The New International

B

SUBJECT INDEX

A.F. OF L.— See also indiv. occupations (unions); for AFL-CIO unity, see Labor Problems.
A.F. of L. at the crossroads (Swabeck) 34 s/o 74
A.F. of L. at San Francisco (Swabeck) 34 n 103
From Atlantic City to Atlantic City (Muste) 35 oc 182
A.F. of L. begins to face the issues (Swabeck) 35 d 212
Does the A.F. of L. face a split? (Swabeck) 36 f 1

ACADEMIC FREEDOM—See also Civil Liberties.
Intellectual freedom and the Stalinists (Howe) 49 d 231
Academic freedom in review (BR) (Martin) 57 sp 111

AMERICAN FEDERATION OF LABOR—See A.F. of L.

AMERICAN HISTORY—See also Labor Problems for Labor history; Negro Problems.
Spirit of the U.S. Constitution (Morrow) 36 f 13
A page of American imperialism (Wright) 36 jn 86
Homage to John Brown (Novack) 38 ja 23
Marx and Engels on the Civil War (BR) (Novack) 38 f 45
History to order (BR) (Novack) 38 my 156
New mirror in the old frame (Novack) 35 ag 239; 38 s 273
Myth of isolation (Gates) 38 s 265
Revolution, black and white (BR) (Novack) 39 my 155
The struggle for national supremacy (Novack) 39 ag 237
Reading from left to right (Macdonald) 39 ag 245
Negro slavery in America (Novack) 39 oc 305
The colonial plantation system (Novack) 39 d 343
In the American tradition (Johnson) 43 n 306
Negroes in the Civil War (Johnson) 43 d 338
Charles and Mary Beard (BR) (Harvey) 45 ja 30
Agrarian struggles in the U.S. (Gorman) 45 ag 140; 45 s 187
The age of Jackson (BR) (Harvey) 46 ap 119
Negro struggle in history (BR) (McKinney) 48 f 63
Boom days (BR) (Blackwell) 48 jy 159
Politics and classes (BR) (Brad) 49 ja 28
Dangerous radicals (BR) ,(Fahan) 50 j/f 58
Crisis of American socialism (Gates) 54 m/j 124
Kempton’s ruins and monuments (BR) (Martin) 55 su 120
Socialism in the U.S. (Shachtman) 55 fa 139
Hofstadter’s dilemma (BR) (Rawlings) 56 sp 58
Behind the myths (BR) (Gates) 56 sp 66
The post World War I witchhunt (BR) (Harris) 57 sp 125
Not on the recommended list (BR) (Falk) 58 wr 58
A deep concern for man and mankind (BR) (P.H.) 58 sp/su 142

AMERICAN LABOR PARTY—See Labor Political Action.

AMERINGER, OSCAR
Utopia from Oklahoma (Whiteside) 39 ap 109

ANARCHISM
Anarchism in Spain (Morrow) 38 ja 6
Anarchist tactics in Spain (Aldred, Bell, Ed.) 38 mr 80
Betrayal in Spain (Styr-Nhair) 38 jy 198
Anarchism in Spain (BR) (Wilson) 41 my 94
The year one of the Russian Revolution. IX (Serge) 49 f 60
Dialogue with Bakunin (Marx) 51 n/d 363

ANTI-SEMITiSM--See Jewish Problems.

ARABS—See also in Sec. C Israel; Middle East; Palestine and indiv. Arab countries.
The Jewish--Arab conflict (Rock) 38 n 335
Four recent books on Palestine (Gorman) 47 mr 89

ARMAMENTS—See Militarism.

ART & AESTHETICS—See also Literature.
Marxism and art (BR) (Ernest) 34 jy 26
Art and action (BR) (Cotton) 34 d 158
Art and Marxism (Feroci) 35 ag 166
Politics and art (BR) (Tyler) 38 my 158
Art by ukase (BR) (Margolin) 38 oc 315
The problem of public sensibility (Farrell) 46 ag 183
[Letter] (Willingham) 47 ap 124
From two old masters (BR) (Howe) 47 ag 189
A Marxist approach to art (Harrington) 56 sp 40

ATOMIC ENERGY—See Science.

AUTO WORKERS
Will the auto industry strike next? (Lore) 35 ja 9
Some lessons of the Toledo strike (Muste) 35 jy 127
Trade unions and the revolution (Muste) 35 ag 153
Reading from left to right (Macdonald) 39 ja 28
Afterthoughts on a union convention (Coolidge) 42 s 233
Michigan Commonwealth Federation (Smith) 44 jn 172
Politics among the auto workers (Shachtman) 44 oc 310
Folklore of Fordism (BR) (Jason) 48 ag 191
The U.A.W. convention (Coolidge) 41 ag 170
The UAW-CIO through the war (Weiss) 43 s 238
The auto workers’ convention (M.S.) 43 oc 259
UAW vs. GM (Ed.) 45 d 259
The convention struggle in the UAW (Hall) 47 s 195; correction 47 d 261
SWP and the UAW (Ed.) 47 oc 231
What is Walter Reuther? (Benson) 47 d 259
Portrait of a militant union (BR) (Hall) 49 s 210
Politics of the CIO convention (Hall) 52 n/d 271

BOLSHEVISM- See also Lenin; Trotsky in this sec.; in Sec. A see Lenin;
Trotsky as authors; in Sec. C see Russia.
The testament of Lenin (Trotsky) 34 jy 6
Dictatorship of party or proletariat? (Shachtman) 34 jy 9
Bolshevism (BR) (Arnecke) 34 s/o 95
Twilight of capitalism (BR) (Carter) 36 f 30
Balabanoff’s memoirs (BR) (Shachtman) 38 n 348
Their morals and ours. 38 n 351
Intellectuals in retreat (Burnham & Shachtman) 39 ja 3
Bolshevism and democracy (L) (Alper) 39 jy 216
Bolshevism and democracy (Goldman) 39 jy 218
Graphic history of Bolshevism. 39 ag 240
The Bolsheviks in the war (BR) (Johnson) 41 f 30
Tradition and revolutionary policy (Trotsky) 41 ap 58
To and from the Finland Station (BR) (Johnson) 41 jn 126
Manifesto of the First Congress of the Comintern. 43 jn 189
The ‘mistakes’ of the Bolsheviks (Shachtman) 43 n 303
A historical treasure (Adams) 43 d 350
What is Leninism? (Trotsky) 44 mr 78; correction 44 ap 108
European labor and fascism (BR) (Jason) 44 mr 95
The party that won the victory (M.S.) 44 n 362
Stalin as Lenin’s heir (Lund) 45 my 106
The roots of Stalinism (Procuna) 46 ap 103
Relationship of program to mass influence; an answer (Munis)—ap 105
The significance of Koestler (L) (Weiss, Howe) 46 oc 250
The basis of workers’ democracy; an answer to Ciliga (Goldman) 46 d 305
[Letter] (Roumos) 46 d 320
Soviets and the Constituent Assembly (Shachtman) 49 s 218
Four portraits of Stalinism (Shachtman)—For details see Sec. A.
Letter from David Shub (Shub) 50 j/f 31; comment (Shachtman) SO j/f 31
Letter from David Shub (Shub) 50 m/a 86; A reply (Shachtman) 50 m/a 91
The Constituent Assembly in Russia (Berg) 50 n/d 334
Lenin’s way—or Tito’s way? (Judd) 50 n/d 338
Serge’s memoirs (BR) (H.J.) 51 s/o 309
Critics of American socialism (Howe) 52 m/j 115
Old fables in new jargon (Harris) 52 m/j 171
Moscow in Lenin’s days (Rosmer)—For details see Sec. A.
A studied failure (BR) (A.G.) 55 fa 197
American Communism: a re-examination of the past (Shachtman) 57 fa 207
A dissent from Shachtman’s view (L) (Draper) 58 sp/su 146; A reply (Benson) 58 sp/su 147

BRANDLER & BRANDLERISM—See also Lovestone.
Brandler on the road to Canossa (B.) 34 jy 30
Letter to Klara Zetkin (Radek) 34 d 155
The course of Herr Brandler (Held) 38 ap 119; 38 my 146
A meeting of bankrupts (Carter) 38 my 139

CIO—See also Labor Problems for AFL-CIO unity; and indiv. occupations (unions).
The story of the CIO (BR) (Widick) 38 n 346
France and the CIO (Widick) 39 ja 25
The CIO convention (Ed.) 47 ja 6
A turning point for the CIO (Jason) 49 d 227
Politics of the CIO convention (Hall) 52 n/d 271

CAPITALISM (General)
Twilight of capitalism (BR) (Carter) 36 f 30
The press (Angoff) 36 ap 64
Modern mythology (BR) (Mizener) 38 f 62
The record of the democracies (Spector) 38 ap 115
Save capitalism first (BR) (Macdonald) 38 s 282
Once again on the ‘crisis of Marxism’ (T.) 39 my 133
Reading from left to right (Macdonald) 39 my 153
Capitalist society and the war (Johnson) 40 jy 114
What is capitalism? (Kent) 41 oc 245
Win the war, win the peace (BR) (Craine) 42 ag 223
The nightfall of capitalism (Shachtman) 48 f 35
Unrealized ambition (BR) (Gates) 52 n/d 328

CAPITALISM, U.S.—See also Economic & Social Conditions.
Declining America (BR) (Morrow) 34 n 126
U.S. capitalism: national or international? (Novack) 35 oc 191
Mahoney bill and revolutionary politics (Cowles) 38 oc 307
Mahoney bill and today’s tasks (Geller, Ed.) 38 n 344
The monopoly committee—first year (Macdonald) 39 ap 105
Tomorrow in America (Allen) 42 ag 198
American capitalism in the war [Resolution] (Workers Party) 43 d 323
Can the Marshall Plan succeed? (Judd) 48 s 195
Capitalism, Stalinism and the war [Resolution] (I.S.L.) 49 ap 116
The counterfeit concept of countervailing power (Vance) 54 m/j 99
A.A.Berle’s capitalist revolution (BR) (Vance) 55 sp 34

CATHOLIC CHURCH—See also Religion.
The anti-Catholic drive in Mexico (Mendez) 35 ja 23
The Pope needs America (Farrell) 46 f 43
The Vatican’s new line (Leonard) 46 ag 188
Marxism vs. Catholicism: a debate (Shachtman & Rice) 49 ja 3
Catholic power (BR) (McDermott) 50 m/j 188

CHIANG KAI-SHEK—See in Sec. C China.

CHURCHILL, WINSTON—See also World War II; see in Sec. C Britain.
Inquilab zindabad! (A.G.) 42 s 229
Trotsky on Churchill (Trotsky) 42 s 230
Lenin on Churchill (Lenin) 42 s 232

CINEMA—See Movies.

CIVIL LIBERTIES see also Academic Freedom.
Wartime censorship (Ed.) 42 d 322
Democracy and the war for democracy (Ed.) 43 jy 199
National Service Act (Ed) 44 mr 67
A National Service Act 45 ja 3
Does freedom of speech include fascists? (Harvey) 45 n 241
hew tactics in fighting totalitarianism (Barrett) 45 n 237; 45 d 267
Civil liberties in the fight against fascism; a reply to Barrett (Draper) 45 d 270
Mealy-mouthed martyrs (BR) (Enright) 48 jy 159
What mean these trials? Hiss, Ceplon & the FBI (Ed.) 49 jy 131
The Smith Act and the Stalinist trial (Ed.) 49 s 195
Classified democracy (Ed.) 50 j/f 4
The horrors of Chambers (Gates) 52 s/o 245
Civil liberties and the philosopher of the Cold War (Haskell B Falk) 53 j/a 184
The Shachtman passport case (A.G.) 54 j/f 3
McCarthy and MCarthyism (Falk) 54 j/f 26
Record of a consistent attack on civil liberties (Harrington) 54 m/a 93
From star to bit player (Falk) 55 sp 6
The Nathan case (Cates) 55 su 72
The Peters case (Falk) 55 su 76
Magazine chronicle (Rev) (Falk & Stein) 55 su 131
Statistics and formulas (BR) (Parris) 56 sp 64
The post World War I witchhunt (BR) (Harris) 57 sp 125
The fight for freedom (BR) (Parris) 57 sp 134

CIVIL RIGHTS—Negro Problems.

