Engineer Union Toilers Protest Miss Jobless

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Engineer Union Toilers Protest Miss Jobless DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, MARCH 20, 1930 Page Three Just Like Whalen Fascist Legion Pays to Slug Jobless LONDON MEET DEBACLE WORKERS CORRESPONDENCE-FROM THE SHOPS COMMITTEE OF SHOWS HEADLONG RACE 110,000 WIRES TO INTO NEW WORLD WAR NO MORE STARVING, BUT FIGHT, WRITE WASHINGTON Whole Fabric of Fake Peace Meet Falls; Stim- (son Scolded by MacDonald for Trick on Japan NEGRO WORKERS The Jobless Refuse to Starve; WillFight AllImperialist Powers Rush War Preparations; Victimized by Bosses, Landlords, “Charity”, J inc. (Continued from Page One ) Secret “Talks” for Attack on Soviet They Find Out Meaning of Class Struggle Chambers6(MeSts-NewYorkCity v : i we suggest Friday, March 21. Please wire answer.” LONDON, March 19.—There is no as part of the general war prepara- attempts of British imperialism. The They See Their Children Starve, and Realize In elaboration of the delegation’s Five-Power conference. All tions yesterday of the imperialist bandit powers to estimates approved provide for an They Must Organize action Wm. Z. Foster, come to “agreements” for increased expenditure of $89,250,000 for war Kr. Wllli&a B. O’Neill, stated: 466 Islington Avenue, war was smashed on the naval craft alone. While MacDonald “This Senate Committee now in armaments (By a Worker Correspondent.) house in a chair. the charity New Tork Citj spouts peace, does hesitate Still session is making a pretense at in- rock of growing imperialist rivalries. he not to man said that he could go to work, Boon 409 by giving CLEVELAND, Ohio.—Am an un- vestigating unemployment. Nobody MacDonald and Stimson are hang- act for war the imperial- they don’t care how sick we are, ing on to attempt money build ma- employed Negro worker. I went to in America can speak more authori- in order to fool ists to their war they want us to go to work. Stic n&n la sent toy us. chinery. charity for help sev- tatively name 7,000,000 the masses as to the real nature of the and went But where will we go to work, in the of you. unemployed workers than the repre- the race-for-armamcnts meet when In the United States, work is eral times, when my husband was every place they said, no help need- Thank it sentatives of the mass demonstra- first convened. rapidly proceeding on the ten 10,000 sick in the hospital for three months ed, no help needed, what are we (Miss) Edith Wray Devlin, tions of March 6. Ifwe to this Yesterday in the House of Com- ton cruisers, several of which will and home sick for three more going to do? charity is only Employment manager get Chiappe is the chief police The hearing we to mqns, Commander J. M. Kenworthy, be launched soon. French imper- of months, listen, go on a bunk, just i will undertake present Paris, and just like Whalen, he I would the wait and see what they one of MacDonald’s collaborators, is rapidly carrying out its of streets and pick up that which did, I had go there j the demands of the unemployed for ialism attacked the workers on was to again, because blurted out “The conference is a naval war building program, nor arc French work or wages, to expose the wage March when they came thrown away and a friend that lives the visiting nurse comes around and The above is a photographic reproduction of one of the many terrible failure. It would be better Japanese capitalists 6, out to | cuts and speed-up and part-time the Italian and demonstrate against unemploy- down stairs in the same tenement, makes us go there. Then what hap- letters given by the American Legion in New York to its members, to close up the conference now.” in this respect. her and my ; schemes being put over on the work- backward ment. Even the troops girl girl we would send pens, I take my baby with me be- which entitled them to $5 for appearing at the Union Square mass The conference closed down long were called Saturday | ers to force them to bear the burden While the conference is closed, out. But also like Whalen and his them every to the Central cause he is the one that needed unemployment demonstration on March 0 to help Whalen’s cossacks. before Kenworthy discovered the Market to get the they help, he needed good milk, well, Many i of the economic crisis of capitalism. maneuvers go on privately. That war bosses, Chiappe got a scare. stale meat of the unemployed Legionnaires who were given $.5 to help slug i failure” business. Un- want. go charity I jobless Legion | And w-e