Child of the Sit-Downs_ The Revolutionary Life of Genora Dollinger - Carlton Jackson [118]
89. UAW Solidarity (Jan.–Feb. 2003): 23.
90. Genora to Sol, May 2, 1949, Dollinger Collection, box 1, folder 24, Reuther Library.
91. Ibid., May 14, 1949, Dollinger Collection, Reuther Library.
92. Ibid., May 6, 1949, Dollinger Collection, Reuther Library.
93. Ibid., May 7, 1949, Dollinger Collection, Reuther Library.
94. Sol to Genora, May 12, 1949, Dollinger Collection, box 1, file 24, Reuther Library.
95. Ibid., May 13, 1949, Dollinger Collection, Reuther Library.
5. Trials and Tragedies
1. Red Channels: The Report of Communist Influence in Radio and Television (New York: Counterattack, 1950), 215.
2. Counterattack 6:39 (Sept. 26, 1952): n. p.
3. Genora Dollinger, senatorial campaign speech, ca. 1948, Dollinger Papers, Los Angeles. See also Dollinger Collection, box 4, folder 11, Reuther Library.
4. Sol Dollinger, e-mail to the author, Jan. 20, 2000.
5. Gluck interview, 362–63.
6. Sol Dollinger, interview with the author, Oct. 31, 1997.
7. Genora Dollinger, campaign article, Flint Journal, Mar. 6, 1950.
8. “Genora Dollinger Is SWP Candidate for Congress,” Militant, Aug. 28, 1950, 4.
9. Ibid., Mar. 5, 1951.
10. Sol Dollinger, interview with the author, Oct. 31, 1997.
11. FBI report on Genora Dollinger, 1953.
12. Genora Dollinger, letter to the editor, Flint Journal, Oct. 30, 1952.
13. “How the Trucks Act Was Passed: Genora Dollinger Blames Major Parties for Reactionary Statute,” Militant, Apr. 28, 1952, 2.
14. FBI report on Genora Dollinger, 1953.
15. Sol Dollinger, interview with the author, Oct. 31, 1997.
16. FBI report on Genora Dollinger, 1951.
17. Sol Dollinger, interview with the author, Oct. 31, 1997.
18. Ibid.
19. “Goodbye, My Son,” Militant, Jan. 15, 1951, 3, Dollinger Collection, box 1, folder 27, Reuther Library.
20. Genora to Sol, Jan. 31, 1951, Dollinger Collection, box 1, folder 27, Reuther Library.
21. Condolence letters to Genora, Jan. 21, 1951, Dollinger Collection, box 2, folder 30, Reuther Library.
22. Genora to Sol, 1951, Dollinger Collection, box 1, folder 27, Reuther Library.
23. Speech to UAW 659, Jan. 1951, Dollinger Collection, box 4, folder 11, Reuther Library.
24. Genora to Sol, Jan. 16, 1951, Dollinger Collection, box 1, folder 27, Reuther Library.
25. Sol to Genora, Jan. 24, 1951, Dollinger Collection, box 1, folder 1, Reuther Library.
26. Genora to Sol, Jan. 19, 1951, Dollinger Collection, box 1, folder 27, Reuther Library.
27. Ibid., Jan. 25, 1951, Dollinger Collection, Reuther Library.
28. Sol to Genora, Feb. 2, 1951, Dollinger Collection, box 1, folder 28, Reuther Library.
29. Genora to Sol, Jan. 16, 1951, Dollinger Collection, box 1, folder 27, Reuther Library.
30. Ibid., Jan. 25, 1951, Dollinger Collection, Reuther Library.
31. FBI reports on Genora and Sol Dollinger, 1951, Dollinger Collection, box 5, folders 11–13, Reuther Library.
32. Ibid.
33. Ibid.
34. Genora to Sol, Feb. 10, 1953, Dollinger Collection, box 1, folder 29, Reuther Library.
35. Ronald Dollinger to Sol, Jan. 31, 1956, Dollinger Collection, box 1, folder 29, Reuther Library.
36. Genora to Sol, Jan. 31, 1956, Dollinger Collection, box 1, folder 30, Reuther Library.
37. Ibid., Oct. 5, 1953, Reuther Library.
38. Sol Dollinger, e-mail to the author, Jan. 29, 2000.
39. Sal Santen to Sol Dollinger, June 1954, Dollinger Collection, box 2, folder 51, Reuther Library. Sol’s friend, Sal Santen, was “sure” that America would be the base from which “Trotsky will conquer the whole world.” It would start in Latin America and then spread north. He told Sol that if you he and Genora “remain faithful to the International movement, the Trotskyists will be in the United States.”
40. Peter Rachle1, “Organizing ‘Wall to Wall’: The Independent Union of All Workers, 1933–37,” in We Are All Leaders: The Alternative Unionism of the Early 1930s, ed. Staughton Lynd (Urbana: Univ. of Illinois Press, 1996), 60. On trade unions, Farrell Dobbs argued that each of them is “a tiny mirror which reflects a small