The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 27, 1934, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

CHANGE ——THE— WORLD! By Michael Gold Greek Revolutionary Workers AM acquainted With some of the real working class Greek comraue ; | members of the Spartacus Club, and the Fur Workers Industrial Union, and similar organizations, I know the brave and loyal qualitfes of these comrades. : a The average American és prejudiced against Greeks, as he is against many nationalities. He has known only the bourgeois Greek restaurant wiotor, who is & mean, miserly exploiter like the bourgeoisie every- ;Compinsky Trio, Marie DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDA Radamsky in Benefit | for German Children The Compinsky trio, who have just returned from a successful concert | |tour through the states, and who| house. They talk, discuss | have been acclaimed in many cities,| the morning’s cases, and le: will play at a theatre benefit given | | by the American Committee for the | Relief of Victimized German Chil-j “wise guys,” the polit dren on Sunday night, Jan. 28, at the 44th St. Theatre, Heywood Broun | and Harry Hirshfield are masters of | ceremonies, and Dt. Henry Moskowitz is director of the theatre benefit. } Appearing on the same program hd Marie Radamsky, who is on @ con- cert tour at present, but who will | make her final appearance at this| benefit prior to her return to Soviet | Russia, where she will fulfill 4 con-| cert tour. | Another to volunteer on behalf of | the children of German refugees is! MAGISTRATE’S COURT By MART’ 'T is recess and people gather in little knots outside the court some of ways a few groups remai ie till have work to do. The: the lawyer's rumner, the bon Weasel, the crap arttsts. on a pig’s belly they el coutt, thriving on the misery fortunate, helpless people. They ar Wily, pawky, fat, shifty babes of the Tammany brood. Prominently pinned on their coat lapels are election bu tons featuting the bullish phiz of he mayor. Their teeth are clamped into stubby cigars. They talk thfough obliquely slanted lips, gang- ster style, They talk about Tammany intrigues, ward heelers, judges with bendable judgments . Y, JANUARY 27. IN BANK rc g is one t vulged. is beca is held in general con | court that the weasel i He refles the attitude of yster lawyers, wea- le gamut of col her, e the prostitute mpt by the crawl She i ath of socie an st this is consid ou y legitimate. er ee ECESS is over. The groups break up and flip their cigar stubs into |the gutter. They go inside the court, Placing themselves in strategic séc- tions. | The afternoon session és not prof- itable for them. é nature of the cases exclude the need for corrup- tion. What can these men do for t liberty to | 1 a, leted quite | 5. / Page Seven Lexington Ave. Ba: for dancin Ac. 3 to First Na- Vernon Andrade’s Datly Worker nd Entertainment followed by at the Vegetarian Workers Cit, 220 St. Proceeds for Morning Preit E SCOTTSBORO Br. LL.D. will cel its and anniversary by giving a Thea- re Night and Dance at the Work ter, 1913 Pitkin Ave, Brookiyn. program, DANCE and Entertainment ih Strikers E. Cen. Excelent Denefit of at Office Workers Union t 8:30 p.m. Excellent 5 # by Prejudice,” symposium on legal tal ts of Seottsboro ease at Washington | | OAKLEY JOHNSON will lecture on “The AcMievements of the Soviet Union” af ths Harlem Br. F.8.0., 87 West 128th @. at 6 Adm. free OPEN FORUM at Mosholu Prog Club, 2230 | Bainbridge Ave., One, fear 27th B at 8:30 p.m. A. Sirsuch will spesc om “Will tration Give Us the the Roosevelt Adnsin | Promised Recovery.” MILTON HOWARD will lecture on “The Roosovelt Inflation Program” at the New Culture Club, 2345 Coney Island Ave., be-| eon Avenues T. and U. | CONCERT and Dance given by U.C.W.0. Womens 48 at 4046 Broadway, near iTist St. at 8 pm. Adm. i5c. | LEONARD E, MINS will speak on “World War Looms” at Washington Heights Work- | ets Center, 4046 Broadway, near 170th Gt. Room 2, at 8 pm. | JOHN’ CHAMBERLAIN, Edward Dehtberg | | and Kenneth Burke in 2 John Reed Olub| Cluding myself and I forgot | symposium on “Bourgeois and Proletarian | ‘Types in World Literature” at Irving Piaza| Hall, Irving Place and 15th St. st 8:30 p.m. DANCE at the Prospect Workers Center, 57 So. Boulevard, Bronx. Good jaz band. | MANUEL GOMEZ, playwright, and Albert | Malts, co-author of Peace on’ Earth, will |speak on “The Social Thestre and the | 1 Letters From Antonoff (This cepeiudes the letters from Todar Antonofi, iilitant Detroit worker, whose threatened deporta- tion to fascist Bulgaria was prevented by bis voluntary departare to the Soviet Union.) A CONCERT ON A SOVIET SHIP Yesterday I was unable I was in bed almost all d got wp at night for the concert. S concert! Everybody was so was sick. friends sang American 501 young Negro boy sang 4 so! the depression which he wrote self. It went over very ; in hushed, | poor vendors. Nothing. Te’s 10 Higa School at 2:30 p.m. Speakers: | Worker” at Steve Katovis Br. LLD., 15 z.