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bd Page Twe Snow, Cold Weather Intensify Suffering Among U nemployed Brooklyn Jobless, Ask-) { ing Work, Terrorized By Police NEW YORK. — Snowsiorms and lowered temperatures, sweeping ea: from the Rocky Mountains, broug’ y to the millions vorkers. men. Recen yelt adininistrat: shipments cities throughout the country © the misery of the unemployed. A mounting death toll, still incor plete, indicated 45 out the night wii Purther deaths temperatures expected to go below the record FRED BIEDENKAPP breaking lows of the past two Weeks./ Candidate for national organ- Warm in Miami izer of the newly amalgamated Southern Florida enjoyed com-| United Shoe Workers Union, paratively warm weather, though the — wealthy vacationists there had their Social activities hampered by clou Weather followed by a Relief sioner Prepare for Shoe Union Elections| Biednkapp Nominated for Organizer C.W.4. workers here in order the large it growers might have a plentitul suppiy of cheap labor. Although there are 26 armories in / Rew York City, and thousands of empty office and apartment build- ings, the LaGuardia administration has not opened any other than the| -The New York con- tee of the Un NEW YORK. solidation two armories recently opened r a “daytime shelters with recreational | Shoe and Leather Workers Ind 1) facilities,” at 125 W. 14th St. for| Union Proc eeding with prepara women, the other for men at 26 ection of off and | and Lexington * Last week nomina- | Although th 1 Secre-| epariinent of Sani- tation reported that ng commit~- y cal together | jo Yor! al tog i oe rn awa tional offi- shovelling ne instance at 154 Columbia St., Brooklyn, 300 Biedenkapp, prese Plied for jobs and or of New Yo out. Police and ional Organize nd for} rer; I.| ted for Gen-! New York. The| is calling a series | eek for the nom- s, business agents 2 embers to the boards. | All shoe workers are called upon to| take note of the following meetings: | Tuesday, Feb. 27th 2 oe workers | riedly sent to intimidate the w A similar uation Station at < Ro En of Sanitation « rookiyn miy 5 7, einen jit after t n all, 918 Halsey stationed : 0 p,m, for the tri 2g Thursd friends who came Thursday, | ; i March Ist all slipper members will| sap Cordon ct ab? | meet at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East | egation to LaGuardia’s office | 4h St. for nominations of officials and won t that they would | of the artment. At all of | sen g 1€ recommendation e Joint Council for an assess- nt will be discussed. 256 Riverdale Ave. at midnight tween 2 and h ne cop Theatre Employes Plan Walkout jobs. Here police lieutenant iscuss Strike ; y F stationed at door, refused them Discuss § trike oy Regular admittance. sent then the Meeting Department of § #ioner Goodrich hire ther nitation mis~ assistant the takers andj x passing. Goodrich to prot be given. work tor {Injunction Menace Hit by Workers in Office of Mayor Say Thev will Smash It By Mass Picket Demonstrations union The ployes affiliated with the A. F near trike vote y went to press. nwhile ng chai bor Board, who ha betrayal of the ta been active trying to t NEW tion vrotes' police to strike, whi ten out nd for union tion will be put ses in the against euvers the Trade J. Buite t, attorney for the Ca- | Greate feteria Workers Union, who accom- | 799 Broad panied the delegation, demanded that | base ‘heir the group be permitted to see the | #nd file comn Mayor. Dunham said that he would| try to arrange a conference with La Arrests on injunction v Buitenkant. “As soon | shiz | Jerome to Speak on dustria and United Front at NTWIU Hall NEW YORK.—lIn response to urgent calls from workers in the needle trades for clarification of | the issues involved in the Austrian workers’ struggles, V. J, Jerome, ! Communist writer, well known for his brilliant and devastating criti- cism of Sidney Hook and other renegades and revisionists, will speak at the auditorium of the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial 3 28th St., on Wed- 2 par workers are | is forum, where h discussion will be held background of the armed revolt of the Austrian workers and itude of the Socialist lead- the united front policie Cor it Party Kelly Miller (Offers Fascist Program For Negro Masses Negro Reformist Stakes Hitler Percentage Policy In Enterprises NEW YORK-—Percentage employ- ment of Negroes, on the line of Hit- ler’s fascist program limiting the number of Jewish workers in enter- prises, universities, etc., is proposed by Kelly Miller, Negro reformist leader, in a letter in yesterday's New York Herald-Tribune. Dr. Miller, who