will expose also the fakery maneuvers against the Soviet Union employment is rapidly growing in don’t when I to the doctor demonstrators told the to go to hell; that they rvcrc All imperialist powers are rapidly pay 10 of the capitalists and their social 1 form the chief subject of conversa- France along with the crisis, and The landlord said at that time I have to the doctor cents for unemployed themselves and would not do the bosses’ dirty work. yushing their naval war building went a visit, cents Legion ! fascist flunkeys in the A. F. of L. tion at these secret and private in- the %vorkers are in no mood to i had to move, so I back to the and then 10 for a bottle A worker member of the turned the above letter over to programs—in fact, this was never charity again, the charity man said of milk, I would like to know where the Daily Worker with an exposure the tactics the j and the ‘socialist’ party in lying formal meetings of the imperialist stand more speed-up, wage cuts of of American interrupted by the quarreling and for that they pay one and charity part in. All they Legion Presumably ; about the conditions and protecting bandits is beyond question. This and repression. Moreover, the would month the comes on behalf of the bosses. the Mr. O’Neill mentioned quibblings at the Five-Power meet. no more. He said I and my want to do all the time is to rob in the letter was in charge the charged with the bosses from the demands of the fact that the boss press tries French troops are nd so "reliable” that of crew carrying out Today the House of Commons to boy could take care of the rent and the poor workers, and us Negroes this fascist mission. I working class.” and show a tendency to fraternize * * * passed an increase air-force burget, keep as quiet as possible. other expenses, when my boy was more because they think we are with the workers instead of shoot Organize. them. sick himself, but they tried to make dumb, but they are mistaken, we Providence Jobless “Socialists” Smell of Oil him go out and work, he was just are going to fight these bosses. PROVIDENCE, R. 1., Mar. 19. able to sit up in bed and around the —NEGRO WORKER, NO JOB. TOILERS PROTEST ENGINEER UNION i A meeting of the Unemployed Coun- (Inprecorr Press Service) The Soviet share of the German oil cils was held at Providence, and a MOSCOW.—Referring to the ne- imports in 1924 was 1.8 per cent, State Executive Board was elected, JUDGE ADMITS How A* F. L. “Solves” Unemployment— also delegates to the National Con- gotiations between the German gov- but in 1929 it had risen to 10.3 per Tt MISS JOBLESS AGENT ACCUSED ! ernment and the Shell and Standard cent and was still rising rapidly Blames the Women Workers | ference at New York on March 29. Oil concerns concerning the estab- to the discomfort of the international A decision was made that a state of an oil monopoly in Ger- oil magnates. demonstration be held in the near lishment IS CLASS CASE (By a Worker Correspondent) struggles and strikes but they give Demand the Release of Got Mysterious $36,100 many in the hands of these con- The oil barons, Deterding and i future, the State Executive to begin CLEVELAND, Ohio.—While the them answers to their questions of 1 cerns, “Pravda” writes Teagle, had now found reliable N. Y. Delegation During Lobby Stunt preparations at once; that in the the that the allies Communist Party and the Trade unemployment and the problems that i efforts of international capitalism in their struggle against Soviet oil of Jufy ! next few weeks meetings and demon- Question Trial Union Unity League are leading the are confronting them. (Continued to an ring against —the German democracy. The from Page On#) WASHINGTON, I). C„ March 18. strations be held in Central Falls, form economic social unemployed workers em- F. of a company union j the Soviet Union becoming social democratic minister Hilferd- Is Political Matter and the The A. L. is against the revengeful capitalist —Claudius Huston, G.O.P. national Woonsocket, Pawtucket Valley and are ployed workers in fighting for re- and cannot be expected to tell the clearer and clearer. ing arranged the Swedish match class justice that now seeks to let I! chairman and lobbyist against pub- other cities, and that a half-day (Continued Page One) lief, the representatives of the Am- the truth, they are Having succeeded in squeezing the monopoly, and the German govern- from workers when loose its terror upon the leaders of lic operation of the government pow- strike be called for the next demon- breaks all over the world.
