The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 25, 1934, Page 6

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~ Page Six WET VORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25, 1934 ee ee | SAVE THAELMANN FROM THESE RATS! Daily . WTRAL ORGAM COMMUNIST PARTY U.S.A. (SECTION OF COMMUNIST INTERMATIONAL? “America’s Only Working Class Daily FOUNDED 1924 'UBLISHED DAILY, EXCEPT SUNDAY, BY THE tOMPRODAILY PUBLISHING CO., IN€., 5@ E. 13th treet, New York, N. Y. Jelepho: Newspaper" ALgonquin 4-7954. Jable Adar Daiwork,” New York, N. ¥. Vashington Bureau: Room 454, National Press Building, kth and F &t., Wash D.C. Lidwest Bu: lelephone a Dea 75 cents. TUESDAY, May Day 1934 in N. Y. By CHARLES KRUMBEIN (District Organizer, New York District, C.P.U.S.A.) APRIL 24, 1934. HE present situation in New York City is such that the mightiest united May Day demonstration ever held is possible. With the increasing infringements on the living standards and rights of the work- ers, they are more determined than ever for action. Wages for the employed and relief to the unemployed have been cut, rising cost verge starvation. eded up to the point of physical exhaustion with the result that more and more workers are thrown into the ranks of the unemployed. Their rights to organize, strike and Picket are being conti challenged. Com- pany unions are on the order of the day. The Negro masses, because of the vicious -discrimina- tion against them, are hit harder than any other. section of the population. Young workers are either unable to get work, or when working, receive less wages than their adult brothers. Women receive less wages than men for the same class of work. The war veterans have had their compensation cut and are denied their back pay (bonus). The foreign born workers are especially discriminated against, intimidated and threatened with deporta- tion when they fight against their increasing misery. In all this the government, both nationally and locally, acts as the executive committee of the bosses. They use every means at their command to force worse and worse conditions upon the work- ers so that the bosses’ profits may be maintained. The workers are denied the mght to organize, strike and picket; injunctions are used against them, police and other armed forces are mobilized daily when the workers resist. In face of such a situation, unity of the work- ing class is more necessary than ever before. The workers when united on a militant working class Program of demands and struggle, can wring con- cessions from their employers as has been dem- onstrated before. Workers have fought back against wage cuts; they have been able to increase their ‘wages and lower their hours as a result of strug- gle. Increased relief for the unemployed has been obtained as a result of broad mass struggle. More can be obtained with the workers united. May Day, the international workers’ day, is the time to demonstrate such unity and thereby put fear into the hearts of the employers and wring concessions from them. z which in face of the continuou m to th living, bring: sly HE tremendous fighting spirit of the auto workers has again broken through all the sabotage of the A. F. of L. officials. This time it is the Cleveland and St. Louis Body plants. The Cleveland plant is tied up completely by the walk-out of 8,400 workers. In Detroit the 4,000 tool and die men still c th the hatred of the em- featist tactics of Matthew are It is obvious that the flames of a nation-wide auto strike smoulder, ready to leap up, at any moment. But depends on how successful the workers are in getting the leadership of their fight into their own hands out of the hands of the A. F. of L. officials, whose sole interest is to see how long they can keep the workers back from .strug- gle, and then to see how they can trick the men back to work without hurting the bosses. The great treachery of the A. F. of L. officials appears in the fact that they deliberately and criminally kept the auto men hog-tied when the employers were trembling in fear of strike at the peak of the production several weeks ago. Now that peak, the most favorable point to strike, is passed But, it is a fact that, despite this treachery of the A. F. of L. leaders, the auto workers can still win their fight. The decisive factor is the way the struggle is conducted. First of all, the strike must be spread to all the auto shops, with connections set up between all the plants in the same city and in the different cities. The Cleveland workers must establish con- nections with Detroit and St. Louis. Then, the auto workers must be absolutely firm in their determination not to fall for the soft soap of the A. F. of L. officials, and stick firmly together against all decisions that do not have the full approval of the strikers as made clear in open consultation with the rank and file. To guarantee the strike against betrayal through fake “arbitration” tricks, broad commit- tees embracing all the departments regardless of union affiliation, etc., must