The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 9, 1934, Page 4

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Page 4 DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1982 19,000 at Rallies Marking 17th Anniversary of Soviets we were shipping enough materials | to Germany to equip 50 planes | Roetal Workers member of the Home Relief Bureau Employes Association, was chair- STAGE AND SCREEN ‘Mass Meeting monthly, The American League man of the Grievance Committee in 5 MEETINGS HAIL : OVER CAPITALISM é | Brewder Points to the Russian Revolution as the | Living Example of for American Working Class The significant gains mad Way Out of Crisis e by the Communist Party in tions inquiry has glaringly brought to light the immediate necessity of | mustering all anti-war forces in a ToNaziArming Central Opera House Rally Is Set for Armistice Day “The results of the Nye muni- 5 : 3 | united front against war,” declares | ‘organized murder’ of 1914-18. All Tuesday’s election gave added enth siasm to the five large | in City Committee of the American | Workers! Negroes! Whites! Stu- | mass meetings held on Wednesday night in Brooklyn, Man- League in urging a mass mobiliza-|dents! Professionals! Make this | tion at the Central Opera House, lays particular stress on the state- ment of Mr. Brown, President of Pratt & Whitney, a subsidiary of United Aircraft and Transport, that ‘not an engine had been shipped to Germany without the knowledge and consent of the United States Government,’ “In calling this Armistice Day Anti-War Rally, the City Commit- | tee emphasizes the immediate neces- sity of militantly fighting against arming a country whose people want peace. This break-neck speed to break down all the barriers raised against war conclusively proves that we are facing a repetition of the (Group Will Put ‘HLR.B. on Trial |Participation Is Urged With All Unemployed Organizations Delegated representatives of the |Home Relief Bureau Employes As- sociation and organizations of the unemployed and relief workers meeting at the Manhattan Indus- trial High School Wednesday night laid plans for a public mass trial of the entire relief administration in Precinct 18 of the Home Relief Bu- reau, When a committee from the Unemployment Councils headed by Barney Oster attempted to present grievances and relief demands to the supervisor, the members were beaten and arrested by police sta- tioned at the relief bureau. On the following morning the Grievance Committee of the social workers circulated a petition de- manding the removal of the police and the dismissal of the supervisor, if after investigation, it was found that she was responsible for sum- moning the police. Shortly after, Dawson was sum- moned to the Borough Office of the Home Relief Bureau and fired for “activity inside and outside the re- ef station.” Commissioner of Wel- Powell and Loy Teamed Again in Film at Capitol William Powell and Myrna Loy are teamed as husband and wife for the third time in the new Cosmopolitan-Metro-Gold- opens today picture is b Woodward. The E. t the Capitol Theatre. ed on a novel by W. . “white Parade,” * a new Fox Film co- * opens today at the Paramount Theatre. “reg aig “There's Always Tomorrow,” based on Ursula Parrott's novel of the same name, is the new picture at the Roxy Theatre, This is the first American film to feature Binnie Barnes, the young English actress who was featured in “Henry the Righth,” The new Roxy stage show is headed by Paul Keast, young singing star of the} Columbia Broadcasting System. “Orphan’s wyn-Mayer film, “Evelyn Prentice,” which | starring Loretta Young and John Boles, | ; Child,” with Edward Arnold, Karen More ley and 12-year-old Frankie Thomas. Other RKO jottings state that ‘Mister Grant,” Arthur Goodrich’s play on the life of General Grant, hes been purchased for production and that “The Divorcee,”* starring Fred Asta: id Ginger Rogers, | 4s bringing in the is from the hine terlands. * “Dark Victory,” the new Tallulah Bank- head play, has changed its mind again, Instead of opening Wednesday, as last | announced, it will open tonight at the Plymouth T. . We s tickets will be honored I have to be exchanged a “Ode to Liberty” is the name of Ina Claire's new sta’ vehicle which Gile bert Miller will present in Janu Tb was adspted from the French cf el Darin into the American of Sidney Hows | ard, } * ie hattan and the Bronx at which about 19,000 workers cele- brated the seventeenth anniversary of the Bolshevik Revo- lution and demonstrated their un-@— Anti-War Meeting a determined reply in answer to the growing menace of war All delegates are urged to report to the City Office fare Hodson in letters to the press has definitely stated that he ap- Proved of the action of the police Benefit,” a new Mickey Mouse cartoon, Paul Peters, A pore il Meg a ers, David Platt and Edna Ocko 5 se will speak on revolutionary drama, cinema and the dance, respectively, at the New School for Social Research tonight at 8:30 67th St. and Third Ave., at 8 p.m. this Sunday, Armistice Day. | “One of the many disclosures in | the city on Nov. 24, The meeting Wednesday night, called to plan city-wide protest ac- Yesterday the Westminster Cinema dying solidarity with the proletariat of the Soviet Union. Browder in the Bronx A total of 9,000 at the largest of the meetings, in the Bronx Coli- seum, heard Earl Browder, general | seorétary of the Communist Party, | deliver a gripping — in | Pointed to the revolution e | + trea working class as a living | example of the way out of eco-| nomie crisis which must be taken by | American workers. Ford In Brooklyn ! In_ Brooklyn, 3,000 workers cheered James W. Ford, section or- ganizer of the Communist Party in| Harlem, when he reminded them | that tee Russian revolution had} ended the oppression of racial and | national minorities in that country amd recalled the words of Karl Marx that “Labor in a white skin cannot be free while labor in a black skin is branded.” The three other meetings were in Arcadia Hall, attended by 3,000, in Cooper Union, attended by 2,000 and in Rockland Palace, attended by more than 1,500. Speaking of the elections, Brow- | der analyzed the vote in terms of what results it will have for Amer- ican workers. He pointed out that the victories of the Democratic Party in the elections over the Re- publicans tn no way solved the) problems of the jobless and of the underpaid employed workers. The New Deal administration will con- tinue to force company unionism, wage cuts and relief cuts on the working class, Browder said, and the working class will increase its re- sistance to these attacks. “What would the workers in the | Soviet Union say,” Browder asked, “ff the brain trust came to them and said, ‘we will solve your need for greater food production by de- | stroying one-third of what you have. We will solve your need for more clothing, building materials, houses, by closing down factories and taking millions of you out of the economic life of the country.’ In the Soviet Union such proposals would win the brain trust not places in the government, but permanent quarters in an insane asylum.” Browder summed up the differ- ences between capitalist America and the Soviet Union by saying: “The more we in America pro- duce, the worse off we are while in the Soviet Union, the more the workers produce the more they have.” Cites U. 8. 8. R. Advances He cited the tremendous ad- vances in production made by the Russian working class and the cor- responding rise in living standards, as contrasted with declining pro- duction and falling living standards throughout the rest of the capitalist world. He took occasion to reduce to ab- surdity the argument offered by anti-working class forces that Com- munism is un-American. “In France they tell the workers that Communism is un-French, in England they tell them it is un- British, but the simple truth is that 2 it tie the world Communism iS class, and for this reason Commu- nism is the common bulwark of the working class against capitalist ex- ploitation everywhere.” Browder reminded the assembled workers that one of the most im- portant tasks confronting them was the continued struggle for