The Daily Worker Newspaper, March 30, 1933, Page 2

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PAGE TWO DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 193 CALL FOR ANTI-NAZI MEET AT GARDEN BRINGS FLOOD OF ANSWERS BARRI CADES Printed by Special Pormis- iN 4 = R L | A sion of INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHERS, 381 Fourth > BY KLAWS NEUKRANTZ All Workers » Avenue, New York City. urged to MELUSTRATED BY WALTER QUIRY [esd thls bosk and spread it among their friends. THE STORY SO FAR:—Kurt Zimmerman, a cement heavyer, comes home at night dead tired from his day’s work. Kurt is active in the work- ers’ movement and his wife, Anna, is afraid that he will again have to go to a meeting. : . Cautiously she began, “Kurt, have you to go out again later?” “No, Anna,—straight to bed this time .. . that is to say,” he looked would rather go to the movies? You wanted to — didn’t you? ” “No, lad, that’s only an idea of your own,” she laughed, but she was glad he had asked all t same. It was not a very convincin; invitation. They did not always treat each other h so much con- ?sideration, but tonight Anna was anxious. She saw how work was pulling him d she thought she could that if she had her way. Before her marriage, Anna had worked for a long time in a fac- tory, and the tender, dreamy girl hhad gone through a hard school. Anna knew what life meant. Kurt pushed back his plate with a yawn: “Is there another ¢ Grop of coffee: “Tomorro your night is ov He got up a @ dog's life! A good was no it was © the kid n in bed. The bed al damp nm the wall. on his back, bones aerely from the pressure of t. It had been a devil of he had car- yiod 125 hundredweight of concrete ys ladder into the building as long as one did not get ill . + next Wed- not going to ; . tomorrow there's a meeting . f only that @arncd radio above would shut up. Anna carefully wound the alarm and put the clock on the chair. He seomed to recover consciousness for a moment when Anna bent over his face to put out the light. He felt that her skin was soft and warm. THE STREET SLEEPS mly served to increase its deso-| late appearance. The last saloons} the few second between subconscious were closed. From somewhere came | the rattling sound of a wooden blind | being let down. A startled cat ran| across the street and vanished through the broken pane of a ceilar| window. Then everything was quiet.) The night wind brought from the| railway bridge on the Nettelbeckplatz | the hollow, long-drawn-out rumble| of the last trains. A few glimmers of light behind curtained windows marked the sombre looming faces of | the tenements. One after another) they were extinguished. In the stony | abysses of the Wedding district night | comes early. The worker's night is short. The only sound in the street came from the hob-nailed boots of the po- lice patrols passing at regular inter- vals. Always three together. Between black walls and narrow yards flowed the turbid waters of the} = Panke. A sower for factory waste in which the children bathed in t "| summer—even the stars on this cold. cloudless Apzil night were not The cramped rooms contained several people apiece. A fetid air en- veloped the faces of the sleepers. Stairs, passages, bedrooins, yards—all| intolerably crowded together, the of humanity permeating exacks, partitions; a compost of te- ag sub-tenants, lodgers — and , the curse of the street! - Hardly a child had a bed to itself. In all great, hungry Berlin nowhere else was such poverty to be found— and so many children. HOMELESS DERELICTS ‘Homeless derelicts nuddled undis- turbed on the stairs. Strange, human , these also slept and had ae ator, painful dreams, their an- ‘xieties and longings.... Tn one of the yards the silence was broken rhythmically by the hacking cough of a consumptive. Behind the curisins of a fourth-floor win- dow, a light went out. In the nar- row kitchen iay not only old mother who never managed to get , until morning, but also the , heavy atmosphere of the narrow , he felt the hot mouth of the ‘who was sleeping with him. Be- the wall a radio set still played music, _ windowpane ciatiered in the have some a | Thr the whole | | dream, | ceilings on their soft warm skin. in it. | @ young metal worker. In) ‘There was the shout of a a ; drunken man, and several hundred people living in the different block heard it and thought: “Franz is] | drunk again!” at her hesitatingly, “unless you | It is all too narrow...a man mu: the other man