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Gai Home Phone: “en Olinyille 5-1109 Page Two DR. JULIUS LITTINS 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Ayes, Brooklyn (Classified ) leges, 1800 Seve ROOM for rent, ISHEL telephone, elevator, in private family, $4./ PRONE: DICKENS 2-3012 508 W. 189th St., Apt. 62 Offies Hours: 8-10 A.M, 1-2, 6-8 P.M. ————— ROOM, ble, 208 W. 9th St. Apt. 6A WORKERS--EAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria 16388 PITKIN AVENUE Near Hopkinson Ave. MOT THAVEN DR. JULIUS JAFFE Surgeon Dentist 401 EAST 140th STREET (Corner Willis Avenue) 9-8749 GARMENT DISTRICT ngle, light, | provements with childless couple, | Brooklyn, N. ¥. | DAILY WORKER, Oifee Phone Estabrook 8-2575 S. L. SHTELDS Surgeon Dentist 2574 WALLAVE AVE. | orner Allerton Avenue Bronx, N. Y. COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE DR. FAN RAY CAFETERIA 156 W. 29th St. | Phones: Chickering 4947—Longaere 10089 New York Garment Section Workers | Patronize Navarr Cafeteria DR. R. H. ISAACS Formerly of Baltimore, Md. has moved his office “o New kat 304 E. 178th Street, Bronx, N. Y. (Cor, Anthony Ave.) | Phone: FOrdham 7-3113 | 333 7th AVENUE Office Hours: 12 to 2; 6 to 8 FP. M. | * Sunday 10 to 12 Noon | Corner 28th St. WORKINGMEN OF ALL COUNTRIES! You Need Natural, Undoped and Unprocesged Health Foods to Give You Health and Strength in Your Struggle for Power. Come to Our Store or Send for Our Health Guide Free— 10% DISCOUNT TO ALL WHO BRING OR SEND THIS AD ALONG! 34th STRE New York (Near Lexington Avenue) ty. — Phone: LExington 2-6926 NOTICE! RUSSIAN ART SHOP Inc. PEASANT HANDICRAFTS ED TO NCH AT. = BRA! 9 West 42nd Street 107 E. 14th Street Large Selection of Gifts, Toys and Novelties from the Soviet Union. ~~ 10% Discount to Readers of the Daily | WORKMEN’S SICK AND DEATH BENEFIT FUN OF 1HE UNITED SIATES OF AMERICA ORGANIZED 1884—INCORPORATED 1899 Main Office: 714-716 Seneca Ave., Ridgewood Sta., Brooklyn, N. Y 58,095 Members in 351 Branches Total Assets on December 31, 1931: 83,488,895.98 Benefits paid since tts existence: Death Benefit: $4,$88,210.53 Sick Benefit: $12,162,051.73 Total: $17,050,262.66 Workers! Protect Your Families! In Case of Sickness, Accident or Death! accordiug to the age at the time of imitiaation in one or S A> 40 cents per month—Death Benefit $355 at the age of 16 to $175 ents per month Death Benefit $550 to $230. may tnsure heir children tn -ase of death up to the age of 18 Death Venefit a cording to age $20 ta $200 Sick Benefit paid from the third day of filing the doctor's certificate, $® and $15, respectively, per week. for the first forty weeks. half of the amount for another forty weks. for women $9 per week for the first forty weeks: $4.50 each r forty w For further info Seeretary, or to the mation apply at the Main Office, William Spahr, Nations) Financial Seeretaries of the Branches. NOTICE! | | Vote Auer of BROADWAY CLOTHING HOUSE IS Coing Out of Business After many years in the retail clothing business the firm is returning to the manu- facturing line and is offering for sale its complete stock of MEN’S AND YOUNG MEN’S Suits, Overcoats and Tuxedos All clothes, all sizes, form- erly selling from $18 to $25, now being sold AS LOW AS 12 Now on sale at our only store, located at 833 Broadway Near 18th St., New York At our store you can get a Suit and Overcoat for the price of one garment anywhere else, REMEMBER! Our entire stock must be sold at once to vacate for manufacturing establishment Our Prices Are the Lowest in the City! LUM’S SPECIAL Better Clothes for Less Money 833 Broadway, New York Near 13th Street— ARE OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY WE New York City’ children. | | | | Dr. S. Waliman ...... Previously Recorded .. TOTAL |GUTTERS OF NEW YORK BEAUTIFUL room for 1 or 2, kitchen priv-| th Ave., Apt. 7B cor. 110th al —bv d 3 forsitie s Thanksgiving party for its school Anna Bosse: Will be glad to be at your Daily Worker affair, tonight at 192 E. Tremont Ave. Bronx, with a cartoon and chalk talk, HELPING THE DAILY WORKER THROUGH DEL: $ 5.00 | 23.70 augniadeage cabaouadesstovcbe carer aoe tbuntiCends sess aMER Amaigamationiove at Shoe Union Meet. | NEW YORK.