TITLE> Venona

Sunday, March 12, 2006

Harold Glasser

Harold Glasser, was an economist in the United States Department of the Treasury and spokesman on the affairs of the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA) 'throughout its whole life' and he had a 'predominant voice' in determining which countries should receive aid. Glasser was a member of the Perlo group of Soviet spies during World War II and worked closely with Harry Dexter White. His code name in Soviet intelligence and in the Venona files is " Ruble".
Contents[hide]
1 Transfer to GRU
2 Perlo group
3 SISS investigation
4 Venona
5 See also
5.1 Source
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Transfer to GRU
Harold Glasser joined the United States Department of Treasury in 1936 and became its assistant director of the Division of Monetary Research by late 1938. At this time, in 1937, Josef Peters transferred Glasser to GRU, after Whittaker Chambers was pressured by Soviet Case Officer Boris Bykov about Harry Dexter White's production. Glasser, the number two man in the division beneath White, reported back that as far as he could discern, White was providing everything of importance.
In 1940 Glasser was appointed Chief American economic adviser to Ecuador through a joint program of the Treasury and U.S. Department of State. In December 1941 the Secret Service forwarded a report to Harry Dexter White indicating that it had evidence Glasser was involved in Communist activities. White never acted on the report. Glasser continued to serve in Ecuador until 1942.
After America became involved in World War II, Glasser received appointments to higher-level positions, such as Vice-Chairman of the War Production Board, was dispatched to serve as economic adviser to American forces in North Africa, U.S. Treasury representative to the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration, and Treasury representative to the Allied High Commission in Italy.
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Perlo group
When Glasser returned to the United States in 1944, he reestablished contact with the Perlo group. Victor Perlo, the groups head, explained to Elizabeth Bentley that Glasser had been an member of the group before the War started, and Glasser was transferred to work with another group. Charles Kramer, another member of the Perlo group, told Bentley that Glasser was transferred to a group working for the GRU headed by Alger Hiss.
In an 25 April 1945 memo from Pavel Fitin, head of KGB foreign intelligence, to Vsevolod Merkulov, head of the overall KGB organization, Fitin asked fair treatment for an award to be given to a longtime operative, Harold Glasser. Fitin called Merkulov's attention to the fact that Glasser had been working for Soviet intelligence for a long time, since May 1937, usually for the KGB but also at times for the GRU. Fitin explained how while Glasser was working with the GRU, Glasser felt he had been slighted. Fitin explained how the group of GRU agents of which Glasser was part, was decorated with honors of the Soviet Union, but Glasser had been neglected because of his transfer back to KGB. The text from KGB Archives reads in part as follows:
"Our agent RUBLE, drawn to work for the Soviet Union in May 1937, passed initially through the military "neighbors" and then through our station valuable information on political and economic issues.... To our work RUBLE gives much attention and energy is devoted and disciplined agent.
"According to data from VADIM the group of agents of the "military" neighbors whose part RUBLE was earlier, recently was decorated with orders of the USSR. RUBLE learned about this fact from his friend ALES, who is the head of the mentioned group. Taking into account RUBLE's devoted work for the USSR for eight years and the fact that, as a result of transfer to our station, RUBLE was not decorated together with other members of the ALES group, consider expedient to put him forward for a decoration of the Order of the Red Star. Ask for your consent.
Fitin's account corroborates Elizabeth Bentley's deposition.
In the transcript # 1759 KGB Washington to Moscow 28 March 1945 Glasser reports the Treasury Department is sending a young lawyer, Josiah DuBois, to Moscow to serve on the American delegation to the Allied Reparations Commission meeting. Glasser says he established “most friendly relations” with DuBois and judged him to be ideologically a Communist, although he was not a CPUSA member. Glasser reports how he counseled DuBois to be more “discreet” in expressing left-wing views and notes that his personal relationship with DuBois was such that he could “normally obtain by asking” anything he wanted.