and the have air. Make room! there! Willi, give us another ..that loosens throat, and makes everything br . mus: .And then Franz comes home and wants to break things up. DREAMS Men slept and dreamt in the night, rest in b torturing e faces of pawnbrokers, distorted sh still haunt the night that bring sweat to dreams bodies of the sleepers...dreams of | yors...of roaring, crushing steam hammers, of the ever swifter conv —sm > | .The grown-sps do not teach childzen to fold their hands, but | shew them how to clench fists and | , “RED FRONT!” matic sti Women cry out in their sleep be- | cause their bodies cannot forget a| torture long since scarred ove. Dreams of yout: yet been fully tuznt out, miserabl tty, bo is longings hi washed dwelling-room with big y low sunflows girls on lanterns children d: warm fire apples sold by the old outside. And while t Resounding knocks sound on a | door. In three, or four of the bed- Yaa street slept. Its few dim lamps/ rooms the heavy thumping bi o a fist in the brain of sleeve: perception of the noise and conscious hearing crowd terrifying dreams. Dreams of the marshal coming for eviction, of the police coming to search the house, of the rent-collec- | tor with a threatening demand for | | arrears, Damp with sweai, the sleep wakes, his dreams dissipated by a new burst of knocking. “Who is that...?” “Open the door, Paul...I've for- gotten my key.” It is only the lodger. In three or four bedrooms, sleepers fall back on their pillows relieved. A long poison draught of night. A DIFFERENT WORLD IN big light rooms of the bourg quarie, opea windows inhale t! Child are asleep in white beds. Every evening they pray: Tired I go now to my rest. Let my eyes to sleep be pressed. Heavenly father, let your eyes Guard my bed till 1 arise. They then go to sleep, and dream | of god, the father with the long white beard, of night with her train | ef stars, of snow-white horses that carry them on wings over the noc- turnal city, and of their new dolls, named Ruth and Rose, dressed in silk... In the alley of Wedding, the yards are so close to each other that little Haidi, when she siands at the win- dow in the evening cannot. see the stars. In the Wedding alleys, night's train of stars has been transformed into an oppressive blanket, half- suffocating the children. In the al- leys of Wedding, the grown-ups do | not teach children to fold their t sow them how to clench fists and si “RED FRONT!” And many dreamed of this in the red alley, on this night, which was | separated by four times twenty-four hours .rom the Ist of May. At five o'clock the first steps sound on the stairs, and men walk shiver- ing, with bundles under their arms | s across the still dark yard. From Wedding railway station, early trains full of silent, sleepy workers, set out for the industrial quarters of Sie- mensstadt, Rummelsburg and Rein- | ickendorf... i (Lo Be Continued) , —® ‘Thousands to Jam Huge Place April 5th Is Indication Meetings Held Today of Various Groups Joining Protest NE Ww YORK.—With a meeting today of the re representatives of wore! sympathetic and intellectual organizations, preparations for the aan Madison Square Garden demonstration against fascism in Ger- many are taking rapid shape. The demonstration, called by the Communist Party, Ly me Garde - for Ais oadcast throug! this protest he 4 fake room clear by these repens It is certain that who will fill Madison Square Gard on April 5 will represent hundred of thousands to os the connec- | tion between American industrialists and bankers The | March 9 reports that Rosar, school and leader of the local ry banner, was forced to march nst | through the streets with a haken- | kreuz eed in his hand fascism and ot such dreams as those haye who clean, bedrooms. Short eams, overcast by the t organization officials, Labor Exchar nge bullies, the Poor Law | doctor, the Workhouse porter focal point of effective protest a » April 5, at 7 p.m,, will be the center “The flood of answers Which is already being received in reply to tele- ‘ams and messages b out the COUDES indicates Case broad Nazis Desecrate Marx’s Birthplace With Swastika Flag BERLIN.