Recommended publications
  • The Courant Sponsored by the Syracuse University Library Associates ISSN 1554-2688
    pecial Collectio n of the S ns Researc lleti h Cen A Bu ter number six spring 2007 THE COUraNT Sponsored by the Syracuse University Library Associates ISSN 1554-2688 Exhibition on the Case of Sacco and Vanzetti Will Be Unveiled for the Fall Semester of 2007 The Special Collections Research Center, as its contri- bution to the university’s Syracuse Symposium with its theme of justice commencing in the fall of 2007, will open an exhibition entitled The Never-Ending Wrong: The Execution of Sacco and Vanzetti based upon its consider- able content documenting the trial of Sacco and Vanzetti and the protests surrounding it. The two Italian anarchists were found guilty of murder in conjunction with an armed robbery in Massachusetts, condemned to death, and execut- ed in 1927. Due to the depth of our holdings in the area of radicalism as it manifested itself in literature and art, we are particularly well prepared to present the wide range of national and international protest that was generated by this sensational trial. As the image on this page attests, critics even likened it to the Salem witchcraft trials of 1692. The core of the exhibition consists of the printed ephem- era that was produced by the Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee and the other contemporary progressive orga- Political cartoon entitled Have a Chair! by Fred Ellis. (See nizations that could see only a travesty of justice in the pro- the piece on Ellis on page eight.) This appeared as one of his works published in The Case of Sacco and Vanzetti in Cartoons ceedings.
    [Show full text]
  • Writing Book 2004
    THE IMPACT OF SOUTHERN HERITAGE AND SOCIALIST IDEOLOGY ON THE RHETORICAL STYLE OF MYRA PAGE Laura Northcutt University of North Carolina –Chapel Hill In 1954 Lillian O’Connor published Pioneer Women Orators, in which she details Aristotle’s the - ory of rhetoric and how women carved their own rhetorical sphere out of it. She asserts that the Bill of Rights launched these attempts in the United States and that “it is time they were examined” (98). However, it was not until decades later that many scholars began seriously devoting time to the study of women’s rhetoric. Recent works such as Jacqueline Bacon’s The Humblest May Stand Forth and Cheryl Glenn’s Rhetoric Retold chronicle women’s use of rhetoric and the struggles they have faced in establishing themselves as “capable and influential rhetors” (Bacon 112). My study builds upon this body of important scholarship by exploring the postsuffrage era rhetoric of a woman, Myra Page, who was compelled to reconcile her Southern heritage and socialist ideology. In the process, she further expanded the sphere of women’s rhetoric. Page’s innovative rhetorical style can be seen through her heavy use of logos, as favored by the male leadership of the socialist movement, and the absence of modesty topos associated with Southern femininity. However, she is also able to maintain her Southern femininity through using pathos, which allows her to adhere to the standards of socialist rhetoric. Page’s 1937 article “We Want Our Children,” which addresses the controversial issue of abortion, serves as a useful site for charting her rhetorical acumen.
    [Show full text]
  • Representations in the Inter-War Years of the American White Working Class by Four Female Authors Paul Ha
    1 The Story Less Told: Representations in the Inter-War Years of the American White Working Class by Four Female Authors Paul Harper A thesis submitted for the degree of MPhil in Literature Department of Literature, Film and Theatre Studies University of Essex March 2017 2 Contents - Abstract p. 4 - 1: Introduction p. 5 Thesis Outline The Authors to be Studied Social and Historical Context - 2: Terminology and Concepts p. 31 Working class Sex and Gender Women’s Writing The Male Gaze Propaganda Propaganda and Art Proletarian Art - 3. Anzia Yezierska p. 55 Yezierska’s Life Yezierska’s Style Yezierska’s Conclusions: An ‘American’ Author: Bread Givers, Arrogant Beggar, and Salome of the Tenements Salome of the Tenements Presentations of Sonya in Salome of the Tenements Conclusion - 4. Fielding Burke p. 95 Burke’s Life Burke’s Style Call Home the Heart and A Stone Came Rolling 3 Presentations of Ishma in Call Home the Heart and A Stone Came Rolling Conclusion - 5. Grace Lumpkin p. 129 Lumpkin’s Life Lumpkin’s Shifting Perspective: Analysis focused on The Wedding and Full Circle Lumpkin’s 1930s Proletarian Novels: A Sign for Cain and To Make My Bread Conclusion - 6. Myra Page p. 173 Page’s Life The Feminist Theme in Page’s ‘Other’ 1930s Novels: Moscow Yankee & Daughter of the Hills Gathering Storm Conclusion - 7. Conclusion p. 209 - Bibliography p. 217 4 Abstract This thesis will study novels written in the interwar years by four female authors: Anzia Yezierska, Fielding Burke, Grace Lumpkin, and Myra Page. While a general overview of these authors’ biographies, writing styles, themes, and approaches to issues surrounding race and religion will be provided, the thesis’ main focuses are as follows: studying the way in which the authors treat gender through their representation of working-class women; exploring the interaction between art and propaganda in their novels; and considering the extent to which their backgrounds and life experiences influence their writing.
