[1] In the same year he was imprisoned (five weeks of detention, without conviction) together with Henry W. Kristiansen, Just Lippe and Albin Eines, after a police raid in the Communist Party offices.
[3] He was also the writer behind Sjurs Sjursen vil bli kapitalist, a satirical comic strip illustrated by Bjarne Restan, which appeared in the same magazine.
[4] He edited Arbeidermagasinet until February 1931, and set out to mold it into an entertainment magazine with a connection to the labour movement.
For enlightenment purposes they ran a column named Kjente menn innen arbeiderklassen ("Famous Men of the Working Class"), and in 1931 Luihn released Arbeidernes fremmedordbok ("Workers' Dictionary of Foreign Words").
[2] It has been called social realistic, and was heavily inspired by Komintern and the Soviet Union, which Luihn admired.