be immediately elected. Instead of the deliberate trick of the A. F. of L. leaders to bury the strike spirit in small halls which keep most of the men outside, there must be militant picketing with active propagandizing of all workers near the plants. Above all there must be a fighting opposition of the rank and file to the A. F. of L. leadership and policies, with the purpose of placing the lead- ership squarely into he hands of the workers themselves. This alone can win victory! The auto workers are fighting the Wall Street profit vultures. They are fighting for decent stand- ards of living for themselves and their families! It is up to the Communists, who everywhere stand for the best interests of the working class, to spread the fighting opposition to the A. F. of L. strikebreaking officials. Get the strike leadership into the hands of the rank and file! Spike the A. F. of L. strikebreaking leaders! A U.M.W.A. Convention HE officials of the Lewis machine that controls the United Mine Workers of America are moving with all their usual trickery in their preparations for the com- Worker | Cleveland Joins Detroit |Chinese Red Army Beats » Regiments | Soviets Win Victory on Southern Battle Front, CANTON, April 24. — The Chinese Red Army has given a crushing defeat to the Nanking forces in a battle at Chi Cheng, on tha Kiangsi-Fukien order. Dispatches say that the Red Army surrounded and disarmed five regiments of Nanking troops. French Workers To Pillory Nazis in Big Public Trial Jurists and Scientists To | Give Evidence in Big | Paris Hall CHICAGO.—The Chicago Com- mittee to Aid Victims of German Fascism will hold a public trial of fascist terror, at which refugees from Nazi Germany will testify. It will be held at Orchestra Hall, | May 23. oS ah PARIS.—The largest hall in all France will be the scene of a pub- lic trial against Fascist terror in |Germany. The French National |Committee of Liberation is | ranging this inquest for May 9. | Declarations and testimony of hundreds of jurists, scientists, writers and workers will be heard at the trial. Here the “Second | Brown Book” and Dimitroff’s “The Reichstag Fire and the Lessons of | the Leipzig Trial” will be presented. |The records of the Investigation Commission of hundreds of refu- gees and other victims of Hitler persecution will be thrown open to the public. The day this was announced a conference of delegates from all parts of Paris was held. Immedi- ately a resolution was adopted by | the representatives of railway work- jers, street car workers, gas, taxi | drivers, packinghouse workers and | others, endorsing the coming trial. | “The shop delegates greet the | Social Lights Support | “Liberation,” Organ of Fascist Silver Shirts NEW YORK.—Many of the most prominent social lights of the city | @re supporting the fascist Silver | Shirts, Hitler’s hero-wroshippers in | America, it was revealed here. With the bankruptey of “Libera- tion,” the official organ of the Silver ar-| | See George Pudiior Is Expelled ‘Indians Massacred By Communist International Bor Resistance to | NEW YORK.—The International Control Commission of the Commu- nist International has issued a state- ment on the expulsion of George Padmore from the ranks of the Communist Party. Padmore, a former member of the Communist Party of the United States, was as- signed to responsible work as head | |of the International Trade Union| Committee of Negro Workers (head- | quarters formerly in Hamburg, ;Germany). He was, at the same time, editor of the “Negro Worker,” monthly organ of the Committee, Padmore was expelled for making | serious deviations from the program of the Communist Party on the Negro question in the direction of rades Browder and Heywood at the recent Party Convention in Cleve- land. The discussion of Padmore’s| deviations will be continued in the May issue of the “Communist,” in which issue shall appear the com-| plete report of Comrade Heywood at the recent Party Convention. Statement of the International Control Commission Padmore, a member of the Com- munist Party, despite repeated warnings, did not break off his con- nections with the exposed provoca- teur Coujate and lived in the apart- ment of the provocateur Jean. In order to deceive the Party organs, Padmore repeatedly stated that he Bolivian Recruiting | Paraguay and Bolivia Both Kill Prisoners, Says Commission GENEVA, April 24—A wholesale |machine gun massacre of Bolivian| | Indians who resisted recruiting of-| |ficers attempting to draft them into the army for the Chaco war is reported by the League of Nations | Chaco Commission, which has just returned without having accom- | plished anything toward settling the | ; War. Call Is Issued for Nat'l Youth Day, May 30th | Day of Protest Against Imperialist War and Fascism” NEW YORK.