9 943 résultats
pp. xiv, 239 + Plus thirty-two photographs. Map endpapers. 8vo. Original full cloth binding. Original dust jacket, worn. "An American correspondent's uncensored report on his precedent breaking journey through postwar Siberia." Coldwar/Economics 7
(Codice KI/0065) In 16° 68 pp. Four articles written by the Revolutionary Mass Criticism Writing Group of the Party School under the Chinese Communist Party Central Committee. Papeerback, very fine copy. ~~~ SPEDIZIONE IN ITALIA SEMPRE TRACCIATA
19.5x13 cm. XIV+510 pages. Softcover. Cover slightly chafed. Spine slightly chafed. Binding visible on several pages. Several pages slightly detached. Else in good condition.
pp. xiii, 208. 8vo. Original full cloth binding. Original dust jacket, slightly worn. Coldwar/Economics 3
RARE third report (of eight) on the effect on the sweating system with statistics and views on the effect of Jewish population and immigration to Leeds and London on their industry. 335x205mm. III+711 pages. Blue cloth rebound Hardcover. Cover slightly stained. Spine slightly wrinkled. Spine edges slightly bumped. Original rear cover (bound between 2 rear whitepages) edges slightly tattered. Front whitepage bottom edge slightly worn. Previous owner's stamp on page III. Some pages bottom corner slightly bumped. Pages yellowing. [SUMMARY]: This extremely rare invaluable historical document on 19th-century Jewish history in Britain is in good condition. PLEASE NOTE: This item is overweight. We may ask for extra shipping costs.
pp. viii, 215. 8vo. Original full cloth binding. Original dust jacket. First Edition. Coldwar/Economics 5.
100p. 8vo. Original full cloth binding. Original dust jacket. Slight wear. Address of publisher inked out on title page and dust jacket. First edition. Scarce defense of the victims of McCarthyism. Coldwar/Economics 7
OTTIME CONDIZIONI
8vo, cloth in dj. (vii),295p. owner's signature, very sparse underlining and notes, ow an excellent copy. adam smith, david ricardo, john stuart mill, karl marx, jevonian revolution. clasical economy.
8vo., First Edition; cloth, a very good, clean copy in price-clipped dustwrapper, the latter very lightly age-soiled and frayed at extremities.
311 pages including index. "A vivid history of the Chinese Communist base areas during the war years.... Suggests that the Yenan experience gave the later rulers of China a unique education in, and model for, government." - Foreign Affairs. "A well-documented, erudite, and readable study." - Library Journal. Unmarked. Moderate wear. Binding sound. Book
Alexandra Kollontai THE WORKERS OPPOSITION. London, Solidarity Pamphlet 1968 english, 70 1968. testo in inglese. "Solidarity Pamphlet No.7. " Opera con copertina morbida in brossura . N 158 Bis
pp. xii, 363. Inked presentation from Jitau Gichuru to Samuel B. Karumba (Kenyan independence activists). 8vo. Original full cloth backed binding. Slight wear. Coldwar/Economics 7
Unpaginated. 12" x 9" x 0.7". Contains issues from January 1945 through December 1946, a tumultuous time for labour in the wake of World War II. Topics include: Tennessee Poll Tax Fight; A New Revision of Marxian Economics, by Raya Dunayevskaya; Barriers on the Way to Socialism, by CARP; C.C.F confusion, by C. Luff; Marxism in New Zealand by R.R. Everson; Labor Conscription - the May-Bailey bill calls for a compulsory labor draft of 18 million workers from 18 to 45 years of age; Labor and Political Action, by Harmo; Vocationalism in Ireland; Comrade Adolph Kohn; The Future of Cartels; Capitalist Justice; An admittedly Imperfect World; 60 million jobs?; Will War Delay Socialism?; Success Story; The Meaning of Social Revolution; When G.I. Joe Comes Home; The Tinplate War; The Jinni and the Master; Inquiring Student Answered; Mexico; Do away with the Working Class; Human Nature as it Really is; Parasites in Fact and Fiction; Is the Status Quo Unchangeable?; Blood and Iron - contemplating the effect of WWII; Is Socialism Inevitable?; Scientific Socialism; Now that Germany has been knocked out, What Next?; The Nature of Co-ops; A Will for Socialism; Who ar the Workers?; Edward Bellamy; The Irish Scene; Franklin D. Roosevelt; Welcome Home, Joe; Canada Goes to the Polls; A Summer Morning in Dublin; Whom the States Serves; Forced Labor in Russia; A Philosopher Squelched - San Francisco Conference; British Election Message; Willow Run - this massive plant will soon be closed after making B-24 bombers for the war; The Great Divide; Guaranteed Annual Wage; Tobin and the Teamsters; S.P.G.B. Election Message; The War's End; Socialism in Britain?; War Memorials and Poverty; Detroit seething with unrest due to postwar industrial reconversion; Russia as she is; Poverty in New Zealand; From Military to Trade Wars; Atomic Energy; Has Britain Turned Socialist?; A Job with the City; Economics of Control; The Case for Socialism; Reformers Emasculate Unions; The Communications Revolution; Guaranteed Annual Wage; Insurance and Security; So this is Peace!; Wages and Prices; A Soldier Thinks; A Program for Workers; Yours - When you want it; The General Motors Strike - the union wants 30%; An American Seaman in India; Homeward Bound; Delusions of A White Collar Worker; Veterans are workers too; Who owns large corporations?; The Truth about Russia; Socialism and Personal Ethics; The Lenin Legend; Tale of Two Continents; Kaiser-Frazer Bonus Plan; Atomic Policy; Fetish of Full Production; What? - No