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es ee essa ee CHANGE ——THE — WORLD! By SENDER GARLIN ILLINGER is dead. The crime war conducted by the United States government is over. Banks are now safe, except from their boards of directors. Rich folks’ babies will now lie unmolested in their cribs. The U. S. Marines can now be shipped back to Haiti, Nicaragua and Cuba fo help teach “self-government” to the colonial possessions of the American Empire. Dillinger is dead. He died, the papers say, with a vicious sneer distorting his face. The notorious outlaw was overwhelmed by only 15 Department of Justice agents. The intrepid representatives of the federal government were totally unarmed except for their pistols. The capture was accomplished as a result of a masterly technique which would have been unique had not the Philistines used it to get Samson through the agency of Delilah. Dillinger is dead, but it’s his own fault. For Mr. Melvin H. Purvis, the brains behind the capture, has revealed that the gangster would never have been shot had he surrendered voluntarily. Which is fair enough. “I made arrangements to surround the theatre with picked men from among my investigators. They were armed only with pistols. No shotguns or machine guns were issued for I wished no general firing that might endanger passersby,” Purvis explained. Purvis’ precautions were apparently well taken, for even so, two women were hit by bullets from the guns of his operatives. Picture what the casualties among innocent bystanders would have been if Purvis had issued machine guns! Fresh from the front, Purvis breathlessly describes the storming of John Dillinger, how his men opened fire and laid him low. So English text by Anne Bromberger ollie mes bores “Set Ernst Thaelmann Free! DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, JULY 25, 1994 ij Set Ernst Thaelmann Free!” and ‘Frances May ig | VORCE > 1 . Best Bige)= mane cBe-shegeat he dare =< av col, Fawn Se TS ee ie ae iname “re = an } ci PIANO Music by F. Ssebo thirt i od Aevch = men shag Beir threatening fides * 7K 5 FS ga hss a a a shat ~ tor te lr a heg fom Fs 7 ~~ an hele od oot: mann froc!™ Fear ~ ing the shmrath of are ~~~ mond Set = = By his side stand the world’s Ernst Thaelmann, besieged in his dark prison cell, Takes heart from the marching songs of the millions. red legions, 333 In Paris squares his name resounds, Through London streets the storm bears him onward; Through clouds and stars, the radio signals Page Five LABORATORY | AND Notes on Science By DAVID RAMSEY “Science” Does Its Bit OURGEOIS scientists are always making the point that science is | “above” such things as class battles This is, of course, the rankest kind of ballyhoo, designed to conceal the truth that whenever it is thought necessary science is mgged in to |front for capitalist brutality and |terror. Last week, when a wave of ; anti-working-class hysteria was let | loose in the kept press, the science | news writers also did their little bit | for capitalism. “Science Service” is a national ‘agency, with headquarters in Wash- ington, that supplies hundreds of newspapers with science news. ‘Science Service used consistently |in your newspaper will build reader | confidence.” On the second day of | the San Francisco general strike, | July 17, it sent out a story which was played up prominently by the | liberal Scripps-Howard paper, the Washington Daily News: | “From the viewpoint of science, | civil strife such as grips San Fran- cisco represents a great waste of | time and effort.” Notice that the | Story does not say that it is some | hack who is speaking. Instead it is made to appear that it is “Science” | proclaiming that strikes are nothing but social “waste.” The story goes on to invent a new | “scientific” theory of hunger. It |seems that “the greatest hazard is perhaps psychological The fear of | being without food will probably be more dangerous than actual lack of |food.” Strikers eand unemployed SHOP and Technology using scale models before drawing the finished designs. Streams of. water are made to flow across ree productions of rivers and falls, Canal locks and dam spillway; studied with cameras so that struce tural flaws can be avoided. In con- nection with the great Svirstroy hydro-electric and navigation proje ect to be built on the Svir river in Northern Russa, twenty sets of scale models were made and studied before the final plans