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Hargrett Rare Book and Manuscript Library, University of Georgia Libraries."],"dlg_local_right":null,"dcterms_medium":["correspondence"],"dcterms_extent":["2 pages"],"dlg_subject_personal":["Smith, Lillian (Lillian Eugenia), 1897-1966--Correspondence"],"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":null},{"id":"dlg_efhf_efhf003","title":"Highlander Folk School : communist training school, Monteagle, Tenn.","collection_id":"dlg_efhf","collection_title":"\"Integrated in All Respects\": Ed Friend's Highlander Folk School Films and the Politics of Segregation","dcterms_contributor":null,"dcterms_spatial":["United States, Georgia, 32.75042, -83.50018","United States, Tennessee, Grundy County, 35.38837, -85.72258","United States, Tennessee, Marion County, Monteagle, 35.24008, -85.8397"],"dcterms_creator":["Georgia Commission on Education"],"dc_date":["1957"],"dcterms_description":["Broadside produced by the Georgia Commission on Education in 1957 documenting the activities at the Highlander Folk School's twenty-fifth anniversary celebration, August 30 to September 2, 1957. The photographs featured on the broadside were taken under false pretenses by Ed Friend, official photographer for Governor Marvin Griffin, for the Georgia Commission on Education. Many of the images selected for the broadside may be found in Friend's Highlander Film.","Newspaper format; caption title.","\"Editorial comment\" signed: Georgia Commission on Education; Governor Marvin Griffin, Chairman; T.V. Williams, Jr., Executive Secretary.","\"Integrated in All Respects\" is a project of the Digital Library of Georgia in association with the Richard B. Russell Library for Political Research and Studies and the Walter J. Brown Media Archives and Peabody Awards Collection."],"dc_format":null,"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":["eng"],"dcterms_publisher":["Atlanta, Ga. : Georgia Commission on Education"],"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NKC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":["S. Ernest Vandiver collection, Richard B. Russell Library for Political Research and Studies."],"dcterms_subject":["Racism--United States","United States--Race relations--Sources","School integration--Massive resistance movement--Georgia","Highlander Folk School (Monteagle, Tenn.)","Highlander Folk School (Monteagle, Tenn.)--Anniversaries, etc.","Propaganda, Anti-communist--United States"],"dcterms_title":["Highlander Folk School : communist training school, Monteagle, Tenn.","Labor Day Weekend at Communist Training School"],"dcterms_type":["Text"],"dcterms_provenance":["Richard B. Russell Library for Political Research and Studies"],"edm_is_shown_by":["https://dlg.galileo.usg.edu/highlander/efhf003.pdf"],"edm_is_shown_at":["https://dlg.galileo.usg.edu/highlander/id:efhf003"],"dcterms_temporal":null,"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":["Cite as: \"Labor Day Weekend at Communist Training School,\" broadside published by Georgia Commission on Education, 1957, Series I., Subseries A, S. Ernest Vandiver collection, Richard B. Russell Library for Political Research and Studies, University of Georgia, Athens, as presented in the Digital Library of Georgia."],"dlg_local_right":null,"dcterms_medium":["broadsides (notices)"],"dcterms_extent":["4 p. : ill., ports ; 28 x 44 cm."],"dlg_subject_personal":null,"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":"HIGHLANDER FOLK SCHOOL \n \nCommunist Training School, Monteagle, Tenn. \n \nLABOR DAY WEEKEND, 1957 \n \nDuring Labor Day Weekend, \n \nL957, there assembled at Highlan \n \nder the leaders of every major \n \nrace incident in the South, prior \n \nto that time since the Supreme \n \nCourt decision. This meeting was \n \ndirected by Reverend John B \n \nThompson, chaplain, University of \n \nChicago. Reverend Thompson has \n \na lengthy record of Communist af \n \nfiliations which appears elsewhere \n \nin this folder. The direction of the \n \nentire school was under the leader \n \nship, as usual, of Myles Horton \n \nThere were representative lead \n \ners of the TUSKEGEE, ALA \n \nBAMA BOYCOTT, the TALLA \n \nHASSEE, FLORIDA BUS INCI \n \nDENT, the MONTGOMERY, ALA \n \nBAMA BUS BOYCOTT, the SOUTH CAROLINA  NAACP \n \nSCHOOL TEACHERS INCIDENT, \n \nthe KOINONIA INTER-RACIAL \n \nFARM - AMERICUS, GEORGIA, \n \nand CLINTON, TENNESSEE, \n \nSCHOOL INCIDENT among oth \n \ners. They met at this workshop and \n \na \n \ndiscussed methods and tactics of \n \nprecipitating racial strife and dis \n \nturbance. \n \nThe meeting of such a large \n \ngroup of specialists in inter-racial \n \nstrife under the auspices of a Com \n \nmunist Training School, and in the \n \ncompany of many known Commun \n \nists is the typical method whereby \n \nleadership training and tactics are \n \nfurnished to the agitators. This \n \nwas a general workshop and would \n \nbe the most common method of de \n \nveloping a long range program. \n \nIn specific emergency situations, \n \nleadership would be sent into the \n \ncommunities to assist. \n \nGood examples of the infusion \n \nof leadership was the appearance \n \nof Bayard Rustin, who appeared \n \nin the Daily Worker, as secretary \n \nof Rev. Martin Luther King. The \n \nappearance of Don West, promi \n \nnent Communist functionary, at \n \nKoinonia Farm disturbances and \n \nthe preliminary surveys conducted \n \nby John Hope, II, preparatory to \n \nthe Tallahassee Bus Incident \n \nTHE FOUNDERS OF \nHIGHLANDER SCHOOL \nHIGHLANDER FOLK SCHOOL was founded in 1932 by Myles Hor ton and Don West; James Dombrowski joined them shortly there after. Don West, presently oper ating in Georgia, was district di rector of the Communist Party of North Carolina. \nPaul Crouch, the top Communist Party functionary in the South, testified before the Subcommittee of the Committee on Un-American Activities that Dombrowski \"gave me the impression of being com pletely pro-Communist and anxious to collaborate with the Communist Party and follow its leadership without taking the risk of actual Party membership.\" \nJohn Butler, another former Communist Party functionary tes tified before the Senate Subcom mittee on Internal Security that Dombrowski at a meeting of Com munist Party leaders in Dombrowski's room in the Thomas Jeffer son Hotel in Birmingham, Ala bama, was introduced to him by Alton Lawrence as a Communist Party member. \nMyles Horton was identified be fore the Dies Committee on UnAmerican Activities as a person who \"attended a secrt convention *n North Carolina, at which time clans were made for spreading the revolutionary theories throughout he South.'