the unity of all working class elements in the fight against entrenched fascism abroad and the growing threat of Fascism at home. He held up the example of Com- munist, Socialis; and Syndicalist unity in Spain against the armed onslaughts of the Robles govern- ment as a splendid example for the revolutionary proletariat everywhere. Referring again to the question of “Americanism” Browder said: “We are the only real heirs of the boys of 1776 who took arms to overthrow the rule of King George Il, which was choking the produc- tive forces of that period. Today when capitalist rule is again para-~ lyzing production, we can find our Way out of the crisis only by mo- bilizing the greatest possibie sec- tions of the working class to press forward to our own November Seventh.” Club Furnished Music Music for the Bronx Coliseum meeting was furnished by the bands of the Prospect Workers Club, the Bronx Workers Club and the Needie Trades Workers Industrial Union. Two revolutionary dances Were presented by the Nature Friends group under the direction of Edith Seigel. Resolutions demanding the imme- diate freedom of the nine Scottsboro un-capitalist but pro-working | \Festival Will Be Held For Italian Newspaper A highly varied program of work- ing class entertainment will be pre- sented at the cultural festival and dance to be held on Sunday night in the Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East Fourth St., for the benefit of L’'Unita Operaia, Italian working class news- Paper, The program wi include 100 voices in an amalgamation of Ital- ian choruses, dramatic competition between the Harlem and Downtown Workers Clubs, vaudeville presenta- tions and selections by a workers’ symphony orchestra. Readers, subscribers, sympa- thizers: help raise $60,000 by Dec. 1. Solicit funds from your friends, shopmates. Contribute today, the munitions’ inquiry illustrates the type of vicious and apparently sanctified methods used by the ar- | maments’ manufacturers. ‘DuPont to block embargo.’ ‘The opposition of DuPont officials and representa~ | tives in Washington to embargo legislation was described at the in- vestigation as an “anti- ace tivity that took place in the War and Navy Department rather than in the Congressional office buildings or in the lobbies of the Capitol”.’ Testimony also showed that the Du- | Pont company turned over to the British Imperial Chemical Indus- | tries, Ltd., an order from Paraguay | for munitions last June, after Presi- | dent Roosevelt had declared an em- | | bargo on arms’ shipments from the | United States to either Paraguay or | Bolivia, “Senator Nye, in a statement to the New York Times, declared that for leaflets. Zimbalist to Appear |At Concert on Noy. 18 For United Front Group Efrem Zimbalist, famous violinist, will face his second working class audience when he appears in Car- negie Hall on Sunday evening, Nov. tions against the firing of Sidonia Dawson, supervisory aide, who was dismissed when she protested police violence against members of the Unemployment Council in the Home Relief Bureau, also planned a city- wide picketing of “sandwich-men” carrying placards and distributing leaflets exposing the discrimina- tions in the relief administration. Organizations represented at the conference formed a provisional ar- 18 under the auspices of the United Front Supporters, a group | |of workers and professionals de-| | voted to recruiting new forces and / resources movement. for the revolutionary Zimbalist recalled yesterday hat | his first working class audience was in Rostov-on-Don, Union, where he played before a large gathering of shock troopers. in the Soviet rangements committee and the en- tire assemblage voted to invite all trade unions, unemployed, civil lib- erties and social and relief workers’ groups to participate in the mass trial and other actions voted upon. The mass trial is intended prin- cipally to bring to the attention of all workers’ groups the circum- stances surrounding the dismissal of Sidonia Dawson, an experienced so- cial worker, Dawson, an active and -the subsequent firing of Daw- son, PIONEER CONCERT IN DETROIT DETROIT, Mich., Nov 8.—The Detroit Pioneer Council has ar- ranged a concert and dance at che Finnish Hall, 5969 14th St., near McGraw, for Dec. 15. All workers’ organizations are asked to support this affair, by at- tending and keeping this date open for the Pioneer Council. In Camarillo, Calif, F. has | been out of work for the last | three years, and is now on County Relief. “We can’t afford to get along without the Daily Worker,” he writes. “I would rather be a few days without eats than miss my Daily Worker.” His $1 contribu- | tion should spur others to collect | for the $60,000 drive, REGISTRATION now going on for course in “The Growth of the Interna- tional Proletarian Class Struggle as Ex- Dressed in the First, Second and Third Internationals.” Given by Max Bedacht. Workers School, 35 K. 12th 8t., Room 301. Tuition fee $1 for five lectures. Begin- ning Saturday, Nov. 10, from 3 to 5 p.m. Friday RED SPARK Br. 605 1.W.O. Celebrates Installation. 47 E. 12th St. Entertainment, refreshments served. Adm. free. JOHN L. SPIVAK lectures on “Planning Pogroms in America.” Co-op. Auditorium, 2700 Bronx Park East. Auspices American League Against War and Fascism, Wil- Mamsbridge Br. NATIONAL STUDENT LEAGUE, 114 W. 14th St. Max Schulman, of International Typographical Union “Big Six,” lectures on “Problems of the Labor Movement.” Series of six lectures, 50c; individual adm. Ibe, PROF. OAKLEY JOHNSON lectures on | “Seventeen Victorious Years of the Rus- | Sian Revolution,” Coney Island Work Club, 2874 West 27th St. Adm. 15c, NATHAN ADLER, writer for New Masses, lectures on “Modern Trends in Litera- ture.” Tremont Progressive Club, 866 E. Tremont Ave., 8:30 p.m. REVOLUTIONARY ARTS SYMPOSIUM. New School for Social Research. ‘Van der Lubbe’s Head,” di ine Strike,” & film. Representatives from all the arts | will speak. Each talk followed by illustra~ tion or performance. All seats reserved. Prices, $1.10, 75¢, Sc. Tickets at Workers Bookshop and at National Committee for Detense of Political Prisoners, 186 5th Ave. SOVIET NIGHT, Mecca Temple, 7 p.m. Abrasah, Russian Troubador; Latvian, Ar- menian, Caucasian, Scandinavian Workers Chorus. Louis Lozowick. Ausp.: F.8.U. New York District. PRIENDS | ton of the Negroes and the Tasks of the White Workers.” REGISTER NOW at Film & Foto League, new address 31 E. 2ist St. Registration Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays, at 7-9 p.m. PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE in Soct~ ety, D. Hoffer, Shule No. 82, 695 Wiona 8t., Brooklyn, at 8 p.m. LECTURE on Soviet Union by Comrade Greenspan of F. S. U., returned from the U. 8. S. R. after visit of ten months there. 1009 Winthrop St., nr. E. 924 St., Brooklyn, at 8:30 p.m, Auspices of I. W. O. Br. ¥-67, Youth Butlders. GEORGE LEWIS of Daily Worker Staff will lecture on “Anti-Semitism in America” at Rugby Youth Club, 84 E. 52nd &t., Brooklyn, at 8:30 p.m. JOHN L. SPIVAK will lecture on “Amer- ica Faces Pogroms’’ at the Prospect Work- ers Center, 1157 So. Blvd., Bronx. Come on time. REGULAR MEETING OF BR. 521, I.W.0., will take place at 8:30 p.m., Mt. Eden Ave. (Paradise Manor). | | 8:15, Alexander Taylor of the O, P. E. E. | will speak cn “Hitlerism and Militarism Threatens the Unemployed.” Auspices of Prospect Br. of American League Against War and Fascism. LOUIS WEINSTOCK on Report of 54th A. F. of L. Convention, at Bronx Workers Club, 1610 Boston Rd., at 8:30 p.m, SCOTTSBORO RALLY at 1300 Walton Ave., nr. 169th St., Bronx, at 8:30 p.m. Auspices Modern Thought Center, Speak- ers, Richard Moore, George Lowe. Enter- tainment from League of Workers Thea- tres. Admission free. NORMAN TALLENTIRE, secretary of the American League Against War and Fascism, lectures on “Danger of War and Fascism,” Stuyvesant Casino, 2nd Av. and 9th St., Room 32. Adnf: free. Auspices Br, 9, LW. O. “COSSACKS OF THE DON,” Soviet Film. The Auditorium, 196 Bleecker St., (near 6th Ave.) at 8:30 p. m. Adm. 35¢, Ausp.: Friends of the New Masses. OPEN Forum. German Workers Club, downtown, 79 E. 10th St. Samuel Gold- berg speaks on “(Scottsboro Case.” Ad- mission free. SADIE VAN VEEN lectures on “The Scottsboro Case.” Boro Park Worket Club, 18th Ave. and 47th St., 8:30 p.m. Questions and discussion. MARGARET COWL lectures on “Sixteen Years After the Armistice,” Utica Center, 1410 Lincoln Place, Brooklyn (one block from Utica Ave. Subway Station), 8:30 P.m. Adm. 15¢. AOPEE Forum. “Shall Man Be the Slave | of Science or Its Master,” by Dr, David Ramsey, 53 W. 19th St.,'8 p.m, Saturday HARLEM Stars in floor show. Harlem's Hot Music. Young Liberator Dance, Sat- =e, Nov. 10. Finnish Hall, 15 W. 126th GET-TOGETHER DANCE and Entertain- ment, Associated Workers Clubs, 11 W. 18th St., Baturday, Nov. 10. Progra Yosel Cutler's Puppets; Bugene Nigob, pianist; Prolet String Quartet; Workers Club Song Bird; “Der Fuchrer”; Celebrities; Dance Orchestra. Eats, drinks, fun galore. Adm. in advance 30c; at door 35c. HEAR Earl Browder, Gen. Yahontof, Hensu Chan, Malcolm Cowley, T. A. Bis- son, Frederick V. Field, Sat., Nov. 10th, Irving Plaza, 15th St.'and Irving Place Banquet and Dance. Native Chinese food ( Chinese style). Club Valhalla Dance Orchestra, $1.25 for both banquet and dance. Sold in advance only (service St 6:30) 50c. Dance ticket entitles you to hear all the speakers. Starts at 8:30 (65¢ at door). Tickets on sale at New Masses, | 31 Z. 27th &., Workers Bookshop, 50 E. | 18th St., Chelsea Bookshop, 58 W, ath St., Rand Bookshop, 7 E. 18th St. or at our headquarters, Friends of the Chinese People, 168 W. 23rd St., CHelsea 2-9006, Mail or phone reservations filled ANCE AND ENTER’ » and Irving Place. Auspices United Rank and File Cutter League of Local 10 I.L.G.W.U. WHAT’S ON of the Workers School, 116) of Workers Theatres, 114 W. 14th St. University Place, cor. 13 30 pa Also: Sunday, 1 to 6 p.m.: “Broken Shoes” Tom Trusdale lectures on “Self-Determint and other Soviet films—20c. at 11 West OPEN FORUM at 722 Prospect Ave., at TAINMENT. Irving | “ON THE MAROH, on the march, the hunger, hunger march.” Ent ment and dance. Spartecus Club, Ww. 25th St. near 8th Ave. Music, play, workers’ songs, refreshments. Resume of what happened on the Hunger March, by Comrade 8. Freda. Given by the Hunger Marchers, Hat check 20c. Sat., Nov. 10, 8 p.m. FRIENDS OF THE WORKERS SCHOOL, 116 University Pl. cor. 13th St., Sat, Nov. 10, 8:30 pm. Russian Night. Russian Art Quintet, Russian entertainment; danc- ing to Pierre Degeyter band. Refreshments, Subscription 25¢. TREMONT PROGRESSIVE CLUB, first | | Anniversary Celebration. Concert’ and | Dance. 866 H. Tremont Ave., 8:30 p.m., W. L. 'T.; Paul Glass; Sam Mandel; Volod- zya_é& Nazaroff, and others. ORGANIZERS Attention! Special meet- | ing of all organizers of the Associated | | Workers Club, 2:30 p.m. at 11 W. 18th St. | ENTERTAINMENT and Dance. German | Workers Club, downtown, 79 E. 10th St Refreshments, good music. Hat check 25c. | CONEY ISLAND Workers Club Celebra- tion of 17 Years of the Russian Revo- lution. Grand Concert, 2874 W. 27th St., Brooklyn Program: Paul Farber, Dance} Group and others, 8:30 p.m. Sunday ANTI-MILITARY Ball, Irving Plaza, | Irving Place and 15th St., Armistice Day, Sunday, Nov. 11, 8:30 p.m. Ausp.: National Student League. Hot jazz band; Trio from “Stevedore," C.C.N.Y. Guttersnipe Quartet, W.L.T. Adm. 49¢. “STRIKE ME RED,” Potamkin’s Revo- lutionary Operetta, with 60 Young Pio- neers. Also W.L.T., Red Dancets, Next Saturday and Sunday, 8:30 p.m., Nov. 10- M1, Fifth Ave. Theatre, 28th’ St. and Broadway. Entire belcony 35c; 2nd bal- cony 250; orchestra and loges 55, 15, 9c. Pioneers, Sth f1., 35 E. 12th St., League on ain “JEWS IN THE SOVIET UNION,” lec- ture by Leon Dennen, author of “Where the Ghetto Ends,” Brownsville Workers School, 1955 Pitkin Ave, Adm. 20c, with this ad 180, PORUM, followed by discussion. Prank Greenspan speaks on “Marriage in the Soviet Union.” Dancing and refreshments to follow. Daily Worker Chorus, 47 Bast 1ath St., 8 p.m. Admission 200. TREMONT CLUB pre- sents an original program of color, sound and movement. “Club Nite.” Dancing, mu- | steal, piano; harmonica band, mandolin | and guitar duet, 866 E. Tremont Ave., | Bronx, 9:30 p.m. | HENRY COWELL tn concert at Pierre | Degeyter Club, 5 E. 19th St., 8:30 p.m. | The program will consist of a talk by Mr. | Cowell and many of his works, as well .as | & Bach Suite, | ANTI-WAR DANCE AND ENTERTAIN- | ment, New Group, 42 Sutter Ave, Bklyn. Lew Pine and his Celebrities; Red Star | Tap Dancers. Subs. with this notice 20c; | without, 25¢. | ARMISTICE DAY ANTI-WAR Protest | Rally. Central Opera House, 67th St. and | 3rd Ave. Mass singing of ahti-wer songs. | Speakers: Louis Perigaud, Dr. Harry F.| Ward, Clarence Hathaway, Rev. Wm. Lloyd | Imes, Rabbi Israel Goldstein, Winifred | Oheppell and Edwin Alexander. Ausp.: American League Against War and Fas- cism, Adm. 0c, AFFAIRS FOR THE NEW YORK DAILY WORKER Friday “Role of the Press’ by Wm. Fuchs at Social Youth Club, 313 Broadway, Brooklyn. Affair given by I.W.O. Br. 74 at 1421 Brook Ave, Bronx. Dance and Entertainment, Mansion Hall, 57 St. Marks Pl. Program: Margaret Larkin, of Theatre Union, will speak. Auspices Pinsker Branch 10 LW.O. “Health in the Soviet Union and the U.S.” by Dr. David Stumhof, New Group, 42 Sutter Ave., Brooklyn, Ad- mission 15¢, Saturday Concert and Dance given by the Daily Worker Campaign Committee, Lithuanian Hall, $75 Joseph Avenue, Brooklyn, Saturday, Nov. 10, 8 p.m. Good program arranged. Tickets 5c. Workers Lab. Theatre—Puppet Show and other entertainment. Boro Park Workers Center, 18th Ave. and 47th = Brooklyn. Auspices Sec. 11 Unit Dance-Entertainment. Russian Work- ers Club, 4049 Third Ave., Bronx. Auspices Unit 13 and 16 Sec. 15, Entertainment and Dance. German Workers Club, 306 E. 149th St. House Party at home of H. Renner, 1543 E. 37th St., Bklyn., 8 p.m. En- November 9th ., 8:30 P.M. MOVIE: Cossaks of the Don The AUDITORIUM 196 Bleecker St. 3 doors east of 6th Ave. Admission 35¢ Auspices: Friends of New Masses tertainment, dancing, Auspices Unit 18, Bec. 17. Entertainment and Dance. Harlem Workers Center, 415 Lenox Ave. Ad- mission 260. Arranged by Solidarity Br, 691 I,W.0. Concert and Dance for and “Daily Worker," 1334 Wilkins Ave. Ausp.? Sec. 8, Unit 17. Sunday Dance and Entertainment. Priends of the Workers School, 116 University PL, cor. 13th St. Program: chalk talk by “del,” violin soloist, and others. Jazz Johnson and his orches- tra. Adm, 28¢. Concert and Package Party. 87 Bay ’Sth St., 6:30 p.m. Auspices 140 L.W.O. Adm. 10¢. Comrades, bring packages. Auspices I.W.O, 140. Dance and Entertainment — Chalk talk by “del.” Friends of the Work- ers School, 116 University Pl. Aus- pices Steve Katovis Br. LL.D. “Birth Control” lecture by Dr. Cherie Appel, Cooperative Auditorium, 2700 Bronx Park East, 8:30 p.m. Auspices Women's Council 11. Coming! ‘Sex Attitudes as Factors in Mental Health,” lecture by Dr, Frankwood E. Williams, Wednesday, Nov. 14, Irving Plaza, 15th St. and Irving Place, 8:30 p.m. Adm. 25¢, “Freiheit” End of St. Petersburg,” 2 showings, 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. Nov. 16, 42 E. 13th St. SEYMOUR WALDMAN, Washington Cor- respondent of Daily Worker, speaks on “The Foreign Policy of the Roosevelt Ad~ ministration,” Priday, Nov. 16, 8:15 p. m. Irving Plaza, 15th St. and Irving Place. Free tickets for those that buy $1 worth of pamphlets in Workers Bookshops. Ad- mission in advance 25¢, at door 36c. JOHN L. SPIVAK, { writer New Masses, lectures on Pogroms.” Brooklyn Academy of Musi Friday, Nov. 16, 8:30 P.M. Tickets for at Brownsville Workers School a1 Brownsville Workers Book Shops, Work Bookshop, 50 E. 18th St. New Masses, 31 E. 27th St. and at box office. OUTSTANDING CONCERT of the Move- | ment, to Support the Fight Against Fi cism and Nazism, Zimbalist will at Carnegie Hall, Sunday, Nov. 18, 8: pm. Proceeds ‘for Anti-Nazi Fighting Fund. Auspices United Front Supporters Tickets now at Carnegie Box Office and Wotkers Book Shop. NEW YORK Daily Worker ot Banquet, | Thanksgiving Eve. Nov. 28 at St, Nicholas Palace. Splendid program, speakers. Get your organization to send delegates, get your own reservation from N. ¥. Daily Worker, 35 E. 12th St. Reservation 78c. FOURTH ANNUAL Concert and Ball, arranged by Br. 132, I. W. ©., Sat., Nov. 17th, at Royal Mansion, 1315 Boston Road (169th St.) W. L. T. in “Hollywood Goes Workers Lab. Theatre Presents “The Red.” New Dance Group. Adm, 40c. in advance, 60c. at door, What are the revolutionary arts JOSHUA KUNITZ, as chairman Tonight: See “What’s On” Sixty thousand dollars will in- sure the Daily Worker for the next year, Concentrate on raising | this sum by the end of November. NATUREFRIENDS FALL FESTIVAL Saturday, Nov. 10 at 8 P.M. Manhattan Lyceum 60 B. 4th St. DANCE ORCHESTRA Adm, 40¢ in advance - 50¢ at door ern en N NRRETIRE SNE RR EAF Tomorrow Night A HOT TIME IN HARLEM !) e YOUNG LIBERATORS | DANCE Finnish Hall, 15 W. 126th St. doing? HEAR EARL BROWDER Secretary of Communist Party of America Gen. YAKHONTOFF Author of “the Chinese Soviets” MALCOLM COWLEY Editor of New Republic T. A. BISSON Far Eastern Expert of the For- eign Policy Association FRED’K V. FIELD Celebrate THE BIRTH OF CHINA TODAY and Rapid Growth of Movement to Aid the Chinese People in Their Struggle for National Liberation DANCE ® tte strains of the CLUB VALHALLA ORCHESTRA SATURDAY, NOV. 10 Secretary of American Council of Institute of Pacific Relations HANSU CHAN Editor of China Today Tickets Sold at NEW MASSES, 31 E. 27th St, WORKERS BOOKSHOP, 50 E. 13th St. CHELSEA BOOKSHOP, 58 W. 8th St, RAND BOOKSHOP, 7 FE. 15th St. Or at Our Headquarters Auspices of Friends of the Chinese People 168 W. 23rd St, — Chelsea 2-9096 Irving Plaza—tith St. & Irv. Pl. SPEAKERS BEGIN 8:30 DANCING AT 10 P.M, 50 Cents for Both] | AT DOOR 65¢ Banquet of Native Chinese Food (served Chinese Style) Begins at 6:30 P. M. BANQUET & DANCE $1.25 Reservations in Advance UR WASHINGTON CORRESPONDENT REPORTS !—, SEYMOUR WALDMAN on THE FOREIGN POLIC ADMINISTRATION The Daily Worker Correspondent that the capitalist press sees fit administration 1s preparing the country for fascism and war. FRIDAY, NOV. 16 8:15 P.M. TICKETS: In Advance 25c, at Door 35e, New York Workers Bookshop Ave., Bronx; 369 Sutter Ave. Brooklyn. and Circulating Library, 'Y OF THE ROOSEVELT will present first hand information, not to print, on how the present IRVING PLAZA 15th St. & Irving Place or PREE for $1 purchase of pamphlets at 50 E. 13th St.; 699 Prospect JOHN L. SPIVAK Lectures on “AMERICA FACES POGROMS” FRIDAY, NOV. 16th - 8 P. M. Auspices: Brownsville Workers School, 1855 Pitkin OP, Ave., and Brownsville Workers 369 Sutter Ave, ‘Tickets on Sale at: Bookshop,, 50 E. 18th St. New Masses, 31 E. 27th St. Academy of Music Box Office. Brooklyn Academy of Music Hanson Pl, and Lafayette Ave, William Browder, chairman Seats . . . 25-35-49-75 cents Workers’ Press Festival for the benefit of @ DER ARBEITER @ DAILY WORKER @ L’UNITA OPERAIA SATURDAY - NOV. 10 tn the Center of German Workers Club, Italian Workers Olub 306 E. 149th St., Bronx Good Program - Dancing Admission 15¢. 1:30 P.M. HITLER AGENTS IN U.S. A. PLOTTING POGROMS ! lecture by JOHN L. SPIVAK on “AMERICA FACES POGROMS” Friday, November 9 PROSPECT WORKERS CENTER 1187 So. Boulevard, Bronx - 8:30 P. M. went on a two-a-day basis, Its first pic- ture is Robert Flaherty's “Man of Aran,” which completed its run at the Criterion. * (ag “The St. Louis Kid,” Jimmy Cagney’s new vehicle about dairy farmers and the midwest milk war, goes into its second week at the Strand Theatre. Cae RT The Anne Sten-Frederick March film “We Live Again,” has been held over at the Radio City Music Hall. This is the third American picture adaptation of 'Tol- stoy’s “Resurrection,” Bakes Whar ‘Those who like the music of Franz Lehar will have an opportunity to hear an international broadcast of “The Merry Widow” over WABC next Sunday night at 7 p.m. The broadcast originates in Vienna, with Lehar conducting the Vienna Phil- harmonic Orchestra, MGM's new film adaptation, directed by Lubitsch, is still current at the Astor Theatre. oie. RKO Radio Pictures has made a film of the Broadway stage hit, “Wednesday's You Can’t Afford To Miss THIS MARVELOUS COMEDY ” 2) py, “RECRUITS” ARTEF Every Fri.