The Daily Worker Newspaper, March 18, 1927, Page 3

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é THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRID ae 18, — FILIPINO CAUSE / Speech by Manuel Gomez FEDERATION OF —Grarret" over atcaning GERMAN PARTY LINKED UP WITH 70 THE BRUSSELS ANTLIMPERIALIST CONGRESS | ABQR, COLOMBIA CONGRESS ENDS Of Term ‘Americanism’ | Manuel Gomez represented the United States Section of thle JOINS THE R | l lJ AMID CHEERING Tikes Five Delegations to Pres. Coolidge Want No War For Mexican Oil Land WASHINGTON, March 17. ive delegations today presented A conference of the national com- |manders of the Grand Army of the | Republic, the United Spanish War Veterans, the American Legion, the ") Veterans of Foreign Wars and the | All-America Anti-Imperialist League at the Brussels Congress of CHINESE VicTO Y | Oppressed Colonial Peoples and Anti-Imperialists. His speech is e si ty me : bie - Be ie i Secretary of State Kello with ' an analysis of the present financial imperialism of Wall. Street, } Disabled Ameri ‘an A tara deciced prnchcn sauiicae othe jolts the lifters 1 . 5 ; . : ¢ m oe; \ : . & upon a definition for Americanism, } B ‘ . rf || Leader Says RevalutiNn or Sees ee Pere cea treet ot emerseen gee f oe = Americans Are qs "fotiows: “Americanism is an un. Delegates to Wotk for ences with Mexico be submitted 1] i | workers, failing love of country; loyalty to its D \ i i Bh dow cannery wedi nyo ieeted by R. I. L. U ng country; 103 ntrat The Counci swish Wi {| Is Hope of Oppresse . : . r y : "i institutions and ideals; eagerness to I arty Conce t son Noe aoe 2 eget i bicton 7. ‘ 7 7 BOGOTA, Columbia (By Mail)— defend it against all enemies; undi-| bn Beas Bib cpandiitny ~N Ae a aa, ate By LAURENCE TODD, PART I.—THE AMERICAN EMPIRE. ‘The Syndieato Central Obrero De Go- vided allegiance to the flag; and al FS Germany (By Mail)—The of Women Voters, The Foreign Po. 1| CFedeteved Presa, ie i dd vaces: |$2,600,000,000.~ Now the amount ex-|!0mbia (Conteil Federation of Work-|desire to secure the blessings of lib-/ fourth session of the congress of | (t¥ ‘Assecianion, and the Nettonal WASHINGTON, Mareh 17 (BPI | Comrades of All nations an se aalt aye $13,000,000 .000. “ers of Colombia) announced receipt erty to ourselves and posterity. the German Communist Party was Phe petition ef the Medien tae } Freadom £68 the, Philippinen; and eon-|_comne trams the and of the dollar, |ceeds §18,000,000,000. of communigation from the Red In-| ‘The Women’s Peace Union imme-|opened on Thursday morhing March) | The petition of the Foreign F {| version 6f Japan from an imperial and of dollar diplomacy,:I present to Z * sd ternational of ‘Trade Unions acceding | diately wrote another, reading: 3 with the presentationyof the re-| Ney -\ssociation bore eae J jyou the American dollar empire as A ‘ ; i i i ialis oy ‘ ‘ -| “Americatiam | i e brave port of the committee on credentials., Natures and was presented to the tic to a democratic force in the Orient, | To the lines of imperialist policy to the request of the Colombian la Americanism is the brave and P' i 4 " ‘ d ; i depends upon the success of the Na- | ‘He common problem of Aor Ue |represented by the Monroe Doctyine por movement for admittance into the true love of and loyalty to the be- The report showed 183 ates with | secretary ba George M. Lamonte, tionaligt xevolutionary movement in| cause it is an empire which takes / 44 the “Open Door,” was added that’ yanks of the R 1. L. U. lief, that the people, of the United decisive votes and 89 with consulta-, of “Ne ork. \tribute from the whole world. ior Maida lor is Ps Reaching full! ‘The letter of the S.C. 0. si\ Stabe ee HAVER. eldamne ve | tive votes. (26 ; if a 1) China, says Pedro Guevara, one of) “ims tanaiiall jot the Dawes Plan. ching The letter of the S.C. re ates, as individual citizens, are mand party. consantre { the two resident commissioners of | This. newest imperialism, of the | consciousness at last, American impe-' questing affiliation addr to | free and equal and that the govern-| Comrade Koetter then decla ake EE eR ee 2 United States speaks its own peculiar! |. )- bi Bote 4 ¥ “ he ss a Comrade Jansen then took the } the Philippines in congress. i the tknuuave bt demoatatio:| ialism became everywhere aggres- “Comrades, members of the . L.| ment of the United States is estab- | “The di s between the impe r.He brought greetings from the | “This Chinese Nationalist movement | at a Hy ig Nace It is “the;3\¥e; From the four corners of the [., Moscow,” reads: lished by the people to exercise pow-|ialist powers ure being intensi Communist Intrnational to the party | as Gionatiatin aah fides oe ee oe te des jearth, the super-profits of imperial- undation Labor Movement. ers delegated by them, in order to| from day to day, It is not possible Spvigg . : |. has strengthened the nationalistic sen-!| ¢end of China.” In contradiction to |‘ oe Tnited ‘, id : Br Pp congress and deciared that the So- ‘| timent in the Philippines,” Guevara|the British, Japanese and other vulgar | &™ began to pour into the United «Greetings of the International So- secure the blessings of liberty to)to declare that in one part of the Uist Ustion ta accom pliniine’ tlae wea ‘| told the Federated Press, because of | imperialists ha policy in China is a tee cial Revolution! themselves and their posterity.” world ‘a revolutionary situation exists | ¢¢ industeializing thee’ concies: He the policy adopted by the western! «Qpen Door.” “equal opportunity for; On the basis of the American dol-| “T am very glad to send you our| So there’s going to be a war over ‘and in another part a stabilization without Siiancia! assisteuen tums tk 1) powers in China. ‘The instinct of| gi)” . {lar empire—which, as all Latin Amer- greetings and to inform you that! Americanism between the soldiers of capitalism. 1 H revolU-| tnited States. ‘1 ngs 8 prevelirs 1) self-preservation of the Filipino peo-| But my Chinese friends, I want you | i¢ans know, is cemented not merely the Sindicato Central Obrero de Col-/ and the peace-loy Workers who thd -Seviab Uuion. and other aaaanene }} ple convinces them that now more |to bear in mind that dub Udele Sam, | bY dollars but also by the flesh and gmbia (Central Federation of Work-! bitterly resent the “American Plan” el ‘onan the adie of exchange i than ever nationalism must be devel-| who can talk so eloquently on behalf | blood of human beings slain and tor- ers of Columbia ) which 12 years of union busting and low wages have The opportunistic deviations disproves. bobaice’s aenaseinee yl oped in the islands. They have nojo¢ the “Open Door in China,” insists | tured ~the so: called American stand- laid the foundation in our country of) yet to be heard from. Likewise the ized by Dengel are no accident, that Soviet L “is becoming | ~ hope at all to be treated by the west-! upon a closed deor—closed, ldgked and ard of living is maintained in the g workers’ trade union moyement,' foreign-born, to whom “Americ but products of the general policy of oye niore depending on Seiial |) ern powers on a basis of equality and! pojted—in Latin America, whose ter- United Rtates. ‘ ‘ purely socialistic in character, has}ism” is coming to mean finger-print- | the German C. P.” : istic countries, I a now has a | oli ritory. the Monroe Doctring Meaia'ss) Even the A vorking elass lately radically ea it its pro- ing, cor td Spying, and occasional Discuss Opposition. favorable trade balance, which has | S Nationalism. i serve of U. 8S. finanee- BY ATIC AN, es S$ | ¢ramme with the aim of directing its| arrest and deportation for militant SR od ., 2 ae sh ae plage ph i] sEtrenal bees Cean s Capital, ‘The democratic-pacifist meth. shares to a certain extent in the prof- vier activities to fight for the aboli: unfon action. a seeseral sitcysalen, followed oft pues been acknowledired by Sha Maa q =“What we say about the Beil yall Bias pte of Amer- its of imperialism, and as a result so, by means of the dictatorship of “nt jthe former opposition group of Ruth omic council of the League of Na- 4| Beene. Bppling : pepe Lose. Unitas SS eer Nees oe ee Tt is inevi.|i8 Permeated with social-patriotic and the proletariat. of the division. of | Care Fischer, Maslov, Scholem, Schwan tions. Comrade Jansen warned ‘ue 1 States in her relations with the Philip-|1can imperialist policy. is imperialist ideology. I spéak partic-' pr oe aap r Royal Marriage to Seal and, Urbahn, in which the comrades German delegates that they must not 1, pines and in fact the legislation pre- tably sueceeded by the phase. of opens | ularly of the skilled workers and, in humanity into ¢ gre Af 2 : Pe vt Ns Weber, Bartels, Schlecht, Wittorf, underestimate the actual temporary }} Sented to congress and discussed in| brutal aggression, such as the entire general, of the dominant elements _ Request Admittance. — Italy’s Ratification aia Thacimam participated. industrial stabilization and its the committee on insular affairs with Caribbean and Central American pop- Fe ing “Taking its stand on this point of 53 “ ke ‘ formed jelezates . th strength { a te ilippi julations @f the Western Hemisphere |™4king up a large body of the mem-. i. ‘11.4 gindicato Central Obrero de Of" Bessarabian Treaty? 