The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 19, 1934, Page 5

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+ DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1934 - Page 5 CHANGE | ——THE — WORLD! By MICHAEL GOLD NDREW CARNEGIE was a vicious exploiter of labor and as pious as a Presbyterian pastor. John D. Rocke- feller, Sr., on his ninety-second birthday, appealed to the people of America to have faith in God and all would be well. The Vanderbilts are habitual church-goers. J. P. Morgan has the finest collection of rare books outside of the Vatican, Millionaires are patrons of the arts, believers in the grace of God, and students of Greek philosophy. Now Secretary of Labor Perkins, the lady strikebreaker, has raised her treble in praise of the brother- hood of man. * * . Perkins at Holyoke HE was addressing the students of Mount Holyoke College on Founder's Day. I once saw Perkins addressing a meeting of women at the Hotel Astor in the newsreels. She has a technique of removing her pince-nez glasses every time she gets around to the emotional high points in her speech. Comes the time when the Secretary of Labor prepares to invoke the glory of womanhood or to sound the depths of patriotic staunchness, and the glasses are pinched off her nose, The first time I saw that gesture repeated, I decided to myself that Perkins suffered from an inability to see those shining and glori- ous virtues to which she was making such fervent appeals. She found it necessary, evidently, to remove her spectacles in order to get a closeup view of that Utopia in which workers like lambs would lie down in the arms of bankers and the profit system of America would proceed peacefully. . . Brotherhood—In Theory T HOLYOKE COLLEGE I can imagine Frances removing her glasses in the same gesture as she hit the high point about the brother- hood of man. “In theory,” she said (and off came the glasses), “the desire of the whole American people is for unity, for brotherhood.” She peered closer at this theory, and hastened to assure the un- dergraduates that the trouble with it was “that too many people are content to emotionalize about it and too many intelligent believers are content to talk about it.” It is extremely possible that the moment that the Secretary of Labor had uttered the statement that the whole American people are for “brotherhood,” there rose in her mind a vision of the recent Amer- ican Banker's Conference. With a closeup picture of the bond issues being planned by Morgan and Co., or the speculative adventures of Andy Mellon, she decided at the moment that perhaps she should qualify her statement about the brotherhood business. It was better to say that these cut-throats believe it in “theory,” which never harmed a stockholder in the history of capitalism, 8 * * The Things of the Spirit 'URTHER in her speech, the Secrétary of Labor passed from the brotherhood of man to the things of the spirit. Whenever insur- ance brokers, bankers or politicians begin to talk about spiritual things and the life of the soul, workers should beware. The bour- geoisie has a remarkable aptitude for striking up poses of the saints and preachers and to talk about the higher things in life whenever the question arises of higher wages or unemployment insurance. The Secretary of Labor likewise felt a supreme uplift of the soul thinking of the clamoring need of the American workers for food and shelter. According to her pious ladyship, “the problem of today is to correlate mass production with a system which is broader than mere material living.” So, The Honorable Secretary of Labor thinks that being hungry, unemployed, worrying about the rent day in and day out, sleeping on park benches, bumming freights, standing on breadlines, being pushed and shoved around Home Relief Bureaus, sweating in mills and factories, being shot and murdered by thugs on picket lines, being lynched and exploited and cheated and deceived by the capitalist class and its thousands of paid and degenerate flunkeys—this life of the working class in America, is “mere” material living! . * A Thing of Beauty “(ULTIVATE the things of the mind and spirit, become interested in the production of beauty.” This is the message of the Honor- able Secretary. The undergraduates of Holyoke are not exactly mem- bers of the working class. Their papas keep offices, labor spies, and gilt-edge bonds. Go home, little undergraduates, and tell your papa to cultivate his spirit a little. Tell him to start producing things of beauty. Tell him that the Secretary of Labor said that he shouldn’t be interested in “mere” material living; there are greater things in life than swindling, buying and