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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 1929 Page Three IMPORTANT MISCELLANEOUS DETAILS IN SHOP PAPER WORK ARTICLE No. 5. By GERTRUDE HAESSLER. There are quite a number of de- ails in connection with getting out + shop paper, which, although they | lo not fall into any of the larger | ind more important categories into | vhich this series of articles was di- | rided, are yet of great significance | nd must be dealt with, | Choosing Name for Paper. The name of the paper must mean iomething. It must instantly bring | 0 the mind of the worker in the | thop something related to the shop | we industry, and indicate action or ggression of some kind. Many of our papers have hit upon very clever | aames. The Station Miners Blast | (Dist. 3) is one of the best examples, | and its twin, the Haddock Miners sight, is also good. The Pennsy | deadlight (Dist. 6) and The Head- ight (Dist. 13) are both good} aames for the railroad industry. The | Wright Propellor (Dist. 2, aero-| lane), The Workers Blade (Dist, 2. | razor factory), and The Spark Plug (Dist. 6, auto) all indicate the in- dustry as well as a driving force of some kind or another. The Red Star is in contradistinction to the| Red Cross, the insignia in the John-| son and Johnson sanitary appliances | plant (Dist. 2). Not only does it counteract the Red Cross atmos- phere, but it is a world revolutionary insignia. In the National Biscuit Company (Dist. 2) where the Uneeda | Biscuit is manufactured, the name chosen is Uneeda Workers Cham- pion—a clever name but a little too long to hit just the right note. In the White Motor Company, the name of the paper is the Red Motor (Dist. | 6). of which limit the horizon of the paper—The Packing House Organ- izer (Dist. 10) and the Northwest- | ern Shop News (Dist. 8). | All the rest of the papers have | rather commonplace names—the | name of the company or industry, with the word “Worker” tacked on. jour Party is organizationally based | There are two papers the names *on the plant. In the case of the world-famous firm like the Ford, the name Ford Work- er (Dist. 7 and 9) means something in itself, m the way of speed-up, the dreaded belt, ete. But what inspira- tion is there, for example, in a name | like The Soss Worker (Dist. 2)? In an iron works some tool or ma- | chine can certainly be found which | would supply a good name. Who Issues Paper? Along with the reluctance alread: mentioned previously in showing the | face of the Party and using the word Communism, goes the even greater reluctance to issue the paper officially in the name of the Com- | munist nucleus. There are two con- siderations which prompt this atti- tude—one that the workers are prej- udiced against Communism and will not read the paper if officially | Communist, and the other that the | workers in the shop nucleus will be | fired more quickly if discovered. But as one examines the papers through- out the period since the last conven- tion, one finds that reluctance van-| ishing, somwhat due to the insistence | of the Party mainly due to the fact | that the workers themselves have | realized that as long as they are| going to have a Communist outlook | expressed in what they write, they | might as well be open in issuing the | paper in their name. | Now all but four papers are issuing in the name of either the Communist nucleus, branch or unit of the W. P., or by the Communist members in the plant, or by a group of Communist | workers in the plant. The last des- ignation is not so good, because it | is better to indicate that there is a} definite unit of the Party working | within the plant. We want the workers to get used to the idea that In two papers absolutely nothing | is indicated about who issues them. | One was issued by the shop commit- | tee, but the second numebr came out under the banner of the Communist Party. This phase of dodging of identity has been almost entirely overcome, but there is another reluctance mani- | workers for you’’—the very tone we |adopt if such workers are employed ;conversations could be worked up|ising not to mention names, ete. But|this was, ex fest in urging the workers to join| want to avoid. We are part of the | there. the Party. This is more marked aco frequent and must also be overcome. | Not only does this method jon every shop issue that is preva-| shop and we speak as workers in|bring out strongly the fact that|lent, and also on every phase of the shop. These are the only ex-|there is super-exploitation of these | Marxian economics, and could be oversight, since in some issues we|pers strike the friendly and com-|courages the workers themselves, find recruiting articles and slogans |radely note that one would expect | who feel the extra pressure, to re- and in others of the same paper |from Communists trying to explain spond to appeals for correspondence. there is absolutely not one word. | |Fourteen papers, throughout all their issues, have never urged the work- jers either in articles or in slogans ly |to join the Party, even in those few | “we | workers.” \the paper also go and organize a eases where the aims of the Party