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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1934 ” Page 7 ‘ || CHANGE —THE— WORLD! -—— By MICHAEL GOLD ites from the News N BELFAST, the Very Reverend Patrick Conifrey, in an ‘address before the Gaelic League convention here re- ently, denounced “jazz music” as a conspiracy. “Jazz,” said the Very Reverend, “was borrowed from Jentral Africa by a gang of wealthy international Bol- hevists from America, their aim being to strike at Christian civiliza- ion throughout the world.” The Very Reverend said that his information came straight from s very authoritative source—from “apple source.” . * . table Millionaires (ROM London, we hear that research is now being made by experts at Somerset House which is expected to establish the “expectancy of life of British millionaires.” According to the journal of the Income Taxpayers Society, figures are available which will enable actuaries to tell the Chancellor of the Exchequer exactly how many millionaires will die in the coming years. The journal comments: “In America, with the millionaire of today being the elevator man of tomorrow, these records would be of little value. But in England, our millionaires are, if fewer, at least more stable.” The results of the research work will be kept secret in order not to excite the population of England too much. * . * In Ford’s ILLIAM McKIE, a tinsmith formerly employed in Henry Ford’s plant in Detroit, testifying before the joint commission of the Labor Department and the National Recovery Board, described the speed-up in the Ford Plant. Of five men wro turned out 300 “jogs” in a given time, he said, two were laid off and the three remaining workers were forced to turn out 500 “jogs” in the same time. He asserted that if a straw-boss caught a man taking a drink of water too often he was fired, “You'd think a worker would be allowed to speak to his neighbor at lunch,” he continued. “You would think he might speak to a man crossing a bridge or on street car or bus. But you rarely find Ford men speaking to each other. The service men come along in the lunch hour and say “move’ and the men move. They send service men to the street cars and to places where the men meet to snoop and spy.” Another testified that whereas it cost Henry Ford 46 cents to make a wheel in 1930 the cost today is only 17 cents. * * A Word from Henry Ford “WE HAVE three fundamentals,” says Henry Ford in the advertise- ment for the new V-8, “durability, esonomy of operation and maintenance and comfort . . . We built more than 20,000,000 cars previous to the V-8. We have built 1,300,000 V-8 cars... We expect to build a million cars and better next year, and the price will be right. If the price is right, people will buy; men will go back to work ... We are trying to make 1935 a busier, happier and more hopeful year.” . * Upton Sinclair’s New Book p° YOU want to know how Upton Sinclair got licked? We have received a postcard trom Mr. Sinclair which states that through the kindness of Providence, Mr. Sinclair is once more & writer and with the most interesting story ever told. The interest- ing story is the story of how Sinclair hopped on the Democratic band- wagon but found to his sadness that even the Democrats were still “backward enough to let his renegade actions go unappreciated. “I, Candidate for Governor: And How I Got Licked,” will be out in January, Mr, Sinclair hastens to inform us. A handsome volume, Says the ex-socialist and licked Candidate, of 200 pages, with forty illustrations, cartoons of the campaign and various fake circulars the enemy got out. Price, cloth, $1.50. . There’s one thing you've got to admit about Sinclair: he does manage to make money out of everything he touches. Perhaps the edition, like his actions, will be a “sell-out.” * * * Factory Made Houses IOUSING costs can be decreased, says Robert H. Armstrong of the realty firm of Armstrong and Armstrong, by having pre-fabricated pbuilding. What is pre-fabricated building? Let Mr. Armstrong speak: “This means that if I want a seven-room house say, in Scarsdale, I can look through a catalogue, pick out the type of house I want, and in a week or ten days it will stand ready for use. The parts of the building will be constructed at a factory and assembled at points where anyone wants a building.” Perhaps in