Wagner Labor Relations Act:
“Forums Planned By CP In Louisiana,” Jun 1935, 4
“Wagner Bill A Blow At Labor,” Jun 1935, 6
“Big Business Prepares War Against Labor,” Jan 1936, 1
“Steel Men Join Union Fast, CIO Leader Reports,” Nov 1936, 1
“AF of L Reactionaries Block Support of Scottsboro Boys,” Jan 1937, 4
“AF of L to Help Organize Agricultural Workers,” Jan 1937, 5
“Protect Our Gains,” May 1937, 2
“Southern Workers Happier Days For,” Jun 1937, 2
The American Scene, “S.W.O.C. Wins 5-2 In J. And L. Election,” Jul 1937, 10
Wagner, Robert:
Caption, May 1937, 10
Wahlforth, Robert:
“Gelders Kidnapped, Beaten; Protested Barton Arrest,” Nov 1936, 1
Wakefield, Jessie:
“Dynamite I.L.D. Car in Harlan,” Aug 1 1931, 2
“Miners Prepare Strike In Ky. Despite Thugs,” Aug 1 1931, 1
“Jail Ky. Strike Leaders; Terror Of Thugs Grows,” Aug 15 1931, 1
“Deputy Murders 3 Harlan Miners,” Sep 5 1931, 1
Wakefield, Lowell:
“Facts Show 9 Negro Boys Innocent; Protest Grows,” Apr 25 1931, 1
“Rousing Welcome to Mrs. Patterson In New York,” May 2 1931, 1
“Dastardly Trick To Fool Parents Fails,” May 9 1931, 1
“Scottsboro Parents Statement,” May 23 1931, 4
“Demonstrate On August 22,” Aug 22 1931, 1
“Jackson Held; 3 Vag Cases Postponed,” Aug 22 1931, 1
“Boys Denounce NAACP; Want Real Defense,” Jan 9 1932, 1
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel:
“‘No Niggers’ Says A.F.L.,” Mar 28 1931, 1
Wales:
“Wales Miners Strike; Mills May Follow,” Jan 10 1931, 2
Walhalla, S.C.:
“34 Are Lynched In 9 Months,” Oct 4 1930, 4
Lynch Law At Work: Walhalla, S.C., Nov 8 1930, 2
Lynch Law At Work: Walhalla, S.C., Nov 15 1930, 2
Walker, Mrs. Albert:
“No More Relief In Dallas, Texas,” Mar 21 1931, 2
Walker, B.P.:
“Armed Troops Stop Funeral Preparations,” Feb 20 1932, 1
Walker, Earl:
“Masked Cops Beat Negroes And Strip Girls,” Dec 1934, 3
Walker, J.:
“Florida Farmers Chase Police and Support the Reds,” Dec 5 1931, 1
Walker, J.W.:
“Tampa Police Stage Raid; Frame Worker,” Jan 16 1932, 2
Walker, Jack:
Important News In Short: Birmingham, Ala., Jan 1935, 4
“Florida Citrus Workers Strike Against Pay Cut In Spite Of Misleaders,” Jan 1935, 5
“Fla. Citrus Workers Win Strike Despite Terror, Traitors,” Feb 1935, 5
Walker, James J.:
“Walker Failed to Get Mooney To Give Up Labor Activities,” Jan 16 1932, 1
Walker, Jimmy:
“Clubs, Jeers for New York Unemployed,” Oct 25 1930, 1
The Reds Say, Oct 25 1930, 4
Walker, Paul:
“Tenant Fights Landlord,” Apr 11 1931, 3
Walker, “Pink”:
Important News In Short: Chattanooga, Tenn., May 1935, 4
Walker, Rebecca:
“500 At Tampa Aug. 1 Meet,” Aug 15 1931, 2
Walker, Woodrow:
“Missing Cropper Thought Slain By Landlords,” May 1936, 5
Walker County, Ala.:
“Slashing Wages In Walker County Mines,” Nov 15 1930, 3
“Misleaders of U.M.W. of A. Sidetrack Walker County Mine Strike,” Aug 31 1933, 2
“Ala. Miners Down Tools, Defy Strike-Breaking Order Of N.R.A. Board,” Mar 25 1934, 1
“N.R.A. Board Rules Against Miners In Alabama Cases,” Oct 1934, 4
“Cotton Row,” Mar 1937, 13
