Title | Party ownership of the press |
Alternative Title | Party ownership of the press: historic documents relating to the establishing of the principles involved |
Contributor (LCNAF) |
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Publisher | New York Labor News Company |
Place of Creation (TGN) |
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Date | 1931 |
Description | Articles by De Leon reprinted from The People (later the Weekly people)--and the Daily people, voicing the interests of the working class and the Socialist Labor Party. |
Subject.Topical (LCSH) |
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Subject.Name (LCNAF) |
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Subject.Geographic (TGN) |
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Genre (AAT) |
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Language | English |
Type (DCMI) |
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Original Item Extent | 32 pages: portrait; 24 cm |
Original Item Location | JK2391.S7N4 1931 |
Original Item URL | http://library.uh.edu/record=b8304494~S5 |
Original Collection | Socialist and Communist Pamphlets |
Digital Collection | Socialist and Communist Pamphlets |
Digital Collection URL | http://digital.lib.uh.edu/collection/scpamp |
Repository | Special Collections, University of Houston Libraries |
Repository URL | http://libraries.uh.edu/branches/special-collections |
Use and Reproduction | In Copyright: This item is protected by copyright. Copyright to this resource is held by the creator or current rights holder, and the resource is provided here for educational purposes. It may not be reproduced or distributed in any format without permission of the copyright owner. Users assume full responsibility for any infringement of copyright or related rights. |
File Name | index.cpd |
Title | Image 28 |
Format (IMT) |
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File Name | uhlib_11131832_027.jpg |
Transcript | jcimv nuras. People. ,ill"~f "~ &W IpLillll FACSIMILE "DAILY PEOPLE' First Issue Why, man, you are off. The People—whether the Daily or the Weekly—never hits anybody. "Why are so many folksies hollering that they are hit by The People?" "Isn't that a sign that The People does hit?" Not at all. The People shoots straight ahead, or rather it runs along the tracks laid down by the Social Revolution. If anybody is hit, it is because he crosses that track, or bucks with his head against the train. Trains never go out of their way to hit a cow. It is the cows that go out of their way to hit the train. Of course, what happens to such cows happens to the folksies whom The People runs over. That's all. —Daniel De Leon, Letter-Box reply, Daily People, Aug. 1, 1909. |