Klein, Ignatz 1921-03-11
Rating |
|
Title |
Klein, Ignatz 1921-03-11 |
Abstract |
Letter to NEW YORK CALL, 3/11/21. Writes that Eugene V. Debs' daily message is the first thing that he looks for when he reads the NEW YORK CALL. Says that he was particularly impressed by today's message. Mentions that he has a great love for the man in prison. Expresses the hope that the NEW YORK CALL will do everything in its power to get Eugene V. Debs released. |
Author |
Klein, Ignatz |
Recipient |
New York Call |
Repository |
Special Collections Department. Indiana State University Library, Terre Haute, Indiana, 47809. |
Date digital |
2008-06-30 |
Date original |
1921-03-11 |
Coverage |
United States -- Indiana -- Vigo County -- Terre Haute -- 1874-1977 |
Subject |
New York Call Socialism -- United States -- Newspapers Amnesty Pardon Political prisoners Prisons Prison sentences |
WV3 Subject |
Famous Hoosiers Labor |
Provenance |
Cooper, Marguerite Debs |
Type |
text |
Material Type |
Correspondence |
Technical Metadata |
image/tiff; Epson Perfection 2450; Adobe Photoshop CS2 8.0; 500 ppi; |
Copyright |
Digital image (c) 2008 Indiana State University Library, Terre Haute, Indiana. |
Item ID |
evd-lettersk-00334.tif; |
Notes |
The New York Call, also known as the New York Evening Call or simply The Call, was a socialist daily newspaper published in New York City, N. Y. It was founded in 1908 and ceased in 1923. It was prosecuted under the Espionage Act for its opposition to United States involvement in World War I. Eugene V. Debs often wrote articles for The Call. |
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