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PAGE MORE MEETINGS FOR MARCHERS Block Committees Winning Relief lwo aul 90 ganization meet- in New 's of National held rchers. More are planned hattan Committee of Ac- t Relief will meet to- Y 10 17th St. to the marchers and e for relief here. i come prepared to ment March. All work- | are invited to send] session, Win Relief for Negroes. ls memployed workers, led Dean St. Block Committee, Quincy St. Home Relief B rant food and rent to three families and register five more. committee has iar in cent of t to the Police Bureau Threaten Council. e Third Ave. ed to the oyed Council of South Brook- uccessful in get- | s they bring Schermerhorn Home Re- Bureau th Miss O'Neil, the} of Bureau, has de-| red war on them. Friday morn-| veral dozen workers went down ireau to demand immediate | he called the police and | der of the delegation ar- to rested. Then she sent & squad of police with a sergeant to headquarters of the Unemployed Council in South Brooklyn, to threaten the members that they would all be arrested if they went again to demand relief for the hungry families. The sergeant was particularly abu- sive when he found that Negro and white workers united in the Council ‘and its demonstrations. The ufem- Ployed workers in swered the police that it was their uncil, fighting for them, and they would do all they could to build it up and to win relief. Hospital Has Man Slugged. Lucian Pesco, unemployed for two | some work as kitchen por- | the Fordham Hospital, Bronx, institution. ye The head dietician fired him for knowing about bootlegging and graft. Not only was he fired, but an am-| bulance driver e di ent to beat him} icked Pesco in JURY ORDERED 10 CONVICT SEAMAN| Judge Rules Sailors Are Not Civilized NEW Y 0 lawyer termed instruc- unconnected the most of partiality a judge, the wing a case nif ‘tion in had ever seen n the case of Govert Schouten ht in i degree a verdict jof assault.” The Schouten was | ze brought by | n Institute. The t of a demonstration | stitution last August when protested the holding r debt, and were ute thugs. tions the Judge of a workers’ or- ad an axe to Institute has an | h huodceds of thousands | a year to grind) he did not dollars He made the following five points in hi; imming up of the case to the j 1—Seamen are not civilized work- | men and require special officers to control them. 2—The Institute has the right to order out and keep out any seaman they wish. (This is in spite of the fact that they beg money as “a home for all seamen” and advertize | that they do not discriminate for Trace color or creed) 3—Any special officer employed by | the Institute has a perfect right at any time to club any seaman into submission and obediance to his or. ders. 4—The city is entitled to protec- tion from these “red hooligans.” This gives the Seamens’ Church Institute which seamen call the Holy Racket, virtual powers of life and death over all seamen. After the case went to the jury a Jawyer in court remarked that “in 21 years of jurisprudence I have never met stich an example of gross par- tiality.” What's On— at 8:30 at St. All in- 13th vited. MASS meeting at Coney Island Workers’ | Club, 2709 Mermaid Ave., Brooklyn, at 8:30 to protest against freme-up of Sam Ciub House, 2nd | oklyn, at 8 pam 10 Independence.’ Auspices. Anti-Im- Unemployed Council. MASS meeting 1347 “Boston Road to celebrate Bronx strike vietory. Come at 8.30 p.m, No admission. : v. dist Subject: “The A. F. of L for Unemployment Insurance." ; New York Workers Correspondence, URE on “15 Years of Workers’ Rule Union” n¢ First Unitarian Chureh, Queens, Long sland, Speaker! MB2TING Agitprop r Laboratory Theatre between 7 and >, Rehearsal group 1 and 2 at 8 p.m, toterested in scenic work and acting verge? to attend at 42 12th St. Technigal Groups of gro families and one white | | Job Sharks Rob $40 from W site BRyamt 9-0290 - 0291 N° 1235 CARL MULLER, Prop, CARL MULLER’S EMPLOYMENT SERVICE 1173 SIXTH AVENUE