The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 22, 1930, Page 2

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Page Two DAILY WORKER, J YORK, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 22, 193u Workers School Gives Courses in Y. C. L. Organization Work New Bed _ asec ee: “THE NEGRO AND WHITE WORKERS OF AMERICA Se Mill Workers Battle Poliee oe ip i Thoesands of Work Work-] SECRECY AND vse | EQB SETTLES son Square Garden Tonight! Of ii diate val to the drive SAVED ME”---GRAHAM secede -y Iron mmbors now going the si ssysare” rkers School h sev- aa aE Baily Mais Worker = QYER LONDON “orc coe.nameenas Deelares Workers Mass Rallies Saved Him EVERY DAY lum for the Young Communist League. One of these is “Organ- BUY IT AT YOUR NEWS- Hoover Annoyed Over | i#stional, Problems of the Young STAND Communist League,” to be given The Daily Worker, central or- Battleship Talk Tuesday, at 8:30 p. m, Another is (Continued from Page One) “History and Problems of the gan of the Communist Party of Youth Movement,” given Mondays, the United States, is the only Ais 1 id +a : the “independent” position of the| at 8:30 p. m. All league members English daily paper in thie cout) | conterence. should subscribe to this course. Fe ee oe ane interests) | But all these seeret “Iuncheons"| For the benefit of night workers (Ce be: Woreiiig aleen! and “dinners” show how hypocritical |the school has arranged two day The Daily Worket Tells You | /Stimson’s bluster was about beine| classes. One is English, on Thurs. About: Opposed to “intrigue” and “secrecy.” | day at 8 p. m. The other course is The miserable conditions of the ha tlie Sebo the “Fundamentals of Communism” workers in all industries, and Hoovet Is “Annoyed.” and is to be given on Fridays, at 8 how they afe preparing for|} WASHINGTON, Jan, 21.—Hoo-|p .m. The cost of each is $4. All Struggle against the speed-up! |yer is reported “annoyed” by the| workers are urged to register now and low wages. discussion over battleships. His | for these day classes, although they It helps to organize these||words are coming home to roost|start in February. workers into militant unions un-| |from the armistice day speech where der the leadership of the Trade| |he said: . ‘or All Kind of Insurance’ ey cage. ant infor.| \{W2 Will reduce our naval strength | ARL BRODSK ti r. Having | mation about the present capi. in proportion to any other Having | ite aie FA ition abe 8 said that, it only ins for the Lamont Aids Wage-Cut/ @uAr W OR KER § talist ¢risis and growing unem-| |Gthors to say how low they will go. Plans of Bldg. Bosses ployment. It cannot be too low for us.” 7 Kast 42nd Street, New York from Ten Years Imprisonment Dept. of Labor in Attempt to Deport Him to Death in Jugo-Slavia White Terror Desevibing his trial in Norfolk,|/League, center of militant unionism ., Whete he was acquitted of the |in this country, as the National a @f “inciting the Negro to|Minéets Union, National Textile rebellign” and held for deportation| Workers Union, Marine Workers beeaude hé advised Negro and white|League, ete., which demands abso- worker to organize into the Trade |lute equality :n labor unions of white Union Unity League, Stephen Gra-| and Negro workers. ‘velephone: Murray HUN 655 WORKERS’ CENTER BARBER SHOP Moved to 30 Unton Square FREIHEIT BLDG——Main Floor boi Belated eth stated tshe an aghlty” after “The Negro and white workers|seant stated time and again, of Améties, rallied by the Interna- re he ie da a tional Labor Defense, saved me from | Munim Tits peel oal te fea ede tga yekrs imprisonment in Norfolk, | os thar T was ‘honest,’ | apn S% thousand textile workers fought police who tried to break up their demonstration at Dartmouth ae _| MT told of the miserable condi-| Mil. Photo shows the workers fighting the police. Theit ated Protest Tang Mrods |tions the Negro workers are forced ” 5a the land against these Negro-hating | adure in such plants as the ella eeied Parnes Guilt Southern Spring Manufacturing Co. ROGR M be ae 4 ;,|and the Planters Mfg. Co. of Ports: T-welked cts of ra hai te | mouth, Va., where they work frori é ir = os | an aint cranlise dee rer Now that Great Britain has de-| S55 Soo—poceeenaeemeoeaeeaiiomae the cheers of hundreds of Negro and 9 45 15 hours daily, for the miser- | DI Scu § S | 0 N WASHINGTON, Jan, 21—With and vel y | |aided that ‘with its many coaling| (Cooeoemman a white workers who had comé to! i116 cum of $1 to $3'a day. | ty boss building contractor asso- it expats the tricks of the| |Stations, and the inefficiency of | ooper court to hear my case. | The prosecuting attorney tepeat-| * ciations represented here at a meet- || eapitaliet countries, which, while| |Dattleships matched against _air- S E R O Y Toler tag (ha hand Smee ern | ed pounded out the fact that I am Lay B : F M ae ee isd sae eur f, the —- | pretending ts we phn ees planes and submarines, it can get | ployets, was felt again. ey &0t) foreign-born worker and that I/ asis or an nited States Chamber 0 om- 7 Lo: ; ‘ along nicely without battleships and CHEMIST the immigration authorities to afrest|/am a member of an organization Struggles in N. Y. Y | merce on behalf of the Hoover “pus. | Heroes of Long Strike am are actually preparing for! lnay proposed to “abolish” thein ae mé. I was taken to headquarters | wiich preaches race equality. uggies in N. Y. [tees council,” the question of wage-| Will Honor Lenin ft stands for the defense of| | Hoover is put in a hole, and is try-/[ ., 687 ae fe aoe and grilled for an hour. They then! Among the splendid witnesses for ; cutting was discussed among the| r efensé of! |ing to crawl out by saying he meant || Estabrook 321 ane, put me ufider $1,000 bail. The De-| iio were Wm. Atigustitie, a Negro (Continued from Page One) | individual bosses. Marching with banners from theif the Soviet Union, the Workers’ jonly a “possible reduction” but dit partment of Labor at Washington |worker, who “was fired from the | tect instigation of the Federal Gov-| Secretary of Commerce Lamont headquarters to the Lenin Memor- Fatherland, against the attack of not and will not stand for “aboli- will push the case. Soon I may be! southern Spring Mfg. Co. because |¢fnment, through the Labor Depart- | addressed the bosses an dsaid that ial Meeting at Madison Square Gar-| | **e, imperialist countries, |tion.” The U. S., having few coal- sent back to Jugo-Slavia, where #|he testified on my behalf, A 20-|nient, in locking out approximately | building would be rushed in an at-|den, the InJependent Shoe Workers’||, 1¢ carries news about strikes! /in5 stations, fecls it necessary to reign of absolute terror is murder- | year-old Negro worker, Emria Motse | 2000 members (of the Independent |tempt to overcome the present |Union will honor the greatest labor ie MeN a on ae have battleships for long distance ing workéts by the thousands. also told the truth. So did Mrs. | Shoe Workers Union. crisis. He did not say anything leader of all time. The shoo work-| | fais about sevolte of the fon | {cruising in.the coming war against | will be shot. Why? |Rebecea Seidman, a white worker, | 3. Textile. about the complete failure of the ers are conducting a struggle in 22 Spout revolts of the op-| | England for markets. | “Because I followed out my ideals. | testify there was no violence at the| The conditions of the Dye and S0-called building program of pres-|shops in New York, waging a fight Pere chesies tha aetertiita the||, To make this clear, an official I brought to the South the plat-|meeting until the police broke it up | Silk Workers in Paterson have been |ident Hoover. Lamont said: jagainst bosses who lock them ou Poet bawling out, somewhat decked with | fori of the Trade Union Unity and arrested me, | beaten down below the level of sub-| “More than half of the homes are |at the request of the U. S. depart- Ae ini W neon bole flowers, has been issued to the press | sistence. The conspiracy of the rented,” and urged the contractors |ment of labor. They are also driv. fight as & evolutionist in the||®@ainst Congressman French of | bod | | bosses, aided by the social reform-/to get the workers to build homes. |ing ahead to organize 45,000 unor+ Idaho, who made a speech favoring Peabody Coal Boss Is ‘LENIN MEET ists, Musteltes and strikecbreaking | How they are to do this with 6,000, |Banized shoe workers. ‘eorkies the lds Aa sh all) | abolition.” Raising Militia Fund |United Textile Workers Union to|000 tnemployed, the secretary of | The procession of shoe unionists the: Colimuntne’ Patty’ and te PS ase <a Bee |will march near another from the! | Qommunist thao bea e Amaleamated Clothi (Continued from Page One) |food workers’ union, itself waging| |" "Tt uepes you to doin the rank maivamate: othing miners would b ve been slaughtered |a bitter fight to win union condi- y 26 = at the beginning of the strike,” said Communist Activities tions, of the Communist Party and to 'Grafters Are Exposed | Gerry Allard, youth organizer of the The virtual slave conditions of the | Peres tee pretend eee eens, ee ie Harry Cohen, organizer and the National Miners Union, who has just jmore than 10,000 dye workers, the | Workers School, ‘emorial was adopted at Monday’s zs 7 whole staff of business agents of bees pig reat pei nel ae dt All N. Pago gag Go [intensive speed-up, the 19-18 home|, Day cases or nignt worker. Eun meeting of the Joint Council of the ke thls coupon, to veur news ||the children’s clothing department of 3 field. o Garden | shift and low wages, give us the |{°™ Onglish: S11. 8. W. U. he | |the Amalgamated Clothing Workers, “Conditions in the Southern Il- perspective of an immediate objec- New rr a ‘apitalism Boss Takes Half. i) linc's nf “'s are so bad that (Continued trom Page One) hae ds ’ h have been thrown out of office. | tive situation for a general silk American Negro, tin-America, shop| In the J. & O. Shoe Co., 164 Til- the thiners are simply forced to re-jstration. The leaflet reads as fol-|Strike in Paterson, which will stim- papers. | Charges of graft were brought by volt, six ycars more than half |lows: ulate a national struggle of silk Labor an d Fraternal the bosses yesterday succeeded in To My Ne of the over 100,000 miners in Il-} “For years we have allowed our-|Workers who suffer from the same taking from the workers half of| | Pin’ wy Or tne Dally Build the United Front of the lino! hi 3 been thrown out of their |selves to follow and be sold out by | general conditions. a : \ thei : Worker from you every day. Order i Organizations |their pay. The boss argued that i t Working Class From the Bottom jobs by the introduction of a fiend-|a group of self-appointed handker-| A prerequisite for correct orien-| 8: pera my copy for me at once. |since he lost much money in Wall Up—in the Industries! ish apee’ > 2 new thachinery,|chief-headed middle class leaders, |tation of the T.U.U.L. in the de-|ATTENTION—A while t' test have been working |politicians, so-called educators and|véeloping mass struggles is the per- | qq\tL income, W. LR. CLOTHING STORE 542 BROOK AyEN Es, Telephone Ludlow Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing High Class Work Done Goods Called for and Delivered All profits go towards strikers and their families, SHOW YOUR SOLIDARITY WITH THE WORKERS! -—-MELROSE— Dairy desravnast omrades Will Alwaya Find 11 Plensant to Dine at Our Place 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Brons (near 174th St. Station) PHONB:— INTBRVALE 9149 |p through more drastic wage euts,| commerce did not explain, | ut |and increased speed up, have sharp- | |ened the intense discontent and the | mood of the masses to