selling, cornering markets, manufac- turing munitions, starting wars, cutting wages, bribing senators. Do you know what your papa will say about the good words of Frances Perkins? He'll say, “Darling, you shouldn’t listen to dema- gogues,” or “Darling, ‘mere’ material living bought you that ermine coat last winter and that new sports roadster.” And what answer will you give him, dear Holyokians? I suggest you investigate some of the things of beauty Mrs. Per- kins herself has produced. I suggest you learn some of the ways she has achieved the higher levels where the spirit lives. See what salary she gets as Secretary. Total the number of workers she has helped to defraud through the tricky arbitration Boards of the N. R. A. See if, like the poor, she sleeps in rooms where the public utilities have cut off all gas, electric and water. See if she produced anything quite as beautiful as that masterpiece of capitalist art—a child starving while milk is poured down sewers. See if her brotherhood of man extends beyond the brothers of Wall Street. And when you are all through, perhaps you will reconcile your- self to papa’s “material” ermine coats and the new sports roadster. After that, you, like the Secretary, can devote yourself to social work, and to lying, hypocritical speeches. Well-fed, well-clothed, admired, manicured, hair-waved, you can step before any microphone in the broadcasting stations of America, and advise the workers not to fight against hunger, but to lie down in the name of Jesus Christ and starve for Mrs. Perkins’ class. en GOLD TO PRESENT ORIGINAL MANUSCRIPTS OF COLUMN Numerous readers have expressed a keen desire to have Comrade Gold present the original manuscripts of “Change the World” to the highest bidder each day. This department has managed to excavate some of these, and will, in the future, preserve the precious copies as an alternative to “Jews Without Money.” They will be autographed. Y¥. ©. L. House Party $ 2.50 Previously received . -$386.54 Total $389.04 Quota $500, - To the highest contributor each day, Mike Gold will present an autographed copy of his novel, “Jews Without Money,” or an original autographed manuscript of his “Change the World” column, An Epic of Anti-Fascist Struggle Faken xbddtied Ack sabres A Aa By STELLA D. BLAGOYEVA ' The Nazis could not gag Georgi Dimitrov, though their noose was slung around his neck, Blagoyeva, Dimitrov’s friend and comrade for 35 years, has packed into her fighting biography all the drama in the life of the hero of the Leipzig trial. CLOTH .75 INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHERS $81 FOURTH AVENUE @ NEW YORK, N. y. — International Publishers 381 Fourth Avenue, New York T am interested in your pub- lications and would like to re- ceive your catalogue and book news. NBIC oonssesesecrsasesneersseenerenrersnetnseents Address <On Hm | Plotting the American Professors Hired to De- liver Pro-Hitler Lectures This is the second instalment of the eighth article of a series by John L. Spivak on “Plotting the American Pogroms,” appearing weekly The New Masses, through whose courtesy the Daily Worker has been given permis- sion to ‘reprint them simultane- ously. In his previous articles, Spivak produced overwhelming | Proof of widespread and organ- ized anti-Semitic activities in this country, closely linked up with Nazi Germany, operating under various disguises such as the Order og 76, Silver Shirts, etc., and involving individuals like former Congressman Louis T. McFadden of Pennsylyania, Ralph Easley, chairman of the Execu- tive Council of the National Civic Federation, George Sylvester Viereck, active Nazi propogandist and Viola Tima, head of the Youth Movement. In this article Spivak turns his attention to Nazi | Propaganda in our schools and | colleges, BBR oe By JOHN L. SPIVAK i, | POINT out these facts briefly to give the reader a notion of how the long arm of Nazi anti-semitic activities works in this country. It is not only active among the stu- dents. It extends to the American professors and teachers, some of whom are conscious Nazi agents, as well as the using of prominent Ger- man professors who visit this coun- try, like Professor Frederick Schone- man of the University of Berlin, who in his eager desire to give pro- Hitler lectures is willing to travel around anywhere in the United States and speak for nothing. If rd exepenses are paid, he is grate- ul. Professors in the universities, like Thomas Alexander of Columbia University—who heads the list of the anti-semitic Order of 76's prominent professorial names of those who will deliver pro-Hitler talks—takes advantage of every op- portunity to address gatherings and offer a defense of