The Pro-Red Orchestra Starts Tuning Up in the U.S.A., 1941
Table of Contents
- Opinions and Opinion Makers in the U.S.A.
- Winston Churchill as a Factor Influencing Americans at the Outset, June 1941
- Initial Reaction of Interventionist Spokesmen and Press to the Soviet Entry into the European War
- Some Diplomatic and Economic Straws in the Wind
- The Roosevelt Administration and Press Supporters Lean Toward Aid at the Time of the August 1941 Atlantic Conference
- The Main Pockets of Resistance to Supporting Stalin
- American Communists as a Complication in the Soviet Aid Debate
- Time, Corporate America and “Culture” Contribute to the Confusion
- New Voices in Behalf of Assistance to Stalin, at Home and Abroad
- Continued Annoyance from Influential Anti-Soviet Liberal Personalities, While Pro-Aid Forces Gain in Academe
- October, 1941 Polls Register a Gain in Aid-to-Stalin Sentiment
- President Roosevelt Creates a Diversion Over the Religious Issue
- Diplomatic Moves Toward Vastly Increased Military Aid to Stalin
- Culture, Big Names and the Well-Placed Lend Their Assistance to the Building Pro-Soviet Bandwagon
- Echoes of the Religious Dust Up Reverberate
- British Propaganda Diversions, and Related American Anglophile Support for the Growing Enhancement of Stalin
- Fellow Travelers Domestic and Foreign Add Their Bit
- Vote of No Confidence from the Saturday Evening Post/Some Practical Consequences of Soviet Aid Get Aired
- The Origins of “Second Front” Talk in the West, and the Impact of Soviet Aid Production on American Labor and Business/ Businessmen
- Pearl Harbor Forces a Temporary Diversion in the Overall Drive to Assist the Soviet Union
- Reactions and Second-Guessing Following Stalin's Avoidance of Involvement in the War Against Japan
- The Dimensions of the Propaganda War as Waged by the Authors and Publishers
- The Ante Rises After Pearl Harbor on Production and Appropriations for Stalin/Davies' Book Mission to Moscow Sets the Tone on the Adulation of Soviet Communism for the Rest of the War
- Notes, 1-25
- Notes, 26-100
- Notes, 101-211
Copyright 1985 by James J. Martin.
Bibliographic information about this document: The Journal of Historical Review, vol. 6, no. 3 (fall 1985), pp. 261-368
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