C American Civil Liberties Union Pamphlets, 1913-1937 2537 1.6 linear feet This collection is available at The State Historical Society of Missouri. If you would like more information, please contact us at [email protected]. INTRODUCTION The papers contain printed pamphlets and reports on issues involving civil liberties, published by the American Civil Liberties Union and such related organizations as the Free Speech League and the League for Industrial Democracy. Also included is miscellaneous socialist and communist literature. DONOR INFORMATION The papers were transferred to the University of Missouri form the UMC Ellis Library on 28 March 1968 (Accession No. 3752). FOLDER LIST f. 1 "On Liberty of the Press for Advocating Resistance to Government Being Part of an Essay Written for the Encyclopedia Britannica, Sixth Edition, 1821." James Mill. Reprinted, with introduction by Theodore Schroeder, by the Free Speech League, New York, 1913. f. 2 "Some Aspects of the Constitutional Questions Involved in the Draft Act of May 18, 1917." New York and Washington, American Union Against Militarism. f. 3 "The War and the Intellectuals," Randolph Bourne. Reprinted from The Seven Arts (June 1917) by the American Union Against Militarism, New York. f. 4 "Constitutional Rights in War Time." New York, American Union Against Militarism, 1917. f. 5 "'Not Guilty!' Chicago, National Office of the Socialist Party, 1917. f. 6 "National Civil Liberties Bureau." New York, National Civil Liberties Bureau, November, 1917. f. 7 "Liberty in Wartime! The issue in the United States today in the light of England's experience." Alice Edgerton. Reprinted from the New York Evening Post (December 20, 1917). f. 8 "Who Are the Traitors?" New York, National Civil Liberties Bureau, January, 1918. f. 9 "The 'Knights of Liberty' Mob and the I.W.W. Prisoners at Tulsa, Oklahoma, New York, National Civil Liberties Bureau, February, 1918. f. 10 The Outrage on Rev. Herbert S. Bigelow of Cincinnati, Ohio." New York, National Civil Liberties Bureau, March, 1918. f. 11 The Truth about the I.W.W.: Facts in relation to the trial at Chicago by competent industrial investigators and noted economists." New York, National Civil Liberties Bureau, April, 1918. f. 12 "The World Safe for Democracy." John A. Hobson. Reprinted from C2537 American Civil Liberties Union Pamphlets, 1913-1937 Page 2 Survey (June 29, 1918) by the National Civil Liberties Bureau. f. 13 "Espionage Act Cases with Certain Others on Related Points - New law in making as to criminal utterance in war-time." Compiled and edited by Walter Nelles. New York, National Civil Liberties Bureau, July, 1918. f. 14 "Freedom of Speech in War Time." Zechariah Chafee, Jr. Cambridge, Harvard Law Review, 1919. f. 15 "The I.W.W.: Its History, Structure, and Methods." Vincent St. John. Chicago, Industrial Workers of the World, 1919. f. 16 'The Right To His Day In Court': Shall Lawyers Defend Those Deemed To Be Adversaries of Our Government." New York, National Civil Liberties Bureau f. 17 "American Deportation and Exclusion Laws." Charles Recht. New York, National Civil Liberties Bureau, 1919. f. 18 "Conscientious Objectors: Remarks of Hon. William E. Mason of Illinois in the House of Representatives, Monday, March 3, 1919." Washington, Government Printing Office. f. 19 "Memorandum Regarding the Persecution of the Radical Labor Movement in the United States." New York, National Civil Liberties Bureau, 1919. f. 20 "India's Freedom in American Courts." New York, Friends of Freedom for India, 1919. f. 21 The Arbitrator, Vol. 2, No. 3 (August, 1919). f. 22 "Hysteria or Common Sense." Reprinted from The New York World (November 16, 1919) by the National Civil Liberties Bureau, New York. f. 23 "Brief and Argument of Gilbert E. Roe in Behalf of Benjamin Glassberg, Teacher." New York, The Teachers' Union, l919. f. 24 "Justice to the-I.W.W." Alexander Sidney Lanier. Reprinted from The New Republic (April 19, 1919) by the American Civil Liberties Union, New York. f. 25 "The Mob Mind Vs. Civil Liberty." Everett Dean Martin. Reprinted from The Behavior of Crowds (New York, Harper and Brothers, 1920) by the American Civil Liberties Union. f. 26 Do We Need More Sedition Laws?" New York, American Civil Liberties Union, l920. f. 27 "The Old America and the New” Judah L. Magnes. New York, American Civil Liberties Union, l920. f. 28 "The Truth About the Lusk Committee! A Report Prepared by the Legislative Committee of the People's Freedom Union." McAlister Coleman, editor. New York, The Nation Press, Inc., March 1920. f. 29 "Since the Buford Sailed: A Summary of the Developments in the Deportation Situation." Albert De Silver. New York, American Civil Liberties union, June, 1920. f. 30 "Seeing Red: Civil Liberty and Law in the Period Following the War." Walter Nelles. New York, American Civil Liberties Union, August, C2537 American Civil Liberties Union Pamphlets, 1913-1937 Page 3 1920. f. 31 "Report upon the Illegal Practices of the United States Department of Justice." Prepared