—Nazi troopers occupied ; the house in Trie where Karl Marx was born, and on the 50th anniver- ary of his death, hoisted the haken- 2uz flag over the building, accord- ing to a report to the “Internation- ale,” Communist daily in Aussig, echoslovakia. The Vienna “Neue Freie Presse” of tening, hostile faces, grotesques, ‘BRING T0 THE FORE THE SPECIAL DEMANDS OF THE NEGRO WORKERS (T.U.U.C. Buro) In the impending class battles in | the U.S.A. the Negro masses a tined to play ena io find their place in the revolutionary class struggle (An- leis December 6, 1932, ete., ete.) | tio ession once the nd white work- Communists can e: i, however, establish WHAT’S ON w of the crit- jical financial situation in the| Daily Worker, are asked to enclose money,| Negro workers are employed in the \at the rate of one cent a word | per insertion, with announce- egegtie | organizations | ythm of auto- 1g machines, of falling | masses of concr s in whom life has | a swing for little glowing red paper ummer evening... m of new shoes, of the the schoolroom, of the Jewoman | { children bugs fall from the stained TION for the Spring Term « the Workers School is now going on at Room 301, 35 E S SPRING COSTUME BALL ch Bist at. Webster slap on a mustard is | | 1} to raise the special on WORKERS CLUB, Lecture by Karl Brodsky on Ger- LECTURE by i. LICHENSTEIN on United Beach Workers Club, 1818 Beth St, J.'L. SPIVACK on the Chain Gang Sys- Bridge Plaza Wor! rs Club, 285 Rodney 8t., A PROTEST MEETING Fascism and pogroms , 20th Ave and 63rd Si gainst German will be held at Savoy JHTING CLASS FOR BEGI OTION PICTURE “Poic , March ist at 8:30 p.m. Admission ‘in advance 15c, | BROWNSVILLE ATTENTION! of the WIR at 1944 Pitkin Ave., March Stst at 8 p.m. Topic: * ENTERTAINMENT 4. 0. P. at 650 Lenox Ave., | Dancers, chalk talk, revolutionary songs. Pre et and DANCE—Section SENDRE GARLIN of the 'SEVERN’S 701 Sunday at 8:30 2 Hh ANNOUNCEMENT. WORKERS FILM and PHOTO LE | announces symposium “Crisis and 4 8:30 p.m. at John 450 Sixth Ave. vn) | th Avenue at 30th St. Club headquart unity of the Negro and white work- ers and toiling masses without plac- ing the question of full equality of the Negroes in the forefront in every ‘uggle of the werking class. Spe- cial demands must be raised for the oppressed Negro masses in every | struggle, in every shop, factory or on the farm. Special demands must be raised for the Negroes because they suffer special forms of oppression d discrimination. “Caste of Un- | touchables.” (C. I, Resolution). We must mobilize the white work- ers to fight against this discrimina- the first to raise the question of the against all bourgeois national ten- the minds of new Negro workers oming into our Party. Laundry and Textile Industries In New York City, thousands of leundry industry. The needle indus- employs about 15,000 Negroes, | Both in the laund:y and needle in- dustries working conditions are bad, and are getting worst Wages are at a starvation level. In both of | these industries the women workers a ning as low as three and four 's per week. The Negroes em- in both of these industries bs. Yet we have not seriously taken up the task of prepar'ng thi work- nt for the rment of . We have ae unity with a nor that precisely be- ‘ause the employers are able to play the workers, one against the other, that it is much harder to win better | conditions. A Breach in the Struggle. A “leading” Party comrade pre- sent at the laundry fraction meeting egro comrade present ationalism” and of being an ad- herent of “Garveyisn The local ne| Party “leades” wes supported in this accusation by the “leading” laundry union comrade. Both of these com- rades show a sad lack of knowledge | of the C. I. line on the Negro ques- tion, which states very sharply that the duty of the white workers is to be in the forefront of the struggle ro rights”, and that “the white onary workers must fly at the | throat of a 100 percent bandit that strikes a Negro in the face”. Could not a comrade who can use such _phras as “Gerveyism” and m” to cover up his failure mands of Negro workers easi! develop to a point |W here he would strike a Negzo in the very white members of the Com- munist Party of the U.S.A. must at once, and without a moment's hesi- tation, take up the struggle for the rights of the onpressed Negro mas- ses; Negro and white Communists together must carry on such strug- gle for the purity of our Bolshevik line, that deviations and distortions shall be cleaned out of our Party. We must immediately and in a Rolshevik manner take up the special fight of the Negroes against discrim- ination, jim-crowism, inequalities on the job, for full social, political and economic equality, and especially on | the job and in the trade unions. GARMENT DISTRICT Garment Section Workers Patronize Naverr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE Corner 28th St. PATRONIZE | CAFETERIA | | Best Food at Workers Prices i) ; / we must at no time allow the | special demands of the Negroes to |be put into the background. The nh hite members of our Party must be special demands of Negroes and |feht for those demands. Negro membe-s of our Party must fight neies, and anti-working class ideas Capitalis Investigators Explode in World; By WALTER WILSON Editor's Note:—This is the con- cluding instalment from the new book, “Forced Labor in the Uni- ted States,” by Walter Wilson. The book was prepared by the Labor Research Association, and has an intreduction by Thecdore Dreiser. International Publishers, 381 Fourth Ave., New York City. Price $1. S the one country of socialism, the Sovit Union has been gaining ir power and in the sympathy of the world proletariat. The capitalis have thus felt an urgent need create a sentiment against the Soviet Union. To this end they have tricd many devices. One of the latest i: the charge of “dumping.” But 5) dumping is a regular capitalist prac tice, the capitalists themselves saw that it did not hold water. So the charge of dumping was changed to: “dumping of goods produced by con- victs and other forced labor.” The scurrilous campaign has been conducted on an international scale. By the House of Lords in England; the French Parliament; journalists, industrialists, bankers, socialists, 5 trioteers, rabbis and ‘chbisho! All have echoed the charge. The a tack has been specially venomous in the United States where the Fish Committee, the National Civic Fed- eration, the National Lumber Manu- | facturers’ Association, Matthew Woll | and his American Federation of La- bor clique, and a host of others have been most vehement in their assaults. Largely through this campaign, provision was put into the Se Hawley tariff act of 1930 forbid importation of goods produced ay convicts or by any other form of forced labor. The real purpose of | the bill was to destroy the n t. for Soviet goods on the grounds that these, especially Soviet lumber, wi produced by other than “free labor. FAKE CHARGES Timber experts, who analyzed the specific charges of the manufacturets of “forced labor” myths in connec- -fon with Soviet timber, found them to be false on thelr face. For in- stance, it was found that two al- leged timber centers, where convicts were supposed to be employed in cut- ting wood for export, did not exist at all! One absurd charge was that pris- oners were forced to work 16 to 18 hours a day and to begin work in the forest so early that matches had to be used in searching for the trees to be cut! Actually, as experts poi ed out, in the northern during the felling season, the x mum daylight lasts six hours and therefore if this were true, the oners would have to fell trees from 10 to 12 hours in dariness! Any logger knows this would be practic- ally impossible and altogether im- practical. Another statement was that each prisoner must fell a total of 44 trees a day. If this were true, it would take only 10,000 men, working 90 days, to produce all the timber that is exported annually ‘rom the Soviet Union! But look at the next charge. According to one statement, May 1, 1930, there were 652,000 prisoners producing timber in concentration camps. At the work rate given ahove, these would produce moze than 100 times the total timber exported. Another “affidavit” gave a still more impossible figure of 55 to 60 trees a day. These trees, according to the same charge, must be cut at soil level—this in winter and with several feet of snow! Another wild rumor had it that 5,000,000 kulaks had been sent to timber cutting in the north country. But, as a mat- ter of fact, in 1931, there were only 1,134,000 workers in the entire lum- ber industry. CHARGES REFUTED Dozens of statements were mode by European and Amer‘can author- ities, all of them veluntary, refuting the charge of the use of convict and other forced labor in Soviet timber cutting. These statements are from capitalist and liberal, as well as working class sources. Lumberjacks from Finland, Can- ada and various other countries, now working in the Sovict Union, have added their pretesis to that 0° work- ers everywheze at the attacks. AMERICANS ALSO DENY CHARGES ANY American authorities who visited the Soviet Union have reported that there is no forced labor in the timber industry. Henry T. Ten Days That Shook the World! China Express! Struggle for Bread! Ete. Ete. Ete. WORKERS’ FILMS Any organization con