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PAG aE Two natr MASS MEETING IS CALLED THIS NOON ON CAMPUS Map Plans to Smash Terrorization the Foreign Students @ of NEW YORK. been called for students of Col est against of Labor nm studen A mass Doak from ge mass meeting will campus and will be representative of the N dents’ Leagu: This meeting will lay Biudent strike at C Doak to withdraw th as Donald Henderson, executive 0inted Spectat foreign st pretends to mak Doak to nid the 15,000,000 that this is only clearly shown by ment of Ralph Easly. Nat Civic Federation, who called on Doak to send stool pigeons into the college to spy on the “radical activities” of the foreign students. Doak is thus trying to ze the | growing militancy of the students in the same way as he is pushing his deportation terror drive against mil- itant workers. Garment workers—1— NEW YORK.—The minority of the organization committee of Lo- cal 30 of the Intern: Garment Workers Union in a call today issued to all members of the local to elect a strike committee con- isting of rep: shops, open to. mobilize the Strike on a rank and file basis. erro: ignidje shops unemployed The statement of the minority | group said “1. We proposed and demanded that women dressmakers must be in- cluded in the organization drive andj t of our y in the opposed to Strike, because they are a inion and a vast major trade. Mr. Greenberg this until the membership overruled | hi We proposed that the Organ- feation Committee shoul e some- thing to say about the leaflets to be issued to the workers. Greenberg ignored us “3. We proposed that shop meet- ings be called of union and open shops so as to mobilize these work- exs and drew them into the strike Preparations. This was also rejected. | “4. We demanded that the strike committee be compgsed on the basis of shop representatives elected by the workers and not of hand picked ap- pointees by Mr. Greenberg and his Executi r at the w end-not tt should control of th> & pertent demand was rejec edministraticn without y or consent. “By tions thet the edminist fagem the be This most im- ed by the als knowl- n is not work- ring a NEW CITY WAGE AND RELIEF CUT Electi ion Conference to Lead Struggle NEW YORK.—A second call to all shop groups, unions, mass and fra- ternal organizations, of Negro and white work: to elect delegates to the Communist Party Mayoralty Election Conference, which will take place on Monday, October 8 p. m. at the Lido Ball Room 146th St. and 7th Ave. was issued today by the N. Y, State United Frent Com- munist Election Campaign Commit- tee, The purpose of the Conference is to ratify the candidacy of William L. Patterson for Mayor of New York 1th City and to adopt a city election plat- | form. . Conditions The call points ou suance of the 15th, living conditions in this city mediate un‘ ¢ beon further cut by 1 food tickets, while a 50 per ce has been made on the rent for war veterans. “Wage cuts are inc tredos with the tacit approval of the ders cf the American Federation Labor and of the Socialist Party, Worse, feed since is- of ‘the workers all sing in group | al Ladies |in so f | collections are concerned. sentatives of the union | workers for a real] in | e convinced Trade Union Meeting Oct. for “Daily” J Octo- - and 15th St to dis- lishing Daily with the jations » to demanc 5 and Street, October Sth | tion local here by President ‘Rvan of t t stitut at 6:30 p,m. The mass meeting,| the I.L.A,, called a meeting Friday. sald Afioluding? the |@ arly paid seamer = OTHER jorganized by the Millinery United ‘The local president announced that have already |Stopped. While committec RICANA y.