May, 1920. Reprinted for Workers' Defense Union, New York, November, 1920. f. 32 "The Conscientious Objectors Set Free." Reprinted from The Nation (December 8, 1920) by the American Civil Liberties Union, New York. f. 33 "The Deportation Cases of 1919-1920." Constantine M. Panunzio. New York, Commission on the Church and Social Service, 1921 f. 34 The Police and the Radicals: What 88 chiefs think and do about radical meetings." New York, American Civil Liberties Union, March 1921 f. 35 "The Supreme Court vs. Civil Liberty: Dissenting opinions of Justices Brandeis and Holmes in cases affecting civil liberty." Compiled by Albert De Silver. New York, American Civil Liberties Union, April, 1921. f. 36 "Lynching and Debt-Slavery." William Pickens. New York, American Civil Liberties Union, May 1921. f. 37 "The Ku Klux Klan." Albert De Silver. Reprinted from The Nation (September 14, 1921) by the American Civil Liberties Union, New York. f. 38 "Irrepressible America." Scott Nearing. New York, League for Industrial Democracy, 1922. f. 39 "The Truth About the I.W.W. Prisoners." New York, American Civil Liberties Union, April 1922. f. 40 "Why Two Governors Freed Political Prisoners." American Civil Liberties Union, New York, February 1923. f. 41 "Mob Violence in the United States." New York, American Civil Liberties Union, March, 1923. f. 42 "War Map of West Virginia." New York, American Civil Liberties Union, March 1923. f. 43 "Public Opinion: Where Does it Stand on the Question of Amnesty of Political Prisoners?" Chicago, General Defense Committee. September, 1923. f. 44 "The Denial of Civil Liberties in the Coal Fields." Winthrop D. Lane. New York, League for Industrial Democracy, 1924. f. 45 "Outstanding Features of the Sacco-Vanzetti Case Together with Letters from the Defendants," Elizabeth Glendower Evans. Boston, New England Civil Liberties Committee, January 1924. f. 46 "The Nation-Wide Spy System Centering in the Department of Justice." New York, American Civil Liberties Union, May 1924. f. 47 "Civil Liberty." New York, American Civil Liberties Union, November 1924. f. 48 "Propaganda and Conscription of Public Opinion." Zechariah Chafee, Jr. Reprinted from the Harvard Alumni Bulletin (December 11, 1924) by the American C1v1l Liberties Union, New York. f. 49 "Unlawful Assembly in Paterson," New York, American Civil Liberties C2537 American Civil Liberties Union Pamphlets, 1913-1937 Page 4 Union, May 1925. f. 50 "Foreign Dictators of American Rights: The Tresca and Karolyi Cases." New York, American Civil Liberties Union, June 1925. f. 51 "The Tennessee Evolution Case." Roberts. Keebler, n. p., l925. f. 52 "Statement-of Facts, Assignment of Errors, Brief and Argument in Behalf of John Thomas Scopes, Plaintiff in Error." September 1925. f. 53 "The State Department's Ban on Saklatvala: The Facts in a Case of International Significance." New York, American Civil Liberties Union, November 1925. f. 54 "The Registration of Aliens A Dangerous Project." Max J. Kohler, editor, 1926. f. 55 "What Do You Think? Nine Revealing Documents." Boston, Sacco- Vanzetti Defense Committee, l926. f. 56 "Free-Speech 1925-1926: The work of the American Civil Liberties Union." New York, American Civil Liberties Union, April, 1926. f. 57 "Sacco and Vanzetti Speak to Judge Thayer." Boston, Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee, l927. f. 58 "There Is Justice: A Summary of the Sacco Vanzetti Case." New York, Sacco-Vanzetti National League, l927. f. 59 "Massachusetts the Murderer," Boston, Sacco Vanzetti Defense Committee, 1927. f. 60 "Anti-Evolution Laws." New York, American Civil Liberties Union, January, 1927. f. 61 Opinion of the Tennessee Supreme Court re plea of John Thomas Scopes, 1927. f. 62 "The Trial of Sacco and Vanzetti: A Summary of the Outstanding Testimony." Louis Bernheimer. New York 1927. f. 63 "Was It Murder?" Walker C. Smith. Seattle, Washington Branch General Defense Committee May 1927. f. 64 "There's Only One Kind of Americanism." Rupert Hughes. Reprinted from The American Legion Magazine (July 1927) by the American Civil Liberties Union, New York. f. 65 "The Supreme Court Vs. Civil Liberty." New York, American Civil Liberties Union, October, 1927. f. 66 "The Shame of Pennsylvania." New York, American Civil Liberties Union, 1928. f. 67 "The New Jersey Case Against Roger N. Baldwin." New York, American Civil Liberties Union, February 1928. f. 68 "The War on the Colorado Miners." New York, American Civil Liberties Union, February 1928. f. 69 "The Blue Menace." Elizabeth McCausland. The Springfield Massachusetts Republican (March 19-27, 1928). f. 70 "Contempt By Publication in the United States." Walter Nelles and Carol Weiss King. Reprinted from The Columbia Law Review (April and May, 1928) by C2537 American Civil Liberties Union Pamphlets, 1913-1937 Page 5 the American Civil Liberties Union, New York. f. 71 "The Victory in New Jersey." New York, American Civil Liberties Union, June 1928. f.
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