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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1933 IT HAPPENS EVERY DAY -—==||| ° ‘orkers Theatre ‘Conference Begins lin Chicago Today Short Stories from the Experiences of a Home Relief Bureau Investigator ; as told to HELEN KAY { | OHICAGO—A call to action has j fone out to all workers’ and farm- aturday } heatr ups, dance and xt neatre group: music (Manhattan) John Reed Clubs, etc.—a call delegates to the Midwest Con- ternals of the Cuban revolution in grea” Setail, Cable dispstclys & Chi for the N. The typewriters stopped clicking; | threatens to put me out on the ‘photographs describe every shot fired, eve "nd, ev" F0b gal ers’ Gonfermnce: to, atient nay| ‘The file ginls looked up. There was, | ‘st¥eet. You'e: supposed to help in pee g D ‘miners’ Conference, to attend at oan eI "€ You?” "URNITURE WORKER, pub- ‘court-martialled. .Weleome iis 2: 4, east one day of the theatre con-| Stunned ‘silence. an emergency, aren't you? FURNITU »- Bi 4 als sgerence also. call the doormen. They struggle 7 You would hardly expect that from the capitalist press. Terre ; The Workers’ Theatre Couneil,| ame aa brypspiom Pipe sernapsgy with the applicant for-relief. | pdustrial pis anges rssapgalod | Yet the insurrection of the Cuban masses has entered a new and | Ciicago section of the League of i “s “Ive been here peacefully at least | New York City. November, Five extremely: ten idee Workers’ Theatres, has accepted the| . The young man had burning | ten times, and you've done nothing | cents. 4 | Worke To Begin with, the majority of the proletariat is under the direct | fer of the national executive com-| Black eyes. For all of his poverty | for me, ‘What else do you expect | mS, Salt ey | Musle influence of the Communist Party. ©) Machado had only some 15,000 me: By Joseph Freeman W Nes capitalist press in the United States has been reporting cortaly | But you, will not find a word about the significance. 9? The red trade unions, which under mbers, now have a membership es- timated anywhere from 150,000 to 250,000. Another important factor is the intensification of the antagonism se of the League of Workers’ ies, to be held today. and to- ow at the Workers’ School. here. @ dates have been set. in order ake it possible for farmer dele- mittee to hold the next National ‘Workers’ Festival in this city in April, 1934. The Midwest Conference marks the- beginning of preparations for this national festival, which will ‘unite “Kindly Reserve a Suite in the Jail...” yelled like a madman. The piercing shriek fang through the business-like _ office. He yelled again. The supervisor he was neatly dressed and care- fully combed, I had seen him at the Home Relief Bureau several times before. Each time he had been turned away. He had gotten in bed. They are all barefooted. The electricity has been shut off for the last two weeks and. the landlord The “supervisor's answer was to | me to do?” he yelled as he was | hustled from ‘desk to desk by the doormen An. Officer ‘swinging his | billie | pushed his way through and took | lished by the Furniture Workers By ROBERT KENT | The November. “Furniture Worker,” | increased to 16 pages, marks a con- | siderable adyance, especially in sub-| | A Bee W. Also 4 Hawa! tian gi ir among the various factions of the landowning and bourgeois classes, The | Many scattered forces and bring the | into the inner. “sanctorum sancto- | the struggling tan by the vollar | ject. matter, over previous issues. ire, ' struggle on the cultural front closer} rum” today by pushing his way’ | jand'pushed him out of the f 4 r : | Agen’ / civ wart Arid We deccinaty batter Tablet oubbkageed Nast yaa fo the workers’ movement. | Past, the door Keeper. “I'l: stay-| "rhe supervisar followed hiv cat~ f, bP news-and arilsleg Ae Mee) | cxow id Housewarming. Party, | ia i The agenda will include discussion | tight here,” he said. side. He was calm now, safe with | Ore concisely, cover more territory, | musical ancing. Steve Katoyis B f j the capture of A. B. C. forces holding the Altares fortress were by no | of the following problems: “Broaden-| “I'll call the police,” threatened “By the way,” he asked, “how. old | 924 Pulsate with the class-struggle. son aat ential | = # means the last of this internal conflict within the bourgeois landowning |ing the Basis of Our Theatre,”| the supervisor. were you when you came here from'| An excellent job is done in exposing | d.