University of Alabama:
“Tuscaloosa Lynch Officials Drive Out Lawyers For I.L.D.” Aug 15 1933, 1
“Grand Jury Refuses To Indict Thugs Who Kidnapped Joseph Gelders,” Dec 1936, 14
“Disarm Industry,” Mar 1937, 6
University of Chattanooga:
“Comrades Tell of Relief Fight, Communist Party,” Apr 11 1931, 1
“Southern Students Join Strike Against War and Fascism,” May 1935, 4
University of Illinois:
“Army Rags, Slop, Workers’ Pay—But No Jobless Aid,” Jan 10 1931, 1
University of Iowa:
“Negroes Forge Ahead In Sports,” Jan 1937, 10
University of Georgia:
“Negroes Forge Ahead In Sports,” Jan 1937, 10
University of Kentucky:
“Spain: Louisville Hears Plea to Aid Spanish Democracy,” Mar 1937, 12
University Laundry:
“Laundry Boss Cut Pay After Raise Was Promised,” Dec 20 1933, 3
University of North Carolina:
“To Displace Many Farm Workers,” Jan 10 1931, 1
“Southern Students Go To World Meet,” Feb 1935, 2
“Southern Students Join Strike Against War and Fascism,” May 1935, 4
University of Pennsylvania:
“Sell Out 2,000 Phila. Weavers,” May 9 1931, 2
University of Tennessee:
Lynch Law At Work: Knoxville, Tenn., Feb 7 1931, 2
“Southern Students Join Strike Against War and Fascism,” May 1935, 4
University of Texas:
Important News In Short, “Students to Strike Against War,” Mar-Apr 1935, 6
“Southern Students Join Strike Against War and Fascism,” May 1935, 4
University of Virginia:
“Southern Students Go To World Meet,” Feb 1935, 2
“Southern Students Join Strike Against War and Fascism,” May 1935, 4
“Browder Speaks At Virginia,” Sep 1936, 6
Urban League:
“The Bond of Solidarity Grows Stronger,” Nov 8 1930, 4
“Negroes Suffer Most In Crisis,” Nov 22 1930, 1
“The Steel Drive,” Jul 1936, 8
U.S. Cast Iron and Pipe Foundry:
“Speed-Up in Chattanooga U.S. Pipe Shops,” Aug 30 1930, 3
“No Benevolence In A Boss,” Sep 20 1930, 3
“A Day In Hot Kilns For $2.00,” Sep 20 1930, 3
“Making Red Shop Out of U.S. Pipe,” Oct 4 1930, 3
“Use Fines To Speed Workers,” Oct 11 1930, 3
“Protest Stagger Plan; Get Fired,” Nov 29 1930, 3
Untitled, Nov 29 1930, 3
“Foot Mashed in Speed-Up—Then He Is Fired,” Dec 13 1930, 2
“Speed-Up So Great Boss Uses Pistol,” Jan 3 1931, 3
“Lie About Jobs In Chattanooga,” Jan 10 1931, 1
“New Machines At U.S. Pipe Lays Off Workers,” Jan 10 1931, 3
“Workers Fooled About Jobs By Lies In Papers,” Jan 24 1931, 2
“Less Men Do More In U.S. Pipe Foundry,” Jan 31 1931, 3
“Get 1-Day Job and Is Docked for Doctor Bill,” Feb 21 1931, 3
“Red Leaflets Right In Mills,” Feb 28 1931, 1
“Cut Working Week at U.S. Pipe in B’ham.,” May 9 1931, 3
“10¢ Coins For ‘Safety’ And More Speed-Up,” May 30 1931, 4
“Meet To Fight Wage Cut Drive,” Oct 17 1931, 4
“U.S. Pipe Shop Workers Existing on Hunger Wages,” Oct 31 1931, 3