—By «8 unanimous jvote, nearly 4,000 unicn members present at Arcadia Hall, Brooklyn, Thursday night voted to join the jmovement for one big industrial junion in the shoe indutsry. Fred Biedenkapp, general secretary of the Shoe and Leather Workers’ | Industrial Union, reported on the | amalgamation movement initiated by he shoe workers in New England i hree shoe unions, the Shoe Wo | 2rotective Union, the National Shoe | Workers’ Association, and the Salem | Shoe! Workers’ Uriton, it which the} Industrial Union had - al jnated. Amalgamation as proposed by the Provisional Committse of the |three unions was to be on the basis }of one i ea at 1 unter rank file control, no arbitration. on | no affiliation ithe A, F. of L, | ‘These principles were laid down st. a meeting of the Provisional Com- mittee last week, which Biedenkapp attended as representative of the Shoe and Leather Workers’ Industrial Union. A convention is to be called in Boston on Dec. 11, Bicdenkapp re- norted, and the action of the conven- tion is to be binding only after a majority vote of the membership of |the respective organizations. Dele- gates are to be elected on the basis of two for every craft represented, and one for every 200 members of partici- | | Committee elected are H. | Mildred Young, Max Spierer, Vincent | Tucci and Jimmie Bonagura. | |the organization, The members elected a provisional committee of five shoe workers to be present at the Shop D cil meeting on Saturday at 12 a.m., at Irving Plaza, at which time the elec- ion of delegates to the Amalgama- tion convention will take place. A committee from the New England delegation will also be present to supervise the election of the dele- gates. The New York Provisional enstein, Terzani Mass Meeting Athos Terzani, anti-Fascist fichte accused of murder, will speak tomor-| row afternoon at 3 pm. at a mass meeting in Irving Plaza Hall, 15th | St. and Irving Place, Radio Workers All CP. and Y¥.C.L. in radio plant: mn'oyed end unemployed, are cated to a special meeting this Sunday at 2pm. at the Y.C.L. district office, Cre See Attention: Millinery Workers A Pre! 'y Conference of active | members, chairmen and chairladies, for the purpose of ceiling a broad con- ference of shon delegates in the hat wear industry is taking place Satur- day, Nov. 25th, 11 a. m., at Manhat- tan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th St. Leather Workers’ Meeting on Role of C. P. C. P. of Williamsburg will hold a meeting of all shoe and leather work- ers tomorrow, 11 a. m., at Workers/| Center, 61 Graham Ave. Brooklyn, | Carpenters’ Meeting At 1 p. m. today, a special open meeting of Carpenters Local No. 2725 will take place in the New Star Casino, 107th St. and Park Ave. NEW YORK CITY DOWNTOWN—Workers Center, 96 Ave. ©. East Bide Workers Club, 165 East Broadway. MIDTOWN—Greek Workers Club, 269 W. 25th St; Armenian Workers Club, 56 W. 20th 6t.; Needle Trades Workers Indus- trial Union, 131 W. 28th St, Midtown ‘Section: — Armenian Club, 114 Lexington Ave., near 28th St.; Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, fourth floor, 131 W. 26th St. [ARLEM—Finnish Workers Hall, Be | 126th Bt.; 115th St.; Harlem Liberator, 2162 7th Ave. YORKVILLE—Hungarian Workers Home, | 350 B. Bist st, LOWER BRONX—Workers Center, 660 Prospect Ave.; Prospect Workers Club, 1157 So. Boulevard; Bronx Workers Club, 1400 | Boston Roar UPPER BRONX — Workers Center, 2075 Clinton Ave; Co-op Unemployed Council, Barker and Britton Streets; Middle Bronx Workers Center, 3882 Third Ave. | _SOUTH BROOKLYN—Workers Center, 182 Myrtle Ave.; Workers Center, 240 Colum~ bia St.; Scandinavian Workers Club, 5008 | Pith Ave. | BORO PARK — Finnish Workers Home, | 748 40th St.; Workers