the near future the suburban bourgeoisie of Scarsdale, the real estate owners, the small brokers, the half-way manufacturers, will be turning Sears-Roebuck catalogues to order a nine and a half room, ready-to-wear house from the house-making factories. It occurs to me that it is extremely doubtful whether Sears-Roebuck would carry models of tenements. On the other hand they might. Model, up-to- date slum tenements for the enterprising landlord who is urgently in need of some good cheap, fire-trap property on which to make a few thousand dollars annual profit. The models can vary. Hast Side type. No fire-escapes. No toilets. No air. Very reasonable. Or Harlem type. Filthy. No heat, Special consignments of rats delivered with house. Disease germs forwarded if desired. Constructed especially for Negro tenants. Very reasonable. I can see the birth of a new industry in America, and the creation of a half-dozen new millionaires if the scheme is ever carried through. And it might be. . . . William Rat Hearst I HAVE a little clipping of one William Randolph Heerst’s typhoid editorials. The same kind of malignant lying, and hypocritical spleen of all the squibs Hearst has written against the Communists. Hearst favors every thing from open lynching, murder, mass terror to deportation. It is enough to make one boil to think that this criminal jingo, this y2n-murderer whose papers share the responsibility for the deaths and murders of the millions who died in the war, should have the effrontery to point to those who struggle for a decent life and a new world as criminals. Public Enemy Number One could very well be William Randolph Hearst. He has a record blacker than Dillinger’s. He has committed more crimes than Baby-Face Nelson. He stands condemned of more villainies than the whole underworld. If there is anybody who is an “undesirable citizen,’ who deserves to be deported to a penal island in the middle of a frozen sea, with nothing but the penguins to keep him company, it is William Randolph Hearst. And that’s an idea what to do with him in a Soviet America. 11th Anniversary and Lenin Memorial Edition SATURDAY, JANUARY 19, 1935 I send revolutionary greetings to the Daily Worker, the organizer | of the American working class, the leader in the fight for a Soviet America! Name MUN, “udp bets cccuyessscccsas escapees at State..... (All greetings, which must be accompanied by cash or money order, will be published in the Daily Worker.) [FLASHES and| CLOSEUPS | | By DAVID PLATT | ATTENDANCE at Soviet Russian | theatres totaled 636,682,000 in | 1933 as compared with 240,060,400 in 1928, according to information | supplied to the Film Daily Year Book. A further increase took place this year. Theatres in the Soviet Union now number 30,000 with ten studios in operation sup- plying films, Sixteen thousand movie fans at- tended the first week's showing of “Three Songs About Lenin” at the Cameo Theatre, breaking all pre- | vious records for attendance at So- viet films. The picture re-opens at the Acme Theatre today. The Hays organization recently cracked down hard on those capi- talist movie reviewers who dared to praise “Three Songs About Lenin.” Says Terry Ramsaye, spokesman, in a recent issue of “Motion Picture Herald”: “Two of America’s great- est and most constructively con- servative newspapers, (sic) the New York Times and the New York Herald- Tribune, have permitted their young men to deliver their columns to the preachment of the Red cause and its glorification—all behind the mask of motion picture criticism. . .” “Three Songs About Lenin,” he continues, “like all Russian pictures which reach these shores, was made solely for purposes of propaganda +++Now comes Russia’s Soviet, born of bombs and ruling by blade and firing squads to make, insofar as it may, a forum of the American screen. And so far they have to help them, Mr. Sennwald and Mr. Watts—in the holy name of Lenin and art.” ae ee '¥Y REPEATING these bewhisk- ered lies about Soviet films, Mr. Ramsaye, who speaks officially for the motion picture producers and distributors of America, is really paying a high tribute to “Three Songs About Lenin,” which of all recent Russian films, has been able through sheer power of its truth and artistry to make lasting im- pressions even upon the minds of arch-conservatives like Will Rogers, who gave