now show them zt nominal cost. Information and Arrangemeats ot a5 E. 29H STREET Organizations Partici- pating in Raising Funds for the Daily, Worker pina vin BANQUET & DANCE FRIDAY, MARCH 31, 8 P. M. > Turkish Workers Club 269 West 20th Street ce e| lief A CLASSICS OF THE SOVIET MoViEs— District Daily Worker Office|| 27-29 W.115th St, N.Y.C. | ts Use “Forced Labor” Lies in |. Drive Against Soviet Union Fake Stories; Speaker Rainey ‘Forced to Admit Soviet Labor Freest USSR Workers Build Classless Society, Free from Slavery Rainey, of Illinois, now the speaker | part of June, 1932, visiting the tim-, is difficult to reconcile ‘armed of the Hol of Representatives, who | ber country in the Arch: ido’ with an absenteeism so j visited the Sov Union in 1 and the northern Dvina great that it endangers the ‘execu- elared: afterwards made sffiday tion of the year's plan’. The tre- the qu they saw. mendous Iabor turnover in Soviet } sia and there isn't any In Archangel the party visited saw- try—about 150 per cent o year t is freer in Rucs!s than in any t mills and lumber yards and watched eom in itself to he a try in the world. the loading of ships, and in no case| refutation ef the ‘forced labor’ mY ma could they find anything that looked | charges. It i ossible for labor a ay eal Mu coer reed or convict labor. The vis-| {0 be ‘conscripted’ ond yet to move ecniie Oa 40,000 talked directly with scores of] from Job to job at so rapid a rate. Dinlia a ani the use of an in-| ‘The fect is that the special inter- nd the Wo! 's un-j| ests which circulate ‘forced labor’ animous in agreeing that ne were | charges make little effort to be working of their own free will and} either urate or consistent.” could leave whenever they li Ac: he holy. or . cording to their affidavits, the young | _ The holy crusade of the dio speech June 21, j are in ch on since I And Walter Duranty, who has lived in Russia ® né | or three years against “forced lab fi for 10 the New York Times | “O"Kers tion that me Work hooted | in the Soviet Union has had one corr said that the free-| “8Y Suggestion that they were woik-| suit certainly not desired by the in- 8 They said: “In Soviet Russia every one must} work if he wants to earn a li | that is the only forced thing about our labor.” ler ae try—especially the United Stat two Am-| The high labor turnover in the| In Russia, a new form of labor was ns, Moscow | Soviet Union also contradicts the | ushered in by the October, 1917, Re- of “forced labor.” Joseph | Volution. The essence of the Revo- rn points out in The Soviet lution was the expropriation of the g (International Publishers) | capitalists and of the 1a’ Kinkead, New owners and the seizure of power by . spent a “As a matter of simple logic, it | the proletariat and the poorest strata — of the peasantry. The formerly ex- 's in the Soviet Union orders given by technical atrasts somewhat curi- itiators of the campaign. It aroused 1 interest in the problem of which in turn led to y” that much forced la- every capitalist. co the invitation of the Sovi timber exporting comp ericans, Spencer Wil! sian Chamber Myron G. Doll, Am accompanied by Rob! York Times coz | ploited and oppressed classes became the new ruling class; the former ploiiers were suppressed. Through the eceeding years of the Revolution the whole economic | Latest Relief Plan 2ssser"5 eogh of entrenched capital | Forced Labor--Tiger’s | bheing overcome by the coll Unemployed Councils to Lead Fight Against | Repeeseie ate oii ar | Tammany Plot ‘ retor, The ‘ 4 | ‘ | LobegN eS eee Second Five-Year Plan lays down as | ry ra rhe ros! i a practical task the emergence of a | NEW YORK—The new program ) cf home and work relief to Negroes | * eee cociety, ready 4 j of the C ency Work and Re- | and joreign born workers to be abnl- | and ideologically to begin t announced by | ' , formation to Communism. | Mayor O'Brien, for shifting twent, SS eS oh 3 . |five thousand men on home relief | % Workers’ control of registration | ° ° |to work relief payrolls, is denounced |! unemployed and distribution of | NoTE:—The book, “Forced Labor | by the 1 ed Council of Great. | relief. ‘ in the United States,” from which |er New York as a demagogic scheme | Will Demonstraie Before Aldermen | the Daily Worker has printed six for cutting relief wage , : | instalments, is, full of similar facts tandards under the pretext of help-| The aldermen in every part of the | and arguments that are indispensable ng the unemployed. city will be