    [Show full text]
  • The Trade Union Unity League: American Communists and The
    LaborHistory, Vol. 42, No. 2, 2001 TheTrade Union Unity League: American Communists and the Transitionto Industrial Unionism:1928± 1934* EDWARDP. JOHANNINGSMEIER The organization knownas the Trade UnionUnity League(TUUL) came intoformal existenceat anAugust 1929 conferenceof Communists and radical unionistsin Cleveland.The TUUL’s purposewas to create and nourish openly Communist-led unionsthat wereto be independent of the American Federation ofLabor in industries suchas mining, textile, steeland auto. When the TUUL was created, a numberof the CommunistParty’ s mostexperienced activists weresuspicious of the sectarian logic inherentin theTUUL’ s program. In Moscow,where the creation ofnew unions had beendebated by theCommunists the previous year, someAmericans— working within their establishedAFL unions—had argued furiously against its creation,loudly ac- cusingits promoters ofneedless schism. The controversyeven emerged openly for a time in theCommunist press in theUnited States. In 1934, after ve years ofaggressive butmostly unproductiveorganizing, theTUUL was formally dissolved.After the Comintern’s formal inauguration ofthe Popular Front in 1935 many ofthe same organizers whohad workedin theobscure and ephemeral TUULunions aided in the organization ofthe enduring industrial unionsof the CIO. 1 Historiansof American labor andradicalism have had difculty detectingany legitimate rationale for thefounding of theTUUL. Its ve years ofexistence during the rst years ofthe Depression have oftenbeen dismissed as an interlude of hopeless sectarianism,
    [Show full text]
  • THE RED DECADE by EUGENE LYONS
    THE RED DECADE By EUGENE LYONS THE WE AND DEATH OF SACCOAND v ANZE'ITI Moscow CARRoUSEL Six Sovrsr PLAYS (ed.) WE CoVER THE WoRLn (ed.) AssIGNMENT IN UTOPIA STALIN, CZAR OF Au. THE RusSIAS \ THE RED DECADE The Stalinist Penetration of America ,/ r Eugene Lyons I<! ?~tdi 1 n. ~ ~ 11 __..._,~t..4..i THE BOBBS-MERRILL COMPANY PUBLISHERS INDIANAPOLIS NEW YORK COPYRIGHT, 1941, BY THE BOBBS-MERRILL COMPANY FIRST EDITION PRINTED AND BOUND BY THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS CORP. G,ARDEN CITY, N. Y., U.S. A. TABLE OF CONTENTS CHAPTER PAGE INTRODUCTION: IN DEFENSE OF RED-BAITING • 9 I THE FIVE AGES OF THE COMMUNIST INTERNATIONAL. 20 II A PARTY Is BoRN • • • • • 29 III BORING FROM WITHIN • • • • 37 IV THE Moscow SoLAR SYSTEM • • 47 v THE AMERICAN PARTY Is PURGED 53 VI A Mn.QUETOAST TAKES COMMAND • 63 VII THE RED DECADE DAWNS • • • 70 VIII FASCISM HAs THE RIGHT OF WAY • 82 IX THE CULT OF RussIA-WoRSHIP. 92 x THE LmERALS INVENT A UTOPIA • • 102 XI APOLOGISTSDo THEIR STUFF • • 114 XII THE RED CULTURAL RENAISSANCE. 128 XIII MoRE PLANETS ARE LAUNCHED • • 141 XIV Moscow Aoor-rs THE TROJAN HoRSE. 158 xv COMMUNISM BECOMES AMERICANISM• 170 XVI THE INCREDIBLEREVOLUTION SPREADS 183 XVII AMERICAN LEAGUE FOR SOVIET w AR MONGERING• 195 XVIII STALIN's CHILDREN'S HoUR IN THE U.SA .. 204 XIX STALIN MUSCLES IN ON AMERICAN LlBOR. • 219 xx RussIAN PURGES AND AMERICAN LIBERALS . 235 XXI HOORAY FOR MURDER! • • • • •• • 246 XXII "FRIENDS OF THE G.P.U." • • • • • 257 XXIII CoCICTAn.s FOR SPANISH DEMOCRACY. 268 XXIV REVOLUTION COMES TO HOLLYWOODAND BROADWAY • 284 xxv AMERICA'S OWN POPULAR FRONT GOVERNMENT 298 XXVI THE TYPEWRITER FRONT • • .