| Frenchman who doesn't spe But the Greek revolutionary Worker is as generous, Lena Hb Ashley Pettis, miusié editor of the | conspiratorial tones." Occasionally A | mah ie ie Be te oars proceeds | Brodsky, Samuel Leibowits, Roset | sea St. at 8:30 p.m. Adm. if.” t ; we |“New M ” is ; if yp | money in it. ap né Osmor raenkel } TION of Bovis vi brave a human being as one could find. The life and death of ‘New Masses,” who will be assisted | few turn from their huddle to spit. | “normally.” Be it Is a few weeks Auspices, 1 Stem TLD. dane eae Sak Thee oe eee n by Dorothy Edwards. She will sing|On the sidewalk, around each group, “Marsh Hymn,” a recetit Ashley Pet- | are yellow gobs of phlegm and pools tis composition. jot brown spittle, The proceeds of the benefit will be} Here's one henchman who ca donated to homes for children of!, certain case quashed for German refugees. Already, 4,500! bucks. He is tall, and from Katovis, a Greek worker, is still fresh in our minds. He was foully mur- ; tered by a New York cop on a picket line. His history has been written in a pamphlet by A. B. Magil and Joseph North. It is the story of a noble and unselfish comrade, whose whole life was given to the cause of the working class, If one were to write a noyel about a» Communist before election—the spirit of Tam- Tmahy pervades every institution they jcontrol. These are holy days, W1 smilin¢. haidshaking, backslap- fills the courts. They given by Rew Oul- iand Ave, bevween Dancing, entertainment, fun include plettires, clay models, Books, ear-|2erobatic stunts by some of the pas- | toons, ahd posters on Btllding of socialism. | Sengers and sailors. In the name of Visitors invited. New Ster Casino, i07th| the paseengers, one Negro worker bee gia Mote spoke, pointing out his surprise at the | pDOUBLR, ‘Program st Workers School! dleverence between conditions on the jorum. M, J. Olgin lectures nin | 5 4 As a Leader of Russian Revol and | Berengaria and the Soviet ship. He ¢ Club, 2243 Coney and 0. 2—Ird Ave., cor. Entertainment. tion, ladies 10¢, get ofe Wotld not teed to search for a béttéer hero, than Steve worker, children have been placed in homes | humped shoulders his rod face juts | Mor Cases ate treated leniently to|““Gonceir and Dance given by Tremont | 2oNm, Bovingdon, Poet-Dancer, wil! give) also pledged himself to write and Kator i which have been opened by the Lord! forward. Foam drools from the show tho humanity of Tammany | prog. club, 960 X. Tremont ave, 8:49 pm. |Teat Mig? pm at h 8t., and! when he returns to America to devote ET some time ago, it seems, I had « little paragraph telling about some Bast Side Greek gangsters and dope-peddlers who ran @ saloon where their gang did its ditty work. On the window of the saloon they had pasted the Blue Bagle sign, and the words, “We Do Our’ Part.” 1 thought this a piece of ironical comment on the hypocrisy of the Blue Fagle drive. Every sweatshop exploiter and gangster was using it to cover up hts crimes. But a certain letter-writer construed this to mean t had attacked the Greek race. Though he signs himself, “Com~- I do not believe he is a comrade to have made such & ely y mistake I might havé as easily have said, “Jewish gangsters,” or “Irish or lian garigsters.” ve, in New York, gangsters of every race, just as we find fascists rose. It is not the task of revolutionary workers to defend gang- just because they happen to be of oe’s own race. On : hand, it is one’s duty to attack and denounce them; our loyalty , but to ctr class. The bosses and gangsters have no o¢; they vorkers of theif owh race without any consciencé. Why wld we defend such people? { Rather Sharp Letter B hisveh to tite letter of this person: Den Comrade Editor: In the Daily Worker of Sept. 10, 1933, the © teal Cotimunists have leatned to