Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
aha @age Four DAILY WORK aily, Worker Published by the Compredaily Publishing Co., Ine, dally axexept Gundy, at 00 43th St., New York City, W. ¥. Telephone ALgonquin 4- 206. "Cable “DATWORK." Address and mail cheeks te the Daily Worker, 50 E. 18th St, New Yerk, W. ¥. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By malt everywhere: One yoer, 36; six months, $8; Borough of Manhattan snd Bronx, New York City. six months, $4.50. Canada, $8 per year: Defend the Communist Party Ticket! HE state of Florida has ruled the Communist Party off the ballot. Although all technical requirements were com- plied with, the capitalist authorities decided that the toilers of Florida shall be denied the right to vote for Communists. Florida has followed in the footsteps of North Carolina and California. In each of these states stfuggles have been going on which dictated this art action against the Commu- Foreign: one year, 98; two months, $1; cxespting nist Party. In Cali he Communists have been fighting for the freedom of Tom Moon In North Carolina the Commun: b for the organization of the textile wor e Communist Party has fought for the org: a tobacco workers and has eater used against the toiling population. ts enemy does everything in its power to su! Parts But above en in order to deprive the workers ‘ity of white and Negro workers in nd Ford. Undoubtedly Florida and a concerted campaign to rule the Party off t hern states. Th candidacy of Ford is a challenge to the white ist rulers. It serves to organize the Negro masses against the terrible conditions of peonage and lynch law, for equal rights self-determination of the Negroes in the Black Belt. The action of Flor 0 the rights of the workers throughout the country. The be taken up. Immediate protest action must be developed he workers everywhere must be aroused to defend their t and their Party. Florida must be forced to put the hammer and sic on the ballot. Adopt resolutions, organize protests everywhere; send te: ‘aphic protests to the Florida Secretary of State, with the demand off the Communist Party!” The Shave. The -Work Scheme RESIDENT WILLIAM GREEN of the American Federa- tion of Labor has come ont in favor of workers employed part time at starvation wages sharing their work and wages with the totally unemployed. The most vicious scheme produced so far in the crisis by the capitalist agencies is the “share the work” plan. This he latest dodge to avoid relief payments and jobless insurance. The jeme is an extension of the stagger system of émployment which al- dy has reduced the income and living standard even of employed workers to the pauper level. It means that a further “division of work” is to be carried out by cutting down the working time of workers now employed and distribut- ing it among a small number of unemployed. It means that part time workers are therefore forcibly assessed that portion of their wages they would receive on the present basis. The cost of caring for the unemployed who will get this part time work is borne, not by the employers or the government, but by the work- ers forced to divide their working time with them. Since this scheme is intended to create new illusions about the pos- sibility of getting jobs and thereby check the struggle for immediate relief and unemployment insurance, since it increases the burdens of un- employment relief on workers and not on the bosses, we are not sur- prised to find that William Green, president of the American Federation of Labor, has given the plan his wholehearted endorsement. . . of their right the elections North Caroli 1 for nd ‘HE “share the work” plan emanated from the fertile brain of Walter C Teagle, head of the Standard Oil of New Jersey and chairman of-the Pederal Reserve Banking and Industrial Committee—one of the chain of Froover committees whose chief fob is the organization and conduct of the capitalist offensive against the workers. Hoover has also endorsed the plan Says William Green, as quoted by the New York Herold Tribune: ‘If employers of labor throughout the nation will give the share- @e-work movement thefr full and complete support, increasing employ- Ment will be noticeable within a very short time in the industrial and economic situation Since the movement originates with the employers (and bankers) Mr. Green can be assured of their support—at least to the extent where it will not interfere with the efficiency of their plants. It costs even less to fake dollars out of one rs’ pay envelope and give them to another wor than to contribute stingy sums donated to the local Community Chests. Here ts a special job for the Rank and File Unemployment Insurance Committees in the A. F. of L. union: They should lose no time in ex- posing the sinister purposes of the share-the-work plan and of the united front of the Hoov baiting corporations administration, heads of Teagle, and President Green the biggest labor- of the A, F. of L. like Persecution in Teachers’ Union JT IS no mere coincidence that the discharge of Oakley Johnson, instructor in New York City College, because