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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1933 Page Five A Leader in the Great World Movement Bryn Mawr College Against War Comes to the United States for Women Workers Veena Trains Misleaders men and the building up of a world) weekly republic. jedited by Needle Trades “Worker Wh Who ‘Attended School to Get Free Meals Tells How’ Rich WHAT —A By H. W.L. L. DANA (Author of “Social Forces in World Literature,” etc. and for- merly teacher of comparative lit- erature at Harvard, Columbia and By Michael Gold "A: Gees ‘Souttiin University of Paris.) Letters from readers are always a most interesting part of a paper. periodical, “Clarte,” Barbusse for some eight} after which hésfarted another af world culture called was his subsequent trips to the land of the Soviets, he wrote in his book,| “One Looks at Russia.” His rec ognition of the splendid record of| the Soviets in international rela-| Continuing his. opposition to mili-| tions, led him to write his, glowing | tary oppression wherever he saw it,| preface to the book, “The Soviet | | which gives us his Inferno, he passes|Barbusse denounced French militar-| Union and Peace.” | In place of Dante's trilogy of the | years, vine Comedy,” Barbusse has} review given us in three great novels a study | “Monde,” of Human Tragedy. Starting with his early pre-war novel, “L'Enfer,” the leader ofya great world move- be Bs 2 = yy a A ast The workers correspondence movement has proved to be one of the T eee against war is coming to ida le es coed ees me ism in the war against the Riffs in| qe growing danger of an attack | Women Teach Organization «ws. IMightiestforees of Soolalist construction in the Soviet Union. | America. ti see oA a nally’ Morocco, showed up in “Hangmen”| 4, this Workers’ Republic by the| eS ee ee I wish the Daily. Worker could print many more letters every day. | During the World War, in the) 000000001 ce ae __ |imperialist nations, led Barbusse, in | NEW YORK.—Last winter I was practically down and owt. I had been | midst of the shrieking of shells, the | rattle of machine-guns, and the | bursting of bombs, a French Poilu in | the trenches wrote a tremendous scorching demonstration of war, This was the book called “Le Feu” or “Under Fire: the Journal of ay Squad.” It presents a terriiic pic-| ture of soldiers who had given up trying to be themselves, who had given up thinking, and become conjunction with Heinrich Mann, | Theodore Dreiser, Maxim Gorki,| | Sherwood Anderson, Havelock Ellis, and other leaders of thought| One day one of my co-unemployed workers invited me to po, throughout the world, to call to-| invitation was extended to me in the office of the Needle Trade Srkers gether the World Congress Against| Industrial Union. As we walked down, ¢ - War which met at Amsterdam in| absorbed in each other’s troubles, it) a group of girls including myself and | August, 1932, the most powerful | made me forget about my lunch and| visited a steel mill. |international gathering against war| before I knew it I found myself in} A Comparison that the world has ever known. In| the New York Women’s Trade Union| As soon as we reached the sire! “This eloquent address at this Congress, | League, which is kept up by the ric we were asked to sign our They have to be edited: down to the bone, of course, for reasons of space, _but the thing- would-be, worth doing. What a cross section of the real mind of the masses such a symposium becomes, often better than the work of the trained reporter. If there“Was mitfe ¥6om in this column I should print many such letters.” But hree are just a few. They have been brutally chopped down to fit inside the non-elastic column lines: Of Course We Agree “Communists talk about the completer equality of men and women. out of work for about nine months and didn’t even have the price for fanch or carfare. Henri Barbusse Why deny iin prattise?’ We fight against racial discrimination. What about discrimimfition against women, within and without the party? Of course it is.a problem to. draw a worker into active party life if his wife is opposed?. So isn’t it.the job of the party to try to draw her in? To explain why:she should: fight this rotten system that enslaves women?”