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vee ~ Er wee ~ v DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1933 Sergei Radamsky Describes Soviet Music World in Interview; To Sing Here Saturday |Chicago Workers Will| |\Commemorate Death of Lenin on Jan, 21) From Moscow to Siberia Scsuleertean } aS ? PW Se CHICAGO.—The Workers’ Cultural | 4 ;, f ) Appointed Professor | Wi A A | Federation is mobilizing al) of its af-| Siberian Men 0 Steel i 8 | ‘Will Give Recital at | sated organizations and other mass By WALT CARMON == de! mm Moscow Music Dail * An - - organizations to participate in the « a Fay % Y AMNNIversary | huge mass pageant which will depict PART V Bees a ae Conservatory in Coliseum enes in the life of Lenin and the| cn es ae ee a a - |present struggles of the workers of| ci bunkers below ground, 8D} op like a By EDWIN ROLFZ ing under the name of ° an. | America. electric car carries six tons of/Then he com 4 WHEN Sergei Radamsty arrived in Behe thai’ eit Ttalinn oman [Coliseum on Jan, 21, ten year after|S*iP to blast furnace No. 2 of the |«Greenhorns,” he calls them 5 New York from the Soviet Unior know that I was not afi Italian or he Pe cats: aaa. Fee y after | New Kuznetsk Steel Plant. orns, calls then fs What, Ne Readers? & little more tha ith his would have fired me. You see, they|the death of Lenin. Bes 2 F : steel worker of 12 years exw =e avowed purpose neaa' tat pocalamens os had rtised for an Italian.” But| The Chicago revolutionary move-| o-ctuo nar ae aa oy out feiee c e (TTAE-other day, in writing about Katayama, you said, ‘Let us indulge | concerts before audiences of workers the manager finally did discover his/ment is making full preparations for| Tn three shifts he ‘can load 2800 | Keene gma little ‘self-criticism and admit that there exists no body of | the many new Soviet songs which Ma , duplicit and Radamsky was fired. | mobilizing thousands of workers to! tons 9 day. The adn: was all erie revohationary readers in America (such as exists in Japan), Now | found during his recent stay in the ra p Mpa a participate in tae commemoration.| made in Ainerica. The bunkers and| exactly What do you mean by that?” asks Herman Michaelson, manag- |U.S.S.R. Both he and Marie Radam- Be ak Tenia CAME ey Be ee ee aeeipow On DO) tha. par for the two new blast. tae- ” ae dM rr ie erackly: Now Masten sky had been travelling into many mee an Tealians -E thee’ T mans) be tutes and. can he sectr9 By st or- | naces will be made in Odessa, }an American steel w re il bie i zm out-of-the-way spots of the workers’ Nit aeeae, ganizations at the Rovnost Ludu| rane for the open hearth| burgh. The new | Be ‘ ‘ ‘he Communist > esult of his wide travels and | printing Co., 1510 W. 18th St. | was An Ti = si pelt get EAB ean! aes hes ‘My understanding is that the as Salas ainots ie fee a ot ae Locate es ees experience, Radamsky is linguist as ae ae Ans ae Gna pg Bath oe kin asf has for press ire this country is something like 400,000. hd aes bing ahie ge well as a singer. He speaks Russian, | er | soviet aie Nb Sapte the rest of his brégac ? ® deal of duplication, it’ is still a moderate estimate to say that a quarter |® aes was oe won for them so Polish, English, German, French’ | Sete oe Rise a tp Steel to him is not a way to Bo- of a miltion people in America buy, in one form or another, coples of | <a, of sorhine crag en heard Yiddish, and has s smattering «| Degeyter Club to gineering can ae clas ate ol just so Reece) sei; revolutionary publications, whether weekly, daily, or monthly. Surely | their recitals in American cities. | fen Soe Coie ere. me. Danet < ‘ We climb up the winding atair-| He was not a revolutionist in Amer= this is a ‘body of revolutionary readers. If you add to it those who Mute Radial ‘served ty sust mo enc Georgian in the Caucasus Begin Series of SWUM LE TESA MA a i . read the papers when they are passed on by the original buyers—mem-~ |-eountry with an added honor—he had| SERGE! RADAMSKY Gino aS peernins eais> ape ineer Sabanoy stands at a hanging} “Once I go to a he bers of tha familly, of the