The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 15, 1930, Page 4

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Published by fe comprofmny Square, New York City, N Page Four Addrees and mail all checks to the Daily Worl ane Union § fee ‘ Y. Telephone Drive. ew of the Party re ding did not appear in Recruiting drive enters a leads the first third.” were also omitted in following hes e national edition: delp’ both editic Inly five districts can be commended for proving the tempo of the recruiting this last week. These are Detroit from 47 last week to 80 this week, New York from 115 to 139, Chicago from 59 to 69, Philadelphia from o 46 and Seattle with its first recruitment district riladelphia squeezed into first e this week with 51 per cent of its quota. he South, without adding any new members holds s nd place, while Detroit with the best record of the week still holds third place. After New York and Chicago were tied for fourth place last week, New York stepped ahead leaving Chicago behind. California, which in the early part of the drive looked ender for first place has fallen to like a cor seventh p “The results of the drive is a yardstick to measure the activity of the various Party dis- cts. Good resolutions and speeches do not recruit any members. .Only activity in the shops and mass organizations can accomplish this. With this in mind such districts as Bos- ton, Buffalo, Cleveland, Minnesota and Conn- ecticut must work doubly hard to keep from being sharply criticized as the conclusion of the drive. Pittsburgh, Kansas City, and Da- kota still are unaware that there is a recruit- ing drive under we Revolutionary Rivalry Grows New Bedford with 22 new members recruited during the first half of the Recruiting Drive, which is one-third of the entire new members recruited in the Boston district, has come for- ward in true proletarian style, worthy of the battles of the textile workers, and challenges all the Boston sections follow: Communist Party, U.S.A., District No. 1, Sec- tions 1, 2, 3, Boston, Mass. Dear Comrades: This is to inform you that at the last meet- ing of our Section Executive Committee, we decided to challenge your section, that we will fulfill our quota before you will. We are in a strong fighting mood, and we will fight to a finish. We are mobilizing our forces for this task, and you can be sure that we will beat you. We are making intensive preparations to make this Party Recruiting Drive a 100 per cent success. Also we want to inform you that we have not only challenged your section, but all the Boston Sections— No. 1, No. 2 and No. 3, You do not know our strategy, but we will give you some comradely advice—Call your army together into a general membership meeting—take up this question thoroughly and prepare them for a fight! the Agrarian Cri Grows Sharper By ALFRED KNUTSON. “HJOLD your wheat and cotton and you will get a better price!’ This is the ery of the farmer capitalists, of the Farmers’ Union, of | the Farm Bureau, of Mr. Legge and the Farm Board, and all the other agencies of finance capital. Don’t glut the market, just permit “or- | derly marketing” to take place, and presto, the problems of the farmers will be solved! But this does not solve the problem for the farmer. He does not get a better price for his grain or cotton by these means. This year it is estimated that about 50 per cent of the wheat in the Northwest is being held on the farms, ie., off the market. The Farmers’ Union has been carrying on a broad and persistent cam- paign to induce the farmers of the Dakotas, Montana and Minnisota, in particular, to hold their wheat, and in these efforts they have succeeded to some extent. However, has the price been effected any? Not so you can notice it. And why not? The fact is that the price is determined by the volume of production; whether it is in storage on the farm, is on the way to market, at the terminals, or held in some other place, makes no difference. It is the existence (vol- ume of production) of the wheat or cotton, ete., that determines its price, not its movement | to market. When farmers buy storage tanks from the Farmers’ Union, therefore, in which to store their grain on the farm and borrow money on it, they are simply out the price of the tank and the interest charged for the loan. The capitalists have merely devised one more way of robbing the farmers. The problem of the surplus spoken of, but surplus production is inherent in capitalist agriculture, it is a chronic disease and can- not be gotten rid of under capitalism. And the capitalist pri speaks only of the surplus | which is occasioned by climatic condition, for- | getting to-mention the fact that the surplus is always present, belonging to and springs from the anarchic methol of capitlist produc- tion. Only in Soviet Russia, where socialized agriculture is being built up, can planful pro- duction take place and the correct relation be- tween agricultural production and agricultural prices be established. The poor farmers must get wise to this sit- uation. They must not depend upon capitalist farm organizations, such as the Farmers’ Un- | ion to show them the way, but join the United Farmers’ League and get théir information from the United Farmer, the only farm paper | that is really fighting for their interest While The Situation in the Y.C.I. and the Turn Towards Mass Work Theses of the Enlarged Plenum of the Executive Committee of the