The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 30, 1929, Page 4

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Four EARLY TASTE OF AUTO SLAVERY FOR CHILDREN Get 25 Cents an Hour for 12 Hour Day (By g workers in the DETROIT, ditions of the con. L. A. Young 2 Com- pany, which is a part of the auto industry are unbearable. I went down to ask for a job in this ticular factory and the boss in the office told me to come to wo! following morning at seven o’clock T came and fou 8 girls also waiti abort 500 men wa cold. After a while the that he did not need a icked a few 15 16 year old boys from the army of mploy- ed men waiting at the gate. They were hired at the rate of 25 cents per hour. In the factory they work from 10 to 12 hours Under the filthiest and vu tions existing in these where the youth work in Det The factory emplo, about 98 per cent young workers from 14 to 20 years of age. As I was standing there I made the acquaintance of one of these workers. He was 15 years old and had just gotten his working papers from the boss controlled Board of Education. He happened to be one of the “lucky” ones that was hired. He said his father who had been working at Ford’s for a period of 5 years was dismissed and young workers put in the older men’s places. He being the oldest of 6 children had to support the family with 15 dollars a week. All young workers in the automo- biles factories especially those work- ing in such plants like L. A. Young, Briggs, Fords, ete., work under the worst conditions. Young workers must organize together with the other workers to fight the bosses in order to get better conditions. Join the. Young Workers (Communist) beague and fight against these mis- érable conditions and for the organi- zation of the working youth. Irish Anti-Imperialist Federation Affiliates ' toWorldOrganization ! DUBLIN (By Mail)—The Anti- fmperialist Federation ‘of Ireland bas officially decided to affiliate with the League Against Imperial- ism and “support it morally and materially in its struggle against miperialism and for national inde- pendence thruout the world.” * The Irish Anti-Imperialist Fede- ¥ation has also decided to intensify its struggle against British im- perialism. GRANITE CUTTERS WIN. STONINGTON, Maine, (By Mail) —_ Workers of the Gross Granite Quarry Corporation here forced the company to go on union operation. The company employs 3,075 gran- ite cutters. Young Workers, 14 and 15 Yea A Story ot the Revolution in Ukraine “Two Days” is a major produc- tion of Wufku, the Ukrainian unit of Sovkino, the great Soviet state film production organization. Op O38 rt WHAT HAS HAPPENED BEFORE Count Krasnofski, a wealthy Ukrainian landowner flees before the Red Army in 1918. He buries the family treasure and leaves his caretaker, Anton, in charge. The count’s fifteen-year-old son gets lost at the station and comes back to the mansion just before the ar- rival of the Red troops. Anton hides him in the attic as the sol- diers bivouac for the night. The story now continues: PART III. Up in the attic the count’s son Paul cowered in fear. He did not know what the Red soldiers would do to him if they found him but he was in the grip of a formless fear. He glued his ear to the keyhole in the door and listened to sounds of the soldiers down in the rooms below. He heard Anton talking to his son, Andrey, the commander of the Red squadron. As Anton started to walk up the narrow winding stairs leading to the attic, Andrey stopped him. “Are you still living up there in that miserable attic, father?” “It was not too miserable for you to be born in,” the old man answer- ed. “You don’t remember your lowly beginnings do you, Mr. High and Mighty Commissar?” Andrey smiled. His father stood on the stairway blocking his way. He felt a sudden wave of love for} this, his own son. How fine he look- | ed in his neat uniform. With what} soldierly abandon he carried his com-| mander’s sword at his side! And then a fear for the boy] Paul overeame him. He had heard of these Bolsheviks before. He knew that if Paul were found all the en- treaties of a father would not deter them from carrying out their duty to their accursed revolution. ed and prepared for sleep himself. ¥ the bitch She wa garden, the garden and at last found the spot 2 she smelled the buried carcass of her young one. ing and set to feverishly digging. Dry leaves and the earth flew in all directions, The sentry posted near