The Socialist Review. Vol. 10 No. 2. April-May, 1921.

The Socialist Review. Vol. 10 No. 2. April-May, 1921.

Contents: The Future of the Review, What Ails American Radicalism? by William Z Foster, Debs (Poem) by Viola C White, Labor’s Answer to the Open Shop Drive by William E Bohn, The Amalgamated Bears the Brunt by Solon De Leon, Workers Education by Alexander Fitzhandler, Is the Proletariat a Majority? by Isaac A Hourwich, The Fight in North Dakota by HGG Telgan, Labor and the North Dakota Drive by the Non Partisan leagues, Against the Third International by BC Vladeck, For the Third International by JB Salutsky, The New Turn in the IWW by Art Shields, What Happened at Tours by Francis Treat, The November Elections by Isaac A Hourwich, Book Reviews, College Notes.

The Socialist Review was the organ of the Intercollegiate Socialist Society, and replaced The Intercollegiate Socialist magazine in 1919. The society, founded in 1905, was non-aligned but in the orbit of the Socialist Party and had an office for several years at the Rand School. It published the Intercollegiate Socialist monthly and The Socialist Review from 1919. Both journals are largely theoretically, but cover a range of topics wider than most of the party press of the time. At first dedicated to promoting socialism on campus, graduates, and among college alumni, the Society grew into the League for Industrial Democracy as it moved towards workers education. The Socialist Review became Labor Age in 1921.

PDF full issue: https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015073797360?urlappend=;seq=39;ownerid=13510798888014333-43

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