1) 5 folie. shinobi louder i de ‘ } reference to the Philippines has) Sia oe familiar with . tbership of the American Federatio®@ O31 i at its recent congress . = Y*|Maslov was calling a conference of, The congress adjourned on Sunday, (| Strengthened the nationalistic senti-|are already tamiar with. of Labor. Recent economic develops ~°UM»!4 io Resided ‘ My be t-| ROME, March 17.2-Denials of ‘re- | bis followers. at en and warned | March 6th after greetings had been | ment in the islands. The Filipino ‘ eos | ments in the United States furnishes .U1Smmousty decided to send greete) her, March 1/.—Denials, of re-| 4 cginst taking part in it. sent to the Communist International Hi people believed with good reason that, Modern imperialism has been de- ings to your Red International of| ports of the forthcoming engage-: * * * this proposed legislation in the recent | scribed here as imperialist capitalism bes eed siking Suan See session constituted the initial steps|—the present, final stage of that cap- joy 014 bu tax sekat Ok &. barede vard 2 i United States | italism which now exploits whole pop- ||" : ; toward adoption by the ‘ ni term, we call class collaboration. of the policy of the western powers | ulations abroad as well as millions of; Without Maine tate aitall pepeedine as applied to China, India, Java, | workers at home Nowhere * ae tha rapidly multiplying forms of Singapore and Indo-China. jmore obvious than in the United | «toss collaboration,” I need merely Blow To Imperialism. Stetes.. -Bome-at you “are familiar cite labor banking, labor insurance - ; og he ae with the accompanying progressive lente hid Mivin'’ end the ms ‘We feel that the ‘umpa bi he | development of expansionist foreign | * pueel eugedy tole: Pires Diaiast Chinese Nationalist eta t © | policy. Chndanteation ahd eeutreltinn-/| (0% lencies Radth 2 apely'oe Hea j present Chinese civil strife will mean! tion of industry led to monopoly, | 1lon principles rough the bona the downfall of the imperialisti¢| which Giskek tank ott the economic—| as trade unions. bey dence EES Y policy: of Japan. No gle | actor and therefore political—power of the |? i. of ae oy She force 4 a. for imperialism, Japan will then| 7 ation was concentrated in the hands | i ve lan” and the machinery ans d become a factor for demvcraey in the | of a small group of plutocrats center- | “ ed under el _Fecently adopte san East. A se ctr Japan could ed: in Wall Street. | eat to Ay: ae pe no menace to the Rs jepend ence ol \ In 1901 the United States Steel) , 10 2 a a itati cach 'y be : the Philippines—a point of ae high-| Corporation came into existence, | “el capitalism that se o. est importance to us in overcoming bringing together the most powerful | ese forms are ba transp anted be the fears of Americans who now op- financial groups, such as the hitherto | Burope, as part o the bd hecg A pose our independence. 3 .. [warring Rockefeller and Morgan in- rationalization.” Thus we nn iat tonahst moveme! vl P, . § umph of imperialism in Japan. That . | forget, however, those features which country will be engouraged to dev lop | selina phaned sk «iit ict United |eisted be Pepe ied ater. iid an imperi ie policy m competition | ci ates made its appearance upon the | 4 fore the nu a ar, on to wi ic with the western powers. \world imperialist stage. ‘The Spanish |{Re ae k é state socialism” was “Sovthe fucute of the Far East—' American War, entered into with the [S°menmes Bivens not merely China but Japan and the) characteristic innocent declarations of | “Class collaboration _ is no new Philippines—will be profoundly af-| libertarian purposes, was the initial |thing in saison It is as old as fected by the triumph of the Can- move in a foreign policy which con- reformism! sere paripaonaey dsc ‘tinues its consistent march to this} measures discussed in the re-' . Conquest of Ouba, Porto Rico! a panies pee ese nia 1 eae ae stepping ieenen from | formist leaders of the Second Interna- ‘ilipino hopes of independence were which American imper' the bills offered by