the film his unqualified endorsement. The real reason, however, for Ramsaye'’s attack is desperate fear of Soviet competition in the realm of cinema. “Three Songs” happens to be a@ financial success. That is not so good for Hollywood. British competition is bad enough. That we can’t very well stop. But Soviet competition is red propaganda. That can be stopped. So run the thoughts of Mr. Ramsaye. All we can say to this is go ahead and try to stop Soviet films, Mr. Ramsaye. You will find yourself up against a movement of enraged cinema fans that will make you and your back- ers publicly eat the dyed red her- ring you have cooked up to dis- credit your competitors. In the meantime Mr. Sennwald, who one day rejoices over “Three Songs About Lenin,” and the next day metes out equal praise to the jingoistic “First World War”; and Mr. Watts, who applauded Musso- lini’s “Man of Courage” as a “lyric celebration of the building of fascist Italy,” while damning “Three Songs” with faint praise, continue merrily to befuddle with their equivocating reviews of films. Sia ceers ANXIOUSLY await Pabst’s “Don Quixote” which opens at the Cameo this Saturday. Expect the worst from Warner Bros. pro- ductions since the notorious labor hater Wm. R. Hearst merged his movie interests (Marion Davies— Cosmopolitan) with this company. First issue of Film Front, bi- weekly mimeographed bulletin of the National Film and Photo League, is out. The contents in- clude an editorial on “The Decency Crusade”; “An Open Letter to Will Hays”; The Films look at the Worker”; “Movie Reviews and Film Front Flashes.” Paul Robeson, American Negro actor and singer, has been invited to spend several weeks with Sergei Eisenstein, Soviet film director, in Moscow, “Call to Arms” will be released by Columbia Pictures Corp. on Jan. |12. A pre-view of this picture will appear shortly in the Daily Worker. Willard Mack, author, director and co-actor of the picture died right after completion of the film. Form your own conclusions. NEW PAMPHLETS “The Advance of the United Front”—a Documentary Account, with an introduction by Alex Bittelman—5 cents. “An American Boy in the So- viet Union,” by Harry Eisman— 10 cents. “The U. and the League of Nations,” by M. Litvinoff—3 cents. ¥ “Fighting to Live,” by Dr. Harry F. Ward—5 cents. “Who Wants War?” by A. A. Heller—3 cents. “Culture in Two Worlds,” by N. Bukharin—5 cents. Pit Sai These pamphlets can be pur- chased at all workers’ bookshops, or from Workers Library Pub- lishers, P. O. Box 148, Sta. D, New York City. Order a quan- Portrait of a False Revolutionist By ISIDOR He has the wa to quench our we sink to our if you let him and if we ride nothing will be to wilt the firm, to soak in us until He has the indoors art to catch you in a chair and drug the air; all motion under balk that he may talk, He'll chant red song like a cricket all day long safe and warm out of the storm, “Oh, see the other side!”— that pendulum’s idle are his aim is won; But most beware when he calls you rare, better than the others; that is his knife to stab your brothers, (From "Comrade-Mister,” by Isidor Schneider, published by Equinox Press, New York) SCHNEIDER tery desire fire, | lowest level hum done. This department, which has weeks due to technical difficul- ties, will appear regularly here- after as a daily feature. All ques- tions should be addressed to Questions and Answers Depart- ment, Deily Worker, 35 East 12th Street, New York, N. ¥. QUESTION: Why didn’t the Soviet Union give the 103 white guara terrorists who were exe- cuted tor counter-revolutionary activity an open court trial? Why doesn’t the Soviet government reveal the actual evidence on the basis of which it carried out the executions? Since the evidence is not mace public, how can this particular action of ‘the Soviet Union be defended?