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PICKET MULLER AGENCY TODAY Job Committee Wins New V i A militant worker named and four other at the Waldorf ¢ d the worker: Ww not apr ig burly icense Buri as defended by ai Defense who xth Ave. had had Cour isfacti nployr: Change Date of J Schaeffer Welcome Tom Mooney Br. 1. L. D. new hea! Sparks Athletic Club ‘h to Membership Workers’ Club, 8:30 p.m Modicot Labor Tei , at 8:30 pm Frank Spector will I With Tom Mooney’ at L. D., 508 New Ji “Five Revolu- pices Council benefit of Admission 15¢ Lecture by Dr. Lieber on toms” at 1813 Pitkin Avg. A\ omen’s Couneil ker and Freiheit. Lecture at Harlem Progressive Youth Club on “The Deopening of the Crisis and Tts Effects on the Working Class.” Marcel Scherer. At 1538 Madison Ave. Lecture by Fanny Jacobs of Workers’ School on “The War Debts and the Geneva Conferences’ 30 p.m, at Tremont Workers’ Clu winvership Meeting Concourse W. lub, 1349-3 Ave, at 8 p.m All interested in playwriehting are ask > attend the Playwrights’ Group of t ‘orkers’ Laboratory Theatre at 42 E, 12th Bt. at 8 p.m if Prof. Willard Atkins, of economics department, N. ¥. U lecture on “Can | the American Youth Be Radicalized” at American Youth Federation, 133 W. 14th Bt, at 8:30 p.m Downtown Br. F. 5. U. membership meeting at 8:30 p.m. U. Lectui Soviet Ru: Prospect Park Br, F. Philosopher Looks Tov at Pranklin Manor, 836 Franklin A Brooklyn. Speaker: Prof. Stephen Graves. Mosholn Br. F.S.U, Lecture—Women in the Jnion—nt 3230 Bainbridge Ave., Bronx. Speaker: Sarah Rice. Moro Park F. 8. U. Lecture—'The Wa Danger and the Soviet Union’-at 1109 45th St. Speaker: Dr. Oakley Johnson rs. EOIAL, RECOGNITION UAMPAIGN BRANCH MEETINGS Bast Bronx Br.—Ambassador Hall, 172nd Bt. and Third Ave. Speakers: Tallentire 4nd Marshall. Harlem Intl. Br.—227 Lenox Ave. Speak- Wages of 400 Girls in Coney Island Laundry Cut to $8 Per Week SCHEME T0 SPLIT Fairway Laundry on Strike; 60 Out to DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1932 MASS MEET ON j TUUL Council Meet | Tonite for AFL Report N. Y. UNEMPLOYED Reinstate One Fired [U.S SR. TUESDAY and to Plan Struggles ‘op | 8 some F | forn hem. DeRuyter | ‘POLISH WORKERS | NEW YORK.—Four hundred gi) 5 > A NEW YORK.—Over 60 workers, all . ibe Conk Borders of Chicago | that ‘were employed, in the Fairway Launch Campaign for une Ave. were re Laundry, 174th St., Bronx, struck $3.6 cut of $1 a wee Moves to New Field | vesterday morning. They demand the} U. S. Recognition down to $8 he | reinstatement of a girl worker, sin- . er cut a month ago. y ‘YORK rl Borders, the| Sled out for discrimination by the] NEW YORK—The first of a series ion, eact of the Ch boss and fired yesterday. jof mass meetings in the Friends of jin five bundles every c tee on Unemplo} | Immediately after her digcharge,|the Sovict Union campaign for un- her job. has come to New York,,and| there was a stoppage. This morning | conditional recognition of the Soviet | 7:30 aa ediately the capitalist press | there is a regular strike, with pick-| Union by the U. S. government will i in the place} rushed to give him publicity. He | eting. be held on Tuesday evening, Dec. 13, athe ay to put up @| pinns to sieit here a tuovement such at Irving Plaza, 16th St. and Irving igeme oe jas he had in Chicago. He outlines he program as: hould erhee| To obtain adequate relief, Hon e Rrceat 2.—To provide the unemployed ate house or hall and | with an active extravert opportunity m a committee, then get in touch | tg go something. with the Laundry Workers’ Union,| 9 — F3 ni : 260 E. 138th St., Bronx, and with it| cationn Sea at ong a Poue work out the next steps. Conditions a! i are evidently ripe for struggle. Borders, in his newspaper publicity | cutie sd elie. |here, unblushingly takes the fuil| credit for the splendid demonstra- | tion of 50,000 Chicago unemployed | a few weeks ago, which smashed the 50 per cent relief cut proposed by Place, at 8 p.m. Corliss Lamont, former assistant professor of philosophy at Columbia University, will be the main speaker of the evening. Having recently re- turned from the Soviet Union, La- mont will