— Helen Hayes; Washington, D. C. Thanks, Ray “Whether it makes you feel better or not, I must say your column and Dr, Luttinger’s-are to me very educational and sometimes enter- taining. Keep it up, ‘because through your articles I have made many new contacts for the Daily, and you and I and the rest of us want to make our Daily Workéf always stronger and stronger.”—Ray, Bklyn., N. Y. Can It Be True? “Like you I’m getting disgusted with the radio. Mooing crooners and Nira yodelers, blatant jazz nad futile beauty-hints make the radio almost useless as arr instrument of culture and enjoyment. There is only one speaker I have listened to with any degree of satisfaction. Station WARD Brooklyn runs a series of weekly broadcasts on books Wednesday mornings at 10:15 a.m: “Paul Kaminsky, who speaks/has on innumerabie occasions eriticized ‘the NRA, capitalists, the Socialist Party, etc. I can assure you it was a surprise and pléasure to hear him coming over the air. I feel he shouldbe encouraged; if he’s not the real thing, maybe he should be shown up. I wish you had a Radio Editor to guide me.”— Irving Pinchuk, Brooklyn, Not Many Such Cops! “Your column is real gold to me. Your article on Jim Larkin reminds me-of a. meeting with him during the war. It was in Brooklyn, at Willoughby- avenue. “How Jim laid it out to them, the place was jammed, police inside-and out. Listening to the conversation of two police, I heard one say, “By gust, he can talk; Jim’s a fine lad and you know, he’s damn Tight about-the war.” The truth had hit home. Greeting to you and the cause ‘we work for.—Nordika, an old timer and grand- mother, Waco, Te: - ‘What A Sorehead “You were raised: om-the East Side of New York and I was raised in the ‘Michigan Copper country—part of the time across from the gas house, boiler factory, eoal’dock, etc. And another part of the time from the smelts, wire mills Sid sawmill. Previous to that a stone quarry, also I put‘ in Several yéar's at the General Motors heliholes here in Flint. “So I guess that’ makes us both intellectuals. There may be some- thing: wrong in me but, I can’t get the local Communist crowd to use me for anything. I must ook educated or something. * Anyway, I’m glad to see there is somebody. in the movement wise enough to get out a good agitational sheet.“ I hope they won’t slam down on it, I mean the present thug government. I am a sorehead, but am really delighted to see that the Daily has ‘made the necessary turh.”—Bert de Vriendt, a sympathizer, Flint, Mich.” Must We Always Explain Poetry? =" Say, what @’ye mean-by that Pittsburgh poem? Every steel organizer = in the district is wondering what- you're driving at; let alone the several * thousand new “members: of the Steel worker's union. It’s true the steel .organizers are run down from overwork, but nof yet ready to kick off, ‘especially with hundréd€"Signing up for the union every day, and some “successful strikes. Why. can’t you write simply, like Arthur Brisbane?”— Jim Allgndpte: Pittsburgh, Pa. «No, it Was Another Mike “T liked: that jazz-poem. I read it to my gang of six giddy, scrappy ‘boys and girls whom “I’m trying to wean away from capitalist bunk. They liked it,-but still préfer Robert Burns. Say, 32 years ago, comrade, -~-I boxed another Mick-Gold in Johannesburg, South Africa. Maybe a nephew of yours, eh, what? as he came from New York. The best of luck.—A. S., Los Angeles. “ Boring Within the Church “We who want Communism have a great stake in the organized religions of the status quo. Why? Great masses are there, yes, the most influential part of the masses, by far. If we are wise and truly scientific we will orgadilze to pefetrite those mass-churches. All those who honestly and consciously take some, stock in a true non-sectarian spirit of religion ought to organize to,drive out the blind leaders of the blind and those who make i#_usiness‘of-religion, For the sake of the oppressed masses, let us sing with them, pray with them, and as sure as the light over- comes darkness, the truth that is in us will light up those strongholds of reaction. ‘Show ‘fhéni- their church is dominated by the selfish rich, show them the conditions of our iniquitous status quo. Teach them the living spirit of Sommuni: ."—William Geminden, Columbus, Ohio. § “How Whalen Smells “The pain. in my neck has increased rapidly since sweet-smeilisy Whale’em flung his tailor-made elegance over Te blue duck. In the saddle as NRA boss, he’s. roaring the old battle cry of “reds,” arrested pickets, squawked, squeaked and squirmed. These four-flushing patriots with one-hand ‘deep in-the’ treasury! It is a fantastic nightmare. But no tyranny can last forever. The day of tolerance is over. What we need is a good red-blooded hatred of bourgeois injustice, and a grim - determinatign to wipe: it off the earth. Machado went; Hitler will go; and maybe Some day! we can rid New York of tin boxes, moron mayors, -and grafting. Tigers,'»-But ‘it wil take a better man than La Guardia, I don’t think..a single~Wall Street banker will vote against him. So what good is ‘he to us-workers? I’m for Fighting Bob Minor this year— T. G— pik dat i Long Island. : “>What Does It Mean? “Can you decipher.the following paragraph? Its title is, ‘a theory of the action: of the .after-effects of a connection upon it’ It is an extract from. a. synopsis. of a paper by the well-known psychologist, Edward L.:Thorndike,-im-the program of the 41st annual meeting of the American Psychological “Association, held here recently. But here it is for you to crack your jaws on: ‘A satisfying after-effect which influences _y the connectioit “whose <after-effect it is does so by arousing what may be called the "¥es’ or’ ‘O%K?’ or ‘confirming’ reaction. This does not «ct _ either mystically or logically to strengthen the right or adaptive or use- ful connection or that connection which causes the after-effect in ques- tion. ‘As a working hypothesis I suggest that the force and mechanism of the cocina reaction are the force and mechanism of reinforcement, ‘applied to- a. connection’. No, it wasn’t written by the inmate of an fasvium nor is“it a typographical error. It’s the profound wisdom of an eminent bourgeois professor. I thought I’d copy it for some of the ‘working-class. youth who still have any reverence left for a bourgeois brutes doing things they do not | want to do, | ‘The book was at once denounced by the military authorities who thought it criminal to tell such truths in war time. Yet the book spree like wild fire throughout France, was awarded the Goncourt Prize as the best French novel of the year, was translated into more than twenty languages, and achieved of our time. The author of this book, Henri Barbusse, combined in himself the best traits of two races: sionate oratory of his French father and the practical realism of his English mother. He was interna- tional not only by his origin but also in his appeal. Men in all countries felt a kinship with him. No one could have been better suited to lead the struggle against war. Before the war, Barbusse had been @ sensitive writer of the naturalistic school of Zola, about whom he has just written a very interesting book, When the World War came, Bar- busse gave up his writing and volun- teered as an ordinary soldier in the 231st Regiment of Infantry. The other soldiers, surprised. to find this writer joining them voluntarily, soon welcomed him as one of themselves. Three times he fell sick. Three times he was invalided home. Three times he returned to the front. He emerged from the war, decorated for bravery and promoted to the rank of lieutenant, but terribly lacerated in body, and soul and filled with a burning desire to carry on to the end an unflinching war against war. Chosen to Head Ex-Soldiers His former companions in arms unanimously elected him president of the so-called ARAC, the Republican Association of Former Combatants, and later when he had succeeded in affiliating this with organizations of the front rank fighters and war victims of other