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eeneenn SG WORLD! By Michael Gold A Veteran’s Post HE Post of the Worker's Ex-Service Men’s League which I mentioned syesterday;,.is located at_69 East Third street, in a basement store near that glittering Nevsky Prospect of the East Side, Second Avenue. It is a poor and bare little place. Our movement is the fight of man::yersus-.money. Millionaires will not give money to help the Red forces « zof life, as they give it so fteely to the black and brown death- armies, .. the “Hitlers and Mussolinis. Our movement is built up on the nickels and-dimes of the workers. The rent of this little hall of the veterans is paid with painfully collected chicken-feed currency. The furniture was acquired by many sacrifices; each wooden bench means that-some -ex-soldier missed several meals. 2Tt .was*a*balmy October evening. At first there were about 100 per- song present. The door leading to the street was wide open; and the \ noise of children and traffic wheels came through. And the neighbor- hood: also drifted through the door; a stalwart butcher in a white apron listened. intently at the back. Many young workers dropped in curiously, leaving’ thefr corner-loafiing. Before the night was over the place was packed; and not with a crowd of tired radicals, but with fresh and eager minds, How stimulating this is to a speaker! romiafiticswho serve the House of Morgan in its war by casting a glamor over, the sickening process of blood and profits; Richard Harding Davis, Lawrence Stallings and the like. Then the Fascist glorifiers of war—such noisy. and venal propagandists as that offensive clown, Floyd Gibbons. Then, of course, those who had denounced war by telling the exact: truth:.Henri Barbusse and the Soviet kino directors. ‘The audience listened patiently. The lecture ended, a few questions were asked, and ‘then there was a discussion period. It was now that this Post of the veterans proved itself unique, for the speaker received more than, he could ever have given. “f"had talked, rather academically, on literature and war. This audience of veterans listened and then created war literature itself. They rose, one after another, and constructed an Odyssey of the American | doughboy. War and Literature SPOKE onthe relations between war and literature, sketching the Education of a Soldier A TALL handsome youth who looked something like Paul Green, the | playwright; got up to speak. In a slow Southern drawl he said with all the’ quiet; restrained bitterness of the proletarian south: “Tam What they call a 100 per cent American; my folks did not come.on the,Mayflower, they missed that ferry, they came on the next one. .It is something to be proud of, some people think; but I don’t see how. a starving man can be proud of the land that starves him. I en- listed\.in the late war because I was a good American and believed everything Tread in the papers. They said one morning that the Kaiser’s navy-was shelling Atlantic City. “well, Td read about the Huns cutting off the fingers of little Bel- giant ¢hildreh, Now they were coming to my own land. It enraged me. I enlisted at once, yet to tell the truth, comrades, it was a struggle for do §O... I. wasn’t especially a coward, but I was scared myself thitking of. tHe bayonet charge. I just couldn’t see myself plunging cold. steel into a fellow-man. But I enlisted. I fought for a year, and was wounded; ~I came back to the country I had saved from the Huns Eohave: been starving-for years, comrades. Last year I went on the Bonus"March-to Washington. And there I saw atrocities committed by Hung but ‘tiéy were not Germans this time. They were 100 per ceni Americans. ‘And. their victims were not foreigners but our own Yankee doughboys of the last war, your buddies and mine. Two veterans were killed. -I sdw if “American bayonet cut off the ear of my buddy. I have ine bay Jesson. I am not afraid of bayonets any longer. I knew STOCKY teditan in overalls, the type of impulsive, loyal fighting East Side kid f“frew up with, was