|Front Rank and File Committee, is|a committee has been appointed to ber of |i7side, D. Redden of the Un Five new productions 2 | expected to mobilize thousands of the | negotiate with tho companies on » shoe |ed Council told 200 offic his’ y The fit needle trades workers in a militant | working conditions in this port,” sated: i ther One" by ‘Henry nave | struggle against the bosses’ program} “Who appointed it?” demanded a ed in this evening at the Biltmore|@f Wage cutting, unemployment and |longshoreman from the floor, and in- Welton; editor them that these cuts Theatra, presented by Thomas Kil-|@8ainst fake labor leaders stead of answering, the chairman ad- ; rker, will open the seamen to no pay other patri The chief players are] William W, Weinstone, editor of | Journed eee) sion on how to bring th q an attack on:.the Geor 1 Nash, Flor-| the Daily Worker and Communist! The rank and file longshoremen . trade union struggles Leroy ney ane nee Vroom and Fuller Mellish candidate for the U, S. Senate, will | went out, but returned in a few min- in the ny | ASS Runes WOU S0r N Gladys Unger, will have | present to the needle trades workers | utes and compelled the officials to ie union workers ¢ | office workers. its premiere at the Avon Theatre on| the election program of the Commu-|call another meeting, wher? they t the organ of the widest| The Isthmian Line officia ‘ht, with Leonre Ulric as| nist Party, and also a concrete pro- | threw: out the appointed. committee masses tried to intimidate the c > cast also includes Ar-| gram of struggle through committees | and elected one from their own num- All union leagues of the Trade Un-|then offered excuses, tson, Patricia Calvert,| elected by the rank and file of the | ber, ion Unity Leag nd shop groups |they were shipping the ‘ and Rui me setae workers, through a uniteq front of | Correct Procedure. are urged to mobilize the widest re- | back to the Philippine ; will bring his produc- employed and unemployed, for better | These longshoremen are thus car- presentation to this important meet-/lieve the unemployed Americana,” J. P. McEvoy’s ' conditions. 2 5 F fae the officials of the 1 to the Shubert Theatre on ? : tying out the policy of the elected We Eas Bi tolipaint” thats house The music mainly | How the furrier workers in New{Rank and File Committee, which : Pri ge aittce oer chi the Ivties by | York City won a victory by fighting |fights against Ryan's wage cut and he $ tanley Expelled as pe just cage ree : The cast inaludes | Pra es be | has a let of demands on conditions, | 1 i; pa cate e’Gowetn Albert. Carrell; uisde:} but by Irving Potash, leader | voted for by rankyand file meetings. Racketeer Collector un oe rains rans an Rex Weber, Ralph Locke|0f numerous struggles of needle and |The demands incitide: 8 or more men To Btanlee ToeSDIE te REGED claudication: ak tReet ‘cup of Doris Humphrey ‘ workers Jin hold and on the dock, 4 men on J. Stan form a mber of | 2! : ‘steel lighters, four men on cars for Section 8, Secretariat of th District number for irresponsibil! ras the e Commtunist Party, a few months ago |¢ and racketeering, sale of literature and | f This individygl speaks in the n of the Daily Wo: and other revo- | lutionary nizaticns at Union| | Square and Columbus Circle, etc, and | has made a number of collections, | | In order to co’ work he sent up his racketeering in Monday through a |to $3.01. He did not use his own|®™0ng marine workers to stop All comrades who have borrowed cuts or| yielded, but is still trying to evade name, and the Daily Worker ac-|shipment of munitions which are| samuel Weinstein, militant worker |™4ts from Dally Worker over 5 days ago|the payment of full wages. cepted this money m the com-|intended for the imperialist war on| who .was framed up on a man-|™USt return them immediately—or all re-| ‘The chief job of the Rank and | mittee. |Soviet China and the Soviet Union. | ghter charge, July 19, 1932, by the | Mests in future will be refused. File Committee is to weld unity be- eee Daily Hh cee teil assume | ee eee {bosses of the Muskin Mfg. Co. in Sees tween the Negro and white long- | any responsi! or the f | r taki: iv ra 5 rt ie Btanleg;, “He does: not repr sent the Bazaar Office Open aree aks tere, el Op the Purni.