is also a leading ex- ponent of a program for driving Negro workers back to the ruined farms for a bare subsistence, admits that the N.R.A. “acts on the fascistic principle,” and that “there is much complaint about discrimination against the Negro under operat the N.R.A. codes.” He ag t codes permit such dis ion “under the guise of regional or local differentials and where the wage level is mandatory under the codes em- loyers often supplant Negro by white workfolks.” He nevertheless de fends the N.R.A. blue buzzard, decle ing “President Roosevelt undoubtedly intends . and impartial treatment under sheltering wing.” Silent on the jim-crow denial of relief to Negro jobless, Miller oppose: his .| unemployment relief, declaring “long- continued public dole will lead to the enfeeblement of will and weakening of character’ of the Negro masses. He urges the fascist principle of “setting @ quota” (limiting) for Negroes in in- dustry. He warns that unless the goy- ernment engages in a gesture of “do- ing something for the Negro masses,” “the great standing idle army of Negroes will constitute a menace to the entire industrial economic and social structure. Local “22 ‘Meetings Throughout the City to Halt Fake Elections NEW YORK.—The left wing group of Local 22 of the I.L.G.W.U. issued a call teday to all dressmakers of the local to come to the section meetings to be held tonight at 8 p. m. at at Third Ave,, following places: 335 25 W. 130th St., Harlem; 124 Second Ave., Manha m; 11 Aron Place, Williamsburg 219 Sackman St., Brownsville; 1377 42nd St., Brook- t | lyn. The nomination of election i | and ob ipervise and c étions will rtance that Tt, is h the dressmakers come in masses to these meetings so that honest workers will be placed on the committees i thus guard against fake elections. Another Crew Joins Boston Ship Strike 1) (Continued from Pag: ficers in shooting at the men and sent a resolution denouncing the ac- tion to the Boston Police Commis- sioner. The Seamen's Institute and crim oifices are working full blast trying to get men to scab on the ships, bt are unsuccessful, Cops are threatening parents of North End boys who are out on probation, demanding that be put on scab work on the pool rooms for strikebreakers, A. F. of L, Sends Seabs , The Boston Ex , is send PS to be .. that there shall be fair | They are also canvassing the| GUTTERS OF ‘By DEL NEW YORK ! j THE PATRON SAINT | “The depression hag aided in spiritual rehabilitation,"—"Hard times have weided the family inte a God-fearing unit,’"—“Economic insecurity has brought forth the long hidden homely virtues.”—Quotations from Sunday's sermons in N. ¥. C. churches. Praise “Daily” for Offer of | Marx Book as Prize in Drive NEW YORK.—The offer of Hugo Gellert’s “Karl Marx’s Capital in Pic- tures,” as a premium and prize in the Daily Worker circulation drive already brought forth telephone calls and airmail letters from wor {ers praising the Daily Worker man- | agement for making possible this of- |® special arrangement is enabled to offer this book for only one dollar to jall subscribers renewing their sub- scription to the “Daily” for a year. The very same book, beautifully printed and iilustrated, is offered tree of charge to workers who obtain either 5 yearly subs to the Datly Worker ($6 per year), or 10 six months subs ($3.50 each). Because of the much higher postage | rate for mailing the Daily Worker to Manhattan and Bronx, New York, the subscription price for these two boroughs is $9 per year, and $5 for | The phone calls were mainly from subscribet ‘lyn who asked that | copy of “Capital in Pictures” be re- erved for them and that they had ent in $6 to renew their subscription » the “D: for a year, and an ad- itional dollar for the book immedi- six months. ately after ing the yet a aus ment of this remarkable offer in | * . Saturday's issue of the “Daily.” | Furniture Workers in An mail letter from a worker, L. J. | in Philadelphia, states: Washington Today want you to know how pleased | I am with our Daily Worker for | To Hit N.R.A. Code making this great offer. Please, | comrades, be sure I would be doing | my best to get new subscribers for cur ‘Daily’ even without a prize. BUT I WANT THIS BOOK. 1 couldn't afford to buy if, Three dollars is a lot of money for one who is without work most of the time. Piease put one of these books aside for me as I'm going to send | You more than enough new subs | pretty soon and get the book free.” | “Karl Marx’ pital in Pictures,” | the 30-hour, five-day week without jis just off the pre It contains sixty'| reduction in pay and a minimum pages of essential text from Marx’s| Wage of 75 cents an hour for un- NEW YORK—To protest against jand to put forward the demands | Worked out at the recent National | Convention of the Furniture Work- |ers Industrial Union, a delegation of | furniture workers, headed by Jos Kiss, |chairman of the unicn, will appear |at the code complaint hearing to be held in Washington today, | history-making “Capital,” and an- | “killed workers. ner Sixty pages of creative litho-| The delegation will demand that | graphs by the well-known proletarian | piece work be done away with in the | artist, Hugo Gellert | Although selling for three dollars, the Daily Worker Manggement | furniture jrade and the right to or- | | Sanize and strike for better condi- thru | tions, Dollfuss Smashes |Hold United Front All(rganizations of Conference on CWA _ Austrian Workers Sunday, March 4th) | lation (Continued from Page 1) | (Cont ued from Page 1) been jailed in addition to the hur | dreds imprisoned for direct partici- bation in the armed struggles, | Dolifuss government began c: | the conference and future actions, all | | organizations are asked to send any | the | possible contributions with their del-| erTying | egates. shine of all the! “In contrast to the broad united | 2 J | front character of the Emergency eee ze fovernment has appointed «| Conference, the Socialist and Loves | ‘ommittee to control the gigantic so- | stoneite leadership, despite the sin- | cere desire of the workers for united | Operative organizations, as a prelim- |inary to taking them over, and has * > front struggle for continuance of already decided to liquidate the | C.W.A. ave’ called @ conference for | Workers Bank, with deposits of| March 1. To this conference they | 54,000,000 schillings, | The trade unions have been abol- | and their gigantic funds and prope s taken over. The tax pr: | visions wh nefitted the workers | | are to be altered, the producers of} ing of the rovisional united front | School Supplies are demanding that comimittes, th Feb. 19, which had and supplies be with-| called the Feb. 15th demonstration material dealers! in which Socialist, Communist and —————— ee | | ANC. W A. workers are asked to at the risk of impris-|Teport at their union headquarters | is of widows of vic- | immediately, or at the general office | war on the w of the Relief Workers’ League, 29 E. ers are refusing to aecept the pacit= | se ages of food supplied by Cardinal! Innitzer, archfoe of the Soviet Union, | his Meanie ata ae a the Which ate being sent out with fas-| workers Committee on Unemploy- | est propaganda enclosed, ment, and Joseph Welsh, of the| Workers Unemployed League, despite | the desire of the membership of |have excluded T.U.U.L. unions, the Unemployment Councils, and the Re- lief Workers League, and all mili- tant organizations. This conference follows the meet- are demandir at the municipality | } cease buying its building materials Girect | Meanwhile, enment, ht Boston Anti-War Meet | the slave furniture code of the N.R.A. | Kiss will put forward demands for | DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1934 || Hathaway to Speak at Ford Birthday | Banquet, March 3 || way will speak at the banquet held |} im honor of James W. Ford, secre- tary of the Communist Party of || Harlem, and candidate of the C.P. for Vice-President in 1932, on the occasion of his fortieth birthday. The banquet will be held at the Esthonian Workers Club, 27 West 115th St., Saturday, March 3, at 8 P.M. Musical entertainment will be furnished by a large jazz band, and the Italian Workers Chorus. Eugene Nigob will render piano solos. Admission will be 50 cents. | Misleaders of Vets _ Act to Sidetrack _ Vote on the Bonus | (Daily Worker Washington Buream) | WASHINGTON, D. C., Feb. 26— | With a vote on immediate cash pay- ment of the world war veterans’ ad- justed compensation (bonus) cer- | tiffeates scheduled for March 12 in the House of Representatives, the re« actionary leadership of the Veterans of Foreign Wars has come forward with a campaign to place the whole question in the hands of a commis- sion who would “investigate,” thus forestalling action, throughout the life of this congress. Representative Carl Weideman (Dem., Michigan), who introduced the resolution for the Veterans of For- eign Wars, denied today that his pro- posal would forestall action on the | bonus payment, but officials at the headquarters of the V. F. W., said that is “exactly” what the resolution would do. The resolution proposes the estab- lishment of & commission of Veterans’ Compensation, which would be “au- thorized and directed to investigate and study all matters relating to the administration of laws and granting benefits to veterans and dependents of veterans . with a view to for- mulating a national policy with re- spect to benefits, monetary or other- wise.” Representative Weideman said: | “It would take out of the arena everything except the bonus.” “What then is the meaning of the | resolution’s proposal that the com- | mission ‘study’ and propose a ‘Na- | tional Policy’ with respect to veterans’ compensation?” he was asked. | “That refers to future wars,” | Weideman replied. “The commission | would set @ permanent rate for com- pensation for future wars.” Want to Pass the Buck | Nevertheless any schoolboy can| read the resolution and see that it Goes propose to give the members of | Congress an “out” from the bonus question—one which is causing the Administration considerable concern right now. President Roosevelt is ab- solutely opposed to bonus payments | How, but the pressure from the rank and file of veterans is so strong that sufficient members of the House have Signed a petition to fcree the sched- uling of @ vote on the issue on March 12. Roosevelt leaders in Congress are embarrassed at the situation—know- ing that their master is opposed, but that the large numbers of members dare not face their constituents in next fall's election with an anti-vet- erans’ vote on their record. The Dem- ccratic leadership does not. either want Roosevelt to be forced to say yes, or veto the bonus and take sole} responsibility for that. Tt is perfectly well known that the! leadership is looking for a way out of this situation—and the V.F.W. res- olution might serve their purpose. It | proposes that the commission report | to the President and Congress, rec- commending legislation on the first day of the next Congress’ meeting. Until it reported, obviously all mat- ters under its investigation would be held in abeyance until then. Propose a Comm’ssion | The Weideman resolution proposes | a commission composed of four Sena- tors, four Representatives, four mem- bers appointed by the President, and two representatives of the American Legion, the Veterans of Foreign Wars, the Disabled American Veterans, the United Spanish War Veterans and the Veterans’ Administretion. Natur- ally, there is no suggestion that the ccmmission contain representatives of the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League, the militant organization which is fighting for immediate cash payments and for repeal of the Eeon- omy Act, Needle Workers to Hear Hathaway on Fascism and War, on Feb, 28th The League of Struggle Against Fascism and War has arranged a special mass meeting of needle trades workers on Wednesday, Feb. 28, right after work, at Bryant Hall 4ist St. and Sixth Ave. At this meeting Clarence Hathaway, editor of the Daily Worker, will speak on the fol- | Free Milk for Racqueteers Now there are tennis players and there are tennis Players, Some are amateurs and some are pros. The pros today, | who used to give away their exhibitions for nothing, openly brag today about the money they get for hitting it up before “Georgeous . . . Beautiful . . . and lovely, lovely, lovely,” re marking audiences. The amateurs stil] maintain their simon pure financial chastity by shunning the professional taint. The latter can afford to do® x9 so. Their expense accounts, ever to haggle over their couple of amounting over the allotted A. ‘oare aol ele Wis a a A. U. $7.50 per day, trips to ar ar Europe, performances before the NYHOW, there was something crownheads of European nobility and their being pampered like beauty queens, gives them the opportunity to flicker eyelashes at the money mongers, The night before fourteen grand was knocked off. Profitable, this playing for baby’s sake. The bablex might get something to drink; but so will the Garden, the players and the rest of the “boys” whe find themselves in on these deals. Even the tennis stars, who were probably brought up with silver spoons down their throats, tell us they also need milk for strength. It’s quite different playing for money and play- ing for love of the game. At these Cup matches in the Hilis somewhere, rests are taken customarily, say in the third set, if the contest runs into the best three out of five. But here it’s different. They play right through for a couple of hours right to the sweaty end, and some- times tearing off eight sets of tennis without sitting down. And thit’s a grind in any man’s country. Bit it’s the bank book that keeps ‘em going. Vines looks forward to the day he gets $30,000 in the blue ledger. Not