were drafted. The work of the Institute great practical importance for s ing in miniature the proble! canals, power development, land reclamation, irrigation, and the gi- gantic project of reforesting over 100,000,000 acres to insure adequate rainfall for barren plains, There are now 421 engineers and research scientists engaged in the Institute's work. Last year, research expendi- tures amounted to $2,160,000, and this year they will be considerably greater. It is interesting by way of com- that in this country the i Y, operated by the government to study Mississippi River problems, employs less than @ hundred men and its budget is but $215,000—only one-tenth of the exe penditure of the Soviet institute. This is another example of how fa: science is progressing in the work- ers’ and peasants’ republic — and how it is in a stage of relative stagnation under capitalism. Death Rates Rise Under the New Deal HE answer to Roosevelt's question as to whether American workers Flash him along from tower to tower. workers will be cheered by the news | excellent was the work of Purvis and his forces that Attorney-General Cummings was prompted to wire him a word of commendation: “Grati- fying as well as reassuring.” Fighting to shatter the fascist night. that “it might even do many people |are better off this year than they good to eat a little less food than | were last year is to be found in the |some of them have been eating.” |rising death rate. The cumulative | By eating nothing at all, they could | effects of the crisis in terms of ill- perhaps master their “fear” of being | ness and. death have become sd | without food, and then there would | heavy that they have broken thru Stone halls and stairways, sparks from boots fly, ‘Tempered to steel by Thaelmann’s labors, Brown-shirted henchmen drag him along; Clenching their threatening fists in salute, “Unorganized War of Poor” Ernst Thaelmann defies them, They wince at his glances, Millions of workers in every language, | be no need of striking (or living, for |the ‘statistical’ les of bourgebis “ ” | that matter). experts. Fearing the strength of proletarian hate, wise yn eetse Romans eer a aeumanin tree} “Science” having Taised its hands|" According to the Metropolitan V Gethente workers will not mourn John Dillinger, for there is no doubt that he could as easily have been a strikebreaking tool of the Department of Justice as he was a thorn in their side. And, quite likely, the only reason Dillinger was not a tool of theirs was that he lacked the proper connections. lin horror at the notion that workers | Lie Insurance Company, the mor- |should fight for their rights, and | tality rate up to the end of May | having explained to them why hun-|was 4.4 per cent higher than for |ger is beneficial, concluded its little | the same months in 1933, The rec- contribution by condoning the use|ords of the U. S. Census Bureau of gas against workers. “The use |for the 86 largest cities show that Fearing the strength of proletarian hate. Fists in salute, demand “Set Thaelmann free!” Copyright, 1934, by Workers Music League (U. 8. A. Section of the Internaltonal Music Buro), 5 E, 19th St., New York. — All Rights Reserved. If the reader of this column can detect no sympathy for John Dillinger, it is because no sympathy is intended for him; sympathy there can .be, however, for Dillinger’s. father, a toil-worn dirt farmer in Indiana and for the thousands working class parents who see their slum-reared children grow up to become criminals and are helpless to prevent it under the present system. As Michael Gold once wrote in this column, ‘Crime is the unorganized war of the poor against the Aich.” When the career of a notorious criminal is ended it is sometimes the practice of-newspapers to review the careers of other criminals, comparing here and contrasting there. John Dillinger isn’t the first of his kind, for a reading of American history will reveal the names of many individuals who: left behind them not fingerprints and prison profiles, but heavily-publicized endowments to the “best universities” to blind posterity to their crimes. There are, for example, the Russell Sage Foundation, Leland Stanford University, the Carnegie libraries, the Rockefeller Foundation, and the Vanderbilt clinics. “Hain’t I Got the Power?” ISRESPECT for the law did not begin with John Dillinger. Didn't Cornelius Vanderbilt once say, “What do I care for the law? Hain’t