of his activity in-a number of militant and revolutionary organi- zations, is paralled by a drive of the officials of the Teachers’ Union against the left wing and its leaders, among whom are Scott Nearing, Solon DeLeon and Donald Henderson. This attempt to expel. the left wing is an attack against the interests of the teachers as a whole. This is to be seen from the character of the left wing program: against salary re- ductions; organization of school committees to combat wage cuts and the tyranny of the Board of Education; active support of the thousands of unemployed teachers; unity with the local unions of the A. F. of L. organiZations which have endorsed unemployment insurance and immediate relief at the expense of the employers and the govern- ment; full union privileges for substitute teachers; full union democracy and the abolition of the official practice oY violating all constitutional democratic provisions, etc For advocating and energetically fighting for this program, the official leadership of the union, headed by Dr. Lefkowitz and Linville, is not only carrying through an expulsion campaign, but is working with the Board Of Education to drive the militant teachers from the school system. * IN the approved style of the A. F by the personal representative of L. (made fashionable in New York f President Green, McGrady, who acted asa state witness against the ng garment, workers in police court), Dr. Lefkowitz of the Teachers U: calls in Dr. O'Shea, head of Tam- *many Hall's Board of Education, to take action against a union member who fought against him in a matter of internal union policy—a definite sigh that the officialdom of the Teachers Union is turning this body into an auxiliary for the suppression of militant teachers. . OHOOL TEACHERS and college instructors are regarded by capitalism as a valuable part of their official apparatus, to keep the working class n a state of servility. It is not surprising, therefore, that agents of the ruling class go to any lengths to maintain control of ‘the Teachers Union and to make it serve the interests of that class. The Left Wing in the Teachers Union is fighting for the most acute demands of the teachers who also are suffering the brutal effects of the capitalist offensive, are fight- ing for elementary democratic rights and in reply to these demands the officialdom of the Teachers Union is employing the same weapons as the réactionary heads of the colleges—the policy of persecution and dismissal from the jobs, as is instanced in City College by the discharge of Onk- lay Johnson. ‘The fight for his reinstatement and for the defeat of this new @rive against the revolutionary teachers, will be successful only if it is accompanied by an exposure of these despicable acts of the Lefkow in the Teachers Union and by forming a united front of tie rank and file teachers against them, joining up this struggle with the fight of the working class for their economic and political demands. 4 t Establishing a Party Nucleus In a Shop | By ¥. MATLUS (ERE in New York we have four 4 Communists working in a shop of about 70 workers, mostly young No nucleus organized in the | shop. Why? What are generally | the reasons? Not a single one is | against shop nucleus generally, but not a single one approved the idea | of a nucleus in this. shop. | One comrade states: . “We are | doing Communist work in the shop anyway ,without a nucleus.” The other comrade declares “Two of us are leading function- | aries in the union, why take us | away from union work?” The third comrade explains: “This is too small a shop, It does not pay to take us out from street units where we are doing ‘good’ work and organize into a shop nu- cleus where we will not do more than what we are doing at pre- sent.” | DO NOT TAKE UP | GRIEVANCES The fact remains — that these comrades have not sufficient time to discuss shop matters. They do not divide the work among. them- selves and establish individual re- sponsibility for certain activities in the shop. They do not plan care- fully how to bring in the Party campaign into the shop. They are not taking up every grievance of the workers in the shop, and de- velop daily struggles through which they could prove themselves the ac- tual leaders in the shop. After a short discussion with the comrades, we more or less suc- ceeded in convincing them of the incorrectness of their arguments, and we decided to establish a nu- cleus. Ses Ss did not take long and we could hear some of the comrades tell- | ing us that “a shop nucleus is a good thing. Not only does a nu- cleus. strengthen the revolutionary union, but it becomes the back- bone of the union.” Not only do these comrades have too few problems in this shop, but the daily problems keep them all quite busy. Through digging in into the troubles of the workers, our comrades begin to feel more individual responsibility to these workers, as Communists, as lead- ers, as a part of the vanguard of the working class. NUCLEUS TAKES UP THE FIGHT The boss was not asleep. He, too, saw that the atmosphere got hotter in the shop. The activities developed by the