the next speaker. He was in deadly earnesiy but, told- of his experiences with the swaggering humor of a ell, “comrades, like the last speaker, I thought the Kaiser was coming. over to grab Mulberry street, and I took up the gun to defend my: dirty old: tenement. ~“Y¥es sir; was good and sore. I went out to get the Hun, but instead the Hun got me. “It was in the Meuse-Argonne. I and a defail of eight others were-sent ‘out to cut some wires. Well, a shell got me in the legs 5, and stomaci—¥ was all cut up. The German stretchers brought me in and I spent seven months in a prison hospital in Berlin. “There ¥ talked to German wounded soldiers. I found they believed in the same : patriotic bunk and religion I did. We wéfe slaughtering each other over the same lie. I have since been thinking and suffering for the past 15, When the next war comes I will be ready to lead and teach the youth in the fight against the real enemy—the capitalists and war-makers of our own land.” ‘A nhurse-made one of the most touching speeches I have ever heard @he had served in many hospitals at the front, and had seen hundreds of proletarian ‘American boys die. Then a°grizzled Jewish-American with a fine face, lined by suffering, waved a paper. “Here’s some war literature,” he said. “It’s a letter from the government, saying my disability pension has been cut from $62.50 a month to $9.00, I have been pronounced an incurable cripple by many doctors—arthritis in 18 joints—from trench rheumatism. I was ® music student in Paris; and the fifth American to enlist there. Wounded ‘at the Marne. Never asked for a pension until too crippled to work. a ‘sa, fe Mia lucky; they’ve cut off thousands of disabled from anythiiig. repare a& new war, and need funds. But this time we'll resist.” Another soldier had been in the regular army for almost fifteen years, then quit when sent to shoot down strikers in the West. Another told of the revolt of the Canadian regiment in which he saw service. “When re we going home?” they asked, and marched on London. ‘t have seen hospitals filled with hundreds of shell-shocked boys, and I ‘have ‘seen other sights,” said the nurse, “and never shall I, and many other nurses I know, rest until we organize the youth against the next war.” _ That is” spirit of this Post, which started a year ago, and now _ has'190 members. All day long men and women come to the bare little | roor;-veterans with a story of injustice to tell. And this Post fights for the rights of the veteran, The Workers Ex-Service Men’s League is the only one~ that still carries on the fight. It is doing magnificent work, f and ought to: be given all the help possible, I would suggest that the 5 veterans organize their own agit-prop groups to drive their message home.to everyone. i . . | Helping Michael Gold to Win : ‘Theo, W. Gehemann . -Paul Spector . aa J... [FLASHES and\The House that Bananas Built:! | CLOSE-UPS | | | By LENS | “The writer does not necessarily have | to resort to direct propaganda. It| will suffice if he shows things as| they are: in our times, truth is revolutionary.”—Henri Barbusse. By this time you have, no doubt, either seen or heard about the RKO-| | Pathe newsreel of the massacre at| } Ambridge, Pa. It has created a stir| unequalled by »ay an elaborate and expensive film turned out by studios anywhere. It has excited to an in- tense pitch the whole scale of class| reactions to a film and letters and editorials about it are appearing in| the capitalist press. | Richard Watts, Jr., of the New) | Yerk Herald-Tribune, fired the first | broadside in a brilliant review en- | titled “Merely A Newsreel.” Richard | | Watts is unquestionably the most/| | competent and honest critic of the| > Arte! Theatre to Open Sixth Season | for a 12-hour day. clearing dense | For treeing. and pruning, | film in the whole capitalist press. We | will not soon forget his uncompro- mising attitude in connection with | “Thunder Over Mexico.” In all his} writings one feels his utter disgust with the cretinistic level to which \ ninety per cent of Hollywood's “art” can sink. And unlike most of his/ colleagues, he writes fearlessly about what he sees. To him the Ambridge newsreel is| | something which “in stark dramatic | | Power and national significance pro-! vides a motion picture of the utmost | importance... At the beginning you | | see the pickets lined up before the mill, while the sheriff and his dep- | uties approach them in a manner not | without its similarity to the ominous! march of the Czarist troops in the Russian revolutionary epic, “Potem- kin”... A deputy strikes a picket with a club and the simple, eloquent | cry goes up, “That ain’t right” You can feel the ever growing ten- sion, then clubs and fists begin to fiy and the deputies open fire. “A striker lies dead upon the street and another, wounded, is carried, away on the back of a friend...the gallant sheriff has, upon the ap-| proach of trouble, hastily stepped into the background. The battle is over, but a man is dead, and bitter, | | unrelenting hatred has been aroused | that no fine words or apologies can | pacify (my emphasis.—L.)... as @ | warning, an omen and a grimly dis- turbing picture of what industrial | struggle really is, the picture is so enormously important that it should be a part of our training in current | events. At the end, the sheriff, with a straight face, deplores the battle and adds that he tried to keep the peace but the strikers- called him bad names... I thought the guardian of the law would be hissed by the high-strung motion picture audi- ences. Yet I am told that at the Radio City Music Hall on Thursday the eloquent gentleman was ap- plauded. At the Embassy Theatre they frequently applaud newsreel pictures of Hitler, for that matter.” * * * A worker writes to the Herald Tribune: “My blood boiled while I viewed the Pathe newsreel depicting the scenes of a labor riot near the steel mills of Ambridge, Pa. How we workers can sit in smug com- placency and view such an episode and not give vent to our feelings veflects to what degree we have been cowed.” And so there you have it, “merely « newsreel!” Where are the thou- sands of newsreels of similar hap- yenings that are invariably “shot” | oy the capitalist newsreel firms and | hat never reach the screen? A jrop in the bloody ocean of capital- st violence against workers has srickled through with the flood of newsreels of baby parades, military maneuvers and N. R, A. speeches and many all too innocent folks become indignant. Weren't the Sacco-Van- zetti newsreels destroyed by order of Hays? And who has forgotten the March Sixth demonstration in 1930, the film record of which was or- dered shelved by the infamous! Grover Whalen? i | “Truth is revolutionary” and makes | “the blood of workers boil,” that is | why such newsreels rot in the vaults | |of the movie firms without ever |reaching an audience. Whalen,| Hays and the class they keep house | for are afraid of truth. . « « A word on the power of the news- reel document and what workers’ organizations can learn from the Ambridge film. It is not generally known, but a fact just the same, that Lenin pointed out in 1921 that the film's greatest power lies in its’ capacity to record reality. It was his opinion that the film is most convineing when it leaves the studio and its artifices and applies itselt , to recording “unplayed” events, We comrades know this to be true from our own experience with newsreel making. We know, for instance, that no enacted movie on the subject could have carried as directly and powerfully as our documentary rec- ord of the Scottsboro demonstration in front of the Supreme Court in} Washington. We can afford to dis- count the criticism of many among us who think that we are handi- capped because we have failed thus far to turn out a single studio film. ‘We agree with Watts, who, con- tinuing on the question of the Am- bridge film, says that “There is something terribly ominous about DAILY WORKER, ehh YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1933 Page Five Wall Street’s By HY KRAVIF | BANANAS — The Fruit Emp're of} Wall Street, by Luis Montes. With| 25 drawings by William Seigel.