-;- Dante s 3 pan. end 5 p.m. i) class. “Artistic Problems,” “‘Repertory,”| “I wish you would,” the young | Italy?”- the Code proposed for the furniture | Sn A reteragiel, 20.0 JNTZ, National Chi ] The ‘Grau San Martin government represents landowners. The | “The New Theatre Magazine and In-|} man answered calmly, “and I will “I didn’t come’ from Italy,” the|industry by the bosses, by represen~ “Clata Yetkin LL.D, will hold lecture on “ ) students who support it are led by sons of landowners and merchants, | ternational Theatre,” “The Farmers’) also greatly appreciate it if you | man shouted. » “I. was born. right | tatives of reactionary furniture work- gad the OA | And the A. B. ©. opposition to the Grau San Martin government is bast |Movement and the Revolutionary | can make accommodations in jail, | here, and so was my wife—-And I |ers’ unions, In simple but. stirring fades | equally upon the bourgeoisie. The also the sons of landowners and merchants. has the support of American imperialism, represented officially by Am- student leaders who support it e In addition, the A. B. © 4 bassador Sumner Welles, who has been directing A. B. C. activities, q Outside of these internal strug; | the Cuban masses. A the crowd shouted: “Why do you | ‘qual at College; 28rd St 4 and Workers’ Laboratory Theatre,| Mind. Some brain treatment might r . i bosses when contrasted with the de-| Lexington | |) ‘The, struggle of the peasants is growing. There have been spon- 5 "| do him good. Brain treatment, un- | 2*test him. Let him go, Let bim eps teg ri lp | } taneous armed uprisings. Land has been/selzed by peasant groups or- | Aree! Ukrainian Dramatic Society, . go. | mands made by the Furniture Work- | presenting | ganized overnight. |) owning classes for control of the state apparatus, gles within the bourgeois and land- ¥ the insurrection of Theatre,” etc. Tomorrow a joint af- fair will be given by all Chicago the- atre groups, with short plays and musical numbers by various language organizations. Groups co-operating with the Work- ers’ Theatre Council include the Blue Blouses, Chicago Workers’ Theatre Pioneer Marionette Group, Nature Friends, Midwest Lithuanian Youth not only for myself but also for my wife and four children,” The super said: no more. He lift- ed the receiver and purred into the mouthpiece, “Kindly send an officer over to our bureau immedi- ately, There's a red here, trying to create a riot. He’s a little off his derstand? Send a cop who can treat his head,” fought for this country, too, if you | please,” A CROWD of people collected on the street. Their sympathy was | with the worker ‘who was being | driven out, Several voices from | The supervisor looked around. He | Saw the enraged crowd and walked | e brought to light. The so- called “reforms” asked by Louis Wald- | man, attorney, representing the up-| holstery, carpet and linoleum Mech-| § anics’ International A, F. of L. union, reveal their relationship ‘to the con~ ditions laid down by the furniture | ers Industrial Union at the hearing and by the United Brotherhood of the slave conditions in this | Hammer Health. s FREIHEIT Gezang Farin “Eleventh An. | ne W..2 and Entertainment ‘Exercise sin Rel CoN, at Pen Hot. 4 Y Br, LL.D, He ¥. chap! Open Fi 1dth 8 Speaker, riem every Bun- s Struggle in | * : * Committee, I.W.O, Engels. Group, The young man jumped. “How up to the arrested man. He er: Vg age Oe | ‘orkers Club, | , 5 : an, smiled | Carpenters