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Louis B. Brodsky : ウィキペディア英語版 | Louis B. Brodsky
Louis B. Brodsky was a magistrate in The Tombs court in New York City who made a progressive ruling regarding dancers and nudity in April 1935. He dropped charges against Louise Wilson, 24, of 15 West 65th Street, Manhattan and Dorothy Sims, 22, of 450 West 150th Street, Manhattan. The two women were arrested by a policeman for indecency while performing before an audience of 101 men at a waiters' club at 80 Greenwich Street. Brodsky dismissed the women from court, saying "nudity is no longer considered indecent in uptown nightclubs and theaters." The women left the club without even a fan to cover them. Brodsky also released the 101 men who attended the performance who were detained at the police station overnight.〔''Court Upholds Nudity'', New York Times, April 17, 1935, pg. 17.〕 ==International verdict== Brodsky's most noteworthy decision came in a case involving six men arrested during a riot which occurred on July 26, 1935. He freed five of the six individuals who tore the Nazi swastika from the SS Bremen (1929). Brodsky compared the emblem to a ''pirate flag''. He refused an apology even though German newspapers and government officials demanded one. United States Secretary of State Cordell Hull sent to Nazi Germany a note of “regret” for Brodsky's decision.〔(GERMANY: Little Man, Big Doings ), ''TIME Magazine'', September 23, 1935〕
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