administration | oq to Peay Hasitt and Santo Dom-|°f the colonial and semi-colonial peo- members to increase the power of/ingo, Central America—until the | Ples for national liberation, And it is Goy. Gen. Wood and to reduce the au-/whole Caribbean area becomes “an NOt aceidental either that the ruling thority of the Philippine legislature.! American lake.” In the Far East, | bureaueracy of the American Federa- None of them passed, but they had) Guam and the Philippine Islands are |tion of Labor is a “loyal supporter” the full support of President Coolidge} the spearhead of U. S. imperialist | of the U. S. State Department in for- | and Speaker Longworth. |policy with regard to Asia. jeign affairs. Criticism of imperialist _ | Developments during and since the | policy is limited to _inessentials, to BUY THE DAILY WORKER World War brought the United States | isolated outrages, to “excesses. AT THE NEWSSTANDS __ into the very front rank of imperial-| It is suggested that the state de- ~ — |ist powers. Industrial capacity was | partment has been inadvised here, RUG TUPUGaGagA ‘em endously increased. Wall Street that it has been subject to undue in- isucceeded the City of London as the | fluence there. Such criticisms—whieh dominant center of world finance,|@re similar to those sometimes in- |The United States passed from a |dulged in by middle class “liberals” i jdebtor to a creditor nation, with huge /#"d pacifists-perform a real service |interests in Europe as well as in Latin to imperialism, because they make it . e “America and Asia. Before the war seem that there is nothing fundamen- ‘Saas . /the total foreign investments’ of j tally wrong. | Saereny capitalism did not reachi (To Be Continued.) ' E RUTHENBERG lexplain the phenomenon to theip-fol- G. . i . CURRENT EVENTS | lowers. Under the new dispensation MEMORIAL ee ee ‘there was no need for explanations since it was a sin meriting eternal PCST CARDS | (Continued from Page One) and lo, this snake would suddenly _grow“to five times his original size | and swallow all the rest. And after | wrapping himself around his fellows | he would cast longing eyes on the | ‘druids. The saint had easy sailing after this. It is true that a few die- hards here and there clung to the old _system for a while, but St. Patrick ‘finally convinced them that they ‘eould have anything they wanted trom him as long as they did not make any trouble. He was a good politician. damnation to k the priest quest- ions, once christianity: was accepted. * *. *. O we®are for St. Patrick. Long may he thrive. Furthermore he may have been & revolutionist for all we know. of happening in March, Spring is an intoxicating season and the people have a tendency to develop a fever for toppling things over when the trees begin to sprout and the birds Legin to twitter in the fields. Here is a good idea. Let us prove that Vatrick was either a revolutionist or the predecessor of the great ma- gician Houdini. We are bound to win either way. Tammany Hall would never allow the Gath regiment ‘to march in“honor of a dead radi¢al and it is not reasonable to expect that . * * T. PATRICK informed the Irish people of that time that there was nothing entirely new under the sun. A spiritual revolution had ta- tken place in Iveland—that was all. Whereas formerly the people wor- ~ Revolutions have a habit | COMLES F OTHENAT RE Aven Duty INSZ Led Marek 2. 14379 IS whole tife was devored to the hullide of the Workers ‘Communist; Party which and when he knew death wax near, Nis last words wares "Tell the Comrates in vanbe, 10 build the Parcs, ine slash, andes the traders Comintern will win, LE on reverse side. 10 CENTS EACH Special rates in lots of ten or more. The DAILY WORKER PUB. CO, LITERATURE DEPT. 33 FIRST ST, NEW YORK shipped rivers and trees, the sun and ‘the moon, from now on they would worship a god who never came into ‘undignified contact with his follow- ‘ers, After all, gods must insist that their followers do not get too, fa- miliar. Anybody could go and scratch his back against a fir tree and pre- tend that he was looking for spirit- ual satisfaction instead of physical relief. Here was a god that kept his distance and expected his followers to do the same. Furthermore on the ground of economy the new system was superior to the old. * * * Bd might be destroyed by fire or blown from their roots by the wind, Rivers might go dry, the sun might be eclipsed by a cloud, like- wise the moon, This would cause the le to worry about the fate of Lie Ree Wy Tammany would care to play second | fiddle to a man who was sufficiently | well up in magic to be capable of | stealing an election without having | to resort to the crude device of stuff- | ing the ballot boxes. Won't Have to, Disarm. WASHINGTON, March 17.