love, I and other comrades jecd that the Jews is using the working men’s newSaper for their betiefit. When they are Writing about other people they empha- éix pationakty. Greeks, that is, referring to the article by Michael cxposing the brothers, thé so-called racketeers, emphasizing they re’ Greeks. “Ts it the regular teachings of Cominunism to try and Knock the doing of Wrong people 45 individuals or groups. Do we advocate that all | people are egtial or is that those runing the destifiies of the Daily Worker and ihe working Glass strtiggle sold out to @ certain group that has alWays put theif nose into everything for thelr own dirty greedy filthy hides to save? “Comrade Editor, you may tell the so-calléd intéliectual Michael Gold that his pen is full of filth and dirt and that he shotild fot use it vo sway the destinies of the working class. “Comrade Editor, if this letter ls not published that means the Daily Worle les sold ott to that partiewlar group. “Com¥adely yours, “A GREEK WORKER,” e HG ie, Of course either the letter of @ fool or of some undeveloped yroritat who is as far from Communism as Ke is from the moon. As & imatter of fact, he has probably been worked upon by some fascist provocateur. It has always béen the fascist method, in America, to inflame the races against each other duting strikes anid similar working class activities. We niay be certain that stovl-pigeons paid by the German Nazis are at Work in various industrial centres, trying to rouse up race feeling and break the unity of the working class. Communism is ihternationalist; it preaches the eqtiality of all races. ‘The Negto workers are the biggest group in Amiefica against whom the bosses aiid fascists have directed their hatred. But in the Communist Party the Negro enters a8 a comradé With fill rights. He doesn’t have to ask for these rights, or even be gratefiil for them; they are his hereditaty due as a worker. But many Undeveloped workers fail to understand why the Commu- | American Committee for the Relief | | known | audience itself—at a previous con- | cert—had asked that the “Intertia- | |can Committee. | Marley Committee, with which the of Victimized German Children is affiliated. Professor Albert Einstein ig honorary president of the Ameri- | Legion or No Legion, Stokowski to Play the “Internationale” PHILADELPHIA. — Leopold Sto~ kowski, noted conductor of the Phil- adelphia Orchestra, today let it be that .the “Internationale” would bé sung at his next Young People’s Concert to be held March 22nd. This was his atiswef to violent | Protests from the Philadelphia cotinty board of the American Le-| gion which was considerably upset by Stokowsky’s announcement that the “Internationale” would be in- cluded in his next program and that the youthful audience would be asked to join in vocal accompani- ment. The conductor declared that the tiondle”’ be played so that could join in the singing. Stokowski_ himself participated in the recent Lenin Memorial Meeting héld in Philadelphia. they Leading Writers Will Attend JRC Symposium Irving Plaza, Sunday NEW YORK—Leading revolution- ary writers and artists, including the editors of the New Masses, and other lefé wirig publications, ate to attend the symposium on liters- ture to be héld toriorrow night at Irving Plaza Hall, 15th St. and Irving Place, under the auspices of the John Reéd Club of New Rork. The subject of symposium is “Types in Bourgeois and Proletarian World Literature,’ and the speak- ers Will b¢ John Chamberlain, Ken- neth Burke and Edward Dahiberg. Joshua Kunite co-editor of the New Masses, wili act as chairman. nets of his mouth as he tells y how Ke does it. Bis-“clients” are dips (pick-pockets), petty larceny crooks, | pimps and that ilk. “Why it’s easy, man,” he explains with nasal gusto. “All I do is call up | Reilly. All Reilly does is call up Too- mey, saying—‘Toomey, that judge now sitting in the Magistrates Court, who is he responsible to?’ And he gets the guy’s name, see. And when he gets it, everything's jake. catise then Toomey says to him, ‘Lis- ten, tell that Judge to quash so and So’s Casé,’ sce. And stire 4s you're) born, it's quashed. Now ain’t that worth fifty bucks, I ask you?” Swe 1O, Many cases which seemed to have been Heard, pondered over, wrestled witb, and decided upon by the judge, have actually been “tried” by a politician’s phone call. The itehy palms of graft magically twist guilty defendants free, and, where it suits the purpose, convict the inno- cent. Behiind-the-scene verdicts are numerous, more numerous than any person not familiar with our courts can ever suspect. Trials seem to run so smoothly, the judge labors with such stern diligence, that it seems al- most impossible to believe someone has forced him to miake a decision even before all the facts of the case have beet rendered. Yet there, in the very courtroom, it is possibie to procure 4 man with the necessary connections in the network of cor- = and to buy a pre-trial ver- ict. Another fellow, the bondsman’s weasel, preys upon those who need money for bail. Always he is ready to potitice tipo victims and soak thent exorbitant fees. This one deals only w prostitutes. He has fur- tivé, jumpy eyes. Pimples dot his long pale face. His clothes are natty, cut in Broadway style. His necktie is tight atourid the collar, making a rim of flesh lap over. “Why of course wé gotta soak the whores," this weasel says. “They're a tisk. The bitches run out on you.” He is lying, and if you manifest that you bélieve he is, the weasel squirms fiabbfly. But you can’t im- press him with facts that disprove his statements. He is too degenerate. Records show that prostitutes sel- dom jump bail. For that reason bail ig set at & very low figure by the court. But the weasel’s reason for a Be- | judges. The court becomes a kind of theater where mock trials are held. The judge cracks jokes, the crowd laughs, It is a period of vots-catch- ing. as a delleatessen knife slicing ba- loney. Emphasis is always on | speed. When there is a hitch in | im the swift procedure the judge | grows angry. But, as if pricked by an election warning, he transforms | his anger into a wisecrack. He | is clever, a good actor. Waves of | laughter lap against his thirsty ego, } One after the other, old women come before the judge. They are charged with selling articles in sub- | Way entrances. One woman carries a basket of pretzels. A more hu- sanitatium. She is feeble, barely able to hold the basket. She can speak only Italian. But she does not speak. She is paralyzed by grief and shame. It is hard for the judge to be fiip- pant, funny now. “That’s private property,” judge tells her. “You've got to stay away from there. The next time you are caught I'll fine you.” Then come young boys, picked up for vagrancy. One boy lives in Co- lumbus, Ohio. He has no parents, He came fo.New York looking for work and hungered, got gaunt as a pole, “Do you plead guilty to being out of a job?” th e judge asks, “Yes.” srancy. This is the first offense. If I let you go, what will you do? You have no home, no folks, no job. What'll you do?” The boy is gium. He frankly does not know. He tells the judge that. “Well, I can’t hold you,” the judge concludes. The boy walks up the aisle with not the slightest feeling of freedom. He is going out into a fog, a jungle, hemmed in by police. No work. No parents. No home. Hunger. A judge can’t joke about that. He nods his head instead . . . a momentary gesture of futility. And the next victim is jostled into the room... . And with a feeling of profound disgust one leaves the Magistrates Court. It is a court riddled with subject. to election moods. A court Where dollars dominate “justice.” A court that can never solve the ne crimes of corroding sys- em, |5-AND-10 ART GALLEY 18 The cases are handled ay ravidly | mane society would place her in a |° “Well, you have no recotd of va-| slimy political strings. It is a court } | Paul Claes, violin; Jacqulin Alpern, soprano; Chalk tal, and other: ‘ADING CIRCLE; short Piano recital; IRISH Ri, | Dr. Oakley | Pi rector 3560 Roehambeau Ave., 25¢, Proceeds for Unempl Miglish Literature from th | list Viewpoint, by , ab 3 p.m, at the Work 2th St, Regitter now. ‘O LEAGUE and New Mass | present Document” at New | Schoot, 66 iath St. at 7 p.m. and at | 8:30 p.m. Donald Henderson, guest speaker. | HOUSEWARMING Party and Dance given by American Youth Federation, 333 %. 