had for only a few months of toiring. Tilden tops ‘em all with figures nm~- ning into the six figures, Bouncing balls for eight sets with- out sitting once makes the synd.cate’s players want milk. They need it for strength. The spectators wouldn't want the fluid. They get seasick from rolling their heads, a a * Egy days from the amateurs to the frank money-making play- ers, we find the great Big Bill Til- den syndicate, They have regular barnstorming tours, playing here a day, there two days, now a week. Their publicity agents have hard times cocking up grudge and do- or-die stories since tennis, after all, is supposed to be such a gentle- manly game. They coin it never- theless, Tilden loses a match, Vines wins, Young blood has its day. Cochet beats Vines or Tilden, or Plaa comes through, The French and the Americans are battling ft out for honors, So the publicity runs on, The other night the Frenchmen, | Plaa and Cochet, and the Americans, Tilden and Vines, got together before @ crowd of 14000, who averaged around two bucks a ducat. They swung their racquets. Backhand, fore- hand, anyhand. The ball bounced back and forth to the rhythm of swinging heads and roiling spectator’s eyes to the tune of 10 per cent gross receipts, My ducat read that this exhibition was for the Free Milk Fund for Babies (Charity). I remember pugi- lists like Dempsey and Tunney fight- ing for the babies, not forgetting, how- DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet, Pitkia and Butter Aves, Broekiyn PHONE: DICKENS 9-301 Office Hours: 8-10 AM., 1-3, 6-3 P.M. BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont P’kway, Bronx Src. OPTOMETRISTSY (2)oPTicians |i 1378 ST.NICHOLAS AVE* 1690 LEXINGTON AVE. at 179% ST.RY. Dr. E. EICHEL Dentist 150 East 93rd Street, New York City Cor. Lexington Ave. Tel. ATwater 9-8830 Hours: from 9 a.m, to 8 p.m. Sun. 9 to1 Member Workmen's Sick and Death Benefit Fund T.NY, @ Come Away from the Noise and Rush of the City for Rest, Quiet — | and a little fun at | Camp « e Nitgedaiget Beacon, —Ph.: Beacon 781 All the Summer Fun with Winter Comfort Cars leave daily at 10:30 a.m. from Cooperative Restaurant—2700 Bronx Park East (Hstabrook 8-140) at 106th S' Willlamsburgh Comrades Welcome De Luxe Cafeteria 94 Graham Ave., Cor. Siegel St. BVERY BITE 4 DELIGHT Capitalism Is Dying! Will Com- munism supplant it or Fascism prop it up a while? Hear the Stirring Debate between Clarence A. HATHAWAY member, 0. E. c., OP. Lawrence DENNIS Leader of Fascism in America Tickets: $1.10, 8c and bbe. On sale at New Massc., 31 5. 27th Street (mail orders filled), Workers Bookshop, 50 E. 18th St. and other central points. Auspices: Press League and New Masses RED PRESS BANQUET like $30,000 collected that night. - firemen. those organizations for unity, stated: llowing questions: What are the Pears at the Colby Cafeteria he is arrested. We came here to protest against the use of police against " Workers.” The Mayor's secretary mere! the approval of the Newspapers are absolutely silent on strikers, the Council stated | the strike, } Efforts are now being made to pull’ out the longshoremen. Seamen in ali ports are being mobilized by the| BO youth Referendum Demanded | Unites 40 Youth Groups “The workers are in no mood for unity,” and definitely stated that the T.U.U.L. and Unemployment Coun- nting 40 Ne-| cils would be excluded from “their” STON, Mass.—Kighty-nine | delegates, repre gro and white organizations with a | conference. At this meeting the Un- combi: that he would refer the protest to| LaGuardia. He seemed to be chiefly | * interested if the charges against the}! “arrested workers alleged any violence. | *- Phillip Miller, 2 worker from the Oolby Cafeteria, answered this ques- | ~ tion by pointing out that all of the! ‘ylolence came from the police. Hej +: - aid told how he was arrested last ‘Tucs- oe Union, warned the bosses iytegnd on the picket line and was | in jail for three days, where he Marine Workers Industrial Union to stop all coal boats when they arrive at the docks. Communist Party Calls Meet The District Committee of the} Communist Party is arranging to cail| a big mass meeting of workers from | all industries to support the strike. | Testo The John Reed Club of Boston has | tony been active since the beginning of the strike and is civing its utmost by Fur Workers Union at Again: | The schoo}: ¥ YORK.—in a mbers of the Board of Di New York Fur Trimmers Joseph manager of the Fur Workers Indus- | Winogradsky, | Association, against an agreement with the In- Fur Workers Union will of the workers in ternational ; against the the unions and youth clubs, cussion of the program of the Ameri- can League, and the Youth Mani- Resolutions against imperialist war ned membership of 2,000, met Boston Youth Conference ist War and Fascism on Friday. delegates represented high 's, Colleges, church groups, trade After a dis- employment Councils and the Relief Workers League put forward pro- posals for the broadest possible united front of all workers. To this action on the part of the Socialist and Lovestonite leaders, the Trade Union Unity Council has issued @ statement reading in part: “This action on the part of these mislead- ers is nothing but a brazen attempt to split the ranks of the workers and in particular, all the organiza- decided to affiliate. was not allowed to communicate with | (eo; ort to the struggle. Club mem-| 8nd fascism, for the freedom of the | Weaken cur Bir eae that the rage ‘his family or attorney. The letic ent prior to a meet- | bers are co. .00d, clothing and | $¢° tsboro boys, victims of American | Union Unity Council today repre- / EThe only way out is to smash the| ing of the A n held last night, | strike funds he seamen, [ticles ‘error, in defense of the Ata! tags organized trade unions with a : lon by mass violations and) where the re going to at-| In an appeal issued yesterday by | {tn working class and the Soviet | membership of 50,000 and has the as picketing,” said Irving Himmer-| tempt to ratify an agreement with | John Reed Club, the“ artists and| Union were adopted by the Confer-| support of thousands of workers ors age oh ek Soper the A. F. of L. Union, which has only | ¥Titers of Boston and throughout the | &nce. ganized into left wing oppositions country were urged to send clothing, food and cash direct to the head- quarters of the Marine Workers In- dustrial Union, 2414 Battery Street, Boston, & small percentage of the organized | oie Buitenkant’s remarks.) tur workers, piWe have come here to see the/ ‘the Fur Workers Industrial Union Sor, he said, “and we insist that! i, demanding that the referendum, sees us.” | which the bosses agreed 1 : Leas us h eS agre upon before | The Mayor's secretary, however,| the National Labor Boar Bags Meet , @ave the delegation no definite an-| ot and that the wor ewer, 4 * which union re; “You have got to understand,” said | — fl, gigs ae “that - you can’t come/ City Hell stating that they will smash | down here any time. I can| the injunction menace by carrying eer iene, Street and : subject will be * no assurances.” | on & campaign of mass violations and | (°° Deepal ris eget ce the delegation left the! mass picketing. Ns t Upsurges in Europe | | Foll be Mia a 5 if FOR LIBRARY CAMPAIGN | dred Rober volution- | ", will be the main ker Thurs- | , Merch 1, 8 p.m. at a raily arranged | A. the Harlem Workers }to the American Workers, wages | Cork Workers ‘Strike BROOKLYN, Schoo! to be held| demanding that the fake promises | given them last November following a strike for a 10 per cent increase within the A. F. of L, unions, “There cannot be an effective struggle in New York City without the active participation of the unions affiliated with the T.U.U.L, and all . 26.—Five hun-) other militant workers employed and the United Cork| unemployed. These workers under . affiliated with the | the leadership of the T.U.U.C, have uck at 10 o'clock foday,| shown by their militant struggles in the unemployed field as well as in the trade uinon field that they were able to foree concessions from the bosses.” eee lowing Fake Pledges, wor! in | be carried out, r 4 workers to do in order to combat fascism and war? Is a united front | between the Socialists and Commu- | nists possible in the struggle against fascism and war, and who is re- sponsible for the division in the ranks | of the workers? | i | i i. J. MORRIS, Ine. GENERAL FUNERAL DIRECTORS ‘to SUTTER AVE. BROOKLYN Phone’ y Dickens 9-1273—4—5 it Phone: Dickens 6-530 tional Workers Order Sunday, March 4th, 7 P. M. NEW STAR CASINO 107th STREET & PARK AVENUE Speakers: EARL BROWDER, Sec., Communist Party MOISSAYE OLGIN, Ed., ‘Morning Freiheit’ CHARLES KRUMBEIN, Dist. Org., C. P. JAMES W. FORD. Chairman: CLARENCE HATHAWAY, Editor of the “Daily Worker.” Program: SERGEI and MARIE RADAMSKY in Soviet Songs of Various Nationalities NEGRO QUARTETTE of the Hall Johnson Choir in a Selection of Songs BOBBY LEWIS of the Group Theatre in Satirical Sketches. Full Will Be Served Dinner This banquet is arranged by the Central Committes of the Communist Party in Support of the New Press, Admission $1.00. Reservations must be sent by March 1st, Address Press Committee, P.O. Station D, Box 136, N.Y.0.