~The United States has assured France and Italy that they may come into President Coolidge’s proposed naval) disarmament conference without risk | of weakening their sea power, the State Department announced, today. | These assurances were contained | in new invitations to the two rs to reconsider their recent flat \re- jection of the proposed Coolidge pat. ley. Copies of these invitations, | quite similar, were made public to- Gay. Read he Daily Worker Every wy Trade Unions and to request to be admitted in the ranks of the latter. “We are writing the present let- ter to inform you of the foregoing resolution and to ask you to give us the necessary instructions so that ment of Crown Prince Humbert of Italy and Prince IHena of Roumania jare renewed from the Villa Savoia today. If the status of Prince Carol is settled a formal courtship may be countenanced by the Italian house-| the Syndicato Central Obrero de) hold. Columbia can consider itself accepted| « Princess Helene, the abandoned in your international. wife of Prince Carol, is a great! “In anticipation of the decision of the R. I. L. Us we send you our greet- ings.” In reply to thé above the Profin- tern (R. 1, Ly...) sent the following letter: “Your letter of the 25th of Sep- tember 1926 was discussed by the Executive Bureau of the Red Inter- national of Labor Unions at their meeting of th th of January. Acece| Affiliation. pe “The eet Bureau of the R. 1.| L. U, decided to accept your affili- ation, and thteugh you send their heartiest greetings to the working class of Colimbia, The Executive indeed, to set up fraternal relations with the workers of your country, which finds itself continually threat- ,ened by the covetous and plunder- It was not accidental that the re- ing imperialism of the United States,| ing country before any great damage The events now developing in your!) ialism proceed- | tional turned a deaf ear to the appeals continent herald the seizure contem- | of forest was burned. « plated by the United States bour-| geoisie, not only of the. central part} of America, but of the whole of| South America in the very near fu- ture. United States imperialism hav- ing enriched itself on the war now discards all democratic forms, and) not only endeavors by force to do-| minate the whole of America, but to! seize control of the politics of the world. With such a situation facing | us the union of the workers of Amer- ica, Europe and Asia, including the proletariat of U. S. S, R. and China, ‘is especially necessary. “The Executive Bureau of the Red! | International of Labor Unions greets | ‘your entrance into the family of the} revolutionary trade union movement, | and from this time onwards hopes | | that connections with the labor move- | ment of your country and the; work- | ers’ movements of other countries | will remain firm and constant. “The Executive Bureau hopes to meet your representative at the next —the IVth—world congress of the R. I. L. U. On date of its convening we shall inform you separately.” With fraternal greetings, General Secretary R. I. L. U. ‘Comrades and ‘Fellow Workers: After a year's heroic struggle of | the Passaic textile workers, the mil! ‘barons were forced to submit to a ‘union in the textile industry of Pas- saic. They are however putting ob- stacles in the way of maintaining? such an organization. Although the strike is almost over, they are taking ‘the workers back very slowly, with! é \the result that thousands of families are without means of existence, 'Pheir | children are hungry. { There are many families whose sole | Supporters were sent to jail for long! periods because of their activities in| the strike. You must come to their Yescue, Relief must go on with full | speed! The General Relief Committee, who! is maintaining a few food stores in| Passaic, appeals to all those who have taken milk coupons to send in their, money as soon as possible, no matter how much you have collected. Send | the money immediately to the Gen. eral Relief Committee, 799 Broadway, | Room 225, also ask for more coupons to sell, * “ The cffice is open from 9 a. m, . m, daily. | NERAL