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Carol Weiss King

Carol Weiss King (24 August 1895 – 22 January 1952)[1] was a well-known immigration lawyer, key founder of the International Juridical Association, and a founding member of the National Lawyers Guild in the United States.[2] Her left-leaning career spanned from the Palmer Raids to the McCarthy Era.[1][3][4]

Carol Weiss King
Born
Carole Therese Weiss

(1895-08-24)August 24, 1895
New York City, US
DiedJanuary 22, 1952(1952-01-22) (aged 56)
New York City, US
NationalityAmerican
Other namesCarol King
EducationBarnard College
Alma materNew York University Law School
Occupation(s)Attorney, legal organizer
Years active1917–1952
Known forPro-communist, civil rights legal defenses of Harry Bridges, Gerhart Eisler, J. Peters
Notable workAmerican Committee for the Protection of Foreign Born, International Labor Defense, International Juridical Association, National Lawyers Guild
SpouseGordon Congdon King
Childrenson
Parent(s)Samuel Weiss, Carrie Stix
FamilyWilliam Stix Weiss; Nina Henrietta Weiss Stern, Louis Stix Weiss

Background

 
Barnard College class of 1913

Born August 24, 1895, Carol Weiss was the youngest child of Samuel William Weiss and Carrie Stix. Her father was a founder of the law firm of Frank and Weiss (1875–1880), then practiced alone (1880–1910). Her eldest brother, William S. Weiss, continued their father's firm until forced to stop by multiple sclerosis. Another older brother, Louis S. Weiss, also entered his father's first Frank and Weiss, which developed into today's Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison.[1]

In 1912, Weiss entered Barnard College as a member of the Class of 1916.[4] Archives show many sides of her college life. In 1913, she appeared in a school play, partook in "Mysteries" (sorority rushing), and played basketball.[5][6][7] In 1914, she was known as "man-hating" yet managed to appear "resplendent" for the Sophomore Dance.[8] She also joined the managing board of the Barnard Bulletin, whereafter her name appeared as an associate editor.[9][10] In 1914–15, she was active in the English Club.[11][12] In 1915, she was involved in the Social Science League, which discussed theories of Scott Nearing and for which she was running as secretary-treasurer.[13] For the Athletic Club, she served as pitcher in 1914.[14]

In 1916, she was among many who had not paid her Athletic Association dues but was in good enough standing to appear listed as a member in the yearbook as well as a committee member for Greek Games.[15][16] She graduated in 1916.[17] In 1917, she entered law school and in 1920 graduated with a JD in Law from New York University; her brother Louis graduated with a BA in Law from Columbia University, although he started law school a year earlier.[3][4]

Career

By the end of 1916, Weiss was "doing volunteer work for the American Association for Labor Legislation."[18] In 1917, she was a volunteer research assistant for the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).[3][4]

By 1920, as Carol Weiss King, she volunteered to work with Local 25 of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union (ILGWU).[1] In 1921, she had opened her own law office.[17] In 1923, her name appears in the Barnard Bulletin as "lawyer" without affiliation stated.[19]

In 1924, the communist Daily Worker newspaper listed her as one of their most successful solicitors of subscriptions.[3] That same year, she had formed a "loose partnership" with radical attorneys. These included Joseph R. Brodsky, Swinburne Hale, Walter Nelles, Isaac Shorr, and Walter Pollak.[20] One of Carol Weiss King's first and most durable relationships was with Pollak, a onetime partner of Benjamin Cardozo, whom she met through her brother-in-law Carl Stern. King, Pollak and Stern worked on the Scottsboro Boys cases, which Pollak successfully argued in the U.S. Supreme Court, among other cases.[1] (Another source cites her as head partner of "Shorr, Brodsky, and King in 1925.[21][22]) King also associated with left-wing activists, including members of the Communist Party of the United States of America.