“No Hiring Going On At Pipe Shop Or Rolling Mill,” Jan 20 1934, 3
“Union Worker Wins Freedom In Frame-Up,” Feb 1936, 7
U.S. Coal and Coke Co.:
“Morgan, Mellon, Ford, Insull Back of Murder Gang Active in Harlan,” Oct 3 1931, 1
U.S. Congress Against War and Fascism:
“Southern Delegates Go To National Anti-War Congress,” Oct 1934, 2
“B’ham Girl Goes Anti-War Meet,” Nov 1934, 5
“Morgan, Mellon, Ford, Insull Back of Murder Gang Active in Harlan,” Oct 3 1931, 1
U.S. Football Association:
“Workers’ Soccer League Against Boss Class Sport,” Sep 26 1931, 2
U.S. Rubber Co.:
“Strike Against Wage-Cuts,” Oct 3 1931, 4
U.S. Smelting and Refining:
“Racketeers in Patriotism,” May 1937, 6
USSR:
“What Do We Stand For?” Aug 16 1930, 1
“Workers, Peasants Of China Set Up Own Rule,” Aug 16 1930, 2
“Communists And Election,” Aug 16 1930, 4
“Pledge At Sacco-Vanzetti Meets Save Atlanta Six,” Aug 30 1930, 1
“A.F. of L. Fakers Convene,” Aug 30 1930, 1
“Are Soviet Miners Free?” Aug 30 1930, 3
Cartoon, “A Nice Man,” Sep 20 1930, 1
“No Stretchout In Greenville,” Sep 20 1930, 3
“Build Our Paper,” Sep 27 1930, 1
“Bosses Cry For War On U.S.S.R.,” Oct 4 1930, 1
The Reds Say, Oct 4 1940, 4
A Communist To A Farmer, Oct 18 1930, 3
“Defend The Soviet Union! Vote Communist!” Oct 18 1930, 4
“Fish Trails Reds South,” Oct 25 1930, 1
“Answers A.F. of L. Flogging In Miami By Joining Communists,” Oct 25 1930, 4
A Communist To A Farmer, Nov 1 1930, 4
“Russian Revolution Meet in Charlotte,” Nov 1 1930, 5
“Such Fakers For Bosses’ Candidates,” Nov 1 1930, 5
“The Election Campaign,” Nov 1 1930, 6
“‘Build Party, Southern Worker,’ Says Invalid,” Nov 8 1930, 3
“On The Path Of The Bolshevik Revolution,” Nov 8 1930, 4
“Workers and Farmers Build Their Own Country----USSR,” Nov 8 1930, 4
“Fish Begins Work in Chattanooga,” Nov 15 1930, 1
“Soviet Union Uncovers Plot to Invade Her,” Nov 22 1930, 1
“Plan Nation Fight For Negro Rights,” Nov 29 1930, 1
“Do Workers In U.S.S.R Starve?” Nov 29 1930, 1
“Greetings From U.S.S.R., Tells of Work On Farm,” Nov 29 1930, 3
“Moscow Trial Reveals War Plot Against Soviet Union,” Dec 6 1930, 1
“Call Masses In 3 Lands To Defense of Soviets,” Dec 6 1930, 1
“Boss Guns Turn On Soviets,” Dec 6 1930, 4
“Reveal Plot For Foreign Intervention,” Dec 13 1930, 1
“Keep Southern Worker Going!—Act Quickly,” Dec 13 1930, 1
“Prevent the War of Invasion!” Dec 13 1930, 4
“Intervention; - It’s [sic] Meaning,” Dec 13 1930, 4
“Demonstrate For Defense Of Soviets,” Dec 20 1930, 1
“Danger of Intervention Sharpens,” Dec 20 1930, 4
“Making the Unemployed an Army of War,” Dec 20 1930, 4
“To Speak on Soviet Farms, In Chatta.,” Dec 27 1930, 2
“Bloated Parasites and Starving Millions,” Jan 3 1931, 4