counries, Barbusse "was made head of the International of Ex-Service men. During the fifteen years since the Armistice, Henri Barbusse has con- tinued year by year to build up a world wide movement of jnterna- tional understanding and opposition to war, In 1919, the year after the’ end of the war, he published a novel called “Clarte” or “Light,” which ends with @ magnificent vision in which, after the war is over, the hero imagines universal revolution in the minds of a larger circulation than any book | International in Origin and Appeal | the pas-| In soldier's uniform when he enlisted in the French army in 1914. Now this eminent French author comes to New York to attend the United States Congress Against War. Barbusse, author of “Onder Fire” and other novels, will be the principal speaker at the public mass reception in New York tonight at Mecca Temple and St. Nicholas Arena. This is his first visit to the United States. the White Terror of Fascism in the Balkans, and helped se cause of the Armenians and Georgians in the Caucasus, Writing books on ail these sub- jects, editing his periodicals, pub- lishing a great number of powerful short stories, Barbusse still had the indefatigable energy to produce in 1925 a vast, comprehensive work in two volumes called “Les Enchaire- ments” or “Chains.” By imagina- tions of a human body, he traced the emerges in “Clarte” in a@ prophetic vision of Paradise. Adopting the title of the novel, “Clarte,” Barbusse proceeded to found the so-called Clarte Movement, to bring light and clarity into the} dark post-war disillusion, and to) organize “a league of intellectual Solidarity for the international cause.” Associated with him in this “fraternal group of free spirits” were other distinguished - French writers such. as Anatole France, Geoges Duhamel and Jules Romains, | innumerable links in the chains of English wrters~ sich as Thomas'|the exploitation of man through the Hardy and H. G. Wells, and other |ages. In this outline of history, Bar- intellectuals from other countries.|busse showed his growing sympathy Yet it was not merely an “Interna-| with the oppressed. tional of Thought” that was aimed Visited U..S. S. R. in 1927 at. Barbusse hoped for cooperation; This. sympathy with the working of the intellectuals and the manual| class was confirmed by his trip to laborers. the Soviet Union in: 1987, at the Founded “Clarte” and “Monde” | titne of the tenth anniversary of the To promulgate these ideas, a bi-| Russian Revolution. About this and | Barbusse emphasized once more the | |need of a United Front, of a union) of the intellectuals with the great | | working masses, who, he decalred,| are themselves the greates power) for intellectual progress and the| jonly hope for crushing war. Since Amsterdam a year ago, Bar- busse has devoted all the unflinch- ing strength of his emacipated body | to carrying on the work of the Inter-| national Oommittee ‘for Struggle) | Against War and has edited the organ of this moyement, the “Front | | Mondial” or “World Front.” To) |maintain this world front against war, he is prepared to travel to the| ends of the earth to keep up that | war upon war which he began in the |trenches nearly twenty years ago. He is now coming to America to} link up the various pcwce move- ments here with the world-wide} movement against war. After the | United States Congress Against War, | which will take place in New York Sept.,29-Oct. 1, Barbusse will tour some -of the chief cities of this jcountry in a series of great mass | meetings against war. We shall have} a chance to see that tall gaunt figure worn to the bone by the war and by the struggle against war, the gentle smile upon that emaciated face, the sad, deep-sunken, pene- trating. eyes, and hear the tremen- dous eloquence of that voice trembl- ing with the nervous earnestness of |@ terrible experience undergone in the last war and a burning desire that there may never be another. During the World War, in contrast to the protest against war that came from the trenches themselves in Barbusse's “Under Fire” there appeared a very different