nucleus among the girls begin to bother him. Not only did the Communists carry on work, but more Party girls became also a part of the leadership in the shop. The boss decided to fire the most active workers. A com- mittee of workers goes to the boss to demand their reinstatement. The boss manoeuvers on the one hand, afraid of the militancy of the workers. On the other hand, the workers’ militanty makes him de- termined to go thru with his plan. But the workers of the shop are | behind this struggle, with the ex- | ception of a few professional scabs. Next morning the boss was sur- prised to see the workers remain- ing outside the shop, refusing to go up to work. The d€termina~ | tion of the workers to fight and | defend their leaders, forced the | bosses to give in, The workers won their demands. MOBILIZING FOR PARTY CAMPAIGNS ‘The work of the Communist nu- cleus brings its fruits. Through | individual talks, through Party lit- erature and papers, the workers are -beginning to be more class-consci- ous. The struggles led in the shop in the forefront of which were the Communists, convinced the workers that Communists are practical people and know how to defend their interests. The election cam- paign is on. The Communist Par- ty must have its candidates on the ballot. For this reason, thou- | sands of signatures of citizens are needed to place the Party on the ballot. The workers respond to the call of the Communists in the shop to put their shoulders to the wheel. ‘Twenty girls come out to help place their candidates on the bal- lot. MASS WORK IN A SMALL SHOP Can mass work be done in such a@ small shop? The work of this nucleus gives a clear answer to this question! Many of these workers are helping to bring forward the program of the revolutionary un- ions and the Party to hundreds of other workers. These workers are trying to convince other work+ ers to vote Communist in the com- ing elections. ASS work does not only mean demonstrations and street cor- ner meetings. Mass work does not only mean thousands of leaflets. According to the 14th Plenum Res- olution of our Party, real mass work can only be done through the establishment of solid personal con~ tact with the masses of the Ameri- can workers, MASS ARRESTS OF WORKERS IN OSAKA ‘TOKIO.—On the 18th of September the police in Osaka carried out mass arrests of workers on charges of Com- munist activity and membership of the illegal Communist Party of Japan. Over fifty workers were arrested. A student named Khanimoro was also arrested. He was charged with having “received Communist information from the United States.” He had re- ceived a letter from the U. S.A. ‘The Japanese authorities have ad- dressed themselves to the police in Los Angeles in order to secure the arrest and extradition of the Japan- ese student at the university there who sent off the letter, “Behind our economic fabric the president placed —Secretary of War Patrick J. Hurley. ment.’ FRANKS HERB, 1 WONT FoRctl gs NEW YORK, MONDAY, OCTOBER 10. 1932 t of the govern- —By Burck The Appeal of the Amsterdam World Congress Against War Calls Upon Workers, Farmers, Intellectuals and Students for a United Struggle Against Imperialist War (ONCLUSION) Tf Congress points out that re- gardless of this or that appar- ently pacifistic political manoeuver every imperialist power whether it be the United States or England or France or Japan or Italy, is work- ing for war, It draws attention to the leading role played by French imperialism which, in its preparations for war, is attempting to bring about and to direct, with the aid of its vassals, Poland, Rumania and other states, —a regrouping of the imperialist forces (Danubian Federation, Laus- anne Pact etc.) * Determined as it 1s to offer every resistance in its power to the cur- rent sweeping the whole present generation towards disaster, the Congress sees salvation only in the concerted action of workers, pea- Sants and all who are exploited and oppressed, It declares that there is no other adequate means of carrying on the war against war. It is aware that many. distin- guished minds are desperately seeking to find a means of saving society by noble dreams. It is aware that there are men who offer a personal resistance to war which may draw down upon them the vengeance of capitalist laws. But it considers that in the face of the terrible challenge offered by present developments it is impossible to stop short at abstract formulas, or to confine onself to means of resist- ance foredoomed to failure; notably the—unfortunately futile—sacrfice constituted by the noble attitude adopted after a declaration of war by conscientious objectors and by all others who fling themselves individually against a collective disaster. It expects that the men of char- acter and courage who preach these heroic Measures and who are pre- pared to accept for themselves the very grave consequences of such an attitude, will join with the others in erecting, stone by stone, from the ground up a massive col- lective barrier against war. Every form of opposition to this work merely helps the enemy. ”*PLEBISCITE” INFFECTIVE ‘The Congress considers that the so-called ite, proposed by some in the event of war, is inef- fective. Such @ referendum can have no influence once the war has broken out. Public opinion will then be forced to accept the situa- tion as it is, and will do so the more readily since it will have been intoxicated by newspaper prop= aganda, Above all the Congress warns the public against governmental in- stitutions, and especially the League of Nations, which functions at Geneva as gan immediate mouth- piece of the imperialist powers, The words spoken at its great pompous ceremonies are words of peace, but its acts are the acts of war. The Congress calls upon the sincere men and women assembled here in war, to expose this hypocrisy which, like all merely verbal pacifisms, aims only at lulling the vigilance of tlie masses, so that the war may ‘once more take them by surprise. ‘The Congress warns the true en- emies of war against the political compromises with the prevailing system practiced by certain leaders of working-class organizations. Such cooperation strengthens this sys- tem and betrays the cause of the struggle against war. The attitude of the leaders of the Socialist In- ternational in August, 1914, one of the outstanding facts of the last war, marks a notable setback in the movement towards human eman- cipation. The hostile attitude adopied by the leaders of the Labor and Socialist International towards the present. Congress, confirms the impression that they maintain the same political position they held in 1914, which is in crass contradictoin to all true principles of socialism. MASS ACTION. ‘The congress addresses itself to the innumerable masses of the pro- letariat which needs only conscious organization in order to come to power. On the strength of the mandate given to it by a multitude of people coming from all quarters of the globe and united in their sincere and burning desire for peace, though holding divergent . political opinions, on the st rength of its profound conviction that the strug- gle against war is only genuine to the extent to which it is efficaci- ous and influences the facts; the congress calls upon the masses, the only invincible power existing in the tragic disorder of our times, to enter upon this scene of disorder in closed and disciplined ranks and to raise its powerful voice, SWEDISH Y. C. i. AT MILI- TARY MANEUVERS STOCKHOLM.—The Swedish mili- tary manoeuvres are proceeding in the neighborhood of Upsala at the moment. Among the illustrious guests is “comrade” Hanson, the prime min- ister of the fourth “workers govern- ment” of His Majesty the King of Sweden, - Hanson is the man who declared in an interview given to American news- Paper correspghdents that Sweden would be prepared “to defend the Baltic States at the order of the League of Nations against the Soviet Union.” He is thus in his element at the manoeuvres, However, other Quests, unbidden guests, were also present. These were members of the Swedish Young Com- munist League engaged in intensive propeganda among the soldiers and distributing leaflets and newspapers. The chief activity of the military police at the moment is rounding up these unwelcome guests and escorting them from the manoeuvre field to which they return with new magerial 11 SEY. Beas 8 Ne It is along these knes that this congress intends that its Interna- tional Committee for the struggle against war shall work towards ex- tending this front of the working class across the world. ia ges fhe ‘ACH of us here takes a sort of pledge, and we take it all to- gether: ~ We sweer that we will never allow the formidable unity which has been established here among the exploited and victimized mas- ses to be broken up, We swear to fight with all our force and with all the means at our command against imperial- ist capitalism that purveyor to the slaughterhouse. We swear to dedicate our selves with all our forces and all our resources to our direct. and im- mediate tasks taking our stand: Against asmaments, against war preparations. and in conse- quence against the governments ruling us; Against Jingoism, nationalist chauvinism, and fascism, the police army of imperialism which, leads to imperialist war and pro- yokes civil war against the mas- ses of the working class; Against war budgets, a vote for which is a dishonor and a crime; Against the loans and taxes that ‘rob the masses in order to increase armaments: , Against the campaign of in- citement apd slander aimed at the Soviet, Union, the country of socialist struction which we will not allow to be touched; Against the dismemberment of China, of which each imperialist power covets a portion; Against the exploitation, op- pression, and massacre of the co- lonial peoples; For the support of the na- tional minorities and the peoples fighting for their national and social independence; For the effective suffport of the Japanese workxers who have raised the standard of struggle against their own imperialist government. All the burdens of war, as well as all the burdens of armed peace and of war preparations, are laid on the shoulders of the work- ing class, whose vanguard is |\ formed by the armament and transport workers. The working class must therefore immediate- ly organize and be on its guard. We swear to fight with all our power against the gathering dis- aster. THE APPEAL, And we continue to appeal to all: to appeal to all workers, peas- ants, and intellectuals of all countries, to the exploited and oppressed. We-call upon them to join us, and .in.public meet. . ings and demonstrations to take the pledges we have taken here ~and to put them into effect. How: the Detroit Welfare “Feeds” Jobless Workers Scenes of Misery in Auto City Show Burning Need of Jobless Insurance By GEORGE COOPER. ETROIT.