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| was in 1907. | ‘aes es Rs peer | 5 13 re m} hi Yet from my chapter | ENTSRTAINMENT AND DANCE given b; Bs 3 ~_ | enough, he always felt that there|Worker of even a few months back, productive,” and proceeds to jumble together phrases y chap' the Neckwear Workers §, & A. Club, at 5/-, mdseape country around Lake) would have to be an “ultimate” revo-|he is immediately struck, when| » which he asserts claims that. B. 19th 6t., at 8:30 p. m ia Geneva, bread was scarce—that is,| tition, But right now they were| y looking over the Needle!) But anyone who will take the trouble to look ihto Voices of October po ce a OM mWbite Goods Scarce for those who made it. The) oniy striking for better conditions| Worker as it now is with the great DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1933 AT'S ON | Saturday ton Ave. at 28th St. ments, dancing, su! Free photos, retres rise and unique enter- Judge—5 Piece Danceland 0; EXTRAORDINARY PARTY and Entertain- | ment at Film and Photo League, 116 Lexing- Page Seven ||An Incident in a |) cece reer rremren ANTS Bet fore a mili- THE TURNING POINT Revolutionist’s Life AN GILES, jment could not wait for the militia] tainment. Admission 25c. D> CONCERT and DANCE given by the Pock- > q Pe iy i” j etbook Workers Rank and File at Workers) The following is an incident | service for several weeks, were never TEARS | Center, 60 B. 13th Si, at & p. m. which brought the reality of the | to be used for “internal disturbances.” } HIRD ANNUAL BARN DAN er- rege % D ” “ e ] a tauaueet me MAPS sama ind Ent io i} capitalist state power as the enemy | But time pressed and the govern- A work of dramatic art An engrossing and am interest- | |___ AMUSEMENTS “LAUGHTER THROUGH DAILY WORKER | !"« film.” a MORNING FREIMEIT By Joseph Freeman fon, 90 St. Marks Pine today, twen ears abe ga (aloe, toon uur _year old youth| lee es ee - | lay, mi, yi later, J y-fo ea n| terizations.” “Highly amusing screen effort.” IN our Jast installment of this serial which deals with the slanders against | ie eee eee eee amie | member of the Central Committee | was in front of the worker WORLD TELEGRAM | N.Y, TIMES revolutionary literature, we saw how the author of an article called “Stalin's Literary Inquisition” misquoted and falsified in the most un. scrupulous manner my first chapter in Voices of October. The example I gave, however, by no means exhausts our literary Grover Whalen’s forgeries. He objects to what he calls my “wonder story” about “everything going fine, and everybody gloriously happy and instead of into the falsifications of the Modern Monthly, will see that I did not say “everything was going fine,” or that everybody was “glor- iously happy and productive.” Here is the passage which our Scribe misquotes: 66 E. Fourth st, All furniture t Workers Cen- | ter, 60 B. 12th St., at 8:30 p. m., given by | the International Workers Order Branch 19, celebrating their 4th year ENTERTAINMENT AND DANCE given at Unit 5, 6, 8 and 9 at 95 Avenue B, at 8 p.m. Admission 150. Workers, at Astoria Hall, 02 ©, Fourth St., Club, 1538 Madison Ave. John Smith Or- at 8 p. m. The first public affair of the group. NOVEMBER BALL and ENTERTAINMENT| given by the Harlem Progressive Youth | of the Communist Party, and whose 50th birthday and 30th year in the revolutionary movement will be | | colebrasen at a banquet in his honor in Irving Plaza Hall tonight. barbers of Lausanne had gone out on strike. Theirs was not only a prob- jtem of bread. Work for a boss and one had to ivie in his house, eat in jhis house, have one’s laundry done In the post-card | th the military