and Joiners, A. F. of L, St. Adm. st door me iea tt. | THE Cuban upheavel is also marked by the struggle of the Negroes tor ae ppeameatel Theatre, Dram ane xe pas Ps very sweetly. Put his hand on the |on the Code in)Washington, a rehearsal changed to Gun-| 3862 Sr Ave, A MRSS } liberation, especially in the province of Oriente. The white landlords ns Pie ann a ee laa Tin ot crany yee” iY young man's shoulder; and said: | precited by a brief and clear an-| Concert after rehearsal at Arling- | ers Center, 2 » Bronx, at 3 || are so terrified by: the notion of free Negroes, that they have resorted to | tory ‘Theatre School, Pee | ce mupervisor again yalled? "Chek iB ae ee but we | alysis, the three Codes, that~of the| “Crate, prenen workers cl | one of the basest methods of white chauvinism, They have raised the out!” The office staff listened with | 1% Yor you'eo.knd mm: wig ‘om “pet ©: | bosses, the labor misleaders and that | sath st., House Party, 8:30 p.m. | slogan: save our wives and daughters from Negro rape. poibaa stunned amazement. an investigator over to your hence | of the militant unton, following each | 1° cents ‘ i The white landlords are now urging the organization of a Cuban Freiheit Chorus to Con hae todey. See, we are trying to do | Other, tell their own story, Hyery bit (Bronx) |) Ku Klux Klan. The Cuban press is full of it. But it refers to the Klan “MY Wife had to discontinue nurs- | our best, We are kind, | of it is absorbing reading. ne Bee a ‘s )) as the K. K. K. K. The only possible explanation for four K’s instead of Sin Oratorio b ing the little one, because she |/ The man gazed at the head su- News from Cities CONCERT: and “Dance! ats thy || three is the broad expansive nature of the Latin American terratinientes & y. Ge 2 rap of salle tor Soe, | pet rieor With “hatred) tn mocking | ne November. “Furniture Worker” | Wott Gente JUST 80, -Bouiead, || —landowners—fostered by tropic heat and unearned increment, Own Conductor # eine for bread and one is ill | Jind’ doy mam: Temize you are | avoids thie mistake made by «. num-| 1 Outte Hy Despite Grau San Martin’s boast that the Cuban army is entirely ty Beall thd css2308 ber of our trade union publications | ¢ Aca / under his control, the army continues to disintegrate. The barracks : awe iz; in New York City, namely of pub- Ht continue to be pens of slavery and brutality where privates are treatsa | NEW XORK.—*Geviter” (Storm), Flizaheth Patterson lishing little or no news of the work- worse an oratorio by Jacob Schaefer, will : s struggles in other cities, “To-| tH e than dogs by their officers. i . * ' be the feature of a concert to be 8 uy Union” gives such ae | FENCE a phenomenon unknown under Machado, The soldiers are |given at the auditorium of the Col- | “Laughter Thru Tears” Re-| cities in the Mid-West New England | openly fraternizing with the workers and peasants, A friend of mine, | lege of the City of New York, Lexing- mains Second Week At Acme| and from the South. The caption is| Dorie just returned from Havana, tells me that on the public squares and |ton Ave. and 23rd St., on Saturday, “Laughter ‘Through Tears,” the | especially significant as the Furni- | | streets soldiers may be seen freely talking to workers. Machado did not | Nov. 18, at 8:15 P.M, by the Fretheit Soviet Yiddish comedy, will remain | tue Wor Industrial Union is | i 12, | like this, and prevented it, Grau San Martin doesn’t like it a’ whit |Gezangs Farein, leading Workers’ for a second week at the Acme ‘The- | ™#&king strides towards becoming @| pening wn bestor, but he cannot prevent it. Chorus and winner of the 1933 Amer- | Jatre. The film has been breaking | Natlon-wide organization, A national | "Pance and Fo FE 4 strange factor in the Cuban situation is the particular form which | #2" Workers’ Music Olympiad Award, | | all records of the 14th’ St. playhouse, | Convention will be held by this Ky | | American intervention has taken. The United States is definitely in- | Based on an anthology of Jewish |The picture was’ screened from the | fo" the first time in January, 1984. ) tervehing in the Cuban revolution. Its battleships are in Cuban waters; |Proletarian poetry compiled by I. | novels of the Yamous Yiddish humor- | >) 185 Stee eae of Ni i Daaleisnens i Greenspan, “Geviter” covers a period ist, Sholom Aleichem. ber of outside of New York | 3150 Rochgmbeau its embessador is directing the A. B. C. 5 of 30 years of revolutionary paid, ps Sicko A through a struggies and in gain- | Scag hehe et he! Cuban masses and the militant workers of the United States |in the United States. ‘The orateno, “Roberta” Opens Tonight At | 2% sttike victories. Tt has headquar- (Brooklyn) this “diplomatic” intervention of Washington and Wall Street. | scored for chorus and symphony or- |: The 3 cer ig! ters as far west as Los Angeles, Cal., , 9f. sb8. 36) hei question remains, why is there no open military intervention, | chestra is in three movements. ‘The | | te Amsterdam: Theat Seattle, Wash. in the mid-Western | maion at Savoy Manslo x to previous forceful intervention in Cuba, Mexico, Nicaragua, | first movement marks the birth of | Max Gordon will ‘present his new | cities, the centers for the furniture | — ke". Santo Domingo? Socialist activities in American life, production, “Roberta,” a musical} industry, in New England and in! Ni har ; ee t ism is | The early struggles of the labor move-~ | comedy by Jerome Ketn and Otto} Montreal, Canada. | auswer ‘Hes in the difficulties which American imperialism is | ont”, the emergence of the So- Harbacht, at the Amsterdam The i ge a i teri. eviencing at this time. Soon diplomatic representatives of Wall cialist Party, the I.W.W., and other this evening. ‘The comedy was a Explains Union ‘on, headed by Secretary of State Hull, will be facing | working class organizations, along ed from “Gowns By Robert: tr In addition to increased news of ENE MR EEN 3 esentatives of the semi-colonial countries south of | with their shortcomings due to say novel by Alice Ducr, Muller, Lyda| sitikes and. struggles by. furniture q “LAUGHTER f ho hatie ae < -}fusion,. petty boiirgeois tende: Roberti, the Polish comedienne whg| Workers in various citles, the Novem- | S H LO M THROUGH re;ations between American imperialism and the Latin Amer- | €t¢., are given musical expression. The 4 appeared in “You Said It,” Bob Hope, | ber issue has addod a feature, ex- , pachttag cs is rether less than happy, Washington has already an. |SOnd movement is a satirical, anni- agers mame Go Fay Templeton and Tamara play the | Plaining the difference between the | CHEM S TEARS nm imperialism feel Wall Street's presstre mi d that it will not discuss taritis or other serious matters at Mon- very severely and rather effectiyely in American. markets, ost keenly--Mexico, Central America, and Colombia, which is now so thoroughly bankrupt that it cannot pay Hilating thrust at the Jewish pseudo- intellectuals and their false ideologi- Seizure of power by the Russian workers, the establishment of the Die~ tatorship of the Proletariat, and its effect upon the American scene... onstrations . . , picket lines, are de- picted, Une Kummer'’s comedy, now playing at He!p Pioneers With Wood- working Circles ~ Carpenters, or any other workers, Please send or bring tools to the Young Pioneers of America, Room 609, 356 E. 12th St., New York City. leading roles, | by Daniel Frohman. Erin O'Brien- | Moore and Horace Braham have | leading roles in the play. | Loraine Hays and Claire McQuillen are new additions to the cast, industrial form of unionization and craft unionization, This is a feature mation so they can expfain to their fellow workers this important dif- ference, and for new readers, this Another welcome addition is news| of Sam Weinstein, furniture worker, ALEI ACME THEATRE -RADIO CITY MUSIC HALL); Yiddish Dinlogue—English Titles pakuvesrogt " oie Fritz Blocki is maki h eK | rf 2 lors ¢ thy ssential spirit t amevican imperialism knows that some of the Latin American {cal mouthings of “Art for Art's Sake.”