    [Show full text]
  • I N Memory of Hosea Hudson, Griot of Alabama Radicalism
    HAMMER AND HOE THE FRED W. MORRISON SERIES IN SOUTHERN STUDIES HAMMER AND HOE ALABAMA COMMUNISTS DURING THE GREAT DEPRESSION ROBIN D. G. KELLEY THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA PRESS . CHAPEL HILL AND LONDON O 1990 The University of North Carolina Press All rights reserved Manufactured in the United States of America The paper in this book meets the guidelines for permanence and durability of the Committee on Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the Council on Library Resources. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Kelley, Robin D. G. Hammer and hoe : Alabama Communists during the Great Depression I by Robin D. G. Kelley. p. cm.+The Fred W. Morrison series in Southern studies) Includes bibliographical references. ISBN 0-8078-1921-2 (alk. paper).-ISBN 0-80784288-5 (pbk : alk. paper) I. Communism-Alabama-History-20th century. 2. Communists- Alabama-History-20th century. 3. Depressions-l 929-Alabama. I. Title. II. Series. HX9 1 .A2K45 1 990 324.276 1 '075'09042-dc20 n memory of Hosea Hudson, griot of Alabama radicalism, Iwhose assiduous note-taking and impeccable memory made this book possible, and for Diedra Harris-Kelley, whose love, criticism, encouragement, and heroic tolerance for living in pov- erty made this book a reality . CONTENTS Preface xi Acknowledgments xvii Abbreviations xxi Prologue. Radical Genesis: Birmingham, 1870-1930 1 PART 1. THE UNDERGROUND, 1929-1935 ONE An Invisible Army: Jobs, Relief, and the Birth of a Movement 13 TWO In Egyptland: The Share Croppers' Union 34 THREE Organize or Starve!: Communists, Labor, and Antiradical Violence 57 FOUR In the Heart of the Trouble: Race, Sex, and the ILD 78 FIVE Negroes Ain' Black-But Red!: Black Communists and the Culture of Opposition 92 PART 11.
    [Show full text]
  • Literary Criticism and Cultural Theory
    Literary Criticism and Cultural Theory Edited by William E. Cain Professor of English Wellesley College A Routledge Series Literary Criticism and Cultural Theory William E. Cain, General Editor Postmodernism and Its Others Revisiting Vietnam The Fiction of Ishmael Reed, Kathy Acker, Memoirs, Memorials, Museums and Don DeLillo Julia Bleakney Jeffrey Ebbesen Equity in English Renaissance Different Dispatches Literature Journalism in American Modernist Prose Thomas More and Edmund Spenser David T. Humphries Andrew J. Majeske Divergent Visions, Contested Spaces “You Factory Folks Who Sing This The Early United States through the Rhyme Will Surely Understand” Lens of Travel Culture, Ideology, and Action in the Gastonia Jeffrey Hotz Novels of Myra Page, Grace Lumpkin, and Olive Dargan “Like Parchment in the Fire” Wes Mantooth Literature and Radicalism in the English Civil War “Visionary Dreariness” Prasanta Chakravarty Readings in Romanticism’s Quotidian Sublime Between the Angle and the Curve Markus Poetzsch Mapping Gender, Race, Space, and Identity in Willa Cather and Toni Morrison Fighting the Flames Danielle Russell The Spectacular Performance of Fire at Coney Island Rhizosphere Lynn Kathleen Sally Gilles Deleuze and the “Minor” American Writings of William James, W.E.B. Du Bois, Idioms of Self-Interest Gertrude Stein, Jean Toomer, and Credit, Identity, and Property in English William Faulkner Renaissance Literature Mary F. Zamberlin Jill Phillips Ingram The Spell Cast by Remains Machine and Metaphor The Myth of Wilderness in Modern The Ethics of Language in American Realism American Literature Jennifer Carol Cook Patricia A. Ross “Keeping Up Her Geography” Strange Cases Women’s Writing and Geocultural Space in The Medical Case History and the Twentieth-Century U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Reading the Autobiography of American Communism*