The Reds Say, Jan 3 1931, 4
“Conditions of Soviet Farmers Improve Daily,” Jan 10 1931, 2
“German Unemployed Benefit By Soviet Orders,” Jan 10 1931, 2
“Must Not Let Paper Stop, Says Worker,” Jan 10 1931, 2
“Attack Communists,” Jan 17 1931, 2
“Lenin—Inspiration of Southern Toilers,” Jan 17 1931, 4
“5-Year Plan Continues Work of Lenin In Soviet Union,” Jan 17 1931, 4
“Demand War Billions For Jobless Aid,” Jan 24 1931, 1
“Pledge Speed Up 5-yr Plan at Soviet Meets,” Jan 31 1931, 2
“Education For All,” Jan 31 1931, 3
“Jailed Jobless Leader Says Must Build Southern Worker,” Jan 31 1931, 4
The Reds Say, Jan 31 1931, 4
“Sick Seaman Told To Eat Well—But How?” Feb 7 1931, 3
“Soviet Farmers Improve,” Feb 14 1931, 2
“No Speculators Here,” Feb 14 1931, 3
“Tenn. Chain Gang Strikes,” Feb 21 1931, 1
“Soviet Masses Elect Officers,” Feb 21 1931, 2
“7-Hour Day In U.S.S.R.,” Feb 21 1931, 4
“Murder On Chain Gang Is Exposed,” Feb 28 1931, 2
“Speed-Up In Mines Means More Workers Lives Lost,” Mar 7 1931, 3
“Militant? Then We’ll Deport You,” Mar 7 1931, 3
“Trial Of 14 Enemies Of Soviet Union,” Mar 14 1931, 2
“Soviet Veterans To Work,” Mar 14 1931, 4
“Farmers Tricked Into Buying Land In Carter County,” Mar 21 1931, 3
“Seek To Bar S.U. Products,” Mar 28 1931, 2
“Soviet Exports Up 14% Last Year When All Others Fail,” Mar 28 1931, 2
“De Priest Shows His True Colors,” Mar 28 1931, 4
“Flies From S.U. Into Glantzstoff [sic],” Apr 4 1931, 3
Caption, “Forced Labor—Where?” Apr 4 1931, 4
“Comrades Tell of Relief Fight, Communist Party,” Apr 11 1931, 1
Caption, “Where Workers Rule—No Unemployment,” Apr 11 1931, 3
“Capitalism versus Communism,” Apr 11 1931, 4
“Demonstrate May Day!” Apr 18 1931, 1
“Send American Worker Delegation To USSR,” Apr 18 1931, 2
Caption, “Ready To Defend Soviet,” Apr 18 1931, 3
“Communists In City Elections In Charlotte,” Apr 25 1931, 1
“More Peasants Join Soviet Collectives,” Apr 25 1931, 2
“30,000 Tractors To Build Soviet Farming,” May 2 1931, 2
“American Worker In Soviet Union Contrasts Conditions; Calls For Big May Day Demonstrations Here,” May 2 1931, 3
“Soviet Success In Oil Industry,” May 2 1931, 4
“Demonstrations Round World,” May 9 1931, 1
Caption, “Workers’ Children—A Contrast,” May 16 1931, 2
“U.S. Negro On Moscow Soviet,” May 16 1931, 2
“Boss Rot in New Orleans Election,” May 16 1931, 3
“Brutal Forced Labor In Miss. Prisons,” May 16 1931, 3
“Bosses Protect White Women?” May 16 1931, 3
Caption, “Where the Farmers Smile,” May 16 1931, 4
“Spring Sowing in Soviet,” May 16 1931, 4
“Mothers [sic] Day,” May 16 1931, 4
“Foreign Workers In Soviet Union Marvel At Advances,” May 23 1931, 4
“Workers Delegation To Soviet Union Witness Success,” May 30 1931, 2
