Tag: William Z. Foster
‘The Left Wing in the Needle Trades’ by William Z. Foster from Workers Monthly. Vol. 5 No. 1. November, 1925.
The Workers Monthly. Vol. 5 No. 1. November, 1925.
What Means a Strike in Steel by William Z. Foster. Workers Library Publishers, New York. February, 1937.
The Workers Monthly. Vol. 4 No. 5. March, 1925.
‘The Principles and Program of the Trade Union Educational League’ by William Z. Foster from Labor Herald. Vol. 1 No. 1. March, 1922.
‘Some Elementary Phases of the Work in the Reformist Trade Unions’ by William Z. Foster from The Communist. Vol. 11 No. 6. June, 1932.
‘Fascisti Against the Workers in Italy’ by William Z. Foster from The Toiler. Vol. 4 No. 193. October 22, 1921.
International Press Correspondence. Vol. 3 No. 3. January 26, 1923.
The Socialist Review. Vol. 10 No. 2. April-May, 1921.
‘Syndicalism in Germany’ by William Z. Foster from Industrial Worker. Vol. 3 No. 25. September 14, 1911.
‘Farmer-Labor Opportunism’ by William Z. Foster from the Daily Worker Saturday Supplement. Vol. 2 No. 233. December 20, 1924.
The Communist. Vol. 18 No. 7. July, 1939.
The Liberator. Vol. 6 No. 11. November, 1923.
‘Company Unionism and Trade Unionism’ William Z. Foster from Workers Monthly. Vol. 5 No. 3. January, 1926.
‘The Miners’ Revolt in Butte’ by Willam Z. Foster from Mother Earth. Vol. 9 No. 7. September, 1914.
The Workers Monthly. Vol. 4 No. 7. May, 1925.
‘The Chicago Federation of Labor’ by William Z. Foster from Labor Herald. Vol. 1. No. 10. December, 1922.
The Communist. Vol. 17 No. 8. August, 1938.
Under Arrest! Worker’s Self-Defense in the Courts by William Z Foster. Labor Defender Pamphlet Series No. 5, 1928.
‘The Historic Southern Conferences’ by William Z. Foster from Labor Defender. Vol. 4 No. 11. November, 1929.
‘Syndicalism in the United States’ by William Z. Foster from The Communist. Vol. 14 No. 11. November, 1935.
Labor Defender. Vol. 2 No. 4. April, 1927.
The Toiler. Vol. 4 No. 193. October 22, 1921.
The Communist. Vol. 17 No. 7. July, 1938.
‘The Significance of the Sit-Down Strike’ by William Z. Foster from The Communist. Vol. 16 No. 4. April, 1937.
The Voice of Labor (Chicago). Vol. 11 No. 592. March 30, 1923.
Daily Worker. Vol. 11 No. 17. January 19, 1934.
Labor Defender. Vol. 11 No. 2. February, 1935.
Communist Election Platform: Against Imperialist War, For Jobs and Bread. Workers Library Publishers, New York. 1932.
The Communist. Vol. 9 No. 3. March, 1930.
Organizing Methods in the Steel Industry by William Z. Foster. Workers Library Publishers, New York. October, 1936.
The Workers Monthly. Vol. 5 No. 11. September, 1926.
‘How Life Has Been Brought Into the Stockyards’ by William Z. Foster from Life and Labor (National Women’s Trade Union League). Vol. 7 No. 4. April, 1918.
Life and Labor (National Women’s Trade Union League). Vol. 7 No. 4. April, 1918.
The Communist. Vol. 18 No. 3. March, 1939.
‘American Origins of the Peoples Front’ by William Z. Foster from The Communist. Vol. 16 No. 12. December, 1937.
The War Crisis: Questions and Answers by William Z. Foster. Workers Library Publishers, New York. January, 1940.
The Labor Herald. Vol. 2 No. 3. May, 1923.
The Communist. Vol. 16 No. 12. December, 1937.
‘Party Trade Union Fractions’ by William Z. Foster from Workers Monthly. Vol. 4 No. 9. July, 1925.
‘The Three Basic Tasks of the Communist Peace Policy,’ Speech by William Z. Foster from The Communist. Vol. 19 No. 7. July, 1940.
‘May Day in Germany: Politicians Try to ‘Knife’ the First of May Holiday’ by William Z. Foster from the Industrial Worker. Vol. 3 No. 11. June 8, 1911.
The Workers Monthly. Vol. 4 No. 4. February, 1925.
The Workers Monthly. Vol. 5 No. 15. January, 1927.
‘Organizing the Unorganized, The Task of the Left Wing’ by William Z. Foster from Labor Herald Library No. 17. Published by the Trade Union Educational League, New York. 1926.
The Crisis in the Socialist Party by William Z. Foster. Workers Library Publishers, New York. November, 1936.
‘Petty Bourgeois Leadership vs Proletarian Rank and File’ by William Z. Foster from Labor Herald. Vol. 3 No. 3. May, 1924.