group, unit, shop nucleus, etethe total |been appointed to the post of Pro-| childhood, he did not again come] Concerts Friday) pe ino Nbich be sounds “The police com I get numberof readers Thay well be counted at more than half a million. fessor of Vocal Art at the Moscow | inderstanding that brings out the) cose to the revolutionary movement ay | adap PE Sita dagp a ed. They leave me go pretty ci . |Conservatory of Music. This is the One has im.” } ¥ | sag ee is @x men at an iron “Opis this Just a delusion? We on the New Masses need to know, | famous school whose history glitters |. Padamsky said that he found his| Unt! 19%, when he hegan to appear! ww yORK.—Hy Slonam, concert |Par. In perfect rhythm they drive becalise We are grappling with this problem just now. We believe the |with the names of Tehaikovsky, | est audiences among the oil workers|tnited States + git ©lmaster of the Pierre Degeyter Club | the bar into t clay-blocked open- time is exactly right for such a weekly; that workers and intellectuals, farmers and the ruined middle class, are all ready and eager for the kind of fighting revolutionary magazine that the New Masses is going to be. Mike, you alarm me, or maybe you alatm yourself. What, no readers?” Seriabin, Ippolitov-Ivanov, Rach- maninoff and a score of other im- mortals of the world of music which hea produced before the Revolu- ion. When I spoke with him recently, of Baku; workers of many national- itie—Russians, Armenians, Turks, Jews and perhaps a half-dozen other nationalities. “A Perfect Internationalist” Radamsky did not want to speak “If it had not been for my trip to Russia in 1927,” he tota me, “where I found that an artist can be treated like a human being, can. possess polit- ical ideas, I would have given up {Orchestra and violinist of the club/ |trio, will share the solo honors with jJoseph Habergr! violinst, |they both appear this Friday nigi jat 815 p, m. at the Pierre Degeyter Club, 5 East 19th St. + a : . } : much about his own life. He preferred | Singing, because of the: scandalous | “ay i ooncer he fir : } We Need A Baok Club the amiable and slightly rotund tenor | 49 tark about the Soviet audiences, | WaY in which young artists are treat- |, This concert is the first in a serie } ‘e Need A sparkled with pride at his new ap-| sna about the concerts he planned to|€d 4M the capitalist countries.” But |! concerts for s Eeene the | { pointment, his professorship at the that first trip to the Soyiet Union | Pierre Degey eee oon | ONT be ‘alarmed, Comrade Michaelson. There are these thousands of revolutionary readers, possibly near half a million. If one adds up the total circulation of the Communist press in America, it reaches a great figure. The Communist workers do read and pay for their read- ing. Moreover, they are intensely loyal to their press, supporting it with a constant stream of donations, and sending in reports and letters. So your contention is correct. But it was books I referred to in my comparison with Japan. We have no organized kvdy of readers who will sustain’ revolutionary poetry and fiction in book-form. It is true that there is a big reading publ for such literature, as was proven, by the success of works like Tlyin’s “Soviet Primer,” Strachey’s “Coming Struggle for Power,” the novels of Dos Passos, and similar works. Bourgeois publishers have begun to realize that a well written revolu- tionary book is often a profitable investment, and worth taking a gamble on, But it is always a gamble with them, not a matter of. conviction. ‘They must, by the rules of business accounting, make a profit or perish. We need.a publishing house that can rise above the laws of business, as does our revolutionary press, which lives despite the paucity of advertising. We need a publishing house that has an organized body of readers, who subscribe by the year and even raise funds to cover any deficits. ‘We need a Workers’ Book Club, in short—a mass of revolutionary read- ers who will provide an audience for our young revolutionary authors, the, best of whom.,will generally find it difficult to