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American Committee for the Protection of Foreign Born

American Committee for the Protection of Foreign Born was the successor group to the National Council for the Protection of the Foreign Born and its successor, seen by the US federal government as subversive for "protecting foreign Communists who come to this country," thus "enabling them to operate here.".[1][2][3][4][5]

American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born
PredecessorNational Council for the Protection of the Foreign Born
Merged intoNational Emergency Civil Liberties Committee
Formation1933
Merger of1982
PurposeDefend rights of foreign born, especially radicals and Communist Party members
HeadquartersNew York City
ServicesLitigation, legislation, public education
National chairman (1942)
Hugh De Lacy
Executive Secretary (1933-1939)
Dwight C. Morgan
Key people
Carol Weiss King (1942-1952)
AffiliationsInternational Labor Defense, International Juridical Association

History

By 1922, groups to defend foreign born communists began to emerge locally, but a National Council for Protection of Foreign Born did not form until May 1926.[4][6]

In 1933, Roger Nash Baldwin of the American Civil Liberties Union formed the American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born. The committee sought to defend rights of foreign born, especially radicals and Communist Party members, who went otherwise legally undefended. It pursued three avenues: litigation, legislation, and public education.[3][4]

The US federal government determined that the committee worked closely with the International Labor Defense, legal arm of the Communist Party USA, in turn an arm of the Soviet-formed Communist International and thus supported Party (Soviet) policies.[1]

In the 1930s, the committee campaigned for asylum rights for refugees of European fascism who faced deportation. After the start of the Spanish Civil War in 1936, the committee protected fighters against Francisco Franco who could not (re-)enter the United States legally, e.g., American members of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade.[1][3][4]

During World War II, the committee joined the Popular Front in promoting national unity against fascism. It helped Japanese-Americans after internment. It successfully defended CPUSA leader William Schneiderman against cancelation of his naturalization due to communist memberships. It defended Australian-born labor leader Harry Bridges.[3]

During the early Cold War, the US federal government increased its efforts to deport foreign born trade unionists and Communists; it also attacked the committee itself. In June 1948, Attorney General Tom C. Clark added the committee to a Justice Department list of "subversive" organizations. The McCarran Internal Security Act of 1950 and the McCarran-Walter Immigration Act of 1952 targeted foreign born Communist Party members. In 1950, Attorney General Herbert Brownell Jr. asked the Subversive Activities Control Board to make the committee register as a Communist front. In 1951, executive secretary, Abner Green went to imprisoned for six months for refusing to submit names of contributors. In January 1952, Carol Weiss King, general counsel, died.[3][4][7]

From 1955 to 1957, the committee faced a charge of violating charitable laws. In 1957, a New York State Supreme Court ex parte injunction stopped the committee from all activities. The committee reformed as a charitable organization. Although also in 1957, the United States Supreme Court reversed deportation of Charles Rowoldt based on membership in the Communist Party, the committee gave up direct legal defense of foreign born to focus on public opinion and legislation, e.g., revision or repeal of the McCarran-Walter Act.[3][4]

In the 1960s, the committee focused on discrimination against Mexican immigrants and West Indian workers. It campaigned to establish a statute of limitation, to eliminate supervisory parole, and to defend the free speech and association of foreign born. Specific bills targeted included the Rodino Bill and the Field-Knorr Bill, "both of which proposed the establishment of sanctions against employers of 'illegal' aliens." The committee also defended political asylum for Haitians.[3]

On April 26, 1965, the United States Supreme Court in American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born, Petitioner, v. Subversive Activities Control Board affirmed an order of the Subversive Activities Control Board requiring that the committee, represented by Joseph Forer, must register as a 'Communist-front' organization.[8]

In 1977, the committee helped win right to public education for children of illegally immigrated parents.[3]

In 1982, the National Emergency Civil Liberties Committee absorbed the committee.[3]

Organization

The US federal government deemed both Communist front organizations that worked closely with the International Labor Defense, the legal arm of the Communist Party USA, in turn, an arm of the Soviet-formed Communist International. Both groups supported Party (Soviet) policies.[1]

The American Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born had ties to the Abraham Lincoln Brigade.[1]