“Admit Brushy Mt. Mines Are A Living Hell,” Jun 6 1931, 2
Caption, “A Factory in Moscow,” Jun 6 1931, 3
“Former Chattanooga Mayor Attacks Reds And Soviet Union; Workers Prepare for August 1st,” Jun 20 1931, 4
“Dem’nstrate Against War August 1st!” Jun 27 1931, 4
“Fight Bosses War August First!” Jul 4 1931, 1
“Int’l Protest On Scottsboro,” Jul 11 1931, 1
“Mellon In Europe Lays Plans For Intervention,” Jul 11 1931, 1
“Collective Farmers In Soviet Union,” Jul 11 1931, 2
“Capitalist Press Lies To Workers About Bolsheviki,” Jul 11 1931, 3
“Defend Soviet Union Demonstrate Aug. 1st,” Jul 11 1931, 4
“Gunfire Behind Reprations,” Jul 11 1931, 4
“2,500 Join Protest in San Francisco,” Jul 18 1931, 1
“Negro War Vet Tells Of ‘Glorious’ War,” Jul 18 1931, 1
“U.S. Pushes War Alliance In German Crisis,” Jul 18 1931, 1
“Chain Gang Prisoner Dies Of Brutality,” Jul 18 1931, 4
“Farm Harvest Is Starvation,” Jul 25 1931, 1
“London Meet Plans War On Soviet Union,” Jul 25 1931, 1
“Scottsboro Protest In U.S.S.R.,” Jul 25 1931, 1
“Prepare Aug. 1st In Charlotte,” Jul 25 1931, 2
“Red Cross Refused To Treat Negro Wounded in World War,” Jul 25 1931, 4
Caption, “Miners’ Homes in the Soviet Union,” Jul 25 1931, 4
“The Civilization They Tell us To Defend,” Aug 1 1931, 4
“Lay Off 1,200 At Ensley T.C.I.,” Aug 1 1931, 1
“Worker in Soviet Union Tells of Scottsboro Protest There,” Aug 1 1931, 3
“Workers Thruout [sic] World Demonstrate August 1st,” Aug 1 1931, 1
“Communists In China Give Land To Poor Farmers,” Aug 8 1931, 2
“Illiteracy Highest, Wages Lowest in S.C.,” Aug 8 1931, 2
“Warns Farmers Against Fakers,” Aug 8 1931, 3
“Workers In Soviet Plant Give Reply To Scottsboro,” Aug 8 1931, 4
“Workers Thruout [sic] World Protest War Preparation,” Aug 8 1931, 1
“500 At Tampa Aug. 1 Meet,” Aug 15 1931, 2
“Formerly Oppressed People Now Live in Freedom in USSR,” Aug 15 1931, 3
“Labor Facts,” Aug 15 1931, 2
“Raise Wages In U.S.S.R.,” Aug 15 1931, 1
“Charlotte YCL Holds Meeting Against War,” Aug 29 1931, 4
“Farm Board Fancies,” Aug 29 1931, 4
“How A Soviet Commune Builds Its Own Industry,” Aug 29 1931, 4
Untitled, Aug 29 1931, 1
“Outlaw Plant In La., Other States Follow,” Sep 5 1931, 1
“‘White Man’s Nigger’ Creed,” Sep 5 1931, 4
“More Workers Comfort In USSR,” Sep 12 1931, 1
“Soviet Women Workers,” Sep 12 1931, 4
“Soviet Collective Farms Successful in Five-Year Plan,” Sep 19 1931, 4
“American Negro Worker Praises Soviet Rule,” Sep 26 1931, 1
“Farm Communes Bring New Life To Soviet Peasants,” Sep 26 1931, 3
“German Sailors’ Greetings,” Sep 26 1931, 1
“Big Soviet Farm Organized and Run by Young Workers,” Oct 3 1931, 3
“Wall Street’s War Game,” Oct 3 1931, 4
