[CHAPTER III]
THE SOCIALIST PARTY OF AMERICA DEVELOPS A LEFT WING, [23]
Revolution Camouflaged as Evolution, [23]; "Yellows," "Reds," "Rights" and "Lefts," [23]; Origin of the Left Wing, [24]; Revolutionary Principles of the Left Wing, [24]; Sympathy with Russian Bolshevism, [25]; Industrial Unionism Advocated, [26]; Mass Action and Strikes the Prelude to Armed Rebellion, [26]; "Moderate" Socialism Rejected by American Revolutionists, [28]; To Overthrow the United States Government, [30]; Text of Call to Moscow International, [31]; American Socialist Party for "Industrial Unionism," [34].
[CHAPTER IV]
THE FREE-FOR-ALL FIGHT BETWEEN THE RIGHT AND LEFT WINGS, [35]
Rowdies at Socialist Meetings, [35]; Revolution in America "at Hand," [36]; "Existence of the Party at Stake," [37]; "The Steering Committee," [38]; Hillquit Says Left Wing is Not "Too Radical," [40]; "Friendly Separation," [41]; The Left Wing Gets More "Dictatorship" Than It Wants, [42]; The Rights Expel and Suspend Tens of Thousands, [42]; The Socialists' "Immortal" Executive Committee, [42]; Manifesto of the Third (Moscow) International, [45].
[CHAPTER V]
BIRTH OF THE COMMUNIST AND COMMUNIST LABOR PARTIES, [52]
Left Wing Conference, [52]; Left Wingers Split, [52]; Call for a Communist Convention, [53]; Too Many Would-Be Lenines and Trotzkys, [54]; The "Firing Squad," [55]; National Emergency Convention, [55]; Who Called the "Cops"? [57]; A Convention on Each Floor, [57]; The Communist and Communist Labor Parties Organize, [57]; Their Principles, [58]; "Reds" No Worse Than "Yellows," [58]; Bolshevism of the Socialist Party, [59]; Utterances at the Emergency Conference, [60]; Revolutionary Character of the Socialist Party, [65]; Trachtenberg on Affiliation with Moscow International, [68]; Glassberg Letter, [69]; Victor L. Berger, [70]; American Socialists Join the Third International, [74]; Hillquit Encourages the Communists, [74]; The Socialist Party's Revolutionary Manifesto, [71]-[75].