Money!; Growing Tensions of Capitalism; Two Worlds; India; Henry in Wonderland; Family and Education in U.S.S.R.; How to Deal with the Atomic Bomb; Recruits Wanted; Opportunity under Capitalism; United Nations and War; Catholicism in America; The Rail Strike; From Boom to Bust; T.B. and Capitalism; Stocks don't make a capitalist; Know the Enemy; Fruits of Victory; Unions in Politics; A Note on American Culture; British Labor Government; Between Two Wars; Who Owns America; Materialist Basis of Religion; Selfishness; Occupational Trends in America; Letter to a Jewish worker; OPA - The Price Sieve; Ireland Today; Serfdom in a Free Society; Questions and Answers; Paris "Peace" Conference and World War III; The Sacred Cow; Full Employment and the Liberals; Berlin Letter; The Worker - That's You!; Unity; The Atomic Age; Where are the Unions Going?; Land of Plenty; The "Flood-Like" Form; Socialism or Capitalism?; An introduction to Economics; How About a 51% Majority; What do we mean by Socialism?. Sturdily bound in maroon boards. Unmarked. Average external wear. Contents clean and gently toning with age. Lettering upon backstrip dull but legible. A sound copy. Book
Hinges starting, frontis plate loose (but present) , otherwise Good Conditio. N; 8vo; 329 pages; First edition. Original boards. 8vo. 329 pages, 20 cm. In English. Early reporting by Reed, part of the same reporting work that took him just a bit further east to report on Ten Days that Shook the World a year later. Includes tissued frontis plate, as well as 47 other single-sided illustrated plates. SUBJECTS: World War, 1914-1918 -- Personal narratives. Very Good Condition. (KH-3-28)
Lenin analyses the collapse of the Second International. [1931] 63 pages. Some foxing on title page and page edges.
Moscow, The Progress Publishers 1978, 183pp.+ 15 ills.out-of-text, publisher's hardcover, dustwrapper, good condition, G21432
pp. xiv, 252. Text illustrations. 8vo. Original full gray printed wraps. Inked ownership of Robert L. Macohn. AFRICA/3
Double-sided three-panel tract measuring 10" x 6" when unfolded. Fascinating follow-up to tract 1 of this series, issued in 1956. Explains how, after viewing Myron Fagan's play "Thieves' Paradise" in 1956, Congressman Usher L. Burdick led a charge, ultimately of over 200 Congressmen, to follow up on allegations made against the U.N. in the play. Explains how the "Enemy Within" stifled any meaningful investigation. Refers to quotes by U.N.'s first Secretary-General, Trygve Lie. Considerable fine-print text. Clean and unmarked with very light wear. Book
"This book is the final and complete exposure of the notorious forgery which, under the name of The Protocols of the Wise Men of Zion, has been the central weapon in the anti-Semitic armory since 1870." - dust jacket of first edition (not included.) "Contains reprints of all the documents relating to the case." - copyright page. [VIII], IX-XXXII, 15-397, [11] pp. Reprint of the 1935 first edition with an informative new introduction by Norman Cohn. Clean, bright and unmarked with light wear to publisher's navy cloth. Brilliant gilt lettering upon front board and backstrip. Binding tight. Small clipping from top corner of front free endpaper. No dust jacket, presumably as issued. A quality copy of this fascinating work. Book
Very Good English Modern decorative cloth. Demy 8vo. (21 x 14 cm). In English. 125, [2] p. The trial of the American spies in Bulgaria. 2000 copies were printed. A report of the trial of M. Shipkov and others. Mihail (Michael) Todorov Shipkov was born to a wealthy family in Bulgaria on January 1, 1911. His secondary education was at the prestigious American founded and Christian based Robert College on the European side of Istanbul, Turkey. His family had derived its wealth from extracting rose oil. With the coming of Communism in Bulgaria after World War Two, the family lost their wealth when their rose fields and factories were nationalized. Reportedly, Communist authorities confiscated 9,000 kilograms of rose oil. Fluent in English, Mihail Shipkov then became a translator at the American Legation in Sofia. It was the worst of political times in Bulgaria. The Cold War was hot: staff members of the American Legation were harassed, arrested, and some died under very suspicious circumstances. For example, in August 1949, Ivan Seculov, a Bulgarian translator employed by the American Legation, died after "falling" out of a four-story window three days after his arrest by the state security militia (secret police). One report has him committing suicide rather than being released from prison to work as a police agent. The truth might never be known. In 1949, the American Legation attempted to get Mihail Shipkov, then 39 years old, and his family exit visas to leave Bulgaria for the United States. The police (militia) opened an investigative file with the code name "????????" (Rodoviiat), translated as "Pink" - not referring to the color, but to his family's rose oil production. On Saturday, August 21, 1949, at 2:30 PM, Mihail Shipkov was arrested by the state security militia, after leaving the American Legation, and taken to the National Assembly building... (Source: History is now magazine).
431p. 8vo. Original full cloth blue binding. ". criticism of the foreign policy of our State Department and of the peace policy of the United Nations." Quite influential on generations of conservatives. Coldwar/Economics 2