—Communist Sympathizer. or Se ANSWER: To reply adequately to all three questions, it is neces- sary to make certain Communist principles clear, The workers and peasants in Russia overthrew capi- The revolutionary objective did not end on the day that Soviets were established. It did not suddenly | terminate when the victorious Civil | War against the counter-revolu- | tonary white guards and the im- perialists of the entire capitalist | world ended in 1921. In building socialism, which is not only an inspiration. to the working class of the whole world but a bulwark of the world revo- lution, the Soviet workers and peasants have had to continuously fight against enemies on the out- side as well as against enemies on the inside. To be lenient against these Ozarist remnants who do everything they can to obstruct the victorious march towards socialism, ers’ fatherland. Their ruthless ex- | hearts of all enemies of the work- ers and farmers republic, and strengthens the working class and its allies. Communists from the time of Marx have made it very clear that the workers in striking at their class enemy do so because it is far better to execute tens and even hundreds of plotters then to en- danger the lives of millions of workers and farmers whom the class enemy threatens to plunge into the horror and slavery of the counter-revolution. To be lenient to the enemies of the work- ing class is to play into the hands of the fascist and white guard con- spirators; it means betraying the proletarian revolution. It should be remembered that revolutionary terror is only used against the counter-revolution to protect the achievement of the working class, which is advancing society to a higher stage, against those who by assassination and destruction wish to plunge it back into capitalist chaos and barbarism, It was only after Uritzky had been assassinated by terrorists, and Len- in had barely escaped with his life that the Soviet government in 1918 declared a war to the finish against the wreckers of the proletarian state. The working class does not employ terror merely as an end in itself. It is a means of protecting the working class against enemies who stop at nothing in their efforts to destroy the workers fatherland. With these general principles in mind the specific incidents now taking place in the Soviet Union should be understood and defended by every worker who is working for the end of capitalism. Irresistibly the workers and peasants are build- tity for your organization. Little Lefty LEFTY |S RUNNING AROUND TRYING “0 FINO PEANUTS AND PRISY “To READ “HEM THE Contents OF “Har EXCITING /. LETTER | Croute Fino 1 ON THE WORKERS CoR- DIRTY NAZI / ing socialism. So great is their HERE GoES HANS, “Thar Questions and Answers been omitted for the past few | against the fragments of the old talism, and are building socialism. | would mean to endanger the work- | termination sirikes fear into the! strength that the working class re- _ cently eased some of its measures society which still exist in the So- | viet Union. An open and honest hand was extended to these people; they were urged to join the work- ers in their great task of building & new world. The G. P. U. (State Political De- | partment), the vigilant and ever- | watchful eye of the working class, was abolished, and its functions turned over to a department of the Commissariat of Internal Affairs. This demonstration of strength on the part of the proletarian dicta- torship was taken as a sign of weakness by the class enemy. | Treacherously he struck down | Comrade Kirov, one of the bravest and best leaders of the working class, The working class struck back at | its enemies. One hundred and three plotters were executed for counter- revolutionary activity of the kind | given by the Daily Worker on Dec. 19 in its documentary expose of a white guard publication—the “Fas- cist,” which boasted of assassina- |tion plots and wide-spread sabo- tage in the Soviet Union. The exact details have not as yet | been revealed by the Soviet goy- | ernment, because it is still engaged in ripping open the web of intrigue. New arrests are still being made. | To reveal the details now would | jmean to warn the rest of the con-| spirators. We can be sure that the tribunals which sentenced the | white guard plotters did so on the basis of irrefutable proof. Through- out the history of the Soviet Union, there have been occasions when proof of guilt on the part of coun- ter-revolutionaries was not revealed because the time was not ripe for disclosure. But. eventually all the details of the various plots were published, so that now even the foreign bourgeoisie admits the guilt of the conspirators who were sen- tenced on those occasions. | Those white guards who have just been executed were deliberately given military trials. It was meant as a warning to all saboteurs, as- sassins and