| esistration now going On| Soak inthe por ot ‘Philadelphia, e |Daily Worker, and the workers are rkers Industrial Union and|for Fall Term of Workers’ ar RR warned against this individual, —District Secretariat —New York District, C, P. LABOR UNION MEETINGS FUR WORKERS All chairmen and delegates of the fur | shops are called by the Fur Department of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union to meet Wednesday, right after work, Plaza Hall to take up questions and unemployment. Jot ereantaetl | DRESSMAKERS Meeting of all dressmakers, Oct p. m, at 36th St. and Eighth Ave. ers from the Unity Committee of mokers. | Meeting” of all dressmakers in Interna- ¥, Industrial Union and open shops on h St, will be held Oct. § at Memorial 344 We h St., rigm after work. 1 give report. s of political views d by the left wig 4 at Speak- | Dress- Ha’ CITY CALENLDAR—. Attention, members of Post No. 1, WESL: Our new headquarters are located at 154 Vest 20th St | TUESDAY at 8 p.m. 2273 Bath h Mayor, and march and demonstration- ree Wee election campaign ‘Third St. and nl Green, as illustrated by the recent wage cuts lin the Needle Trades industry and of the Longshoremen,” the call states, | Elect Delegates! The call conclydes with: | “All these facts point to the need | working class unity, the need for a fighting united front against the cap- | italist class for jobs and bread, Lo! us make the October 10th Conference a powerful demonstration of the | growing unity of the working class | and a challenge to the bosses’ pro- gram of hunger and war. Elect your delegate! Forward to an active par- | ticipation in the election of Commu- | nist Party candidates and for the | Communist Party demands” | Marine ‘WORKAWAYS : USED TO € was expelled by the District | Wage cut from $1 jt ame |harder than the average, merely for | ion and the Water’ |committee a few dollars amounting {Council are carrying on a campaign | W ork ers Fighting P Pay Cuts Ww einstone and Potash GT Are Main'Speakers at! * AU Milliners Mass Meet OVER (9 ONDITIONS 9 on of P.S.13 Meet Thursday rs Asso YORK, —That conditions in a Tig an, will hold in New Job le Seamen Hit schcol auditor Phil ladelohia Nan Breage 9 Oh 6 at 8 p. m, at} | Ae, ; Scheme par Aces: is Hilquit, Her-|Hlects Own Committee | }bert H, Lehman and Zariisky of the sree The Waterfront L em | recent will be brought out by PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Oct. 3, — ent a committ }leading s “Polly” Baker, placed over the In- | nen’s Associa- office at Br nd 42nd | ternational Longshoi ot int lumber, smaller loads, eight hour day, a comedy by {full union wages for car gangs, no “When Ladies Meét,” Ire chel Croth will have its pre- Prospect Hat Shop The Waterfront Unemployed Coil pte a opto ae ges rae F at the Royle Theatre on Workers on Strike |sisctimination. bes cinshe 4c Geek ae | ‘Thursday evening, presented by John Dislike Wage Cut among its crew 12 “workaways’ | Goide es Walter es Frieda Spring Byington, t. Rawlinson The situation is very hot in Phi- | ladelphia, the men being intensely dissatisfied with the wage cut of 12 per cent negotiated’ by Ryan and} the companies, The struggle may | break out over the working condi. } |tions. Already one firm, the Jarca | Stevedoring Co. has tried to cut wages and has been stopped. Jarca et Royals! Ritteen workers wen on strike yes- ne Royals morning at the Prospect Hat |Shop, 20 W, 3rd St. The workers are demanding union conditions and no |discrimination. Militant picketing is jbeing conducted, led by a rank and |file committee. n working seamen and even | ap. set an heir food and pascage a The Isthmian Line has been c: ing considerable munition ‘ar East. The N git Weinstein Tonight at "Riderwood Lyceum Till Midnite Tonite | The Red Press Bazaar office, at the sixth floor of 35 East 12th St will be kept open until 12 o'clock | midnight tonight to accommodate all Party units who have not yet| ent