Clarence Miller (activist)

[6] On February 2, 1926, Miller met with Albert Weisbord, William Weinstone, Joseph Zack, and others named Kovetz, Blumkin, Baylin, and Dyaik.

"[16] (In 1949, Beal wrote, "Comrade Edith Miller was addressing the Court, but she was anticipating the commendation of Stalin's lackeys in New York and Moscow.

[18] Beal later noted, "It was characteristic of Southern justice that the four Yankee 'foreigners'–George Carter, Joseph Harrison, Clarence Miller, and I–were given the more severe sentences... from seventeen to twenty years of hard labor in the State prison at Raleigh.

[11] After the trial, William F. Dunne, editor of the Daily Worker, offered to help the condemned escape to the Soviet Union.

Clarence Miller, his wife, Beal, and three other co-defendants secretly raised funds and secured fake passports and left the States.

(In September 1931, when Beal made a second trip to Russia, he did so in the company of Myra Page and her husband, John Mackey.

In a 1937 article, Beal wrote, "I could not, like Clarence Miller and so many other complaisant dream-walkers, convince myself that the suffering and futility which I saw everywhere in Stalin-land were but figments of the Capitalist imagination.

[3] On June 27, 1931, the Lovestoneite newspaper Revolutionary Age mentioned an article on the Young Communist League that "Clarence Miller was district organizer back in 1928.

"[3] According to Vera Buch Weisbord, Miller had supported Jay Lovestone but left the Lovestoneites for the main CPUSA.

[11] In 1926, Sam Krieger took "Clarence Miller" as his Party name, which he used for his chapter in the 1926 book The Law of Social Revolution, published under the lead of Scott Nearing.