“Stock Market Rise Follows Wage Cuts,” Oct 17 1931, 4
“Four Main Columns Will Reach Capitol Dec. 7th,” Oct 24 1931, 2
“Negro Workers! Beware Miss. Grafter,” Oct 24 1931, 3
“Workers Of South Must Carry Out Mass Fight Against War Plotters,” Oct 31 1931, 1
“Nation Editor Praises Soviet,” Oct 31 1931, 2
“Big Increase In Wages In Soviet Union,” Nov 7 1931, 1
Caption, photo, “Workers Hovels In America,” Nov 7 1931, 3
Caption, “USSR,” Nov 7 1931, 1
Caption, untitled photo, Nov 7 1931, 3
“Chattanooga Bar Head Lauds The Soviet Schools,” Nov 7 1931, 2
“The Soviet Union Solves Problem of Natl. Minorities,” Nov 7 1931, 2
“Fourteen Years of Soviet Power,” Nov 7 1931, 1
“Hoover Agent Takes Trip To Soviet Border,” Nov 7 1931, 3
“Soviet Young Workers,” Nov 7 1931, 4
“U.S. Delegation In Soviet Union,” Nov 7 1931, 4
“What Is Soviet Economic System?” Nov 7 1931, 1
“Winter Relief Demand Before U.S. Governm’t,” Nov 7 1931, 1
“Yank Bandits Back Warfare In Manchuria,” Dec 5 1931, 1
“Soviet Wage Increase,” Dec 5 1931, 1
“Politicians In Panic Try To Evade Issue,” Dec 12 1931, 1
“War Plotters Smuggle Arms Against USSR,” Dec 12 1931, 2
“Japan Bandit Raids Upheld By League, U.S.,” Dec 19 1931, 1
“John Haynes Holmes Praises Soviet Union,” Dec 19 1931, 2
“New Stage in War Against China and the Soviet Union,” Dec 26 1931, 4
Untitled, Dec 26 1931, 2
“Hatch Murder Plot For War Against USSR,” Jan 2 1932, 1
“Miners Wages High In Land Of Soviet Rule,” Jan 2 1932, 3
“White Guard Prince Commits Suicide,” Jan 2 1932, 4
“Czech Tool Of France Plots Murder of Jap,” Jan 9 1932, 2
“Delegates Who Visited U.S.S.R. To Tour South,” Jan 9 1932, 3
“Again the Flood Horror,” Jan 9 1932, 4
“Black Judases Aid U.S. War Plans In Haiti,” Jan 16 1932, 3
“Party Recruiting Drive In District No. 16,” Jan 16 1932, 4
“Scottsboro Is Brought Up At Tampa Trials,” Jan 30 1932, 3
“All Readers of the Southern Worker Must Rally to Save Paper,” Jan 30 1932, 4
“Nanking Govt. Troops Flock To Red Army,” Jan 30 1932, 4
“World War Looms as Bandit Powers Clash in Far East; Demand U.S. Withdraw Arms,” Feb 6 1932, 1
“Tennessee Coal and Iron Getting Ready for War,” Feb 20 1932, 2
“Soviet Peace Policy,” Feb 20 1932, 2
“Communism Stronger Each Year, Says Prof.,” Feb 20 1932, 3
“Women and War Pamphlet Is Out,” Feb 20 1932, 3
“The Murder of Harry Simms a Challenge to the Working Class,” Feb 20 1932, 4
“Stop The Robber War Against China!” Mar 5 1932, 1
“Carl Anderson, Liar and Faker, Cannot Be Found,” Mar 5 1932, 2
“Tom Mooney’s Mother Pleads For Prisoners,” Mar 5 1932, 2
“Draft Blanks Being Printed For New War,” Mar 5 1932, 4
“What We Stand For,” May 20 1933, 1
“All Cargoes And Ships For U.S.S.R. Must Have Union Labor,” Aug 15 1933, 2