* \nPaul Crouch testified before the Senate Subcommittee on Internal Security that \"The Highlander Folk School is a school operated at Monteagle. Tennessee, ostensi bly as an independent labor school, but actually working in close co operation with the Communist Party.*' \n \nMYLES HORTON the director of Highlander Folk School, Monteagle, Tennessee, is shown speaking. Reverend John B. Thompson, chaplain University of Chicago directed the Labor Day Weekend 1957 \n% \n1 \n \nHIGHLANDER EXECUTIVES \nThe following is a listing of the executives of Highlander Folk School as it appeared in their 24th annual report of October 30, 11)56. B R. BRAZEAL, Dean. Morehouse \nCollege. Atlanta, Georgia SEPTIMA CLARK Highland**) \nFolk School. Monteagle. Tenn GRACE HAMILTON. Atlanta Ur \nban League, Atlanta, Georgia. G R. HATHAWAY, Secy.-Treas., \nUPWA-CIO, Chicago, Ill. JOHN HOPE. II. Industrial Ref \nlations Consultant. Fisk Uni versity, Nashville, Tenn. MYLES HORTON. Director, High lander Folk School, Monteagle. Tenn. \n(Continued on page 4) \n \nFRED ROUTH, a headquarters official of Southern Regional Council, 63 Auburn Ave., N. E., Atlanta, Georgia, is pictured above leading a workshop In at least one of these sessions, the tactics of includ ing women and children in racial demonstrations and incidents was propounded on the basis that police are reluctant to shoot women and children. Southern Regional Council is the recipient ot Ford, Fund tor the Republic grants of $497,000.00. Fund for the Republic grants orig inated with the Ford Motor Company. Southern Regional Council is the parent organization of 12 statewide Councils on Human Rela tions operated only in the Southern States. Southern Regional Council has been able to exploit the facilities ot religion and education because ot o quasi-religious status afforded by occupancy ot space in a building owned by a huge church. The leadership ot few units ot the Communist apparatus have rec ords of Communisl affiliations which exceed those of present and past directors of Southern Regional Council. \n \nCommunist Front Records \n, Of Leadership of Highlander \nInter-racial Seminar 1957 \n \nf \nSeminar. Both Horton and Thompson have long been regarded as useful aids to the Communist apparatus. \n \nPrinted below is a consolidated listing of the Com New York Youth Council \n \nmunist Affiliations of persons in attendance at the Labor Open Letter on Military Aid to \n \nDay \n \nWeekend, \n \n1957 \n \nSeminar \n \nat \n \nHighlander \n \nFolk \n \nSchool, \n \nSpain Open Letter \n \nProtesting \n \nDeporta \n \nMonteagle, Tennessee. \n \ntion of Harry Bridges \n \nAbraham Lincoln School \n \nContinuations Committee ot the Peace Information Center \n \nAmerican Committee for Protec Conference on Peaceful Alterna People's Artists \n \ntion of Foreign Born \n \ntives to the Atlantic Pact \n \nPeople's Daily World \n \nAmerican Committee for Yuogoslav Council on African Affairs \n \nPeople's Drama Theatre \n \nRelief \n \nDaily Worker \n \nPeople's Institute of Applied Re \n \nAmerican Continental Congress for Dinner for Pearl Hart \n \nligion \n \nWorld Peace American Crusade to End Lynch \ning American Folksay Group American Peace Mobilization \n \nW. E. B. DuBois Testimonial Sponsoring Committee \nEmergency Civil Liberties Com \n \nPeople's Songs Petition to Reconsider Prosecu \ntions Under the Smith Act \n \nmittee \n \nPolitical Affairs \n \nEmergency Peace Mobilization \n \nProgressive Citizens of America \n \nAmerican-Soviet Music Society American Youth Congress American Youth for Democracy \n \nFirst Line of Defense Frederick Douglass School Harlem Employment Committee \n \nProgressive Party of Massa chusetts \nProtest Meeting for Howard Fast \n \nAssociation of Internes and Medi Highlander Folk School \n \nProtestant Digest Associates \n \ncal Students Bill of Rights Conference Boston Freedom of the Press \nCommittee Brooklyn Professional Committee \nfor Democratic China Brownsville Freedom of the Press \nCommittee (Brooklyn) Camp Kinderland Chicago Ad Hoc Committee of \nWelcome for the Dean of Can terbury Chicago Committee to Defeat the M undt Bill Chicago Committee to Secure Jus tice in the Rosenburg Case Citizens Emergency Conference for Interracial Unity Citizens Emergency Defense Con ference Civil Rights Congress Committee for a Cultural Salute to Paul Robeson Committee to Defend America by Keeping Out of War Committee for a Democratic Far Eastern Policy Committee to End Sedition Laws \n \nInterfaith Committee for Peace Action \nJefferson School of Social Science League of Struggle for Negro \nRights League of Young Southerners Main Stream Masses \u0026 Mainstream Methodist Federation for Social \nAction Metropolitan Music School Michigan Herald Mid-Century Conference for Peace Mother Bloor Celebration Commit \ntee Nation Associates National Citizens Emergency Re \nlief Committee to Aid Strikers Families National Citizens Political Action Committee National Committee to Abolish the Poll Tax National Committee for Peaceful Alternatives National Committee to Repeal the McCarran Act National Council of the Arts. Sci \n \nProtest against Verdict of Guilty in Case of 11 Communist Lead \ners School for Political Action Tech \nnique Schroon Crest Camp Sing Out Southern Conference Educational \nFund Southern Conference for Human \nWelfare Southern Negro Youth Congress Stop Rankin Meeting Swapping Song Fair Teachers Union, Local 555 Testimonial Concert \"Bound for \nGlory\" for Woodie Guthrie United Office and Professional \nWorkers of America, Local 16 United Packinghouse Workers of \nAmerica United States Arrangements Com \nmittee, World Youth Congress U. S. Sponsoring Committee for \nRepresentation at the Congress of the Peoples for Peace Veterans against Discrimination of Civil Rights Congress of New \n \nCommittee for Equal Justice for Mrs. Recy Taylor, an auxiliary of International Labor Defense \n \nences and Professions National Council of American-So \nviet Friendship \n \nYork Veterans Fighting \ngene Dennis \n \nFund \n \nfor \n \nEu \n \nCommittee for the First Amend National Negro Congress \n \nVoice of Freedom Committee \n \nment \n \nNational Negro Labor Council \n \nWashington Committee for Demo \n \nCommittee for the Negro in the Nature Friends of America \n \ncratic Action \n \nArts \n \nNew Drama \n \nWestchester Peekskill Committee \n \nCommittee for Peaceful Alterna New Masses \n \nWingdale Lodge \n \ntives to the Atlantic Pact \n \nNew York City Council of the VVin-the-Peace Conference \n \nCommittee to Secure Justice in the Rosenberg Case \nCommonwealth College Communist Party \n \nAmerican Youth Congress New York Committee for Protec \ntion of Foreign Born New York Community Divisions of \nthe