compromise thetr Moscow Conservatory. But the insti- tution’s immortals had nothing to do with this pride, as I discovered after only a few minutes of conversation with him. It was the deep sense of joy that Radamsky felt at having gained the affection and esteem of the Soviet workers which brought the glow to his face, the enthusiasm with which he informed me of his professorship. “To be a professor in a capitalist country would have meant that I would have to spend much time with pupils who are often talentless, but whose sole qualification ist hat they Possess the means with which to pay for musical studies. But to be a pro- fessor of music in the U.S.S.R.—that means you are helping the most gifted of children and young people of the entire country—in a land| where song is deep and indigenous) and significant, where they sing not only at play but at work.” Radamsky described his stay in the U.SS.R., his numerous appearances before factory audiences. “What they (the Soviet workers) loved most,” he declared, “were our American Negro give before workers in the United States. But I gathered, after asking & series of questions which interrupt- ed his descriptions of Russian worker- audiences, that he was born in Rus- sia “somewhere near Kharkov.” He ran away from home in his early teens, to a school in Poland. Soon afterward he attended a dramatic school in Germany, and from there he went to Italy, where he received his operatic education. After his arrival in America, he travelled over the United States with opera companies and even in vaude- ville. “I was stranded so often,” he said, “that I hate to recall it.” For thirteen weeks once, he travelled in an opera company as an Itallan, go- cleared his problem for bim. He dis- at he could be—and he has nee—an artist. giving his the revolutionary working Sergei Radamsky will make his first appearance before an American audi- ence since his return from the USS.R., at the tenth anniversary celebration of the Daily Worker in the Bronx Coliseum, East 177th St., this Saturday evening. His recite] consist of a group of is he lected on his recent tour in Azer- baijan, Caucasian, Tartar and other federated republics of the Soviet Union. I~ | Unveilin | ducted by David Grunes. A special feature of the program | will be the unveiling of a mural ded-' |icated to the club by Phillip Ever. | good, well-known American painte: Harry Martell, chairman of the Ri search Group and an instructor at | the Workers’ School, will make the| | acceptance speech, | | The following program will be pre- | |sented. | | Concerto Grosso, in a Minor ,. Vivaldi! Eine Kleine Nacht Music .... Mozart of New Mural by Philip | Evergood. | Acceptance Specch by Harry Martell | |Doube Concerto ... séeve Bac | THE NEW FILM By LEO T. HURWITZ MIRAGES DE PARIS, directed by Fedor Ozep, produced by Pathe- Natan, featuring Jacuelline Fran- celle. inherent in films without: relying on leg show and gags. With Rene Clmr on the swift de- cline as indicated by his last t films, Ozep may be given the tinsel laurel as the finest producer of the amusing, witty film. “His palate is richer, his cinematic treatment less dry and formularized than the late style of Rene Clair. Mirages is de- WHAT'S ON RATE THE 10TH DAILY WORKER | VERSARY ON SATURDAY, DECEM. 30 trom 8 M. to 2 A, M., at 0 x Coliseum. 3! AD FOR PROGRAM. REGISTRATION is now going on for the Harlem ‘S School, 200 W. 136th St. is ready to be tapped. Everything is as drama- tic now as the high point in a the- atre. To the side of the furnace slag pours down ® sandy grove. It rkles like fireworks gone mad. The steel worker before it bends his ead before the heat, his large hat flowing over his face. The six men at the furnace door pull out the bar which has been upen earth surnaces at Stalinsk, West Siberia, steel workers are unemployed now. “Hell,” he says, “I get a job It always get a job.” He doesn’t realize what has hap- pened in America Good Soviet tobacco does not satisfy him, He yearns for ihe Pitts- burgh steel days. If only he conld get a package of “Five Brothers” smoking tobacco. ‘Will