America organizes to win the war; a handbook on the American war effort. Publisher New York : Harcourt, Brace and Company, [c1942] Paging 2 p. 1., [iii]-x p., 1 l., 395 p. : ill. diagrs. ; 21 cm. Notes Illustrations of military and civilian insignia on lining-papers. Contents What are the fundamental issues of the war? By H. S. Commager.--How did the war begin and spread over the world? By F. L. Schuman.--How does this war differ from other American wars? By M. Lerner.--How is the Navy organized to fight the war? By P. Schubert.--How is the Army organized to fight the war? By S. L. A. Marshall.--How is the Air Force organized to fight the war? By L. D. Lyman.--How can America co-operate with its allies? By H. M. Vinacke.--What are the farmers doing to help the war effort? By C. R. Wickard.--How are we organizing our industrial machine to outproduce the enemy? By A. E. Dodd.--How can American labor help the war effort? By J. Chamberlain.--How can we pay for the war? By D. C. Coyle.--How can censorship help win the war? By B. Price.--How are we organized for psychological warfare? By L. Farago.--How can individuals keep a healthy morale in wartime? By A. U. Pope.--What are the scientists doing? By W. Kaempffert.--How can the Nation strengthen its health? By P. De Kruif.--How can young people help? By C. H. Judd.--How can artists and writers help the war effort? By D. C. Fisher.--What are we fighting for? By W. Churchill and F. D. Roosevelt.--Foundations of the peace, by H. A. Wallace.--Afterword: To the young people who study this book, and Study suggestions, by E. M. Hunt.

 

From The SWORD and the SHIELD, C. Andrew and V. Mitrokhin, 1999

The SWORD and the SHIELD :
The MITROKHIN ARCHIVE and the secret history of the KGB

Christopher Andrew and Vasili Mitrokhin.
New York : Basic Books, 1999.

 

From My Mission to Russia by Sir George Buchanan, 1923

My Mission to Russia and Other Diplomatic Memories
by Sir GEORGE BUCHANAN
British Ambassador, Petrograd, 1910-1918
Boston : Little, Brown and Company, 1923.

 

From For the President, editor Orville Bullitt, 1972

For the President   Personal and Secret
Correspondence Between Franklin D. Roosevelt and William C. Bullitt
ORVILLE H. BULLITT, EDITOR

Boston : Houghton Mifflin, 1972.

 

From Witness, Whittaker Chambers, 1952

New York : Random House, 1952.

 

From Soviet Russia in China by Chiang Kai-shek, 1957

Soviet Russia in China; a summing-up at seventy
by Chiang Chung-Cheng (Chiang Kai-shek)
New York : Farrar, Straus and Cudahy, 1957.

From The God That Failed

The god that failed / Richard Crossman, editor ;
with a new foreword by David C. Engerman.
New York : Columbia University Press, 2001.
( Originally published: London : Hamilton, 1950. ISBN 0231123957 )

From Russia To-day and To-morrow by Paul N. Miliukov, 1922

New York : Macmillan, 1922.

 

From The World of the Slavs by Albert Mousset, 1950

New York : Frederick A. Praeger, 1950.

 

From The Fatal Years by Colonel B. V. Nikitine, 1938

THE FATAL YEARS
FRESH REVELATIONS ON A CHAPTER OF
UNDERGROUND HISTORY BY COLONEL B. V. NIKITINE
With a Preface by SIR ALFRED KNOX
London   Edinburgh   Glasgow
William Hodge, 1938.

 

From Ex-communist witnesses, Herbert L. Packer, 1962

Stanford, Calif. : Stanford University Press, 1962.

 

From The Autobiography of George Samuel Schuyler, 1966

Black and Conservative; the autobiography of George S. Schuyler.
New Rochelle, New York : Arlington House 1966.

 

From Poland and Russia 1919 - 1945 James T. Shotwell, Max M. Laserson, 1945

( New York : King's Crown Press, 1945. )
Westport, Connecticut : Greenwood Press, 1976.

From The Communist Trail in America by Jacob Spolansky, 1951

New York : Macmillan, 1951.

 

SUN YAT-SEN His Political and Social Ideals
Compiled, Translated and Annotated by Leonard Shihlien Hsü.
University Park, Los Angeles :
University of Southern California Press, 1933.

 

From  LENIN RED DICTATOR by George Vernadsky, 1931

New Haven : Yale ; London : Oxford, 1931.

 

From Russia's Ruin by E. H. Wilcox, 1919

New York : Scribners, 1919.

 

From Sun Yat-sen versus Communism by Maurice William, 1932

Baltimore : Williams & Wilkins 1932.

 

From Last Chance in China by Freda Utley, 1947

Indianapolis, New York : Bobbs-Merrill, 1947.

From The Merchant of Revolution, Z. A. B. Zeman and W. B. Scharlau, 1965

London   New York   Toronto :
Oxford University Press, 1965.

Germany and the Revolution in Russia 1915-1918,
Edited by Z. A. B. Zeman
London New York Toronto :
Oxford University Press, 1958.