| the Plymouth "Theatre, tion of “Yoshe Kalb etin cat 'bs| every trade publication ought . to| | of Sholom Alsichem's: representations,” —~ Dally Werke c2is6ei2s will’ re nt British interests. Both Japan and Great Britain |The last movement deals’ with the presented: in English on Broadway | adopt. It gives older members infor- With STREET and NION SQUARE JOE COOK in |TEN MINUTE ALIBI 2 and Washington are therefore compelled to avoid the th “Growing Pains,” a comedy by | 2rticle, which is to be continued, sup~ SHOW PLACK of the NATION | r r = Q new phases of th can you contribute hammers, saws, horn ins, omedy by a “Roxy” 280 AM, || of forcible intervention in Cuban affairs, Such interven- oa the ek phan Mo Bg pind td planes, chisels, any kind or shape of | Aurania Rouverol, will open on | hea petits nat ee reg hig eich Fo ore | OLD YOU R HOR : ES > the intense hostility not only of the Cuban masses— | the guidance of the Communist Party | Woodworking tools, for classes which | Thursday, Nov. 23, at the Ambassa-| ah a pie roy re added strength “LITTLE WOME | Winter Garden #7 # 5 se cady liste and resist “diplomatic” tntervention—but would in- |@nd the Communist. Intemational |the Young Pioneers of Americs are| dor Theatre instead of the. follow. | oY T Unions Sid te ene eer ||| Sean Bennett, Fatt Lakag” Frances, Dee ||| Tuts cat ee in addition other Latin American countries, particularly those |-+- hunger marches... mass dem- | starting? Peddie Merit hy Be | unions. i. | snedlucaie cm its deviiy'to the U. 8. bankers. Jacob Schaefer, composer of “Gevi- 1 > Jeff | A New Maledrana » : ~ serving a term in Sing Sing, after he | Jefferson “ Now | de. Macey eardaaaa te At this stage Jb may definitely be sald that the anti-imperiatist | tet) Js & ter hs wee oe : Wal Timed Sor leeitiia wr cetae: OFS tavcaseias une aes avn” | bine. t: iia washeon deepen tee agrarial revolution has commenced in Cuba, But it has not been de- |Ciub Last fall he represented both furniture workers in Brooklyn. in “TORCH SINGER” | Fe eee renee Xe Fe Pe yeloved., beyond its initial stages, the club and the Workers’ Music A letter from a furniture worker | added feature: “DELUGE” with Rabicidlauecee ves) en ait 26 2 ‘Tais places @ grave responsibility upon the Cuban Communist Party | League at the International Congress in the Soviet Union contrasts the | PEGGY SHANNON & SIDNEY BLACKMER |) tHe THEATRE GUILD _ presenis— which is now playing a role of first magnitude in the Cub’n upheaval. of Proletarian Musicians held in conditions of these workers under MUSIC sa gu E O'NEILL's ComEDY Ti pisces equally grave responsibilities upon the revolutionary work- |Moscow. “October” an earlier ora- Socialism with those under American AH, WILDERNESS! ers of the United States, who must intensify their aid and support to i ihe Well as other works by Jacob ir — = apiratiere,, The 8 Felis eo eeeN oe ay 7 GUILD itneas S24°8ts W. of Biway the insurrection of the Cuban workers and peasants, Schaefer, have been published and of the slavery capitalism Jmposed on, Philharmonic ae Symphony Ey rs. 8Sal.2.20 Performed in the Soviet Union. ‘The first half of the program will be devoted to a group of songs for 11;30—Laae Orch. ‘ 12:00—Robbins Orch. WIZ—T160. Ki the workers. Some Limitations TONIGHT’S PROGRAMS WEAF—660 Ke ‘To facilitate this support, the American workers must take advantage * MOLIBRE'S COMEDY WITH MUSIC of the contradictions within American imperialism, They must also take WALTER, Conductor. The School for Husbands { aa There is still room for improve- | PGIE HALL adyantage..of ihe differences between American imperialism and the ch :00 F. M.—John Herrick, Songs | |] with Ossood PERKINS—June WALKER : 25 , ‘ orus among which are @ number} 7:09 P. M—Half Hour For Men—J, ©.) 