Glasser is in the subjcet of several June 1945 Venona cables. Three June 1945 transcripts report Glasser's transmitting U.S. State Department reports of Soviet war losses, a State Department report on a Finnish company believed to be hiding Nazi financial assets, and an Office of Strategic Services report on the movement of Nazi gold through Swiss banks.


SISS investigation

After the war he was economic adviser to the American delegation at the Council of Foreign Ministers meeting in Moscow in 1947 and economic adviser to the Treasury secretary at the board of governors meeting of the World Bank. In December 1947 at the time of his resignation, Glasser was assistant director of Treasury's Office of International Finance.

Glasser's promotions and job ratings throughout his career were determined by fellow Communists Frank Coe and William Ullmann; promotions and job ratings were reviewed and backed by Harry Dexter White. Transcripts of Glasser's promotions and job rating forms signed by Coe, Ullmann, and White are in Interlocking Subversion in Government Departments Report.

Pavel Fitin later described as “valuable” the political and economic information Glasser passed along, all of which found its way into thirty-four special reports to Josef Stalin and other top Kremlin leaders. Glasser’s materials were “all of critical interest to the leadership of the USSR” because it included the contents of an Office of Strategic Services (OSS) memorandum about the economic consequences of stripping Germany of heavy industry; an internal memorandum from the Department of the Treasury concerning conferences at State Department on postwar reparations; and an internal memorandum by the Treasury Department concerning Lend-Lease policy toward the Soviet Union. A 4 June 1945 cable reports Glasser would be on the Treasury committee advising Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson, the U.S. prosecutor at the Nuremberg War Crimes Tribunal.


Venona

Harold Glasser is referenced in the following decrypted Venona project cables:

1195 KGB New York to Moscow, 21 July 1943;
1206 KGB New York to Moscow, 22 July 1943;
588 New York to Moscow, 29 April 1944, p. 1
588 New York to Moscow, 29 April 1944, p. 2
588 New York to Moscow, 29 April 1944, p. 3
769, 771 KGB New York to Moscow, 30 May 1944, p. 1
769, 771 KGB New York to Moscow, 30 May 1944, p. 2
769, 771 KGB New York to Moscow, 30 May 1944, p. 3
79 KGB New York to Moscow, 18 January 1945, p. 1
79 KGB New York to Moscow, 18 January 1945, p. 2
179, 180 KGB Moscow to New York, 25 February 1945.
1759 KGB Washington to Moscow, 28 March 1945;
3598 KGB Washington to Moscow, 21 June 1945; [1]
3600 KGB Washington to Moscow, 21 June 1945; [2] [3]
3645 KGB Washington to Moscow, 23 June 1945;
3688 KGB Washington to Moscow, 28 June 1945.


See also

Significance of Venona

Wikisource:Venona 79 KGB New York to Moscow, 18 January 1945, KGB in Treasury


Source

Whittaker Chambers, Witness (New York: Random House, 1952), p. 430

Allen Weinstein, Perjury, The Hiss-Chambers Case (New York: Random House, 1997), pgs. 326-327.

Fitin to Merkulov 25 April 1945, File #43072, Vol. 1, pp. 96-97, KGB Archives.

Allen Weinstein and Alexander Vassiliev, The Haunted Wood: Soviet Espionage in America—the Stalin Era (New York: Random House, 1999)

Interlocking Subversion in Government Departments,’ part 2, 81–82, 98–99.

John Earl Haynes and Harvey Klehr, Venona: Decoding Soviet Espionage in America, Yale University Press (1999)


Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harold_Glasser"


Categories:
Jewish Americans
Soviet spies
Venona Appendix A

Bela Gold

Bela Gold, also known as Bill Gold was born 30 January 1915 in Goloszvar Hungary and was married Sonia Steinman Gold in 1938. Gold attended New York University majoring in industrial engineering for four years, then attended Columbia University for two years in graduate studies on economics.