struggle. ‘U8h THIS COUPON. lary St., Brooklyn, an open shop, | |———————e——— s members. Stand Dealer: 1 ORGANIZATIONS | St. he would not be able to run his dances, cone! irs, such as bazaars, business unless the workers agreed te fe hich - * 5 *, cy part time. As an instance of what is| preachers, who are ambitious to be-|sistent struggle to eliminate oppor-|sanientions desire publicity in this |to leave half of their pay with him Vegetarian happening, not caly in Illinois, but jcome capitalists themselves, and be-|tunism manifested in opposition to |cy!ynny must, De Dald for nt the xatc|for some time. The union is pre- throughout the mine fields, there is|tray the whole race to gain their|the line of the Profintern (Red In-|for three i ertions. ‘The space al-| Paring a leaflet calling on the work- RESTAURANT thé ease of Oricnt Mine No. 2 in|own personal ends, and to improve |ternational of Labor Unions) and |1vea,0¢,this rate is a maximum of | ers for action. 199 SECOND AVE, UE RATIONAL West “rankfort, where I used to|the conditions of their class, the|the T.U.U.L. The open and fully|line. A total ot 25 words, Many more strikers’ homes were sete Pebcteitn oe work. This m' is the largest in| middle class. Our Negro politicians, |exposed enemies of the workers have eussbctaied: uareas Wait | visited by thugs this week and the a eae lo rtf the world and in 1924 employed |who fool us into voting for them on|now been joined by the renegade| | Ail Progressive Ladies Tailots Cos- | Strikers told by the gunmen to keep = 1,990 men. Today it is producing |the plea of race loyalty are like the jelements who fight against the Sume,prewmakers will meet at the away from the picket line. The prettically the same amount of coal | white politicians, only tools of the |program and activities of the T.U. 1830) at the Unity Co-operative House, thugs requested that at least the with only 1,000 men and they are bosses. Neither the republican, dem-|U.L. under the cloak of revolution-|iturt sts oeloch.” Puogieectn aroun | Strikers should wear wear bandages all of part time. cratic or socialist parties are organ-|ary phrases. The complete defeat|Local 38. | so that it would seem they have “On April 1, the agreement in the |ized for the interest of the work-jof these enemies of the T.U.U.L.,| Workers Schoet Sports Club, | Dee? beaten up. A thug has to show TMiinois mine field ends, That means Jers, black or white. There is only |the Lovestonites and Cannonites, is} Meets Jan. 22 at school to march in| t#@ boss who hires him that he is NOW PLAYING! A SOVKINO FILM hae moments of ene, at in’... tre~ acting.” bY : OF THE TREMENDOUS REVOLUTIONARY! yN STEPPES HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT ‘ in Memor! busy! & powerful drama of the Russian 1600 MADISON AVE, a strike. On September 1, the agrée-|one Party that can fight for inter-|necessary for the development of jody to Lenin Memorial. 3 See thrilling ple of Revolution in which leads = ment in the anthracite, involving lests of the workers, regardless of |the T.U.U.L. as the revolutionary | Independent workmen's Circte, | ,,0f course the strikers refused and/] EStwin addressing, “a ee playa the Tending role imactitante || Phower UNiveratty: 8565 188,000 miners, terminates. The jrace or nationality, and that Party |Trade Union Center. Failure to real- | Branch 52, the thugs in one instance were beat-|| crowd! struggle between the Red Army and ccc aetD decided all members be at Lenin Me-/en off from a house by the striker, Tee coerce morial, Jan, 22. Cgmmittee with plac- United Mine Workers will not lead|is the Party of the workers, THE|ize this represents an underestima- SPECIAL ADDED ATTRACTION! these workers "> struggle, because it COMMUNIST PARTY. tion of the need for struggle against ards st Sisaison unre Gatden at || Who, thtew anything he could get| “CELEBRATION OF THE 12TH ANNIVERSARY | [iJ "ot Syvvesset ass is @ company union and a strike-| wwe only support enemies when all forms of opportunism and re- sii : * ian oeces: ie: a aeai | OF THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION” | John’s Restaurant breaking agency of th bosses. Only |, gid the so-called race uplift |formism and against all enemies of ROR Si a pipsrinricd showing OTALINGSALININ-<VOROSHILOVenand others \] SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E.12th St. New York 562 W. Sth St., (bet. Sth & Gth Aver. FILM GUILD CINEMA St. (het, th on Gould. Continuous Daily Noon to Midnight oon Prices—-Weekdays 12-2, 35—Sat. & Sun. 12-2, 50c. G AME O NOW|, 44 Comrades Meet at FAME Ofviecnen|| ~~ BRONSTEIN’S ; 1789 Vegetarian Health WITH TALK AND MUSIC Restaurant “UP THE CONGO” }|| 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx " 4 i z The women’s department of the/| the National Miners Union can tional Association |the Profintern, and its American |4stn st. Brook ° . lead them as well as the tens of li spraiae tc a! fe Section, the T.U.U.L. |Communist Party in Lalor Move= padeeenceibe auce cyrorners | Aion - ' °F lof Colored People, the Urban 7 |ment.” is calling a shop delegate conference thousands of unorganized miners },|League and the Universal Improve- Take Offensive. CIV eh ctene Jot sonia. workers for Feb. 9 a6 a fight (2 will be iy iy|™ent Association. These organiza-| One of the manifestations of the| ro nelp adiressine’'At, LL.D. Na-|the union headquarters. An enter- scope. In this struggle, we Willing scab herders, and strike |rieht danget is hesitation in develop-|tional Office, Broadway, room | ¢a: js lasa- on 6 ight danger is hesitation P| on md Bar ye tainment and dance is scheduled for peo ar BL aay aha ale A It |Dteakers, are 2 oh bd with a ing and arousing the fighting spirit |*""" T°" °°",% "ye ‘0,8 Pm Feb. 15 under the auspices of the conscious worst enemy of the Negro race, the /of the workers into assuming the} | Wiltamabate 2.04Dy ‘women’s department in a large hall will mean new set Lesa bi are slaughterer of South African Ne- offensive in struggles against wage Wiltole Burske Aa amines: coins dh Williamsburg. Lo te Mee niente the |Stoes: the agent of the British im-jeuts and in meeting the attacks of |{0, lenin Memorial tonight in Madi-|" striking shoe workers of Ridge- lief. Only by contributing jperialists and the League of Na-|the bosses (shoe, needle). This hesi- et wood Section will meet at their W. 1. B. and by building it into ®\tions, General Jan Smuts. When'|tation constitutes a lack of faith in weekly organization meeting today ‘Theatre Gail@ Productions “METEOR” GUILD ¥: 63 sys 8:60 Mats, Th.&Bat. 2:40 real_mass organization will the |ou. brothers are lynched these or-/the masses and capitulation before miners receive the aid that will help | carry us forward to victory.” ganizations tell us to go to court— ithe attacks of the bosses and social e.|at 2 p.m. at Flushing Mansion, A Inugh with every thrill 1088 Flushing Ave., Brooklyn. All workers and other sympa- ea i bere Pcl siter beat reformists. ae, a vebste' S which do everything oppress an "i * : «,|Manor, 125 Tickets a thizers are urged to help the thou-| ¥ Jot us Negro workers and are in Without eliminating bureaucratic |§i:59 from 1 Aid, | Workers Fight War Le i reed sail i i i 104 Fifth Avenue. Phone Watitins sands of striking and victimized tha eavvide of the sites: bose clden tendencies, without drawing rank tis, or Workers Moskau 2 . Illinois miners and their families by | ith the lynchers themselves. Danger in S. America “RED RUST” By Kirchon & Ouspensky DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE | Saeeeceeeereeineneneneeeerennneseeet Ethel Barrimore Theatre 47th Street, West of Broadway Eves. 8:50. Mats. Wed. & Sat. 2:30 and file workers into leadership, Pago hts Bven 3:40, Mater Shuredny sending funds at