7:15--Th: | the “ ” Atternecs ab M00 | Thes., B'way & 40 v. imperiatism of other powers. , of new Soviet Songs, David Sapiro| || Nugent | Tikehees Muskeleere-Skcich | | ment in the ey Mere Joser IHEVINNE || EMPIRE suasistetnorsasetnad They must struggle against the exploiters of this country who at |will be ab the plano for those songs| 7:30—Cl"eus Days—Sketch | aris: Vangtt7 01] Gone” DAO ene aeons plentic| Mo; Friday Att, 200 rir the same time oppress them and their Cuban comrades. which are not unaccompanied, The| s:00—conemics In the New Deal—Lever- | tee Se aA rere, is ree ful. graphical errors that can be avoided symphony orchestra and the Freiheit There are still too many typo- Gezang Verein will be conducted by BAX—BRAHMS—-SCHUMANN Saturday Eve, at ing Tyson; Economie Background of the | New Masses and Film-Photo 0; New Deal—Dr. Alvin Johnson, Director, | pn a AB od ts") ©. G Hoffman 2... ees ees evel $1.00 Group of Class Conscious Previous Total .......,......391.37, » first program of the series on story of the Russian Film,” at the . lecture by Joseph Freeman, editor o! the New Masses. ‘There will be two showings at 7 p. m: and 9:30 p. OEM OF THE TURY PRETUDICE Tw Ler THs Pacts SPEAK POR THEMSELVES. | ary Literature” and the speakers are Writers Group, Milton Howard, writer on economics and literature, and NEW YORK.—The first symipositim | the FACTS @RE FACTS TOTHEM BIGOTRY 1S —ad- au: American Theatre Sunday tures, f¢ recitals, etc., this Sun- Prospects American Theatre,” is based on the questionaire in the November is- foremost figures in the American theatre world today, including Sid- Wallace Phelps, secretary of the|ney Howard, Anita Block, Barrett H. Clark, Paul Peters, Michael Gold, Virgil Geddes and many others, Sev- cht Club Boys; Vivian Ruth, Songs Re! Orch, Men About Town Trio; 9:00—Robert McGimsey, Whistler 9:15—-Hunting — George U. Warren’ Jr, :Game Commissioner of New Jersey 9:30—Bronx Marriage Buresu--Sketch 45-—The Lowland Singers 00—Neleae Denlels, Songs Bt 1 | 10:00—Chicago Symphony,Orch.; Edgar G. Prochnik, Austrian ,Minister to the ton—Prederic William Wile { 8:13—Pray and Braggiott!, Piano Duo “Byrd Expedition | [En Route to Antarlicy Music From New | |: York umn captions and stories. A box there and there, a two column story censcious on the economic battlefield, They shou!d be educated to know | rovemeni. Al iy it. is @ publica-| Fon very well worth sihseribing to| | 10:39—News Bulletins 10:45—-Jones Ore. :Mt—T9’ Be Announti¢”s , not only for furniture | as well, Iin- riher, Jt can become | 2 The “Honest Citizens” Get Together | AGU ~TSK TSK, HE WWeITED A RIOT ~ TSK; tsk! ouR oD CHa@p GMLIZATION, DESTROY OUR SAX To YOU, AS HONEST hy QUIT | | | CIUZENS, TIS YOUR, | Sooty To Convict | JAMES MARTIN. | | | } Eg | On ‘sale, at: Jewish Center — J, BIW Drug ‘Store, 29th St. and Will Jectyre on Saturday, Nov. 18, 7.15 . * qccmedian; Shirley. Howard, Songs fa ce 1 f-reading. The Mozart, D'Indy, Str League Present Uelping the Daily Worker through Michael Gold, : Schaefer, PEA ooas oo Sgeudtuenta | #:90,-Caro Lamoureux, Boprano; -Ludovie ere praaielsheahd 2 over |{ ARTHUR’ guDsoN Mer. “SPRING” Contributions received to the credit of Michael Gold in his Socialist G.C, | 9:00—Juck Peari, " Comedian; Goodman | 9:00—rom South Amerloa: Greetings to ies, is still too monotonous Lax competition ‘with Dr. Luttinger, Edward Newhouse, Helen Luke, Jacob —— Orch.; Demarco Sisters, Songs; Robert| Radio. City From. Argentina, Brazit, | Past issues, ts sai oe . Durek and-Del to raise $1,000 in the $40,000 Daily Worker Drive: Symposium on Prospects for 9g, BS Tenor; Lenders ‘Trio Venezuela, and Uruguay * "| by the indiscriminate use of two col- SCOTT NE 'ARING The Man With The Movie Camera” — | _UL 8, Speaker BD et a Wilh ‘ Inaugurating 2 Movie and Lecture ow White, bays 5 y centered between two singlercolmn ‘ . a i Workers ovsvsnesessesnseee 498 otal to Dake ooosersceee-$80668 | EW yoRK—The ‘Theatre chub | 10h cee Maly Pim — susie, with | ibg0—Same ay WEAR. heads, wider use of drawings of ‘pic~|| eee ee CONOR History of the Soviet Film is A *. a @ newly formed section of the Work~| 11.39 iors | OTE ack a tures, will help tremendously toim-}fs-° | ~CRIST vi a First Showing in Film |John Reed Club Lecture Series | ¢, 27%; Theatre, will hold the| iz’00—wisen ‘Orch’: ‘Dorie Quartet; tary ‘WABC—860._Ke . Prove its appearance. ‘Saturday, Nov. 25th, 8 o'clock jew acnoteroe noua metninee Series in N. Y. Today on Literature to Start feat of © Of symposiums, Jec-} Wood, Soprano; Tommy Harris, Gonss;| 7:99 p, M.