the south wall heard strange noise behind him. “Who goes there,” he challenged. There was not answer. He challeng- howled near the| number of the slaves as the gas looking for her} spread thru the building after the dead puppy. She nosed her way into opped howl-! DAYLY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY. in rs Old, Exploited ‘LAUNDRY SLAVES ARE OVERCOME BY ‘POISON CHLORINE. Misleaders Keep Ne-| groes Out of Unions | (By a Worker Correspondent) | WASHINGTON, D. C., (By Mail). | Escaping fumes of deadly chlorine | |gas from a faulty cylinder in the | Tolman Laundry at Sixth and C | Streets recently overcame a large safety valve blew off the 200 pound | storage tank. More than 20¢ slaves, mostly Negro workers, men and wo- nen, slave in this laundry for star- ation wages, averaging less than $15 a week, and work more than 12 ship off the Virginia capes. The them, and some of these “heroe JANUARY 20, 1929 The thirty-two members of the crew of the Italian freight Young Saved in Spite af Hand-Picked Heroes x er * real seamen of the “Ame plainly sc | hours a day, 7 days a week. This is true not only of the Negro slaves |in the Tolman Laundry, but in doz- | jens of laundries in Washington, | | where over 1,000 Negro workers are Spring and Wire Plan. Florida,” taken off their sinking deny the “heroism” of the rescue; the sea was calm, the rescue crew were a hand-picked lot of the chief officer's pets, only two seamen among red; the “America’s” lifeboat gearing wouldn’t work right; and the whole “hero” business is false patriotic publicity for the U. S. Shipping Board, ed again and still no answer. He|!0rced to slave more than 84 hours fired a shot into the darkness and|® Week, for wages less than $15 a a, terrified, fled. | week. Most of these laundry slaves Inside the mansion Andrey heard|"¢ Negro women. Of the workers the shot and ran into the garden to| overcome in the Tolman Laundry, ee ; |100 were Negroes. ion the sentry. “Someone was prowling about} The escaping gas, due to the| jover there near the wall, comrade,”| faulty equipment supplied by the | the sentry explained. They lit a lan-| bosses, is a serious danger to the | tern and made an examination of the} many hundreds of low-paid laundry ; grounds. They came across the hole/ slaves, The chlorine gas is used in dug by the mother-dog. A portion| the laundries for bleaching purposes. of the case buried by Anton and| Several of the Negro workers are |Count Krasnofski protruded. They/ still in hospitals, and were made pulled the box out of the ground and | very seriously ill. There is no trace examined its contents. of any union for the laundry workers “T will send it to headquarters in| in Washington. Even if the white, | the morning,” Andrey said. “In the! reactionary labor fakers wanted to | morning y-u will take it down to| organize the laundry workers, which | di mn headquarters.” The sentry} they do not, for these reactionary |was pleased with his commission) officials, many of whom are mem- jand smiled his appreciation. |bers of the Ku Klux Klan openly, | Upstairs in his attic old Anton} would refuse to allow the Negro prepared his only bed for the boy| workers, who are the worst exploit- Paul. He tucked him in as of old) ed of the southern laundry workers, and spread a spare blanket on the| join the union. These misleaders are floor for himself. The candle flick-| always coming out in the capitalist | ered and went out. | press of the south with attacks on | The bombardment has ceased ex-| the Negro workers, calling them at the Yiddish AURICE of the Yiddish Art Theatre, announces that he will hold strictly to the policy of bringing a new production into the repertory on an average of every five weeks. Re- hearsals. have progressed to the point where he is in a position to set the date for the premiere of Shakespeare’s “Othello” for this Thursday evening. “God, Man and Devil” will take its place with an occasional performance in the gen- eral repertory of the theatre. The production of “Othello” at the Yiddish Art marks. the first performance of a play of Shakes. peare’s in the ten years history of this institution and Mr. Schwartz has lavished on it the richest tal- ents of his organization to mark this occasion. Boris Glagolin, noted regisseur of the State Theatres in Moscow and Leningrad, who has cooperated heretofore with the Yid- dish Art Theatre since his coming SCHWARTZ, director | cept for a low rumble away to the south. It was quiet now. Silence reigned in the house. This was the end of the first day. ss Orca Dawn. The beginning of the second day. Upstairs in the little attic old An- ton arose from the cold floor racked with rheumatic pains. Young Paul Anton looked affectionately at the was sle-ping soundly in his bed.