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The "Revolutionary Union
Movement" form of organization spread to other Detroit plants: including FRUM (Ford Revolutionary Union Movement) at the Ford River Rouge Plant, and ELRUM (Eldon Avenue Revolutionary Union Movement) at the Chrysler Eldon Avenue plant. These organizations were brought together
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As it grew, DRUM faced a crisis of expectations. Auto workers had created an independent organization, but opinions differed about DRUM's future mission. Debates concerned whether DRUM should continue as a reform movement within the UAW or a dual-union which would seek to replace the UAW. The League
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against conditions in the
Hamtramck plant. The strike was observed by some 4,000 workers, lasted 2.5 days and prevented the production of 3,000 cars. In the subsequent Local 3 election, DRUM ran as an alternative slate. Although it did not win, the new organization drew notice for its militancy and
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of
Revolutionary Black Workers eventually split between those who wanted to remain focused on the auto industry and those who wished to expand the League into a national political organization. The nationally oriented movement, led by
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plant was 70 per cent black while the union local (UAW Local 3), the plant management and lower supervision, and the
Hamtramck city administration was dominated by older
156:; yet in spite of their growing presence in the auto-industry African-Americans rarely rose to positions of leadership within the union. On July 8, 1968 DRUM led a
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Ann
Thompson, Heather. "Whose Detroit? Politics, Labor, and Race in a Modern American City". Cornell University Press, 2001.
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373:. International Socialism (1st series), No. 36, April/May 1969. Transcribed & marked up by Einde O'Callaghan for the
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386:. Courtesy Endpage.com. Marked up by Einde O'Callaghan for the Marxists' Internet Archive. Retrieved August 13, 2005.
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DRUM sought to organize black workers to obtain concessions not only from the
Chrysler management, but also from the
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biography and writings. League of
Revolutionaries for a New America speakers bureau.
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The League of
Revolutionary Black Workers, Arab Americans, and Palestine Solidarity
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109:(DRUM) was an organization of African-American workers formed in May 1968 in the
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Class, Race, and Worker
Insurgency: The League of Revolutionary Black Workers
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302:, ed. James Green. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. 1983. Hardcover
383:"Workers have to deal with their own reality and that transforms them"
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Revolution in the Air: Sixties
Radicals turn to Lenin, Mao and Che
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Former African-American trade union movement in the United States
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351:"The League of Revolutionary Black Workers: A Historical Study"
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Workers' Struggles, Past and Present: A Radical America Reader
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and the senior leadership had been early supporters of the
316:. 250 pages Publisher: Cambridge University Press (1977)
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Detroit, I Do Mind Dying: A Study in Urban Revolution
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Walter P. Reuther Library of Labor and Urban Affairs
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298:, Vol.3, no.2 (Mar.-Apr. 1969), reprinted in
230:"Dodge Revolution Union Movement Finding Aid"
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161:willingness to challenge the UAW hierarchy.
336:Detroit Revolutionary Movements Collection
253:. 320 pages Publisher: Verso (June, 2002)
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423:Defunct trade unions in the United States
204:"The Dodge Revolutionary Union Movement"
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285:The Dodge Revolutionary Union Movement
167:League of Revolutionary Black Workers
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408:African-American history in Detroit
272:; Revised edition (August 1, 1998)
370:Dodge Revolutionary Union Movement
107:Dodge Revolutionary Union Movement
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363:Martin Glaberman Internet Archive
264:Georgakas Dan and Marvin Surkin.
428:Trade unions established in 1968
133:estimated at the time that the
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154:American Civil Rights Movement
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438:African-American trade unions
85:Politics of the United States
377:. Retrieved August 13, 2005.
24:Dodge Revolutionary Movement
292:Working Class Self Activity
169:which formed in June 1969.
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413:African-American socialism
202:Glaberman, Martin (1969).
375:Marxists Internet Archive
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448:Trade unions in Michigan
268:. 254 pages Publisher:
208:International Socialism
129:Detroit labor activist
345:Wayne State University
312:Geschwender, James A.
183:United National Caucus
179:New Communist Movement
443:Socialism in Michigan
353:by A. Muhammad Ahmad.
111:Chrysler Corporation
380:Glaberman, Martin.
367:Glaberman, Martin.
146:United Auto Workers
117:assembly plant in
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119:Detroit, Michigan
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67:Civil Rights
47:Headquarters
31:Abbreviation
75:Black Power
402:Categories
287:. Audio CD
189:References
115:Dodge Main
141:workers.
135:Hamtramck
95:Elections
63:Communism
214:21 April
58:Ideology
42:May 1968
339:at the
165:in the
125:History
39:Founded
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433:Dodge
318:ISBN
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