, will hold a meet­ The club also elected a new slate will hold Its monthly meeting Fri­ ing at 8 p. m., tomorrow at the PRATT* WHITNEY AIRCRAFT day at 8:80 p. m. In the fireplace Odd Fellows hall. A penny bingo Eaet Hartford 8, Coaaectleat room of the Manchester “ T.” A will be held after the business large attendance Is hoped for as meeting. Refreshments will be plana for the annual Christmas served.. PRESCRn^lONS partv will be discussed. Entertain­ ment and refreshments will follow Co. No. 3 of the South Man­ CALLED FOR the business. chester Fire department will hold a meeting at eight o'clock tonight AND Manchester Grange will meet at headquarters on Spruce street. DEI.IVER.ED KEN’S PJUNT SlIOP tomorrow night at 8 o’clock In Charles Varca of Glastonbury Is congratulated by Samuel J. Tag­ Open Eveolaga Till -StiW Trumail Wins Victory in Election Orange HaU. Following the busi­ A small rubbish fire on Gerard gart of the Manchester Disabled American Veterans. Varca was re­ ^ •f'- street In a back yard near East Kea Beer, Prop President Gets Vote ness meeting a surprise entertain­ cently appointed Alde-de-Camp to the National Commander and he P IN E 194 Hlghlatol St. TeL' X-llSS Dewey Gains State ment will be presented. Mrs. Wil­ Center called out Company No. 3 received hla certificate at a meeting held Saturday at the V. F. W. Red Men’s ber T. UtUe. lecturer of tee of the South Manchester Fire de­ Home. Those pictured are, left to right: Albert Downing, Varca,. Orange who has charge of this partment at 8:30 last night. There Wilfred Bull A Taggart, and Walter Barelsza. PHARMACY feature of the program promises was no damage. t 664 Center St. The Disabled Veterans also discussed at their Saturday meeting an enjoyable show. TeL 2-9814 To Score Astounding Rehearsal for the Salvation Ar­ ^he Forget-Me-Not campaign that will be launched soon. The arti­ Support as Bowles my Songster Brigade tonight has ficial lapel-flowers will be made by disabled veterans, and the pro­ HALE’S been cancelled. However, an Im­ ceeds fromjthe campaign will go towards the support of disabled vet­ IT'S portant band practice will take erans and their famillea . .... place tonight at 8 o’clock. Headquarters FOR Upset of Forecasts Mrs. John Valclulls of 196 Oak Wins f a i t h s street reporU finding three purple violets blossoming In her garden BINGO yesterday, which she thought un­ Election Conceded by usual for November 1. All Except One of Ms- fo r PLAYING STARTS PROMPTLY AT 8 P. M. Next Governor Parties Share Rival When Chief J V -> Mrs. Athena Cramer Janssen I jop State Offices Be- Democrats Clinch AND YOU DON’T STAY LATE Executive Leading in will speak on "Musle In Our Re- ' low Govemop Also HWon and In Our Ufe,” at the State’s Seats 28 Sutes Having 304 monthly meeting of Center Church Won by Democrats; Glenwood Women’s Federation tomorrow Congress Control, Electoral Votes; Dewey I , till- I OA ,V.’ Week evening at eight o’clock. Group A Control o f State Sen­ In tie S. House of Center church women Is In T l B k e r H a U At Time Ahrad in charge of the program. Group B. ate Also Shifted; Re- 16 States W ith 189 •4 !• ealkat MAIN STREET Grab Majority o f Seat* ] worship. Group C, refreshments ’ publicans^ $(etain Republican Monopoly Dewey Takes an^ Group D, hospitality. ■•f* *iif.___ In House After Sen-l Electoral Ballots . CAUOR Wl • Majority in ^ House Broken When Demo­ Because of Election Day none of Ranges, Refrigerators ate Tie Broken; Peo­ the YWCA Tuesday classes a n R U D Y YO U NG DOOR PRIZE crats Gain Victory Empire Stale By The Associated P t m Washers and All Oth­ B y Carl J. Lalnmhi ple Behind Truman meeting this afternoon or eve- In Three Contests President Truinan, in sn Range and Fuel ntaig. P H IL A LLE N er Appliances Come and Try It and You Will Like It New Haven, Nov. 8.