59223734http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6sn1gtfrevised
SNAC: Social Networks and Archival Context
VIAFrevised2015-09-22machineCPF merge programMerge v2.0revised2016-08-16T16:12:03machineSNAC EAC-CPF ParserBulk ingest into SNAC Databaserevised2016-08-16T16:12:03humanSystem Service (system@localhost)created2024-03-19machineSNAC EAC-CPF SerializerSNAC Identity Constellation serialized to EAC-CPFpersonCole, Natalie, 1950-....presumedCole, NataliepresumedCole, Natalie Maria 1950-presumed1950-02-06AmericansCommunist Party of the United States of America.Cole, Natalie, 1950-....Natalie Cole collection, [ca. 1991-ongoing].Natalie Cole collection, [ca. 1991-ongoing].2 folders.Collection contains clipping and publicity files. Museum of Performance & DesignThe, Daily Worker, and, The Daily World, Photographs Collection, Bulk, 1930-1990, 1920-2001Guide to the Daily Worker and Daily World Photographs Collection, 1920-2001227 Linear Feet in 226 record cartons and 2 oversized boxesThe official organ of the Communist Party, USA, the Daily Worker's editorial positions reflected the policies of the Communist Party. At the same time the paper also attempted to speak to the broad left-wing community in the United States that included labor, civil rights, and peace activists, with stories covering a wide range of events, organizations and individuals in the United States and around the world. As a daily newspaper, it covered the major stories of the twentieth century. However, the paper always placed an emphasis on radical social movements, social and economic conditions particularly in working class and minority communities, poverty, labor struggles, racial discrimination, right wing extremism with an emphasis on fascist and Nazi movements, and of course the Soviet Union and the world-wide Communist movement. The paper has had a succession of names and has been published in varying frequences between daily to weekly over the course of its existence. In 2010 it ceased print publication and became an electronic, online-only, weekly publication titled the People's World. The bulk of the collection consists of printed photographic images produced through a variety of processes, collected by the photography editors of the Daily Worker and its successor newspapers as a means of maintaining an organized collection of images for use in publication. Images of many important people, groups and events associated with the CPUSA and the American Left are present in the collection, as well as images of a wide variety of people, subjects and events not explicitly linked with the CPUSA or Left politics.GermanRussianEnglishTamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives