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So, who's the ignoramus? |
There seems to be little press attention on the arrest of John A. Bienjavsky, or indeed little attention to Mr. Bienjavsky at all. The
Butte Daily Bulletin reported on February 14, 1920 that Mr. Bienjavsky had been arrested in Seattle by the “radical squad,” and that he was in possession of “a trunk load of books on electricity and radio energy, a dictionary in three languages, a collection of essays in English, Russian and Japanese, and much radical literature.” (Although the
Daily Bulletin simply marks the arrest as “Wednesday,” which would imply the prior Wednesday, February 11, the
Seattle Times reported on the arrest on January 29, a Thursday. Mr. Bienjavsky was arrested on Wednesday, January 28, 1920.)
Mr. Bienjavsky worked as a wireman (that is, an electrician) for the Tacoma line of the
Tacoma Railway and Power Company which explains the books on electricity and radio, but maybe the not the “radical literature.” The
Daily Bulletin reported that Mr. Bienjavsky was “thought to have been a university professor.” He was born in Russia in 1875, making him forty-four at the time of his arrest. The
Daily Bulletin was a socialist newspaper; its masthead bore the words “We Preach the Class Struggle in the Interests of the Works as a Class.”
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