— astounding upset of pre-lial- f,_0>nnecticut divided its InQoseRun P h on e 2-1254 Mew Haven, Nov. 3 Bulletin! loting predictiono. today won B t Monica’s Mothers Circle win election - honors, giving its meet tomorrow evening with Mrs. a.JW llaM «W i aeeticut Democrats and Republi­ -Wi^iinKton, Nov, 8^— the presidency. H e will have OIL or JOHN YOUNG eight electoral votes to Gov. Enoch Hanscom of 48 Perkins cans shared control of the atate’s — Democrats grabbed control Edge Over Truman On­ a Democratic Senate and strMt. Instead of with Mrs. John It Takes More Than Thomas B. Dewey and the Phone 8202 six House seats in Congress to­ of Congress today. The ma­ House to work with him. Velanek as scheduled. governorship to a Democrat, ly 40,400 Vote# in Gov. Thomas E. Dewey, his day. jority in the House approach­ L T. WOOD C O . BZ-OPA Administrator Ches­ 11m annual meeting of the Man- A Republican monopoly on the ed a landslide. The voters un­ Almost Complete Re- ter Bowles. Besides the gov­ (1 BlneD SI. TU. 44N ohester Garden Club, with election House delegation was broken in seated 50 or more GA).P. tumr^ from Election McMahim Says Traami of of ficers will take place Mon­ Hopes and Dreams To ernorship, unofficial tabula­ jresterday’s election when Demo­ House members, and gave day evening In Center church tions oomptoted today aaw Demo- crats wrested three of the seats Hod Only People With Hiai housa. cisto soize three of tiie oix Houm from G.O.P. tocumbents. the Democrats a majority in New York, Nov. 3—(iP)—Gov. *aeata and oU except one of the Chester Bowles, who was eleet- Victorious Democratio candi­ the Senate. Thomas E. Dewsy squeaked Norwalk. Noy. S.—(iW—UWte Miss Boifeara Kloppenhurg and 'major ototo olHcea below gover- 1 governor yesterday, defeating dates were Abraham A. Ribicoff, through to his home state with ed atotea Senator lito> Mlsa Virginia Green, senior Girl Bu9d A Fine Home... ‘ ndr. the toeombent, O w . Jamee E. in the First district; Mrs. Chase Mahon (D., Oonn.), cmament- goeuts of Troop 1. will speak over Says- Shaanea. President Tnioiaa will lead the nation fOr the next four yean aa re- Washington. Noy. 3.— (/P) ths closest margin for a president­ control of the state Senate atoo Going Woodhouse, Second; and ial raos to recent BsApIre State tojlay on Preoidsat Trte otatioa WTUT Thursday morning ohlfted to the Pemocrata, 22 John A. McGuire. Third. R e p ^ - suit ofDw Bleetteg jrasteHay.
Recommended publications
  • Passport Refusals for Political Reasons: Constitutional Issues and Judicial Review
    THE YALE LAW JOURNAL VOLUME 61 FEBRUARY 1952 NUMBER 2 EDITORIAL BOARD CHARLES A. RmcH Editor-in-Chief Fmmcx M. RowE Executive Editor ROiERT ALAN BIcxs JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN HOWARD I. FRIEDMAN CHARLES L. MANDELSTAM Article and RICHARD N. GOLDSTEIN Comment Editors Book Review Editor GEORGE A. Wmss Note Editors WARREN H. SALTZMAN HENRY C. SHAYEWiTZ Case Editor ManagingEditor HEATH L. ALLEN JAY V. GRImM ALAN Y. NAFTALIN TIMOTHY ATYESON HAniN HOLMES ALAN L. REIsTEiN BoUDiNoT P. ATrERBuRY SAUL D. KRONOVET ARTHUR S, SACHS WALLACE BARNES LEONARD LEHMAN WILLIAM C. SCIIAAD JAN C. BROWN DEAN B. LEWIS HOWARD SOLOMON ANN THACHER CLARKE IMOGENE MCAULIFFE HOWARD L. SWARTZIXAN JAMEs B. FRANKEL SANFORD C. MILLE RAYMOND S. TROUnit Editor in Military Service STHEN W. TULIN, Comment Editor MARIE MCMAHON MARVIN H. MORSE Business Secretary Student Business Manager Subscription price $5.50 per year This number, $1.00 Canadian subscription price $6.00 per year; Foreijn, $6.25 per year; For prices on other issues inquire The Yale Law Journal, 401A Yale Station, New Haven, Connecticut CONTRIBUTORS TO THIS ISSUE FLEMING JAMES, JR., B.A. 1925, LL.B. 1928, Yale University. Co-author, Shulman & James, Cases on Torts (1942). LaFayette S. Foster Professor of Law, Yale Law School. PASSPORT REFUSALS FOR POLITICAL REASONS: CONSTITUTIONAL ISSUES AND JUDICIAL REVIEW "Everyone has the right to leave any country, including his own, and to return to his country." -Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Article 13, Paragraph 2.1 Fn anomx to leave one's country temporarily for travel abroad is important to individual, national and international well-being.
