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      • Dilling was the best-known leader of the World War II women's isolationist movement, a grass-roots campaign that pressured Congress to refrain from helping the Allies. She was among 28 anti-war campaigners charged with sedition in 1942; the charges were dropped in 1946.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_Dilling
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  2. Feb 25, 2021 · The gruesome death of 22-year-old Elizabeth Short confounded Los Angeles investigators in the late 1940s and remained a topic of intrigue in the decades that followed.

  3. Elizabeth Eloise Kirkpatrick Dilling (April 19, 1894 – April 30, 1966) was an American writer and political activist. [2] In 1934, she published The Red Network—A Who's Who and Handbook of Radicalism for Patriots, which catalogs over 1,300 suspected communists and their sympathizers.

  4. Elizabeth Short was a 22-year-old native of Medford, Massachusetts, who headed west with aspirations of stardom. On January 15th, 1947, she was found dead in a vacant lot in L.A.’s Leimert...

  5. Elizabeth Dilling was a widely known critic of Judaism prior World War II until her death in 1967. In writing Jewish Religion, Ms. Dilling chose her research materials with care. Her primary source, the Soncino Talmud, was produced by the finest scholars of Judaism.

  6. According to Glen Jeansonne, professor of twentieth century American history at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee who studied Dilling and her allies while writing Women of the Far Right: The...

  7. Dec 18, 2015 · Elizabeth Short's murder remains one of the oldest cold cases in Los Angeles—and the most sensational killing in a notoriously dark period of the city’s history. On January 15, 1947, a local...

  8. Sep 8, 2022 · Leslie Dillon And Mark Hansen: Two Of The Prime Black Dahlia Suspects. Bettmann/Getty Images Leslie Dillon, a prime Black Dahlia suspect, in 1949. One theory about the Black Dahlia murder posits that it wasn’t one person who killed Elizabeth Short — but perhaps as many as three.