Caption to photo panel, Aug 15 1933, 1
Caption, Nov 15 1933, 1
“The Russian Revolution—And Us,” Nov 15 1933, 4
“The Workers’ Greatest Leader,” Jan 20 1934, 4
Important News In Short: Moscow, USSR, Jul 1934, 2
“Communists In Elections With Fighting Slate,” Oct 1934, 1
Important News In Short: Moscow, USSR, Oct 1934, 3
“A Soviet Girl Textile Worker Writes to Us,” Oct 1934, 5
“Nov. 7, Date Russian Workers Took Power In 1917, Observed In South,” Nov 1934, 2
“Roosevelt and Soviet Union Have Different Aims; Stalin,” Nov 1934, 6
“Durr May Have To Leave Town on Wave of Workers’ Anger At Lyncher Writings,” Jan 1935, 2
Important News In Short: Moscow, USSR, Jan 1935, 4
“Communists Follow In Path Lenin Pointed,” Jan 1935, 6
“No Jobless Miners Under Workers Rule,” Jan 1935, 6
“Soviet Pioneers Write To Southern Workers Kids,” Jan 1935, 6
“Japan, China Bosses Join Against Toilers,” Feb 1935, 2
“Steel Output Goes Over Top In U.S.S.R.,” Feb 1935, 2
“P. Robeson, Noted Singer-Actor Happy in Workers’ Land,” Feb 1935, 3
“Textile Workers Advance Under Workers’ Rule,” Feb 1935, 6
“Deny Negro Toilers Relief—Say to Pray,” Mar-Apr 1935, 6
Important News In Short: Moscow, USSR, Mar-Apr 1935, 6
“Negro Farm Toiler Writes of Soviet Life,” Mar-Apr 1935, 6
Caption, “Does This Look Like Starvation?,” Mar-Apr 1935, 8
Notes of Soviet Workers Advance, May 1935, 3
Caption, Jun 1935, 4
“Stakhanov Increases Well-being Of Workers In The U.S.S.R.,” Jan 1936, 3
“A Farmer Labor Party For The South,” Jan 1936, 6
Title Illegible, Jan 1936, 6
“Gastonia Leader Scorns Hearst,” Feb 1936, 4
“World Is Facing Danger of New War Slaughter,” Feb 1936, 7
“Hitler Moves To Start War In Europe,” Mar-Apr 1936, 1
“Freedom of Soviet Union Is Described by American Writer,” Mar-Apr 1936, 7
“American Writer Finds New World Where Oil Kings Once Ruled,” May 1936, 6
“Modern Education—Soviet Style,” May 1936, 6
Caption, “Soviet Textile Worker Honored,” Jun 1936, 7
“New Constitution Makes Another Advance In The Soviet Union,” Jun 1936, 7
“U.M.W. President Scores Green,” Jul 1936, 4
“New Soviet Constitution Guarantees Right To Work,” Jul 1936, 7
“Under Workers Rule,” Jul 1936, 7
Caption, “Kids In The Soviet Union,” Sep 1936, 6
“Defend Madrid; Need Munitions; Appeal for Aid,” Nov 1936, 7
“Compare Soviet Elections With Those in America,” Nov 1936, 8
“Nov. 7th, What It Means,” Dec 1936, 10
“Soviet Most Democratic,” Nov 1936, 9
“Italy, Germany Support Rebels,” Dec 1936, 15
“What Social Security Act Really Means,” Jan 1937, 11
“Here’s What Soviet Workers Have,” Jan 1937, 11
Caption, May 1937, 7
U.S. Steel Corp.:
“T.C.I. Hounds Birmingham Workers,” Aug 16 1930, 1
“U.S. Steel Makes Millions,” Aug 16 1930, 3