were excellently explained. Of these Others, on the other hand, fre- | quently carry special articles ex-| plaining why workers should join. Some have special boxed slogans. | The election campaign brought out many recruiting slogans in papers | |which had never urged the workers | ally of too immediate a character, to join in any previous issues. Ob-| jviously this shortcoming is also be-|paigns of the Party sufficiently. | ing steadily overcome, and some pa- | Withdraw the Marines from Nica- pers are becoming quite skillful in| linking up the idea of joining in the | course of political or economic ar- ticles. The Hattie Carnegie Worker | (Dist. 2), for instance, writes an ar-| ticle on the results of the election | and develops it into an explanation | why the workers should join the Party. Comradely Tone of Paper. A simple and insignificant touch, but one which strikes the tone of the paper, is the use of the term workers” rather than “you The first speaks in a comradely tone and the second is very apt to sound aloof and degen- erate into a patronizing tone. One paper used the phrase “Doesn’t that teach you a lesson?” It could just as easily have read: “Shouldn’t that teach us a lesson?” Another paper said: “You workers should go and ‘organize a union.” And why shouldn’t the editors of union? Another paper says frankly: “This paper is printed by a group of steel to workers and to lead them. Use of Slogans. Slogans not only break up the| too solid, but they have a distinct | political vi alue, especially when fre-| some have not even mentiond the | quently repeated. Some of the pa- Party in any connection whatever. | pers use slogans very cleverly, while others ignore them entirely. Their use is becoming more and more fre- | quent, ‘however. | But the slogans suffer from the) same ills that afflict entire papers in many instances. They are gener- and don’t express the political cam- ragua, Defend the Soviet Union, Hands Off China—such types of slo- gans are swamped under the mass of Join the Union, Read the Daily Worker, Fight for the Eight-Hour Day, Demand Vacations With Pay, Abolish the Speed-up, etc. Vote Communist, of course, got its fair |share, and seemed to have given an impetus to the other political slogans as well, for they are gradually gain- ing space recently. Some slogans, even when used, are not well placed in the paper. They | are hidden in a maze of other ma-| terial, or they are all run together | n one particular column, instead of | being sprinkled about where they catch the eye better and help the ap- | pearance of the paper. Special Features. Those papers which have set aside special columns or sections or pages | for the youth or the women working in, the plant, devoted the special in- terests of these doubly-exploited | sections of the working class, have taken an important step which every | shop paper in the country should| |plains, and the other who who doesn’t So far only 16 papers devote special space to the young workers, | pushed in the shop papers, that no|Pulse” immediately in a matter that | ters and only 5 to the young girls and women. These are important aspects |paper and prevent it from looking | of the work and should not continue to be underestimated in the Party. Language sections have begun to} develop in a few papers. This is of | infinite importance in reaching the workers in the shop who don’t get our general propaganda, and it cre- ates a special confidence of these workers in the paper and consequent- ly in the Party. Of course this is feasible only in plants that employ |In some papers it is obviously an/ amples, however. All the other pa-|bodies of workers, but it also en-|syndicated throughout the country. Daily Worker. The campaign for the Daily Worker in the shop has been so well more need be said except to urge| the few papers that have neglected | it, to get busy. Date and Number. Putting the date on the paper, and |or three lines to repeat the address) is pt in a theoretical strangely enough at least ten papers | fashion, because the information was neglect to carry the address with|not available at the national office. the appeal. Some of them have the|/The matter of distributing the pa- address elsewhere in the paper, it per, for instance, and the question is true, but it would take only two/of selling it; how the information collected and written up; how and would be much more likely to| much of it is done by the unit mem- make the worker “obey that im-|bers themselves; all of these mat- require local information which is so easily postponed on any ex-|is difficult to obtain on a nation-wide cuse. seale. The whole subject of getting Some neglect putting in any ad-| out a shop paper, in every phase of three papers have neither address nor an appeal to write in. Even \dress whatever in their papers, and|the work, is worth a hand-book is- sued by the Party as a guide for the units, and such a handbook would the number of the issue, seems like| Where the address is given, it is cover the subjects mentioned above. an unimportant matter, but why not |Sometimes so obscure that the work- | Qhis is only part of the general cen- try to be