I got the power?” The development of American capitalism was simply the ruthless struggle of various financial pirates to apportion the pub- lic domain of the United States. “Robber barons” is what Matthew Josephson appropriately calls them in his book of that name. And robber barons they were. Most of these worthies made their money by building railroads, these who later became known as Captains of Industry. Laying the basis for the Capone technique which was to follow, these Captains of ndustry, lacking capital, would shake down commu- nities through which their railroad lines would naturally run and threaten to divert the line of the money was not forthcoming. Such was the “enterprise” of these great Empire Builders and Winners of the West! Henry George, describing this process in his. famous book, “Prog- ress and Poverty,” wrote: : ee “A railroad company approaches a small town as a highwayman approaches his victim. The threat, ‘If you do not accede to our terms we will leave your town two or three miles to one side!’ is as efficacious as the ‘Stand and deliver,’ backed by a cocked pistol, For the threat of the railroad company is not merely to deprive the town of the ‘bene- fits which the railroad might give; it is to put it in a far worse position than if no railroad had been built.” An Historic Getaway | janage alee is dead, and so is Jay Gould, the famous railway pirate. But their careers were as parallel as the tracks on Gould’s lines. During one of the battles for financial control of these railroads— when judges in the pay of Vanderbilt outmaneuvered pwhlic officials in the pay of Gould—Gould found himself in a fix not unlike Dillin- ser’s famous stand in that midwestern roadhouse which he turned into an armed camp, “Notices, warrants and writs were known to be on their way at 10 o’clock of the morning of March 11, 1868, when Daniel Drew, Jim Fisk and Jay Gould, after emptying the safes in West Street and cramming a great bundle of six millions in greenbacks into a valise, threw themselves into a hack and rode at stop speed toward the Hud- son River. At the Jersey City Ferry, a formidable bodyguard of Erie porters and detectives already waited to escort them to Jersey. It was a close call; the deputies, hard on their heels, had managed to arrest two directors and clap them into Ludlow Street jail. Some others had escaped in row-boats across the river. + “Arrived in Jersey City the men of Erie estabiished their main offices in the hotel known as Taylor’s Castle, hard by the Erie depot, They threw armed guards about the place and renamed it ‘Fort Tay- lor’.” (From “Robber Barons.”) . ee . . Dillinger Was Born Too Late - Nese Dillinger. Gould the railroad Colossus, was in constant fear of his life. “Gould’s private offices were in the massive, bomb-proof citadel of the Western Union Company, a gloomy pile, six stories high, costing $2,200,000. Here Gould’s person, at least was safe. For the piti- less tactics he pursuéd were not such as to make him immune from physical danger.” This, Jay Gould had in common with John Dillinger. The “law” got Dillinger, but not Gould. And the reason was that Gould, Vander- bilt, Fisk, Rockefeller and the rest had the country in the bag, and their descendants still have the racket sewed up. No less than three billion dollars in savings of small depositors were expropriated by the biggest banks, in the last 12 months—since Roosevelt took office. That's a record for plunder that Dillinger could never approach. Dillinger was born 75 years too late to make use of his abilities. He could have founded a dynasty equal to Gould’s. He could have been a real big shot. Bui, as matters stand, John Dillinger was just a small-timer trying 4o muscle in, Escape ™ The Legal Position of the Prisoners 4 Retard exists in Germany no law or legal norm concerning the in- ternment, the length of imprison- rment or the general treatment for political prisoners. By a special or- der of Bruening, political prisoners may not even complain. The po- litical prisoners are hostages in the hands of the Nazis. The cultural situation of the pris- oners is of the worst kind. They are continually obliged to sing chau- vinistic war songs. They have no newspapers, no libraries, no books, not even scientific ones, The water is undrinkable. They have less privileges than a common crimi- nal, who is allowed to see his fami- ly; who is allowed to receive food and clothes