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CHANGE -THE— TODAY—As Brisbane Would Write It 'HE newspapers are full of a number of things these days. A 19-year old son of a wealthy business man was shot and critically wounded by a patrolman efter a three-mile motorcycle chase. The youth, Philip W. Parker, Jr., was “stunting” on his machine when the policeman gave chase. While the officer was questioning him, according to the former's story, the youth suddenly started his motorcycle and suddenly sped off toward White Plains. This is food for thought for the Reds who for years have been Saying that the police are in the pay of Wall Street. Karl Marx was & grand old man in his way, but we all have lots of things to learn. * ‘ . Here I am riding on the Santa Fe Railroad. We’re now passing Albequerque which has a lower death rate from mosquito bites tihan any other city of its size. The Santa Fe is the kind of railroad that our forefathers must have dreamed of in the days when all they yhad was horses and buggies. Buckle’s monumental “History of Civili- zation” is a book that can teach us about this miracle. * ’ . Thousands of words appear each day in our newspapers. What @ thrilling adventure for so many thousands involved in this great game. One wonders whether those who are trying to organize the newspapermen realize that the men and women involved in this pro- fession are really artists of a sort, and not merely slaves like one finds in a textile mill. Journalism is an activity only for those who prize the thrill and wonder of life and its little foibles more than they do a few extra dollars in their pay envelopes, Herodotus was our first great Journalist! . * * In Camden, that quiet little industrial town in Jersey, comes the news that it took a jury only six minutes to convict a man of assault and battery. He was sentenced immediately to from 12 to 15 years in prison. The defendant was convicted of shooting Patrolman Frederick Blackburn, who tried to stop a car in which he and others were riding in Gloucester City. Another good example of Jersey justice, noted for its speed. Our system of common law affords us the kind of protection that is needed in our civilization: “He who laughs last laughs last.” Wise words are these. , Disturbing the Queen -“] HOPE,” writes Dale Curran, “you read the front-page story in yesterday's Herald-Tribune about the Communists and the Queen of Holland. It sounded like something out of a Gilbert and Sullivan opera. “The Associated Press, telegraphing madly from The Hague, said: ‘Three Communist members of the Dutch parliament who shouted in- sults after Queen Wilhelmina had finished an address to the law- makers were jailed today as an infuriated crowd tried to get at them.’ Knowing the A. P. and the H.-T., this was enough to arouse lively curiousity. It seems to tell so much, and there is obviously so much left out, What was the crowd infuriated about? What did the Com- munists do to the Queen? I’ve always believed the old story to the effect that ‘You cawn’t even approach her, you know.’ * “But the mystery clears up a bit when you read further. Says the A. P.; ‘The disturbance culminated a disorder outside as the Queen was approaching to open parliament. Ten automobile loads of demonstrators tried to break up the royal parade but were fought off by police.’ §S-0-o0-o-0! Where was the infuriated crowd then? Now we begin to get it. It must have been an infuriated crowd of cops. “After grudgingly admitting that the arrested: members were re- leased after questioning at police headquarters, the dispatch winds up with a paragraph that on the surface has nothing to do with the story. ‘It was disclosed tonight that the government proposed to spend $8,240,000 on new ships for the Hast Indian Navy and $2,065,000 on the nevy in Holland.’ “That's all the light the Associated Press can cast on the incident. But directly under it the United Press has its own brief dispatch. (No imagination, this U. P. crowd). ‘Three Communist members of parliament, arrested today, were charged with shouting “Down with Coinjn’s hunger program,” during the Queen’s speech. Dr, Hendrik Colijn is Premier.’ That's all. “There are several things wrong with this U. P. dispatch. It’s too short to carry a two-column head; it told in two sentences what the A. P. took half a column to hide; worst of all, it left out the old emotional appeal of the regal insult and the howling mob, all cops. There's no imagination here, and no cooperation. If these boys don’t get together better on their stories, there is going to be a shake- up among the foreign correspondents.” , . . Radios in Hock (ees on my recent cclumn on Nicholas Murray Butler of Columbia University, Richard Leighton writes: “You quote Nicholas Murray Butler to the effect that ‘Forty per cent of American families have radios in their homes.’ “As an example of the falsity of Butler's statement, let me say that my own radio has not been in my ‘home’ for more than a year now. It's still held by a man in his home as security for a $6 loan. When I mentioned this fact to two other friends of mine, both of them explained that they, too, have lost theirs to pawn shops. “In my own case the man who is holding my radio as security also has a radio in his home, making two in his and none in mine. “It's one thing to say that radio manufacturers have disposed of radios equivalent to 40 per cent of America’s homes. “It's something entirely different to state, as Nicholas Murray Butler does, that anywhere near that 40 per cent actually have radios in their homes.” . * * Companion-piece to the Gideon Bible INTERESTING news comes from the literary front. Those who have sometimes spent cheerless days in hotel rooms or in the monastic cells of the Y. M. C. A. will be glad to learn that the Gideon bible is being supplemented by a new thriller. The “Book Notes” of the New York Times, September 15, in- forms us that the American Tract Society, which supplies bibles to hotels, has sent in a large rush order for Tatiana Tchernavin’s fan- tastic hair-raiser, “Escape from the Soviets.” The only other literature that the hotel managers must now provide in order to complete the education of their patrons are the editorials in the Chicago Tribune and the frerizied anti-Communist publicity releases emitted by Ralph Easley of the National Civic Fed- eration. * * . Adios, But No Flowers, Please Ae talking about books, I expect to catch up on my reading during the next couple of weeks. I am looking forward to “China's Red Army Marches,” by Agnes Smedley; “Dimitrov,” by Stella D. Blagoyeva, and in the final days of convalescence I plan to tackle “Fascism and Social Revolution,” by R. Palme Dutte. I am counting on Comrade Trachtenberg of the Internationa! Publishers to send tliése books over to the hospital by special messenger. As for the readers of this column, please don’t send flowers. Instead, organize house parties, whist tour- naments and family gatherings and rush the proceeds to the Daily Worker $60,000 fund, crediting the same to this column. For I anticipate that my first words upon emerging from the ether, after my eprondix operation Monday will be, “Was the full quota raised?” Toward the $500 Quota— NAME ... ADDRESS Credit to “Change the World!” Column, WORLD! = DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 22. 1934 __ | Democracy Versus *A Manual of Arms In Dictatorship Is, Pamphlet’: sTheme| DICTATORSHIP AND DEN RACY IN THE SOVIET U by Anna Louise Strong. 0. 0. 5 GC- national Pamphlets Reviewed by | LISTON M. OAK |“FICTATORSHIP ve Democ- racy” is a question which agitates ) Americans throughout the coun-| | t Anna Louise Strong revorts | that on her lecture tour a large | percentage of the questions asked | her were concerned with this issue. Wide misunderstanding exists be-| cause the favorite way of slander- | ing the Soviet Union is to link the names of Stalin, Hitler andj | Mussolini, to identify proletarian | with fascist dictatorship. Both are castigated as un-American, un-| suited to conditio. here, Those loudest in praise of “American lib- erty and democracy” are often most Jenthusiastic about the New Deal| and the “strong-man” policy of the N.R.A. with its fascist tendencies, | and are also most violent in co! demnation of “Bolshevik tyranny Anna Louise Strong cites the} wider participation by the Soviet masses in all political and economic activities, as the primary criterion of the spread of real democracy. The Soviet government represents the “fiexible inclusion of millions of individual wills” in a collective ef- | fort toward building a better world, an economy of abundance, a so-| ciety in which there will be no need for dictatorship or state power of} any sort. On the road toward that | kind of society, Soviet toilers take | an active part in deciding every step; not only in carrying out plans but in making them. If the Soviet government were dominated by the individualistic tyranny of Stalin as portrayed by the enemies of the Soviets, it could never have survived these seven- teen years, could not mobilize the | determination and the enthusiasm of 170 millions in accomplishing the spectacular success of socialist | construction which are now indubit- able historic records. IN recent years, Anna Louise Strong | writes, perhaps a million kulaks, rich peasants who exploited hired labor, were exiled to other parts of the U. S, S. R. from European Rus- sia and the Ugraine. Who exiled} them? The ordinary picture given is of the ruthless and omnipotent | OGPU invading their homes at night, shooting some, spiriting others away secretly. Nothing of the sort happened. The poor peas- ants and farmhands, constituting | the vast majority of the rural popu- | lation, gathered publicly in village | Soviets, discussed their problems, decided which kulaks were impeding | by force the program for the solu- tion of these problems by collectivi- | zation, and asked their government to deport them. Thus proletarian dictatorship is| | basically workers’ democracy, direct- jed against their enemies. This! instance is given by Anna Louise | Strong as typical; she gives many others equally interesting. There is no gulf between Soviet | citizen and Soviet leader as e sts | between worker and __ politician, | citizen and official ruling class and} working class, in capitalist countries. Leaders alien from the masses lose their leadership in the U. S. S. R; they must have and keep the ap- proval and confidence of those among whom they live and work. The guiding principle is the most intimate relationship between offi- cials and-rank-and-file, the diffu- sion of power, of governmental ac- tivity, among the masses, It} works, Lo eee works is explained in detail this extraordinarily fine pamphlet, It deals convincingly and with clarity with the character | | and function of the Communist }—— Party in guarding the interests of | the workers, in fighting their class enemies, in creating a collective will, in organizing socialist com- HOY it petition, in fighting graft and sabotage, in organizing collective | leadership. No honest person who reads this | pamphlet can ever again believe there is any similarity, either in aim or method, between fascist and proletarian dictatorship. TUNING IN 7:00 P.M,-WEAF—Baseball Resume WOR—Sports Resume—Ford Prick WiJZ—To Be Announced WABC—Jerry Cooper, Songs 7:15-WEAF—Homespun—Dr. William H. Foulkes WOR—Danny Dee, Commentator WJZ—Stamp Club—Capt. T. Healy WABC—Whet the New Deal Has Done for Agriculture—Edward A. Oneal, President American Farm Bureau Federation, from Chicazo 7:30-WEAF—Martha Mears, Songs WOR—The O'Neills—Sk WsZ—From Honolulu; Hawaiian Music WABC—Jack Smith, Songs ‘7:45-WEAF—Flyod Gibbons, Commentator WOR—To Be Announced WABC—Mary Eastman, Soprano; Concert Orch. 8:00-WEAF—Bestor Orch. WoOROrchestral Concert, Augusto Brandt, Conductor WJZ—Joseph N. Weber, Pres. Amer. Fed. of Musicians, speaking at Musicians’ Protective Association Dinner, Rochester, N. Y. WABC—Roxy Revue; Henrietta Sohu- mann, Piano; Claire Majette, Songs; Dorthy Miller, Soprano; John Gurney, Baritone 8:30-WEAF—Canadian Concert WOR—Organ Recital WJZ—Mercado Mexican Orch. 8:45-WABC—Fats Waller, Songs 9:00-WEAF—Veterans of Foreign Wars 35th = Anniversary —_ Celebration; Speakers, Major Gen. Smedley But- Jer, James E. Van Zandt, Com- mander-in-Chief V.F.W., etc. WOR—Della Baker, Soprano; Chas. Massinger, Tenor WJ2—Radio City Party, with John B. Kennedy; Black ‘Orch. WABC—Stevens Orch. 9:30-WEAF—The Gibson Family—Musical Comedy, with Conrad Thibault, Baritone; Lois Bennett, Soprano; Jack and Loretta Clemens, songs; Voorhees Orch. and Others WABC—Benjamin 10:00-WOR—John Kelvin, Tenor WJZ—To Be Announced WABC—Dance Orch. 10:15-WOR—Peuline Alpert, Piano 10:30-WEAF—To Be Announced WOR-Dance Orch. WJZ—Barn Dance WABC—Michaux Congregation 10:45-WEAF—Siberian Singers, Direction Nicholas Vasilieff, Tenor | JN the past our | will not only be of great benefit to | one industry in the history of the | | lated |in the past few days. | Jong experience in the labor move- ' the Textil e Struggle’ on, T. U. U. L. Secretary Urges Wide Disiribution for New Pamphlet by Hathaway By JACK STACHEL Communist Party was very slow and often entirely | failed to publish pamphlets draw- ing the lessons of the strike strug- gles. Lately this is being overcome In the last year a number of very important pemphlets on the lessons of the strike st gles. But in the pamphlet just off the press, “Communists in the Strike” by Comrade Hathawa: have the first pamphlet pul right in the heat of a strike, it | | | Cc. A, HATHAWAY | the Party and to atl worker in fu-| ture struggles. Above all it is a tre-| mendous weapon in the fight to win United States. This pamphlet should be circu- in 100,000 copies IN THE NEXT FEW DAYS. If this will be done, we will be able to ascribe to this little pamphlet an honorable place in drawing the lessons of the future. For I am convinced that it will greatly affect the out- come of the strike. “Communists in the Textile| Strike” written by the editor of the| Daily Worker, with an introduction | by Comrade Alex Bittelman, con- sists of a series of editorials that) have appeared in the Daily Worker | Comrade Hathaway has written these editorials on the basis of his ment and fresh from the scene of the great Minnesota strike. In thees editorials he daily answered the burning quest facing the| workers in this historic struggle. | He has combined in these editorials | the basic policies in strike leader- ship as worked out by the revolu- tionary trade union movement| through years of experience, with an intimate knowledge of the prob- Jems of the textile strike, the an- swers of numerous political ques- tions raised by the capitalist class, the government and the AFL bu- reaucracy. It is truly a manual on how to carry on and win the textile strike, how to build and ex- tend the influence of the Party. eo, 8 8 IN. the last few days I have had oc- casion to meet with our organiz- ers of New England and New Jersey personally, as well as to receive daily letters from our comrades in | all of the striking areas, north and urge all our Party comrades in field to give this pamphlet the wid- est circulation. Listening to the report of the New England organizers, I was pleas- antly surprise that despite the still | great underestimation of the Daily Worker much progress has been made in bringing our Party’s cen- tral organ to the strikers. All of the organizers, without exception, | had nothing but praise for the way the Daily Worker is reacting to the strik Not only is the “Daily” printing the most important news | of the strike, but above, alll thi | pointed out, the paper provides the | organizers every day with the | answers to questions | raised in the strike, both pol | and organizational. Even more im- portant was the report of the or-/ | ganizers as to the response of the workers to the Daily Worker. Every organizer, without exception, pointed out that the workers were most eager to get the “Da‘ One comrade in New Bedford was able to sell 126 Saturday morning and took another 150 copies for the same | afternoon. The same reports came | from ali comrades who scriously made efforts to bring the Daily Worker to the strikers. Unfortu- nately, however, still only a small | number of the Party members were engaged in this work. One co! rade report “We sold 300 copies and could have sold 2,000 more if we had them.” As I was listening to the reports of the comrades I was regretting that this valuable guidance that the Daily Worker provided for our | organizers and the workers received jonly the small circulation that it did. It was therefore a welcome surprise to me when I learned o the plan to publish the most im- | portant editorials in the form of a pamphlet. I am sure that this will be welcomed by the Party organiza- tions and that with a little effort tens of thousands of copies can be distributed in the next few days. IN THIS pamphlet are to be found the answers to the burning ques- tions facing the strike today—how to spread the strike, the election of rank and file strike committees, the popularization of the demands of the strike, the demands of the Negro textile workers, the explana- | tion of and the fight against arbi- tration, the defeat of the “red scare,” the mobilization of support and solidarity for the strike, the | fight against terror, the organiza- tion of relief, the bringing forward of the Party program and recruit- ing into the Party, etc. It com- bines both a manual for the or- ganizers, and an appeal to the strik- ers. It answers the questions to the textile workers as to the role of the Party in the strike and at the same time is an appeal to all workers to support the textile work- ers. No organizer, no textile striker, |no worker should be deprived of the privilege of reading and studying this pamphle!. It depends upon the Party organizations how many workers will find it possible to se- cure a copy of this pamphlet, There is only one shortcoming in this pamphlet that I wish to pers out. In the rush to get it cut a suscription blank for the Daily | Worker and an application card to | the Party were omitted. The com- | rades in the field can overcome! this by either inserting, if possible, | such matcrial in each pamphlet sold, or at least approaching cve worker who buys the pamphlet 0: | the Daily Worker subscription and joining the Communist Party, Adamie Deseribes Effect Of ‘1917’ on His Work ° On the occasion of the recent Soviet Writers Congress, the Sec- retariat of the International Union of Revolutionary Writers addressed three questions to prominent writers in a number of countries. The questions were: What influence has the Bolshe- vik Revolution had upon your work? What do you think ef So- viet literature? What problems interest you most at this time? Among the American writers to whom these questions were ad- dressed are Joseph Freeman, Theodore Dreiser, Malcolm Cow- ley, Louis Adamic, Isider Schnei- der, Granville Hicks, Corliss La- mont, Joseph Kalar, James Steele. We have already re- printed the answers of Joseph Freeman and Malcolm Cowley. Today we are publishing the an- swer of Louis Adamic, author of “The Native’s Return,” “Laugh- ing in the Jungle,” and other bocks. The answers of other writers will be printed in sub- sequent issues of the Daily Work- er.—Editor’s Note, ee By LOUIS ADAMIC 'HE existence and achievements of the Soviet Union have been for years one of the most important factors in my intellectual and emo- tional consciousness. The ideas, principles, and methods which are the basis of the Soviet Union doubi- less are the highest promise and hope that humanity has today. In the U. S. S. R. alone the two chief virtues of human life, energy and intelligence, are successfully teamed and harnessed to pull mankind up the road of progress... . oe ee 'Y opinion of Soviet literature?. . The novels and short stories of | the Soviet writers that have come to my attention in English transla- tion seem to me technically in- ferior to the novels and short stories produced by non - Communistic | writers in the United States and individuals) to grow up to statures commensurate with the colossal other capitalist countries. But that is natural. The revolutionary writers in the U. S. S. R. are still experimenting with forms, looking for themselves as artists, trying to invent styles which would be effec- tive for their materials, trying (as LOUIS ADAMIC goings-on within the borders of their enormous empire. One vecent translation into English that in- terested me very much was the novel, Time Forward! ee oe T events and cultural pro- cesses in capitalist countries are specially attracting my attention? A year ago I returned from an ex- tended visit to my native land, Yugoslavia, where I had found a tense revolutionary situation. I just published a book about that. Yugo- slavia and the rest of Balkans and :| Eastern Europe are a vastly im- portant factor in the world situa- tion, much more important than generally recognized, and I eagerly watch for developments in that part of the world. Lately Cuba has been very interesting. So has been the Far East, And, of course, there is |\Socialist Leader Tells of Visit to Gov. Ely of Mass. The following is written by 2 member of a united front dele- gation which recently calied on Gov. Ely of } husetts to de- mand a cessation of the terror against striking textile workers and for the right to strike and picket. The delegation included prominent writers, ministers and leading intellectuals, — Editor’s Note. + ee By JOHN WHEELW HT WENT to talk to G ys he is all for ppiness of , the hi | ers who won piness of the owners of textile mi and He i not 1 tors sarily y (which comes and goes and which no one can call back now) but for happiness, just | for happiness. To bring hapiness to New Eng- land, he is ready to call out the | National Guard. Capitalism, all conceivable economi brings the greatest hi greatest nu er, he belie It its faults, such as unemployment, and to set it right Governor Ely is prepared to call out the N Guard. He is det ined to nt to work. Now sounds good—but, just a minute, what does His Excellency mean, He means, and says he means that if the operators (he has some in mind) gi surance that the ma, workers are content to work under present conditions, then, he, Gover- | nor Ely, considers it his armed guard, eee HAT may sound fair enough—the | has been given up by protection of the rights of indi- viduals and all that; but to any one who knows anything about at 1 s just as anarcr t the alled out to pre rence of the majority of or Governor when the ozganizec voters had elected a Democrat to| office. What would happen to the) political will of the maj Just the same thing that would happen to the trade unionists’ right to collective bargaining if Governor Ely had his way. He maintains that if some work- ers in a mill want to strike and want to persuade all the others to do so, they have -absolutely call in the aid of strikers in any ether mill or town to heip tien He considers this an interference | With the “ri k.” It’s about as much interference as ward heel ing from block to block in given precinct is an fe with the right to vote; go down with any one y iow anything about trade union- n. How in the mill is in co; other mill, can one town when in another Organized w ‘ theiz ideas” to organized worke: no matter whether they live in the town, bk or some county, or state—o?| | nation for that matter. Governor Ely’s ideas are about as sensible |the idea that he could outlaw a | salesman for a union-made cigaretie 1! who apprcached t | non-union cigarette. eos UT the matter is more serious. Im2gine the intimidation counting the votes of the worke who want to avail themselves of} “right to work.” Imagine the pressure put upon the possible | to strike | intimidation of any who may change their minds with the passage of time. Governor Ely ys hi the happi of r als, of workers jenough to stand for the nd the hours that other too rugged to stand for. jb ve the tively, Oh yes, but scabs have the “right to work.” As these two rights contradict each other, National Guard must be called out} to protect scabs. Governor aged rugged speed-up worke Strikers any old conditions, work wealth of Massachuse eMess of the slave. tts is the hap- NEW YORK.—A general assembly of all students of the Workers School will be held today at 35 E. 12 St., 2nd floor, 2 p.m. A Dis- trict representative of the Commu- nis Party will address the students. All students are urged to attend this important assembly. |Los Angeles Workers Reopen M.W.LU. Hall port of Los Angeles, the Marine Workers Industrial Union Hall, at 246 W. Sixth St., is open again. Four times raided, the hall was closed shortly befsre the end of the recent strike by armed police and police-recruited thugs. the “New Deal” in the United} will help bring on a new world war, which i expect will end in a world revolution—in the sovietiza- tion of all the countries. .. On the side of culture,I consider the most notewovthy the growing radicali- zation of serious writers and artists everywhere, (From International Literature No. American Distributors, International lishers.) ; is stopped. Page Seven | LABORATORY AND SHOP By DAVID RAMSEY Chemists Discover Mysterious Current Two chemi: schel Hunt 2 of Pur electrical curre! ing after its’ e been cut off. Th established thecrie: A “Brain Vitamin” in,” B-4, has been ues to go on in a Y second to a minute after the current | ¢ phantom. h investigation is coverers saic ine whether unit intangible appears ab- h thi are belit is y brain tis 8 | History and ene ohana Objectivity vitamin to Bourgeois historians used to at-|0f a person. uty to see | former interpreted historcial events | that they get to work, under an | from the point of view of the ruling county for a Republican | inferiority comp! then? | 2nd unas | | { | | | The bourgeois ; | seis | the fa as | smoker of ‘ Last | that | will go on while the operators are| minority who declare for their right | And finally, imegine the | is all for'| right to bargain collec- | the | Ely’s plan to protect | work is nothing more or less than} a plan to force work—work under | at the} point of the bayonet, and the threat | of the bomb. The happiness which | Ely would bring to the Common-| Gen’] Assembly Today | [CARE SAN PEDRO, Sept. 20.—Backed | |by more than 30 workers from the | States, with its imperialism that | | Nazis intend to re-write history | the viewpoints tack Marxists for asserting that the Electric Shocks Reveal Brain Conditions Dr. George Kreezer has found a clue to the brain co tal deficiency in class. Today the pretense of bour- geois social scientists to objectivity the ideologists f fascis: Pr senberg, the e age Aes ts berg, the w es of idio {ees era ges ae ternn,| to electric currents. Mus ba di ster on mentally deficient people having a tember 17. that the fascists were se mental g to re-write German differently r to conquer “doctrines that see} to currents electri ~*~|than normal people do. The reace to the German | #0" of the former has some resem- i to Whe German) bience to that of an animal who jpeones . . has had an i: to the higher iit is not true,” he declared, “that| centers of its brain. This latter there is such a thing as an objective | lable view of histor ts only “a German y: state in ani Pavi and h Amusements oa WALTER HUSTON in SINCLAIR LEWIS’ ODSWORTH als has been studied by students. There osenberg means that the| in| order to place the Germar rialists in a favorable 1i is nothing new his procedure. ns have al- I ways written hist is new is M tuling cl Dramstized by SIDNEY HOWARD Rosenberg’s attack on the fiction| SHUBERT, West 4ith St. 400 seats $1.10 Evs. 8:40 sharp. Mats that objectivity is the goal of bour- , Wed. & Sat. 2:30 history. It signifies that ; Film and Photo League prese! PROGRAM OF SHORTS ln ms of libera n. It must at- tack anything that even pretends to |aim at the truth. | In conclusion, we should note that ist historians do not claim to npartial. Their work ana rical events from the vie SECOND EXPERIMENTAL nade SEPTEMB: R 22. 5 and 9:30 P.M. SATURDAY, Iwo Performances: at NEW SCHOOL FOR SOCIAL RESEARCH 66 West 12th Street in advance at Film and 12 E. 1%th 8t.; Masses, 31 E. 27th St.; Workers Bool Shop, 50 E. 13th St. Tickets at door etails at all times with cts of a situation, their his- torical writings are truly objective. Salt Is Not a Taste According to Dr. Samuel Renshaw of Ohio State University, there is! th ST. THEATRE on Broadway 9:30 A. M. TO MIDNIGHT | | POPULAR fF | Newds “Well put tegether.” DAILY WORKER—“Smashing Anti-Fascist Indictment.” “ERNST THAELMANN” A Film History That Makes History Special Anti-Fascist Program All Saturday Eve. AUSPICES—THAELMANN LIBERATION COMMITTEE i) The Birth of Internationalism! 2nd WEEK! “MASS The DAILY WORKER y “New Russian film worthy addi- tion to Soviet art.” DOSTOYEVSKI’ 5 STRUGGLE” | “PETERSBURG | A Soviet Talkie in 4 Lan- | MiGs’ beep ete T SUPER TALKING FILM Produced t Odessa Comsomol Titles)—2nd BIG WEEK _ | St es Spee r musical score of Ukrain- lodies (English Titles). TILL AP ES outaln it ACME THEA. 0% & Union Sq. “ICOR” CERT SIDOR BELARSKY In a Progrsin of Soviet Folk Songs NATIONAL NEGRO THEATRE Will present DONALD HEYWOOD and his NEGRO DANCE GROUP from ‘AFRICANA’ In African and Mode ican Negro Dances NORMAN CAZDEN Famous Piano Soloist in a Program ef Classic, Modern and Soviet Compositions SATURDAY, SEPT. 22nd TOWN HALL 8:30 P. M. 113-123 W. 43rd St., Near B’way Tickets 50c, 75¢ and $1.00, Tax Exempt, at “‘Icor,”" 799 Broadway, N. ¥., Room 514, Workers Bock Shop, 50 E. 13th St., Town Hall Box Office On Day of Concert CO) Soviet MUSIC | DANCE RECITALS Eight Dance Recitals, Oct. 13, Nov. 17, Dec. 15, Jan. 19, Feb. 2, Mar. 8, Mar. 23, Apr. 27. shaw & His Ensemble Dorsha of Men Dancers Sophia Delza $1-CHAMBER MUSIC - $1 Oct. 7, Nov. 2, Dec. 16, Jan. 4, Feb. 15, Apr. 5: Gordon String Quartet—Barrere- Salzedo-Britt—Clarence Adler é& Boris Charles Weidman Martha Graham Miriam Winslow Carola Goya WASHINGTON IRVING H. S. Irving Place and 16th Street for the series of eight Wachinwius Irving H. S. Irving Place and 16th Street | $] For sub: certs. Mail orders to People’s recitals. Mail orders to Symphony Concerts, 32 Union || ° Students’ Dance Recitals, Square (STu. 9-1391). Also on 8? Union Square (STu. sale at Lord & Taylor's and at Wanamaker's.