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rAGh AWU U sited oniersace Adopts MARCH PROGESTS Plan for Huge Campaign to BALKAN FASCISM Force Freeing of Mooney. Delegation to Five Told Consulate Offices Renegade Opposition $ i > Ss By Mooney’s Represen ! Also To Be Mooney Da N ¥ K.—Joinix Le a 1 id » lib: yoney ters \EW YORK Sd th j t M on fs he by the arbitr itom his livin tomb in San ¢ ¢ , deleg more than of ting point at 500 work: one i aENG k ding the York Uni minut police department Front ree ‘om coney on € n, Plaz Sunday, voted march led by the Red hout a dissenting voiee to support 1M Congress to | Band,’ Mt ie aa tae ay we carried Fight Against Les : n Fascism!”; “Down With th 4 Dict tip of King Alexan i Last! Free And Inde y : 5 M Down With pe fi x 1 Michailoy, Bulgaria's Al Capo- resolution: nurder of workers the Balkans | Turkish, Bul- | Rumanian | Follow Spirit ‘4 Mooney Le ek and Deportation Threat Greek “e passports into that trap, sir demands instead. | had thej “| delegation | ejected, then tried to cajole , giving them chairs, ciga- arguments. | gation was firm, and warn-| ed rit would be back in greater num- b delegates did presented t Tense Cont ence Yugo-Slay consul fled from his | and remained away. The Rumanian consul tried flat-| tery and suavity, but had to promise | to send the protest across. The Bulgarian Consul-general ar-| gued that he had no connection with | political affairs. | All delegations reported back to a} meeting in Columbus Circle, and the organization of further anti-fascist struggle will go on, in co-operation between the Balkan Provisional Com- mittee Against Fascism and the An- ti-Imperialist League. 2,463 DAILY CALL PAIL WOniok, Ne Ww AHS TUES) AY, MARCH a8: 1933 Chinese Unemployed Here Organize and Put Demands | YORK.—C workers in, associations took part in the Gibson New York city have been for the last | committee by sending delegates to it, sever onths organizing the i-|and paid banquet and transportation Unemployed Associatio: of|expenses which alone would have New York” with a program| been sufficient to support a number nanding immediate reliet from|of unemployed Chinese for many organizations and| days. The Chinese charities did not unemployed demon-|in any way pratest the discrimina- work city | tion against Chinese or foreign born workers by the Gibson committee. eady won a| The Kuomintang newspaper here tenants in| paid no attention to the unemployed kers ciation he for j and 42nd Street ar waukee to int ecutive Commi Pa Force Students to S Loyalty Pledge in Order to —— The Conference opted a motion c Front May 1 dem in which all v City their D IMPORTANT NOTE: In view of the critical financial situation in the Daily Worker, organizations are urgently asked to enclose money, at the rate of one cent a word per in- serlion, with announcements. had any ondition- ie Wall Street hunger ent were not allowed to gra- who Frame Student to 60 Day Tuesday antes ce for trike Activities ee White, 19, a Subject anuary on a ARCHITECTURI he had See ote a window of a Wednesday gainst which the PARIS COMMUNE MEETING © Wo:kers Industrial gal 8:30 p.m. at emont Worke: jas 4 Clinton Ave. All workers welcon Bers must attend. Auspices Upper International Labor Defense klyn, to 60 days was son of the} SEASON. | the broom factory. Paila cacital te ¢ British n joked aside the testi- cellist Thursday egeyt by the defense and Stal evented Edward Kuntz, York Dict~ict abor Defense from LECTURE by Israel Amte Epa iy gees pm. at Boro Park so a student, was 48th Bt. Brookly he same charge, though ject: “German Situation g a Its een my oi 7 ately fone Fae ani arrest the same wit- tives.” " a G0H Woiaens Counsell 25 ness “identified” him and White as Woe aan the ones who had thrown bricks at Saturday the window CONCERT-DANCE Saturday night 8 p — at*Menhattan Lyceum, 66 E. Fourth FOR UNEMPLOYY d social in~ nine-piece Negro jazz ‘band. | Dan surance, against sedition and eviction fawn. Auspices Council of Wo: laws, for the defense of the Soviet Admission 40 cents, With thi Union, against imperialist wart The only witness | FOR AID INN. Y. Big Increase Since the Banks Closed NEW YORK, March 13.