April 1921, Vol. 1, No. 3, Serial No. 3 issue of the Industrial Pioneer, an early publication of the Industrial Workers of the World.
CONTENTS
-Red Russia and the IWW: a letter from Tom Barker
-Toward a definite syndicalist policy (Extracts from articles by Angelo Faggi of USI, Salvador Segui of CNT, French delegation to the Berlin syndicalist conference)
-Two conventions of Italian labor by G.C.
-The status of organized labor in Soviet Russia
-For a concerted plan of action by H. Van Dorn
-Organization by James Kennedy
-On the threshold of the great work of reconstruction in Soviet Russia by Karl Radek
-The star is risen by Julia C. Coons
-Conference on scientific organization of labor and production in Soviet Russia
-How industry is managed in Soviet Russia
-From Berlin to Moscow by E. Bouwman
-The Australian labor movement by J. Morris
-What have you done with the old men by Berton Braley
-"Let's go into business" by A Worker
-Ship committees - a problem in organization by Card No. 804943
-The story of the sea by Tom Barker
-Defense news by John Martin
-The International Council of Trade and Industrial Unions by A. Lozovsky
-The stranger by Julia C. Coons
-The story of a hard workingman and his white-collar son by H.V.D.
-A real love story by John E. Nordquist
-A statement by Zinoviev on the relation between economic and political bodies
-What our readers say about the Industrial Pioneer
Comments
Well worth the read. I read
Well worth the read. I read these years ago but rereading them now, good deal
Thanks for getting this and the other "IP" up
This article is worth the
This article is worth the historical read: -
Interesting that that's in
Interesting that that's in the same issue as articles from Radek and Zinoviev. That was sure a short historical window.
Also interesting to see the French syndicalist fascination with the Moscow union federation that still has some echo in the contemporary "Revolutionary Syndicalist Committee"/