In Washington Gold worked for the Senate Subcommittee on War Mobilization. Also for the Economic Programs in the Foreign Economic Administration. In 1942 Gold described his job as principal social science analyst, and that his duties were to carry out special administrative research assignments for the Chief of the Bureau of Intelligence, Office of Facts and Figures, for the head of the Division of Program Surveys, Bureau of Agriculture Economics. On a government questionnaire Gold stated he was best suited for directing research requiring knowledge of many engineering, managerial and economic aspects of industrial operations, and also as a director of social research.

Gold was a member of the Silvermaster spy ring, a group of American citizens working within the government which gathered and transmitted classified information to the Soviet Union during World War II. The information he supplied Soviet intelligence was considered excellent information regarding United States Foreign Economic Administration. His salary in his job was more than double many other members of the group.

Gold served as an adviser on Foreign Economic Development Problems and Programs. Specifically he arranged for the analysis of plans and projects for the reconstruction of war damaged areas and the economic development of foreign countries, and helped formulate programs for major geographical areas of the world in conformance with the long range interests of the United States. Gold would apprise the relationships among industry, reconstruction, foreign development, U. S, conversion,and foreign disposal requirements, for the effective adjustment to one another, and apprise the relationship between war relief and immediate rehabilitation measures, and longer run proposals to minimize waste and major gaps in the continuity of reconstruction programs. And Gold would arrange for the comparative analysis of U.S. postwar requirements for war materials and consumers' goods and the production potentials and local market potentials of alternate development requirements.
Gold's code name in Soviet intelligence and in the Venona project is "Acorn".


Source

Silvermaster Group FBI FOIA


Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bela_Gold"


Categories:
Soviet spies
Venona Appendix A

Bernard Redmont

Bernard Sidney Redmont obtained an M.S. form the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism in 1939 and was awarded the school’s highest honor, Pulitzer Traveling Fellowship. Redmont has a reading and speaking knowledge of German and Latin.

Redmont was an employee of the Rockefeller Commission and was the head of the Foreign News Bureau of the Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs (CIAA).

Redmont was identified by Elizabeth Bentley as one of her contacts who supplied her with information from he gathered while employed in the CIAA for transmission to the Soviet Union. Redmont also appears in the Gorsky Memo, a December 1948 memo written by Anatoly Gorsky. Gorsky was a senior official of the Committee of Information (KI), the agency then supervising Soviet foreign intelligence. Code name "Mon" occurs in the Venona transcripts as an unidentified Soviet source and one compatible with identification of "Mon" as Redmont.

Redmont became CBS News Moscow and Paris bureau chief and also worked for Westinghouse Broadcasting Corporation/Group W and other media outlets. In 1961 Redmont served as President of the Anglo-American Press Association. In 1968 Redmont covered the Paris peace negotiations and was granted an interview by North Vietnamese negogiator Mai Van Bo. In 1973 Redmont covered the Yom Kippur War. Later he became Dean Emeritus of Boston University College of Communication. Redmont authored of Risks Worth Taking: The Odyssey of a Foreign Correspondent.


Sources

Alexander Vassiliev’s Notes on Anatoly Gorsky’s December 1948 Memo on Compromised American Sources and Networks

Professors of Denial: Ignoring the truth about American Communists

FBI Silvermaster file


External link

Bernard Redmont interview with Mai Van Bo, Hanoi's representative in Paris peace negotiations


Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernard_Redmont"


Categories:
Jewish Americans
Columbia alumni
American journalists
Soviet spies
Venona Appendix B

Flora Wovschin

Flora Don Wovschin was born 20 February 1923 in New York City. Her mother was Maria Wicher and her stepfather was Enos Wicher.

She attended the University of Wisconsin, Columbia University and Barnard College. At Barnard she was active in the American Students Union and may have been a member of American Youth for Democracy. She attended Barnard with Marion Davis Berdecio and Judith Coplon, both of whom Wovschin later recruited into service for the NKVD.