from them. At Sonnenburg the political pris- oners are allowed to write a one- page letter to their families only once every fortnight. At Branden- burg they can write only once a month. Everyone in’ Germany is well acquainted with the horrors of the concentration camps, and we can imagine the agonies of these helpless wives and parents who do not know from month to month if their husbands and sons are still alive. ee 6 Ten Thousand Political Prisoners Threatened with Sterilization A SHORT time ago the National Socialist Minister, Dr. Dietrich, visited the most terrible of the con- centration camps of Germany, Da- chau. Hans Beimler, who escaped from this hell, calls it the “ante- room of death.” After his visit Mr. Dietrich claimed that at least 80 per cent of the 2,000 prisoners are bastards from a racial point of view and he proposed to sterilize 1,600 of them. That means the same fate for thousands of political prisoners all over Germany. Dietrich is re- ported to have made this cynical comment, “We don’t want most of these political prisoners to. die, but we want their race to die out.” Wher one thinks of the thou- sands of assassinations perpetrated by the Nazis against helpless pris- oners, one can easily imagine that they will carry out this suggestion. Tt is the duty of every civilized hu- man being to protest against this display of barbarism. Seventy Prisoners at Sonnenburg Threatened with Death know definitely that the lives of 70 prisoners in Sonnenburg are in danger. One of the wardens warned the political prisoners: “Take care of yourself. There is to be another big provocation soon, Hammel and Gurske said that this time something “big” have to be organized. “And what if 50 or 70 Communists are shot down?” This information should be a challenge to all those who have a spark of humanity in their hearts. When we think what workers, paci- fists, intellectuals, have suffered, when we think of their tortures, when we think that all these men are at the mercy of the homosexual brutes and of the drug-fiend Goe- ring, we cannot but rise in protest. Nor must we think that the spirit of our comrades is broken. that they have given up the struggle, In Au- gust, 1933, when the band played Nazi songs in the courtyard. only from the The Sonnenburg Torture Cam 20 or 30 of the prisoners raised their arms in the fascist salute. The others stood like a wall: of stone, another proof of the failure of the Nazis “to win over the prisoners by the heart and mind.” Everyone Must Do His Part Before It Is Too Late IONNENBURG is lost in a sort of wilderness 40 miles from the Polish frontier, far from the mil- lions of eyes and ears of the great cities of the world. But the call of those tortured within its walls reaches the ears of all men—the cry of men who gave their liberty Nazis ! to fight fascism so that you may have liberty, who gave their lives that you may live. Workers, farmers, scholars, in city and in village, in office and in factory, you cannot remain deaf to this appeal. There is a dark night hanging over Ger- many. Help bring the light there. Help us heal the wounds inflicted on us by the savagery of the regime | of Hitler. Give the political prisoners in Germany moral and financial en- couragement. HELP US BEFORE IT IS TOO) LATE. (THE END.) By DAVID PLATT A TYPICAL expression of Nazism at its bluntest right in the heart of New York City, is seen in the case of a young Jewish film worker by the name of Herman Blander. Blander, for four years an em- ployee of Cinelab, Inc,, film devel- opers and printers, 33 W. 60th St., where he worked in the dark room, winding and developing film, etc., was recently fired from his job be- cause his Nazi boss, a Mr, Frank Weisser, Superintendent of the company, is of the belief that the Jewish people are a curse to the human race and should be poisoned or sterilized en masse, For many months, Blander who is a small, reticent man, under 30 years, had been enduring all kinds of petty abuses at the hands of the anti-semitic S. A. Mann-Weisser, a burly brute weighing 240 pounds, about twice as much as his victim, merely because he happens to be a Jew and the Nazi code says Jude Verrecke (perish jewry). Senge WO weeks ago, Weisser called him into his office, shoved a D. A, W. A. badge up against his face to remind him of the stern reality of fascism, and told him to get the hell out of the office and stay out, he was fired. Bewildered, Blander, who is the sole support of his wife (soon to give birth), both of whom haye been living for months on the meager $20 a week (often less, since some- times there are only three or four day’s work a week in this N. R. A.