“They Can Never Smash Us!,” Aug 16 1930, 4
“The Birmingham Demonstration,” Dec 27 1930, 4
“Tax Refund To Rich Exceeds Hoover Relief,” Jan 3 1931, 1
“‘All Legal Forms Strictly Observed’,” Apr 18 1931, 4
“75% Industries Have Cut Wages In Nation Drive,” May 30 1931, 1
“Mass Arrests of Harlan Miners; I.L.D. on Scene,” Jun 13 1931, 1
Caption, “Lay-Offs, Wage-Cuts for Steel Workers,” Aug 1 1931, 3
“Lay Off 1,200 At Ensley T.C.I.,” Aug 1 1931, 1
“The Civilization They Tell us To Defend,” Aug 1 1931, 4
“Will We Permit Third Winter of Starvation?” Aug 8 1931, 4
“The Southern Worker Reaches One Year,” Aug 22 1931, 2
B’ham Notes, Aug 29 1931, 4
“War—In the Ky. Mine Fields,” Aug 29 1931, 1
“5 More Furnaces Closed By T.C.I.,” Sep 5 1931, 2
“Morgan, Mellon, Ford, Insull Back of Murder Gang Active in Harlan,” Oct 3 1931, 1
“Stock Market Rise Follows Wage Cuts,” Oct 17 1931, 4
“Denied Hospital Treatment,” Oct 31 1931, 4
“Work Like Mules in Steel Trusts Ala. Coal Mines,” Dec 5 1931, 3
Untitled, Feb 10 1934, 3
“New Deal Dividends,” Dec 1934, 4
“McDuff—Prince of Stool Pigeons,” Jan 1935, 1
“Why a Farmer-Labor Party?” Feb 1936, 8
“Alabama Labor At The Crossroads,” Mar-Apr 1936, 2
“Workers Desert Company Unions,” Mar-Apr 1936, 6
“Yellow Dog’ Contract Rejected By Company Union Steel Men,” Dec 1936, 5
“Disarm Industry,” Mar 1937, 2
“Disarm Industry,” Mar 1937, 6
“Steel Victorious!” Apr 1937, 3
News of the Month in the South, “Steel Drive Begun in Chattanooga,” May 1937, 11
U.S. Steel Quarterly:
“Many Displaced In Pipe Shops,” Mar 14 1931, 3
Uthank, Ben:
News of the Month in the South, “Harlan Coal Operators Tyranny Over Miners Told,” May 1937, 13
“Harlan Cracks Open,” Jun 1937, 6
Utica Knitting Co.:
“55 Hours Work, $1-$3 Pay In Utica Mills,” Jun 10 1933, 2
“Googe Betrays Blue Mountain Strike To Boss,” Jun 10 1933, 2
“We Answer New Attacks With New Struggles,” Jun 10 1933, 4
Utilities Act:
“Big Business Prepares War Against Labor,” Jan 1936, 1
Utley, R. Willis:
“Company Union Driven Out By Workers Demand,” Jan 1936, 4
UTWU: see United Textile Workers of America
Uvalda, Ga.:
“No Farm; Kills Self,” Jan 2 1932, 4
-V-
Vacuum Oil Co.:
“Lay-Offs At Vacuum Oil,” Oct 25 1930, 3
“6,000 Jobless in Port Arthur,” Nov 1 1930, 4
Vagrancy laws:
“T.C.I. Hounds Birmingham Workers,” Aug 16 1930, 1
“Call Workers To Smash Terror,” Sep 6 1930, 1
Untitled, Sep 6 1930, 1
“B’Ham Workers Resist Terror,” Sep 13 1930, 1
“Crisis Works In Houston,” Sep 13 1930, 3
“A Vagrancy Warrant—Boss Answer To The Unemployed,” Sep 20 1930, 2
“‘Get Job or Go To Jail,’ Says Judge,” Sep 27 1930, 1
“Crumbs For The Jobless,” Oct 4 1930, 1
“Houston TUUL Continues Work Despite the Attacks of Police,” Oct 4 1930, 2