—The ap- plications for aid at the City Home Relief bureau has doubled since the closing of the banks, according to report of the commissioner of blic welfare. During the last month there have been 103,250 families who eived relief from the bureau. The first three days of the “bank holiday” there were new applications averag- ng 2,463 a day. More than half a million persons are on the emergency relief, which | means that they are facing the worst i | form of destitution, because the re- 'S | lief bureau does not give out a penny | if it is possible to convert even house- | hold goods into cash. There are also innumerable discriminations based n rules regarding length of residence, moral” status of the applicants, and so forth. Full and immediate payment of the war veterans’ adjusted compen- sation certificates; no cut in the disability allowances; no discrimi- nation in hospitalization, He’s Getting His While the small depositors are being swindled out of a big por- tion of their deposits, the bankers, with the help of their government, are geetting thers. The Daily Worker leads the fight against this robbery of the masses and the wholesale wage and relief cuts that are being put through. Keep the Daily Worker fighting! N. Y. DISTRICT SLUMPS IN ‘DAILY’ DRIVE; JOIN IN TAG DAYS TO KEEP PAPER ALIVE ‘Only $288.33 was contributed tothe Recrived Saturday Daily. Worker on Saturday, due to a| Previously regeived — great extent to New York's con- Total to date. tinued: laxity in raising funds. The SATURD. New York district sent in one of the} DISTRICT 1 lowest day’s totals in more than a} 74,,{2°”)..4. .4| Ukrainian Woe month—$67.85. This, together with — | et Having eae the-equal failure of every other dis-| tt to date 24 Iacomo Emanuel 1.00 triet- with the exception of Boston,| caren 7” | Frits Ualt 14, | Plunges the “Daily” deeper into a] Trew York) | Section 1 1.00 crisis which may engulf it completely Plaza 6.00] "Steves Party B60] at any moment. A Comrade 50 | The New York branches of the tn-| 4 Heller 1 Peatiennte | 15 ternational Workers’ Order, together | sympathi 09H. Lerner 2.00 with out-of-town and national Collected by Work~ | branches, remained silent again Sat Bi ice tage a ufday in the face of the suspension Bodue suet? asl threat. Not a cent from a single On List 2 250 | branch of this great organization! _| Section 6 On List 28372 50 Workers: members of the Com-| ollected co elit Nad peu munist Party and of sympathetic Cotter ite teeta bes, At ofganisations, get busy! Raise the|Coltcctea ty Smale tor WO an aie 12825, erisis in the “Daily” at every meet-| 129 ing of your organization, and ever; pet civepe gl ve by ‘ime you see a friend or fellow Collected by D. be tented ‘List 34632 Collected by C. Coleletet by 8. ou by worker or neighbor, get them to con-| Collected ty L Kaye, List J ribute! Speed all Tag Day funds | ¢ lected by 1. Levy, List 18: Uirectly to the Daily Worker, Make | Cuiiccid )¥ P- Shapiro H. Ge t Possible for our paper to carry on!! ¢ ‘ollected b inst Total Totat to date 39,201.29 ——, District's DISTRICT 4 afCtleseod (Buffalo) otal 4 prin sxo0} “Tito date $1,232.35 jeaa;| “DISTRICT 9 Tel to date $280.27 vanes DISTRICT 5 eee 0.90 (rittsbureh) reer mika TH to date $288.19 Til to date $346.51 age a 1.00 pistarcr @ | 7! bi (Cleveland) TH to date $130.37 Total $10.00 ueraicr, 9 (Colorado) TH to date $662.59] 9, {¢ DISTRICT 7 ‘TH to ante $87.73 (Detroit) ——w Totat MISCELLANEOUS ——— | Hololnty, Hawais $5.08 TH to date $6 Chinese benevolen Officials of the rganiza and ions have raised thousands of dol- 's on ever ext they could uti- e, Recently t ed on a drive for money to hina the hones of th country But n the unemployed Chinese here placed tk ands before the inese Chi = Was no an- the en 0c! tion was t etter that the cha- rities were “unable to do anything. At the same time the gentry run-| ning these charities and benevolent able | oc- | until the association began to dis- tribute leaflets rallying the jobless to force relief from the rich Chinese. |'Then it began suddenly to discuss “how to help the Chinese unem- | ployed in U. S. A.” In one of its editorials it advised the Chinese for the gentry organize themselv that if they did organize | be deported. | The Kuomintang consul in New} York has also declared that helping the Chinese unemployed is “outside jobless workers to wait to help, and not to on th pretext they might at the Pub By GEORGE LEWIS On the second floor of the New York Public