. . . Ulianov . . . received the sum of 1,000 rubles ($500,00), which was quite enough to make it possible to start activities. This money, like later payments, passed through the hands of A. M. Kalmykova, a part apparently coming directly from her own personal means. Ulianov went abroad with legal permission, receiving a foreign passport from the Governor of Pskov. At the very last minute, however, the plan almost fell through, for Ulianov visited St. Petersburg, which he had no right to do under the police restrictions, and was there arrested. But he was soon set free, and on July 29, 1900, he entered Germany. V. L. Burtsev, the best authority on the history of the secret police in Russia up to 1917, thinks that the Police Department purposely permitted Ulianov to pass the border.2 The prospect of a Marxist newspaper abroad seemed to the Police Department advantageous for the conflict with the terroristic organizations of the narodniki, which were raising their heads ; ;concerning these the department had information through Azev, who from 1893 on had been in its service and also in the revolutionary circles of the Narodniki.

In the latter half of August, Ulianov arrived in Switzerland for conferences with the Liberation of Labor group ; its participation, as the most authoritative Russian Social Democratic Labor organization, was indispensable for the success of the projected publication. But Ulianov�s conversations with this group nearly ended in a break.

Plekhanov, who headed the Liberation of Labor group, regarded himself as the natural leader of Russian social democracy. So it seemed to him logical that he should be in charge of the newspaper. Ulianov was to be limited to the obscure role of a technical assistant, mainly concerned with contacts with Russia. . . .

It is not surprising that there followed a sharp conflict between Plekhanov and Ulianov. The reverence Ulianov had felt for Plekhanov vanished forever. . . .  Plekhanov was recognized as the honorary sponsor of the enterprise, but the editorial offices of the paper were located not in Switzerland, where Plekhanov lived, but in Munich, Germany, where Ulianov could feel freer from Plekhanov�s supervision. The months of October and November, 1900, Ulianov passed in making ready for the first number of the Iskra (�The Spark) as it was decided to name the new paper. The first number appeared on December 24, 1900. Ulianov soon succeeded in bringing into the work people who thought more nearly as he did. From Russia came Martov, who became the chief worker in the editorial staff, and Krupskaya, who took charge of correspondence with Russia on the affairs of the Iskra. If Ulianov was the sole master of the enterprise, as he had earlier thought he should be, nevertheless he was able to play the leading role.

When many Marxists began to voice discontent with the new turn of affairs, the editorial staff of the ,I>Iskra—of course at the demand of Ulianov&3151;determined to transfer publication to a point still further removed from Plekhanov. Early in April, 1902, the editorial office of the Iskra was moved to London. A new member was introduced into the staff, a young man recently escaped from Siberia, named Bronstein, who later became famous under the pseudonym Trotsky. Despite his youth, Bronstein soon began to take an independent attitude toward Ulianov. . . .

Plekhanov was a brilliant and astute debater and publicist whose talents, however, were somewhat superficial. . . . The inner disturbances in connection with the Iskra finally became obvious in a division of the Iskra followers at the Second Congress of the Russian Social Democratic Labor party. [* See later, chap. Ii, sec.1]

The publication of the Iskra played a great part in the preliminary history of the Russian Revolution of 1905. . . .

( pages � 38 )

 

After lengthy preparations, the Iskra group succeeded in bringing together a convention of the Russian Social Democratic Labor Party. According to official party precedence, it was called the Second Convention, the First being considered the one held in 1898 which actually did not have real significance from the point of view of party organization because the majority of its leaders were quickly arrested.

The gathering of 1903 was really the first party convention. It opened in Brussels on July 30 and held fifteen session, the last on August 4. . . .

( page 47 )

 

Two different tendencies were now evident in the ,I>Iskra faction—a majority controlling twenty four votes, and a minority controlling nine votes. This marked the beginning of the split which has become widely known since that time, between the Bolsheviks (the majority) and the Mensheviks (the minority). Both Plekhanov and Lenin officially stood at the head of the Iskra majority at the Convention, but in truth its animating spirit was Lenin. At the time of the Convention, Plekhanov obviously took Lenin�s course only because of a feeling that it would not be correct for him to violate the unity of the Iskra group. But the place of first violinist in the party concert passed to Lenin. Martov, formerly a sympathizer and colleague of Lenin, stood at the head of the Iskra minority, and he had the support of Trotsky.

The split of the Iskra group into two sections occurred on a question concerning not the party program but the problem of organization, during a discussion of the formula in section 1 of the party constitution determining the conditions of party membership. Lenin proposed the following formula: �Every person shall be considered a party member who recognizes its program and supports the party both by material means and by personal participation in one of the party organizations.� Martov�s formula read: �Every person shall be considered a member of the Russian Social Democratic Labor party who accepts its program, supports the party by material means, and accords it regular personal co-operation under the direction of one of its organizations.�

For anyone not consecrated to the cause it is difficult to discern any substantial difference between the two formulas. But around this question boiling passions seethed ; concerning it long orations were declaimed ; and in consequence of it the party divided in two. The internal significance of all the conflict amounted to this :

According to Lenin�s variant of the formula, the only person who could be considered a party member was one who, belonging to a ;arty organization, must through that fact be bound in his conduct by an iron party discipline and consequently be subordinate to the regulations of the party center ; thus Lenin envisaged in the party a conspiratory organization formed wholly of illegal agents. According to Martov�s variant, any person might be a member of the party who accorded it co-operation, although not entering directly in the party organization and only being affiliated with it, that is to say, actually retaining the possibility always of refusing to execute instructions of the party center or to adhere to party discipline ; thus individuals, following a legal curse of action, might belong to the party, and in case of opportunity it would not be difficult to transform the whole party into an open legal organization.

As he had already made it clear in his brochure What Is To Be Done, in 1901, Lenin wanted an organization of the kind which was later realized in the Bolshevik party, that is, an organization welded together by an iron discipline. . . .

( pages � 50 )

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