in their greetings for the Ba-| ,. * aar. All Party units are urged | the to take up at their meetings the question of the Baze send greetings in at the ci the | meeting. Immediate payment of the ‘Bonus’ to the ex-soldiers. Smash Wage Cut! | released on $25,000, will speak | Ryan and the companies reduced | Ridgewood Labor Lyceum, | Rid d, L, I., Tuesday, at 8:30 p. |m,, it is announced by the United |Front Weinstein Defense Commit- tee, | School, 35 E, 12th St., 3rd fl, HARLEM SCOTTSBORO BENEFIT | The Crowning Affair of Scottsboro Week ENTERTAINMENT JULES BLEDSOE DUKE ELLINGTON MONETTE MOORE W. C. HANDY BENNIE CARTER’S DANCE ‘FATS” WALLER & His New BAND Black and White Orchestra ROCKLAND PALACE, 280 W. 155th ST. Friday, October 7th Show Starts 8:30 P. M. Tickets, $1.00 AUSPICES: SCOTTSBORO UNITY DEFENSE COMMITTEE (A BROAD Ci MITTEE OF NEGRO AND WHITE, WRITERS, ARTISTS AND PROFESSIONALS), AFFILIATE FOR THE DEFENSE OF ALL STAR SHOW ine hundred workers proclaimed | solidarity and pledged their ort to Weinstein at an open-air ting at Avenue B and 7th St., Saturday night. Unemployment and Social In- surance at the expense of the state and employers. OLITICAL PRISONERS DANCING TILL DAWN DAILY WORKER 9th ANNIVERSARY WILL BE HELD DECEMBER 38lst NEW YEAR'S EVE. BRONX COLISEUM We call upon all Organizations to keep this day free EAT AT THE ROYAL CAFETERIA 827 BROADWAY Between izth & 13th Sts.) Royal Dishes for the Proletariat GUR WORKERS MEMBERS OF F.W.LU. ATLE (TION COMRADES! Health Center Cafeteria WORKEKS CENTER 50 EAST 13th STREET Patronize the Health Center Cafeterix and help the Revolutionary Movement BEST FOOD REASONABLE PRICES = WORKER 13th Strect, New York City DAYS Bronx COMRADES, PATRONIZE | Movvisania Stock Farms, Inc, GRADE “A” DAIRY PRODUCTS ) Bast TAG Classified oi D ROOM fer rent. Nice room Se = or two, All improvements. Inquire | 883 ‘Tinton Ave, Bronx, » NY. Y. evenings 837 F. 18th St, Apt. 1. Gross. + 9 . OCT. 14, 15 AND 161] | Hate cieere VANTE! " 3824 THIRD AVE., BRONX, N. ¥. . ; WANTED—Two-room furnished apartment shar Garcia wary PRESS BAZAAR OPENS OCT. 6 Registration for New York City Voters Will Open October Lith | NEW YORK, Oct in New York City of Citizens et tase i the coming elections will take pla‘ 5 aal Gr eetings Must on October 10, 11, 12, 13, and 14 fre Be In By Midnight 5 p,m. to 10:30 p. m., and on Ost. | Z 15th from 7 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. ee All comredes, friends’ and le thizers in New York City w jcitizens are urged to register on any minute preparations are being ected for the sixth annual Red zaar in Madison Square G: ae 8th Ave., 49th and 50th Sts. from Cf ths Above dates so that they may /Thursday, Oct 6 to Monday, Oct. 10, he ; ’-!to which workers from New Yo 8th. Any citizen in New York City |‘? 2 porn Newsy Ots J and vicinity will threhg in support of {the D: Worker, Morning Freiheit and Young Worker. One of the special features of the Bazaar will be the Black and White Jorn stra of Rosenthal and John C. Smith, which will be on hand to play any request numbers, aside from the regular music for dancing every night (free cf charge) “From soup to nuts,” “from a needle to a radio,” that’s what work- they com> to pur- chase their necessities, whether dress- es, suits, or books and brief-cases, Wearing apparel; household goods, pictures, litzrature—anything, every- thing you can think of—will be on who fails to register on any of the above davs will not be eligible to vote on Nov, 8th, wages from 85 cents per hour to 75 cents on straisht time and from $1.20 | per hour to $1.10 on overtime. Ryan did this without consulting the men, or having any elected delegates from the various ports at his negotiations | with the employers. The cut went into effect Saturday. The longshoremen, though much dissatisfied, did not sufficiently per. fect their dock committee and rank and file committee organization in time to precipitate a struggle