— “we have nine hese soup kitchens. one’s opening up next week, supervisor of one of these “welfare” kitchen told me proudly. “You we are going to do away with fare grocery checks just as fast as we can. It's so much cheaper to feed them in our soup kitchens.” I gagged, as I passed the food vats. The raw, rdnk, sourish smell of soup kitchen fod sickened me, And I have no doubt it sickened those who have to eat it. It was the evening meal time—two meals, one at. seven o'clock in the morning and the other at five in the eve- that’s all Detroit's poor, if get soup kitchen tickets, get to gee were coming in, self- shame-faced, humiliated at the Heceaatiy of being herded to- gether like cattle for their feeding. Each individual, as he passed into the kitchen, had to display a num- bered check. hese people were jus6 so many numbers to the im- personal “charity” of the Welfare Department; and the numbers, and the herding tégether, and the hur- ried lines eating at bare tables, looked just like a prison. Except that one could imagine no possible offense for which these little chil- dren, some of them two and three years old, were being punished. MOTHER AND CHILDREN A mother of Spanish descent gave up trying to get her two tots, neither over four, to eat the soup kitchen slop, threw her face on her hands, and began to weep loudiy. The frightened children swelled the outcry. “Ya vamos a comer,” “we'll try to eat now,” the bright-faced little boys assured their mother. After a while, she dried her eyes, but makes no further attempt to feed the children. What is wrong? But look at the food! she cries. Her husband (sitting with bitter, set face beside her) and herself, they can get the food down. But the children cannot eat it, tt is no usetrying any more, children can- not eat such food. ‘The blue milk they can drink, but that is all. She gathers together the bread which she and her husband abstain from eating in order that the children may have it, and wraps it in a piece of newspaper, When the children get hungry she will soak it in water and feed them with it. T LOOK at others in the soup kit- chen. Obviously they are hun- gry: gaunt, cavernous faces, thin wrists, flat chests, flatter stomachs. But they eat with no relish, they cat because if they do not eat they will die. An old man chews and chews while tears run down his face. A pretty young girl of six- teen, her clothes and hair arranged with pitiful carefulness, pitiful be- cause the clothes are mended and remended in @ score of places until they can hardly be kept together, forming a terrible contrast to her beautifully delicate face, catches my eyes watching her, and chokes on | her food; the shame of her publs.oy degradation overwhelms her, “IT’S MUCH CHEAPER” “Yes,” the supervisor goes on to tell me, “v* find its much cheaper feeding t'cm here. This way, if their meal ticket isn’t punched, the city doesn’t have to pay for that Out of nine hundred regis- ered here, sbout two-thirds show up for a meal. They go somewhere for some reason, maybe looking for a job, and miss their meal. And, of cot on rainy days, like yes. terday’s thunderstorms, they stay home with their kids. It's much cheaper this way. Before, when we gave them grocery checks—$8 every two weeks to a family of four— they used up the whole check. But they seldom ever use up their whole meal check. It costs the city so much less money.” T look at the supervisor. Can he be saying this in earnest, telling me how from the need of looking for jobs and staying inside out of the rain, the city wins a point in its struggle to avoid caring for the des- titute? his flabby, fat face is solemn and unctuous, he actually means it. UT the Welfare Department’s kitchens are only for families. For the childless couple or the sin- gle man, there is no relief at all. There are couple of privately run soup kitchens, but the single men tell me that the food is simply in- edible. They go, instead, from door to door, to the back entrances of bakeries and restaurants, begging for the left-overs. A steady stream of the single unemployed can be seen going from door to door. Nor is there any place for them to sleep. I was shown through the McGregor. Institute, a privately-run flop housé, The manager showed me, proudly, his long dormitories, his cafeteria, his chapel; he could house seven hundred men. But there were only about two hundred nightly. Why? His answer was that on summer nights the men preferred to sleep