    [Show full text]
  • Wallace Says Peace Demands Approach Soviets
    MDNDAT, FEBRUABT IMS iHanrfrretrr Dally amdaUea ter-n .’ laotb *f too assy. ISI for temorrow atobt-oa- a propooal "A* Tott Writa, So You Ara," to Richard and Roger Luko, twin that the town sat aoMa monay for a the UUa of tba talk which Virginia aona of Mr. and Mra. Joaaph Uiko Engaged to Wed List Meetpiig raaarva' fond. TIi* bodgst dbas 9,452 Draw, wldaly known handwriting of 30 DivUlon atreet.. wlU enter make provlakm for tba allotmant ana^at, win give to the membara E ^ant collage, Provldenca, R. L, of a larg* amOubt o f aohoot-u of tbe Women’a Oub thla evanlng tomorrow. The brother* graduat­ Of Directors monay. aoou MT plamfiag and an- ytm M m t U n ed with the 1046 cloaa from Man- M anekester^ City of Fttlage Charm ______ i*«i ot Ntw Bri­ at tbe South Metbodlat church. glnaanng, som* for aaaargani iSira. Dwight Perry and Mra. cheater High achool and have classroom space and soma tor tb* -t o tain, wU BMlw iMt otfldnl vlalt been employed at Qulnn'a Phar­ To Hold PubUc Hear- purehas* of a sita'tor on* ot tba (TWELVE PAGES) PKiarfoiii€i|ill to AadOTaoa-WiM Aunlllnry, V. Richard T. Owen* ara co-chair­ MANCHESTER, CONN, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1848 men of tbe hoateu committee. macy. three now elementary schools .y o u LXVH., NO. 128 r.W„ nt ite BMttlac tomorrow ing on the Budget To- wMeb hov* bean recommondad for V • ’ Moattor at «ickt e’ooek la tlio The Poat Miatreaa Club o f Manebastor.
    [Show full text]
  • The Withering Away of the American Labor Party
    THE WITHERING AWAY OF THE AMERICAN LABOR PARTY BY ALAN WOLFE Assistant Professor of Political Science Douglass College, Rutgers University EW YORK State's American Labor Party (1936-56) existed in a variety of forms: pro-Democratic electoral vehicle (1936), independent third party (1937-44), one of two "third-parties" in the state (1944-47), state branch of the national Progressive Party (1948-52), and ideological interest group with strong pro-communist leanings (1953-56). Most scholarly studies of the party, such as those of Bone, Sarasohn, and Moscow,1 which end in either 1946 or 1948, have treated only the first three forms. Because of this, the last eight years of the American Labor Party remain unexamined. Text-book treatments skip over the 1948-56 period with passing references to communist domination or infiltration.2 This unfortunate lacuna deserves to be filled, and the recent acquisition by the Rutgers University Library of the party's papers for this period provides the wherewithal to do so.3 1948 was a key year in the history of the American Labor Party because of the candidacy of Henry A. Wallace for President. No sooner had the year begun than on January 7, at a meeting of the state executive committee of the party, the ALP split over the ques- tion of endorsing Roosevelt's former Vice-President. Anticipating a strong pro-Wallace move, the state chairman, state treasurer, and 1 Hugh A. Bone, "Political Parties in New York State," American Political Science Review, 40 (April 1946), 272-82 ; Stephen B. Sarasohn, The Struggle for Control of the American Labor Party, 1936-48 (Unpublished Master's Essay, Columbia University, 1948) ; and Warren Moscow, Politics in the Emfire State (New York, 1948), Chapter 7.