Young Communist International. Note: Because of a typographical error, the following” final sentence in the last para- | graph of yesterday’s installment was omitted: And finally, there is no due attention, as- sistance and leadership from the Communist Parties; there are instead attempts to estab- lish guardianship over the youth; the Party kernel in the Young Communist League is very weak and, in addition to that, is not doing what it should do. ge eae (Continued) The task placed by the V Congress be- fore all the Sections of the Young Communist International in the capitalist countries: to bring about a decisive turn towards Bolshevik mass work, continues to confront them in its full scope and with growing persistence on ac- count of the new revolutionary upsurge to be observed in the labor movement. The winning of the majority of the working classes by the Communist Parties, which is the main task of the Communist International, has as one of its necessary conditions the winning of the major- ity of the young workers. The Young Com- munist Leagues upon which this task is, placed, will be able to accomplish it only by applying the new forms of united front tactics, new forms of struggle and organization of the working class youth, transferring in actual reality the center of gravity of their entire work towards the shops and factories and the mass organizations of the young workers. The most important and basic element of the turn is the struggle of the Young Communist Leagues for leadership in the class struggles of the working class youth. Not a single strike, not a single demonstration, even the most in- significant, should pass without the Young Communist League trying to get contro] of the movement. The gigantic class struggles in the third period of post-war capitalist development do not remove from the agenda the daily rout- ine, tedious and persistent work among the trade unions, homes, schools, educational or- ganizations, on sport grounds, during rambles, in places of entertainment, etc. Without this work, into which every member of the Young Communist League must be drawn, without tying up the most varied interests and require- ments of the proletarian youth, with the gen- 5 Workers! Join the Party of Your Class! Communist Party U. S. A. 43 East 125th Street, New York City. I, the undersigned, want to join the Commu- nist Party. Send me more information. NAME... 26... ceccccscesssccccccsesccsemeees Address ,......46 +» vity. » Age. ri} Mail this to the Central Office, Communist Party, 43 East 125th St., New York, N. Y. Occupation .. ] eral class tasks, the matter of winning over the majority of the working class youth cannot be fulfilled. The turn means a struggle against tendencies |“to work where it is easier,”—in territorial or- } ganizations, rather than in factory nuclei; it | means the struggle against the neglect of “tedi- | ous” and allegedly “unpolitical” work in sport clubs and other mass auxiliary organizations. The turn means a further application of the new offensive tactics in all struggles of the working class youth and organization of its participation in general struggles of the pro- letaric+; it means a dc..sive overcoming of sec- tarian isolation of the Young Communist League organizations, their narrowness, the fear of the masses, culture tendenc’es and back- wardness. The turn can be made only on the basis of the line of the Party in the Young Commu- nist League and on the basis of broad develop- ment of Communist “Youth Politics.” For this purpose it is necessary: (a) Decisively to fight against the right. deviation, against the conciliatory attitude to- wards it, against opportunism in practice, both in the Party as well as in the Young Commu- nist League, and simultaneously to carry on a decisive struggle not only in words, but in deeds, against the Trotzkyist and all other ten- dencies of petty bourgeois radicalism, sectarian- ism and “left” phrases and deviations, against a neutral and indifferent attitude towards the ‘left” danger; to renew the League cadres by decisive promotion of rank and filers and by systematic work amongst them, carrying on a decisive struggle against all group menifesta- tions, the selection of people according to group principles, group concealment of each other’s mistakes, the covering up of shortcomings and defects in work, A system of responsibility for work is necessary from top to bottom, es- tablishing as a criterion in. the selection of cadres their ability to follow the course of mass Bolshevik work in accordance with the political line of the Comintern, to establish the leading role of the Party in relation to the Young Communist League from the bottom to the top, decisively discarding the system of a purely formal representation of the Communist Party in the Young Communist League organizations and striving for real work and leadership of the delegated Party comrades in these organ- izations; to create and strengthen the Party kernels in the Leagues by drawing all active Youth into the Pa:y. (b) To organize on the basis of the united front from below tactics the struggles of the working class youth for its daily demands jointly with the general struggle of the pro- letariat; this means that the Young Commu- nist League must formulate and propagandize the demands of the working class youth in the struggles against militarism, fascism nad capi; talist rationalization and subordinate them to the