officers, ing that they re “demand- re and permit the their right to . The young had never "seriously con- cred the state and its forces as emies of the workers. ‘True id along with other workers who. were striking for higher wages, The officers stated they were under orders. Those in the rear of the mass began pushing forward to get THE of the ss dusirial Unien—October and Nov ember Issues. When one remembers the Needle dvances this union paper has made, both in its appearance and content It 1s a neat looking, attractive paper. Both the October and November It is alive with news of struggle.| SOVIET YIDDISH COMEDY with English Titles, || ACME THEATRE { th STREET & Dfjq ® to 1 p.m, Exo. Sat, bum. & NION SQUARE Hol. Day. Midnite show Sate | RKO Jefferson Mth St. & an 3rd Ave. JEAN HARLOW end LEE TRACY in “BOMBSHELL” “THE KENNEL MURDER CASE” " ARY ASTOR ™ BIRTHDAY- i “ i chestra, 2 humorous plays, Admission 25c, |in his house and have ones wages re- | into the People’ i “ f the str : im FOWSEL © “The diversion of energy from the politics of literature to the cre- 3 plays. A‘ mm 25¢ ni ie People’ House. ‘Those in|issues are full of news o! st ! HE ation of literature collowing the pines: of 1924 has resulted in Wr Gann ak tone duced accordingly. front felt the sharp points of the|and victories in the different sec-|) rar THEATRE GUILD presonte— —AND— tremendous growth,” I said on page 58 of Volces of October. ‘The | Contribution 280. Ladies treo. ” '™| The barber shops of Lausanne, as| bayonets pressed against their bel-|tions of the industry—fur, knit UG O'NEILL's COMEDY - & net have passed since the Party resolution stilled the troubled | CONCERT AND DANCE given by wariem|in other citles of Switzerland ab that| Ties. |The young German lad also|custom teilors, ete. “You imm AH, WILDERNESS! 3 0 Y E A R q3 ve years that have passed since the Party resolutcn Workers School, 200 W. 135th St., Room 221, were the centers of working | felt the point of the bayonet. The|see that the Union has been 8 engeh with GEORGE M, COHAN 4 waters of controversy over the dictatorship of proletarian Mterature have winessed new poems, plays and novels, powerful and finely wrought, many of which can be justly called ‘proletarian literature,’ and all of which, in one way or another, reflect the new life ushered in by the Revolution,” This is the passage which our Scribe points to as an example of falsifying the facts of the “exact mathematical center” of the “literary inquisition.” He points to it, however, in a form which he recompenses, and which he tears out of its context. I urge the reader (and even our Scribe, if he has any intellectual integrity left) to consider the very next lines which follow immediately after the passage cited above, “In the following chapters,” I said, “this life, as described by the poets and novelists, will be considered concretely. IT MUST BE POINTED OUT, HOWEVER, THAT SOVIET LIFE CHANGES RAPIDLY; WHAT IS TRUE TODAY MAY NO LONGER BE TRUE TOMORROW. Where social life is so consciously and ruthlessly directed by the organized working class, decades may be leaped over in a year. THE ARTS ARE CONSIDERED IN THIS BOOK ONLY AS THEY WERE AFFECTED BY THE OCTOBER REVOLUTION AND THE INTRODUCTION OF THE NEW ECONOMIC POLICY. As this book goes to press, the first reports of the operations of the Five-Year Plan indicate that a new at 8:30 p. m. ‘Baltimore delegate wil g Aam: Interesting entertainment, CHARLES RECHT International Lawyer will speak on “What Soviet Russia Means to the Youth of Today” at Young America Institute, Steinway Hall, 113 W. Sith Bt. THE COMRADE who receive the wrong hat by mistake at the irish affair on ers Club please return same and receive vis own in exchange. (Bronx) GORKY DRAMATIC SECTION will present & Soviet Russian Play at the Middle Bronx Workers Club, 3882 Third Ave. Mandolin Orchestra of 50; dancing by a good band. HERMAN BLANC, Russian singer, Yasht Nikogossef, Caucasian Dance, Vardan, Cau. casian, singer, Parker Watkins, Negro Spirit- uals and Del, Daily Worker cartoonist will be on the program at 792 B. Tremont Ave. near 177th St. Subway Station. There wil! also be dancing. Admission 165¢, CONCERT AND DANCE at the Prospect Worker Center, 1127 So, Boulevard, Pro- gram: Chorus, ‘workers Lab. Theatre, Red Dancers. CONCERT AND DANCE at the Advance Sunday, Nov. 19th, at the West Side Work- | time, class thought. Many problems were thrashed out but never really settled. Revolution against the existing order of things was continually discussed. |Of course, the workers sensed and instinctively felt that the capitalist state (they more often used the word government than state) was not their own, But even in the heated con- versation of the barber shops, they | seldom mentioned Marx, A 24-year old youth was one of the leaders in the barbers’ strike. Germany, he was a member of the land. It was unusual for foreign- born workers to be admitted to mem- bership. The German, Austrian and organization in Switerland. But the twenty-four year old German who was already known in the gentle- An apprentice at thirteen, born in | | thirty days in which a bread and} Social-Democratic Party of Switzer- | Hungarian Socialists had their own | workers were disnersed, but the bitter struggle continued, Many factories and plants con- ceded the workers their demands. The barbers lost their strike and the twenty-four year old German lad was immediately deported to another part of the country, from Wadt to | Bern, The bayonets had driven an im- | portant lesson home. For days after the strike, the youth pondered on the capitalist power, the State. To- day, he will tell you of how, in those butter strike became a political strug- | gle, he lived through the develop- ment of thirty years. He will tell you of how he entered the st thinking he was a revolutionist and| of coming out of it, knowing he was going to be a revolutionist. The twenty-four year old youth, Max jened with workers in new branches jef the industry. Here, by contrast wiht such pap- ers as the “Advance” (organ of the Amalgameted), the needle worke: find out what the N. R. A. really means to themselves, Here (in the Initgoods, fur dressing, and fur in- dustries are exposed for what they are, and the hearings of these codes with the part the National Textile Workers Industrial Union played in these hearings—not one of knee- craping to the bosses like the right wing officialdom, \but one of concrete exposure, of con- crete demands for the .workers, of |cnterests of the workers, The October issue has an excellent article telling the workers what the November issue) the codes in the/ in Washington are described, together | government and) |being in Washington to represent the | NTT ahea., 62d St., W. of Bway GUILD Ey.8.20Mats,Thurs.@Sat.2.20 MOLIERE’S COMEDY WITH MUSIO The School for Husbands in Revolutionary Movement on Two Continents SWITZERLAND — AMERICA MAX BepacuT TESTIMONIAL - BANQUET ‘SEATS NOW at Box OMce ATRE UNION presenta EACE ON EARTH” by George Sklar & Albert Maltz ors of “MERRY-GO-ROUND” Civic Repertory Theatre, 14th Bt. & Oth Ave, | wa, 9- PRICES: 300 600 $1.10, $1.65 MUSIC “Phill harmonic - Symphony | WALTER, Conductor. AT CARNEGIE HALL SPEAKERS: period of development in Soviet life has opened, to be followed, it may be | Guard Cultural Grop, 936 B, 165th St. aril “that itator,” | Bedacht, is tod: ber hh N. T. W. I. U. means to them— — crema | * ‘DANCE AND press as “that damn agi jedac! is today a member of the). 3 ite: | This Sunday Afternoon at #00 Earl Browder assumed, by a new turn in Soviet art and literature. be NaE Parner OnE AAINMENT tendered | elonged to the Swiss Party. Other-|Central Committee of the Commu- eee ME ch ee Soloist4: GRETE STUECKGOLD, Soprano Lively jazz band. Excellent entertainment, refreshment. Admission 25c, wise though, there were no stringent rules on who could or could not be- nist Party of the United States, |shortcomings in this issue—no news GUSTAV SCHUETZENDORF, Baritone ‘HUBERT—WOLT—WEBER Clarence Hathawa: OW why did our literary jesuit of the Modern Monthly omit this | concerr aND PARTY given by Women’s |: i ° + ___jof the struggles of workers in other |} Thursday Eve., Friday Aft., 2:30 r passage? Why in particular did he omit the words in CAPS? Gouncil 39, Unit 20, Seotion 6 and Branch The fae geyries ap Ga |Minute Movie Review) nastries (this, while 75,000 miners, |] sotvists: auBenT sPaLDING. Violinist James W. Ford 190 L.W.O., at Westchester Workers Center, 4 ‘ f Switzerland was |tens of thousands of steel and metal | Ae Toca RESPIGEE Willi Wei The answer is simple. He could make out a “case” only by falsifying | 1548 Wostchester Ave. ors’ organization of Switzerlai ¥ N Mer. m lham einer what I said. Had he cited what I actually did say he would not have a leg to stand on. For what I said in so many words was that Voices of October dealt with the “arts as they were affected by the October Revolution and the New Economic Policy.” Even a rabid partisan ought to know that the New Economic Policy ended in 1927, three years before his “exact mathematical center.” CONCERT AND DANCE given by the Tre- mont Progressive Club, 862 B. Tremont Ave. Good Jazz Band, fine concert, proletarian prices, BALLOON DANCE given by Jackson Workers Club, 785 Westchester Ave. (former- ly Union Workers Center). Good band. Good 2. time. PARTY given by ¥.0.L. Unit 5 at 1451 Crotona Pl, apartment 16, bet. 17st and also a member of the Social-Demo- cracy. He was leading the opposi- tion against the strikers at the same time. The strike became a general strike. All morning that early April, work- ers plastered the city of Lausanne with strike proclamations. Mechanics Eat ’Em Alive If you like to watch life-and. death wrestling bouts between desert snakes, where the victor absorbs the victim and drags him hom to finish the digestive process at leisure dur- ing the ensuing months, then don't workers, thousands of shoe workers were striking); | not enough workers’ correspondence; practically nothing Union; not enough exposure of the reformist needle union misleaders. The November issue contains im- portant articles on the Federal in- on the United Front activities of the | | Charles Krumbein SYMPOSIU | The Role of the Press : JOSEPH FREEMAN, M-U-S-1-C Editor of the New accsl| f ANDRE CIBULSKH KYLE CRICHTON, Associate Editor of Scribners | It is true that Voices of October was published in 1930. That was due | gt, Paul Pi.’ Good time time assured, dro rr ive” dictment against the Union; work|| Myra PAGE, pped their tools, painters left | fail to see “Eat Em Alive” now ts i to various accidental factors. But it is also true, and I said so specifically, (Brooklyn ) their scaffolds hanging in mid air,|playing at the Cameo Theatre, All ped oe cae Rsnilgt penal al} witha a of Onthe ar Storm | Soviet Singer al é that the book deals chiefly with the October Revolution and the NEP. | ppanxsorvina DAWNCE and Entertain-|°he chocolate workers of the large |your doubts about snake being able tional ‘Textile Workers Industrial Sunday, Nov. 26, 1933, 8 p. m. I also said that we may expect “a new turn in Soviet art and literature” Peter Kohler Co. plants came out to swallow snake will vanish com- EUGENE |New School for Social Research Pe eal Bec igang Honal Workers 1 NIGOB rive at Workers Center, 1813 Pitkin Ave, Mt . lete! , ‘or the fur workers; an ar-| | ‘ 3 af as @ result of the Five-Year Plan, but that new turn is NOT discussed by @uperuh Rrouteaonte.. A mals Ping ic/to a man and struck. pletely when you see this film. You'll tiele on Hillquit and the nee die | | Pianist in Voices of October. The beautiful hills and mountains, be surprised to see how easily a six- MANDOLIN CONCERT and Dance given | 1 workers. There is an article on the! Auspices: PI 4 F " “ ” by the Progressive Workers Cultura Club,|the woodlands of long needle-like | teen-foot rattlesnake can slip through 2 ee | 2 ‘ I would not have hesitated to discuss the “new turn” in New York, | 1% ‘summer ave. Dancing by band!|trees and the soft spring air hid|the tonsils of an eighteen took “king. |American Federation of Labor con-| | aes. | re Miss GRESSLER, for I believe my knowledge of and contacts with the Soviet literary scene would have enables me to form valid opinions from the Soviet press and irom letters. But I had spend part of 1929 in Mexico, was out of touch with Soviet literature, and therefore confined my own statements to the period which I knew first-hand, I took the trouble to say just that in some many words, And our indignant Scribe in the Modern Monthly took the t rouble to OMIT those very words. But why should I complain about having my statements twisted out of context by the Modern Monthly? Who am I to be spared when our DANOE AND ENTERTAINMENT given by Youth Builder I.W.O., Branch 467. Red Hot Jazz Band, Play “Broadway | 1933.” Skits by a Wise Cracker at 1009 Winthrop St. Admission 150, PARTY GIVEN by the LL.D. Chorus at 218 Van Sicklen Ave., Brooklyn. Refresh- ments free, Admission 25¢. A RED CABARET and DANCE is arranged by Council 10 at 87 Bay 36th St, Dancing and interesting program. ETCHERINKA and CONCERT ites by the wielding of police truncheons and the flow of workers’ blood. Almost every worker in the French section was out. “Viva Ia greve general,” the shout was taken up by constantly swelling qroups of marching workers. The Big Hall and the People’s House, where the barbers plied their trade against the bosses during the strike, snake, And if you can sit si] in yore seat while a centipede is tearing apart a spider or while a gila monster is sinking its teeth into| the head and fangs of a puzzle rat-| tler, or while some strange desert battler is disfiguring the torso of a wild desert rat, your nerves are in_pretty good shape. Personally I found {t a pleasure persisions | vention which is good, but does not deal with the granting of an Amer- ‘can Federation of Labor charter to the Amalgamated—a subject which {must be discussed in the very next issue of the Needle Worker — and there are exralient editorial com. ments under the heading, “At the Point of the. Needle.” Violinist TONIGHT! SATURDAY, 8P. M@ Party for the DAILY WORKER @® HERMAN BLANC Russian Songs the W.TR, at 421 Stone Ave. at 8: 9 B } H y, Scribe does not spare Lenin himself this indignity? ‘Admission ise in advance; at door 206," |became the center for the masses. |and a relief to see snakes, lisards|2 ronx Units to old) Ripe Pion babe F af “ (Downtown) Lines of marchers poured in around | and rats that were somewhat out of Daily’ ffai * \ VORDAN RV G P I A ] A 4 M, J. OLGIN lecture todey, at 2p the People’s House. But they could | the ordinary variety of reptiles you ay Affair Tonight 4 fi (OW our Scribe did this I shall explain tomorrow. Meantime I should like to say that while Voices of October said nothing about RAPP in 1930 because I was out of touch with the Soviet literary scene, I soon had occasion to learn a great deal about RAPP from several sources. On the one hand, I was in correspondence with several RAPP leaders whom I had known well in Moscow. On the other hand, I heard from various fellow-travellers and liberal newspaper correspondents who were opposed at the Workers School on “What's Happen |ing in Russia,” at 35 B. 12th st. GALA CONCERT and Dance celebrating Thanksnothing in the Clarte, French Work- ors Club, 304 West 58th St. Good Program, plano and violin soloists, Costrocm 0c, CHAMBER MUSIC Concert of the Freiheit Mandolin Orchestra, at 106 B, 1ith St, Program mandolin gatemble, Mathew Kaha, conductor, David Freed, violi cellox solo. not get in. The back sections of the crowds could not sce that surround- ing the center was a line of busi- ness-like steel bayonets. The gov- ernment had sent out the recruits, It was against their own law, which specifically stated that workers had the right to enter their own hail. find so abundantly in Tammany and Wall Street. At least the desert rat is not protected by the “law.” “Eat 'Em Alive” was photographed by Harold Austin on the Nevada Desert with the aid of a telephoto lens to get closeups of the battles and is about the best animal-eat-animal NEW YORK.—Units 8 and 28, Sec- tion 15 of the Communist Party, have | arranged a concert and dance for the Drive, to be held this eveniny, 8:30 .M., at 792 Tremont Ave., the Bronx. All neiehborhood workers are urged benefit of the Daily Worker's $10090| Caucasian Songs PARKER WATKINS Negro Spirituals DEL, Daily Worker Cartoonist D-A-N-C-I-N-G@ SAT., NOV. 18, 8:30 P. M. } | 15th St., cor. Irving Place TICKETS $1 “ at WORKERS’ BOOK STORE 50 East 12th Street i to RAPP. Admission 25c, The law also stated that recruits, | flicker that has come along in many |to attend, 192 E. TREMONT AVE, ie But perhaps the best picture I got of the Soviet literary situation | Sunday who were youths conscripted into moons, Don’t miss it. Sg Pee (Near E. 177th St. Station) OR AT DOOR™@ > at the “exact mathematical center” was from Boris Pilnyak. From March | opsx rorum on “What Is Hai | zs Admission 150 se ppening | x 12 to August 3, 1931 Boris Pilnyak lived at my house. I saw him lit- pc Germany,” given by Comrade Otto! | @ j erally 24 hours a day. He could not speak English, did not learn it, and | Durick, editor of German Weekly | “Der i R ii laminae ance ect eee | cee aaa Cina saesinn'y therefore could not be left alone. ia, it caieaica nba esa Al | @ USS a =| . |WILLIAM BELL————= Despite differences in character, outlook and even politics, Pilnyak | ,GRTRUDE HUTCHINGON, Asoosinte Bat. || | Spaghetti Supper—Dance })) orricrat. Optometrist °* ™™ and I liked each other. He talked to-me a great deal and with unusual j Soviet Russia” at Young America Institute, H U D Ss re) W Eeten iy Seaentladl take ad candor, To these circumstances I owe an improvement in my knowledge | Steinway Hall, 118 W. sith St. peste hort | — | Betcaas Bronx “Sect 3 of the Russian language and of Soviet literature. Needle Trade Workers Dance Group at Army and Navy Store SUN. NOV. 26th. 7:30 P M i For five months I heard, day in and day out, from a master of lan~ | fijlctlve Dance Studio, 77 Fifth Ave. Lec-| TONTIGHT’S PROGRAMS 5—Piano Duo ” . » 7:30 P.M. ¢ o guage and image, stories about Soviet life and Soviet literature. I | Leadership,” by