In 1924, she began to edit the Law and Freedom Bulletin an ACLU digest that recorded state and federal cases involving significant questions of constitutional law.[1][4]

In her 30-year career, she represented hundreds of foreign-born radicals threatened with deportation in administrative proceedings in the lower courts and in the Supreme Court. In 1942, she became general counsel to the American Committee for the Protection of Foreign Born (ACPFB). Due to her association with controversial clients, King herself was subject to surveillance by the FBI.[1]

ILD, IJA, ACPFB, NLG

In 1925, she helped Brodsky found the International Labor Defense for the CPUSA (then operating under the name Workers Party of America) and served on its legal advisory committee.[3][21] In 1931, she became the primary founder of the International Juridical Association.[23]

In 1937, she helped found the National Lawyers Guild.[1]

In 1942, she became general counsel for the American Committee for the Protection of Foreign Born, until her death in 1952[4]

In a footnote in his 1952 memoir, Whittaker Chambers notes:

In the early 1930s, Hiss had been a member of the International Juridical Association, of which the late Carol [Weiss] King, a habitual attorney for Communists in trouble, was a moving spirit. The International Juridical Association has been cited as subversive by the Attorney General. Also among its members: Lee Pressman, Abraham Isserman (one of the attorneys for the eleven convicted Communist leaders), Max Loewenthal (Max Lowenthal), author of a recent book attacking the F.B.I.[24]

Cases

King supported several United States Supreme Court cases including Powell v. Alabama (1932) (the first Scottsboro Boys case) and Herndon v. Lowrey (1937).[4]

Harry Bridges 1938

 
Harry Bridges (1937), whom King defended

King's best-known client was union leader Harry Bridges, who faced deportation in 1938 for alleged membership in the Communist Party. The case reached the Supreme Court of the United States, which reversed the deportation order during World War II.

William Schneiderman 1940

King's representation of Communist Party leader William Schneiderman[25] exemplifies her success in enlisting other (male) attorneys to work for free on key constitutional cases — in this case, recruiting Wendell Willkie, the 1940 Republican Party presidential nominee, to represent Schneiderman before the Supreme Court. King won this case in 1943, preventing the Government's revocation of the Communist Party leader's citizenship.[4]

Gerhart Eisler 1947

King also represented Gerhart Eisler in his trial in July 1947. She accused FBI agent, Robert J. Lamphere, of framing Eisler.[26] After only a few hours of deliberation, the jury brought in a guilty verdict and he was sentenced to a year in prison.[27] Lamphere asked Eisler as the court was adjourning, "Gerhart, do you think you got a fair trial?" He replied: "Yes, a fair trial but an unfair indictment. Lamphere later recalled: "It was the last time I saw Eisler in person; in a way, I almost liked him - his bravado was astonishing."[28]

J. Peters 1948

King also defended "red conspirator" J. Peters against the INS (named by Louis Budenz and Whittaker Chambers as mastermind of a Soviet underground spy ring operating in Washington, DC, during the 1930s and 1940s) and counseled Peters on how to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) (1948-1949).[29]

Although the J. Peters case was among the best known of King's career, Ann Fagan Ginger makes only a single reference to it in her biography of more than 500 pages.[2]

Sung v. McGrath 1950

King took on many cases against the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS). Her most important legal victory came from Sung v. McGrath (339 U.S. 908, 1950). In this case, the Supreme Court acknowledged that INS was subject to the same administrative and procedural rules as all other federal departments. This ruling froze deportation hearings until the INS agreed to comply with the requirements of the Administrative Procedures Act.

Later

 
Carol Weiss King's client Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, shown here (center) in 1913 photo with Paterson silk strike leaders Patrick Quinlan and Carlo Tresca left and Adolph Lessig and Bill Haywood right

In 1951, King joined more than half a dozen other lawyers in defending 17 Communist Party members, including Elizabeth Gurley Flynn. The communists were accused of charged conspiring to "teach and advocate violent overthrow" of the government. The other lawyers were: Abraham L. Pomerantz, Victor Rabinowitz, Michael Begun, Harold I. Cammer, Mary Kaufman, Leonard Boudin, and Abraham Unger. Later, they were relieved by O. John Rogge, gangster Frank Costello's lawyer George Wolf, William W. Kleinman, Joseph L. Delaney, Frank Serri, Osmond K. Fraenkel, Henry G. Singer, Abraham J. Gellinoff, Raphael P. Koenig, and Nicholas Atlas.[30]

