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‘i: Fea eet Communist program among Negro| DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1929 4 BRE We ise) egg IRE \ Page THREE SPEED-UP FORCED ON PA. TAILORS BY WISLEADERS AmalgeamatedPromises Bosses More Profits | PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 4.—The| Amalgamated Clothing Workers Union “settled” caother strike here when it signed an agreement with the clothing firm of Steinberg and Oritsky, guaranteeing the employers / that the workers will be speeded up and the volume of production be in- creased. The agreement provides for recog- nition of the Amalgamated company union which will use efficiency ex-) perts to speed up workers. This is the second Philadelphia shop within | a week with which the Amalgamated | has signed speed-up agreements. Last week it signed an agreement | with Leo Daroff and Co. Call Another “Strike.” A {strike” has been called in the| shop of Pincus Bros. Inc., which un- doubtly will also result in the be-| ‘ teayalt he the workers. | i Se Hea rere ou) Militant tailors told today how the ns in America, Hall has been one “ f the outstanding leaders in the Amalgamated conducts its “strikes.” v. to|Struggle for the rights of the op- Before calling upon the workers to} ikaled Ne pire siasean leave the shop, union representatives | PT°SS is iain Hi Gehilons hold conferences with the sub-con- Gee Leteheaarien ae fat Immediately following the ratifi- tractors of the shop in whick the| |. B rae cation conferences, Hall is scheduled strike is to be called. The company 5 oh |to speak in every section of the city. | union officials pay the sub-contrac- ‘A : ic aid in| AM active campaign will be carried ters $2,000. or $8,000 for his aid in| specially in the Negro districts, crippling the work in the shop. When Bee, 8 the strike is ended the sub-contrac- | tors, with the a'd of the union are) permitted to exploit the workers un- A rebellion against Wall § | ing at Quantico, Virginia, down HALL WILL SPEA HERE ON SUNDAY |Negro Communist to Address Conference Communist program for full econ- omic, political, and social equality 4 for the Negro masses, against high der them to the maximum degree. | vents, for organization of the unor- One of the reasons, the militant} - ; , | ganized. tailors also said, for the present epi-| demic of “strikes” icing called by) the Amalgamated, is the fear for the feft wing forces among the tailors, jclares a statement issued by the |New York Campaign Committee of |the Communist Party, “is in line who recently held a very successful | with the Communist, program of shop delegates conference. Several] militant struggle for the interests shops here have anion agreements |o¢ the Negro workers,” with the progressive section of the |” «t¢ jg q significant commentary on needle trades, where union condi- Fi A |the activity of the Communist Party hens prevail. ‘and the growing influence of the Fruit Pickers Help Gastonia Prison masses, that the Gastonia Gazette has used the nomination of Otto TS Hall as the occasion for a vicious | campaign against the Communist |Party, The Gastonia Gazette has tried to stir up race prejudice to| turn the Gastonia workers against the Communists because the Com- munist Party fights for full equality for Negro workers.” The statement further calls upon Negro workers organizations to sup- port the Ratification Conferences by sending delegates. The conferences will be held as follows: Manhattan, 26-28 Union Square; Bronx, 1330 Wilkins Avenue; Brooklyn, 56 Man- hattan Avenue. All workers frater- nal organizations, shop committees are urged to elect their delegates im- mediately if they have not yet done 80. (Continued from Page One) ized at present, will soon follow | your precedent.” Fruit pickers work under miser- able conditions. They are migra- tory, beginning their duties when ihe crops are ripe in the Northwest and traveling to the Coast, to work Jong hours daily in the fruit groves of Washington, Oregon and Calif- ornia. Their contribution was received at the national office of the Interna- tional Gastonia Joint Defense and Relief Campaign Committee, at 80 E. Eleventh St. N. Y. C. today at the same time with letters and sums of money from Japanese workers in | San Francisco, American workers in New York, needle trades and office r Worker School Reunion workers. The Japanese branch of the 1. L.| LO Be Held on Sept. 8 D. in San Francisco sent five dollars; | the Armenian branch of the I. L. D. in New York, $100, receipts from a picnic held for Gastonia; Oliver Reiner, of Reinerton, Pa. a miner with ten children in his family, sent | $5. Workers in the Epstein Brothers dress shop, of 1361 Broadway, New York, collected $25 from their shop- mates and brought it to the defense committee, stating, “It is our fore- most obligation to save the Gastonia strikers and we appeal to all work- ers to support us in this duty. Working Class Restaurants Helping. Esther’s Scientific Restaurant, at 1606 Madison St., has agreed to give a large portion of the proceeds on September 5, 6, and 7 to the defense fund. The Workers School is inviting all former students of the School and jall interested comrades and friends to a students reunion to be held on the evening of Sept. 8:in the Audi- |torium on the. fifth floor, Workers Center, 26 Union Square. gram of Negro songs, to be sung by other features. Bedacht, Nearing to Speak. Max Bedacht, head of the Na- tional Agit-Prop Department of the| Communist Party; Scott Nearing, | prominent Labor educator and Sam| Darcy, Assistant Director of the} |Workers School, will address the gathering. Every former student and all friends of the School are urged to attend the reunion to usher in its seventh year. Women Workers Aid. The United Council of Working Class Women of New York sent in $72 this week. Office Workers of N. Y. Contribute. The Office Workers Union of New York has pledged ten per cent of the profits of their roof garden dance to be held Saturday evening, Sept. 14, at the Hechsher Roof Gar- den, 1 East 104th St. The Woman’s Circle of the Slovak Workers Society, of Irvington, N. J. sent $200 for the defense, after a number of picnics, ete., run on be- half of Gastonia. Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 183 W. Sist St,, Phone Circle 7336 BUSINESS MEETING] ld on the first ward of the month at 8 p. “For Any Kind of insurance” (ARL BRODSKY lephone: Murray Hil 5550 7 East 42nd Street, New York emy! 2 from 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. FURNISHED ROOMS Now is your opportunity to get a room in the magnificent Workers Hotel Unity Cooperative House 1800 SEVENTH AVENUE OPPOSITE CENTRAL PARK * Cor. 110th Street Tel. Monument 0111 Due to the fact that a number of tenants were compelled to leave the city, we have a num- ber of rooms to rent. No security necessary, Call at our office for further information. Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX P/ 7K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gente’ Tailor 1818 - 7th ae New York Bet 110th ana Next To ‘Unity Co-operative House Tel.: DRYdock 8880 ee eee Frances Pilat NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE MIDWIFE (Bet. Ist & 2nd Sts.) Flowers for All Occasions 16% REDUCTION’ TO READERS OF THE DAILY WORKER 351 E. 7/th St., New York, N. Y. Tel. Rhinelander 8916 to bring before the workers the| “The nomination of Otto Hall,” de-| The School has prepared a pro-| = Charles Burroughs, recitations and| to the se ne of the