Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
‘| mer, |The Death of Essie Horn 4 NE of the saddest notes I have received in a long time comes from a comrade, informing me of the:death of Essie Horn, in an accidental She was the little’ girl who danced in a Broadway cabaret, but hated all that bourgeois cheapness, because she was a Communist, and knew there could be a better world: 4 Essie wrote a charming letter, which I printed in this column over a month ago. She described a dialogue in the dressing room of the night club where she worked, and what other girls had to say about the death of Tex Guinan. She ‘also sent some money to the Daly Worker, She frequently made such contributions out of her slim wages. Essie had begun to take cottses at the Workers’ School, and was about ready to join the Young Communist League. is always something especially touching about the death of the ee Pciatalies has been stolen from the world; « bovtoeo greatness and goodness, perhaps. Youth is a struggle for clarity an strength. When death interferes, it is as if a melody had been cut in two, before the final chords were resolved to make plain the meaning of the whole. . vs for a precious When a Young Communist dies, we are doubly stricken, soldier of the revolution has been taken from us. Essie had begun to see, amidst the tinsel trappings and false commercial joy of Broadway, the glimmerings of a red dawn. She knew what life might be, and now she is dead. We do not pray for our dead, because all prayer is a mockery and self-deception, But we love and remember our dead. What was good in them, passes into our struggle, and deepens our will and devotion. will always remember this brave little girl. I hope some wake a group ah forming will take her name as their own. It would be the finest memorial Essié could have, or would have wanted. May the mother earth rest lightly on you, Estie, and the wind and sun bless you in the strange dance of Time, . Change the World! ‘ARRY WEST, of Washington, 2. C., writes a short note, which con- tains a suggestion so valuable, that I am going to adopt it at once, He wants the title of this column changed from “What hoa 4 to the more vigorous and meaningful title: “Change the World! “What a World’ is a familiar and much used bourgeois phrase,” he says, “and is usually followed by indifference and lack of action.’ He is right. It's very difficult to find a good title for one of these columns. I would be ashamed to. admit the names I first projected. Harrison George used to run a column in this paper, named Red Sparks, one of the best titles one could find.» Someone suggested I use the title, “Red Raspberries,” and I almost did, but was saved in time, by the level head of Bill Randorf, the city editor, ‘Thanks, Comrade West. You have helped the Daily Worker become a more unified revolutionary paper. If you have any other ideas as good, send them in. Cleveland Worker’s Schooi ‘HE Workers School of Cleveland has just moved into its new head- T quarters. After a magnificent response from the workers and sym- pathizers of the city and surroundings, the comrades .write they are able to establish a really excellent. headquarters, where twenty-six courses | will be given to over 350 students. This is important news. Cleveland is one of the major capitals of industrial Amertea, and, every bit of progress there marks a turn in American Ife. i Many workers’ schdols are being set up these days. The one in Harlem has begun to flourish and expand, There is a successful school in Boston, others in Pittsburgh, Chicago, and some even in the south. What these schools are doing is to lay a solid basis of Marxian isnowledge In the working class. New leaders of revolutionary struggle will graduate from these schools, men and women who will never waver or succumb to the many insidious Wberal disguises under which capital- ism tries to hide its ugly reality. ‘The school in Cleveland faces the same difficulties as do the other schools. “The people of Cleveland:are hungry for learning of a revo- lutionary nature,” writes the Library Committee. “The facilities of the school are such that we will be able to establish a real proletarian cul- tural centre