From 9 September 1943 to 20 February 1945 she worked in the Office of War Information then transferred to the United States Department of State She resigned from the State Department 20 September 1945. Wovschin acted as courier between Judith Coplon and Soviet intelligence. Wovschin transmitted to the Soviet Union the information that the Americans had somehow become aware of NKVD internal codenames for various American institutions, including CLUB, HOUSE, BANK and CABARET, as used in the NKVD's most secret communications. [1]

After the war she renounced her American citizenship and travelled to the Soviet Union where she married a Soviet engineer. An FBI counterintelligence report on Wovschin has a hand written note in the margin stating she may have died serving as a nurse in North Korea. Her code name in Soviet intelligence and in the Venona project is "Zora".


Source

NSA Venona Collection

227 Moscow to New York 13 March 1945, p.1

227 Moscow to New York 13 March 1945, p.2


External link

Bernard Schuster and Joseph Katz: KGB Master Spies in the United States


Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flora_Wovschin"


Categories:
Jewish Americans
Soviet spies
Venona Appendix A

Enos Wicher

Enos Regnet Wicher was married to Maria Wicher and was the stepfather of Flora Wovschin. He was a professor at Columbia University. During World War II he worked in the Wave Propagation Group at Columbia's Division of War Research and spied for Soviet intelligence. His code name in Soviet intelligence and in the Venona project is "Kin" (also "Keen").

Wicher was a two-time Wisconsin state chess champion.


Source

Haynes, John Earl & Klehr, Harvey (2000). Venona: Decoding Soviet Espionage in America, Yale University Press. ISBN 0300084625.


Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enos_Wicher"


Categories:
Jewish Americans
Soviet spies
Venona Appendix A

Bruno Pontecorvo

Bruno Pontecorvo (Pisa, Italy August 22, 1913 - Dubna, Russia September 24, 1993) was an Jewish-Italian atomic physicist, early assistant of Enrico Fermi then author of numerous studies in high energy physics, especially on neutrinos. He became notorious, even outside the scientific community, because of his voluntary move to the USSR in 1950, where he continued his research on the decay of the muon and on neutrinos. The prestigious Pontecorvo Prize was instituted in his memory in 1995.


Contents[hide]
1 Life
2 Selected Publications
3 Books about Bruno Pontecorvo
4 See also
5 External links


Life

Pontecorvo was born into a wealthy non-observant Italian Jewish family, at only 18 he was admitted to the Course of Physics held by Enrico Fermi at the University of Rome La Sapienza, becoming one of the closest (and the youngest) assistants of Fermi and one of the so called Via Panisperna boys (as the Fermi's group of scientists is often recalled, after the name of the street where their laboratory was).

In the 1934 he contributed to the famous Fermi's experiment showing the properties of slow neutron that led the way to the discovery of the nuclear fission.

In 1936 he moved to Paris to work in the laboratory of Irène and Frédéric Joliot-Curie on effects of collisions of neutrons with protons and to the electromagnetic transitions among isomers. During this period he was influenced by the ideas of socialism to which he remained loyal for the rest of his life. In Paris, in 1938, he joined with Marianne Nordblom, a young student of French Literature, and their first son was born during that year.

Pontecorvo was unable to return to Italy because of the fascist regime's racial discrimination against the Jews, he remained in Paris until the Nazis entered in the city, then he fled with his family to Spain and shortly after to the USA, where he had found employment for an oil company in Tulsa (Oklahoma). While at the oil company he developed a technology and an instrument for well logging (that he forgot or did not mind to patent), based on the properties of neutrons. This technology may be considered the first practical application of the Via Panisperna boys' discovery of slow neutrons.

In the USA he was not called to participate to the Manhattan Project for the construction of the atomic bomb, possibly because of his committed socialist beliefs. In 1943 was invited to join Chalk River Laboratories in Canada, where he concentrated on cosmic rays, on neutrinos and on the decay of muons.

In 1948, after he obtained the British citizenship, he was called by John Cockcroft to contribute to the project of the British atomic bomb and shortly after he was appointed as professor at the University of Liverpool.