Committee to Free Earl \n \nWire to President Truman to Veto the McCarran Bill \nWorkers Alliance Young People's Record Club \n \nConsumers Union \n \nBrowder \n \nYoung Progressives \n \nHouse Committee Citations \n \n\\ \nwrr \nhi i1 \n \n* ft \n \nIhe Daily Worker, official organ ot the Communisl Party, credits the foundation of Southern Regional Council to Jim Jackson, Negro Communist, presently head of Southern Affairs Commission of the Communist Party. Jackson is also credited with the establish ment of Southern Conference Education Fund.; and Southern Con ference for Human Welfare, both organizations are recognized parts of the Communist apparatus and have interlocking director ates with Southern Regional Council. The American Legion Firing Line, May 15, 1957, referring to the incorporating papers says \"This document, filed in the Superioi Court of Fulton County, State of Georgia, listed the names of five incorporators ot the Council as follows: Dr Rufus E. Clement, Ralph McGill, and Bishop Arthur J. Moore, of Atlanta, Georgia,- Dr. Charles S. Johnson, ot Nashville, Tennessee (now deceased); and Dr. Howard W. Odum, Chapel Hill, North Carolina. (See Petition of the Incorporation, Book 062, pages 64-67, 1-6-44; and \"7he New York Times\", 10-17-55.) \n \nA few of the Communist Fronts listed above are de NATIONAL COMMITTEE TO \n \nfined so that the readers may more fully understand their REPEAL THE McCARRAN ACT \n \nactivities. \n \nAll \n \ndefinitions \n \nare \n \ntaken \n \nfrom \n \n\"GUIDE \n \nTO \n \n\"To defend the cases of Commu nist lawbreakers, fronts have been \n \nSUBVERSIVE ORGANIZATIONS AND PUBLICATIONS\" devised making special appeals in \n \npublished January 2, 1957 by the U. S. House of Representa behalf of civil liberties and reach \n \ntives Committee on Un-American Activities, Washington, ing out far beyond the confines of \n \nD. C. \n \nthe Communist Party itself. Among these organizations are the . . . \n \nAMERICAN COMMITTEE FOR COMMONWEALTH COLLEGE National Committee to Repeal the \n \nPROTECTION OF FOREIGN \n \nA \"Communist enterprise\" cited McCarran Act. When the Com \n \nBORN \n \nas subversive by an investigating munist Party itself is under fire \n \n\"To defend the cases of Com \n \nmunist lawbreakers, fronts have \n \nbeen devised making special ap \n \npeals in behalf of civil liberties \n \nand reaching out far beyond the \n \nconfines of the Communist Party \n \nitself. Among these organizations \n \nare the \n \n. American Commit \n \ntee for Protection of Foreign Born \n \nWhen the Communist Party itself \n \nis under fire these offer a bul \n \nwark of protection.\" \n \nCommittee of the Arkansas Legis lature. It received money from the Garland Fund. \nEMERGENCY PEACE MOBILIZATION \nCited as a Communist front which came forth, after Stalin signed his pact with Hitler, to op pose the national defense program, lend-lease, conscription, and other American \"war-mongering\" efforts It immediately preceded the Amer \n \nthese offer a bulwark of protec tion.\" \nNATIONAL NEGRO CONGRESS \n\"The Communist-front movement in the United States among Ne groes is known as the National Negro Congress. . . . The officers of the National Negro Congress are outspoken Communist sym pathisers, and a majority of those on the executive board are out right Communists.\" \n \nAMERICAN YOUTH CONGRESS ican Peace Mobilization in 1940. \n \nNATIONAL NEGRO LABOR \n \n\"It originated in 1934 and \n \nLEAGUE OF STRUGGLE \n \nCOUNCIL \n \nhas been controlled by Communists \n \nFOR NEGRO RIGHTS \n \n\"One of the Communist fronts \n \nand manipulated by them to in \"The Communist-front movement currently active in seeking to de \n \nfluence the thought of American in the United States among Ne ceive American Negroes into serv \n \nyouth.\" \n \ngroes is known as the National ing the Communist cause is the Na \n \nCIVIL RIGHTS CONGRESS \n \nNegro Congress. Practically thr tional Negro Labor Council . . . same group of leaders directing The organization was formally \n \nCited as an organization formed this directed the League of Strug founded at a conference held in \n \nat a Congress on Civil Rights held gle for Negro Rights, which was. Cincinnati, Ohio, October 27 and \n \nin Detroit in April 1946 as a mer until 2 years ago, the name of the 28, 1951, under the direction of \n \nger of two other Communist-front Communists front for Negroes. leading Negro Communists in the \n \norganizations (International Labor The name was later changed . \n \nUnited States, such as Abner Ber \n \nDefense and the National Federa in 1936 to the National Negro ry, Sam W. Parks, and Coleman \n \ntion for Constitutional Liberties); Congress.\" \n \nA. Young. According to the latest \n \nit was \"dedicated not to the broad \n \navailable information, Young is the \n \ner issues of civil liberties, but spe METHODIST FEDERATION present National executive secre \n \ncifically to the defense of individ \n \nFOR SOCIAL ACTION \n \ntary of the organization, from \n \nual Communists and the Commun \"With an eye to religious groups, which post he controls and directs \n \nal Party\" and \"controlled by in the Communists have formed re NNLC activities \n \nA study of \n \ndividuals who are either members ligious fronts such as the Method the operation of the council shows \n \n\u003ef the Communist Party or openly ist Federation for Social Ac that, rather than helping the Ne- \n \nloyal to it.\" \n \ntion ...\" \n \n(Continued on page 4) \n \n Labor Day Weehend at Communist Training School \n \ni- \n \n- \n \n1957 \n \n\\` \n \n.. \n \n \n\u003e\u003e \n \nLISTED ELSEWHERE in this folder are the Communist related records of Reverend John B. Thompson (seated), chaplain University of Chicago and chairman of this four day seminar and Aubrey Williams, Montgomery, Alabama, president Southern Conference Education Fund, Inc. and puplisher. Southern Farm and Home Magazine. \nExperts on Communism observe the record of Aubrey Williams to reflect anti-US foreign policy and anti-US domestic policy. As early as 1944 a report of the Committee of which Congressman Dies was chairman named Aubrey Williams as a member of the National Citizens Political Action Com mittee and cited that organization as \"the supreme bid of the Communist Party for power in the United States through a front.