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Abram Flaxer

Abram Flaxer (1904-1989) was an American union leader who founded the State, County, and Municipal Workers of America (SCMWA), which merged with the United Federal Workers of America (UFWA) to form the United Federal Workers of America (UFWA), of which he became president.[1][2][3][4][5][6]

Abram Flaxer
Born
Abraham Flaxer

(1904-09-12)September 12, 1904
DiedJanuary 11, 1989(1989-01-11) (aged 84)
NationalityAmerican
Known forFounder of SCMWA, President of UFWA
Political partyCommunist Party USA
Spouse(s)Victoria White, Charlotte Rosswaag

Early life

 
Flaxer supported a group against "The Arrest of Morris Schappes" (here, a drawing by Hugo Gellert, depicting Schappes' arrest amidst Rapp-Coudert Committee hearings (1941)

Abram Flaxer was born "Abraham Flaxer" on September 11, 1904, in Vilnius, Russian Empire (now Lithuania). Around 1910, his family immigrated to the United States, where they settled in the Williamsburg, Brooklyn area of New York City. He studied at the Rand School of Social Science and then the City College of New York, where he received a BS (or AB). He joined the "Pen and Hammer" (Marxist) club and supported the defense of professor Morris Schappes. In 1932, he obtained a degree from New York University Law School; that summer, he also studied mathematics at Columbia University. In 1935, he told his first wife Victoria that he would be joining the Communist Party USA under the Party name "John Brant."[1][5]

Career

 
Vito Marcantonio (from 1949's Pictorial Directory of the 81st Congress) was an important political ally of Flaxer's

Flaxer was a social worker who in the early 1930s joined radical "Rank and File" movements like the Communist Party USA or the Socialist Party of America along with others like Mary van Kleeck, Jacob Fischer, Bertha Capen Reynolds, and Lewis Merrill.[6]

Flaxer taught in a Bronx vocational school, at which time he also became an organizer for unemployed teachers. He joined the New York City Emergency Relief Bureau (ERB) and the Communist Party USA (CPUSA) and became ERB executive secretary. The growing ERB changed its name to the Association of Workers in Public Relief Agencies. Flaxer gained political relationships with New York City's Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia and Harlem-based Congressman Vito Marcantonio (and joined Marcantonio's American Labor Party). Flaxer helped form the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) union, an American Federation of Labor (AFL) member.[1]

In 1937, Flaxer broke with the AFSCME to form the New York-based State, County and Municipal Workers of America (SCMWA) union as member of the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO). The SCMWA represented local government workers. Flaxer became SCMWA's SCMWA's national president as well as member of the CIO's Executive Board. He became active in the National Municipal League and the Civil Service Assembly.

In 1939, Flaxer led SCMWA into an anti-war stance. He became a leader in the American Peace Mobilization group as a member of its national council.[4]

In 1941, Flaxer reversed into a strong pro-war stance. That same year, Lewis G. Hines, secretary of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania's Department of Labor and Industry stated that Flaxer had "been singled out on a number of occasions as one of the leader members of the Communist Party in this country." In 1941, SCMWA's membership reached 53,000 government employees.[4]

During World War II, bitter infighting arose within SCMWA between pro- and anti-Communist groups. SCMWA also faced congressional scrutiny from the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC).[1] In 1941 at a SCMWA convention, Flaxer said and, again in 1942, wrote in Survey Magazine that government employees should reserved the right to strike during war.[4] In 1944, Flaxer was a four-page subject in a report by the United States House of Representatives. It noted he had been president of the SCMWA CIO since inception in 1937 and a Communist Party activist "as far back as 1936." He had been a "general manager" of the "American Federation of Government Employees" AFL, a member of which (John P. Frey) testified to his Communist links. He had headed the Association of Workers in Public Relief Agencies and joined with the "Communist-controlled" Workers Alliance (to request a parade permit). The report noted that the New York City Teachers Union had joined the SCMWA. As of 1944, his Popular Front memberships included the Committee on Election Rights, Prestes Defense Committee, Schappes Defense Committee, Reichstag Fire Trial Anniversary Committee, National Federation for Constitutional Liberties, American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born, American Committee to Save Refugees, United Spanish Aid Committee, Non-Partisan Committee for the Re-election of Congressman Vito Marcantonio, National Negro Congress, Public Use of Arts Committee, and National Council of American-Soviet Friendship.[4]

In 1946, SCMWA and the UFWA merged to form the United Public Workers of America (UPWA). UPWA had an overtly pro-Soviet foreign policy, which contributed to a severe drop in members, who moved to rival AFSCME.[1]

On January 26–28 and February 2, 1948, a hearing of the House Education and Labor Subcommittee, chaired by U.S. Representative Clare E. Hoffman, occurred on the topic of a strike by United Cafeteria and Restaurant Workers (Local 471) and its parent, the United Public Workers of America (UPWA), CIO, against Government Services, Inc. (GSI), which had already lasted nearly a month. Hoffman refused to let Flaxer read a statement and asked questions, including whether Flaxer was a communist. One of his UAW attorneys, Nathan Witt, objected to "abuse of congressional power." When another attorney, Joseph Forer, rose to follow on from Witt, Hoffman asked him, "Are you the same Forer who defended Gerhard Eisler?" When Witt objected to Hoffman's question, Hoffman ejected Witt from the hearing.[7][8][9] On January 26, 1948, UPWA negotiations director Alfred Bernstein (father of Carl Bernstein), charged that House committee agents had raided the union's offices. During January, William S. Tyson, solicitor for the Labor Department, and Robert N. Denham, general counsel for the National Labor Relations Board, both agreed that nothing in the Taft-Hartley Act prohibited GSI from bargaining with a non-complying union. However, Denham added, the Act intended to "eliminate Communist influence from unions by denying to such unions the services of NLRB."[10]

On November 24, 1948, Flaxer sent a letter to Truman decrying the tendency to brand a person disloyal simply because they advocated for improvements in civil rights.[3][11]

In November 1949, attack on the UPWA culminated at a CIO convention.[12] The CIO passed resolutions barring Communist Party members from holding leadership positions.[13][14][15] CIO convention delegates then charged 10 unions, the UPWA among them, of being communist-controlled.[15][16] A committee of anti-communist CIO vice presidents,[12] chaired by Textile Workers Union of America President Emil Rieve, was established to try the union and (individually) Flaxer on the charges.[15][16][17] The UPWA immediately ceased paying its member dues to the CIO,[18] and denounced the committee as biased due to the strong anti-communist feelings of its members.[19] As the trial approached in January 1950, the UPWA issued a lengthy document which purported to show that it had not parroted the Communist Party line and had upheld the CIO political platform.[20] When the informal trial opened on January 9, the UPWA attempted to bring more than 250 witnesses in its defense, but the crowd was barred on the grounds it would intimidate the committee.[21] At the hearing, Transport Workers Union of America President and communist Mike Quill (who had broken with the Communist Party USA some years earlier but not abandoned his communist beliefs), testified that Flaxer had coordinated his organizing efforts and criticism of the CIO with CPUSA leaders.[12]

The CIO executive board on February 16, 1950, voted 34-to-2 to expel the UPWA.[22][23][24] On March 1, 1950, the CIO expelled UPWA in a purge of Communist dominated unions.[1] On August 8, 1951, Flaxer's ex-wife Vivian White Soboleski testified that Flaxer had been a Communist Party member and that he had joined in 1935.[5] On August 23, 1951, Louis F. Budenz testified that he had known Flaxer (as well as Alfred Bernstein, father of journalist Carl Bernstein) as a Communist Party member from 1940 to 1945 (when Budenz left the Party).[5] On October 5, 1951, Flaxer appeared with David Rein as counsel. In February 1953, the UPWA dissolved.[25][26][27][28][29]

 
Flaxer joined many radicals in opposing Executive Order 9835, signed by US President Harry S. Truman in 1947 (here, page 1)

Flaxer opposed anti-subversive (anti-communist) witch-hunts. He debated US Representative Richard Nixon on the radio regarding the federal loyalty program under Executive Order 9835. By 1950, he found himself accused of CPUSA membership.[6] On October 5, 1951, Flaxer appeared before the United States Senate Subcommittee on Internal Security (SSIS) but refused to name names on the UPWA membership list. On October 6, 1953, he was found guilty by jury of contempt of Congress and sentence to two months in jail plus a $1,000 fine.[6] On June 21, 1956, a Federal Court of Appeals upheld Flaxer's conviction; David Rein defended Flaxer, helped by Joseph Forer.[1][26][30] In 1958, David Rein (partner of Joseph Forer) defended in Flaxer v. United States, 358 U.S. 147 [1958]), which ruled in Flaxer's favor.[31]

Personal life and death

In June 1928, Flaxer married Victoria White of Exeter, New Hampshire; they stayed married "exactly ten years."[5] Some time after 1940, Flaxer married Charlotte Rosswaag, who served in the SCMWA as a welfare investigator as well as chair of its Lower Manhattan subgroup.[1][4][5]

Flaxer had a bank account at the Emigrant Savings Bank (listed in 1951 testimony as the "Immigrant Savings Industrial Bank"), as well as the Corn Exchange Bank, East River Savings Bank, and Bankers Trust.[5]

Abram Flaxer died on January 11, 1989.[1]

Works

Abram Flaxer wrote an unpublished memoir, A View from the Left Field Bleachers.[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Rosswaag, Charlotte (1 June 2018). Guide to the Abram Flaxer Papers WAG.073: Historical/Biographical Note. New York University. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  2. ^ Bernhardt, Debra E.; Bernstein, Rachel (2000). Ordinary People, Extraordinary Lives: A Pictorial History of Working People in New York City. NYU Press. pp. 118–122. ISBN 9781416591290. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  3. ^ a b Thompson, Francis H. (1979). The Frustration of Politics: Truman, Congress and the Loyalty Issue, 1945-1953. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. p. 60. ISBN 9780838621325. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  4. ^ a b c d e f House Reports. US GPO. 1944. pp. 108–112. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Subversive Infiltration of Radio, Television and the Entertainment Industry. US GPO. 1952. pp. 9–20 (Vivian White Soboleski), 21–23 (Louis Francis Budenz), 67–104 (Abram Flaxer). Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  6. ^ a b c d Reisch, Michael; Andrews, Janice (2002). The Road Not Taken: A History of Radical Social Work in the United States. Psychology Press. pp. 64 (photo), 65 (rank and file), 96–98. ISBN 9780415933995. Retrieved 30 November 2019.
  7. ^ Congressional Record: Proceedings and Debates. US GPO. 1948. pp. D65. Retrieved 9 November 2019.
  8. ^ Simpson, Craig (2 January 2018). "Against the cold wind: The 1948 cafeteria workers strike". Washington Spark. Retrieved 20 March 2017.
  9. ^ Marder, Murray (2 January 2018). "Flaxer Refuses To Answer on Communism". Washington Post. p. 1.
  10. ^ Wilder, Frank (27 January 1948). "Union Asserts Office Raided in GSI Strike". Washington Post. pp. 1, 6.
  11. ^ Flaxer, Abram (24 November 1948). "Abram Flaxer to Harry S. Truman, with Reply From William D. Hassett, November 29, 1948". Harry S. Truman Library. Retrieved 30 November 2019.
  12. ^ a b c Zieger, Robert (1995). The CIO, 1935-1955. University of North Carolina Press. pp. 278, 288, 289. ISBN 9780807821824. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  13. ^ "Vote Aides Murray in Red-Ouster Plan". New York Times. 1 November 1949.
  14. ^ "Two Leftist Unions Expelled By C.I.O." New York Times. 3 November 1949. p. 1. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  15. ^ a b c Stark, Louis (6 November 1949). "Ouster of Leftists Is Pressed By C.I.O.". New York Times.
  16. ^ a b "Ten Unions Accused Formally By C.I.O.". New York Times. 19 November 1949.
  17. ^ "Left-Wingers Face Trials By the CIO". New York Times. 24 November 1949.
  18. ^ "Murray Cites 6 Units For Not Paying C.I.O.," New York Times, December 17, 1949.
  19. ^ "Unions Denounce C.I.O. Trial Board," New York Times, November 28, 1949.
  20. ^ "Union Facing Trial Accuses the C.I.O.," New York Times, January 9, 1950.
  21. ^ "C.I.O. Bars Crowd at Trial of Union," New York Times, January 10, 1950.
  22. ^ Fried, Richard M. (1990). Nightmare in Red: The McCarthy Era in Perspective. Oxford University Press. p. 110. ISBN 9780199878734. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  23. ^ "C.I.O. Expels Union of Public Workers". New York Times. 17 February 1950. p. 5. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  24. ^ Biondi, Martha (2003). To Stand and Fight: The Struggle for Civil Rights in Postwar New York City. Harvard University Press. p. 149. ISBN 9780674010604. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  25. ^ "Ex-Union Head Loses 2d Contempt Appeal". New York Times. 4 April 1957. p. 11. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  26. ^ a b "Contempt Appeal Lost". New York Times. 22 June 1956. p. 12. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  27. ^ "Red Taint Charged in Welfare Union". New York Times. 20 April 1953. p. 1. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  28. ^ McCartin, Joseph A. (23 January 2007). "Bringing the State's Workers In: Time to Rectify an Imbalanced U.S. Labor Historiography". Labor History. 47: 73–94. doi:10.1080/00236560500385934. S2CID 153901686.
  29. ^ Arnesen, Eric (2006). "United Federal Workers of America/United Public Workers of America". Encyclopedia of U.S. Labor and Working-Class History: 1444–1446. ISBN 9780415968263. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  30. ^ "Abram Flaxer v. United States, 235 F.2d 821 (D.C. Cir. 1956)". Court Listener. 30 July 1956. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  31. ^ "Flaxer v. United States, 358 U.S. 147 (1958)". Justia. 1958. Retrieved 29 November 2019.