rebellion pronto, m anywhere? Wall Street ships these marines, in train- to kill the workers who dare op- y | Will Deménateabe on Union Square on World Youth Day (Continued from Page One) meetings eve ave been organized for day this week and special ap-| s have been made to youth or- ganizations to make the Union Sq. demonstration a s demonstra- tion against impe t war and for the defense of the Soviet Union. The White Guard attacks upon the Soviet Union in Manchuria, th refusal of the Chinese tol, return the railway to ian workers, has dramatically brought | jout the fact that the imperialists lare doing all in their power to pro-| voke war with the Soviet Union as a means of crushing the only Work- ers’ and Farmers’ Republic. In Arabia today we also find the | guns of the imperialists crushing the rising colonial m s who are struggling for liberation from for- eign imperialism, At any moment the young workers of America may be called upon to give their lives} for the further exploitation of these | oppressed people. Toda the danger of war is |greater than ever. International Youth Day will be a real demonstra- tion of the working youth. It will show that we are aware of the prep- jarations for war, that we are also preparing to turn such war into a of the workers against the | t | All | All rkers, and especially young | |workers, must voice their protest to| the growing militarization, to the growing danger of an attack upon the Soviet Union, by participating | in the Union Square demonstration on Friday, Sept. 6. This demonstra- tion will also demonstrate our unity with the Arabian and Jewish masses who are at the present struggling for freedom against Great Britain, All on Union Square, Friday, at 6 p.m. | DERBY NO. 3,172. CLEVELAND, 0., Sept. 4—The first of 15 airplanes participating in the Cleveland to Toronto Interna- tional Derby took off from Munici- pal Airport here today. Cooperators! Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 BAST 115th STREET Second Ave. New York Office hours: Mon., Wed., Sat., 9.80 a, m. to 12; 2 to 6 P. M. Tues. Thurs., 9.30 a, m. to 12; 2 to 8 p.m Sunday, 10 a, m. to 1 p. m, Please telephone for appointment. i Telephone: Lehigh 6022 DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Reom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected ‘with any other office |] Cor. MELROSE—, Dai VEGETARIAN airy RESTAURANT omrades Will Always Find it Pleasant to Di! it Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) PHONE:— INTERVALD 9149. MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blvd., T-onx, N.Y. Right off 174th St. Subway Station RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE1.UE Bet. 12th and 18th Sts. | Strictly Vegetarian Food HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet IN. 302 E.12th St. | New York MLD, HITS HARD AT MILL TRIAL But Needs Support to} Win the Case (Continued from Page One) fendants is extremely great and the orkers must not allow the cupital- st class through its newspapers and other institutions to lull them into ja false sense of security and trust in capitalist justice, I. L. D. repre- | sentatives stated today. “The defense is tremendously handicapped by the fact that the prosecution has all the power and | wealth of the capitalist class and | government behind it. The I. L. D. has only very limited funds co'lected from workers in the Nationa! Joint Workers International Relief and International Labor Defense cam- paign. Continued and even more determined support of the I. L. D. will free the 16 militant workers and return them to the ranks of labor to lead future struggles against the stretch-out. Nothing else wil! save them. The best legal talent avail- able, nine prominent defense law- vers, are fighting