speak on “Soviet Russia In 1932.” Oakley Johnson, expelled from City College for daring his in ti fellow ‘DAILY’ BIRTHDAY FETE ON DEC. 3ist | Browder to Speak at) 9th Anniversary few relia | Brodsky of the National Committee NEW YORK—The celebration of |! the F. S. U. will also speak. |the ninth anniversary of the Datly Admission is 35 cents and tickets 5 | Worker, which will be held Dec. 3i,|™ay be secured at the F. S. U. dis- the authorities, and forced the Re- |New Year’s Eve, in the Bronx Coli. | tTict office, 799 Broadway, Room 330, construction Finance Corporation to | Seum, 177th St. and Starlight Park,|@nd at the Workers’ Book Shop, 50 h hundreds of thousands of dol-| Will be a demonstration in support |. 13th St. lars to Chicago to keep up the relief | of all the struggles of the American payments. | working class, which the Daily FIGHT POGROMS C.P. Calls for Help of | ; to say what he thought, and Carl} Borders Sabotaged Worker is leading. It will also be a “| the Board of Aldermen, which “|On Felony S| among the Fraternal Order of Ea- | 14th st.—| Workers Here | NEW YOR K—Calling rs of upon the the United States, and the Polish workers protest against the roms on Jews organized government of Poland policies of ruthless tional minorities, the | Communist Party isssued_ the, following by the f nd aga: ression of n¢ h Buro of country angs of Fas- jents invaded the ‘s in Lwow wound- ndreds of Je ‘s and hop Keepers and looting their nd homes, and similar de- ing place in other cit- ose once more the overnment of Poland as the 1 heir of most barbar- murder traditions of ous d to save its ng the ang . The only difference he fascist government of has alrea 1uch narrow- the popu- rom gangs the cadres of its ht Pogrom | e fascist government of Paland ake off the responsibility roms just as the Tzarist government did by pretended sharp © quell the disovders. The that the pogroms were organ- y the police, that the govern- ment intervened only after some 200 were wounded, and after organized} self-defense of the workers made the | situation quiet uncomfortable for the | fascist murderers.” The only real purpose of the mil- | t intervention of the government | | which turned Lwow and other cities | of Poland into armed camps, is to| and to protect the pogrom gangs.” disarm worke: -defense groups | Tammany Factional | Row Brings Out Hint | That McKee Grafts NEW YORK.—Mayor McKee tes- | tified before the Hofstadter Com- e yesterday. Things were very dry as proposals for minor changes in the city charter were mulled over | and over, until one of McKee's fac- Tammany tional Hall, “Do you think it is good policy for | the President of the Board of Alder- } men to represent either himself per- or through his firm, a pri- | vate client on a matter that comes j before the Board of Estimate and Apportionment?” McKee was for years president of is small changes, the Board te McKee threatened McNaboe with} suit for libel, and the committee | protested McKee shouldn't be in-| sulted, and nothing more came of | | it, at the time. m | Hoever Man Convicted Charges NEW YORK.—Senator James J. Davis faces trial on Dec. 12 on | charges of operating a lottery among | the Fratern:! Order of the Moose, | from which he is said to have pock- | eted more thar $100,000. Conrad H. M nn of Kansas City and two others haye already been [convicted of operating a lottery gles. Mann is a member of President | Hoover's Unemployment Commission and a former president of the Kan- sas City Chamber of Commerce. He is said to have reaped $230,000 as his personal share of the spoils. LABOR UNION MEETINGS | ¢ of the Metal Workers’ In- | | dustrial Union to the Hunger Marho will re- | port at the New York local membership meeting being held tonight at 80 E. 11th 8t., | pore 222, at 8 p.m COMMITTEE OF 100 MEETS SATURDAY A special meeting of the Committee of 100 will be held tomorrow, Saturday, at 1 pam. in the auditorium of the left wing groups, 140 W. 36th Bt., to discuss the| present sitnation of the cloakmakers in | relation to the:coming elections in the cloak . | locals. i The Needle ‘Trades Workers’ Industrial Union calls on all members of the various | | trade bos the executive council and of- | | ficers to participate in a meeting called by | | the T.U.U.C. tonight at 8 p.m. in Manhat- | tan Lyceum, 66 E. Fourth 8t., where «| | roport of the Cincinnati conference will be | | given ers: LeRoy and B. Friedman. Williamsburg Br.