Studs Terkel's FBI File Unearthed, With A Few Surprises

CHICAGO — Long before the FBI identified him as a suspected communist and spent decades watching him and talking to confidential informants about him, late Chicago author Studs Terkel came to the agency for a job.

That’s just one of the revelations – and maybe the most surprising one – contained in a thick FBI file that the NYCity News Service posted on its Web site over the weekend after obtaining it under a Freedom of Information Act request.

The release of the file marks the most extensive look into Terkel’s work and activities as viewed by federal authorities, particularly by the FBI when it was headed by J. Edgar Hoover.

That the FBI kept such a file is hardly a surprise. Terkel was an avowed liberal who supported the civil rights movement and opposed the Vietman War. His books and radio interviews stand as a tribute to working people and the downtrodden. Terkel spoke and wrote openly about being blacklisted during the McCarthy era, when studios – fearful of being accused of sympathizing with communists – refused to hire actors, writers, directors and others suspected of having pro-communist sentiments.

Terkel, who wrote the best-seller “Working” and Pulitzer Prize-winning “The Good War, died last year at the age of 96.

Andre Schiffrin, who edited all of Terkel’s books, said Terkel was “very proud” that FBI started a file on him, although he had applied for work at the agency as a “student fingerprint classifier” in 1934, according to one document.

“He was proud of the fact that when he applied for work at the FBI … Hoover (was) saying, ‘He’s not our kind of guy, not our kind of boy,’” said Schiffrin, a longtime friend of Terkel.

Documents in the FBI file date to 1945 and most are from the ’40s and ’50s. But the file also contains some documents from the 1960s and ’70s and, for some unknown reason, a copy of a 1990 Wall Street Journal article about junk bond king Michael Milken, in which Terkel was quoted.

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The news service reported that it received only 147 pages of what it said was a 269-page file. It said the FBI refused to hand over the rest for “privacy and other reasons.”

Most of the pages are devoted to the FBI’s effort to determine if Terkel was a communist.

Some references – such as one about a confidential informant telling the FBI that Terkel had agreed to give a “short talk at the Red Army Celebration” – seem laughable now. But they are the types of accusations that resulted in scores of people in the entertainment industry being blacklisted in the late 1940s and into the 1950s.

One confidential informant reported that Terkel appeared to take inspiration from the New York-based communist newspaper “Daily Worker” and that he once said blacklisted actor and singer Paul Robeson “is a product of all the people fighting for freedom, for justice for all.”

A 1950 file states that Terkel “reportedly has been Master of Ceremonies at various functions from 1945 to 1949 sponsored by the American Youth for Democracy, Joint Anti-Fascist Refugee Committee, civil Rights Congress and International Workers Order, which have been designated by the United States Attorney General as Communist Organizations.”

In at least one instance, a person whose name was redacted said Terkel was a member of the Communist Party of America.

Yet nowhere in the file does the FBI assert point-blank that Terkel was a party member.

And Schiffrin said Terkel wasn’t.

“He was certainly sympathetic to a lot of their causes, but he never did join,” said Schiffrin. “He used to boast that he never met a petition he didn’t like.”

Schiffrin said Terkel might have been disappointed to learn of one notation in the file: that he was discharged from the Army in 1943 because he was too old.

That wasn’t the reason, said Schiffrin. “Military intelligence got him out because he was subversive,” he said.

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Change that makes a difference?

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Corsi peddles "America for Sale"

For a well credentialed, alternative viewpoint, you may like to check out Corsi. It’s a bit on the grim side, but he gives some suggestions to remedy, at the end, which I always appreciate, as opposed to pure dissent.

And of course, we pray for our leaders and enemies and that God’s will is done.

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Oregon morn'

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The Beginner’s Guide To Minimalist Travel

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The Beginner’s Guide To Minimalist Travel

Editor’s note: This is a guest post from Karol Gajda of Ridiculously Extraordinary.

“Is that all your stuff?”


While embarking on my current 100+ day sojourn I’ve been asked that question almost daily. Most people take more stuff for a 3 day weekend break than I’ve taken on this long trip.


If you’ve struggled to pack what you need in a carry-on I will show you the light. It’s not difficult and you don’t have to do everything at once. Remember the old cliché, slow and steady wins the race.


1) The first step to minimalist travel is to use a smaller carry-on.


If you don’t have enough room to pack all your stuff you’ll be forced to eliminate the unnecessary.


Personally, I use a 32L backpack, the Deuter Futura 32. If you can’t grasp the small size of a 32 liter pack, it’s about the same volume as most school backpacks.


I also carry a small messenger bag just large enough to fit a paperback book, an iPod, a small bag of almonds, and my Asus Eee 1000HE, a 10″, 3 pound netbook PC.


I can actually fit all of my things in my backpack, but the messenger bag is great to take out while exploring during the day.


The biggest benefit of a backpack vs a rolling carry-on is a backpack is much easier to carry around.


2) No matter how long your trip, pack no more than 3 shirts in neutral colors so everything matches everything else.


This way you never have to think about what to wear. If your shirts, pants, and jacket always match you simply wear whatever is clean.


I have 2 black T shirts, 1 orange T shirt, and 1 pair of khaki colored convertible pants (which I obviously wear on the plane and everywhere else).


In case it gets cold, I also have a black long-sleeved shirt in addition to my black jacket.


As for shoes, 1 pair of black shoes to wear and 1 pair of flip flops (in my case, Vibram FiveFingers) to pack.


Dark colors are also better for visible cleanliness reasons. If you spill sauce on light colored clothing it stands out. Unfortunately I couldn’t find dark colored convertible pants that fit me (I’m 6′5″), so I had to settle on khaki.


3) Multi-use soap minimizes your liquids considerably.


Dr Bronner’s organic fair-trade liquid soap can be used to wash your body, shampoo your hair, brush your teeth, and clean your clothes. Buy it in large bottles and fill smaller 3 ounce airline-approved bottles to pack in your carry-on.


3 ounces of Dr Bronner’s soap lasts me about 4 weeks and yes, I use it for everything.


If Dr Bronner’s isn’t available in your area you have 2 options:


First, check out your local health food store and ask them if they carry organic vegetable based soap. This will be similar to Dr Bronner’s.


Second, every outdoor/camping store I’ve been to carries somethi…

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Nasal Irrigation Using a Neti Pot: For the Common Cold and Congestion

http://ezinearticles.com/?Nasal-Irrigation-Using-a-Neti-Pot:—For-the-Common-Cold-and-Congestion&id=85143

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U.S. House of Representatives Roll Call Votes

Boehner’s amendment fails. http://clerk.house.gov/evs/2009/index.asp

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health care abortion debate, live, now

Debating health care abortion ‘Stupak’ amendment to health care plan, live on CSPAN, now.

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Health care reform Pelosi, Dems lock up 218

Sources: Pelosi, Dems lock up 218 - Patrick O’Connor and John Bresnahan and Jonathan Allen - POLITICO.comHours before an expected vote on a sweeping health care bill, House Democrats believe they’ve secured the 218 votes they need to approve the bill, several party insiders said.

http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1109/29263.html

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Apple to launch Verizon iPhone, 2010

Report: Apple to launch Verizon iPhone in Q3 2010

By Prince McLean

Published: 05:00 PM EST
MacBook Pro Review
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A new report citing sources in the Taiwan handset supply chain says Apple has contracted to produce a UMTS/CDMA hybrid iPhone due in the third quarter of next year that will enable the company to sell a single global handset to all carriers, and specifically to Verizon Wireless in the US.

Though all my Verizon pals are soooo very Blackberry, perhaps this will lure them to a more open email standard.

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