    IRSH 53 (2008), pp. 395–423 doi:10.1017/S0020859008003532 r 2008 Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis Was the Personal Political? Reading the Autobiography of American Communism* J AMES R. BARRETT SUMMARY: Taking the communist memoir as a sub-genre of working-class autobiography, the article analyzes, first, the characteristics of the communist autobiography, the conditions under which such works were produced, and their intended functions. Second, the article considers some personal dimensions of American communist history and how this more subjective side of the history relates to the more familiar political narrative of the movement. Recent feminist and other theory of autobiography are employed to analyze approximately forty communist autobiographies and other personal narrative material to analyze personal love and marriage, child rearing and family life, and self-identity within the party. INTRODUCTION Amid calls for global approaches to the study of history, some labor historians have turned to the more personal dimensions of working-class life through the study of biography and autobiography. While an emphasis on social process, collective experience, and material conditions has largely defined social history for a generation, recent theory, the decline of the labor movement, and political transformations have encouraged some to consider the more subjective aspects of working peoples’ lives. At the same time, the history of American communism has enjoyed a renaissance, with a new generation of anti-communist scholars
    [Show full text]
  • [Name of Collection]
    A Register of the Herbert Romerstein collection 1864-2011 1236 manuscript boxes, 35 oversize boxes, 17 cardfile boxes (573.2 linear feet) Hoover Institution Archives Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305-6010 Phone: (650) 723-3563, Fax: (650) 725-3445 Email: [email protected] http://www.hoover.org/library-and-archives Prepared by Dale Reed 2013, Revised 2016 1 Hoover Institution Library & Archives, 2016 Herbert Romerstein collection, 1864-2011 Collection Summary Collection Title Herbert Romerstein collection, 1883-2009 Collection Number 2012C51 Collector Romerstein, Herbert collector. Extent 1235 manuscript boxes, 36 oversize boxes, 17 cardfile boxes (573.2 linear feet) Repository Hoover Institution Archives Stanford University, Stanford CA, 94305-6010 http://www.hoover.org/library-and-archives Abstract Pamphlets, leaflets, serial issues, studies, reports, and synopses of intelligence documents, relating to the Communist International, communism and communist front organizations in the United States, Soviet espionage and covert operations, and propaganda and psychological warfare, especially during World War II. Physical Location Hoover Institution Archives Language of the materials The collection is in English 2 Hoover Institution Library & Archives, 2016 Herbert Romerstein collection, 1864-2011 Information for Researchers Access Box 519 restricted; use copies available in Box 518. The remainder of the collection is open for research; materials must be requested at least two business days in advance of intended use. Publication Rights For copyright status, please contact the Hoover Institution Archives. Preferred Citation [Identification of item], Herbert Romerstein collection, [Box no.], Hoover Institution Archives Acquisition Information Materials were acquired by the Hoover Institution Archives in 2012 with additional increments thereafter. Accruals Materials may have been added to the collection since this finding aid was prepared.