\" \nFew people if any have aided the Communist Party more in its conspiracy against peace between the races in the southern part of the United States tnan did Aubrey Williams. It is incredible that any man with a record of Communist affiliation like that of John B. Thompson could long remain as chaplain or pastor to students in a non-Communist institution. \n \nHARRY SCHNEIDERMAN (5th from left), 5825 S. Blackstone, Chicago, Illinois, attended the Com munist Training School at Highlander over the Labor Day 1957 Weekend. The wife of Harry Schneiderman is formerly of Atlanta, Georgia. \n \nS-* \n \n* \n \nf \n \n \n \np*' \n \nBOTH THE DAY AND NIGHT LIFE at Highlander Folk School Labor DayWeekend Seminar were inte grated in all respects. \n \nALONZO G. MORON, President of Hampton Institute; Sep*ima Clark, integration workshop director at Highlander Folk School; C. N. Parrish, Wilma D. Stokely, a writer of Newport, Tennessee, and Allen McSwcin a leader of the Clinton, Tennessje, incident discuss the impact of integration. \n \nVn \n \nm \nTHIS PICTURE of a station wagon lettered FINDLAY STREET, NEIGHBORHOOD HOUSE, CINCIN NATI, OHIO, is included for the purpose of illustrating how many units of the Communist apparatus are assisted by organizations purportedly charitable or religious in nature. Reverend Maurice McCracken of Neighborhood House, Cincinnati, who is pictured elsewhere attended this Communist Training School. Apparently he used this station wagon as transportation. Neighborhood House is located at 901 Findlay Street, Cincinnati, Ohio, and is supported by the Community Chest. This same address is also the address of Friends of Koinonia Farms. \n \ny / \nC. N. PARRISH (on left) who was panel moderator on the question \"What Is the Impact of Integra tion on the People?\" is shown with Rosa Parks (3rd from left) and Maurice McCracken (4th from left). Rosa Parks was one of the original leaders of the Montgomery Bus Boycott. This agitation has re sulted in strife and violence in the Alabama capitol r-*d continues to maintain tension and disauiet. Maurice McCracken is affiliated with Neighborhood House, 901 Findlay Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. \n \n,V \nc \n \nmSt \nU mm \n \np \n \ni \n \n* \n \n* \nROSA PARKS, who precipitated the Montgomery Alabama Bus Boycott, and Ralph Tefferteller of New York's Henry Street Settlement listen to group training under the watchful eye of Abner Berry of the Central Committee of the Communist Party. Berry reported the meeting of this Communist Tra ning School in his column in the Daily Worker of September 10, 1957. \n \nPICTURED HERE are leaders of fivle recertt scenes of racial disturbance and violence. Septima Clark, presently director of Highlander integration workshop was associated with the South Carolina-NAACP School Teachers Incident. Conrad Browne is a leader of inter-racial Koinonia Farms, Americus, Georgia, the scene of boycotts, disturbances and violence. \nDavid H. Brooks was a leader of the Tallahassee Bus Boycott. This incident was commenced only after a psychological survey of the area had been made to determine the outcome. Rosa Parks was the central figure in the agitation which resulted in the Montgomery Bus Boycott. Charles Gomillion, Dean of Students at Tuskegee Institute, was the leader of the Tuskegee Boycott. \n \nm \n \nf \n \nI? \n \n/ \n \naf \n \n4 \n \n*#/ \n \nU \n \ni \n \nROSA PARKS, MARTIN LUTHER KING AND REViREND ABERNATHY: \n \nThree outstanding leadership people of the infa nous Montgomery, Alabama, bus incident. The development, precipitation and financing of this inflammatory project called for behind the scenes planning and direction beyond the ability or capacity of local people. The relationship between Communist leadership and racial strife is evident from coast to coast and from the Gulf of Mexico to the Great Lakes. \n \nCONRAD BROWNE (with glasses), Koinonia Farm Leader, Americus, Georgia, Allen McSwain (ex treme right), Clinton, Tennessee, and Reverend Maurice McCracken (2nd from right), Cincinnati, Ohio. Browne was a resident leader of Koinonia Farm during the violence, boycotts and other incidents arising at this socialistic interracial community. Don West, the identified Communist co-founder of Highlander Folk School was observed to be a frequent visitor to Koinonia. Koinonia and Highlander Folk School jointly operate an interracial \"summer camp.\" Allen McSwain is credited with precipitating the Clinton, Tennessee, public school incident. Reverend Maurice McCracken long connected with racial unrest in Cincinnati, Ohio, is pastor of St. Barnabus Church and is connected with Neighborhood House, a community chest supported or ganization, 901 Findlay Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. 901 Findlay Street is also the address of Friends of Koinonia Farm. \n \nPETE SEEGER is typical of the entertainer who gives his time and talent to the support of the Communist apparatus. He is a talented musician who is in attendance at many meetings such as this Communist Training School at Highlander. \nThe Daily Worker of February 22, 1949, lists Pete Seeger as a participant in the New York State Youth Board of the Com munist Party. \n \nI \nREVEREND MARTIN LUTHER KING addresses the assemblage. Reverend King,president of the Southern Christian Leadership Con ference is best known for his activities in the Montgomery Boycott, Montgomery Improvement Association and the March on Washing ton which he conducted with Bayard Rustin. The Daily Worker lists Bayard Rustin as one who attended the 1957 convention of the Communist Party USA. Bayard Rustin is identified in the Daily Worker as secretary to Reverend Martin Luther King. \nThe activities of Reverend Martin Luther King represent the ultimate in \"civil disobedience.\" It is doubtful that Reverend King could have carried on such a program without outside leadership and financing; Bayard Rustin is perhaps the leading expert on \"civil disobedience\" in this country. \nThe Southern Christian Leadership Conference is a new organ ization founded by Reverend King for region-wide agitation of racial violence and strife. \n \nk \nCHARLES GOMILLION, Dean of Students at Tuskegee Institute, was the leader of the Tuskegee, Alabama, Boycott; his agitation is in large part responsible for ihis disturbance. Gomillion has been most vehement in his defense of Communists and the Communist Party. His principal areas of agitation and infiltration have been among educators, Negroes, and youth groups. \n \nf t \nPICTURED HERE (foreground) is Abner W. Berry of the Central Committee of the Communist Party. On the first row are Reverend Martin Luther King (2nd from right) of the Montgomery Boycott, Aubrey Williams (3rd from right) president of the Southern Conference Education Fund Inc. and Myles Horton (4th from Right) the director of Highlander Folk School. These \"four horsemen\" of racial agitation have brought tension, disturbance, strife and violence in their advancement of the Communist doctrine of \"racial nationalism\". \n \n Georgia Commission on Education \n \n220 AGRICULTURE BUILDING \n \n19 HUNTER STREET, S. W. \n \n' \n \nATLANTA 3, GEORGIA \n \n336,3 \n \n07 ttUlJj/ \nA3/r^- \n \n'i \n \nI \n \nc:  \n \n- \n \nA \n1 /IS \n \n*1 \n \nEvery American Has the \n \nT .V . \n \nV* \n \nRight to Know the Truth \n \nEDITORIAL COMMENT \n \nQuestions Bulletin. June 1950, (18) National Citizens Emergen \n \nOn the preceding pages you have seen pictures of the leaders of every major race incident in the South from May \n \npage 1. (21) Mid-Century Conference for \nPeace--initiating sponsor-- VVork- \n \ncy Relief Committee to Aid Strik ers Families--member of national board--Worker, March 17. 