as much like a newspaper |¢r could not easily find it when he tralization needed in this work, and |papers elsewhere when |as possible? And how much easier | Wants it. Sometimes the address is | until more detailed attention is given jit is to refer to previous issues, oy |Put inconspicuously at the end of a/it, it will continue to suffer from |to certain issues of brother shop pa-|!ong and involved article, \ which many of the grave defects that have occasion|means that only the worker who| been pointed out in the course of the large sections of one foreign na-|arises, to say nothing of making |Teads the article through, would find #rticles. tionality. The Chicago Harvester Worker (Dist. 8) appeals to the workers in| ftalian and in Polish to write to the paper in their own languages. The Hattie Carnegie Worker (Dist. 2) ap- peals to the great number. of Ital- ian needle trades workers in the shop by writing special articles in their own language. The Soss Worker) (Dist. 2) has a special Italian and a special Spanish section, and the Workers Blade (Dist. 2) has a spec- ial Spanish page. This compara- tively recent innovation ought to be adopted throughout the Party. The Mascot (Dist. 2) in several issues included a feature which ought to become prevalent throughout the country—a conversation carried on between two workers, one of them necessarily class-concious, who ex- | |no date, neither understand much, but is willing to learn. In this way the imperceptible wage-cutting tricks of the boss were explained step by step in one issue, and another issue explained how the boss works up prejudice between na- tionalities and exploits it to his own | advantage. Here again a centralized distributing apparatus for shop pa- per work would be valuable. Such easier the task of the Party re-|it- And in several instances the ad-| viewer. Four of our papers do not num- | ber their issues with either volume dress was hidden in the body of long articles. The best way to do is follow the But on the whole no one can deny that much progress has been made, a great deal in some phases of the work, and somewhat less in other cr number. Thirteen of them carry |'egular newspaper practice of print-| Phases, such as the political hand- And one paper carries| date nor number. It is a ing all the necessary information about the paper in a box in the top ling of the subjects. Still, for work that is yet in its infancy in the Party, small matter, but should not be neg. |corner of one of the pages, as the|We can say that although much is lected. The Demands. Every issue should carry the of- ficial demands, and if they are pure- |ly shop demands, it should be stated |Soss Worker (Dist. 2) has a others do. This box contains the b= The ecial how often, the address, and the scription and single copy rat |Ford Worker (Dist. 7) and some|yet to be done before they become what Communist organs the shop |name of the paper, who issues it,|Should be, compared with the level they had reached at the time of the last convention, the progress. that has been made is obvious and in- so. The constant repetition of the|box for the address, showing a contestable. demands, shows that the paper is fighting for a consistent policy, but even more important, should strikes | worker carrying a letter to the mail- box—suggestive and conspicuous. Every appeal to join the Party At the convention, the increased attention which the Party is sure jto give this very important phase |break out in the factory, the work-| should give the address of the Party. | of Party work, will result in a much jers would already be so familiar with our particular demands, that \they would be inclined to adopt them; | even in the face of official union re- Every ~~veal to read the Daily Worker should carry an address where it can be obtained—all of these addresses, even if it means | sistence. They should be conspicu- | repeating an address on every page | critical, but all greater comparative improvement than can be claimed at the presen! time. These articles have been extremely the criticism has ously placed in each issue, and boxed |or several times on a page, should | been made in a spirit of helpfulness, if possible. That sets them in a class |be given, for it pays to make it as/to stimulate the comrades to in- by themselves in each issue. Appeals by the papers to the| workers to write in shop news are quite prevalent in our papers, some making special efforts to gain the | paper work that cannot be covered \direct parti confidence of the worker by prom-| Conclusion. There are some aspects of shop even in such an extensive series as jeasy as possible for the worker to creased attention, and to give those | Fostering Workers Correspondence. | find the place he wants. who are only entering this phase 0; Party work, the benefit of practica experience which has been gainec in the course of seyeral years o! pation and experimenta work. |tion in this HALTED KOLCHAK ARMS DELIVERY Communist Delegate Led Picketing (Continued from Page One) take us approximately a period of 24 hours, “Immediately I saw who was the consignee for this stuff, I jumped up on the box and we had a