& Sat.Ev'g omane Sun. Mat. & Ev'g Prices; .50-.75-81 Now Playing Phone Chickering 47999 pam, Each talk will he accompenied by appropriate illustrations. Auspices of the National Committee for the Defense of Political Prisoners, * William A. Brady is giving thought to @ revival of Shaw’s “The Shewing-Up of Blanco Posnet.” if this materializes; Shaw's new one-acter, “The Six of Calais,” will be used as a curtain raiser, The Amusement Department of the New York Daily Worker would like to know what Plays, movies, concerts and recitals are patron- ized by our readers, Amusements AN EXPOSE OF AMERICAN POLITIOS! Henry Hammond, Inc., presents FRED STONE in JAYHAWKER By Sinclair LEWIS & Lloyd LEWIS | CORT Thea., 48 St. E. of By, BRy. 9-0046 Eves. 8:40. Mats. Wed. and Sat. 2:30 ALWAYS 260 GOOD SEATS AT 50c Positively Last 3 Weeks! ANGELO HERNDON say ery comrade must see ‘Stevedore’.”” stevedore Special Reduced Rates for Parties Civic Repertory Theatre, 1ith St. & 6th Ave Eves. Mat. Tues. & Sat. 2:30 Prices: 80¢ to $1.50. NO TAX ++, an heroic symphony of Lenin and Leninism!” —DAILY WORKER. tation.” “y+. makes the Hollywood films seem pallid LEN 42nd St. East of Broadway CAMEO work beauty and emotional exal- —HERALD-TRIBUNE. 6 ONGS ABOU of unusual —N. ¥, TIMES. studio exercises.” IN’ “Timely... ACM 14th Street & Union Square Pudovkin’s ‘“‘DESERTER’”’ omething to talk heatedly about.”—DAILY WORKER. PARALLELS THE GREAT STRIKE WAVE IN THE UNITED STATES “STRIKE Harry Alan Potamkin’s Revolutionary Operetta —— ME RED” Also: WORKERS’ LABORATORY THEATRE — RED DANCERS Next Sat., Sun. | Entire Bale NOVEMBER 10th, 11th, 8:30 P.M. Entire 2d Balcony—25e Orch., Loges 55, 75, 99¢ slime 5th Ave. Theatre 28th Street at Bway Auspices: Young Pioneers, 35 E. 12th St., Theatres, 114 W. 14th St, CH 2-953, 12th St.; New Masses, 91 E, 27th Bt 5th floor, AL 4-5707; League of Workers’ Tickets also at Workers Bookshop, 50 E, SUNDAY: 1 to 6 P.M.— “BROKEN SHOES” & other Soviet Films—20e Orchestra-Dancing. Prof. Frankwood j-— CELEBRATION OF THE 1ith ANNIVERSARY OF THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION. SOVIET NIGHT ABRASHA, The Troubador, will sing and play native sonj 40 voices; Scandinavian Workers’ Chorus; Acrobats, Sports, Dancer-Oriental Music; Armenians-Amella Babad, Artist of the Artef; Balalaika Latvians-Chorus of Pyramids; Caucasian Williams, Hays Jones, Louis Lozowick FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9th, at 7:30 P. M. MECCA TEMPLE BALLROOM, 135 West 535th Street, New York City Auspices: Friends of the Soviet Union, 799 Broadway. Tickets at Workers Book- shop, 50 E. 13th St.; New Masses, 31 E, 27th Sit. Chelsea Bookshop, 58 W. 8th St. ADMISSION 35c. Labor Sports Union National Negro Thea. a Black Houdini Featuring: PATIENT KISH (only female escape artist) Greetings from Clarence Hathaway Editor, “Daily Worker” M. Olgin Editor, “Morning Freiheit” Mac Weiss Editor, “Young Worker” Dancing (till dawn) e Saturday Doors open 1 p.m. International 1,000 voices érnst Grayson (Dramatic Tenor) Internat’l Costume Bail Chorus Greatest Event Friday or Sunday for the Revolutionary Press . Friday Sunday Afternoon DAILY WORKER Srapetnien "proctse | YOUNG WORKER | osteat’racn Pyramids, Gymnastics MORNING FREIHEIT See ee mee BAZAAR ST. NICHOLAS PALACE West 66th Street (Near Broadway) TONIGHT SATURDAY AND SUNDAY ADMISSION peu ane) pet Tea) oe AS sortment of finest e Saturday wai tS ed oe tee opera + merchandise sold at Combination ticket for all 3 days - - - 75¢ | {proletarian prices. The F. 8, U. Workers Lab. Theatre PUPPET SHOW Black Houdini and Patient Kish in a special performance for children Sunday Night Ernest Grayson (Dramatic Tenor) All Negro Cabaret Nite Dancing (till dawn) 60 BOOTHS packed with the largest as~ Baialaika Orchestra will entertain the crowd during meals in a specially prepared program. A Modern Moscow Cafeteria is the choicest food and drinks, especially for the Bazaar with being installed a variety of Famous Deacon Johnson and his National Negro Jazz Orchestra of twelve pieces will Play every night for the dancing,

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