    [Show full text]
  • Revolutionarywriters on May 1 Questions
    DAILY WORKER. NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JANUARY IS, 1935' Page 5 ittle Lefty Big Hearted! by del Illll&P / Tue only sill “To stop HE LiSTeN<5 1b AaSo t Find iy rS Vtsk;TEk/ i-ll m - <ce ,\ Change lefts nut) uuciz Wmk* 'H* ' ltRR'OLe * I SeRY OF BROtAUYY/ J impossible for. \ Fl* YriiS RKSHf J Wl \ hunger • iay poverty Questions |H John are with-The Pfgp/lfi 1 r— =—v and is n.R.mi rr W hTion and <sufF£Rin&. “3 me in \ now. i’ll-sendI VEiean-ftou-ib WUBmm&l kT\|l 1 listen Workers r benevolent look U-t) properly care. you a cook on rj and .... - .. see MBPRKFfINNie j. ....i . PERWN6 UNO fiSK. HER £oPPoftTof= ■ Answers jjjg World! Goc ML &ILL By ZO2-T daily MICHAEL GOLD (fORMeHt.YH.R- This department appears on the feature page. All questions should he addressed to "Ques- APHIS Father Coughlin has at last got vTH£ MflC>flMiS"NoY tions and Answers,” c/o Daily Worker, 50 East IN'* Oi>TSeN(*S HER. to the point where he wants to I3th Street, New York City. around • flSSiSTfmr, EDWARD * • have every Communist shot, A. B. Magil - HE 'o Question: Is there equality of pay in the Soviet reports. Norman Thomas is a nice man, ANN &DRLRK'£ INfR^DUC* Union? If there is economic inequality, will net and the good Father says he can work with -ORV REMAPS the better-paid individuals accumulate enough to him, but the Communists are atheists and free- invest for profit?—J. D. lovers, unpatriotic, blood-thirsty monsters, and Answer: In the Soviet Union workers perform Father Coughlin wants their blood for his coffee.
    [Show full text]
  • TOTALITARIANISM and PARTISAN REVIEW Benli
    ABSTRACT Title of Document: DIALECTICS OF DISENCHANTMENT: TOTALITARIANISM AND PARTISAN REVIEW Benli Moshe Shechter, Ph.D., 2011 Directed By: Professor Vladimir Tismaneanu, Department of Government and Politics This dissertation takes the literary and culturally modern magazine, Partisan Review (1934-2003), as its case study, specifically recounting its early intellectual history from 1934 to 1941. During this formative period, its contributing editors broke from their initial engagement with political radicalism and extremism to re-embrace the demo-liberalism of America's foundational principles during, and in the wake of, the Second World War. Indeed, Partisan Review 's history is the history of thinking and re-thinking “totalitarianism” as its editors journeyed through the dialectics of disenchantment. Following their early (mis)adventures pursuant of the radical politics of literature, their break in the history of social and political thought, sounding pragmatic calls for an end to ideological fanaticism, was one that then required courage, integrity, and a belief in the moral responsibility of humanity. Intellectuals long affiliated with the journal thus provide us with models of eclectic intellectual life in pursuit of the open society, as does, indeed, the Partisan Review . DIALECTICS OF DISENCHANTMENT: TOTALITARIANISM AND PARTISAN REVIEW. By BENLI MOSHE SHECHTER Dissertation submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of the University of Maryland, College Park, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy 2011 Advisory Committee: Professor Vladimir Tismaneanu, Chair Professor C. Fred Alford Professor Charles E. Butterworth Professor James M. Glass Professor Roberto Patricio Korzeniewicz © Copyright by Benli M. Shechter 2011 Preface What steered me in the direction of this dissertation topic—beyond my supervisor— was my interest in what seems to be a perennial battle: intellectuals versus anti- intellectuals.
    [Show full text]
  • Information to Users
    INFORMATION TO USERS This manuscript has been reproduced from the microfilm master. UMI films the text directly fi^om the original or copy submitted. Thus, some thesis and dissertation copies are in typewriter fiice, while others may be fi’om any type of computer printer. The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. Broken or indistinct print, colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bleedthrough, substandard margins, and improper alignment can adversely affect reproduction. In the unlikely event that the author did not send UMI a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Oversize materials (e.g., maps, drawings, charts) are reproduced by sectioning the original, beginning at the upper left-hand comer and continuing ftom left to right in equal sections with small overlaps. Each original is also photographed in one exposure and is included in reduced form at the back of the book. Photographs included in the original manuscript have been reproduced xerographically in this copy. Higher quality 6” x 9” black and white photographic prints are available for any photographs or illustrations appearing in this copy for an additional charge. Contact UMI directly to order. UMI A Bell & Howell Information Company 300 North Zed) Road, Ann Arbor MI 48106-1346 USA 313/761-4700 800/521-0600 EDWARD J. O'BRIEN: BEST SHORT STORIES AND THE PRODUCTION OF AN AMERICAN GENRE DISSERTATION Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Jacquelyn S.
    [Show full text]