13th St. at 8:30 p.m. Bobby's Syncopators, En- tertainment, Refreshments. Hat check 28¢. | ITALIAN WORKERS Center Unite wili joutertain you at 461 W. 26th St. from 8 | P-m. to | DAN a.m. Adm. 10e. E and Entertainment given by Lower st Gide Workers Club, 108 Bleecker Bt. . Greene St. Adm. 100. |, MOUSEPARTY snd Entertainment given by Steve Katovis Br. LL.D, at 992 E. ieth | St. Apt. 24 at 8 pam | WRITERS and artists Party and Dance the John Reed Club, 490 Bixth Ave, 8: Good jasz band and feature enter- |». ti t. | TEN DAY BAZAAR for the benefit of the'| Morning Prettisit given by the East- Bide | Workers Club, 165 &. Broadway, beginning Saturday till Tuesday, Peb. 6, Special ba | gains. “Program changed every day. GALA HOUSE PARTY given by the Hi [lem Workers School at Tyndales, 158 Aud bon Ave, N.¥.C. Movies, dancing, refresh | ments, ete. Adm. 456. |. HOUSE PARTY given by the Joe Hilt Br, LL.D. at 1965 Seventh Ave. Apt. 3A, cor, | 113th St. st @ p.m. on the occasion of thelt |Atth anniversary. | Adm, 100, | PARTY, Dancing, Refreshments at John Brown Youth Br. LS.N.R. at 3718 Third Lave. Apt. 5. Adm. 15¢, |. Excellent Concert and Dance at the Pros- | pest Workers Center, 1157 So. Boulevard, Good program. Double orchestra. || OLE-GRAND Youth Club will hold » Cos | tute Ball at their elub room, 380 Grand Bt, |N.Y.C. |. HOUSE PARTY given by Mt. Bden Work- ers Center, 288 2, 174th Mt. Good time assured. VICTORY Party given by Crotone Park | Bast Block Committee at the Neighborhood | Workers Center, 1400 Boston Rd. Good en- | tertainment, dancing. Adm. 10¢. ‘Wo Dance League teachers an¢ sterting on Feb, 2 | leaders course jter at Workers Dance League office every day between § and 9:30 p.m. at 60 B 1th St. Room 632. neat week. Brownsville Workers | 1885 Pitkin Ave, Brooklyn, | BROOKLYN LOCAL ot School, Register now. the Alteration |Patnters Union will have its Installation | Concert and Dance at 2239 Church Ave,, oor, Flatbush. New officers will bo greeted and |installed. Good band. Daily Worker drama | Stoup. Adm. 250, | CONCERT and Dance for benefit of our Sport Section at Brownsville Youth Center, {105 Thatford Ave., Brooklyn. Adm. 25c, DANCE nnd Entertainment. ‘Waltz Con- |test at Prog. Workers Culture Club, 159 |Sumner Ave. Brooklyn, at 8:30 pm. Al Siegel and hie orchestra. ANNIVERSARY Celebration Ban- quet, Concert and Dance at American Youth Club, 407 Rockaway Ave. at 8:30 p.m. Repre- jsentatives from mass organization to be | present. | HOUSE PARTY given by Mdith Berkman CLASS in Russian for beginners starts| |_ TRE LOWER Hatlem Unemployed Councli | will hold @ dance at 6% &. 8:90 p.m. LECTURE at the Pordham Prog. Club, 208 Rd. p.m. 104th Bt, at B. Fordham }_o | ree at 8 PLAYERS present at the 12th St. ® program of . dence and vocal ensemble, Philadelphia ALL WORKERS will gather at the Baresr the United Worker Organizations of of 3) South Phila. on Friday and Saturday, Jan. | 36 and 97 at Garrick Hail, 507 B 8th Bt. | Adm. 25¢ for both nights; 186 one night. | SOCOBR GAME between the Dynamo Soo- | |cer Team of Workers Club of Strawberry | Mansion and the Banater Soccer Team on | Sunday at 1 p.m. at Rising Sun and Olney | Avenue, | DANCE on Sunday night at 8 p.m, given by the Workers Olub of Strawberry Mantion | at 2014 N, 32nd St. Good music, | “AROUND the Tea Table” with Harry Mitchel, just returned from Russia, who wilt | speck on “What I Saw in Russia” on Satur- | dey @ the Workers Cultural end Sports Cluh, 2014 N. 32nd Bt, | Wilkes Barre, Pa. THE WORKERS CENTRE will give » Sewer | Kraut Gupper for the benefit of the Work- | era Center at 325 B. Market St. on Sunday, | Jan. 98, at 7:90 p.m. Pittsburgh “THE HISTORY and the Fighting ‘Tradi- _| Hons of the Negro People of the South,” leoture by Ben Careathers at the Mont- mental Baptist Church, 2240 Wylie Ave. on Sunday, Jen. 28 at 2:30 p.m. Adm, free. Newark LW.O. Br. 60 is building s revolutionsry brass band. Ali comrades who pisy any | brass or wind instrument are invited. First meeting will be held st 1 Peshing Ave, on Wednesday, Jan. 31 at 8 o'clock, BARN DANCE at the Jack London Club, 920 Court Bt. Good dance orchestra; fine entertainment; refreshments. Adm. 250. THE LL.D. has srranged @ mags meet. ing and movie on Sunday evening at 8 p.m. |at Workers Center, $04—44th St., Union Clty. Ruby Bates will be the main epeaker. Sam Strong, district org. LL.D. will aleo speak, “Road to Lite’ will be the film feature, Boston, Maes, |. DRAMATIC Group of the John Reeé Club | Hg ad Tr. ot hep sketches at the affair whie! e LL.D, wil ive on Saturday jae 88 Hawthorn &t., Come. | Detroit, Mich. COMRADE John Schmets, O.F. District Org. will discuss “Tactics of the Commu- nist Party” on Monday, Jan. 29 at the John Reed Club rooms, 108 W. Hancock St, 6 Pm Worcester, Mass. BANQUET at the