King herself made only one appearance before the Supreme Court, in Butterfield v. Zydok (342 U.S. 524, 1952), which she lost.[1]

African-American Communist organizer Angelo Herndon was another client.[1]

She also represented petitioner Harisiades in the important U.S. Supreme Court immigration law case Harisiades v. Shaughnessy, 342 U.S. 580, 1952.[2]

Personal life and death

She married Gordon Congdon King in 1917.[4][31] Her husband died of pneumonia in 1930, leaving her a widow with one son—and her work.[1] (Her brother William married 1915 Barnard alumna, Ray Levi.[32])

The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) kept King under surveillance due to her close communist associations.[4]

On January 22, 1952, Carol Weiss King age 56 died of cancer.[1][2][4]

Legacy

Barnard College recognized Carol Weiss King in a 1951 issue of the Barnard Bulletin:

Carol Weiss King '16, is a prominent lawyer specializing in immigration work. She has served as counsel in several well-known cases, including the Harry Bridges case, for which she was chief counsel up through the U.S. Supreme Court; and the William Schneiderman[25] case, in which she was co-counsel with Wendell Willkie. Mrs. King has also published numerous articles for law reviews.[33]

Other alumnae who appeared in that article include poet Leonie Adams Troy ('22), author Irma Simonton Black ('27), and Margaret Mead ('23).

The National Lawyers Guild's Immigration Project presents the Carol King award each year in Ms. King's honor to an outstanding immigration advocate.[2]

Walter Pollak's son, Senior U.S. District Judge Louis Pollak (who married King's niece), wrote the foreword to Ann Fagan Ginger's 1993 biography of Carol Weiss King.[1]

Works

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Carol Weiss King". Jewish Women: A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia. Retrieved 27 December 2010.
  2. ^ a b c d e Ginger, Ann Fagan (1993). Carol Weiss King, human rights lawyer, 1895-1952. Boulder: University Press of Colorado. ISBN 0-87081-285-8. LCCN 92040157.
  3. ^ a b c d e Thompson, Craig (17 February 1951). "The Communists's Dearest Friend". Saturday Evening Post. pp. 30, 90–93.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Guide to the Carol Weiss King FOIA Files TAM 394". New York University. 29 May 2018. Retrieved 19 October 2018.
  5. ^ "C.S.A. Party". Barnard Bulletin. 3 November 1913. p. 1.
  6. ^ "Mysteries". Barnard Bulletin. 13 October 1913. p. 1.
  7. ^ "14-16 Basketball Game". Barnard Bulletin. 12 March 1913. p. 1.
  8. ^ "Sophomore Dance". Barnard Bulletin. 9 March 1914. p. 1.
  9. ^ "New Bulletin Members". Barnard Bulletin. 11 May 1914. p. 4.
  10. ^ "New Bulletin Members". Barnard Bulletin. 11 May 1914. p. 2.
  11. ^ "English Club". Barnard Bulletin. 30 November 1914. p. 2.
  12. ^ "English Club". Barnard Bulletin. 29 November 1915. p. 3.
  13. ^ "Social Science League". Barnard Bulletin. 13 December 1915. p. 3.
  14. ^ "Baseball '16 vs. '17". Barnard Bulletin. 27 April 1914. p. 4.
  15. ^ "A.A. Dues". Barnard Bulletin. 13 March 1916. p. 88.
  16. ^ "Athletic Club". Barnard Bulletin. 1916. pp. 88, 98.
  17. ^ a b "Alumnae Notes". Barnard Bulletin. 21 October 1921. p. 5.
  18. ^ "Alumnae Department". Barnard Bulletin. 19 December 1917. p. 6.
  19. ^ "Alumnae Vocational Conference - February 15". Barnard Bulletin. 9 February 1923. p. 1.
  20. ^ "UNITED STATES ex rel. BRAZIER et al. v. COMMISSIONER OF IMMIGRATION AT PORT OF NEW YORK". Court Listener. 15 December 1924. Retrieved 27 December 2010.
  21. ^ a b "King, Carol Weiss (1895–1952)". Women in World History: A Biographical Encyclopedia. 18 May 2010. Retrieved 27 September 2017.
  22. ^ "UNITED STATES ex rel. GILETTI v. COMMISSIONER OF IMMIGRATION, ELLIS ISLAND, NEW YORK HARBOR". Court Listener. 4 November 1929. Retrieved 28 September 2017.
  23. ^ "Report on the National Lawyers Guild, Legal Bulwark of the Communist Party". U.S. Government Printing Office (GPO). 1950. Retrieved 28 November 2016.
  24. ^ Chambers, Whittaker (1952). Witness. New York: Random House. LCCN 52005149. Retrieved 2 December 2016.
  25. ^ a b "Finding Aid to the William Schneiderman Papers larc.ms.0327". Online Archives of California.
  26. ^ "Robert Lamphere".
  27. ^ "Gerhart Eisler".
  28. ^ Robert J. Lamphere, The FBI-KGB War (1986) page 62
  29. ^ Sakmyster, Thomas L. (March 2011). Red Conspirator: J. Peters and the American Communist Underground. University of Illinois Press. Retrieved 27 December 2010.[permanent dead link]
  30. ^ "Judge Relieves Defense Aides In Red Trial". Washington Post. 9 August 1951. p. 2.
  31. ^ "Alumnae Notes". Barnard Bulletin. 11 October 1917. p. 4.
  32. ^ "Alumnae Department". Barnard Bulletin. 13 April 1917. p. 4.
  33. ^ Collins, Peggy (12 April 1951). "Former Bulletin Eds Attain Career Fame". Barnard Bulletin. p. 2.
  34. ^ King, Carol (August 1933). "The Sacco-Vanzetti Case is not Dead" (PDF). New Masses: 22. Retrieved 13 May 2020.