NEW YORK special | = 2 ; RECEIVED from M_(_—-a- C8 Address _ he amount of for providing @ Fee $_ for supplies | The above is a reproduction of a | Employment Agency, 1173 6th Avenue, to Charles Doley for a $50 per month job which the | and information were provided by mittee. |Pack Court Today As Worker Is Tried for | Fighting _Job Sharks | | NEW YORK—Pack the court at | | 214 West 54th Street at 10 o'clock | this morning, when Charles Doleys, | a Bronx worker, will face charges of | | ‘disorderly conduct” because he has | | refused to permit the Carl Muller | | Employment Agency, 1173 Sixth Ave. | to steal $40 from him, the Sixth | Avenue Job Agency Grievance Com- | mittee urges. Other members of | the grievance committee also. will | | face charges in that court this mor- | ning for fighting against job shark swindlers. | ‘The Muller Agency swindled Doleys | lout of $40 in cash for a $50- -per. | month job which did not exist, the} | grievance committee said. The total | | price for the “job” was $50. Doleys| borrowed the $40, because he wes des- | | perate for work. | When Doleys and committee mem- | bers demanded the return of the| | stolen $40, the former was handed | ibe summons to appear in court this morning for “disorderly conduct.” | Magistrate Charles Brandt, Jr., | sued the summons. the Council an- | is- ‘Printers to Get Fake Referendum |Can Vote for Cuts or for Howard to Settle | NEW YORK.—President Hewson | i} appointed a strong arm squad, eral “assistant sergeants at arms” at the Typographical Union (“Big 6”) ae ing yesterday, and jammed through } by Steam roller tactics a vote of 410 to 235 to put out a tricky referendum on the job |printers’ scale. The | printers will be allowed to choose one or the other of two propositions: to | accept the employers’ wage cut scale, or to let the International President Howard arrange the scale with the employers. Every motion to propose anything else the printers might vote for, was ruled out of order. In spite of Hewson’s declaring the motion out of order, a resolution was passed by the meeting denouncing the newspaper award. Hewson’s ruling was voted down by the meet- ing, and the motion was put and | carried, | * 8 | NEW YORK.—Over .150 apprent- | ices of Local 6, of the International | | Typographical Union, met Priday at their school, 220 West 19 St., and| adopted the following resolution: “Whereas, the apprentices of Typo- | graphical Union No. 6, have been e the evidence | Made the victims of a double wage |U.SS.R., whe is arriving this Friday cut, we the apprentices assembled at this mass hearing in the school for | Printers’ Apprentices hereby protest | against the arbitraty wage cut and | request that the off of “Big 6 | immediately attempt to overcome this | |condition by causing to be revoked | | the double wage cut.” | The slash in apprentices’ wages | | was part of the award of the arbiter in| the printers’ union negotiations with |the employers. The printers got a| stagger shift system which they are | fighting in the chapels now. | Chapel Chairman Speaks The meeting of apprentices was | | sponsored by the Economics Club in| the school, and endorsed by the Stu- dent Council. F. E. Brown, chairman of the World-Telegram chapel was the in- vited speaker, and denounced the award and the double wage cut, urg- ing action against them. A membe~ of the Economics Club preceded Mr. Brown and spoke on the need of crganization among the apprentices. Chairman Graham, of the scale committee, who was instrumental in securing the double wage cut, spoke, tried to justify his action, and of- fered the argument that “wage cuts | are the fashion, and we must have one too,” Socialist Urges Submission E. Cassidy, Socialist candidate in the last election, and member of the be taken. After hearing all speakers, the ap- prentices’ adopted the resolution above, and sent it to the scale com- mittee, the membership committee and the meeting yesterday afternoon of Local 6. They plan to report back on