COLD WAR—See also Truman Admin. Foreign Policy; War Danger; and headings listed under International Relations. Paris Peace Conference (Ed.) 46 s 199
The Paris Conference—interim observations (Ed.) 46 oc 228
Paris Conference another zero (Ed.) 46 n 260
How Partisan Review goes to war (Howe) 47 ap 109
Resolution on the international scene (Workers Party) 47 ap 114
Germany after the Moscow meet (Judd) 47 jy 134
The Marshall Plan vs. the Stalin plan (Ed.) 47 oc 227
James Burnham, a modern Cato (Weber) 47 oc 234
Peace prescription (BR) (Fenwck) 48 ap 127
The new Europe (Ed.) 49 jy 134
Europe rejects war (Silone) 49 jy 135
The politics of incineration (Fahan) 50 m/a 75
Burnham rides again (BR) (Loumos) 50 m/a 123
’Balanced collective forces’ (Ed.) 50 j/a 199
Dubious history (BR) (Fenwick) 50 j/a 252
Irresponsibility in disguise (BR) (Gates) 54 j/f 60
After the London agreement (Stein) 54 j/a 163
The power of the Third Camp [Resolution] (I.S.L.) 54 j/a 183
The post-Geneva spirit (Haskell) 55/56 wr 207
A farewell to politics (BR) (Hill) 56 sp 62

COLONIAL QUESTIONS—see Imperialism; National Liberation Policy.

COMMUNIST INTERNATIONAL—See also headings listed under Bolshevism.
A new turn to the united front (Ed.) 34 ag 35
What we gave and what we got (Trotsky) 34 s/o 91
A letter to the Independent Labour Party (I.C.L.) 34 d 152
Letter to Clara Zetkin (Radek) 34 d 155
On the Seventh Congress of the Comintern (Trotsky) 35 c 177
The real meaning of the united front (Swabeck) 35 oc 180
Who defends Russia? who helps Hitler? (L.T.) 35 oc 189
The Comintern and social-patriotism (Feroci) 35 d 234
The question of organic unity (West) 36 f 17
Living Marxism (BR) (G.N.) 36 jn 93
History of the C.I. (BR) (Carter) 38 f 61
[As we go to press...] 38 my 136
The 1938 Belgium and the Stalinists (Ed.) 38 jy 197
The question of the united front (Trotsky) 38 jy 216; 38 ag 250
Balabanoff’s memoirs (BR) (Shachtman) 38 n 348
The International of universal chauvinism (Detil) 39 my 147
Stalinism and the war (Carter) 41 my 68
What next in Europe? (Europacus) 42 ap 81
Stalin dissolves the Comintern (Adams) 43 jn 164
Manifesto of the First Congress of the Comintern. 43 jn 189
The class nature of the Stalinist parties [Resolution] (Garrett) 46 ap 126
The heroic period of the Comintern (Gates) 46 s 205
The nature of the Stalinist parties (Shachtman) 47 mr 67
Trotskyist primer (BR) (Cohen) 48 s 221
On the psychology of Stalinism (Andrade) 49 ja 27
The new world union federation (Bonet) 50 j/f 48
Problems of yesterday and today (Rosmer) 50 m/j
180 Revelations and explanations (Falk) 56 su 71
An important book (BR) (J.F.) 57 su 204

COMMUNIST LEAGUE OF AMERICA
A letter to American Trotskyists (Trotsky) 40 s 171
25 years of American Trotskyism (Shachtman) 54 j/f 11

COMMUNIST PARTIES, FOREIGN—See indiv. countries in Sec. C; see also Communist International.

COMMUNIST PARTY OF THE U.S.—See also Wallace, Henry.
The decay of the Stalinist party (Swabeck) 34 jy 20
The Communist, June ‘34 (Rev) (V.T.) 34 jy 31
A stupendous bureaucracy (M.S.) 34 s/o 78
The press: Decision, action, discussion. 35 mr Opp.p.80
The press: Our star-spangled reds. 35 ag Opp.p.176
The question of organic unity (West) 36 f 17
American intellectuals and the crisis. I (Novack) 36 f 23
Prize novel (BR) (J.W.) 36 f 30
In opposite directions (M.S.) 36 jn 65
An American purge. 38 ja 28
A frame-up that failed (Hudson) 38 mr 73
A letter to Corliss Lamont (Eastman) 38 ap 122
Red fantasy (BR) (Wolfe) 38 ap 126
History to order (BR) (Novack) 38 my 156
The Stalinist convention (Shachtman) 38 jy 202
A modern Bolus [Clipping] (Oneal) 38 jy 223
Browder’s two Roosevelts (Gates) 38 ag 233
Reading from left to right (Macdonald) 39 ja 28
The editor’s comments. 39 f 35; 39 mr 67
Stalinism and the war (Carter) 41 my 68
Return of a scoundrel (Adams) 42 d 345
The ‘liquidation’ of the Communist Party (Ed.) 44 ja 7
What are the ‘community councils’? (Leonard) 44 ja 21
The upheaval in the C.P. (Ed.) 45 ag 131
James P. Cannon as historian (Gates) 45 oc 207
Stalinist literary discussion (Farrell) 46 ap 112
The nature of the Stalinist parties (Shachtman) 47 mr 67
The bitter box (BR) (Stoker) 47 mr 95
The neo-Stalinist type (Draper) 48 ja 24
American student movement: a survey (Falk) 49 mr 84
What mean these trials? (Ed.) 49 jy 131
The Smith Act and the Stalinist trial (Ed.) 49 s 195
A left wing of the labor movement? (Shachtman) 49 s 204
Intellectual freedom and Stalinists (Howe) 49 d 231
The horrors of Chambers (Gates) 52 s/o 245
The origins of the Communist movement in the U.S. (Falk)—For details see Sec. A.
The Communist Party at the crossroads (Benson) 56 fa 139
American Communism: a re-examination of the past (Shachtman) 57 fa 207, A reply (Draper) 58 wr 49; a rejoinder (Shachtman) 58 wr 63
A moral breakthrough. (BR) (Hoffman) 58 wr 63
An excellent theoretical analysis (BR) (Harrington) 58 sp/su 137

CONSCIENTOUS OBJECTION—See Pacifism.

COUGHLIN, FATHER—See Fascism, U.S.

CRIMINOLOGY
Criminology and society (Wolfe) 36 jn 78

DEMOCRATIC PARTY—See Elections, Liberalism, New Deal; Truman Admin.

DEWEY COMMISSION—See in Section C Russia.

DIALECTICAL MATERIALISM—See Marxism.

EASTMAN, MAX—See also in Section C & D
Trotsky on Max Eastman (Trotsky) 34 n 125
Max Eastman’s straw man. (West) 35 d 220
Max Eastman as scientist (Burnham) 38 jn 177
A little wool-pulling (Burnham) 38 ag 246
Max Eastman’s new faith (Ed.) 41 jn 101

ECONOMIC & SOCIAL CONDITIONS, U.S.—See also Capitalism, U.S.
Honky-tonk (BR) (Berg) 34 ag 62
American capacity (BR) (W.E.G.) 34 ag 64
The housing question in,America (McBride) 35 mr 47
Anderson’s dilemma (BR) (J.W.) 35 jy 143 [Caption transposed on page]
What is this business reviva1? Swabeck) 36 ap 40
The crisis and the 1iberals (Cowles) 38 mr 75
Pluperfect plutocracy (BR) (Novack) 38 mr 91
Strike of capital? (Cowles) 36 ap 107
Spending and the stock market Cowles) 38 ag 24
Pensions and the crisis (Ed.) 38 s 260
Save capitalism first (BR) (Macdonald) 38 s 282
What is ‘socialized’ medicine? (Harvey) 38 d 369
Reading from left to right (Macdonald 38 d 374; 39 ja 27
Socialized medicine (L) (Rorty, Mia, reply by Harvey) 39 ja 30
Behind the farmers’ vote (Cowles) 39 f 49
A reminder to the unemployed (Ed.) 39 mr 68
The monopoly committee—first year (Macdonald) 39 ap 105; 39 my 154
The struggle against the oil octopus (Novack) 39 jy 213
Twenty-five million of us: the story of W.P.A. (Macdonald) 39 s 268
The American war economy (Macdonald) 41 ap 40
The TNEC report(Ed.) 41 jn 102
Aircraft and finance capital (Demby) 41 jn 103
Gloom in Wall Street (Demby) 41 ag 174
America’s war economy (Demby) 41 s 200
The new economic ‘boom’ (Ed.) 41 oc 228
Modern war and economy (Gates) 41 n 274
A capitalist looks at the economics of war (BR) (Demby) 41 n 283
The war and minorities (Fenwrck) 41 d 295
The Truman and Vinson reports (A.G.) 42 f 5
An economic review of 1941 (Gates) 42 mr 37
Roosevelt’s economic program (A.G.) 42 my 99
Tomorrow in America (Allen) 42 ag 198
The middle class in crisis (Allen) 42 oc 264
How the other 2% lives (BR) (Fenwick) 42 oc 285
Financing big business (BR) (J. C.) 42 d 348
Small business in descent (Adams) 43 mr 75
Finances and the war (BR) (A.) 43 mr 93
Unemployment: a post-war prospect (Gates) 43 my 139
What is incentive pay? (Weiss) 43 jn 168
A brief review (BR) (Green) 43 jn 192
The coming crisis in the U.S. [Resolution] (Workers Party) 43 d 327
The costs of the war. 44 f 58
Is full employment possible? (Francis) 45 d 262
Economic basis of the black market (Green) 45 d 279
Big business in a democracy (BR) (Harvey) 46 f 53
Profits and the housing crisis (Gould) 46 mr 83
The struggle on the price front (Ed.) 46 s 195
Wage-price spiral and the mood of the workers (Ed.) 46 oc 227
Compulsory free trade (Ed.) 48 ja 4
Politics of anti-inflation (Ed.) 48 ja 5
Boom days (BR) (Blackwell) 48 jy 159
Folklore of Fordism (BR) (Jason) 48 ag 191
Boom and bust in American prosperity (Ranger) 49 mr 67
The American recession (Kimbay) 49 jy 153
Sternberg’s view (BR) (Brad) 49 ag 189
Devaluation and the dollar crisis (Farley) 49 s 199
How Europe aided the U.S. (Gates) 50 j/f 9
After Korea—what? (Vance) 50 n/d 323
The permanent war economy (Vance)—For details see sec. A.
Social forces and politics in the U.S. [Resolution] (I.S.L.) 51 j/a 207
The middle class in U.S. society (BR) (Haskell) 51 s/o 288
[Letter] (I.S.L., Phila.) 51 n/d 375
The permanent war economy under Eisenhower (Vance) 53 j/f 89
The myth of America’s social revolution (BR) (Vance) 53 m/j 167
Fear of depression in the U.S. (Vance) 53 n/d 303
The economic outlook for 1954 (Vance) 54 j/f 8
The counterfeit concept of countervailing power (Vance) 54 m/j 99
A.A.Berle’s capitalist revolution (BR) (Vance) 55 sp 34
The rich get richer (Simon) 55 sp 54
The crisis in distribution (Vance) 55 su 86
Economic prospects for 1956 (Vance) 55/56 wr 215
Immigration and the U.S. (BR) (H.B.) 56 sp 68
The Eisenhower recession (Vance) 58 wr 3
The recession: a Keynesian view (Roseman) 58 sp/su 129