Walker County, Ga.:
“Brutal Murder On Chain Gang,” Dec 27 1930, 1
“Guard Gets One Year For Killing Worker,” May 16 1931, 3
Walkerton, Canada:
“Finds New Graft,” Oct 10 1931, 4
Wall Street:
The Reds Say, Sep 6 1930, 4
“Militant? Then We’ll Deport You,” Mar 7 1931, 3
“Shops Are Place For Our Paper,” Jun 13 1931, 3
“A. F. of L. Rank And Filer Raps Green’s Speech,” Jun 20 1931, 2
“Force 20% Wage-Cut On Shopmen,” Jul 4 1931, 3
“Defend Soviet Union Demonstrate Aug. 1st,” Jul 11 1931, 4
“International Solidarity,” Jul 18 1931, 4
“Wall Street’s War Game,” Oct 3 1931, 4
“World War Looms as Bandit Powers Clash in Far East; Demand U.S. Withdraw Arms,” Feb 6 1932, 1
“N. Orleans Seamen Hail Ky. Strikers & Class Prisoners,” Feb 6 1932, 3
“We Are Not Taking This One Lying Down,” Jun 10 1933, 4
“Bosses Plan Fascism,” Dec 1934, 2
“Union Ore Miners Resist T.C.I. Starving, Freezing and Spy Attempts,” Jan 1935, 5
Wall Street Journal:
“Steel Wage Cut Is Bosses’ Plan,” Nov 1934, 4
Walla Walla prison:
“I.L.D. Broadcasts Call From Prison,” Oct 3 1931, 2
Walla Walla, Washington:
“Two Centralia Prisoners Out After 12 Years,” Jan 9 1932, 2
Wallace, Henry:
“This Year They Plow the Cotton Under; Next, They Plow the Croppers Under,” Sep 20 1933, 4
“Small Cotton Growers Face Ruin in 1934,” Jan 20 1934, 1
“Farm Leaders Hit Reduction In Crop Acres,” Feb 1936, 4
“Farm News,” Mar-Apr 1936, 5
“Missing Cropper Thought Slain By Landlords,” May 1936, 5
“Farm News” May 1936, 5
“Farm News,” Jun 1936, 5
“For Drought Relief,” Jun 1936, 8
“Farm News,” Jul 1936, 5
“Kentucky Workers Alliance Launches organization Drive,” Mar 1937, 13
Wallace, Woodrow:
“Boy Miners Sue Alabama Fuel Co.,” Feb 1936, 2
Wallins Creek, Ky.:
“To Spread Strikes In Kentucky, W. Virginia,” Jul 25 1931, 1
“Miners Prepare Strike In Ky. Despite Thugs,” Aug 1 1931, 1
“Miners To Picket White House, Hit Gov.; UMW Scabs,” Aug 1 1931, 1
“‘Flux,’ Deadly Disease, Hitting Kentucky Fields,” Aug 8 1931, 1
“Jail Ky. Strike Leaders; Terror Of Thugs Grows,” Aug 15 1931, 1
“Miners Face Gunmen To Hear Report NMU Unity Conference,” Aug 22 1931, 3
“Kentucky Miners Prepare Strike Machinery In Spite of New Raid and Arrests by Gunmen,” Oct 3 1931, 1
“Morgan, Mellon, Ford, Insull Back of Murder Gang Active in Harlan,” Oct 3 1931, 1
“Harlan Terror Continues As Strike Looms,” Dec 19 1931, 2
“Company Thug Killed As He Attacks Men,” Jan 9 1932, 4
Wallis, Frank E.:
“State Lynch Law Condemns Tom Robertson,” Oct 18 1930, 1
“An Appeal,” Oct 18 1930, 4
“Prepare Mass Anti-Lynching Conferences,” Oct 25 1930, 1
“Rule Death Law Valid In Atlanta,” Oct 25 1930, 1
Untitled, Oct 25 1930, 3
“Your Help Wanted,” Oct 11 1930, 1
“Call for Mass Conference Against Lynch-Law,” Nov 1 1930, 3
Wallis, J.H.:
“Attack Foreign-Born In South,” Apr 11 1931, 1
Walls, Ollie:
“Gadsden Workers Speed Organization Despite Attacks,” Jul 1937, 13
Walls, Tommie:
“Case Effected By Scottsboro,” Nov 1936, 4
Walmsley, T. Semmes:
“Collectors Win Strike,” Oct 4 1930, 3