} “scabs,” when as a matter of fact no worker is more willing to join a fighting union than the exploited | Negro worker. Thé Negro workers | of the south will come to realize that | the Workers (Communist) Party is ithe only Party that fights for all workers, regardless of race. N.C. J. to America, has staged “Othello.” | Mr. Schwartz, himself, will play the role of Iago and ‘B. Baratoff the tole of Othello. Celia Adler will appear in the role of Desdemona. The settings for this production have been painted by Alexander designed by Bobri. The musical score to be used is that of Verdi, written for the opera and orches-, trated for the dramatic production | Chertoff and the costumes have been | Art Tomorrow TOM POWERS t | \ | In Eugene O’Neill’s tense drama “Strange Interlude’ which just passed its 300th performance at the John Gelden Theatre. Us Si. PETERSBURG’ ‘AT LOEW'S THEATRES. — No film has ever been accorded stab by the critics, both here and abroad, than “The 1 of St. Petersburg,” the story of the last of the czars and Russia synerlatiyes |mass of chesnut-brown tousled hair by Professor Shvedoff. | of pre-revolutionary days. Schwartz to Present “Othello” MORE CHARGES —ONJOHNSTON Oklahoma Governor Is Impeached Again OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla, Jan. 29 (U.P).—Three additional impeach- ment charges against Henry S. Johnston, already impeached and suspended as governor of Oklahoma, were adopted today by a house in- | vestigating committee. The charges were expected to be| adopted by the House itself later in | the day, * * * Johnston is now impeached on | eight charges, some of which spe- | cify corruption in office, and others {of which relate to an attempt to | break up by use of soldiers or of | bribery, legislatures which wanted {to investigate his conduct of the | financial side of his office. NEW OPEN-SHOP MILL. —A new hosiery mill, which will lo- leate at Black Horse Pike, will not | hire union workers, it is said. The plant will employ 200 workers. | BLACKWOOD, N. J., (By Mail). | * Andrey took a step forward. ; Which lay on his pillow. | “Come, father,” he said, “let us| “Get up, little master. It is time.} go upstairs and talk. Here there is; Maybe they will come and look for too much noise and confusion.” you.” The boy yawned. Then His fcther was terrified. | he remembered the danger he was in “Please, son—no, not tonight.” and hastily jumped out of bed. And then with a show of dignity. | He rushed over to the window and “Aren't you satisfied with what you|looked out on the grounds down be- have taken for yourself. Let me be.|low. The yard was alive with sol- Do you want to drive me out, too?”| diers, horses were being watered and His son walked away. \fed. Smoke from the soup-wagons} Andrey posted the sentries at all| curled skywards. | approaches leading to the Krasnof- The sound of footsteps was heard ski mansion. Over the massive iron|on the stairs. The young aristocrat gate he hung the red flag and went) was in a panic. “They are coming} back to the house. up here—they are coming,” he said When he came back into the house | and rushed around the room looking the soldiers were lying asleep,|for a place to hide. Calmly, like the sprawling here and there. He yawn-| good old father he was, Anton took | |the frightened boy and led him into} Furuseth, Reactionary, jan adjoining attic room and hid him} | behind some old trunks and discard-| ‘ed furniture. Hardly had the old man returned| BOTH OIL GANGS CLAIM VICTORY Rockefeller, Stewart, Make Employes Vote Both Rockefeller and Stewart spokesmen are claiming victory in the race for proxies to decide the control of the Standard Oil of In- diana, Charles Evans Hughes is general council of the proxy committee. It was revealed by Rockefeller’s New York office that a number of had written to the committee pledg- ing support to John D. Rockefeller, Jr., in his attempt to oust Col. Rob- ert W. Stewart from chairmanship large trust companies and trustees The premiere on Thursday eve- ning will be in the nature of a tes-| timonial performance in honor of Mr. Schwartz. Regular perform- ances will be given on Friday eve- ning, February 1, and twice each on Saturday and Sunday, February 2 and 3. Indian Congress Envoy Sent to United States’ The Indian National Congress has appointed Salendra Nath Ghose as its official envoy to the United States. The congress also has ap- pointed Ramlal B. Bajpai secretary of the Indian National Mission to the U. S. The mission represents the congress. ALLAHABAD, India, Jan. 29.