action taken in the Local mem'yrship meeting to the next meeting of the Economics Club, | Dec, 22nd. :|Gorky Awards to Be Announced Dec. 23 writing, an Annual Maxim. Gorky Award has been instituted by the Revolutionary Writers Federation, The first presentatin will be made at the All-New-York Gorky An- niversary Festival, in Central Opera House, Friday, Dec. 23. Sets of Gorky’s works in English autographed by Gorky, will be award- ed for the three most outstanding proletarian novels published this / year in America, to be chosen by a| group of leading writers of the re. voluttonary movement, ee | Danger: Banquet Jan.8 union, urged that no militant action | To further American proletarian | $40 receipt issued by the Carl Muller | of the Bronx, latter did not receive. The receipt the Sixth Avenue Grievance Com- TO START TODAY Framed on m Charge of | Manslaughter NEW YORK.—The trial of Sam} | Weinstein, militant furniture worker | }and war veteran, who was framed | up on a charge of manslaughter, | | starts today at 9 a.m., in the Bronx County Court, Tremont and Arthur | Ave's. Weinstein was framed up in con- | nection with a strike at the Mishkin | Furniture Co., in which he played an active role. Despite the fact that | he proved conclusively that he was | in another part of the City at the} time the murder was committed, the courts carrying out the wishes of the boss, have been making strenuous efforts to railroad him to a long jail term. The International Labor De- | fense has been conducting his de. fense. All workers’ organizations are urged to arrange protests meetings and to send telegrams demanding Wein- stein’s release to the Bronx district attorney, Charles B. McLaughlin, Bergen Building, the Bronx. Tonight a Weinstein defense meet- ing will be held at the Coney Island Workers Center, 2709 Mermaid Ave. Admission is free. Defense funds are urgently needed. They should be sent to the Wein- stein Defense Committee, care off International Labor Defense, 1799 | West P jin | WEINSTEIN TRIAL | DIES OF INJURIES Funeral Today for Mary Diaz W YORK.—The funer » who died last Thurs N of Mary the Majestic Metal Co., St., where she take place today (Monday) at 1p. m. when a procession will start from the Hernandez Funeral Parlor, at 62 1i4th St. to the Mt. Olivet Cemetery. 200 Varick The accident which killed Mary Diaz, was due to the greed of the boss, Mr. Kasdan, who tried to save on overhead” by introducing a stencil- washing machine in the spray room order to fire a number of the stencil_washers. This machine was tested before being installed in tite | paint room. It emitted sparks. Mr. | Kasdan knew perfectly well that with all the explosive liquids and paint- stuffs in the spray room an explo- sion was liable to happen. Mr. Kasdan, like other bosses, was thinking primarily of his profits as | against the lives of the workers. Mary might have been saved if she jhad been given the proper medical care in time, Here, again, Mr. Kas- dan “could not afford” to lay out any of his money, or even to guarantee payment for the services of a pri- vate nurse and private room. law requires that in an accident of this kind the boss must guarantee payment to the hospital, if the Com- pensation Bureau of the Dept. of Labor does not meet the bill). For many days after the explosion Mary was kept in a noisy ward in St. Vin- cent’s Hospital despite the fact that | her condifion had become critical. Forced Hospital Care When the Metal Workers Union Group inside the shop had leaflets distributed to the workers exposing these facts, and because of the sen- timent that these leaflets aroused among the workers, Mr. Kasdan had the necessary attention secured for Mary Diaz. This proved too late to save Mary’s life. Dozens of workers from the shops, and many friends and neighbors of the dead girl viewed her body at the funeral home to express their in_ dignation and protest against the brutal disregard of workers’ lives and safety. The Majestic boss, Mr. Kasdan, Broadway, Room 