26 results
- Tags: Censorship
- Item Type: Text
Statement on Theater Censorship, May 2, 1907 (excerpt)
Addams supports the idea of regulating theaters aimed at juvenile audiences, but not banning children from attending.
Trinity in Disgrace.--America's Opportunity., October 14, 1916
The article discusses Bertrand Russell's ouster from Trinity College at Cambridge because of his defense of a conscientious objector.
Testimony Before the House Judiciary Committee on the Espionage Bill, April 9, 1917
Addams testifies in opposition to a proposed bill that would censor anti-war speech before the House of Representatives Committee on Judiciary.
Jane Addams et al. to Woodrow Wilson, April 16, 1917
Addams and others ask Wilson to ensure that free speech and democratic values are not lost during the war.
Otto Peretz Schwarzschild to the Editor, June 8, 1917
Schwarzschild writes to newspaper editors proposing an office to help exchange messages between Americans and their relatives living in the Central Powers.
John Dennis Moore to Jane Addams, June 11, 1917
Moore hopes Addams won't be discouraged by press reaction to her speech.
Ernest Flagg Henderson to Jane Addams, June 13, 1917
Henderson sends Addams an anti-war article (not found) which he is having trouble having published.
Paul Underwood Kellogg to Jane Addams, August 8, 1917
Kellogg tells Addams that he plans to go to Europe and asks for letters of recommendation. He also discusses issues concerning the Survey's article on conscientious objectors.
Rosa Luxemburg to Sophie Liebknecht, December 1917
Luxemburg details her imprisonment for writing anti-war pamphlets, and asks for reading material.
Crystal Eastman, Emily Greene Balch, Agnes Lisle Brown Leach, and Jessie Wallace Hughan to Jane Addams, December 6, 1918
Eastman, Balch, Leach, and Hughan express their eagerness to have an international meeting of the Women's Congress as suggested by Post.
Vilma Glücklich to Marguerite Gobat, December 2, 1919
Glücklich describes the worsening political situation in Hungary.
The Open Forum: The Place for Free Discussion and Tolerance in American Progress, January 31, 1920
Gage discusses the role of open discussion with reference to the Haymarket uprising.
Keepers of the Faith Photograph, February 7, 1920
Addams's photograph was included in a gallery of Keepers of the Faith, along with a caption noting that the Justice Department had her under surveillance.
The Tribune and Miss Addams, February 14, 1920
The Survey corrects the February 7 article that indicated that Addams was under surveillance by the Justice Department.
Speech at Auditorium Recital Hall, February 22, 1920 (excerpts)
Addams and Catt opposes the efforts of the government to deport immigrant radicals because of their political beliefs.
Jane Addams to Paul Underwood Kellogg, March 16, 1920
Addams comments on Kellogg's recent discussions about Anita Whitney.
The Immigrant and Social Unrest, April 19, 1920
Addams discusses the relationship between immigrants and social unrest. This speech was given at the National Conference on Social Work in New Orleans.
Paul Underwood Kellogg to Jane Addams, May 6, 1920
Kellogg tells Addams about Edward Krehbiel's efforts for Anita Whitney.
The Necessity for Leadership in the Americanization Movement, June 19, 1920 (summary)
Addams's discussion of the role of immigrants in America was summarized in the published proceedings of the Biennial of the General Federation of Women's Clubs, held in Des Moines.
The Greatest Free Speech Trial of the War, February 1921
The American Civil Liberties Unions seeks funding for an appeal of the Industrial Workers of the World conspiracy case.
Albert De Silver to American Civil Liberties Union Members, February 15, 1921
De Silver asks American Civil Liberties Union members to allow the use of their names in an advertisement regarding the International Workers of the World free speech case.
Jane Addams to Upton Sinclair, August 17, 1922
Addams tells Sinclair about a time when her suffrage speech was banned from the University of Michigan's campus.
Jane Addams to Carrie Chapman Catt, May 31, 1927
Addams advises Catt that the attacks made against her by the Daughters of the American Revolution are a blend of truth and fiction.
Chicago's Mayor Turns Censor, November, 1927
Addams examines Mayor William Hale Thompson's censorship of British books and influences.
Truth and Justice vs. the D. A. R. Court Martial, ca. 1928
Bailie tells her side of her dispute with the Daughters of the American Revolution and its blacklist.
Our Threatened Heritage, April 5, 1928
Bailie's exposé on the leaders of the Daughters of the American Revolution.
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