“Rush to Defense of Our Comrades,” Mar 7 1931, 4
“Aim To Stop Militants In Dock Strike,” Mar 14 1931, 1
“1,000 Demand Jobs In N.O.,” Jul 18 1931, 1
“Mayor Lied To New Orleans Jobless—No Jobs, No Money,” Jul 25 1931, 3
“Mayor Walmsley Jails Jobless Leader in N.O.,” Aug 1 1931, 2
“White and Negro Workers In New Orleans United Front,” Sep 1934, 2
“N. Orleans Police Try Break Strike of Longshoremen,” Sep 1934, 5
Walsh-Healey Act:
“Steel Victorious!” Apr 1937, 3
Walsh and Weidner Boiler Co.:
“Jobless Gets 50 Cents To Evict Himself,” Nov 22 1930, 3
Walters, Jacob:
“Meetings Banned,” Sep 5 1931, 3
Walthers, John:
“War Veteran Shoots Self,” May 1936, 3
Walton County, Ga.:
My Life, Nov 29 1930, 4
My Life, Dec 6 1930, 4
Wanek, Carl:
“Czech Tool Of France Plots Murder of Jap,” Jan 9 1932, 2
Wang Chin-Wei:
“New Stage in War Against China and the Soviet Union,” Dec 26 1931, 4
Wangerin, Otto:
“New Magazine Will Give Lead to Workers in Class Struggle,” Dec 12 1931, 4
War:
“What Do We Stand For?” Aug 16 1930, 1
Lynch Law At Work: West Point, N.Y., Aug 16 1930, 3
“Carry on the Fight for Social Insurance!” Sep 6 1930, 4
“Bosses Cry For War On U.S.S.R.,” Oct 4 1930, 1
“Young Toilers and Elections,” Nov 1 1930, 5
“Boss Guns Turn On Soviets,” Dec 6 1930, 4
“Prevent the War of Invasion!” Dec 13 1930, 4
“Making the Unemployed an Army of War,” Dec 20 1930, 4
“Money For War, But None For The Unemployed,” Dec 27 1930, 1
“Demand War Billions For Jobless Aid,” Jan 24 1931, 1
“Something To Think Over,” Feb 21 1931, 2
“Demonstrate May Day!” Apr 18 1931, 1
“Send Warships Against Central American Masses,” Apr 25 1931, 2
“To Conscript Four Million In Coming War,” May 23 1931, 2
“Want War Funds For Unemployed,” May 23 1931, 3
“Youth Protests Boss War Plans,” May 30 1931, 1
“Quiz Workers For War Jobs in Birmingham,” May 30 1931, 3
“Dem’nstrate Against War August 1st!” Jun 27 1931, 4
“Fight Bosses War August First!” Jul 4 1931, 1
“Mellon In Europe Lays Plans For Intervention,” Jul 11 1931, 1
“Gunfire Behind Reprations,” Jul 11 1931, 4
“Negro War Vet Tells Of ‘Glorious’ War,” Jul 18 1931, 1
“U.S. Pushes War Alliance In German Crisis,” Jul 18 1931, 1
“Farm Harvest Is Starvation,” Jul 25 1931, 1
“London Meet Plans War On Soviet Union,” Jul 25 1931, 1
“Prepare Aug. 1st In Charlotte,” Jul 25 1931, 2
“Let’s Fight Starvation Instead of for Bosses,” Jul 25 1931, 3
“Red Cross Refused To Treat Negro Wounded in World War,” Jul 25 1931, 4
“The Civilization They Tell us To Defend,” Aug 1 1931, 4
“World War Veteran Sounds A Warning,” Aug 1 1931, 4
“More Armories For Alabama,” Aug 8 1931, 4
“Workers Thruout [sic] World Protest War Preparation,” Aug 8 1931, 1
“Bosses Prepare Young Workers for New War,” Aug 22 1931, 3
“Cadden Says 20,000 Unemployed in B’ham,” Aug 29 1931, 3
“Charlotte YCL Holds Meeting Against War,” Aug 29 1931, 4
“Ala. Natl. Guard Prepares For War,” Sep 5 1931, 3
“International Youth Day,” Sep 5 1931, 4
“Negro Candidates Prominet [sic] In N.Y. Communist Campaign,” Sep 19 1931, 1