— fe BOSS TURNS ON “AMMONIA ON JOBLESS YOUTI Did Not Leave Plac | Fast Enough | (By a Worker Correspondent) T have been out of work now f _ two months. Every day at 6 o’cloc | in the morning I go out to look fc | work. This morning I went out to place called the Preston Watch Cas Co., at 100 W. 21st St., New Yor | City. When I arrived there, ther | Were about 300 young workers wait ling to get a job. After waiting abov |an hour, the boss told us that he ha |hired somebody and ordered ever jone to get out. We did not get out fast enough t | please the boss, so he turned on th | ammonia, which started a riot. Ever jone was choking, coughing, and gas; |ing for air. We milled around try ing to get out. This act of the bos angered the young workers so 11uc that as an answer to the coward! act of the boss they pulled down | sign and tore off the door. Youn | workers, to act against the bosse: |terror, join the Young Worker | (Communist) League. Fight for th |working class program of th League, —M. M. Jessica Smith Speak: on Soviet Women ai Phila, Workers Forur | PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 29— | Jessica Smith, author of “Wome In the Soviet Union,” who recent]; | returned from the U, S. S. R. wher | she spent a number of years study |ing the life and working condition | of women in the New Russia will b the speaker at the next meeting o the Workers’ Forum on Sunday Feb. 8, 8:15 p. m. at 1628 Arc] Street. | She will include in her lectur | the various aspects of Soviet pea sant life and a particularly interest ing part of her lecture will be se: and family relations in the workers republic, the housing question an various other related subjects. — ‘Theatre Guild Production = SIL-VARA’S COMEDY CAPRICE GUILD Thea. Ww. bzna st Teves, 8:50 Mats., Wed., Thur: 2:40 Wings Over Europe By Robert Nichols and Maurice Browne Sovkino, the film trust of Soviet | Russia, is responsible for the re- lease of the picture, but it was di-| rected by a young genius Pudowkin, who used the people of the coun- try, 50,000 of them as his actors, and not a professional in the lot. The characterizations are superb,! and the whole cinema work a posi-j| tive delight. | “The End of St. Petersburg” will be shown at Loew’s Theatres, as| MARTIN BECK THEA. follows, in addition to their regular | on St, West of 8th Ave. " Palace: Qvenings 8:50, — Matin rograms: N. Y., Pre-| miere, Oriental, 46th Street, all in| Brooklyn; Boulevard, Fairmount,| Grand, Bronx; Prospect, Flushing, | Long Island; all of these Monday, | Tuesday and Wednesday, Jan. 28, | 29, 30, It will also be shown Jan.} 28th at Loew’s Avenue B; Jan. 29, 30 and 31 at Burland, Bronx; Jan.|~ 31 and Feb. 1, Spooner, Bronx; Feb. 5, 6, 7, 8, Kameo, Brooklyn; Feb. Thursday & Saturday, EUGENE O'NEILL'S Strange Interlude John (} JN Thea. 68tb GOLDEN ,Thea.. 68th HVENINGS ONLY AT 5:30 t9! 146 W. Sith Holds Back the Seame |to his room then a knock was heard| “ of the Indiana company. |on the door. His heart thumped but Also today it was made public CANADA PAINTERS GET RAISE 9) 3, 4, Broadway, Brooklyn, Els- CALGARY, Canada (By Mail).— | mere, Bronx; Jan. 30, 31, Feb. 1, Organized painters of Calgary have | Coney Island, Burnside, Burnside |outwardly his appearance was not that Rockefeller’s interests in the LITTL) ARNEGIE | Noon to Midnight PLAYHOUSE | Popular Prices “Escaped From Hell” 2ND BIG WEEK U-BOAT9 AUTHENTIC—SENSATIONAL Photoplay of the German Terror of the Sea CIVIC REPERTORY 148t.sthav \v Eves. 8:20 | 50c; $1.00; $1.60, Mats, Wed.