every inch of the way against the battery of mill own- ers’ attorneys who have unlimited money at their disposal with which to aceomplish their purpose of burn- ing these courageous leaders of the TW: “The I. I. D. depends upen the dimes and dollars of the workers to finance the expensive legal defense. In the name of the 16 defendants, the I. L. D. calls upon the workers of America to rally now to the sup- port of the Gastonia defense.” IMPERIALIST ADVERTISING. LOS ANGELES, Sept. 4—Com- mander Byrd started a radio impulse from his Antarctie camp in Little America which blew an automobile horn and drew curtains from an en- larged picture of the imperialist ex- plorer at the national radio expo- sition here last night. ——_—___. The working cli cannot ai lay hola of the renay-mad, machinery, and wield it for own urposc....This new Commune (Paris Commune) breaks the modern state power.—Marx, — | broidery workers, are not fooled by Rebellion Against Imperialism? ve me rise These Down! F AKE PLE ATERS, Communist Activities h Plenum thesis. IS BIG FAILURE Needle Workers Dally Agents, Section 5, All Daily Worker agents of S 5 are to meet at 1230 W Sept. 5, 8.30 5 on Thursday, * rors. Section 5 Funetionaries. Spurn C Uni Will meet, Thursday, Sept. 5 p.m., at 1330 Wilkins Ave, to DEN eT OOD Bats’ ie activization ot the men | r the present election « | (Continued from Page One) en hes, ae jthe Needle Trades Workers Indus- ‘ Antt $F. Section, 3. | tri Meets Thursday, Sept. 5. trial Union, last night indicated. | , Meets Thursday, Sept. 5. 6 “The small response to the fake Tenth Plenum. A district will be present. strike call of the company union,” | - * * Jcseph Bor manager of Unit 14, Section 2. | ge otichow: ts Meets Thursday, Sept. 5, 6.30 p.m the Joint Board of the Industrial “at at 1179 Broadway. | Union, asserted last night, “shows ght Unit 1, Section 4. Attention. | mt A special meeting has been calle yr Mae 2 for Thursday, Sept. 5, p.m Cee 103rd St., for discussion 9 6 at 1179 Broadway |that the great mass of the em- the talk of the scab union. The | majority ignores the agents cf tho strikebreaking union for they real- ine that the International Ladies Garment Workers Union is not @ Frelhelt Singing Society Piente. The annual picnic of the Freit Singing Society will be held on Sun- of the Tara iv fi . Sept. 8, at Pleasant Bay k yeepon of the workers in their fight nx, The Freiheit chorus, -ed by |for better conditions but an instru- ob Schaefer, will appear in a new program of songs and instru music. John C. Smith’: band will provide mus * * | ment of the bosses to reduce wages, dehatten hours and speed-up work- Brighton Beach I. eting of the L. D., will 30 p.m Workers Want Real Struggle. | “The workers in the trades, who |the company union attempted to call {on strike and failed, know that only the dle Trades Workers Indus- Am Beach Ave: * * Dental Mechanics Meet, ri i The .Dental Laboratory Workers trial Union can successfully lead) ,,ihe jRental Laborate them in struggle for increase in! Thursda ening, Sept E ng Plaza Hall, 15th and Irving Pl, to wages, reduction of hours and an aggressive fight against piece work| and speed-up conditions. By rally- ing to the Industrial Union, the! , needle trades workers will conduct a discuss the issues arising out of the approaching expiration of the ent agreement, * 8 Cc, New York 1 a L. D. pres- Fraternal Te RTT he next meeting of al New ¥ Defense, | Sent p.m. Workers Center, 28 Union Sq. | a, eens lem Youth Dance. m Progressive Youth Club Saturday eve- fadison Ave the C. C. C. of International La- will be held Thursday, in room 602 of the * * Naturfreunde, * Die Suglish Sect. m. a this Sunday, et subw for * swim * Drug Clerks. A general membership meeting of will