1946. \n \n1954 until the time of this meeting, Labor Day, 1957 Week cr, April 30, 1950, page 15. \n \npage 5. \n \nend (August 30, 31 and September 1, 2). You have seen (22) National Committee to (19) National Citizens Political \n \ni \ni-  \n \nexecutives and leaders of many organizations active in the Abolish the Poll Tax--sponsor-- Action Committee -- member--of \n \nsoutheastern region of the United States. All of the pictures contained in this folder were taken during this one weekend \n \nletterhead, March 8, 1946. (23) National Committee for \nPeaceful Alternatives -- co-chair \n \nficial list, August 1944. (20) National Citizens Political \nAction Committee--vice executive \n \nat this Communist training school. Highlander Folk School, man--folder, December 1950. \n \nboard--pamphlet, December 1950 \n \nMonteagle, Tennessee. \n \n(24) National Committee to Re (22) National Committee to Re \n \nNames of the national figures are easily identified with peal the McCarran Act--initiator peal the McCarran Acts--signer of \n \nlieir pic-ture.s,,41ther names of les \ni ij introduc ijrposel \n \nnd \n \nres are those given If identifications, \n \n--letterhead, January 19, 1951. (25) National Committee to Re \npeal the McCarran Acts--signer of \n \nopen letter to Senator Hennings-- press release, November 14, 1955 \n(23) Peace Information Center \n \nas possibly, to open letter to Senator Hennings-- --endorser of World Peace Appea' \n \nile: \n \n3n1eadersj sot part! imo wof , this Communist letter, November 14, 1955. \n \n--leaflet, August 31, 1950 \n \namiri^ siHSip and\u003c^T|^r linate /|^formation to the gen- (26) National Council of Amer (24) New York City Council of \n \nera! public. THTs'Oommission woulcTappreciate your furnish ican-Soviet Friendship--member to the American Youth Congress -- \n \ning to us any further identifications you can make. \n \nwelcome the Dean of Canterbury speaker at New York State model \n \n--booklet, November 1948. \n \nlegislature of youth--call and pro \n \nIt behooves each of us to learn more of Communist in (27) National Council of the gram, January 28-30. 1938. \n \nRALPH HELSTEIN, (2nd L) President of United Packing House Work ers of America-CIO, is pictured here with Abner W. Berry of the National Central Committee of the Communist Party. \nHelstein is representative of a small group of Labor extremists who serve the Communisl Party by affiliation with the Communist apparatus and by the utilization of their own organization to \n \nfiltration and the direction of Communist movements. Only Arts, Sciences and Professions-- (25) Petition to Reconsiders- \n \nfurther aims of the Communist Part'. Abner Berry is a member of the Central Committee of the \nCommunist Party and is a columnist for the Daily Worker. Berry is one of the top ranking Negro Communists in America. His pres ence at a meeting such as this seminar insures the Communist Party against deviations from the Party principles. \n \nthrough information and knowledge can we combat this signer of ad--St. Louis Post-Dis Prosecutions Under the Smith Act .'signer of appeal Daily Worker. (34) Southern Conference Edu rated on March 1955) is no less a NATIONAL COUNCIL OF THE \n \nalien menace to Constitutional government. \n \npatch, June 20, 1951. \n \n--signer--New York Times, An- January 20, 1954, page 4. \n \ncational Fund -- director -- letter Communist project than its prede \n \nARTS, SCIENCES AND \n \nAll or any part of this folder may be reproduced by any \n \n(28) Open Letter on Military Aid to Spain--signer--Daily Work \n \nperson or organization with or without credit being given rer, May 17, 1951, page 9. \n \nto this Commission. \n \n(29) Open Letter Protesting De \n \ngust 8, 1955. page 9; Daily Work er. August 8, 1955. page 8. \n(26) Progressive Citizens of America--speaker at rally, 1047 -- \n \n(8) Appeal for Amnesty for the Jailed Leaders of the Communist Party Convicted Under the Smith Act--signer -- Daily Worker. De \n \nhead. July 1954. (35) Southern Conference Edu \ncational Fund -- director -- letter head, April 1955. \n \ncessor. Camp Unity.\" WOR'LD youth congress Cited as a Communist confer \n \nPROFESSIONS \nCited as a Communist front which is \"used to appeal to special occupational groups ...\" \n \nGeorgia Commission on Education \n \nportation of Harry Bridges--sign Williams' testimony before Senate cember 10, 1952. page 4. \n \n(36) Southern Conference Edu ence held in the summer of 1938 \n \nGovernor Marvin Griffin, Chairman er--letter, April 22, 1943. \n \nInternal Security Subcommittee. (9) Bachrach Open Letter -- cational Fund -- coordinator of at Vassar College. \n \nVETERANS AGAINST DISCRI \n \nT. V. Williams, Jr., Executive Secretary 220 Agriculture Bldg. L9 Hunter St.. S.W. Atlanta. Ga. \nRecords of Don West, John B. Thompson, \nJames Dombrowski, Aubrey Williams \nListed below are the records of Communist Affiliations of four of the leaders of Highlander Folk School. \nJAMES DOMBROWSKI JOHN B. THOMPSON DON WEST \n \n(30) Protest against Verdict of Guilty in Case of 11 Communist Leaders--spoke out against verdict --Worker, October 30, 1949. p. 3 \n(31) People's Institute of Ap plied Religion -- sponsor -- letter head, April 16, 1953. \n(32) Protestant Digest Associ ates--signer of call to dinner-for um--call, February 25, 1941 \n(33) Southern Conference Edu cational Fund--member of board of directors -- letterhead. January 1951. \n(34) Southern Conference for Human Welfare--vice president-- \n \nMarch 19, 1954. page 112. \n \nsigner--letter, September 19, 1955 \n \n(27) Progressive Citizens of (10) Brief Amici Curiae for the \n \nAmerica--elected to board of di-1 Communist Party--signer--U. SI. \n \nrectors--Daily Worker, May 1947 Supreme Court, October 1955. \n \n(28) Protest Meeting for How (11) Committee for Equal Jus \n \nard Fast--sponsor--New Masses. tice for Mrs. Recy Taylor, an aux \n \nOctober 14. 1947. page 24. \n \niliary of International Labor De \n \n(29) Southern Conference Edu fense--sponsor -- booklet. August \n \ncational Fund--president; endors 1945. \n \ner of declaration--folder. Novem (12) Committee for Medical \n \nber 20. 