EDUCATION—See also Academic Freedom; Student Movement.
Some notes on workers’ education (Muste) 35 d 225
Popular education in crisis (Macdonald) 39 jn 176
Reading from left to right (Macdonald) 39 ag 245
The crisis in American education (Wright) 57 fa 251

EINSTEIN, ALBERT
Reading from left to right (Macdonald) 38 d 374

EISENHOWER ADMIN., DOMESTIC POLICY & GENERAL
Eisenhower; portrait in brass (Fenwick) 49 mr 72
The permanent war economy under Eisenhower (Vance) 53 j/f 89
The economic outlook for 1954 (Vance) 54 j/f 8
McCarthy and McCarthyism (Falk) 54 j/f 26
The growth of American conservatism... [Resolution] (I.S.L.) 54 j/a 202
The Eisenhower recession (Vance) 58 wr 3

EISENHOWER ADMIN., FOREIGN POLICY—For U.S. relations with indiv. countries,
see country in Sec. C; see also in Sec. C Korea.
Shifts in American foreign policy (Haskell) 53 j/f 18
America’s post-Stalin policy (Haskell) 53 j/f 59
Aftermath of the Korean truce (Ed.) 53 j/a 175
France and American foreign policy (Stein) 54 m/j 113
After the London agreement (Stein) 54 j/a 163
The power of the Third Camp [Resolution] (I.S.L.) 54 j/a 183
The post-Geneva spirit (Haskell) 55/56 wr 207
The Eisenhower doctrine (A.G.) 57 wr 3

ELECTIONS
The second Roosevelt election (Swabeck) 34 d 134
Will Roosevelt be re-elected? (West) 36 ap 33
The editor’s comments. 38 d 355
Behind the farmers’ vote (Cowles) 39 f 49
The editor’s comment. 39 jy 195; 40 oc 179
The Willkievelt campaign (Macdonald) 40 oc 182
The election results Shachtman) 43 n 291
The P.A.C., the elections and the future Ed.) 44 oc 307
The PAC and the elections (Ed.) 44 n 355
The Republican sweep (Ed.) 46 2 291
Two conventions; challenge to labor (Ed.) 48 ag 163
The Truman upset and labor politics (Ed.) 48 n 259
Labor and the elections (Ed.) 32 m/a 51
Why labor supports the Democrats (Ed) 52 j/a 179
The Eisenhower victory (Haskell) 52 s/o 215
The elections: a post-mortem (Haskell) 56 fa 179

ELECTRICAL WORKERS
What happened at the U.E. meeting (Gates) 44 oc 316
The U.E. convention fight (Gates) 49 s 196

ENGELS, FRIEDRICH see also Marx; Marxism
Engels’ letters to Kautsky (Trotsky) 36 jn 73
Engels’ war articles (Trotsky) 44 my 137

FAIR DEAL—See Truman Admin.

FARMERS & FARM PROBLEMS
Behind the farmers vote (Cowles) 39 f 49
The economics of cotton farming (Pytlak) 39 ap 120; 39 my 144
Cotton economy in depression (Pytlak) 39 ag 247
The Negro in. Southern agriculture (Birchman) 39 d 345
Agrarian struggles in U.S. (Gorman) 43 ag 140
The farmers last frontiers (BR) (Black) 46 ja 24.
Technological progress in agriculture (Fabius) 46 ap 116

FASCISM (GENERAL)
Bonapartism and Fascism (Ed.) 34 ag 37
Apologetics (BR) (Carter) 33 ja 28
Philosophy of confusion (BR) (Grote) 35 oc 207
The Prerss (clipping) (Angoff) 36 ap 64
Fascism and big business (Guérin) 38 oc 297
Mann in uniform (BR) (Stanley) 38 n 350
School for dictators (BR) (Macdonald) 39 ap 126
Capitalist society and this war (Johnson) 40 jy 114
State and counter evolution (Johnson) 40 ag 137
Trotsky’s place in history (Johnson) 40 s 151
What is the Fascist state? (Macdonald) 41 f 22
German society and capitalism (Gates) 41 ap 49; 41 my 86
Fascism—a new social order (Macdonald) 41 my 82
Burnham and his managers (Gates) 41 jy 144; 41 ag 175
Once again, the German economy (A.G.) 41 d 294
The theory of the offensive (BR) (Gordon) 42 jn 157
Current economic developments in Germany (Gates) 42 oc. 268
The Nazi system (BR) (R.F.) 42 d 349
Princely potpourri (BR) (Amadeus) 43 mr 92 Trotsky on democracy and fascism (Ed.) 43 jy 216
Fascism and democratic slogans (T rotsky) 43 jy 217
Trotsky and the Iron Heel (Trotsky) 45 ap 95
New tactics in fighting totalitarianism (Barrett) 45 n 237; 45 d 267
Does freedom of speech include fascists? (Harvey) 45 n 241
Civil liberties in the fight against fascism.; a reply to Barrett (Draper) 45 d 270
Koestler and Jewish fascism, (Brooks) 47 f 54
The concentrationary universe (BR) (Howe) 47 s 220
Bend sinistmr (BR) (Stoker) 47 s 221
’1984’—Utopia reversed (BR (Howe) 50 n/d 360
Judgment of an era (Gates) 31 n/d 315; 52 j/f 20; 52 ma 74
Dissipating a reputation (BR) (Stein) 55 su 128

FASCISM, GERMAN & ITALIAN -See under country in Sec C

FASCISM, U.S.
The Long and Coughlin movements (Swabeck) 35 my 103
Fascism’s dress clothes (Burnham) 38 jy 207
The editor’s comment. 39 mr 67
The editor’s comment. 39 jn 163
Reading from left to right (Macdonald) 40 jn 104
Lindbergh: swastika waver (Ed.) 41 s 198
Technocracy: a totalitarian fantasy (Temple) 44 mr 73; 44 ap 117

FEDERALISM—See World-Federalism.

FILMS—e Movies.

FOREIGN POLICY (GENERAL)—See also Socialist Policy (War) and headings listed under International Relations.
The editor’s comments. 38 jy 195
War-mad liberal (BR) (Morrow) 39 my 156

FOREIGN POLICY, U.S.—See also foreign policy under New Deal; Truman Admin., Eisenhower Admin.; also Imperialism, U.S.
America and the war in the Pacific (Weber) 34 ag 33
The debate on the Ludlow bill (Ed.) 38 f 37
The myth of isolation (Gates) 38 s 265
The friends of the war referendum (Draper) 39 oc 302
Blitzkrieg and revolution (Ed.) 40 my 83
Wallace and the people’s war (A.G.) 42 jn 131
Make-believe war? (BR) (Hall) 42 ag 222
The end of isolationism in the U.S. (Ed.) 43 s 227
Does America have a foreign policy? (Adams) 43 oc 266
The post-war planners (Ellis) 44 ag 251
China policy at work (Ed.) 50 j/f 6
Shifts in American foreign policy (Haskell) 53 j/f 18
Irresponsibility in disguise (BR) (Gates) 54 j/f 60
’Coexistence’ as a catch-phrase in the cold war (Shachtman) 55 sp 22
The revolution in world trade (BR) (A.G.) 56 su 135
Introduction to American foreign policy (BR) (M.A.) 56 su 136
U.S. foreign policy in the clouds (Bottone) 57 fa 245

FOURTH INTERNATIONAL—See also Trotskyism and the headings there listed.
For the Fourth International! (Ed.) 34 jy 1; reprinted 44 jy 230
Towards the Fourth International. 35 mr Opp.p.80
The 3rd International is dead—long live the 4th (rd.) 35 ag Opp.p.145 [’The press prints...’] 38 ag 252
Ignace Reiss: in memoriam (Reiss) 38 s 276
The Fourth International meets (Ed.) 38 s 278
A great achievement (Trotsky) 38 oc 293
The 4th International is launched (Shachtman) 38 n 325
Toward a decision (BR) (Trotsky) 38 n 347
To the secretariat of the Fourth International (Morrow) 46 ja 13; correction 46 f 49 (footnote); 46 f 53
[Letter] (Group of European Emigrés) 46 ja 30; Statement [in reply] (International Communists of Germany) 46 ja 30
The congress of the Fourth International (Shachtman) 48 oc 236

GENERAL
For the Fourth International! (Ed.) 34 jy 1
The aims of our review (Ed.) 38 ja 3
The need for politics (Ed.) 50 j/f 3
Reflections on a decade past (M.S.) 50 m/j 131

HISTORIOGRAPHY
A new technics (BR) (J.G.W.) 34 jy 29
Intellectual in defeat (Melvin) 41 ja 10
A telescopic history (BR) (Gates) 41 n 285
A self-repudiation (BR) (Stoker) 44 ja 31
Trapped in emptiness (BR) (Fenwick) 50 j/f 60
Lord Acton and political power (Stein) 53 s/o 291

HISTORY, U.S.—See American History.

HITLERISM—See Fascism; see in Sec. C Germany.

HOOK, SIDNEY—See also Academic Freedom; Civil Liberties; as author, see in Sec. A.
Marxism: science or method? (Gotesky) 34 d 147
Hook purges Marxism (Temple; 41 my 76
The philosophy of history and necessity (A.A.B.) 43 jy 209
Social-democracy vs. Communism (BR) (Howe) 46 n 285
Civil liberties and the philosopher of the Cold War (Haskell & Falk) 53 j/a 184
Hook goes soft on Gomulka (Harrington) 57 fa 269

IMPERIALISM (GENERAL)—See also War Danger; see indiv. countries in Sec.C.
The record of the democracies (Spector) 38 ap 115
World war by stages (BR) (Widick) 38 s 285
Capitalist society and the war (Johnson) 40 jy 114
Imperialism in Africa (Johnson) 41 jn 110
What is imperialism? (2inoviev) 41 d 303; 42 f 16
War and the colonial peoples (A.G.) 42 ap 67
Factories and colonies (ER) (N.J.) 42 jn 160
The myth of the United Nations (Judd) 42 ag 205
Plunder in Southeast Asia (BR) (Fenwick) 43 ap 127
The Atlantic Charter abandoned (Ed.) 44 jn 164
Power politics of the Big Three (Lund) 44 d 393
Deadlock at London (Ed.) 45 oc 195
Colonial world in ferment (Ed.) 45 n 227
Resolution on the international scene (Workers Party) 47 ap 114
Stalinism and the colonies; a dispute (’Samasamajist’ & Judd) 47 s 218
Colonial questions today [Resolution] (Comm. League of China) 47 oc 253;
correction 48 f 59
Source book on imperialism (BR) (Judd) 48 ap 128
A step forward for the third Camp (Berg) 49 s 194

IMPERIALISM, U.S.
America and the war in the Pacific (Weber) 34 ag 33
A page of American imperialism (Wright) 36 jn 86
A new horizon for American imperialism (Gates) 40 jn 101
The inter-American cartel (Gates) 40 ag 133
Features of U.S. imperialism (Demby) 41 my 73
Uncle Sam and John Bull (Judd) 41 s 207; 41 oc 231
’Good neighbors’ (BR) (Wilson) 42 mr 60
A cry for imperialism (BR) (Vaughan) 42 oc 286
’Unifying’ the Americas (BR) (Craine) 43 ja 30
Bolivia—colony of the U.S.A. (Craine) 43 jy 213
’Brothers under the skin’ (R.F.) 43 d 345
Imperialism by any other name (Ed.) 44 ap 104
The dilemma of national self-determination (Ed.) 44 jy 195
Behind the Pearl Harbor exposé (Garrett) 45 d 283
America’s role in Europe ((Judd) 46 ja 5
Compulsory free trade (Ed.) 48 ja 4
Marshall Plan: road to conquest (Paxon) 48 jy 138
[Letter] (Judd) 48 s 223
Marshall Plan: phase II (Judd) 49 jy 137
ECAnomics (BR) (Nail) 49 jy 159
Sternherg’s view (BR) (Brad) 49 ag 189
After Korea—what? (Vance) 50 n/d 323
India and the U.S. (BR) (Baker) 51 m/a 123
The permanent war economy. IV (Vance) 51 j/a 232

INDEPENDENT LABOR PARTY—See in Sec. C Britain.