“Sailor Jailed As Vagrant; Reveals Graft,” Nov 8 1930, 3
“Arrest Scores Jobless In Beaumont As Vags,” Nov 15 1930, 3
“Jail Seamen In Houston Daily,” Nov 22 1930, 2
“Sea Institute Is A Black Hole,” Nov 22 1930, 3
“Free Yelping Boss Coyote, Not Worker,” Nov 22 1930, 3
“A ‘Vagrant’,” Nov 22 1930, 4
“Vag Case Postponed,” Nov 22 1930, 4
“Police Help Unemployed,” Nov 22 1930, 4
“Boss Court in Houston Rules Reds Are Vags,” Dec 6 1930, 2
“The Terrible Crime of Organizing ‘Vagrants’,” Dec 6 1930, 4
“Demand State Jobless Fund In N. Carolina,” Dec 13 1930, 1
“Jail Husband as ‘Vag,’ Try Same On Wife,” Dec 13 1930, 3
“Jailed as Vagrant For Protecting A Child,” Jan 3 1931, 2
“Won’t Starve, Won’t Walk—He’ll Fight!” Jan 3 1931, 3
“Try To Stop T.C.I. Workers Organizing,” Jan 10 1931, 1
“Organizers On Trial Expose T.C.I. Terror,” Jan 17 1931, 2
“Worker Tell [sic] How B’ham Trial Proved Communists Are Right,” Jan 17 1931, 3
“Rush to Defense of Our Comrades,” Mar 7 1931, 4
“Kidnap Two Organizers In Dallas,” Mar 14 1931, 1
“Chatta. Trial Set March 19,” Mar 14 1931, 1
“Texas Cops Jail Workers Asleep In Empty Houses,” Mar 14 1931, 3
“City Council Flees Jobless, Refuses Relief,” Mar 21 1931, 1
“Chattanooga Trial Set March 31,” Mar 28 1931, 1
“Jail Braxton, Marine Organizer, in Orleans,” May 16 1931, 1
“Jail NTWU Organizers In Elizabethton,” Jul 4 1931, 1
“Greenville Law Frames Worker,” Jul 25 1931, 3
“In the Rayon Mill Jail,” Aug 15 1931, 4
“Jail Many Jobless,” Aug 15 1931, 2
“Kill 1, Wound 4, Jail Communist Organizer,” Aug 15 1931, 1
“Demonstrate On August 22,” Aug 22 1931, 1
“Jackson Held; 3 Vag Cases Postponed,” Aug 22 1931, 1
“‘Free’ Fla. Workers Get 40 Cents a Day,” Sep 5 1931, 4
“Jobless Seaman Get [sic] 25 Days On Chaingang,” Sep 12 1931, 3
“Night Raids To Scare Leaders Of Unemployed,” Oct 3 1931, 3
“Forced Labor In Arkansas Cotton Fields,” Oct 31 1931, 3
“Red Cross, Police, Charities Drive Unemployed to Slavery,” Oct 31 1931, 4
“500 Jobless Demonstrate Against Hunger in Houston,” Nov 7 1931, 3
“Forced Prison Labor,” Dec 12 1931, 3
“Mass Action Wins Defense for Jones,” Dec 12 1931, 1
“Police Continue Attacks on Hunger Marchers Return,” Jan 2 1932, 2
“Talk of Mutiny In Alabama Prisons,” Jan 2 1932, 2
“Tampa Police Stage Raid; Frame Worker,” Jan 16 1932, 2
“Party Recruiting Drive In District No. 16,” Jan 16 1932, 4
“Destruction of Crop Takes Bread From Mouths of Thousands of Farm Laborers, Writes Texas Farmer,” Jul 12 1933, 3
“Army Recruiting Officers Round Up Boys On Soup-Lines,” Sep 20 1933, 3
“Texas Sheriff Jails Hundreds of Jobless,” May 1935, 2
Important News In Short: Jacksonville, Fla., Jun 1935, 6
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