be held today at nd Ave * * _Meet Tonight, Section, Tr League will m work at Union | toni militant fight against the company union and the employers.” * Shop Delegates Meet Wednesday. A meeting of shop delegates from dress, cloak, fur, millinery and tailor shops will be held Wednesday, after work at Irving Plaza, Irving Place and 15th Street to act on the 50 cent {tax voted at the recent meeting of |the General Executive Board of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial |Union for the defense of the Gas tonia workers now on trial in Char- lotte, N. C. Tariff War on U.S. Urged by N. Zealand; Fight on Bill Here | WELLINGTON, New Zealand, Sept. 4—A stronger tariff fight * * New Zealand government in conjunc tion with the British empire advocated here by premier Joseph Ward in the Assembly today | “The time is approaching when response to the prohibitive American tariffs would have to receive the at- tention of the New Zealand govern- ment,” Ward said. ae Socialists, Zionists, Attack Communists (Continued from Page One) Jewish fascists attempted to break it up, but were not successful. After- wards the socialist-Zionist mob at- tacked the committee when they were entering headquarters. Because William Simons was ex- posing the imperialist role of the Zionists in Palestine, at an open air meeting last night at 7th St. and Avenue B, arranged by the Com- munist Party, he was arrested and taken to the East 5th Street police station, The police did not make arrests until Simons exposed the Zionists and British imperialism. When so- cialists and Zionists in the crowd ob- jected to what Simons was saying, he was taken into custody. WASHINGTON, Sept. 4.—Alleged “progressives” manufacturers hit by the Hawley- Smoot tariff to fight the bill when it is presented to the house today. They will repeat the familiar but long exploded argument that “the farmer requires the same tariff pro- tection as the eastern industries.” The strategy, useless to the poorer farmers since they are the victims of the rich growers’ trusts end the pools rather than of the tariff rates, | will nevertheless help boost the rep- utations of the “progressives” as “friends of the farmers” in their respective western constituencies. the bourgeois age, a by this—that it antagonisms, More and more, society i splitting up into two gtent hostile camps, into two great and directly contra- posed classes: bourgeoisie and pro- letariat—Marx. Build Up the United Front of the Working Class From the Bot- tom Up—at the Enterprises! against the United States by the | formed a block with | house representatives of individual | |OP. AIR MEETS 79th St. and ist Ave. at 8.15 p, m., speaker, L. J. Engdahl; ’32nd St. and Lenox Ave. at 8 p. m., speakers, N. Ross, A. Suskind, Williams; Rutgers Sq., Forward Bldg., speakers, Olgin, | Sultan; Washington St. and Clare- mont Parkway at 8 p. m., speakers, | Guss, 146th St. and 7th | Ave. at 8 p. m., speakers, Geo. Pow- C. Reeve; ers, H. Silverman; comrades to re- port to 154 Watkins St., Brooklyn, at 8 p. m., speakers, J. Magliacano, |D. Morgan, R. Ragazin; Brighton Beach Workers Club, E. 7th St. and Brighten Beach Ave. at 8 p. m., speakers, S, Pollock, A. Schalk, I. | Zimmerman; 180th St. and Prospect Ave. (Bakers Local 164), speaker, Geo. Primoff; Steinway and Jamaica Ave., Astoria, L. I. at 8 p. m., speak- ers, S. Harper, Wm. Frank; Newark, | N. J. at 8 p. m., speakers, L. Baum. Many Women Workers \Die in Factory Blast; Caught in Ruins, Burn BRESCIA, Italy, Sept. 4—A ter- rifie explosion in a factory here killed an unknown nuinber of work- ers before they could escape. Many caught under fragments of the build- ing, burned to:death before they could be rescued. Fifty persons, mostly women were working in the factory at the time |of the explosion. Most of the bodies were beyond identification. at E. ‘oing to| | built, 8 U.S. DENIES AN * ACCORD ON NAVY, WITH ENGLAND | Hoover Sees Admirals} To Build More Ships 4 (Continued on Page Three) to announce U. S.