INDEPENDENT SOCIALIST LEAGUE (From 1940 to 1949 called Workers Party, q.v.)
The ISL lights its ‘listing’ (Gates) 53 s/o 239
The Shachtman passport case (A.G.) 54 j/f 3
The Shachtman case (A.G.) 55 su 71
The case for socialist regroupment (Gates) 57 sp 71
Statement of dissolution (I.S.L.) 58 sp/su 72

INTELLECTUALS
Marxism and the intellectuals (Novack) 35 d 227
American intellectuals and the crisis (Novack) 36 f 23; 36 jn 83
The dilemma of ‘Partisan Review’ (Howe) 42 f 20
How Partisan Review goes to war (Howe) 47 ap 109
Intellectuals’ flight from politics (Howe) 47 oc 241

INTERNATIONAL BUREAU FOR REVOLUTIONARY SOCIALIST UNITY—See London Bureau.

INTERNATIONAL LABOR ORGANIZATION—See League of Nations.

INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS—See Cold War; Foreign Policy; Imperialism; League of Nations; United Nations; War Danger; World War I and II; also foreign policy under Eisenhower Admin.; New Deal; Truman Admin.

JEWISH PROBLEMS—See also in Sec. C Israel; Palestine.
Thermidor and anti-Semitism (Trotsky) 41 my 91
Anti-Semitism and Polish labor (Rudzienski) 47 ja 9
[Letter] (Lynn) 47 f 62
Anti-Semitism and the Polish people (I.) (Findley) 47 ap 127; reply (Erber) 47 ap 127; A reply to a false charge (L) (Rudzienski) 47 ag 191
Views on anti-Semitism (BR) (Shields) 49 ja 30
The Jewish question and Israel [Resolution] (I.S.L.) 51 j/a 222
The basis of Russian anti-Semitism (Stein) 53 j/f 27

JOURNALISM
Hearst (BR) (Karandash) 36 jn 94
They, the people (Macdonald) 38 jy 209; 38 ag 248; 38 s 271
Reading from left to right (Macdonald) 38 d 373
An American dynasty (BR) (Clayton) 48 mr 95
Millionaire ‘free press’ (BR) (Victor) 48 mr 95

KAUTSKY, KARL—See Marxism.

KOESTLER, ARTHUR—See listing in Sec. D.

KRUPSKAYA,
N. K. Krupskaya. 39 mr 95
Krupskaya’s death (Trotsky) 39 ap 117

LABOR PARTY—See Labor Political Action.

LABOR POLITICAL ACTION
The problem of the labor party (M.S.) 35 mr 33
Is a third party coming? (Swabeck) 35 ag 145
The Labor party: 1938 (Burnham) 38 mr 71
The trade unions in politics (Swabeck) 38 mr 78
A timid Lochinvar (Ed.) 38 my 132
Crisis and reform labor politics (Cowles) 38 my 133; 38 jn 181
The question of a labor party: The challenge and the answer (Burnham 6 Shachtman) 38 ag 227
The question of a labor party: for the present party position (Draper) 38 ag 229
Party lines in New York (Ed.) 38 s 259
Labor party and progress (Goldman) 38 s 279
A new recruit to the Democrats’ left wing (Ed.) 38 d 357
A party without a program (Beirce) 39 mr 74
The struggle in California (Mini) 39 mr 78
American labor and politics (Coolidge) 40 oc 186; 40 d 205
The miners’ strikes and the labor party (Ed.) 43 jy 197
The election results (Shachtman) 43 n 291
The fight for a labor party [Resolution] (Workers Party) 43 d 329
What are the ‘community councils’? (Leonard) 44 ja 21
The ALP fight (Ed.) 44 f 35
Ups and downs of the labor party movement (Ed.) 44 ap 99
Michigan Commonwealth Federation (Smith) 44 jn 172
The P.A.C., the elections and the future (Ed.) 44 oc 307
The PAC and the elections (Ed.) 44 n 355
Which way for PAC (4ehnson) 44 d 390
How PAC’s strategy worked out (Mason) 45 d 285
Lessons of the Detroit elections (Harvey) 46 ja 17
Third-party trends (Draper) 47 mr 75
Taft-Hartley and labor politics (Gates) 47 ag 164
The Truman upset and labor politics (Ed.) 48 n 259
City machines and labor politics (Barton) 49 ja 15
Social forces and politics in the U.S. [Resolution] (I.S.L.) 51 j/a 207
The ‘Why?’ is missing (BR) (Ranger) 51 s/o 304
Labor and the elections (Ed.) 52 m/a 51
Why labor supports the Democrats (ES.) 52 j/a 179
The Eisenhower victory (Haskell) 52 s/o 215

LABOR PROBLEMS -See also A.F. of L.; CIO; Labor Political Action; and individual occupations (unions).
Strikes and the economic cycle (Weaver) 34 jy 18
The strike wave and the left wing (Cannon) 34 s/o 67
American trade union problems (Swabeck) 35 ja 7; 35 mr 64
Strikes on the 1933 horizon (Muste) 35 mr 57
Labor historian (BR) (Brown) 35 mr 76
Labor in 1935—panorama & prognoses (Muste) 35 my 102
Toiler’s tale (BR) (Wilson) 35 jy 142
Trade unions and the revolution (Muste) 35 ag 153
The Wagner bill and the working class (West) 35 oc 184
Some notes on workers’ education (Muste) 35 d 225
The question of trade union unity (Widick) 38 ja 13
Mahoney bill and revolutionary politics (Cowles) 38 oc 307
Labor unity—a new stage (Widick) 38 n 331
Mahoney bill and today’s tasks (Geller, Ed.) 38 n 344
The story of the CIO (BR) (Widick) 38 n 346
The struggle in California (Mini) 39 mr 78
Organizing Negro labor (BR) (Widick) 39 oc 318
The editor’s comment, 39 n 323
Labor and strikes in wartime (Shachtman) 41 ap 38
Roosevelt and labor (Coolidge) 41 jy 138
A corpse attempts to rise (Ed.) 41 n 264
The war and priorities (Fenwick) 41 d 295
The issue of labor unity (A.G.) 42 f 3
The role of labor in the war (Wilson) 42 f 13
An economic review of 1941 (Gates) 42 mr 37
A portrait of John L. Lewis (Wilson) 42 my 102
Women in war industries (Green) 42 my 116
A labor base for Negro struggles (Stone) 42 ag 207
A new crisis in the labor movement (Coolidge) 43 ja 3
Another presidential order (E.G.) 43 f 35
Crisis of the War Labor Board (A.G.) 43 mr 67
The Roosevelt edict (A.G.) 43 ap 99
What is incentive pay? (Weiss) 43 in 168
Shifts in the union movement (Coolidge) 43 n 300
Government and labor (BR) (S.L.) 43 n 319
In the international tradition (Johnson) 44 ja 10
Labor problems at the Steel Workers convention (Coolidge) 44 my 131
Toward a new trade union program (Coolidge)—For details see Sec. A.
Ten years of U.S. labor history (Coolidge) 44 jy 221
Five labor conventions (Shachtman et al.) 44 oc 310
Wechsler on John L. Lewis (BR) (N.J.) 45 mr 63
The Murray-Green-Johnston charter (Ed.) 45 ap 67
Negroes in organized labor (Coolidge) 45 ap 90
The World Trade Union Conference (Gates) 45 my 112
The strike wave (Edit.) 46 ja 3
Strike settlements (Ed.) 46 mr 67
Negroes and the labor movement; an answer (Coolidge) 46 mr 89
Return of the injunction (Ed.) 47 ja 3
Politics of anti-inflation (Ed.) 8 ja 5
Crisis of leadership (BR) (Wheelon) 48 jy 160

The record of Taft-Hartleyism (Temple) 48 n 259
Labor’s leaders (BR) (Hall) 48 n 287
On Mills’ book (L) (Coleman) 49 ja 31
Labor policy: New Deal and Fair Deal (Hall) 49 ag 163
The new world union federation (Bonet) 50 j/f 48
A service to labor (BR) (Jason) 50 j/f 59
John L. Lewis (BR) (Jason) 50 n/a 122
Sees flaw in Lens (L) (Craig) 50 m/j 191
Apology for privilege (BR) (Hall) 51 j/f 61
A view of labor (BR) (Hall) 51 s/o 302
Present and future of U.S. labor (Jason, Hall) 53 s/o 244, 249
Mild book by a mild man (BR) (B.H.) 54 j/f 63
The growth of American conservatism and new problems for the labor movement (I.S.L.) 54 j/a 202
Labor unity (Hall) 55 sp 3
Labor unity: a momentous event (G.K.H.) 55/56 wr 212
Organization and consciousness of the American working class (Benson) 56 su 106
Unions, racketeers and senators (Benson) 57 su 161
What do you know about labor? (BR) (Hall) 57 fa 272
Evidence of the challenge to labor (BR) (Hall) 58 sp/su 141
Personal and moral problems of the worker (BR) (Bottone) 58 sp/su 143

LABOR UNITY—See Labor Problems.

LEAGUE OF NATIONS—See also United Nations and headings listed under International Relations.
The Soviets and the League of Nations (Ed.) 34 jy 5
Sanctions and the British general elections (Ed.) 35 d Opp.p.209
The record of the League (Ed.) 36 ap Opp.p.33
A corpse attempts to rise (Ed.) 41 n 264
Bourgeois new worlds (BR) (Gates) 42 jy 189

LENIN—See also headings listed under Bolshevism.
The testament of Lenin (Trotsky) 34 jy 6; 34 ag 39
A legal Marxist (BR) (Carter) 34 ag 63
Lenin and Rosa Luxemburg (Shachtman) 35 mr 60; 38 my 141
A new Lenin book (BR) (Carter) 38 jy 219
The German left and Bolshevism (Held) 39 f 46
Trotsky on Churchill (Trotsky) 42 s 250
The myth of Lenin’s ‘revolutionary defeatism’ (Draper) 53 s/o 255; 53 n/d 313; 54 j/f 39
Economic roots of reformism (Cliff) 58 wr 41

LENINISM—See Bolshevism.

