Word: browder
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...other important piece of business was cleared away. Earl Browder, their old chairman, heaved out in 1945 when he went on advocating cooperation with capitalism (when the wartime party line had been changed), abjectly pleaded for reinstatement as a party member. The 250 delegates snorted collectively: for Browder even to ask to be taken back was in itself a "form of anti-party activity." Perhaps deviationist Browder, who is still the Kremlin's publishing agent in the U.S., was also being held in reserve, in case Moscow's line should be changed again. In any event the comrades...
...door was subsequently opened to him. The Un-American Activities Committee invited him in to tell what he knew about the C.P. But Browder, testifying at a special closed session in Manhattan, said little. Afterwards, he wandered out, sat on a bench in Foley Square and told the press even less...
Where did the information go? She was sure it went to Russia, via Golos and his friends at Communist headquarters in Manhattan. After Golos died, she frequently saw Earl Browder, then the boss of the U.S. Communist Party, and showed him her political information. But her military information, she said, was turned over directly to "the real Russians." Sometimes she and some of her Washington contacts met at the Manhattan apartment of John Abt, onetime Government employee, now a moving spirit in Henry Wallace's Progressive Party (see Third Parties...
...Miami, the FBI also picked up Edward Browder Jr.,* a former R.A.F. pilot who was already under sentence for stealing 21 machine guns from a U.S. Government arsenal last April for use against Betancourt. Browder, the FBI said, organized last week's bombing mission, recruited the U.S. flyers and promised the pilots $30,000 apiece for the job. The question the FBI did not answer: Who financed Browder and paid for the planes...
...Commie Leader Earl Browder...