as well. Our place will buzz with activity. But already we are beginning to feel oppressed by our shortage of materials with which to work. The call for books and ‘pamphlets is a very serious problem, Our students can’t afford to buy all the materials needed for the courses. “We are making demands on the municipal library, but these, as you cau imagine, will be only slightly satisfied. So we are calling on the vest friends of the revolutionary movement to help. If they can spare any books or pamphlets, tell them to send them on, They will be used again gratefully. The address is 1524 Prospect Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio.” of : Don't iow your reading uidtielaway; every book or revolutionary pamphlet or even newspaper, has somebody waiting anxiously to read it. Our workers are sunk in the depths-of poverty and can’t afford to buy the literature they need and craves, Pess the word on. There are many such groups that need your help > DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JANUARY 18, 1934 FLASHES and, Department-Store Basement _ CLOSE-UPS | { By LENS | (Coneiusion.) | | Number 5 of Experimental Cinema | continues to becloud the political is- |sues in the “Thunder Over Mexico!” scandal by reprinting the scenario which they admit Eisenstein himself |labelled “Apple-Saucy” and which | | was used by him for no other purpose than to set the spies of the Rodri- guez government on a false track! If this és not playing directly into |the hands of Sinclair and Lesser, what is? And the editors have the temerity to announce editorially that they have “built up a nation-wide press campaign against the mangled versiou of ‘Que Viva Mexico!’” What they have succeeded in building up is a straw target for Sinclair to shoot \at conveniently, and nothing more. | Eight long pages devoted to a sce- jnario which Eisenstein never meant to shoot! And here is the only “rea- |son” Experimental Cinema can think jof for printing it: “It is hoped that this self-derogated work of the au- thor will furnish a clue to the real magnitude of the rich and glorious vision of Eisenstein and Alexandroff,” lows the “apple-saucy”: scenario “furnishes” absolutely nothing! For bsaraieind Lela ace the E. C. crew is insincere and un; ipled in its work on behalf of the Biveareta film, we need but to point to the fact that one of its close associates who originally carried on a “world shak- tng” campaign of letter writing and wire sending to European and Amer- ican magazines calling on all “art lovers” to save “Que Viva Mexico!” is now showing “Thunder Over Mexico” in the little movie theatre under his management in Baltimore, the The clique controlling Experimen- tal Cinema is capit ee the ever-growing following that the So- | viet cinema is building up in capi- talist America. In order to do this with the proper effect they have de- veloped a unique brand of cabala in | which the words “Marxist” and “rev- olutionary” and “working class” are interspersed with sufficient frequency to awe the right and convince the left. A good example of this Philis- tinism is found in the contributions of Lewis Jacobs in the current issue of the magazine. To further im- Press with a good front, articles by leading Soviet directors are reprinted | side by side with high-sounding arty | Nonsense by one Kirk Bond and con- fused opinions by Rene Clair. The |only real contribution in the issue is | an article by “Clay Harris” on Holly- | wood newsreels. It is the only piece | of solid political analysis of the role jand significance of the capitalist! | newsreel in America. This article | Was turned over to the editors of | Experimental Cinema about a year |and a half ago. Comrade “Harris” jhas since learned the character of this adventurist group and is helping | to expose them in California. | We regret to state that a truly! | disconcerting discovery in the maga-| | zine is the presence of a short note | jon Marry Alan Potamkin, written by Comrade Irving Lerner of the New York Film and Photo League. Leav- |ing aside for the moment the ques- tion of whether it is correct for a| member of the Film and Photo | League to contribute to a publica- | tion at a time when we are