Ronald Radosh
From KeyWiki
Ronald Radosh was a red-diaper baby who eventually broke from the communist movement and became a respected scholar/journalist in this area of research. His life story as a red-diaper baby and then as a more conservative political writer is told in the fascinating book ""Commies: My Journey Through the Old Left, the New Left and the Leftover Left."
Socialist Scholars Conference 1966
The Socialist Scholars Conference 1966, held September 9-11, at the Hotel Commodore, New York, included panels such as:[1]
Political Ideology of American Corporate Liberalism The Corporate Ideology of American Labor Leaders: From Gompers to Hillman
- Ronald Radosh, Queensborough Community College
The Corporate-Liberal Ascendancy and the Socialist Acquiescence: An Inquiry into Strange Times
- Martin J. Sklar, Rochester University
Commentators:
- Philip S. Foner, New York City
- Gabriel Kolko, University of Pennsylvania
- James Weinstein, Studies on the Left
- Robert Engler, Sarah Lawrence College
In The Times Founding sponsors
In 1976 founding sponsors of the Institute for Policy Studies/New American Movement linked socialist journal were;
- Robert Allen
- Julian Bond
- Noam Chomsky
- Barry Commoner
- Al Curtis
- Hugh DeLacy (1910-1986
- William Domhoff
- Douglas Dowd
- David Du Bois
- Barbara Ehrenreich
- Daniel Ellsberg
- Frances Putnam Fritchman
- Stephen Fritchman
- Barbara Garson
- Eugene D. Genovese
- Emily Gibson
- Michael Harrington (1928-1989)
- Dorothy Healey (1914-2006)
- David Horowitz
- Paul Jacobs (1918-1978)
- Arthur Kinoy
- Ann J. Lane
- Elinor Langer
- Jesse Lemisch
- Salvador Luria (1912-1991)
- Staughton Lynd,
- Harry Magdoff (1913-2006)
- Herbert Marcuse (1898-1979)
- Carey McWilliams (1905-1980)
- David Montgomery
- Carlos Munoz, Jr.
- Harvey O'Connor (1897-1987)
- Jessie Lloyd O’Connor (1904-1988)
- Earl Ofari
- Ronald Radosh
- Paul Schrade
- Derek Shearer
- Stan Steiner (1925-1987)
- Warren Susman (1927-1985)
- Paul Sweezy (1910-2004)
- E.P. Thompson (1924-1993)
- Namoi Weisstein
- William A. Williams (1921-1990)
- John Womack, Jr.[2]