    [Show full text]
  • PRESIDENT TRUMAN VERSUS the EIGHTIETH Congressi
    PRESIDENT TRUMAN VERSUS THE EIGHTIETH CONGRESSi A STUDY OF THE SPECIAL SESSION OF 19^8 APPROVED: Maj&r Professor Minor Professor nmnmre^ Chaijrman of the Department of Political Science * DeanVjf the Graduate School Muller, Arnold J., President Truman Versus the Eightieth Congresst A Study of the Special Session of 19^8. Master of Arts (Political Science), December, 1970, 171 pp., 2 tables, bibliography, 157 titles. The problem with which this investigation is concerned is the description and. analysis of President Harry S Truman's use of his Presidential prerogative in recalling the Repub- lican Eightieth Congress into special session on July 26, 19^8. Numerous and varied materials were used in making the investigation of the political significance of the special session. Basic sources include the Congressional Record. Public Papers of Harry S Truman. Truman's Memoirs. the New York Times t and autobiographies of persons connected with the event. A multitude of secondary works and supplementary articles have also been employed. The study follows events chronologically and is organized around those actions which led to the session, the session itself, and the political results. Chapter I is concerned with the reconversion problems of President Truman in postwar America and those events which led to the election of the Eightieth Congress in 19^6. Chapter II is an investigation of the Eightieth Congress's reaction and treatment of President Truman's domestic legislative proposals and the major points of disagreement. Chapter III is devoted to the politics of 19^8. The major events traced are the liberal and Southern Z>r revolt movements within the Democratic Party, the Republican Party's nomination of Thomas E.
    [Show full text]
  • Scientific and Cultural Conference for World Peace
    REVIEW OF THE SCIENTIFIC AND CULTURAL CONFERENCE FORWORLD PEACE ARRANGED BY THE NATIONAL COUNCIL O~ THE ARTS, SCIENCES AND PROFESSIONS AND HELD IN NEW YORK CITY ON MARCH 25, 26, and 27, 1949 APRIL 19, 1949 Prepared and released by the COMMITTEE ON UN-AMERICAN ACTIVITIES, U. S. HOUSE OP REPRESENTATIVES WASHINGTON, D. C. COMMITTEE ON"UN';A:MERICAN' ACTIVITIES, UNITED STATES HOUSE OF REPRESEKTJ\TIVES JOHN B.WOOD, Georgia, Chairman FRANCISE. WALTER, Pcnnsyivanla J. PARNELL THOMAS, New]ersey BURR P. HA.RRISON,Virglnin RICHARD M. NIXON, California JOHN McSWEENEY, Ohio FRANCIS CA.SE, SouthDakota MORGAN M. MOULDER, Missouri HAROLD H. VELDE, illinois LOUIS J. RUSSELL, Senior. IflIJe&tioatoT :attNl~~nNMANDEL, Direclor: Of lU8earch JOlIN W. CARRINGTON, Olerk Of Comrn!t(ie II ~ ... " :... X" ~.~ ...... \" .', - . / A REVIEW OF THE SCIENTIFIC AND CULTURAL CONFERENCE FOR WORLD PEACE ARRANGED BY THE NATIONAL COUN­ CIL OF THE ARTS, SCIENCES, AND PROFESSIONS AND HELD IN NEW YORK CITY ON MARCH 25, 26,. AND 27, 1949 Parading under the imposing title of the Scientific and Cultural Conference lor World Peace the gathering at the Waldorf~A~toria 'Hotel in New York City on 1tlarch 25, 26, and 27, 1949, was actually a supermabilization of the inveterate wheelhors~s and supporters of the Communist Party and' its auxiliary organizations. It was in a sense a glorified pyramid club, pyramiding into one inflated front the names which had time and again been used by the' Communists as. decoys for the entrapment of innocents. The Communist-front connections of these sponsors, as reflected by the tabulation in this report, are very extensive.
    [Show full text]
  • H. Doc. 108-222
    EIGHTIETH CONGRESS JANUARY 3, 1947, TO JANUARY 3, 1949 FIRST SESSION—January 3, 1947, to December 19, 1947 SECOND SESSION—January 6, 1948, 1 to December 31, 1948 VICE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES 2 PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE OF THE SENATE—ARTHUR H. VANDENBERG, 3 of Michigan SECRETARY OF THE SENATE—CARL A. LOEFFLER, 4 of Pennsylvania SERGEANT AT ARMS OF THE SENATE—EDWARD F. MCGINNIS, 5 of Illinois SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—JOSEPH W. MARTIN, JR., 6 of Massachusetts CLERK OF THE HOUSE—JOHN ANDREWS, 7 of Massachusetts SERGEANT AT ARMS OF THE HOUSE—WILLIAM F. RUSSELL, of Pennsylvania DOORKEEPER OF THE HOUSE—M. L. MELETIO, of Missouri POSTMASTER OF THE HOUSE—FRANK COLLIER ALABAMA J. William Fulbright, Fayetteville Helen Gahagan Douglas, Los Angeles REPRESENTATIVES Gordon L. McDonough, Los Angeles SENATORS E. C. Gathings, West Memphis Donald L. Jackson, Santa Monica Lister Hill, Montgomery Cecil R. King, Los Angeles John J. Sparkman, Huntsville Wilbur D. Mills, Kensett James W. Trimble, Berryville Willis W. Bradley, Long Beach REPRESENTATIVES Fadjo Cravens, Fort Smith Chet Holifield, Montebello Frank W. Boykin, Mobile Brooks Hays, Little Rock Carl Hinshaw, Pasadena George M. Grant, Troy W. F. Norrell, Monticello Harry R. Sheppard, Yucaipa George W. Andrews, Union Springs Oren Harris, El Dorado John Phillips, Banning Sam Hobbs, Selma Charles K. Fletcher, San Diego Albert Rains, Gadsden CALIFORNIA Pete Jarman, Livingston SENATORS COLORADO Carter Manasco, Jasper Sheridan Downey, San Francisco SENATORS Robert E. Jones, Jr., 8 Scottsboro William F. Knowland, Piedmont Edwin C. Johnson, Craig Laurie C. Battle, Birmingham REPRESENTATIVES Eugene D. Millikin, Denver Clarence F.
    [Show full text]
  • As Jewish Life in the Late Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries Became
    1 Introduction Matthew Hoffman and Henry Srebrnik s Jewish life in the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries became A more economically and politically precarious, various movements arose which claimed they had found the “solution” to the political dilemmas facing the Jewish people. Some were religious, some frankly assimilationist, some completely universalistic and adherents of socialist doctrines, and some, of course, were nationalistic and Zionist. One political movement, though, combined elements of two strands, Marxist universalism and Jewish nation- alism. This grouping of like-minded organizations, active mainly between 1917 and 1956, we have termed the Jewish Communist movement. It had active members throughout the Jewish diaspora, in particular in the various countries of Europe and North America, as well as in Australia, Palestine, South Africa, and South America. These were later interconnected on a global level through international movements such as the World Jewish Cultural Union, or Alveltlekher Yidisher Kultur Farband (YKUF), founded in 1937. YKUF, which operated mainly in Yiddish, created a great variety of newspapers and theoretical and literary journals, which allowed Jewish Communists to communicate, disseminate information, and debate issues such as Jewish nationality and statehood independently of other Commu- nists. Though officially part of the larger world Communist movement, in reality the Jewish Communists developed their own specific ideology, which was infused as much by Jewish sources—Labour Zionism, the
    [Show full text]
  • THE HAMM. LAWYERS GUILD Headquarters for the NATIONAL LAWYERS GUILD Have Been Moved from New
    Published monthly by the MINUTEMEN, P.O. Box 68, Norborne, Mo. Subscription rate, $5.00 per year We guarantee that all law suits filed against this news letter will be settled out of court. WORDS WON'T WIN- ACTION WILL July 1, 1964 THE HAMM. LAWYERS GUILD Headquarters for the NATIONAL LAWYERS GUILD have been moved from New . York to Detroit and Ernest Goodman, of the law firm of Goodman, Crockett, Eden, Robb and Philo, has been elected national Guild president. The Guide To Subversive Organizations and Publications, published in December 1961 by the U. S. Government Printing Office (Price 70 cents), offers the following pertinent information regarding the NATIONAL LAWYERS GUILD: 1. Cited as a Communist front. (Special Committee on Un-American Activities, House Report 1311 on the CIO Political Action Committee, March 29, 1944, p. 149). 2. Cited as a Communist front which "is the foremost legal bulwark of the Communist Party, its front organizations, and controlled unions" and which "since its inception has never failed to rally to the legal defense of the Communist Party and individual members thereof, including known espionage agents." (Committee on Un-American Activities, House Report 3123 on the National Lawyers Guild, September 21, 1950, originally released Sept. 17, 1950). 3. "To defend the cases of Communist lawbreakers, fronts have been devised making special appeals in behalf of civil liberties and reaching out far beyond the confines of the Communist Party it- self. Among these organizations are the ***National Lawyers Guild: When the Communist Party itself is under fire these offer a bulwark of protection." .(Internal Security Subcommittee of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Handbook for Americans, S.Doc.