| Prepared under the direction of Labor Research Association, end John Reed Club of New York. In. ternational Pamphlets, No. 35, 5 cents. For a concrete and readable ex- ample of what is meant by the term | | “Wall Street imperialism,” this new| | little pamphlet is recommended as a} fitting companion to Harry Gannes' “Yankee Colonies,” No. 7, in this same series. For the author has| taken “the greatest American im-/ perialist enterprise in Central Amer-| | ica—the United Fruit Co.” and traced | the ramifications of its rule. A rule, the author points out, based on the humble banana which is sung and Tomorrow Evening NEW YORK, Oct. 19—The Jewish | Artef Theatre will present its first | Third ; play of the season, “The Parade,” by Charles Walker and Paul Peters, at the Hecksher Foun- | dation, at 5th Ave. and 104th St. tomorrow evening. “The Third Par- ade” is based on the Bonus March to Washington. The Artef is the only Jewish work~ ingclass theatre existing in Amerca. As such it has set itself the aim of portraying the social and revolution- ary struggles of workers in America. The Artef, besides presenting such American plays as “Roar of Ma- chines,” by F. Cherner, “Drought,” by H. Flannigan, has also staged sev- eral plays portraying both the revo- |lution and the present program of | construction in the Soviet Union, ‘ such as “Hirsh Leckert,” by M. Kush- by 8. Daniel, and | nirov, “Four Days,” “A Steppe in Flames.” Latest Soviet Newsreel Now Showing At Acme Theatre On the same program with “The Red-Head” (“Poil de Carotte”), the Acme Theatre is showing the latest Soviet newsreel, which has just ar- rived from Moscow and was released here by Amkino. Some of the high- lights of the film are: Opening of the new kindergarten school for Korean children in Vladivostok; the Marionette Theatre under the man- agement of Sergei Chaszoff; Fatima Muktavora, one of Soviet Russia's foremost operatic stars, singing an aria from “Carmen,” and a native ‘Usbek girl, singing and dancing na- tional Usbek dances, accompanied by @ native orchestra. “Headline Shooter,” the story of a camera news-hawk, is the new screen feature at the Rialto Theatre begin- ning today. William Gargan and Frances Dee are starred. Other play- ers include Ralph Bellamy, Gregory Ratoff and Wallace Ford. Early American Film of Labor Struggle to be Shown Tonight NEW YORK.—A film showing of “Little Church Around the Corner,” early American film concerning labor struggles in the coal fields, will take place tonight at the Film and Photo League, 220 East 14th St., at 8 and 10 p.m. The proceeds will go to the support of the Daily Worker, | of equipment; | telephone and railway lines; and the Fruit Empire joked about in this country. The little group:of Boston and Wall Street parasites who make up United Fruit, dominate an area of almost three and a ‘half million acres which the company owns or leases in Caribbean countries. The com- pany also owns over 27 million worth hundreds of miles of “Great White Fleet” of 100 ships. Nearly 150,000 agricultural laborers are employed by the United Fruit in| Honduras, Guatemala, Colombia,| Costa Rica and several other coun- tries bordering on the Caribbean.) About half these workers are Ne- | groes who have been imported chief- ly from Jamaica. Both Negroes and whites are forced to live in filthy | barracks consisting of six or eight | rooms, each room housing an entire | | family, “Company stores” keep the workers in debt ust’ as coal miners in town are bled dry. Dividends of $30,000,000 Dur ng Cr’ Even during pre-crisis years the company paid wages as low as $1.12 | forests. workers were paid’ at the rate of | about 70 cents a day on piece work. But since 1929, wages have been slashed as much as60 per cent! The | author quotes a-‘recently returned student who told of:$1-a weck being paid to Costa Ricaft peasants. No wonder then that United Fruit | could report profits” éf $9,000,000 for | the first nine months of the current) year—nearly $5,000,000. more than | ing the three crisis “years, amounted to over $30,000,000! minate the working thours of its em- ployees. It controls.