plotters against the working class that their activity will not be tolerated. They will be exterminated as fast as they are discovered and proof of their dis- ruptive actions is established, The swiftness of the Soviet gov- ernment’s actions was dictated by the circumstance of defending the USS.R. against military interven- tion, which is being spurred by the German and Japanese govern- ments. Johannes Steel, foreign editor of the New York Post, re- ports that “it was suggested to me in London and Paris that the as- sassination of Kirov, one of the Bolshevik leaders, might be the be- ginning of a wave of foreign med- dling throughout the Soviet Union, which might not be disconnected with the new German-Polish alli- ance.” ‘We can now see that the execu- tions have struck fear into the heart of all plotters against the | proletarian state. The class enemy has learned again that the work- ing class ‘will ferret out and punish him as energetically and as suc- cessfully as it is building socialism. The actions are not directed against those elements of the old society who are willing to con- tribute their efforts to building so- cialism. They are directed against Czarist and fascist terrorists who openly boast in their press of their crimes against the workers’ state. As Izvestia said, “We will raise our vigilance and watchfulness to a high degree to single out the ter- rorist crimes and to take decisive measures in this fleld on the basis |and Hammer, the American Negro | | 7:15-WEAF—Varlety Musicale | WORLD of the THEATRE Stevedore in Chicago CHICAGO.—After six successful months in New York and in Philadelphia, “Stevedore,” Theatre Union's smas ment of lynching and Ji as a weapon of the bosses against | Negro workers, will open at the Sel- wyn Theatre in Chicago on Dec, 24 for a month’s showing. The) Theatre Union's plan for the sub- sequent tour includes showings in| Milwaukee, Madison, Minneapolis, | Detroit, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Buf-/ falo, Boston and other cities. | An audience for the Chicago run} of “Stevedore” has been assured in | advance for at least three weeks by | the support of 25 coope: ing organ- izations which have taken theatre | parties. The Communist Party of Chicago has taken the full house for | the matinee of Dec, 25. The Inter- | national Labor Defense has taken a bloc of tickets. for the evening of Dec, 24; the Trade Union Unity League for Dec. 26th; the Interna- | tional Workers Order for Jan. 7; | the American League Against War) and Fascism for Jan. 9; the John Reed Club for Jan. 15; and the) League of Struggle for Negro Rights | and the Nature Friends for Jan, 17./ Other organizations which are | supporting “Stevedore” by taking theatre parties include the Chicago| Federation of High School Teachers, | the Friends of the Soviet Union, the Chicago Workers Theatre, the Pocket-Book Workers Union and} others A, F. of L. unions, the Pen National Association, the Young | Communist League, Chicago Co- operative Council, the League of Workers Theatres, the Artef, Pack- | ing House Workers Industrial Union, and various workers clubs. The Chicago Federation of Labor has given its endorsement to “Stev- edore.” The Socialist Party has| taken a large bloc of tickets for the | Jan. 1st performance and the| League for Industrial Democracy for Dec. 28. | “I congratulate the Theatre Union | for sending this great play on an extensive tour,” Robert Minor said today in Chicago. “I saw ‘Stevedore’| in New York and again in Los An- geles, and consider its production an event of tremendous political significance. I urge all Chicago workers to see this play, which deals with the struggles of Negro and white dockworkers in New Orleans against a threatened wage - cut, against discrimination, segregation, and lynching.” TUNING IN| 1:00-WEAF—Religion in the News—Walter Van Kirk WOR—Sports Resume—Stan Lomax | WJZ—John Herrick, Baritone WABC—David Harum's Christmes Gift—Sketch WOR—Tonians Quartet WJZ—King Orchestra 7:20-WOR—Dance Oxchestra WABC—Sounds of the Cities—Dr. E. E. Free 1:45-WJZ—Pickens Sisters, Songs | WABC—Fundamental Aspects of the New Deal From a Lawyer's Point of View—John W. Davis, Attorney 8:00-WEAF—Concert Orchestra, Sigmund Romberg, Conductor-Composer; Byron Warner, Tenor; Helen Mar- shall, Soprano; William Lyon Phelps, Narrator WOR—Organ Recital WJZ—The Modern Room—Cecil Secrest and Julian Noa WABC—Roxy Revue; Concert or-| chestra; Mixed Chorus; Soloists; | From Philadelphia 8:20-WJZ—Grace Hayes, Songs 8:30-WOR—Dance Orchestra WJZ—Olsen Orchestre €:45-WABC—Mary Courtland, Son; bruster Orchestra; Male 9:00-W2AP—Rose Bampion, Contralto: Scrappy Lembert and Billy Hill- pot, Songs; Shilkret Orchestra WOR—Hillbilly Music WJZ—Radio City Party, With John B. Kennedy; Black Orchestra WABC—Grete Stueckgold, Soprano; Kostelanetz Orchestra 9:30-WEAF—The Gibson Family—Music Comedy, With Conrad Thibault, Baritone; Lois Bennett, Soprano WOR—Denny Orchestra WsZ—National Barn Dance WABC—Himber Orchestra 10:00-WOR—Dance Orchestra WABO—Concert Band, Edward dAnna, Conductor | 10:30-WEAF—Cugat, Goodman and Murray | Orchestras (Until 1:30 A.M.) | WOR—Richerdson Orchestre WJZ—Kemp Orchesira WAEC—Veriety Musicale 11:00-WOR—News Bulleting. WJZ—Dorsey Orchestra WABC—Michaux Congregation 11:15-WOR—Russian Musicale 11:30-WJZ—Dance Music (Also WOR, WMCA) WABO—The American Scene: Const- to-Coast Radio Trip Presenting Cross Section of U. 8. Activities | on Eve of Christmas Week ' rapid extermination of the fascist terrorists” Knowing the history of the re- peated plots against the Soviet Union; owing that the Soviet government only acts against ene- mies who wish to destroy socialism; it behooves every worker who is a friend of the Soviet Union to de- | fend the actions taken against the | white guards. To stand silently by | while the enemies of the USS.R. including those “friends” of the Soviet masses, Abe Cahan and Al- gernon Lee, hypocritically cry for “open trials,” is to give aid and encouragement to all who are en- deavoring to bring about the de- struction of the Soviet system, and to defeat the struggles of the work- ers in the capitalist countries of special decisions for the most All Wet! D'You “THINK @LL DACHSHUNDS IS NAZIS | WAY LONCE SRW HANS SNIFF RY & SWASTIKA ON A - POLE N'THEN against hunger, war and fascism. ANY | dark age in which science wil retro- jis available indicates that appro- | | the Board asked for. Thus the re-| | port is wish-fulfillment on the part | LABORATORY and SHOP SCIENCE AND THE CRISIS Hard times have made the aver-| and age scientist give uw that he has no conce: and its conflict: His p for truth, as he would ha By David Ramsey has turned into a fra s a job. Although economicall cs And by n with scientist is very close to the poverty, the $200,000,000 Soviet line, he still likes to think himself| Union spent for reserach an integral part of the ruling c! which in the main uses him an instrument to But he that he has become a jobber for v = industry, and blaniies his troubles on! are posed. Th the “laboring man.” 1934, it the reader limited chare ace ses his eyes to t A theory is being developed that! s it is the “ignorant working man”! by who is blocking the further devel- opment of scientific research. Ac | transmission of cording to this theory, the worker rents through blames science for bringing on the fog-di t crisis, and in Tetaliation he brings What has kept these innovations the force of his prejudices to bear from being put into full operation against scientific work. Some of the Se aes oe more pessimistic exponents of this|® ‘he Profit sy ni he Yee view predict the emergence anew interests of particular groups of cap! S. Research along these and | lines sidized by the government would primarily serve to advertise column), the high-v gress back to magic. superstition very good grounds for bein, mistic. about the Bey of piper | It would be a stepping stone towa: under capitalism. Dr. Karl T,|5@nding these companies govern- Compton, president of the Massa-|™ment bonuses. In this connection it chusetts Institute of Technology,|!S Significant that among the mem- has estimated that there has been a| bers of the committee are represen- cut of $50,000,000 in the annual bud-|tatives of large corporations who get of funds spent for scientific re- | would profit from the industrial de- search. A more realistic estimate | velopment of these techniques. would run in the neighborhood of | $100,000,000. In fact, the data that| 'HE Board does not consider any priations for research have been | fundamental and revolutionary curtailed by at least 50 per cent. But| changes in technique. In a recent it is important to note that the! issue of Iron Age, for example, there slashing of scientific budgets has|was a brilliant presentation by an not been done by workers; they| engineer of a continuous method of have been cut by big business and! producing steel which would save the government. by the very people! five dollars on every ton. If the in- and the institutions that most | dustry were running at capacity this scientists look to for a solution of| would mean a saving of about $250 - their troubles. 