External links

  • Truman Library: Flaxer letter to Truman, dated 29 November 1948
  • Library of Congress: Photo of Abram Flaxer 1937
  • Getty Images: Photo of Abram Flaxer 1948
  • LIFE Photo of Abraham Flaxer 1948
  • Getty Images: Photo of Abraham Flaxer 1949

abram, flaxer, 1904, 1989, american, union, leader, founded, state, county, municipal, workers, america, scmwa, which, merged, with, united, federal, workers, america, ufwa, form, united, federal, workers, america, ufwa, which, became, president, bornabraham, . Abram Flaxer 1904 1989 was an American union leader who founded the State County and Municipal Workers of America SCMWA which merged with the United Federal Workers of America UFWA to form the United Federal Workers of America UFWA of which he became president 1 2 3 4 5 6 Abram FlaxerBornAbraham Flaxer 1904 09 12 September 12 1904Vilnius Lithuania then Russian Empire DiedJanuary 11 1989 1989 01 11 aged 84 NationalityAmericanKnown forFounder of SCMWA President of UFWAPolitical partyCommunist Party USASpouse s Victoria White Charlotte Rosswaag Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Personal life and death 4 Works 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksEarly life Edit Flaxer supported a group against The Arrest of Morris Schappes here a drawing by Hugo Gellert depicting Schappes arrest amidst Rapp Coudert Committee hearings 1941 Abram Flaxer was born Abraham Flaxer on September 11 1904 in Vilnius Russian Empire now Lithuania Around 1910 his family immigrated to the United States where they settled in the Williamsburg Brooklyn area of New York City He studied at the Rand School of Social Science and then the City College of New York where he received a BS or AB He joined the Pen and Hammer Marxist club and supported the defense of professor Morris Schappes In 1932 he obtained a degree from New York University Law School that summer he also studied mathematics at Columbia University In 1935 he told his first wife Victoria that he would be joining the Communist Party USA under the Party name John Brant 1 5 Career Edit Vito Marcantonio from 1949 s Pictorial Directory of the 81st Congress was an important political ally of Flaxer s Flaxer was a social worker who in the early 1930s joined radical Rank and File movements like the Communist Party USA or the Socialist Party of America along with others like Mary van Kleeck Jacob Fischer Bertha Capen Reynolds and Lewis Merrill 6 Flaxer taught in a Bronx vocational school at which time he also became an organizer for unemployed teachers He joined the New York City Emergency Relief Bureau ERB and the Communist Party USA CPUSA and became ERB executive secretary The growing ERB changed its name to the Association of Workers in Public Relief Agencies Flaxer gained political relationships with New York City s Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia and Harlem based Congressman Vito Marcantonio and joined Marcantonio s American Labor Party Flaxer helped form the American Federation of State County and Municipal Employees AFSCME union an American Federation of Labor AFL member 1 In 1937 Flaxer broke with the AFSCME to form the New York based State County and Municipal Workers of America SCMWA union as member of the Congress of Industrial Organizations CIO The SCMWA represented local government workers Flaxer became SCMWA s SCMWA s national president as well as member of the CIO s Executive Board He became active in the National Municipal League and the Civil Service Assembly In 1939 Flaxer led SCMWA into an anti war stance He became a leader in the American Peace Mobilization group as a member of its national council 4 In 1941 Flaxer reversed into a strong pro war stance That same year Lewis G Hines secretary