On August 31, 1950, in the middle of a holiday in Italy he abruptly left Rome for Stockholm with his wife and three sons without informing friends or relatives. The next day he was helped by Soviet agents to enter the USSR. His abrupt disappearing caused lot of concern to many of the western intelligence services, mostly to the British and American ones, worried of the escape of atomic secrets on behalf of the Soviet Union after the then recent case of Klaus Fuchs. But as it was pointed out immediately, Pontecorvo had had only limited access to "secret subjects" and even later no allegation of spying or of transferring of secrets to the Soviets has ever been made against him.

In the USSR Pontecorvo was welcomed with honor and given a number of privileges reserved only to the Soviet nomenclature. He worked until his death in what is now the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research (JINR) in Dubna, concentrating entirely on theoretical studies of high energy particles and continuing his research on neutrinos and decay of muons. In recognition of his research he was awarded the Stalin Prize in 1953, membership to the Soviet Academy of Sciences in 1958 and two Orders of Lenin. In 1955 he appeared to the world in public at a press conference where he explained to the world the motivations of his choice to leave the West and work in the USSR. Pontecorvo did not leave the Soviet Union for many years, the first trip being in 1978 when he travelled to Italy. He died in Dubna in 1993, afflicted by Parkinson's disease.

In 1995, in recognition of his scientific merits, the prestigious Pontecorvo Prize has been instituted by the now Russian Joint Institute for Nuclear Research. The prize, awarded annually to an individual scientist, recognizes “the most significant investigations in elementary particle physics,” as acknowledged by the international scientific community.

The scientific work of Bruno Pontecorvo is full of formidable intuitions, some of which have represented milestones in modern physics, e.g.:

the intuition of how to detect anti-neutrinos generated in nuclear reactors (methodology used by Frederick Reines who was awarded for this with the Nobel prize in 1995);

the prediction that neutrinos associated with electrons where different from those associated with muons (for which experimental verification, another Nobel prize was awarded to J. Steinberger, L. Lederman and M. Schwartz in 1988);

the assumption that neutrinos, in the vacuum, may convert in another type of neutrinos, property known as neutrino oscillations (for which experimental verification a Nobel prize was awarded to M. Koshiba and Ray Davis in 2002).


Selected Publications

Neutron Well Logging - A New Geological Method Based on Nuclear Physics, Oil and Gas Journal, 1941, vol.40, p.32-33.1942.


Books about Bruno Pontecorvo

M. Mafai - Il lungo freddo: Storia di Bruno Pontecorvo, lo scienziato che scelse l'URSS - Milano, 1992


See also

solar neutrino problem
Sudbury Neutrino Observatory
Super-Kamiokande


External links

Biography / Scientific Works / Popular Articles / About B. Pontecorvo / Photoalbum (in english and russian)

1950's news of Pontecorvo's disappearing from BBC archive

CONSCIENCE, ARROGATION AND THE ATOMIC SCIENTISTS Journal of the Federation of American Scientists, Volume 47, No. 4, July/August 1994


Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bruno_Pontecorvo"


Categories:
1913 births
1983 deaths
Italian physicists
Nuclear secrecy
Nuclear physicists
Soviet spies
Venona Appendix C
Natives of Pisa
Jewish scientists

George Silverman

Abraham George Silverman graduated from Harvard University and was considered a brilliant mathemetician and statistician. In the early days of the President Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal, he worked for the Railroad Retirement Board in Washington D.C. From there he found employment in the Federal Coordinator of Transport, the United States Tariff Commission and the Labor Advisory Board of the National Recovery Administration. During World War II, Silverman was civilian Chief of Analysis and Plans to the Assistant Chief of the Army Air Forces Air Staff for Material and Service, assigned to the Pentagon. Silverman supplied documents from the Pentagon to the Silvermaster group of Soviet spies. Silverman knew Greg Silvermaster to be a conduit for CPUSA chairman, Earl Browder.