—-297 South Pifth st. Speakers: Jay Portell and M. Cohen. Sen Gate Br.—3712 Oceante Ave. care V. Guttleman, Speakers: A, Morris and Paul Miller | employed was led by a united front | trating into the remotest sections of |of the Workers Committee on Un- || Stage and Screen | | ard Addinsell, the English composer, | | has written a special musical score, | A special dress rehearsal of “Alice” | demonstration for building the Daily | This movement of the Chicago un- | into a powerful mass orvan, pene-| committee, initiated by the Unem- | the country, ployed Councils, and into which| Among the speakers will be Earl Borders and his henchmen were | Browder, secretary of the Communist forced, much against their will, by | Party, whose central organ the Daily the response of the rank and file | Worker is. A revolutionary program is being arranged, including the In- | ternational Workers’ Order Sym- | phony Orchestra, the noted singer, | Sergei Radamsky, in Soviet songs; Borders and his lieutenants, at ev- | ® ™ass workers’ chorus and the New ery meeting opposed, eyen to the | Dance Group. point of threatening a split, all mo-| All organizations are urged to rally tions for militant action, all plans | their members to participate in a for demonstrations at local relief -body in the Daily Worker celebra- stations before the homes of city | tion. councilmen. He was only defeated | by the response of tl ile | Qy delegates, including those trom his| Siba Funeral Today; Victim Police Terror own organization, to the militant slo- gans of the Unemployed Council. — NEW YORK.—Roberto Silba,; well- known militant food worker, and member of the Cafeteria Department of the Food Workers Industrial Union, died last Monday from a se- vere case of tuberculosis. Comrade | Silba had been lying in the hospital for the past 20 months. In a statement issued yesterday by the Food Workers Industrial Union, it was pointed out that “Comrade Silba, before he became sick was one of our best fighters for the condi- tions of the cafeteria workers. His activity was outstanding, especially during the Zelgreen Cafeteria strike. The funeral will take place on Sat- | urday, Dec. 10, at 2 pm. from the Spanish Workers Center at 24 W. 115th St., in Harlem. All workers are urged to enter the procession. employment to the call for united, militant action issued by the Unem- ployed Councils. Foster Greets Workers Sehool on 10th Year; Celebration Tonight Tonight at 8 o'clock the Workers School will open its three gala nights of celebration of ten years of “Training for the Class Struggle” at Irving Plaza, Irving Pl. and 15th St., with a mass meeting. Among the speakers at tonight's mass meeting are, Earl Browder, secretary of the Communist Party; Jack Stachel of the Trade Union Unity League; Harry Jackson, of the Marine Workers Industrial Union; S. Saunders, member of Workers Ex- Servicemen’s League; M. J. Olgin, editor of the “Freiheit; A. Markoff, director of the Workers School and Alexander Trachtenberg. The “Frei- heit Singing Society and John Reed Club artists will entertain. William Z. Foster, who is sick and is unable to appear has sent his warm greetings to this meeting. The Workers School, in its tenth year is now ending the Fal] Term with 1,600 students enrolled and is preparing for the opening of the Winter Term with a larger enrollment of workers. Borders tried vigorously, and in vain, to split the movement’ for the great mass demonstration by a trea- cherous and tricky fight which raised the Communist issue; he tried to prevent the demonstrators from carrying militant placards, he spread discouragement and pessimism as to the success of the march. - ——<$<—<———— Butler and Thomas Tell Tammany Rulers How to Save Money NEW YORK.—Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia Uni-j | versity, and Norman Thomas, So- cialist Party leader, appeared before the Hotffstadter Committee Wednes- day and explained how New York City government could save money! for its treasury. Butler said Staten Island should be joined to New Jer- sey and made a free port, duties to be charged when goods left the port. Thomas objected to Butler's plan for abolishing the mayor's office, said people of New York “needed someone to dramatize the elections.” He said | he wasn’t for the five-cent fare be- | cause it was only five cents, but be- | | cause it “dramatized” the struggle in | | New York. | | Neither proposed any detailed plan 1 13 feeding the 1,160,000 unemployed ere, een THEATRE GUILD TO PRESENT | “BIOGRAPHY” ON MONDAY | NIGHT | The Theatre Guild’s second pro- | duction of the season, “Biography”, a new play by S. N. Behrman, will open on Monday night at the Guild Theatre. Ina Claire, who has not | been seen here for four years wil]! HOSPITAL AND OCULIST PRESCRIP- TIONS FILLED AT 50% OFF | | White Gold Filled Frames |Fight Slave Code for Taxi Drivers: Mass Meet Monday All taxi drivers are urged to at- tend a mass meetink Monday at 8 pm. at Irving Plaza, 15th St. and Irving Pl. in order to further the fight for the immediate revision of the vicious taxi drivers’ code which goes into effect on Dec. 15. This code gives fleet owners the rignt to take away licenses simply if they think their drivers have too much dead mileage. When the code becomes effective, any policeman will have the authority to declare any cab “unfit” and thereby to take away the drivers’ license. ‘The meeting is called by an inde- pendent group of drivers who are circulating a petition demanding modification of the code. It is sup- ported by the Taxi Workers Union. Maurice Hotchner, chairman of the Board of Taxicab Control, has been invited to address the meeting on how the new code will affect drivers. Other speakers will be Bill Dunne, well known labor leader, and Mr. Schwartzbach, famous labor attor- ney, who will explain how the code will hurt the interests of all drivers, and how this code is also illegal. CHRISTMAS EVE. SATURDAY DECEMBER 24 District Training School GRADUATION BALL Auspices:— Communist Party and Young Com- munist League Rockland Palace 155 TH STREET & 8TH AVE. Entertainment and Dance CELEBRATION OF THIRD ANNIVERSARY I SPARTACUS Greek Workers Educational Club at PARK PLACE 5 W. 110th ST. (Near 5th Avenue) COMEDY DRAMA Admission 80 Cents ARTEF Jewish Workers recrs Norert, FOUR DAYS HEROIC TRAGEDY OF THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION SUN., Dec, 11, Mat.2:30; Eve.8:30 FIFTH AVE. THEATRE BROADWAY and 28t head the cast, which will also in- bes osened Larimore, Arnold Korff, ‘ay Fassett, Charles Richman, Alex-|{] Mas i . ander Clark and Mary Arbenz. | aoe ps The Civic Repertory Theatre will | Between Bowery & Christie, N.Y. | Stage their new production, “Alice ||| pen Dally trom 9 to7 oy In Wonderland”, an adaptation, of ||L_semie?_1¢ te 4 Orchard _ 4.0230 Lewis Carroll's story by Eve Le Gal- lienne and Florida Friebus on Mon- | day night with Miss Le Gallienne, Josephine Hutchinson, Joseph| Schildkraut, Charles Ellis and Leona Roberts in the principal roles, Rich- Zyl Shell Frames Lenses Not Included Intern! Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE th FLOOR will be given on Sunday evenin; for | MF See aaa oe the benefit of City and Country | peickaleddthadainda | School. met | “TRISTAN AND ISOLDE” AT MET- ROPOLITAN OPERA HOUSE “Tristan and Isolde”, will be pre- sented at the Metropolitan Opera House next Wednesday night with Kappel, Branzell De Loor and Schorr. Other operas of the week in- clude: “Tannhauser”, Monday night with Rethberg and Laubenthal; “Traviata”, Thursday matinee with Ponselle and Lauri-Volpi; “L’Elisir d’Amore”, Thursday evening with | Morgana and Falco; “Faust”, Pri- day evening with Mario and Marti- nelli; “Don Giovanni”, Saturday matinee with Ponsell and Schipa and “Mme. Butterfly” on Saturday night with Rethberg and Jagel. Importers of Soviet Candies SPECIAL with this ADVERTISEMENT Odessa Fruit Chocolates 4 LB. BOX FOR $1.00 M. RICHMAN 145 E. HOUSTON ST. NEW YORK