External sources

  • Ginger, Ann Fagan (1993). Carol Weiss King, human rights lawyer, 1895-1952. Boulder: University Press of Colorado. ISBN 0-87081-285-8. LCCN 92040157.
  • "Carol Weiss King". Jewish Women: A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia. Retrieved 27 December 2010.
  • Thompson, Craig (17 February 1951). "The Communists's Dearest Friend". Saturday Evening Post. pp. 30, 90–93.

carol, weiss, king, august, 1895, january, 1952, well, known, immigration, lawyer, founder, international, juridical, association, founding, member, national, lawyers, guild, united, states, left, leaning, career, spanned, from, palmer, raids, mccarthy, bornca. Carol Weiss King 24 August 1895 22 January 1952 1 was a well known immigration lawyer key founder of the International Juridical Association and a founding member of the National Lawyers Guild in the United States 2 Her left leaning career spanned from the Palmer Raids to the McCarthy Era 1 3 4 Carol Weiss KingBornCarole Therese Weiss 1895 08 24 August 24 1895New York City USDiedJanuary 22 1952 1952 01 22 aged 56 New York City USNationalityAmericanOther namesCarol KingEducationBarnard CollegeAlma materNew York University Law SchoolOccupation s Attorney legal organizerYears active1917 1952Known forPro communist civil rights legal defenses of Harry Bridges Gerhart Eisler J PetersNotable workAmerican Committee for the Protection of Foreign Born International Labor Defense International Juridical Association National Lawyers GuildSpouseGordon Congdon KingChildrensonParent s Samuel Weiss Carrie StixFamilyWilliam Stix Weiss Nina Henrietta Weiss Stern Louis Stix Weiss Contents 1 Background 2 Career 3 ILD IJA ACPFB NLG 4 Cases 4 1 Harry Bridges 1938 4 2 William Schneiderman 1940 4 3 Gerhart Eisler 1947 4 4 J Peters 1948 4 5 Sung v McGrath 1950 4 6 Later 5 Personal life and death 6 Legacy 7 Works 8 References 9 External sourcesBackground Edit Barnard College class of 1913 Born August 24 1895 Carol Weiss was the youngest child of Samuel William Weiss and Carrie Stix Her father was a founder of the law firm of Frank and Weiss 1875 1880 then practiced alone 1880 1910 Her eldest brother William S Weiss continued their father s firm until forced to stop by multiple sclerosis Another older brother Louis S Weiss also entered his father s first Frank and Weiss which developed into today s Paul Weiss Rifkind Wharton amp Garrison 1 In 1912 Weiss entered Barnard College as a member of the Class of 1916 4 Archives show many sides of her college life In 1913 she appeared in a school play partook in Mysteries sorority rushing and played basketball 5 6 7 In 1914 she was known as man hating yet managed to appear resplendent for the Sophomore Dance 8 She also joined the managing board of the Barnard Bulletin whereafter her name appeared as an associate editor 9 10 In 1914 15 she was active in the English Club 11 12 In 1915 she was involved in the Social Science League which discussed theories of Scott Nearing and for which she was running as secretary treasurer 13 For the Athletic Club she served as pitcher in 1914 14 In 1916 she was among many who had not paid her Athletic Association dues but was in good enough standing to appear listed as a member in the yearbook as well as a committee member for Greek Games 15 16 She graduated in 1916 17 In 1917 she entered law school and in 1920 graduated with a JD in Law from New York University her brother Louis graduated with a BA in Law from Columbia University although he started law school a year earlier 3 4 Career EditBy the end of 1916 Weiss was doing volunteer work for the American Association for Labor Legislation 18 In 1917 she was a volunteer research assistant for the American Civil Liberties Union ACLU 3 4 By 1920 as Carol Weiss King she volunteered to work with Local 25 of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union ILGWU 1 In 1921 she had opened her own law office 17 In 1923 her name appears in the Barnard Bulletin as lawyer without affiliation stated 19 In 1924 the communist Daily Worker newspaper listed her as one of their most successful solicitors of subscriptions 3 That same year she had formed a loose partnership with radical attorneys These included Joseph R Brodsky Swinburne Hale Walter Nelles Isaac Shorr and Walter Pollak 20 One of Carol Weiss King s first and most durable relationships was with Pollak a onetime partner of Benjamin Cardozo whom she met through her brother in law Carl Stern King Pollak and Stern worked on the Scottsboro Boys cases which Pollak successfully argued in the U S Supreme Court among other cases 1 Another source cites her as head partner of Shorr Brodsky and King in 1925 21 22 King also associated with left wing activists including members of the Communist Party of the United States of America In 1924 she began to edit the Law and Freedom Bulletin an ACLU digest that recorded state and federal cases involving significant questions of constitutional law 1 4 In her 30 year career she represented hundreds of foreign born radicals threatened with deportation in administrative proceedings in the lower courts and in the Supreme Court In 1942 she became general counsel to the American Committee for the Protection of Foreign Born ACPFB Due to her association with controversial clients King herself was subject to surveillance by the FBI 1 ILD IJA ACPFB NLG EditIn 1925 she helped Brodsky found the International Labor Defense for the CPUSA then operating under the name Workers Party of America and served on its legal advisory committee 3 21 In 1931 she became the primary founder of the International Juridical Association 23 In 1937 she helped found the National Lawyers Guild 1 In 1942 she became general counsel for the American Committee for the Protection of Foreign Born until her death in 1952 4 In a footnote in his 1952 memoir Whittaker Chambers notes In the early 1930s Hiss had been a member of the International Juridical Association of which the late Carol Weiss King a habitual attorney for Communists in trouble was a moving spirit The International Juridical Association has been cited as subversive by the Attorney General Also among its members Lee Pressman Abraham Isserman one of the attorneys for the eleven convicted Communist leaders Max Loewenthal Max Lowenthal author of a recent book attacking the F B I 24 Cases EditKing supported several United States Supreme Court cases including Powell v Alabama 1932 the first Scottsboro Boys case and Herndon v Lowrey 1937 4 Harry Bridges 1938 Edit Harry Bridges 1937 whom King defended King s best known client was union leader Harry Bridges who faced deportation in 1938 for alleged membership in the Communist Party The case reached the Supreme Court of the United States which reversed the deportation order during World War II William Schneiderman 1940 Edit King s representation of Communist Party leader William Schneiderman 25 exemplifies her success in enlisting other male attorneys to work for free on key constitutional cases in this case recruiting Wendell Willkie the 1940 Republican Party presidential nominee to represent Schneiderman before the Supreme Court King won this case in 1943 preventing the Government s revocation of the Communist Party leader s citizenship 4 Gerhart Eisler 1947 