called upon by mass de- | to workers. Every worker should read | Under this plan, workers and their | lesations of the unemployed, support-| the entire book in order to be able families will be denied relief or cut | €4 by part-time and employed work- | to effectively smash the anti-Soviet off the relief rolls unless the family |€2S, endorsing these recommende-| forced labor lies and to expose the to what is virtually | tions and the demand for public| horrible forced labor conditions in heads agree forced’ labor at wages less than are | hearings. the United States and its colonies. now ‘eguiar city em- ployec AS this plan progresses, if ployed as well as unemployed workers A } A U S E } { E N E S does not stop it, thousands more of | <ms=/- the employces of city departments “GREATEST PICTURE EVER MADE” will be thrown into the ranks of the unemployed. Prevailing rates of pay | George Jean Nathan, and Emil Jannings the trade unions will be undermined . \ by the unwilling and enforced com- || Now Greater Than Ever! In Sound!) ¢ petition of workers on so-called re- out } ! het projects. Aln thousands of ’ WORLD - ACCLAIMED | ramily heads have been fired by the || Se MI. EISENSTEIN masterpiece | Work Bureau with thou- . e ” eae cted to be thrown || ARMORED 66 agen || CRUISER otemaAInN Call for Public Hearing We pects eae The Unemployed Council of Great- |} of the famous Odessa) R BROADWAY =| STARTING er New York will demand of Mayor || Massacre never! K CAMEO le O'Brien and the Board of Estimate |f O°" Defore! 2 idlesionetsSr ll Balada at Hear at City Hall where the suf- FRANCIS LEDERER & DOROTHY GISH in ‘ering and misery enforced upon the | Start. Tom’w—4 Days Only! M unemployed by the City Relief Ad-|, “One of the Two Best Films of 1932” AUTU. N CROCUS ministration and graft anq corrup- RENE CLAIR’S Wt Bal gh Sieco Bh tae myth and ype peed y be exposed, The Council will || Ermant Stinsing Satire of Soctety: Eves, $:40, Mats. Wed., Thurs. & Gat. intreduce legislative measures | at BN N such a Prblic Hearing in the inter- ous ests of the unemployed, calling for: 1. Immediate registration and re- Nef without red tape and delay for the organized protest of the em- said Theodore Drieser, Douglas Fairbanks, established by years of struggle by Emergency sands more exp the immediate calling of a Public tion to which workers are Subjected foci, aul wae Ge oe all those in need. KO JEFFERSOD 1th st. ¢|NOW 5 Robt. Armstrong & Constance Cummings ji La Liberte’ ) || "The Billion Dollar SeandaP Extra Feature: “THE IRON MASTER” (TO US LIBERTY) with REGINALD DENNY and LILA LEE 2. Cash payment of all relief in- ue PUDOVKIN’S Soviet Flim ia stead of vouchers. mad A i 99, 8. Single people to be given full Rig Life Is Beautiful PALA bed ht Lap te step al : relief in their homes instead of in- |{ worners ACme Theatre laws, for the defence of the Soviet, mibulene or camps. 4. ‘ged be re-! ht r ei it Sse" APRIL FIRST DANCE, 8 6. TUDENTS OF THE WORKERS’ SCHOOL at trade union rates. Increased relict at a, minimum New Dance Group—Harmonica Concert Workers School Theatre Group I4TH ST. AND UNION SQUARE Union, against imperialist war! a ae of $10 a week cash for unemployed couples, $3 additional for each de- pendent, and $1 a day cash minimum for single workers. 7, Shelter to be provided for all the homeless and those in homes to " @ protected from eviction by low- Good Band Chop Suey ering of ronts and repeal of the evic- tion Iq : ADMISSION 25¢ 8, Discrimination in distribution | ALL PROCEEDS FOR THE DAILY WORKER ——— 2 SPLENDID LARGE Hall and th cresting oo JUBILEE ll CELEBRATION LECTURES, MEETINGS, Ete new estoman Of the MORNING FRETHEIT ORKERS HOME (The Only Jewish Revolutionary Werlsing Class Feper in America) Saturday Eve., April 1 - } — TWO HALLS — Brooklyn MECCA AUDITOR UM ACADEMY OF MUSIC 50th Stroot, Between 6th and Laisyetle Avenue aud Ashland ith Avenues Place 115 Second Avenue one 4 PROGRAM Feet NOS eal Unto | Fretheit Singing Society and Fretheit Mandolin. Orchestra is ’ NDWI Conducter: 7, SEAPFER SOLS * ae ARTEF One-Act Play, b: Paier | 101 University Place Phone UNiversity 40165 TOWN come at New York Workers ¥ Thy AY Rainr’s Cafeteria “SHULEM GETS A MEDAL from Pilsudsky Government” idust Around the Corner: SAME PROGRAM IN BOTH HALLS | Betepoone Foaming Squcee C-KD.#9H1 [ee B5e, 55e and 83e (tax included). For sate at Freiheit office, 35 & $ A%th St, 6th floor, and Werkers Book Shop, 50 E, 13th Sty

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