Center, 1109 45th St. | BATH BEACH—Bath Beach Workers Club, 87 Bay 25th 6t, BENSONHURST — Bensonhurst Workers uw Ww. Esthonian Workers Club, 27 W. Volunteer Stations for “Daily” Tag Days Center, 2006 Toth mt. CONEY ISLAND — Coley Island Workers Center, 27th St. and Mermaid, BRIGHTON BEACH — Brighton Beach Workers Center, Brighton Beach and Coney Island Ave. WILLIAMSBURG — Workers Center, Graham Ave.; Bridge Plaza Workers Club, 285 Rodney St.; Laisve, 46 Ten Eyck St.; Progressive Workers Center, 159 Sumner A ve. BROWNSVILLE — Brownsville Workers Center, 1813 Pitkin Ave; American Youth Club, 103 Thetford Ave.; Hinsdale Workers Club, 313 Hinsdale St. JAMAICA—Jamaica Werkers Center, 148- 29 Liberty Ave. PHILADELPHIA 1137 N. 41 St.; 434 N, 62 St.; 1747 N. Wil- ton St.; 1831 N. Pranklin 8t.;'715 N. 6 8t.; 995 N. 5 St.; 3115 Dauphin St; 245g N. 30 St.; 2014 N. 32 St.; 2223 Master St.; 1208 Tasker St.; 1629 8. 5 St; 710 Passyunk Ave.; 1036 Locust St.; 2530 N. 2 8t,; 1810 South st. BOSTON Dudley St. Opera House, 118 Dudley 8t.. Roxbury, Mass.; New International Hall, 42 Winonah St., Hoxbury; 35 Westminster St., South End, Boston; Russian Hall, 93 Stand- ford St., West End, Boston; 74 Wildwood St., Dorchester, Mass.; Workers Center, 88 Haw- thorn St. Chelsea; 105 Shirley Ave., Revere, Mass, Workers School Foru SUNDAY LECTURE CALLED OFF All Go to Bronx Coliseum Instead Next Sunday, December 3, at 8 p. m. WM. PATTERSON will lecture on “The New Phase in the Scottsboro Case” at WORKERS’ SCHOOL FORUM, 35 E. 12th St., 2d Floor QUESTIONS — DISCUSSION - ADMISSION 25¢ PHILADELPHIA © Play by John Reed Club Workers’ Labortary Theatrfe DAILY WORKER VICTORY BANQUET Sunday Evening, November 26th at JEFFERSON MANOR Broad and Jefferson Streets PROGRAM HALL Bella Dorfman — Artef Prominent Speaker NEW YORK, S. |fed late yesterday afternoon by C. A. ates Coun-| ... | tampered ATURDAY, NOVEMBE 25, 1933 Callahan, Decatur Judge, Rushes Case Against Negro Boys (Continued from Page 1) Circuit Court reporter, when court reopened this morning after a late ht session, The defense was still hing for the names of Negroes ‘hich resulted in a en Leibowitz rolls be im- y » and promptly for a handwriting expert. Late this afternoon, while Letbo- was examining J. H. Stewart, r member of the Jackson Coun. 'y Board, Judge Callahan ruled defense could not probe into he actions of the jury board in king up their jury list. It followed a heated command by i to “Stop right s lef counsel for defense asked Stewart if Snodgrass “a qualified Negro.” an said angrily. int to show that this jury mission.” Yames Those of Witnesses e the search for names con- jtinued, the defense subpoenaed the ve! en sboro Negroes whose names ere found on the jury roll. They were Hugh Sanford, Ples Larkin, 's Moseley, K. D. Snodgrass, Cam er and Mark Taylor. All o. Negroes had beon defense wit- at the trial of Heywood Pat- n this Spring. The name of Hugh Sanford in the on County jury roll was identi ireuit Court clerk, as that of a Negro, __ Leibowitz jumped up: “Your |Honor,” he demanded, “I want this page marked for future identifica- tion.” ‘To newspaper men who asked hether he suspected that the name jbad been inserted since the Scotts- horo cases in order to show that Ne- groes were not discriminated against, Leibowitz said: “I have nothing to say about this at the present time.” Leibowitz demanded that the jury jounded by the court, which Leibowitz asked J. E. Moody, Jack- son County Jury Board member, to write his name. several times on a sheet of paper. This was entered in evidence. Letbowitz’s tactics are obviously to get samples of the handwriting of all jury board members while they are identifying persons Hsted on the jury roll and place these on file, so the handwriting exnert can identity the one who wrote in the names of the Negroes, Their names had been written either over or under red lines drawn at the bottom of the pages where they were found. At the session last