338, | Workers’ Center Is in The provisional committee of the Central Committee of the Commu- nist Party of the United States of America is arranging a banquet which is to take place on Sunday, Jan. 8, 1933, in the Workers’ Center, who is a “Socialist” and a financial contributor to the S. P., is circulat- ing threats and rumors through some of the foremen and foreladies that those atending the funeral will be fired. The Metal Workers Industrial | Union through its members working | in the shop is mobilizing the workers | to stop work for a half a day, be- ginning at 12 noon and go to the| funeral. Speakers representing the 35 E. 12th St., second floor, for the benefit of the Workers’ Center. The| committee declared: “All revolutionary organizations, trade unions, trade union groups and | party units are urged to elect dele- | gates to this banquet and to send their contributein with the delegates | in order to enable us to save the| Center. “We are at present confronted with the danger of foreclosure and thereby | the loss of our Center | ICOR Head Speaks on Biro-Bidjan Dec. 22nd The National Chairmat! of the| Ycor, the organization for the sup-| port of Jewish colonization in the | from the Soviet Union, on Thursd: | Dee, 22, at Webster Hall, 119 East 11th St, at 8:30 p.m. will report on} the achievements of the Jewish col- | onists in Biro-Bidjan, where a Jew- ish Socialist Soviet Republic will be | proclaimed in 1933. He will also| speak on the present situation in the | Soviet Union. This reception {s being arranged by the National Icor Committee and the New York branches of the Icor. Admission to the reception will be | 15 cents. Dist. Training School | Graduation Ball Dec.24 NEW YORK.—Many workers are | preparing to greet the 25 students | who are finishing their course in the New York District Training School of the Communist Party at a grad- | uation ball Saturday Dec. 24, at 8) and Eighth Ave. Among the 25) students are five members of the Young Communist League. An interesting entertainment pro- gram is being arranged, including Edith Segal and her Red Dancers in @ new revolutionary dance depicting the struggles of the Negroes in the South. A 10-piece jazz band will furnish music for dancing. Admis- sion will be 40 cents. 1,000 in Line Seek Jobs Shoveling Snow NEW YORK —Last night about | 1,000 Shivering jobless, from all| trades, waited silently at Station 9 of the City Street Cleaning Depart- ment, at 63 F. 11th St., where they sought a chance to obtain a day of | work shoveling snow. The small proportion of the job- seekers who would be given work | | would receive $5 for 10 hours work; | from 6 this morning to 4 this after- noon. Teachers Vote to Let Bankers Pay Relief NEW YORK.—More than 500 public school teachers met Saturday in Stuyvesant High School and voted that because of the pay cut just given them they would not be able to pay the five percent of their wages hitherto given for food to children. They called on the bankers who or- Gered the pay cut to devote five per cent of their income for this purpose instead, pm. at Rockland Palace, 155th St. | Union will speak at the cemetery. ‘Sign Up Now for Workers’ School | Winter Courses) Registration for the new classes will | be closed several days before the | Winter Term starts on January 9th. | In the new descriptive catalogue | just issued by the Workers School are | listed 12 classes in Principals of Com- | munism, 7 classes in Political Econ- omy, 3 classes in Marxism, 3 classes in Leninism, 2 classes in Trade Union | Strategy, 2 classes in History of the American Labor Movement, etc. The teaching staff has been increased to 38 instructors teaching more than 53 classes, | | | | stase and sereen_| Stage and Sereen | ‘TUCKECE” OPENS TUESDAY JCRECE” 0} NIGHT AT BE.ASCO THEATEE “Lucrece,”) Thomnton Wilder's translation of with music by Deems Teylor, will | Theatre. Katherine Cornell, Robert Loraine, Blanche Yurka, Brian Aherne and Pedro de Cordoba -onp| the cast. “Anybody’s