Descripción
Offered is the July 16, 1951 issue of "The Freeman" (Vol. 1 No. 21) edited by John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette and published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc. out of Orange, Connecticut. Issued in Two Sections, separately published - each section measures 8-1/4" by 11-1/4" - Section 1 contains 32 pages (with articles, editorials, and book reviews); Section 2 contains 8 pages and is devoted to the lengthy article "Free Men vs. the Union Closed Shop" by Donald R. Richberg (the subtopics are: The Union Argument; Socialism and Fascism; "Security" for Whom?; Purpose and Value of Unions; What Is Democracy?; Union-Employer Monopolies; Warning Voices; and Conclusion). Highlights from Section 1 (the main issue) include: The Help Chiang [Kai-shek] Did Not Get by Lucian B. Moody; A Field For Americanization by Blake Clarke ("It is becoming a commonplace that the future of Western civilization will be decided in Asia, among whose peoples the Communists conduct unremitting psychological warfare against the United States"); Biddle Defeats Biddle by Burton Rascoe (which begins, "Francis Biddle, former Attorney General, is the first man in history, as far as I have been able to discover, who has ever carried on an agitation to have the United States Supreme Court declare him to have been not only frequently and flagrantly guilty of illegal acts and criminal malfeasance in office but also of 'arbitrary and capricious' statements of a libelous, slanderous and defamatory nature"); Planned Economy - A Case History by Towner Phelan (on the Central Arizona Irrigation Project); The Higgledy-Piggledy Nature of Bertrand Russell by Hugh Stevenson Tigner. Former owner's name to front covers; periodic light underlining to text and check marks to margins in pencil. N° de ref. del artículo 014845
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