“War Veterans Must Put Up Fight Against American Legion Fraud,” Sep 19 1933, 3
“Wall Street’s War Game,” Oct 3 1931, 4
“Stock Market Rise Follows Wage Cuts,” Oct 17 1931, 4
“Central Committee Calls For Utmost Support of National Hunger March,” Oct 24 1931, 4
“Workers Of South Must Carry Out Mass Fight Against War Plotters,” Oct 31 1931, 1
“Faster War Planes,” Oct 31 1931, 2
“Yank Bandits Back Warfare In Manchuria,” Dec 5 1931, 1
“Scottsboro Frame-Up Part of War Game Says Ohio Conference,” Dec 5 1931, 4
“War Plotters Smuggle Arms Against USSR,” Dec 12 1931, 2
“New Stage in War Against China and the Soviet Union,” Dec 26 1931, 4
“Hatch Murder Plot For War Against USSR,” Jan 2 1932, 1
“January ‘Communist’ Splendid Number for Guide to Action,” 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
“Communist Party Can Get Results,” Feb 20 1932, 4
“Stop The Robber War Against China!” Mar 5 1932, 1
“Whitewashing Franklin D. Roosevelt,” Mar 5 1932, 4
“Draft Blanks Being Printed For New War,” Mar 5 1932, 4
“What We Stand For,” May 20 1933, 1
“Fight the Danger of a New World War,” Jul 12 1933, 4
“The Russian Revolution—And Us,” Nov 15 1933, 4
“‘Turn Over War Funds To Feed Unemployed,’ Says Jobless Meeting,” Feb 10 1934, 1
Ward, George S.:
“How the ‘Black List’ Works In Kentucky Coal Regions,” Oct 10 1931, 1
“Harlan Cracks Open,” Jun 1937, 6
Ward, J.P.:
“Jail Seamen In Houston Daily,” Nov 22 1930, 2
Ward, O.P.:
“Stool Pigeons Exposed,” Jul 1937, 15
Ward, Sears:
“Arrest Planter for Kidnapping,” Nov 1936, 5
Ware County, Ga.:
“Farmers In Gun Fight For Bread,” Jan 3 1931, 1
“Kills Negro On Pretext of Rape,” Nov 7 1931, 4
Ware Shoals, S.C.:
“Speed Workers Up As Order Beg For Jobs In Greenville,” Dec 13 1930, 3
“Ruling Class Takes Another 17-Year-Old Negro Boy’s Life,” Jun 6 1931, 4
“Another Mill Cuts Wages,” Oct 10 1931, 4
Warm Springs, Ga.:
“Tammany Roosevelt ‘Winning South’,” Oct 31 1931, 4
Warren, Ark.:
“Court Denies Injunction,” Sep 1936, 5
Warren, Ed G.:
“They Didn’t Know,” May 1937, 15
Warren, Erwin:
“Dairy Strikers Tricked Into Signing ‘Confession’,” Mar-Apr 1936, 3
Warren, Ohio:
“Protest Murder of Warren, O., Worker,” Oct 17 1931, 1
“Kill Two; Wound Many In Cleveland Eviction Fight,” Oct 17 1931, 2
Warren, William “Billy”:
News of the Month in the South, “Paroles Appealed for In Reeltown Cases,” May 1937, 12
Warrenton, N.C.:
“34 Are Lynched In 9 Months,” Oct 4 1930, 4
Warrenville, S.C.:
“Textile Strikes Sweep South As N.R.A. Brings Pay-Cuts, Stretch-Out,” Nov 15 1933, 1
Warrior, Ala.:
“Miner’s Child Starves To Death,” Oct 4 1930, 1
“County Refuses Relief To Starving Workers in Warrior,” May 9 1931, 2
“Make Warrior Miners Professional Beggars,” May 16 1931, 1
Warrior River:
Important News In Short: Birmingham, Ala., Jul 1934, 2
Warsaw, Poland:
“Clashes In Europe On Feb. 25,” Mar 7 1931, 1
“Polish Terror Rages Against Working Class,” Oct 31 1931, 4
Warwick, Rose:
“Police Murder 3 Negro Jobless At Chi. Eviction,” Aug 8 1931, 1
Washburn, Edith:
“Eighteen Held on Herndon Law in Atlanta Jail,” Jun 1936, 1
Washburn, Walter:
“Ga. Workers Kidnapped,” Jul 1936, 6
Washburn, Mrs. Walter E.:
“Klan Burns Fiery Cross At Home Of Herndon Defender,” Aug 15 1933, 2
Washington Commonwealth Federation:
The American Scene, “Washington Repeals Syndicalism Law,” Apr 1937, 10
Washington Conference for Unemployment Insurance:
“‘10 Years In Prison For Every Communist In Alabama’,” Feb 14 1931, 4
Washington County, Pa.:
“Penna. Miners Build Defense,” Sep 12 1931, 1
Washington, D.C.:
“Georgia Tobacco Farmers Ruined,” Aug 16 1930, 3
“Remember Ella May!” Sep 13 1930, 4
Lynch Law At Work, Sep 27 1930, 1
“10% Wage Cut In Candidate Bankhead Mine,” Sep 27 1930, 1
Untitled, Sep 27 1930, 3
“Winter!---What Now?” Oct 4 1930, 1
“Cotton Price Down 47%,” Oct 25 1930, 3
“Answers A.F. of L. Flogging In Miami By Joining Communists,” Oct 25 1930, 4
“Admits Crisis,” Nov 8 1930, 3
“No Relief But Lies By Hoover Regime,” Nov 15 1930, 1
“Postal Workers Laid Off by Hoover Regime,” Nov 22 1930, 2
“Nation Drive For Signers Of Our Bill,” Dec 13 1930, 1
“Money For War, But None For The Unemployed,” Dec 27 1930, 1
“Hoover Gives Out 5 Jobs—We’re Fired,” Dec 27 1930, 3
“Tax Refund To Rich Exceeds Hoover Relief,” Jan 3 1931, 1
“Charlotte Gives Bats For Bread,” Jan 3 1931, 1
“Hyde Reveals Drought Fund Not For Poor,” Jan 3 1931, 2
Lynch Law At Work: Washington, D.C., Jan 3 1931, 2
“Army Rags, Slop, Workers’ Pay—But No Jobless Aid,” Jan 10 1931, 1
“Polite Cursing,” Jan 10 1931, 3
“Many Hunger Marches Thru Out Country,” Jan 17 1931, 1
“Club Congress Into Action!” Jan 31 1931, 4
“‘10 Years In Prison For Every Communist In Alabama’,” Feb 14 1931, 4
“House Launches Attack Against Foreign-Born,” Feb 28 1931, 2
“White Rulers Deny Negroes Schooling In Black Belt,” Mar 28 1931, 2
“Soviet Exports Up 14% Last Year When All Others Fail,” Mar 28 1931, 2
“Try To Deport 100,000 Seamen,” Apr 4 1931, 2
“Nation-Wide Wage-Cutting Drive Grows,” Apr 11 1931, 1
“Miners Starve In Serfdom In West Virginia,” Apr 11 1931, 2
“D.A.R. Fears Communists; Call For Police,” May 2 1931, 3
“6,000,000 Children Underfed,” May 2 1931, 4
“Scottsboro Conferences in 12 Cities,” May 16 1931, 4
“Green Forced To Admit Cuts But Betrays Strikers,” May 23 1931, 2
Untitled, Jun 6 1931, 1
“3 Billions Lost In Wage-Cuts In 3 Months of 1931,” Jun 13 1931, 2
“Women’s Wage Half Necessary Minimum Report Shows,” Jun 20 1931, 4
“Women’s Wages Low,” Jun 27 1931, 3
Caption, “40,000 Miners Fighting Starvation,” Jul 4 1931, 4
“Crooked Bishop’s Pal Gets Govt. Parole,” Oct 17 1931, 4
“Four Main Columns Will Reach Capitol Dec. 7th,” Oct 24 1931, 2
“Central Committee Calls For Utmost Support of National Hunger March,” Oct 24 1931, 4
“Bishop Indicted On Election Fraud,” Oct 24 1931, 4
“Preparing To Take Demands To Washington,” Oct 31 1931, 1
“Faster War Planes,” Oct 31 1931, 2
“Speed-Up In Navy Yards,” Oct 31 1931, 2
“Winter Relief Demand Before U.S. Governm’t,” Nov 7 1931, 1
“Workers Fight For Immediate Winter Relief,” Dec 5 1931, 1