Edit King also represented Gerhart Eisler in his trial in July 1947 She accused FBI agent Robert J Lamphere of framing Eisler 26 After only a few hours of deliberation the jury brought in a guilty verdict and he was sentenced to a year in prison 27 Lamphere asked Eisler as the court was adjourning Gerhart do you think you got a fair trial He replied Yes a fair trial but an unfair indictment Lamphere later recalled It was the last time I saw Eisler in person in a way I almost liked him his bravado was astonishing 28 J Peters 1948 Edit King also defended red conspirator J Peters against the INS named by Louis Budenz and Whittaker Chambers as mastermind of a Soviet underground spy ring operating in Washington DC during the 1930s and 1940s and counseled Peters on how to testify before the House Un American Activities Committee HUAC 1948 1949 29 Although the J Peters case was among the best known of King s career Ann Fagan Ginger makes only a single reference to it in her biography of more than 500 pages 2 Sung v McGrath 1950 Edit King took on many cases against the Immigration and Naturalization Service INS Her most important legal victory came from Sung v McGrath 339 U S 908 1950 In this case the Supreme Court acknowledged that INS was subject to the same administrative and procedural rules as all other federal departments This ruling froze deportation hearings until the INS agreed to comply with the requirements of the Administrative Procedures Act Later Edit Carol Weiss King s client Elizabeth Gurley Flynn shown here center in 1913 photo with Paterson silk strike leaders Patrick Quinlan and Carlo Tresca left and Adolph Lessig and Bill Haywood right In 1951 King joined more than half a dozen other lawyers in defending 17 Communist Party members including Elizabeth Gurley Flynn The communists were accused of charged conspiring to teach and advocate violent overthrow of the government The other lawyers were Abraham L Pomerantz Victor Rabinowitz Michael Begun Harold I Cammer Mary Kaufman Leonard Boudin and Abraham Unger Later they were relieved by O John Rogge gangster Frank Costello s lawyer George Wolf William W Kleinman Joseph L Delaney Frank Serri Osmond K Fraenkel Henry G Singer Abraham J Gellinoff Raphael P Koenig and Nicholas Atlas 30 King herself made only one appearance before the Supreme Court in Butterfield v Zydok 342 U S 524 1952 which she lost 1 African American Communist organizer Angelo Herndon was another client 1 She also represented petitioner Harisiades in the important U S Supreme Court immigration law case Harisiades v Shaughnessy 342 U S 580 1952 2 Personal life and death EditShe married Gordon Congdon King in 1917 4 31 Her husband died of pneumonia in 1930 leaving her a widow with one son and her work 1 Her brother William married 1915 Barnard alumna Ray Levi 32 The Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI kept King under surveillance due to her close communist associations 4 On January 22 1952 Carol Weiss King age 56 died of cancer 1 2 4 Legacy EditBarnard College recognized Carol Weiss King in a 1951 issue of the Barnard Bulletin Carol Weiss King 16 is a prominent lawyer specializing in immigration work She has served as counsel in several well known cases including the Harry Bridges case for which she was chief counsel up through the U S Supreme Court and the William Schneiderman 25 case in which she was co counsel with Wendell Willkie Mrs King has also published numerous articles for law reviews 33 Other alumnae who appeared in that article include poet Leonie Adams Troy 22 author Irma Simonton Black 27 and Margaret Mead 23 The National Lawyers Guild