—A call to make May 30, “Memorial Day” for the jingo militar- ists, and National Youth Day | for the workers, into a gigan- \tie nation-wide youth demon- | stration against war and fas- |cism has been issued by the Youth | Section of the American League Against War and Fascism | “On May 30, Memorial Day, un- |der the guise of honoring those | who died in the last says the League's manifesto, “thousands of | speeches in schools, radio, movie, |and newspapers will be made glori- fying war. Thousands of parades | throughout the country will pro- claim the glory of dying ‘for our country.’ ” Pointing to the immense war preparations of the Roosevelt gov- ernment, to the rise of fascist ten- | dencies in the lynching of Negroes and the N.R.A. breaking of strikes, and to the criminal preparations of all the capitalist powers for an at- tack on the Soviet Union, the mani- festo concludes: “The young people of this coun- try must cry ‘A Halt to the War Plans!’ “The Youth Section of the Amer- ican League Against War and Fas- cism, representing tens of thou- sands of organized workers, farm- ers and students calls upon the youth of America to act. We must |mot allow May 30 to be used as a means for spreading propaganda | for imperialist war. “Instead of Memorial Day, we call for demonstrations of hundreds of thousands of youth for a National Youth Day Against War and Fas- | cism. “For the past three years large | sections of American youth have demonstrated on May 30, National Youth Day. This year, with war |as close as it is, it is imperative | that the youth take action for it is ; We who will be used as cannon fodder in the next war. | “We must not permit political or any other differences to stand in the way of united struggle against the common enemy — imperialist war. Unity is the cry of the hour. | Unity against imperialist war! “Let the Natonal Youth Day demonstrations this year be a pow- erful protest against the war plans and war preparatons of the govern- ment. ‘Demonstrate National Youth Day, May 30, “Stop the criminal war prepa- | rations of the U. S. Government! “Rally for the fight against im- | perialist war and fascism.’ | Shirts, an anti-semitic, anti-radical, The commission repeated a story | issued by the Bolivian government | ; | 10 justify the massacre, that the} Negro petty bourgeois nationalism, had already broken with Jean. Such which led him to direct and active ing Pittsburgh District Convention, to be | organization, it was disclosed that ‘conduct on the part of Padmore | ANTI-FASCIST MEET IN held early in May. at least fifteen of our “upper class” PASSAIC A mighty May Day demonstration this year will result in showing the workers their power when united. This can result in increased wages to meet the increased cost of living; more and cash relief for the unemployed; exerting pressure for the passage of H. R. 7598 (the workers’ Unem- ployment Insurance Bill); obtain rights for the Ne- gro masses and freedom of the Scottsboro boys stop the offensive of the bosses and their gov- ernment against the workers’ rights to organize, strike and picket; obtain better conditions for the young workers and women; force better conditions and the bonus for the war veterans; stop the dis- criminations and threats of deportation against the foreign born. And above all weld a mighty force im the struggle against war and fascism. The leaders of the Socialist Party and Amer- fean Federation of Labor have done everything within their power to prevent unity on May Day. They refused to give any consideration to the ap- proach of the left wing workers of New York City for one united May Day demonstration. More than this, after “fighting” for the right to demonstrate in Union Square, which was granted them, they “voluntarily” withdrew from Union Square knowing beforehand that once their fol- lowers came to Union Square they would remain, fraternize and unite with the left wing workers who were to come into Union Square after the So- Cialist Party, and thereby bring about real unity of the New York workers over the heads of and against the wishes of the Socialist Party and Amer- iean Federation of Labor misleaders, . * Raed task of all the left wing workers, and es- pecially the Communists, is to reach all the workers in New York City, and especially those still under the influence of the Socialist Party and Amer- ican Federation of Labor leaders, to acquaint them With the facts and the need of unity and thereby bring them into one powerful May Day demon- stration which is being organized by the United Front May Day Conference. Millions of leaflets are to be distributed between now and ‘May Day. Local meetings are being held; parades and dem- onstrations on a sectional basis are to take place. ‘Two hundred thousand copies of a special May Day edition of the Daily Worker must be distributed, All of this requires the greatest activity on the Part of all those that are for unity on May Day. Between now and May First every worker should make it his business to drop everything else and give all of his energy and time to building the mightiest and most powerful May Day demonstra- tion that New York has ever seen. Come daily to the Section Headquarters and the headquarters of your mass organization to carry on this