The American Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born had various subcommittees:

  • Regional: New York Committee for Protection of Foreign Born, Los Angeles Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born, Bay Cities Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born (Pittsburgh), Clatsop County Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born (Oregon), Midwest Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born, Committee for Protection of Oregon's Foreign Born, Western Pennsylvania Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born, Detroit Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born, East Bay Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born, East Side Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born, etc.[2]
  • Ethnic: Albanian Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born (Michigan), American-Polish Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born, American-Yugoslav Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born (Pittsburgh), Bulgarian-American Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born, Czechoslovak Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born, Estonian Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born, Greek-American Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born, Hungarian-American Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born, Italian-American Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born, etc.[2]
  • Regional and Ethnic: Chicago-Greek Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born, Chicago-Jewish Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born, New York-Polish Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born, etc.[2]
  • People Defended: Charles Doyle Defense Committee, Claudia Jones Defense Committee, Committee for the Defense of Martin Karasek, Harry Bridges Defense Committee, etc.[2]

In 1950, the Internal Security Act listed as a "subversive" "Communist-front" organization.[2]

People

The committee had a small staff. Dwight C. Morgan served as executive secretary from 1933 to 1939. Abner Green succeeded him and served from 1941 to 1959. Carol Weiss King served as general counsel from 1942 to 1952; she also co-founded the International Juridical Association (IJA).[4] Ira Gollobin served as associate counsel from 1936 to 1966 and then general counsel from 1967 to 1982.[citation needed]

Leaders

National Council for Protection of Foreign Born Workers:

  • President: Joseph Dean[1]
  • Legal Advisor: Henry T. Hunt[1]
  • Secretary-Treasurer: Nina Samorodin[1]
  • First Vice President: Max Orlowsky[1]
  • Second Vice President: P. Pascal Cosgrove[1]

In 1942, Hugh De Lacy was national chairman.[9] In 1951, Louise Pettibone Smith was elected chair.[10]

Members

Members or individuals affiliated with the American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born included: Albert Einstein, Bela Lugosi, Rex Stout, Emily Balch,[4] Donald Ogden Stewart, Joris Ivens, Edward G. Robinson, Jacob Ben Ami, Zlatko Balokovic, Bay Lev, Maurice Hindus, Emil Lengyel, Max Lerner, Ella Winter, Maxim Kopf, Pachita Crespi, Yasuo Kuniyoshi, Li Yu Ying, Bela Schick, Vilhjalmur Stefansson, Charles Collins, Hugo Ernst, Leo Krzycki, Michael Obermeier, Michael Quill, Ira DeA Reid, Vito Marcantonio, Canada Lee, William Rose Benet, Dr. Aaron Bodansky, Irene Bordoni, Louis B. Boudin, Henrietta Buckmaster, Morris Carnovsky, Aaron Copland, Kyle Crichton, Joseph Curran, Henry Pratt Fairchild, Abram Flaxer, Langston Hughes, George Jessel, Emil Ludwig, Fredric March (and Florence Eldridge), Dudley Nichols, Olga Petrova, Arthur Upham Pope, Louis S. Posner, Adam Clayton Powell Jr., Elmer Rice, Paul Robeson, Doris Rosenthal, Lisa Sergio, Frank Tuttle, Orson Welles, Max Yergan, Blanche Yurka, William Zorach, James A. Baker, Hugh De Lacey, Leo Eloesser, Guy Endore, Edward L. Parsons, Reid Robinson, Maxwell S. Stewart, Theodore Dreiser, Mary McLeod Bethune, Franz Boas, Van Wyck Brooks, Thomas F. Ford, Frank P. Graham, Sidney Hillman, Rockwell Kent, Robert Morss Lovett, Sidney Lovett, Henry N. MacCracken, Francis J. McConnell, Culbert L. Olson, Max Radin, Walter Rautenstrauch, Rose Schneiderman, Guy Emery Shipler, Harry F. Ward, Mary E. Wooley, Pearl M. Hart, Carey Me Williams, Thomas Addis, Sophonisba Breckinridge, Henry Cohen, Stephen Fritchman, Aline Davis Hays, Carol King, Edgar A. Lowther, Lewis Merrill, Stanley Nowak, Max C. Putney, Adolph J. Sabath, George Seldes, Peter Shipka, Herman Shumlin, Curt Swinburne, Donald Henderson, Manuel Buaken, Frederick N. Myers, Frederick V. Field, Lewis Alan Berne, Joseph Cadden, Martha Dodd, Muriel Draper, Abram Flaxer, Alexander Meiklejohn, Genevieve Taggard, John B. Thompson, Oswald Garrison Villard, J. Raymond Walsh, Art Young, Louis Adamic, and James Waterman Wise.[1]