“Politicians In Panic Try To Evade Issue,” Dec 12 1931, 1
“Scottsboro Challenges Lynch Senators,” Dec 19 1931, 1
“Marchers Return from Journey To Washington to Organize for National Feb. 4 Demonstrations,” Dec 19 1931, 1
“Doak Snarling New Lies About Hunger March,” Dec 26 1931, 1
“New Stage in War Against China and the Soviet Union,” Dec 26 1931, 4
“Great Discovery by Senate Committee of Crooked Bishop,” Jan 2 1932, 2
“Police Continue Attacks on Hunger Marchers Return,” Jan 2 1932, 2
“Railway Union Heads In Big Wage Cut Plot,” Jan 2 1931, 1
“Workers Will Rally Behind Demands Feb. 4,” Jan 9 1932, 1
“Again the Flood Horror,” Jan 9 1932, 4
“Chloroform For Baby,” Jan 9 1932, 4
“Party Recruiting Drive In District No. 16,” Jan 16 1932, 4
“Negro Leaders Out of Georgia State Rebuplican [sic] Party,” Feb 6 1932, 3
“Present Negro Rights [illegible] Ruby Bates One [illegible] of March,” May 20 1933, 1
“Covington Co. Masses Storm Court House,” Jul 12 1933, 1
“Mass Protests Again Snatch Scottsboro Boy From Death Chair,” Jul 12 1933, 1
“Gangs Terrorize Farmers Who Won’t Plow Under; Landlords Pocket Profits of Destruction,” Aug 15 1933, 2
“T.C.I. Workers Who Got $8.00 in 1930 Now Get $3.80; Company Deducts Jobless Aid From Pay When Re-Hiring,” Aug 15 1933, 2
“This Year They Plow the Cotton Under; Next, They Plow the Croppers Under,” Sep 20 1933, 4
“Men Of S.P. Lines Vote Strike, But Officials Sell Out,” Dec 20 1933, 1
“CWA,” Jan 20 1934, 2
“Gov’t Cuts Off CWA, Firing in South First, Jobless Plan Fight on Hunger,” Mar 25 1934, 2
“‘Wouldn’t Quit The Reds For All The Mules in Alabama,’ Says Paxton,” Mar 25 1934, 2
Important News In Short: Washington, D.C., Jul 1934, 2
“Transients Who Vote To Be Cut Off Relief,” Sep 1934, 4
“Texas Conference For Relief Action,” Oct 1934, 2
Important News In Short: Washington, D.C., Oct 1934, 3
“Mass Protest At Bankhead Bill Forces Gains,” Oct 1934, 3
“Congress Called To Washington For Jobless Bill,” Nov 1934, 1
Important News in Short: Washington, D.C., Nov 1934, 4
Important News in Short: Washington, D.C., Nov 1934, 4
“Congress Called To Back Workers Insurance Bill,” Nov 1934, 6
“Croppers Union Proposes Unity, Plans Strike,” Dec 1934, 1
“New Deal Slashes Jobless Relief,” Dec 1934, 1
“Workers’ Congress To Washington Supported By Southern Masses As Unions Back Insurance Bill,” Dec 1934, 1
“White Worker Gets Threat, Attempt Stop Struggle,” Dec 1934, 3
“Seamen Win Aid By Mass Action In New Orleans,” Dec 1934, 5
Important News In Short: Washington, D.C., Dec 1934, 6
“The United Front in the South,” Jan 1935, 1
“Workers Insurance Congress Unites Thousands in Washington: Relief Cut More By New Deal As Profits Rise,” Jan 1935, 1
“Workers Insurance Congress Unites Thousands in Washington: White, Negro Workers And Farmers Send Delegates From South,” Jan 1935, 1
“Demand Fascist Laws Against Workers’ Party,” Jan 1935, 2
Important News In Short: Washington, D.C., Jan 1935, 4
“The Communists And The Fight For Unemployment Insurance,” Jan 1935, 6