AGENTS WANTED—Tel. ORchard 4-7778 Attention Comrades! OPEN SUNDAYS Health Center Cafeteria Workers Center — 50 E. 13th St. Quality Reasonable Prices ————t CAMP NITGEDAIGET BEACON, N. Y. The Only Workers Camp OPEN ALL YEAR—HEALTHFUL FOOD, REST, RECREATION SPORT AND CULTURE All Winter Comforts—Steak Heat—Hot and cold running water in every room $12.50 PER WEEK City Phone—EStabrook 8-1400 Camp Phone—Beacon 731 Automobiles leave daily from COOPERATIVE t eoranmant, 2700 BRONX PARK EAST Good Seats at 50 Cents | A joint meeting of the Trade Un- ion Unity Council of union executive boards, committees of trade sections and of opposition groups will be held tonight at 7 Lyceum, 6 At the meeting the particular tasks of strengthening the Trade Union Unity Council and giving more ac- tive assistance and leadership in the shop and local struggles for re- lief will be taken up. There will be a report of the Cincinnati A. F. of L. convention and the Rank and File Conference for Unemployment In- surance, and the question of the election of new delegates in all af- filiated organizations of the TUUC | will be discussed. ‘The basis for such at this mecting. All tioned committees should | without fail and be on time. raring | st this mecth will be decided upon members of the above men- attend ‘MARCH REPORT IN NEWARK TONIGHT | Military Park Meeting Greets Col. 8 NEWARK, N. J., Dec. 8—More than 4,000 workers greeted Column 8 of the National Hunger March as it passed through here today from Washington. The Newark delegation will report at a mass meeting at 8 p.m. Friday at Boelgers Hall, 358 Morris Ave. About 1,500 assembled in Military Park for a mass meeting when the marchers from the Northeast reach- ed the city. Other thousands lined the sidewalks. Armed police were everywhere . Local Newark leaders and Hunger Marchers spoke, The description by speakers of the police attack and tear gassing of men and women marchers in Wil- mington, Delaware, home of the du Pont powder and war materials manufacturers, caused wide com- ment and condemnation of the acts by the workers of this city. Many of ithe marchers were still suffering from the effects of the gas. One speaker’s voice broke entirely during his talk because of the gassing he had received. Bronx MEET YOUR COMRADES AT THE Cooperative Dining Club ALLERTON AVENUE Cor. Bronx Park East Pure Foods Proletarian Prices BRANCH 521 — I. W. 0. Lecture by COMRADE ALBERT RUDIN “why Planning Under Capitalism Is a Failure” FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9th, at 9:30 P. M. At 11 Mt. Eden Aye. (PARADISE MANOR) Professor SCOTT NEARING Will Speak On “The Menace of World Fascism” at Union Workers Center 801 PROSPECT AVENUE (Near Prospect Aye. Station) ADMISSION 25 CENTS MICHAEL GOLD FAMOUS WRITER Will LECTURE on “The Beginning of the American Proletarian Literature” FRI, Dec. 9, 8:30 P. M. Prospect Workers Center 1137 SOUTHERN BOULEVARD ®) Managed by the wel BRUNSWICK 237 W. 37th STREET WORKERS ATTENTION! QUALITY FOOD AT WORKERS PRICES Only Cafeteria in Garment District Above 34th Street employing members of the FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION ‘known Mr. Gruber CAFETERI 237_W. 37th STREET Author:—"JEWS WITHOUT MONEY” a OF | HEALTH OFFICIAL PEARS EPIDEMIC Starved People Could Not Resist It NEW YORK.—Health Commis- sioner Wynne, speaking among his }own kind, at the annual meeting of the New York City Visiting Commit- tee of the State Charities Aid Asso- | ciation, thre iseretion overboard for a time Wednesday and made some | important admissions. Twenty-five per cent of the chil- éren in the public schools are under- nourished, he said. “just luck.” It might be several times higher, what with people not having money enough to buy all the food and clothing they needed, if it had {not been for the two mild winters just passed. There is no indication that the winter will be mild. Wynne said it “is wrong to spread | fairy tales,” like those by Hoover in | his message to congress, about people |really being in better health now because they do not eat as well. Wynne clinched these remarks by stating that any epidemic this year Affair Dec. 24 at Rockland Palace for Worker Graduates The present death rate, he said, is | NEW YORK.—When 25 workers graduate on Dec, 24 from the func- tionaries training school established by the N. Y. District of the Commu- nist Party, they will be greeted on that night at a giant dance and en- ainment at Rockland Palace, h St. and Eighth Ave. A large Negro jazz band will provide music fer a , in addition to an en- tertaining program of specialties. This affair, falling on Christmas Eve, is under the joint auspices of the Communist Party and the Young Communist League. Admission will | be 40 cents. | | Strike in “Tastee Bread Co.”; White Plains; 14 Hour Day WHITE PLAINS, N. Y., Dec. 8.— | Workers of the Tastee Bread Coy |part of the Cushman Bakery chain,! will be disastrous because of the low-|are on strike. They got together af- jered resistance of the starved and | ill-clad population. TO HEAR DELEGATES MONDAY The Canarsie. Unemployed Council will hold a mass meeting on Monday night to hear a report of its dele- gates to the National Hunger March. The meeting will be held at 8:30 p.m. at P. S, 115, Ave. M and E. 92nd St. ter hearing a Communist speech, and took action . These workers have been putting, | jin a day that lasts from 3 a. m. to} 5 p.m. Lately their weekly day of! rest has been taken away, and they are on a seven day work week. Their salary has been cut four times, and gif t be now they have to share on the stale f returned loaves. ANNOUNCEMENT. Dr. Louis L. Schwartz SURGEON DENTIST ‘Announces ‘The removal of his office to larger quarters at 1 Union Square (8th Floor) Suite 803 ‘Tel. ALgonquin 4-9805 DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY|) 107 Bristol Street (Bet. Pitkin & Sutter Aves.) B’klyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-303 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-8 P.M. STARTING TODAY—FOR 4 DAYS EMIL ZOLA’S “NANA” with WERNER KRAUS Noted Continental Star — FIRST EXCLUSIVE SHOWING — THE HUNGER MARCH Pietures of the demonstrations from all over the country, presenting every phase from fhe meeting in New York to the march in Washington worxerss Acme Theatre Ith Street and Union Square Cont. from 9 a.m—Last show 10:30 p.m. (TYIC_REPERTORY na 500, $1, $1.50 Evs, 8:80 Mats. Wed. 4 Sit-2:30 EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director ”” Tonight rte “DEAR SANE” Sat. Mai "eter Pan” — Eve. —.“‘Liliom” THE GROUP THEATRE Presents SUCCESS STORY Evenings, 8:40; Mats., Wed. and Sat | Francis Lederer and Dorothy Gish in AUTUMN CROCUS 1 The New York and London Success MOROSCO THEATRE, 45th St. W. of Bway | Evs. 8:40, Mts. Wed. & Sat. at 2:40 Hold an Open Hearing on Hunger in your neighborhood; invite all jobless and part time workers and keep a record of their evidence KO JEFFERSON 44 &. #|NOW, “Divorce in the Family” with JACKIE COOPER & CONRAD NAGLE Added Feature “PAYMENT DEFERRED” with CHARLES LAUGHTON nxoC AM E Operisy NOW! | “VIRGINS OF BALI” 25e. to 1 P.M. Monday to Friday There's always a better show at RKO | The Paris Underworld Secrets of the French Police| Buy RKO Thrift Book: Ashton Wolfe’s amazing tales of blood-red nights + + « come to life in all their stark realism. with GWILI ANDRE G. Ratoff and F. Morgan By John Howerd Lawson RKO MAYFAIR “27 5 Maxi! Elliotts Thea., 39th, of Broadway renin, BO Me Wek ae eee Tap || Dally to2 p.m. 35011 p. m. to close 35¢ 0% JIPPODROME 6TH AVENUE 43D STREET Continuous 10 . to 11:30 P.M, Greatest Amusement Value in N.¥. Vaudeville and Motion Pictures ( Feature—"THE FIGHTING GENTLEMAN” Mats. 15¢ Children always ae 200 10c TONIGHT! EARL BROWDER JACK STACHEL A, MARKOFF Sunday Night: Banquet. . Tenth Anniversary Celebration WORKERS SCHOOL MASS MEETING ——_SPEAKERS—— H. JACKSON A. TRACHTENBERG M. J. OLGIN ——ALSO PROGRAM BY— Freiheit Singing Society—John Reed Club Artists ADMISSION 25¢ IRVING PLAZA Saturday Night; Concert and Dance. AT 8P.M. IRVING PLACE & 15th STREET Ticket 50 Ticket 50¢ ADMISSION 40 CENTS New Yeavr’s Eve (SATURDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1982) BRONX COLISEUM Buy Tickets in Advance and Save 20 Cents ————————— PRESS FUND 20 CENTS