of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania s Department of Labor and Industry stated that Flaxer had been singled out on a number of occasions as one of the leader members of the Communist Party in this country In 1941 SCMWA s membership reached 53 000 government employees 4 During World War II bitter infighting arose within SCMWA between pro and anti Communist groups SCMWA also faced congressional scrutiny from the House Un American Activities Committee HUAC 1 In 1941 at a SCMWA convention Flaxer said and again in 1942 wrote in Survey Magazine that government employees should reserved the right to strike during war 4 In 1944 Flaxer was a four page subject in a report by the United States House of Representatives It noted he had been president of the SCMWA CIO since inception in 1937 and a Communist Party activist as far back as 1936 He had been a general manager of the American Federation of Government Employees AFL a member of which John P Frey testified to his Communist links He had headed the Association of Workers in Public Relief Agencies and joined with the Communist controlled Workers Alliance to request a parade permit The report noted that the New York City Teachers Union had joined the SCMWA As of 1944 his Popular Front memberships included the Committee on Election Rights Prestes Defense Committee Schappes Defense Committee Reichstag Fire Trial Anniversary Committee National Federation for Constitutional Liberties American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born American Committee to Save Refugees United Spanish Aid Committee Non Partisan Committee for the Re election of Congressman Vito Marcantonio National Negro Congress Public Use of Arts Committee and National Council of American Soviet Friendship 4 In 1946 SCMWA and the UFWA merged to form the United Public Workers of America UPWA UPWA had an overtly pro Soviet foreign policy which contributed to a severe drop in members who moved to rival AFSCME 1 On January 26 28 and February 2 1948 a hearing of the House Education and Labor Subcommittee chaired by U S Representative Clare E Hoffman occurred on the topic of a strike by United Cafeteria and Restaurant Workers Local 471 and its parent the United Public Workers of America UPWA CIO against Government Services Inc GSI which had already lasted nearly a month Hoffman refused to let Flaxer read a statement and asked questions including whether Flaxer was a communist One of his UAW attorneys Nathan Witt objected to abuse of congressional power When another attorney Joseph Forer rose to follow on from Witt Hoffman asked him Are you the same Forer who defended Gerhard Eisler When Witt objected to Hoffman s question Hoffman ejected Witt from the hearing 7 8 9 On January 26 1948 UPWA negotiations director Alfred Bernstein father of Carl Bernstein charged that House committee agents had raided the union s offices During January William S Tyson solicitor for the Labor Department and Robert N Denham general counsel for the National Labor Relations Board both agreed that nothing in the Taft Hartley Act prohibited GSI from bargaining with a non complying union However Denham added the Act intended to eliminate Communist influence from unions by denying to such unions the services of NLRB 10 On November 24 1948 Flaxer sent a letter to Truman decrying the tendency to brand a person disloyal simply because they advocated for improvements in civil rights 3 11 In November 1949 attack on the UPWA culminated at a CIO convention 12 The CIO passed resolutions barring Communist Party members from holding leadership positions 13 14 15 CIO convention delegates then charged 10 unions the UPWA among them of being communist controlled 15 16 A committee of anti communist CIO vice