Joseph Freeman (writer) a member,[11] as wel Mady Christians.[12]

Publications

The following publications of the American Committee provide details that appear in the Guide to Subversive Organizations and Publications (And Appendixes):

Publications by ACPFB members:

  • Deportation Terror: A Weapon to Gag America (1950)[13]
  • Deportation Drive vs the Bill of Rights: The McCarran Act and the Foreign Born (1951)[14]

Other publications include:

  • The Foreign Born in the United States (1936)[15]
  • Unequal Justice[16]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Fourth Report - Un-American Activities in California - 1948: Communist Front Organizations. Senate of the California Legislature. 1948. pp. 98 (Lincoln Bridge), 113–114 (organization). Retrieved 18 October 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Guide to Subversive Organizations and Publications (And Appendixes)... House Document No. 398. US GPO. 1962. pp. 15 (Los Angeles, Albanian), 18 (front), 28 (Polish), 34 (Yugoslav), 35 (Bay Cities), 36 (Bulgarian), 40 (Charles Doyle), 41 (Chicago, Midwest), 46 (Clatsop, Claudia Jones), 49 (Karasek), 50 (Oregon), 54 (Wn PA), 65 (Czech), 67 (Detroit), 68 (East Bay), 69 (East Side), 71 (Estonian), 80 (Greek), 81 (Harry Bridges), 82 (Hungarian), 93 (Italian), 128 (NY-Polish), 183–205 (description), 191 (Lamp), 195 (Beacon). Retrieved 18 October 2018.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Guide to the Records of the American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born TAM.086". New York University. 2 May 2018. Retrieved 18 October 2018.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h "American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born Records (1926-1980s)". University of Michigan. 2 May 2018. Retrieved 18 October 2018.
  5. ^ Sherman, John W. (2001). A Communist Front at Mid-century: The American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born, 1933-1959. Praeger. Retrieved 18 October 2018.
  6. ^ Draper, Theodore (5 July 2017). American Communism and Soviet Russia. Routledge. Retrieved 8 September 2018.
  7. ^ Walker, Samuel (1999). In Defense of American Liberties: A History of the ACLU. SIU Press. p. 179. Retrieved 18 October 2018.
  8. ^ "American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born, Petitioner, v. Subversive Activities Control Board". Cornell Law School - Legal Information Institute. 26 April 1965. Retrieved 19 October 2018.
  9. ^ Romerstein, Herbert; Breindel, Eric (1 October 2001). The Venona Secrets: Exposing Soviet Espionage and America's Traitors. Simon and Schuster. Retrieved 18 October 2018.
  10. ^ Ko, Grace (2012). "Achtemeier, Elizabeth Rice". In Taylor, Marion Ann (ed.). Handbook of Women Biblical Interpreters. Baker Academic. pp. 457–459.
  11. ^ Gannon, Francis X. (1973). A Biographical Dictionary of The Left: Volume 4. Western Islands. pp. 376–378. Retrieved 18 October 2018.
  12. ^ Navasky, Victor (1 October 2013). Naming Names. Open Road Media. Retrieved 18 October 2018.
  13. ^ Green, Abner (1950). Deportation Terror: A Weapon to Gag America. New Century Publishers. p. 23. Retrieved 18 October 2018.
  14. ^ Green, Abner (1951). Deportation Drive vs the Bill of Rights: The McCarran Act and the Foreign Born. New Century Publishers. p. 23. Retrieved 18 October 2018.
  15. ^ Morgan, Dwight C. (1936). The Foreign Born in the United States. ACPFB. Retrieved 18 October 2018.
  16. ^ Heins, Marjorie (2013). High Priests of Democracy. New York University Press. p. 90. Retrieved 8 September 2018.