fighting it (remember that that same issue contains an editorial attack against us!), there still remains the fact} |that a request for a eulogy of Po- tamkin by a group that devoted a good deal of its energy in reviling him when he lived, should have prompted Comrade Lerner to hesi- tate, to say the least. Any comment on Potamkin Experimental Cinema at this time should have analyzed the divergent roads traveled by either |since the rift that occurred three | years ago: Potamkin Leftwards, E. C. | to the Right. Comrade Lerner's note has helped to create a little confusion on this score. We have learned only the other day that the question of whether Potamkin's name ought to appear in number five of E, C. has caused @ split in the editorial staff of the magazine. It was finally printed only as a face-saving ges- ture! |_ Im the very same issue in which Lerner’s article appears there is ad- vertised a forthcoming article in No, 6 of E. C. by B. G. Braver-Mann (written when Potamkin was yet alive) entitled “The Cult of Glib- ness,” a bitter attack against Harry Alan Potamkin! The Film and Photo League as- sumes an unequivocally sharp stand against the nest of unprincipled dis- rupters and careerists comprising Ex- perimental Cinema. Our criticism and The new Soviet talking mies of Progress,” its American premiere, will continue | @ second week at the Acme Theatre. | The picture, which was produced in| the U.S.S.R. by Rosfilm of Leningrad, | “Enemies of Progress” torical document of the notorious: Ataman Annenkov, one of the last of the Tzarist generals who caused havoe the revolution. frontier is the locale for this story. The Chinese and Mongolian types in- troduced in the film give a lifelike! realism to the tense days of the struggle of the Red Army against the | The actors include Livanoy, noted | the film, “Massacre,” with Richard Barthel- | literature by M. Vetch, national sec- mess featured, is the new film at the |retary of the Pen and Hammer, Reeg-| TONIGHT’S PROGRAMS By MARTHA MILLET Somebody's daughters and sweethearts Bending, arms aching, to lift the boxes Smilingly dazzlingly (painted eyes Of a hunted thing). NEW YORK.—The Central Pioneer Buro, central body for children’s work in the revolutionary movement, sterday issued the following call f support of the $3,000 drive for New Pioneer magazine ‘The Central Pioneer are affiliated 12,000 children in different children’s organizations, appeals to the masses of parents and n to support the drive to intain the New Pioneer, its organ for children “The Central Pioneer Bureau has I munch peppermints and wonder Bureau, to If seeds burst into life without sun So very many, all bustling and talking Packing (girl with trapped faun’s eyes Saying, “Yes madame,” busying herself With wrapping a dress the color of The New Pioneer By STEWARY CARHART . ‘The Central Page Five Central Pioneer Buro Calls for Support of the * a ew Pioneer” support to the azine work among children. Pioneer Bureau j onal Confere: which e to help concluded a N: idren’s Work a tricts and ten different natior ganizations were name of this cor 000 children re r It calls jgroups, troops and schoo Historical sketches, fiction, verse,|#0%, the last three years, guided the ‘ : fOtee Gatheitne tS: | editorial and business policies of the |into revo) Her thinned blood). | accounts. ot: Picsieer ‘tetivities and) magazine, Under the leadership of|the drive pple it Sedo oF yne| the Bureau, the New Pioneer has be-| “In order to accom I am jostled and pushed by the crowd, thinking New cbt come the recognized children’s maga-| Central Pioneer Bureau offers the Is this th vorld 1 ee 4 * oe zine among the workers and poor | following prizes for the drive 8 this the world and am I awake? This issue includes the best story | farmers. Under its leadership a cir-| “1. A 1 er for the for children which has appeared inj culation of over 10,000 has been highest district over the quota Somebody’s loved ones running to any magazine within the present re-|reached. The magazine today has| “2.A National Banner for the viewer's experience, “Bloody Sunday” | tremendous prestige throughout by Moissaye Olgin. Olgin’s exper- revolutionary movement. jence through