presidents 12 chaired by Textile Workers Union of America President Emil Rieve was established to try the union and individually Flaxer on the charges 15 16 17 The UPWA immediately ceased paying its member dues to the CIO 18 and denounced the committee as biased due to the strong anti communist feelings of its members 19 As the trial approached in January 1950 the UPWA issued a lengthy document which purported to show that it had not parroted the Communist Party line and had upheld the CIO political platform 20 When the informal trial opened on January 9 the UPWA attempted to bring more than 250 witnesses in its defense but the crowd was barred on the grounds it would intimidate the committee 21 At the hearing Transport Workers Union of America President and communist Mike Quill who had broken with the Communist Party USA some years earlier but not abandoned his communist beliefs testified that Flaxer had coordinated his organizing efforts and criticism of the CIO with CPUSA leaders 12 The CIO executive board on February 16 1950 voted 34 to 2 to expel the UPWA 22 23 24 On March 1 1950 the CIO expelled UPWA in a purge of Communist dominated unions 1 On August 8 1951 Flaxer s ex wife Vivian White Soboleski testified that Flaxer had been a Communist Party member and that he had joined in 1935 5 On August 23 1951 Louis F Budenz testified that he had known Flaxer as well as Alfred Bernstein father of journalist Carl Bernstein as a Communist Party member from 1940 to 1945 when Budenz left the Party 5 On October 5 1951 Flaxer appeared with David Rein as counsel In February 1953 the UPWA dissolved 25 26 27 28 29 Flaxer joined many radicals in opposing Executive Order 9835 signed by US President Harry S Truman in 1947 here page 1 Flaxer opposed anti subversive anti communist witch hunts He debated US Representative Richard Nixon on the radio regarding the federal loyalty program under Executive Order 9835 By 1950 he found himself accused of CPUSA membership 6 On October 5 1951 Flaxer appeared before the United States Senate Subcommittee on Internal Security SSIS but refused to name names on the UPWA membership list On October 6 1953 he was found guilty by jury of contempt of Congress and sentence to two months in jail plus a 1 000 fine 6 On June 21 1956 a Federal Court of Appeals upheld Flaxer s conviction David Rein defended Flaxer helped by Joseph Forer 1 26 30 In 1958 David Rein partner of Joseph Forer defended in Flaxer v United States 358 U S 147 1958 which ruled in Flaxer s favor 31 Personal life and death EditIn June 1928 Flaxer married Victoria White of Exeter New Hampshire they stayed married exactly ten years 5 Some time after 1940 Flaxer married Charlotte Rosswaag who served in the SCMWA as a welfare investigator as well as chair of its Lower Manhattan subgroup 1 4 5 Flaxer had a bank account at the Emigrant Savings Bank listed in 1951 testimony as the Immigrant Savings Industrial Bank as well as the Corn Exchange Bank East River Savings Bank and Bankers Trust 5 Abram Flaxer died on January 11 1989 1 Works EditAbram Flaxer wrote an unpublished memoir A View from the Left Field Bleachers 1 See also EditFlaxer v United States 358 U S 147 1958 State County and Municipal Workers of America SCMWA United Federal Workers of America UFWA United Public Workers of America UPWA Arthur Stein Alfred Bernstein Herbert Fuchs David Rein Joseph ForerReferences Edit a b c d e f g h i j Rosswaag Charlotte 1 June 2018 Guide to the Abram Flaxer Papers WAG 073 Historical Biographical Note New York University Retrieved 29 November 2019 Bernhardt Debra E Bernstein Rachel 2000 Ordinary People Extraordinary Lives A Pictorial History of Working People in New York City NYU Press pp 118 122 ISBN 9781416591290 Retrieved 29 