outdoors. But I heard a different story from an unemployed Ford worker, a sturdy German-American whom I singled out from the hun- dreds sleeping in Grand Circus Park and Cass Park, THE McGREGOR INSTITUTE “The McGregor Institute? All you get there at the most is three nights lodging. After that you have to pay. Sure, they got plenty room for more there, but they won't let us in. They keep the number at about two hundred because they have to make some showing to gét money from the city and dona- tions.” When I told him how the manager had said the men pre- ferred to sleep outdoors, his face. flushed with indignation. “Look at them,” he cried, pointing to the workers, row on row, were stretch- ed out on the thin grass, trying to sleep. “Look at them,” he scream- ed. “Don’t you think they'd rath. er sleep in bed?” al SO eee t! METHING NEW 1 AMERICA” t I turned back ie fo ipa me . “How io ee! wee ite TT asked. “How - 8 Yous think?” he answered, “There are those still waiting, hoping against hope for jobs. But they are gete ting tired waiting. There are offi crs like myself,” and hé looked full ‘id, thane a have known @ before | there is no sense waiting.” “When the two ki-ds get together, then we shall have somethiig very new in America.” Letters from Scuttsboro Boys Call for Increased Struggle Solidarity of Workers Yorkers Everywhere Brings Stirring Messages from Cells ‘ ‘ROM the death cells in Kilby Prison, Alabama, tortured by the guards, half-starved, taken out for “exercise” only when their would- be executioners have the spectacle of another man burning in the chair to terrify them, the Scotts- boro boys write to their friends of the International Labor Defense, and to the workers of the world to whom they look to save their lives. Not all of them can write, but those who can—Roy and Andy Wright, Olin Montgomery, Charlie | Weems, Haywood Patterson, Ozie Powell and Willie Robertson—speak for the others. They speak of the monstrous frameup which has brought them to the death-house—it is a night- mare to them: “I wouldn’t even ‘tempt to do such, even if I had ever thought of such a thing in my whole life,’ Roy Wright, 14, who was. condemned to, life imprisonment, writes. He has bad eyes, is going blind. In the prison, no medical attention for this is provided. “My eyes is given me some trouble and I am tire of them- given me trouble too,” he writes. “Something I Know I Did Not Do.” Olin Montgomery, 17, writes: “I am here for something I know I did not do. My pore mother has no one to help hur to make a living. but me. She had a little girl left only five years old to take care of and she has no job at all. And I gess you all know how times is on the outside. I did all I cud for my pore mother to help her live and my litle sister. They just made a frameup on us boys. 1 know I out give uo one any cause to mistreat me this way, I know I outvand 1 hope you all‘is doin all you can for .us boys.- I ask my: mother for a pair of shoes and she say she-was~ not able to send me any shoes, it is getting cold on the Rock Place in my cell.” f iS a aN AYWOOD PATTERSON writes poems in his cell sometimes, and his letters have a poetic qual- ity; “I am as innocent as the tiny mite of life just beginning to stir beneath the heart,” he writes, “I hayen't did anything to be impris- oned like this? They beat me at Scottsboro and Gadsden and I did not know what they arrested me for until they had us tied with ropes and trying make me tell lies.” The workers in the prison feel soli- darity with these black boys who are victims of the same capitalist “justice” which has brought them, too, to. the death house. Ha; writes: “I receiveq your teehee and the dollar sure came in ha for smoking tobacco, etc. We hay some more men here that is sen. tenced to death, but they is good te all of us they divided their tobacco” with us as long as they had, it,” And when Andy Wright. asks quite simply whether arrangements can be made for them to get some exercise, the cry of the worker whe does not understand that capitalis¢ Justice is just what it is shouted over the world: “Tf it is any way you can fix is so we can walk around ang get some pxercizin please, I would like might well if you could. This Prod Msi Place don’t agree with me ei well.” Acknowledge Solidarity ‘Their letters express the -under- standing of the boys of the solidar-\ ity of workers all over the world who are fighting to savé them, One great’ thing we all. were pleased to hear and that was that our friends are going to stick with us,” Charlie Weems writes. : “Now I hope to tell you that: thank all of the workers for all that are being done for us, and too, we are longing for the day to come — whe we can enjoy our freedom and meet our many friends,” Ozie Pows ell wrote last July. And Andy Wright: “It really makes me feel protected and in thé cadre of some that mean me and ‘thé’ “rest-of us~all the good in the world. Don't think for a’ single time that we don't feel grateful to you and the workers.” s A letter from a worker on ‘the outside means a lot to the Srlkeite ers in Kilby Prison: “T xeceived your eas few T was 80 ane