RELIEF COMMITTEE | to) PMT B friend of Princess Mafalda of Hess, ‘sister of Prince Humbert. Since ih these days royal matri- mony is merely a part of internation-| al politics, the talk of a match be- tween the two royal houses is taken by observers to indicate a degree of | permanency .to the Roumanian-Ital- ian partnership in the Balkans, |malized by ratification of the Bes: |abian treaty. New Jersey Forest Burns. BUTLER, N. J., March 17 probably was the first for fire of the year in northern New Jersey jcurred today on the slope of Kakout T Bureau of the Ko 1, L. U. is very glad, | Mountain, five miles from here. The | fire was discovered by a lookout of the state forestry department’s fire patrol and was extinguished by vol-/ oe} Comrades Pfeiffer, Mildenstreit, Bottcher, Briefand, Meyer, Diekmann, Ulbricht, and Haussen then discussed the problem of es ishing a er contact with left wing organizations, to follow up the gains made by the party since the X congress, and to watch the growing opposition move- ment inside the social democratic party. Close of the morning session. SR ae During the following sessions dele- gates from other countries were given the floor who told of the pro- blems and advances made by their respective parties. The congress then discussed var- ious internal problems in the Ge man situation, the necessity of strong opposition to the fascisti propaganda in Germany and the military mobili- zation against the Sovies Union. Other delegates spoke of the im- portance of a strong women’s organ- ization und urged greater activity to increase their influence. Repre- sentatives from the Young Spartacus League gave a detailed account of and all other parties represented by delegates present. The delegates rose to sing the International, and then cheered the cause of International solidarity. Germans Balks The British. GENEVA, March 17.—Germany geographically, politically and eco- nomically the keystone to any Wes- tern European combination of pow- ers against Russia, has blocked the British informal, but none the less, well-designed move here for concert- ed action against Soviet propaganda. That was the chief feature of the first quarterly League of Nations’ council meeting this year. Despite all officials’ denials, infor- mation coming from sourtes which ought to know something about it, insists that Sir Austen Chamberlain in his private talks with Herr Strese- mann, the German Foreign Minister, and others, touched on the subject of a blgc against the Union of Soviet Sociglist Republies. h unteers from here and the surround-| the League's work. After again discussing the frac-! tional struggle within the party, a demand was made for the liquidation pacientes {of opposition fights between ultra The Daily Worker Every Day lefts and rights, and to work to-' was done. About twenty-five acres Read TIRES ON TIME Miller Tires—factory equipment on many of America’s finest cars. Only a small down payment puts one or a set on your car. Pay the balance in convenient payments. Buy them now while prices are low. Electrify Your Radio With Yhileo A and B Eliminators ui Terms as Low as $10.00 Down Freiheit Jubilee SATURDAY EVENING APRIL 2nd, 1927 Farmerty B. 0. Bodkin Tire Co, 494 Central Avenue, Newark, N. J. DOLEY CABINETS MADISON SQUARE GARDEN 49th Street & 8th Avenue Freiheit Gesangs Verein accompanied by Yew York Symphony Orchestra will present the poem of the Russian Revolution TWELVE written by Alexander Block. Musie and Conducted by JACOB SCHAFER. BAKERY PRODUCTS (Union Made) If not, let us know and we'll instruct our driver to call at your home. Finnish Co-operati Tel. Windsor 9052, H sdk heey + + aa + % + ve Trading Association, Inc. 4301 Eighth Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. sede dede ete che ote ote eben ade ete oboe ne ate ofa abe obeobe 6 RUTHENBERG #. Memorial Meeting + Brooklyn, March 18, at Royal Palace + +e + + Engdahl, Weinstone, Rebecca Grecht, Ray Ragozin, : _— Prnserka and a Jewish speaker. + Lithuanian Chorus, + + + i a JACOMO RIMINI and SERGEI RODOMSKY in a special program. 16 Manhattan Ave., near Broadway. SPEAKERS: The well-known soprano ROSA RAISA in a special program, This will be her first recital n New York within the last 2 years. ALL SEATS RESERVED. Tickets: $1, $1.50 and $2 at Freiheit, 30 Union Square. PEER EEFEFEP EEE OS singing, “Aida.” Reesereeserterrere teeter de

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