“Tenants, Croppers Form United Front; Arkansas Leader Jailed,” Feb 1935, 1
“Troops, Jail Against Ga. Textile Pickets Fails Stop Strike,” Feb 1935, 1
“Mass Pressure Brings Support of Workers Bill by Congressmen,” Feb 1935, 2
“Southern Vets Start On Way To Capitol Demanding Bonus,” Feb 1935, 2
“U.S. High Living Standard Is Lie,” Feb 1935, 2
“U.S. Supreme Court Faces Negro Rights in Scottsboro Case,” Feb 1935, 3
Important News In Short: Washington, D.C., Feb 1935, 4
“Union Delegate to Workers’ Congress Reports—Urges Support For H.R. 2827,” Feb 1935, 4
Important News In Short: Washington, D.C., Mar-Apr 1935, 6
“F.D.R. Smashes Wage Standards In Plan For Work Relief,” May 1935, 1
Important News In Short: Washington, D.C., May 1935, 4
“Vicious Herndon Sentence Upheld By Supreme Court,” Jun 1935, 1
“Enrollment In C.C.C. Camps To Be Doubled,” Jun 1935, 3
Important News In Short: Washington, D.C., Jun 1935, 6
“Negro Congress Called To Meet In Washington,” Jan 1936, 2
“Card Shows Why Industry Moves South,” Mar-Apr 1936, 4
“Steel Union to Follow C.I.O. Leadership,” Jun 1936, 1
“Negro Youth Hold Meeting,” Sep 1936, 1
“Southern Negro, White Youth Hold Conference in Richmond,” Jan 1937, 3
The American Scene, “Youth Delegates March on Washington,” Apr 1937, 10
Washington, George:
“Workers, Peasants Of China Set Up Own Rule,” Aug 16 1930, 2
Washington, James:
“Greenville Law Frames Worker,” Jul 25 1931, 3
“Night Raids To Scare Leaders Of Unemployed,” Oct 3 1931, 3
Washington, Matthew:
“Tuscaloosa Lynchers Again Active,” Sep 1934, 2
Washington, Mattie:
“Poor Farmers Shot Down By Landowners,” Dec 6 1930, 1
Washington, Pa.:
“Miners Hunger March 16 Miles,” Apr 25 1931, 1
“Penna. Miners Build Defense,” Sep 12 1931, 1
Washington Park:
“Huge Demonstration in Chicago,” Jul 18 1931, 1
“Thousands Demonstrate Against Cop Brutality,” Aug 15 1931, 1
Washington, Robert:
“Birminham [sic] I.L.D. Leader Railroaded On Traffic Charge,” May 1936, 5
“I.L.D. Leader Tells Story of Bribe Offered by McDuff,” Jun 1936, 6
Washington State Federation of Labor:
The American Scene, “Washington Repeals Syndicalism Law,” Apr 1937, 10
Washington State House of Representatives:
The American Scene, “Washington Repeals Syndicalism Law,” Apr 1937, 10
Water Valley, Miss.:
Lynch Law At Work: Water Valley, Miss., Jun 20 1931, 2
“White Farmer Hangs for Murder of Negro,” Jan 1937, 12
Waterbury, Conn.:
“Scottsboro Conferences in 12 Cities,” May 16 1931, 4
Waterfront Unemployed Council:
“Seamen Win Aid By Mass Action In New Orleans,” Dec 1934, 5
“Workers Insurance Congress Unites Thousands in Washington: White, Negro Workers And Farmers Send Delegates From South,” Jan 1935, 1
“Mobile Seamen Fight Against Forced Labor,” Jan 1935, 3
“Negro I.L.D. Lawyer Defends Seamen,” Feb 1935, 3
Waters, C.H.:
“Women ‘Persuade’ Scab Railroaders,” Dec 1936, 5
Waters, Walter.:
“Southern Vets Start On Way To Capitol Demanding Bonus,” Feb 1935, 2
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