LIBERALISM—See also New Deal; Truman Admin.
American intellectuals and the crisis (Novack) 36 f 23
The crisis and the liberals (Cowles) 38 mr 75
’The Nation’ makes a choice (Ed.) 38 jy 195
America, I love you (BR) (J.B.) 38 jy 221
Reading from left to right (Macdonald) 38 d 373
War-mad liberal (BR) (Morrow) 39 my 156
On the ‘fallen women’ of liberalism (Luxemburg) 42 jy 184
A liberal and the war (BR) (O’Connor) 42 jy 186
The liberal in the U.S. (Barton) 50 n/d 371; 51 j/f 51
Lobbyist for the people (BR) (G.K.H.) 54 m/j 159
The elections: a post-mortem (Haskell) 56 fa 179

LITERATURE AND LITERARY PROBLEMS—See also Silone, I.
Celine’s journey (BR) (Birney) 34 jy 28
Two poets (BR) (Roskolenkier) 34 d 159
Fontamara (BR) (Trotsky) 34 d 159
Oxford manner (BR) (J.W.) 35 ja 31
In search of Diana (BR) (Roskolenkier) 35 jy 143 [Caption transposed on the page]
Art and Marxism (Feroci) 35 ag 166
An American ‘Germinal’ (BR) (Allard) 35 oc 208
An appraisal of Leo Tolstoy (Lenin) 36 f 22
Prize novel (BR) (J.W.) 36 f 30
The tottering order (BR) (Rothe) 36 f 31
Soaring aloft (BR) (Roskolenkier) 36 ap 64
Dos Passos’ America (BR) (Wolfe) 38 mr 90
Incompleat angler. BR) (Burnham) 38 mr 92
White mule (BR) (B.W.) 38 mr 94
Red fantasy (BR) ,(Wolfe) 38 ap 126
Politics and art (BR) (Tyler) 38 my 158
Magic and the machine (BR) (Tyler) 38 oc 316
The child as scapegoat (R) (Dupee) 38 oc 318
The GPO orders a novel (BR) (Morrow) 39 mr 94
School for dictators (R) (Macdonald) 39 ap 126
The dilemma of ‘Partisan Review (Howe) 42 f 20
Dos Passos’ crumbling ground (BR) (I.H.) 42 f 31
Literature and ideology (Farrell) 42 my 107
Comrade Ganville’s ‘hicks’ (BR) (Hain) 42 in 159
Steinbeck goes to Norway (BR) (Howe) 42 n 160
A note on James T. Farrell (Fangston) 42 jy 182
And what company (BR) (H.J.) 42 jy 191
A new literary critic (BR) (R.F.) 43 mr 91
Men from nowhere (BR) (R.F.) 43 d 351
Significant failure (BR) (Stoker) 44 ja 29
A work of major significance (BR) (R.F.) 44 ag 272
Trotsky and the Iron Heel (Trotsky) 45 ap 95
Four books by Koeatler (BR) (Loumos) 45 ag 155
Stalinist literary discussion (Farrell) 46 ap 112
Prater violet (BR) (Stoker) 46 ap 118
A comment on literature and morality (Farrell) 46 my 141; correction 46 s 200
The fate of writing in America (I.H.) 46 ag 191
American literature marches on (Farrell) 46 s 218; 46 oc 243
Cain’s Movietone realism (Farrell) 46 d 308
Discovery of Europe (BR) (Victor) 47 mr 95
Discussion of a first novel (Farrell) 47 ap 111
[Letter] (Wilingham) 47 ap 124
The problem of ‘political’ literature (Willingham) 47 iy 148
The literary left in the middle ‘30s (Farrell) 47 jy 150
On the significance of Koestler (Gates) 47 jy 155; a reply (Howe) 47 jy 158
Psychoanalysis and literature (Diener) 47 ag 188
From two old masters (BR) (Howe) 47 ag 189
On literary narcissism(L) (Essex) 47 ag 192
Bend sinister (BR) (Stoker) 47 s 221
Policies and the artist (L) (Willingham) 47 s 221
Lost decade (BR) (Renwick) 49 ja 29
Meet Ilya Ehrenburg (Thomas) 49 jy 149; note 49 ag 178
Literary ‘discussion’ in Russia (Fowler, ‘Pravda’) 49 ag 186
’1984’—Utopia reversed (BR) (Howe) 50 n/d 360
Fictionalized biography (RR) (Harrington) 55 su 129
Is there a political novel? (Harrington) 58 wr 23

LONDON BUREAU
A meeting of bankrupts (Carter) 38 my 139
A fresh lesson (“ Trotsky) 38 d 364
Centrism and the war (Judd) 41 jn 114

LONG, HUEY—See Fascism, U.S.

LOVESTONE, JAY & LOVESTONEISM—See also Brandler & Brandlerism.
On good intentions, 35 ag 176
Lovestone and morality (Ed.) 38 jn 197
A new recruit to the Democrats’ left wing (Ed.) 38 d 357
Reading from left to right (Mcdonald) 39 ja 28
Centrism and the war (Judd) 41 jn 114

LUXEMBURG, ROSA—as author see also Sec. A.
Lenin and Rosa Luxemburg (Shachtman) 35 mr 60; 38 my 141
Luxemburg and the Fourth International (Trotsky) 35 ag 168
The German left and Bolshevism (Held) 39 f 46
Politics and Rosa Luxemburg (Craine) 43 f 48; A letter (Forest) 43 mr 94; A reply (Craine) 43 mr 95
Luxemburg’s theory of accumulation (Forest) 46 ap 107
The traditions of Polish socialism (Rudzienski) 47 f 41

McCARTHYISM—See Civil Liberties.

MANN, THOMAS
Mann in uniform (BR) (Stanley) 38 n 350

MARX, KARL—See also Marxism; as author, see Sec. A.
Karl Marx and Moses Hess (Hook) 34 d 140
An unusual friendship (Mehring) 43 my 158
Sir Grant Duff meets Karl Marx (Grant Duff) 49 d 254
A visit with Karl Marx (Swinton) 50 m/j 184
A complete bibliography of Marx’s writing (BR) (A.G.) 57 sp 117
The first international (BR) (A.L.) 58 sp/su 144

MARXISM—See also Art; Engels; Literature; Marx; Psychology; Religion;
see also Marx as author in Sec. A.
Dictatorship of party or proletariat? (Shachtman) 34 jy 9
Marxism and art (BR) (Ernest) 34 jy 26
A new technics (BR) (J.G.W.) 34 jy 29
American Socialist Quarterly (Rev) (Carter) 34 jy 31
Bonapartism and fascism (Ed.) 34 ag 37
Soule’s revolution (BR) (Morrow) 34 ag 61
Engels on historical materialism (Engels) 34 s/o 81
Bolshevism (BR) (Arnecke) 34 s/o 95
Declining America (BR) (Morrow) 34 n 126
Marxism: science or method? (Gotesky) 34 d 147; 35 mr 71; 35 my 106
Marx’s criticism of ‘True socialism’ (Hook) 35 ja 13
Oxford manner (BR) (J.W.) 35 ja 31
Lessons of the Paris Commune (Trotsky) 35 mr 43
To make a revolution (BR) (J,W.) 35 mr 77
Marxism: science or philosophy? (Eastman) 35 ag 159
Philosophy of confusion (BR) (Grote) 35 oc 207
Max Eastman’s straw man (West) 35 d 220
Marxism and the intellectuals (Novack) 35 d 227
Levy on Marxism (BR) (Grote) 36 f 29
Marx and Feuerbach (Hook) 36 ap 47
Engels’ letters to Kautsky (Trotsky) 36 jn 73
Ninety years of the Communist Manifesto (Trotsky) 38 ja 20; corrected text 38 f 53
Marx and Engels on the Civil War (BR) (Novack) 38 f 45
Their morals and ours (Trotsky) 38 jn 163
Max Eastman as scientist (Burnham) 38 jn 177
Metaphysics of H. Levy (Gruen) 38 jn 188
Means and ends (Dewey) 38 ag 232
Burnham dodges my views (Eastman) 38 ag 244
A little wool-pulling (Burnham) 38 ag 246
Halting progress (BR) (Gotesky) 38 ag 253
[Letter] (Tyler) 38 s 281
[Letter] (C.B.) 38 s 287
[Letter] (Scouller) 38 oc 312
Marxism and progress (BR) (Gotesky) 38 oc 313
Martov’s mysticism (Goldman) 38 d 366
Intellectuals in retreat (Burnham & Shachtman) 39 ja 3
Karl Kautsky (Trotsky) 39 f 50
Once again on the ‘crisis of Marxism’ (T.) 39 my 133
Moralists and sycophants against Marxism (Trotsky) 39 ag 229; correction 39 oc 319
Dialectical materialism and science (Trotsky) 40 f 24
A petty-bourgeois opposition in the S.W.P. (Trotsky) 40 mr 35
The politics of desperation (Burnham) 40 ap 75
Marxism and national defense (Erber) 40 jn 106
Marxism and Deweyism (Sherman) 40 jn 109
State and counter-revolution (Johnson) 40 ag 137
The progress and stagnation of Marxism (Luxemburg) 40 ag 143
Hook purges Marxism (Temple) 41 my 76
Concerning historical materialism (Mehring) 41 jn 120; 41 jy 152; 41 s 221
To and from the Finland Station (BR) (Johnson) 41 jn 126
A new bourgeois critic (BR) (Howe) 42 ap 94
Aspects of Marxian economics (Johnson, Carter) 42 ap 77
A new stage for world labor (Bellasi) 43 my 146; 43 jn 172
The divine right of the Hohenzollerns (Marx, Mehring) 43 my 154
The philosophy of history and necessity (A.A.B.) 43 jy 209; 43 oc 273
Machiavelli and modern thought (Fahan) 43 d 334; 44 ja 24; 44 f 50
A self-repudiation (BR) (Stoker) 44 ja 31
Engels’ war articles (Trotsky) 44 my 137
Maurice William and Marxism (Leonard) 44 my 146; 44 s 301
Laski, St. Paul and Stalin (Johnson) 44 jn 182
Europe and the revolutionary party (Gates) 44 jy 218
The American people in ‘one world’ (Johnson) 44 jy 225
Tasks of the present period (Gates) 44 ag 261
The anti-Marxian offensive (Barrett) 44 s 293; 44 oc 325; 44 d 406
Marx’s alleged self-contradiction (Emmett) 44 s 297
Some questions of clarification (Intl. Comm. of Ger.) 45 my 123
Luxemburg’s theory of accumulation (Forest) 46 ap 107; 46 my 137
Sectarianism and the democratic demands (Germain) 46 my 151
The importance and scope of democratic demands (R.C.P. of Belg.) 46 my 152
Human nature (BR) (Howe) 46 ag 189
The timetable for revolution (Trotsky) 46 oc 252
The withering away of the state (BR) (Howe) 46 oc 254
On historical methodology (Howe) 47 f 56
[Letter] (Emmett) 47 f 63
The nature of the Russian state (Shachtman) 47 ap 99
[Letter] (Forest) 47 ap 124
[Letter] (R.B.) 47 ap 126
Intellectuals’ flight from politics (Howe) 47 oc 241
The nature of the general strike (Trotsky) 47 oc 249
The meaning of the ‘inevitability of socialism’ (Draper) 47 d 269
The neo-Stalinist type (Draper) 48 ja 24
Not by politics alone (Trotsky 49 ja 29
Is social science possible? (Grey) 48 ja 31
Marxist missionary (BR) (Fenwick) 48 ja 31
The nightfall of capitalism (Shachtman) 48 f 35
Lenin as philosopher (BR) (H.D.) 48 mr 96
Marxism vs. Catholicism: a debate (Shachtman, Rice) 49 ja 3
The inevitability of socialism (Conley) 49 mr 92; 49 ap 114
The relevance of Trotskyism (Judd) 49 ag 179
Socialism and the family (Trotsky) 49 ag 184
The relevance of Marxism; in reply to Henry Judd (Gates) 50 j/f 32
Variations on a theme (BR) (Gates) 50 m/j 186
Marginal utility socialism (BR) (Farley) 50 n/d 378
Workers’ control of production (Trotsky) 51 m/j 176
Selected pages (BR) (H.J.) 51 n/d 366
Critics of American socialism (Howe) 52 m/j 115
The precursors of Marx (Analytikos) 52 m/j 163
A poor try (BR) (Mott) 52 m/j 169
Stalin on socialism (Shachtman) 52 n/d 284
Unrealized ambition (BR) (Gates) 52 n/d 328
A contribution to economic literature (Gates) 53 m/a 104
Magazine chronicle (Rev) (Falk E Stein) 55 su 131
A Marxist approach to art (Harrington) 56 sp 40
An amalgam of Marx and Keynes (BR) (Vance) 57 su 170
What is orthodox Marxism? (Lukacs) 57 su 179
Economic roots of reformism (Cliff) 58 wr 41

MATERIALISM- see Marxism.

