The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 7, 1933, Page 2

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ie ea Bras ™ Li u EF as aL — . PAGE TWO DAILY | WORKER, NEW _YORK, SATURDAY, JANUARY 7, 1933 - == = =: — == WHAT?’S ON-- JOHN REED DANCE in clubrooms, 450 Sixth Ave. Snappy orchestra, first of se- ries of regular Saturday night sffaire. Chalk talk competition by Yeading John Reed Club artists, winner to be filmed by Workers Film end Photo League. Attractive pro- wrain, special features. Admission 2c. RED WEDDING Celebration at Chernesh- evsky Club, 123 Second Ave. Hot dinner [ng Beginning € p. m. Enterteinment, band, refreshments. Adm, 600 (in- Glades dinner), Benefit. Novy Mir-Downtown Unemployed Counci!-Daily Worker. All in- vited. SAILORS Dance, others invited, siso at the International Seamen's Club, 140 Broad St, Bp. m. Admission 20 cents. VICTORY Banquet by Pred Bell Troop! Y.P.A, at 963 Gutter Ave., Brooklyn. Adults Se; children 0c, All invited. SUPPER given by Alteration Painters at/ 421§ Third Ave., cor. Tremont. 8p. m. All alteration painters invited. DANCE-Entertaniment fiven by American Youth Federation, 133 W. 14th Bt., 8 p. m. BANQUET-DANCE by the Astoria Branch TLD at Turn Hall, 44th and Broadway, Astoria, L. I. Benefit Scottsboro Defense. Admission 49 cents. DANCE-Entertainment given by “Why Not” Social Club and Bronx 1 Unit ¥OL at 393 E. 139th St, Bronx. Admission 25¢ —soupie 15 cents. VOLUNTEERS wanted to address envel- opes for an hour or two for import emergency work. Neat handwriting only essential. American Committee for Strug Against War, 10¢ Fifth Ave, room 1811, near 26th St. SOCTAL—D: c. P. Queens Gounty 78% Porest Ave., Brook n by Ridgewood Gnit Labor Lyceum, PARTY at Nat Turner Br. ILD to cele- te receipt of charter at 400 % 17ist Bt. r Washington Ave., Apt. 4G. A food ¢ guaranteed, Mo ‘admtission. All wel- come ENTERTAINMENT-Dance given at new headquarters of "Spartacus’--Greek Work- ere Club, 209 Wert 2Sth 8t., cor. 8th Ave. Refreshments. AU invited. | SOCIAL wathering of Opposition Group] cf Imdies Tailors and Custom Dressmakers of Local 38, p.m. at 140 W. 3th St., one fight up. No admission. CONGERT-Dance given by Bill Harwood Branch ht 3188 Coney Tiland Ave, 2:30 D. ™. Auspices Weinstein Defense Com- onittee. Good band. Refreshments, Adm. 23 cents. SURPRISE AFFAIR given by Womens Counc! No. 33, Bensonhurst at 2008 Toth St. 8 p.m. Refreshments. CONCERT-DANCE given by ILD South Brooklyn Section at Oriental Palace, 8515 Rew Utrecht Ave. (cor. O6th St), Bklyn., p. m. Benefit poiltical prisoners. A plendid program. Richard B. Moore, speak- er, Good dand, refreshments. Adm. 25¢. Directions: BMT West End to itth Ave. * Station. DANCE given by Laundry Workers Indus- trial Union at 260 . 136th Gt. cor, Third Ave. to celebrate {nstallation new execu- tive and officials. Asecciation of Brooklyn at 340 Columbia St. 7:98 p.m. Grand time promised. CONCERT-Dance at Prospect Workers fovea 1187 Southern Bivd., Bronz. Good Entertainment benefit. of Daily wwoPher et tralien Workers Well 385°, 10mm &.. 