Hitlerism — as Professor Alexander has done and is doing. It is this eminent Pro- fessor Alexander who met with one of Gulden’s secret, agents, Olga Grunewald, “consulting psycholo- gist," who went to him after she had been at the German Consulate on May 1, 1934, to discuss organiz- ing a branch of the anti-semitic eee of 76 at Columbia Univers- ity. Professor Alexander assured this secret agent of his fullest coopera- tion. The meeting between this secret agent and the professor took place in the professor's study on May 10, 1934. It was Professor (C)—PLOTTING J Alexander, too, who aided this secret agent in drawing up.a list of over Noble Minded M To The New Masses: Having faith in your spirit of Pogroms. Lawyer Writes New Masses a Letter r. Bruderhausen’s fairness, we are justified in calling attention to a misstatement of fact in your edition of October 9, 1934, on page 12 in the article by John L. Spivak Plotting the American Near the end of the third column on page 12, you state the follow- ing: “... At another time, the propaganda was consigned to ‘respect- able’ addresses. Each ship has a specific address or collection of ad- dresses to which material is sent. The SS. St. Louis which docks at Pier 86, for instance, (in case Customs Officials are interested), has its anti-semitic propaganda wrapped up in neat packages and con- signed to the German Book Import Company, 27 Park Place, New York City or to A. Bruderhausen Book Shop, 15 West 45th Street, New York City.” If there were a scintilla of tru which you speak. Indeed, Mr. Bruderhausen is not a Mr. Bruderhausen is too noble Law Offices of H, A. and C, E. Heydt 521 Fifth Avenue Jew haters in the country. For a time he edited Das Neue Deutsch- land, and the anti-semitic Nazi newspaper, the Deutsche Zeitung, which today sets the pace in spread- ing the “hate-the-Jew” creed. Fred Scheibe is not only a mem- ber of the Friends of the New Ger- many which takes the lead in spreading the “hate-the-Jew” creed but appears frequently as one of the chief speakers at Nazi propa- ganda meetings. In this way “unpaid volunteers” who spread Nazi and anti-semitic propaganda creep into our schools and colleges. . would take too much space to list all the students, professors and instructors in our schools and colleges who consciously and un- consciously carry on anti-semitic propaganda as well as defend Hitler policies. I found these teachers in almost every university and college in the land. Some are not active Nazis, but in a shrewd, scholarly manner present pictures of Nazi Germany which gives the impres- sion that all's well in that desolate land. For instance, Professor Hartel, a German connected with Storrs Ag- 100 professors and teachers in New York and Philadelphia who might become members of the Order of ’76 to carry on espionage activities and anti-semitic propaganda. Some of our leading teachers like Mrs. Elizabeth Schrader, head of the German Department of the New York State Department of Education, are members of Nazi or- ganizations. How much Mrs. Schra- der has to do with the appointment of “unpaid volunteer” teachers of German in the New York schools I do not know but I cannot imagine that Martin Hartmann and Fred Scheibe, who as “unpaid volunteer” teachers work under her, were ap- pointed without her knowledge. It would have been difficult to get them a regular teacher’s pay but these generous souls volunteered to “teach” for nothing. And certainly it is difficult to be- lieve that Mrs. Schrader, a member of Nazi organizations, does not know that these two “unpaid volunteers” are among the leading anti-semitic propagandists in the country and that they welcome an opportunity to carry on their pro-Hitler and anti-semitic activities right in the heart of the New York school sys- tem where they can influence not only students but teachers who in their turn can influence countless other students. If Mrs, Schrader pleads ignorance and the New York State Depart- ment of Educaiton wishes to know more about these volunteer propa- gandists, I shall be glad to give them full details. At present, I think it is sufficient to say that Hartmann is one of the most rabid CORRECTION In Friday’s Daily Worker, -there was a serious error in the article on this page announcing publication of the November is- sue of “The Communist.” The last sentence of the first para- graph, reading “The same is true of the needle workers,” should have been “The same is true of the dress section of the needle trades workers.” th in respect to Mr. Bruderhausen, the allegations would be passed by—but it isn’t true and we feel you do not wish to sponsor misstatements and we are authorized by Mr. Bruderhausen to say