MEDICINE—See Science.

MILITARISM—See also Pacifism.
Arms and capitalism (Hart) 34 s/o 72
The end of the naval truce (Weber) 35 ja 11
Call out the militia! (BR) (Novack) 38 jn 189
The war mobilization plan (Michaels & Gates) 38 n 337
F.D.R. and the Industrial Mobilization Plan (Draper) 39 jy 203
The friends of the war referendum (Draper) 39 oc 302
The problem of the people’s militia (L) (Carter) 39 n 334
Total war and revolution (C.D.E.) 41 ap 46
Art of war—ancient and modern (Jason) 44 ap 113
Engels’ war articles (Trotsky) 44 my 137

MINERS
An American ‘Germinal’ (BR) (Allard) 35 oc 208
The aftermath of the miners’ strike (Ed.) 41 n 260
The meaning of the miners’ fight (A.G.) 43 my 131
Once again, the miners’ fight (A.G.) 43 jn 163
The miners’ strikes and the labor party (Ed.) 43 jy 197
Men and coal (BR) (Q.) 44 mr 93
Lewis keeps control in the miners union (Coolidge) 44 oc 312
$500,000 marked void (Ed.) 50 m/a 67

MINNEAPOLIS TEAMSTERS STRIKE—See Teamsters.

MINNEAPOLIS TRIALS—See Socialist Workers Party.

MOSCOW TRIALS—See in Sec. C Russia.

MOVIES
A mission in fraud (A.G.) 43 my 134
The language of Hollywood (Farrell) 45 ja 24
The problem of public sensibility (Farrell) 46 ag 183
Cain’s Movietone realism (Farrell) 46 d 308
A note on ‘The Open City’ (Schapiro) 46 d 311
[Letter] (Farrell) 47 ja 31

MUSIC
The fire bell tolls but once (Davis) 42 s 255

NRA—See New Deal, Domestic Policy.

NATIONAL LIBERATION POLICY
Socialism and national liberation (Smith) 42 mr 49
The meaning of national liberation (Jackson) 42 jn 149
China in the World War (Shachtman) 42 jn (Part II) 162
On the national question in Europe (Ed.) 42 jy 174
Against national oppression [Resolution] (Workers Party) 42 jy 175
What is the national question? (Smith) 42 jy 176
The Polish workers have the floor (Smith) 42 ag 211
Lenin on national revolution (Lenin) 42 ag 221
China in the war (Shachtman) 42 s 249
The national question: de Gaullism and socialism (Europacus) 42 d 332
Some views of Marx (Smith) 42 d 335
The national and colonial struggles [Resolution] (Workers Party) 43 ja 9; 43 f 38
National and colonial problems (Shachtman) 43 mr 76
National liberation and fantasy (Hall) 43 ap 113
Issues on the national question (Gates) 43 jn 184
An open letter to Max Shachtman (A.T.) 43 s 243
My reply to the open letter (Shachtman) 43 s 251
Socialism and the national question (Johnson) 43 oc 281
Politics in the stratosphere (Gates) 43 oc 286; 43 n 311
The national question and the European socialist revolution (Johnson, Allen & Brown) 43 d 341
Socialist United States of Europe (W.P. Group of members in S.F.) 44 f 59; 44 mr 89
Small nations and independence (Ed.) 44 jn 170
The dilemma of national self-determination (Ed.) 44 jy 195
Bolshevism and self-determination (Lenin) 44 jy 205
On the program of the party (Lenin) 44 jy 208; correction 44 ag 269
The working class of Poland (Engels) 44 jy 211
Misunderstanding or folly? (Shachtman, Peck) 44 ag 270
Capitalist barbarism or socialism (International Communists of Germany [IKD]) 44 s 275 (Part I only); 44 oc 329 (Part 1 & II)
Opportunism and adventurism (Arlins) 44 n 365
The SWP and European revolution (intl. Comm of Ger.) 44 d 411
America’s role in Europe (Judd) 46 ja 5
Historical retrogression or socialist revolution (Johnson) 46 ja 25; 46 f 59
Chinese Trotskyism in the war (Wang) 48 f 58; 48 mr 90

NATIONAL QUESTION—See National Liberation Policy.

NAZISM—See Fascism; see in Sec. C Germany.

NEGRO PROBLEMS
Shifts in the Negro question (Wright) 34 n 113
An angry epic (BR) (Becker) 35 ja 30
Homage to John Brown (Novack) 38 ja 23
Revolution, black and white (ER) (Novack) 39 my 155
Negro slavery in America (Novack) 39 oc 305
Organizing Negro labor (BR) (Widick) 39 oc 318
Revolution and the Negro (Johnson) 39 d 339
The colonial plantation system (Novack) 39 d 343
The Negro in Southern agriculture (Birchman) 39 d 345
Native Son and revolution (Johnson) 40 my 92
The voice of Richard Wright (Fenwick) 41 n 287
Our white ‘democracy’ (A.G.) 42 f 7
Odell Waller (A.G.) 42 jy 164
A labor base for Negro struggles (Stone) 42 ag 207
The black ‘republic’ (BR) (Klein) 43 f 61
The West Indies in review (Carlton) 43 jn 181
The race pogroms and the Negro (Carlton) 43 jy 201
Negroes in the Civil War (Johnson) 43 d 338
’Brothers under the skin’ (BR) (R.F.) 43 d 345
The psychology of Jim Crowism (Freeman) 44 f 44
Negro intellectuals in dilemma (BR) (Forest) 44 n 369
Negroes and the revolution [Resolution] (Coolidge) 45 ja 7
Negroes and the revolution [Resolution] (Johnson) 45 ja 13
Negroes in organized labor (Coolidge) 45 ap 90
Negroes in the revolution (Forest) 45 my 119
For a new trade union program (Coolidge) 45 ag 137
Negroes and the labor movement; an answer to F. Forest (Coolidge) 46 mr 89
[Letter] (Lynn) 47 f 62
Negro struggle in history (BR) (McKinney) 48 f 63
You can’t live there! (BR) (McDermott) 48 f 63
African survivals? (BR) (Leonard) 48 mr 94
Can capitalism end Jim Crow? (McKinney) 48 ap 101
The Southern Negro and democracy (Benson) 56 sp 3
The deepening struggle (Martin) 56 su 82
A one-sided view (BR) (H.W.B.) 57 sp 129

NEW DEAL, DOMESTIC POLICY & GENERAL—See also Liberalism; Roosevelt.
New trends under the New Deal (Weber) 34 jy 16
Soule’s revolution (BR) (Morrow) 34 ag 61
Roosevelt and the state (Weber) 34 s/o 85
The second Roosevelt election (Swabeck) 34 d 134
Roosevelt and the now Congress (West) 35 ja 1
The Roosevelt ‘security’ program (West) 35 mr 40
The housing question in America (McBride) 35 mr 47
The passing of the N.R.A. (Swabeck) 35 jy 122
The Wagner bill and the working class (West) 35 oc 184
Will Roosevelt be re-elected? (West) 36 ap 53
What is this business revival? (Swabeck) 36 ap 40
The function of the New Deal (Soule, Novack) 36 ap 44
A review of the month (Ed.) 38 f 35
Roosevelt faces the future (Burnham) 38 f 43
Roosevelt as home-builder (Ed.) 38 mr 70
The editor’s comments. 38 my 131
The collapse of the New Deal (Spector) 38 jn 173
They, the people (Macdonald) 38 jy 209
Browder’s two Roosevelts (Gates) 38 ag 233
Spending and the stock market (Cowles) 38 ag 241
They, the people (Macdonald) 38 ag 248
A thought for this month. 38 ag 249
The editor’s comments. 38 s 259
Some purge suggestions (Ed,) 38 s 260
They, the people (Macdonald) 38 s 271
The adolescence of the classes (Ed.) 38 d 356
The forest and the trees ahead (Ed.) 38 d 357
Reading from left to right (Macdonald) 39 ja 27
The editor’s comments (Ed.) 39 f 35
Behind the farmers’ vote (Cowles) 39 f 49
The New Deal’s domestic Munich (Ed.) 39 mr 68
A reminder to the unemployed (Ed.) 39 mr 68
Reading from left to right (Macdonald) 39 mr 92; 39 my 153
The editor’s comment. 39 jy 195
The future of Roosevelt (Burnham) 39 s 260
Twenty-five million of us: the story of W.P.A. (Macdonald) 39 s 268
Political trends in America (Ed.) 40 jn 99
The editor’s comments (Ed.) 40 oc 179
The Willkievelt campaign (Macdonald) 40 oc 182
Roosevelt and labor (Coolidge) 41 jy 138
OPM and the dollar-a-year men (Ed.) 41 n 263
The Truman and Vinson reports (A.G.) 42 f 5
Roosevelt’s economic program (A.G.) 42 my 99
The Roosevelt message (A.G.) 42 s 228
Discussion on Congress (A.G.) 42 oc 259
Another presidential order (E.G.) 43 f 35
Crisis of the War Labor Board (A.G.) 43 mr 67
The Roosevelt edict (A.G,) 43 ap 99
The struggle between Congress and Roosevelt (Ed.) 43 jy 195
National Service Act (Ed.) 44 mr 67; 45 ja 3
Reconversion (Johnson) 45 mr 40
Labor policy: New Deal and Fair Deal (Hall) 49 ag 163
Kempton’s ruins and monuments (BR) (Martin) 55 su 120
Roosevelt as a saint (BR) (Rawick) 57 su 201
A new look at the New Deal (Rawick) 58 sp/su 104

NEW DEAL, FOREIGN POLICY—See also Imperialism, U.S.; World War II; for U.S. relations with a given country, see that country in Sec. C.
A review of the month (Ed.) 38 f 35
Roosevelt faces the future (Burnham) 38 f 43
Reading from left to right (Macdonald) 38 d 373
The editor’s comment. 39 my 131
The United States at war (Macdonald) 40 ap 72
The editor’s comments (Ed.) 41 ap 35; 41 jn 99; 41 oc 227
War in the Pacific (Ed.) 41 n 259
American capitalism in the war [Resolution] (Workers Party) 43 d 323
Through Hopkins’ eyes (BR) (Parley) 49 f 63

“ NEW INTERNATIONAL” — (Note: material in the business and circulation columns and notes in the magazine is not indexed.)
A greeting (Trotsky) 34 jy 1; reprinted 44 jy 230
The new ‘New International’ (Ed.) 34 d Opp.p.129
Affairs—but not private (Ed.) 39 mr 69
Let the readers decide (Ed.) 39 oc 291
N.I. down under. 42 d 347
The N.I. in Latin America (Moreno) 44 jy 233
’The New International’ in England (Britannicus) 44 jy 234
Martin Abern (Ed.) 49 ap 99
Our last issue (Ed.) 58 sp/su 71

NUCLEAR ENERGY—See Science.