appeal en- titled “Above the Battle.” The very title indicates the difference. This was written by Romain Rolland, who was then aloof from the conflict, high in the mountains of Switaer- land, which was like an island of peace set in the midst of an ocean of war. It was an idealistic appeal to idealists in contrast to Barbusse’s realistic appeal. to the common man. For many years it seemed as if the movements 0] to war were di- vided into two groups following these two points of view. Now, however, they have fortunately become united. Romain Rolland has joined Henri Barbusse in calling together the World Congress gainst War and now generously describes Barbusse as “The greatest visionary in Europe since the war.” Stage and Screen Sinclair Lewis’ “Ann Vickers” Is New Film Feature At Radio City Radio City Music Hall is now show- ing “Ann Vickers,” a new RKO Radio ‘picture based on Sinclair Lewis’ novel of the same name. Irene Dunne plays the leading role. Others in the cast include Walter Huston. Edna May Oliver, Conrad Nagel and Bruce Cabot, |, The stage bill is headed by “Fan- tasie Diaboloque,” with George Price, Hilda Eckler, Curtis and Cotay, Raya Keene, M. Vodney, N, Arshemsky and the ballet. Other stage items include “In Chains,” with Alice Dawn as soloist; “Papillon,” with Patricia Bowman and ballet and “Rachemy by Mana-Zucca, with Viola Philo, so- prano and the choral ensemble. Beginning today the Cameo Thea- tre will present “The Power and the Glory” for a week's engagerfent. Spencer Tracy, Colleen Moore, Ralph Morgan and Helen Vinson play the leading roles, “Her First Mate,” with Slim Sum- merville, Zasu Pitts and Una Mer- kel, is the prinicipal screen feature at the Jefferson Theatre beginning Saturday. The program will also in- clude “A Shriek In The Night” with Ginger Rogers, Lyle Talbot, and Ar- thur Hoyt, Starting Wednesday the film program will include two fea- tures, “I Have Lived,” with Anita Page, Alan Dinehart and Gertrude Astor and “The Important Witness,” with Noel Francis, Donald Dillaway and Dorothy Burgess. Help improve the “Daily Worker.” send in your suggestions and criticism! 10:30—Mario Cozzi, baritone. 10:45—Headline Hunter—Floyd Gibbons. 11:00—Jesters Trio. 11:15—Stars of the Autumn—Professor Rob- ert H. Baker, Harvard “Observatory. 11:30—-Chnids Orch. 12;00—Calloway Orch, 12:30 A. M.—Lowe Orch. oe.) 6 WABC-=860 Ke. 7:00 P. M.—Myrt and “Marge. | 7:15—Just Plain Bill+Sketch 7:30—Martin Orch.; ‘Travelers Quartet. }—News—Boake Carter. (0—Green Orch.; Men About Town Trio; Harriet Lee, contraito, $:15—News—Edwin ©. Hill. TONIGHT’S PROGRAMS WEAF—660 Ke. 7:00 P. M.—Charlie Leland, comedian; Male Quartet, be 15—Billy “Bachelor—sketch, 8:00—Concert Orch.; soprano; Cavaliers Q 9:00—Fred Allen, comedian; Grofe Orch, 9:30—Lee Wiley, songs; Young Orch. 10:00—First Nighter Drama, 10:30—Lum and Abner. 11:00—Davis Orch. 11:30—Fisher Orch. 12:00—Sosnick Orch. Dragonette, 12:30 A. M.—Molina Orch. :30—Spitalny Orch.;--Ebhel Pastor, s0- casi Saas prano; Nicolint Cosentino, tenor. wet | 9:00—Irvin 8. Oobb, stories; Goodman WOR—110 Ke. Orch,; Footbali—Parke H. Davis. 1:00 P. M.—Sports—Ford Frick,. 9;15—Mary McOoy, °3oprand; Tommy Me- 1:18—Ghosts of the Catacombs—Cketch, Laughlin, tenor; -Kostelanetz Oreh. 1:30—The Count of Monto Cristo—Sketok.| 9:39—all-American Football Show, with 7:45—News—Gabriel Heatter. 8:00—Detectives Black and Blue—Mystery Drama. 8:15—Studio Program. 8:30—Jack Arthur, songs. 8:45—Musical Gazette, 9:00-—-Bronx Marriage Bureau—Sketch. 9:15—Willie Robyn, tenor; Marie Gerard, soprano. 9:30—Robbins Orch. 10:00—Organ Recital. 10:15—Current Events, Harlen Eugene Read. 10:30—Variety Musicale, 11:00—Time; weather. 11:02—Moonbeams Trio, 11:30—Denny Orch. 12°00—Scotti Orch. Wwsz—760" Ke. 7:00 P. M.—Amos 'n’ Andy. ‘%:15—Treasure Island—Sketch. 7:30—String Symphony, 8:00—Walter O'Keeffe, comedian; Shutta, songs; Bestor Orch. 30—Pctash and Perlmutter—Sketch, 45—Red Davis—Sketch. 00—Leah Ray, songs; Harris Orch. 30—-Phil Baker, comedian; Shield Orch.; Christy Walsh; Speaker, Coach #. 0. Crisler of Princeton. 