-British agreement jon the terms of “parity,” but that -|\a last minute cablegram from U. S. prevented him. a Still Considerable Period. Government officials here de- |clared that they did not know what |MacDonald’s mathematical state- ment about 17 and 20 meant, but thought that however MacDonald de- vided the points at issue, a single lone of the three not agreed on was {more important than all the others put together. Stimson stated: | “In the opinion of those of us who | have been working on it on this side, | we have been making hopeful prog- ress, but we feel that it will require |still a considerable period of hard | work on details before an agreement Jon parity is arrived at.” The conference with Hoover was |secret and all refused to talk. | Senator Hale visited Hoover yes- terday and after leaving the White | House stated he thought all the re- |cently authorized cruisers would be ame | —— ES Call Party, League Members to do Vital Work This Evening To All Party Members: To All League Members: You are instructed to report to 143 E. 103rd St. tomorrow at 7 p. m. for important Party and League work, | ANNUAL PICNIC of the FREIHEIT SINGING SOCIETY * Sunday, — 8 Pleasant ~~ Park # : % Bronx e = = Excellent Program ~ New Songs Playing and Singing JACOB SCHAEFER Conductor ‘ JACOB MASTEL! “Stage Director Tickets in Advance 35 At the Gate 50 Cents Qn sale at Morning Freiheit, 30 Union Square; Cooperative Restaurant, Bronx; and from all members of the chorus. DIRECTIONS TO THE PARK: ‘Take Lexington or Seventh Ave. Subway to 177th St, Bronx. Untonport car to the end of the line. Fifth Ave. bua takes you free of charge to the grounds. ents E jackson, Imo; Course No. 8. 7:00 to 8:20 P. M. Course No. 9. ‘ee, $5.00. Course No. 10. Course No. 11. Monday, 7:00 to 8:20 8:30 to 8:20 P. M. Course No. 17. and Sam Darcy. Course No. 18. 8:30 to 9:50 P. Course No. 19. 00 to 8:20 P. Course No. 20 - 21. Course ne. 22. J. Olgin. Course No. 23. Course No. 24. hl. Monda: Course No. 25. History of Course No. 26. Course No. 28. Monday, 8:30 to 9:50 WORKERS SCHOOL 26 Union Square, New York City. Instructors: | John Steele, N. Ross, A. Suskind, Mary Adams, Freda Serby, Bush, Eda Field, Mary Ghent, V: Bidreecin Mesnil, Ann Swirsky, Sonia Ginsburg, A. Harris, V. I. Jerome. Speech Improvement. Fee $5.00. | Public Speaking. Labor Journalism and Workers Correspondence. Whittaker Chambers and N. Honig. Thursday, 8:30 to 9:50 P. M. PRINCIPLES OF MARXISM-LENINISM | Fundamental: Rebecca Grecht, Nat Kaplan, J. Oblon, Morris Pasternak. 50 P.M.; Thursday, 8:30 to Thursday, 3:00 to 4:15 P. M. for ae worked Program of the Communist International. yh Mat Sam Darcy and Wm. Si History of Class Struggles I. 8:30 to 9 Monday, 8:30 to 9:50 P. M. Spring T. History of Friday, 7:00 to 8:20 P. M. History of Economic Theories. Course No. 29-30, History of the U.S.A. A. Landy. Tuesday, 7:00 to 8:20 P.M. NGLISH Green, Eli Jacob- Instructor to be announced. Thursday, V. I. Jerome. Monday, 8:30 to 10 P. M. Gane No of J wood. | lourse No. Communism. Instructors: Perilla, P.M; taal 7:00 to 8:20 P. M.; Wednesday, 0 P.M.; Friday, 8:30 to 9:50 P.M.; Course No. 12. Marxian Economics A. Ray Ragozin. Monday, 7:00 to 8:20 P. M. Course No. 13-14. Marxian Economics B. J, Mindel. Tuesday, 8:30 to Wedn \ Course No. 47. Cou Principles of Marxism I. A. Markoff. Tuesday, 7:00 to I, Rijak. Course No. 48. Course No. 16, Principles of Marxism II]. H. M. Wicks. Tuesday, 7:00 to W. W. Weinstone 8: 0 to 9:50 P. M. im. H. M. Wicks and A. Landy. Tuesday, Max Bedacht and J. L. Eng- Max Bedacht and J. L. Eng- ‘erm. the American Labor Movement. Vern Smith. Class Struggles II. FEE Instructor to be announced. P.M. Course No. 31. Course No. 37. of Robert Dunn. Course No. 38. | John Williamson. Course No. 39. 