he ever go back, we ask him. deepest:feelings for a bourgeois audience. work songs and spirituals.” aitiegiee finitely recommended for its charm,|~°" 77" 4 « 6 a to the hit The golden metal Well, after all, he says, he may as * * . Appeared With Langston Hughes Vivacious wit and trivial satire are|Wwit and tunefulness. But one hopes | TAayrsda ana vo pour slowly. Tuns down | well stay here now, : . iy jthe grooves of sand towards the] we y vict ; Once, tol E ared Ozep’: j- | that Ozen’s next attempt will con- me ef fe go away with the conviction ‘ A Contrast in Autho jointly bs a alg Langston bsg ela he Fedor Ozep’s MI-| in humor with a greater satirical| Fist WEEKLY New Masses on| Waiting ladles on the tracks below. | that Kovalenko knows which side his | Tages de Paris, now showing at the| bite, and will be concerned with a | newsstands, F: Dec, 29, stand | Men are banking up the sand now|bread és buttered. isan example of what I mean. Take two authors who thoroughly Hughes, the American revolutionary | Acme Theatre. The publicity bally-| cupject that offers fresher opportu- | does y it call Caledon 24 along the groovi Another skims/ First we watch his ov bein \ know the Soviet Union and write about it. One, like Maurice Hindus, | Poet whose stay in the USSR. coln- | noo racket is taken for a ride in the eee Sas Gee ANS MOBILIZATION RALLY ot | the slag off the flery surface, These| tapped. Prom the hack 150 tons of \ for example, is perfectly adapted to a bourgeois success. His books are |‘iugnestrocd peetey to the verken; | urlesaued story of an innocent |debunked and burlesqued publicity |e"e"isa ace ay es OS YS] are no boys playing in ® gutter on|stecl pours like golden honey. Ko\- | popular because he makes clear on every page that he is merely a re- | and I sang the poetry to them. Marie schoolgirl who comes to Poke to be- | game. “SOVIET DIPLOMACY” lecture by Ker- f. rainy day. ‘This is moulten pig} alenko does this twice a day, and porter, and has no sympathy with Communism; in fact, as in his last |sang Scotch, Irish and English folk |COMe, am opera star, Only | after hert Goldfrank at Paradiso Manor, 11 W.|iron spluttering and sparkling and|he doesn’t care much where it g | : . > » a 8) Madeleine Duchanel has had her Mt. Eden Ave., at #:30 p.m. Admission 10c.} tamed to the will of Soviet. steel| Steel is Nauid pig tron and ges ye book, believes that Fascism will succeed in the western world. songs and ballads. is mame plastered over the front pages joann eS Bsa 2.8 eae at ae | Workers. heat end Golagiiia. “Ane thactahe \ Joshua Kunitz: on’ the other hand, though better acquainted with | “2 Came here with real speed,” he} o¢ the newspapers as having been Stage and Se laary ‘Baptist Church, 1777 Atinutic Ave, More Stecl for Socialism “Five Brothers” smoking tobac Be the Soviet Union, a better stylist, and far better as an authoritative |C°Mfessed. “American style, My last) murdered by a renowned opera basso Ze an reen Brooklyn, at 8 p. m. ere: Allan Taub,} It yours and gushes madly now Steel Into Rails ee 4 concert in Moscow was on October! goes she stand a chance of getting Steve Kingston, Mollie Samuels. Auspices:|Jike a thousand wild horses. The| ‘The steel is poured i 7 student and critic of Soviet literature, has a more difficult row to hoe |23. at 10:30 I was still on the stage|_ hearing. From that point on her | eee Waites ‘Coumell’ Working Class Women. "| furnace roars as the flow of air is|Tt coca ac: the eee, ue tnoH im the bourgeois reading world because of the fact that he refuses to singing a last encore. And a half-|rise to fame is fast. Paris has be- | 2/egfeld Follies” Coming To|, OPN, MEETING of White Fising Ra! i004 "Race keeper Vorokhov | casings ace tater ox ‘The glowin, hide from anyone his single-minded loyalty to Communist principles. John Reed had the same trouble. He was probably the best-known hour later I was on the train, all ready for the trip to Berlin. The audi- come Madeleine-Duchanel-conscious, and learns to make love in the Winter Garden, Jan. 4 4-B, at 8:30 p.m. neighborhood invited. THEORORE BAYER will lecture on All young workers in “phe Works carefully now watching the flow. He directs his brigade of five ingots go to the soaking pits fo reheating and then to the) rolling | reporter in the bdurgeois magazines, the highest-paid journalist in | °°, Sh oc leer pig lge galas Madeleine-Duchanel-manner. Billie Burke's “Ziegfeld Follies,” will) intervention and Civil War Period,” at west | men ee {moment's need. | The| mill. Like a huge cake of ‘golden | ‘Amrica at the tinte, until the period when he found himself a partisan | {he ooo splendid fatewells I have| Mirages de Paris is a musical be presented by the Shuberts at the Side Br. % Us SMa. Seondwas. at 100tn | first ladle is filling up. Nearly 80|¢lowing ice. Steel arms grip it, turn of the social revolution. Then the bourgeois editors cut him off more and more from his audience and income, until John Reed wrote nowhere except in the revolutionary press. A workers’ book. club giving an author the assurance of at least 0,000. revolutionary readers would create a solid revolutionary literature ever received.” Before Radamsky left the Soviet Union, just after his farewell appear- ance, a representative of Gometz (the Government Booking Concert Bu- reau) presented him with a contract, comedy in the true style of the movies, in the manner somewhat gmilar to Rene Clair’s. It makes such sunersnectacles as Gold Diezers and Footlight Parade and the rest of the Hollywood crop look sick and Winter Garden on Thursday, Jan, 4, ‘The musical show is now playing its tryout in Newark. “False Dreams, Farewell,” a new) play by Hugh Stange, will be Frank Merlin’s next production, scheduled “PROFITS IN STEEL,” lecture by Kalmun Hecht, at Pen & Hammer, 114 W. 21st St., at 8:30 p. m, Open forum discussion will follow talk. LECTURE on “Communism and Anar- chism” by Comrade Vergani in Centro Ope- rola di Harlem, 2242 Second Ave. tons of pig iron is ready to be made into steel. Engineer Sabanoy sounds the order on the tron bar and the flood gates are opened for the second ladle lying alongside. We look into the roaring furnace through blue glass. The flames are it over, throw it under the rollers. The glowing block flattens, grows in length, then becomes a long reddish- gold snake. It is hammered inte axle steel, into steel for rails. Into steel bars for foundries as far as e Leningrad. The rails will run into im this country, of this I am sure. At present such writers must some. asking him to return to the Soviet | Pale. It speeds along at a swift |for the Little Theatre on Jan. 15. Frida doing a devil's da: t Heat of 3 i visual through ——_——_— | iw g lance tn a heat of|all corners of the land. Axle steel how find their audience amongst the bourgeois publishers, and it $8 | Union soon for a series of recitals | DUS pret Basi dae pone J 8h “Dawn To Dawn” At Little|. S™* stony ot tue scoustore rrinl| 1,600 degrees centigrade. will go into Soviet machinery. The no bed of roses and'ts a source of corruption to them, It’s true enough that sometimes a fine and straight-forward revolu- tionary poem like Robert Gessner’s recent volume, “Upsurge,” will find ® publisher who will take a chance, but Gessner had already published two novels with Farrar and Rinehart and thus staked a claim. I doubt that a young unknown would find this necessary backing. Cheer Up, New Masses! LL of which, of course, doesn't mean that the New Masses will not find a body of readers in its new weekly form. Man and boy, I have been connected with the Masses tn its various avatars for over fen years. Nobody will ever know the headaches that with the right line, quarrel with Hugo Gellert, and hold the hand of - The weekly New Masses enters an entirely new world, where every American institution thas crashed, and fascism and war hang low like throughout Russia. “I signed it without reading it,” the tenor told me. Plans 60 Concerts in U.S.S.R. When he returns to the Soviet recitals. In the summer he will be given @ two-month vacation. “At the Sea-shore and mountains, it will be, with first class accommodations. ‘There will be