Game,” by Paul marl ton, will have its premiere at the | Bijou Theatre on Wednesday night. |The players include Rdna Hibbard, Sam Wren, Louis Sorin and Marian Waring-Manley, ‘Theatro dei Piccoli” will be pre- sented by S. Hurok on Thursday | ‘evening at the Lyric Theatre, This | this noted international group of marionette players, headed by Vitto- rio Podrecea, The program includes comic opera, fantasies, ballets, circus cludes some 800 “players.” “Honeymoon,” | uel Chotzinoff and George Backer, will open on Friday night at the Little Theatre. Katherine Alexan- | | der, Rose Alexander, Rachel Hart- the cast. Civic Repertory plays of the week will include “Liliom,” tonight, Wed- nesday and Friday evenings; “Alice | in Wonderland,” Tuesday evening | and Wednesday and Saturday after- |noons; “Camille,” Thursday evening /and “Peter Pan,” Saturday night, ANNA STEN IN “TEMPEST” AND DNIEPERSTROY FILM AT ACME Anna Sten in “Tempest,” an en- grossing film drama, is the screen feature at the Acme Theatre today and tomorrow, Emil Jannings plays the leading male role. The New York Sun reviewer states: “Tempest is extraordinarily interesting. , . . I liked the dramatic intensity, the production methods and above all the acting.” The same program includes the latest release from the Soviet Union, the pictures of Dnieperstroy, the opening of the largest power dam in the world. The film is in sound and shows thousands of workers cele- brating the kig ev ® | lay from | wounds received in an explosion in was employed, will | (The | Andre Obey’s play, | open Tuesday evening at the Belasco | is the first American presentation of | acts, vaudeville, ete. The group in- | @ comedy by Sam- | zell and Joseph Spurin-Calleia head | “Real Independence | for Philippines” to DAILY NO NEW YORK, MONDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1932 METAL WORKER N. y. YOUTH HIT Be Discussed Tonite, BOSS W AR J AN, 15 NEW YORK.—William simon, sec- | retary of the Anti-Imperialist League will speak on “Real Filipino Inde- | | pendence.” and expose the present bill for fake independence now pe by Congress. The speech, followed ty questions and discussion from. the floor, will be tonite at 8 p.m. at the Club House, second floor, at 47 Sands St., Brooklyn Elected delegates on the National Hunger March will also report. Ad- mission is free and all are invited Food Workers to Be Charged Medical Fee, | NEW YORK.—The 325,000 hand} | of food in New York City will after |Jan, 1, be forced to pay fo e medical examination required by | the Sanitory Code of all persons en- gaged in food handling occupations |'This includes cooks, waiters, soda grocery clerks, etc. This examination was given free |by the Department of Health, but jnow, in carrying out the bankers’ |and the Tammany officials’ inter | fied drive to shift more burdens on | the shoulders of the workers, the Department of Health has decided to take this much more money out | of the pockets of the food handlers. Health Commissioner Wynne tries to make out he is doing this to give | private doctors more business, but he also points out he is cutting down his budget by the same amount of | to the swollen money bags of the bankers. | fountain employes, butchers, bakers, | money, so that what one set of doc- | | tors gain, another set will lose, with | Communist candidate for vice-presi- | the food workers forced to contribute | dent, |Big Ral lly, Manhattan Lyceum, 2 P. NEW of this ci imperialist w: on. und y, tan Lyceum, 66 2 pm. In connection ie Young Com- out. ni rxers have ready gone to’ thelr death in Imperialist blcod bath raging in South America between Bolivia and Paraguay. Tens of pene ands more are being cent daily to t death. and Peru are feverishly all their forces for another | Britain threetens Pr Movement of Japanese fo to the border of the Soviet Union and shipping of huge armame border are going ahead a In this atmosphere of ft | prepara ations and war “rehearsals' | already going on, thousands | gether at this huge Leni | Luxemburg Anti-War M Liebknecht, and Luxemburg, al- full speed. | s Meeting. ihe erish war |a will Liebknecht | both its own offices and special ad- | the | il rs | {| cious friends. ts to that | resign Freeman Will Debate| Bonus Marchers Need Levine on 5-Yr. Plan on Wed. December 21st n, author of and Isaac Don Le- Josheph Freen Soviet Worker,” vine, author of the vicious anti- Soviet book, “Red Smoke,” will de- bate on Wednesday evening, Dec. s the Five-Year The debate will Star Casino, Park on the subject; Plan a Success?” be held in New Ave. and 107th St. Italian Socialist Paper Supporting Union Rackeieers NEW YORK.—The Italian “social- | ist” newspaper, “Stampa Libera,” 81) F. Tenth St., has bean caught work- | ing hand-in-hand with Sam Farulla, ident of the Doll and Union, and his suspi- Farulla at the last meeting of the union was forced to because of his co-opetation | with ors and the bosses against the interests of the member- shi Thi Toy “Stampa Libera” is furnishing | vice to Farulla and his crowd on how leaders of the German youth move- | | ment were in the forefront in the | ermany. For this st s Imperialist war they were shot down in cold blood. Januarv 15th ts the anniversary | the deaths of these two martyrs of} the working cl Good prog Comrade James V and Irving Herman, District Organizer of the Young Communist League, New York District. PATRONIZE OUR APVERTIZERS ANNOUNCEMENT Dr. Louis L, Schwartz SURGEON DENTIST Announces ‘The removal fad his office to larger ters at 1 Union Suinrs «8th Floor) Suite 803 Tel. ALgonquin 4-9805 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. | NEW YORK. — More than one} hundred have already registered for | the new Winter Term of the Work- | ers School. The Fall Term, which closes on December 23rd, is a record | term, with 1,600 students enrolled. | Fas en Importers of Soviet Candies SPECIAL WITH THIS ADVERTISEMENT 3 Ib. Box Russian Candy $ DE LUX PACKAGE Mail Check or Money-Prepaid M. RICHMAN, 145 E. Houston St. New York, N. Y, AGENTS WANTED—Tel. Orchard 4-7773 JADE MOUNTAIN Amorican & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12 & 13 Welcome to Our Comrades |{"" OLD AND NEW PATRONS =, Eat At | SCHILDKRAUT’S VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT |} 4 WEST 28TH STREET | ONLY STORE IN NEW YORK | PRICES NOW AT CAFE- TERIA LEVELS DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY * 107 Bristol Street (Bet. Pitkin & Sutter Aves.) B’klyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1- Attention Comrades! OPEN SUNDAYS Health Center Cafeteria Workers Center — 50 EF, 13th St. Quality Food Reasonable Prices Hospital and Oculist Prescriptions Filled At One-Halt Price White Gold Filled Frames. ZYL Shell Frames Lenses not included COHEN’S, 117 Orchard St. First Door Off Delancey St. Telephone: ORchard 4. intern] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE lth FLOOR AU Work Done jer Versunn) of DR. JOSEPRSON Uare WORKERS—EA Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Near Aopkinson Ave. Brooklyn, N. ¥ Garment District Good Food Served Right | Farragut Cafeteria 326 Seventh Av,, at 28th St. Phone Tomkins Sq. -0554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: PALIAN DISHES | a ovinrs, with atmosphere | where all vadicals meet |] 808 B. 12tb st. New York | Garment Section Workers Vatronire Navarr Cafeteria 333 Tth AVENUE Corner 28th St, | | | 237 W. 37th STREET WORKERS ATTENTION! Only Cafeteria in bilge aad Bek deta arere 34th Street employing FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION | Managed by the well-known Mr, Gruber BRUNSWICK CAFETERIA 287 W. 3ith STREET QUALITY FOOD AT WORKERS PRICES The John Reed Clubs of the United States DEBATE: ‘Is the 5-Year Plan A Success?’ J, FREEMAN, author of “The Soviet Worker”, says YES ISAAC DON LEVINE, author of “Red Smoke”, says NO ROGER BALDWIN, Chairman Wednesday Evening, December 21, at § P. M. NEW STAR CASINO, 107th St. and Park Avenue ADMISSION 55¢ and $1.10 TICKETS can be had at ROOM 225, 799 BROADWAY, New York and WORKERS’ BOOK SHOP, 50 East 13th Street, once again to fool the membership of the union. The paper regularly | permits Farulla to use its office on the second floor. The “Stampa Libera” thus is lending its influence | to the racketeering policy of Farulla j and company. “The | Support; Act Now! The Bonus Marchers in Wash- ington need food and clothing to enable them to get back to their | local communities and continue | the struggle for immediate pay- ment of the bonus and for local relief. Food, funds and clothing should be “sent to the Veterans’ Rank and File Committee, 154 W. 20th St, Sympathizers having trucks or cars for use in the city should also communicate with this | address, Sale Starts Dec. 21 at 2 Workers’ Bookshops | NEW YORK. —The two Workers | Book Shops, one at 50 East 13th St. and the other at 1457 Wilkins Ave, Bronx, are making great prepara- tions to inagurate a sale on all liter- ature. This sale will start on Dec. 21, and end on Dee. 31st. Realizing that many workers who wish to buy | literature cannot do so because of lack of money, the sale is so arrang- led that the discounts will average from 20 per cent up to 50 per cent }on some articles. | All books on Marxism.Leninism, all | fiction and in fact every piece of literature in both stores will be sub- | ject to the sale prices. The sales will be conducted at both stores for the convenience of the workers so | that they will not have to make i unnecessary trips AMUSEMENTS THE THEATRE A COMEDY BY Witty Tolerance, Sparkling Always.” GUILD THEATRE “A Play of “BIOGRAPHY” Ripping GUILD Presents S. N BEHRMAN over Deeps and Shallows and + » . EVENING SUN. 52nd St. W. of Broadway, Evs, 8:30 Matinees Thursday and Saturday at 2:30 TODAY AND with EMIL JANNINGS . Dramatic “TEMPEST” Shssteoratiarily Talarestin intensity . ¥. SUN tw, ACME THEATRE "TOMORROW EXTRA SPECIAL DNIEPERSTROY, USSR. Soviet Union Celebrates Opening of World's Largest Power Dam—Millions of People in Parade—In Sound UTH STREET and UNION Cont. from 9 AM. yw 10:80 Workers ———s. HUROK ee International DANCE FESTIVAL MARY WIGMAN ize GROUP Ist American Performances SUN, Eve., Dee. 25° TUES, Eve., Dec. 27 SAT, Matinee Dec. 81 American Debut SHAN-KAR HINDU DANCERS and MUSICIANS MON. Eve., Dec. 26 WED. Eve., Dec, 28 FRI. Matinee, Des. 30 ESCUDERO Spain’sGreatest MaleDancer WED. Mat. Dec. 28 _SAT. Eve,, Dec. 81 Tickets Now On Sale for Above Events at NEW YORKER THEATRE Déth Street, West of Broadway Prices $1.10 to $3.30 (ine, Or Mail Orders to HUROK MUSICAL BURBAU, Inc. 118 West 57th S&, N. ¥. C. Tax) THE GROUP THEATRE Presents ‘Success STORY uathi By John Howard Lawson Maxine Elliotts Thea., 29th, E, of Pry Evenings, 6:40; Mat: d. and Sat., 2:40 Civic Repertor 14TH STREET & 6TH Ory (WATKINS-9-7450) Prices 50c—$1.00—$1.50. Evenings 8:30 Matinees SAT. & Wed. 2:30 Eva Le Gallienne, pirector REPERTORY FOR THIS WEEK Tonight .. “Liliom” Tues. eve, ‘onderland” Wed. mat. “Alice in Wonderland” Wed. eve. + “Liliom” Thurs. eve. “Camille” Fri. eve. . Sat. mat. Sat. eve. . SEATS 4 WEEKS IN ADVANCE Box Office & Town Hall, 113 W 43a Weis LEDESER & DOROTHY GISH in | A UTUMN CROCUS | ‘The New York and London Success | MOROSCO THEATRE, 45th St. W. of B'way | Evs, 8:40. Mts. Wed. & Sat, at 2:40 | *0.C AM E Onnnaesy N “VIRGINS OF BALI Se. to 1 P.M. Monday to Friday Bway at rxo MAYFAIR “7a Now THE SPORT PARADE with JOEL McCREA and MARIAN MARSH x0 JEFFERSON 12 St. «NOW CLARK GARTH and JEAN HARLOW in “RED DUST” Added “SCARLET DAWN” @ Feature with Douglas Fairbanks, Jr, Dail Concert ee I. W. 0. SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (M. Stitimen, Conductor) SERGE] RADAMSKY Soviet Tenor INT’L CHORUSES FREIHEIT SINGING SOCIETY pew ADMISSION 40 CENTS EARL BROWDER, Speaker Year's Saturday, Dec. 31 BRONX COLISEUM Ball ee NEW DANCE GROUP and others NEGRO AND WHITE DOUBLE BRASS BAND ORCHESTRA DANCING TILL MORNING By. PRI FUND 20 CENTS BUY TICKETS IN ADVANCE and SAVE 206¢