&Sat.,2.3¢ EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director Today Mat., “Peter Pan.” Tonight, ‘The Lady from Alfaqueque’, and “On the High Road.” Thurs. Eve, “The Cherry Orchard.” ‘hea, 44 St.W.ofB'way SHUBERT fie 820 Main Wed. and Saturday WALTER WOOLF inthe Thrilling J'he Red Robe Musical Hit with HELEN GILLILAND. won an increase in wages of 20 cents and Walton Ave., Bronx; Feb. 6,; Drama of Devils Island with JEAN an hour. Ethel Barrymore (By a Seaman Correspondent) | guns of the gangsters? Has he for- junusual. He brushed some dust from Andrew Furuseth is the president of the Seamen's Union. I never met | him personally or at any meeting, in| fact he is not to be met on the | waterfront. The nearest I ever got) to him was during a convention of | the A. F. of L. held in Los Angeles —while the other delegates were painting the town red—no, I don’t mean the kind of red that stands for the working class,—I mean, wine, women and song. So while the misleaders of labor were indulging in their favorite sport, Andrew, who has passed that age, took a notion to come down to San Pedro, which is the port of Los Angeles, for the purpose, as he | would put it, of “meeting the boys and reviving their dead hopes.” Of course the real purpose was to further insure his position as mis- leader of the seamen. It was one of those “good-will” visits of which | we hear so much about in this epoch of.speed-up, long hours and starva- x gee, ship I was slaving on arrived two days after Andrew’s visit. The \ Pedro waterfront was in a tur- il. The corner of Sixth and Dea- Was a. open * rum. | crook, the worst kind of misleader of gotten the courts over which the “flag” flies? Andrew Furuseth is known in the councils of the misleaders of labor as “Honest Andy.” Yes, it is the kind of honesty which exists among crooks. True, Andy does not wear diamond rings or ran a pleasure resort and he may not yet have a million dollar bank account, but for | all that he is the worst kind of| labor, for he is a jesuitical hypocrite, | playing two roles, having two faces | —one for the ship owners in Wash-| ington and one for the seamen who he misleads. As the years go by we see less| of the second face. Why? Because it has lost its straitness. It is so crooked that Andy cannot look hon-| est seamen in the face. Does “honest” Andy know that the two watches are today fast becom- ing a thing of the past? Does he know that our wages are far from being a living wage? Does he know that the ghost of the Vestris lurks in 99 out of every 100 American ships today? I want t> ask him now that he is/ in Washington, where another war | his clothes and said, “Come in.” His son Andrey, the red command- er and two soldiers entered thé‘room. Andrey looked about. the roomi in a suspicious manner. He looked under the bed, into a closet; then he saw his picture tacked up on the wall besides his mother’s. He extended | his hand to his father. “I'm sorry, father,” he said, “T) made a mistake. We have to be very | careful—these are dangerous days.” Inside the other attic room young | Paul shivered and cowered behind an} old trunk. Will they never go, he| thought to himself. Then the sound of retreating footsteps was heard and the boy breathed a sigh of re- lief. Anton went into the attic and took | Paul by the hands and led him back to his room. He brushed the attic dust off from his school uniform. “See, little master,” he said, “last night when you were alseep I went} downstairs and found some good things for you to eat. Cakes, some eggs and tea.” And spreading a white cloth on his little table as in the good old days he said formally: “Breakfast is served, little mas- ter.” The aristocratic boy seated himself Standard Oil Company of Indiana now amount to $36,000,000. The total investment in the company is roughly one billion dollars and is distributed among 58,000 stockhold- ers of whom 16,000 are employees. Many of the employees are pledged to support Colonel Stewart. They | hold very little stock, Wales ‘Enjoys Trip to Mine Hells as the Bosses Slash Pay WINLATON, Durham County, | England, Jan. 29.—The prince of Wales flying trip to the mine re- gions of North England, “to investi- | gate poverty and distress” and pose for pictures with his arm about un- employed miners’ daughters, is an- other fine publicity stunt and charity fake of the Baldwin govern- ment. He walked among the badly clcthed and underfed miners and their) families who are facing starvation | and the capitalist press immediately reports on the “democratic spirit” | of the heir to the throne and of how |“concerned the government is over take effect March 1; the remaining half the following March 1. i 9, 10, 11, Freeman, Freeman St., Bronx. DISTRIBUTE A BUNDLE OF '| Daily Worker | | Half of the increase will |7, 8, Inwood, 167th St., Bronx; Feb,| MURAT and Countess von Hsterhazy. Inc. ARTHUR HOPKINS | Presented by Affiliated Huropean Producers, H O LIL y Comedy Hit by PHILIP BARRY in “THE KINGDOM OF GOD” By G. Martinez Sierra Ethel Barrymore Thea, 47th S'. Eves. 8.50; Mats. Wed, and Sat. Chick. 