no worry about man- agers stealing receipts and about profits, profits, always profits! “Imagine that in the United States!” he added. These concerts will be given mostly in Mos*ow, with others in Baku (cen~ workers’ clubs and factory groups know how difficult it ts secure real, understand- with no concessions to the pre-es- tablished style of stage musical comedy, which is the stiff pattern for American movie musicals. Ozep’s training in the Soviet cinema has stood him in good stead in this light and gracious film. He works Carnegie Playhouse “Dawn To Dawn,” @ new film pro- duced by an independent group headed by Cameron MacPherson and directed by Josef Berne, is now play- in terms of the humor and rhythms ing at the Little Carnegie Playhouse. | TUNING IN ‘T:18—Billy Bachelor—Sketch ‘7:30—Lum and Abner 45—The Goldbergs—Sketch 10:00-—Whiteman :30—Terry and Ted-—Sketch ‘U:45—Maverick Jim—Sketch 8:15—Willy Robyn, Tenor; Merie Gerard, Soprano iS—Peroy Waxman—Talk 10:00—Bisie ‘Thompson, Organ; Stanley Mee~ [SURE- 1m 5¢. nue UU, ER, T oIsuar- IZ2KEO0 YoU AS Oe s $:45—Sizzlers Trio 9:00—Death Valley Days—Sketch 9:30—Himber Orch, iS 10:00—Canadian Concert i 10:30—President Roosevelt,” “Speaking Woodrow Wilson Foundation at —News—Edwin ©. Hill 0—Shilkret Orch; Alexander Gray Songs; William Lyon Phelps, Nazrator; Young America—Gene 9:00—Philadelphis Studio 9:15—Talk — Robert 1 a &: &: ley; Howard Marsh. Songs; Kostelanets Orch, by Joseph Brodsky, at Rand School, 7 E. 15th St. Auspices N. ¥. District I. L.'D. | Tickets 30c in advance at Workers Book jShop, 50 E. 13th St, I. 1, D., 810 Broad- | way, Rand School Book Shop, 7 B. 15th St, LECTURE on “Morals in a new world,” at Cheerful Cafeteria, 713 Brighton Beach Ave., at 8 p. m., by Gertrude Hutchinson. Aus- pices: Ocean Side Br. F. 8. U. LECTURE by Prof. Stefan Graves on ‘“In- tellectuals in the Glass Struggle,” at Tre- mont Progressive Club, 866 E. Tremont Ave., [at 8:45 p. m, CONCERT at Pierre Degeyter Club, 5 ¥. } 19th St. Pierre Degeyter Club Orcheati | David Grune, conductor. Bach Double Cot certo; also Vivaldi, Moaart, unveiling mural by Philip Overgood. Harry Martell, speaker. Admission 5¢, ‘HE AMERICAN LITERARY SCENE,” a mposium, Granville Hicks, Michael Gold, alcolm Cowley, Joseph Freeman. Webster anor, 126 EB, ith St., at 8 p.m. Tickets pire,” @t Crystal Ballroom, 13th and Madi- son Aye. Auspices Friends of Soviet Russia. Admission 25e; children 100, on Bat., Dec. |soth ,at 7:20 p. m. Detroit, Mich. children 10¢c. Auspices United Front Comm. Meet Tomorrow to Form LW.0. Branch in Bath Beach NEW YORK.—A _ new English- speaking branch of the International Workers Order is being formed in In twenty minutes the flow has subsided. Nearly 20C tons of metal have been tapped, trapped and are now on the way to the open hearth. Furnace keeper Vorokhov, perspira- tion streaming from his face, directs @ crew at a clay gun that looks like a@ small cannon. The gun is sunk into the jaws of the furnace. s to shoot wads of clay and the opening is blocked again. On the outside the electric car ins to dump ore from Magnito- sk into the furnace. Gas and air are shot into it. More steel for Socialism. The Man From Pittsburgh At Open Hearth Oven No. 1, Kovalenko is in charge of the brigade, It} burden will be ted off human shoulders and Soviet man will star up straight and look at the sun. (Concluded Tomorrow) MUSIC |The Philharmonic! Orchestra At Carnegie Tonight The Philharmonic Orchestra, under the baton of Hans Lange, will appear in Carnegie Hall this evening. The program: Overture, “Meeresstille und R Auspi Nati 1 Student Le: . - every minor poet who has been taken down with revolutionitis. ter of the Eee Oe. tee TONIGHT'S PROGRAMS #00 Captedn haat Adventures ~ spent he beth mate tied bomen Lg Boviet steel ork eae nor Pers It ts a welter of irritating detail, but looxed at in perspective, the | regular concert halls. WEAF—660 Ke Ra0—Adventures in MesttG=De, Herman Madison, Ill. the United States he was’ known |*Winter” and. “Spring?” aiieen seas | ‘Masses has played a great and historic role in the