the medium of his | “This is the first time that the excellent style has produced a beau-| magazine must come to the masses tifully written account of a boy slot workers and poor farmers for di- awakening class-conscious during the | rect support. savage attack of the Czar's police on|tance that we maintain and develop the peacefully assembled workers. AS part of the material in com-|out the task of building a mass revo- memoration of the triple Lenin,|lutionary children’s movement. Liebknecht, Luxemburg anniversary, | &S each mass organization has the | : the The lavatory: powder, rouge, are quite Sufficient to cover pale faces (the cough Of the consumptive can be smothered In a handkerchief). Somehow I cannot think of the angels Saying, “Yes madame, two dollars and a half.” Martha Millet has contributed a full-|task of building a children’s section, |page poem, Many of the touches of | So it has the task of giving direct It is of utmost impor- | |the magazine as a step in carrying} Just | highest troop, group or school in the | dri | “3. A copy of the new book, ‘Our |Lenin,’ to every child raising over } $10. A pennant or streamer to every troop raising over $25, “5. An honor certificate to every | chilld raising over $2. “The call concludes with an appeal | to all children to get active immedi- | Stely to put the campaign over the top. |this fifteen-year old poet are quite | Praisewort hy. Such lines as: | “His name has bloomed through- | out the world, his voice shal! never | fade, | Who led the Russian working {| | class to selun the things they sande | Thursday \indicating a maturing thought and| pgp BurLDERS « |@ deep class-consciousness and rev-| workers at store jolutionary fervor. jat City Daily Wo n Bt., store. New Pioneer fiction generally i HARLEM WORKERS SCHOOL, Winter good. The two stories in this issue, | Term, opens tonight, 200 W. 135th St. Stu STAGE AND SCREEN — etapa: WHAT’S ON Week at the Acme Livanov film, “Ene- which is now in| to sell Daily Please apply Office, 35 ¥. 12th “Tough Boy” by Phil Wolfe, describ-| ents may still register hefore the first ts baged on the story “The Last Ata-| ing the experience of two teams who| #a0%,0fench class. ©) °°" determine to unite their forces to} turned from the compel the opening of city gyms,. and “The Lucky Snake” by Jack Parker, which describes with remark- ably realistic touches the realization} Mody Be Te et ae ee of two homeless boys that they must) po" ysempers will please ucttie ter struggle together with the millions of | tickets to our y. other homeless for the right to ves tae Une Or. ieero OE vane ricer | hold the interest of the reader and 13th, Papen Brookiya, aye are are particularly effect! mission free banks . “Our Lenin,”| PIERRE DEGEYTER club book-review of “Our Lenin,’ | nearsal at 6:30 p.m, Soviet Union as F. 8. U. delegate, will speak on his impressions and experiences there at 1330 Wilkins Avenue, is a his-| near Freeman St. Station, Auspices: P.8.U. East Bronx Br. MEMBERSHIP MEETING of the Tom in Asiatic Russia during The Russo-Chinese Chorus re- at $ E. leth Bt. au was edited by Harry Alan} voices ne t y y | Voices needed. Must read music. Jacob Whites led by the Ataman, A Chin- Potemkin and Ruth Shaw, is the one] Schaeffer, conductor. ese theatre, with its wierd music, its fi hich mars the high level of Spr perce ne ig ey iN . a edious| it Political Meaning,” lecture by J. P. age old drama and dances form an thi r much tedious} so, at the Friends of the Chinese People, broad item to the telling of the repetition and of a poor use of lan-| 168 W, 23rd St., Room 12, at 8:30 p,m: story. : The mu e effer f th Adm, 15¢, Noted The cumulative effect of the| Adm, Soviet artist of the Mos- ken run of simple sen-| OPEN FORUM st Bronx Shoe Workers kc m Of § =| Cen kd ow se z, 192 Tremont Ave, Bronx, by Joe Soviet artist of the Moscow Art Thea-| °?™, Fe aur ve asd Lin n for the ordinary] Maglicano of United Shoe Workers Union tre; Gardin, who played in “Shame";| °% At@man” emies of Pro- sta Surely a book- ‘he present situation in the Shoe In-| a wean: hi | §ress,” now in its second week at iIdren 12 to 16 years old| “ustry.” and Youdin, who plays the leader of| the Acme Theatre. $ o be written in primer! ,,~ECrURE. by Dr. H. Tenenbaum, given the Red forces, Excellent type por-| does not have to be written in primer! at ‘the regular meeting of the Nurses and trayals form one of the highlights of | Se seahetae ese ea ee | Hospital Workers League, 83 E. 20th St. at , | 830 Pm. Considering the issue as a whole,| 3,2 - or ena - » Sto a REUBEN S. YOUNG will lecture on ee ee eee i dee more emphasis could have been} “what I Saw in the Soviet Union” Pi ; #4 \x e principal roles. a stage| ov ¥ i y. The | W PSU, at 2042 Broadw Before Midnight” At The | snow is headed by Reggie Childs and S1ve2 t0 2 Sioned stualvarsary. Oe | Se deoin ek at aca pm. acta. tie Jefferson Theatre historical sketch of the mi FREIREIT Mandolin Orchestra early re- his orchestra and Sheila Barrett reval oy evolu began in this issue is ex- cellent, hut the magazine would have arsal at 8 p.m. sharp. All members must ae ‘ters at 7:30 p.m, The Jefferson Theatre is now] Wy. 1 . ; A the ae ncaa plise | dnisht,” win| Workers School Offers | sained’ i¢ historical meter‘al on the |, ‘ showing “Before Midnight,” with % teinie Pec n aa ar i. abet ¥ in ls Social | alph Bellamy in the leading role. C » in Li ‘ . ary had bee | subject of @ lecture by Dr, Ralph my u ing rol ourse mn Literature | situted, Oheri Appel at 8:30 p.m. at Pen and Ham. The same program include a second | jar Hive: Clrante ‘anitnat jence ana| me 14 Ceci “sh Seeaeee eee| NEW YORK.—The Workers | nature” ‘maintains its usually high| OPEN MRPTING Editi Berkman Br. LL.D. Rogers and Norman Foster play the | school is introducing a special course level. ‘Treating current subjects he| *t Boro Park Workers Club, 4104—I8th Ave, Teading roles. on Saturday afternoons in English geais with facte-—and interesting | PTOkWR st 0:20 p. TRISH WORKERS CLUB Open Forum on ones—and brings in excelent inter-| “Rise of Fascism in Ireland” y J. J. Mul- TUNING IN [|[-eerem 8:30 pan 2 ah . af a . J. OLGIN i |Theatre Union to Give) worccrs Gist si) tire sh, tne Allerton lec ” B “Roosevelt's Policy ; |““Stevedore,” New Negro | Rc eee oe it 8:30 p.m. > . | vi |Drama, Early in March! | Elia May USIC in G: ture by Prede- ‘efugee, conduc- so | at Pierre 'Degeyter The Cooperative branch of the| ji3¢ foun Mee Concert} NEW YO eh Bt. at 2:18 p.m, Admis- Workers’ Short Wave Radio Club Orch. |Negro play cealix the s GARLIN vill speak on “Reform | will meet today at 8:30 p, m. at} 6:00—Captain Diamond's Adventures lele of the Black ear ne tionary Literature” at the ‘Tre- Fast Sketch | ni k $ J ‘ont Prog. Club, 886 B. Tremont Avenue, | ae ee Park M Renemens | ser aavectutes in Mealih—Dr. Harms arves of New Orleans against! Bronx, at 3:45 p.m 2 ey oe 4 Southern ruling class oppression, | _ SYMPosTuM a ‘The Menace of War and} as ene jwill be the next producton of the | St the Bronx Workers Club, 1610 7 e ys Fs | Bos , at 8:30 p.m. Benj. WEAF—660 Ke 9:30—Duehin Orch. Theatre Union, the new theatre | and ab. Harris, spealeen, 00d: Goldstein Mountaineers Music 10:00-—The Dry Goods teeta Code—Genersl| group which is producing working-| UIsTON a. e editor of Soviet Rus- Hugh §. Joh Dachelor—Sketch | sla Today, tator,| class plays at worker-prices. on “Outlook for 1934 | Lecture on “Music in | Germany” at Degeyter | (Club Friday Eevening NEW YORK. — Herr Frederick Oharles Adler, a German refugee, | formerly a well known conductor and | music publisher in Germany, will talk on “Music in Germany,” tomorrow, jat 8:15 p.m., at the Pierre Degeyter | Club, 5 BE. 19th St., New York. | | Herr Adler, prior to his leaving representative ; Germany, was the of “New Music”...he was the works of many of | there jk er of the proletarian composers of Ger= well as the works of Arnold pul | the n Schoenberg and other modern com- | posers. In his talk he will deal w |musical developments in Germany, | prior to and up to the event of the | Seizure of power by the Nazis. | ‘Shanghai Document’ to |Be Shown at New School | (NEW YORK—The Film and Photo |League and New Masses announce |their fourth program of the series of film showings on the “Hist |the Soviet Fiim” on Saturday Jan, at the |27, at the New School for Social Re- Search, 66 W. 12th St. “Anti-Impe- rialism” is the topic to be presented and will be represented by the classic film “Shanghai Document” in its | complete version. | Donald Henderson, secretary of the Open Forum discus-| American League Against War and |Fascism, will be guest lecturer of the evening. Performances will be given at T p.m. and 9:30 p.m. Due to the |nature of the program tickets must fl . | all Fy | obtained in advance. They wil be Strand Theatre, Ann Dvorak, Claire istration begins today, at the office |MeWv® materiel 4 ntsc] ch QW, Baslch speaking. precch tthe availabe at the ‘New Maes officg * e | e general ance between his-| 1.W.O. is being organized in the East Bronx, 4 by pete. eee ey ae ee ee aE ae Merle wi bat St ory, accounts of Pioneer activities, | All those wishing to join this branch please | a a a adapted © ron Bhar Gisenl u mess |tiction dealing with the problems of| gemmunleate with Augusta zipkin, 2141) story. | KENOSHA AIDS “DAILY” See eres ey ae Friday Red Front! John W. Boyle's production olf] KENOSHA, Wis—A total of $28.90! one of the most effective magazines| MIKE GOLD will lecture on “Trade ar “Sweden, Land of the Vikings,” is|was raised here at a movie showing|;,, covering its field. | Unions and the Revolutionary Press” at eae left, left, = being held over for a third week at|/held for the benefit of the Daily > the Oifce Workers Union, 114 w. 14th st.| The drums, hear the drums’ steady Alligge ma i _| Such a medium for ng §M/ at 8:30 p.m. Dancing will follow Ie | y the 55th Street Playhouse, | Worker, ‘This contribution is as [wepitg (alnaes ontlaean serie | ogee Daneing wh follow lecture. | ae, nee ‘If I Were Free” is the screen at-|warded to help our “Daily” insta. #) struggle re needs should not] Stéllation of John Reed Br. 514 LW.O. at| a val eft, left, 3 traction at the Palace this week.|new press. | pul mayo “B, the International Workers Center, 2918 w.| Red workers are marching today, | be allowed to die. Ev and | 30th st. 2 | We march, let no one hinder, we | Sympathetic intellectu: i to} Bch fo ied will speak Roa “The Role will pass, rite pest oy of the Dai Yorker in the Cl St fle" > ‘ the rece oitae the aa ae ye. Vegetarian Workers ‘Club, 220", We carry the flag of the working he raising the $3, Ath St. class s continued regular) jqitoT URE Leninism and Its Relation! Tn the face of our class enemy, We ask no quarter, they shall not turn us back, We're standing ready for the fina’ attack, On our enemy the bourgeoisie. Red workers, we greet you, comrades, Clench you fist for the fray, | Ranks unbroken, shoulder to shoulder Strong for the worker’ great day, | See, there stand our oppressors, Boldly their weapon they flaunt. | Proletarians, prepare for the struggle, Red Front, Red Front, r onal Ri Jin U.8.4 the U.S. SLAYING : struggle against it further clarifies ny Howard, Banas, Jesters Trio | | ERMA dicen biel Penn-| “Peace on Earth.” the first pro-| Youth Federation, in) Seeeta at, ANeCGM| PLEADS GUILTY IN SLAYING and emphasizes the Lathan aay ca :00—-Valleo Orch Soloists Lene a tikes |duction of the Theatre Union is] St. at 8:20 pm.’ Adm. 166. wie sarees dachta sche 44 @ popular publication devot | 9:00—Capiain Henry Show Boat Concert | 2°: She Gt een jnow in its eighth week and will| i ss, 30, pleaded guilty yest y Ex Blanket Stiff Aotivitieg Que sicnnine oe the arcs :8:00-—Wi me aeiypot A Tay eyecare acai lcontinue indefinitely at the Civic Boston | the shooting of Rose Grygill, 17. The ‘VERY week or so I get a postal card from Los Angeles, sgned X |ing revolutionary film movement in| 1:00—Vicie Philo, Soprano 11:39—Denny Orch, “POPS” Concert and Dance for the de-| girl was shot when she 41H8—Nornsn Cordon, Bass PRS ee : criment las ‘America. 12:00—Olsen Oreh. fense and relief of class war prisoners and There are many sui cards ahd letters from all over the country. | renee eee | WABC—860 Ke bene ith fon homes sirane oid | Roneripsteny: tho. . som . x I hope the comrades forgive me if I don't answer them all. I try my |Concert for Jobless | WOR—T10 Ke M |suthor of “Merry-Go-Round” ‘and| aad ubimore Chicago vest to, but Uke mail piles up, and sometimes buries everyone in this oe. | At New School Sunday | sw» ». Pre lt Tao—Serenadens, Orch. Bi eines erence oad tog oh Lemans Hall, 800 ‘Block. Hows oe ay at, Bonkers yecum, ‘ar9e of Gigs Gucieeitn: Wuoeune car: nn ee ens NEW YORK.