- D, A. W. A. business) he had been earning with the company, stumbled out of the office and into the arms of the owner of Cinelab, a Mr. J. H. Smith. Blander hopefully told the story to Smith, who sympathized with him, saying he couldn’t see any dif- ference between Jew or Gentile, would | they both had red blood, and said he would speak to Weisser and told him not to worry but to come to work the next day. The proprietor’s word was also law at Cinelab—per- haps! Blander went home to his wife. The next day Smith was nowhere to be found. Instead Blander was given the following note signed by Smith: “I have talked over the situation of your employ with Mr. Weisser and there is nothing further I can do for you. Since Mr. Weisser is the superintendent in charge of the laboratory and absolutely respon- sible for the work turned, out his word is final. I am, however, at- taching a week’s salary which Jewish Film Worker Fired By Nazi Superintendent should carry you until you find other work. Wishing yon the best of luck, ete.” (My emphasis—D, P.) Later Mrs. Blander, ill though she was, decided to call on Weisser and plead for her husband’s job, and her child's life. Weisser was brutally adamant to her pleas but before she left, hypo- critically handed her a letter of recommendation to the effect that Blander was “honest, trustworthy and a conscientious worker but due to business conditions it was neces- sary for us to cut down our force. We can recommend him to whoever may have use for his services.” See HE next step carried Blander to the American Jewish Congress, an organization reputed to be alert to cases of anti-semitism as* this. Here he was greeted by Solomon L, Goldsmith of the Congress who listened to the story, was seemingly touched, and straightway phoned Weisser, who informed the Congress that Blander was “released” solely because he was unfit for the work, he was too small and his hands were too short. From that moment on the atti- tude of the American Jewish Con- press became one of complete hos- tility to the importance of the issues involved, of extreme hesitancy in examining the facts of the. case and of absolute unwillingness to publicize the matter. The Congress made not the slightest effort to verify Blander’s story, sent no representatives to the Cinelab, but kept referring Blander to the Jew- ish Aid Society and the Home Re- lief Buro, in hope that this would solve the problem for both of them. Finally Blander gave them up in disgust, but not without a parting shot from Goldsmith that the Con- gress has hundreds of such cases but could do nothing about them either, He then told his story to real anti-Nazi fighters. Now the Anti-Nazi Federation and the Film and Photo League have taken up the case and a bitter fight is being waged against the Cinelab Com- pany and Nazism in New York until Blander and other such victims of discrimination are re-instated in their jobs. Sympathetic organizations and individuals are urged to send pro- tests to Cinelab Company, 33 W. 60th St. to Mr. Frank Weisser, Superintendent and Mr. Smith, Proprietor, denouncing the discrimination against Jewish em- Ployes and demanding the imme- diate re-instatement of Blander. professionals, | J. HI STAGE and SCREEN | “Stevedore In Its Final Week At Civic Repertory | This is the final week of the Theatre Union's production “Steve- | dore” at the Civic Repertory The- | jatre. The Paul Peters-Gerge Sklar | play, which opened on April 18, as} | the second production of the group, will end its long run on Saturday | night. “Life Begins At 8:40,” the new | revue by Ira Gershwin, E. Y, Har- burg, David Freedman and Harold Arlen, which is scheduled to come to the Winter Garden in August, | will oepn its out-of-town tour at | the Shubert Theatre, Boston, next | Monday. | “Riot Torn World” Now Showing At The Embassy The Embassy Theatre is present- | ing this week, as a reminder of the 20th anniversary of the opening of | the imperialist war, a series of news films under the title of “Riot Torn | World.”