Sat- urday against the cut, There is still|hand for your choosing. But “the time for that. It is a question of|early bird” gets the choicest mer- electing leading anti-strike commit? | chandise. Greetings in the-Bazaar Souvenir Program from units, mass organiza, tions, trade unions, and individuals, tees to defy Ryan and his hench. men and smash the qt. Fight For Conditions must be handed in not later than Meanwhile, the Ryan agreement midnight tonight, at the Bazaar does not settle the working condi-|Committze, 6th floor, 35 E. 12th St. tions in the various poris. Polly Baker's idea in Philadelphia is | Ryan's idea everywhere: just appoint | Rast Side Unemployed @ committee to make working cond! tions worse, give the longshoremen Council Holds Relief Today Send yours in immediatel: a new kind of wage cut and more unemployment in the shape of big- | ati ger loads, smaller gangs, and ia emonstration a machine through discrimination ae ‘i bees and favoritism, NEE PORE eoun oF deleester elected by the workers of the neigh In every port the longshoremen | porhood at a mass meeting and o Should follow the eiiample of Phil- adelphia — kick out the appointed committees and have regularly elec- ted negotiation committees of rank and file workers. Carry on the fight. against the bad conditions at the same time organization against the wage cut is built up, |The Marine Workers Industrial Union pledges all possible help, ganized under the leadership of the East Side Unemployed Council, 317 E, 31st St., will go to the Home Relief Bureau this morning to demand that they put an end to all evictions of jobless workers and furnish imme- diate cash relief for the thousands of poverty-stricken families in the vi- cinity. The father of the late Com- rade Seman, whose family is now in Gig Scie eres desperate need, is a member of the VOTE COMMUNIST delegation. Against Imperialist War; for the defense of the Chinese peeple and of the Soviet Union. The Daily Worker needs YOU ' its mass pipet am Drive— in Intern’) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 Bristol Street (Bet. Pitkin & Sutter Aves.) B’klyn PHON! DICKENS 2-3012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M, 1-2, 6-8 P.M, 80 FIFTH AVENUE 1ith FLOOR AU Work Done Under Versona) Care of DR. JOSEPRSON AMUSEMENTS —— ‘NOW PLAYING! Gripping Soviet Talkie = SNIPER TITLES IN ENGLISH ron the horror of st a pacifist picture. sson is “Turn the say 8d Big Week! N.¥.American said ‘GOONA-GOONA’ is utterly new and interesting” JOHN eRe in ‘A BILL OF DIVORCEMENT’ with Billie Burke-Katharine Hepburn NSELOR-AT-LAW C OU WITH BY PAUL MUNI ELMER RICE PLYMOUTH THEA. W. 45th, LA, 4-6720 Bives, 8:30, Mats. Thurs, é& Sat,, 2:30 Daily Worker. Acme Theatre Sireet and Union Square THE worKhes itth § A. H. WOODS, MGR., Presents THE STORK IS DEAD A New Farce by Hans Kottow Adapted by Frederic & Fanny Hatten PRICES: NIGHTS, 50c to $2.50 MATS. WED. & SAT., 50c to $2.01 48TH S8T. THEATRE, East of Bro Eves. 8:40. Mats. Wed. and Sat,. THE GROUP THEATRE presents SUCCESS STORY By JOHN HOWARD LAWSON Maxine Elliett’s Thea,, 39th, E. of Bway Eys..8:30 Matinees Wed. & Sat. at 2:30 Unemployment and Social In- surance at the expense of the state and employers. * sake CAMP WOCOLONA MONROE, N. Y, ERIE R.R. Lodging: $1 per day, $4 per week ALL INCOME TO THE DAILY WORKER 2 MANHATTAN OPTICAL CO, COHEN’ CUT RATE OPTICIANS SYES EXAMINED oPpToME’ ¥ REGISTERED STS tometrists—White Gold $1.50—She'l Frames $1,90 122 WESTER STREET Union Square. Cali D. P. 0, or write care Rugonis id Worker, AIS) Comradely Atmosphere. Proletarian Prices Daily Worker Morning Freiheit Yousg 5S DAYS of Worker ENTERTAINMENT; DANCIN MUSIC; FUN; SINGING; EATS; 117 ORCHARD ST,, Near Delshoty (near Chrystie St.) Tel: Orchard 4-0230 LES AT HALF PRICE! Masison Square Garden THURS., FRI, SAT., SUN., MON, OCTOBER 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th BARGAINS; DRINKS Ete. [DON’T BUY NOW, WAIT TILL THE BAZAA