000.000 a year. And this consid: tion does not take into account the revolution in other inches of pro- ‘Ps IS capitalism that has destroyed | duction that the new method woul bring about. But such a method in- the scientist's opportunity to! volves a long-range research pro- develop his ideas. There is more|gram of about $50,000,000, and the money to be made from destroying | destruction of property rights. Un- crops than in developing new agri- | der eas circumstances Bo such fines revolutionary innovation wi in- cultural techniques. Rent can still troduced, and as the engin be collected from fire-traps; why | developed the idea hin build, or encourage research in new} future development is_p housing? The scientist, if he is|im the Soviet Union. honest, will admit that when you | To be able to plan fundamenta mention the word “idea” to a cap-; Scientific research you must italist he screams for a policeman ee bare economy of unless it has the promise of sweet! order to have a 5 profits. you must first hove a proletarion Consequently those scientists who |T¢Volution which destrovs property toady to big business for small | "hts and Sega Thess nig favors only increase the contempt |S0ns that every Spidey AC, Bs that the bourgeois has for a man | {? eer oe ao ae a who doesn’t devote his life to mak-|{0F him or his work Were " ing money or clipping coupons. ed aghast pclente Res in aa Some awareness of this fact has ap-| ‘ists have in arge part become as- parently crept into the minds of | Pects of conspicuous waste that the individual scientists, but by and | Capit 30 oF aun aa oisae large, 7 ati i those nhase scientific w r large, they still beg for crumbs. jare directly concerned with war- The report of Roosevelt's Science! fare will be encouraged Advisory Board which was released| told Planck k is the latzst example of | ntist going cap in hand t hy significant that | ukewise v administration dished out| theoretical work, if billions to big business, it refused! swift returns, to appropriate the small sums that| r who United States a hang about it will not bring in the + giv Thus it is only in the Soviet Union that there are unlimited pos- pode sibilities for the scientist. The ma- mae ap he Matitesie ae terial basis for progressive dévelop- likelihood that ite prc d pl ij] | Ment within the sciences is a social- 3 Proposed plan Will s+” economy. In such a developing be put into operation. nn a: | economy, science paces social and etre. | economic progress, and in turn is | itself stimulated and developed. The : Bees strikes the reader first | constant interaction between social- about the research plan is its| ist society and sclence would be the tiny magnitude. Over a period of|basis for the accelerated develop- six years $16,000,000 are to be spent.| ment of both. MILITARISM AND FASCISM IN JAPAN By O. Tanin and E. Yohan Introduction by Karl Radek, who sayst “The present work is of great scientific and political value... . It uncovers the fuse which leads to the explosives in the Far East hidden in the cause of peace ... reveals con- SIA SES, cretely the roots of the military le ae ike pate tev hectare fascist movement in Japan, and the lege oka coe ae 4 | catalogue and book phases of its development; acquaints | baste sherpa Bog ere International Publishers 381 Fourth Avenue, New York Gentlemen: the reader with its ideology, organ- ization and the place it occupies in ue : the complex system of forces which determine the basic problems of eres, 2 Japanese imperialist policy. CLOTHBOUND, 326 pages, $1.75 INTERNATIONAL 6 PUBLISHERS 381 FOURTH AVENUE NEW YORK, N.Y - Newark Only New Jersey Showing At Special Low Prices for Ail Workers THE SOVIET PICTURE YOU BEEN WAITING FOR “3 SONGS ABOUT LENIN” Exaetly as shown on Brozdway 1 to 5 P.M. 30c 5 P.M. 40c to close EXCEPT SAT., SUN, & HOLIDAYS Now Playing HAVE i