. The film presents a pic-| torial record of the last 20 years, | |of the important events on this side, in Europe and in Asia. High points of the film include war} | scenes from China, Mexico, Argen- | tina and Africa; revolts in Ireland, Austria, Spain, France, England, Germany and America. It presents a pictorial chapter of history as it| developed since 1914. The same program includes a travelogue on Morocco and 30 other news clips, including the San Fran- | cisco strike, TUNING IN | 1:00 P.M.-WEAF—Baseball Resume WOR—Sports Resume—Ford Prick ‘WJZ—Johnson Orch. WABC—Enzo Alta, Songs 1:15-WEAF—Gene and Glenn—Sketch WOR—Al and Lee Reiser, Piano WJZ—Press-Radio News WABC—Vera Van—Songs 7:20-WJZ—Johnson Orch. 7:30-WEAF—Philadelphia City Symphony Orch., Dr. Thaddeus Rich, Con- ductor WOR—The O'Neills—Sketch ‘Wwiz—Jewels of Enchantment-Sketch, With Irene Rich WABO—Paul Keast, Baritone 7:45-WEAF—Irene Bordoni, Songs WOR—Joseph Mendelsohn, Baritone WJZ—Prank Buck's Adventures WABO—Boake Carter, Commentator 8:00-WEAF—Jack Pearl, Comedian WOR—Dance Orch. WJZ—Cop Killer—Sketch WABC—Maxine, Songs; Spitalny Ensemble 8:15-WABO—Emery Deutsch, Violin 8:30-WEAF—Wayne King Orch. WOR—The Lone Ranger—Sketch WJZ—Igor Gorin, Baritone WABC—Everett Marshall, Baritone 8:45-WJZ—OM the Record—Thornton Fisher 9:00-WEAF—Fred Allen, Comedian; Song- smiths Quartet; Hayton Orch. WOR—Footlight Echoes WJZ—Goldman Band Concert, on ‘Mall, Central Park WABO—Detroit Symphony Orch., Vietor Kolar, Conductor 9:30-WOR—Tex Fletcher, Songs 9:45-WOR—Dramatized News 10:00-WEAF—Lombardo Orch. ‘WJZ—Johnson Orch. WABC—Broadcast to Byrd Expedi- tion; Warnow Orch. 10:15-WOR—Current Events—H, E. Read 10;30-WEAF—Other Americas—Edward Tomlinson, Author WOR—Robison Orch. WJZ—Denny Oreh.; Harry Richman, | | | Songs WABO—California Melodies WOR—Kahn Orch. ‘WJZ—Balladeers Quartet WABC—Nick Lucas, Songs | with weak hearts.” | Park Workers Club. | Temple, 243 of tear gas in control of mobs by | the death rate up to the week end- the military will probably save|ing June 2 was 5.1-per cent above many lives, since it is easier to dry|that for the corresponding part of tears than mend bullet holes.” This | last. year. is the same kind of “logic” that} The bourgeois chemists use when they explain that |tend that there is no explanation poison gas is the remedy for unem- {for this phenomenon. All workers ployment, flat feet, tuberculosis,|know that the answer lies in five baldness and impotence. | years of decreasing food consump- This horrible and inhuman argu-|tion, the breakdown of health ment is repeated by our almighty | standards, and similar products of “Science,” but in speaking of the | the capitalistic crisis. therapeutic qualities of gases he} Ee . forgets himself and says: “Nauseat- | ing gas may be used before bullet: are resorted to, although this gas, which causes severe vomiting, may | cause death in the cases of those He does not add that a severe dose would kill almost anybody. statisticians pre« Whom Does Science Benefit? CLUE to the answer to this ques» cently made by Dr. C. J. West of the National Research Council. He |and scholarships in every field, from the vitamins of cranberries to the psychology of pekitiésée pups, are | supported directly by 115 industrial | concerns and associations. Of these, 77 corporations openly subsidize students because they have been ere Conquering Nature IN THE SOVIET UNION the work- ers demonstrate daily that the Soviets plus science make for prog- ress and socialism. Every achieve- ment of the Second Five-Year Plan has, as one of its bases, a new achievement in science and tech- nology. its. The other 38 associations dis- | guise their motives by posing as | “non-profit” institutions. This sim- |ply means that a group of com- The victory of Dnieprostroy made | panies, instead of a single corpora- t.e Russian workers determined to|tion, benefits from the research free the Soviet Union from the| work of the student, necessity of using foreign experts | The process works somewhat along and techniques in the construction | these lines. The chemical trust gives of hydroelectric stations. That they |a fellowship to X University, which are making considerable progress| uses the money to train a young towards this goal is evident from |chemist. He discovers a new knock- the news that the world’s largest |out gas that is used to kill strikers hydraulic laboratory has been estab-|at the Y plant owned in common lished near Leningrad. The Research | by the chemical trustand the uni~ Institute in Hydro-Technics is the| versity. (The chairman of the result of the