External sources

  • Records of the American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born, Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Archives, New York University Special Collections
  • University of California's Bancroft Collection: Labadie Collection - American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born papers
  • American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born Records (1926-1980s)
  • Cornell Law School Legal Information Institute - American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born, Petitioner, v. Subversive Activities Control Board

american, committee, protection, foreign, born, successor, group, national, council, protection, foreign, born, successor, seen, federal, government, subversive, protecting, foreign, communists, come, this, country, thus, enabling, them, operate, here, america. American Committee for the Protection of Foreign Born was the successor group to the National Council for the Protection of the Foreign Born and its successor seen by the US federal government as subversive for protecting foreign Communists who come to this country thus enabling them to operate here 1 2 3 4 5 American Committee for Protection of Foreign BornPredecessorNational Council for the Protection of the Foreign BornMerged intoNational Emergency Civil Liberties CommitteeFormation1933Merger of1982PurposeDefend rights of foreign born especially radicals and Communist Party membersHeadquartersNew York CityServicesLitigation legislation public educationNational chairman 1942 Hugh De LacyExecutive Secretary 1933 1939 Dwight C MorganKey peopleCarol Weiss King 1942 1952 AffiliationsInternational Labor Defense International Juridical Association Contents 1 History 2 Organization 3 People 3 1 Leaders 3 2 Members 4 Publications 5 See also 6 References 7 External sourcesHistory EditBy 1922 groups to defend foreign born communists began to emerge locally but a National Council for Protection of Foreign Born did not form until May 1926 4 6 In 1933 Roger Nash Baldwin of the American Civil Liberties Union formed the American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born The committee sought to defend rights of foreign born especially radicals and Communist Party members who went otherwise legally undefended It pursued three avenues litigation legislation and public education 3 4 The US federal government determined that the committee worked closely with the International Labor Defense legal arm of the Communist Party USA in turn an arm of the Soviet formed Communist International and thus supported Party Soviet policies 1 In the 1930s the committee campaigned for asylum rights for refugees of European fascism who faced deportation After the start of the Spanish Civil War in 1936 the committee protected fighters against Francisco Franco who could not re enter the United States legally e g American members of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade 1 3 4 During World War II the committee joined the Popular Front in promoting national unity against fascism It helped Japanese Americans after internment It successfully defended CPUSA leader William Schneiderman against cancelation of his naturalization due to communist memberships It defended Australian born labor leader Harry Bridges 3 During the early Cold War the US federal government increased its efforts to deport foreign born trade unionists and Communists it also attacked the committee itself In June 1948 Attorney General Tom C Clark added the committee to a Justice Department list of subversive organizations The McCarran Internal Security Act of 1950 and the McCarran Walter Immigration Act of 1952 targeted foreign born Communist Party members In 1950 Attorney General Herbert Brownell Jr asked the Subversive Activities Control Board to make the committee register as a Communist front In 1951 executive secretary Abner Green went to imprisoned for six months for refusing to submit names of contributors In January 1952 Carol Weiss King general counsel died 3 4 7 From 1955 to 1957 the committee faced a charge of violating charitable laws In 1957 a New York State Supreme Court ex parte injunction stopped the committee from all activities The committee reformed as a charitable organization Although also in 1957 the United States Supreme Court reversed deportation of Charles Rowoldt based on membership in the Communist Party the committee gave up direct legal defense of foreign born to focus on public opinion and legislation e g revision or repeal of the McCarran Walter Act 3 4 In the 1960s the committee focused on discrimination against Mexican immigrants and West Indian workers It campaigned to establish a statute of limitation to eliminate supervisory parole and to defend the free speech and association of foreign born Specific bills targeted included the Rodino Bill and the Field Knorr Bill both of which proposed