—Polttical Situation in Weshing-| Also the November issue contains || at’ JEWISH CENTER 86 West 12th Street aN. I. rGhiiecoW forums, . fae maaner canes Bne se Bob~ as eemadarie Waller Whe i” gman, Practically no article thet brings| ocean Parkway and Neptune Ave,, day, Nov. 18, 7.15 & 930 p.m. NW YORK.—The Film and Photo day, at 42 E, 12th Bt. 8:30 P.M. dian eye pee Denny Orch s forward the Communist Party,” 4 is °°" Brooklyn Guests Admitied. Single Showing League and the New Masses present age ‘This symposium, “The for WOR—7 10 e K Froman nd Charles Carlile, |not enough to make workers class~ J Tickets 25¢ Get tickets from New Masses, 31 E. 27 Bt. ¢ of @ series will be held tomorrow at 1:00 F. M—Sports—vord Prick ly Plano rty is their friend and'whieh |] sormaiaave, << Werkers Book a t. w School for Social Research, 66 ‘sue of the “New Theatre” magazine,| 7:15—Golf—Bill Brown. 8:80--George Jessel, Comedian: Vera Van, | Which Par . || Mermaid“ Ave. < Workers, Bool Private Film Showing of Vy. 12th Stw today. "The program will |8 p, m. at the John Reed Club head- ed by the League of Workers | 7:30—Rverett. Mocosey, Baritone ee Bonga Blan Boys Giarie: Rich Orep. [thelr enemics. os Shop, 50 E. 13th St. “THE 2 THIEVES” ‘ onsist of two films, “Spring” and the | quarters, 430 Sixth Ave. The subject tes Of UE.A, A copy Of Wis] Sept rnemen Te autip ‘gaiien, | Spo Bend One reyes Mauna, Cone|...The promising “factor about” the Get, Yours At-Onv6 at COOPERATIVE HALA, 87 W. 128th Sty sian With the Movie Camera,” and |i, «Aesthetic Problems in Revolution. | Uestionnaire was sent to some of the] ““"Gondustor; Jeanette chicerer, Clarinet’ | A ieee ‘ “Furniture We is its steady im- Supply Limited! SUNDAY, NOV. 1th’ at 8:30 P.M. | Auspices, Harlem Br. F.8.U. Subscription 208 t 429 Sixth Av: Come “THIS COCKEYED WORLD” For the Naty Werker Saturday, November 18 ud (2 fights up) with your Piuck a feather ENTERTAINMENT iu }11 classic of the “Kino Eye” period. eral of the above mentioned will be| !8:18~Xano and Kenner, Songs teas een ‘truly an outstanding publication of | : AND DANCE Nathan Adler, movie critic and short~ 30-Orgen Recital | 12:00—"yman. Orc on its kind in the country, More power . aA New Kind ef Party acass fteids nine a offered Fresent, Suntoy, nicht, to give thle) tier ape ‘| i09 Ropking’ Oran, °° er A John Reed Club Affair at LAFAYETTE HALL 165 West 131st Street Dancing to Liberator Orchestra Admission 15¢ in Advance; - At Door 20¢ e DAYS OF THE TRIAL ARE TUE TURIES OF STRAM- | AND MY FRIENDS, Waar WIN P24 4 joe ti ome Ge AUSPICES: UNIT 424 Pi BAL sues v8 Toute uns wowu!| | Toe ane dare oe gas weerecet J || Z| wereb as oar Wo te aa ocean OF Admission “15e Proceeds to Daily Worker LADIES AND GENTLE- WR SUST DECISIONS - cob pai ag DARK FORCES Wo -PLaa to RUIN “STRI John Reed Club -—~PRESENT——~ KE ME RED” An Operetta in 5 Acts and 1] Scenes 500 Children, Negro and White T Wie aor PILL GOT RY Irsaoveds OE= ad Me! AOMES. AID FAMILIES | Aad INTRO- YouR AOneST = o IATROVERE] ©] DUCE ANARCHY AND. Black wESS | P ‘4 . j . nias TINS Wire Peanie ere Chel teragtio) epee aor Sok Oe: | and Young Pioneers of America In Honor ot the Memory of Harry Alan Potamkin Presentation of Portrait Bust of Potamkin CITY COLLEGE AUDITORIUM, 23rd St. and Lexington Ave. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 25, at 8 P. M. TICKETS: 35¢; 50c and $1.00