Workers Center # 3 Harrison St. on Sunday at 8 p.m. AMUSE (his time and energy for the defense lof the Soviet Union. I was the last speaker, bringing |greetings to the sailors from the American Section of MOPR (IL.D.) jand the class war prisoners. I told |them about the lynchings of Negro | workers, about the deportation of foreign born and about the new | Preparations of the American impe- | rialists. IN SOVIET LAND ‘Wednesday everybody was up early. | We began to see land. The sailors lexplain to us that here is the Fin- {land shores, At 1:30 p.m. we enter | Soviet waters, One old fellow had three suit-cases land six trunks. I¢ took them more than two hours to examine his bag- gage and he had plenty. When they got through with him he was almost }in tears. He thought he could come here and open up a business! | Will think different now, because th | took most of it away, and told h to get plenty of American dollar: pay duty for it. THE SCOTTSBORO VERDICT IN MOSCOW Law night about 7:30 p.m. T resting and read Sasha Small’: ticle in Inprecorr, at the same Mstening to the radio. like thunder when I Haywood Patterson was tenced to die in the ele got up, put on my coat MOPR to look for —. wasn't there. I asked therm to send some one from the Presidium comrade came out and I told hi about it. Immediately nounced it, Byery face turned wi Here in the Soviet Union where ¢ Revolution im 1917 solved the pr of race and nations] ciscri where the people are fre mobilize all the Amer: workers and particule:ly F ff protest resolutions against lynchings of Negroes awaiting him at his desk. MENTS THE FIRST INTERNATIONAL TALKIE! American Premiere Today “The War “HELL on Greatest of Anti. nist Party “allows itself to be dotinated by Negroes,” just as this so- Films” called “Gteek worker” thitiks the Party is domitiated by Jews. | TUNING IN OPENED IN N. Y. Br. LL.D. ab 1710 Orotona Park Bast. Apt. | 6D at 8:30 p.m. —HENRI BARBUSSE The Communist Intemational is dominated by fo race. The French Communists go to prison for fighting for the rights of fhe Moors and Indo-Chinese and other races under the heél of Fréfich white imperial- ism, The Communists in California do the same and go to jail defend- ing the Japanese, Filipino and Mexican workers of that state. In the South white and Negro cotnrades fight side by side in the LL.D. and the Share Croppets’ Unions. It is the first duty of a Communist to fight against the imperialism and chauvinism of his owa land, ‘This letter writer, Who signs himself “Greek Worker’ is not yet pre- pared to @o this, for he thinks it necessary that fie deferid some cheap gangstets who would slig him down in a stfike if paid for it by a boss of any rate. * ‘ ry Nazi Frenzy, Too I HAVE also received several long letters from Nazis during the past few months. They read like the ravings of lunatics; it is @ little ter- aitying to realize that sith minds aré now rulihg @ large European nation. The German bourgeoisie weré ruined by the war and the inflation, and without a doubt, are now somewhat pathological. How otherwise can one explain the peculiar iffationalism of all their statements? Yet they are crudely cunning, too, and this letter of a “Greek worker” shows the Nazi influence at work somewhere, in some mysterious forgotten place. Today, in America, to succumb to race prejudice is to help bring on Fascism and the breakup of trade unionism and the end of all working class rights. Remember that, comrades, when somebody tries to prejudice you against Negroes, Greeks, Jews, Japanese or any other race. What is their object? It is obviously to divide the working class against itseif. Poet-Dancer Is Feature at Olgin Lecture NEW YORK —Moissaye J, Olgin, , just 6 ditor of the.“ Freiheit” Pen ion. Bovitigton, who is tive of bs is 10 rill speak on “Lenin as Leader of Pied jegular. Yorkers School, 35 East 12th St., Intefnational Theatre in Moscow and in Keol University, Tokio. Bovington will select a few num- morrow at 8 o'clock. oA special feature of the evening | bers from his repertoire which in- ill be & the Mother, Father, ancer, John ‘Bovington, who has IM MARTIN 3 + Ger rune mows T'a GONNA Tua wine, Tole, ith and Inventor. LAY OFF - You cant — No No! WoT HERE — No | VIOLENCE! | the Northwest, has worked in the | 12: F.S.U. BROADCAST THIS SUNDAY A. M. ‘The speech of Corliss Lamont on “Recognitiori—and After” at the na- tional convention of the F.S.U. will be broadcast from New Star Casino over Station WJZ on Sunday morn- ing between 10:30 and 11 o’cléck. Re- ception groups are being formed all over the country to hear the speech from the following stations: Baltimore—WBAL; _—Pittsburgh— KDKA; Boston—WBL; Springfield, Mass—WBZA; Rochester—WHAM; Cleveland—WGAR; _Detroit—WJR; Ciricinnatl_—WLW or WCKY; the following Oticago stations: KYW, WNER, LS, WMAQ, WCFL; St. Louis-KWK; Kansas City— WREN; Council Bluffs, Ia—-KOIL; | 5 .