night, Kelly Morgan, clerk of the ‘eckson County Court admitted that ye handwriting “looked like mine.” » Leibowitz sent for dames M. Haring, famous handwriting expert, who had’ testified in the Hall-Mills case and other celebrated causes celebre. He is expected in Decatur tomorrow morn- ing. He will examine the handwrit- ing in en court and tell whether the v g is Motgan’s and whether the writing dates from 1931, when the Jury roll was prepared, or more re- cently, Leibowitz announced this morning that he was willing for Knight to name his own handwriting expert and the defense would agree to abide by nis decision, provided that if it were ‘ound that the jury rolls had been with, the indictments against the Scottsboro boys would be quashed. Knight refused to entertain the offer. “I am not interested,” he said. “I have another approach to these names of Negroes on the jury roll, and Mr. Leibowitz will know nothing about it until the last minute.” A_ few minutes before Leibowitz made his announcement to the news- papermen, Judge Callahan strolled over and informed them that he had examined the fury roll, which he had ordered impounded and that he had found about forty names writ- ten “over or under” the red lines, which marked the bottom of the pages. Asked whether these names were white or colored, he sald he did not know. CITY AFFAIRS BEING HELD FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE Daily, qhorker I know what you are trying to} ] | (Batting for EDW I'm in for it. Spors Union wrestling tournament Wednesday night. If you want to know what a rank amateur I am in these matters, I'll tell you. When the first pair of wrestlers got on the mat I thought they were Red Dancers. All the help I got from Eddie was that the boys were in fact getting redder and red- and thighs. But first let me tell you about th reliminary bout, which I un stood better than the others. spectators were impatiently waiting for the tournament to begin. But the ved evrtoin that covers the stave of Finnish Hall hung heavy and si- lent. It concealed a bout between the “managers” of the tournament and the cops. A tall gentleman in a@ gray fedora with lots of pink in his face and lots of fat bulging over his belt, accom- panied by two of New York’s finest sluggers in uniform, was explaining to Eddie Newhouse that the tour- nament was off. The law of the State says that no outfit which ain’t connected with the AAU. can hold an athaletic bout without they first get a license from the State Athaletic Commission. This license costs a lot of dough, but that was none of the pink gentlemah’s business, He Just got a hot tip to close this show down, and he was gonna do it, Gordon of the LS.U. explained that a license was unnecessary. It was true the spectators were charged admission, but that fee was not for the bout. It was to hear C, A. Hatha- way lecture. That's the gag, said the pink gen- tleman, but the real thing is the bout, A comrade in the crowd that sur- rounded the pillars of the law said something about the A.A.U. proteet- ing racketeers. You're not saying I’m a racketeer, said the pi gentleman. I'm not say'ng it, said the comrade in_ the crowd. Missing the irony, the pink gen- tleman softened. Poissonally, I don't care what you guys do, he said. I'm here to do a job. I got my orders, and I’m gonna carry them out. Now if them people out there didn’t pay a fee it would be different. That settled it. We announced to the audience that they must return their entrance fee to the box office, but if they wanted to they could do- nate it to the Daily Worker. Did the gentlemen of the law ob- ject to donations to the Daily Work- er, a labor newspaper? No, they with their money. So the preliminary bout ended with a victory for the “managers” of Bronx Hung. Herzl \der, at least around the neck, back | could not tell the people what to do| Our Own Toe-Twisters By JOSEPH FREEMAN AKD NEWHOUSE) Eddic Newhouse, the brightest sports writer of them