    [Show full text]
  • Antisemitism and the American Far Left Stephen H
    Cambridge University Press 978-1-107-03601-7 - Antisemitism and the American Far Left Stephen H. Norwood Frontmatter More information Antisemitism and the American Far Left Stephen H. Norwood has written the fi rst systematic study of the American far left’s role in both propagating and combating antisemi- tism. This book covers Communists from 1920 onward, Trotskyists, the New Left and its black nationalist allies, and the contemporary remnants of the New Left. Professor Norwood analyzes the defi ciencies of the American far left’s explanations of Nazism and the Holocaust. He explores far left approaches to militant Islam, from condemnation of its fi erce antisemitism in the 1930s to recent apologies for jihad. Norwood discusses the far left’s use of long-standing theological and economic antisemitic stereotypes that the far right also embraced. The study analyzes the far left’s antipathy to Jewish culture, as well as its occasional efforts to promote it. He considers how early Marxist and Bolshevik paradigms continued to shape American far left views of Jewish identity, Zionism, Israel, and antisemitism. Stephen H. Norwood (PhD, Columbia University) is Professor of History and Judaic Studies at the University of Oklahoma. He is the author of fi ve books on American history, including The Third Reich in the Ivory Tower (Cambridge 2009), which was a Finalist for the National Jewish Book Award for Holocaust Studies. He coedited the Encyclopedia of American Jewish History (2008, with Eunice G. Pollack), which won Booklist’s Editor’s Choice Award. © in this web service Cambridge University Press www.cambridge.org Cambridge University Press 978-1-107-03601-7 - Antisemitism and the American Far Left Stephen H.
    [Show full text]
  • Truman Asks Solons for Aid for Chinese
    » TUZSDAT, raBBVABT IT, 1M> T W t l V ^ ^nrl|»Bt»r Eortting IfrraUt Averagn DsHy Clrealstlea » V •v llw Manta M Jesesfy, IM A BOO, Kenneth Charles, waa Thy Holy Wounds X Flad”, eom- bom February 7, at Altoona, Pa. Jap Beetles Are Not Des4; poaad by Johann B. Koenig ITSS. 9,452 Second Sermon The aervlGe*wlU cloee, aa has Fuel Shortage A b o u t T o w n General hospital, to Mr. and Mrs. Seen in East Center St. • at tas AnMt Kenneth Gam. Mrs. Gam waa the been customary, wtth aa evening •41 fonner Miss Jdarlanne Femuaon, hymn, the well-kaown “ Sun of My Is Seen Ended TtM Tiimmirli CUaa o f Um The Jap beetlea are back. O f the Series Soul, Thou Savior Daar, It la Not Ohureh of *tl>e Nawroao wni matt dMighter of Mr. and Mrs. Cliarles Ihren before the grip of winter Manchestsr^A CUy of ViUego Charm EL ¥>rguson of IPS East Centsr Night If Thou ^ Near,” baaed oa thiB evening at 7:45 at the home has been thoroughly looaened, the well-known worda of the Goe^ street of Ura. John IfcAUiatar, M Wada- reports hav*e come In that six Rev. Paul G. Prokopy to pel o f Luke: "AhMe with ua, for Unless Prolonged Cold yOL. LXVH., NO. IIS •n Fags t6 > MANCHESTER, CONN., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18,1948 (EIGHTEEN PAGES) PRICE FOUR CENIH worth atreet. A full attendance la live beetles who apparently it la toward evening, and the day WEDNESDAY u t ^ aa theie will be btialneM of The Manchester Ski Club will managed to keep oosy during Preach Tomorrow Eve* is far spent." Weather Sets In From Importance.