—-KWCR; TONIGHT’S PROGRAMS WEAF—660 Ke. 1:18 P.M.—Réligion in the News—-Dy. stan- 1:80°7Gireas Days—Sketch 15—Boston 5 Oreh.; Dr. Serge Koussevitsky, 10:00—Rolte Orch; Men About Bown Trio; Robert L. Ri 11:00—One Man's Family—Sketoh 11:30—-Hollywood on 1001 0: | Co- WOR—710 Ke Eire A Sarena tnd tH Hershfteld ‘7:30-Little Symphony Oreh., Philip James, il Sail MARTIN SLIPPED SOMETHING OVER ON Le NRT (ml E AK Al: rn Due to An Unavoidable Error Conductor; Vera Webster, Piano 8:30—Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association Benefit Program 9:80—Bronx Marriage Buredu—Sketch 9:46—Lane Orch. 10:15—Katherine Jagg!-wier and Aug's Tollefsen, Piano Duo 10:30—Organ Recital 11:00-—Weather Report 1:0l—Tremaine Orch. 41:30—Coleman Orch. 12:00—Berger Orch. | WIZ—760 Ke 7:00 P.M.—John Herrick, Songs 7:15—Robin Hood—Sketch 1:30To Be Announced 8:00—The New Deal and Civil Liberties— Roger Baldwin, Direetor American Civil Liberties Union; Mortis Ernst, Attorney $:30—Canadian Concert :00—Varlety Musicnle 9:30—Duchin Orch. 10:00-—Ingenue of the Sierras—Dramatic Sketch 10:30—Barn Dance Fret 12:00—Denny Orch. 12:90 A2f.—Stern Oroh. oe WABC—860 Ke 1:00 P.M.—Michaux Congregation ‘:30—Serenaders Orch.; Phil Cook, imper-\iributor and, presumably, the author, | sohations 7:45—Jones Orch. | dag saad ftom Miss Fane's Baby 19 bio tt Lambert and Billy Hillpot, 8:00—Philadetphia Oren. 9:15—Stoopnagle and Budd, Comedians; Re- hard Oreh.; Vera Van, Songs $:30—Band Concert, Edward Dianna, Con- | iuctor 10:00-—Rebroadeast ftom Byrd Expedition en | Route to Antarctic; Music from New! ork i} 10:36-News Bulletins 10:45—Leaders {n Action—H. ¥. Kaltonborn 11:00—Lombardo Orch. eee Orch. E Oren. 12:30 AM.—Lyman Orch, 1:00—Hopking Orch. LADIES A DUE To AN UNAVOIDABLE ERROR WE ARE Forced RED Dancers Studio Party, 77 Fifth Ave. | | Jace Band, Entertainment, Reftesiments, | Midnight surprise, Sunday PARTY arranged by Unit 4, Sect. 1 at Italian Workers Center, 233 Bast 10th Bt., Bunday pight. Entertainment, Bill Stegel, John Reed Club artist in Chalk talk, other features. THE FOLLOWERS of Nature will hike to j Hutchinson River Parkway. Meet at 10 2, m. sharp at 21st St. White Plains Rd. Station, OPEN FORUM of the Tom Mooney Br. 7.1. D. at 323 EB. 13th St. at 3 p.m. Speaker, Paul Salter on “The Class Basis of the U.S. Constitution.” Questions and diseu § VILLAGE FORUM, 224 W. 4th St. facing Sherldan Sq. lecture by Dr. Luttinger on Medicel Racketeering at 2:20 p.m. NEW YORK.—The newly estab- lished Upstairs Gallery, 28 East 26th! St., the first permanently instituted | | “five and ten” (dollar) art venture, | | seems to be making headway, indi- | cating apparently that there was room for just stich an enterprise. In s "cas, instead of the two or three exhibitors with which the gallery opened, there are now half a dozen including among them some! feltly well-known names. For ex- ample Milton Avery is showing gouaches, Saul Berman, Louis Fer- ; Stadt and Abraham Tromka, water | colors. Small oils and lithographs by| DramATIc Section Harlem Pog. Youth ; Aline Fruhauf are on view, litho-/ Club, 1838 Madison Ave. is producing a play. | graphs by Adolf Dehn, wood cuts by | Rehearsals at 2:30 pn. Players are needed , | hs Produced in four different countries—spoken in four languages, mainly English, Directed by Victor Trtvas (now in exile), | vith Wladimir Sokoloff (of the Moscow Art The.) ‘Ernst Bus (now in exile) Louis Dougiss, Negro Int'l Vaudeville ser VANGUARD CULTURE i4th STREET and UNION SQUARE ACME THEATRE |oy. GUILD prosente—. THE ANTI-WAR PLAY — St Big Month —THt THEATRE | RUGENE O'NEIUL's COMEDY | AH, WILDERNESS! | with GEORGE M. COHAN | GUILD 2 224 8. Wot aw ay Ev.8.20Mats, Thur.&Sat.2:20 |PEACE ON EARTH | Menri Barbusso says; “I shall write and | talk about this piay in France.” | CIVIC REPERTORY Thea,. 1ith S. & 6th Ay, [Negro boys lynched by deputies from | “And the guilty brutes go free?’ | rs * especially Negro comrades are invited. | WA, 9-450. Brgs. 8:45. c to $4 50 NO St. Clair Wales, and etchings and} “HanLenm workers School Forum, 200 W.|| MAXWELL ANDERSON’S New Play || Mats. Wed. & Sat., 2:30, 0° 1 tax drawings by various well-known art! issth S mh 214A, lecture by =. P.| oe | | ists, j Greene of “The Present Situation in cuba” || MARY OF SCOTLAND Southern Preacher Is Lynch Poem Sponsor | BIRMINGHAM, Ala.—The Rev. Grover ©. Tucker, minister of Tus- fealoosa, Ala., is the publisher, dis- of a lynch ballad praising the mur- der of Dan Pippen and A. T. Harden, that town last August, and calling for bigger and better lynchers. “Have you heard of the Scotts- | bero cases? “Mave you heard of the 1.L.D.? “Do you want your little girls murdered, | is one of the final stanans of the dog- gerel, which calls for “love for the Ku Klux Klan” and “one hundred per cent law and order” plus a dona- at 3:90 p.m. Adm. tree, | LECTURE by Pref. Oakley Johnson on} ‘The NRA. As A War Threat and Its| |Latest Development” at the Social Youth Guture Club, 215 Broadway, Brooklyn, at | 3:90 p.m, ‘THE SCOTTSBORO Br. of the L.S.NR. is| conducting class every Sunday afternoon | at 3 p.m. at 210 W. 68th St. on History and) Economic Development of the Negro People| Throvghous the World, Instructor, ahs | | Siegel. No charge. MOVING Picture of Munger March and | ——~——— ae | Bons Maren at 6 p.m. Dancing from 6 to | |8 snd from 10 to 1 a.m. Good Music. | IEGFELD FOLLIES | Shae stgosiny r Workéts Cli, 108 ats eee |e a Regen OWARD, Er it man. | . Jugosiay Workers Clu! ‘ s fe nene , _Everel q TWO Showings of 2 movies, at: 1-0. andi| SHALL, Sean SARGENT, Patrice BOWMAN: | 9-11 p.m. Womens’ Cornett 22 shows “White WINTER GARDEN, R’way and Sth. Evs. 8.30) | Heli of Palu” and Charlie Chaplin in| Matinees Thursday and Saturday 2:30 with HELEN PHILIP ELEN HAYES MERIVALE MENKEN ALVIN ‘Thea., 52d St., W. of BY Ey.3:20.Mats, Thur. &S3at.2:20 EUGENE O'NEILL'S New Play | DAYS WITHOUT END enry Miller’s P7240 nings §: H E |» JUDITH ANDERSON, Come or AGE 5 CLEMENCE DANE & RICHARD ADDINSELL MAXINE ELLIOTT’S Thea., 39th, E. of Bway Eves. 8:50, $3.30 to 55c, Mats. Wed. & Sat. MAXIM GORKY’S “YEGOR BULITCHEY” ARTEF POUNDATION | Sth Ave. at 1odth Bt. Theatre “By all means go to Every Baturday & | gee it” Sunday Evening | °° now sf ; HECKSCHER J Adm. Adults 16¢,’ chil-! jaran 300, - | MARTIN KAYE will lecture on the Cu-| operative Auditorium, 2700 ' Roperta Hl t New Musical Comedy by ban Situation for the Bill Haywood Br. f. fa Ri j wood Br. D, At International Workers Center, 6 Naw auton BOAR, WEE, Fan the. $8. Island and Brighton Beach Ave, at 8:30 p.m. | pr , . LECTURS by Dr. Zlatkin on “Safeguard: | ing the Workers’ Health in the United States | and in the Soviet Union” at Bronx Workers | it ** | Now || Club, 1610 Boston Rd. 8:30 prt. A euRT W. Donn P. The 4 MARX BROTHERS RKO 14th St, | Jefferson \% § tion of 10 cents to the reverend. NO GENTLEMEN- THs Wet To PRESENT THE TROPHY INDOORS INSTEAD OF HERG = THANK — ALL FOR e&Tc- RO} speak at the Weat | ry c Side Workers Open Forum, 2642 Broad-| in “DUCK SOUP” Way, Near 100th Street, at 8 p.m. on War! gaged teature:—“FLAMING GOLD" with | MAE CLARKS & PAT O'BRIEN MUSIC . é | Philharmonic - Symphony TOSCANINI, conductor AT CARNEGIE HALL This Sunday Afternoon at 3:00 Saint-Saens, Tommasini, Wagner, Ravel ‘Thurs. Eve. st 8:45; Fri, Aft. at 2:30 | 4th PROGRAM of BEETHOVEN CYCLE Sat. Eve. at 8:13; Next Sun. Aft. at 3:00 Bruckner, Beethoven, Brahms, Bach ARTHUR JUDSON Mat. (Steinway Piano) | TOWN HALL tues. Bre., Fed. 6, 8:20 | MARTHE Viennese pancer KRUEGER Louis Horst at Pisne Steinway Plano What is your organization doing to gain mew readers for the Daily Worker? Help build owr “Daily.” By Quint WAY WISE GUY- L ESCORT YA! | | eee oy i | \ ART FOR ALL $5 - Ten Dollar Gallery - $10 M. Zimbe! Is shown water colo engr hographs, ings, etchings and wings by Avery Dehn Ferstadt Berman Tromka Spiegel Fruhanf & others 28 EAST 56th STREET 10-6 Dally — — EL. 5-3462 DETROIT, MICH. First Soviet Dancers Granted permission by U.S8.8.R. to visit America, Direct from the Marinsky Theatre in Leningrad VECHESLOVA -AND— CHABUKANI ORCHESTRA HALL Woodward and Parsons Sun., Jan, 28, 8:30 p.m. Tickets 50c., T5c., $1., $1.50 Detroit Concert Society Tickets at John Reed Club, 108 W. Hancock, Schuman’s Book Store, 127 W. Adams ths

Other pages from this issue: