the deportation in scythes' militant was sentenced sept. 17 in the miami, fla., fed eral...

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W illiam Worthy, foreign cor- respondent for the Baltimore Afro-American, was sentenced Sept. 17 in the Miami, Fla., fed- eral district court to three months in prison and nine additional months on probation. At the trial last month Worthy was convicted of reentering the U.S., his native land, from Cuba without a pass- port. For visiting China as a jour- nalist in defiance of the State De- partment travel ban, Worthy’s passport was revoked in 1956. Worthy posted a $1,000 appeal bond with the Florida court and the Workers Defense League an- nounced that it w ill carry an ap- peal up to the Supreme Court, if necessary, on grounds that “ cit- izens have the right to travel at their own risk without govern- ment prohibition.” At a spirited open-air rally in New York City’s Harlem the Sat- urday before W orthy’s sentencing, a crowd of some 750 heard 20 leaders of the Negro community speak in his defense. These in- cluded Paul Zuber, attorney for the Englewood, N.J., movement; James Farmer, national director of CORE; Percy Sutton, president of the N.Y. NAACP branch; Allan Morrison, N.Y. editor of Jet and Ebony; Alex Prempeh of the Black Nationalists; Daniel Watts, chair- man of the Liberation Committee for Africa; and Richard Parrish, [The following article was writ- ten by a young civil-rights activist who was in Albany, Ga., this sum- mer.] The whirring fan cut through the thick, hot Georgia air and as it spun, its sharp blades cut deeply into the sound of the South. The old Negro Spirituals combined with the modern quest for Free- dom to produce one sound: the sound of struggle. Outside the church were hun- dreds of milling youth who could not squeeze into the crowded meeting. They stood in groups, leaned on cars, formed small audiences around the open church- vvindows, trying to hear the speak- ers, sang freedom songs and talked —- about school, cars, girls, friends, but mainly, mainly about the A l- bany Movement. They say in Albany, Georgia No neutrals have we met. You either are a Freedom Fighter Or a Tom for Chief Pritchett. Which side are you on? Which side are you on? Pritchett is Albany’s police chief. Inside the church several hun- treasurer of the Negro American Labor Council. Parrish served as chairman of the rally. Supporters included Black Muslim leader Malcolm X, AME Bishop D. Ward Nichols, Rev. Milton Galamison, Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee. At one point in the meeting, when donations for the defense were being given, police stopped the collectors. Worthy took the microphone and said: “You want to know where the enemy is? There it is in uniform. The FBI has tried to stop this rally. Uncle Toms have tried to stop it. But the police can’t push us around up here like they do in Albany, Ga." The collection continued and the police retreated. In his speech, Worthy drew cheers when he declared the rev- olution had wiped out racial dis- crimination in Cuba and pointed across the street to the Hotel Theresa where Fidel Castro had stayed in 1960. He said he was being persecuted because he told the truth about Cuba. He said this was the time for militancy and unity among black people and that he would fight his case from coast to coast. The Committee for the Freedom of William Worthy, which is in need of funds, may be reached at Suite 301, 217 W. 125 St.. New York City. dred people stand or sit side by side. Hands clap in rhythmic pat- terns as paper fans flutter in a futile attempt to cool the perspir- ing singers. The people of Albany are the most significant, most in- spiring, most impressive thing about the Movement. In the au- dience sit mothers who have left their families to march to jail so that their children, born enslaved, would be free; and men who have lost their jobs because of activity in the Movement. Typical of their feeling is the story of a preacher in Lee County, where the Shady Grove Baptist Church was burned, who received a phone call that he had three weeks to live. His reply was that he would live those three weeks in freedom. The people, of Albany, of Georgia, w ill not be frightened any more. A t a mass meeting, on the street, on a march, their faces reflect hope, determination and defiance. They w ill not be turned around! Ain’t going to let Chief Pritchett Turn me round, turn me round, turn me round. (Continued on Page 2) Victory Won In Scythes' Deportation A resounding victory for polit- ical freedom and civil liberties was won in the U.S. Court of Ap- peals in Chicago on Sept. 13. An order of the federal Immi- gration and Naturalization Service for the deportation of George A. Scythes of West Allis, Wis., was that day overruled. The witch hunters had ordered Scythes deported to Canada on charges that he held membership in the Socialist Workers Party from 1938 to 1955 and had served on educational committees and as treasurer in the Newark and Milwaukee SWP branches. In line with the drive to curtail political freedom in this country, the framed-up charge that the SWP is a “subversive” party served as the basis for a final de- portation order against Scythes in June 1960. Order Reversed In reversing this order, the U.S. Court of Appeals declared: “Accordingly we find no sub- stantial evidence in the record that the Socialist Workers Party advocates or teaches by its ‘Declaration of Principles and Con- stitution’ the violent or forceful overthrow of the Government of the United States within the mean- ing of the test laid down by Scales and Noto. Furthermore, there is no substantial evidence showing that there is a party line within the organization which advocates or teaches such overthrow.” The witch-hunting prosecutors had cited numerous passages which they vainly tried to torture into advocacy of force and vio- lence. Valuable Precedent Scythes was born in Canada and came to the U.S. in 1933. He has been fighting the efforts to deport him since 1958. The victory in this case, how- ever, goes far beyond saving him from a terrible and heartless in- justice. It is a vindication of the political rights of the Socialist Workers Party and an important gain for the cause of all political freedom and civil liberties in the U.S. It should establish important legal precedents of great value in the fight against the Smith and McCarran Acts and other deporta- tions for holding social beliefs. SWP Nominees File Petitions In N.Y. Elections NEW YORK, Sept. 21 — Wind- ing up a six-week petition drive, the New York local of the Socialist Workers Party today filed 22,000 signatures with the Secretary of State in Albany, N.Y.. to put its candidates on the ballot in No- vember’s gubernatorial elections. New York State requires 12,000 signatures of registered voters from independent candidates seek- ing state posts. A minimum of 50 signatures must be obtained in each of the state’s 61 counties. The SWP exceeded the minimum requirements by 10,000 signatures. The slate of socialist candidates includes Richard Garza for Gov- ernor, Sylvia Weinstein for Lieu- tenant Governor, Carl Feingold for United States Senator, Leroy McRae for Attorney General and Allen Taplin for Comptroller. A ll the candidates w ill speak at a kick-off election rally Saturday night, Sept. 22, at 116 University Place. Defense of the Cuban Revolution against the hysterical and slanderous campaign whipped up against it by President Ken- nedy, Congress and the daily press w ill be one of the campaign issues highlighted at the meeting. The possible formation of a Caribbean division within the Or- ganization of American States is being discussed in Washington. This division would include the Central American regimes and the Betancourt government of Vene- zuela. Washington hopes that in such a group, a vote granting the cover of “multi-lateral action” to a U.S. invasion would be obtain- able. The governments of Britain, West Germany and Norway are now under diplomatic pressure from the U.S. to prevent ships regist- ered in their countries from being used in commerce between Soviet- block nations and Cuba. In addi- tion, British tankers on long-term charter to the Soviet Union, car- rying crude oil from Black Sea ports to Cuba, have had to return across the Atlantic empty because they are refused cargoes in U.S. ports. Only three years ago, 80 per cent of Cuba’s trade was with the United States. Since the U.S. em- bargo, Cuba has been forced to shift all that trade to the Soviet bloc and obtaining shipping for that trade is an acute problem. U.S. harassment of shipping to Cuba has the effect of making it even more expensive and in- creases the hardships of the Cuban people. The harassment, however, is not expected to stop the ships. British shipowners, for example, feel that their competitors w ill carry any goods Britons refuse to transport, and are therefore resisting U. S. pressure. Cuban counter-revolutionary groups in Miami and Puerto Rico have received a shot in the arm (Continued on page 7) THE MONROE DOCTRINE TODAY 1) The U.S. Forbids Invasion of Any Country in Western Hemisphere by a European or Asian Power. 2) The U.S. Forbids Any Country in Western Hemisphere (Especially Cuba) To Build Its Defenses Against a U.S. or U.S.-Backed Invasion. Fidel Castro Movements For Peace Go Political By Edward Slater In recent months, the peace movement in the United States appears to be giving increased at- tention to political action. The tendency is away from emphasis on “pressuring” office-holders and candidates and toward direct in- tervention into politics. Anti-war activists are debating means of political action, seeking an effec- tive vehicle by which to make their voices heard in election cam- paigns. The majority of the peace groups at this time seem content to let this intervention consist in giving support to “peace candidates” of the major political parties. The Nation reported on July 28 that at least 30 such candidates w ill be running in Senate and Congres- sional races this fall. Other activists are expressing dissatisfaction with this approach. The fate of candidates like Rep. Frank Kowalski, a liberal who sought the Democratic nomination as senatorial candidate in Connec- ticut, is making them think twice about the possibilities for effective activity within the major parties. Kowalski not only lost the nomina- tion this year, but was refused endorsement for the post he now holds — Representative-at-large — in a way similar to that in which increasing numbers of “liberal” and “ reform” candidates are being dumped by the Democratic Party. The Kennedy Administration, which resumed nuclear testing, sent troops to Southeast Asia, is fighting an undeclared war in Vietnam and is whipping up a (Continued on Page 2) Eyewitness in Albany ------------------------------------- B y A lic e L a w re n c e ------------------------------------- President John F. Kennedy is planning new blows against the Cuban people while deferring outright U.S. m ilitary inter- vention in Cuba until he thinks he can get away with it. The new anti-Cuba moves include increased pressure on Latin American governments to develop some form of diplomatic cover for U.S. intervention; pressure on Western nations to boy- cott Cuba; and giving the green light to counter-revolutionary Cuban groups in the U.S. and Puerto Rico to increase their hit and run raids. THE MILITANT Published in the Interests of the Working People Vol. 26 - No. 34 Monday, September 24, 1962 Price 10c Part of the crowd at the Sept. 15 Harlem unity rally for William Worthy. The rally lasted from 3 p.m. to 8 p.m. at Harlem’s key intersection. Kennedy's Policy Aims New Blows A t Cuban People A United Harlem Rallies to Worthy By Leroy McRae SWP Candidate for Attorney General of N. Y. By Fred Halstead

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Page 1: THE Deportation In Scythes' MILITANT was sentenced Sept. 17 in the Miami, Fla., fed eral district court to three months in prison and nine additional months on probation. At the trial

W illia m W o rth y , fo re ign co r­respondent fo r the B a ltim o reA fro -A m e ric a n , was sentencedSept. 17 in the M ia m i, Fla., fed ­e ra l d is tr ic t co u rt to three m onths in prison and n ine ad d itiona lm onths on proba tion . A t the tr ia l last m onth W o rth y was convicted o f reen te ring the U.S., his na tive land, fro m Cuba w ith o u t a pass­po rt. F o r v is it in g C h ina as a jo u r ­na lis t in defiance o f the State De­pa rtm e n t trave l ban, W o rth y ’s passport was revoked in 1956.

W o rth y posted a $1,000 appeal bond w ith the F lo rid a cou rt and the W orkers Defense League an­nounced th a t it w i l l c a rry an ap­peal up to the Suprem e C ourt, i f necessary, on grounds th a t “ c it ­izens have the r ig h t to tra ve l at th e ir ow n ris k w ith o u t gove rn ­m ent p ro h ib it io n .”

A t a sp irited op en -a ir r a l ly in New Y o rk C ity ’s H a rlem the Sat­u rd ay before W o rth y ’s sentencing, a crow d o f some 750 heard 20 leaders o f the Negro com m u n ity speak in his defense. These in ­c luded P au l Zuber, a tto rn ey fo r the Englewood, N.J., m ovem ent; James F arm er, na tiona l d irec to r o f CORE; Percy Sutton , president o f the N.Y. N A A C P branch ; A lla n M orrison , N .Y. e d ito r o f Jet and Ebony; A le x Prem peh o f the B lack N a tiona lis ts ; D an ie l W atts, c h a ir ­man o f the L ib e ra tio n C om m ittee fo r A fr ic a ; and R icha rd P arrish ,

[The following article was w r it ­ten by a young civil-rights activist who was in Albany, Ga., this sum­mer.]

The w h ir r in g fan c u t th rough the th ic k , ho t G eorgia a ir and as it spun, its sharp blades cut deeply in to the sound o f the South. The o ld Negro S p ir itu a ls com bined w ith the m odern quest fo r F ree­dom to produce one sound: the sound o f struggle.

O utside the church were hu n ­dreds o f m il l in g you th w ho could not squeeze in to the crow ded m eeting. They stood in groups, leaned on cars, fo rm ed sm all audiences around the open chu rch - vvindows, try in g to hear the speak­ers, sang freedom songs and ta lked —- about school, cars, g irls , friends, bu t m a in ly , m a in ly about the A l­bany M ovem ent.

They say in Albany, Georgia No neutrals have we met.You either are a Freedom Fighter O r a Tom for Chief Pritchett.Which side are you on?Which side are you on?

P ritc h e tt is A lb a n y ’s po lice ch ief.Inside the chu rch several hun­

treasu re r o f the Negro Am erican Labo r C ouncil. P a rrish served as cha irm an o f the ra lly . Supporters inc luded B lack M us lim leader M a lco lm X , A M E B ishop D. W ard N ichols, Rev. M ilto n G alam ison, Ossie D avis and R uby Dee.

A t one p o in t in the m eeting, when donations fo r the defense were be ing given, po lice stopped the collectors. W o rth y took the m icrophone and said: “ You w ant to kno w where the enem y is? There i t is in u n ifo rm . The F B I has tr ie d to stop th is ra lly . Uncle Toms have tr ie d to stop it. B u t the po lice can’t push us around up here lik e they do in A lb an y , G a." The co llec tion con tinued and the police retreated.

In his speech, W o rth y drew cheers w hen he declared the re v ­o lu tio n had w iped ou t ra c ia l d is ­c r im in a tio n in Cuba and pointed across the street to the H o te l Theresa w here F ide l Castro had stayed in 1960. He said he was be ing persecuted because he to ld the t ru th about Cuba. He said th is was the tim e fo r m ilita n c y and u n ity am ong b lack people and th a t he w ou ld f ig h t his case fro m coast to coast.

The C om m ittee fo r the Freedom o f W ill ia m W orthy , w h ich is in need o f funds, m ay be reached at Su ite 301, 217 W. 125 St.. New Y o rk C ity .

dred people stand o r s it side by side. Hands clap in rh y th m ic p a t­terns as paper fans f lu t te r in a fu t i le a ttem p t to cool the p e rs p ir­ing singers. The people o f A lb an y are the most s ig n ifica n t, m ost in ­sp iring , m ost im pressive th in g about the M ovem ent. In the au­dience s it m others w ho have le ft th e ir fam ilies to m arch to ja i l so th a t th e ir ch ild re n , born enslaved, w ou ld be free; and men w ho have lost th e ir jobs because o f a c tiv ity in the M ovem ent.

T y p ic a l o f th e ir fee lin g is the s to ry o f a preacher in Lee County, w here the Shady G rove B ap tis t C hurch was burned, w ho received a phone ca ll tha t he had three weeks to live . H is re p ly was tha t he w o u ld liv e those three weeks in freedom . The people, of A lbany , of Georgia, w i l l no t be frigh tened any m ore. A t a mass m eeting, on the street, on a m arch, th e ir faces re fle c t hope, de te rm in a tion and defiance. They w i l l not be tu rned around!

A in ’t going to let Chief Pritchett Turn me round, turn me round,

turn me round.(Continued on Page 2)

Victory Won In Scythes' Deportation

A resounding v ic to ry fo r p o lit ­ica l freedom and c iv i l lib e rtie s was won in the U.S. C o u rt o f A p ­peals in Chicago on Sept. 13.

A n o rder o f the federa l Im m i­g ra tion and N a tu ra liza tio n Service fo r the deporta tion o f George A. Scythes o f West A llis , W is., was th a t day ove rru led .

The w itc h hunters had ordered Scythes deported to Canada on charges tha t he held m em bersh ip in the Socia list W orkers P a rty fro m 1938 to 1955 and had served on educa tional com m ittees and as treasu re r in the N e w ark and M ilw au kee SW P branches.

In line w ith the d r iv e to c u r ta il p o lit ic a l freedom in th is coun try , the fram ed -up charge th a t the SW P is a “ subvers ive” p a rty served as the basis fo r a f in a l de­p o rta tion o rder against Scythes in June 1960.

Order ReversedIn revers ing th is order, the U.S.

C ourt o f Appeals declared:“ A cco rd in g ly we f in d no sub­

s ta n tia l evidence in the record tha t the S oc ia lis t W orkers P a rty advocates o r teaches by its ‘D ec la ra tion o f P rinc ip les and Con­s titu t io n ’ the v io le n t o r fo rce fu l o ve rth ro w o f the G overnm en t o f the U n ited States w ith in the m ean­ing o f the test la id dow n by Scales and Noto. F u rthe rm ore , there is no substantia l evidence show ing tha t the re is a p a rty line w ith in the organ iza tion w h ich advocates o r teaches such o ve rth ro w .”

T he w itc h -h u n tin g prosecutors had cited num erous passages w h ich they v a in ly tr ie d to to rtu re in to advocacy of fo rce and v io ­lence.

Valuable PrecedentScythes was born in Canada and

came to the U.S. in 1933. He has been fig h tin g the e ffo rts to deport h im since 1958.

The v ic to ry in th is case, ho w ­ever, goes fa r beyond saving h im fro m a te rr ib le and heartless in ­jus tice . I t is a v in d ica tio n o f the p o lit ic a l r ig h ts o f the Socia list W orkers P a rty and an im p o rta n t ga in fo r the cause o f a ll p o lit ic a l freedom and c iv i l lib e rtie s in the U.S. I t should establish im p o rta n t legal precedents o f g reat va lue in the f ig h t against the S m ith and M cC arran Acts and o ther deporta ­tions fo r h o ld ing social be lie fs.

SWP Nominees File Petitions In N.Y. Elections

NEW Y O R K , Sept. 21 — W in d ­ing up a s ix -w eek pe tition d rive , the New Y o rk local o f the Socia lis t W orkers P a rty today file d 22,000 s ignatures w ith the Secretary of S tate in A lbany , N.Y.. to pu t its candidates on the ba llo t in N o­vem ber’s gube rna to ria l elections.

New Y o rk State requ ires 12,000 s ignatures o f reg istered voters fro m independent candidates seek­ing state posts. A m in im u m o f 50 signatures m ust be obta ined in each o f the sta te ’s 61 counties. The SWP exceeded the m in im um requ irem en ts by 10,000 signatures.

The slate o f socia lis t candidates includes R ichard Garza fo r G ov­ernor, S y lv ia W einste in fo r L ie u ­tenant G overnor, C a rl Fe ingold fo r U n ited States S enator, Le roy McRae fo r A tto rn e y G eneral and A lle n T a p lin fo r C o m ptro lle r.

A l l the candidates w i l l speak at a k ic k -o ff e lection ra lly S atu rday n igh t, Sept. 22, at 116 U n iv e rs ity Place. Defense o f the Cuban R evo lu tion against the hyste rica l and slanderous cam paign w h ipped up against i t by P resident K e n ­nedy, Congress and the d a ily press w i l l be one o f the cam paign issues h igh lig h ted at the m eeting.

The possible fo rm a tio n o f a Caribbean d iv is io n w ith in the O r­ganization o f A m erican States is be ing discussed in W ashington. T h is d iv is io n w ou ld inc lude the C en tra l A m erican regimes and the B e tancourt governm ent o f Vene­zuela. W ashington hopes tha t in such a group, a vote g ra n tin g the cover o f “ m u lt i- la te ra l ac tion ” to a U.S. invasion w o u ld be ob ta in ­able.

The governm ents o f B r ita in , W est G erm any and N o rw ay are now under d ip lo m a tic pressure fro m the U.S. to p reven t ships reg is t­ered in th e ir countries fro m being used in com m erce between S ov ie t- b lock nations and Cuba. In add i­tion , B r it is h tankers on lo n g -te rm cha rte r to the Soviet U nion, c a r­ry in g crude o il fro m B la ck Sea ports to Cuba, have had to re tu rn across the A tla n tic em p ty because they are refused cargoes in U.S. ports.

O n ly three years ago, 80 per cent o f Cuba’s trade was w ith the U n ited States. S ince the U.S. em ­bargo, Cuba has been forced to s h ift a ll th a t trade to the Soviet bloc and o b ta in ing sh ipp ing fo r tha t trade is an acute problem . U.S. harassm ent o f sh ipp ing to Cuba has the e ffec t o f m ak ing it even m ore expensive and in ­creases the hardships o f the Cuban people.

The harassment, however, is not expected to stop the ships. B r it is h shipowners, fo r exam ple, fee l th a t th e ir com petito rs w i l l c a rry any goods B rito n s refuse to transport, and are the re fo re res is ting U. S. pressure.

Cuban co u n te r-re v o lu tio n a ry groups in M ia m i and P uerto Rico have received a shot in the arm

(Continued on page 7)

THEMONROE DOCTRINE

TODAY

1) The U.S. Forbids Invasion of Any Country in W estern Hemisphere by a European or Asian Power.2) The U.S. Forbids Any Country in Western Hemisphere (Especially Cuba)To Build Its Defenses Against a U.S. or U.S.-Backed Invasion.

F id e l Castro

Movements For Peace Go Political

B y E d w ard S la te rIn recent m onths, the peace

m ovem ent in the U n ited States appears to be g iv in g increased a t­ten tion to p o lit ic a l action. The tendency is aw ay fro m emphasis on “ p ressuring” o ffice -h o lde rs and candidates and tow a rd d ire c t in ­te rven tion in to po litics . A n t i-w a r activ is ts are deba ting means o f p o lit ic a l action, seeking an e ffec­tive veh ic le by w h ich to make th e ir voices heard in e lection cam ­paigns.

The m a jo r ity o f the peace groups at th is tim e seem con tent to le t th is in te rve n tio n consist in g iv in g support to “ peace candidates” o f the m a jo r p o lit ic a l parties. The N ation reported on J u ly 28 th a t at least 30 such candidates w i l l be ru n n in g in Senate and Congres­siona l races th is fa ll.

O ther ac tiv is ts are expressing d issa tis fac tion w ith th is approach. The fate o f candidates lik e Rep. F rank K o w a lsk i, a lib e ra l w ho sought the D em ocra tic no m in a tion as senatoria l candidate in Connec­ticu t, is m ak ing them th in k tw ice about the poss ib ilities fo r e ffec tive a c tiv ity w ith in the m a jo r parties. K o w a ls k i no t o n ly lost the nom ina ­tion th is year, bu t was refused endorsem ent fo r the post he now holds — R epresen ta tive -a t-la rge — in a w ay s im ila r to th a t in w h ich increasing num bers o f “ lib e ra l” and “ re fo rm ” candidates are be ing dum ped by the D em ocratic P a rty . The K ennedy A d m in is tra tio n , w h ich resumed nuc lear testing, sent troops to Southeast Asia, is f ig h tin g an undeclared w a r in V ie tnam and is w h ip p in g up a

(Continued on Page 2)

Eyewitness in Albany------------------------------------- By A lice L aw rence -------------------------------------

P re s id e n t J o h n F. K e n n e d y is p la n n in g n e w b lo w s a g a in s t th e C u b a n pe op le w h ile d e fe r r in g o u t r ig h t U .S. m i l i t a r y in te r ­v e n t io n in C u b a u n t i l he th in k s he can g e t a w a y w i th it .

T h e n e w a n t i-C u b a m oves in c lu d e in c rea sed p re ssu re on L a t in A m e r ic a n g o v e rn m e n ts to d e v e lo p som e fo rm o f d ip lo m a t ic c o v e r fo r U .S . in te rv e n t io n ; p re ssu re on W e s te rn n a tio n s to b o y ­c o tt C u b a ; and g iv in g th e g re en l ig h t to c o u n te r - re v o lu t io n a ry C u b a n g ro u p s in th e U .S . an d P u e rto R ico to in c rease th e ir h i t an d ru n ra ids .

THEMILITANTPublished in the Interests of the Working People

V o l. 26 - No. 34 M o n d a y , S e p te m b e r 24, 1962 P r ic e 10c

P a rt of the crow d at the Sept. 15 H a rle m u n ity ra lly fo r W illia m W o rth y . T h e ra lly lasted fro m 3 p.m . to 8 p .m . at H a r le m ’s key intersection.

Kennedy's Policy Aims New Blows At Cuban People

A United Harlem Rallies to W orthy

B y Lero y M cR ae SWP Candidate for Attorney General of N. Y.

By F red H alstead

Page 2: THE Deportation In Scythes' MILITANT was sentenced Sept. 17 in the Miami, Fla., fed eral district court to three months in prison and nine additional months on probation. At the trial

Page Two TH E M IL IT A N T Monday, September 24, 1962

...Eyewitness in AlbanyTHUMBS UP!'

(Continued from Page 1)A in ’t going to let Chief Pritchett T u rn me round,I ’m going to keep on a’ w alk in ’,

keep on a’ ta lk in ’,M arching on to Freedom Land.A in ’t going to le t no jailhouse T u rn me round, turn me round,

turn me round.A in ’t going to let no jailhouse T u rn me round,Keep on a’ w a lk in ’, keep on

»’talking,M arching on to Freedom Land.

A m ong the audience and on the p la tfo rm are students — fro m the age o f n ine to college age — w ho a re n ’t a fra id o f fac in g in tim id a tio n and beatings a t the hands o f rac is t police. U s ing the tac tic o f passive resistance, the students go lim p w hen arrested and force the cops to c a rry them b o d ily in to the ja ils . O ften , w h ile the po lice pe rfo rm th is “ service,” the students are h it, k icke d and th row n .

H ave you heard about the new law T h at Chief Pritchett made?I f you stand üp for your rights H e’l l throw you in his cage.

One young h igh -schoo l student w as k icke d as she was ca rried to the p a trp l wagon. Then, w hen they go t he r to the po lice station, a p itc h e r o f w a te r was h u rle d in to he r face as she la y passive ly on the flo o r. T h is type o f b ru ta li ty is com m onplace in the A lb a n y s tru g ­gle. Y e t the students and the men and the wom en con tinue to sing:

The only thing that w e did right Was the day we began to figh t . . .

As Freedom Songs are sung, the y are accompanied w ith c lap -

p in g -a n d -fo o t-s to m p in g . Sometimes the songs cease and o n ly the c lap- p in g -a n d -fo o t-s to m p in g sound con­tinues, f i l l in g the chu rch w ith an alm ost hypno tic , rh y th m ic beat. A l l o f a sudden someone ye lls , “ F R E E D O M !” The audience p icks up the chant w ith a deafening, thunderous ca ll fo r “ FR EED O M ! FR E E D O M ! F R E E D O M !” A t these tim es the room v ib ra tes and the v e ry w a lls seem to qu ive r. The chan t fo r “ F R E E D O M !” f i l ls a ll ava ilab le space and the re is no room fo r doubt.

A fter a MeetingA t the end o f a mass m eeting,

the com m u n ity rises to its feet, s ing ing “ W e S ha ll O vercom e.” S lo w ly they f i le ou t in to the hu m id , s lig h t ly cooler S outhern n ig h t. Some c lim b in to cars, b u t m ost begin the long w a lk home th ro u g h the p o lice -ca r-in fes ted darkness. The you th hang around aw h ile , ta lk in g and jo k in g . Then they, too, begin to head fo r home, k ic k in g up the dust of the streets, unpaved in the Negro section of tow n .

A fe w students w a lk to the o f­fic e o f the S tuden t N o n v io le n t Co­o rd in a tin g C om m ittee (SNC C) w h ic h is near the church. I ts tw o, sm all, bare rooms o ffe r a place fo r discussing. On thé w a ll, p r in te d in w h ite cha lk is the slogan: S E G R E G A T IO N ’S G O T TO GO! On the shelves in back are m a­te r ia ls fo r the vo te r-re g is tra tio n d r iv e th a t SNCC is c a rry in g on in

nearby Lee and T e rre ll Counties. Some em p ty coke bo ttles are by the m im eograph m achine. P icke t signs lean against the w a ll— ready fo r the n e x t day ’s action. The s tu ­dents ta lk about m any th ings, bu t forem ost the A lb a n y M ovem ent.

The A lb a n y M ovem ent began to take fo rm in O ctober 1961 when SNCC f ie ld secretaries, Charles Sherrod and C o rde ll Reagon, came to A lb a n y . They w ere the re to set up a v o te r-re g - is tra tio n d r iv e in the su rround ing area.

T hey soon found out, however, th a t they w o u ld f ir s t have to convince the people o f A lb a n y o f the need fo r a c iv i l- r ig h ts s trug ­gle. A t f i r s t people w ere apprehen­sive — even a fra id to w a lk on the same side o f the stree t as the “ Freedom R iders.” S herrod and Reagon began to go to the pool ha lls , the churches, the bars and social c lubs and in th is w a y they contacted the people and ta lked to them about the strugg le . Soon, the com m u n ity began to be less a fra id : they began to come in to the SNCC o ffice and ta lk .

Students Responded First

S tudents w ere the f ir s t to take up the ca ll fo r Freedom . D issatis­fie d w ith the “ c losed -m ind ” a t­mosphere o f th e ir campus, A lb a n y State, they w ere ready to ta lk w ith the SNCC w orke rs , ready to p lan dem onstrations, ready to go to ja i l . A nd so, in e a rly N ovem ­ber, n ine students m arched tow a rd the segregated A lb a n y bus depot. Threatened w ith arrest, the y le ft and f ile d a ff id a v its w ith the In ­te rs ta te Com m erce Com m ission.

Then, on N ovem ber 22, f iv e s tu ­dents w ere arrested as they a t­tem pted to use the bus depo t’s fa c ilit ie s in an in tegra ted m anner. F o r th is, the students w ere sus­pended in d e fin ite ly b y the “ Uncle T om ” Dean o f S tudents at A lb a n y State College. Though th is was done in an e ffo r t to q u e ll the r is ­in g s p ir it o f the m ovem ent, i t had the reverse e ffec t. The s p ir it and the m ovem ent grew .

D u rin g th is tim e, the A lb a n y M ovem ent was fo rm a lly set up and mass m eetings w ere begun. F rom these m eetings came mass m arches to c ity h a ll. D u r in g the several m arches in December, over 700 persons w ere arrested.

Center of Activ ity

The SNCC o ffice has become one o f the m a in centers o f a c tiv ity among the you th in the A lb a n y M ovem ent. They use i t fo r p a in t­in g p icke t signs, w r i t in g and p r in t ­in g leafle ts , p lan n in g dem onstra­tions and as a ga the ring place. As they s it around, someone w i l l laugh and begin to sing:

You better leave segregation alone

Because they love segregation Like a bound dog loves his bone.

The o the r k ids laugh k n o w in g ly and jo in in singing.

G eorg ia ’s sum m er heat is op­pressive. The a ir seems th ic k and im m ovable . B u t, because the laws, the customs, the governm ent o f G eorg ia is even m ore oppressive, the M ovem ent can and does move. The people m arch, sing, chant, go to ja il, f ig h t. The system w h ich m ust “ Keep the b lack m an do w n ” is be ing challenged. Ideas th a t w ere never supposed to have been tho ugh t are be ing fo rm ed. A nd fro m these ideas flow s a m ove­m en t — a m ilita n t, s trugg ling , u n a fra id m ovem ent made up of people w ho refuse to liv e as they have been forced to fo r hundreds o f years. The phony “ peacefu l re ­la tion s ,” so tou ted by the w h ite Southerner, are be ing shattered and in th e ir place, in the Negro com m un ity , emerges a courageous m other, a jobless b u t se lf-respect­in g man, a d e fia n t you th w ho w i l l in tim e he lp create a new system in w h ich everyone is equql.

A lth o u g h they face bom bings, lynch ings, beatings and harass­m ent, the people in the A lb a n y M ovem ent con tinue th e ir struggle. O ver and over they sing:

I t ain’t no harm to have your mind Set on Freedom!

The U n ited Aerospace W orkers (aerospace and m issile d iv is io n o f the U n ite d A u to W orkers) has g iven no tice o f in te n tio n to s tr ik e the N o rth A m erican A v ia tio n cor­po ra tion i f an agreem ent is no t reached by Sept. 22. A s tr ik e had been threatened fo r J u ly 23 b u t was postponed fo r 60 days pend­in g resu lts o f a p res iden tia l fa c t­f in d in g board appointed to recom ­mend a se ttlem ent fo r 100,000 w o rke rs em ployed by fo u r m a jo r aerospace com panies and re p re ­sented by tw o unions — the U A W and the In te rn a tio n a l Association o f M ach in ists.

Wages and secu rity prov is ions in the aerospace in d u s try lag fa r be­h ind those in o the r m a jo r m anu­fa c tu r in g indus tries organized by the tw o un ions. In add ition , tech­no log ica l changes have resu lted in a loss o f over 25 per cent o f the p ro du c tion jobs in the in d u s try since 1957, w h ile to ta l em p loym ent in the in d u s try increased. These changes are co n tin u in g apace.

In face o f th is prob lem , last M ay's U A W conven tion reso lved to f ig h t fo r S upp lem en tary U nem ­p loym e n t B ene fits and o ther jo b secu rity p rov is ions in aerospace, to ra ise wages to the leve l o f other industries , and to ga in a un ion shop.

The p re s id en tia l board, h o w ­ever, recom m ended Sept. 11 a th ree -yea r con trac t w ith sm all wage increases each year (ru n n in g between fiv e and n ine cents an h o u r) and a vote among the w o rke rs , w h ereby i f tw o - th ird s agreed, a un ion shop w o u ld be in ­s titu ted . T h is he lps solve the u n ­ion secu rity p rob lem , and w i l l p ro b a b ly assure U A W and IA M dues collections, b u t leaves the jo b secu rity and c o s t-o f- liv in g p ro b ­lem s unresolved.

U A W P resident W a lte r R euther issued a sta tem ent Sept. 12- say­ing, “ We and the aerospace w o rk ­ers we represent are fu l ly aw are

(Continued from Page 1)w a r atm osphere over Cuba and B e r lin , cannot p e rm it its ow n p a rty to become a veh ic le fo r opposition to these po lic ies.

A som ewhat d iffe re n t approach is be ing tr ie d in Massachusetts w h e re P o lit ic a l A c tio n fo r Peace (P A X ) is ru n n in g an independent candidate, H . S tu a rt Hughes, fo r U.S. Senator. A s ig n if ic a n t aspect o f th is cam paign is the am ount of support w h ich Hughes, a H a rva rd h is to ria n , has been able to d ra w fro m students and o ther young an­t i-w a r activ is ts .

R unn ing an independent cand i­date in Massachusetts is a m a jo r u n d e rta k in g — re s tr ic tiv e e lection law s req u ire a t least 72,514 s igna­tu res on no m in a ting pe tition s be­fo re the candidate ’s name can ap­pear on the ba llo t. M ost o f the w o rk o f co llec ting these signatures was accom plished b y teams o f s tu­dents w ho gave th e ir tim e and energy to tra v e l th rou gh the state as p e tit io n w orke rs . O th e r v o lu n ­teers p rov ided them w ith accom­m odations and w o rk in g fa c ilit ie s in each area.

“Quiet Anti-Com m unist”M ost of Hughes’ support comes

fro m his stands on d isarm am ent — fo r U.S. in it ia t iv e tow ards it , re ­n u nc ia tion o f nuc lear testing, w i th ­d ra w a l of troops fro m ce rta in overseas bases, etc. He has come ou t against the A p r i l invas ion of Cuba and stands fo r the re -estab- lish m e n t o f no rm a l trade and d ip lo m a tic re la tions w ith tha t coun try .

Nonetheless, the re is m uch to ind ica te th a t h is supporters are lik e ly to be disappointed. D escrib ­in g h im se lf as a “ q u ie t an ti-C o m - m un is t,” Hughes accepts the fu n -

o f the im portance o f u n in te rru p te d p roduc tion in th is in d u s try . W e the re fo re re lu c ta n tly accept the B oa rd ’s recom m endation . . . con­d ition ed on s im ila r acceptance by the com panies.”

W hen N o rth A m erican d id no t im m e d ia te ly announce acceptance, the s tr ik e notice was given. I t is d o u b tfu l, how ever, th a t the s tr ik e th re a t is seriously m eant by the U A W leadership. In h is A ug . 11 statem ent, R euthe r w en t a long w ith the p re s id en tia l board ’s dec la ra tion th a t in the aerospace f ie ld “ . . . the s tr ik e is no t a v a il­able as a means o f a rb itra m e n t.”

* * *

The fo llo w in g cogent rem arks on the question o f s trikes in the aero­space in d u s try appeared in an a rtic le by C. V . P ark inson in the A ugust issue o f the V erm on t Peace L e tte r:

“ The chorus fro m the R ig h t is strong on the sub ject o f the th re a t­ened w a lk o u t in the m iss ile fie ld . Says the B u r lin g to n (V t.) Free Press (J u ly 20 ): ‘B ig la b o r is ask­in g fo r serious troub le . . . .’

“ F rom ano the r p o in t o f v iew , la b o r is asking fo r troub le i f i t doesn’t stand up now and m a in ­ta in the r ig h t t o ‘s tr ik e ; i t w i l l be worse o f f i f i t knuck les under to governm ent pressure. I t w o u ld be re fresh in g to see the m il ita ry re ­m inded th a t the ha rdw a re they th ro w about so c a v a lie r ly and i r ­respons ib ly is made by men in factories, th a t when the men don’t w o rk , they don ’t have the h a rd ­ware. T h is w o u ld be a good les­son fo r the m il ita ry , bu t i t w o u ld be even m ore im p o rta n t to see some ind ica tions th a t la bo r realizes the fact itse lf.

“ I f la b o r can’t see w here the present road leads — i f they can’t see themselves as a p a rt o f the m il ita ry m achine, p o te n tia lly u n ­der the th u m b o f the Pentagon — then they w i l l have o n ly them ­selves to b lam e.”

dam en ta l prem ises o f the cold w a r; his a im is n o t to end it, bu t to conduct i t in a m ore ra tio n a l m an­ner. Despite the fa c t tha t his cam ­pa ign is independent o f bo th m a jo r parties, h e shares th e ir basic com ­m itm en ts ; h is stated purpose is " to streng then the tw o -p a r ty system by b r in g in g to the cam paign cha l­leng ing issues w h ic h n e ithe r can­d ida te o ffe rs .”

The task o f a “ peace cand idate” is a d i f f ic u lt one. R ea lly to oppose the cold w a r a t the po lls and to g ive p o lit ic a l voice to the aim s o f the peace m ovem ent is to take a stand against the w ho le d riv e o f U.S. cap ita lism tow a rd w a r. I t is to oppose the in terests o f the p o w e rfu l forces beh ind th a t d rive , in te rests w h ich the R epub lican and D em ocratic parties are com m itted to defend.

I f the peace m ovem ent is to be successful in its in te rv e n tio n in to p o litic s i t w i l l have to f in d w ays to avo id the dead end tha t lies in g iv in g suppo rt to these c o ld -w a r pa rties (and thereby, how ever un ­in te n tio n a lly , to the cold w a r i t ­s e lf) .

The va rious attem pts at inde ­pendent “ peace cam paigns” are in ­d ica tive of the fa c t th a t th is search is go ing on. B u t in the long run , i t is to the w o rk in g class, a po w e r­fu l fo rce w ith no in h e re n t stake in the w a r d rive , th a t the peace m ovem ent m ust look fo r e ffec tive a n ti-w a r action — to the fo rm a tio n o f an independent p o lit ic a l p a r ty o f the la b o r m ovem ent. W h ile w o rk in g fo r th is goal, a n t i-w a r ac tiv is ts can g ive voice to th e ir aim s in m any areas by g iv in g sup­p o rt to S oc ia lis t W orkers P a rty candidates w ho are opposing the tw o c o ld -w a r parties.

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The National Picket Line

Page 3: THE Deportation In Scythes' MILITANT was sentenced Sept. 17 in the Miami, Fla., fed eral district court to three months in prison and nine additional months on probation. At the trial

Monday, September 24, 1962 T H E M IL IT A N T Page Three

W hy Kennedy Hesitates to Invade CubaB y A r t Preis

The U n ited States, m igh ties t in ­d u s tria l and m il i ta ry pow er ever know n, undoub ted ly could w ipe ou t l i t t le re v o lu tio n a ry Cuba in blood, a lthough the a ttem p t w o u ld prove m ost costly. A f te r a ll, W ash­ing ton could f ie ld an a rm y in Cuba o f greater m anpow er than tha t sm a ll c o u n try ’s to ta l popu la tion .

I f K ennedy has so fa r hesitated to loose U.S. cap ita lism ’s stupen­dous des truc tive pow er on C uba’s estim ated seven m illio n people, it is no t th rou gh any com punction o r hu m an ita ria n fee ling . U.S.- n ianned a irc ra ft laden w ith je llie d gasoline (na pa lm ) bombs fo r m onths have been ra in in g fla m in g death and destruction on the v i l ­lage fo lk o f South V ie tnam . There is no reason to be lieve th a t K e n ­nedy is m ore m e rc ifu lly disposed than P resident T rum an , w ho did no t hesitate in 1950 to p lunge th is cou n try in to a fu ll-s c a le invasion o f Korea — w ith o u t a vote o f Congress le t alone consu lting the A m erican people.

In T ru m a n ’s “ po lice action ,” the5,720,000 U.S. com batants suffe red some 160,000 ba ttle casualties and as m any m ore due to accident, fro s t-b ite am puta tions and disease. M ore th fm 2,000,000 South K orean c iv ilia n s alone were slaughtered, m ost o f them bu rned a liv e by U.S. napa lm bombs. A n o th e r 2,000,000 w ere in ju re d and 4,000,000 made homeless in the process o f th e ir “ lib e ra tio n .”

One o f the ch ie f reasons w h y T rum an d id n o t hesitate in June 1950 to in te rvene w ith U.S. arm ed forces in the K orean c iv i l w a r was h is c e rta in ty th a t such in te rv e n ­tio n w o u ld be ca rried o u t as an

F o llo w in g Congressional ap­p ro va l o f a b i l l a u th o riz in g Pres­id en t K ennedy to c a ll up 150,000 m il i ta ry reserves as he deems nec­essary, the Senate F ore ign Re la­tions and A rm e d Services c o m m it­tees are m ee ting jo in t ly th is week to discuss fu r th e r moves against the Cuban people.

U nde r consideration are Re­pub lican ride rs to the c a ll-u p b i l l and a reso lu tion o f Sen. M ike M ansfie ld , the D em ocra tic m a jo r ity leader, ca llin g fo r support to K e n ­nedy in any m ove — in c lu d in g Use o f force — against Cuba. A t the same tim e Senator George A. Sm athers (D .-F la .) announced his in te n tio n o f a ttach ing an am end­m en t to M a n s fie ld ’s reso lu tion w h ic h w o u ld g ive fo rm a l recogn i­t io n to a Cuban g o ve rn m e n t-in - ex ile .

The recent rash o f v io le n t a n ti- Cuban speeches made by p ro m i­nent congressional figu res, gives a s ta rt lin g in s ig h t in to the th in k ­in g now preva len t in W ashington circles. There are those lik e Senators J. S trom T hurm ond (D -S .C .), B a rry M . G o ldw a te r (R -A r iz .) , and E ve re tt M . D irksen ( R - I l l . ) w ho w a n t an im m ed ia te invas ion o f the sm all is land.

In a Sept. 7 s tatem ent D irksen declared th a t the U.S. should act against Cuba u n ila te ra lly i f nec­essary. “ O bv ious ly the Congress of the U n ited States,” he said, “ has re sp o n s ib ility in the m a tte r. In 1955 w hen C om m unis t C h ina menaced Form osa and the Pesca­dores, the Congress by jo in t reso lu ­tion authorized the P resident o f the U n ited States to em p loy our ow n arm ed forces as he deemed necessary to p ro tect those A s ia tic is lands.”

O th e r Senators v ie w the s itua ­tio n d iffe re n tly . Senator Thom as J. Dodd (D -C onn .) said, “ The call fo r an A m erican m il ita ry occupa­tio n of Cuba is fa lse in its em ­phasis and lays us open to unnec­essary a ttack by the C om m unist and C astro ite propaganda ap-

“ in te rn a tio n a l” action under the U n ited N ations labe l. On June 27, 1950, the ve ry day T rum an ordered U.S. arm ed forces to a id D ic ta to r Syngm an Rhee, the U N S ecurity C ounc il — w h ich the Soviet U n ­ion at the tim e was boyco tting — was able to pass a m otion ca llin g on U N m em ber na tions to g ive m il ita ry support to Rhee.

Thus, the U.S. invas ion of Korea, w h ich invo lve d ne a rly 6,- 000,000 m em bers o f a ll U.S. arm ed forces, was conducted under the c loak o f the UN, a lthough on ly a few o the r countries — p r in c ip a lly England, T u rk e y and the P h ilip ­pines -— supp lied a few thousand token troops.

K ennedy has no such “ in te rn a ­t io n a l” cloak. He cannot hope to get U N sanction fo r an invasion o f Cuba on grounds o f “ aggres­sion” by the Castro governm ent against th is o r any o ther coun try . The aggression has been a ll on the side o f W ashington, rang ing fro m econom ic em bargo to ou t­r ig h t arm ed invas ion w ith Cuban c o u n te r-re v o lu tio n a ry m ercenaries in A p r i l 1961.

I f K ennedy is to get some so rt o f “ in te rn a tio n a l” cover fo r an as­sau lt on Cuba, i t w o u ld m ost lik e ly have to come fro m L a t in A m e r i­can countries, spe c ifica lly fro m the O rgan iza tion o f A m erican States. A t the m om ent, th a t p o s s ib ility seems rem ote. The lead a rtic le in the Sept. 13 W a ll S tree t Jo u rn a l g ives a ve ry fra n k exp la na tio n fo r th is “ L a t in L e th a rg y ,” as its a rtic le by s ta ff w r i te r P h ilip G eye lin is headlined.

G eye lin reports fro m W ashing­ton th a t “ U.S. lis te n in g posts across L a t in A m erica are p ic k in g up a h ig h ly s ig n ifica n t hush.”

paratus. Because o f th is , an A m e r­ican m il i ta ry occupation o f Cuba, even i f ca rried ou t w ith d ispatch and e ffic ie ncy , m ig h t v e ry w e ll produce a w orsen ing o f the p o lit ­ic a l s itua tion in L a tin A m erica .”

D odd ’s s ix -p o in t p rogram to “ free ” Cuba includes the invoca­tio n o f the M onroe D octrine fo r p ro c la im in g a to ta l em bargo on S ov ie t m il i ta ry shipm ents to Cuba and a possible subsequent “ to ta l blockade on a ll shipm ents to C uba” except food and consum er goods.

Senator W ayne M orse (D .-O re .), cha irm an o f the Senate L a tin A m erican A ffa irs subcom m ittee hopes to get suppo rt fro m the O r­ganization o f A m e rica n States fo r com m on action against Cuba. I f th is can’t be done, M orse said, then “ the U.S. w i l l s t i l l have the re s p o n s ib ility to take w h a t course o f action the facts show m ay be necessary . . . to pro tect the secur­i t y o f the A m erican people fro m the th re a t o f a Russian C om m unist beachhead a lm ost on ou r ve ry ow n shores.”

O n the o the r hand Senator K e n ­ne th B. K e a tin g (R .-N .Y .) be­lieves a “ horse trade ” is in the o f f ­in g between the U.S. and the S ovie t U n io n ove r Cuba and B e r lin . K ea ting said reports c ir ­cu la tin g in W ashington “ suggest th a t the S oviet U n ion m ay w a n t to p u t Cuba and B e r lin up on the auction b lock together fo r a d ip ­lom a tic deal.”

“ In brass-tacks language,” he said, “ i t w o u ld mean th a t P rem ie r K h rushchev has to ld P resident Kennedy, ‘you la y o ff on B e rlin . W e’l l la y o f f on Cuba. B u t i f you press us in B e r lin , then we w i l l p u t the screws on you in Cuba.’ ”

K e a tin g added, “ the U n ited States m ay w e ll be toy in g w ith some S oviet deal to l in k the tw o. In some o f h is m ost recent u t ­terances, the P resident has spoken o f the tw o crises in the same b rea th and has in e ffec t urged a ‘w a it and see’ a tt itu d e .”

T h a t “ hush” is the stud ied silence fro m a ll L a tin -A m e ric a n gove rn ­ments, even the m ost hostile to Castro ism , concern ing action against Cuba in opposition to the m il ita ry and econom ic a id supplied the Cuban people by the S ov ie t- b loc countries. G eye lin w rite s :

“ N o t one o f the 19 L a t in gov­ernm ents w ith the m ost to lose fro m Red encroachm ent in th is hem isphere has ye t to come fo r ­w a rd w ith concrete proposals fo r tougher an ti-C a s tro action, e ith e r co llec tive ly by the O rgan iza tion of A m erican States, o r by the U.S. alone. F a r fro m proposing invasion o r b lockade of Cuba as a good m any U.S. po litic ia n s are doing, these La tin s are no t even suggest­in g such m ild e r measures as a jo in t em bargo on trade w ith Cuba.”

OAS Im potentS ho rt o f an actua l m il i ta ry in v a ­

sion o r blockade, the J o u rn a l cor­respondent po in ts out, there is “ l i t t le the O AS cou ld now do to re a lly damage Castro.” In fact, the “ m ere m en tion o f e ith e r course, ju d g in g fro m the ca re fu l sound­ings,” w ou ld “ acu te ly em barrass o r even open ly antagonize a lo t o f L a tin governm ents and perhaps even th rea ten some w ith v io le n t o ve rth ro w by Castro sym pa th iz­ers.”

The Castro governm ent its e lf does no t th rea ten the ru lin g groups o f o the r L a tin -A m e ric a n coun­tries, G eye lin makes clear. “ E x ­perts re p o rt a s lacken ing o f sub­version e ffo rts fro m Cuba,” he w rites . “ B u t hom e-g row n le ft is t m ovem ents o f the Castro type are flo u r is h in g in m ost key L a tin coun tries ” and “ they feed on ra c k ­in g economic d istress and la te n t a n ti-A m e ric a n sen tim en t.”

To fo re s ta ll C astro -type u p ris ­ings in L a t in A m erica , the K e n ­nedy a d m in is tra tio n has tr ie d to persuade the ru l in g classes o f the L a tin -A m e ric a n countries to g ran t a few m ild economic and social re fo rm s in re tu rn fo r U.S. fin a n c ia l aid. “ B u t w e a lth y landow ners and fina nc ie rs are p o lit ic a lly p o w e rfu l enough in m ost countries,” w rite s G eye lin , “ to insure th a t change w i l l be p a in fu lly slow and tha t the p o lit ic a l im p ac t on restive populaces w i l l be long delayed.

“ The upshot, as one h igh U.S.

Unions H it Polaris — The B r i t ­ish Trades U n ion Congress, a t its m eeting in B lackpool on Sept. 7, ca lled fo r the rem ova l o f U.S. m is s ile -c a rry in g subm arines fro m th e ir base a t H o ly Loch, near G lasgow, Scotland. The delegates, representing m ore than 8 m illio n w orkers , approved the a n ti-P o - la r is reso lu tion in the face of strong opposition fro m the lead­ersh ip o f the unions, w ho c la im ed tha t i t con trad ic ted the o ff ic ia l Trades U n ion C ongress-Labor P a rty p o lic y on defense.

Chinese Interest in Cuba — Tw opam phlets on the Cuban R evo lu ­tio n have been trans la ted and published in China. One contains the F irs t and Second D eclara tions o f H avana; the o ther is F id e l Cas­tro ’s M arch 26, 1962 speech about A n íb a l Escalante and the In te g ra t­ed R e vo lu tio n a ry O rgan iza tions (O R I) o f Cuba. A cco rd in g to P eking R eview , “ The pam phlets are now on sale in a ll Chinese c itie s .”

The Silence T hat Shouts — E ng­lish language newspapers in Johan­nesburg, South A fr ic a , have fo re ­cast th a t house a rrest w i l l soon be used to silence p o lit ic a l op­position. P rovis ions o f South .Af­r ic a ’s v ic ious anti-sabotage law em pow er Justice M in is te r B a lth a ­zar V o rs te r to con fine people to th e ir homes and to s tipu la te who m ay v is it them . B o th he and P re m ie r V erw oe rd have been s ta t­in g in recent speeches th a t action m ust be taken against “ lib e ra lism

o ff ic ia l puts it , is ‘even m ore than the usual num ber o f exp los ive s it­ua tions ju s t w a it in g fo r somebody to toss a m atch.’ A n d one o f the m ore in fla m m a to ry ‘matches,’ i t ’s agreed, w o u ld be an a ttem p t by the U.S., o r b y hem isphere nations acting co llec tive ly ,, to topp le the Castro governm ent by fo rce .”

One U.S. o ff ic ia l is quoted by G eye lin as saying: “ T he re ’s re a lly no t m uch p o in t in c lean ing house in Cuba, even i f we w ere sure we re a lly could, i f i t means se tting up a ha lf-dozen m uch m ore im p o r­tan t countries on the m a in land fo r a C om m unist ta ke -o ve r.”

A lth o u g h the recent a r r iv a l of increased S ov ie t a id to Cuba is the p re te x t fo r the new crescendo in the an ti-C a s tro cam paign, the re a l reason fo r th is bellicose c lam or is the need to d is tra c t a t­ten tion fro m the d ism al fa ilu re o f the A llia n c e fo r Progress. The f ir s t b ir th d a y o f th is p rogram , launched w ith such fan fa re a yea r ago, was Aug. 17. M ore than one lead ing newspaper took note o f the qu ie t w ay the K ennedy a d m in is tra tio n s lid over th is im p o rta n t f ir s t an­n ive rsa ry .

“Alliance for Progress’The A llia n c e fo r Progress’ a r t i­

cles o f organ iza tion , signed at P un ta de l Este, U ruguay, on Aug. 17, 1961, w ere tou ted by K ennedy as the great answ er to Castro ism . I t was c la im ed th a t th is p ro jec ted p rogram o f $20 b il l io n o f U.S. a id to L a t in A m erica over ten years w o u ld w ip e ou t the te rr ib le pov­e rty in the lands south o f the R io Grande, e lim in a te the w o rs t abuses o f the L a tin A m erican ru l in g classes and g ive the masses m ore secu rity and freedom than they cou ld hope to f in d fo r themselves along the road o f Castro ism .

On the occasion o f the A llia n ce fo r Progress ann iversary , R icha rd Boyce, S crip ps -H o w a rd corres­pondent, w ro te fro m W ashington th a t the p rogram “ has n o t made im pressive progress.” T h a t is su re ly the understa tem ent o f the year. T ad Szulc, o f the New Y o rk Times, w ro te on the same occasion th a t the ann ive rsa ry “ comes to ­m orro w against a background o f c ris is in A rg e n tin a and B ra z il and serious un rest elsewhere in the hem isphere.” In fact, in A rg e n tin a and Peru, m il i ta ry d ic ta to rsh ips

w'hich is the sm a lle r b ro th e r o f com m unism .” V o rs te r also is p re ­p a rin g a d ra ft b i l l to weed ou t law yers w ho are Com m unists, suspected libe ra ls , o r “ p o lit ic a l undesirab les.” The Johannesburg Sunday T im es com m ented on Sept. 9: “ I t is conceivable th a t in o rder to silence Com m unists and ag ita ­tors m ore e ffe c tiv e ly i t m ay be necessary to silence the en tire na tion .”

Outpost of the Free W orld —C a rry in g the U .S .-backed p o licy o f “ s tra teg ic ham le ts” a step fu r th e r , the Ngo D in h D iem re ­gim e in South V ie tn am has estab­lished w h a t i t ca lls “ stra teg ic w a rds ” and “ s tra teg ic ce lls” in Saigon. A “ stra teg ic w a rd ” com ­prises between 100 and 200 fa m ­ilies, sub -d iv ide d in to cells com ­p ris in g a lane o r tw o. Each en­closed ce ll has its ow n entrance w h ich can be sealed o f f as soon as an a la rm is sounded in o rder to fa c ilita te a search by the police.

‘H oy’ Attacks Jehovah’s W it­nesses — The Aug. 28 issue o f Hoy, organ o f the Cuban C om ­m un is t P a rty (P S P ), ca rried an a ttack on m em bers o f the Je­hovah ’s W itnesses. The newspaper accused the re lig ious group o f a id ­in g co u n te r-re vo lu tio n th rough c a rry in g on “ negative a c t iv ity ” in Cuba.

Chiang Stamps Out Commu­nists — A recent issue o f the A m erican m agazine Newsweek was seized before i t cou ld be d i­s tr ib u te d to subscribers on the N a-

had taken over. A lth o u g h the U n ite d States au thorized $1,517,-300,000 in a id to L a t in A m erica between M arch 31, 1961, and las t June 30, reported Szulc, “ the b u lk o f these funds has no t been d is ­persed.” M oreover, W ash ing ton observers “ say advances to w a rd basic social and econom ic re fo rm s have been few .’\

These re fo rm s are supposed to come in la rge measure fro m a “ s e lf-h e lp ” p o rtio n o f the A llia n c e fo r Progress p rog ram w hereby, as R ichard Boyce reported , a “ stag­ge ring S8 b il l io n is to be p u b lic and p riv a te cap ita l fro m the L a t in countries them selves.” B u t “ v e ry l i t t le o f th is se lf-h e lp has been fo rthco m ing .”

Flight of CapitalJus t how m uch “ s e lf-h e lp ” has

come fro m the L a tin -A m e ric a n ru l in g classes was ind ica ted by K ennedy h im se lf in h is re p ly to a question a t h is Sept. 13 news conference. T ry in g to e x p la in the la ck o f progress o f the A llia n c e fo r Progress, K ennedy revealed: “ L a t in A m erica has had a f l ig h t o f ca p ita l in recent m onths w h ic h has been serious. In ad d ition , the price o f its p r im a ry products has also dropped in recent m onths. So th a t even the assistance we have g iven has no t been enough to keep L a t in A m erica even, p a r t ic u la r ly w hen its popu la tion increase am ounts to a lm ost th ree pe r cent.”

A c tu a lly , reported Szulc in the p re v io u s ly c ited Tim es a rtic le , “ the f lo w o f dom estic cap ita l ou t o f L a t in A m erica fa r exceeds a lliance investm ents.”

U.S. im p e ria lism feels an in ­to le rab le fru s tra tio n . I f W a ll S tree t doesn’t destroy C astro ’s Cuba, its exam ple w i l l beckon ever m ore in v it in g ly to the 200 m il l io n L a t in A m ericans oppressed by hunger, squalor, disease and b a ck -b re ak in g to il. I f W ash ing ton alone o r in con­ce rt w ith the ru le rs o f L a t in A m erica assaults Cuba, i t m ig h t mean an even q u icke r f la re -u p o f the L a t in A m erican masses.

In any event, K ennedy fea rs the issue w i l l never be settled on the beaches o f Cuba alone. B u t i t can­no t be ru le d ou t tha t, i f p o lit ic a l pressure becomes too great, he is op po rtu n is t enough and a rro ga n t enough to r is k the reckless gam ble of another C uban invasion.

tio n a lis t Chinese is land o f T a i­wan. O n ly about h a lf o f the m aga­zines ever reached subscribers. W hen these were de live red , m ost o f the illu s tra tio n s fo r a fea tu re a rtic le on C om m unis t C h ina w ere e ith e r inked o u t com p le te ly o r p a r t ia l ly obscured. B lacked ou t fro m the cover was a p o r tra it o f M ao T se-T ung w ith Chinese c h a r­acters read ing “ Long L iv e the People’s R e pu b lic ” and o th e r slogans. Inside, how ever, the i l ­lu s tra tion s w ere no t com p le te ly ob lite ra ted . Instead, over p ic tu res o f M ao and s ix o th e r Chinese leaders were in d iv id u a lly stam ped the Chinese characters “ F e i C h iu ,” m eaning “ B a n d it C h ie fta in .”

United Front Broken — TheJapanese soc ia lis t press has p u b ­lished an a rtic le b y Saburo Eda, G enera l Secre tary o f the S ocia lis t P a r ty o f Japan, re p u d ia tin g the fo rm e r entente betw een th a t p a r ty and the Chinese C om m unis t P a rty on the s trugg le against im p e r ia l­ism and w a r. The ru p tu re , accord­in g to a Reuters d ispa tch o f Sept. 2, was over S oviet resum ption o f nuc lea r testing. A t the recent w o r ld congress against nuc lear weapons, the Japanese Socia lists sought a reso lu tion condem ning a ll nuc lea r tests, w h ile the Chinese and Russian delegates ins is ted on upho ld ing the resum ption o f tests by the S oviet U n ion . S ocia lis t leader Eda’s a rt ic le said the Chinese C om m unis t P a rty had no r ig h t “ to fo rce its ideo logy” on the Japanese Socialists.

Senatorial Ravings Indicate Trend of Anti-Cuba Drive

B y L il l ia n K ie ze l

World Events

Page 4: THE Deportation In Scythes' MILITANT was sentenced Sept. 17 in the Miami, Fla., fed eral district court to three months in prison and nine additional months on probation. At the trial

Page Four TH E M lL l tA N T Monday, September 24, 1962

the MILITANTE d ito r: JO SEPH H A N S E N

M anag ing E d ito r : G EO RG E L A V A N Business M anager: K A H O L Y N K E R R Y

P ub lished w e e k ly , excep t fo r om ission o f f iv e sum m er issues, b y The M ili ta n t P u b lis h in g Ass’n ., 116 U n iv e rs ity P I., N ew Y o rk 3, N. Y . Phone CH 3-2140. Second- class postage pa id a t N ew Y o rk , N .Y . S u b sc rip tio n : $3 a year; Canadian. $3.50; fo re ig n , $4.50. S igned a rtic le s b y c o n tr ib u to rs do n o t necessarily represen t The M i l i ta n t ’s v iew s. These are expressed in e d ito ria ls .

V o l. 26 - N o . 34 345 M o n d a y , S e p te m b e r 24, 1962

Anti-Semitism in ArgentinaW h e n P e ro n is ta ca n d id a te s , backed b y th e A rg e n t in e la b o r

m o v e m e n t, w o n th e e le c tio n s la s t s p r in g , th e m i l i t a r y b rass m o ve d q u ic k ly to p re v e n t th e ir ta k in g o f f ic e and to en su re a g o v ­e rn m e n t f r ie n d ly to U .S . in te re s ts . T h e c u r re n t o u tb re a k o f a n t i- S e m itis m in A rg e n t in a is b u t one o f th e f r u i t s o f th is U .S .-b a c k e d re g im e .

T h e a n t i-S e m it ic w a v e has b ro u g h t s w a s tik a s s c ra w le d on w a lls , p h y s ic a l assau lts on Jew s, and th e s to n in g and m a c h in e - g u n n in g o f J e w is h e s ta b lis h m e n ts .

S pokesm en fo r A rg e n t in a ’s J e w is h c o m m u n ity s ta te th a t th e p o lic e ta k e no a c tio n a g a in s t th e p e rp e tra to rs o f o u tra g e o u s c r im e s l ik e th e re c e n t w o u n d in g o f a J e w is h s tu d e n t b y g u n f ire an d th e c a rv in g o f a s w a s tik a on a J e w is h g i r l ’s b reas t. These spokesm en also p o in t to th e a n t i-S e m it ic g ro u p s ’ c o n n e c tio n s w i th im p o r ta n t m i l i t a r y f ig u re s and sec tions o f th e R om an C a th o lic h ie ra rc h y in e x p la n a t io n o f th e im m u n ity f ro m p ro s e c u tio n . .

W h ile th e e n c o u ra g e m e n t o f such o u tra g e s b y its A rg e n t in e a llie s m a y m a ke W a s h in g to n so m e w h a t uneasy, i t m u s t accep t f u l l re s p o n s ib i l ity fo r th e m . T o m a in ta in its h o ld on A rg e n t in a , U .S . im p e r ia lis m has m ade a dea l w i th th e m os t re a c tio n a ry sec­t io n s o f th a t n a t io n ’s r u l in g classes. T h a t these c irc le s in c lu d e o p e n ly a n t i-S e m it ic and fa s c is t e le m e n ts is m e re ly an e m b a rra s s ­in g p a r t o f th e b a rg a in .

The Abuse of OvertimeM a n y com p an ies a re fo rc in g t h e ir e m p lo yes to w o rk o v e r­

t im e in s te a d o f c a l l in g b a c k those w o rk e rs a lre a d y la id o f f . T h is is a c o n t r ib u t in g fa c to r in th e c o n tin u e d job lessness in m a n y p a r ts o f th e c o u n try . E m p lo y e s o f th e M e tro p o l ita n T ra n s it A u th o r i t y in B os to n , fo r e x a m p le , re c e n t ly engaged in an “ i l le g a l” s t r ik e in th e ir b a t t le a g a in s t th e p ra c tic e . In D e tr o it w h e re th is abuse is com m o n , th e g re a t re s e n tm e n t o v e r i t am o ng th e u n e m ­p lo y e d has in th e pa s t le d to S a tu rd a y p ic k e t lin e s a ro u n d a u to p la n ts e n g a g in g in it .

D o th e com p an ies p e rp e tra t in g such an o b v io u s in ju s t ic e s im p ly n o t g iv e a d a m n a b o u t th e m en th e y h a ve la id o ff? I t ’s th a t in p a r t. I t m a y also be a w a y o f t r y in g to pe rsua de tho usan ds o f “ s u rp lu s ” w o rk e rs th a t th e y h a ve no chance o f e v e r g e tt in g ba ck th e ir o ld jo b s an d th a t th e y m ig h t as w e l l go e lse w h e re and s top c re a tin g a “ soc ia l p ro b le m ” b y th e ir presence.

B u t th e com p an ies rea p im m e d ia te a d van ta ge s f ro m th e p ra c ­tice . I t m akes fo r “ m o re e f f ic ie n t a n d c o n v e n ie n t” s c h e d u lin g o f p ro d u c tio n . M o re o v e r, i t saves p a y m e n t o f f r in g e b e n e fits to those w o rk e rs w h o w o u ld h a ve to be re -h ire d , w h i le such p a y m e n ts do n o t r is e as m u ch w h e n a red uce d w o rk fo rc e is p u t on o v e r ­t im e .

T h e p ra c tic e is n o t o n ly a d ire c t in ju r y to la id - o f f w o rk e rs , i t is a fa ls e b e n e fit fo r th e ir e m p lo y e d u n io n b ro th e rs . C o m pa n ie s u t i l iz e in c re a se d ta k e -h o m e p a y f ro m o v e r t im e as a m eans o f a v o id in g in c re a s in g h o u r ly w ages to m ee t r is in g l iv in g costs.

T h e soc ia l p ro g re ss o f th e w o r k in g class fo r a lo n g t im e has d e m a n d e d a s h o r te r w o rk w e e k . U n e m p lo y m e n t and th e o n ru s h o f a u to m a tio n m a k e th e s h o r te r w o rk w e e k th e m os t p re ss in g im ­m e d ia te issue fo r la b o r. So fa r th e to p la b o r le a d e rs h a ve done n o th in g b u t ta lk a b o u t th e m a tte r . In th e m e a n tim e th e ir to le ra ­t io n o f th e w id e s p re a d m a n a g e m e n t p o lic y o f re q u ir in g o v e r t im e ra th e r th a n r e - h ir in g la id - o f f w o rk e rs n o t o n ly a g g ra va te s u n ­e m p lo y m e n t b u t in som e in d u s tr ie s is b r in g in g a b o u t a de fa c to in c rea se o f th e w o rk w e ek .

Curran and Cuba

By F ra n k L o ve llD E T R O IT — I t isn ’t o ften tha t

the tru th is spoken in cap ita lis t po litics . W hen it is, i t ought to be defended.

Here in M ich igan we have an in d u s tr ia lis t, George Rom ney, fo r ­m er president o f A m erican M o­tors, cam paign ing fo r governor on the R epublican ticke t.

I though t Gus Scholle, A F L - C IO state pres ident and a leader of the D em ocratic P arty , accurate­ly described Rom ney when he called h im a “ phony.” Scholle e laborated: “ George Rom ney is not on ly a phony, he’s a s lick car salesman, and car salesmen are p re tty w e ll in do c trina ted in the fine a r t o f m isrepresenta tion . They a ll em bellish w ha t they have to say.”

O f course Scholle d id no t speak the w ho le tru th . I f he had, he w o u ld have added tha t a l l cap i­ta lis t po litic ians , Dem ocrats as w e ll as Republicans, practice the “ a rt o f m isrepresenta tion .” A good exam ple w ou ld be the fin e -so u n d - ing p la tfo rm o f K ennedy in 1960 as com pared w ith the p u tr id p ro ­gram o f K ennedy in 1962. I t w ou ld also have been in o rder to m en­tion th a t Dem ocrats lik e to pu t au to corpora tion presidents in positions o f pow er too — lik e the fo rm e r Ford president, R obert S. M cNam ara, who is now Secretary of Defense.

G eo rge R o m ne y

B u t Scholle was r ig h t as fa r as he w e n t — in w h a t he said about Rom ney, and in w 'hat he said about car salesmen.

As soon as he said it, however, the roo f caved in . A ho w l o f in ­d igna tion w en t up fro m the auto dealers and th e ir associations. They lodged angry protests w ith the D em ocratic P a rty , dem anding th a t i t repud ia te Scholle. The Re­pub licans jum ped in to the act. The local d a ily papers came s taunch ly to the salesmen’s defense, e x to ll­ing th e ir v irtu e s and p ra is ing th e ir methods.

“ W ith o u t salesmen (au to ) p ro ­duction m ig h t as w’e ll cease,” one

Urban Air Pollution Linked To Profit-Hungry Industries

B y M a r i ly n L e v in

M uch is said nowadays about fa llo u t fro m nuc lear explosions, b u t l i t t le pro test is raised against another type o f dangerous fa llo u t w h ich robs m e trop o litan residents o f years o f th e ir lives.

Huge am ounts o f contam inated

A t th e h ig h p o in t o f th e n e w s p a p e r h y s te r ia a g a in s t C uba e a r l ie r th is m o n th Joseph C u rra n , p re s id e n t o f th e N a tio n a l M a r i­t im e U n io n , c a lle d a press con fe re n ce to an no un ce th a t he w as g o in g to le a d a m o v e w i th in th e In te rn a t io n a l T ra n s p o r t W o rk e rs F e d e ra tio n fo r a b o y c o tt o f s h ip p in g to C uba . T h e N M U m e m b e r­s h ip , o f course, ha d n o th in g to say a b o u t th is . C u r ra n — save fo r a l i t t l e p ro m p t in g f r o m th e K e n n e d y a d m in is tra t io n — d id i t on h is o w n .

C u r ra n is an o p p o r tu n is t w h o , w h e n i t s u ite d h is ca re e r, w as one o f th e m os t o u ts p o k e n s u p p o rte rs o f th e S ta lin is t l in e am ong U .S . la b o r o ff ic ia ls . H e f lo p p e d o v e r to a n t i-c o m m u n is m w h e n th e w itc h h u n t began a f te r W o r ld W a r I I . N o w , a lo n g w i th th e re s t o f th e A F L - C IO b u re a u c ra ts , w h o s u p p o rte d th e B a tis ta g a n g ­s te rs in c o n tro l o f C u b a n u n io n s p r io r to 1959, C u r ra n seeks to in g ra t ia te h im s e lf w i th th e U .S . g o v e rn m e n t b y b e in g a w i l l in g f in k a g a in s t th e C u ba n re v o lu tio n .

T h is w i l l n o t save th e u n io n s in th is c o u n try f ro m re a c tio n a ry a tta c k . O n th e c o n tra ry , C u r ra n ’s m o v e w e ake ns U .S . la b o r b y fe e d in g th e re a c tio n a ry h y s te r ia . A n d i f th e im p e r ia lis ts in W a s h ­in g to n s h o u ld succeed in d e s tro y in g th e C u b a n R e v o lu t io n , U .S. la b o r w o u ld p a y h e a v ily . C u b a ’s d e fe a t w o u ld o n ly in te n s ify re a c ­t io n he re , e n c o u ra g in g an d e m b o ld e n in g a l l th e a n t i- la b o r fo rces — w h ic h a re a lso th e m os t h y s te r ic a l ly a n t i-C u b a n fo rce s in th e c o u n try .

T h e t ru e in te re s ts o f th e A m e r ic a n w o rk e rs l ie in o p p o s in g a l l a t te m p ts to w e a k e n o r d e s tro y th e C u b a n R e v o lu t io n .

partic les, p r im a r ily fro m the smokestacks and furnaces o f heavy in d u s try , fa l l on ou r b ig c ities d a ily . In D e tro it i t ’s over 60,000 tons a day, and th a t’s not counting the vast quan tities o f h a rm fu l gases discharged in to our lungs.

Hardest h it by the ap pro x im a te ­ly 2,000 chem icals p o llu t in g the a ir are the new born, the i l l and the aged — those least able to re ­sist the poisoned atmosphere.

I t is d if f ic u lt to measure exa c tly the hea lth hazards resu ltin g fro m in d u s tr ia l fa llo u t, p a r t ly because e ffo rts along th is line have not been o f f ic ia lly encouraged o r ade­qua te ly financed.

B u t a pu b lica tio n o f the U.S. D epartm ent o f H ea lth , Education and W e lfa re states tha t “ acute ep i­sodes have dem onstrated th a t heavy concentra tions o f a ir p o l­lu ta n t can produce acute illness and sudden death.”

T h is re fers to w eathe r qu irks , lik e the one in London ten years ago, w hen 4,000 people were k ille d and thousands others made se ri­ously il l .

C u m u la tive E ffe c t“ O f greater significance, how ­

eve r,” the H E W rep o rt continues, “ is the lo ng -te rm exposure o f com ­m u n ity popu la tions to lo w e r con­cen tra tions o f a ir po llu tan ts , w h ich m ay resu lt in g radua l de te rio ra ­tion o f health , ch ron ic diseases and p rem ature death.

“ A n im pressive body o f c irc u m ­s tan tia l evidence is now accu­m u la tin g w h ich lin k s a ir p o llu tio n w ith increased m o rta lity fro m card io - re sp ira to ry causes, in ­creased susce p tib ility to resp ira ­to ry disease, and in te rfe rence w ith no rm a l resp ira to ry fu n c tio n .”

A n a ir p o llu tio n expert recen tly said th a t a g rea t m any people “ are h a lf-s ic k o r be low pa r phys ica lly because o f the contam inated a ir they breathe .” He also estim ated th a t “ people w ho liv e in urban areas where the a ir is unclean are tw ice as lik e ly to get lu n g cancer as those l iv in g in the c o u n try .”

In d u s tr ia l fa llo u t and nuclear fa llo u t are bo th de s tru c tive o f h u ­m an hea lth and life , b u t at least

the discussion o f in d u s tr ia l f a l l ­ou t cannot be fogged up by a rg u ­m ents about “ na tiona l defense” and cold w a r propaganda. In a p o lit ic a l sense, there fore , i t is m ore easily preventable .

There are a lready m any know n e ffec tive m ethods o f con tro lling , reduc ing and e lim in a tin g a ir p o l­lu tio n ; others could be discovered, i f the re was a w i l l to do so; and, u n lik e M ich igan , m ost states have a ir -p o llu tio n con tro l law s on the books. B u t l i t t le o r no th in g is done, and e x is tin g law s are po o rly en­forced, because i t takes money.

The men w ho con tro l bo th in ­d u s try and governm ent w ou ld ra th e r go on po isoning the a ir (and us) than p e rm it th e ir p ro fits to be cut.

le tte r w r i te r thundered. Most salesmen are “ h a rd -w o rk in g , con­scientious, honest people engaged in the le g itim a te occupation o f se lling cars to the pu b lic ,” w ro te another. Scholle was accused oi t ry in g to “ create a serious m is ­tru s t in everyone w'ho earns th e ir live lih o o d th rough sales.”

Then the in te res tin g th in g hap­pened: Scholle issued a fo rm a l apology to the salesmen. A n ab­je c t apology.

“ I was ta lk in g about ju s t one salesman — Rom ney,” he said. “ The statem ent was made in a jo c u la r vein, and I had no in te n ­tion w hatsoever of m ak ing d is ­parag ing rem arks about au to salesmen as such. The las t th ing in the w o rld I w o u ld w ant to do is re fle c t on the in te g r ity o f car salesmen. F a r be it fro m me to put auto salesmen in general in the same category w ith Rom ney.”

I don’t w an t to exaggerate. The salesmen a ren ’t the ones w ho set the po lic ies, prices and procedures fo llow e d by the auto in d u s try — the m a jo r resp o n s ib ility rests w ith the boards of d irec to rs o f the co r­porations, w ho set the pa tte rns by the m is lead ing adve rtis ing cam ­paigns on w h ich they spend m any m illio n s of do lla rs each year. The salesmen are ju s t the fa ll guys, the ones closest to the buyer.

Despite tha t, they are masters o f m isrepresenta tion and w o u ld n ’t las t a t th e ir jobs fo r a m on th i f they w e ren ’t. W ho ever m et a salesman w ho adm itted , “ M y com ­p e tito r across the street can sell you ju s t as good a car at ju s t about the same price?”

I t is a so rry state o f a ffa irs when a un ion o ff ic ia l and Dem o­c ra tic p o lit ic ia n has to apologize fo r speaking the tru th .

I f they can’t even te ll the tru th about car salesmen, how can any­body depend on them to te ll the tru th about the much m ore c ruc ia l p roblem s o f w a r, unem ploym ent, rac ia l d isc r im in a tio n and the tw o - p a rty system?

"Deliberate Speed"O n ly 33 school d is tr ic ts are

p lan n in g to in it ia te desegregation th is fa ll. Since the Suprem e C o u rt’s 1954 decis ion o u tlaw ing school segregation on ly 948 o f the 3,047 school d is tr ic ts w ith J im C row schools have begun any in ­tegra tion . O ver 700 o f these are in non-S outhe rn and border states such as O klahom a (195), M issouri (203), K e n tu cky (148), D e law are (92), W est V irg in ia (43) and M ary land (23). M oreover, in m any d is tr ic ts listed as desegregated there has been on ly token in te g ra ­tion o f a few Negro ch ild re n , most are s t i l l in J im C row schools.

Poet’s Corner

The Man He Killed‘Had he and I b u t met B y some old ancient inn.

W e should have sat us down to w e t R ig h t m any a n ip p e rk in !

‘B u t ranged as in fa n try ,A n d s ta rin g face to face,

I shot a t h im as he a t me,A n d k il le d h im in his place.

‘ I shot h im dead because — Because he was m y foe,

Just so: m y foe o f course he was; T h a t’s c lear enough; a lthough

‘He tho ugh t he’d ‘lis t, perhaps, O ff-h a n d lik e — ju s t as I —

Was ou t o f w o rk — had sold h is traps No o the r reason w hy.

‘Yes; q u a in t and curious w a r is! You shoot a fe llo w down

Y o u ’d tre a t i f m et w here any ba r is, O r he lp to h a lf-a -c ro w n .’

— Thomas H a rd y (1840-1928)

Who's Slick? Us Car Salesmen?

Page 5: THE Deportation In Scythes' MILITANT was sentenced Sept. 17 in the Miami, Fla., fed eral district court to three months in prison and nine additional months on probation. At the trial

Monday, September 24, 1962 TH E M IL IT A N T Page F ive

TEN YE A R S AGO

IN THE M I L I T A N TLetters From O ur R eaders

‘L ib e ra tio n , lik e freedom , is one o f the sweetest o i a ll words. Yet, when m outhed by any lead­ing spokesman fo r A m erica ’s r u l­in g c ircles, the w o rd ‘lib e ra tio n ’ sends a shudder o f h o rro r th rough the w o rld . Thus, an ou tc ry of a la rm m et Gen. E isenhower's A m erican Legion p roc lam ation ot th is c o u n try ’s m ission to ‘lib e ra te ’ those lands o f Eastern Europe and Asia now con tro lled by or in a l­liance w ith the S oviet U n ion . . .

“ Korea is a g r im ob ject lesson. D a ily , U.S. w a r com m uniques boast o f the w anton b lo w in g up o f the factories, m ines, dams, pow er sites. O ff ic ia l UN reports te ll o f m illio n s of c iv ilia n s burned a live by f la m in g je llie d gasoline (n a p a lm ), b low n up by h igh -exp los ive bombs, sp la ttered w ith m achine gun bu lle ts and rockets.

“ W herever the forces o f ‘l ib e ra ­tio n ’ gain con tro l, even m om en­ta r ily , to ta lita r ia n po lice and m il­ita ry regim es are imposed. In Korea, the no torious d ic ta to rsh ip o f Syngm an Rhee, whose most e ff ic ie n t in s titu t io n is his f ir in g squads, . is the end -p rodu c t of U.S. ‘lib e ra tio n .’ ” — Sept. 22 1952.

20 YE AR S AGO“ T e s tify in g before the Senate

B an k in g C om m ittee on Septem ber 15, |W m . H .] D avis [C ha irm an of the W ar L a b o r B o a rd ] stated th a t i f the Congress w ro te the ‘L i t t le S teel’ fo rm u la in to law , it w ou ld mean th a t 75 per cent o f wages w ou ld go no h ighe r than they are now.

“ ‘ I f w o rkers w an t m ore pay,’ he said, e xp la in in g how the ‘L i t ­t le S tee l’ fo rm u la w orks, ‘They m ust w o rk ove rtim e to get i t ’ . . .

“ Most of the b ig In te rn a tio n a l un ions have made protests against the ‘L i t t le S teel’ fo rm u la . B u t none of the top o ffic ia ls has dared to a d m it tha t th is a n ti- la b o r fo rm u la has the app rova l o f P res i­dent Roosevelt. Davis, in his testim ony, f la t ly po in ted out who is behind the fo rm u la , when he said, ‘We are going to app ly tha t p r in c ip le u n t il the P resident te lls us to stop.’

“ T h is statem ent c le a rly reveals tha t eve ry a n ti- la b o r ru l in g o f the W LB tu rn in g down the ju s tif ie d demands o f the w orkers , has been made w ith the fu l l agreem ent of 1he P resident w ho con tro ls the W L B .” — Sept. 26, 1942.

FIDEL CASTROcn

Marxism-Leninism(Speech of Dec. 2, 1961)

84 pages $1

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A sk lo r o u r new li te r a tu r e lis t

Answers QueryNew Y o rk , N. Y .

In y o u r L e tte rs co lum n o f Aug.27 there was a query about the source and date of a w ide ly -used quota tion from K a r l M a rx . I t is to be found in his m ain w o rk , C ap ita l. Since he w ro te in G er­man w hat we have are trans la ­tions. There are several, s lig h tly d iffe re n t.

The E verym a n ’s L ib ra ry ed ition (1929) o f Eden and Cedar P a u l’s trans la tio n gives in Vol I, C hapter 8, page 309, the fo llo w in g version: “ In the U n ited States o f A m e r­ica, any sort o f independent labo r m ovem ent was paralyzed so long as s lavery d is figu red a pa rt of the repub lic . Labo r w ith a w h ite sk in cannot em ancipate its e lf w here labo r w ith a b lack sk in is b randed.’’

The Charles H. K e r r & Co.’s ed i­tion (1918) of Sam uel M oore and E dw ard A v e lin g ’s trans la tio n puts it in Vol. I, C hapte r 10, page 329, thus: “ In the U n ited States of N o rth A m erica , every independent m ovem ent o f w o rke rs was pa r­alyzed so long as s lavery d is ­figu red a p a rt o f the R epublic. La bo r cannot em ancipate its e lf in the w h ite sk in w here in the black i t is b randed.”

Since C a p ita l f ir s t appeared in p r in t in 1867, tha t, I suppose, w o u ld be considered the date of the quo ta tion .

A.L.P.

More InformationGlens Falls, N. Y.

I understand th a t M a rx ’s com ­m en t on w h ite skinned and black sk inned la bo r (see le tte r colum n, M ilita n t , A ug . 27) appears in C ap ita l.

M a rx and Engels coined the slogan “ W orkers o f a ll countries un ite ! you have no th in g to lose bu t yo u r chains.” T h is slogan was addressed to a ll w o rkers , no t to those o f a single race.

The In te rn a tio n a l W ork in gm en ’s Association, be tte r know n as the F irs t In te rn a tio n a l, was founded in 1864 w hen the C iv il W ar was approaching its c lim ax. T h is o r ­ganization , at the behest o f M a rx , w ro te a le tte r to P resident L inco ln , w h ich reads in p a rt as fo llow s:

“ F rom the com m encem ent o f the tita n ic A m erican s tr ife the w o rk ­in g m en o f Europe fee l in s tin c ­t iv e ly th a t the star-spang led ban­ner ca rried the destiny o f th e ir class. The contest o f the te rr ito r ie s w h ich opened the d ire epoch, was i t no t to decide w he the r the v irg in soil o f im m ense trac ts should be wedded to the la bo r o f the em i­g ra n t o r p ro s titu ted by the s lave- d rive r?

“ W hen an o liga rchy o f 300,000 slaveholders dared to inscribe fo r the f irs t tim e in the annals o f the w o r ld “ s la ve ry ” on the banner of arm ed revo lt, when on the ve ry spot w here h a rd ly a cen tu ry ago the idea o f one great dem ocra tic re p u b lic f ir s t sprang up, whence the f ir s t D ec la ra tion o f the R ights o f M an was issued, and the f ir s t im pu lse g iven to the Europeanre vo lu tio n o f the 18th cen tu ry ;when on th is ve ry spot cou n te r­revo lu tio n , w ith system atic th o r­oughness, g lo ried in rescind ing‘the ideas en terta ined a t the tim e o f the fo rm a tio n o f the o ld con­

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By James P. Cannon

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s t itu t io n ’ and m a in ta ined ‘s lavery to be a bene fic ien t in s titu t io n ,’ in ­deed, ‘ the on ly so lu tion o f the great prob lem o f the re la tions of cap ita l to labo r,’ and cyn ica lly procla im ed p ro p e rly in m an ‘ the cornerstone of the new e d ifice ’ — then the w o rk in g class o f Europe understood at once even before the fana tic pa rtisansh ip o f the u p ­per classes fo r the Confederate ge n try had given its d ism al w a rn ­ing, tha t the slaveholders’ reb e l­lion was to sound the tocsin fo r a general ho ly crusade o f p ro pe rty against labor, and th a t fo r the men o f labor, not on ly th e ir hopes fo r the fu tu re , b u t even th e ir past conquests were at stake in tha t trem endous c o n flic t on the o ther side o f the A tla n tic . E veryw here they bore p a tie n tly the hardships im posed on them by the cotton cris is, opposed en thus ias tica lly the p ro -s la ve ry in te rve n tio n — im p o r­tu n it ie s o f th e ir be tte rs — and fro m m ost pa rts o f Europe, con­tr ib u te d th e ir quota o f blood to the good cause.

“ W h ile the w o rk in g men, the tru e p o lit ic a l pow er o f the N orth , a llow ed slavery to de file th e ir own repub lic . W h ile before the Negro m astered and sold against h is w i l l , they boasted i t the h ighest p re ­roga tive o f the w h ite -sk in n e d la ­bo re r to sell h im se lf and choose his ow n m aster, they were unab le to a tta in the true freedom o f labor, o r to support th e ir European b re th ren in th e ir s trugg le fo r em ancipation, bu t th is b a rr ie r to progress has been swept o f f by the red sea of C iv il W ar.

“ The w o rk in g men o f Europe fee l sure tha t, as the A m erican W ar o f Independence in it ia le d a new era o f ascendancy fo r the m idd le class, so the A m erican a n t i­s lavery w a r w i l l do fo r the w o rk ­in g classes. They consider i t an earnest o f the epoch to come tha t it fe ll to the lo t o f A braham L in co ln , the s ing le -m inded son of the w o rk in g class, to lead the cou n try th rough the strugg le fo r the rescue o f an enchained race and the reconstruction o f a social w o r ld .”

The above le tte r was de live red to the A m erican embassy to be fo rw a rde d to W ashington at a tim e w hen the Tories of the w o r ld w'ere vo ic ing m ora l (and ren de ring m a­te r ia l) support to the slave states.

K.M .G .

ThanksNew Y o rk , N.Y.

C ongra tu la tions on the f irs t e igh t-page M ilita n t. The bigger paper is a rea l im provem ent. Keep ’em ro llin g .

W .B .

A Modern Jean Valjean?D e tro it, M ich .

Lester B rookins, a 45 -yea r-o ld fa th e r o f 13 ch ild ren , has been g iven a fo u r-y e a r prison sentence fo r m a il fraud .

I t appears the B rook ins fa m ily have been using a f ic t it io u s church society to o rder m erchandise from m a il-o rd e r houses, then sold i t w ith o u t pay ing fo r it . Investiga to rs ind ica te the “ lo o t” has totaled $33,000 in eleven years.

The Brookinses liv e in the poorest and oldest section o f De­tro it . They have been the rec ip ­ien ts o f re lie f fo r some tim e. I f w e take a conserva tive estim ate o f S120 a week fo r a fa m ily of 15 to keep body and soul together, they w ou ld need an annual stipend o f $6,000 to get by. I f we then deduct $3,000, w h ich was th e ir an­nua l average incom e, fro m the “ lo o t,” the B rook ins fa m ily m ay have received $60 a week in re ­life , a nice sum on w h ich to starve in genteel fashion!

These bare economic facts n o t­w ith s ta nd ing , the judge, in sen­tencing M r. B rookins, issued th is stern rebuke: “ You have beenw o rk in g th is racke t fo r eleven years. T h is constant fra u d u le n t conduct has cost somebody an aw ­fu l lo t o f m oney. I t in vo lve d losses to le g itim a te businesses. B u t I

know the frauds w i l l no t con tinue because you are go ing to ja i l . ”

W hat about B il l ie Sol Estes, you ask? T h is m illio n a ire is s t i l l “ out on b a il,” w ith a m urdered m arshal som ewhere in the shadows.

You understand o f course tha t in th is greatest of a ll cap ita lis t nations, ju s tice has a double s tand­ard. Negotia tions fo r the rich , sum ­m ary action fo r the poor.

Jim Campbell

Unity Against FascistsB ro o k lyn , N.Y.

I w r ite th is le tte r w h ile s t i l l in anger, and I w r ite to a ll the le ft press, fo r I am mad, and a b it disgusted at the so-ca lled “ a n t i­fascists” here in New Y o rk C ity .

Today, (A ug . 27) was the beg in­n ing o f a school, he ld by the C h ris tian Crusade, at Carnegie H a ll.

On Meet the Press, N BC Radio p rogram , D r. Schw arz adm itted tha t his m ain purpose in com ing to New Y o rk was to gain p u b lic ­ity . He fe lt he was be ing ignored by the press and N. Y . was the place to ga in the p u b lic ity he needed. He also adm itted , accord­ing to the N.Y. T im es, th a t m any o f his students d id jo in m any of the u ltra - r ig h t organizations.

The w o rld w id e conven ing o f fascist and Nazi groups in E ng­land some tim e ago, a ll ind ica te a g ro w in g w o r ld -u n if ie d com m and o f the fascist and Nazi forces the w o r ld over.

Y e t we w ho are supposed to be an ti-fasc is t, s tudy h is to ry , ou r e r­rors, and are supposed to be the leaders of, o r the fro n tlin e figh te rs against fascism, and here in N.Y., an ti-fasc is ts d isc rim in a te against o ther an ti-fasc is ts .

We cannot seem to u n ite around the m ost g la rin g enem y o f the le ft, the outspoken fascists in A m erica . “ We w on ’t m arch w ith them ,” o r “ th is is ou r lin e ,” or “ you m arch there and we here.”

D id any o f these so-ca lled a n t i­fascists read ever o f one a n ti­fasc is t re fus ing to en ter the gas cham ber o f H itle r , because an an ti-fa sc is t o f another group was k il le d there? W ill no t a l l le ftis ts , un ion is ts , libe ra ls , Jews and Ne­groes and Puerto Ricans, a l l jo in together in death, i f these scum w in? L e t the A m erican le f t wake up, we cannot a ffo rd the lu x u ry o f d iv is io n . Le t us now begin a u n ifie d group u n it in g a l l now who desire to f ig h t the g ro w in g fascist menace. L e t us fo llo w the exam ­ple o f the London an ti-fasc is ts . U n ited we can crush, expel and e lim in a te the fascists fro m our c ity .

T his d iv is io n is not on ly stup id , i t ’s c r im in a l.

A rthu r A. Stone

The Un-Comic BooksO akland, C a lif.

I spent a po rtion o f la s t n igh t in the in te lle c tu a l en te rp rise o f read ing ch ild re ns ’ com ic books. Besides the ty p ic a l spectacle o f D onald D uck smashing a mouse on the head, etc., the re was one ve ry in te res ting l i t t le s to ry con­ce rn ing an e v il L a tin -A m e ric a n d ic ta to r w ho showed a rem arkab le resem blance to F ide l Castro. In words, deeds, and especia lly in fac ia l expressions, the e v il d ic ta ­to r (D r. Zarago) was po rtrayed as the m ost ghastly a p pa rition o f e v il and ty ra n n y th a t ever sta lked the earth .

W hy are these “ com ics” w r i t ­ten? W hy are these c r im in a l lies propagated am ong the defenseless youngsters o f our nation? I ’l l te ll you w hy. W a ll S treet is scared of F ide l! W a ll S treet is scared o f the

e ffec t tha t he w i l l have upon the m inds o f ou r you th and be lieve me it w o n ’t take the fo rm o f mouseketeer hats e ither! F ide l represents the masses o f the w o r ld ’s have-nots ris in g up in a tum u ltu ou s storm to c la im w h a t is the irs , w h a t has been denied to them fo r centuries.

But W a ll S treet, as a group o f in d iv id u a ls , is sm all. So these businessmen m ust purchase a llies in th e ir fea r and th e ir crim e. They must purchase unquestion ing a l­lies. H ow do you get unquestion­ing allies? How' do you d e -b ra in people? In o ther words, b ra in ­w ashing. W ho is to unde rtake th is task? One o f the arms o f W a ll S treet, M adison Avenue. I t is among th e ir m any duties to raise a w ho le generation o f unquestion­ing, u n th in k in g , w h ite -b ra in e d you th.

The story of D r. Zargo is a fr ig h te n in g s to ry o f double-speak. Freedom is s lavery. W ar is peace. Love is hate. Those w ho love h u ­m an freedom and have sacrificed th e ir a ll fo r i t are p ic tu red as slave d rive rs . Those who strugg le fo r peace are p ic tu red as w a r­mongers. Those whose hearts o v e rflo w w ith love fo r hu m a n ity and are w ill in g to sacrifice th e ir lives fo r its be tte rm en t are p ic ­tu red as h a te -f ille d monsters. I leave you w’ith one unanswered question: Is D r. Zarago a Cuban D ic ta to r o r the pe rson ifica tion o f W a ll Street?

J.K.U.S. Test Ban O ffe r

New Y o rk , N. Y . U.S. d ip lom acy w i l l t r y to head

o f f S ovie t nuclear tes ting b y “ o f­fe r in g ” a nuclear test ban tre a ty .

The New Y o rk T im es o f J u ly 27 reports: “ I f the a d m in is tra tio n decides to con tinue the h igh a l t i ­tude tests, i t w o u ld mean th a t the series w ou ld un do ub te d ly extend th rough A ugust. The p rob lem is com plica ted by expecta tion th a t the Soviet U n ion w i l l resum e atm os­pheric tes ting by m id -A u g u s t. The a d m in is tra tio n had hoped th a t the U .S.A. could conclude its test series before the Russians re ­sumed the irs , thus s h ift in g the onus o f w o r ld d isapprova l onto the Soviet U n ion .”

A r th u r Dean, U.S. “ D isarm a­m en t” Am bassador in Geneva, is p repa ring to change h is p ropa­ganda lin e on “ the accuracy and v a lid ity o f underground test de­tec tion .” P rev iou s ly he denied the efficaciousness o f de tecting un de r­ground tests w ith o u t the a llow ance o f d ire c t inves tiga tion (spy ing?) on Soviet te r r ito ry . He is fra u d ­u le n tly c la im in g th a t now “ because o f recent new sc ie n tific develop­m ents” (w here? w hen and b y w hom ?) unde rg round test detec­tion has suddenly become va lid .

He know s dam ned w e ll th a t the v a lid bases fo r id e n tific a tio n o f underground nuc lear tests have existed long before. In fa c t no­w here in the w o r ld have scientists fa ile d to detect and id e n tify any underground o r o the r nuc lear test.

A t th is p r in t in g the S ov ie t U n ­ion m ay have resum ed its des­pe ra te ly needed tests, since they are about o n e -th ird as fa r ad­vanced as the U.S. A cco rd in g to upper echelon op in ion , the S oviet U n ion o n ly possesses a defensive nuclear fo rce w h ile the U.S.A. has m ost p ro ba b ly an o ffens ive — ag­gressive 3 s tr ik e nuc lear force. W h ile M cN am ara and G ilp a tr ic k open ly boast o f th is , M a lin o vsky o f the S ovie t U n ion o n ly speaks o f re ta lia tio n . P.M.S. B la cke tt o f the B r it is h R oya l Society F e llo w ­ship, Hanson B a ld w in , etc., con­cur. J.A.

Thought fo r the Week“ We sha ll stand f irm . We can c a lm ly p ro c la im tha t we are ready

to die at o u r posts, bu t we don’t know i f the governm ent o f the U n ited States and the generals o f the Pentagon and those Senators w h o c a ll fo r w a r against o u r cou n try are also ready to d ie . . . We are no t sardines. The sha rk should no t m ake the m istake o f th in k in g we are , because th is tim e i t cou ld w e ll be his last m istake .” — F id e l Castro, Sept. 11.

Page 6: THE Deportation In Scythes' MILITANT was sentenced Sept. 17 in the Miami, Fla., fed eral district court to three months in prison and nine additional months on probation. At the trial

Page Six THE M IL IT A N T Monday, September 24, 1962

A Canadian Views British Labor CongressBy Ross Dowson

SEPT. 5 — The annua l congress o f the B r it is h T rade U n ion M ove­m en t opened in B lackpoo l th is M onday. I t is the 94th fo r th is p ioneer body o f the now w o r ld ­w ide trades-union m ovem ent. Some1,000 delegates rep resenting 182 un ions and alm ost e igh t and a h a lf m il lio n w o rke rs have assembled in the ornate W in te r Palace in th is seaside vacation reso rt on the edge o f the M id lands — the in d u s tr ia l heartland o f England.

F irs t appearances o f the con­gress place i t in strong con trast to un ion conventions on the N o rth A m erican con tinen t. There is no razzle-dazzle here. The vast h a ll is bare, as is the p la tfo rm , o f flags, banners and slogans. There are no d isp lays in the foye r — no booths boosting certa in a ffilia te s , d isp la y ­in g un io n -la b e l goods o r p ro m otin g p o lit ic a l action. There is on ly one tab le w ith a sm all spread o f un ion lite ra tu re — a ve ry m odest one in ­deed.

Papers On Sale

As you approach the entrance you are m et by a c lus te r o f p e r­sons. Aside fro m the haw kers of the d a ily press (w ho, as a m a tte r o f course, hand le the D a ily W o rk ­er, pub lished by the C om m unis t P a r ty ) you are m et by proponents o f v iew s w ho do no t ye t appear around A m erican trad e -u n io n con­ventions. T h is m o rn in g tw o young m en w ere se lling an a n ti-n u c le a r- arm s pam ph le t; I learned th a t ho lidave rs and those delegates w ho a rr iv e d Sunday were greeted on the prom enade by an im pressive dem onstra tion fo r nuc lea r d is ­a rm am en t: tw o p re tty g ir ls were se llin g Keep L e ft, the socialist you th paper th a t has refused to d ie on the orders o f the r ig h t-w in g L a b o u r P a rty leadership; and an old w om an was hand ing ou t a pam ph le t u rg in g la bo r s o lid a r ity w ith the old-age pensioners.

T h is a fte rnoon I was handed an e la b o ra te ly -p rin te d le a fle t o u t­lin in g the W e llingbo rough Trades U n ion F estiva l, one o f s ix be ing organ ized by the tra d e -u n io n - sponsorea C entre 42. The em inent p la y w rig h t, A rn o ld W esker, sought to place them on delegates’ seats b u t was to ld by the genera l p u r ­pose com m ittee th a t they w o u ld have to be d is tr ib u te d at the en­trance

The congress opened w ith a wom an in the c h a ir — and she was no t by any means “ decora­t io n ” to dem onstrate th a t in p r in ­c ip le la bo r is fo r equal wages and equal r ig h ts fo r wom en. The c h a ir-

' m an fo r the e n tire congress is

Dame Anne G odw in , general sec­re ta ry o f the C le rica l W orkers U n ion and pres ident o f the Trades U n ion Congress. W ith congress u n ­derw ay, the f ir s t guest speaker was no t P rim e M in is te r M acm illa n nor any o f his T o ry cohorts. I t was H a ro ld W ilson, cha irm an o f the La b o u r P a rty , w ho ta lked in term s o f M a c m illa n ’s defeat th rough a La bo u r P a rty v ic to ry .

B u t none o f th is is su rp ris ing . A f te r a ll, the B r it is h un ion m ove­m en t is d iffe re n t in m any ways fro m its A m erican coun te rpart. A l l the basic indus tries are organized in B r ita in . The unions have th e ir ow n p a rty — the L a bo u r P a rty — and a ll the discussions here are ta k in g place w ith in th is fra m e ­w o rk and w ith the conv ic tion th a t the p a rty w i l l take the n e x t elec­tion .

The w ords “ socia lism ,” “ na­tio n a liza tio n ,” “ p lanned econom y” are u tte red in Ir is h brogue, Scots b u rr, O x fo rd and Lancash ire ac­cents, w ith o u t so m uch as the raise o f an eyebrow in th is congress of un ion ists. M an y o f the delegates are lead ing activ is ts in the L a bo u r P a rty and in the C om m ittee fo r N uclear D isarm am ent. La s t con­gress w en t on record as opposing a ll nuc lear tes ting — one o f the top leaders is w e ll know n as a u n ila te ra lis t [advocate o f hav ing one’s ow n cou n try d isa rm w ith o u t w a it in g fo r o ther nations to do s o ].

Only Occasional Sparks

B u t hav ing noted these po in ts o f d iffe rence , i t is necessary to record th a t tw o and a h a lf days’ sessions saw on ly occasional sparks o f m ilita n c y . O n ly once o r tw ice in con tribu tions fro m the floo r, never fro m the p la tfo rm , d id one get even so m uch as a suggestion tha t there is any awareness o f w h a t is tak in g place in the shops, the docks and the p its [coa l m ines] o f B r ita in .

U nem p loym ent figu res in August (the la test a va ila b le ) w ere alm ost double those o f a yea r ago and the highest since unem p loym ent s ta tis tics were f i r s t com puted u n ­der the present system in 1948. In some areas, in Scotland and in the N ortheast, the ra te o f unem p loy­m en t stood a t fo u r per cent — m ore than doub le fo r B r ita in as a w hole.

The past m on th has w itnessed extensive la yo ffs in a irc ra ft due to the cance lla tion o f the B lue W ate r M iss ile P ro jec t, announce­m ents by the Coal Board o f fu r th e r w idespread p it closures, and gov­e rnm en t decla ra tions o f ra ilw a y closures th a t w i l l e lim in a te 20,000 jobs over the n e x t f iv e years. H and in hand w ith unem ploym ent has

Protest Polaris LaunchingB y Joyce C ow ley

V A L L E J O , Cal., Sept. 15 — The A n d re w Jackson, the seventh and largest nuc lear subm arine b u ilt b y the U.S. N avy, was launched here today a t a gala champagne p a rty . The top brass made speech­es, the band p layed and a cannon boomed. M rs. K e fa uve r, sharing the festooned p la tfo rm w ith v a r i­ous o th e r d ign ita ries , had the questionable p r iv ile g e o f ch ris te n ­in g the ship. H e r daughte r L in d a was m aid o f honor. A com m enta­to r on the loudspeaker described in g low ing de ta il the ladies' beau­t i f u l gowns and m ag n ificen t o rch id corsages. M rs. K e fa u ve r w i l l receive a precious gem as a re w a rd fo r sm ashing the b o ttle on the ship — pa id fo r, lik e the $100,000,000 A n d re w Jackson i t ­self, fro m the taxes o f w o rk in g people in th is coun try .

N o t among the in v ite d guests w ere 60 wom en w ho stood across the channel fro m the sh ip w ith posters c a llin g fo r un ive rsa l and com ple te d isarm am ent. M em bers o f the B erke ley, M a r in and San Francisco W om en F o r Peace, they tra ve lle d 35 m iles to V a lle jo to p ro test the launch ing o f another .grim c a rr ie r o f nuc lear weapons.

ROSS DOW SON, veteran Canadian socialist, is the edi­tor of The W orkers V anguard published monthly at 81 Queen Street West, Toronto 1, Canada (Subscription: $1 a year). He is now visiting Europe. By in ­advertance his byline was le ft off his interview in last week’s M il ita n t of Roger Protz, the editor of the proscribed British Labor Party youth paper, Keep L e ft.

come a co rpora tion p o licy o f ge t- to u g h -w ith - la b o r th a t has resu lted in a rash o f s trikes by F ord w o rk ­ers, by dock w o rke rs at L iv e rp o o l and by ligh te rm e n in London.

T h a t th is develop ing cris is at no tim e became a m a tte r o f con­cern to th is assemblage o f B r it is h la bo r is due to the fac t th a t B r it is h la b o r shares one th in g in common w ith the la bo r m ovem ent o f N o rth A m erica . T h e ir names arc d if fe r ­ent, they speak w ith a d iffe re n t accent and th e ir incomes are m ore modest, b u t tim e a fte r tim e in these tw o and a h a lf days i t was c le a rly revealed th a t the B r it is h labo r m ovem ent, lik e the A m e r i­can, has encrusted upon i t a con­se rva tive -m in de d and cow a rd ly leadership.

Indeed i t w ou ld appear th a t the m a in purpose o f the T rade U n ion Congress leadership, w ith G eneral S ecre tary George W oodcock at th e ir head, is to assure the ru l in g class o f G rea t B r ita in th a t they

are prepared to a ttem p t to reshape the B r it is h trad e -u n io n m ovem ent fro m an in s tru m e n t o f w o rk in g - class strugg le and socialism in to a too l fo r d is c ip lin in g the w o rke rs — g iven due and proper recogn ition by the governm ent and its b ig - business d irectors.

Congress opened M onday w ith a speech by W oodcock on a reso lu ­tion on trade -un ion re fo rm sub­m itte d by the t in y U n ion o f Post O ffice W orkers. In the name o f the General C ouncil, W oodcock ac­cepted the m otion . “ I th in k i t is at last tim e we exam ined B r it is h trade un ions to see how fa r we are fa il in g to b r in g ourselves in to con­fo rm ity w ith the tim es . . . ” — tim es th a t he described as the a ff lu e n t society. H ow does an o r ­gan iza tion fo rm ed a cen tu ry ago to com bat unem p loym ent con fro n t prob lem s o f fu l l em p loym ent, he asked. “ W e sha ll ask ourselves w h a t are we here fo r? ”

Spells I t Out

T h is ta lk abou t s tream lin ing the unions was in te rp re te d in va rious w ays and passed over q u ic k ly w ith none o f the b ig un ions ta k in g pa rt. B u t on W ednesday m o rn in g in the debate on “ the pay pause” and economic po licy , W oodcock spelled ou t w h a t he m eant. He exp la ined the G enera l C o un c il’s re jec tio n o f the T o ry N a tio n a l Incomes Com ­m ission w ith a s ta tem ent dep lo ring i t as an a ttem p t “ to impose on the TUC p o lit ic a l o p p ro b riu m as a smoke screen fo r th e ir ow n in ­e ffic ie n cy .”

He appealed to the governm ent “ to lis te n td the TUC instead o f m ak ing us the scapegoats fo r th e ir fa ilu re ,” and asked i t i f i t w anted th e ir citizens to act reasonably on wages to f ir s t create the r ig h t mood, no t s im p ly t r y to impose some conception o f re s tra in t. “ We have not damned the o the r people, we have said no th in g about the gross in eq ua litie s .” A l l we said, he to ld the delegates, is th a t “ we are not iso la tin g wages.” He appealed to the governm ent to a ttem p t to understand th e ir p rob lem — to create the r ig h t mood —- and they w o u ld set themselves the task of crea ting “ responsible c itizens w ho

w o u ld respond to sensible, fa ir and decent s t im u li.”

W hen it came to the T o ry ’s N a­tio n a l 'Econom ic D eve lopm ent C ouncil, fro m w h ich a com posite reso lu tion , m oved by the D raugh ts ­men, Sheet M eta l W orkers, the I r o n f i t ters and the Scottish P a in t­ers, urged the C ounc il to w ith ­d raw , W oodcock fu r th e r c la r if ie d the course o f the leadership. Speakers fro m the f lo o r condem ned NEDC as a T o ry im p ro v isa tio n de­signed to res tra in wages and sa l­aries and stated th a t p a rtic ip a tio n w ou ld o n ly take the emphasis aw ay fro m the type o f p lann ing we w a n t — p la n n in g fo r use no t fo r p ro fit. One speaker w arned: “ W e can’t change the Tories, bu t there is a good chance o f the Tories chang ing you !”

W oodcock responded th a t we m ust exp lo re NEDC, tha t i t is too e a rly to laud o r condemn it. “ We have to d iscover w h e the r the T o ry governm ent can be changed!” he declared and ended up w ith the sta tem ent th a t “ we m ust no t g ive the im pression th a t w e w a n t fre e ­dom to be irrespons ib le .”

Press Praise

In the process o f th is m orn ing 's debate, F ra n k Cousins o f the T ransp o rt and G enera l W orkers U n ion , w ho has been characterized as a s to rm y pe tre l on the G enera l C ounc il and w ho p re v io u s ly re ­jected p a rtic ip a tio n on NEDC, made his peace w ith the G en­e ra l C ouncil. “ W e are on NEDC and m y un ion is now proud th a t w e are associated w ith i t . ”

W oodcock’s p o licy has w on h im the p la u d its o f the d a ily press. The ed ito rs o f the London Tim es de­clared, “ M r. George W oodcock dem onstrated th a t in the present TU C genera l secre tary B r ita in has a trade un ion leader o f s ta tu re . . . The un ion leaders are to set th e ir m inds, a t last, to one o f the m a jo r economic prob lem s o f the day and one th a t cannot easily be solved even w ith th e ir cooperation. W ith ­ou t it , a so lu tion w o u ld be a lm ost im possib le .”

B u t the B r it is h w o rke rs have ye t to be heard fro m w ith regards to th is c a p ita lis t-s ty le so lu tion .

[To be continued next week]

A sm all group rep resenting the San D ie g o -V a lle jo w a lke rs raised slogans fo r u n ila te ra l d isarm am ent and an E verym an I I I voyage to the S ov ie t U n ion to pro test fu r th e r bom b tests. (T he w a lke rs fro m San Diego, m em bers o f the Com ­m ittee fo r N o n v io le n t A c tio n — W est, m isca lcu la ted the tim e of th e ir 500-m ile h ike and m ost had no t y e t a rr iv e d .) B u t tw o un id e n ­t if ie d pacifis ts , w ho m anaged to get in to the sh ipya rd and d is tr ib ­u te leafle ts , w ere p ro m p tly es­corted ou t by police.

The d ig n ity and seriousness of the protesters stood in sharp con­tra s t to the festive ho lid a y cha r­acter o f the la un ch in g ceremonies.

“ The A n d re w Jackson,” said a s ta tem ent d is tr ib u te d to a th o u ­sand onlookers, by W om en fo r Peace, “ w i l l fu n c tio n as a ro v in g launch ing pad fo r 16 P o la ris m is ­siles w ith hydrogen bom b w a r ­heads. Each m iss ile can be f ire d fro m under the sea and has a range o f 1,725 m iles. The f ir e ­pow er o f th is subm arine is e q u iv ­a len t to th a t o f a l l the bombs dropped in W o rld W ar I I . . . We fee l th a t such prepara tions do no t p ro tec t ou r lives, b u t a c tu a lly p u t us in grea te r p e r il . .

Arm y Streamlining — P res i­dent K ennedy signed a b i l l Sept. 7 to speed up the dea ling ou t o f ju s tice in the arm ed forces. The b i l l extends the pe riod o f tim e tha t a m an can be con fined w ith ­ou t a c o u rt m a rtia l fro m 14 days to 60 days. The a rm y brass e x ­pects the new reg u la tion to cut the num ber o f sum m ary co u rt m a rtia ls by 75 per cent.

Lunar Note — In a paper de­live re d to the W o rld H ea lth F o ­ru m on S yph ilis Sept. 5, P au l W. K in s ie o f the A m erican Social H ea lth Association w arned th a t i f the moon is to be kep t free of venera l disease, p ro s titu tio n m ust be ba rred there.

As Long As I t Sells Papers —The H earst newspaper cha in en­joyed a reve rsa l o f the usual sum ­m er sales s lum p las t A ugust. Said H ears t’s na tion a l ed ito r, F ra n k C o n n iff: “ I ’m ju s t as so rry as the ne x t fe llo w about M a r ily n M onroe. I lik e d and adm ired her. B u t as long as she had to do it , w h a t a break th a t she d id i t in A ugust.”

Justice — L ittle and Long D e­ferred — In an o u t-o f-c o u r t set­tlem e n t the new ow ners o f T avern on the Green, a p r iv a te restau ran t in New Y o rk ’s C en tra l P ark , pa id the C om m ittee to Secure Justice fo r M o rton Sobell $1,350. The com m ittee b ro ug h t s u it fo r com pensation fo r losses in A p r i l 1958 w hen the T ave rn canceled a com m ittee fu n d -ra is in g banquet a t the last m inu te . Pressure fo r such cance lla tion came fro m then P arks Com m issioner R obert Moses, w ho though he has proven no

lin e a l descent fro m the B ib lic a l prophet, believes he has the same o r m ore prerogatives. The com m it­tee announced th a t p a rt o f the set­tlem e n t m oney w i l l be app lied to lega l costs fo r M o rton S obe ll’s c u rre n t appeal fo r a new t r ia l or to have h is 30-year sentence set aside as illeg a l.

Police “Shoot” Unintim idated Pickets — A d ru g store in the Cape C anavera l tow n o f M e l­bourne, Fla., lends cameras w ith flash attachm ents to loca l police w ho proceed to “ shoot” the a n ti- segregation p ickets organized by the local N A A C P . A p p a re n tly the idea was th a t be ing photographed w o u ld scare the p ickets bu t they fa ile d to get the idea and swear to con tinue the p icke tin g t i l l the lunch coun te r is desegregated.

Do As I Say . . . — “ RO M E, Sept. 10 — Y oung M en s tudy ing fo r the priesthood m ust le a rn to love p o ve rty and to face w ith courage the renunc ia tions and hardsh ips o f the apostolate, Pope John X X I I I said today to a group o f s p ir itu a l d irec to rs o f sem­inaries. L a te r the Pope m oved fro m his apa rtm en t in the V a tican to a new sum m er re tre a t fo r a week o f m ed ita tion and p raye r . . . ” — F rom a New Y o rk Tim es d ispatch.

B rutality —• A recen tly released re p o rt o f the A m erican M ed ica l Associa tion states th a t each year m ore ch ild re n in th is cou n try are k il le d and seriously in ju re d by beatings adm in is tered by parents than by disease o r in auto ac­cidents.

A Legitimate Question — Thenotion , w id e ly prom oted by reac­tionaries, th a t a id to dependent ch ild re n prom otes ille g it im a c y was r id ic u le d at a Sept. 11 pu b lic hearing by M yles B. Am end, cha irm an o f the New Y o rk State B oard o f Social W e lfa re . He asked: “ W ou ld anyone seriously assert th a t a m o the r w ou ld have an ad d itiona l c h ild to ga in an added d a ily a llow ance o f a p p ro x i­m a te ly 60 cents?”

Don’t Feel Superfluous — A re ­p o rt issued last m on th by the b u s i- ness-sponsored C om m ittee fo r Econom ic Developm ent, recom ­m ending a o n e -th ird reduc tion in the U.S. fa rm popu la tion as a so lu tion to a g r ic u ltu ra l surpluses, has p re c ip ita ted a boyco tt th re a t by fa rm ers in M innesota, M is ­souri, Iow a , Kansas and Nebraska. A ffe c te d are Sears Roebuck and F o rd M o to r Co., some o f whose o ffic ia ls signed the rep o rt. The pro test began A ug . 14 w hen 150 fa rm ers v is ited the Sears b ranch in L in co ln , Neb,, and handed in th e ir m a il-o rd e r catalogues.

M en Who O ffer Kids Candy —D u rin g the la s t w eek in A ugust D om in ic L a u ria n o gave aw ay lo ts o f candy and chew ing gum to k ids around M an ha ttan ’s W est 127th St. F rom those w ho came to tru s t such a “ k in d m an,” the po lice de­tec tive gathered enough in fo rm a ­tio n to round up ten boys, ran g ­in g in age fro m seven to 14, who, he alleges, stole bicycles, tricyc les, scooters and some o ther p lay th ings fro m a storeroom .

It Was Reported in the Press

Page 7: THE Deportation In Scythes' MILITANT was sentenced Sept. 17 in the Miami, Fla., fed eral district court to three months in prison and nine additional months on probation. At the trial

Monday, September 24, 1962 THE M IL IT A N T P a g e Seven

How the Drug Profiteers Victimize YouB y M a rv e l Scholl

M ost M ilita n t readers are fu l ly aw are o f the facts su rround ing the cu rre n t T ha lid om id e scandal w h ich b roke ove r the heads o f the d rug in d u s try w hen S h e rr i F inkb in e , young T V actress and m o the r o f fo u r hea lthy ch ild ren , announced she was seeking a legal abortion to avo id bearing a deform ed ch ild as a re su lt o f he r hav ing taken the drug.

Socia lists have a lw ays advocated socialized m ed ic ine — and th is present s itua tion is a g ra ph ic ex ­am p le o f w h y i t is so necessary th a t hum an w e lfa re be taken ou t o f the hands o f the p ro fit-seeke rs . Socialized m ed ic ine is usu a lly d is ­cussed fro m an econom ic po in t of v ie w , fo r instance, w h a t happens to the average A m erican w o rk in g - class fa m ily w hen serious illness s trikes. N ow i t is tim e to exam ine another facet o f the question. W hat k in d o f m ed ica l care is ava ilab le , even w hen you can a ffo rd it , o r can arrange c re d it to pay the b ills?

The question is so b ig, th a t in th is a rtic le o n ly one phase can be taken up — th a t phase represented b y the l i t t le w h ite p re scrip tion y o u r doctor w rites .

T he d ru g in d u s try is a vast m onopoly in th is cou n try . U n lik e in m ost o the r countries w here drugs cannot be patented and are s tr ic t ly p rice -con tro lled , in the U.S. the s ick person is a cap tive o f the d ru g tru s t. In h is in tro d u c ­tio n to the re p o rt o f the Senate a n t i- tru s t subcom m ittee, Senator Estes K e fa u v e r o f Tennessee, sub­com m ittee cha irm an , said: “ Hew ho orders does n o t buy, and he w ho buys does no t o rd e r.”

In o th e r words, the phys ic ian acts as the pu rchasing agent fo r the consum er. I f the docto r w rite s h is p re sc rip tio n us ing a brand

Weekly CalendarDETROIT

A P resentation -from th e Poems, Songs and Stories o f Bertolt Brecht b y the Debs Players. Fri., Sept. 28, 8 p.m. Dobs H a ll, 3737 W oodw ard. A usp .: F ri­day N ig h t S ocia ls t Forum.

M IN N E A P O L IS Labor Book Store "O p en House."

C o m p le te stock o f books on M arxism , Socia lism , the Labo r M ovem en t, the C uban R evo lu tion . Specia l Sales, New Books, Refreshm ents and D oo r Prize. Fri., Sept. 28, 4 p.m., 704 Hennepin Ave.

•N E W YO R K

Socialist Workers Party Election C am ­paign Rally. Richard Garza, c a n d id a te fo r G o v e rn o r w ill discuss Socialist De­mands in the 1962 Elections. B rie f re ­marks by Sylvia W einstein , c a n d id a te fo r L t. G o ve rn o r, C arl Feingold, c a n d id a te fo r U.S. S enator, Leroy M cRae, c a n d i­d a te fo r A tto rn e y G e n e ra l, and Allen Taplin, c a n d id a te fo r C o m p tro lle r . Socia l fo llow s. Sat., Sept. 22, 8:30 p.m., 116 University PI. (13 th St. near U nion Sq.). D ona tion $1, s tudents 50c.

BOSTO N. Boston Labor Forum , 295 H untington Ave., Room 200.

C H IC A G O . Socialist W orkers P arty , 302 South Canal St. Room 210. W E 9-5044. I f no answer, call H U 6-7025.

C L E V E L A N D . Eugene V . Debs H all, Room 23, 5927 Euclid Ave., Cleveland 3, Ohio. ,

D E N V E R , M ilita n t Labor Forum , 1227 C alifornia. M ain 3-0993. Foi; labor and so­cialist books In ternational Book E x ­change, 1227 California. Open 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. M on. through F ri.

D E TR O IT . Eugene V . Debs H all, 3737 W oodward. TEm ple 1-6135.

LOS A N G E LE S . Forum H all and M od­em Book Shop. Socialist W orkers Party, 1702 East Fourth St. A N 9-4953 or W E 5- 9238. Open 12 noon to 5 p.m. daily, Sat. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

M IL W A U K E E . 150 E. Juneau Ave.M IN N E A P O L IS . Socialist W orkers Party

and Labor Book Store, 704 Hennepin Ave., H a ll 240. FEderal 2-7781. Open 1 to 5 p.m ., Monday through F riday , Sat­urday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.

name, the custom er pays th rough the nose fo r h is m edicine. He can­no t shop around fo r a be tte r p rice (o r a be tte r p ro du c t unde r its chem ica l o r generic n a m e ).

In the e a rly 1900’s a group o f young in te lle c tua ls , led by Jack London and U p ton S in c la ir, c rea t­ed such a scandal about the food in d u s try th a t they forced the gov­e rnm en t to take action. Congress passed the P ure Food and D rug A ct. B u t these law s governed m a in ly the processing o f food. I t was n o t u n t i l 1938, w hen another scandal b roke a round the f ir s t “ w onder d ru g ” — S u lfa n ila m id e — th a t law s spe c ifica lly reg u la ting drugs w ere passed.

Th is is the la w unde r w h ich the Food, D ru g and Cosm etic A d ­m in is tra tio n now operates. I t m ay have been a progressive la w when i t was passed b u t today i t is a l­m ost w orth less. F o r instance, u n ­der th is act a d ru g f irm can app ly fo r c e rtif ic a tio n o f a new drug, and i f the F D A cannot prove, w’ ith in 60 days, that, the d ru g is unsafe , i t is au to m a tica lly c e r t i­fied . There is no p rov is ion in th is la w tha t a d ru g m ust also be e f­fec tive . C e rtific a tio n can be re ­quested before research on an im als and hum ans is com pleted.

D r. Frances Kelsey, the o ther hero ic w om an in the T ha lidom ide story, was ba re ly able to p reven t the licensing o f th a t d ru g on ly by u t i l iz in g de lay ing techn ica litie s —- w r i t in g fo r “ fu r th e r in fo rm a tio n ” every tim e the 60-day l im it was in s ight. M e rre ll & Co. subjected her to heavy pressure d u rin g the 13 m onths she kep t T ha lidom ide fro m the m arke t. They com pla ined to

B y G eorge L avanR obert Soblen is now beyond

the reach o f W ash ing ton ’s ven ­geance. H is se lf-induced death cheats our governm ent o f the pleasure o f ja il in g a m an dy ing o f leukem ia.

U.S. pow er and m ig h t were stra ined and law s o f o ther coun­tr ie s w ere flo u te d to recapture h im . Is ra e li o ff ic ia ls w ere pres­sured in to b re ak ing th e ir own law s to hand h im over. B r ita in ’s e x tra d it io n tre a ty spe c ifica lly e x ­cludes espionage cases bu t th a t once haugh ty na tion obed ien tly ra ilroaded the e x tra d it io n o f im ­p e ria l W ash ing ton ’s q u a rry . Th is is said to have resu lted fro m a personal phone ca ll by P resident K ennedy to P rim e M in is te r M ac­m illa n .

Though the s igh t o f a dy in g fu g it iv e a t bay d id not move the heads o f governm ents, i t aroused p ity in no rm a l men. B u t b itte r as was Soblen’s end, th is was no t the tru e tragedy o f h is life . H is f l ig h t and death m ove one to p ity , the preceding, the rea l tra g ­edy, m ixes th a t p ity w ith con­tem pt.

The S obo lev itz ius bro thers —

N E W A R K . N ew ark Labor Forum, Box 361. N ew ark , N ew Jersey.

NEW Y O R K C IT Y . M ilita n t Labor Forum , 116 U niversity Place. A L 5-7852.

O A K L A N D -B E R K E L E Y . Labor Book Shop and Socialist W orkers P arty , 563 16th St., Oakland 12, Calif. T E 6-2077. I f no answer call261-5692.

P H IL A D E L P H IA . M ilita n t Labor Forum and Socialist Workers P arty , 1303 W. G irard Ave. Lectures and discussions every Saturday, 8 p.m., followed byopen house. Call PO 3-5820.

SAN FR A NC ISC O . M ilita n t Labor Forum , V A 4-2321. For labor and so­cialist books, Spartacus Bookstore, 2331 M arke t St. U N 3-7675. Open 12 noon.

ST. LO U IS . Phone M ain 1-0969. Ask for Dick Clarke.

SA N D IE G O . San Diego Labor Forum , P.O. Box 1581. San Diego 12, Calif.

S E A TTLE , 1412 18th A ve., E A 5-0191. Lib rary , bookstore. Open 12 noon to 5 p.m. Saturdays.

Sen. Estes K e fa u v e r

he r superior, w ho, h a pp ily , backed D r. Kelsey, tha t she was a “ p e tty bu rea ucra t” w ho was “ keeping them fro m the Xm as m a rke t.”

D r. K e lsey ’s predecessor, another wom an doctor, had so in fu r ia te d bo th the d rug tru s t and he r ow n boss (he said he was t ire d o f her “ destroy ing his good re la tions w ith

R obert and Jack — w ere p o lit ic a l spies fo r the GPU, S ta lin ’s secret police, inside the T ro ts k y is t m ove­m ent. Reference to them m ay be found in the tes tim ony subm itted in 1937 to the Com m ission o f In ­q u iry , headed by John Dewey, w h ich investiga ted the m onstrous fra m e -u p charges against Leon T ro ts k y in the M oscow “ Confes­sion” T ria ls .

The be tra ya l o f sincere and de­voted revo lu tio n is ts to the ja ile r , the hangm an and the professional assassin — w h ich is the a im of such spying — is p ro ba b ly the m ost despicable act o f w h ich m od­ern m an is capable. H ow m uch o f the blood o f those T ro ts k y is t leaders and m ilita n ts m urdered by S ta lin ’s gunm en in W estern Europe, was on Soblen’s hands?

The tru e tragedy o f his l i fe was tha t, ha v in g entered the re v o lu ­tio n a ry m ovem ent p resum ab ly as an honest socialist, he fe l l in to the to ils o f S ta lin ’s po lice and fro m weakness o f character tu rned in fo rm e r and be trayer.

A s S ta lin b roke and used peo­ple w ith o u t com punction, so the Ben G urions, M acm illans and Kennedys regard people as th ings to be used. In th is cou n try the c o ld -w a r propaganda m ach ine ’s insa tiab le need fo r a tom -spy cases led to the S obolevitz ius b ro th e rs ’ convictions. Jack Soble became his b ro th e r ’s p r in c ip a l accuser and showed g reat m en ta l d is ­tu rbance in co u rt — probab ly fro m m onths o f m erciless F B I g r ill in g . He has ju s t fin ished his re la t iv e ly l ig h t sentence.

A lm o s t a l l the evidence against Soblen was o f co llec ting in fo rm a ­tio n about T ro tsky is ts , Social Dem ocrats and Z ionists. T h is is obv ious ly p o lit ic a l, not m ilita ry , espionage. The prosecu tion ’s a t­tem p t to p u t in a co lo r o f m il ita ry espionage were vague, w eak and redo lent o f fram e-up . E m inen t figu res w ho w o rked in the OSS (w a rtim e O ffice o f S tra teg ic Serv­ices) departm ent in vo lve d have declared no m il ita ry in fo rm a tio n ever came there.

B u t the propaganda m achine has done its jo b and A m erican newspaper readers are convinced th a t Soblen was an “ a tom -spy.”

the d ru g in d u s try ” ) th a t she was trans fe rre d to another departm ent. She then q u it and took a non­governm ent job . The Food and D ru g A d m in is tra tio n , accord ing to her, was “ m ere ly a c lea ring house” fo r the d ru g lobby.

In 1961 Senator K e fa u ve r in ­troduced a b i l l w h ich w o u ld have corrected some o f the ev ils by t ig h te r con tro ls ove r the in d u s try . H is b i l l p rov ided tha t:

• a d ru g f irm requesting cer­t if ic a t io n o f a new d ru g prove both its safe ty and e ffica cy ;

• c e rtif ic a tio n become a fo rm a l licensing by the S ecre tary o f H ea lth , W e lfa re and Education ra th e r than a de facto clearance to se ll i f w ith in 60 days the Food and D ru g A d m in is tra tio n has no t proved the d ru g unsafe;

• the F D A be em powered to rem ove a suspected d ru g from the m arke t;

• d ru g companies be requ ired to m ake th e ir research records ava ilab le to the F D A and reg is ter the q u a lifica tio n s o f th e ir “ c lin ica l inves tiga to rs ” fo r clearance;

• d ru g companies labe l th e ir products w ith both trade names and generic names;

• d ru g com panies be re q u ire d in th e ir adve rtis ing to doctors to advise o f any bad side-e ffects a d ru g m ig h t have;

• companies be req u ire d to test a l l an tib io tics , batch by batch, and in s titu te q u a lity m a n u fa c tu rin g methods.

A cou n te rp a rt o f th is Senate b i l l was s im u ltaneous ly in troduced in the House by Rep. O rcn H a rr is (D -A rk . ) .

K e fa u v e r’s b i l l was sent to the Senate J u d ic ia ry C om m ittee w here i t was so tho ro u g h ly bu tchered th a t i t em erged a m ere shadow. The com panion b i l l in troduced by Rep. H a rr is began co llec ting dust in a pigeonhole in the House Com ­m erce Com m ittee.

The emasculated K e fa u v e r b i l l

(Continued from Page 1)fro m the recent hys te ria against Cuba and open ly declare th a t th e ir purpose in conducting the ra ids they have been m aking against Cuban ships and harbors is to p rovoke w a r between the U.S. and Cuba. Some exiles are even hope fu l th a t such an action as s in k in g a S ov ie t ship could e m b ro il the U.S. in a w a r w ith Russia,” reports the Sept. 18 W a ll Street Jou rna l.

Cuban co u n te r-re vo lu tion a rie s are now be ing a llow ed to jo in the U.S. A rm y d ire c tly fo r tra in in g together in special un its.

Reserve C a ll-U p

K ennedy ’s request fo r s tand-by a u th o r ity to ca ll up 150,000 re ­serves passed the Senate un a n im ­ously and was la te r approved by a House com m ittee w ith o u t d is­sent. There is no t a sing le voice o f fa irness o r reason, opposed to the p repa ra tion fo r c rush ing the Cuban R evo lu tion , heard in the e n tire Congress. T here is o n ly d is ­agreem ent over w hen and how i t should be crushed.

Chester Bow les, P resident K e n ­nedy ’s special adv iso r on A fr ic a n , L a tin -A m e ric a n and A sian a ffa irs , expressed the a ttitu d e o f the “ l ib ­era ls” in the a d m in is tra tio n w hen he said Sept. 16 th a t those w ho u rge im m edia te m il i ta ry action w ere engaging in fo lly , b u t th a t the y w ere “ expressing a fru s tra ­tio n w h ich a ll o f us fee l.”

Some resistance to the hyste ria appeared outside the governm ent. A n advertisem ent c a llin g fo r the U.S. to accept m ed ia tion o f d is ­putes w ith Cuba was placed in the Sept. 16 N. Y. Tim es by a group o f p ro m in e n t libe ra ls , in c lud in g : E m il Mazey, U n ited A u to W orkers secre ta ry -treasu re r; Rev. Dona ld H a rr in g to n o f N ew Y o rk ’s Com ­m u n ity C hurch ; H . S tew a rt Hughes, H a rv a rd professor and

was ready fo r the Senate f lo o r w hen the T ha lid om id e scandal broke. H a s tily the J u d ic ia ry Com ­m ittee pu lle d i t back, re invested i t w ith its fo rm e r flesh, and b ro ug h t i t o u t fo r action. On A ug . 25 i t passed the upper house unan­im ous ly . (H a lf the Senate is up fo r re -e lec tion th is fa ll .)

The H a rr is b i l l is s t i l l in the House Com m erce C om m ittee w here hearings are go ing on. Y ou can judge the k in d o f w itnesses be ing heard by the fo llo w in g quotes:

James F. Hoge, rep resenting th e P ro p rie ta ry Association (p a te n t m ed icine m anu fac tu re rs ) p ro test­ed th a t the req u ire m en t fo r “ p ro o f o f e ffica cy as w e ll as safe ty cou ld cause serious tro u b le fo r the se lf- m ed ica tion p repara tions.”

D r. R obert J. Feeney, speaking fo r the huge Chas. P fize r & Co. was w o rr ie d about w h a t in te r ­p re ta tion the F D A m ig h t p u t on the w o rd “ e ffica cy .” (W ebster de­fines it ve ry s im p ly -—- “ e ffe c tive ­ness.” )

D. L . B run e r, executive secre tary o f the A n im a l H ea lth In s titu te (the an im a l food and dru g m anu­fac tu re rs ) jo in e d w ith o the r seg­ments o f the., in d u s try in opposing “ e ffo rts tp w r ite s tr in g e n t new safeguards in to d ru g -m a k in g and d is tr ib u t io n ”

The tim e fo r Congress to ad­jo u rn is ra p id ly approaching. I f the K e fa u v e r-H a rr is b i l l is n o t re ­ported ou t fo r House action i t w i l l die w ith ad jou rnm en t. The d ru g tru s t w i l l have won ano the r v ic ­to ry .

The basic ph ilosophy o f c a p ita l­ism is caveat em p to r — “ le t the bu ye r bew are.”

U nde r socialized m edicine, w i th ­ou t th is v ic ious p ro fit-b e fo re -a ll- else m otive , m ed ica l and pha rm a­ceu tica l research cou ld f lo w e r, b r in g in g hea lth to a l l the people. I t is long overdue fo r us, as a people, to recognize th is and to do som eth ing concrete about it.

independent candidate fo r U.S. Senator in Massachusetts; H om er Jack, a leader o f the C om m ittee fo r a Sane N uc lea r P o licy ; e x - Congressman Charles O. P o rte r o f Oregon; D av id Riesman, lead ing sociologist; and N orm an Thomas.

C a rl Fe ingo ld, S oc ia lis t W o rk ­ers P a rty cand idate fo r U.S. Sena­to r from New Y o rk , declared Sept.16 th a t he “ w o u ld make defense o f the Cuban re vo lu tio n a m a jo r p a rt o f m y cam paign.”

T he U n ite d N ations b u ild in g in N ew Y o rk C ity was p icketed Sept.17 b y over 500 persons p ro te s ting U.S. th rea ts against Cuba. T h e dem onstra tion was ca lled by the Fail- P la y F o r Cuba C om m ittee.

In T oron to , 150 persons unde r the auspices o f the Canadian F a ir P la y F o r Cuba Com m ittee p icke t­ed the A m e rica n Consulate and V erne l O lson, Canadian FPCC cha irm an, ca lled on the C anadian people to p ro tes t s tro n g ly an y fu r th e r U.S. moves to v io la te C uba’s sovere ignty.

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Local Directory

Soblen’s Real Tragedy

...Kennedy Cuban Policy

Page 8: THE Deportation In Scythes' MILITANT was sentenced Sept. 17 in the Miami, Fla., fed eral district court to three months in prison and nine additional months on probation. At the trial

Page E ight th e MILITANT Monday, September 24, 1962

The danger of nuclear fa ll-out is stirring Americans to protests like these.

Monroe Finds New Way To Harass Rights Groups

M onroe, N.C., scene o f the no­to rious “ k id n a p ” fra m e -u p case s t i l l pend ing tr ia l, has passed a new ord inance.

The c ity fa the rs ordained tha t pa id o ff ic ia ls o r employes o f clubs,

"Monroe Day" in DetroitContingents in Detro it’s L a ­

bor Day parade from United Auto Workers Locals 3, 7, 235, 262 and 600 were among those carrying signs about the fram ed-up Monroe “kidnap” case. The signs had been fu rn ­ished by the Detro it chapter of the Committee to aid the Monroe Defendants.

In addition, F ord Facts, the newspaper of Ford Local 600, is serializing the story of the struggle a g a i n s t Monroe’s white-supremacists. The first lengthy installm ent appeared in the Aug. 18 issue.

Through the efforts of the C A M D chapter in Detroit over 30 churches and organizations observed “Monroe D ay” on Aug. 19, setting aside tim e in their meetings to tell the Monroe story.

associations o r unions, seeking mem bers w ith in M onroe’s lim its m ust reg is ter and be licensed.

F irs t, however, a ll such w o u ld - be so lic ito rs m ust, according to the Sept. 6 M onroe E nq u ire r, “ se­cure ap prova l fro m the ch ie f of police, a fte r show ing good m ora l character, free o f m em bersh ip in subversive organ izations and a w illingness to be fin g e r-p r in te d .”

The new ord inance is obv ious ly aim ed at c iv i l- r ig h ts organ iza­tions and unions. O ffic ia ls o f U n ­ion C ounty, o f w h ich M onroe is the seat, have long boasted “ there are no un ions in U n ion C oun ty .”

H ow ever, the re is a c iv i l- r ig h ts m ovem ent, even though the K K K - dom inated a u tho ritie s forced its leader, R obert F. W illia m s , to flee to Cuba. M oreover, the re is a de­fense m ovem ent fo r the three young m en defendants, a w a itin g t r ia l on the phony k idnap charge, and fo r M rs. Mae M a llo ry , a po­li t ic a l refugee fro m Southern “ ju s tice ,” ja ile d in Ohio, w h ile she fig h ts against e x tra d it io n to M on ­roe.

Store in Calif. Balks at Union

By M a r ia di SavioS A N FR A N C IS C O — Employees

o f Cost P lus, a San Francisco im ­p o rt store, are f ig h tin g fo r un ion recogn ition . The D epartm ent Store Em ployees U n ion Loca l 1100 and R e ta il C lerks U n ion Local 648 won a c lear m a jo r ity in the em ploye vote to un ion ize Cost P lus w o rk ­ers, b u t managem ent is re fus ing e ith e r to recognize the vote o r agree to a coun ting o f i t by a d is ­in te rested th ird pa rty .

Some w o rke rs are m a in ta in in g a ro u n d -th e -c lo ck p icke t line , bu t m ost are rem a in ing on the jo b fro m fe a r o f re ta lia tio n by m an­agement. Cost P lus seems de­te rm ined to f ig h t its employes in o rd e r to avoid pay ing them a de­cent wage scale. A n o th e r San F rancisco im p o rt store, A dk ins , re ­cen tly closed down to avo id un io n ­iza tio n . Its “ secret” plans are to re-open in f iv e m onths, s ta ffed, o f course, by no n -u n io n clerks. I t is possible Cost P lus w i l l im ita te th is move.

The Cost P lus p ickets are de­te rm ined , how ever, to w in un ion recogn ition and a un ion wage- scale com parable to th a t in the c ity ’s m a jo r stores. They have be­gun th e ir f ig h t in good sp irits .

Demand U.S. Action In Murder of Negro

G O O D M A N , Miss., Sept. 13— The S tudent N o n v io le n t Coor­d in a tin g Com m ittee today p ro ­tested the k i l l in g o f an un iden ­t if ie d Negro m an discovered here yesterday in the B ig B lack R ive r. The body was in a sack w e igh ted dow n w ith 100 pounds o f rocks.

Charles M cDew, S N C C cha irm an, w ire d A tto rn e y Gen­era l R obert F. K ennedy, “ We urge the Justice D epartm ent to im m e d ia te ly investiga te the k i l l in g o f an u n id e n tif ie d Negro man in Holm es C ounty. Please send fede ra l troops a n d /o r m arshals to he lp reconstruct M iss iss ipp i because the N az i- m inded citizens have declared open season on Negroes.”

The S tudent N o nv io le n t Co­o rd in a tin g C om m ittee, based in A tla n ta at 135 A u b u rn Ave., N.E., has been conducting a v o te r-re g is tra tio n cam paign in M ississipp i fo r a year. Several fie ld secretaries have been a r­rested, threatened, and beaten by mobs.

Though SNCC receives some funds fro m the Southern Re­g iona l C o un c il’s V o te r Educa­tion P ro ject, a d d itiona l con­tr ib u tio n s are desperately needed.

B y M a x DuncanThere is no such th in g as a

safe leve l o f rad ia tion . T h is is the w a rn in g in a re p o rt fro m the U n it ­ed N ations S c ie n tific C om m ittee on the E ffects o f A to m ic R ad ia­tion issued Sept. 10. The report, adopted unan im ously by the 15- na tion com m ittee, stated th a t re ­search had “ c le a rly established” th a t even sm all doses o f rad ia tion could g ive rise to “ a w ide va rie ty o f h a rm fu l effects, in c lu d in g can­cer, leukem ia, and in h e rite d ab­no rm a litie s .”

The com m ittee emphasized “ the need th a t a ll fo rm s o f unnecessary exposure be m in im ize d o r avoided

Strike Hits New Haven Tire Plant

B y H a rry BergenN EW H A V E N — In a p o w e rfu l

dem onstra tion o f s o lid a rity , 760 m em bers o f Loca l 93, U n ited R ub­ber W orkers, q u it w o rk here Sept. 4 in a pro test in v o lv in g a new autom ated m achine a t A rm s trong R ubber Co. A t a tu rb u le n t m eet­ing Sept. 8, the men voted, under heavy pressure fro m In te rn a tio n a l o ffic ia ls , to re tu rn to w o rk Sept. 10. L a te r in the week the com pany cap itu la ted and ended the cause o f the grievance.

The new m achine, described as a “ m onste r” by w orkers , is cap­able o f p roduc ing both tru c k tires and passenger tires. The com pany p u t passenger-tire b u ild e rs o f L a ­bor G rade 9 on the m achine, pay­ing them nine cents an hour less than the tru c k - t ire bu ilde rs who are supposed to be w o rk in g at it. The resentm ent started to p ile up on M ay 2, w hen a grievance was f ir s t f ile d .

U n d e rly in g the w o rke rs ’ anger is the th re a t o f au tom ation . They know th a t the “ m onste r” can w ipe ou t n ine types o f operations. A ltho ug h there was techn ica lly no con trac t v io la tio n by the com ­pany in in tro d u c in g it, the w o rk ­ers fea r th a t the new m achine w i l l sweep the in du s try , lo w e r ea rn ­ings, destroy labo r grades, and cause layoffs .

“Starve at Home”In the past f iv e years o r so,

A rm s tro n g R ubber has doubled p roduction . F ive years ago a s h ift produced 2,000 tires — now it p ro ­duces 4,000. Take-hom e pay fo r m any w o rkers here is now $800 to $1,000 a year less than tw o years ago as a resu lt o f b roken w o rk-w eeks. Y et com pany p ro fits are reported to have skyrocketed. The tw o m a jo r stockholders, W alsh and M ach lin , who are also com pany o ffic ia ls , earn salaries of $125,000 each, to say no th in g of th e ir d iv idends.

One m em ber at the m eeting objected to c a llin g o f f the w i ld ­cat, saying, “ I f I ’m go ing to starve, I m igh t ju s t as w e ll starve at home w h ile I ’m resting .”

Loca l 93 has a rep u ta tio n in labo r c irc les here as a m ilita n t and progressive un ion. Last year, its leadership was voted ou t 600- 200 in an election in w h ich alm ost a ll the Negro w o rkers in the p lan t expressed resentm ent o f P resident F rank Pern o ’s biased attitudes. A bo u t o n e -th ird o f the w orkers are Negro. W h ile there are c r i t i ­cisms o f the new president, Don Jew e ll, he is lik e d personally . He has processed grievances in a som ewhat be tte r fash ion than Perno. He has also co-operated in up -g ra d in g Negroes in p la n t-w id e jobs, instead o f m a in ta in in g the m ill- ro o m ghetto.

e n tire ly .” The te rm in a tio n of nuclear testing, i t stated, “ w o u ld bene fit present and fu tu re genera­tions o f m an k in d .”

A cco rd ing to the repo rt, b io log ­ical, o r sematic, damage is more lik e ly at h igh-dosage leve ls of rad ia tion . H ow ever, the rep o rt noted tha t scientists have been unable to discover any threshold fo r a “ safe” dosage.

The re p o rt was m ore em phatic on the effects o f ra d ia tio n in p ro ­duc ing he re d ita ry damage. Stress­ing evidence show ing th a t “ genetic damage occurs at the low est levels e x p e rim e n ta lly tested,” i t w en t on to state, “ i t is p ru de n t to assume tha t some genetic damage m ay fo llo w any dose o f rad ia tion , h o w ­ever sm a ll.”

W ith o u t a tte m p tin g to p inp o in t the num be r o f abnorm a lities caused by rad ia tio n in one fo rm o r another, the com m ittee po in ted ou t tha t s ix per cent o f a ll liv e - born babies have v is ib le he re d ita ry damage, and an uncounted n u m ­ber have hidden, o r recessive damage. R ad ia tion is suspected o f p la y in g a d ire c t o r in d ire c t ro le in a l l o f these abnorm a lities .

Carbon 14The rep o rt emphasized th a t “ any

increase in the am ount o f ion iz ing rad ia tio n to w h ich hum an popu la ­tions are exposed is expected to b rin g about a p ro p o rtio n a l in ­crease in the frequency o f m u ta ­tions.”

The 442-page report, the second issued by the com m ittee, gives new emphasis to the ro le o f Carbon 14, a p r in c ip a l e lem ent in fa llo u t, in causing h e re d ita ry a b n o rm a li­ties. C oncentrations o f Carbon 14 have risen 25 per cent above the

n a tu ra l incidence as a resu lt o f nuclear testing. R ad ia tion fro m th is source w i l l lin g e r fo r m ore than 20,000 years because o f its e x tre m e ly low leve l o f absorp tion.

The com m ittee a ttem pted to take the edge o f f its fin d in g s by m a k ­ing a po in t o f th e ir “ te n ta tiv e " na tu re and the need fo r fu r th e r research. P roponents o f testing can be expected to seize upon th is s lim open ing to m in im ize the c lear dangers the re p o rt portrays.

W ashington s im ila r ly m in im ize d the dangers invo lve d in its 200- m ile -h ig h nuc lear exp los ion over Johnson Is land on J u ly 9. In the face o f s trong w arn ings by B r it is h scientists tha t the test cou ld have serious effects, p a r t ic u la r ly in re ­la tio n to the Van A lle n B e lt, a n a tu ra l b e lt o f rad ioac tive partic les w h ich pe rm anen tly encirc les the earth , the U.S. w e n t ahead w ith the test.

C o n tra ry to Pentagon expecta­tions, the exp los ion knocked out transm issions fro m tw o U.S. sa te l­lite s and one B r it is h sa te llite , and created a new be lt o f ra d ia tio n e x ­tend ing to w ith in 200 m iles o f the e a rth ’s surface.. The A t o m i c Energy Com m ission now reports th a t th is con tam ina tion , w h ich was expected to d isappear w ith in a few weeks, w i l l last fo r m any years a t h igh a ltitudes.

The unexpected resu lts have forced the U. S. to revise its sched­ule o f nuc lear tests and to de lay the launch ing o f several sate llites.

“ You can o n ly pro tect y o u r l ib ­e rties in th is w o rld by p ro tec ting the o ther m an’s freedom . You can on ly be free i f I am free .” — Clarence S. D a rro w (1857-1938)

Teacher Fired for Views To Appeal Court Decision

LO S A N G E LE S — A tto rn e ys fo r W ende ll P h illip s announced th a t they w i l l appeal the Sept. 12 decision o f S uperio r C o u rt Judge K . C. D avis upho ld ing the d ism issal o f the F u lle r to n (C a l.) J u n io r College w e ld in g in s tru c to r. P h illip s was discharged fro m his teaching jo b last Jan. 15 “ fo r unpro fessional con­d u c t” unde r the D ilw o r th A c t fo r ¡fpffre fus ing to in fo rm against his fo r ­m er p o lit ic a l associates o f the C om m unis t P arty .

A t the school board hearing P h illip s answered a ll questions concern ing h im se lf and his past and present p o lit ic a l a c tiv itie s and opin ions. B u t he d rew the lin e on nam ing any past o r present p o lit ­ica l associates.

He adm itted be longing to the C om m unis t P a rty u n t il 1951 and a ttem p ting to re jo in in 1957, a fte r K h ru shch ev ’s reve la tions on the crim es o f S ta lin , in o rd e r to re ­fo rm the p a rty a long dem ocra tic lines. The p a rty denied h im read­m ission. He la te r jo ine d the So­c ia lis t W orkers P a rty to w h ich he presen tly belongs.

P h illip s contends th a t the ques­tions designed to com pel h im to become an in fo rm e r go beyond the provis ions o f the D ilw o r th Act, are repugnant to his p rinc ip les , to the tra d itio n s o f freedom o f con­science and to the r ig h t o f m in o r i­ties.

T he recent n a tion a l convention o f the A m erican Federation of Teachers, A F L -C IO , assailed C a li­fo rn ia ’s D ilw o r th A ct, under w h ich P h illip s was fire d , fo r pena liz ing teachers “ w ho refused to in fo rm on the p o lit ic a l be lie fs o f th e ir colleagues.”

O ver 140 academic figu res in 40 in s titu tio n s o f lea rn ing fro m U C L A to H a rva rd have sponsored the W ende ll P h illip s Academ ic F reedom C om m ittee on the ground th a t a cou rt v ic to ry in h is case could establish the r ig h t no t to in -

W e n d e ll P h illip s

fo rm as a s ig n if ic a n t p r in c ip le of co n s titu tio n a l law . P rom inen t among them is D r. E. U. Condon, fo rm e r cha irm an o f the A m erican Association fo r the Advancem ent o f Science and N obe l-P rize w in ­ner L inu s Pau ling .

S ta rtin g Oct. 3, P h illip s w i l l go on a three-rr>pnth na tiona l speak­ing tou r d u rin g w h ich he w i l l address college audiences from A rizona to Massachusetts.

“ No less im p o rta n t than m y f ig h t fo r ju s tice in the courts is the hearing I expect to get fro m the academic com m u n ity and the frie n d s o f freedom on the v ita l issues in m y case,” said P h illip s .

No Safe Radiation Level Declares UN Committee