work. The possibilities are here. Our task is to utilize them. By doing so, we will make May Day, 1934 in New York City an historic one and @ real beginning for the winning of the majority of the working class for the revolutionary way out of the crisis. Down tools May First! All out to Union Square at 2 o'clock! All out to Madison Square Garden at 7:30 p.m.! ‘ : 4 oin the Communist Party' EAST 12TH STREET, NEW YORK, N. Y. | Please send me more information on the Comma- nist Party. | The announcements are sent out late, the men in the locals are being canvassed with the same tricks that packed the national con- vention with Lewis henchmen. The reason for this is not far to seek. The “new agreement” that Lewis and the coal opera- tors have handed down to the miners has made their conditions, if anything, worse than before. The capitalist press of Pittsburgh hails this agreement as giving the men a 24 per cent in- crease in pay. This is a deliberate deception. Whatever slight increase is. provided for ap- plies only to one miner in ten. The machine men and the loaders, constituting 90 per cent of the miners, get their wages cut by the new agreement. Under the agreement these miners get paid ac- cording to the size of the slate. Places that have one foot of slate get 56 cents a ton, others will get 52 cents. In addition, the operators will deduct for the drilling of holes. All this means that the pay envelopes will shrink, since the agreement gives each of these miners one hour less work than be- fore. On top of all this, the new agreement pro- vides that all rents, powder, house coal, etc., etc., will cost the miners 10 per cent more, thus guar- anteeing a real slash in wages for a large majority of the miners! . . . 'HE men wanted a $6 a day scale with a 6-hour day and a 5-day week, with full proportional increases for all the loaders and machine men, This demand they had placed in thousands of reso- lutions sent to the recent national U.M.W.A. con- vention. This is what the miners demanded of their officials. But the officials trampled on these wishes, and worked out this new agreement to cut the wages of the miners. It is no wonder that the officials are still keeping the agreement a secret from a large part of the miners. In many places the miners, even on top of false rumors that they were getting 65 cents an hour, struck for the re- moval of their many grievances, for the abolition of the penalty clause, for pay for dead work. As the miners know what the new agreement gives them, they will strike again! The fight for a real strike against the coal operators for a real improvement in miner’s con- ditions must be begun at the coming U.M.W.A. con- vention. At the coming convention in May, the rank and file miners will get a chance to fight the officialdom of the U.M.W.A., who do nothing but protect the interests of the coal operators. Every local must send its best fighters to the convention, Under no conditions must a local pass up the chance to send its own delegates. Boycott of the convention only helps the Lewis crowd. Fighting resolutions must be passed in the locals against the new agreement and carried by the dele- gates to the convention. The miners will and must put forward their demands of the $6 a day and the 6-hour day and 5-day week, with the same proportional pay for the loaders and machine men. Together with this must go the demands for dead work, abolishment of the penalty clause, against the N.R.A. boards and against forced arbitration, against discrimina- tion of the Negro and young miners, etc. To carry this out must go the election of good honest rank and file miners as delegates to the coming convention. There is not a moment to spare. The rank and file miners must get busy. For a fight for the 36 a day, 6-hour day and 5-day week, | contributed funds for its upkeep. Among the leading names are those of Mrs. Marie M. Ogden, past | president of the Contemporary Club of Newark, widow of a Prudential Insurance Company official, and | Mrs, Lillian E. Terry, 131 East 66th | St., kin of social registerites. The incorporators of the maga- zine were listed as Mary Joyce Ben- ner and Olive E. Robbins, both of whom listed their address as 299 Madison Ave. || Irish C. P. Leader | Speaks in Three support of the petty bourgeois neo- Garvey schemes centering around | Liberia, and to fraternize with counter-revolutionary bourgeois na-| tionalist groups in Paris and Lon- don, as well as with known agent provocateurs, Padmore’s deviations contained | very valuable lessons for our Party |in the U. S. A., particularly in regard | to our work among the Negro masses | |at the present time. This is so | because of the increased activity of| the Negro bourgeois reformist lead- | ers and the widespread growth of| reactionary petty bourgeois na- | tionaliss movements, the influence | | of which has been expressed by Cities This Week | isividual Negro comrades within | NEW YORK.— Sean Murray, |] leader of the Communist Party of |] Ireland, speaks tonight in Port- land, Maine, at 8 p. m., in Work- ers Center, 82 Union Street; in Boston Thursday night, 8 p. m., in Deacon Hall, 1651 Washington St.; and in New Haven, Conn. Saturday night, April 28, 8 p. m., at the Little Art Cinema Theater. | our own ranks, | Therefore, the discussion of Pad- more’s deviations which led directly | to the camp of the enemy will have value for the further clarification of our tasks in the struggle against the growing bourgeois reformist and petty bourgeois nationalist dangers | among the Negro masses as related | to the whole struggle on two fronts, |for working-class internationalism, ‘emphasized in the reports of Com- might lead to new arrests, as it made the work of the provocateurs easier. Padmore carried on work which undermined the class unity of the toiling Negro masses, and, under the pretense of advocating the ne- cessity for the unity of all Negroes on a racial basis, he tried to lay the path for unity with the Negro bour- geois exploiters and with their agents, the national reformists, which could not help leading to the interests of the Negro toiling masses becoming subordinated to the ex- ploiters. Padmore began to work openly for the benefit of national bour- geois organizations. With this aim question of “saving Liberia” and collecting funds to cover the ex- penses of Liberia. Instead of mobi- lizing the masses for the struggle |for the genuine independence of Liberia against the imperialists who | enslave Liberia and against the Lib- eria bourgeois government which bargains with the imperialists, Pad- imore took his stand openly on the Indians had killed and ceremonially | eaten the recruiting officers, as an | expression of their protest. | Both the Bolivian and Para- guayan armies massacre prisoners | wholesale, claiming they cannot | afford to feed them, the Commis- sion reported. The Commission re- ported with astonishment that the Indians of the Chaco region have army. Side of the Liberian government. work in the committee, he did not | Pass on the documents to the com- rade replacing him and did not hand to anyone. |_ At a meeting on Feb. 23, 1934, the | I. ©. C. decided to expel Padmore | from the Communist Rarty for con- tacts with a provocateur, for con- | tacts with bourgeois organizations on the question of Liberia, for an in- correct attitude to the national question (instead of class unity striving towards race unity) and for | not handing over the affairs of the committee on which he-had worked, no sympathy with the aims of either | After Padmore was removed from | | over the contacts of the committee | Padmore entered into negotiations | with the national reformists on the | PASSAIC.——An anti-fascist. meet will be held in Kanter’s Auditorium, Friday, April 27, 8 p.m. Israel Am- ter, National Secretary of the Un- employed Council; Sam Reed, Sec. Org. of the C. P., and S, Saller will speak. Widow of Weallisch Gets Year for Aid To Bruck Fighters || _LOEBEN, Austria, April 24— Pauline Wallisch, widow of Kolo- man Wallisch, Mayor of Bruck and Socialist leader who was hanged by the Dollfuss-Heim- wehr government for his part in the February anti-fascist fight- ing, was sentenced to one year at hard labor yesterday, for hay- ing carried food and cigarettes to the workers during the fight- ing. Marie Sertner, who did the received the same sen- same, tence, Trish Repub Communist Party Hails Break with Reformism in Ranks of I. R. A. At the moment when the active interest of American workers in the struggles of the workers and farmers of Ireland has received a renewed stimulus through the tour of Sean Murray, leader of the Communist Party of Ireland, in the United States, the following report on the development of the anti-imperialist front in Ireland has special significance for Ameri- can workers.—Editors. Aig By CHARLES DONNELLY A new grouping of anti-imperial- ist forces is forming in Ireland just now. Keen interest in the issue and, unfortunately, also considerable con- fusion as to what it is, are wide- spread. This confusion is being de- liberately intensified by the reaction- ary bureaucratic Army Council of the Irish Republican army. The Army Council has throughout the economic war refused to or- ganize the republican resistance. It has clearly shown its incapacity to lead the republican front. But it has never been afraid of radical phrases, and this is apparently its ground in claiming that the new front, formed “without its consent,” is in reality a breach of the republican hegemony. To encounter its propaganda, it will be sufficient to publish the history of the new movement. At the General Army Convention of March last the following state- ment was put forward for ratifica- tion: “That we, authorized delegates from all units of the army in Ire- Jand and Britain, assembled at the General Army Convention of the Irish Republican Army, redeclare gether recently in New York. ation. Gralton, Irish-born, was de; ship of Irish peasants’ struggles, TWO IRISH REVOLUTIONARY LEADERS (Right) Sean Murray, leader of the Communist Party of Ireland, and (left) Jim Gralton, Irish revolutionary leader, photographed to- Murray is on a speaking tour of the United States in behalf of the revolutionary struggle for Irish liber- ported from Ireiand for his leader- our allegiance to the Republic of Ireland, based upon production for use and. not for profit, and in which the exploitation of human beings, with all its attendant mis- eries and insecurity, shall not be tolerated, as shown in the pamph- let headed Governmental Policy and Constitution of Oglaigh na h- Eirean. “We again declare, in reply to the demands of, and coercion by, the governments of Northern Ire- land and the Irish Free State, that the Irish Republican Army shall not be disbanded until such time as the government of the Irish Republic, based upon political and social principles set out in the pamphlet referred to, is function- ing freely.” The convention, influenced by a ruling of the chairman and by the attitude of the leaders, refused by a narrow majority to ratify the amendment. As a result, three prom- 1 |inent delegates, Peader O'Donnell, | Michael Price, and George Gilmore, left the convention. Five days later Price wrote the Army Chief-of-Staff, that as a Republican who was “per- feetly convinced” that the “Republic of a United Ireland will never be achieved, except through a struggle, which overthrows capitalism on the way” he was forced by the attitude of the convention disclosed in its refusal to ratify the above state- ment, to resign from the LR.A., “that one-time revolutionary body.” Left-wing republicans, organized chiefly by O’Donnell and Gilmore, then held a conference at Athlone and issued a manifesto, calling for a big republican anti-imperialist congress, and announcing the for- mation of a bureau for its organiza- tion. The bureau has been set up and has its address at 202 Pearse Street, Dublin. Their manifesto was immediately responded to by the Communist Party of Ireland, which hailed it as Signalizing the revolt of a large section of the I.R.A., and announced that Irish Communists will work wholeheartedly to achieve the na- tional mobilization of workers and farmers for which the manifesto calls. But the Communist. Party, while joining in the work of form- ing an anti-imperialist front, will oppose any attempt to create a new party. The Communist Party also lays stress on the importance of the proposed congress, which must be made “the biggest hosting against capitalist imperialism the country has seen since the Anglo-Irish war.” | “The congress,” it says, “must be the starting point of a nation-wide struggle, based on the immediate issuzs confronting the working masses, for the winning of national | freedom, and the establishment of | the United Republic of the workers and farmers.” Meanwhile the Army Council is working with all its strength to break the new front against imper- On April 6th the Adjutant-Gen- eral of the LR.A. addressed a com- munication to the officers concerned in the new party informing them that a court martial had been pre- pared for them, ‘The Council of the IR.A. then added to the number of documents a pathetic, but much advertised, at- tempt to hide the disruption of the army, to confuse republicans, and to disrupt the republican front. These enemies of the revolution, who prevented the ratification of a definite and revolutionary state- ment at the Army Congress set out | by claiming that so far as the Ath- lone statement “is an attack on the present social and economic sys- tem, and an indictment of the policy jalism, : lican Army Left Wing Calls Anti-Imperialist Meet @ ij ! Army Council Strives Te Break New-Formed Militant Front of the governments of the Six and Twenty-Six counties, the Army Council is in complete agreement.” This, they say, “must be clearly understood.” ‘They deny that the Athlone meet- ing expresses a disruption of the army, and stoutly declare that “this attempt” at “division” “will fail as others have failed.” (Meanwhile their organ “An Phoblacht” refers to Gilmore and O'Donnell as “desert- ers”). But they are forced to “regret” that “good republicans should have lent their names in such a way to the attack on the army”—especially at such a time! Tearfully they dis- play their record. They have actu- ally “repeatedly indicted the Fianna Fail government.” they justify the hauteur of their concluding prophecy of the future career of the “disrupters”: “This party will,” actually, “in course of time, contest elections and enter the Free State Parlia- ment. Inevitably it will follow the road which has been travelled by other constitutional parties, which, though setting out with good in- tentions, ended in failure.” The Army Council has now re- vealed its isolation from the revo-. lutionary republican movement and the real aspirations of republicans. Trish Communists will work hard tc prevent the confusion of revolu- tionaries on our tensing front by the the anti-imperialist front, Perhaps it is by this record that

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