that he never received any such propaganda of In other words, the statement is harmful to him and makes a characterization which is absolutely untrue to fact, type to lend himself to any propa- ganda against the Jewish race for heis proud to claim among his friends and customers many of that faith, ~minded to seek retribution simply for a misstatement of fact and deems he has done his duty by calling your attention to it, trusting that you at the proper time and in your manner may correct the error because it has been seen by many of his friends and thus may prove harmful to him if not corrected HERMAN A. HEYDT. (On May 8, 1934, the S.S. St. Louis docked at Pier 86. It had on board anti-semitic pamphlets wrapped and addressed to A, Bruder- hausen Bookshop, 15 West 45th Street, New York City. hausen is correct in saying he never received the literature. The package was opened by an inspector and confiscated.—J. L. 8.) je EEE Mr. Bruder- ricultural College in Storrs, Conn., not only carries on active pro-Hitler propaganda at the college, but glad- ly accepts speaking engagements throughout New England at which he defends Hitler’s anti-Jewish policies. Karl F. Geiser, professor of Political Science in Oberlin College, in another one of those who sees in Hitler an influence for the good, I mention these not to single them out among the many but to impress the reader with the ava- lanche of anti-semitism in our high- est, institutions of learning. Professors accept free passages to Nazi Germany and no country or shipping company in the world gives out free passages without ex- pecting something in return. So I wonder what actuated the Ham- burg-American and North German Lloyd lines to give a first-class pas- sage to the wife of a C, C. N. Y. instructor, Mrs. C. von Bradisch who sailed on the S.S. New York on May 18, 1933, to be followed on August 10, 1933 on the same ship by her husband, listed as Prof. J, von Bradisch. This wonderment is based on a letter that R. T. Kessemeier, the resident manager in Philadelphia of the North German Lloyd and Hamburg-American lines wrote to Robert. Biele of Philadelphia in WORLD of the THEATRE GOLD EAGLE GUY: a play by Melvin Levy. Presented by the Group Theatre of New York. At the Majestic Theatre, Boston. Reviewed by N. S. r EVERY port of the Pacific and most ports throughout the world, the ships openly and blatantly bearing the Dollar sign on their stacks have long been known by the seamen and the native longshore- men as the emissaries of their mos’ rapacious exploiter—the Dollar line. ‘The placing of the dollar sign upon the stacks as the symbol of the line, representing its ideals, is similar to the way in which Mussolini exalts the fasces—the instruments with which the populace was scourged and executed in ancient Rome —the unashamed symbol of unfettered capitalism’ and capitalist dictator- ship. The founder of this line— Robert Dollar—was one of the most vicious exploiters and labor-haters in the marine industry. Uneques- tionably he is the prototype of the central figure in Melvin Levy's play —“Gold Eagle’ Guy Button. The rise of “Gold Eagle’ Guy over the period of 40 years covered by the play is the rise of capitalism on the West Coast, based upon theft, swindling and murder. Guy Button has all the crude animal strength and drive of the Jack Lon- don heroes, but unlike Jack Lon- don’s strong-man capitalists—Burn- ing Daylight, Smoke Bellew, etc.— Guy Button’s strength is the im- personal strength of capital—the strength only to accumulate, to pile wealth upon wealth. This is the strength which enables him to snatch the Keane Shipping Co. from the weak hands of his part- ner and build up the Gold Eagle Lines with ships and docks all over the Pacific. It is the strength which is coupled with the most brutal destruction of everything that stands in the way of accumulation—the terrific ex- Little Lefty Ploitation of coolie labor which he WE NOW “AKE You toe (i res is the first to import, the destruc- tion in his personal life of his own friends, of his wife who is driven to her death by his ruthless spirit, of his love for the actress Ada man- ken whom he never wins because he knows only how to dominate and master, and of the talented young artist whom he inspires with his talk about strength and then ties to his own golden chariot. In all that he does, Gold Eagle Guy feels himself the instrument of the Lord. His crowning achieve- nent, the sinking of one of his own ships after stealing its cargo of gold, he plots together with God. “And maybe the valves would then be opened and the Lord would let the ship go down and none would know.” And when his assistant leaves to carry out the job, it is more in warning than in prayer, as one partner to another, that Guy solemnly utters, “God, don’t you let nothing happen to that young fel- Jer!” The class struggle does not ap- pear in the pay!—except as a dim background in the panic of 1879— as an alternative inspiration which the young artist vaguely begins to feel. And when the crash comes— symbolized by the San Francisco earthquake of 1906—it comes on the basis of inner. conflict alone, the Lord crushing not only Guy's ene- mies, but Guy also. ‘The play receives a fine collective production from ihe Group Theatre Players. Necessarily everything cen- ters on the main character; and Bromberg, the actor who played Dimitroff in New York, gives a magnificent picture of “Gold Eagle” at the different stages of his 40- year career. The acting of all the players is characterized by an in- telligent understanding of the so- cial forces back of the people they are depicting. The excellent set- tings contribute further to a pro- duction of the greatest interest and of considerable educational value on the true picture of the hey-day of t “rugged individualism.” Pogrom Free European Trips Supplied by German Steamship Lines June, 1933 is. j the Fri s of New G organization which lead in anti-semitic member of propag: this country. This letter stated Enclosed you l find a list of Professors in the various colleges which will no doubt be of assistance to you.” The professors listed as prospec- tive aids for this Nazi-directed anti- semitic organization include the following: Or. Ernst Jockers, University of Pennsylvania. Prof. Doernenburg, La Salle College, Phila. Dr. Harry W. Pfund, Carl Schurz Foundation, at present at Haverford College, Haverford, Pa, Dr. Preston A. Barba, Allen- town, Pa. Prof. Daniel B. Shumway, Uni- versity of Penn. Prof. George Bickel, School, Pottstown, Pa. Dr. Karl Reuning, Swarthmore College. C. R. Walter Thomas, Dickin- son College. Prof. W. Haussmann, German Department, Central High School, Broad and Green Streets, Phila, *, is Bee referring to those prom- inent educators who were giyen free passages to Nazi Germany, it is as good a time as any to point out that the Hamburg-American and North German Lioyd lines are members of the Transatlantic Con- ference with headquarters at 80 Broadway, N. Y. City. This con- ference provides severe penalties for giving free passages by any of its members, Six months ago the Hamburg- American and North German Lloyd lines were caught by Emil Lederer, sole arbiter of the Conference, giv- ing free passages to four people. The German shipping lines were fined some $60,000 but the fine was kept secret. The fact is that be- tween January 1, 1933 and May 9, 1934 these two Nazi shipping com- panies gave over 30 free passages, some of them to Nazi propagan- dists. If the shipping companies who are members of the Transatlantic Conference or Mr. Lederer who assesses the fines, will write me care of The New Masses I shall be happy to present them with a complete High sages, the names, the boats on which they sailed, the class of pas- sage, the date of sailing and at whose suggestion they were given free passage. This list, which is too large to be published in full here, includes in- fiuential persons like Karl K. Kit- chen, once a Broadway columnist for the New York Evening World. Kitchen was given a first-class passage May 3, 1933 on the Bremen, He returned after a visit to Ger- many ready to write a series of pro-Hitler articles. Some of them appeared. Col. E. Alexander Powell, nationally known lecturer on inter- national subjects, who has been class cabin on July 22, 1933, on the Europa. Burton Holmes, interna- list of all who were given free pas- | telling the world what a fine place | Nazi Germany is, sailed in a first- | S John Howard Lawson’s New Pamphlet Exposes tice’ i WELCOME ‘Jus SOUTHERN A Defense of Political Price: 5c Reviewed by CLARENCE WEINSTOCK EADERS of the D: by now thoroughly fa the ers Pr the facts behind the arr r elo Herndon and of the nine cottsboro boys. Lawson's report gives intimate details of a deleca- tion's visit to these prisoners early in July to investigate the discrimi- ion against and mistreatment of them The delegation was sponsored by the National Committee for the De- of Political Prisoners, in as tion with the American Ci Liberties Union, the Internation: Labor Defense and the Herndon De- fense Committee. Members of delegation were: John Howard Law- son, playwright, William Rollins Jr. novelist, Winifred Chappell, of the Methodist Federation for Social Ser- vice, Martin Russak, editor of Textile Workers’ Abrons, Southern field representa- tive of the American Civil Liberties | Union, William Serber, student at Yale University. Were it not for its terrible im- Plications, the visit to Herndon, who | was released on $15,000 bail just a {month after the delegation saw him, would sound like a comedy of lies. Everything affirmed by the officials is denied by Herndon; everything denied by them is affirmed by him: ill health, discrimination, unlawful censorship of correspondence, the withholding of books sent to him. | (“No prisoners are permitted to have | quantity of books and papers be- {cause they might make a fire and heat the bars in order to bend them,” said jailor Hunt.) The dele- n the Soutl composition jon and Clarence Norris Prison, Montgomery) zh a one= heriff Hawkins, Wright and 1 rad tear gas pumped into their aight into heir eyes, by a guard against whom they could not dare to appeal HE pamphlet also deals y arrest of Lawson on criminal libel” and includes abun- dant quotations from the Southern | ess which show that rulers of the South felt the arrest of Lawson was a tactical blunder on their part. T e conclusion includes a state- on the complete disregard of constitutional, civil and human rights by the officials of Georgia and Alabama, a c ion which has since been dou borne out in the arrests on charges of insurrection of a gr xX people meeting in a priva house near Atlanta, a charge which the Grand Jury failed to sustain; in the arrest of two young women strikers during the textile strike on the same charge; and in the arrest of 10 members of the I. W. O. in Atlanta on the “literature” charge; in Alabama the recent developments in the Scotts- boro case and the part played by the state in them only emphasize the points raised in the pamphlet. The Fascist character ef every legal judgment and political action, the open cooperation of the police with the K. K. K., and the “Men of Justice,” and the direct associa- tion of political oppression with economic disorder, is analyzed in the course of the pamphlet. Lawson's pamphlet deserves a real welcome, not “A Southern Wel- gation, by no means Communist in come.” Attorney for | Expelled from | Because Philip Wittenberg acted |as attorney for the Macauley Com- | pany during the recent strike of its ; Workers organized in the Office | Workers Union, Literary Section, he has been expelled from the Na- | tional Committee for the Defense of Political Prisoners In a letter informing him of his | expulsion, Alfred H. Hirsch, secre- |tary of the National Committee, | states that the charges were based on the following points: “1. That during the first strike of the employes of the Macauley Com- pany, you presented yourself to the | strikers as a mediator, whereas, as | admitted by Mr. A, L. Furman to |Isidor Schneider at a later date, you were at the time acting as | counsel for the Macauley Company. | “2. That during the course of the | second strike, you made a promise | to representatives of the strike com- | mittee that you would either make appointment for them with the em- ployers of the Macauley Company, or that you would resign as counsel for the Macauley Company. You | did neither. |. “3. That your statements to John Macaulay Co. i mown traveller and lec- |. Spivak in the presence of wit- bees llc on a free passage on | nesses to the effect that you could the Europa, on April 8, 1934. | Nazi Germany sees nothing wrong Sabbatical Protests in giving free passages to gentle- | men who are in a position to any | Cause Board To Drop something good about Hitler's gov- : = ernment. In fact, it sees nothing | Mask of Liberality wrong in spending money to carry | on anti-semitic propaganda in this | Dropping its mask of liberality country. That the Nazi consul-gen- | yesterday, the Board of Education eral in New York gave money tO | through a “high official” threatened Frather Francis ariiigye pit fetta ae | teachers with greater restrictions on boy, N. J., to print a vicious anti- | sabbatical leaves. The “high offi- semitic throwaway as well as money | cja],”, whose name could not be to George Sylvester Viereck, the learned, had apparently been an- Nazi agent in this fag has al- | gered by the protests of teacher or- ready been established. ganizations against proposed re- The various consulates are undef | strictions on leaves. the direction of the German Em- Roused to the danger in the pro- bassy in Washington. I was curi-| posed rules which would have re- ous to know how Hans Bente, ae duced both the period of the leave German Ambassador, viewe' iS} as well as made it mandatory on wholesale dissemination of A the teacher to report on what use money to propagate the “hate-the- | she had made of her vacation, or- Jew” creed in direct interference in | ganizations had - protested