struggle for the proletarian dictatorship. Without lowering to any extent the political level of the work of the Young Communist League,, it should be brought closer to the psychology an! understanding of the youth, adopting the methods of agitation and propa- ganda. To permeate the entire work with the spirit of militait internationalism, organizing Gd Sa “paTwor New York, N : ~ SOUTHERN “HARMONY” Pras ~ fire a “£ tb a ee ae National Textile Workers’ Union. murdered Ella Ma Wiggins. A. F. of L. Baily es Worker Central Organ of the Communist Party of the U. S. A. wer By Mail (in New York City only): $8.00 a year; By Mail (outside of New York City): $6.00 a year; CREION mew. aes 34.50 six months; 95.50 six months; $2.50 three months $2.00 three months By Fred Ellis ‘se God “We here in Lumberton live sweetly together, mill owners hand-in-hand with mill work- ers,” said the mill owners’ flunkey, Prosecutor Britt, in the trial of Organizer Caudle of the Britt speaks for the same gang that kidnapped and beat into unconsciousness the young union organizer, Totherow, as well as Saylors and Wells, and But the mill workers know that the class struggle is raging in the South—the workers must organize and fight the bosses and the bosses’ agents of the a A TS SEP SAA SRS on a broad scale the work of international edu- | cation of the toiling youth. The turn embraces all the political tasks | confronting the Young Communist Internation- | al at the present time’and for this reason the atempts te picture the turn as a narrow “or- ganizational” task, pertaining only to a change of the system of work, and the tendencies to cover up the passivity in mass work and the failure actually to accomplish the turn by general abstract discussions about the “politi- eal significance of the turn,” depriving it of its organizational practical importance, are ab- solutely wrong and politically harmful. 6. The Plenum records weakness in the dis- cussion regarding the turn which up to the present time has been carried on abstractly and mainly by the committees. The shifting of the center of gravity of carrying out the turn from discussion in the upper quarters to practical work at the bottom, in the nuclei, the local organizations, the draw- ing into this work on the basis of actual mass | an relent! elf-criticism and self-activity of the lower organizations, the entire rank and file and every individual member of the Young Communist League—are a basic condition for | the realization of the turn. The Plenum particularly warns all Sections | of the Young Communist International against a formal approach to the question of the turn towards mass work. A relentless struggle must be declared against all those who will pay lip service to the decision about the turn, but | who will sabotage it in practice, and against | those who will simply limit themselves to its | formal acceptance, because a formal attitude towards the turn, as was shown by the fate of the decisions of the V Congress, is the greatest danger. Taking into account the unsatisfactory sit- uation in the Sections of the Young Communist International which in some countries takes on a form of a crisis, the Plenum of the Execu- tive Committee considers it necessary to make a close study of the main causes of the crisis in the Czecho-Slovakian, British, Norwegian and Austrian Leagues (an investigation of the lower organizations, reports, instructions, conferences) and point out the concrete meas- ures necessary to guarantee that the necessary change will be effected in the Leagues. The most important lessons of development of these Leagues on the basis of examples from the actual activity to make this the possession of all Sections of the Young Communist Interna- tional and all the members of the Young Com- munist organizations (press, directions to the Leagues, conferences, actual personal instruc- tions, etc.). In order to bring about the necessary change the Plenum raises before all Section# of the Young Communist International and before the Executive Committee of the Young Commu- nist International the following concrete tasks, the carrying out of which must be accomplish- ed under the closest observation: | | (a) All forces of the organizations must be immediately concentrated on work in large en- terprises of the most important industries where masses of young workers are concen- trated. The Plenum makes it obligatory for all leading organs of the Leagues, beginning with the Central Committees and ending with the lower local and section committees—to carry out a systematic and most thorough in- vestigation of the economic work done in the enterprises, analyzing in the most thorough manner, its achievements and defects, and, simultaneously, selecting leading cadres among the young proletarians who proved in practice their ability to do mass work among the work- ing class youth. The Enlarged Plenum of the | ‘ Executive Committee makes it mandatory for all Leagues to create in the immediate future strong working factory nuclei in the large en- terprises employing many young workers. The failure to carry this out must bring with it a change in the composition of the leading or- gans of the Leagues. The Plenum binds all Leagues to pay most serious attention to sys- tematic and uninterrupted recruiting of mem- bers, transferring the center of gravity of this work to the enterprises. (b) All the work in the factories ‘cannot be | done from the