—A gala concert. will LEC hee bite Pr Ri peat angue ity < of Negroes in the South with the| is every night, ‘7:45-—-Harry Hershfield 8:15—Willy Robyn, Tenor; Marie Gerard, rand Orech.; Alexander Gray,|S2me vigor and courage with which Songs: William Lyons Phelps, Naxrator'|“Peace on Earth” struck at imper- 9:00—Philadelphia Oreh. be given at the New School for So- a solid page of such letters printed every day. cial Research this Sunday by the America, better than that which any corps of professional reporters ‘They form a picture of 390—1 Jialist war. A National Committee of the Unem-| 9:30—pramatized News 9:15—Talk--Rol Benchiey; Howard | ‘@list war ae M U S E M E N I S could paint. “Of ployed Councils for the benefit of the| 945A! and tee Reiser, Piano Duo; John} | Marah, Sons Rosielansta. Oreh | Ghee MERE cae Oakes ‘The upper class like to believé'that the worker is, as the Italian | National Convention Against Unem-| 9.9 °Netten Hae—=Coltornls 4 ein 9:00--Redfern Hollingshead, ‘Tenor; Baker, Soprano 9:30—Comedy Sketch 9:45—Bock Tall 10:00—Elsie Thompson, Organ 10:15—Current Events—Harlan Eugene Read 10:30—Th Joily Russians 11:00—Moonbeams Trio 11:30—Ccleman Orch. 13:00—Danco Orch, Della | 10:00—Gray Oreh.; Trio | 10:30—News Reports 10:45—Warnow Oreh.; Connie Gates, Songs; Clubmen Quartet Trene Taylor, Songe;| pr SOVIET’S NEWEST TALKING PICTURE? ND biG WEEK —=—==mm ) |ENEMIES ployment. | The concert wili include the New Dance Group, Theatre Union Danc- ers, novel Soviet movie, the hereto- fore unshown film of the 1933 Hun- ger March, and the Workers Labora- tory Theatre in “Newsboy,” PITTSBURGH, Pa—aAn example of revolutionary devotion to the Daily | Worker is shown by the Russian Na- | tional Society, which turned over $1.25 | collected by it to pay rent for its hall, jat 1508 Sera St., to the “Daily” to ‘help install its new press, poet, Campanella, expressed it, “a beast of muddy brain.” But if Cam- panella could read these letters, he would know what a fund of wisdom and creative imagination lies buried in the Working Class. This is the force no liberal ever can believe in, when he makes his calculations for a new society. But it is the force that built the Soviet Union, and that will build a better world. The DAILY WORKER says: —“An important chapter of living history without » single moment of dullness.” 11:15—Charles Carlie, Tenor 11:30—Jones Oreh 12:00—Nelson Orch. 12:20 A, M—Lyman Orch. 1:00—Pancho Orch, BASED THY STORY “THE LAST ATAMAN” PRODUCED IN SOVIET RUSSIA-CHINA. (ENGLISH TITLES) ACME THEATRE ‘tmoxsscane UNTON SQUARE {_ GUILD | presente, Roland YOUNG and Laura HOPE CREWS in. THEATRE EUGENE O'NEILL’s COMEDY “Her Master’s oice AH, WILDERNESS! Plymouth ™. ¥: ar Bys. 8.40 GEORGE M. CORAN GUILD Mats. Thurs, & Sat.. 2:4¢ Thea., 524 St., W. of Bway MAXWELL tnhttions me en, (CX JUDITH ANDERSON in ANDERSON’S New Play MARY OF SCOTLAND OME OF AGE HELEN PHILIP HELEN by Clemence Dane & Richard Addinsell HAYES MERIVALE MENKEN ELLIOTT’S Thea., 39th, E. of B'way So That’s How They Fixed Jim! MAYOR- AE DAY was, WILL BE-A,2 7MoRRIED Success ! FOR AWHILE By QUIRT EASY—, CHICAGO GREASES THEM ALL UP — AND WHEN THEY SHOULD SWEAT THEY CAN'T — So DOWN THEY Go! : waatlssat * {UREACASD AIS GANG BRO Out ‘Oe THE RACE as AINT THAT MARVELOUS } EAP AUT AT? So ruais on! ALL PORES FILLED witu HEALY GREASE AAS PUT Tim’ AND AS Com— RADES out OF THE RACE~ Maver @ tHE BOSSES ARE TOO SMART MAXINE Eves, 8:50, $3.80 to S5e, Mat. Weds, and Sats, a ee plore en Ev.8:20.Mats.Thor.&Sat.2:20 ]) THE ANTI-WAR PLAY 7TH BIG WEEK EUGENE O'NEILL'S New Play DAYS WITHOUT END PEACE ON EARTH ALTRED KREYMBORG sary: ‘The one play Yo Thea., 43rd St, we mot alsa.” Henry Miller’s 2%;,(%45¢ CIVIC REPERTORY hen. 11th 6. & th Av | : aad a | wa. Eves. cto $4. eee Se eo Mats, Wed. a sat, a:z0. SO°° * 1° Thy 7 TEGFELD FOLLIES { *KO Jefferson Wh 8 & | Now | with PANNE BRICE | bag Willie & Kugene HOWARD, Kverett MAR- SHALL, Jane FROMAN, Patricia BOWMAN, WINTER nd “Joe eae ore ‘BOth. Evs. 8.30 also:—“RAFTER and Saturday %.90 | with GINGER ROGERS &