9944. MAXINE BLLIOTTI’S West 39 St. Eyes, 3:50 Thea. W. 45 St. By. 8.50 PLYMOUTH Mats, Thurs. & Sat. 2.35 Fay Bainter Matinees in JEALOUSY; visto. i Order a bundle of Daily Workers for dis- tribution in front of the large factories, in union meetings and all other places, where workers congregate. This is one of the best means of familiar- izing workers with our Party and our press, i Send in your Workers Correspondence and ORDER A BUNDLE TODAY: DAILY WORKER 7~—“Two Days” THIS SERIAL STORY NOW RUNNING IN THE DAILY WORKER is based on_the yemarkable Soviet Revolutionary Film which will be shown for its American Premiere on the Opening Program — — Starting This Saturday, February 2, at 12 Noon FILM GUILD CINEMA 52 WEST STH STREET (Between 5th and 6th Aves.) CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCE DAILY 12 to 12 — Popular Prices SPECIAL MIDNIGHT SHOWS THIS SATURDAY AND SUNDAY Every seaman I met had some-— ¢ to say about Andrew and the Hall.” Andy was going to o“hiway with the Fink Hall. One ipmate of mine whom I met said: y, you should have been to that is being plotted, does he know that Sted fovents the ship owners’ government is again bards left the room and went into | preparing to send us to the bottom ) the old attie room where he had| of the sea? If Andy does not know) ,. black bread for all ‘"‘s it is because he is tied up} ee oniug ot a lies he |with the interests of the shipping) tated his own breakfast. { the plight of the miners.” | 26 UNION SQUARE, NEW YORK CITY In the meantime South Wales | mine owners are even cutting the wages of those employed and de- creasing the subsistence wage for GO TONIGHT! Grove Street Theatre Steriems, sa, fussy. sume station Sheridan Sq. 7th Ave. Station WHERE ALL NEW YORK RADICALS MEET TO SEE Please send me ..copiés of The DAILY WORKER at the rate of $6.00 per thousand. (Spring 2772) 5 Min. fro roadway NAME .iccscccecceeseeseteceeeeesnsaeeeseeesresseeeene ene < su would have shed tea 3,! spoke of the old days, the ship days.” dy issued a pamphlet calling n the seamen “not to forget the which had given them three and other improved condi- E.” I want to tell Andy that that | jn the face still stings. It will ‘so easy to make us turn the cheek in the next war. which has given us three Has Andy forgotten the we had to put up for the hes, and has he forgotten and the mit bosses. Sc men of American, wake up! Today, for tomorrow is too late. Furuseth is permitting the Naval Reserve Bill to be passed. He is not trying to organize the vast ma- jority of the seamen who are unor- ganized. Wake up, seamen, or the Internatiopal Seamen’s Union will, like the Vestris, go down with you. Join the Marine Workers’ Progres- sive League where the seamen are organizing 90 per cent of the unor- ganized seamen into a real fighting union! —J. H. END OF PART III. SHOWER OF LEECHES heavy shower of leeches fell on Ca- hallito, a town near here, It is be- lieved the leeches were carried up- ward from a nearby swamp by a whiriwind and later descended by force of gravity. We have seen above that the first ion by the work- proletariat BUENOS AYRES (By Mail).—A , the men. The thousand unemployed workers’ representatives now on their march to London will, when | they all collect on Trafalgar Square on Feb, 22, answer the shielding \charity of the king, the bosses and \th> reformists, LABOR TRAITORS TO MEET. WASHINGTON, (By Mail).— The reactionary officials of the In- ternational Seamen’s Union will meet in Washington for their an- nual convention on Feb, 11, The officials of the union have a long ipgord of betrayal of the seamen. ADDRESS....++sse00e84 CITY. To arrive not later than.. I am attaching COMING! New Masses S Friday, March 1, Webster Hall WATCH FOR DETAILS SOON! soos STATE COMING! pring Carnival By UPTON Directed by Em J ind prese’ Discounts allowed on block of For information call Comrade Singing Jailbirds ] A Powerful Revolutionary Play of the Cla: MATINEES SATURDAY—PLAYING SUND. No Worker Should Minn It—Many Come Back to See It Again! POPULAR PRICES and to wo Napoli, Business Playwrights Theatre, Watkins 0588. SINCLAIR Struggle in America! nted by the New Playwrights Thea. 8 ers’ organizations. ‘Manager of New

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