8:30 to 9:50 P. M. Problems of Communist Organization, day, 7: Course No. 41. A. Moreau and Wm. Simons. Course No. 42. Pauline Rogers. Course No. 45. posium, Register Now: / CLASSES BEGIN ON SEPTEMBER 30TH 40. 00 to 8:20 P. M. Problems of the Revolutionary Tuesday, 8:30 to 9:50 P. M. 43 - 44. in ‘charge of Olga Gold. Course for > day, 8:30 to 9:50 P.M. 6 Organizational Problems of the Fee $2.00. 30 to 9:50 P.M. Fee $1.00. Fee $1.50. History of the Russian Revolution, J, Mindel. American Trade-Union Problems. Symposium Course in chargé Monday, 7:00 to 8:20 P. M. Theory and Practice of Trade Unionism, Friday, 7:00 to 8:20 P. M. Lessons of New York Labor Struggles, Symposium. Monday, 7:00 to 8:20 P. M. Capitalism and the American Negro. Problems of Working-Class Women. Thursday, 7:00 to 8:20 P. M. , Problems in the Organization of Women in New York. Thursday, to be given the latter half of the Fall Term. Fee $2.00. ial Problems of Working-Class Children, To be given for 6 weeks in the latter half of the Fall Term, Thursday, 8:30 to 9:50 P. M. Course No. 1. English 1 —Monday and Wednesday, 8:30 to 9:50 P."M. Course No. 32. Development and Extent of American Imperialism. Scot Course No. 2. English If —Monday and Wednesday, 7:00 to 8:20 P. M Nearing. Wednesday, 8:30 to 9:50 P. M. ; English Il —Tuesday and Friday, 7:00 to 8:20 P. M. Course No. 33. Social Institutions Under Capitalism. Scott Nearing, Weds Course No. 3. English III —Tuesday and Friday, 8:30 to 9:50 P. M. nesday 7:00 to 8:20 P. M. A English [Il —Wednesday and Friday, 7:00 to.8:20 P. M. Course No. 34. History of the Communist Party of the U. S$. A. Max Bé- Course No. 4. English IV —Monday and Wednesday, 7:00 to 8:20 P. M. dacht. Monday, 7:00 to 8:20 P. M. —Twa 8:30 to 9:50 P. M. Course No. 35. History of the Communist International, Peter Smith, Friday; Course No. 5. —Tue: and Thursday, 8:30 to 9:50 P. M. 8:30 to 9:50 P. M. : ‘ r E —Monday and Wednesday, 7:00 to 8:20 P. M. Course No. 36. History of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, Alex. Course No. 6. English VI —Tuesday and Friday, 7:00 to 8:20 P. M. ander Trachtenberg. To be given in Spring Term only. ' Course No. 7, English VII—Tuesday and Thursday, 7:00 to 8:20 P. M. PROBLEMS OF THE LABOR MOVEMENT F) Wm. Z. Foster and Friday, Jack Stachel. Fris Movements in Latin-America, C. Briggs and O. Huis- J. S. Poyntz pad Fee $2.50. 7:00 to 8:20 PL Greenbaum and Kitzed, + Fee $1:50. i Communist Youth Movemenk; Wednesday, 8:30 to 9:50 P. M. Fee $2.00. History and Problems of the Youth Movement, Monday, 8:30 to 9:50. P. M. Coot No. 49. Gilbert Green. Edith Saunders, Tues- The Pioneer Movement and Its Tasks. Mary Himoff. Monday; 30 to 9:50 P. M. Movement. Instructor to be ‘a LITERATURE AND DRAMA i Course No. 51. Problems of the Cooperative Lenina and War, Robert Minor and John Harvey. Thursday, announced. Fee $2.00. Teas Tuesday, 8:30 to 9:50 P. M. ; Theory of the Anarchist, Socialist and Communist Movements. Ee CAR ee Wednesday, 7:00 to 8:20 P. M. oes! rata Communist Manifesto. A. Landy. Thursday, 7:00 to 8:20 P. M. MISCELLANEOUS PY HISTORY Course No. 54. Esperanto. I. Rosenthal. Thursday, Functionaries Seminar. ENGLISH, $8.00 PER TERM * Other Classes, $4.00 per term * Except where otherwise noted, Every Saturday Afternoon at 4:00 P. M Opening to be Announced. Wednesday, 8:30 to 9680 8:30 to 9:50 P. M. Write for Full Descriptive Catalogue 1929-1930 Reunion of Students, Sunday at Worker Center, 26 Union Sq. Speakers, Bedacht, Nearing