-governments, churches, politics, in these countries. And such control is nowhere more clearly apparent than-in the brutal | | suppression of strikes-and revolts of | laborers who struggle against intol-) erable conditions. Stich a strike oc- curred in Colombia “in. 1928, when | assistance of the government which quest of the American- concern. important struggles Have taken place, President Collindres sent troops to Montes, and the fact that the United States State Deparment too is at the beck and call of such, imperialist ex- ploiters. Such a pamphlet, brilliantly illus- trated and popularly written, should be of the greatest'value in the cam- paign to enlighten workers in the United States concerning the condi- tions of their ‘fellow-workers in countries under Well Street rule. Workers in these» countries have shown political alertness in following the struggles of U; S;-labor. But the of the anti-imperielist struggles in! the Caribbean. Now, when the focus is on Cuba — where, United Fruit also has wide holdings | —such a pamphlet as this is most timely. It should be distributed not only by every single John Reed Club and all Anti-Imperialist League branches. It should be a “best seller” ence where workers are gathered.| Buy a copy and see for yourself if this is not the most appealing pam- phlet yet issued in the effective In- ternational series.” TUNING IN TONIGHT’S PROGRAMS WEAF—660 Ke. 7:00 P.M.—Charlle Leland, comedian; Male Quartet. 1:15—Billy Bacheior—Sketch. :30—Trappers Music. 45—The Goldbergs—Sketch, 8:00—Concert Orch.; Jessica Dragonette, soprano. soprano; Cavaliers Quartet; Rice—Football Talk. 00—Pred Allen, comedian; Grofe Orch. '30—Lee Wiley, songs; Young Orch, 0—First Nighter Drama, 10:30—Lum and Abner. 11:00—Davis Orch. 11:30—Sosnick Orch. 12:00—Ralph Kirbery, songs. 12:05 A.M.—Weems Orch. 12:30—Molina Oreb. > WOR—710 Ke. 7:00 P.M.—Sports—Ford Frick. 1:18—Song of My Soul—Sketch. ‘7:30—Terry and Ted—Sketch. 1:45—Plano Duo; Hazel Arth, contralto. 8:00—Detectives Black and Blue—Mystery Drama. 15—Billy Jones and Ernie Hare, songs, 30—Dramatized News. 8:45—Willy Robyn, soprano. . :00-—Varlety Musicale. :§5—Organ Muste; Stanley Meehan, tenor. st: —erreent Events — Harlan Eugene 10:20 Battle Liebling’s Musik Shoppe. 11:00—Weather Report. the simple directness of the news- reel account, The unpretentiousness, the stark simplicity of a brief episode in the class wer, captured without artifice by camera and microphone, is, among many other things, so dramatic that staged incidents of in- dustrial warfare obviously cannot be compared with it.” tenor; Marie Gerard, THE LAWYER FROM THE INTERNATIONAL LABOR DEFENSE - Twow't aver JUN PEFENDED BY THAT RED out Fit/— Cottine YOURE NOT. wadTED ON THIS CAaSsE!-WE Doa'T DEAL the Falke tn Soa “Ok TO THE You Grantiand | 11:02—Moonbeams Trio. —Nelson Orch. }0—Holst Orch. ar, Bis WJZ—760 Ke. 7:00 P.M.—Amos 'n’ Andy. | 7:15—Three Musketeers—Sketch. 7:30—Circus_Days—Sketch. 45—Talk—Irene Rich. :00—Walter O'Keefe, commedien: Shutta, songs; Bestor Orch. 0—Potash end Perlmutter. S—Red Davis—Sketch. o—Leah Rey, songs; Harris Orch. 9:30—Phil Baker, comedinn; Shield Oreh.; Male Quartet; Neil Sisters, songs. 10:00—My African Hugting Trip—F. Trubee Davison, president American Museum of Natural’ Histery,, ‘interviewed by Roy Chapmen Andrew! :30-—Mario Cozzi, bétitone; Concert Orch. S-—Headline Hunter—Floyd Gibbons. 00-—Berrie Brothers, :18—Winking Demon Star—Professor R. H. Baker, Harvatd, Observatory. Ethel : . WABC—860 Ke 7:00 P.M.—Myrt and-Marge. 5—Just Plain Bill—Sketeh. Travelers Ensemble. 45—News—Boake Garter. 00—Green Orch.; Harriet Lee, contralto. 8:15—News—Edwin , Hill, B:20—Irvin 8. Cobb, sborles; Goodman 9 1S Tommy McLiaughlin, baritone; Kos- telaneta Orch 0—All-Amerivan ‘Football Show, with weeaker, Andy Kerr, Christy Wals! 10:00--Olsen_ and Johnsen, ‘comedians; Bos- k Orch. Colgate Coach 10:39 Alexonder Weetleott,. Town rier. 10:45—Symphony Orch. 12:00—Gray Orch. 12:29 A.M.