In 1941, Silverman was on loan to the Treasury Department and worked for a period of time on the frozen funds policy. Assistant Secretary of the United States Treasury Harry Dexter White used Silverman to supply documents to Soviet intelligence in the latter part of 1942 and early 1943. Presidential Assistant Lauchlin Currie furnished Silverman with oral information, including information that the United States was on the verge of breaking Soviet codes. Irving Kaplan of the War Production Board was also giving Silvernman information to be transmitted to the Soviet Union. As the war progressed, the volume of material increased. Silverman worked closely with Lud Ullman, who also worked at the Pentagon and did the photographing of stolen documents prior to being turned over to the Golos network.

In August 1945 Silverman left the Pentagon to work for the French Supply Council in Washington D.C., an office of the new French regime.

Silverman and Silvermaster learned much about U.S. policies and about Lauchlin Currie and Harry Dexter White's own views through their association. Currie appears to have been involved in carrying out orders from Roosevelt to get U.S. intelligence services to return Soviet cryptographic documents to the Soviet Union and to cease decoding operations.

The code name "Aileron" appears in the Venona project and was identified as Silverman. Aileron was possibly a reference to Silverman’s Air Force position.



Source

Silvermaster Group FBI FOIA

Politics and the Attack on FDR's Economists


Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Silverman"


Categories:
Soviet spies
Venona Appendix A
Jewish-American scientists

Boris Morros

Boris Morros (January 1, 1891 - January 8, 1963) was an American Communist Party member, Paramount Studios producer and Soviet agent.

Morros was born in Saint Petersburg, Russia and emigrated with his family to America. He was recruited as a Soviet spy in 1934, and Vasily Zarubin first became his contact in 1936.

The mysterious "Mr Guver" letter sent to FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover in 1943 from anonymous source now widely believed to be KGB Officer Vassili Mironov, named Morros as an agent working with Soviet intelligence and identified Elizabeth Zarubina as Morros contact.

In December Zarubin drove with Morros to Connecticut, where they met with Alfred Stern and his wife Martha Dodd Stern. Soviet intelligence wanted to use an investment from the Stern's in Morros sheet music company to serve as cover for espionage. The Stern's invested $130,000 in the Boris Morros Music Company.

In 1947 Morros became a counterspy for the FBI. He then reported on Jack Soble and members of the Soble spy ring, while also passing low-level secrets and misinformation back to Moscow. Morros' codename in Soviet intelligence and the Venona files is "FROST."
His credits include the Laurel and Hardy film The Flying Deuces and Second Chorus with Paulette Goddard and Fred Astaire. Morros also worked with Bing Crosby, Ginger Rogers, and Rudy Vallee.
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Internet links
Listing at Internet Movie Database
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Source

Boris Morros, My Ten Years as a Counter-Spy (London: Werner Laurie, 1959).

The Mocase Case.


Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boris_Morros"


Categories:
1891 births
1963 deaths
Soviet spies
Venona Appendix A
Cold War spies
Jewish-American businesspeople

Monday, February 27, 2006

The National Lawyers Guild

The National Lawyers Guild is a radical far-Left Bar Association in the United States for lawyers and related professions. Similar in some respects to the American Civil Liberties Union, it has stronger leftist political leanings. It was founded in 1936 by the Communist Party USA. During the Cold War, the NLG was an active affiliate of the International Association of Democratic Lawyers, a front for the Soviet Union. During 1978, the CIA described the NLG as "one of the most useful Communist front organizations at the service of the Soviet Communist Party, [an organization that] has so consistently demonstrated its support of Moscow's foreign policy objectives, and is so tied in with other front organizations and the Communist press, that it is difficult for it to pretend that its judgments are fair or relevant to basic legal tenets."