    [Show full text]
  • Toledo Union Journal
    Defend Labor Official TOLEDO UNION -JOURNAL Toledo CIO _____________pr«*eBt<ny 59,999 CIO Memh erg I w_JV o r th w e st e rs Ohio Publication Vol. 6, No. 10 48,000 Circulation TOLEDO, OHIO, FKIDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1918 Price 5c Local 12 At CIO School Gosser To Seek Co-op W abace Candidate Wins Sentiment Richard Gosser, UAW vice- In New York City Vote presiden, revealed today thal he was seeking to discover the sentiment in Toledo relative I to the organization of a co­ -f '> operatively owned store. Btrrko Asks Defends Minority Third Party .Man Beats In explaining his interest in nr! the co-op movement, the UAW’ sate:*; vice-president said: “I know that TIUC Leave Opponents Two-to-One there is considerable sentiment Vice-Mayor Thomas H. ... '■ here favorable to the. co-opera­ NEW YORK, Feb. 18 (Special Wire)—Leo Isacson, can­ tive movement. I also know .that Burke’s application to the To­ didate of the American Labor Party, backed by Henry Wal­ the time is ripe for organizing ledo Industrial Union Council lace and his third party movement, scored a decisive victory such a plan in Toledo, but I for an indefinite leave of ab­ would like to have some ex­ over three opponents here yesterday in a special congres­ pression from the people before sence from his executive sec­ sional election. undertaking this important retary duties for the TIUC will Isacson’s victory which was labeled as a blow to the work.” be one of the principal matters to come before the CIO delegates Democrats took place in the Bronx which has been a Demo­ Mr.
    [Show full text]
  • Of Nationhood
    Preface DREAMS OF NATIONHOOD American Jewish Communists and the Soviet Birobidzhan Project, 1924-1951 i A BBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS JEWISH IDENTITIES IN POST MODERN SOCIETY Series Editor: Roberta Rosenberg Farber – Yeshiva University Editorial Board: Sara Abosch – University of Memphis Geoffrey Alderman – University of Buckingham Yoram Bilu – Hebrew University Steven M. Cohen – Hebrew Union College – Jewish Institute of Religion Bryan Daves – Yeshiva University Sergio Della Pergola – Hebrew University Simcha Fishbane – Touro College Deborah Dash Moore – University of Michigan Uzi Rebhun – Hebrew University Reeva Simon –Yeshiva University Chaim I. Waxman – Rutgers University ii Preface Dreams of Nationhood: American Jewish Communists and the Soviet Birobidzhan Project, 1924-1951 Henry Felix Srebrnik Boston 2010 iii List of Illustrations Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Srebrnik, Henry Felix. American Jewish communists and the Soviet Birobidzhan project, 1924-1951 / Henry Felix Srebrnik. p. cm. -- (Jewish identities in post modern society) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-1-936235-11-7 (hardback) 1. Jews--United States--Politics and government--20th century. 2. Jewish communists--United States--History--20th century. 3. Communism--United States--History--20th century. 4. Icor. 5. Birobidzhan (Russia)--History. 6. Evreiskaia avtonomnaia oblast (Russia)--History. I. Title. E184.J4S74 2010 973'.04924--dc22 2010024428 Copyright © 2010 Academic Studies Press All rights reserved Cover and interior design by Adell Medovoy Published by Academic Studies Press in 2010 28 Montfern Avenue Brighton, MA 02135, USA [email protected] www.academicstudiespress.com iv Effective December 12th, 2017, this book will be subject to a CC-BY-NC license. To view a copy of this license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.
    [Show full text]