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Description Field Ind Field Data
Leader LDR cam a 00
Control # 1 2003056164
Control # Id 3 DLC
Date 5 20190911110558.0
Fixed Data 8 030616r20031966inu b 001 0 eng
LC Card 10    $a 2003056164
ISBN 20    $a0872206866
ISBN 20    $a0872206858 (pbk.)
Obsolete 39    $a219027$cTLC
Cat. Source 40    $aDLC$cDLC$dDLC$dGCG
Geog. Area 43    $an-us---
LC Call 50 00 $aE806$b.N425 2003
Dewey Class 82 00 $a320.973$222
Title 245 00 $aNew Deal thought /$cedited by Howard Zinn.
Imprint 260    $aIndianapolis, IN. :$bHackett Pub. Co.,$c2003,c1966.
Phys Descrpt 300    $axlvii, 431 p. ;$c22 cm.
Series:Diff 490 $aAmerican heritage series
Note:General 500    $aOriginally published: Indianapolis : Bobbs-Merrill, c1966. (The American heritage series).
Note:Bibliog 504    $aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
Note:Content 505 00 $tThe myth of rugged American individualism (1931) /$rCharles A. Beard. -$tProduction for use (1933) /$rUpton Sinclair. -$tAfter capitalism--what? (1933) /$rReinhold Niebuhr. -$tThe age of distribution (1934) /$rStuart Chase. -$tThe future of liberalism (1935) /$rJohn Dewey. -$tA philosophy for politicans (1935) /$rThurman Arnold. -$tEvery man has a right to life (1932) /$rFranklin D. Roosevelt. -$tThe Roosevelt program and organization of the weak (1933) /$rPaul H. Douglas. -$tThe ambiguity of the New Deal (1934) /$rRobert M. MacIver. -$tBusiness needs the New Deal (1934) /$rEdward A. Filene. -$tWe need a declaration of interdependence (1936) /$rHenry A. Wallace. -$tBold, persistent experimentation (1932) /$rFranklin D. Roosevelt. -$tPlanning must replace Laissez Faire (1932) /$rRexford Guy Tugwell. -$tA business approach to economic planning (1934) /$rGerard Swope. -$tPlanning will lead to oligarchy (1937) /$rWalter Lippmann. -$tPlanning step by step (1944) /$rDavid E. Lilienthal. -$tControlling the giant corporation (1933) /$rErnest Gruening. -$tHow effective is securities regulation? (1934) /$rWilliam O. Douglas. -$tStop collectivism in business (1938) /$rFranklin D. Roosevelt. -$tThe rule of reason in antitrust action (1939) /$rThurman Arnold. -$tRoosevelt's refusal to make a choice (1939) /$rRaymond Moley. -$tThe concentration of economic power (1941) /$rTemporary National Economic Committee. -$tThe war on distress (1933) /$rHarry L. Hopkins. -$tEnd the slums (1938) /$rNathan Straus. -$tThe government should support art (1936) /$rLewis Mumford. -$tThe drama of the federal theater project (1939) /$rHallie Flanagan. -$tA TV a "yardstick" for the opinion industries (1939) /$rMax Lerner. -$tThe need for long-range public investment (1939) /$rAlvin Hansen. -$tUnions of their own choosing (1935) /$rThe Wagner Act. -$tWhy exclude domestic workers? (1935) /$rHeywood Broun. -$tIndustrial democracy in steel (1936) /$rJohn L. Lewis. -$tA G.M. stockholder visits Flint (1937) /$rRobert Morss Lovett. -$tA letter F.D.R. ought to write (1937) /$rOswald Garrison Villard. -$tHow the NLRB changed "little Siberia" (1939) /$rPhilip Murray. -$tUrban support for the farmer (1933) /$rFiorello La Guardia. -$tA defense of the New Deal Farm Program (1938) /$rHenry A. Wallace. -$tDamn the whole tenant system (1935) /$rWilliam R. Amberson. -$tThe torment of migrant workers in California (1936) /$rJohn Steinbeck. -$tFarm workers and "dirt farmers" need power (1942) /$rCarey McWilliams. -$tFor a thirty-hour work week (1933) /$rHugo Black. -$tThe consumer must be permitted to consume (1933) /$rStuart Chase. -$tThe principles of social security (1935) /$rFrances Perkins. -$tThe Social Security Act is only a beginning (1935) /$rHenry Ellenbogen. -$tA fair day's pay for a fair day's work (1937) /$rFranklin D. Roosevelt. -$tThe breakdown of relief (1938) /$rSamuel Lubell and Walter Everett. -$tGovernment should also protect "the right to health" (1938) /$rHenry E. Sigerist. -$tDoes the south owe the negro a New Deal? (1934) /$rGuy B. Johnson. -$tThe New Deal: slogans for the same raw deal (1935) /$rJohn P. Davis. -$tThe New Deal is for the negro (1935) /$rRobert C. Weaver. -$tU.S. Department of (white) Justice (1935) /$rWalter White. -$tNot "special consideration" but a "new social order for all" (1936) /$rHarold L. Ickes. -$tCan federal action change the south? (1940) /$rW.E.B. Du Bois. -$tSocial issues before the Supreme Court (1933) /$rFelix Frankfurter. -$tFallacies about the court (1935) /$rMorris R. Cohen. -$tThe court needs "new and younger blood" (1937) /$rFranklin D. Roosevelt. -$tMinimum-wage laws are constitutional (1937) /$rThe Supreme Court Retreats. -$tFDR was "a little left of center" (1946) /$rFrancis Perkins. -$tThe New Deal "moves in every direction at once" (1935) /$rBenjamin Stolberg and Warren Jay Vinton. -$tA new party to challenge capitalism (1935) /$rFloyd B. Olson. -$tSocialism, not Roosevelt's pale pink pills (1936) /$rNorman Thomas. -$tThe maintenance of prosperity is extremely difficult (1938) /$rJohn Maynard Keynes. -$tThe old problems are unsolved (1939) /$rJohn Dewey. -$t"Extraordinary accomplishments" and "failure in the central problem" (1940) /$rThe New Republic.
Local Note 590    $aRecommended in Resources for College Libraries
Subj:Geog. 651  0 $aUnited States$xHistory$y1933-1945$vSources.
Subj:Topical 650  0 $aNew Deal, 1933-1939$vSources.
Subj:Geog. 651  0 $aUnited States$xSocial policy$vSources.
AE:Pers Name 700 $aZinn, Howard,$d1922-2010.
SE:Ufm Title 830  0 $aAmerican heritage series (New York, N.Y.)