The NLG has been the vanguard of the Open Borders Lobby. The NLG opposes the Patriot Act, globalization, big business, the WTO, called for the adoption of "the Plan of Action from the 2001 UN World Conference Against Racism, Xenophobia, and Related Intolerance" (which were composed of high anti-American and anti-Israeli sentiments), and has given open support to convicted terrorist lawyer Lynne Stewart, post-conviction. Former NLG executive vice president Kit Gage replaced Sami al-Arian as president of the National Coalition to Protect Political Freedom (NCPPF) after al-Arian's February 2003 arrest on a number of terrorism charges.

The NLG is directly associated with the following far-Left organizations: Communist Party USA (CPUSA), Open Borders Lobby, the Southern Poverty Law Center, the National Network for Immigrant and Refugee Rights, Communities in Solidarity with Immigrant Workers, Refuse & Resist, Global Exchange (whose leader has been widely credited as being behind the Seattle WTO riots). The NLG is a member organization of the far-Left United for Peace and Justice coalition. Far left activist Chip Berlet is involved in the leadership of the National Lawyers Guild and has served as its Vice President, despite not having a law degree and not being an attorney himself.


According to Berlet:

"The cacophony at some [Guild] meetings. . . [arises from] debates featuring cadres from Leninist, Trotskyist, Stalinist, and Maoist groups, along with Marxists, anarchists, libertarians, and progressive independents - interacting with a preponderance of reluctant Democrats - all intertwined with multiple alternate identities as lawyers, legal workers, labor organizers, tribal sovereignty activists, civil liberties and civil rights advocates, environmentalists, feminists, gay men and lesbians, and people of color."[1]

The NLG has received funding from the Open Society Institute, the John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, and the Ford Foundation.

The NLG constitution states that one of its purposes is to establish a social and political movement "to the end that human rights shall be more sacred than property interests."
Michael Avery, a law professor at Suffolk University Law School, is the current President of the National Lawyers Guild. President-Elect Marjorie Cohn, a law professor at Thomas Jefferson School of Law, will become President in October 2006.
[edit]


External links

Tamiment Library NLG Archive Administrative Files 1937-1969
National Organization (National Office)
Washington, D.C. Chapter
Los Angeles Chapter
San Francisco Chapter
New York City Chapter
Massachusetts Chapter
Maryland Chapter
Minnesota Chapter
University of Wisconsin Chapter
NLG National Immigration Project
NLG Center for Democratic Communications
Discover the Networks' Dossier on the National Lawyers Guild


Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Lawyers_Guild"

Thursday, February 16, 2006

Marion Bachrach

Marion Bachrach was the sister of John Abt and also a member of the Ware group, a group of government employees in the New Deal administration of President Franklin Roosevelt who were also members of the secret appartus of the Communist Party of the United States (CPUSA) in the 1930s. Bachrach was the personal secretary and congressional office manager to Representative John Bernard of the Minnesota Farmer-Labor Party in 1937-1938. Bachrach also was a correspondent for the newspaper PM.

Membership and meeting of the Ware group were highly secretive, and many members eventually infiltrated into higher levels of the United States government during World War II. After Alger Hiss was cut out from closer contact with the Ware group, Hiss remained a close associate of Marion Bachrach.

On November 20, 1942 Soviet foreign intelligence (Dimitrov to Fitin, RTsKhIDNI 495-74-484) requested a background report on Bachrach from the Comintern and received a positive report.
Marion Bachrach wrote several tracts sold to Communist consumers. Some original publications appear to be quite profitable among collectors and sellers. Among them are Amnesty! Proposal of an amnesty program to release the members of the Communist Party imprisoned under the provisions of the Smith Act, This Obvious Violence, You Are on Trial and The Federal Grand Jury is Stacked Against You.


Sources

Harvey Klehr, John Earl Haynes, and Fridrikh Igorevich Firsov, The Secret World of American Communism (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1995)

John Earl Haynes and Harvey Klehr, Venona: Decoding Soviet Espionage in America (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1999)

FBI Silvermaster file


Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marion_Bachrach"


Category:
Venona Appendix D