ORGANIC UNITY—See Communist International; see in Sec. C France.

PACIFISM—See also World-Federalism.
The Stalinists and pacifism (Swabeck) 34 ag 54
Non-violence (BR) (West) 34 d 159
Altgeld and amnesty (Ed.) 48 ja 3
Bertrand Russell (Ed.) 48 oc 229
The pacifism of the masses (Parisot) 49 ag 171

PERMANENT WAR ECONOMY—See Economic & Social Conditions.

PHILOSOPHY—See Marxism.

PIVERT, MARCEAU—See in Sec. C France.

POETRY- See Literature.

POLITICAL ACTION—See Labor Political Action.

POPULAR FRONT—See Communist International; see also in Sec. C France, Spain.

PRESS—See Journalism.

PSYCHOLOGY & PSYCHOANALYSIS
Neurotic society (BR) (Wolfe) 35 mr 78
Carl Jung and the Nazi superman (Koster) 45 oc 204
The politics of psychoanalysis (Stiles) 46 ag 176; a note 46 oc 256
The politics of psychoanalysis; discussion and rebuttal (Farrell, Newman, Lange, Stiler) 47 ja 20
Psychoanalysis and literature (Diener) 47 ag 188

RAILROAD WORKERS
Coming struggles on the railroads (Weaver) 35 jy 125
Briefer mention (BR) 38 mr 95
The railroad strike (Ed.) 46 ag 163

RELIGION—See also Catholic Church.
Gods and society (BR) (Morrow) 35 ja 29
The church struggle under fascism (Trotsky) 46 s 213

ROOSEVELT, F. D.—See also New Deal.
The making of a warmonger (Draper) 38 s 268
F.D.R. and the Industrial Mobilization Plan (Draper) 39 jy 203
Roosevelt’s secret war (Enright) 48 ag 167

RUBBER WORKERS
In a billion dollar industry (Wilson) 35 mr 69
Progressives at the rubber convention (Bell) 44 oc 318

SCIENCE
Outlook of science (BR) (Solon) 34 d 157
Captive science (BR) (Marshall) 35 ja 28
Genetics (BR) (A.B.) 36 jn 95
Einstein (BR) (A.B.) 38 my 157
What is ‘socialized’ medicine? (Harvey) 38 d 369; letters (Rorty, Mia) 39 ja 30; reply (Harvey) 39 ja 31
The 3-cents a day plan (Luttinger) 39 mr 90
’Socialized medicine’ (BR) (Luttinger) 39 my 155
Hospitalization plan (L) (Daniel) 39 my 158
Dialectical materialism and science (Trotsky) 40 f 24
Atomic energy and socialism (De Voorter) 45 s 175
Socialism or—atomization! (De Voorter) 45 n 235
American science goes to war (Grey) 48 jy 144
The scientist in a time of terror (Barton) 50 j/a 210

SECOND INTERNATIONAL—See Socialist International.

SEDOFF, LEON—As author, see Sec. A.
Leon Sedoff, 1905-1938 (Ed.) 38 mr 70
In memoriam (Ed.) 42 mr 63

SHIPYARD WORKERS
Behind the shipbuilders’ fight (Lund) 44 oc 314

SILONE, IG:NAZIO—See also in Sec. D.
Silone on Marxism and Christianity (Fahan) 42 s 246

SINCLAIR, UPTON
Passports to Utopia. II (Marshall) 34 d 145

SOCIAL CREDIT
Passports to Utopia. I (Marshall) 34 n 115

SOCIAL-DEMOCRACY—See Socialist International; Socialist Party, U.S.; for the socialist movement of a given country, see that country in Sec. C.

SOCIALIST INTERNATIONAL
The Second International in the war (Shachtman) 34 ag 43
The question of organic unity (West) 36 f 17
The social roots of opportunism (Zinoviev)—For details, see Sec.A.
European labor and fascism (BR) (Jason) 44 mr 95
Revisionism and planning (Trotsky) 45 mr 59
Social-democracy vs. Communism (BR) (Howe) 46 n 285
Resolution on the international scene (Workers Party) 47 ap 114
Capitalism, Stalinism and the war [Resolution] (I.S.L.) 49 ap 116

SOCIALIST LABOR PARTY
The S.L.P. 34 d 154

SOCIALIST PARTY, U.S.
Dictatorship of party or proletariat? (Shachtman) 34 jy 9
The Socialist Party convention (Cannon) 34 jy 12
American Socialist Quarterly (Rev) (Carter) 34 jy 31
What next in the Socialist Party (M.S.) 34 n 98
Right face in the Socialist Party (M.S.) 34 d 131; [letter] (Henson, Hanson) 35 ja 32; reply (Shachtman) 35 ja 32
[Letter to SP members] (Delson); [statement to SP members] (Thomas);
A picture of the Socialist Party (unsigned) 35 mr 80
A party and its book (BR) (J.W.) 35 jy 142
At the crossroads in the Socialist Party (Cannon) 35 ag 151
“ War” by Norman Thomas (BR) (J.W.) 35 d 240
In opposite directions (M.S.) 36 jn 65
The convention of the new party (Ed.) 38 ja 4
A head without a body (M.S.) 38 jn 175
Their morals and ours. 38 n 351
Return of a scoundrel (Adams) 42 d 345
Enquiry: into what? (E.W.) 42 d 347
Their morals and ours (BR) (Coben) 48 oc 255
Portrait of a socialist rebel (BR) (Fahan) 49 ag 190
Crisis of American socialism (Gates) 54 m/j 124
The origins of the Communist movement in the U.S. I (Falk) 55 fa 151
The Socialist Party of America (BR) (Benson) 55/56 wr 269
The case for socialist regroupment (Gates) 57 sp 71
Statement of dissolution (I.S.L.) 58 sp/su 72

SOCIALIST POLICY ON WAR—See also National Liberation Policy.
The Second International in the war (Shachtman) 34 ag 43
On the slogan of ‘disarmament’ (Lenin) 34 ag 50
The bands are playing (West) 35 jy 113
The struggle for peace and the Anglo-Russian Committee (Trotsky) 35 oc 201
Sanctions and the coming war (Spector) 35 d 209
Sanctions and the British general elections (Ed.) 35 d Opp.p.209
The Comintern and social-patriotism (Feroci) 35 d 234
“ War” by Norman Thomas (BR) (J.W.) 35 d 240
Just wars in the light of Marxism (Wollenberg) 36 f 2

Page 54


The positions of SWP and WP on unity; [letters and statements] 45 oc 218
Documents on WP-SWP unity (SWP) 45 n 250
Reply to SWP plenum resolution (Workers Party) 45 n 253
On WP-SWP unity negotiations [documents] (Workers Party) 46 ja 21
On the tempo in Europe (Morrow) 46 f 49
Goldman’s replies to questions (Goldman) 46 f 55
[Letter] (G.) 46 my 159
[Letter] (Arlins) 46 my 159
Welcome SWP minority (Ed.) 46 s 200
South Africa (H.J.) 46 n 284
Joint statement on unity (SWP and WP) 47 ap 98
Unity—will it work? (Goldman) 47 ap 106
SWP unity line changes again (Goldman) 47 ag 182
Speech [on unity] (Stein) 47 ag 186; (Cannon) 47 ag 187
SWP and the UAW (Ed.) 47 oc 231
Why SWP blocked unity (Workers Party) 47 d 285
’Comrade’ Tito and the Fourth International (Draper) 48 s 208
25 years of American Trotskyism. I (Shachtman) 54 j/f 11

SOCIALIST YOUTH (INTERNATIONAL)
The Copenhagen socialist youth conference (Held) 35 oc 206

SOCIOLOGY
Thorstein Veblen, sociologist (Wright) 35 ja 20
Neurotic society (BR) (Wolfe) 35 mr 78
Criminology and society (Wolfe) 36 jn 78
An evasive dissent (BR) (Harrington) 57 sp 120
An uneven study (BR) (Harrington) 57 sp 127

STALIN—See also in Sec. C Russia.
Stalin the theoretician (Wright) 35 mr 74
Gangway fo’ de Lawd (J.G.W.) 35 my 109
In one and the same issue. 35 oc 208
Stalin in reality and legend (BR) (Held) 35 d 237
Stalin as a theoretician (Trotsky) 41 oc 247; 41 n 280
Stalin as Lenin’s heir (Lund) 45 my 106
Trotsky’s ‘Stalin’ (Shachtman) 46 oc 229
Stalin’s place in history (Gates) 53 m/j 144

STALINISM—See Communist International; Communist Party, U.S.; for Communist
parties abroad, see the individual countries in Sec. C; also Russia; East Europe, etc.

STEEL WORKERS
Reading from left to right (Macdonald) 39 ja 28; 39 f 56; 39 mr 92; 39 jy 221
Labor problems at the Steel Workers convention (Coolidge) 44 my 131
$500,000 marked void (Ed.) 50 m/a 67
The steel seizure (Ed.) 52 m/a 52

STUDENT MOVEMENT—See also Academic Freedom; Education.
Rebel students (BR) (Garrett) 36 f 31
American student movement: a survey (Falk) 49 mr 84

SUBVERSIVE LIST—See Civil Liberties; Independent Socialist League.

SUPREME COURT
The spirit of the U.S. Constitution (Morrow) 36 f 13
Record of a consistent attack on civil liberties (Harrington) 54 m/a 93

TEAMSTERS
Minneapolis and its meaning (Cannon) 34 jy 3
A labor lieutenant and top-sergeant (Strang) 35 ag 163
A frame-up that failed (Hudson) 38 mr 73

TECHNOCRACY
Passports to Utopia. II (Marshall) 34 d 145
Technocracy: a totalitarian fantasy (Temple) 44 mr 73; 44 ap 117

THIRD INTERNATIONAL—See Communist International.

THIRD PARTY—See Labor Political Action.

TRADE UNIONS—See Labor Problems; Labor Political Action; A.F..of L.; CIO; for individual unions, see occupations (e.g. Auto Workers, Miners, &c.)