10:00—National Recovery- or National Dis- aster—Rev. E, A, Walsh of Georgetown University, Washington. 10:18—Coiumbians Orch. -~ 10:30—Alexander Woollcott; ‘Town Crier, 10:45-Symphony Orch. 11:15—News Bulletins. 11:30—Belasco Orch. 00—Lombardo Orch. :30 A. M.—Rapp Oreh, 1;00—-Henderson Orch. Bruno Walter To Open Philharmonic Season + The new seasorm of the Philhar- monic-Symphony-Orehestra will open next Thursday night-at Carnegie Hall with Bruno Walter eonducting. The program includes. -the Beethoven Overture to “Coriolanus,” the Beeth- oven “Pastrale” Symphony and Sym- phony No. 1 in C minor by Brahms. Ethel | Friday WHAT’S ON ‘Week SCHOOL, Last 138th Street, HARLEM WORKERS of Registration, 200 West Room 212 B. REGISTER NOW for five months course in fundamentals of revolutionary movie thea~ tre and camera technique at Workers Film and Photo League, 220 ¥. 14th St. Open every evening except Tuesdays and Sat- urdays, Capable instructors, Small fee pay- able in advance. ‘THE COOPERATIVE COLONY, 2700 Bronz Park East announces courses in elementary, intermediate and advanced English; ABC of | Communism, Political Economy, Russian and Esperanto. ‘Term begins Oct. 2, Register at the Shule, between &10 P. M. LECTURE in CLASS STRUGGLE by Irving Walters at Progressive Workers Culture Club, 159 Sumner Ave., Brooklyn. LECTURE ‘Can the N.R.A. Succeed” by John Santo at E, Tremont Workers Club, | 1961 Prospect Ave., Bronx. GENERAL MEMBERSHIP MEETING of the Daily Worker Volunteers at Workers Center, 35 E. 12th St. (2nd floor) at 8 P. M. har NOLASS IN COLONIAL PROBLEMS at Down Town Branch of. Anti-Imperialist League, 90 E. 10th St. Every Friday be- ginning with Oct. 13th. Free Tuition. . P. Greene, instructor, OPEN AIR ELECTION Campaign Meeting at Lydig Ave. cor. Cruger or Holland Ave. | Petham Parkway Workers Club, 2179A White | Plains Road. 2 | Saturday BANQUET to celebrate the 14th Anniv * * Good entertainment. Workers Center, 35 E. | 12th St., 2nd floor. Admission 26c. MONSTER CONCERT AND DANCE and Election Relly, Auspicea of Harlem Section of C. P. at Rockland Place, 158th St. and Eighth Ave. ENTERTAINMENT AND DANCE at Tremont. Wotkers Club, 1961 Prospect A\ SECOND ANNUAL DANCE, AND ENTE! TAINMENT at Progressive Workers Culture Clb, 159 Sumner Ave., Brooklyn. DANE given by Washington Heights Un- employed Council, 601 West 16ist St. corner Amsterdam Ave. CELEBRATE the 14th Anniversary of ©. P. at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 £, Pourth St. | Auspices, Section 1. Admission 28¢. FIRST ENTERTAINMENT AND DANCE | ganization work. capitalists (such as Mrs. Roosey Mr. Wise’s daughter and Ss daughter, etc.) for the benefit of the unemployed girls. They fed, and preached to us and tried to make us forget our real course; they also tried | to convince us that prosperity is just around the corner. The depression hit me so hard that I was compelled to attend their free lunches daily. After attending a number of these lunches I heard about a Bryn Mawr College for wo- men workers, which is kept up by the same capitalists, but for this the American Federation of Labor do- nates too. They send girls there from different unions for six weeks | free of charge @nd teach them or- (Of course, not our way.) Being very curious and hav- ing nothing to lose I decided to go and was accepted. Now I'll tell you of an incident that took place at Bryn Mawr Sum- mer School. One of the teachers took | O’Neill’s “Ah Wilderness” Next Monday At Guild The Theatre Guild will open its| current season on Monday at the! Guild Theatre with Eugene O’Neill’s| with | George M. Cohan in the leading role.