—Dance ors 1:00—Hopkins Orch, a typical Pennsylyania company | | Additional news portrays loca! si '|gles now taking place in vari | schools. Not only does -United Fruit do-| about 1,000 were massacred with the | had declared martial law at the re-| And in Honduras,“where the most)” crush a strike early“in 1932 against | 20 per cent and. 25. ‘per cent wage! cuts. Other revolts are recorded by | latter have been -generally ignorant | incidentally, | “ at every mass meeting and confer-) Lik COLLEGE NEWS, organ the National Student League Greater New York. Oct. 16. 2%. Baptised in studen College, student need. The current issue is four-page me cede eekly fills a very definite contains a sonal message from Henri to the students of Americ as an y the famous au’ of where he calls for inte 3 ictor reported here of three anti-R.O.1.C. candidates for the Student Council | at City College is all the more sig-| nificant. A splendid article by Joseph Staro- | | bin, expelled from C. ©. N. Y., pre-! }sents new facts about Antt Fierro, murdered anti-fasc’ and quot probably y demonstration. Anti-war plans at Columbia i: ide the publication of }@ pamphlet exposing the part that | University ple } from one of Even though space limitations are severe, adding feature material of the | Fierro story type and expanding the ‘Letter Box” would go a long way |towards popularizing this paper among the students. With repre: | measures growing more tinually, school audienc: come a powerful voice and o: of impending struggles for s r rights, against war, and the fasc menace. WHAT'S ON Friday FILM Showing of “Little Church Around | he Corner,” early Ameri ing labor struggles in t ue, at 8:30 p.m. Adm. ELECTION SYMPOSIU Shell A Worker Vote Fi sarties will he represented. Pre: ers Center, 1157 So, Boulevard, 5:30 p.m. 'T will speak on “Youth * Al Wilson of the Coop Maple ‘My Trip Ave, Thru slides. od Gar- Street and eal parties have . Robert Minor will speek for | the Communist Part: LECTURE cn Peland,’? by of the Daily | Culture Ciub, al 189 Sumner Ave., on bu Breckiya, a¢ 830 pam. burr Br. Adm. ‘Avepioes, ise. Chester Ave. Pm. WOMEN'S COUNC! land, is having en Lenenbaum, Daily of the Volunteers Soturdey CONCERT and Di Workers Club, 87 CHINESE NIGHT Coune'l No. 23 at Bath Beach ment at Pen and St., from 8:30 un- Hammer, 1 til dawn. Rochester, N. Y. VOTE COMMUNIST Banquet on October 22 at Wor! Center, 448 Ormond St Detroit, Mich. JOHN SOHMIES, ¢ ict organizer of the ers School Forum, Sunday, October 22, st} 3 pm. at the Finnish Hall, 999 1éth St, Philadelphia, Pa, DANCE and Exhibition of Prcletarian Art by members of the John Reed Club will be given at Srawbe:ry Mon: ‘Workers: Club on Saturday Oc cher 22 at 8 p.m. at 2014 N, 32nd Street, Adm. 280, IM SuRe IF YOu witt QLLOW OUTLINE cask WILL SON SEE THIS > WITHOUT A CouGT Your (‘> meen YEARS. by QUIRI pr OARTING ILLUSIONS ARE LIKELY To BRE IT TouGd FoR, Ti —~ John | ascism—White Terror, in| wi “prookiyn, | KY will lecture on ‘“‘Scotts- Line at 8:15 Mo. 8 of, Consy Is-| Room, 297, | pan. | £ Ze] 4 : Short Wave Club Announces ‘Moscow October B Broadcasts mbers Club of the are month of | iation R-V 59 has | ivers to report on | will fore h the | r to} the ort- | this program | techn: e with the | they obtain | to volunteer g the best re-| \dcasts. cluk 2 of Mos: National “Aggie Appleby,” New Film At Radio City Music Hali Music Hi Men, | principal roles. The stage shoy Other m the Bi arade,” with Mis iss Bodan- William Castle, and Offen- “Orpheus,” ith Jacques concertmaster of the or- chestra. “Songs of Song. At Jefferson the Jefferson sent “Songs of h Dietrich, Brian and Lionel Atw ther “Solitaire Man,” with Herbert | Bi nd and Lionel on the same program, Back the Clock,” with Lee} Mae ‘clarke and Otto Kroger, | will be the c! n feature be- sinning Wednes “Goodbye | Again,” with Warren "Williams, Joan Blondell and Genevieve Tobin, will| iz shown as an added feature. Mary ing Com-|~ pany rep e gnition. The con two-tube — shi voice and code and foreign stati oaare 20. Friday—R “Oct. 21. dition Wo: Oct. Workers’ Condi- Mining Indus- ; Workers in t 24. Tuesday—Science and Cul- « of the Moscow Soviet. 