merger of eleven fully | university's board of trustees is also equipped hydraulic laboratories, In|the head of the chemical trust.) the buildings of the Institute are to| and when the chemist makes a few be found the most modern instru- | more profitable discoveries, he comes ments and devices, many of them | back to the university to lecture on invented by its research staff. “The Healing Qualities of Poison The Institute has successfully de- | Gases, and Their Relation to the veloped an ingenious method of! Therapeutic Effects of Religion.” WHAT’S ON NEW DEADLINE: All notices must be Yorkville Br, F. 8. U. in by 9:30 a.m, in order for it to appear RLES BURROUGHS lectures om “The Revolutionary Theatre Movement in ba jthe United States.” Harlem Workers | School, 200 W. 135th St., Room 214A, 7:30 | P. m.” Admission 25. pices CHA! in the next s issue, Wednesday LECTURE “Negro Problems,” by J. W. Ford, Instructor at the Workers School, at National Student League, 114 W. 14th St., from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Adm, 15c. NEW THEATRE film showings. Three riotous films. Showings at 7 end 9:30 p.m. New School, 66 W. 12th St. Adm. 35c. Auspices: New Theatre Magazine. POLPEICAL PRISONERS NIGHT, Irving Plaza, Irving Pl. and 15th St. Speakers: Joseph Tauber, Joe Gilbert, Milton Hern- don and others. Entertainment: Cast of “Stevedore,”” National Negro Theatre, Workers Laboratory Theatre. Adm. 25¢. Auspices Tom Mooney Br., I. L. D. Pro- ceeds Herndon Defense Fund. RICHARD B. MOORE speaks on “‘Scotts- boro to Thaelmann.” Hinsdale Workers! fun and good food. Club, 572 Sutter Ave. Brooklyn. Aus-| MOONLIGHT CAMP FIRE given by Of- Pices: Alfred Levy Br., I. L. D. Adm. free. fice Workers Union, Saturday, July 28th. REGULAR MEMBERSHIP MEETING,| Take car No. 23 on llth St., get off at Prospect Park Br. F. S. U., 1071 Bergen | Mermaid Lane or meet 5 p.m. at 130 8, St., near Nostrand Ave., Brooklyn, 8:30| 8th St. Entertainment, food. Pp. m. Discussion on “Labor Conditions | in the Soviet Union and the United States.” OPEN AIR PROTEST MEETING at 47th St. and 10th Ave. Pat Toohey, editor of | Labor Unity will speak on “Fascist Terror | on the Pacific Coast.” Auspices: Boro SHOWING of Soviet anti-war film “Sniper.” Also “Bloody Memorial Day, in Los Angeles” and Chaplin comedy. Film and Photo League, 12 E. 17th St. Shows ing from 3 p.m. to 11 p.m. on Saturday, July 28th. Adm. 20c. OUTING TO CAMP KINDERLAND by Harlem Progressive Club, Sunday, July 29th at 6:30 a. m. Register any evening this week at 1888 Third Ave., near 104th St. Round trip $1. Philadelphia, Pa. PIONIO held under the auspices of Sec« tion 3, Communist Party on Sunday, Aug. 12th at 52nd and Parkside. Plenty: of PICNIC given by Dimitroff-Popoff Br, |. LD. on Sunday, July 29th at sand | and Parkside Ave. Milwaukee, Wis. PICNIC given by I. L. D. on Sunday, July 20th at Greenfield (Gebays) Grovi 047 W. Greenfield Ave. Gates open jgROBERT HAMILTON speaks on the'l 11 a.m. ‘Take Wells No. 10 "West Allis” Recent Events in Germany” at Labor| car to Sind. Walk three blocks north . 84th St, 8:90 p.m. Aus-| to Grove. AMUSEMENTS —JAMES W. FORD— Sie CONCERTS, Lewisohn Stadium, Amst.Ave.&138 St. Communist Leader, Comments on aus - ae fa “THE UNKNOWN |, Tough Thursday’ Ni SOLDIER SPEAKS” Sunday through Thursday Nights, 8:30 RMANDY Added Feature: FRISCO STRIKE NEWS Conducted by 01 '-ACME The., 14th St.,&UnionSq.— Opera Performances with Star Casts Friday Saturday Nights at 8:30 Conducted by SMALLENS '—Prices: 25¢-50e-$1.00(BRadhurst 2-2626). | | | | | 11:00-WEAF—Meyer Orch. | | Jewish and Gentile firms and in-)| dividuals at present dealing with} Cinelab Company are also urged to| boycott the company until such} time as Blander is re-instated on; the job. All those interested in! helping the case should communi- cate with the Film and Photo! League, 12 E, 17th St., New York! City. | NEW THEATRE NITE Wednesday, July 25th—at the NEW SCHOOL 66 W. 12th St. Three Films—Rene Clairs Satire “HORSE THAT ATE THE HAT’— Charlie Chaplin “THE FIREMAN”— New Soviet Cartoon “PEACE CONFERENCE” Two shows—7 and 9:30 P.M.—Adm. a5 j FINAL WEER! WILLIAM PATTERSON says: “Congratulations on the splendid stevedore CIVIC REPERTORY THEA. 105 W1tSt. | Eves. 8:45, Mats. Tues. & Sat. 2:45 |} 30e-40c-60C-75e-$1.00 & $1.50, No Tax tion is furnished by a study re- _ found that 200 research fellowships ~ | found to be a fertile source of prof="" Adm, 206.