point of view of capturing the leade’ hip in the class struggles of the young | workers and active participation of the entire Young Communist League organization in them. A strike (particularly strikes of -the youth, the drawing in of all young workers into strikes and other demonstrations of the work- ing class, the extension of every movement, the transformation of economic into political strikes, formation of fighting committees of the youth, organization of the unorganized, etc.) is one of the chief means whereby the Young Communist League can most quickly become a Bolshevik mass organization of the proletarian youth. In bringing about the turn, the application of the united front tactics from below is of paramount importance. In the present condi- tions of the class struggle, negligence in the application of the united front tactics from below, a method of winning the majority of young workers is seriously jeopardizing the solution of this task. In this connection the question of youth delegates in the factories is becoming of great improtance. These delegates should be elected by all young workers em- ployed in a given factory (both organized and unorganized), and should he regularly con- vened. The Plenum instructs the Presidium and all Sections to collect and study in the next two months all the most important material re- garding strikes and the participation of the | youth in the general struggles of the working class, the negative and positive examples of ap- plication of the united front tactics and, on the basis of experience of the recent struggles, demonstrations and activities, draw the neces- sary lessons, popularize and utilize them for further work of the various Sections, and en- sure the carrying out of the turn. *(c) The development of broad anti-imper- jalist and anti-militarist activity which is of first-rate importance at the present time in all countries. Along with the intensification of the ideological struggle against all forms of militarization of the youth, and-particularly its pacifist camouflage, it is necessary to apply new forms of mass anti-militarist work, ensur- ing the mobilization of the broad masses of the toiling youth in ‘the struggle against im- perialist wars, in defense of the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics, and for the libera- tion of the colonies (anti-military conferences and committees on the basis of enterprise and mass organizations, youth sections of the Anti- Imperialist Leagues; defense organizations of the Jungfront type; unions of recruits and the reserves, etc.). It is necessary to begin a sys- tematic building up of nuclei in the army and navy and also in the enterprises of the war industries, In developing in every way the struggle of the soldiors and sailors for their partial daily demands, it is necessary to always link it up with the struggle for our general and ultimate slogans. d) A radical reconstruction of the present work of the Young Communist. organizations in the general proletarian and mass youth LENIN ON IMPERIALIST WAR Editor's Note: In connection with the Lenin Campaign of the Communist Party, the Daily Worker is running a Lenin corner during the month of January, containing some of Lenin’s | most important teachings on imperialist war | and the organization of the Communist Party. | | | The present installment concludes the article in previous issues of The Daily Worker. It is taken from Lenin's Imperialist War—The Struggle Against Social Chauvinism and So- cial Pacifism, constituting Vol. XVIII of his Collected Works (International Publishers, New York). * * * | is impossible to carry out the tasks of Socialism at the present time, it is impos- sible to accomplish a really international uni- fication of the workers without radically breaking with opportunism and without making clear to the masses the inevitably of its fiasco. It must be the task of the social-democracy of every country first of all to struggle against the chauvinism of that country. In Russia this chauvinism has completely embraced the bour- geois liberals (the cadets) and partly the Na | rodniks down to the Socialists-Revolutionists and the “Right” Social-Democrats. It is par- ticularly necessary to brand the chegwvinist declarations of such men as E. Smirnov, P. Maslov and G. Plekhanov, who have been taken up and widely utilized by the bourgeois “pa- triotie” press. Under given conditions it is impossible to determine from the standpoint of the interna- tional proletariat which is the lesser evil for Socialism: the defeat of one or the defeat of the other group of belligerent nations. For us Russian Social-Democrats, however, there cannot exist the least doubt that from the standpoint of the working class and of the la- boring masses of all the peoples of Russia, the lesser evil would be the defeat of the tsar- ist monarchy, the most reactionary and bar- barous government oppressing the greatest number of nations and the greatest mass of the populations of Europe and Asia. The political slogan of the Social-Democrats of Europe for the near future must be the creation of a republican United States of Eu- rope. In contrast to the bourgeoisie, which is ready to “promise” anything in order to draw the proletariat into the general stream of chau- vinism, the Social-Democrats will explain that this slogan is false and senseless without a revolutionary overthrow of the German, Avs- trian and Russian monarchies. In Russia, due to the greater backward:iess of the country, which has not yet completed its bourgeois revolution, the tasks of the Social- Democrats are, as heretofore, the following three fundamental conditions for a consistent democratic reconstruction: a democratic re- public (with full and equal rights for all na- tionalities, including the right of self-determi- | a more active part in the restoration of Europe nation), confiscation of the landowners’ land, and an eight-hour work day. In all the other advanced countries, however, the war has placed on the order of the day the slogan of a So- cialist_ revolution, which becomes the. more urgent the more heavily the burdens of war are pressing on the shoulders of the proletariat : and as it becomes apparent that it will play ! after the horrors of the present “patriotic” | barbarism aided by the gigantic technical prog- ress of big capitalism. The utilization by the bourgeoisie of the laws of war time for gag- ging the proletariat, makes it absolutely neces- sary to create illegal forms of agitation and organization. Let the opportunists “save” the legal organizations at the price of betraying their convictions; the revolutionary Social- Democrats will utilize the organizational habits and connections of the working class to organ- ize illegal forms of organization befitting an epoch of crisis, in order to fight for Socialism and to unite the workers, not with the chau- vinist bourgeoisie of their respective countries, but with the workers of all cq@mtries. The proletarian International has not perished and will not perish. The working masses ‘will over- come all obstacles and create a new Interna- tional. The present triumph of cm | is short lived. The greater the war losses, thet clearer it will become for the working masses that the opportunists betrayed the cause of the workers and that it is necessary to turn the weapons against the governments and the bour- geoisie of the rspective countries. Turning the present imperialist war into civil war is the only correct proletarian slo- gan. It is indicated by the experience of the Commune, it was outlined by the Basle resolu- tion (1912) and it follows from all the condi- tions of an imperialist war among highly de- veloped bourgeois countries. However diffi- cult such transformation may appear at one time or another. Socialists will never relin- quish systematic, insistent, unflinching: prepa- ratory work in this direction once the war has become a fact. Only along this road will the proletariat be able to break away from under the influence of the chauvinist bourgeoisie, and sooner or later, in one form or another, will it take de- cisive steps on the road to real freedom of peoples, and on the road to Socialism, Long live the international brotherhood oi the workers united against the chauvinism and patriotism of the bourgeoisie of all countries! Long live a proletarian International, fre¢ from opportunism! Central Committee, RUSSIAN SOCIAL-DEMOCRATIC LABOR PARTY. | Written October, 1914. Sotsial-Demokrat (Social Democrat), No. 33, ¥ November 1, 1914, sive work in all existing auxiliary organizations with a view to the political moulding to the youth and a systematic recruiting of members for the Young Communist League. Secondly, maximum initiative is necessary in the crea- tion of new types of auxiliary organizations, namely, factory organizations (along indus- trial lines on the basis of youth delegates in the factories, sport and other factory groups, etc,), youth trade union sections on the factory principle, International Red Army groups, mutual aid and various anti-fascist, sport, educational and other youth associations. Young Communist League members belonging to auxiliary organizations should constitute properly functioning fractions. The work carried on by Young Communist organizations in the industrial, cultural and sport associations, must be of a political char- acter. It.is not the task of the Young Com- munists working in these organizations to show that they arg good sportsmen and educational workers, but that they can carry on systematic agitation and propaganda, that they can rouse the class-consciousness of the young workers, and make the latter understand the general class tasks of the proletariat and the struggle for the proletarian dictatorship. e) The Young Communist League organiza- tions must pay particular attention to sport unions of the working class youth. In these unions they must crystallize the basic kernel for strike pickets, proletarian self-defense, workers’ fighting committees and Red Guards, people for work in the imperialist armies. They should utilize sport organizations for the mil- itary training of the working class youth, f) In all of the opponent and “neutral” or- ganizations having many of the working class youth in their midst, it is necessary to work stubbornly and persistently for their disintegra- tion and for the winning of the young workers to our side. For this purpose it is necessary to send steadfast Young Communist members into, such organizations and draw into this work organizations which are under Young Communist influence. It is necessary to attend all public meetings of political opponents, to carry on open discussions in factories. as well as outside of them in order to demoralize their organizations. The Plenum instructs the Pre- sidium specially to work out concrete measures and ‘tasks in the matter of disruption of the Young Socialist International, ‘and religious and fascist organizations (the “Dopo Lavore” and the “Strelok,” etc.). . g) Work must immediately begin amongst the agricultural laborers and poor peasants, especially in agrarian countries. In this con- nection the ties that some workers have with villagés should be made use of. Rural work requires extensive application cf subsidiary forms of organization of the youth. h) The illegal Leagues will be able to make the turning only if they fight agairst the pecu- liar deviations which are particularly strong in thenr owing to the peculiar conditions under which they have to work On the one hand, there are legalist tendencies to be observed, a striving to carry on all activities legally and to under-estimate the importance and the lead- ing role of the illegal organizations. On the other, hand, there is a very strong tendency to be isolated from the external world, to neglect the possibilities of carrying on legal work, a sharply expressed spirit of sectarianism, often giving rise to pernicious political theories (ter- rorism). Both: these deviations result in a limited development of the Young Communist League, a rejection of mass work and, in the end, liquidation. Attention in the countries where the Young Communist Leagues are il- legal must be directed chiefly to the strengthen- ing and development of the illegal organiza- organization is also absolutely necessary. It is first of all necessary to develop inten- tions, and to a skillful coordination of legal and illegal methods of work, The underground Leagues should also. devote much of their attention to those spheres of ac- tivity which have hitherto been in a most negli- gible state; weakness. of the organizational ap- paratus, especially with regard to conspiracy, inadequate contact between the Central Com- mittees and the lower organizations, insuf- ficient contact with the Party in all of its links, insufficiency of literature and inade- quacy of the press, extremely poor contact with the international movement, i) It is necessary to emphasize the importance of preparing the Leagues which are still legal for illegality with which they are threatened and which they will soon have to experience. This preparation is first and foremost a polit- ical task. It consists in a strengthening of oug¥ connections with the masses through the instru- mentality of a wide struggle for the League’s legal existence and an ideological preparation of the League members for clandestine work. Parallel with this, all organizational measures must be taken to prepare the organizations in all their stages for a transition to illegality. j) Revolutionary competition in all spheres of Young Communist League activity must be- come one of the basic interests in raising the initiative and revolutionary self-activity of each organization and every member of the Young Communist League. It is necessary to draw into the revolutionary competitions the broad masses of young workers as well as the auxiliary organizations. 7. A decisive turn in all Young Communist International work towards broad mass activity is the only way out of the present impasse in the Young Communist International Sections and of successful solution of the task af win- ning the majority of the working class and peasant youth. The discussion about the turn has already reached the most advanced seetions of Leagues. But this is only a beginning, it is only the first step in the struggle for the tu The struggle is still ahead, it is gigantic a stubborn. It is necessary courageously, to move forward without fearing the difficulties, unflinchingly exposing the errors and short- comings, removing the bad leaders, boldly pro- moting new people whore distinguishi feat- ures would be possible clarity and steadfast- ness, contact with the masses, ability to or- ganize and lead them,’ perseverance: and per- sistent work, unlimited devotion to the: cause, and unwavering faith in the final victory of the proletariat. The execution of: the accepted decisions must be looked after, verbal declara- tions will not suffice; everyone must be checked up in practice, talk about mass: work: must not substitute actual mass work, as has’ been fre- quently the case in the past. a Pee It is necessary ‘to generalize and ‘broadly ‘to. popularize the experiences of the various coun- tries in the matter of realization of the turn, The struggle is sharpening, persecutions ary increasing, the bourgeoisie is intensifying its attack on the youth; the time we still have at our disposal before the decisive battle for: the proletarian revolution is being shortened; the conditions of Young Communist Interna. tional work are becoming more complex, but also more favorable as the militant ‘ ‘ity 0 the mass of the proletariat and of the working class youth is growing. In these’ conditions the Young Communist International must direct’ all its inspiration and enthusiasm towards the realization, and an acceleration of the tempo, of the turn, inspiration and enthusiasm which is inexhaustible among thé brave members of the Young Communist League who, many times, have proven their devotion to the revolution and to the Comintern. Only thus will the Young Communist International ‘be able to carry out its historic mission, its duty the pro- letarian revolution and the Cot it Inter- national. : a i) |

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