TROTSKY, LEON—See also Trotskyism; in Sec. C Russia; as author, see Sec.A.
For the man on the planet without a visa (Ed.) 34 ag Opp.p.33
Leon Sedoff, 1905-1938 (Ed.) 38 mr 70
Leon Trotsky: his heritage (Shachtman) 40 s 147
Trotsky’s place in history (Johnson) 40 s 151
Trotsky’s writings in English (Mann) 40 5 173
The revolutionary optimist (Shachtman) 41 ag 168
Trotsky’s struggle against Stalinism (Shachtman) 42 ag 203
Trotsky and the ‘New Course’ (Shachtman) 43 s 231
Leon Trotsky and the Workers Party (Erber) 46 s 201
The heroic period of the Comintern (Gates) 46 s 205
Reviewing ‘The New Course’ (BR) (Howe) 46 s 210
Trotsky’s ‘Stalin’ (Shachtman) 46 oc 229
After ten years; on Trotsky’s ‘The Revolution Betrayed’ (Johnson) 46 oc 236
Trotsky’s role in 1920-23 (Erber) 47 ja 16
On historical methodology (Howe) 47 f 56
[Letter] (Goldman) 47 mr 96
Leon Trotsky—in memoriam (Ed.) 47 ag 163
The relevance of Trotskyism (Judd) 49 ag 179
The relevance of Marxism; in reply to Henry Judd (Gates) 50 j/f 32
Leon Trotsky, 1879-1940 (Ed.) 50 s/o 259
Trotsky in Paris during World War I (Rosmer) 50 s/o 263
The diary of Victor Serge. VI (Serge) 50 s/o 309
Anatomy of murder (BR) (J.M.F.) 50 s/o 315
Natalia Trotsky’s letter (Rosmer) 51 s/o 250; correction 51 n/d 314
The end of socialism: a review of Isaac Deutscher (Shachtman) 54 m/a 67; 54 m/j 145; 54 j/a 170
A valuable compilation (BR) (A.G.) 57 sp 115

TROTSKYISM—See also Fourth International; Trotsky; for U.S., see also Communist League of America; Workers Party (1934-36); Socialist Workers Party; Workers Party (1940-49); Independent Socialist League; for other countries, see country in Sec. C.
The ‘Clemenceau Thesis’ and the party regime (Trotsky) 34 jy 24
A reply to Olgin (BR) (Wright & Carter) 35 ag 171
Footnote for historians (M.S.) 38 d 377

TRUMAN ADMIN., DOMESTIC POLICY & GENERAL
Altgeld and amnesty (Ed.) 48 ja 3
Why Wallace is running (Ed.) 48 ja 7
Two conventions: challenge to labor (Ed.) 48 ag 163
The record of Taft-Hartleyism (Temple) 48 n 259
Truman’s Fair Deal: payment deferred (Hall) 49 f 35
Labor policy: New Deal and Fair Deal (Hall) 49 ag 163
How Europe aided the U.S. (Gates) 50 j/f 9
The steel seizure (Ed.) 52 m/a 52

TRUMAN ADMIN., FOREIGN POLICY—See also in Sec. C Korea; for U.S. relations with a given country, see that country in Sec. C.
The Wallace dismissal (Ed.) 46 n 262
The Marshall plan vs. the Stalin plan (Ed.) 47 oc 227
Marshall Plan: road to conquest (Paxon) 48 jy 138
Can the Marshall Plan succeed? (Judd) 48 s 195
[Letter] (Judd) 48 s 223
Marshall Plan: phase II (Judd) 49 jy 137
ECAnomics (BR) (Hall) 49 jy 159

UNEMPLOYED MOVEMENT—See Labor Problems.









UNEMPLOYMENT—See Economic and Social Conditions.

UNITED NATIONS
The myth of the United Nations (Judd) 42 ag 205
Three partitions (Ed.) 48 ja 3

VATICAN—See Catholic Church.

WALLACE, HENRY—See also New Deal.
’The struggle for freedom’ (A.G.) 41 d 291
Wallace and the people’s war (A.G.) 42 jn 131
Reconversion. I (Johnson) 45 mr 40
Is full employment possible? (Francis) 45 d 262
The Wallace dismissal (Ed.) 46 n 262
Why Wallace is running (Ed.) 48 ja 7
What makes Henry run? (Fahan) 48 f 54
The Wallese wasteland (BR) (Furst) 48 mr 94
The Wallace campaign (Ed.) 48 oc 228

WAR DANGER—See also headings listed under International Relations.
Storm clouds over Europe (Shtip) 34 n 111
The end of the naval truce (Weber) 35 ja 11
Problems of the Pacific (BR) (Weber) 35 mr 77
The bands are playing (West) 35 jy 113
The Anglo-German naval pact (Jerukhimovich) 35 ag 156
Sanctions and the coming war (Spector) 35 d 209
The end of Locarno (Held) 36 jn 67
The editor’s comments. 38 mr 67
Towards a Four-Power pact (Ed.) 38 mr 67
The editor’s comments. 38 jy 195
World war by stages (BR) (Widick) 38 s 285
The editor’s comments. 38 oc 291; 38 n 323
The Popular Front’s guilt (Spector) 38 n 329
A fresh lesson (Trotsky) 38 d 358
Reading from left to right (Macdonald) 39 f 55
The editor’s comment. 39 ap 99; 39 s 259
The Kremlin in world politics (Trotsky) 42 oc 260

WAR ECONOMY—See Economic & Social Conditions.

WAR POLICY—See Foreign Policy; Socialist Policy on War.

WOMEN & SOCIETY
Women in war industries (Green) 42 my 116
Women, biology and socialism (Gould) 46 f 46

WORKERS PARTY (1934-36)
Prospects for a new party in America (Ed.) 34 s/o 65
Three conventions (Ed.) 34 n Opp.p.97
The Workers Party is founded (Muste) 34 d 129
The new ‘New International’ (Ed.) 34 d Opp.p.129

WORKERS PARTY (1940-49)—Changed name in 1949 to Independent Socialist League, q.v.; for SWP-WP unity question, see Socialist Workers Party.
Don Basilio replies (M.S.) 42 jn 151
Five years of the Workers Party (Shachtman) 45 ap 73
A resolution on organization (Workers Party) 46 mr 93
Founding principles of the Workers Party [Resolution] (Workers Party) 46 ap 124
Welcome SWP minority (Ed.) 46 s 200
Leon Trotsky and the Workers Party (Erber) 46 s 201
The secret life of James Burnham (Cassel) 48 f 62

WORLD-FEDERALISM
Bourgeois new worlds (BR) (Gates) 42 jy 189
A bourgeois mirage (BR) (Grey) 43 f 62
Modern man is obsolete (BR) (Tobin) 46 ap 122

WORLD WAR I
The Second International in the war (Shachtman) 34 ag 43
Diplomacy in the world war (Vassilkovsky) 34 ag 52
Rosmer’s book (BR) (Trotsky) 36 jn 96
The Bolsheviks in the war (BR) (Johnson) 41 f 30
The social roots of opportunism. I (Zinoviev) 42 mr 54
World War I in retrospect (Allen & Stone) 42 jn 144; 42 jy 179; 42 ag 212
A lesson from history (BR) (J.M.F.) 42 oc 287
What are the prospects for socialism? (Temple) 43 jn 179; 43 jy 221
First encounter (BR) (Victor) 47 f 61
Trotsky in Paris during World War I (Rosmer) 50 s/o 263

WORLD WAR II—See also War Danger; see individual countries in Sec. C.
The Second World War (Ed.) 39 oc 292
The USSR in war (Trotsky) 39 n 325
The editor’s comment. 39 n 323
Reading from left to right (Macdonald) 39 n 332
Party opinion (Ed.) 40 f 3
For the Third Camp! (Ed.) 40 ap 67
The Soviet Union and the World War (Shachtman) 40 ap 68
Blitzkrieg and revolution (Ed.) 40 my 83
A new horizon for American imperialism (Gates) 40 jn 101
Reading from left to right (Macdonald) 40 jn 104
Capitalist society and the war (Johnson) 40 jy 114
Liberty, equality, fraternity 1789-1940 (Ed.) 40 ag 131
The editor’s comments. 41 f 19
Total war and revolution (C.D.E.) 41 ap 46; 41 jn 107
The editor’s comments. 41 my 67
Hitler’s attack on Russia (A.G.) 41 jy 131
The editor’s comment. 41 ag 163; 41 s 195
The eastern front (Butterfield) 41 s 211
The free world of bankrupts (Howe) 41 oc 254
A chorus of mixed voices (Fenwick) 41 oc 255
War in the Pacific (Ed.) 41 n 259
’The struggle for freedom’ (A.G.) 41 d 291
An outline of the war (Sterling) 41 d 307
Harold Laski writes a revolution (BR) (Temple) 41 d 316
The future of the war (M.S.) 42 mr 36
Programs for a German defeat (Judd) 42 mr 43
War and the colonial peoples (A.G.) 42 ap 67
The Balkan debacle (BR) (Wilson) 42 ap 93
War in the far Pacific (Judd) 42 my 111
The theory of the offensive (BR) (Gordon) 42 jn 157
China in the World War (Shachtman) 42 jn 162 (Part II)
Rep. May speaks out (A.G.) 42 jy 163
A liberal and the war (BR) (O’Connor) 42 jy 186
Make-believe war? (BR) (Hall) 42 ag 222
The fourth year of the war (A.G.)42 s 227
China in the war (Shachtman) 42 s 249; 42 oc 272
Panacea for victory (BR) (H.J.) 42 oc 283
Stalinist diplomacy and the war (Gates) 42 n 309
Behind Russia’s war front (BR) (Casting) 42 n 318
After Pearl Harbor (A.G.) 42 d 323
World politics and North Africa (Fahan) 43 ja 14; correction 43 f 64
North Africa interlude (A.G.) 43 f 36
Russia’s war aims (A.G.) 43 f 37
The cost of the war (Adams) 43 f 46
The road to socialism [Resolution) (Workers Party) 43 mr 70
The struggle for air supremacy (Fahan) 43 ap 103
The way out for Europe (Johnson) 43 ap 116; 43my 149
Russia’s foreign policy in war (BR) (Craine) 43 jn 174
Democracy and the war for democracy (Ed.) 43 jy 199
Notes on Russia in the war (S.) 43 jy 205
Problems of the Italian revolt (M.S.) 43 s 233
The coming invasion of Europe (Lund) 43 s 245
Notes on Russia in the war (Shachtman) 43 oc 267
Stalin’s aims in Europe (Shachtman) 43 n 296
Long war—or short? (Ed.) 44 ja 3
The meaning of the fight over Poland (Ed.) 44 ja 5
Toward a new Versailles treaty (Young) 44 f 40
The invasion—a new phase of the war (Ed.) 44 jn 163
What is being planned for Europe? (Ed.) 44 jn 165
Vansittartism (BR) (Gorman) 44 jn 190
The Allies versus Europe (Ed.) 44 ag 243
The course of the war (Johnson) 44 ag 247
A work of major significance (BR) (R.F.) 44 ag 272
Capitalist barbarism or socialism (Intl. Com, of Ger.) 44 s 275 (Part I only); 44 oc 329 (Suppl.) (Part I & II)
The struggle for Europe (Ed.) 44 d 387
Power politics of the Big Three (Lund) 44 d 393
Airpower in World War II (Jason) 45 ja 28
The Yalta conference (Ed.) 45 mr 35
The end of the European war (Ed.) 45 my 99
Letter on Yalta (J.C.) 45 my 126; reply (Ed.) 45 my 127
Deadlock at London (Ed.) 45 oc 195
Balance sheet of the war (Ed.) 45 s 163
Behind the Pearl Harbor exposé (Garrett) 45 d 283
Resolution on the international scene (Workers Party) 47 ap 114
Carlson: ‘Homo Stalinensis’ (BR) (Fenwick) 48 ja 26
Inside the Stalin-Hitler deal (Saunders) 48 f 42
Stalin’s role in the Nazi pact (Coben) 48 mr 80
Russia’s secret documents on Munich (Coben) 48 jy 154
Roosevelt’s secret war (Enright) 48 ag 167
At the Munich conference (Coben) 48 ag 186
War vignette (BR) (Fenwick) 48 s 222
No glory, no glamor (BR) (Stewart) 48 s 222
Hitler’s coolies’(BR) (N.S.) 49 ja 28
Through Hopkins’ eyes (BR) (Farley) 49 f 63
Eisenhower; portrait in brass (Fenwick) 49 mr 72
Capitalism, Stalinism and the war [Resolution] (I.S.L.) 49 ap 116
War strategy (BR) (Fenwick) 50 j/a 253
The German soldier (BR) (Fahan) 50 s/o 319

YOUTH PROBLEMS—See Academic Freedom; Communist Party, U.S.; Education; Socialist Youth (International); Student Movement.

ZIONISM—See Arabs; Jewish Problems; see in Sec. C. Israel; Palestine.


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