| new play, “Ah Wilderness,” Others players in the cast include Marjorie Marquis, Elisha Cook, Jr. Ruth Holden, Eda Heinemann and Gene Lockhart. Another new production scheduled | for next week is Leon Gordon’s pre- sentation of his own play, “Undesir- able Lady,” which will come to the newly remodeled National Theatre on Tuesday night. Nancy Carroll, who has been playing in films for some time, will return to the stage in the leading role. NATIONAL CALENDAR Passaic, N. J. WILL OSLEBRATE the 14th Anniversary ot ©. P. on Sunday, Qct. ist st Kanter's Auditorium, Monroe Interesting pro- gram. Admission 10c. Hartford, Conn. CELEBRATION of Communist Party An- niversery st Lyric Hall, 585 Park St. at 8 P. M. Selected musical program and nation: ally known speakers. Philadelphia, Pa. THIRD RED LITERATURE Night at John Reed Club, 136 S. 8th St., ism, discussion from the floor, Philadelphia, Pa. WEEK END OUTING to W.LR. camp at Lumberville, Pa. Sept. 29th and 30th. ‘Trucks and automobiles will leave from 473 N. 4th St., at 10 A, M. Chicago, Ill. FAREWELL BANQUET for Williamson, Saturday, Sept. 30th at Peoples Auditorium, 2457 W. Chicago Ave. at 8 P. M. | mills, Reading, eritic- | Friday at 6 P. M. and Saturday | names and give the state we live in. We were divided into two groups, each group was given a man to show us around. First we went into one factory that has great big ovens, that conten huge pieces of iron. As we walked around every now. and then sparks of fire would come flying in the air and we would cover our eyes. As we walked on we saw an old man stand- forehead. The guard told us thet was bg there was to see (I thought to my: self, “It’s enough torture ga a man!”) The men have three shifts and each man works eight hours # day. Z a { g i Eg ete fi 3 g ys Fs ee d campus about 4:00 o" cil members weer then inf they were invited out Be ull real class-conscious worker out For an example, before I thought it was a disgrace to for fear that someone might see-me; | now if necessary, I'll be the first one | to put on a sign and picket. —A Fur Pointer of the NIWA. AMUSE MENTS WELCOME “THE PATRIOTS” IS AN THE DAILY WORKER SAYS: “Greatest of all Soviet sound films. and urge your friends to see it.” Also: ANTI-WAR DELEGATE: NDICTMENT OF IMPERIALIST WAR “THE PATRIOTS” A GORKI CONCEPTION (ENGLISH TITLES) “MOSCOW ATHLETES ON PARADE. See it yourself ACME THEATRE | 8° Jefferson js" Be « ARLINE JUDGE and BRUCE CABOT in “FLYING DEVILS” and “POLICE CALL” with NICK STUART and MEI KENNEDY RADIO CITY SHOW PLACE of the NATION Direction “Roxy” Opens 11:30 A.M. “ANN VICKERS” with IRENE D) and « JESSE LASKY’'S FOUR STAR HIT! | “The Power and the Glory” RKO CAMEO wry tl ia’ net FOLD YOUR HORSES | Winter Garden | Thursday and Saturday at 2:80. 14th Street and | Union Square JOE COOK in Cont. from 9 A.M. Midnite Show Sat. A Musteal Runaway im 24 Scenes y & Sth St. Celebrate the : 14th Anniversary of the Communist Party SATURDAY, SEPT. 30th at 8 P, M. MANHATTAN LYCEUM 66 East 4th Street a CONCERT DANCING SPEAKERS, REFRESHMENTS, AUSPICES: SECTION 1, C: P. ADMISSION 25e.. PARTY ANNIVERSARY BANQUET given by SECTIO. Goop Foop 2, Communist Party ENTERTAINMENT At WORKERS CENTER, 50 E. 13th St. Let us know what the workers in This program will be repeated at the college education.” —N, By Chleage, Tl Foks shop sekik beet the “Ditiy.®. | so.cttns Geta ayers eomee | Fea afternoon conoetts EU ey mea Teeth AXA ct ll SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, at 7 p.m. fe i ; ua ae a Speakers: EARL BROWDER, National Secretary,’C. P.; C! te oe hesieesa KRUMBEIN, District Organizer, C. P———Occasion for Welcom- “IM MARTIN™ A Good Socialist : s by QUIRT ing Comrade ARONBERG, Section Organizer. Admission 35 cents. Program: Featuring JUANITA LEWIS and MC KINLEY SCHEY ol ! THESE in Revolutionary Songs and Recitations, (I ASSURE YOu T THOUGHT THE STRIKE WOULD GE OVER |8Y THE TIME You APPLIED FIRMLY BELIEVE IN STRIKES ~ ITS APRINCIPLE wity ME- BUT. Timmy. Don't yvOU THINK A STRIKE Now \S INADVISABLE, FOR VIEWED FROM A LARGER VIEW POINT IT DOESN'T GIVE THE N-RA-A-CHANCE TO WORK OUT THINGS FOR THE FR GENEFIT he ALL- IT HINDERS £ | OAR LET ME | EXPLAIN THIS: TERRIGLE MISTAKE - | GEFORE You -CONDE™M ME FOR | SENDING YOU DOWN il = THERE’ TO WORK: WAIT A MINUTE TUE Cope / THE WORKERS SCHOOL Announces a Series of Current Events-Lectures on “What Is Happening in’ Russia?” by MOISSAYE J. OLGIN EVERY SATURDAY AFTERNOON First Lecture: Saturday, September 30th, at 3 P. M. at WORKERS’ SCHOOL, 35 East 12th St., 3rd floor, New York Oity Questions; Discussion Single Lecture 20¢