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Only United Force of Working Class Will Smash Roosevelt- Ww all St. Plot Forced Labor Prison Army Camps Plotted by Bos: SES L Way to Cut Wages and Prepare for War By I. AMTER No unemployment insurance—but unemployment but PRISON camps, into which the workers will be herded. for relief. According to report, the War Department is organizing the ea sand men will be recruited from the streets, the men who are getting or not getting relief} They wall be compelled to work vat the camps f for their BO! ae and LODGING, and today. Protest at Boat Against Japanese War Monger March 23. h 23, This leadi butcher yesterday poured forth, i In protest against the butchery of sses by Japanese im- and the greatly increased threat of the oncoming new world| don, threats war, the American Committee for| concealed be: the Struggle Against War calls upon) sires for all workers, workers’ organizations] sees “a dang and peace organizations to demon-| ist plans of Japan strate Thursday, March 23, at 9 a. m.| those who would at Pier 59, North River (West 18th} or even to prevent war. Street). The Japanese imperialist agent, Yosuke Matsouka disembarks from the Leviathan on his way back to Japan. The Japanese imperial agent ‘Yosuka Matsouka, who was the chief delegate to the League of Nations for Japan, and who has placed large orders for munitions in France, will arrive in New York next Thursday, “FREE TOM MOONEY!” WILL BE A CENTRAL DEMAND ON MAY FIRST NEW YORK.—The Provisional Ar-, Mooney. yangements Committee which is in| This action of the Arrangements charge of the preparations for the] Committee was taken on the basis huge United Labor May Day Con-jof the resolution adopted at the ference which will prepare the May| Mooney Conference held Sunday, that Day demonstration announced y terday that one of the central slogans | to be ralsed in the May Day struggle, apart from the slogan of Unemploy- ment and Social Insurance, will be the demand for the liberation of Tom} an All individuals, labor organizations and peace organizations are w turn out in large numbers March 2 at 9 a.m. Give effective the imperialists! Demonstrate their slaughter of the Chinese mas: Against the new world war rapid! developing in Europe, Asia and South America! ed be an integral part of the struggle for the freedom of Mooney. The Arrangements Committee also urged all organizations to immediate: elect their delegates to the United Front Conference which will be held jon Sunday at 1 p. m. in Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East 4th St. Mooney Runners to ‘ | The Arrangements Committee es- Serve Six Months pecially appealed to rank and file members of the Socialist Party, the a r- | American Federation of Labor unions LOS ANGELES, March 7—Char- pea See ges of “disturbing a public meeting” and all organizations of the unem- which resulted in the conviction ot | Ployed to elect delegates for this six Tom Mooney runners who dem- onstrated at the recent Olympics, conference. The Committee further stated that this conference must bring were upheld by the Appelate Court The court, however, reversed the together the greatest possible number conviction for “disturbing the peace,’ of worker delegates who must plan the greatest May Day demonstration reducing the original sentence from nine to six months. | ever held in the City of New York. All of the six youths, two young at ae men and two girls, were defended by the International Labor Defense. They are Meyer Bailin, Jess Shapiro, Edward Palmer, Ben Boots,, Esther Dell and Ann Davis. WORKERS’ CHILDREN’S PENNIES TAKEN FOR ROOSEVELT POOL NEW YORK.—The City Commit- tee of the International Workers Or- der officially endorsed the United Labor May Day Conference to be held on Sunday, March 26, at 1 p. m. at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East 4th St., |anr urged all its branches to elect | delegates, CONCERT & THEATRE Sunday, March 26, 8 P. M. at Spartacus Workers Club 269 West 25th Street NEW YORK.—The bosses’ gutter sheet, the “Daily News,” is conduct- ing a campaign collecting the pennies ef workers’ children, the latter elready steeped in the misery Roose- velt and his bankers thrust upon them, to buy the “holiday on work- ers’ salaries” President a swimming pool. Every day the “News” pictures and stories of how badly Roosevelt needs ® pool, but says nothing of the workers’ gold the President and his bankers are swimming in, —PROGRA! SKIT—“BROADWA: by Theatre Collective JACK SHAFFRON—BASSO JOSEPH HABERGRITZ—VIOLINIST JULIA HABERGRITZ AT THE PIANO CHALK T) Admission ‘or the Benefit of Section communist Party LABOR UNION MEETINGS OFFICE WORKERS ©. Hathaway will speak at the mass mob- Mization meeting to launch @ recruiting eampaign of the Office Workers Union, 8 ™m., March 22 at Stuyvesant Casino, 9th and Second Ave. LABOR UNITY AGENTS Comrade Mac Harris is making a tour now for the Daily Worker. He will take up the organ- | ization of the financial drive as well as problems of circulation. The com- rades are requested to make all al hope are conte Ly at 4 cir| arrangements to make the tour of Fepresentatives present at the Labor Unity| Comrade Harris a success. Comrade Aeents meeting ot ame? March 20, 8t| Harris will visit the following cities: Room 238 in 799 Broadway. rae Albany—March 20 Gloversville—March 21 Yonkers—March 22. CLASSIFIED WANTED TO BUY—Cash paid for old gold, teeth, 045 E. 163rd St., Davis, Dept. Store. AMUSEMENTS “SHAME is a gripping account of i life in the Soviet Union, with its new IND BIG security for the toiling masses, whose WEEK The New Soviet Morality! enthusiasm, consciousness of power, collective initiative and sense of own- ership and responsibility pervade the story.” —DAILY WORKER. 0 we se “The New Soviet Film at the Cameo pro- vides the most complete, intimate and of life in present-day yet been revealed In the homan and real,” N. ¥, HERALD-TRIBUNE cinema, Alive, FIRST FILM OF THE SECOND NGLIsH > - YEAR PLAN NSO JEFFERSON 1% & # NOW | SPENCER TRACY and BETTY DAVIS In | “20,000 Years in Sing Sing”) Added Feature—“DANGEROUSLY YOURS” with Warner Baxter and Mirlam Jordon TODAY AND TOMORROW ONLY ‘ISLE OF PARADISE” BALI AS IT REALLY 18 LIFE AND HABITS OF THE BALINESE! NATIVE MUSIC! Starting Wednesday: “DANTON” WonkERS Acme Theatre 1TH ST. AND UNION SQUARE FRANCIS LEDERER & DOROTHY GISH In A UTUMN CROCUS 4 The New York and London suce MOROSCO THEATRE, 45th Et. W. of Biway fves. 8:40. Mats. Wed., Thurs, & Sat., 2:40 iB A y| “reserves” the May Day demonstration should; in the future—no relie This is the Roosevelt program Two to five thou- mps. an $1.00 a day. not receive this 2 used to provid their f Thus, the { camps are not only for the homeless youth, but for married men _ Who breaks up hoi Roosevel de | the e aid of the other progressives,” Sen- Costigan, Wagner, » the new ry Green and, with Norman Thomas, program, with this Not Free To Leave be go and come. army discipline, and to leave mp onl, ocure better jobs.” at the unemployed. direct attack on the ¥ they son labor will not be | competit ion with “free” labor, it| obvious that it cannot be prevent- This means that wages all around will be slashed on the pre- tentious plea of iding the unem- ployed.” This comes on top of the inflation chemes put through for the pro- tection and support of the big banks. te and the loss of billions in deposits to the small deposit the dr up of the cost of living, the cutting of wages, the throwing of more hun- dreds of thousands of workers into the streets, as for instance in the ig down of the Buick and ler auto plants, indicate what n store for the workers. Remember His Deeds Masses of workers still are under the influence of Roosevelt’: gogy. They still think he will do something for them. These work- ers should remember his bank pro- gram, which will cost the workers and small depositors billions of dol- larg in deposits; his wage cut pro- gram for government employees and the veterans’ relief cuts, which are only the beginning of general wage slashes. And above all they should not for- get his army prison labor program, which is an open fascist program in preparation for a general assault on the working class conditions, and for another imperialist war. “Power as if we were in fact in- vaded by a foreign foe!”, is what Roosevelt asked in his inaugural speech. Roosevelt wants dictatorial power—the bankers have given it to him—the bankers whom he assailed in his bid for votes. What is to be done? Now only the united force of the working class will help. The United Front of all working class organizations, no matter what their character may be unemployed organizations, unions, shops, fraternal lodges, clubs, irres: pective of political leanings, reli ous affiliations, whether of native or foreign-born workers — all of us must get together in the struggle against the Roosevelt-Wall Street army prison labor program. The Unemployed Councils must be in the forefront in brinzing about this united front. Who Opposes Unity? Some there are who oppose this united front: the leaders of the A. F, of L. and of the Socialist Party. These people support the Roosevelt program. They may pretend, as eres does in his speech at Wilkes- barre, that they oppose Roosevelt's gram, but thefy do and will do nothing to prevent its being put through. Norman Thomas may go to Wash- ington in “disagreement” with Roose- velt’s program, but he comes away “approving the steps Roosevelt has taken in the financial crisis!” These people and their colleagues are preventing the workers from uniting, just as in Germany they responsible for the fact that Hit- is ler is in power—which now using to smash the whole wo ing cl: including the Social-Demo- | cratic workers. Build the United Front in every locality. Send resolutions to Roose- velt, White House, Washington, D. condemning his work program. Di mand that he put through legisla- tion along the line of the demands put before him by the National Com- mittee Unemployed Councils, for emergengy cash relicf of $50 for each worker, plus $10 for each dependent. wer he Also immediate enactment of a bill for Unemployment and Social In- surance at the expense of the em- ployers and the government. The times are moving fast. The situation grows sharper. The work- ers must not lose 2 moment. Roose- velt is ramming thru a policy of hunger. Only the workers can stop it, by militant action in every locality in the fight for relief and insurance, by struggles against wage cuts, against the denial of our rights. “The Communists fight for the attainment of the immediate aims, for the enforcement of the momentary interests of the work- ing class; but in the movement of the present day they also re- present and take cere of the fa- ture of that movement.” —(Communist Manifesto). A crime against the working class to permit the Daily Worker to sus- pend, Rush funds today, the squeezing out of the small banks, | DAILY WORKEK, I free tol be under | | dema- | Ww YORK, Bis hoe bh MAKUM ZU, LYSS AGAINST FORCED LABOR CAMPS; FOR UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE Roosevelt's Police Attack Johns a This was the beginning of the ; shoved at first, then Reremonrae: police attack on the jobless who | tack typical of the capital police, planned to ask for an increase | with women and babies like the in unemployment relief in Wash- | ones in the picture clubbed along ington. The unemployed were | with the men. (THE COLLAPSE OF AMERICAN FINANCE | Two Pamphlets That Clear Up Many Questions The banking “holiday” and the nation-wide collapse of the present financial strueture on top of the three-year-old crisis raises many persistent questions which the workers want answered. Answers to many such questions will be found in two pamphlets by Anna Rochester, who has made a special study of the economic situation in this country. Her Wall Street (5¢ cents, International Pamphlets No. 30) shows precisely in whose hands the banking system is, how the fi- nances of the country are complete- ly controlled by J. P. Morgan, Rocke- feller, Mellon, Ford and a handful of others. She shows that the control of in- dustry and trade is also concentrated in the hands of the financial mag- | nates. She describes how Wall Street control operates and how it runs the government. his will be very help- | ful in understanding the new legisla- | | tion being proposed by President Roosevelt and the present develop- ments, Soaking the Poor In Profits and Wages (10 cents, In- ternational Pamphlets No. 16), Anna Rochester shows how the rich con- tinue to get richer during the crisis, how wealth becomes more concen- trated at the expense of the “small fry,” how dividends are maintained and even increase—while wages are cut, unemployment increases and the conditions of the masses grow daily worse and worse. Both these pamphlets are extreme- 11 suited for mass distribution moment, with all layers of the class and some sections of the workers caught directly in the bank jclosures, and indirect wage-cuts through inflation and high prices already beginning. Order immediately in large quan- tities for m distribution, from Workers Library Publishers, Box 148, Station D, New York. Single copies may be obtained from workers’ book- shops. The Wall Street Secretary of the ‘Treasury, William H. Woodin, looks over the shoulder of Roosevelt in glee as he signs the new currency inflat‘on bill. The bill sharply raises the cost of living for the masses, NOTICE! John Allan, who was the organizer for the International Labor Defense in Sacramento, Cal. Section and who worked mostly in Vacaville, has been expelled from the International La- bor Defense after he disappeared with $130 which he collected in the name of the I. L. D, “I CONTRIBUTED” iit cacne", we"! Ratner’s Cafeteria 115 Second Avenue Food Workers Industrial Union. GARMENT DISTRICT MENTION THE DAILY WORKER DENIS WHOLESALE AND RETAIL FLORIST. FLORAL DESIGNS A SPECIALTY Phone Tom! is Sa. John’s Restaurant SURCIALTY: I'VALIAN DISHES 0554 101 W. 28th St., New York|}|| — & vince with simoxpte PHON VANNA 4-2170 where all radlenls meet | ae E, 22th St. New York | PATRONIZE. __ | SEVERN’S CAPETERIA | 7th Avenue at 30th St. Best Food at Workers Prices JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12 & 13 Welcome to Our Comrades Comrades meet at STARL'GHT RESTAURANT 117 East 15th Street Bet, Union Square and Irving Place HOME COOKING —COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE Management: A, Jurieh from Pittsburgh Garment Section Workers Patronize =~ Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE Corner 24th St. ney) presided and Mayor Hoan Socialist Party, stated: “One-sixth of | the earth’s surface has abolished cap- italism.” This was the first indica- tion of the spirit of the rank and file and socialist workers at the meeting and what they were waiting to hear. All was dull while Heinrich Bar- tel, editor of the deceased Socialist weekly, Vorwarts, spoke—limiting himself to such wisecracks as “The socialist child (Marxism) grew up with red hair,” and making great ef- | forts to display his erudition by using Marxian terms and dishing out wildly the names of Robert Owen, Feuerbach and others. A Surprise Tableau. Then a very interesting thing hap- pened. The Nature Friends (an in- ternational workers’ nature organiza- | tion), who have participated in many | Communist Party programs, gave a group of labor tableaus, each tableau explained by their speaker. They showed the rise to power of the proletariat and the destruction of the bourgeoisie, and in the last tableau their speaker ended with the words: ‘You shall only overpower the bourgeoisie by revolution—NOT BY THE BALLOT BOX!” The curtain went down and there was a moment of silence—it was an unexpected blow—then suddenly the workers burst out in thunderous ap- plause—that was what they wanted, not the soppy words that had been |dished out to them by previous speakers, Hoan Worried, This demonstration made Hoan very nervous (the writer and Hoan were both backstage), and he began pacing up and down, apologetically saying: “Its very cold here.” He was the next speaker. A few verbatim quotations from Hoan’s miserable speech speak for themselyes: “The Communist Mani- festo was called so because the word | ‘Socialist’ was in ill repute then—but today the proper name is the ‘Social- ist Manifesto.’ ” After naively attacking the univer- sities because they do not teach Marxism, he stated: “Young students here who wish to become really edu- cated should join the Socialist Party and learn Marxism, which will en- able them to confound with superior knowledge all their university friends.” Sounds like an ad—. . . “they laughed when I sat down to play . . .” etc, Again he harped on “intelligence” —If you use your intelligence, up here in your noodle, not one drop of blood will be shed in the overthrow of capitalism!” Then he proceeded by inuendo to point out how the Na- ture Friends had learned how to use their muscles, etc. but apparently not their intelligence, and so were not responsible for their speaker's ex- planation of their tableaus, Then came the amazingly stupid statement: “Why, look at Spain! They had a great revolution and not one drop of blood was sned!” (His authority for this is undoubtedly the Milwaukee Leader, which never men- tioned the reign of terror and mur- der of countless workers in Spain.) Did Hoan call for action or organ- ization on the part of the workers? Nut a word but, “Now is the time to | DAILY WORKER DONATION LIST | _ League: j Yetta Rice 05 t i M Miller D Baker | get down to serious thinking!” This Received Friday $ 46443] M Straim | E Sherman aga Previously received 19, 67.21) J Farb E Brain 5 is Hoan’s ae me 5 Fs ee, out of Hi Bernstein D Brain the crisis, “serious thinking!” with a Rt aa oO DATE ___. J Goldstein Ht Morr militant exclamation mark. “Are CONTRIBUTIO! L Ratmer A Cypress a DISTRIOr T Babin S Chomsky , Kalzman Sy you going to join the only movement, é New York L Kalibas Coll, by hate ' Weinstein ollected at Cafe | L Roerich School: | C Fsantell Europa 3.00| J Radish 23) Mi Zuderman 25! Levine PE Re thas andar by sors ibd A cated Comrade Lonis 1.00/ M Srdlich 16) L Frank «10| Nabiseo Worker —.10 Ed Klaus A Glover A Bernstein G Vernikott 5 Richmond Hill Chil-| Unit 9. Sec 2 J Witter Choken drens Workers Section 8 Anonymous Giacinia, A, 1.00 School 4.80 i R Gordon A Lewis 1.00 ‘ood Workers Ind ‘un F Paitel >| S Hartley 1.00 triat Union G Tannenbaum Coll by Camp Nit- 50 R MeDonald M. Tannenbaum gedalget affair 2.30 2YL shell ‘Frames pioneers $1.00 A Kirsh L_Scherber Other collections 5.35 Lenses not included Prospect Pk. Br. Unit 15, See 2 AFL Printer Workers of M. I. e it, FS: Unit 6,” Section SU ale) eather, show: COHEN’S, 117 Orchard St. Section 10 nation Dhairman L, Spi- FP Ferman are Plaza Wkrs., | D Popkin val 2.001 | Tete mace: Onchard. es ie .56| K Stadbein M Lifshitz 0 | A Braces. takes tec A. Alperowitz Sam Gurin 10 Section 8, collections N .20| Krasner — M_ Greentieia 5 Brownswille bas pe -10) | TOTAL $169.57 B Yelderman 1 1.06} 8 Kates 95! Til to date $10635.84 Goldberg Wood Lat i. E Israelite Prospect Workers | Sam Winkler Center 25.00 107 Bristol Street inberg WESL Post 3.00 mn , Colt by Unit 6, See 2] W Nelson, Workers DOWNTOWN | (tes. Pitkin & Sutter Aves.) Biklyp © Pisich aha! 20 PHONE: DICKENS 2-012 2 arker ing 25 z, Ei a Adraith Benevolent | Polit Econ Class, Workers Welcome at Of eg ete Sy eaek eee, ee s y si Wed. 1, {ntern’'| Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE ith FLOOR All Work Done Under Versonad Care of DR. JOSEPASON Al omrades Meet ar BRONSTEIN Vegetarian Health Restaurant 538 Claremont Parkway, Brows BROOKLYN For Brownsville Proletarians SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE him, the educational director of the® By E. C. spoke. Milwaukee Socialist Leaders’ Words on Marx Fall Flat in Face of Deeds Mayor Hoan Cites Spain As Country Where “Revolution” Was Ac- complished Without A “Drop of Blood Being Shed” MILWAUKEE, Wis.—Milwaukee Socialists celebrated the 50th Anniversary of the death of Karl Marx on the night of March i4 at a meeting at which Max Raskin (city attor- One of Raskin’s “brilliant” intreductory remarks was, “. . . It will not be long before | capitalism will BEGIN to decay and fall. The first applause of the evening was evoked when Andrew Biemiller, who followed The March issue of the Com- munist is given over almost in its entirety to the commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the death of Karl Marx, the founder of scien- tific socialism. The issue contains a series of invaluable articles on the theory and practice of Marx- ism, as well as on_ significant events in the life of Marx. Almost 100 pages—virtually an entire book, are devoted to this end. Among the articles are: 1, “Marx, Founder of Scientific Communism and Organizer of the Communist Party,” by F. Brown. Brown traces briefly the develop- ment of Marxi Leninism from the time of Marx's formulation of the theory of proletarian dictator- ship in 1850, through the bank- ruptcy of the Second International and up to the formation of the Third (Communist) International in 1919 under the leadership of Lenin. 2. “Life and Work of Karl Marx,” by Max Bedacht. In this article, Bedacht outlines the development of Marx's thought from his, student days at the university of Berlin until his death in 1883. Marx's mas- tery of the Hegelian dialectic scon after his graduation from the Uni- versity of Jena, his editorship of ie Rheinische Zeitung,” his intensive study of economics and French socialist theory as a result of his experience in editing the paper, and, finally, his active part- icipation in the revolutionary wave of 1848, from which time on he threw himself heart and soul into the formulation of scientific soc- ialism and the independent organ- ization of the proletariat, are brief- ly but adequately described. 3. “The Emergence of an Ameri- ean Revolutionary Proletariat,” by Sam Don. On the basis of the re- markably clear analysis of Ameri- can capitalism made by Marx 75 years ago, an analysis which life itself is verifying to the last detail today, Don probes into the causes of sectarianism among the revolu- tionary workers in the United States. Don shows that it was both the Socialist Party and the left secter- janism of the I. W. W. and the Ppetty-bourgeois reformism of the Socialist Labor Party which have MARCH COMMUNIST COVERS MANY PHASES OF LIFE AND WORK OF MARX served to isolate the revolutionary workers from the basic sections of the American working class, and that when, under the leadership of the Communist Party, the work- ing class liquidates these past ideo- Jogical influences, it will, bearing out the prophecy of Engels, ‘“‘ac- complish in months what the Euro- pean workers accomplished in de- cades.”” 4. “The Struggle of Marx and Engels against the Opportunism of German Social Democracy,” by G. Vasilkovsky, (Translated from the Russian.) Vasilkovsky concisely but defin- itely recapitulates the struggle of the great revolutionists, Marx, En- gels. Lenin and Stalin, against the carriers of petty-bourgeois ideolo- gy within the ranks of the working class, and of the methods used by the revisionists, including distor- tion, concealment of documents and outright forgery, to vitiate the revolutionary essence of Marxism- Leninism. 5. “Marxism and Revisionism.” by V. I. Lenin. This article was first published by Lenin in 1908, on the occasion of the 25th anni- versary of the death of Marx, and is very timely in its application to the American revisionists against whom our Party is now struggling. 6. “The Revisionism of Sidney Hook,” by Earl Browder. In this article, the secretary of the Com- munist Party of the U. S. A., an- nihilates the pretensions to Marx- ism of Professor Sidney Hook, self- styled authority on Marx. cick ee 7. “Marx on the Civil War,” Let- ters which show the intense in- terest with which Marx followed évery step of the war. The famous statement by Marx: “Labor with a white skin cannot emancipate itself where Jabor in a black skin is branded,” appears in one of these Jeticrs. 8 8. “The End of Relative Capitalist Stabilization and the Tasks of Our Party” contains excerpts from the report of Earl Browder to the Six- teenth Plenary Session of the Cen- tral Committee of the U. S. A. It is an object lesson in the applica- tion of Marxism-Leninism to the concrete conditions facing the Ame~ rican working class today. that offers the way out—the So- cialist Party?” he asked. Apparently nobody was, so he weakly concluded with slapping himself heartily on the back, “They admit throughout the country that the working people, who govern the city of Milwaukee, have done a little better job than the goy- ernments of any other American cities.” And most workers in Milwaukee will agree that the Socialist city hall seat warmers have done a better job: Relief rations for a family of five for two weeks—$2.63; forced labor, with 30 to 90-day sentences for re- fusal to work on county “relief” jobs; Socialist police-clubbing at relief sta- tions, Haymarket and Red Arrow Park demonstrations; unanimous So- cialist support of Hearst's “Buy American” campaign. Calif. Legion Acts to Rouse War Hysteria LOS ANGELES, March 18.—Films showing the navy in wartime action, and other scenes calculated to drum up war hysteria, were featured at the American Legion annual Navy night fete in Hollywood where some 1400 legionaires attended. On the very same day the Legion displayed again its fascist role by organizing to aid the Hollywood dep- uty sheriffs by standing outside of banks, armed with guns, policing res- idential districts in automobiles and otherwise intimidating workers and small depositors among whom are many rank and file vets who lost their money because of the bank “holiday.” Principles of Communisin Political Beonomy Marxisni-Leninism Negte Problems al Problems Trade Union Strategy Youth Problems REGISTRATION STARTS TODAY SPRING TERM WORKERS SCHOOL CLASSES IN Organization Principles Public Speaking Revolutionary Journalism Play-writing for the Workers’ Theatre History of the American Labor Movement Iistory of the Russian Revolution English-Russian Classes fill up quickly. Don’t wait till the last week. Avoid disappoint- ment. Register right now! Get new descriptive booklet at the Workers School, 35 East 12th Street, 3rd Floor Phone ALgonquin 4-1199 ATTENTION TOMORROW, WORKERS—EAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Neas Hopkinson Aye. COMRADES ! MARCH 24ST GRAND OPENING OF THE NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA IN THE WORKERS CENTER at 50 EAST 13TH STREET The Cafeteria is now remodeled so as to better satisfy our patronizing Comrades our Motto; FRESH 00D P ROLETARIAN RICES ON ASSO — |