November 2019 a b Thompson Francis H 1979 The Frustration of Politics Truman Congress and the Loyalty Issue 1945 1953 Fairleigh Dickinson University Press p 60 ISBN 9780838621325 Retrieved 29 November 2019 a b c d e f House Reports US GPO 1944 pp 108 112 Retrieved 29 November 2019 a b c d e f g Subversive Infiltration of Radio Television and the Entertainment Industry US GPO 1952 pp 9 20 Vivian White Soboleski 21 23 Louis Francis Budenz 67 104 Abram Flaxer Retrieved 29 November 2019 a b c d Reisch Michael Andrews Janice 2002 The Road Not Taken A History of Radical Social Work in the United States Psychology Press pp 64 photo 65 rank and file 96 98 ISBN 9780415933995 Retrieved 30 November 2019 Congressional Record Proceedings and Debates US GPO 1948 pp D65 Retrieved 9 November 2019 Simpson Craig 2 January 2018 Against the cold wind The 1948 cafeteria workers strike Washington Spark Retrieved 20 March 2017 Marder Murray 2 January 2018 Flaxer Refuses To Answer on Communism Washington Post p 1 Wilder Frank 27 January 1948 Union Asserts Office Raided in GSI Strike Washington Post pp 1 6 Flaxer Abram 24 November 1948 Abram Flaxer to Harry S Truman with Reply From William D Hassett November 29 1948 Harry S Truman Library Retrieved 30 November 2019 a b c Zieger Robert 1995 The CIO 1935 1955 University of North Carolina Press pp 278 288 289 ISBN 9780807821824 Retrieved 29 November 2019 Vote Aides Murray in Red Ouster Plan New York Times 1 November 1949 Two Leftist Unions Expelled By C I O New York Times 3 November 1949 p 1 Retrieved 29 November 2019 a b c Stark Louis 6 November 1949 Ouster of Leftists Is Pressed By C I O New York Times a b Ten Unions Accused Formally By C I O New York Times 19 November 1949 Left Wingers Face Trials By the CIO New York Times 24 November 1949 Murray Cites 6 Units For Not Paying C I O New York Times December 17 1949 Unions Denounce C I O Trial Board New York Times November 28 1949 Union Facing Trial Accuses the C I O New York Times January 9 1950 C I O Bars Crowd at Trial of Union New York Times January 10 1950 Fried Richard M 1990 Nightmare in Red The McCarthy Era in Perspective Oxford University Press p 110 ISBN 9780199878734 Retrieved 29 November 2019 C I O Expels Union of Public Workers New York Times 17 February 1950 p 5 Retrieved 29 November 2019 Biondi Martha 2003 To Stand and Fight The Struggle for Civil Rights in Postwar New York City Harvard University Press p 149 ISBN 9780674010604 Retrieved 29 November 2019 Ex Union Head Loses 2d Contempt Appeal New York Times 4 April 1957 p 11 Retrieved 29 November 2019 a b Contempt Appeal Lost New York Times 22 June 1956 p 12 Retrieved 29 November 2019 Red Taint Charged in Welfare Union New York Times 20 April 1953 p 1 Retrieved 29 November 2019 McCartin Joseph A 23 January 2007 Bringing the State s Workers In Time to Rectify an Imbalanced U S Labor Historiography Labor History 47 73 94 doi 10 1080 00236560500385934 S2CID 153901686 Arnesen Eric 2006 United Federal Workers of America United Public Workers of America Encyclopedia of U S Labor and Working Class History 1444 1446 ISBN 9780415968263 Retrieved 29 November 2019 Abram Flaxer v United States 235 F 2d 821 D C Cir 1956 Court Listener 30 July 1956 Retrieved 29 November 2019 Flaxer v United States 358 U S 147 1958 Justia 1958 Retrieved 29 November 2019 External links EditTruman Library Flaxer letter to Truman dated 29 November 1948 Library of Congress Photo of Abram Flaxer 1937 Getty Images Photo of Abram Flaxer 1948 LIFE Photo of Abraham Flaxer 1948 Getty Images Photo of Abraham Flaxer 1949 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Abram Flaxer amp oldid 1101880332, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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