1948. \n \nFreedom--signer of statement op \n \n(30) Southern Conference Edu posing questioning of profesisonal \n \ncational Fund --president; sponsor people by Un-American Activities \n \nand speaker at first southwide con Committee--leaflet, June 1952. \n \nference cin discrimination in higher (13) Communist Party--identi \n \neducation--program, April 8, 1950. fied as a member of by John But \n \nSouthwestern Regional Conference on Integration -- folder. May 17. 1955. \n(37) Southern Conference Edu cational Fund -- director -- South ern Patriot, December 1956, p. 4 \n(38) Southern Conference for Human Welfare--executive secre tary--official report, 1942. \n(39) Southern Conference for Human Welfare--executive secre tary-- Daily Worker, January 29. 1946, page 4. \n(40) Southern Conference for Human Welfare--administrator-- letterhead, June 1, 1947. \n \nDAILY WORKER \n\"The chief journalistic mouth piece of the Communist Party founded in response to direct in structions from the Communist In ternational in Moscow. . The first issue of the Daily Worker ap peared on January 13, 1924. . No other paper or publication ot any kind in all American history has ever been loaded with such a volume of subversive, seditious, and treasonable utterance as has this organ of the American Com munists.\" \n \nMINATIONS OF CIVIL RIGHTS CONGRESS OF NEW YORK Cited as a subversive affiliate \nof the subversive Civil Rights Congress. \nMASSES AND MAINSTREAM Cited as the successor to New Masses, \"a Communist magazine.\" \nNEW MASSES \"Nationally circulated weekly journal of the Communist Party . . . whose ownership was vested In the American Fund for Public Service.\" (Garland Fund). \n \nAUBREY WILLIAMS \n \nletterhead, July 25, 1947. \n \n(31) Southern Conference Edu ler in sworn testimony before Sen- (41) Southern Conference for EMERGENCY CIVIL LIBERTIES \n \nEach of these four men was prominent in the establishment (35) U. S. Sponsoring Commit cational Fund--president--letter- ^ate Committee on Internal Secur Human Welfare--signer of mani \n \nCOMMITTEE \n \nPOLITICAL AFFAIRS \n \nof Highlander Folk School or in its subsequent operation. tee for Representation at the Con head, January 1951. \n \nity -- Committee Hearings. March festo--Southern Patriot. June 1947, \"To defend the cases of Com Cited as an \"official Communist \n \nThey represent the nucleus of this Communist Training \n \nSchool. \n \nDONALD L. WEST \n \ner of open letter for--Daily Work \n \n(1) American Peace Mobiliza er, March 31, 1955, page 8. \n \ntion--endorser--call to American (2) American Continental Con \n \nPeople's Meeting, April 5-6, 1941. gress for World Peace--sponsor-- \n \n(2) Book Union -- contributor-- Dailv Worker. July 29. 1949. page \n \nNew Masses. October 1, 1935. back 5 \n \ncover. \n \n(3) American Crusade to End \n \n(3) Committee for Equal Justice Lynching--signer of call to pilgri \n \nfor Mrs. Recy Taylor, an auxiliary mage to Washington, D. C.--call. \n \nof International Labor Defense-- September 23, 1946. \n \nmember of committee of sponsors (4) American Peace Mobiliza \n \n--booklet, August 1945. \n \ntion -- chairman -- Daily Worker, \n \n(4) Communist Party -- member September 3, 1940, page 4. \n \n--House Committee Report on (5) Appeal to Guard Civil \n \nSouthern Conference for Human Rights -- signer -- Daily Worker, \n \nWelfare, 1947, page 5. \n \nAugust 28, 1950, page 3. \n \n(5) Educators for Wallace -- (6) Bill of Rights Conference-- \n \nmember--pamphlet, October 1948. sponsor--program and call, July (6) Mother Bloor Celebration 16, 1949. \n \nCommittee--sent greetings--book (7) Chicago Ad Hoc Committee \n \nlet, undated. \n \nof Welcome for the Dean of Can \n \n(7) National Council of the Arts, terbury -- member -- folder. No \n \nSciences and Professions--sponsor vember 1948. \n \nof conference--report of confer (8) Chicago Committee to De \n \nence, October 9-10, 1948. \n \nfeat the Mundt Bill--signer of \n \n(8) National Federation for Con statement--Daily Worker. Septem \n \nstitutional Liberties -- signer of ber 15, 1950. page 9. \n \nopen letter asking the President (9) Chicago Committee to Secure \n \nto rescind Biddle decision on Har Justice in the Rosenberg Case-- \n \nry Bridges--booklet, July 11, 1942. signer of open letter--Daily Work \n \n(9) National Wallace for Presi er, December 25, 1952. page 8. \n \ndent Committee -- member--press (10) Citizens Emergency Con \n \nrelease, March 23, 1948. \n \nference for Interracial Unity--del \n \n(10) New Masses--contributor egate--booklet, September 25. \n \n--New Masses. April 10. June 5. 1943. \n \nand June 26. 1934; August 27. (11) Committee to Defend Amer \n \n1935; May 28. 1946. \n \nica by Keeping Out of War--chair \n \n(11) Open Letter on Harry man--letterhead, August 10, 1940. \n \nBridges -- signer -- Daily Worker, \n \nJuly 19, 1942. page 4. \n \n(12) Committee for Equal Jus \n \n(12) People's Institute of Ap tice for Mrs. Recy Taylor, an aux \n \nplied Religion--state director for iliary of International Labor De \n \nGeorgia--letterhead. December 11. fense -- sponsor--booklet, August \n \n1940. \n \n1945. \n \n(13) People's Institute of Ap (13) Committee for Peaceful \n \nplied Religion--sponsor and state Alternatives -- vice-chairman -- \n \ndirector for Georgia -- letterhead. letterhead. March 30, 1950. \n \nFebruary 12, 1941. \n \n(14) Continuations Committee of \n \n(14) People's Institute of Ap the Conference on Peaceful Alter \n \nplied Religion--field leader--let natives to the Atlantic Pact--initi \n \nterhead, April 9. 1942. \n \nator-- Daily Worker. August 22. \n \n(15) People's Institute ol Ap 1949, page 3. plied Religion--member of South (15) Committee to Secure Jus \n \nern Committee--letterhead, .lanu tice in the Rosenberg Case--signer \n \nary 1, 1948. \n \nof open letter--Hyde Park Herald, \n \n(16) People's Institute of Ap 1952. \n \nplied Religion--member of South (16) Dinner for Pearl Hart-- \n \nern Committee--letterhead. April sponsor--Daily Worker. April 6. \n \n16, 1953. \n \n1950. page 4 \n \n(17) Pilot (Communist-controll (17) Emergency Peace Mobiliza ed weekly, of National Maritime tion--sponsor--call and program. Union)--writer for-- Pilot. Mav August 31-September 2. 1940 \n \n11, 1945, page 17 \n \n(18) Interfaith Committee for \n \n(18) Southern Conference for Peace Action -- sponsor -- leaflet. \n \nHuman Welfare--signer of mani October 7, 1951 \n \ngress of the Peoples for Peace-- sponsor--press release. December 9, 1952. \n(36) Wire to President Truman to veto the McCarran Bil--initia tor-- Worker. September 17. 1950, page 3. \nAUBREY WILLIAMS \n(1) American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born--spon sor of conference--program and call, October 25-27, 1949. \n(2) American Crusade to End Lynching--signer of call to pil grimage to Washington--call, Sep tember 23, 1946. \n(3) American Youth Congressspeaker at 2 or 3 of their annual meetings--Williams' testimony be fore Senate Internal Security Sub committee, March 19, 1954, p. 109 \n(4) Appeal to Guard Civil Rights --signer--Daily W'orker. August 28, 1950, page 3. \n(5) Association of Internes and Medical Students--speaker at an nual convention--official program. December 27-30, 1950. \n(6) Brief Amici Curiae for the Communist Party--signer--U. S. Supreme Court, October 1955. ,, (7) Civil Rights Congress -- speaker at rally, September 11. 1947 --Williams' testimony before Senate Internal Security Subcom mittee. March 19. 1954, page 107. \n(8) Committee to End Sedition Laws--signer of statement--press release, November 19, 1955. \n(9) Committee for Peaceful A1 ternatives to the Atlantic Pact-- member of executive board--letter head, September 16, 1950. \n(10) Commonwealth College -- served on committee and contribu ted to -- Massachusetts investiga tion of Communists, 1938. \n(11) Continuations Committee of the Conference on Peaceful Alter natives to the Atlantic Pactsigner of open letter to Congress --letter, August 21, 1949; Daily Worker, August 22, 1949, page 3. \n(12) Daily Worker--petitions U. S Senate--Daily Worker, Janu ary 26, 1946, page 9. \n(13) VV. E. B. DuBois Testimon ial Sponsoring Committee--spon sor--program, February 23, 1951 \n(14) Highlander Folk Schoolmember of board or in some way affiliated with from about 1944 t\u003c 1954--Williams' testimony before Senate Internal Security Subcom mittee. March 19. 1954. p. 103. \n(15) Mainstream--sponsor New Masses, October 28, 1947, page 2 \n \n(32) Southern Conference Edu cational Fund--president and mem ber board of directors--letterhead. July 1954. \n(33) Southern Conference Edu cational Fund -- president and member of board of directors--lethead, April 1955. \n(34) Southern Conference Edu cational Fund--signer of petition to Senator Hennings--petition. No vember 7, 1955. \n(35) Southern Conference Edu cational Fund--president--SouthPatriot, December 1956, page 4 \n(36) Southern Conference for Human Welfare--speaker at con ference--program. November 2023, 1938. \n(37) Southern Conference for Human Welfare--speaker at con ference--program and call. April 14-16 1910. \n(38) Southern Conference for Human Welfare--signer of peti tion to U S. Senate--Daily Work er, January 28. 1946. page 11 \n(39) Southern Conference for Human Welfare -- chairman of nominating committee. 1946 - Wil liams' testimony before Senate In ternal S e c u r,i i y Subcommittee March 19, 1954. page 103. \n(40) Southern Conference for Human Welfare--signer of mani festo -- Southern Patriot. June 1947, pages 4-5. \n(41) Southern Conference for Human Welfare--member of hoard of representatives -- letterhead. July 25, 1947. \n(42) Washington Committee for Democratic Action -- member -- membership list. 1939. \n(43) Workers Alliance - paid tribute to--Appendix IX. page 1749. \nJAMES A. DUMBROWSKI \n(1) American Committee for Indonesian Independence -- signer of letter--Indonesian Review. 1946 \n(2) American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born--sign er of birthday greeting to Sabath --Lamp, May 1946. page 3 \n(3) American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born--spon sor of 15th anniversary national conference -- program. December 11-12. 1948. \n(4) American Continental Con gress for Peace. Mexico City -- United States sponsor -- leaflet. September 5-10, 1949. \n(5) American Peace Crusadesigner of call to peace pilgrimage \n \n18, 1954. (14) Conference on Constitu \ntional Liberties in America speaker--program, June 7-9, 1940 \n(15) Continuations Committee of the Conference on Peaceful Alter natives to the Atlantic Pact--sign er of open letter to Congress--let ter, August 21, 1949. \n(16) International Workers Or der--defender of--Fraternal Out look, November 1948, page 6. \n(17) International Workers Or der--defender of --Daily Worker, June 18, 1951, page 8. \n(IS) Methodist Federation for Social Action--nominated memberat-large by national membership meeting, December 27-29, 1947-- 1847 ballot, page 2. \n(19) Methodist Federation for Social Action -- nominee--official ballot, September 2, 1953. \n(20) Methodist Federation for Social Service--nominated for na tional committee--1945 ballot, p. 4. \n(21) National Citizens Political Action Committee -- member--offial list, August 28, 1944. \n(22) National Committee to Re peal the McCarran Act--signer of open letter to members of Con gress-- letter. January 19 1951 \n(23) National Committee t\u003c Re peal (he McCarran Act--signer of open letter to Senator Hennings --dated November 14. 1955 \n(24) National Committee to Win Amnesty for the Smith Act Vic tims -- sponsor -- letterhead. Mav 22. 1953 \n(25) National Conference to De fend the Bill of Rights--sponsm -- leaflet, December 2-3, 1950 \n(26) National Federation fi Constitutional Liberties--signer of -itatement opposing renewal of the Dies Committee--pamphlet. Janu ary 1943. \n(27) National Negro Congresssponsor--10th convention program May 30, 1946 \n(28) People's Institute of Ap olied Religion -- sponsor -- letter head, April 9, 1942. \n(29) People's Institute ot Ap plied Religion--member of South ern Committee--letterhead, lanu ary 1, 1948. \n(30) People's Institute ot Ap plied Religion -- member of South ern Committee--letterhead. April 16, 1953. \n(31) Southern Conference Edo cational Fund--endorser of declai ation--folder. November 20. 194* \n(32) Southern Conference Ed\u003e \n \npages 4-5. (42) Southern Resident Labor \nColleges--member of finance cam paign committee--letterhead. Feb ruary 10, 1937. \n(43) Statement Defending the Communist Party--signer-- Daily Worker, March 5, 1941, page 2. \n(44) Win-the-Peace Conference --sponsor--call, April 5-7, 1946. \n(45) World Peace Appeal--sign er--leaflet, August 31, 1950. \nHIGHLANDER EXECUTIVES (Continued from page 1) \nDR. LEWIS JONES, Rural Life Council, Tuskeegee Institute, Alabama. \nMAY JUSTUS, Tracy City, Tenn. DR. GEORGE MITCHELL, Execu \ntive Director, Southern Re gional Council, Atlanta, Ga. REV. EUGENE SMATHERS. Cal vary Presbyterian Church, Big Lick, Tenn. DR. P. A. STEPHENS, Chatta nooga, Tenn. JORDON STOKES, III, Attorney at Law, Nashville, Tenn. LUCILLE THORNBROUGH, As sociate Editor, East Tennes see Labor News. Knoxville, Tenn TOM WHITE, Sec., Tennessee State Legislative Board. Broth erhood of Railroad Trainmen, Lexington. Tenn. AUBREY WILLIAMS. Publisher. Southern Farm and Home, Montgomery, Ala. \nCHARLES WILSON, Tennessee Representative. International Union of Mine. Mill and Smelt er Workers. Columbia. Tenn. \nMRS. GEORGE WOLFE. Takoma Park. Maryland. \nCITATIONS (Continued from page 1) \ngro worker, it has been a deterrent to him.\" \nSOUTHERN CONFERENCE FOR HUMAN WELFARE \nCited as a Communist-front or ganization \"which seeks to attract southern liberals on the basis of its seeming interest in the prob lems of the South\" although its \"professed interest in southern welfare is simply an expedient foi larger aims serving the Soviet Un ion and its subservient Communist \n \nmunist lawbreakers, fronts have been devised making special ap peals in behalf of civil liberties and reaching out far beyond the confines of the Communist Party itself. Among these organizations are the . Emergency Civil Lib erties Committee. When the Com munist Party itself is under fire these fronts offer a bulwark of protection.\" \nABRAHAM LINCOLN SCHOOL \n\"Schools under patriotic and be nevolent titles indoctrinate Com munists and outsiders in the the ory and practice of communism, train organizers and operatives recruit new party members and sympathizers * * * A school of this type has been the Abraham Lincolfi School, Chicago * * * \" \nAMERICAN PEACE MOBILIZATION \nCited as \"one of the most sediti ous organizations which ever op erated in the United States\" and \"instrument of the Communist Party line prior to Hitler's attack on Russia.\" \nAMERICAN YOUTH FOR DEMOCRACY \nCited as the new name under which the Young Communist League operates and which als\u003c largely absorbed the American Youth Congress. \nCOMMITTEE FOR PEACEFUL ALTERNATIVES TO THE ATLANTIC PACT \n\"As part of Soviet psychological warfare against the United States. Communist fronts seek to paralyze America's will to resist Communist aggression by idealizing Russia's aims and methods, discrediting the United States, spreading defeat ism and demoralization . Spe cializing in this field . . have been such organizations as . . the Committee for Peaceful Alterna tives to the Atlantic Pact . . \" \nCOUNCIL ON AFRICAN AFFAIRS \nCited as a Communist front \"formed to provoke racial fric tion.\" \nJEFFERSON SCHOOL OF SOCIAL SCIENCE \n\"Schools under patriotic and be nevolent titles indoctrinate Com munists and outsiders in the the ory and practice of communism train organizers and operatives re \n \nParty monthly theoretical organ.\" \"Political Affairs, formerly \nknown as The Communist, `a maga zine of the theory and practice of Marxism-Leninism published month ly by the Communist Party of the United States of America,' now calls itself `a magazine devoted to the theory and practice of Marx ism-Leninism.' rts chief editor is Eugene Dennis, executive secretary of the party.\" \nNAACP Approval, \nSupport, Participation \nReverend Martin Luther King. Rosa Parks, Charles C. Gomillion. Reverend David Brooks, Allen McSwain, Conrad Browne and others who attended this session at High lander Folk School provided major leadership in the following inci dents of interracial strife: (1) the Montgomery Bus Boycott; (2) the Tuskegee Boycott; (3) the Talla hassee Bus Boycott; (4) the Clin ton School Incident; (5) Kononia Farms Inter-racial Violence and the March on Washington. \nEach of the above-listed persons and incidents has received the na tional acclaim and complete sup port of the National Association for Advancement of Colored Peo pie. In fact, these incidents and the operation of these individuals have provided a major portion of the active program of the NAACP. \nThose who conducted this Labor Day session at Highlander inter spersed their lectures and discus sions with appeals to those present to secure new memberships for the NAACP and especially urged that teachers join and support the NAACP \nThe unqualified support by the NAACP of the above-named indi viduals and incidents must be view ed in light of the fact that ten of the directors including Benjamin E. Mays, President, Morehouse College, Atlanta. Georgia, have amassed the surprising total of over 400 instances of Communist Front Affiliation; more than half the directors have public records of Communist Affiliation. The di rectors of the NAACP both pres ent and past have continually dem onstrated an amazing propensity for affiliating themselves with pro-Communist causes. \nThe Honorary Chairman of the Directors of the NAACP, W. E. B DuBois has amassed a longer pub \n \nfesto--Southern Patriot. June 1947. (19) League of Young Southern (16) Mid-Century Conference for to Washington. D C.--leaflet, cational Fund--director -- program Party in the United States.\" \n \ncruit new party members and sym lic record of Communist affilia \n \npages 4-5. \n \ners--sponsor -- letterhead. August Peace--sponsor--call. May 29-30, March 1. 1951 \n \nof conference. April 8. I95u \n \npathisers. . . . Schools of thes\u003c- tions than any other person in the \n \nJOHN P,. THOMPSON \n \n13. 1940 \n \n1950. \n \n(6) American Peace Crusade-- (33) Southern Conference Ed  \n \nWINGDALE LODGE \n \ntype have been \n \nJefferson United States with the staggerin'! \n \n(1) American Committee for (20) Methodist Federation fcr (17) Mother Ploor Celebration sponsor--letterhead, May 26. 1951 cational Fund -- director -- lett.e \"The Comrrrttee is convinced School of Social Science. New total of literally hundreds of such \n \nProtection of Foreign Born --sign Social Action -- speaker -- Social Com mittee--sponsor--booklet \n \n(7) American Peace Crusade - head. January 1951. \n \nthat Wingdale Lodge (incorpo York. ...\" \n \naffiliations. \n \n "},{"id":"ugabma_wsbn_wsbn37174","title":"High School Girls Comment on Curriculum at New White Private High School in Little Rock (1957)","collection_id":"ugabma_wsbn","collection_title":"WSB-TV Newsfilm Collection","dcterms_contributor":null,"dcterms_spatial":["United States, Arkansas, Pulaski County, Little Rock, 34.74648, -92.28959"],"dcterms_creator":["WSB-TV (Television station : Atlanta, Ga.)"],"dc_date":["1957-01-01"],"dcterms_description":["High School Girls Comment on Curriculum at New White Private High School in Little Rock (1957)","Title supplied by cataloger."],"dc_format":["video/mp4"],"dcterms_identifier":["Clip number: wsbn37174"],"dcterms_language":["eng"],"dcterms_publisher":null,"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":["Original found in the WSB-TV newsfilm collection."],"dcterms_subject":["Education","Children and Youth","Segregation","Schools"],"dcterms_title":["High School Girls Comment on Curriculum at New White Private High School in Little Rock (1957)"],"dcterms_type":["MovingImage"],"dcterms_provenance":["Walter J. 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