all, has a morbid | Sense of humor. But I suppose he will explain everything by his desire to encoursge nmateur sports, amateur spectators, and amateur sports-writing. First he dragged me out of a sickbed to watch the Daily Workers’-Labor the tournament in 30 minutes 8 sec- onds. A pair of wrestlers came on but I didn’t have a chance to watch them because my attention was distracted by two other wrestlers in the group | that crowded around the mat on the stage. These two were engaged in a heavy | intellectual bout, Beginning with a discussion of the relative merits of ceeded to discuss the nature of com- etition under capitalism, This wrestling, one said, is just part of capitalist competition, Under so- alism there won’t be no competi- ion, Yeah, said the other, and how about socialist competition, As the lads went on and off the nat, massaging each other like rub- vers in a Turkish bath, I tried to carn something about the art from J. A. Hathaway, waiting on the stage or his turn, C. A, Hathaway, I had heard, had seen a three-letter man at prep- chool. But I couldn't for the life of me, find out whether the three letters were F.S.U., L.W.O, or LL.D. I remarked that the wrestlers were doing an awful lot of back-slapping. That, explained the three-letter man, shows the wrong kind of poli- tical training, Spartacus club, was doing some fine wrestling. Even I could tell that. When the semi-finals were over, three-letter man Hathaway, made the best speech on labor sports I've heard in this country. He ought to write it up and publish it. It explained the difference between the old S. P, ontempt for sports as an evil which ‘stracts the worker from the class- struggle, and the Communist realiza- tion that the worker's healthy and normal interest in sports must be made a bridge to and a part of the revolutionary labor movement. Anyway, I learned that size counts for something in wrestling. I saw two mohammeds unsuccessfully tack- ling man-mountain P, Kaupienen of the Brooklyn Kaytee, who, by the end of the evening, came out sweatless and heavyweight champion. J. Cox, Negro wrestler of the Y. M. Cc. A., put up a vigorous and skillful scrap for the 175 lb, championship. Too bad he didn’t quite make it, He was by far the finest looking speci- men of: manhood on the mat. This first wrestling tournament un- der Daily Worker auspices ought to he followed by more, I'd like to sce one in a big p'ace, where the mat is big enough for our agile beef- throwers. And where there is an an- nouncer who knows something about wrestling. Helning the Daily Worker Through Ed Newhouse Contributions received to the credit of Rdward Newhouse in the Socialist competition with Michael Gold, Dr. Luttinger, Helen Luke and Jacob Burck to raise $1,000 in the $40,000) | Daily Worker Drive: | ae Gi 1.00 | Previous total Total to date . the two men tangling torsos on the| mat, our barrel-chested debaters pro- | This boy, J. Lekas, of the Greek | T.U.U.C. Class | Class in current events for trade | union functionaries will be held to- day at 3:30 p. m. in the Workers School, | Clarence Hathaway will discuss | “The Struggles of the Farmers.” (OUT OF TOWN AFFAIRS FOR THE Daily, Norker Shenandoah Section ‘The outstanding film “War Against tht Centuries” will be shown in the following towns on the dates listed bel November 24th: Kurlmont, Pa.: At Liberty Mall, 10th and Pine St. November 26th: tears Pa.: At 412 N. Shamokin St. Louis, Mo. November 26th: |] Monster Banquet at Peoples Pinance Bidg. Tickets 500. So. Norwalk, Conn. November 24th: Pilm showing of the Soviet movie “phe Two Thieves” at the Workers Center, 102 Washineton St., at 8:15 p.m, Auspices of I.W.O. Branch 67, Philadelphia November 24th: Concert and Dance given by Sect. 1 at 1208 Tasker Street. Elizabeth, N. J. November 26th: Entertainment and Dance given by Elizabeth Unit of the Communist Party at Lithuanian Club, 408 Court St. Adm. 150. New Kensington, Pa. November 26th: Film showing of “Shame” at