once to the Na- tional Office of the W. I. R., 949 Broadway, Room 512, New York City. Katovis, Near Death “Negro and white workers of New York! The Sixth Anniversary of the death of our great leader, Lenin, takes place on January 22. On that day, at 7 p. m. the Party of the working class, the Party of Lenin, the Communist Party, is call- mass organizations, will never gain the complete faith of the masses in our leadership. Bureaucratic tendencies are mani- fested in many of our unions. Only through the most energetic self-cri- Volunteers Wanted. For strike relief work, Local New York, Workers International Relief, 799 Broadway, room 221, * our unions will never develop into |! Council No. 24 Lecture. On “Five-Year Plan,” Thursday night, Jan. 23, 8.30 p,m. at 1746 Monroe Ave, Bronx. * Banquet Women’s Council. (Continued from Page One) of trade unions called by the Latin American Trade Union Confedera- tion at Montevideo, Uruguay, and both the Bolivian unions and the Paraguayan unions are pledged to unite against both governments 1f and Saturday at 2:40 —— |The Prince of Pilsen” "Death Takes a Holiday” with PHILIP MERIVAL A comedy about life. JOLSON’S ‘9th St. & 7th Av, Eve. s:s0 Mats, Thurs, nnd Sat. Musical Comedy Favorite E. Reom 803—Phone: Algonquin 6183 Not eonnected with any other office Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 EAST 115th STREET * ait Police |; ._ |ticism, only through the most sys-| ,, Pie eer ter es 1 4 1 Tormented By a peer hve tematic broadening of the leader-|tes “Women's Council, Friay. nighi, {they carry their servility to imper- (Continued from Page One) Sq Garden.” ship, only by constantly drawing jan. nea 80 E, 11th St, room 535, | ialist interests to the point of war. ware Garden. 30 p. police as he lies in his critical con-| ‘Tne program for the meeting was with AL SHEAN VIVIAN HART, ROY CROPPER. VIC REPERTORY iat Eves. Cor, Second Ave. New York DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY lense telephone for appointment Telephone: Lehigh 0022 tank and file forces into the lead- as Mee * Wahiticinebles Gikan ead + * ‘0. Mats. Thur. Sat.. 2:30 ion announced today, by the iat (ership can our unions develop into ‘ ‘y 0c. $1. $1.50 = ae fever last night wis 104 de-| limon tor agitation ene Preps. (Militant organs of class struggle. aay night Jan, 24, at Workers Sehool RAINBOW EVA Le GALLIENNE, Director g 4 by the I. L. D. taeda, ple ee vy (To Be Continued) ‘siaaecal pine! See as BALL I) Tonight—“THE LIVING CORPSE” Advertise your Union Meetings rene Gactar Sane h7-Se | “Y—Singing of the International by COSTUME Today Mat—“THE SEA Need Volunteers, Workers School needs 26 volunteers to do some very important work for 4 the school at the Lenin Memorial Friday, January 24 Meeting tonight. Report at the Gar- here. For information write to BRONX THEATRE GUILD || Te DAILY WORKER Stdney Stavro, Direct bayhictehepgy Sta ctor ‘Tremont Thentre, Tremont & Web-|| 26°28 Union Sq., New York City ater Aves. Bronx “HHH” A aatire on the medical profess Even. 8:80; Mats, Wed. & Sai Tel. Tremont 565. Beg. Mon—“THE KILLER”—a play on a social problem, was refused permission to examine | ene assembly, Katovis. The police, Tammany’s 2-—Introductory remarks by chatr- thugs, refused to remove the — MhcLenin Showed the Way, for the is’ bedside—e Negro Mnaxex! Address by 0. Hall. . den riaht after work, : t from Katovis ide—even thoug! et ceenineh: den right after work. Ask for Com a the dying man is requesting it. B—Join_the Party of Lenin! Ad- NEW WEBSTER MANOR “Man Is a Prisoner.” dream br Robert ee FIFLSON SEARCH a 125 Hast 11th Street Friends of Katovis were told to|wonament! A: by = =| FORMER SCHOOLTEACHER — Pri-| Tickets $1.50 to be obtained at rene leave today by the nurse, who said: | 7-~Installation of Com ee ee eeeeiee nme te LEAGUE FOR MUTUAL AID “Don't ig realize this man is a fs The Duties of