the establishment of sanctions against employers of illegal aliens The committee also defended political asylum for Haitians 3 On April 26 1965 the United States Supreme Court in American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born Petitioner v Subversive Activities Control Board affirmed an order of the Subversive Activities Control Board requiring that the committee represented by Joseph Forer must register as a Communist front organization 8 In 1977 the committee helped win right to public education for children of illegally immigrated parents 3 In 1982 the National Emergency Civil Liberties Committee absorbed the committee 3 Organization EditThe US federal government deemed both Communist front organizations that worked closely with the International Labor Defense the legal arm of the Communist Party USA in turn an arm of the Soviet formed Communist International Both groups supported Party Soviet policies 1 The American Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born had ties to the Abraham Lincoln Brigade 1 The American Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born had various subcommittees Regional New York Committee for Protection of Foreign Born Los Angeles Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born Bay Cities Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born Pittsburgh Clatsop County Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born Oregon Midwest Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born Committee for Protection of Oregon s Foreign Born Western Pennsylvania Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born Detroit Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born East Bay Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born East Side Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born etc 2 Ethnic Albanian Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born Michigan American Polish Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born American Yugoslav Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born Pittsburgh Bulgarian American Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born Czechoslovak Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born Estonian Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born Greek American Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born Hungarian American Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born Italian American Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born etc 2 Regional and Ethnic Chicago Greek Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born Chicago Jewish Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born New York Polish Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born etc 2 People Defended Charles Doyle Defense Committee Claudia Jones Defense Committee Committee for the Defense of Martin Karasek Harry Bridges Defense Committee etc 2 In 1950 the Internal Security Act listed as a subversive Communist front organization 2 People EditThe committee had a small staff Dwight C Morgan served as executive secretary from 1933 to 1939 Abner Green succeeded him and served from 1941 to 1959 Carol Weiss King served as general counsel from 1942 to 1952 she also co founded the International Juridical Association IJA 4 Ira Gollobin served as associate counsel from 1936 to 1966 and then general counsel from 1967 to 1982 citation needed Leaders Edit National Council for Protection of Foreign Born Workers President Joseph Dean 1 Legal Advisor Henry T Hunt 1 Secretary Treasurer Nina Samorodin 1 First Vice President Max Orlowsky 1 Second Vice President P Pascal Cosgrove 1 In 1942 Hugh De Lacy was national chairman 9 In 1951 Louise Pettibone Smith was elected chair 10 Members Edit Members or individuals affiliated with the American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born included Albert Einstein Bela Lugosi Rex Stout Emily Balch 4 Donald Ogden Stewart Joris Ivens Edward G Robinson Jacob Ben Ami Zlatko Balokovic Bay Lev Maurice Hindus Emil Lengyel Max Lerner Ella Winter Maxim Kopf Pachita Crespi Yasuo Kuniyoshi Li Yu Ying Bela Schick Vilhjalmur Stefansson Charles Collins Hugo Ernst Leo Krzycki Michael Obermeier Michael Quill Ira DeA Reid Vito Marcantonio Canada Lee William Rose Benet Dr Aaron Bodansky Irene Bordoni Louis B Boudin Henrietta Buckmaster Morris Carnovsky Aaron Copland Kyle Crichton Joseph Curran Henry Pratt Fairchild Abram Flaxer Langston Hughes George Jessel Emil Ludwig Fredric March and Florence Eldridge Dudley Nichols Olga Petrova Arthur Upham Pope Louis S Posner Adam Clayton Powell Jr Elmer Rice Paul Robeson Doris Rosenthal Lisa Sergio Frank Tuttle Orson Welles Max Yergan Blanche Yurka William Zorach James A Baker Hugh De Lacey Leo Eloesser Guy Endore Edward L Parsons Reid Robinson Maxwell S Stewart Theodore Dreiser Mary McLeod Bethune Franz Boas Van Wyck Brooks Thomas F Ford Frank P Graham