last the internal affairs of this country. |spring. As a result, the committee (Lo Be Continued) jon leaves, which included Superin- tendents Stephen F. Bayne, John E. —$—$—$ $ < — — $$ _ {| Wade and William EF. Grady, had TO CHEER LITTLE LEFTY been forced to make the gesture of “Dear Lefty: I am sending inviting teacher organizations to $1 for another piece of cake, have delegates meet with the com- though I have a suspicion that || mittee. your dog took it to get even || Protests from unemployed organi- with you for socking him the zations and other militant organi- other night. Keep up your |/zations that had been omitted from good work—some day will come |/the invitation have had the effect when not only the rich kids of exposing this gesture of democ- but all little fellows like “Pea- racy and forcing into the open nuts’ and yourself can have it, this latest expression of fascism for there is enough of it in || which the warning distinctly carries. this world.” The threat made was to limit the —DOG LOVING WORKER, sabbatical leaves to the line laid Bob Minor Troop, down in the State education law. a $ 2.00 This would mean cutting them down Dog Loving 1.00 to one year’s leave in every seven, ‘ Rec’d .... 133.48 deduction not to exceed a half EM pel year’s pay. The law requires the I 136.48 teacher to promise not to leave the ea $500. system within the two years fol- ‘lowing the leave. Uncle John Takes No Chances! Defense Group and would do more that you had already done to injure the cause of the strikers was an indication of a state of mind which is certainly not fitting for a member of this committee. “4. That if, as you claim, you were serving as attorney for the em- ployers of the Macauley Company in order to help the union, your actions have been a complete denial of such contention. “5. That it was the consensus of opinion of the Executive Commit- tee that it is unethical for a mem- ber of this committee to represent employers in a labor dispute.” The Furman referred to in the charges is the owner of the Macau- lay Company. The strike of the Macaulay work- ers is still on and picketing cons tinues. Although the Regional La- bor Board decided for reinstatement of the four discharged workers, the National Labor Relations Board claims that it can do nothing about actually having them reinstated. — mi. SCIENCE BELOW 20% Lab and Shop, which has a quota of $250, lower than any other department, appears only twice a week, but that’s no reason why Ramsey supporters should hold on to their con- tributions instead of rushing them in! Anon . -$ 1.00 State & Revolution... 1.00 Previously Rec'd ...... 42.24 Total $44.24 TUNING IN 7:00 P.M.-WEAF—Ray Perkins, Songs WOR—Sports Talk—Ford Frick WJZ—Amos 'n’ Andy WABC—Myrt and Marge—Sketch 7:15-WEAP—Gene and Glenn—Sketch WOR—Comedy and Music WJZ—Plantation Echoes; Bailye, Songs;, Robison Orchestra WABC—Just Plain Bill—Sketch 1:30-WEAF—Minstrel Show WOR—Mystery Sketch WJZ—Red Davis—Sketch WABC—Paul Keast, Baritone; Orch, 7:45-WEAF—Uncle Ezra—Sketch WOR—Dance Music WJZ—Dangerous Paradise—Sketch WABC—Boake Carter, Commentator 8:00-WEAF—Himber Orchestra WOR—Lone Ranger—Sketch WJ2Z—Jan Garber, Supper Club WABO—Robison Buckaroos 8:15-WABC—Edwin C. Hill, Commentator 8:30-WEAF—Symphony Orchestra; Gladys Swarthout, Soprano; Mixed Chorus WOR—Variety Musicale WJZ—King’s Guard Quartet WABC—Concert Orchestra; Hackett, Tenor 8:45-WJZ—Prom Schooner Seth Parkers Sea Chenteys 9:00-WEAF—Gypsies Parker, Tenor WOR—Citizens Family Welfare Come mittee Dinner, Hotel Astor; Speake ers, Former Governor Alfred Smith, Governor John G. Winant of New Hampshire and James G, Blaine, Chairman of the Committee WsZ—Same as WOR WABC—Rosa Ponselle, Soprano; Kose telanetz Orchestra 9:30-WEAP—To Be Announced WOR—Lum and Abner—Skeich WJZ—Strange Lady—Sketch WABC—Gluskin Orchestra: Block a Sully, Comedian; Gertrude Niesen, Songs; Chiquito, Sones 9:43-WOR—Dramatized Dime 10:00-WEAF—Eastman Orchestra; Lullaby Lady; Male Quartet Mildred Charles Orchestra; Frank fem, WOR-Frank and Flo, Songs WJZ—Presentation of American Woe man’s Association Eminent Attaine ment Award at Friendship Dinner, Hotel Roosevelt; Speakers, Mra, Caroline O'Day, Representatives Elect; Mrs. Frank A. Vonderlip, and others WABC—Wayne King Orchestra 10:15-WOR—Current Events—H. E. Read 10:30-WEAF—Waste in Government Relief Expenditures—Senator William E, Borah of Idaho WOR-—Variety Musicale ‘WsZ—America in Music; John Tasker Howard, Narrator WABC—Public Health Needs—Dr. Thomas Parran Jr.. New York State Health psioner 10:45-WABC—Emery 5 Violin 11:00-WEAF—The Grummits—Sketeh” cid WOR—Nes WJ2—Kemp Orchestre

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