Dattals ‘Theatre at 2 p.m. 40 per cent pro~ ceeds for Daily Worker. Ausplces, CP. of Arnold. Cleveland November 25th: Dance and Vetcherinka given by Ses- tion 2 at Lithuanian Workers Hall, 920 E. 79th St. Detroit November 26th: Affair given by Unit 12 Bee. 1 at the Greck Workers Ciub, 544 E. Latayette Street. Adm. 10c, Lecture and Concert, featuring re- port on U.S.3.R. by Comrade N. Sam- aroff et Carpenter's Hall, 935 Alger Ave, at 1:50 Adm, 10¢. Cincinnati, Ohio November 29th: House Party, excellent supper and interesting program on Thankssiving Bye. given by a group of Women Sympachizers of Cincinnati at $31 Clark St., at 8:30 p.m. (Newark, N. J.) Nov. 25th: The Jewish Workers Club of Newark will hold 2 house party at ih> home of Comrade Sehukman, 1104 Grove St., Irvington. Noy. 25th: House Party given by the Jack Lon- don Club, 39 Court St. Dancing and entertainment. (Cleveland, Ohio) Nov. 27th: Dance and entert-'s~=>t ments at 4209 Lorain Ave. the United Brotherau. .. and Joiners of American, Local 1160. Admisison free. given by RSONAL WILL Sam Markoviten, “age TT, o sect ® inches, please communicate with his father immediately. Or if anybody knows of his whereabouts please do so. When left home wore moleskin coat, brown cap, black work~ ing shoes. Had 1933 drivers license. SCHEDULE FOR NOVEMBER 26, 1933 Home Team Visiting ‘Time Park Rome 3 2PM. Orotona Park Hessler Spartacus Fichte 1PM. rotons Park Behil Italian American Ecuadore 3PM. Betsy Head Katz Faleons 12:30 P.M. Jasper Oval Harvey Ttalia vs. Zukunft—Exhibition A2 Division — oo ie ee, | ee Pr M. 08. Jel Colonials eh 1 P.M. No.2 Can Cortlandt Priedman Monabt Bye Bi Division Hero Maple 10:30 A.M. Jasper Oval Dauntless M. Prospect Ttallan American 1PM. Betsy Head Pichte Hinsdt PM. McCooms Dam Maples LWw.o. 12:30 M. Central 64th 8t. Red Spark Spartacus 1PM. ‘Thoo. Jefferson Nonpareil 8. America 2:30 P.M. Dicoust eh © ORM. ‘Thos. Jem Red Spark Pren 1 AM, 108. ferson Fichte ACUS 1PM. be Berkowitz, Greek Spart. ‘Youth Culture 10:30 A.M. Central 64th St. Swanson Going to Russia? e Workers needing falt outfits of horsehide leat! ined © Windbreakers, Breeches, Hig! AN receive spe- cial reduction rehases at the rr SQUARE DEAL "enon| ARMY and NAVY STORE 121 THIRD AVE. (2 doors South of 14th Street) Saturday, Nov. 25th: Grand Coneart and Dance given by East New York Workers Cinb, 603 Cleveland Stree! Program: Freihelt Gesanva Verain, New Danes Group. Adm, 25c. Movie showing of “Lan and “Struggle for Br ers Center, 1918 Pitkin Av lyn, nnder ai ot Council No, 82. 20, Vetcherinka givan by the Bulgarian Mecedonian Workers Club nt 108 W. 24th St. Lots of good ents and drinks, Concert and Dance at Workers Cen- Bronx, 5 OP. | Women’s Talented dancers and singers; Bronx | Dram, Clab, Chalk Tatk. Adm. io, [ Dance and Entertainment at Hun- garian Workers Home, 851 E, Sist St. given by Unit 17 See, 2, Adm, 1c. , House Party at home of B, Altshuler, | ii eks Ave. Apt, 4-E, Bronx, given by Unit 10 See. 15. Lots of spaghetti and other good food, i Entertainment and nce given Unit 16 See, 1 at the Cli-Grand Ch House Party at home of Thel Near- neber, 1926 Bergen St. Brooklyn; auspices of Bronwaville Progressive Workers Club, Shule 4, at 4p. mm, > Vecherinka and Dance given at the Macedonian Workers — Fducattonal Club, 103 W. 2th St. Excellent en- tertainmetn, Cheek Room 2c. Sunday Concert and Banquet given by Unit 18, Seo. 5 and Wormer Couneil, at 1304 Southern Boule at 8:30 p.m. } Dinner and Entertainment given by Unit 16, Sec. 11, at 2879 W. 16th St., Brooklyn, at 8 p. m. CORLISS LAMONT FRIENDS OF THE SOVIET UNION AND THE ICOR MASS VICTORY RECOGNITION MEETING Wednesday, November 29th, 8 P. M. BRONX COLISEUM Speakers: COUNTEE CULLEN M, KATZ M. OLGIN LOUISE THOMPSON DR. HARRY F. WARD S. ALMAZOV ADMISSION 25¢ EAST 177th STREET CHAIRMAN ..........2+4+..CARL BRODSKY HERBERT GOLDFRANK rT ES ENTERTAINMENT —FREIH EIT GESANG VEREIN W. I. R. BAND — FREIHEIT MANDOLIN ORCHESTRA — ~ a