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Page Two NEW PACT WITH MEXICO CHURCH Vera Cruz Legislature Opposes Betrayal (Contr 1ec ior: 1 j Page One) r Dwight V Morrow yed a major role in the n Protest Betrayal. Vera C Mexico, That the r ry al- tween the Portes Gil gov- nd the cath church is iled with the universal rts would 1 repo. S tested by of the by on of the Vera Cruz leg-{ believed to be due to the crass, bet: coming from the} workers’ 3 nts’ movements of the country under the leadership of the Communist Party, the tional Peasan League, the Wor ers and Pe: Bloc and the new Militant tre on federation. ai! MOORS RESISTING FRENCH BOMBING Still h Garrison Walled In i BULLETIN. i-EL, BORDJ, Moroceo, June 14.— Two thousand mountain Moors are still firing with deadly effect in a guerilla warfare upon the loyal troops of France, in spite of air- planes which continued throughout the day yesterday to fire on the rebel forces with machine guns be- sides throwing bombs. In the French| outpost of Ait-Yakoub 360 men are} quartered. They are reported to be! gradually using last supplies of food, water and ammunition, Fail- | ing supplies are causing many desertions. Frencl TANGIER, Morocco, June 14.—j| Heavy fighting is reported from the | French post at Ait Yakoub, where Moorish tribesmen, rallying wide-} spread support in their fight against French imperialist domination, sur- round the garrison. Over 8,000 “troops under the leadership of the renowned butcher, General -Freyden- berg, are expected any moment to reinforce. the walled-in garrison. They were preceded by three squad- rons of airplanes from the Rich field, which dropped 600 bombs and used machine guns against the re- volutionaries with the same capacity for organized murder which won Freydenberg promotion in the early Riffian wars. In further att npts to minimize the stubborn resistance offered to the invaders, the French government | is attempting to pass off the losses | as “due to the bright-colored uni- forms” of their soldiers. The Ait Yakoub troops are hungry, and airplanes were unable to drop supplies. Resultant dissatisfaction among the rank and file of the troops is only intensified by the sul- len attitude of the men toward the! oppressive discipline of the Foreign Legion. These factors are viewed | by the Moors as paving the way for) @ven greater successes. = The adventurer-chief _Glaoui, ight over by the French since 1914, has again renewed his pledge aid the suppression of the revolt. is pledge, however, is weakenea the increased discontent of the ibesmen he rules. AK EXPULSION. M UNIVERSITY PITTSBURGH, (By Mail).— A, meeting of the full board of s of the University of Pitts- igh was held today in order to ar” the case of the two expelled dents of the university for their ities in behalf of the workers, e hearing, at which the expulsions re confirmed, was held behind losed doors at the Commonwealth it Co. building, a lorge finance ition in Pittsburgh. At. the beginning of the hearing, ie board gave out statements to two students showing that their ulsion on May 2 had been done ith the knowledge and consent of ie board. The charge was that the had held a meeting of the jiberal Club on the campus after ¢ administration of the university dissolyed the club. The ques- asked of Arthur G. McDowell id | distributing | will i, (Continued from Poge One) ghout the week beginning to- »w with Tag D, All work- | ers are urged by statements from the I, L, D. New York office, the New York district of the Commu-| _{|nist Pa Trade Union Educa- tional Le and other orga of workers to go to the I. L. llth St., Room 402, and en-| collectors for the Tag Days. cago workers are this week stirring leaflet list a: C a s to the great factories in} ion, and will hold two huge} meetings tomorrow, with good| speakers and a picnic Sunday, to} defend the Gastonia frame-up vic- tims. Big mass meetings are being or- ganized in Detroit, Monday night and Tuesday night. A Tuesday night mass meeting at Cleveland is scheduled. It will be in Insurance Center Hall. All these mass meet-| ings are under the auspices of the!| 4. LB, Lucy Parsons Helps. Lucy Parsons, widow of one of the | Chicago Haymarket martyrs, Albert} R. Parsons, writes her plea for the working class to defend the Gas- tonia strikers, and warns of the 1 ss of employers’ courts, greatly alarmed about the | lives of our comrades in Gastonia. I} quote you a sentence from Judge Gary’s ruling in the Haymar- ket case, He said: ‘It is not claimed | that defendants threw the bomb, but their writings and teachings paved the way that led to the throwing of the bomb,’ “The bomb was thrown when po- lice attacked a peaceful meeting, | self defense as in Gastonia. \t Wall Street War Service Calis for Huge Army ° I. L. D. in Court Battle for Lives of Strikers’ Leaders }Paul Crouch, also representing the union, The N. T. W. was demanding thru these three, the f of ehese three, the release of their headquarters, the newly erected hot up by the headed by Al- derholt, Since Alderholt’s death, the head- yy the dep- quarters has been held i members and union See Prisoners. Tom Jimison, attorney for the In- ternational Labor Defense, appeared before Superior Court Judge Har ing today and demanded on order to next door to the tent | vAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1929 Wall secretary Street’s of Good, above, present- ing a diploma t of the future leaders the the war 0 one in of worke grad- uating West Point cadet, In his speech to the cadets he called for a huge army to use against the workers, and in- structed the cadets in the fine points of suppressing militant workers, { * |from a new station, A large crowd gathered, Deputies drove past con- |tinually. One deputy and the weaver boss came to the house on the lot where the distribution was heing made and asked whether it as the new headquarters. Only one striker has accepted the food bribe of the Manville-Jenckes , /Co., offered to all strikers if they would go back to work and leave | the strike and the N. T. W. U, One woman told the mill man- Baugh, “I won’t take your breaking food. You made it ible for the W, I. R. to con- dy relief by your riot. We 0 her starve a few days and wait until the W. I. R. is cperat- ing again.” A number of sympathizers are cffering their lots for food distribu- tion purposes. The strikers are again getting relief. They are as ready as ever to carry on the strike. | The 24 SEMARD SHOWS — - GERMAN PARTY ~ TASKS AT MEET |World Conflicts Grow; | Must Fight “Rights” (Continued from Page One) son, foreign minister of the British king, will continue the war pre- parations against the Soviet Union together with his party comrades, Mueller of Germany and Boncour of | France. | “The second great contradiction of the present period is the growing | {revolutionary movement in the col- onial and vassal countries, The} third contradiction is the intensifi- leation of the antagonism among the perialist powers, particularly the Anglo-American antagonism, The British MacDonald government) means no pacifist democratic era nor | liquidation of the Anglo-American antagonism, | Growing Internal Contradictions. | “At the same time the internal | contradictions in the capitalist coun- | tries are intensifying parallel with} the proletarian will to fight. The} |present year has been characterized | by labor struggles everywhere. ‘Under the leadership of the Com- jmunist Party the working masses are clearly taking up a counter-of- fensive. | “The economic struggles are in-| icreasingly taking on a political char- | acter. Among the major tasks of | the German Communist Party is the | \fight for the hegemony of the work- | ing class. The successful conclusion of this struggle is the most im- portant condition for the final vic- tory of the proletariat. | | | An experienced traitor to the Donald also naturally knows how to get th members of his family. He obtained p daughter, running them in easy bourgeois parliamentary spoils are shown above. 1 SENATE PASSES. - DEBENTURELESS ~ FAKE FARM BILL \Large Majority Clears | Way for Conscription WASHINGTON, 14.—As expected President Hoover gave orders to end the sham war over “debentures” in the farm bill and get the fraud on the farm- ers out of the road so that attention could be paid to his military con- seriptién bills, the senate today passed the farm bill in the form de- cided upon in the house of repre- | sentatives. Yesterday the house rejected the {debenture proposition by a large vote. Today the joint conference |committee accepted the bill unani- without debentures. June | was when The senate vote is 74 to 8. The |debenture provision originated in \the senate, and was a conyenient British work rs like Ramsey Mac- | cxeuse for shifting responsibility i epOue ofieB0 for for the present bill, a wretched ex- rliament seats for his son an jeuse for farm aid promises made ts. “The recipients of the | ayving the campaign by Hoover and |other republican party spokesmen. dis' SOUTHERN PRESS BERATE “DAILY” Boss Press in Rage Against Exposures (Continued from Page One) | rifled with at this time. ... The bill now goes to Hoover, who “We have put up with all sorts |will sign it. It provides for no re- of insults and abuse from these in- |lief for the farmers, but outlines a terlopers.” 4 \raortgage plan, of farm loans, di- By “interlopers” they mean the |rected by and profiting the bankers, e lead: interfering with Man- | Bt aS PUBLISHER AIDED 5 ville-Jenckes’ little program of star- vation wages and the ten or twelve hour day for child slaves. The editorial says further: “We have treated them with con- |sideration and kindness” . . . (such jas Dayonetting them, blackjacking permit attorneys and Alfred Wagen- DEsotereeeienset lice Knecht, secretary of the Workevs|icined the W. I. R. local commit- International Relief, to see the Gas-|toe, and the Gastonia defense com- tonia relief committee of the W. I.| mittee of the International Labor R., which is in jail. Eventually the | pefonse, Gastonia city solicitor gave consent | Cops: Tamm Bask WHOA, and Wagenknecht was allowed in, William F. Dunne, also represent- ing the W. I. R., was not permitted to enter, The imprisoned relief committee turned over valuable information R and details of its work, and arrange- | °° : a co ments with various people for col- lecting food and maintaining the tent colony and relief station. The interview was with Bertha Craw-| ford, Robert Allen, K. Y. Hendricks, | Amy Schechter and Caroline Drew of the W. I. R. committee, but Wa- genknecht saw also some of the strike leaders, including Clarence Miller, Melvin Sanders and Vera Bush, the latter a woman N. T. W. organizer charged with murder. Horrible Jail Conditions. These prisoners were formerly held in the city jail, but are now the strikers, mill deputies and police yesterday turned back two truck- |loads of food sent here from New The Workers International elief appeals to all workers to ntribute food or funds for food, |clothing, medicine, ete. | tions for the Gastonia strike directly to Workers International Relief, National Office, 1 Union Square, New York, and they will be relayed to the W. I. R. committee in Gas- tonia, b Funds for the heavy defense ex- penses that will surely result in this, the most important labor frame-up Pursuing its policy. of starving | Fight Against Right Wing. |touching picture of a noble knight “A merciless struggle against the |of old, helmet, plume and all the right wing is necessary. The May |cther trappings, bowing in grief | Day events proved the development jcver the grave of Police Chief Al-| of the masses to a higher political |derholt, who led the attack on the | |stage of the class struggle and show- |strikers’ tent colony last Friday and | ed the swift development of the|was fatally wounded. The noble Sir social democrats into an open so-|Galahad carries a shield labelled |cial-faseist party. “Justice” and below this: “Gas- “The great significance of the |tonia.” In the foreground, lying in May events consists in that it has |the grass, is a snake labelled, “Com- | women and children, sending a masked mob to destroy their head- quarters at night, shooting up their tent colony and jailing hundreds of them in an attempt to cow their spirit and break thei {horrible conditions!) “Not Healthy for Them.” But the Gastonia Gazette editor- ial goes on to say that in spite of these “kindnesses” “they (the strik- strike against | Send dona- | given the Party the possibility of \utilizing the experience of the May |struggles in a non-acute revolution- ary situation for preparing the} Party for armed insurrection in an munism.” “Lynch justice weeps, but only for a moment,” is the announcement of the Manville-Jenckes Company and their tone is, “We'll see to it that! ers) have demoralized business and mill conditions in West Gastonia!” and: “We do not want to see any more \of these leaders and organizers com- POWERINTERESTS ‘Copley Denies Charges; Proven by Evidence WASHINGTON, June 14.—Ira C. |Copley,, owner of a chain of 23 |newspapers in California and Illi- |nois and active worker in the inter- jest of the power trust, was yester- day charged by Senator Norris with open connection with the power in- dustry at the Federal Trade Com jm on hearings. The weakness of Copley’s denial ;was revealed even more clearly these 71 workers who dared to re- | volt against their serfdom and to} defend their lives against murderous attacks do not get away.” Supply Funds. | In its issue of the day before, | June 10, the Gazette carries most! acute revolutionary situation. The May Day events prove that social | democracy has developed from social | chauvinism and social nationalism | to social imperialism and now to so- |eial fascism. The threats of the social fascists to establish a dicta- |New York. ing in here from New Jersey and|when he reviewed on the stand his It will not be healthy | operations in the utilities field in fer them.” jrural Illinois, where he controlled The editorial page of this issue|the Western United Corporation of the Gazette is largely devoted to |and its subsidiaries three years ago. “cussin’ out” the Raleigh News and | He said he had made a fortune in Observer and the Greensboro News, | utilities before entering the news- because in their comment on the/paper field. Copley admitted hold- Friday shooting these two papers|ing 12,500 shares of preferred stock tacilessly referred to the meaked|of the Western United having a par mob assault on the previous head-|value of $100 per share, but he at- “I have been sending the Inter-|removed to the county jail. In the national Labor Defense some money |city jail conditions are unbearable. from time to time, whenever I could | Six in one cell were forced to sleep collect some or sell the Labor De-|on ‘the concrete floor, with only fender, I will do all that I can now, | three blankets among them. The for a great deal of money will be!prisoners are fed a couple of sand- needed.” |wiches a day. Bush, Drew, Schech- 3 |ter and others were in a cell which Bulwinkle’s Earlier Frame-Up. | was filled with tear gas, said to GASTONIA, N. C., June 14.—|have resulted when the police were Major Bulwinkle, who fs leading the | experimenting with tear gas bombs efforts to electrocute Fred Beal and|jto throw at union meetings, One twelve more strike leaders and give} bomb exploded, and even the police at \eratic congress was a congress of ministers, police presidents, high state officials and trade union fak- ers, whereas the Congress of the Communist Party in the proletarian Wedding district is the exact oppo- ‘sisa—the real representative of the Worker Youth School |vevolutionary German proletariat. | s s. | Wedding and Mcrdeburg are two) for Trip to USSR worlds: en the one hand, the world Answering the eall of the Young DELEGATION CALL in America, should be rushed to In- A ‘ «_ |infl: atory statements, plainly | “ torship means d f fascist capi-|inflammatory b Pay. ternational Labor Defense, 80 East) 2iist ‘dictatorship against the peo. (calling for lynch nooses and the| 11th St., New York. Netaviat: stake: is aaa as | ern’ Uolierenen Refused the Truth. ‘ANSWER PIONEER “The Magdeburg. social demo- The Gastonia Gazette was given | | quarters a few weeks ago, a straight story of the events Fri- ae eae as a day and since by Juliet Stuart | Poyntz, and refused to print it. The Gazette also does some fancy juggling with names and guesses recklessly about individuals, It “dis- covers” in its issue of June 12 that Bill Dunne, a correspondent of the Nitgedaiget and Unity to Tax Guests to Aid Camp Nitgedeiget and Unity Daily Worker, is none other’ than|Camp, summer resorts where hun- | George Pershing, who was on the |dreds of workers spend their vaca- ground during the strike. tions, have decided to tax all visit- The two men do not in the least |ors to the camp 50 cents and all the Communist Press ! bourgeoisie, capitalism, imperialism Pioneers of America for a workers’ ard wer. preparations atainst. the |company and for Troy Jones when} 58 others long prison terms, is well| were gassed. known here. He was put on as Many of the prisoners were given head of the prosecution after the!a severe third degree, and the Manville-Jenckes officials and al/clothes of one prisoner are soaked crowd of their “Committee of One|in blood from the tortures inflicted Hundred” hired gunmen invaded the upon him by Gastonia police, The city council and made a stormy de-| prisoners had no opportunity to mand that Bulwinkle go on the city|wash for four days, payroll. The demonstration was | Lynch Mob Howls, merely to give the excuse for an ar-| Released prisoners report that a rangement made some time before by the city officials and the Man-| ville-Jenckes managers, informants declare, Bulwinkle was attorney for the Friday and Saturday, and that cries prisoners through the jail windows, Some of the strikers arrested days after the raid on the tent col- \Iynch mob gathered outside the jail | of “Lynch them” were heard by the | S Z *8 |Soviet Union; and on the other hand, | jchildren’s delegation to the Soviet |ing Wedding May Day barricades, | | Union, various organizations are be- | proletarian revolution, defense of| jginning to send in resolutions of en- |the Soviet Union, preparation of the jdorsement and backing. Among the | proletariat for armed insurrection |first to have been received was One |fo the overthrow of the capitalist |from the oa Pardean Jewish | system and the establishment of the Workers’ Children's. Schools, dictatorship of the proletariat. The statement adopted by the na- “rhe struggle against onportun- ei convention of the schools fol- ism is urgently necessary. Without BS jcleaning the Party ranks from op- es . ss ys., /portunism it is impossible to win | The preparation of all capitalist |the masses, impossible to win the countries for a new war and esve-|final victory. The expulsion of the | cially for an attack against the Sov- right wingers strengthened the Com- jiet Union, must draw great atten- |munist Party, but the cleansing | | | Foresee War. resemble each other, but the Gas- tonia Gazette has told so many lies |to be given to the Communist Party | about the strike that a few more make its pages merely more ridic- ulous but not more unreliable. Another absurd statement in the paper is that Beal was discovered reading the American Mereury, and that therefore Mencken, its editor, “and men of that stripe” are sup- week-enders 25 cents, the total sum press. These camps have contributed }much money to the revolutionary |movement in the past, All the la- bor struggles in recent years have received great aid from these two camps. tempted to pass his ownership of |the shares off hy saying he held them for his wife, his sister and a friend. | A program of intensified pub- \Ecity in which the Chicago Indus- \tvial Conservation Board planned to juse radio, lecture campaigns, motion |pictures and school rooms was out- lined by W. J, Sylvester, member of |the board. BIG FIRE PERILS WORKERS. SOFIA, June 14.—Twenty build- ings and factories at Phillipoplis | Were destroyed by a fire which lasted ten hours and inflicted heavy losses. Firemen were helpless owing to a lack of water, which was carried by hand from a nearby town. Workers narrowly escaped. porting the strike, The Charlotte Observer also chron- icles Albert Weisbord as “secretary of the Communist Party,” a state- ment which is far from the fact. More Lynching Editorials. | Today and Tomorrow ONLY! \the buck” to Bulwinkle. they attempted to frame Beal on! abduction charges because Jones, a| scab, had.a wife who left him and} stuck by the union. Beal was. freed | on that occasion, as the case was a| too obvious fraud. Mill Propagandist. Bulwinkle, also, at the time the Gastonia strikers’ delegation went to Washington, wrote Senator Over- man telling the absolute falsehood that “conditions in the textile mills of the South are good,” and that the “average wage is $18 a week.” Overman made this letter public, and when strikers who know the wage is about half what Bulwinkle stated, denounced the letter in Over- man’s presence, the senator “passed | The Released. The strikers released day before yesterday, all with minor charges | against them, are: J. B. Suddeth, H. | Drinkwater, Judd Quinn, Charles | Hipman, Lee Whitman, T. P. Hed- |don, Charles Heddon, James Robin- son, W. D. Martin, Edgar Passmore, Jesse Pickleseimer, J, D. McAbee, J. A. Anderson, Tom Self, G. W. Evans, Sam Griffin, N. M. Mor- ris, J. L. Murray, J, M. Lynch, G. W. Robinson, J. C. Shubert, Paul Shepafd, Will Shepard, and John Queen. An I. L, D. Gastonia Strikers’ De- fense Committee is being organized, The I. L. . has taken Charlotte head- guarters at 116.Court St, and has The I,L.D, has taken Charlotte head- quarters at Southern Hotel, Gas- tonia, The arrangements for coun- sel are being completed. Mayor Refuses Headquarters, Shaking his finger in Ellen Daw- son’s face, Mayor Denny of Gas- tonia yesterday denounced the “women associates of Beal” and categorically refused a request of James Reid, national president of only to this ,“‘illegal” meet- a the National Textile Workers Union, ony and the shooting were rail- lroaded on minor charges of va- grancy, etc., and sentenced. They are now in the chain gang. Two women strikers were among those given 30-day sentences. The Inter- national Labor Defense is appealing all these cases. Among the prisoners are Jane Tartness, sick with pellagra (a dis- case caused by insufficient variety cf food), and the striker, Gardner, who is very ill with tuberculosis. The confinement in the jail irritates his lungs and has made the disease worse. Two pregnant women, one in her seventh month, were forced to sleep on the concrete floor of the city jail. Distribution of cigarettes, to- bacco, tooth brushes, soap and maga- zines has been arranged by the W. tion of the workers of the entire world. “Tn connection with this, two very important children’s congresses will |take place this summer, one of the Roy Scouts in England and a second the Congress of the Soviet Union Pioneers, The purpose of both these congresses is clear, The congress of the Pioneers in Russia has in- vited children’s delegations from the entire world. This will be a worthy answer to the Boy Scout Jamboree that will be held in England. “Taking this into consideration, the Young Pioneer organization of America hes decided to send a chil- dien’s delegation to the U. §. S. R. The first convention of the Non- Partisan Jewish Workers’ Children’s School endorses this decision and pledges itself te help send « chil- I. R. for the prisoners in the jail. Starting New Colony. Wagenknecht was informed today that the deputies recognized the right of the workers’ guard at the dren’s delegation in where there should, also be included, if possible, a child from our schools.” tent colony to bear arms because they wanted to offer them, as a bribe, deputy sheriff's stars for liquor raids, An attempt is being made by the W. LR. to secure a new Jot and start a new tent colony for the evicted strikers. The deputies in possession of the W. I. R, relief tent are consuming the soft drinks and other supplies, A ransacking of the W. I. R. medicine chest re- sulted in deputies declaring they dis- coyered a bottle of paregoric. The police are trying to make a big scare about it. The city manager yesterday flatly refused to restore this relief tent to the W. I, R. The policy of the city is to starve the strikers into submission to slavery in the Loray mill. Food Distributed. A big distribution of food was Dawson, ‘an N, T. W. organizer, and made by the W. I, R. yesterday Lawyers, “Uplifters,” A.F.L. Misleaders Chat at Negro “Conference” Doctors, lawyers and prosecuting attorneys together with a handful of social workers and American Fed- eration of Labor officials, staged a so-called conference for Negro labor. in Cleveland. One of the meetings was arranged with speakers, but no questions were allowed; another meeting was a round table conference; the last ses- sion was another meeting, but only three questions were allowed after each speaker. ‘ The speakers were a doctor, a lawyer, and a Y. M, C. A, worker, who filled the conference with a luke-warm flavor of well-paid gocial workers. One whole meeting was | process is not yet finished. The \right wing role is now held by the conciliators, The attitude of the con- ciliators at the Party Congress, par- ticularly the speeches of Ewert and Meyer, show the conciliators now occupied the position of the right wing and had formed a new right wing fraction in the Party, Must Warn Conc“iators. “The Party must warn the con- ciliators that if they continue their activities th< will share the fate of the expelled liquidators, The Comintern is the Communist World Party, whereas the social-dernocratic parties are independent nationalist parties. Unlike the social democracy each section of the .Comintern is completely independent from bour- geoisie, from trust capital and fi- nance capital, “The delegation of the Communist International is convinced that the Communist Party Congress will give a clear Marxist-Leninist analysis of the situation, will exercise sharp self-criticism, will carry out the tasks before it and justify the hopes of the German and the international proletariat. “Long live the Communist Party of German! Long live the Commu- nist International! Long live the world proletarian revolution!” Storms of applause greeted the conclusion of Semard’s speech, the celegates rising and joining in the singing of the “International.” Transition to Fascism. Lenz, speaking for the Central Committec, declared the conciliators failed to gragp the new situation which was that of a transformation period from democratic parliamen- tarism to fascist distatorship, The conciliators’ memorandum declares the Brandlerists are making “oppor- tunist deviations from Bolshevist policy for the winning) of the devoted to the “Social Welfare of the Negro Worker.” masses,” and then declares the Com- munist Party majority has broken The Gastonia Gazette, completely | subservient to the Manville-Jenckes Company and a strikebreaking or- gan from the beginning, continues to incite to lynching. An editorial ir. its issue of June 10 is entitled, “In No Mood to Be Trifled With,” and states: “The temper of the people of this community is such as is not to be with the important Leninist lessons People who call Brandlerists “Bol- shevists with deviations,” and de- clare the Party majority un-Lenin- ist, do not belong in the Party, Lenz declared, Delegates from the Rhineland, from Erzgebirge, Silesia, the Ruhr, Berlin and Danzig spoke and the session closed. The afternoon session was ad- dressed by Semard, representative of the Executive Committee of the Communist International, His speech, which will be reported later, was greeted with tremendous en- thusiasm. LOWEST COST" EXCURSIONS TO RUSSIA js Be creel 8:5: Ueorme’ oi Judy 2A 8. S, Leviathan: eee duly 27 MOSCOW Complete AL mee rie, 32 5. FREE Soviet V No Documents Required American-Russian Travel Agency, Inc. 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