26. Thursday—Talk on Soviet Foreign Policy. . 27. Friday—Review of the Oct. 28. Saturday—Workers’ Condi- . kK on Workers of the Food y—Science and Cul- The Sixteenth Anniversary of joviet Policy Toward National norities ‘ sday—Talk by Robert ection.” It will be apparent that the pro- grams are valuable for all readers. of the Daily Wor! They are much onal in content than sts ever devised in the United States. There are other pro- grams broadcast on other wave- lengths and there are on the same wave-length (50 meters) other broad- casts in German, French, Dutch, edish, Hungarian and Czechoslovakian. These come in on the R.V. 59 sta- tions at 50 meters wave-length on | Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays, and on other days the broadcasts coi on 45.38 meter wave-length. Ho ever, the Workers’ Short-Waye Club suggests that it is more likely that | only the 50-meter broadcas' | available for the short-wave receiv | sets. AMUSEMENTS (‘Poil de Carotte’’) Fren ch Dialogue. English Subtitles A Story of Adolescence. EVERY PARENT SHOULD SEE THIS PICTURE! “Always Interesting. Polgnant Pieturial Study.” “THE RED-HEAD” ACME THEATRE 14TH STREET AND UNION SQUARE 15°20 1PM. Exe. Sat. Sun, & Hol. Midnight Show Sat. —N, ¥, Times. BEING HELD FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE Peety DSA Friday, October 20: Film showing of “Little Church Around the Corn Early Amer- m film ¢9 labor strug- 8 and 10 ue, 220 ‘kers Club, 265 Rod- will show a new Soviet avers of the clud and their only. You must get. your t , Concert end Refreshments Tit 9 Bec. 2 at 50 E. 19th Banevet and Communist Party, will he Com= tie Aacand Aanivensary st tee ing War end the Auto Workers” at Worlk- | St ip so 220 E. lth 25 per for Daily Worker. ent proceeds | Mouse Party and Entertainment, dancing, good food, at 854 E, 13th St. Ist Mloo~, Sunday, October 22: Party and Dance nt £23 E. 16sth St. . H at 3 p.m. Special enterta! 1440. Brownsville Culture Club, New York Ave., @ lesture on “Ameri in Cuba.” EB. P, Greene, of tho Anti-Imperialist League, will be the lecturer. Entertainment and Refreshments at 308 EF, 12th St., top floor rear, at 7 p.m. Given by Unit 1 Sec. 2. House Party and Entertainment, good musical numbers and recita- tions. Given by Unit 4 Sec. 15 at Apt. G-43, 2700 Bronx Park CITY AFFAIRS} ‘BEGINNING TODAY JACOB BEN- AMI ‘The Wandering Jew’ Adapted from a story by Jacob Mestel, based upon current problems of Jew- ish life in Germany ®*° CAMEO!"2< | 1-RADIO CITY MUSIC HALL SHOW PLACE of the NATION Direction “Roxy” Opens 11:30 A.M. ||| SGGie APPLEBY Maker of Men’ with Chas. Farrell and Wynne Gibson and a great “Roxy” stage show 35c to 1 p.m.—Sée to 6 (Ex. Sat. & Sun.) EKO Greater Show Season Mon. to Fri.ip.m. 25e | RKO Jefferson a 2 Now GEORGE ARLISS in “VOLTAIRE” with DORIS KENYON | also “LIPE IN THE RAW” with GEORGE Q'BRIEN and CLAIRE TREVOR JOE COOK in FOLD YOUR HORSES A Musiea! Rureway in 24 Scenes Te. Pr & 50th St Winter Garden "srr Ose. wae Thursday and Saturday at 2:36. f NEATRE GUILD _ presents— NE O'NEILL's COMEDY WILDERNESS! GEORG! ‘CHAN | GUILD Saas MOLIERE’S Ci ¥ WITH MUSIC "E SC’ OO! FOR HUSBANDS | Adapted in rhyme by ELECTION SYMPOSIUM “What Party Shall A Worker Voie For?” Friday, Oct, 20, at 8:30 pam. SPECT WORKERS CENTER Southern Boulevard, Broax Representatives of rli Political Parties will be present HARLEM PROGRESSIVE YOUTH CLUB presents "wo Great Events for the Benet of the Daily Worker This Saturday Night Concert and Dance GOOD PROGRAM NEGRO JAZZ BAND This Sunday Night Dr. Paul Luttinger will Lecture on “SEX AND YOUTH” 8:30 P.M. Harlem ive Youth Club 1538 Madison Ave., New York City CLARENCE HATHAWAY, ‘Will be the Main Speaker at the DAILY WORKER BANQUET Sunday, Novem CARL BRODSKY, Chairman Editor of the Daily Worker ber 12th, 8 P.M.