free speech

In These Times: Sanders Steps Up

Catalog Number: 
Magazine, In These Times
Date: 
June 20, 2005
Abstract: 
In These Times is a monthly political magazine based in Chicago
Language: 
English
Format: 
Series Title: 
Item Donor: 
English

In These Times: Bush vs. the World: Why Washington Can't Go it Alone

Catalog Number: 
Magazine, In These Times: Bush vs. the World
Date: 
April 14, 2003
Volume: 
27
Issue: 
10
Abstract: 
"In These Times" is a magazine dedicated to exploring the social justice, political issues, and current events that the United States faces these days. Published in Chicago, the magazine's articles are written by staff, that explore issues facing all U.S. citizens. In this issue, articles are "News," "Appall-o-meter," "In Person", "Viewpoint: Resigning in Protest," "The First Stone," "Union Yes, War No," "Bush vs. the World," "Which Side are we on?," "Our Media, Not Theirs," "The Holy Grail," "Against All Odds," "Stranger than fiction," "Dear Mr. Vonnegut," and "Terrible Beauty."
Language: 
English
Format: 
ISSN/ISBN: 
01605992
Item Donor: 
In These Times

In These Times: Psyops

Catalog Number: 
Magazine, In These Times: Psyops
Date: 
September 1, 2003
Volume: 
27
Issue: 
20
Abstract: 
"In These Times" is a magazine dedicated to exploring the social justice, political issues, and current events that the United States faces these days. Published in Chicago, the magazine's articles are written by staff, that explore issues facing all U.S. citizens. In this issue, articles are "News," "Appall-o-meter," "The Third Coast," "Back Talk," "Capitol Report," "The First Stone," "How to Sell a War", "Web of Lies," "Hung Out to Dry," "The Kids Aren't All Right," "Local Anesthesia," "Memory, Down with the Ship," and "War of Words."
Language: 
English
Format: 
ISSN/ISBN: 
01605992
Item Donor: 
In These Times

Lumpen

Hobohemia: Emma Goldman, Lucy Parsons, Ben Reitman & Other Agitators and Outsiders in 1920s/1930s Chicago

Catalog Number: 
Book, Beck, Frank O.
Date: 
1956, Kerr edition: 2000
Volume: 
Bughouse Square Series
Abstract: 
From the 1910s through the Depression 30s, when Chicago was the undisputed hobo capital of the United States, a small north side neighborhood known as Towertown was the vital center of an extraordinary cultural/political ferment. It was home to Bughouse Square (the nation's most renowned outdoor free-speech center), Ben Reitman's Hobo College, and the fabulous Dil Pickle Club, a highly unorthodox institution of higher learning that doubled as the craziest nightclub in the world. In such places, and in scores of other nearby open forums, tea-rooms, little theaters, bookshops, art galleries, taverns, and cafes, Wobblies, anarchists, and other agitators mingled and debated with a wide range of jazz-age artists, writers, musicians, and eccentrics. It was something like New York's Greenwich Village, but-thanks to the prominence of the Chicago-based IWW-much more workingclass, and more openly revolutionary. Frank O. Beck's "Hobohemia" contains a long-time Towertowner's vivid reminiscences of this colorful, dynamic, creative and radical community that flourished for a generation despite constant onslaughts from the Red Squad, the Vice Squad, bourgeois journalists, fundamentalists and other bigots. Some of the characters he writes about are well known-Emma Goldman, Lucy Parsons, Ben Reitman, Jane Addams-but Beck's personal recollections of them will be new to most readers. Even more exciting are his memories of such less-well-known personalities as "Red" Martha Biegler, widely regarded as the greatest woman orator at the Square; softspoken labor organizer Anna Martindale; Nina van Zandt Spies, widow of Haymarket martyr August Spies; and irascible Jack Jones, the former Wobbly who from 1916 till his death in 1940 served as the Dil Pickle's ringleader and referee. Originally published in 1956, "Hobohemia" has long been out of print and hard to find. This new edition is long overdue, for the book is still one of the best firsthand accounts of a unique place and time. Franklin Rosemont's introduction provides a historical overview of Chicago's working class counter-culture and a biographical sketch of Beck. It also relates the book to earlier and later literature on the subject and fills in some gaps in the narrative. Helpful notes in the text correct a few errors. Also new in this edition are the illustrations, and a useful index.
Language: 
eng
Notes: 
Abstract borrowed from Charles H. Kerr. Additional keywords: Lizzie Davis, Mary "Mother" Jones, Katherine Dunham, Dorothy Day, Dr. Joseph Greer, Jack Macbeth, Social Science Institute, Jimmy Rohn, John Keracher, Frederick M. Wilkesbarr, Herbert William Shaw, Philosophy, Rudolph Weisenborn, Stanislaus Szukalski, Edgar Miller, Arturo Machia, Carl Sandburg, Max Bodenheim, Vachel Lindsay, Emanuel Carnevali, Harriet Monroe, Eunice Tietjens, Fenton Johnson, Lew Sarett, Jun Fujita, Helen Hoyt, Rudolf von Liebich, John Drury, Harvey Zorbaugh, Cold War, Mr. Porter, Bill Shatov, Waldheim, Forest Home Cemetary, Homeless, Class, Homosexuality, Paddy Carrol, Aimee Semple McPherson, Morris Levine, Eugene Debs, Labor, Seven Arts Club, The Pit, Latin Quarter, Hippolite Havel, Alexander Berkman, Newberry Library
Subjects: 
Format: 
ISSN/ISBN: 
0-88286-251-0

Youth Truth

Catalog Number: 
z.62.2
Date: 
Summer 2006
Volume: 
Vol 7, No. 2
Abstract: 
The official zine of Americans for a Society Free from Age Restrictions. Features on: The DOPA Act, designed to protect children in libraries and schools from predators by restricting access to social networking sites; objections to BusRadio in Massachusettes based on the idea that kids can't filter advertising and how that insults their intelligence; book reviews on the misuse of the term Children's Rights to refer to only custody battles, and on an argument to provide government assistance to all parents as compensation for shaping society. Also includes national news links.<br />
Language: 
eng
Subjects: 
Format: 
Publisher: 
ISSN/ISBN: 
1527-4489
Website: