The Daily Worker Newspaper, March 20, 1930, Page 1

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i | MAKE LIBERATOR HUNGRY JOBLESS ee NY, The fake Senate “Unemployment” hearing listens to a “Millionaire Hobo,” and to Sen- ator Wagner, the chum of Walker and Whalen who are trying to send the repre- sentatives of the unemployed workers to jail. Now they are faced with the demand to listen to the unemployed themselves through their regular- ly elected committee. | Baily as second-class matter at the Post Office at New York, N. Y., under the act ef March Enterca 8. 1 FINAL CITY EDITION ae Published daily exeept Sunday by The Comprodaily Publishing ij ,, Union Square. New York City, N. ¥. NEW YORK, THURSDAY, MARCH 20, 1930 SUBSCRIPTION RA Outside New York, by mail $6.00 per 2S: In New York by mail, ARs 00 per year. Price 3 Cents ELECTED TO TRY CA The ! Case ; Struggle Sharpens CUBA BENER AL on World-Wide Front Fro thousands of churches yesterday the prayers of as many thousands of priests arose toward the skies. At least, we know that the air exhaled from human lungs is charged with carbon-dioxide gas, and heated gas will rise—so, in this sense, the pope’s world-wide im- perialist propaganda “arose toward the heavens.” ; The volume and venom of imperialist war propaganda ‘today is greater than ever before in the history of the world, and the effec- tiveness of this propaganda is not to be ignored. It is directly aimed at the mobilization of a world-war of all capitalist nations against the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics. : The pressure toward such a world-wide imperial the Soviet Union is se great as to constitute an immediate menace from day to day and week to week. ae eae It must be borne in mind, however, that the propaganda of the popes and bankers is not finding place in a vacuum, but in a very con- crete world, where other developments are furnishing the greatest pos- sibility that ever has been seen for the mobilization of the working class and oppressed peoples against the imper' list war makers. The whole capitalist world idst of a rapidly deepening The boasted stabilization of capitalism has reached a stage of rottenness and precariousness which not even the capitalist press can any longer conceal. The very efforts of Hoover, the Pope, MacDonald, Tardieu, Mussolini and Mueller for saving their respective capitalist systems are the efforts which find expression in the increasing war threats between imperialist powers, such as that between the United States against Great Britain, on the éne hand, and the united front imperialist war drive against the Soviet Union, on the other hand On top of the economic erisis, political and minist rises are coming in one country after another. In Poland this week a train-load of soldiers demonstrated against the government and over-rode the efforts of the police to stop them. Poland shows more and more evi- dence every day of the likelihood that Pilsudsky’s pest-hole of reac- tion may be the weakest link, the first break in the world-wide system of imperialism. Partly for this very reason the Polish ruling class is openly striding forward toward the war against the Soviet Union. In China the cut-throat agent of the American Wall ment, General Chiang Kai-shek, finds it impossible to regime of terror—and not only as against the Chinese militarist agents of other imperialist powers. there is a steady and incessant growth of the proletarian revolutionary movement, supported more and more by the peasant nrasses. From Cuba comes the news of the furious efforts of the Wall Street “president” Machado to throttle the labor movement by the ar- rest and imprisonment of all militant workers and their leaders. The tremendous demonstrations of March 6 against unemployment in all other capitalist countrie » to be followed by the same type of dem- onstrations throughout Latin America today. The revolt against im- perialism in Latin America is added to the constantly developing revo- lutionary movements in India and China. Every month that-passes “by adds to the-streigth of the citadel of the working class, of the revolutionary forces, in the building of the new socialized industry of the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics. The Pope, Pilsudski, Hoover, Mueller, Tardieu, and MacDonald know this perfectly well, and the race is one in which the imperialist powers’ only hope to succeed is in preparing and precipitating the for the destruction of the workers’ revolutionary government in Soviet Russia before the socialist economic system is strengthened too greatly. Tke Communist Parties which must lead any effective struggle against the capitalist system, are growing and ripening into mature Bolshevik Parties. The powerful Communist Party of Germany al- ready constitutes a giant of strength for the proletarian revolution, amd other Communist Parties in Europe are developing rapidly, winning more and more the position of leadership of the working class. The Communist Party of the United States, after being freed from the debasing influence of the renegades, Lovestone, Pepper & Co., is advancing in size and political maturity at an unprecedented rate. It can id approximately that the Communist Party of the United States aining now at the rate of about 100 new members every day. This Party has already arisen within a few short months from a position of relative isolation to one in which more than a mil- lion workers knowingly follow its leadership, and the revolutionary trade union movement is already becoming a serious reality war against reet gov- abilize his er ‘or And so we can say that, if capitalist reaction is more militant and more all-per ing than ever before, the revolutionary labor movement and its ally, the revolt of oppressed colonial peoples, are advancing still more rapidly throughout the whole world. Organize the Unemployment Councils! Organize the unorganized workers! Build up the new revolutionary trade union movement under the Trade Union Unity League! Organize the masses of workers against the coming imperialist war—train them for the de- fense of the Union of Socialist Soviet Republi The danger is that the great advances now being made by the working class will not be consolidated in organized form. Most important of all, build the revolutionary Communist Party, which alone can lead the fight. ! AMASS ORGAN, MAKE FOOD RAID J. W. Ford Calls for All Pillage Bakery Wagon Workers Support of Cakes and Rolls In an article written on the “Lib-| Driven desperate by hunger at the erator,” by J. W. Ford, national Ne-! gro organizer of the Trade Union| aoe stale bread and rotten stew Unity League, he says, in part: “The ‘Liberator announces a seri. ™e2sured out to them at the bread- ous campaign to raise funds to build line of the Salvation Army at 225 the paper into a mass organ that, Bowery yesterday, a thousand starv- goes into every ee Sar cern, ing men waiting in line broke thru every factory and mill and every i)0 jolie euar Fa farm section of this country where fhe police: gusts, that aivea sara ‘here ave Negro toilers. ‘guard over the hungry men, and “The so-called Negro (‘race’) pa-| seized a truck load of jelly rolls, rs do not meet these needs of the! cakes and cookies that halted in Negro toilers. One would expect that | front of them. the more than 200 Negro weekly When the truck stopped, the job- newspapers of this country should be | less hundreds rushed the truck be- helpful and render aid in the strug-| fore the cops’ clubs could be mobil- gles of the Negro toilers, the pos-| ized and grabbed nearly half the sibility is there. But what do we | load before being driven back. Evi- find? We find that most of these| dently the jobless were not only papers when they are not openly| hungry, but tired of the slop fur- and directly against the interests of | nished by the fake charity of the the Negro workers, they are un-/ Salvation Army which has enriched ceasingly carrying on propaganda | the Booth family dynasty under the and giving out information that has ' mask of charity. as its aim the dulling of the class, SEN a Ake consciousness of Negro workers. yALK to your fellow worker in Send contributions at once to the your shop about the Daily “Liberator,” room 338, 799 Broad: Worker. Sell him a copy every way. Don't delay! The “Liberator” | day for a week. Then ask him to needs your help now! become a regular subscriber a sight of food and resenting the usual } ~ STRIKE SET -FOR THURSDAY Wall St. Lackeys Are Unable to Call Halt to Mass Preparation Fight Unemployment Many Arrests Made; by Bloody Machado Havana dispatches Wednesday gave news that the general strike set for Thursday was ordered in all industries and public utilities and that all the desperate efforts of the fascist government, the lackey of Wall Street imperialism, were un- able to stop it despite the score more of working class leaders ar- rested in the last 24 hours. The strike in Cuba is one of the sharpest struggles connected with the mass political strike and dem- | onstrations called for all over Latin |America by the Latin American Trade Union Confederation of Mon- tevideo, Uruguay, in protest against the unemployment of great masses who are doemed to starvation by capitalism. In Cuba, however, the working class is especially angry at the | Machado government which has or- dered the closing down of the Na- tional Confederation of Labor and the Havana Federation of Labor, and the arrest of many of the work- ing class leaders. An example of the resentment shown by the Cuban workers is the resolution passed by the cigar mak- ers of Havana, which says in part: “We protest collectively and pub- licly the attack onthe Confedera- cion Nacional Obrera de Cuba and the Federacion Obrera de la Ha- bana, genuine class organizations that lead the working class strug- gle; we protest especially against the deeree of hte government de- claring the functions of these or- ganizations suspended, and against the unheard of and lying campaign with which the bourgeoisie tries to justify their persecution of the workers’ movement—aided by yel- low lackeys, “We,declare our intention of de- fending our organizations, and as proletarians we pledge ourselves to maintain them. We’ demand that the authorities annul the decree, and declare the unquestionable legality of the workers’ organizations.” POPE WHIPS UP WAR HYSTERIA ‘Prayers’ Lay Basis for War on USSR ROME (Vatican City), Mar. 19.— | Pope Pius XI, doing the bidding of \the imperialist masters continued the campaign of whipping up a war spirit against the Soviet Union in | the interest of | Pius preached before a crowd of | 7,000 mostly rich parasites who had ; money enough to gather for the anti-Soviet meeting at St. Peter's |basilica. The pope, bedecked in jewels worth hundreds of thousands of dollars, while millions of workers starve throughout the world, called jin mystical terms for armed inter- vention by the imperialist powers against the workers’ republic in be- half of the kulaks and capitalists. aaa eee MOSCOW (By Mail).—Comrade Yaroslavsky, speaking to foreign correspondents here pointed out that the Jaws of the Soviet Union are the ‘only laws in the entire world which |provide for freedom #of ’ conscience jand religious beliefs, as well as sci- entific teachings, in contrast to the | United States, where the capitalist state in Tennessee carried on a heresy trial against scientific teach- ings. He referred to the following quo- tation in the pamphlet, “Communists and Religion”: “Our Party is carrying on a strug- |gle against religious prejudices, re- ligious creeds by means of science and enlightenment, by means of books, newspapers, lectures, films, informal talks directed against re- ligion and religious deception, Our | program warns all Communists that, lin carrying on this work, they must jact in a manner not to offend the \feelings of true believers, because | by offending the feelings of true be- jlievers, one does not weaken but can jonly stvengthen religious beliefs.” world capitalism. | | Toile Pont 4 Railroading of | Jobless » Comm. | STAMFORD, Conn., March 19,—} | A protest meeting held Sunday, at-| tended by many Negro and white! workers, protested against the ar- {rest and persecution of five work- ers jailed here for their activities | in the March 6 unemployed demon- | stration. | J. Louis Engdahl, general secr tary of the International Labor De- |fense, pointed out the attempts of | the bosses to railroad the delega- | tion representing 110,000 New York | workers. The case of the five Stamford j workers comes up Thursday, and a} demonstration is planned for the} court room. | + oi eh hs St. Paul Protest Meet. ST. PAUL, Minn., March 19.—At |a meeting of over 200 workers on | Sunday at German-American Hall, a protest resolution was passed |calling on the workers to fight | against the bosses’ class vengeance jagainst the arrested unemployed |workers and their leaders. The resolution, in part, said: “This meeting demands the dis- missal of all charges and sentences against the unemployed workers’ delegation and the arrested demon- |strators in New York City and | thruout the country. When has it | become a crime to protest against war, hunger, and unemployment, we ask? We stand behind the heroic March 6th fighters and will fight (Continued on Page Three) POWERS GIVEN 6 MOS, CHAIN GANG Acquit Two Held; Tell Communist Aims WINSTON-SALEM, N. C., Mar. 19.—M. H. Powers, district organ- izer of the Communist Party, was sentenced this morning to three months on the chain gang in a Wins- ton-Salem city court on the framed lup charge of “carrying concealed | weapons.” | Eibert Totherow, youth organizer | } of the National Textile Workers Union, and Si Gerson, TW. organizer, were acquitted in the |same case. | All were arrested yesterday while lin a car in a crowded city street. The {arrest and frame-up follows the sentencing of Dewey Martin, district organizer of the N.T.W., on a fake \charge of not having money enough in the bank for a $10 check (the money was deposited in*check form, jand the bank had not collected it as |it should) and the frame-up cases of “insanity,” ete., launched against | Amy Schechter and other organizers lin Chattanooga. Powers case is |part of a general campaign of South- ern courts and police to “snipe” one after another the active organizers jof the Communist Party, the N.T.W. and the Trade Union Unity League, and try by this means to prevent organization in the South. A Class Case. The trial of Powers, Gerson and | Totherow quickly showed its class nature and evident collusion of the city solicitor, the tobacco and cotton | detectives and the judge. When the three were called upon to testify, be- fore giving them the oath, the soli- citor insisted upon questioning their | religious beliefs. All three main- tained firmly that they maintained in science, and not in superstition. Young Totherow threw the packed \courtroom full of Negro and white | (Continued on Page Three) BIG COMMUNIST - VOTE ST. PAUL Enormous Increase Over That of 1928 MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., March 19. |—One Communist candidate for councilmen polled 4,467 votes in the St. Paul municipal elections here. Karl Reeve, running for Mayor, got 813 votes; for city council, Ander- son got 4,467 votes; Rebecca Grecht got 1780; Bartlett got 1324. This is the highest for Communist candidates ever polled in St. Paul. In the congressional elections in 1928, the vote was 693, The Communist candidates ran on a straight Communist ticket, and made a campaign on the basis of a revolutionary platform, \nufacturing centers throughout the | CONVENE JUNE 14 UNEMPLOYED TO FORM METAL PITAL IST COURTS DELEGATION DEMANDS HEARING BY FEDERAL GOVERNMENT RUNNERS’ UNON AS JOBLESS PUSH MARCH 29 MEET Official Call Points| Out Growth of TUUL League Since Aug. Meet in Youngstown Every Steel and Metal PITTSBURGH, March 19. — The National Executive Board of the Me- | tal Workers Industrial League thru COMMITTEE OF lits secretary, Andrew Overgaard, an- | |nounces the calling of a national con- | to Boss Press |vention of steel workers, metal oe 110,000 WIRES. tor Jo b le ss chinery workers, electrical supply | workers, in Youngstown, Ohio, on June 14 and 15 for the purpose of organizing a new revolutionary in- | dustrial union in the metal industry. The intense rationalization, wage- cut campaigns, and speed-up in the While the fight against unem- steel mills and metal manufacturing Ployment is taking form throughout shops throughout the country has re-|the country with the Unemployed sulted in radicalizing the workers Councils, revolutionary trade unions who are responding from day to day and industrial minority leagues of to organization. |the Trade Union Unity League elect- League Growing Rapidly. Jing delegates to the National Con- priieesuceeta oe: Uomo eal Workere| comes se NeW fone on, Match Tdtatrial League sihons the sCleve- j the delegation elected by the March land Gutiventioniot tie Trade) Union | comonsuration in New Zork yee Unity League August 31, 1929, in | terday addressed a demand to the recruiting decisive elements in the|U- S. Senate Commerce Committee, industry into its ranks has convinced now pretending to be “investigativts The Jobless Refuse to Starve; Will Fight He stoned oxeeative board of the (Unemployment, demanding that the necessity of the formation of an in- | elesation be heard. ipa dustrial union which can lead the| The telegram, signed by Wm, Z. chairm nt to Sen workers in the struggle against ra- | Foster, n of the delegation, tionalization and speed-up. The | Was tor Hiram Johnson League has functioning locals in the |at Washington, and read as follows most important steel and metal ma-| “On behalf of the one and a quarter million workers who as- sembied in gigantic unemployment demonstrations in all the principal American industrial centers on March 6, in wer to the call of country which have been set up in| (Continued on Page Three) : the Communist Party and the International iieade Union’ Unity “Teague oar Wireless | delegation requests that it be | heard .by your committee in its News present bearings on unemploy- ment. | “Our delegation will present the proposals of these great masses of workers which express the inter- ests of the whole seven million unemployed. We ask you to set a time to hear our delegation, and (Continued on Page Three) (Wireless By Inprecorr) BERLIN, March 19.—The scandal | over the fascist Frick, minister of the interior of Thuringia (one of the German states) has come to a head. Communist accusations against Frick have been ignored, but today formal | information was filed with the pro- secutor’s office in Leipzig charging Frick with high treason, prepara- tions for a putsch and the develop- ment of the Thuringian police into a party weapon of the fascists. The “socialist” Severing, minister of interior of the Reich, has written to the Thuringian government re- questing that it answer his previous letter of February 17, as the failure to reply represented an insult from Frick. Severing declares that he is given instruction to break off cor- | respondence with Thuringia and stop the subsidies to it from the Reich, particularly for the police, until the affair is settled. This “heroic” action of Severing|and Manhattan. Then he said that against Frick, the fascist minister, “Communists wrecked a shoe shop is to be contrasted with Ebert’s ac-|in Brooklyn, by smashing $100,000 tion in 1923 against the Communist | worth of machinery and shoe leath- ministers in the Saxon government, | ey,” A statement issued by the In- when the dissolution of the Saxon dependent Shoe Workers Union says: government was ordered, and the) «cossack Whalen spoke the truth Reichstag issued a declagstion for|in the first instance, but every shoe the dictatorship of the Reichswebr orier knows that the bosses hired which invaded Saxony and slaugh: terali tg amimmtiichiete cowl aia- tered the workers. dae ibeamee ipa Gn: . 4 + |chinery, and then blame it on the strikers. Whalen shculd know that THIRD POLICE VICTIM DIES — Communists do not smash machinery. (Wireless By Inprecorr) |They organize the workers and ad- BERLIN, March 19.—The third vocate the confiscation of the in- victim of the police attack on the ,dustries and machinery by the unemployed demonstrators of March | workers and farmers under a Soviet 6 died yesterday. He was a young Republic, where there will be no construction worker named Peschke, bosses who own the bread and but- who died from a bullet wound in ter and starve the workers.” the stomach received from the police | Shoe Workers Membership Meeting under orders of the “socialist” police | ‘Tonight. chief Zoergiebel. earn eRe: 6 ey Sea Sy liieditig. of Iie anaeperdint Shoe POLISH PRAYERS AGAINST | Workers Unions will be held tonight, SOUR) araneoee | (Continued on Page Two) (Wireless By Inprecorr) aa aha WARSAW, March 19.—' sh * s - anti-Soviet Sunday was a failure, Ne: | Ask Investigation or |Whalen; It’s Boss Rule ‘SHOE WORKERS ANSWER WHALEN wil Important Membership Meeting Tonight Chief Cossack jat a Congregational Tuesda; jan arm, church meeting mitted that he detailed of police to club the heads \of striking shoe Workers in Brooklyn cause the Greek orthodox churches demonstratively refused to join the | campaign for “suffering Christians | in Russia,” the refusal being a pro- test against persecutiohs suffered | by the Greek orthodox church o: Poland from the Catholic authorities. A resolution adopted Tuesday ight at the Community Church, New York, asks that Walker call a | hearing to investigate police bru- tality ordered by Whalen on the PPP AZO SRG IIT March 6 demonstration. The Com- ree COW Hae ng, POWERFUL | munist church tribe of liberals 5 = | overlook the fact that the brutality, MOSCOW, March 19.—A power-|though carried out by Whalen ful radio station, reaching nearly all) directly, was ordered by Walker European countfies, is operated here} and the bosses. Displacing Whalen at Chelkovo, twenty miles north of | by another capitalist police commis- Moscow. The station, most power-| sioner will not stop the brutality ful on the continent, has a broad-| against unemployed workers who casting radius of 4,000 miles, demand “Work or Wages.” membership ee ® ‘More Letters the country the capi- flooded with Throughout talist |letters from workers on unemploy- press is being | ment, and protesting against the | beating up of workers at the March |6 jobless demonstrations, as well as on other questions relating to the unemployment situation Mrs. A. Romano writes Pittsburgh Press as follows: “If some people would think more about this case of unemployment they would not think about prohibi- tion. About this parade held by the unemployed, they have my hearty approval. They show that they are real men; more power to them and their leader. Mr. Devine, who! |speaks the truth. “In the recent elections we, the people of Pittsburgh, voted that the |firemen’s pay be raised awd they repay us by being ready %o turn on the water to keep back our fel- low citizens because they are fight- ing for work. What right had they, I would like to know! They are firefighters, workingmen them- selves; they go for the workingmen and not against them. “Wake up, people of Pittsburgh, wake up; next time you vote, vote for somebody who for the work- | ingman and not the rich.” Foster, Minor Exposed Walker. “T attended the meeting of the Board of Estimate and Apportion- (Continued on Page Three) JUDGE ADMITS IT to the IS CLASS CASE: Question of Jury Trial Is Political Matter Supreme Court Justice Ford and Assistant District Attorney Unge engaged yesterday in debate that exposed in most amazingly frank manner the clear-cut class nature of |the court case against Foster, Mi- nor, Amter, Raymond and Lesten, the delegates elected by 110,000 demonstrators in Union Square to tell Mayor Walker the jobl want- | ed work or wages, immediate relief jand some other things. The case was in open court, Su- preme Court Special Term, Part I, and the debate was provoked by the | order granted the defense attorneys | the day before by Judge McCook, | calling upon the district attorney to | show cause why the case of the five delegates should not be changed from special sessions to general ses- sions. The point in this change is that special sessions is a peculiarly | atrocious New York capitalist insti- | | tution where you are tried by three ‘judges, and can get a sentence of three years in prisén without any \trial by jury. In general sessions |you get a jury. “Serious Aspects.” Judge Ford interrupted a legal gument over precedents and points jof law between Assistant District ‘Attorney Unger and Attorney H. T. Hunt for the defense, by throwing |a realistic bombshell. | “I read the newspapers,” said Ford, “and I see that this is no iso- |lated case. There were these out- (Continued on Page Vhree) Piola sib baa \Jobless Council Ex- lecutives Meet Tonite Executive Committees of all | Unemployed councils will meet tonight at 8 p. m. sharp at the Central Office of the Unem- All unions and T.U.U.L. groups | must send representatives to this | meeting. [Soke SAAR eae one UG ¥ ployed Councils, 13 West 17th St. | ‘Giant Mass Demonstration at Coliseum Elects Workers’ Own Jury to Judge Capitalist Trial of Jobless Committee Work or Wages Demand To Be Made on Washington if Senate Com. Worker Get In Touch | Making Fake Investigation Hears Delegation As Deman ded MASSES CHEER JOBLESS FIGHT Thousands Pledge to Defend Delegation Over 11,000 poriens gathered yes- terday at the Bronx Coliseum, 177th St. and Bronx River, to carry on and broaden the fight for ork or Wages” supported by over 1,250,- 000 wo on March 6, throughout the United States, to protest against the railroading by the bosses of the leade: of the unemployeé movement, William Z. Foster, Rober! Minor, Israel Amter, Joseph Lester and Harry Raymond and to elect 2 labor jury to pass judgement on thy mass class vengeance of the capitalist gov ernment against the unemployed movement. When the chairman, Benjamin, in- troduced William Z. Foster, th audienc s¢ and cheered for a lon; time. speech was frequent ly interrupted by nthusiastic cheer. ing and applause. Foster pointed out the significance: of the great mass mobilization o March 6, particularly, he said suc demonstrations as 20,000 workers i: a city like*Youngstown, Ohio. Foster pointed out that Whalen an’ Walker obey their capitalist mar ters, and “we fight them!” He cor: nected up the struggle of the ur employed workers with the hunge strike of the militant Latin Ame: iean workers in Mexico City, wh: likewise are fighting against Ame: imperialism. “We must suy ort them in their struggles,” sa foster. he courts now take up the a’ i tack on the unemployed worke where the police clubs left off. It all part of the same fight. It the bosses answer to the deman of the unemployed; but it will n the workers.” Foster a halen of lying, and said th a battery of perjurers were beit mobilized, chief of whom was Whal: himself, “Whalen proposes jail for all us,” said Foster. “He wants to p me in jail for good. My answer that Whalen has foot and mouth di ease. Whalen talks too much. E bosses told him to. do such acts ai not talk about them. “Walker declared at the Board + Estimate meeting that the worke would reject the message of t. (Continued on Page Two) JOBLESS CASES terro cused ¥V Plan Class Vengeanc Against Many Today the class-vengeance cas jagainst Foster, Minor, Amter, Le ten and Raymond are set befo ;Judge McInery at the 57th Stre: \Court. Magistrate McInery is | Tammany henchman on the order « Magistrate Flood, who did the boss bidding so willingly, At the same time, McInery has s before him the case against Ra mond Luzi, who charged wi is “assaulting” officer Talbot, abor |which the capitalist press, on tl! instigation much to-do. | bail. lease against Leon jwith “assault.” First Luis charged with “assaulting” an off. jeer by the name of Dempsey. B» Dempsey wasn’t assaulted and wor Jof all couldn't identify Luis. { |they got another cop to make tl ‘charge. The fact is Luis was 4 |tacked by five of Whalen’s arm | thugs, beaten and then arrested. The case against Harry Eisma” whose only “crime” was attendi: the March 6th demonstration Union Square, comes up in the Ch dren’s Court on 22nd St. of Whalen, made Luzi is out on $2,0( McInery will also hear ti > Luis, charg: ! wes

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