mass meeting right there of all the work- ers assigned to that ship. (Loud and prolonged applause.) “T gave them a talk and said something like this: ‘Fellow-work- ers, are we going to allow these am- munitions to be shipped to kill off the Russian workers? We are not union men if we do this, and [’make a motion that we take the signa- tures of 25 members of the I. L. A., | which constitutes a general member- | ship meeting, and call everybody off | the dock and into the hall for a/ meeting.” “We did that and we called up Curley Cutwright, the business agent, and called the men off the ships to the hall. In that demon- stration there was just as big a} crowd as there is here. There were utimatums written up spontane- ously to Fresident Wilson and to congress, thet there be no muni- tions consigned to Kolchak or to Russia or to any foreign country cut of the port of Seattle. “The result was that we put a picket line right on that particular dock (applause). The rest of the boys all went back to their respec- tive ships to work. What was the result? Down came the imperialist cossacks, down came the policemen on horses, down came the American Legion, down came the militia in uniform and you know how they went to work and through the Legion they got the Legionnaires to load the ship. “But instead of taking a period of 24 or 30 hours, it took them four days to load that boat and the last report I had was from Com- rade Wolfe, that it was delayed long enough so that the Bolsheviks got that ship and turned the guns and used them against Kolchak and used them for the Russian Revolu- tion. (Overwhelming applause.) “T tell you, comrades, Seattle is a very strategical point. It is only approximately 5,000 miles from Seattle to Vladivostock and we, as members of the Communist Party in the oncoming war, will certainly do our part, And, in closing; I want to state, since I have been in New York for a period of ten days—we came here a little earlier—that the Seattle delegation has been on the dressmakers’ picket line, and I have been in those shops chasing the scabs out of the shops, and that is the test of solidarity.” (Loud and prolonged applause.) FLOAT FREIGHTER AGAIN. After 172 days’ effort, the 5,100- ton American steel freighter Edith was floated today in the harbor of San Juan, Porto Rico, where she was driven aground during a hur- ricane last Sept. 14, word received here today said. The vessel lay in two feet of water on a bed of solid rock. The salvage crew blasted has begun. Hoover has promise imperialism is seen involved. EQUITABLE HAD ~ BIG SLUSH FUND Refuses to Say What It | Did With $200,000 | the | Publication yesterday of comptroller’s record of the deal be- | tween the Equitable Bus Co. and the | Brooklyn-Manhattan Transfer Co. | gram for a bus monopoly through a merge’ of interests these two con- trol in Greater New York was ac- companied by a high degree of fren- | zied finance. | The deal is temporarily in abey- | ance, partly because of the publicity, | and, it is said, because the Tam-| rmany administration demanded too high a price for letting it go through. Slush Fund. A mysterious fund of $200,000 was accumulated by the Equitable officers, for unknown uses, and they refuse absolutely to say what it was intended for or what became of it. Frank R. Fageol, Ohio bus owner, and others admitted to the comp- troller according to the record just made public, that ‘they put large sums of ready cash into the Equit- able when it began to campaign for a license from the Tammany city administration for a merger with the B.-M. T. Fageol admits putting in $90,000 himself. Later, during the investigation, he changed his testimony and denied the gift. Ghandi Goes to Burma; Indian Boycott Goes On CALCUTTA, India, March 6,— Mahatma Ghandi, Indian leader, left for Rangoon, Burma, yesterday. The boycott against foraign cloth which led to a demonstration in Mirzapur Park recentiy, continues. Ghandi, who had urged a crowd in the park to boycott machine made British cloth, was shocked when na- tionalists set fire to’ foreign cloth as a menace to home industry. He was arrested during the demonstra- tion. He left today after signing a with dynamite a path through the ) feet wide. personal bond pledging his appear- Mobilize Troops to F: ight Clerical, Landlord Revolt i | d aid to the Pories Gil governmen $61,000,000 to Improve’ | Rivers and Harbors as. Part of Plans for War WASHINGTON, March 6.—Allot- | ment of approximately $50,000,000 | for river and harbor improvements in the United States and Hawaii was announced today by the secre- tary of war. More than $11,000,000 w: ted to the Missouri and Mis rivers. | | s allot- This appropriation is a disguised | naval appropriations in congress | that it would go for those harbors and harbor works that would be} useful for rapid embarking of | troops. | LONDON WORKERS FIGHT REACTION Support Leader Fired) by Union Executive (Wireless By “Inprecorr”) LONDON, March 6.