Sidney Hillman Rockwell Kent Robert Morss Lovett Sidney Lovett Henry N MacCracken Francis J McConnell Culbert L Olson Max Radin Walter Rautenstrauch Rose Schneiderman Guy Emery Shipler Harry F Ward Mary E Wooley Pearl M Hart Carey Me Williams Thomas Addis Sophonisba Breckinridge Henry Cohen Stephen Fritchman Aline Davis Hays Carol King Edgar A Lowther Lewis Merrill Stanley Nowak Max C Putney Adolph J Sabath George Seldes Peter Shipka Herman Shumlin Curt Swinburne Donald Henderson Manuel Buaken Frederick N Myers Frederick V Field Lewis Alan Berne Joseph Cadden Martha Dodd Muriel Draper Abram Flaxer Alexander Meiklejohn Genevieve Taggard John B Thompson Oswald Garrison Villard J Raymond Walsh Art Young Louis Adamic and James Waterman Wise 1 Joseph Freeman writer a member 11 as wel Mady Christians 12 Publications EditThe following publications of the American Committee provide details that appear in the Guide to Subversive Organizations and Publications And Appendixes The Lamp Monthly publication f the American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born in New York City 2 New York Beacon Publication of the New York Committee for Protection of Foreign Born 2 Publications by ACPFB members Deportation Terror A Weapon to Gag America 1950 13 Deportation Drive vs the Bill of Rights The McCarran Act and the Foreign Born 1951 14 Other publications include The Foreign Born in the United States 1936 15 Unequal Justice 16 See also EditInternational Juridical Association International Labor DefenseReferences Edit a b c d e f g h i j k Fourth Report Un American Activities in California 1948 Communist Front Organizations Senate of the California Legislature 1948 pp 98 Lincoln Bridge 113 114 organization Retrieved 18 October 2018 a b c d e f g h Guide to Subversive Organizations and Publications And Appendixes House Document No 398 US GPO 1962 pp 15 Los Angeles Albanian 18 front 28 Polish 34 Yugoslav 35 Bay Cities 36 Bulgarian 40 Charles Doyle 41 Chicago Midwest 46 Clatsop Claudia Jones 49 Karasek 50 Oregon 54 Wn PA 65 Czech 67 Detroit 68 East Bay 69 East Side 71 Estonian 80 Greek 81 Harry Bridges 82 Hungarian 93 Italian 128 NY Polish 183 205 description 191 Lamp 195 Beacon Retrieved 18 October 2018 a b c d e f g h i Guide to the Records of the American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born TAM 086 New York University 2 May 2018 Retrieved 18 October 2018 a b c d e f g h American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born Records 1926 1980s University of Michigan 2 May 2018 Retrieved 18 October 2018 Sherman John W 2001 A Communist Front at Mid century The American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born 1933 1959 Praeger Retrieved 18 October 2018 Draper Theodore 5 July 2017 American Communism and Soviet Russia Routledge Retrieved 8 September 2018 Walker Samuel 1999 In Defense of American Liberties A History of the ACLU SIU Press p 179 Retrieved 18 October 2018 American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born Petitioner v Subversive Activities Control Board Cornell Law School Legal Information Institute 26 April 1965 Retrieved 19 October 2018 Romerstein Herbert Breindel Eric 1 October 2001 The Venona Secrets Exposing Soviet Espionage and America s Traitors Simon and Schuster Retrieved 18 October 2018 Ko Grace 2012 Achtemeier Elizabeth Rice In Taylor Marion Ann ed Handbook of Women Biblical Interpreters Baker Academic pp 457 459 Gannon Francis X 1973 A Biographical Dictionary of The Left Volume 4 Western Islands pp 376 378 Retrieved 18 October 2018 Navasky Victor 1 October 2013 Naming Names Open Road Media Retrieved 18 October 2018 Green Abner 1950 Deportation Terror A Weapon to Gag America New Century Publishers p 23 Retrieved 18 October 2018 Green Abner 1951 Deportation Drive vs the Bill of Rights The McCarran Act and the Foreign Born New Century Publishers p 23 Retrieved 18 October 2018 Morgan Dwight C 1936 The Foreign Born in the United States ACPFB Retrieved 18 October 2018 Heins Marjorie 2013 High Priests of Democracy New York University Press p 90 Retrieved 8 September 2018 External sources EditRecords of the American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born Tamiment Library and Robert F Wagner Archives New York University Special Collections University of California s Bancroft Collection Labadie Collection American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born papers American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born Records 1926 1980s Cornell Law School Legal Information Institute American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born Petitioner v Subversive Activities Control Board Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title American Committee for the Protection of Foreign Born amp oldid 1108322239, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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