a New Mem-| sr ogcow jan, 21—Troops of | ‘Bast Third Street. "| 104 Fifth Ave, Phone Watkins 7581 prisoner , Jan. 21. Katovis has a shattered spine, Pik Piedae of Revolutionary | the Red Army in the Anadir River Slavens — “ four feet of his entrails have been ¢. Welcome to the Communiat | region have organized dog and rein- FOLLOW LENIN’S TEACHINGS! PREPARE FOR CLASS-WAR BATTLES removed, as a result of the bullet} 7a". Goes Rea. deer parties to search the Anguema Study at the that entered his body when the| A mans paceant. direction Emjo| River valley for the two missing WORKERS SCHOOL cop placed his gun against his spine conceived by Ealth Sexal.| American aviators, Carl Ben Eiel- 20-28 TINTON SQUARE arranged by Edith Segal, mu- and shot. PUBLIC SPRAKING—Monday 8:30-9:50 P. M—V, 1. JEROME rection, Paul Kellér, Groups |son and Earl Borland, according to ‘Two biood transfusions have been |pértictpating: Workers Dramatic!s message dated January 10 from THEORY AND PRACTICE OF TRADE UNIONISN—Vrlday 7100-8120 P.M. || MARXIAN ECONOMICS A—Monday 7:00-8:20 P, M—CL_ARENCE MILLER we t0| Workers Lahorat ‘Theatre, Fret-|the ice-bound Soviet steamer, Stav- Bie ce ware tee hos-| elt, Gesanen ‘Rereln, wie earans | ropol, pitsl is municipal owned—run by the |Union. “™OT™™” si A ‘radio dispatch last week r2- ernment that ordered| Leta Bele (dance romp). (ported that the missing American a shot. 1 thor Conventions nocache fliers had been forced down in the omand that Katovis be re-| {cere S—Revolt (dance wromp). — | Anouerna section. ei dis ee \! pool from this hospital,” Sam| scene 5—Strtke (dance croup). The Stavronol notified the Soviet || ANARCHIST, SOCIALIST AND COMMUNIST MOVEMENT. in : vetary of the-L L. D. in| scome From eho U8. 8. | Arctic Commission, searching forll cienamy Om AMMRIGAN LABOR! MC vo aoa 3. OLGIN | | d today. “The same! --np). Wi the lost fliers, that two doesled Wednenila 0:50 P, M—V. 1. JEROME | parties, with foot to last = month, || PROGRAM OF COMMUNIGT INERT ATION ee se P. Met. A. DARCY rtarted to search for Fielson and|| PROBLEMS OF COMMUNIST ORGANIZATION ‘1 fp Friday 7:00-8:20 P, Ma=J, WiLLIAMSON PROBLEMS OF WORKINGCLASS WOMEN Thursday 7:00-8:20—P. ROGERS MANY OTHER COURSmS, SEND FOR CATALOGU SPRING TRHRWS FORTY-ODD COURSES START FEBRUARY 3, 1980 SUNDAY FORUM—JANUARY 26. AT 8 P. M. (ADMISSION 25 CENTS) WILLIAM F, DUNNE, Editor “Labor Un! t demanded his life] °"""" *—Towarde Stragmtet i hurt | not tit to be in charge Of! | vio. share of the 15,000 New | Borland, one groun hoping to hurt ity “NAVAL WAR CONFERENCE AND’ DRIVE AGAINST THE WORKERS” ON BOTH SCREENS MARY and DOUG PIKFORD: FAIRBANKS ALL TALKING! ‘TOGETHER! “TAMING of the SHREW” Stage Shows—Roth Théatres from CAPITOL THEATRE, BROADWAY GULL” Yom. Night—“MLLE. BOURRAT” —— [BUTCHERS’ UNION jUncal 174, A.M.U.@8.W, of A.A, Office and Headquarters: (anor ‘Temple, 248 i eéth st, Et COOPERATIVE RESTAURANT Service and Self-Service uyverant 7770 HAS REOPENED UNION SQUARE CAFETERIA, INC. 26-28 Union Square Business meetings held the first Monday of the month at 8 p, m, inducational meetings—the third Monday of the month, Bxeoutive Board | meetings—every Tuesday afternoon at & o'clock, \ One fi 'y! One Union! Join and e Common Enemy! Office open from 9 a. m, to 6 p.m, his shooting are cer} Baila The Daily Worker—Send him back to health.” obs from Zneshko to aKluchinsk Ray, ong protests against this bru-| “7 lend the other from Tokarov to Cane tal'ty will be made at the Gastonis: old, J, Amter, Otto Huiswood, J. | North. Shitrin-Mincola defense mass meet- (1, Engdahl, Michael Obermier and] The Soviet flier, Chuknovoky, is ing in Irving Plaza, at Irving Place \Sam Nesin, Shifrin and the other |preparine for a flicht in search of oond 15th St, Friday, 8 p. m. Ben|defendants will speak. the missing avitors , 4 New York City

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