—The execu- tive of the Garment Workers’ Union has. dismissed Elsbury, member of the Communist Party and London organizer of the union. His offense was that he led a successful strike in the Rego factory. At the same time Sullivan, the London secretary of the union, was placed on proba- tion, Cohen, the London executive com- mittee member of the union, left the meeting orgauized by the members to protest these actions. Tomorrow there will be a general meeting of the union members in London to consider supporting Els- bury and Sullivan. The desire of the London members to form a new union is intensified by these actions of the executive. DE VALERA FREE. BELFAST, Ireland, March 6 (UP) —Eamonn De Valera, Irish leader who was imprisoned here recently for violating an injunction against entering this section of the country, was released from prison today. He lance for a hearing on March 26, ‘ returned immediately to Dublin, Some of the Mexican federal troops on march through outskirts of Mexico City on way to fight the insurgents of the reactionary “agrarian” Obregonistas and the clericals. Actual fighting t to break the revolt, British SARGENT GIVES GRAFTER PAROLE Miller, Daugherty Pal Is Let Loose WASHINGTOD March 6. -— The SSiPPi | parole from Atlanta Penitentiary of | Colonel Thomas W. Miller, alien property custodian convicted of ex- (B.-M. T.) indicates that the pro-|¢xpenditure for military purposes, |tensive graft and sentenced to 18 jas it was stated in the debate on| months, was the last official act of Attorney General Sargent, just be- fore he turned over his office to William D. Mitchell. Since Sargent was going out of office anyway, it was thot better by administration chiefs that he re- ledse the associate of Attorney-Gen- eral Daugherty and collector of big graft from German property owners who wanted their factories back when the war was over. Miller was connected with a hold- up scheme by which the American Chemicals Co., German owned, had to pay a hundred thousand in Lib- jerty bonds before they could do busi- ness again, Daugherty was tried for this offense also, but got clear. Evidence at tte trial showed the bonds were laid on a bed in a hotel room and split three ways, The prosecution charged Daugherty got some of them. Newark Mass Meeting This Friday to Aid the Summit Silk Strikers A mass meeting, “to extend aid to the striking textile workers of Sum- mit, N. J.,” as a circular distributed there reads, is to be held this Fri- day evening at 8 o'clock at the Work- ers’ Progressive Center, 93 Mercer St., Newark, N. J. The meeting is to be held under the auspices of the National Textile Workers’ Union, which is leading the strike and the International Labor Defense. Prominent speakers from New York will address the meeting as will the Paterson organizer of the N. T. W., Martin Russak. The I. L. D. has agreed to take over the task of defending the scores of strikers in Summit,:nearly every man of which is now out on bail for some “offense” or other. STORIES OF USSR Subscription Drive to Safeguard Paper (Continued from Page One) | wood’s Book,” the Daily Worker is} now preparing to give its readers another unusual feature. Starting next Wednesday, we will begin pub- lishing short stories by the leading writers of Soviet Russia. These stories are contained in a new vol- ume, “Azure Cities,” just issued by International Publishers. They depict \the new life that is being built in | the workers’. and peasants’ republic and include some of the best literary works produced since the Revolution. Subscriptions and more subscrip- | tions. This is the great need of the Daily Worker. Every new subscriber will receive free the handsomely | bound copy of “Bill Haywood’s Book.” Every new subscriber will | to L’Huma DAILY’ TO PRINT ‘French Gov’t Censors News nite on Strike PARIS (By Mail).—The govern- ment of “National Union” is doing all in its power to sabotage the work of the “L’Humanite,” French Communist daily, and prevent the reports of the metal workers’ strike in Bordeaux fromm reaching Paris in time for publication. A telegram, sent by the Humanite | correspendent in Bordeaux, after being held up for hours, was cen- sored by the minister of the interior and out of the 1,086 words originally sent the censor removed 640 words. The Humanite calls this plain steal- ing of words and suppression of im- |portant news which the black cab- inet would not like to see published. The news item in question re- ported fraternization between the soldiers sent to break the strike and the workers, similar to the frater- nization in Grande Combe during the coal strike last month. The minister of the interior and the cen- be certain of not missing any of the installments of the unusually inter- esting Soviet stories which start next week, | All the workingclass news of im- ) portance in the world, two big fea-|learned the facts. tures, the revolutionary inspiration | {and guidance of the only fighting ‘proletarian daily newspaper in the English language in the world—this is what a sub will bring you. | Workers who are already regular | readers of the “Daily” must get} ibusy at once. mates and friends. Get them to subscribe. Build the newsstand cir- culation of the “Daily,” particularly |in New York City. Prevent future financial crises and strike a blow for your class by strengthening its chief organ. Subs, and more subs —flood the business office of the “Daily” with them! German Socialists Fight Unemployment Relief Legislation BERLIN (By Mail).