Libre at Fifth Avenye two small black tables of interest to These two tables form) glass-covered every worker. a Karl Marx exhibit. The first edition of “Capital” is there, in German. Then there is the first edition of the Russian transla- tion, published in 1872, the edition that Lenin read. Letters in the neat, precise hand- writing of Karl Marx are there, in} German and in English, as well as} the original telegram written by En-| gels announcing the death of Marx. In addition there is the first issue of the “Neue Rhenische Zeitung,” pub- | lished in 1848 with the name of Karl | Marx on its front page as editor-in- chief, a vivid. reminder that Marx} was not only the student and philo-| sopher of the working class revolu-| tionary movement, but a foremost fighter in the struggle. First editions of works about:Karl Marx are also there, including Rya- zanov's collection, of essays by En- gels, Lafargue and others. Of course the public library does not lose its chance to put forward Otto Ruhle’s biography. Workers Should See Exhibit Workers should see this exhibit be- fore it is put aw: as no doubt the library will‘not have it on view very long. You may have trouble in find ing the two small tables on the sec ond floor. The public library, es- tablished by some of the money Car- negie sweated out of the steel work- ers, is not exactly anxious to give much publicity to the founder of the working class revolutionary move- ment. Why, workers may ask, is this ex- hibit put on at all in the bosses’ pub- lic library? After so many years of silence in the bosses’ educational in-| stitutions, this small whisper, this small exhibit, is a significant admis- sion of fear and respect. Facts Have Spoken The name of Karl Max rarely has been mentioned in bourgeois buoks. Here and there the name creeps in- to a footnote, into a chance remark, to be vilified, to be dismissed with a crisis, and the rise of Socialist con- struction in the Soviet Union, have spoken, and these thousands of fool- ish books are swept aside. The officials of the public library whose salaries are cut, by a process whose explanation they can find only in the pages of Karl Marx, must realize in some degree how much bourgeois rubbish they spend their lives in classifying. Bourgeois eco- nomists would like to have their readers forget their boasts and pro- phecies of the past. Now they make a half-hearted bow of respect to Marxism, by means of two small glass-covered tables. Want to Marx Perhaps they hope they can keep Marxism within the confines of an exhibit or two. Perhaps they hope to add Karl Marx to the list of their “great men,” and bury him with the SPLENDID LARGE Hall and Meeting Rooms TO HIRE Perfect for BALLS, DANCES, LECTURES, MEETINGS, Etc. IN THE New ESTONIAN WORKERS HOME 27-29 W.115th St., N.Y.C. Phone UNiversity 4-0165 BROOKLYN AVALON Cafeteria’ 1610 KINGS HIGHWAY OPEN DAY AND NIGH DEWEY 9-9512 “RENDEZVOUS” For Brownsville Proletarians SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE BRONX Mott Haven 9-8749 DR. JULIUS JAFFE Surgeon Dentist 401 EAST 140th STREET (Cor. Willis Ave.) DAYTON 9-4000 D, BACKER INTERVALE Moving & Storage Co., Inc. BRONX, N.Y. 2 WESTCHESTER AVE. Total to date 95.00 The Karl Marx Exhibit sneer. But the deepening capitalist | his responsibility.” | i lic Library dead saints of the bourgeoisie. But the Soviet Union grows while capitalism declines. But the working class of every country is more and more rallying to the battle-cry of | Karl Marx, “Working men of all} countries unite!” Not a little exhibit | of two tables, not a building full of exhibits, but the final emancipation | of the working class, the growth of socialist construction throughout the world, the building of a world class- jless society is the monument that! will finally do justice to the name ot | Karl BO ty aes ‘FOOD PRICE RISE IS CONTINUING Women Toilers Take Lead in Fighting It NEW YORK, March 12. — Retail prices are soaring all over the coun- try. In New York bread is up from one to two cents a loaf; butter that early last week sold for 20 cents a pound is now between 28 and 30 cents; canned milk has gone up from | three cents a small can to four cents; meat of all kinds is much higher, with beef leading, the price of steers | on the Chicago market being 28 per! ent higher, with retail prices