revolutionary growth I learned from Radamsky that| 7:0¢?. M-—Mountaincers Music Bundesen er FILM showing of “Fragments of‘sn &m-|as Koval. For 12 years he worked | in the steel plants in Pittsburgh, Gary and Youngstown. Dohnanyl’s Suite, Op. 19. This pro« gram will be repeated on Friday af- ternoon. ACME THEATRE “ster | aasea & Union Sq. | Attraction greasy gray thunderheads on the horizon. Bal , he is invited to appear | 10: ‘Orch Hotel Maydower, Washington, DG.” M M i Events gnove 0 gapldly now that » monthly magazine ‘finds itself |before the factory. “It is considered | 11:13 "Norman Gordon, Bese obelaadene tio” retue Nand osivaynganse “entitled: “Wolies |= _A USE dei ENTS the highest honor in the Soviet | 11:30—Madriguera Orch, ET ea ning ead ae | SE eee — chasing Dreathlessly_in the rear. A weekly alone can keep up with ” Radamsky informed me, | 12:00—Rsiph ‘Kirbery, Songs 11:30—Scottt Orch. ese ee eerie as saan AMERICAN FREMIERRI the swift forced marches of current history; a weekly is of most vital |ufor an artist to be invited to sing at | 12:05 A. M-—Callawoy Orch. Bie nite eine ces Dancing will follow.” : FEDOR OZEP’S SOAP IRAGES 99 : :30—Denny Oreh, Se itai factory concert halls. io ee wane. seen New Britain, Conn. : : De PARIS content Responsive hone eee Biese WO} 110 Ke hee Lota ae ed WiQVIET FIM showing of “Potemkin.” st 11 “Brilliant Performances—in the manner of EISENSTEIN aoe Bot thee ke Se ivan 18 Trews Gabriel Heater E1S-—Just Plain, Bill_sketeh day, Dec. 28, at 8 p, m. Admission 200; || Or PUDOVKIN.”—Herald-Tribune, (Preneh Taikie—Linelish Titles) GT Anniversary Cele bration in Moscow -—-THE THEATRE GUILD _ present BUGENE O'NEILL’s COMEDY AH, WILDERNESS! with GEORGE M. COHAN GUILD pratt SF ot wey Ev.8.20 Mats. Thurs.@8at.2.20 ;RADIO CITY MUSIC HALL— 50 St. & 6 Ave.—Show Place of the Nation { Direction “Roxy” Opens 14;34 a.m, DOLORES D@& RIO - PRED ASTAIRE in “FLYING DOWN TO RIO” concerts be: ae 10: eo—Gray Orch. ine eeuen Songs; Trio] Bath Beach, Brook A of Seal go to = | 10:15—Current Events—Harlan Kugene Read ray a e , ss; Trio| Bat each, yn. group . x 1, 8:18, 10:27 (Jd week) it is the thing to do. o30—mne oly Busslans ae as area, menial ren, | Workers for bias branch bie hold The School for wit Musio Supreme CHRISTMAS SHOW 03-—Me ms ‘ D Concert: a A a adllchct vcs a. is to 6 di :30—Martin, :00—News Reports an open meeting tomorrow at 8 p.m. Husbands | ‘the Soviet Union this is all | tjs0-senen ae HSOPan Regan, Tenor at the Bath Beach Workers Center, |} vith Osaeed PERMING—Jeae Yt | ®° Jefferson is & & | Now the at ‘one WJZ—760 Ke 11:30—Jones. Orch. a 87 Bay 25th St. All workers inter- |{ EMPIRE s.comate.wed. Ther, MAX BARR & MYENA LOY in concert is 7:09 P, M.—Amos 'n’ Andy Tate Ac MecLymen Oret 9% ested in such a branch are urged ee “Prize Fighter and the Lady” full of fire and 7:13—nobin H 1:00-—Lighé Orch. to attend this meeting. MAS WHEE. ARDURRIR'S. Mem cee also:—“SWEETHEARY OF SIGMA CHI” E KIDDER- Yup! Gettine to Understand Esch Other 4A GA X GETCHA ~- i : YOu SEE MISTER: CHICAGO. Wk ARE HAVING 4 MARATHON by QUIRT SALRIGUT Yousr AN’ MR CAK WORK MARY OF SCOTLAND with HELEN PHILIP ELEN WAXES MERIVALE MENKEN ANTI-WAR PLAY. USTER CRABBE & MARY CARLISLE Roland YOUNG and Laura HOPE ORNWS th “Her Master’s Voice” ‘Thea,, W, 45th St. Evs. 8.48 Plymouth ity nuns non, Fr, sate YA ORDERED: oe VERSED ( SPORTS Tm Goon wid MY Cooks, RUN AERE PROM TINTON | IT OUT TOMORROW- ON EARTH Burt I DIDNT Count f AROO OR CA LEAD UNDERSTAND: To PUNKTON ~ TEN MILES— NOW IT LOOKS AS THOUGH THE COMMUMISTS RUNNERS ARE GONNA WIN- SEE P+ MOW You Don't Loot /f YALL LIKE A RUNNER ot AT MEANS /, YASEE, YA ASKED FOR SOMEONE WHO KXNOWED SPORTS — I KNoWS'EM — BUT DA WRONG KIND: by the “MERRY-(10-ROUND” Lo Theatre, 11h St. & Oth Ave. Events ‘8:45; Mats. Wed. & Brt. 2:30 FRICES: 300 to $1.50, No tax W ESTONIAN ORKERS’ HOME -29 West 115th Street New York City RESTAURANT and BEER GARDEN The 8-Page Club Cooperative Dining Club ALLERTON AVENUE Cor. Bronx Park East Pure Foods Proletarian Price possible Union Square District, onee to L, L. c-o Daily Worker,