—The Reich- stag was again the scene of a stor- my unemployment demonstration. |The whole of the motions in aid of the unemployed, brought in by the Communists in view of the millions out of work, were rejected by the bourgeois and social democratic parties. Even a motion proposed by |the SPG a few days ago, for the continuation of benefit even in cases of permanent unemployment lasting over one year, was now re- |jected with the votes of the SPG lafter the Communists had taken it jup again. The indignation roused by this deceitful manoeuvre was expressed in tempestous cries of “shame” from the unemployed in the galle- ries. One unemployed worker held an extremely excited and violent accusatory speech from the gallery against the SPG, and was support- ed by the enthusiastic applause of the Communist fraction. Von Kardorff, the vice-president broke off the session. Zérgiebel’s policemen threw themselves at once upon the demonstrating unemployed and dragged them from the visitors’ galleries by brutal force. ° | ‘The proletarian movement in the |nelf-conscioun, independent movement of the immense majority.—Karl Mar; (Communing Manifentod. leffice in Paris, worried at the lack Talk to your shop-| sor cut out the news about the |fraternization. The news was, how- | jever ebtained when the L’Humanite Jof news, telephoned Bordeaux and The telegram was paid for on the count of 1,086 words, but the Hu- manite received only 443 words. This was checked up by the t mony of the chief of the Bordeaux telegraph service. One whole section was cut out. This reported that a body of work- Bordeaux, singing revolutionary the soldiers were engaged in maneu- yers. The soldiers cheered and en- couraged the workers, despite the intervention of the officers. INT'L WOMEN'S DAY TOMORROW Big Celebration, ‘Daily’ | to Have Special Issue (Continued from Page One) jers marched before the infantry at |#!l other papers of the Workers (Communist) Party and the Left |songs, and right into the field where |wing will also issue special editions on International Women’s Day. The chief ‘slogans’ which the Wo- men’s Departmerit of the Workers | what right the telegrams were cen- Another cut passage related how (Communist) Party has issued for the pickets demonstrated before athe demonstrations are: struggle large shipyard, which was guarded against the war danger, and fight by an artillery corps and how they |capitalist rationalization. The tasks were cheered by the soldiers, some |it has set are: a recruiting drive of whom joined in the singing of |to bring women into the Party and the International. jthe trade unions, and the building The 1L’Humanite by of the new Left wing unions. demands , The demonstrations will be only sored on their arrival in Paris and |part of a campaign of propaganda why the Humanite was singled out, and organization which is to con- and characterizes the action as a|tinue in the Party and the mass war measure. organizations throughout March, VUVV FOO" 444444 42 A 4 vvv Marty Defies Rulers; | Says Labor Voted to | Free All Politicals| (I. L. D. News Service) | PARIS, (By Mail)—The “Hu- manite™ publishes an interview with Andre” Marty, the, newly elected Communist deputy for the consti- tuency of Puteaux. | Marty, it will be, remembered, is |in prison serving a sentence of 4 years for “insulting” Marshal Foch by publishing an open letter to |Foch in connection with the latter’s anti-Soviet interventionist plans as exposed in the famous interview with a representative of the British newspaper “Referee.” In the mean- time, the French Chamber of Depu- ties has refused to obtain the re- lease of Marty in order to permit him to take his seat, whereby the chamber has shown itself even more reactionary than the parliament of the Empire which permitted the im- prisoned deputies to take their seats. Marty declared: “I don’t know whether the chamber will decide to secure my release or not, but in any case, that is not so important. The workers voted for far more than my release. They voted for the release of Menetrier also and for the re- International Labor Defense Annual Bazaar TO AID CLASS WAR PRISONERS! Folk Dances; Athletics; Concert. FINNISH NIGHT TONIGHT TOMORROW March 7, 8, 9, 10 SATURDAY SUNDAY lease of the 143-other comrades who are in prison and serving sentences totalling 933 years of hard labor for their activities on behalf of the working class. Not only that, but their votes also represented a warn- ing for all those war-mongers who are preparing for an intervention against the Soviet Union.” Bolivian Telegraphers Begin General Strike LA PAZ, Bolivia (By Mail). — The telegraphers throughout all Bolivia have declared a strike, de- manding an exact accounting of the social insurarice funds over which they now have no control, but to which they are compelled to con- tribute, RESTAURANT EXHIBITIONS MUSIC CONCERTS Continuous Spectacle STAR CASINO. 107th Street and Park Avenue Join and Support the International Labor Defense! & 4 & 4 4 ty 4 4 4 vv VUVUCCCCC bf