be- ween 40 and 42 per cent higher. Veal is $1.00 a hundred pounds higher on the Chicago market, at $7.50, while the retailers have boosted the price as much as 30 per cent. Maintain Higher Retail Rate Price trends characteristic of the course of the crisis since 1929 main- tain approximately the same propor- tion, The chief characteristic of price trends was the fact that retail prices sank much slower than whole- sale prices. Today with wholesale Prices rising rapidly, the retail prices are advancing proportionately faster. In all markets there is a sharp ad- vance of sugar and coffee. There are also price advances in many articles of clothing, particularly shoes and hoslery. Edith Berkman, who contracted tuberculosis as a result of the per- secution of the bosses for her mili- tant leadership of striking textile workers, still faces danger of de- portation to fascist Poland. Only mass pressure of the working class can save her. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 Bristol Street (Bet Pitkin & Sutter Aves.) B’kiya PHONE: DICKENS 2-3018 Office Hours: 8-16 A.M., 1-2, 6-8 P.M. ANNOUNCEMENT Dr. Louis L. Schwartz SURGEON DENTIST Announces The removal of his office to larger quarters at 1 Union Square \(8th Floor) Suite 803 Tel. Algonquin 6-9803 tntern’) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE ith FLOOR AD Wort Done Under Persons) Car DR JOSFPESON EAT AT THE ROYAL CAFETERIA 827 BROADWAY Between 12th & 13th Ste.) Royal Dishes for the Proletariat OUR WORKERS MEMBERS OF F.W.L0 $$$ TAXI “BONUS” Morgan’s Co. Making Men Pay for Gas NEW YORK.—A spirit of among the cab drivers, shown by ma- ny quitting their jobs at Morgan's “Terminal Cab Corporation” has postponed the scheme to make the men pay losses until March 15. But the company is pushing through a clever wage cut to reduce the com- mission from 40 per cent to 33 and one third. They call it a bonus. They offer 10 per cent additional commis- sion, if the men will pay 10 cents a | | gallon for gas, The net result is, with @ very few exceptions which the company makes much of, that the men, already down to $5 to $12 a week, lose a dollar or two more. The Taxi Workers Union, 80 East llth Street, is organizing the men for a struggle. Its official paper, “The Taxi Worker” off the press today, will have a complete exposure of the Terminal’s wage cutting scheme, and plans to fight it. Come up to Room 231 and get some copies. 4 NEGRO YOUTHS FRAMED BY COPS Accused of Robbing} Man They Never Saw NEW YORK.—Four young Negro workers, Tom Brown, John Christian, | Joe Turner and a youth whose first | name is William, were arrested in an outright frame-up last Saturday | charged with robbing a white man, they never saw before, of $14.40, A policeman called the four as they were going into Brown’s home, they stopped and he told them they were under arrest. The policeman took them over to a white man who was obviously drunk and asked him, “Are these the guys?” The man said they were the ones who robbed him. Unable to find the real criminals the police as usual are trying to pin it on Negro workers. The boys will have a hearing to- morrow morning at the 121 Street and 3rd Avenue Court at 10 a. m. The International Labor Defense immediately came to the defense of the young workers. Shoe Workers Strike; Demand Pay Increase; Unite for Struggle NEW YORK.—Under the Teader- | Ship of a United Front Shop Com- mittee, the lasters, heelers and fit- ters of the Martin Weinstein Shoe Co., 35 York Street, Brooklyn, are out on strike for an increase in wages on certain shop operations and re- cognition of the shop committee, Al- though part of the crew belongs to the Federation of Shoe Workers, the appeal of the workers of the Shoe and Leather Workers’ Industrial Union for rank and file unity based on struggle to win their demands, was enthisiastically supported by members of the Federation. The Shoe and Leather Workers’ Industrial Union calls upon all shoe workers to support the strike, NEW YORK.—A Marx Memorial and celebration of the anniversary of the Paris Commune will take place at Hunts Point Palace, 163rd St. and Southern Blvd., at 2 p. m., Sunday, March 26. C. A. Hathaway, district organizer of the Communist Party will be the main speaker. The Frel- heit Chorus, Red Dancers, Workers Theatre, and Prospect Mandolin Club are included on the program. The concert and memorial are under joint auspices of the Communist Party, section 5, and all mass organizations are asked to cooperate. of the Bronx. Workers’ organizations Organizations Partici- pating in Raising Funds for the Daily, Worker pi css Bridge Plaza Workers Club 285 Rodney Street, Brooklyn MOVIE SHOWING 10 Days That Shook the World WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15 at 8 P.M. Comrade Mac Harris is making a tour now for the Daily Worker. He will take up the ization of the financial drive as well as problems of circulation. The com- rades are requested to make all Harris will visit the following cities: Ithaca — March 14 and 15 Binghamton—March 16 Schenectady—March 18 & 19 Albany—March 20 Gloversville—March 21 Yonkers—March 22. Special Program to members of I. W. O. and Co-operai with a letter from your organizat City Phone—i:stabrook 8-1400 REQTAURANT, 2700 BRONX Do You Know of the Reduction in Rates at CAMP NITGEDAIGET BEACON, N, ¥. Every Week-End $12.50 Includes Tax qperative $10.50 per week OPEN ALL YEAR—HEALTHFUL FOOD, REST, RECREATION SPORT AND CULTURE poses drial erie yy he Po al steer et icc la in Every Koom Camp Phone—Bescon 731 Workers organizations write for Special Excursions and Rates AUTOMOBILES LEAVE DAILY FROM CO-OPERATIVE PARK EAST, BRONX, N, ¥. IS BIG PAY CUT unrest “BANKS TOOK YOUR GOOD MONEY, WILL REPAY INFLATED PAPER” Marxists Analyze Crisis At Meet On 50th An- niversary of Great Leader’s Death NEW YORK.—“What money the smal) depositor gets out of the banks will be in nearly worthless inflated currency,” District Organizer Hathaway of the Communist Party warned the audience in St. Nicholas Arena Sun- day night. The occasion was the Fiftieth Anniversary of Karl Marx's death. Com. munist speakers analyzed the pre- | &— sent crisis in the light of Marxist i | | | } theory. Hathaway pointed out that Roose- velt’s solution was to add 4 billion dollars more paper money to a cir- culation already inflated, so that 3 billion gold will be all that is back of 8 billion paper, and a dollar will soon be worth only 25 cents gold. Carl Brodsky, chief counsel of the International Labor Défense, was chairman of the meeting. Other speakers included, Richard B. Moore and Alexander, District Agit-Prop. The I.W.O. band played several num- bers. “They cheer now when Roosevelt is shown in the moving pictures, but inside of six months,” said Hatha- way, “these cheers will be turned to hisses. Workers will come into the Communist Party with a speed that we can hardly realize at the present ume.” Hathaway pointed out that the cu- mulative. effect of the crisis was started by the chaotic mass produc- tion at the peak of prosperity based on the belief of permanent prosper- ity. The Socialist Party hastened to remove the words “class struggle” from their party platform, substitut- ing class collaboration. Everything was to be solved on the basis of mass production, said socialists and capit~ alists alike. Today the revolutionary vanguard of the workers is the only section of the American population that knows the causes, effects and way out of the present crisis, but the great mas- Ses are going to learn. Meeting At John Reed Club At another meeting, earlier in the day, the John Reed Club, the Revo- lutionary Writers Federation, the Pen and Hammer, and the National Stud- ents League, commemorated the fif- tieth anniversary of the death of Karl Marx, by a series of lectures on Marx's relation to the various phases of modern society, before an audi- | picture Stage and Screen PICTURING THE WORKERS OF U.S.S.R. RUNNING INDUSTRY “Shame,” the new Soviet talking at the Cameo Theatre, 42nd Street near Broadway, is a simple and gripping account of life in the So- viet Union, with its new security for the toiling masses, whose enthusiasm, consciousness of power, collective in- itiative and sense of ownership and responsibility for the machines and their production pervade the story. The story is centered mainly in a turbine plant, although several scenes of the home life and love affairs of the workers are given. The workers in a turbine factory in Leningrad greet with unbounded enthusiasm the an- nouncement by the Party secretary, Vesia, of the approval by the govern- ment of their counter-plan—the plan originated by the workers in the Soviet plants to surpass the tasks @ assigned them by the official plan. From an enthusiastic factory meeting they return to their machines and tools determined to push through their plan in record time. But some- thing goes wrong with the turbine part on which Semion Ivanitch Bab- chenko, and old skilled mechanic, had been working. Skvortzov, a declassed engineer, has been sabotaging the factory. The turbine is off center. And the flag of shame is hung ever the machine by the workers. The en- tire factory is despondent, with the exception of the wrecker, Skvortzov, who gleefully convinces himself. that the workers are defeated, that “the scum” as he arrogantly refers to them when alone with his mother, can never master the tedhnique of pro- duction. But the workers refuse to admit defeat. Under the leadership of the Party secretary and old Bab- chenko, who deeply feels the shame of the defective turbine, they take heroic measures to overcome the set~ ence of 1,000 at the John Reed head- te I heir plan on quarters at 450 Sixth Ave. BASE See Sere nnle te nile pen O —| time. Babchenko, himself a sneerer _oseph_ Freeman, the author of! at the new notions of collective work, ‘Zhe Soviet Worker,” talked on| becomes an enthusiastic supporter of “Marxism and Culture,” saying: “It| the plan, following a dramatic scene is fitting to pay homage to this man| in which he first threatens to leave at a time whe1 the whole world is! the factory and then in an angry living through his prophecies.” outburst, typifies the attitude of the Harry Magdoff, a member of the} Soviet workers, shouting at his cri National Students League, who has | tics “I am a worker in my dwn face been very active in the spreading of tory.” In the end it becomes clear to revolutionary propaganda in educa-| the whole factory that not Babchen- tional institutions talked on “Marx-| ko, but the declassed engineer, was ism and Education.” to blame for the defective turbine. Paul Salter, of the Pen and Ham- The film is produced by Soyuz- mer, spoke on “Marxism and| kino and directed by Frederick Erm- ler and Sergei Yutkevitch, Science.” V. J. Jerome tore the petiy pre- tensions of the distorters of Marxism to pieces and Alexander Trachten- berg outlined policies for the future “Marx the Revolu- Cc. B., NEW WORKINGCLASS DRAMATIC GROUP ORGANIZED NEW YORK.—The Engdahl Play- ers, organized and directed by Mi-~ chal Lame of the Workers Labora~ tory Theatre, is a new group recent~- ly formed to dramatize the calss struggle and to be used as a weapon against the boss class. The members of this organization have See | themselves after the working otes® leader who died as a soldier in the? ranks of the fighting proletariat ~ and in his desire to free the Scotts- boro boys, in his talk on tionist.” Full and immediate payment of the war veterans’ adjusted compen- sation certificates; no cut in the disability allowances; no discrimi- nation in hospitalization. AMUSEMENTS ‘New Soviet Film—American Premiere ‘POLISH TERROR’ ey ‘Triasylo) English Ty‘les With A. BUCHMA, Star of “Jimm!s Higgins” EXTRA ADDED FEATURE— Unemployment Demonstration worttns Acme Theatre ATH ST. AND UNION SQUARE “Ten Best Pictures Rolled Into One!” Herald-Tribune The New Soviet Morality! 1) FRANCIS LEDERER & DOROTHY GISH io AUTUMN CROCUS Monosce THEATRE, isin aw orbs) Eves. 8:40. Mats, Wed., Thurs. & Sat., 2:40 2X0 JEFFERSON "8 8. 4/NOW ‘A FAREWELL to ARMS’ with GARY COOPER and HELEN HAYES Added MORAN AND MACK Feature in “HYPNOTIZED” - | Classics of the Screen! A WEAPON IN THE WORKERS’ FILMS-ciass STRUGGLE STRUGGLE FOR BREAD—The dramatic story of the making of the workers’ paper the DAILY WORKER, can be shown at a very small charge. We are also booking SOVIET FILMS Every organization should take advantage of this opportunity to use the film for stimulating activities, drives, etc. CAN BE SHOWN ANYWHERE AT A NOMINAL COST, Information—Bookings at DAILY WORKER DISTRICT OFFICE, 35 East 12th Street Tel; AL 4- DAILY WORKER BANQUET at MANHATTAN LYCEUM, 66 E. 4th St, MARCH 19 at 7:30 P. M. ALL ORGANIZATIONS ARE INVITED TO SEND DELEGATES MICHAEL GOLD will act as chairman. Speakers MOISSAYE J. OLGIN, Famous Author and Editor Morning Freiheit CLARENCE A. HATHAWAY RICHARD B. MOORE CARL BRODSKY 1. AMTER Entertainment—Chalk Talk, John Reed Club 2 )]