LEON TROTZKY ASSERTS PARLIAMENTARY MOVEMENT HAS BEEN RIPPED APART – DESERTION OF PARTY LEADERS A CRIME, HE SAYS. (Call)
New York Call Tuesday, January 16, 1917 pp. 1,3
New York Call Tuesday, January 16, 1917 pp. 1,3
New York Call December 27, 1916 p. 2.
“Man cannot live by bread alone, not even one dollar and eighty-two cents worth. Neither can a woman.” Dorothy Day’s humorous article about trying to live on $5 a week, the typical wage of young working women. (New York Call Monday, December 18, 1916, page 2.)
New York Call Friday, December 15, 1916, page 3
New York Call Tuesday, December 12, 1916, page 2
New York Call Sunday, December 10, 1916, page 3
New York Call December 6, 1916 p. 3
New York Call Sunday, December 3, 1916, page 5
New York Call Friday, December 3, 1916, page 3
New York Call November 30, Thanksgiving Day, 1916 p. 2
New York Call November 30, Thanksgiving Day, 1916 p. 2
New York Call November 21, 1916 p. 3
New York Call November 13, 1916 [Her first page 1 by-line]
New York Call November 16, 1916 Page 1
New York Call November 15, 1916 p.2
New York Call Sunday, November 12, 1916, page 2
Summary: Her first court assignment is confusing with no sure way of getting home. (New York Call 11 November 1916, p. 2 DDLW #61)
Three short stories and a poem Dorothy submitted to the Chicago Daily as a young girl.
Summary: Tales from each stop of a long journey from New York through Cleveland, Chicago, St. Louis, Tulsa to Amarillo, Texas. Tells of many efforts at the works of mercy, learning to make rosaries, lectures, liturgies, and enduring suffering. (The Catholic Worker, January 1950, 1, 8. DDLW #606).