s Immigration Project presents the Carol King award each year in Ms King s honor to an outstanding immigration advocate 2 Walter Pollak s son Senior U S District Judge Louis Pollak who married King s niece wrote the foreword to Ann Fagan Ginger s 1993 biography of Carol Weiss King 1 Works Edit The Sacco Vanzetti Case is not Dead New Masses 1933 34 References Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m Carol Weiss King Jewish Women A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia Retrieved 27 December 2010 a b c d e Ginger Ann Fagan 1993 Carol Weiss King human rights lawyer 1895 1952 Boulder University Press of Colorado ISBN 0 87081 285 8 LCCN 92040157 a b c d e Thompson Craig 17 February 1951 The Communists s Dearest Friend Saturday Evening Post pp 30 90 93 a b c d e f g h i j k Guide to the Carol Weiss King FOIA Files TAM 394 New York University 29 May 2018 Retrieved 19 October 2018 C S A Party Barnard Bulletin 3 November 1913 p 1 Mysteries Barnard Bulletin 13 October 1913 p 1 14 16 Basketball Game Barnard Bulletin 12 March 1913 p 1 Sophomore Dance Barnard Bulletin 9 March 1914 p 1 New Bulletin Members Barnard Bulletin 11 May 1914 p 4 New Bulletin Members Barnard Bulletin 11 May 1914 p 2 English Club Barnard Bulletin 30 November 1914 p 2 English Club Barnard Bulletin 29 November 1915 p 3 Social Science League Barnard Bulletin 13 December 1915 p 3 Baseball 16 vs 17 Barnard Bulletin 27 April 1914 p 4 A A Dues Barnard Bulletin 13 March 1916 p 88 Athletic Club Barnard Bulletin 1916 pp 88 98 a b Alumnae Notes Barnard Bulletin 21 October 1921 p 5 Alumnae Department Barnard Bulletin 19 December 1917 p 6 Alumnae Vocational Conference February 15 Barnard Bulletin 9 February 1923 p 1 UNITED STATES ex rel BRAZIER et al v COMMISSIONER OF IMMIGRATION AT PORT OF NEW YORK Court Listener 15 December 1924 Retrieved 27 December 2010 a b King Carol Weiss 1895 1952 Women in World History A Biographical Encyclopedia 18 May 2010 Retrieved 27 September 2017 UNITED STATES ex rel GILETTI v COMMISSIONER OF IMMIGRATION ELLIS ISLAND NEW YORK HARBOR Court Listener 4 November 1929 Retrieved 28 September 2017 Report on the National Lawyers Guild Legal Bulwark of the Communist Party U S Government Printing Office GPO 1950 Retrieved 28 November 2016 Chambers Whittaker 1952 Witness New York Random House LCCN 52005149 Retrieved 2 December 2016 a b Finding Aid to the William Schneiderman Papers larc ms 0327 Online Archives of California Robert Lamphere Gerhart Eisler Robert J Lamphere The FBI KGB War 1986 page 62 Sakmyster Thomas L March 2011 Red Conspirator J Peters and the American Communist Underground University of Illinois Press Retrieved 27 December 2010 permanent dead link Judge Relieves Defense Aides In Red Trial Washington Post 9 August 1951 p 2 Alumnae Notes Barnard Bulletin 11 October 1917 p 4 Alumnae Department Barnard Bulletin 13 April 1917 p 4 Collins Peggy 12 April 1951 Former Bulletin Eds Attain Career Fame Barnard Bulletin p 2 King Carol August 1933 The Sacco Vanzetti Case is not Dead PDF New Masses 22 Retrieved 13 May 2020 External sources EditGinger Ann Fagan 1993 Carol Weiss King human rights lawyer 1895 1952 Boulder University Press of Colorado ISBN 0 87081 285 8 LCCN 92040157 Carol Weiss King Jewish Women A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia Retrieved 27 December 2010 Thompson Craig 17 February 1951 The Communists s Dearest Friend Saturday Evening Post pp 30 90 93 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Carol Weiss King amp oldid 1106561529, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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