J, Gi Cael ay WEAF—660 K feel ih pee New Address at 288 East 174th Street 100 abe ere eae learned many things about Soviet literary groups and personalities which | , “STOR! bia ttre Wat re lecture, He c 2—Trint Orch. 105 THIRD AVE Mustc by “The Brown Revelers” |) Heke Peat ate, you will not find in print. Giub, 3883 Third Ave., at 8:30 p.m. TS B, M--Football Scores i2:00—Rebbine Orch. «i havent calf | Phone: Tompkins Square . :20—Don: ovis, Songs - Pilnyak was a fellow traveller, RAPP did not like him and he did | ,.080F- OAKLEY JOHNSON will lecture on) 7-30 Donald Novus, Songs DRE so SCORE Ee a not like RAPP. He told me @ number of stories which were not to | way Workers Club, 2179 White Plains Rd.) [48—Mountaineers Music WJZ—760 Ke Gives Honest Values in Genuine ohn Reed Cla RAPP’S credit, and gave a rather vivid account of methods which even- pr el i eer tree dele wis ; P. M.—John Herrick, Songs Horsehide Sheeplined Coats; onn hee u tually led to RAPP'S dissolution. He also revealed those characteristics | wext," at 051 Leggett ave, auspices Uni 9| 9:00—Jack Pearl, Comedian; Goodman | 7 SA eee Windbreak Diaschan. and You Pi f A . fellow-traveller which led to the rise of RAPP, ¥.O.L. Speaker worker delegate from Mary-| Oreh.; Demarco Sisters, Songs; Robert | 7:20 Zrlo, Roma indbreakers, reeches, ng Fioneers 0 merica of the fellow-traveller wi : land. Simmons, Tenor; Leaders Trio oti Hish Shoes, Boots, Work 5 But quite different from the Modern Monthly’s diatribe was the pic- | “LECTURE on “Is the Femily Broken Up| 930—Yecht Club Boys; Vivian Ruth, Songs; | 3°09 Cuciel Philossohy of ee New Deal— Ste Lie ee en ee er ture Pilnyak gave me of the role of the Communist Party in literature, |! the Soviet Union,” given by Women's! |, ,xelsmann Orch. Rexford G. Tugwell, Assistant Seore- Shirts, Gloves, Ete. ‘STRIKE ME RED’”’ ‘ ” by » 38, at 501 W. 16ist Bt., at 7:30, 10:00—Rolfe Orch; Men About Town Trio; tary of Agriculture; Harry W. Laldler, 2 Instead of being “persecut by “Stalin's literary inquisition,” the fellow- White, Organ Chairman of the Board, Nat'l Bureau 4 traveller was protected against RAPP'S excesses by the Party. Pilnyak | UECTURE by Sidney Bloomfield at Ad-|110G-One | Man's Family—sketch, With) Gr''gognomlo. Research EEE An Operetta in 3 Acts and 12 Scenes showed me documents in which the Party reversed various of RAPP's | {thao p/m, on “Glass Conflict in Society. | 11:30—Hollywood on the Air ae en Salhet aee 50 Children, Negro and White %. sctlons against him, arith, CONCERT at the Ztallan Progre-| 12%, Wises Ores, Dorie, Quartet: Mey | o:00—Warlety | Muslale AIRY, LARGE In Honor of the Memory of Harry Alan Potamkin ; 3 “talin’s literary inquisition” was a bulwark against excesses which | On sat, Nov. 25th. fhe Gyabiie, Bives singer: Ryan and Rob | ee Getne wroarans ata er alate Meeting R Presentation of Portrait Bust of Potamkin RAPP was committing against certain writers, REGARDLESS OF | _!SRAEL AMTER will speak on “The Stru ri ; wach | 12:00—Childs Orch, eeting Ooms all WHETHER THEY WERE PARTY MEMBERS OR NOT. The Party was gle a Uf gp fet Insurance and the Communist Party,” at Se. See ‘ids 12:00 A, M—Boottl Orch. To Hire CITY COLLEGE AUDITORIUM, 23rd St. and Lexington Aver SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 25, at 8 P. M. Workers Club, 1610 Boston Rd., Bri “ acting as a brake against a literary group which had its uses as well as a “signideance a Pemiis WOR—710 Ke WABC_860 Ke Suitable for Meetings, Lectures TICKETS: 35¢; 50c and $1.00 abuses. Eventually the Party abolished that clique. Recognition by the U. 8.,"" by M. Shulman 7:00 P, M.—Political Situation in Washing. dD: in According to our noisy toy-pistol of the Modern Monthly, the Party | Sto: euls Engdahi Workers Club, 3092 ul) 38 B. Me“Gou—B Brown, gothic Brederic William Wile : ee ~ = em —s stepped in on April 28, 1982 and abolished RAPP. Yet one year before | "GGMRADE Det,” Daily worker cartoon-| T4¢—Malp THio Timon Deasy Of oe Czechoslovak — SIXTH ANNUAL DAN that, in April 1931, I heard from one of RAPP's bitterest opponents, {1% will speak at the open forum of the| 0) Tittle symphony Orch., Philip James,| 7:80—Jane Froman and Oharles Carlile, documented stories of how the Party protected fellow-travellers against RAPP. Helping the Daily Worker through Michael Gold. Contributions received to the credit of Michael Gold in his Soctalist competition with Dr. Luttinger, Edward Newhouse, Helen Luke, Jacob Burck and Del to raise $1,000 in the $40,000 Daily Worker Drive: R. Herkkiner oy 80.50 Icor Br., New Brunswick Previous Total ......sseeeee “Total to date .. JIM MARTIN ‘Tom Mooney Branch I.L.D., at 3 p. m, at 108 E. ih St., room’ 202’ on the “Labor Press.” Admission tree, SYMPOSIUM on “Theme and Style in Revolutionary Literature’ with Maxwell Bodenheim, Philip Rahv and Alfred Hayes, iy the John Reed Club, 430 Sixth Ave, at Pp. m, WORKERS School Forum; Janes Ford will lecture on “The Negro People and the Struggel Against Imperfalism- American, African and the West Indies,” at oY 135th St, room 214A, Admission} goy; ‘THE FOLLOWERS of Nature will hike to their camp at 10 a. m. sharp. Meet at’ Perry. end one way, ride home bus. ane RATURE FRIENDS hike to Timp @ Hear Mountain, Meet at 4%nd Bt. Conductor; Gertrude Mittleman, Piano 00—Robert McGimsey. Whistle s—Bronx Marriage Bureau—Sketch 10—Dance Orch. 00—Helene Daniels, Songs Ferry at hours. m. Fare $1.25. Walk 5-6 Bring heavy shoes and lunch. , Detroit WILLIAM GOETZ will speak at Finnish ‘Hall, 5969 14th St. on “What He Saw in the Soviet Union.” ae free, Time 3 P. m., on Nov. 261 Philadelphia DANCE and Entertainment at Workers Cultural Sport Club of Strawberry Man- jon, 201d ws ,22d BF. on Bat, Nov. 5th, Admission 25¢ That’s What He’s Paid For! Songs; Berrens Orch. 8:00—Elmer Everett Yess—Sketch 8:15—Fray and Bragslott!, Piano Duo Songs; Eton Boys Quartet; Rich Orch 9:00—Elder Michaux Congregation 9:30—Band Concert, Edward D'Anna, Con- ductor 10;00-—Rebroadcast From Byrd Expedition en Route to Antarctic; Music From New York 10:30—News Bulletins 10:45—Leaders in Action—H, V. Kaltenborn | 11:00—Jones Orch, 11:15-—-Little Orch, | 11:30—KMBO Dedication Program | 12:00—Portland Junior Symphony Orch, |, aJacaues Gerehkovitch, Conductor 12:30 A. M.—Florits Oreh. 1:00—Hopkins Orch, :30-—-George Jessel, Comedian; Vera Van, | Workers House, Ine. 347 E. 72nd St. Telephone: RHinelander 5097 New York SAM & FRANK Trucking and Moving 436 East 13th Street © New York _Spectal Low Rates for Daily Worker by QUIRT OFFICE WORKERS UNION NEGRO JAZZ BAND REFRESHMENTS Thanksgiving Eve., Wed., Nov. 29 STUYVESANT CASINO 142 SECOND AVENUE NEW YORK CITY | Admission at Door 40 cents - + With Ticket 25 cents New Masses GENTLEMEN OF THE JURY, You HAVE GEARD THE EVIDENCE FOR BOTASIDES -ITIS$ FOR YOU TO DECIDE WARTHER (T(S LOPSIDED- AAO T'LL GELP Yous THaT’s WHATIM Palo 2 FOR — PERSONALLY, I c) WOULD HANG ANYONE { Come Wow, Dio’ Tt 17? OM, OAR! HEREAD MY [Z DIDN'T IT STRIKE You, LADIES AND GENTLE MEN, THAT OUR COURT Was TURNEDO (NTO A FORUM FOR COMMUNISM? TM ALL AFLUSTER AY SUCH BRILLIANCE | COSTUME BALL (this year it’s a circus) 4 WEBSTER HALL FRIDAY EVE. 119 East 11th St. a pov ba . TICKETS $1.00 IN ADVANCE $1.00 AT DOOR BOXES $10.00 ORDER TICKETS BY MAIL PHONE: NEW I gar 31 E. 27th ” CALEDONIA 5.