8 p.m. PIXAR fivin at, Chochoelarax: Workies House at 347 E. 12nd St. Program tainment, ‘Adm. 15 conte, "Dante given by Con-/ earners, oo ih Bt. MO PARTY av Lhigakt's Siyélo, 318 St. Apt. 8. Free. Benefit Work- era_B8choo! SDANCE-Entertainment et Harlem Prog. ‘Youth Club, 1538 Madison Ave. Godd jazz Dand. Admission 35 cents, DANCE-Entertainment given Harlem 3 YOU at Italian Workers Center, 118th Admission 25 cents, @ p.m. Danhee given by Units ‘Workers Center, 650 . ™. Proceeds Warkers ter. DANCE given by newly organized “Latin Ameriean Youth Sports Club" ot the nail of Polerto Rican Anti-Imp. Assn., 22 West 114th St, 8 p.m. Members of YOL snd other fase] oreealzations fraternally invited. Good nd. 1849 Jerome Ave. VETOHSRINKA Ooncert-Dante by Unit 22.0. P. at 96 Avenue C. Admission 10 cents, 6:30 p.m. Benefit Workers Center. SOCIAL arranged by Section 18 Unit 9, ©. P. at #12 Rast isoth St., neer Southern Blvd. Mustc—entertainment—retreshm Admiesion 18 cents. Good time promis Au workers invited. RBART of Womens Coun¢i! 21 at 1894 50. Bivd. All invited. Good time. CERT given by Womens Council 3 Bt 270 Mermaid Are. SIxTH SF of Council 18 at 1873 dara ya of Womens Coun- Oi 48 at 904 Herkimer St., Brooklyn. ge ANNIVERSARY of Womens Council it 1163 Lenox Road. * Spain given by Womens Counell & at 3889 Third Ave., Bronz. HOUSE PARTY given by Council 25 at O76 Warring Ave., Apt. 18 3B. by Michae! Grahim on “-Thes-| tre Under the Soviets” at Workers Labor- story ‘Theatre Forum, 42 patti Pp. m. ue. Also dramatic 3 ip play iG for the Student 3 pe ai gre hoe) ‘War, tonight i iuterationsl $00 Riverside Drive, 8 p. m. Speak- k Lamont, Berhand J. and Entertainment gives by Unit 4599 &. i7ist 8t., Bronx., All young workers invited. PRIENDS HIKE to Pailsade; ieman gireet Ferry, soith t. st ® m. Pare 20c. Leader Ruth Mat Mrs. Corligs Lamont, Berhard J. PRIENDS HIKE to Bryn Mawr ‘Ven Cortland Park Station, 9 a.m 5c. Leader Hugo Koch. Walk 4 hrs. +h of Followers of Nature to Dougias- fom Fond. Mest cor. 43nd at. and Lexing- tom-Ave., not later 10: by P. Rahv on prolterien Lit- i Oy aon 404, TWO, 1108 45th 10 eenta. | acc. on Workers Sporte vs. Bosses rk Athletic Ciub, 333 Sheffield mm. Dance at § p.m Good} invited. | by Isidore Schneider, poet and “Literature ag @ Capitalist 2 Revolutionary Yrri putting. the Clase tru “st regular Sunday af Of John Reed Club, 480 Sixth Ave., m. Admission 35 cents. by Elsa Block, editor of the or, on thé Revoluiionery Upeuree of Sines 0 p.m. tonight isobar Workers Club, 48 Man- Brooklyn. Louise Thompson on “why d Sovport the Boviet Union" ‘forum usted nt 227 Lenox ‘Netiem Internatione! Branch, PSU., by L. De Santes on “The Ri slalist Party” at Flatbush Work- Or ee. Highway, . at arlem Workers, Center, Ave., AK i43nd ond i4ird Sts. Wittiams on cway Are at 4p. m. at Torkville Workers Por- Bt, Labor Temple, 2:30 Spesker: 1. Hermann, Y.C.L. of per and Soviet ‘Union. FORUM at TWO Hall, 47 Spring- rk, X. J. 9 p.m. Speaker ees Sec. Unemployed Coun- ne dway near #éth &t., Dm. nod J pata ba the LRA ven dy Bestion 2, ©, P./ ‘Can Capitalism | mulated is nothing more or less than | Adm. 26¢. Pio- | neers will give a play. | system and share the work plan, in- “| islators. "| to the lower than subsistance wages FOSTER EXPL AINS, DEMAND on HOURS) Exposes Black Bill As Boss Instrument { (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) | boecietinctaliemetenee tae | the expense of the government and | employers, with the continual deep- j ening of the crisis and the increase in unemployment, the situation de-/ mands that the maintenance of this} gigantic mass of workers and their) |the starvation level be made the responsibility of the Federal Gov- | ernment, employers and bankers. | Only powerful organization and mil- itant mass struggle by workers can force such action. The T.U.U.L. favors and will suo- dependants who are forced down to} Metal Union Calls on |Marko Corp. Worker: NEW YORK. —The bosses of the | Marko Storage Battery Corporation | zave a New Year's “present” to the 60 workers in the form of a ten per | | cent wage cut | | ‘The notice that was posted by the | company on the walls of the factory in which they announced the 10 pe: | cent cut, promises to the workers that if they accept this cut, they will be able to give full employment. | to the workers during the coming year. | The Metal Workers Industrial Union gave out a leaflet explaining to the workers that this is an empty Promise that serves the purpose of ‘making the workers accept the cut without a fight, and calls upon the workers to organize into a shop com- mittee and thus fight against the cut. | port any shorter hour and shorter | work bill providing it stipulates that | all wage cuts or decrease of weekly} earnings are simultaneously prohib- | ited; and that there shall be estab- lished @ definite minimum wage for all workers in the U. S. irrespec' tive | of sex, color or nationality. Bill Is Stagger Plan. 3—The proposed bill as now for-| a legalization of the present stagger | tended by the employers and bank- | ets for the purpose of evading the} cost of the maintenance of the un- employed at a decent standard and placing the entire burden oh the} wornets. The bill is merely a legal extension of the share the work sys- tem endorsed by both President Hoo- ver and President-elect Roosevelt, and officially supported by the De- partment of Labor and the Depart- ment of Commerce over the signa- ture of Secretaries Doak and Chapin, jaunched by Walter G. Teagle, head | of the Standard Oi] Company of} New Jersey—which in itself was an extension of the Hoover stagger plan | and both of which were endorsed by President Green of the American Federation of Labor, now one of the principal supporters of the Black Bill. Even if the Black Bill were modi- fied so as to prohibit reduction of | wages and earnings and if one can} conceive of such a bill being passed by Congress and escaping the veto of President-elect Roosevelt, it would } in no way tend to solve the present crisis. | Sows ¥iusions. 3.—Another main purpose of the Black Bill is to create or strengthen the illusions among the toiling sec- tions of the population that such a measure can be secured by purely legislative action as against mass or- @anization and mass struggle; to create or strengthen the illusion sist such a measure can solve the ques- tion of permanent mass unemploy-/| ment in the U. S. and restore so-| called prosperity. Tries to Check Struggie. | 4—A further purpose of this bill, | and this is corroborated by the fact | that it receives the unqualified en- dorsement of the leadership of the American Federation of Labor which has relentlessly obstructed, discour- aged and sabotaged the struggles of | its own members, of the member- ship of the unions affiliated with the TU.UL. and of the unorganized | | Workers House, Inc. In order to help the Metal Work- | ers Industrial Union to organize the workers of the Marko Storage Bat- tery Corporation, and all the other metal shops ,it is necessary that members and sympathizers shall in- tensify the collection for the $1,000 Strike Fund. Brazil Gov’t May | Drop U. S. Bosses! A new line-up in the undeclared | war between Colombia and Peru which is threatening to engulf the toiling masses of all South America « FIGHT MOVE OF [to Fight Wage Cut | TAXICAB TRUSTS |Struggle Asainst New Code Grows NEW YORK.—The big taxi corpo- rations are trotting out their most reliable war-horses in an efflort to put across the vicious new taxi code which is designed to strengthen their monopoly, to drive thousands of small fleet operators and independ- ents out of the industry and to sub- ject the drivers to increased police control and persecution. H. A. Inness Brown, an old-timer at the game of betraying the cabmen has organized a racket known as the Taxicab Chamber of Commerce, with himself as secretary, and has come out insdefense of the Board of Taxi- cab Control. Brown is also editor of the “Taxi Weekly,” which supports the big taxicab trusts such as the Checker Cab Manufacturing Corp., whose operating unit is the Parmelee system, and the Terminal Cab Corp., which is @ subsidiary of General Motors. ‘The “Taxi Weekly” has been spon- soring the Board of Taxicab Control for years for these big trusts which also have their political hirelings. During the Seabury investigation, State Senator Hastings was revealed as @ go-between for the Terminal Cab Corp. at a salary of $18,000 a year. The Wall Street broker, Sisto, representing the Checker Oab Com= was indicated yesterday in an Asso- ciated Press report that the Brazilian Government had decided to establish @ blockade against the passage of | Colombian warships and troop trans- Ports up the Amazon River. The reversal of the Brazilian policy of supporting Colombia could have but one interpretation: that the British imperialists have scored a diplomatic victory over their U. 3. rivals and bribed the Brazilian gov- ernment away from the U. S. bloc of South American puppet state Gottlieb’s Hardware 118 THIRD 4VENTH Near Mth St. ‘Tompkins Sy. 6-4547 All winds of ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Cutlery Our Specialty Airy, Large Meeting Rooms and Hall TO HIRE Suitable for Meetings, Lectures and Dances in the Czechoslovak 347 E. 72nd St. New York Telephone: Rhinelander 6007 WEDDINGS Hennington Hall 214-216 Second St, New York City FOR BALLS, BANQUETS, Stuyvesant Hall 140-142 Second Ave. New York City | CATERING FOR ALL OCCASIONS workers both employed and unem- ployed against wage cuts, against | speed up, for the shorter work day | .| and for compulsory Federal Unem- ployment Insurance and Relief at| the expense of the Government and | the employers and bankers—is to} check the rising tide of struggie, now | the most immediate development of} the crisis in both industrial centers | and in the agricultural communities. | Need TUUL Ammendments. 5.—The whole history of the labor | movement in the U. 8. and in all! other countries shows that achieve- | ments for the working class and the | whole toiling section of the popula- | tion in the field of social reform are | secured by the organized power and | mass struggles of the workers, of which elections and legislative hear- ings are parts, and not by the bene- ficent action of capitalist party leg- In this particular case, that of the Black Bill for the 30 hour week. it means that an attempt is being made to give official sanction now being paid to the working class of the U.S. | Ject: Union and the Unemployed. 10:30 a.m. OPEN FORUM st Brownsville Shoe Cen- ter, 149 Sutter Ave., Bklyn., 11 a. m. Rep- resentative of TUUC will leed discussion on present problems in Trade Union movement. OPEN FORUM of Section 5, District 2, ©. P. at $69 Prospect Ave., Bronx. Speaker Sidney Bloomfield on ‘The Completion of Pirst Pive-Year Pian.’ FORUM of WESL Post at 547 Hopkins | Ave., Admission free, 8 p. m CLASS in “Principles of Class Struggle” | to 6 p. ce Bp. 7 Southe: Bivd., Bronx. LECTURE by William Simon at Bronx | Workers Club, 1610 Boston Road, 8:30) p.m. Subject: Significance of Paraguayan War. LECTURE by Ben Stallman at Coney Is- | land Workers Center, 2709 Mermaid Ave. Coney Island 11 a. m. sharp on. “Role of | Cloakmakers Unemployed Council and the | Present Situation in the Trade.” HOUSE PARTY xiven by Walter Roiat| Branch ILD at 197 Humboldt Bt., Brookisn. | DANCE-Choral Evening at Italian W Center, 2242 Second Ave., bet. 116t 11éth St., 7 p.m VETCHERINKA-Concert at 1801 Bryant | Ave, Bp. m. Arranged by Unit 3, Section | ENTERTAINMENT-DANCE at 1838 Madison | Ave, 8 p.m. Auspices, Lower Harlem U.0. Program. Al workers invited. COLORLITE DANCE at 1373 43rd Bt., Brooklyn, 8 p.m, Auspices Boro Park Work- ers Club. Good band. DANCE at Brichton Prog. Club, at 129 Briehton Beach Ave.. tonight. Good band. DANCE given by Tremont Workers Club, 2078 Clinton Ave., 8 p.m. All invited. "| CLASS in ballroom dancing at Concourse Workers Club, 1349 Jerome Ave, 1 p.m. | CLASS in public speaking, 3 p. m. Open! Forum at 8 p. m. | | 26 BAST TH STREET NEW YORK Tel. Algonquin 3356-8845 We Carry & Full Line of STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES N FORUM of Shoe Workers ot Yoor Bronx Park Bast, Bron, Sub- for Organizetions Manhattan Lyceum Hall For Mass Meetings, Entertainments Balls, Weddings and Banquets 66-68 E. 4th St. New York SPLENDID LARGE Hall and Meeting Rooms TO HIRE Perfect for BALLS, DANCES, LECTURES, MEETINGS, Ete. IN THE New ESTONIAN WORKERS HOME 27-29 W.115th St., N.Y.C. Phone UNiversity 4-0165 HOSPITAL AND OCULIST PRESCRIP- TIONS FILLED AT 50% OFF White Gold Filled Frames 31.50 Zyl Shell Frames 1.00 Lenses Not In Jed Maohattan ptical Co. 12@ HESTER ST. Between Bowery & Christie, N.¥. Dpen Dally from 9 to7 By Sunday 10 to 4 Orchard 4-0230 BRIGHTON BEACH | Units 6, 9, 11 of the Newly Organized Section 11 Have arranged on affair for JANUARY 15, 1933 3159 CONEY ISLAND AVE. All Proceeds for the “Daily”. Fequested to keep this free All Organizations TONIGHT GALA OPENING Entertainment & Dance NEW HEADQUARTERS OF THE SPARTACUS Greek Workers Educ. Club 269 WEST 25TH ST. Corner Eighth Avenue ALL INVITED CONCERT & DANCE FOR THE POLITICAL PRISONERS AND THEIR FAMILIES ORIENTAL PALACE 8515 New Utrecht Avenue, Brooklyn corner 85th Street Saturday, Jan. 7, 7:30 p.m. Speaker, RICHARD B. MOORE Refreshments Good band for dancing Admission 35 cents Auspices: South Brooklyn Section, I.L.D. BALLOON DANCE riven by TREMONT WORKERS CLUB 2075 CLINTON AVENUE Saturday, January 7, 1933 Admission 25 cents pany, gave See Walker a present of $27,500 to use his influence in putting through the Board of Taxi- cab Control. The Amalgamated Taxi Associa- tion, sn organization of several thousand independents, has failed to carry on a real struggle against the board because of the misleaders at its head who are putting their trust in Mayor O’Brien. The only real opposition to the new code is being led by the Taxi Workers Union, which is organizing the drivers and independents to force, through mass struggle, a Modification of the most vicious parts of the new code. rey Sem ADVER PATRONIZE OUR TIZERS ——=—"" OLD AND NEW PATRONS “| Bat at SCHILDKRAUT'S VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 4 WEST 28TH STREET ONLY STORE IN NEW YORK PRICES Now At care. TERIA LEVELS DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 Bristol Street (Bet. Pitkin & Sutter Aves.) B’klyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3013 Offiee Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-8 P.M. Alg. 4-0649 Strictly by appointmen: Dr. L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST 653 HROADWAY Suite 1607-1008 Cor. idth St ie coe ee A York OPEN SUNDAYS Health Center Cafeteria Workers Center — 50 E. 13th St. Quality Food Reasonable Prices JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12 & 18 Welcome to Our Comrades Phone Tomkins Sq. 6-9554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES & place with ntmosphere where all endicais meet 303 EB 12th St. New fork Brooklyn WORKERS—EAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PI IN AVENUE Near Hopkinson Ave. Groohtyn, #. For Brownsville Proletarians SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE BROWNSVITTE WORKERS PATRONIZE AVENUE CAFETERIA 426 SUTTER AVENUE Classified nm comrade wishes English conversa enings after 8 p.m. Apply F, cate Dally Worker. TO SHARE—Two-room apartment (man comrade); $5 month; 12th St. and Av. A. Write ©. L., c-o Daily Worker. FURNISHED ROOM for rent, Suitable for one or two; reasonable; comradely atmos- phere in Flatbush, Call Windsor 8-1486, Bronx FREEMAN CAFETERIA Formerly the R. & M. 1291 WILKINS AVENUE NEAR FREEMAN COMBADELY ATMOSPHERE r. WILLIAM BELL OPTOMETRIST 106 E. 14th St., near 4th Av. totern’) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR AD Work Done Under Persons) Oare @ DR. JOSEPHSON Garment District Garment Section Workers Fatronize Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE Corner 28th St. Good Food Served Right Farragut Cafeteria 326 Seventh Av., at 28th St. HYGRADE VEGETARIAN and DAIRY RESTAURANT 149 West 28th St. New, York A REAL TREAT FOR WORKERS ° Special Dinner 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. 45c Phones: Chickering 4947—Longacre 10089 COMRA4DELXY ATMOSPHERE FAN RAY CAFETERIA 156 W. 29th St. New York L. O. x. Cooperative Barber Shoy 169 WEST 29TH ST. (Near 7th Avenue) 50c Haircut and Shave NO WAITING — — 6 BARBERS PROLET-BUEHNE SAVE THE HOME OF ALL REVOLUTIONARY ACTIVITIES Elect Delegates to the . THIRD ANNUAL BANQUET of NEW YORK WORKERS CENTER SUNDAY, JANUARY 8th, 1983 at 7 P.M. At the WORKERS CENTER—35 E. 12th St., 2nd Floor Speakers: EARL BROWDER; J. W. FORD Chairman: JOE BRODSKY Program: YOSEL KOTLER, BILL GROPPER Both members of the John Reed Club ADMISSION 40 CENTS ADMISSION: 35 Cents. With This Coupon 30 Cents Auspices: Communist Party, U.S.A., pine: SAT, JAN. 21, 1933 7:30 P. M. MANHATTAN and BRONX BRONX COLISEUM EAST 177TH STREET BROOKLYN ARCADIA HALL 918 HALSEY STREET {near Broadway) District No. 2, 52 E. 13th St. DAYLIGHT BAKERY—RESTAURANT * 711 Allerton Ayenue (Near Woolworth's) FRESH BAKING 4 TIMES DAILY Special Attention to Parties and Banquets KATZ & MARKUS, Managers CULTURAL SEVERAL GOOD APARTMENTS WorkersCooperative Colony 2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST (OPPOSITE BRONX PARK) has now REDUCED THE RENT ON THE APARTMENTS AND SINGLE ROOMS Kindergarden; Classes for Adults and Children; Library; Gymnasiam; Clubs and Other Privileges NO INVESTMENTS REQUIRED Take Advantage of the Opportunity. WORKERS PATRON CENTURY CAFETERIA 154 West 28th Street Pure Food Proletarian Prices ACTIVITIES & SINGLE ROOMS AVAILABLE Plains Read, Station, Stop at Allerton Avenue Tel. Olinville 6-1400—1401 Lexington Avenue train to ve| 9 om. to 8 pm, | Oftice open daily 9 a.m. to 5 pu | J Saturday Sunday 10 a.m. to 2 “THt LAND Armenkino FIFTH AVEN ADMISSION FOR THE BENEFIT OF (FIRST SHOWING IN THE U.S. A.) (SOVIET ARMENIA) January 13, 1933, at 7:30 P. M. 28th Street and Broadway | AND PANVAAR OF NARI Production UE THEATRE 30 CENTS THE DAILY WORKER |*xo MAYFAIR Held Over—3rd Big Week First Time at Workers’ Prices Ask Any of the Thousands Who Saw Kameradschaft’||'rte HUMAN DRAMA OF ny ys.9 ||| HOW THE 5-YEAR PLAN Comradeship WAS COMPLETED! (All English Titles) See What A Mine Disaster Means! THE worxers Acme Theatre 4th Street and Union Square Cont. from 9 a.m.—Last show 15 cents 9 A. to 1 P.M.—Mor MEN é JOBS Amkino’s sae Talking Film | (with Added Enellan Dia- logue—All Titles in English) |SAGA OF AN AMERICAN THE THEATRE Grr Presents ENGIN 7 By OGRAPHY GINRER IN RUSSIA A comedy by S. N. BEHRMAN Special Soviet Newsreel GUILD THEATRE, 5°4 . West of Bway Eve. 8:30, Mats. Thurs, & Sat, at 2:00/ Showing GORKI, LENIN’S WIDOW, This picture will not be shown at a4 other theatre in New York this THE GROUP THEATRE ,Presents UCCESS STORY weer WEEK By John Howard Lawson Elliotts Thea., 39th, E. of B'wa; 8:40; Mats. Mon and Sst. 2: Maxine ‘Evenings, FRANCIS LEDESER & DOROTHY GISH in a a Sets MKOJEFFERSON "905 are, (NOW ‘The New York and London Success WILL ROGERS MOROSCO THEATRE, 45th St. W. of B’way Eves. $:40. Mats. Mot., Wed. & Sat, 2:40 in “TOO BUSY TO WORK” PIVIC REPERTORY "slers a. Dirnire AMP pm. vo mance Te re emcee ne te be » MUSIC 500, $1, $1.50 Evs. 8:30 Mats. Wed. & Sat. 2:80 EVA LE GALLIENNE. Director Today Mat. Tonight ‘ALICE IN WONDERLAND” THE THREE SISTERS” Philharmonic Symphony WALTER, Conductor agave 4 tl onary House Sunday Af 8 at 3:00 WAGNER- stnaves’ PROGRAM Carnegie Hall, Thurs. uy Jan. 1s, at 8:45 Friday Afternoon, Ji + 12:30 YDN—BRUCKNER Carnegie Mall, Sat. Eve., Jan, 14, st 8:65 Sunday Afternoon, Jan. 15, at 8:00 Soloist: JOBEF Hi ARTHUR JUDSON, Mgr. “THE MUMMY" with BORIS KARLOFF Send in your bundle orders for Lenin Memorial edition of the the special Ninth Anniversary- Daily Worker Jan. 14. HOFMANN (Steinway Pfano) Tonight at 8 P. M.! “PROLETPEN” ART PROGRAM —AND— COSTUME BALL SATURDAY EVENING, JANUARY 7, 1933 at MANHATTAN LYCEUM, 66 E. 4th ST. Admission 40 Cents , Lit. Coupon 10 Cents The United Committee of 11 Branches of the RUSSIAN NATIONAL MUTUAL AID SOCIETY STALIN BRANCH, F.S.U. and POLISH WORKERS’ CLUB arranged a Special THEATER PERFORMANCE 8 DANCE SUNDAY, JANUARY 8, 1933 at MANHATTAN LYCEUM, 66 E. 4th St., N. Y. For the Benefit of the Communist Press 40 Per Cent cf the Proceeds for the Daily Worker ‘The central group of the Russian Workers Dramatic Circle (Burevestnick) will give a Revolutionary Play which has been “very sticcessful in the U.S.S.R. as well as other parts of Europe. THE MUTINY ON A CRUISER A Three-Act Play in Russian under the direction of L. KOPEL- VICH-LUGANOFF and N, NIKULIN. DANCING AFTER THE PERFORMANCE DOORS OPEN 4 P. M. ADMISSION 40¢ During the intermission Russian dishes can be obtained. WORKERS SCHOOL FORUM Tonight Tonight Israel Amter wiillecture on “The Political Significance of the National Hunger March” SATURDAY, JAN. 7—8 P. M. IRVING PLAZA Irving Place and 15th Street For the first time the Hunger March will be the subject of political analysis at the Forum ADMISSION 25 CENTS QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Final Announcement for Registration Some Classes Are Still Open—Don’t Wait! NEW TERM BEGINS MON., JAN. 9th SERGETI and MARIE RADAMSKY LAST CONCERT, SAT, JAN.’ Classic, Polk, Sepa oe rener ns Songs by Soviet Composers—Radamsky Concert Studjo, 66 Fifth Ayenue.—Tickets $1.00 f ;

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